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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Jaleel v Southend University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust (Race Discrimination; Harassment; Practice and Procedure - Burden of Proof) [2023] EAT 10 (03 February 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2023/10.html Cite as: [2023] EAT 10 |
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Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
MR NICK AZIZ
MR ANDREW HAMMOND
____________________
MRS HENNA JALEEL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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SOUTHEND UNIVERSITY HOSPITAL NHS FOUNDATION TRUST |
Respondent |
____________________
Alex Shellum (instructed by Capsticks LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 9 November 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
Race Discrimination; Harassment; Practice and Procedure – Burden of Proof
The claimant in the employment tribunal was employed by the respondent as a consultant. From 2015 she was appointed to an additional role as a Director of Medical Education (DME). Her contract in that role was for a three-year fixed term. Her predecessor, who was not of her race, had held the role for some nine years without it being readvertised.
Following a number of episodes of conflict at work the claimant went off sick, indicating work-related stress. During her absence a colleague was appointed as Associate DME to cover her responsibilities. Following her return to work she declined at that point to resume the duties of the DME role. She raised an internal grievance, including against her line manager as DME. He decided to readvertise the DME post at the end of the three-year term. The claimant was invited to apply, which she did. When she attended for interview she discovered that her line manager was on the panel and asked that he be recused. He refused to step down. In this he was supported by an HR manager.
Among other complaints considered by the tribunal were complaints that the line manager's decision to readvertise the DME post was an act of direct race discrimination, and that the conduct of the line manager, and HR manager, in the exchanges about the recusal application made at the interview, amounted to unlawful harassment related to race. In relation to both of those complaints the tribunal decided that the burden of proof did not shift to the respondent. The basis of the appeal was that the tribunal had erred in law in deciding that the burden did not shift.
Held: The tribunal had correctly directed itself as to the law relating to the complaints and the burden of proof, and applied it to the facts found. The EAT could therefore only interfere in its conclusions as to whether the burden shifted if they were in the legal sense perverse, which is a very high threshold. The EAT could not say that the tribunal's decisions on the burden of proof were perverse and the appeal was therefore dismissed.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE AUERBACH:
Introduction
The Facts
"18. The Claimant was paid an additional £8733 per annum in respect of the DME role. The role was a fixed-term appointment for three years, subject to extension following review; it was described as a temporary role with an end date of 31 March 2018; it came with 1 PA responsibility payment ('PA' stands for Programmed Activity, which equates to 4 hours per week).
19. Although the Claimant initially had an Associate DME working with her, Dr Simpson, she resigned from the Trust towards the end of 2015. At the time Mr Rothnie did not support the Claimant's suggestion that the post of Associate should be advertised. The Claimant felt that this was a deliberate decision taken by him to disadvantage her. Mr Rothnie explained that he did not appoint an Associate because at the time there was no separate funding for the post, and we accept that evidence. However, he planned to put an Associate in place in due course. He later did so, in circumstances which we set out below."
"61. The Claimant stated that, at a regular one-to-one meeting in November 2016, Ms Maton suggested that, if the Claimant was feeling under pressure, she might wish to step down from the position of DME and that there may be someone ready to take up the post in her place. Ms Maton accepted in cross-examination that she may have suggested this. We find that she did.
62. On 6 February 2017, the Claimant had a meeting with Professor Kinnear. She told him about the suggestion that she might wish to stand out from the DME role and the pressure she felt she was under. Professor Kinnear replied: 'well Lucy [Coward] should be ready by now if you want to give up'.
63. The Claimant took these conversations as an indicator that there was a wish to replace her in the DME role with Dr Coward. The fact that these observations had been made also fuelled her later mistrust of the process which the Respondent initiated in 2018 to re-advertise the DME role."
"78. On 28 March 2017, the Claimant collapsed while at work. She suffered a head injury and was taken to A&E, where she was admitted and treated for a suspected stroke. She was later diagnosed with work-related stress. On 31 March 2017 the Claimant's GP signed her off until 13 April 2017.
