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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Denteh v. Commissioner of Police for The Metropolis & Ors [2003] UKEAT 1033_00_1601 (16 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/1033_00_1601.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 1033__1601, [2003] UKEAT 1033_00_1601 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 2 December 2002 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MRS R CHAPMAN
MR S M SPRINGER MBE
APPELLANT | |
2) MR E SNOW 3) MS C HULME 4) MR J PARKER 5) MS M HARDING |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
______________________________________________________________________________
For the Appellant | MS NAOMI CUNNINGHAM (of Counsel) Appearing under the Employment Law Appeal Advice Scheme |
For the Respondents | MR DIJEN BASU (of Counsel) Instructed by: Solicitor's Department Metropolitan Police Service New Scotland Yard London SW1 OBG |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
"(1) The tribunal permitted an appearance of bias in that the Respondents and their legal team were allowed to remain in the hearing room at the conclusion of the hearing for some 15 or 20 minutes after the Applicant had left."
"The court must first ascertain all the circumstances which have a bearing on the suggestion that the judge was biased. It must then ask whether those circumstances would lead a fair-minded and informed observer to conclude that there was a real possibility, or a real danger, the two being the same, that the tribunal was biased."
"At the end of the hearing in November 1999 the Chairman asked to go out to the Applicant's waiting room while she looked up some case references for me for the purpose of the closing statement. The Respondents' witnesses and legal team remained in the Tribunal hearing room. I was concerned and waited at the main door leading to the Tribunal room. I observed that the Respondents still remained in the room and after about 15 minutes the Court clerk came to my room to hand me a piece of paper with the case references."
He maintained that account under cross-examination, stating that there was no indication the Respondents' team were leaving the Tribunal room during the fifteen - twenty minutes that he waited in the Applicant's waiting room until the Tribunal clerk brought the case references found by the Chairman.
(i) At paragraphs 37-44 EWR the Tribunal deal with the Appellant's application for employment with MPS. They found that he had not been truthful or accurate in some of the information he supplied in that form. In so finding they rejected an allegation by Mr Denteh that some of the details included in the form had been forged by the Respondents. One factor taken into account in reaching that conclusion was that during cross-examination Mr Denteh had alleged that these alterations had been made by the Respondents before he had even been interviewed (successfully) for the job (EWR paragraph 39), something the Tribunal did not consider likely. Ms Cunningham submits that in so finding the Tribunal had misinterpreted the Appellant's evidence. We cannot accept that submission; as Mr Basu points out, in his written response to the Respondents' closing statement (Bundle 2/227) Mr Denteh referred to the alleged forged application form as: "something which occurred even before my employment relationship started."
(ii) Next it is said that the Tribunal failed to allude to the fact that the Appellant's line manager, Mr Snow, had himself made a false claim about his employment history, as the Tribunal found had Mr Denteh. This suggestion arose, we accept from Mr Basu, during the Appellant's cross-examination when he alleged that during his employment Mr Snow had told him that he, Snow, had worked for Coopers & Lybrand for six-seven years, whereas the finding by the Tribunal (EWR paragraph 41) was that he had in fact worked for that firm of accountants for two years. Whether or not that conversation took place we have been taken to no application form completed by Mr Snow for employment with MPS which contained demonstrably false information.
(iii) At paragraph 2 EWR the Tribunal lists the seven witnesses, including the Appellant, called to give evidence on his behalf during the fifteen day hearing. It is said, correctly, that no reference is thereafter made to the evidence given by four of those witnesses, James Yanwube, Agnes Fadun, Everton Walker and Maria Charles. Their evidence is summarised by Ms Cunningham in this way; Mr Walker had previously worked for the MPS and had left, he said, because of racist treatment. Mr Fadun had spent twenty two years working for MPS and stated that there was racism within the organisation which meant there were no promotion opportunities for black people (it was not alleged by the Appellant that had been refused promotion on racial grounds). Pausing there, we think that the Tribunal were entitled to take the view that general allegations of what may loosely be called 'institutionalised racism" did not assist them in determining the sharp factual conflicts arising in this particular case. As to Mr Yanwube and Ms Charles, also former work colleagues, their evidence is described by Ms Cunningham as that of character references. Again, that evidence plainly did not assist this Tribunal in deciding where the truth lay.
Thus analysed, it seems to us that no inference of bias or the appearance of bias on the part of this Tribunal can be drawn from the fact that no reference was made in their lengthy Reasons to evidence which was at most of peripheral significance. It is not necessary for a Tribunal to refer to each and every piece of evidence heard over fifteen days.
(iv) Then it is said that the Tribunal failed to refer in their Reasons to a discrepancy between what was pleaded in the Respondents' Form IT3 and oral evidence given by a witness, Mr Matthews, as to why further references were sought in respect of the Appellant some five months after his employment started. Having considered the evidence of Mr Matthews, recorded and accepted by the Tribunal, we are unable to discern any discrepancy.
(v) The point is then made that the Respondent's evidence changed during the hearing as to whether any telephone calls had been made to the Appellant's former employers. The evidence came from Ms Harding, a Personnel Manager. The relevant extracts appear in the Chairman's Notes of Evidence dated 11 June 2002. There is no basis for contending that the evidence changed.
(vi) What is clear is that on one matter the case advanced by Mr Basu in cross-examining the Appellant was not supported by evidence later called on behalf of the Respondents. It was first suggested that the Appellant had altered a document. Subsequently a witness, Ms Desai, was called by the Respondents to say that she had altered the document on the Appellant's instruction. That matter is dealt with at paragraph 186 EWR. The Tribunal say:
"It was conceded and accepted by MPS that the manuscript in the document …..had been made by Ms Desai."
The Tribunal then went on to accept her evidence that she had written the entry on the Appellant's instruction. Ms Cunningham argues that the Tribunal closed their minds to the point made by the Appellant; that the Respondents' case had changed. We do not think that they did. The reference to it being 'conceded and accepted' by the Respondents encapsulates the fact that the initial case advanced by Counsel in cross-examination was not borne out in the evidence; it was not that the Appellant had himself physically completed the document; rather that the entry had been made by a member of staff, Ms Desai, but on the Appellant's instructions.
(vii) Finally, on this aspect of the appeal, it is said that the Tribunal misinterpreted the Appellant's tape recordings of grievance meetings. We understand that these were covert recordings made by the Appellant. The sound was indistinct. The Tribunal heard extracts from those tapes. Apparently there was disagreement between the Appellant and the Respondents as to some of the words used on the tapes. The Tribunal's understanding equated to that of the Respondents. Now it is said that we should listen to those tapes in order to determine for ourselves precisely what was said. We decline to do so; it is difficult to imagine a more obvious question of fact for the fact-finding Tribunal, the Employment Tribunal, than what words were used on the tape-recording.