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Scottish Court of Session Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Taylor v. Dumfries And Galloway Citizens Advice Services [2007] ScotCS CSIH_28 (18 April 2007)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/2007/CSIH_28.html
Cite as: [2007] CSIH 28, [2007] ScotCS CSIH_28

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FIRST DIVISION, INNER HOUSE, COURT OF SESSION

 

Lord President

Lord Philip

Lord Kingarth

 

 

 

 

 

[2007] CSIH 28

XA198/06

 

OPINION OF THE COURT

 

delivered by THE LORD PRESIDENT

 

in

 

APPEAL

 

by

 

ANTHONY JON TAYLOR

Appellant;

 

against

 

DUMFRIES & GALLOWAY CITIZENS ADVICE SERVICES

Respondents (No. 2):

 

_______

 

 

 

 

 

Act: Party; (Appellant)

Alt: D. Ross; Russel & Aitken (Respondents)

 

18 April 2007

 

[1] This is a further appeal to the Court of Session in protracted proceedings arising out of the appellant's claim against the respondents for compensation following his dismissal from their employment in 1999. The earlier appeal to this court resulted in an opinion and interlocutor dated 26 February 2004 (Taylor v Dumfries & Galloway Citizens Advice Services 2004 SLT 883). By that interlocutor the court allowed, in part, the appeal (which was concerned only with certain issues relative to the quantification of compensation) and remitted to a differently constituted employment tribunal ("the second tribunal") for a hearing on certain aspects of the appellant's claim for loss of earnings.

[2] The second tribunal, having heard further evidence, awarded to the appellant compensation for loss of earnings in the total sum of £18,558. Against that determination the appellant appealed on five grounds to the Employment Appeal Tribunal; the respondents cross-appealed on one ground. The Employment Appeal Tribunal dismissed the appeal, sisted the cross-appeal and referred certain issues back to the second tribunal. The appellant sought from the Employment Appeal Tribunal, and was granted, leave to appeal to this court. Two grounds of appeal (again related to the quantification of the appellant's loss of earnings) were presented to this court. Before discussing these it is appropriate that we rehearse the factual and procedural background.

[3] In 1997 the appellant accepted part-time remunerated employment with the, then, Wigtownshire Welfare Rights Office, which was subsequently absorbed into the respondents' organisation. He was based at Newton Stewart, where he also lived. Towards the end of 1998 the respondents, a company limited by guarantee, determined upon a restructuring. Its General Manager, Mrs. Mungall, having met the appellant, wrote to him on 26 November 1998 in the following terms:

"Dear Tony,

Restructuring

Following our meeting together to discuss your position within the restructuring of the Company I now wish to confirm in writing what you are being offered with effect from 1 April 1999.

The post of Welfare Benefits Officer presently based in the Newton Stewart Office is being moved to the Head Office in Dumfries and will form part of the Central Support Team. Your place of work therefore will no longer be at the Newton Stewart Office and you will be expected to work from the Dumfries Office. The hours will remain the same, 24 hours per week, however the salary is being increased from APII (£9,652) to APIV.1 (£11,500).

The post will report directly to the General Manager.

You have already indicated that you will not be prepared to move.

I wish to advise you that the consultation period is being extended to 7 December and that there is also an appeal process for any member of staff who feels they are being unfairly treated.

Please let me have your confirmation in writing that you accept/do not accept the proposal in relation to your own individual circumstances.

Yours sincerely".

[4] The appellant did not accept that proposal. He had suffered for some years from severe arthritis and from intestinal and other problems. He felt himself incapable of undertaking, in the terms in which it was offered, the post based at Dumfries, some 50 miles from his home. He was then dismissed.