79. On 20 April 2017, Mr Rothnie learnt from OH that the Claimant would be away for at least two months. On 2 May 2017 the Claimant was invited to a sickness absence meeting but the next day OH wrote that the Claimant was not fit to attend such a meeting and specified that any communication should only be in writing. There is a psychiatric report from around this time, which summarises the reasons for her work-related stress. There is no reference to race discrimination in that document.
80. The Tribunal accepted Mr Rothnie's evidence that the Respondent needed someone to take responsibility for Medical Education on a day-to-day basis during the Claimant's absence, especially in circumstances when it was unclear when she would be returning. There was a requirement to attend meetings, to prepare for HEE visits and to deal with practical matters such as signing cheques etc. This led to the appointment of Dr Lucy Coward as Associate DME.
81. However, we found the timing of that appointment somewhat surprising: it was made on 1 April 2017, only three days after the Claimant started her sick leave and the day after the GP fit note on 31 March 2017, which signed her off for a relatively short period. Mr Rothnie's evidence was that the Respondent had been seeking to identify funding for some time and that this became all the more urgent in her absence.
82. The Claimant's pleaded allegation is that Dr Coward had been appointed as Director of Medical Education in her absence. That was incorrect: Dr Coward had been appointed Associate Director of Medical Education. The Claimant accepted that this was not her post; it was a different post. Dr Coward was subsequently made Interim DME when it became clear that the Claimant was going to be absent for some time. The Claimant remained in post and continued to be paid in respect of her DME duties throughout her period of sickness absence and beyond. She was not replaced; arrangements were simply made to cover the DME role. For those reason, this allegation must fail.
83. On 23 May 2017, the Respondent received further advice from OH confirming that contact with the Claimant should only be in writing. Further advice on 14 June 2017 was that 'clinically she is not yet well enough to engage in discussions in relation to work'. OH proposed to review her in two months' time at which point they anticipated that she would be able to engage with the Trust. On 14 July 2017 the advice was that 'clinically it would be detrimental and delay her recovery if contact was made at this stage'. In the circumstances, we find that the Respondent cannot be criticised for not keeping the Claimant updated about arrangements made to cover her DME duties in her absence."
"90. The Claimant returned to work on 2 October 2017. She was offered the opportunity to resume the DME role but told Mr Currell that she would not be performing any DME duties until her grievance was resolved.
91. She had a meeting with Mr Rothnie on 16 October 2017, at which there was another discussion about whether the Claimant would resume her DME role. The Claimant gave no undertaking to do so, pending advice from the BMA. They discussed Dr Coward's role and the Claimant asked Mr Rothnie whether Dr Coward would now step down. He replied that she would not, as she had been appointed to the Associate role, which was different from the Claimant's. This reinforced the Claimant's suspicion that it was Mr Rothnie's long-term aim to replace her in the DME role. It is plain that she felt vulnerable in that role."
"96. On 23 January 2018, Mr Rothnie wrote to the Claimant informing her that the DME post was to be advertised as her tenure would end on 31 March 2018. He wrote: 'I am writing to inform you that the Trust will be advertising the post shortly to ensure the post is filled from 1 April 2018. I would usually arrange to meet with you to review your performance for the year however I understand that you have not returned to the Director of Medical Education role since her return to work and feel this wouldn't be appropriate with your outstanding grievance. I would therefore like to take this opportunity to thank you for the work you have done since you were appointed to the post of Director of Medical Education in April 2015 and would welcome an application from you should you wish to reapply for the post.'
97. The Tribunal notes Mr Rothnie's observation that it would not be appropriate for him to review the Claimant's performance in the DME role, given that she had an outstanding grievance which included allegations about his management of the DME role. The Tribunal understands why he might have considered it inappropriate for him to conduct that review; it was less clear why it would not have been possible for another senior manager to conduct the review on the Respondent's behalf.
98. The post was advertised on 31 January 2018. The Claimant was extremely unhappy with the decision to do so. She considered that it was further evidence of a plan by Mr Rothnie to replace her with Dr Coward. She was particularly struck by the fact that Dr Coward had been appointed as Associate while she was on sick leave and in circumstances where Mr Rothnie had previously insisted that there was no funding for an Associate to support her.
