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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Mehmet (t/a Rose Hotel Group) v Aduma [2007] UKEAT 0573_06_3005 (30 May 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2007/0573_06_3005.html Cite as: [2007] UKEAT 573_6_3005, [2007] UKEAT 0573_06_3005 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 12 April 2007 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE REID QC
MR G LEWIS
DR K MOHANTY JP
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
APPEARANCES
For the Appellant | MISS LAURA COLLIGNON (Of Counsel) Instructed by: YVA Solicitors 460 Holloway Road London N7 6HT |
For the Respondent | MR M ONIBOKUN Legal Adviser Instructed by: Messrs Wisdom Isaacs Solicitors 2nd Floor 2A Powis Street London SE18 6LF |
NATIONAL MINIMUM WAGE
Inferring discrimination
Injury to feelings
A employed R as night manager at his hotel. R was a Nigerian but had permission to work in the UK. A paid R less than the minimum wage on the basis that he was vulnerable. When R sought to obtain a NI number A first tried to discourage him and then dismissed him. Was the ET entitled to find race discrimination and (if so) was it entitled to make the awards it did?
HIS HONOUR JUDGE REID QC
"8.6 During the Claimant's employment he had not received itemised payslips. We accept the Claimant's evidence that these were not produced to him until much later. The Respondent argued that these were the responsibilities of his accountant but the Respondent, who is a businessman, must have been aware of the responsibilities involved when employing people. Whilst the appropriate tax on the Claimant's earnings was eventually paid, this was not done until December and only after the Claimant's representatives had raised the matter strenuously with the Respondent.
8.7 We find that the Respondent ran a business which was organised to avoid paying relevant taxes. We find that cash receipts were not recorded, the wages paid to the Claimant were not recorded until some time after the event and no steps were taken to register the Claimant's employment with the Inland Revenue. …. He said that he gave favours to relations in return to work and that a lady was given accommodation in return for carrying out cleaning work. Not only does he appear to have very little regard for Revenue regulations but he arranged the terms of the Claimant's employment to avoid the need to pay him the Minimum Wage and to require him to work hours in excess of those prescribed by the Working Time regulations."
"15. We did consider, when making this decision, the fact that there was strong evidence to suggest that Mr Mehmet was very concerned about his own tax position should the Claimant persist in his application for a National Insurance number. If he had put this forward this as his reason, it might have amounted to a discreditable but non-discriminatory reason. As, however, he did not put this case forward, we do not feel entitled to consider it as a reason which we should take into account. In any event, if correct, it is such a discreditable reason it will seem inappropriate that the Respondent should be able to take advantage of it, on the basis of ex turpi causa."
(1) The case had been put as one of direct discrimination. The question of indirect discrimination had not been raised and it was too late to seek to introduce a claim for indirect discrimination at this stage.
(2) The Tribunal's decision reasoning contained a central inconsistency: on the one hand it held that the employer was a person who "ran a business which was organised to avoid paying relevant taxes" and on the other hand it acted on the assumption that in dealing with the hypothetical comparator the employer would have acted with scrupulous legality. If that was correct, the first two findings of discrimination could not stand because
(3) The appropriate comparator was a British or British based person who wished to approach Department of Work and Pensions in relation to his National Insurance Number.
(4) If the Tribunal had approached the case by comparing the treatment the employee had received with the treatment that would have been afforded to a person having all the characteristics as the employee save for his race it should come to the conclusion that the hypothetical comparator would have fared no better. The employer would not have been willing to pay tax for a British or British-based person in a similar situation to that of the employee any more than he was for the employee. The evidence revealed the employer as a person who sought to exploit those in a vulnerable position. The treatment of the employee had occurred not because of the employee's race but because of his perceived employment status. The Tribunal was wrong in presuming that it must treat the employer as law-abiding and paying at least the minimum wage.
(5) The Tribunal was wrong in law in refusing to consider whether the employer's concern as to his own tax position was the reason for his treatment of the employee when deciding that the employer had not discharged the onus on him of showing that the reason for his conduct towards the employee was not discriminatory. The reference to "ex turpi causa" was entirely mistaken. The question was not whether the employer had "put this case forward" or "pleaded it" but what the evidence disclosed.
(6) The only proper conclusion for the Tribunal to have reached was that the employee was treated as he was because of his insistence on going to see the Department of Work and Pensions and it was on that ground and not on the ground of his race that he was so treated.