![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Finnigan v. Ministry of Defence Police [2005] UKEAT 0019_05_0109 (1 September 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2005/0019_05_0109.html Cite as: [2005] UKEAT 0019_05_0109, [2005] UKEAT 19_5_109 |
[New search] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN Q.C.
MISS J A GASKELL
MISS G B LENAGHAN
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | Mr D B Stevenson, Solicitor Of- Messrs Thompsons Solicitors 16-18 Castle Street EDINBURGH EH2 3AT |
For the Respondent |
Mr D L Murray, Solicitor Of- Messrs Morton Fraser Solicitors Litigation Division 30-31 Queen Street EDINBURGH EH2 1JX |
Detriment
SDA – ET did not err when it found as a fact, correctly directing itself in accordance with Jeremiah v Shamoon that Claimant did not suffer a detriment.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC:
Introduction
The issues
The legislation
"30. In this case, it is the claimant's position that she was discriminated against by the respondents in terms of section 1 (2)(b) and 6(2)(b) of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 (as amended). Section 1(2)(b) of that Act provides:-
"In any circumstances relevant for the purposes of a provision to which this subsection applies, a person discriminates against a woman if (b) he applies to her a provision, criterion or practice which he applies or would apply equally to a man, but —
(i) which is such that it would be to the detriment of a considerably larger proportion of women than of men, and
(ii) which he cannot show to be justifiable irrespective of the sex of the person to whom it is applied, and
(iii) which is to her detriment."
Section 6(2)(b) of the Act then provides:-
"It is unlawful for a person, in the case of a woman employed by him at an establishment in Great Britain, to discriminate against her —
(b) by dismissing her, or subjecting her to any other detriment."
The facts
"1. The appellant, Mrs Susanne Finnigan, was employed as a Police Officer with the Ministry of Defence Police from 22nd June 1987 until 14th November 2003 when she was deemed to have resigned from her employment.
2. In 1998 the appellant commenced a career break to facilitate her husband's transfer to the MoD base at Glencarse, Perthshire. The appellant relocated to Scotland and between 20th January 2000 and 14th November 2003 she made a number of applications to return to work as a police officer in the MoD Scottish Region.
3. The appellant' s first child was born on 16th April 2002 and the family resided near her husband's base in Perthshire.
4. In summary the appellant was first offered a full-time post at either RNAD Coulport or HMNB Clyde in the West Coast of Scotland. When she was unable to accept these full-time posts she was offered part-time work at the same bases in the West Coast. She was unable to accept part-time work in the West Coast and continued to request a post within travelling distance of her home. In August 2003 the appellant was offered a full-time post at RNSE Caledonia in the East Coast. However she was unable to accept this post on a full-time basis and requested that she be allowed to undertake this post at Caledonia part-time. This request was refused and the appellant was deemed to have resigned as of 14th November 2003."
"In our view, it is clear that historically, Caledonia and the other East Coast bases had never had part-time working and we consider that the claimant has established that this was a "practice" which at least potentially disadvantaged her (although we shall consider later whether the potential disadvantage was an actual detriment)."
"38. The final issue, which is once more for the claimant to establish, is that the practice to which we have referred, was to her detriment. As we have set out earlier in these reasons, the claimant, like other police officers employed by the respondents, was subject to a mobility clause which says that she is liable to be transferred compulsorily from one station to another in accordance with the exigencies of the service. When the claimant was asked whether she was bound by such a provision, we understood her position to be that she was and, in particular, she said, in the course of her cross-examination that the document at page 88 of the productions which is dated 30 November 1997 and which granted the claimant her initial two year career break reinforced, at paragraph 2g the concept of mobility. The claimant added, according to the Chairman's notes "I couldn't select the station I wanted to go to". The only other witness who gave evidence about the mobility provision was Chief Inspector Milton — he said that it was an operational requirement — as establishments closed down, there was a need to move people. The document at page 254 of the productions headed "Transfers" then gives a variety of reasons which may result in the compulsory transfer from one station to another of an officer including promotion, to fill vacancies existing elsewhere, in the interests of career development, reduction in complement, and closure of an establishment at which the officer is serving. We find that not in the least surprising — it appeared to us to be wholly appropriate for the respondents to include such a mobility or transfer provision in their contracts of employment for police officers and it follows that, in our view, the respondents were justified in its inclusion in such contracts. All that being so, and since it is clear that the claimant was offered both part and full-time work at Clyde and Coulport and full-time employment at Caledonia, it is difficult to understand just how the claimant considers that by refusing her part-time work at Caledonia, or another East Coast base, that amounted to a "practice" which disadvantaged her. We agree with Mr Murray's submission that the claimant's position has altered from that set out in the originating application. There, in paragraph 11.13 of the paper apart, the claimant avers that she had suffered indirect sex discrimination "…..as a consequence of the requirement to work full time." In the event, that was never the case since it is clear that the claimant was offered the opportunity of working part-time at either Clyde or Coulport and according to the Chairman's notes, the claimant told us that she simply did not explore that offer. Then, in terms of "The Questions Procedure" and, in particular, the "Questionnaire of Person Aggrieved…." (see page 17 of productions), the claimant noted that the act of discrimination was "….your refusal to facilitate my return to work at RSNE Caledonia on a part-time basis." During the course