99. Nonetheless, albeit reluctantly, she applied for the role; she had been expressly invited to do so by Mr Rothnie himself. The closing date for applications for the DME post was 19 February 2018. The Claimant was invited to an interview on 16 April 2018."
"103. When the Claimant arrived for her interview for the DME role, and shortly before the interview was about to begin, she was informed that Mr Rothnie was on the panel.
104. Mr Rothnie's evidence in his statement was that there were two applicants for the role, the Claimant and Dr Coward, both of whom were shortlisted and invited to interview. He stated that no decision had been taken as to who would be appointed; that would be a panel decision.
105. Mr Rothnie accepted that at the point when the Claimant was invited for an interview he was aware that the Claimant had an outstanding grievance against him. He accepted that he had probably seen the email from the Claimant's BMA representative of 24 November 2017, which set out the Claimant's allegations against him, or at least had had its substance communicated to him. One of those allegations, of course, related to the appointment of Dr Coward (now the Claimant's competitor for the substantive role of DME) as Associate DME the previous year.
106. His oral evidence was that the organisation of the interviews for the DME post was conducted by the Postgraduate Medical Education Department and that he was not party to it. He said that he had assumed the candidates would be aware who was going to be on the interview panel; he thought there was nothing inappropriate in his being on the panel.
107. The Tribunal considers that it ought to have been obvious to Mr Rothnie that it was profoundly inappropriate for him to sit on a selection panel in circumstances where one of the candidates had raised a grievance against him personally, which had yet to be resolved. It was all the more inappropriate in circumstances where the majority of the complaints in that grievance related to the very role being recruited for. The inappropriateness was compounded by the fact that one of those allegations expressly related to the only other candidate in the selection process, Dr Coward. There was an obvious conflict of interest.
108. We reject the Respondent's suggestion that the Claimant ought to have known that Mr Rothnie would be on the panel. The only document referred to which supported this was the Job Description, which stated that the panel would include 'Medical Director (or representative)'. On any ordinary reading that left open the possibility that Mr Rothnie could be replaced by someone else. There is no reference in the correspondence inviting the Claimant to the interview to Mr Rothnie's being on the panel.
109. The Claimant made a contemporaneous note of the events of 16 April 2018. We find that her note is accurate and is consistent with her account elsewhere of the events of that day. When she arrived, she was met by Ms Parton, a manager in Medical Education. The Claimant asked her who was on the panel; Ms Parton said that the panel was composed of Mr Bill Irish (Postgraduate Dean), Ms Sue Bridge from HR and Mr Rothnie. The Claimant was shocked by this information.
110. She was shown into the interview room and was told that Mr Rothnie would be chairing the panel. He began to make his introductions, at which point the Claimant interrupted to say that in her view there was a clear conflict of interest because she had raised a grievance against him with regard to the very role for which she was being interviewed. Ms Bridge asked her how long she had known about the composition of the panel. The Claimant explained that she had only just discovered it.
111. The Claimant's note records the following exchange [original format retained]:
'Then I addressed to Neil and told him that I am surprised he is sitting in the panel. I am sorry. In a deep and low-pitched voice, leaning forward, Neil asked me, "OK, so you do not want to proceed?" I replied: No, because the panel is biased. I explained again that there is a conflict of interest as I have just mentioned. Neal asked again: "I will ask you again, do you want to proceed?" I said: No. Neal asked me again: "OK so you do not want to proceed"? I found this repeated question very intimidating and overwhelming. However, I replied again, "No, I do not want to proceed unless the panel is changed". Neil replied, "OK we can't change the panel at a short notice".
112. Mr Rothnie was taken to this note by the Tribunal and asked for his comment. He denied that he had been intimidating; he stated that the phrases in quotation marks did not sound like him; he observed that the Claimant's account as to what he said about the panel not changing 'does not accord with my memory'.
