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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Ford v Scottish Ministers (PUBLIC INTEREST DISCLOSURES - detriment - causation - UNFAIR DISMISSAL - "reason" for the dismissal - connection to protected disclosures) [2024] EAT 197 (12 December 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2024/197.html Cite as: [2024] EAT 197 |
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B e f o r e :
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MR MALCOLM FORD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE SCOTTISH MINISTERS |
Respondent |
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Dr Andrew Gibson, Solicitor (Morton Fraser MacRoberts LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 August 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
Public interest disclosures – detriment – causation
Unfair dismissal – "reason" for the dismissal – connection to protected discosures
The appellant was dismissed for the stated reason of misconduct. He made an application to the Employment Tribunal in which he claimed inter alia that he had been subjected to detriment on the ground of having made protected disclosures (section 47B of the Employment Rights Act, 1996) and that he had been unfairly dismissed (sections 98 and 103A ERA). The tribunal dismissed all of his claims.
Four grounds of appeal were advanced. The appellant submitted that the tribunal had erred in its approach to detriment and causation in relation to two of his section 47B allegations (grounds 1 and 2), and had further erred in finding that his dismissal was fair (grounds 3 and 4).
Held: The criticisms of the tribunal's approach to two of the appellant's section 47A claims were well founded, but no error of law was apparent in the tribunal's approach to the claim of unfair dismissal. The appeal was allowed on grounds 1 and 2 and the case was remitted to the same tribunal to consider the four issues set out at paragraph 59 below. The appeal on grounds 3 and 4 was refused.
The Honourable Lord Fairley:
Introduction
The tribunal's factual findings and conclusions
Alleged detriment on the ground of disclosure 1
"I would feel unfairly punished and embarrassed to be seconded out of the Injury Team after 16 years. I am genuinely trying to stop the SPPA acting outwith the law and trying my best to stop the SPPA being open to charges of gross negligence and maladministration."
"You will be undertaking a secondment to NHS awards team until the Police Injury issues raised have been satisfactorily resolved and I think that would be around 4 weeks. NHS awards have a high workload which I am keen to address and you will be assisting that team, alongside other work colleagues who are also helping out from other teams in operations as from Monday. This is not a punishment for bringing your concerns to my attention but is to give you a break from the casework with which you have concerns until they are resolved."
"We found that there was a link between the claimant raising the Police issue and being required to move. That was apparent from Ms Guthrie's e-mail to the claimant of 9 March 2017. However, we also found that there was tension between the claimant and his team leader, Ms Scott… It was credible that Ms Heatlie was concerned about Ms Scott's health. It was also credible that Ms Guthrie should want to move the claimant away from the casework with which he had concerns. We did not consider the fact of the claimant being required to move to be a detriment."
Disclosure 4
Disclosure 5
Alleged detriments on the ground of disclosures 4 and 5
"It has been brought to my attention that there are causes for concern over your conduct, which relate to allegations of insubordination; refusal to follow reasonable management instructions; misuse of official information; frustrating the implementation of policies once decisions are taken, by declining to take, or abstaining from, actions which flow from those decisions; and negligence causing financial loss, damage or injury to people."
"On 19 June 2018 you and Mr Dunn met with Audit Scotland and despite previous full internal investigations into your concerns you again reported the same beliefs that errors were being made in relation to public service pensions. Although SPPA remain unaware of the specific conversation you and Mr Dunn had with Audit Scotland, it did provide details of complaints about final salary links and retained firefighters benefits we provided under scheme regulations that were the subject of your previous complaints. SPPA provided a full response to Audit Scotland on 8 August 2018."
"You have falsely accused SPPA of the misuse of public funds and of corruption on a number of occasions and have written to the First Minister and other Scottish ministers under the heading 'Public Pensions Scandal' with complaints that were similar to those fully investigated by SPPA. You have also falsely stated that staff were being required to give false information to members or 'revolt and be disciplined'."
"The reason for [the disciplinary] allegations was, in our view, explained in the paragraph from Ms Heatlie's letter to the claimant of 27 February 2019 which we have quoted at paragraph 87 above. It related not to the claimant having made whistleblowing disclosures but to his conduct. In those circumstances we did not regard the initiation of the disciplinary allegations as a detriment on the ground that the claimant had made a protected disclosure."
The disciplinary proceedings and dismissal of the appellant
The grounds of appeal and submissions for the appellant
Respondent's submissions
Decision and reasons
Ground 1
Ground 2
Ground 3
Ground 4
Conclusion and disposal
a) Was the secondment of the claimant in or around March 2017 an act of detriment on the ground that he had made the first protected disclosure?
b) Was the disciplinary investigation undertaken by Mr Thompson between February and May 2019 an act of detriment on the ground that the claimant had made the fourth and fifth protected disclosures?
c) Were the claimant's complaints about either or both of those matters timeously presented to the tribunal in terms of section 48 ERA?; and
d) If so, what is the appropriate remedy?