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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Jalaal v Grampian Health Board & Ors [2024] EAT 97 (18 June 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2024/97.html Cite as: [2024] EAT 97 |
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Edinburgh EH3 7HF |
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B e f o r e :
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DR ALAA JALAAL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GRAMPIAN HEALTH BOARD TAYSIDE HEALTH BOARD NHS EDUCATION FOR SCOTLAND |
Respondents |
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Mr Kenneth McGuire (instructed by NHS National Services Scotland) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 13 June 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Lady Haldane:
Introduction
Background
"They were not however the acts of the first respondent and we did not consider that what the third respondent did in relation to those matters should be in some way taken to be acts of the first respondent for the purposes of assessing fairness. They were matters over which the first respondent had no control or influence. We make further comments in relation to those matters below. We did not consider that those acts of the third respondent could render the dismissal by the first respondent unfair".
"In searching for the reason for a dismissal for the purposes of s 103A of the Act, and indeed of other sections in Pt X, courts need generally look no further than at the reasons given by the appointed decision-maker. Unlike Ms Jhuti, most employees will contribute to the decision-maker's inquiry. The employer will advance a reason for the potential dismissal. The employee may well dispute it and may also suggest another reason for the employer's stance. The decision-maker will generally address all rival versions of what has prompted the employer to seek to dismiss the employee and, if reaching a decision to do so, will identify the reason for it. In the present case, however, the reason for the dismissal given in good faith by Ms Vickers turns out to have been bogus. If a person in the hierarchy of responsibility above the employee (here Mr Widmer as Ms Jhuti's line manager) determines that, for reason A (here the making of protected disclosures), the employee should be dismissed but that reason A should be hidden behind an invented reason B which the decision-maker adopts (here inadequate performance), it is the court's duty to penetrate through the invention rather than to allow it also to infect its own determination. If limited to a person placed by the employer in the hierarchy of responsibility above the employee, there is no conceptual difficulty about attributing to the employer that person's state of mind rather than that of the deceived decision-maker." (Per Lord Wilson at paragraph 60).
"241. In Uddin v London Borough of Ealing [2020] IRLR 332 the EAT extended that principle to the second manager's knowledge of facts, which had deliberately not been passed on to the dismissing manager."
Submissions for the respondents
Analysis and decision
Disposal