113. The Tribunal finds, on the balance of probabilities, that Mr Rothnie did question the Claimant repeatedly, and in a challenging manner, as to whether she was refusing to continue with the interview if he remained on the panel.
114. The Claimant's note then records that Ms Bridge asked her to step outside, while the panel discussed the position. She was kept waiting for around 10 minutes. Ms Bridge then emerged and informed her that the interview would not go ahead on that day, solely because the Claimant had not been forewarned of the presence of Mr Rothnie on the panel. However, as the DME would involve reporting to Mr Rothnie, he would remain on the panel when it reconvened but he would not be the sole decision maker as there would be a representative from HR and another person on the panel. Ms Bridge said that she would consider how they could give the Claimant reassurance about the fairness of the process and would revert to her about this.
115. Ms Bridge accepted in cross-examination that she told the Claimant that Mr Rothnie would remain on the panel, that it would be 'normal practice' for him to do so. Again, the Tribunal finds that that was wholly inappropriate in the circumstances. The Claimant had raised a legitimate (indeed obvious) conflict of interest. The only reasonable course of action was to reassure the Claimant that an alternative panel member would be found, as was clearly provided for by the job description referred to above.
116. According to the Claimant's note, she then left the building. We accept her evidence and reject Ms Bridge's account in her statement that she (Ms Bridge) went back into the room, agreed with the panel that Mr Rothnie would be replaced by Dr Celia Skinner, Chief Medical Officer, and then went out to inform the Claimant of this before the Claimant left. We consider it implausible that Ms Bridge would have committed to telling the Claimant that Dr Skinner would be on the panel without first consulting the latter as to her willingness, and availability, to do so. We note Mr Rothnie's oral evidence that they did not have dates or availability to be able to reschedule on the day.
117. Moreover, the Claimant's account is consistent with the account that she gave at the grievance investigation meeting on 20 April 2018 with Clare Burns, in which she said:
'Sue Bridge (SB) stated that the interview would not proceed as HJ [the Claimant] was not notified of the panel in advance and hence would be rearranged. HJ would be advised of the new date. SB further advised HJ that NR has to remain on the panel as the line manager of the DME post. When HJ suggested NR could be deputised, SB did not comment on this but replied that she would come back to HJ as to how the bias could be mitigated. HJ said that she has not heard anything from SB to date'.
118. A decision was eventually taken to replace Mr Rothnie with Dr Skinner, but we find that it was taken at a later point and was not communicated to the Claimant on the day of the interview. We consider that the best evidence as to when that decision was communicated to her is the email of 10 May 2018, in which Ms Barton wrote to the Claimant inviting her to a new interview on 25 June 2018 and notifying her that the interview panel would consist of Dr Skinner, Prof Irish and Ms Bridge. By that point the Claimant had already resigned."
The Tribunal's Decision
"127. The burden of proof provisions are contained in s.136(1)-(3) EqA:
(1) This section applies to any proceedings relating to a contravention of this Act.
(2) If there are facts from which the court could decide, in the absence of any other explanation, that a person (A) contravened the provision concerned, the court must hold that the contravention occurred.
(3) But subsection (2) does not apply if A shows that A did not contravene the provision.
128. The effect of these provisions was conveniently summarised by Underhill LJ in Base Childrenswear Ltd v Otshudi [2019] EWCA Civ 1648 (at para 18):
'18. It is unnecessary that I reproduce here the entirety of the guidance given by Mummery LJ in Madarassy. He explained the two stages of the process required by the statute as follows:
(1) At the first stage the Claimant must prove "a prima facie case". That does not, as he says at para. 56 of his judgment (p. 878H), mean simply proving "facts from which the Tribunal could conclude that the Respondent 'could have' committed an unlawful act of discrimination". As he continued (pp. 878-9):
"56. … The bare facts of a difference in status and a difference in treatment only indicate a possibility of discrimination. They are not, without more, sufficient material from which a Tribunal 'could conclude' that, on the balance of probabilities, the Respondent had committed an unlawful act of discrimination.