of the present hearing, the claimant widened that to include other East Coast bases, particularly that at Crombie. Having so said, we think it reasonably clear that, from the outset, the claimant's position has effectively been that the failure of the respondents to offer her part-time work at Caledonia, was always to be the issue in this case. That being so, we are inclined to agree with Mr Murray that the fact that the claimant did not get what she wanted, did not amount to a detriment within the meaning of the Act. Whatever the claimant's preference, the fact is, as she has accepted, that she is subject to a mobility clause and the practice about which the claimant complains is not, in our view, one which placed the claimant at a disadvantage. In that connection, we also bear in mind that the child care arrangements which the claimant would have had to make had she been offered part-time work at Caledonia would have been the same as the child care arrangements which would have been required had she accepted part-time work at either Clyde or Coulport, namely assistance from her husband (who clearly would have been regularly available), her mother and her sister-in-law. The only difference would have been that the claimant's journey time to either of the two bases in the West of Scotland would have been approximately two hours per day longer than would have been the case if she had required to travel to Caledonia. That, we concede, might well have been disadvantageous had the claimant wanted full-time work. However, as we have set out earlier in these reasons, part-time work at any of the respondents' bases, at least on a half time basis, would only have required the claimant to have worked for seven days out of twenty-eight and by arrangement, the claimant could have worked even less if she had so chosen. Moreover although we had no evidence as to the extent of holidays for half-timers it is clear that the number of holidays would reduce the number of occasions the claimant would require to attend her work with the result that in any given year the claimant would only have required to work for some ninety-one days less her annual holiday entitlement. Since it is clear that in considering whether, in any given case, there is disadvantage or detriment, the employment tribunal has to take account of all the circumstances of the case we do not consider that in the present circumstances, any detriment can be said to have existed. In that connection, we note the observation of Lord Justice Brightman in the case of Jeremiah to which we were referred on behalf of the respondents, to the effect:
"I think a detriment exists if a reasonable worker would or might take the view that the duty was in all the circumstances to his detriment." (the emphasis is ours).
That observation was endorsed by Lord Hope in the case of Shamoon to which we were also referred by the respondents where, at paragraph 35 of the House of Lords judgment, Lord Hope says:
"But once this requirement is satisfied, the only other limitation that can be read into the word is that indicated by Lord Brightman. As he put it in Ministry ofDefence -v- Jeremiah…. one must take all the circumstances into account. This is a test of materiality. Is the treatment of such a kind that a reasonable worker would or might take the view that in all the circumstances it was to his detriment? An unjustified sense of grievance cannot amount to 'detriment': Barkers Bank Plc -v- Kapur & Others (No.2) 1995 IRLR 87..."
In our opinion, the claimant in the present case had an unjustified sense of grievance and looking at matters in the round, as we require to do, we are unable to hold that the claimant was subjected to any detriment. That being the case, the claim of indirect sex discrimination must fail."
The Claimant's case
The Respondent's case
The legal principles
"It is for the applicant to identify the requirement or condition which she seeks to impugn. These words are not terms of art: they are overlapping concepts and are not to be narrowly construed: see Clarke v Eley (IMI) Kynoch Ltd [1983] ICR 165, 170—171. If the applicant can realistically identify a requirement or condition capable of supporting her case, as Mrs Allonby did here to the employment tribunal's satisfaction, it is nothing to the point that her employer can with equal cogency derive from the facts a different and unobjectionable requirement or condition. The employment tribunal's focus moves directly to the question of unequal impact."
"34. The statutory cause of action which the appellant has invoked in this case is discrimination in the field of employment. So the first requirement, if the disadvantage is to qualify as a "detriment" within the meaning of article 8(2)(b), is that it has arisen in that field. The various acts and omissions mentioned in article 8(2)(a) are all of that character and so are the words "by dismissing her" in section 8(2)(b). The word "detriment" draws this limitation on its broad and ordinary meaning from its context and from the other words with which it is associated. Res noscitur a sociis. As May L J put it in De Souza v Automobile Association [1986] ICR 514, 522G, the court or tribunal must find that by reason of the act or acts complained of a reasonable worker would or might take the view that he had thereby been disadvantaged in the circumstances in which he had thereafter to work.
35. But once this requirement is satisfied, the only other limitation that can be read into the word is that indicated by Lord Brightman. As he put it in Ministry of Defence v Jeremiah [1980] QB 87, 104B, one must take all the circumstances into account. This is a test of materiality. Is the treatment of such a kind that a reasonable worker would or might take the view that in all the circumstances it was to his detriment? An unjustified sense of grievance cannot amount to "detriment": Barclays Bank plc v Kapur and others (No 2) [1995] IRLR 87.
It is clear from Lord Hope's formulation that the first requirement of a Claimant is that detriment or disadvantage must be shown, and so we should adopt that approach to the order of argument before us today.
"The guiding principle, when it comes to construing the reasons of an industrial tribunal at an appellate level, must be that if the tribunal has directed itself correctly in law and reached a conclusion which is open to it on the evidence, the use in other passages of its reasons of language inappropriate to the direction it has properly given itself should not be allowed to vitiate the conclusion unless the relevant words admit of no explanation save error of law."
Conclusions