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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Ramos v Nottinghamshire Women's Aid Ltd & Anor [2024] EAT 67 (30 April 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2024/67.html Cite as: [2024] EAT 67 |
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EA-2022-000689-AT EA-2022-001278-AT |
Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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MR LORENZO RAMOS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) NOTTINGHAMSHIRE WOMEN'S AID LIMITED (2) MS A J BLOOMER |
Respondents |
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RULE 3(10) APPLICATIONS – APPELLANT ONLY
Hearing date: 24 April 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE JAMES TAYLER:
"In short, the Tribunal was satisfied from the evidence presented that the claimant had no genuine desire of applying for the role the respondent had advertised. He was solely using the Tribunal process to seek money from the respondent."
"74. For the reasons I have provided, I am satisfied that the proposed grounds of appeal identify no arguable question of law. Moreover, as I have noted, most of the points raised have been addressed in some detail either in the ET's decision on the claim and/or in its subsequent judgment on the second reconsideration application; as the claimant is aware, his appeal against that decision has been ruled to be totally without merit.
75. In my judgement, the same can be said of the claimant's two appeals before me. The grounds of appeal identify no question of law such as would engage the jurisdiction of the EAT (see section 21 Employment Tribunals Act 1996) and I reject the application made under rule 3(10) EAT Rules and dismiss these appeals. More than that, however, it is apparent that, by these appeals, the claimant has sought to go behind the permissible findings of fact of the ET, which informed its decision on the merits of his claim, and against the exercise of its discretion in making the PTO. That is properly to be described as an abuse of the appellate process. As the claimant has acknowledged, he is a serial appellant before the EAT (in the pre-hearing correspondence earlier referenced in this judgment (see, e.g. paragraph 7 above), the claimant referred to the number of appeals he is pursuing in this jurisdiction); he is therefore aware that an appeal can only be pursued on a point of law. The claimant has failed to take on board the further explanations provided by the ET in its judgment on the second reconsideration application, and has failed to engage with the reasons provided by HHJ Barklem at the rule 3(7) stage. He has sought to pursue grounds of appeal that are totally without merit and I duly so record.
76. Yet further, the claimant's conduct of these proceedings has been abusive of the process of both the ET and EAT. I have already set out my findings in relation to the claimant's conduct of these appeals but the same can also be said in relation to his making of persistent applications before the ET, demonstrating no engagement with the earlier reasoning provided to him for the decisions he asked to be reconsidered. This is rightly to be described as vexatious behaviour and I consider it appropriate to refer my ruling on these appeals to the Registrar for consideration as to whether there might be grounds for the claimant's litigation conduct to be considered by the Lord Advocate."
"23. The claimant's name, as stated on the claim form, is Mr Lorenzo Ramos. During the hearing, he offered me his Spanish passport which showed his name as Lorenzo Garcia Ramos. The claimant explained that he sometimes uses his middle name and sometimes uses his surname.
24. The Respondent drew my attention to a number of Judgements of the Employment Tribunal in which the claimant was Mr L Garcia. At the earlier case management hearing before Employment Judge Ahmed, the claimant said that his name was not Garcia and then had subsequently refused to confirm or deny whether it was.
25. The Judgements relating to claims brought by Mr L Garcia [pages 120 – 167] relate to discrimination complaints concerning applications for a variety of disparate roles in various locations.
26. There were some marked similarities between the claimant and the claimant in those Judgements, for example in one case the claimant had the same date of birth as Mr Ramos, and, although fluent in English, had a strong French accent, as Mr Ramos accepted in evidence that he does. In two other cases, he worked as a market researcher, as Mr Ramos told me he currently does, when giving evidence at the hearing before me.
27. The claimant refused to answer any questions about the earlier proceedings brought by Mr L Garcia. The reason he gave for this was to protect him from victimisation under section 27 of the Equality Act 2010. However, the claimant's evidence was such that I believe he is the same person who brought the earlier claims using the name Mr L Garcia."
"35. I considered, taking the claimant's case at its highest, the prospects of him succeeding in his claim for sex discrimination against the first and/or second respondents.
36. I have serious doubts over whether the claimant will succeed in his sex discrimination claim. Firstly, I consider that the claimant will have great difficulty in convincing a tribunal that he has been treated less favourably than an actual or hypothetical comparator. The claimant will struggle, in my view, to show that he was genuinely interested in applying for a part-time, relatively low-paid role which is such a distance from his home in Hounslow.
37. The claimant does have a degree in accountancy but I still consider that he is unlikely to be able to satisfy a Tribunal that he wished to work in this role, when he took no active steps to obtain the application pack, or to find out more about it, or indeed find out the reason why the first respondent had advertised for a female in the way it had.
38. Additionally, even if the claimant was able to show that he was genuinely interested in applying for the role, I consider that the claimant was highly unlikely to have been successful in any application for a role within the first respondent's organisation.