57. 'Could conclude' in section 63A(2) [of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975] must mean that 'a reasonable Tribunal could properly conclude' from all the evidence before it. …"
(2) If the Claimant proves a prima facie case the burden shifts to the Respondent to prove that he has not committed an act of unlawful discrimination – para. 58 (p. 879D). As Mummery LJ continues:
"He may prove this by an adequate non-discriminatory explanation of the treatment of the complainant. If he does not, the Tribunal must uphold the discrimination claim."
He goes on to explain that it is legitimate to take into account at the first stage all evidence which is potentially relevant to the complaint of discrimination, save only the absence of an adequate explanation.'
129. In Hewage v Grampian Health Board [2012] ICR 1054 the Supreme Court held (at para 32) that the burden of proof provisions require careful attention where there is room for doubt as to the facts necessary to establish discrimination, but have nothing to offer where the Tribunal is in a position to make positive findings on the evidence one way or the other."
"163. The remaining allegations of race discrimination, in respect of which the Tribunal has accepted jurisdiction are as follows. 163.1. Issue 3(H)(ii), direct race discrimination - The decision to re-advertise the Claimant's DME role on 31 January 2018. 163.2. Issue 3(I), harassment related to race - The conduct of the interview on 16 April 2018. Is there evidence from which the Tribunal could reasonably conclude that the treatment was because of/related to race?
164. With regard to the re-advertising of the DME, the Claimant can plainly point to a difference of treatment and a difference of race as between her and Professor Kinnear: he held the role for some nine years without the role being re-advertised; he is white. Arguably, there was a significant difference in the material circumstances between the two of them: Professor Kinnear continued to perform the role throughout the whole of his tenure, whereas the Claimant had declined to do so since her return from sickness absence. However, we will set that aside for the time being.
165. As for the conduct of the interview on 16 April 2018, the Tribunal has no doubt that the presence of Mr Rothnie on the panel, his behaviour when the Claimant questioned it, his refusal to recuse himself and Ms Bridge's handling of the Claimant's objection were all 'unwanted conduct': we accept the Claimant's evidence that she was shocked by these events. As this allegation was advanced as a claim of harassment related to race, there was no requirement on her to point to an actual or hypothetical comparator.
166. The Tribunal went on to consider whether the Claimant had discharged the burden on her to show evidence from which the Tribunal could reasonably conclude that the decision to re-advertise the role was 'because of' race; and that Mr Rothnie's decision not to recuse himself from the interview panel was 'related to' race.
167. The only evidence which the Claimant led in her statement was her account of conversations she had had with other BAME colleagues who considered was that there was a culture of race discrimination in the organisation and, specifically, that race might be a factor in Mr Rothnie's treatment of her and other colleagues. That was opinion evidence which, by its nature is of very limited probative value. Moreover, it was hearsay opinion evidence: we heard no direct evidence from the individuals concerned. We concluded that this evidence was not sufficient to discharge the burden on the Claimant to provide evidence from which we could reasonably conclude that her race played any part in the treatment complained of.
168. As for Mr Ojo's further submissions (at paragraph 26 of his closing submission), far from pointing us to 'overwhelming evidence' that race played a part in the treatment of the Claimant, they did not begin to raise a prima facie case of race discrimination. In the Tribunal's view they fell into the trap of assuming that pointing to less favourable, or adverse, treatment and a difference of race is in itself sufficient to discharge the burden, which the authorities are clear it is not. We could discern nothing in those submissions which was sufficient to provide the 'something more' from which we could reasonably conclude that race was a factor in respect of the two surviving complaints of race discrimination.
169. Those two claims accordingly fail because the Claimant has not discharged the initial burden on her to show that race was a factor in the alleged treatment."
"174. We take a different view of the Respondent's conduct in relation to the DME interview (Issue 3(1)). It is clear from the Claimant's witness statement that the events of 16 April 2018 had a very considerable impact, subjectively, on her trust in the organisation. She wrote in her statement: 'the turn of event[s] at the interview left me with lost hope'. The Tribunal must, however, consider whether the Respondent's conduct (effectively, that of Mr Rothnie and Ms Bridge) on that occasion, viewed objectively, was likely seriously to damage the relationship of trust and confidence between employer and employee. We conclude that it was.