39. Finally, I have serious doubts over whether the claimant will be able to show that he suffered injury to feeling from reading the job advertisement online and being deterred from applying.
40. I, therefore, have to consider whether the claimant has no reasonable prospects of success. I noted that this was a high threshold, particularly for discrimination cases, in light of the case law as referred to above. In my view, this case almost passed the threshold for no reasonable prospects of success, however, I considered that it did not quite do so. Therefore, I do not strike out the claim for sex discrimination on the basis that it has no reasonable prospects of success.
41. I then considered whether the claim should be struck out on the basis that it was vexatious. It was clear to me that the claimant is the same person as Mr L Garcia in the claims to which I was referred by the respondents during the course of this preliminary hearing. Therefore, I have reservations that the claimant may be seeking to use the Tribunal process to obtain settlement monies for discrimination claims brought in respect of various job advertisements rather than bringing legitimate claims for discrimination. However, I do not consider that there was sufficient evidence before me at this stage to validly strike out his claim on the basis that it was vexatious.
42. In considering whether a deposit order should be made in order to allow the claimant to continue with his sex discrimination claim against the respondents, I recognise that this is a lower threshold than that for striking out claims. I have no hesitation in making a deposit order in this case against the claimant on the basis that his claim has little reasonable prospects of success.
43. I consider that the claimant has little reasonable prospects of success for the reasons referred to above in considering the strike out application. Namely, due to the difficulty he faces in showing that he has been considered less favourably because of his sex. As stated above, I consider he will have difficulty in showing that he was genuinely interested in the first respondent's role, and also feel that he will be unlikely to show that he would have been successful in the role. He is unlikely to be able to show that he suffered injury to feeling from reading the advertisement. Additionally, I consider that the respondents are likely to be able to successfully defend the claim by falling within the exception of being an occupational requirement as required by paragraph 1 of schedule 9 to the Equality Act 2010."
"(1) Where at a preliminary hearing (under rule 53) the Tribunal considers that any specific allegation or argument in a claim or response has little reasonable prospect of success, it may make an order requiring a party ("the paying party") to pay a deposit not exceeding £1,000 as a condition of continuing to advance that allegation or argument.
(2) The Tribunal shall make reasonable enquiries into the paying party's ability to pay the deposit and have regard to any such information when deciding the amount of the deposit.
(3) The Tribunal's reasons for making the deposit order shall be provided with the order and the paying party must be notified about the potential consequences of the order."
"The question of whether an organisation such as the first respondent has a genuine occupational requirement for a particular role to be female (even if it also provides services to male victims of domestic violence) is a complex and sensitive issue that is inherently likely to require consideration of full evidence to resolve."
"c) Judge Welch was biased against me because she imposed on me a Deposit order because I have maybe issued previous claims but not because of the merit of this current claim. This is confirms because she makes reference to my possible other claims in paragraphs 24, 25, 26, 27 and 41. In paragraph 27 she even make reference to similarities between my current claim and my possible other claims what she should not have done if she was really neutral."
"d) Because Judge Welch did not have valid reasons for having imposed on me a Deposit Order she should have been biased against me also because she imposed on me a Deposit Order also out of compassion for women victim of violence because she is himself [sic] a women."
"56. Moreover, the ET's reference to those other claims could not amount to an act of victimisation. Putting to one side (i) the fact that the respondent was specifically arguing that the claimant was a serial litigant who brought proceedings such as this in bad faith, as he never had any interest in the positions in issue, and (ii) the absence of any provable detriment, given that the ET found as a fact that the claimant was not interested in the job in question in this case, this was an issue being raised in legal proceedings, on which the ET was making a judicial determination - there could be no breach of the EqA in such circumstances. As for the suggestion that the claimant was seeking to protect himself against "persecution and breach of privacy": (i) he had chosen to pursue claims before the ET, there could be no question that the respondent had been seeking to persecute the claimant, and (ii) given the open justice principle and the fact that decisions on the claimant's claims will be publicly available (something of which the claimant is well aware, hence his objection to an earlier deposit order being available on the on-line register (a point referenced in his grounds of appeal)), there could also be no question of breach of privacy."
"59. By his fourth and fifth grounds of appeal, the claimant contends that the ET had no evidence to support its decision that he was not deterred from applying for the advertised position by reason of the discriminatory content of the advert and/or failed to properly consider his evidence that demonstrated that some people might be deterred from applying in such circumstances. He says that the "burden of proof is on employment judge Hoey to prove that I was not interested in the position and not to me to prove that I was interested in it".
60. As a matter of law, the ET (and I note that the Employment Judge was sitting with lay members when determining the claimant's case) bore no "burden of proof"; rather it was for the claimant to establish facts from which the ET could conclude, in the absence of any other explanation, that he had suffered direct sex discrimination contrary to section 13 EqA (the first stage of the burden of proof provision under section 136 of the EqA)."