175. Mr Rothnie acted improperly in agreeing to sit on the panel. He knew that the fact of the Claimant's grievance against him gave rise to a potential conflict: it was in part for that reason that he had decided not to conduct a review of the Claimant's performance in the DME role; it was for that reason that he had been replaced as case manager of the grievance. He knew that much of the substance of the grievance related to his conduct in relation to the DME role; the Claimant had alleged that he had been unsupportive of her in the role. He knew that the Claimant was unhappy with the appointment of Dr Coward as Associate Director of Medical Education and that Dr Coward was the only other candidate for the DME role in April. Against that background, his decision to sit on the DME recruitment panel was, in the Tribunal's view, perverse.
176. His response to the Claimant's objection to his presence compounded the matter. When the Claimant suggested that he recuse himself, he challenged her repeatedly and inappropriately. Even after private discussion, Ms Bridge communicated to the Claimant that Mr Rothnie would not recuse himself from the panel. The Tribunal considered that his conduct was wilful.
177. Viewed objectively, his conduct would suggest to a reasonable observer that he was indifferent to the risk of actual or perceived bias in the conduct of an important recruitment exercise, which would affect the Claimant both professionally and financially. Given his seniority in the organisation, and the fact that he was the Claimant's direct line manager in relation to that very role, this was likely seriously to damage the relationship of trust and confidence between employer and employee. It is fundamental to a sound employment relationship that important matters of recruitment are, and are seen to be, conducted fairly and without the appearance of bias.
178. We asked ourselves whether there was reasonable and proper cause for Mr Rothnie's conduct. The only explanation advanced for it was that it was important for him to be on the panel because he would be the line manager of the successful candidate. However, we have already found that there was provision within the recruitment material for someone else to sit on the panel in his place. Indeed, that was eventually proposed, albeit after the Claimant's resignation. There was no reasonable and proper cause for his conduct.
179. As for Ms Bridge's conduct on the day, whether she agreed or disagreed with the position that she communicated to the Claimant, the fact that a senior HR manager within the Respondent company appeared to be condoning the inappropriate conduct of a recruitment exercise would, in the Tribunal's view, be likely further to damage a reasonable employee's trust in the organisation, viewed objectively.
180. We find that the Respondent's conduct of the interview on 16 April 2018 was, in itself, a breach of the implied term of trust and confidence and it was, accordingly, a repudiatory breach of contract, in response to which the Claimant was entitled to resign and claim constructive dismissal.
181. If we are wrong about that, we conclude that the Respondent's conduct of the interview, taken together with Ms Maton's inappropriate imposition of duties on the Claimant in 2016/2017, was likely seriously to damage the relationship of trust and confidence and was a repudiatory breach of contract, in response to which the Claimant was entitled to resign and claim constructive dismissal."
"20. In relation to the first disputed allegation (Issue 3(H)(ii)), the Tribunal concluded (at para 164) that the Claimant could point to a difference of treatment and a difference of race, although an issue remained as to whether she could point to a comparator whose circumstances were materially the same as hers. The Tribunal put that issue to one side, a step which both representatives accepted could only be in the Claimant's favour at that stage of the analysis, since it removed a potential obstacle in her path.
21. In relation to the second disputed allegation (Issue 3(I)), the Tribunal found that the Claimant was subjected to unwanted conduct, which is the first necessary element of a successful claim of harassment related to race. Self-evidently, the mere existence of conduct that is unwanted does not, in itself, prove that the conduct was tainted by considerations of race.
22. The Tribunal then went on to consider whether the Claimant had discharged the burden, which the authorities are clear falls on her at the first stage, to prove facts from which a reasonable Tribunal could properly conclude, absent an adequate explanation from the Respondent, that there was unlawful discrimination. To use the phrase which appears in the authorities, had she proved the 'something more' sufficient to shift the burden to the Respondent, requiring it to provide an adequate non-discriminatory explanation for the treatment, failing which the claim must be upheld?
23. The Tribunal found (at paras 167 and 168) that she had not. For the reasons we gave there, we were not satisfied that she had provided any evidence that race was a factor; alternatively, having regard to the evidence which she did adduce, we concluded that it was not such that a reasonable Tribunal could properly conclude that there was unlawful discrimination.
24. Since the burden of proof did not shift the Respondent, there was no requirement on it to prove an adequate, non-discriminatory reason for the treatment.
25. Mr Ojo criticises that conclusion (at paragraph 7 of the application) on the basis that no express or implied finding was made by the Tribunal as to whether it accepted or rejected the Claimant's allegation of direct race discrimination/harassment related to race. We reject that criticism: the Tribunal made an express finding that both claims failed, because the Claimant had not discharged the initial burden on her. For the avoidance of doubt, this was not a case where the Tribunal felt able to move directly to the 'reason why' question; it was for that reason that we had regard to the burden of proof provisions.
26. The Tribunal accepts Mr Gil's submission that the real question is whether, having made that finding, it was sustainable. The authorities are clear that the bare facts of a difference in status and a difference in treatment only point to the possibility of discrimination. Those two factors, without more, do not amount to facts from which a Tribunal could conclude that the Respondent had committed an unlawful act of discrimination (Madarassy). It was for that reason that we rejected the matters relied on by Mr Ojo in his written closing submissions at the liability hearing: because they fell into the trap of assuming that that those differences were enough in themselves. The Tribunal agrees with Mr Gill submission that Mr Ojo has fallen into the same trap again in making this reconsideration application.
27. Mr Ojo refers to the fact that the Tribunal heard evidence of other employees whose roles were not readvertised, and submitted that this could amount to the 'something more' required to shift the burden of proof. We do not accept that submission. The existence of other potential comparators merely provides further possible evidence (subject to the Tribunal being satisfied that they were in materially the same circumstances) of difference of treatment/difference of race. It does not provide the 'something more' required.
28. Mr Ojo then submitted that the Tribunal reversed the burden of proof, arguing that once it had found that the conduct alleged had occurred, it was for the Respondent to show that the reason for it was not as a result of the Claimant's race, and that it was not for the Claimant to explain the Respondent's conduct. That is to misunderstand the operation of the burden of proof: the burden only shifts to the Respondent to show that the reason for the treatment was in no sense whatsoever because of the Claimant's race, if the Claimant has discharged the initial burden, which she had not.
29. Mr Ojo then points to paragraph 161 of the judgment, in a passage dealing with 'conduct extending over a period' in the context of limitation, in which the Tribunal found that 'there is a strongly arguable connection between the decision to advertise the DME role in January 2018 and the later conduct of the interview in April 2018'. 30. All that the Tribunal was finding there was that there was a factual nexus (almost too obvious to be stated) between the advertising of a role and the interview for it. There is nothing in that finding which could be probative of race being a factor in either decision."
Summary of the Grounds of Appeal and the Respondent's Defence
The Law; Arguments and Discussion; Conclusions
"19. We accept Ms Cunningham's submission that nothing in the new statutory burden of proof alters the evidence needed to establish a prima facie case as that concept was used in the well known authority of King v Great Britain-China Centre [1992] ICR 516. Nor does it affect, in our view, the analysis of how evidence is to be assessed when determining at the second stage whether the employers have provided an adequate (in the sense of non-discriminatory) explanation as laid down by the Court of Appeal in Bahl v The Law Society [2004] EWCA Civ 1070; [2004] IRLR 799. The significant legal change is that whereas formerly under the analysis in King the Tribunal could but was not obliged to draw an inference of discrimination if there was a prima facie case and no adequate or satisfactory answer, now the Tribunal must draw such an inference in those circumstances. Whether in practice Tribunals did frequently take advantage of their discretion not to find discrimination where the conditions referred to in King were established, is a moot point."
Outcome