[5] He presented various claims to an employment tribunal. One of these was that the respondents had not fulfilled their duty under section 6 (as originally enacted) of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 to make reasonable adjustments and had not, under section 5(2), shown that such failure was justified. By its decision dated 10 April 2002 the Tribunal upheld that claim. It found that the respondents had discriminated against the appellant within the meaning of section 5(2) of the Act in respect that they had failed to comply with the section 6 duty imposed on them in relation to the appellant as a disabled person and could not show that their failure to comply with that duty was justified. In discussing this aspect of the claim the tribunal stated in its judgment:

"The Disability Discrimination Act requires us to have regard to the Code of Guidance and practice issued by the department. This code gives some examples of what might be regarded as 'reasonable adjustments' (at para. 4.20):

(b) the allocation of some of the disabled person's duties to another

individual

(d) alterations to the disabled person's working hours

(e) assignation of him to a different place of work.

We also had regard to the guidance offered by Morse v Wiltshire C.C. 1998 IRLR 354.

It seems to us that some of these options ought to have at least been considered. For example, a reduction in working hours at Newton Stewart (with Mrs. Mills in post there) and only one day per week at Dumfries for the purpose of attending Tribunals, might have been an option. The applicant accepted that he was already travelling to Dumfries on four or five occasions per month and this situation was apparently acceptable to him, with difficulty. Allocation of duties to another individual might for example have involved the applicant doing only Tribunal work, with others interviewing the clients or customers at Dumfries, and passing the files to him at Newton Stewart for study and preparation. We are not convinced that an arrangement of this type could not have been entered into, to reduce the travel time involved, and it is insufficient for the respondents simply to state that such arrangements would have been impractical when they did not even consider them at the time. A move to Dumfries was not the only option available, although the respondents did their best to convince us that it was ... ".

[6] The tribunal then proceeded to assess compensation. It made an award for injury to feelings, which has at no stage been challenged. It assessed compensation for loss of earnings at £753. It arrived at that figure by taking the appellant's annual net earnings while employed at Newton Stewart (£7,536) and dividing that figure by ten. That calculation proceeded on the basis that the appellant had failed to mitigate his loss (hence only one year's earnings was appropriate as a starting figure) and that his chance of retaining his employment in some form should be assessed at 10%.

[7] That approach was unsuccessfully challenged by the appellant before the Employment Appeal Tribunal but on further appeal to this court he was in part successful. This court remitted two issues bearing on the quantification of compensation to the second tribunal, namely, (1) the appellant's prospects of retaining his employment in some form and (2) mitigation of loss. The second tribunal, having interpreted that remit broadly, made its award of £18,558 for loss of earnings.

[8] Two grounds of appeal were urged before us by the appellant. The first was that the second tribunal had erroneously taken, as the basis for calculating the appellant's loss, the salary (subject to annual increments) which he had been earning in the job at Newton Stewart, rather than the salary for the job based at Dumfries with respect to which the respondents had been found not to have made reasonable adjustments. It was the loss of earnings with respect to the latter job, subject to deduction of income tax and national insurance contributions, which was the true measure, it was submitted, of his loss. The second ground was that the second tribunal had erred in restricting the appellant's annual loss to the years 1999-2003 rather than making an award for the whole period from his dismissal until his ordinary retiral age in 2005. The Employment Appeal Tribunal, it was submitted, had erred in law in failing to recognise and correct the errors in law made by the second tribunal in respect of each of these matters.

[9] It should be noted that the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 has in the course of these proceedings been amended and recast by the Disability Discrimination Act (Amendment) Regulations 2003 (SI 2003/1673) and by the Disability Discrimination Act 2005. At the hearing we were referred to the provisions as originally enacted. So far as appears, however, no amendment affects the issues arising. We shall refer only to the original statutory provisions.

[10] With respect to the first of the two grounds of appeal to this court the Employment Appeal Tribunal said:

" ... we find the claimant's approach to be misconceived. There was no evidence before the tribunal that he would ever have earned £11,500 gross. That was the salary that would have been paid for the job he was offered but he would not agree to taking that job. That was what, as we understand it, precipitated the circumstances in which his claim arose. Whilst the tribunal found that he had been discriminated against that was on account of the respondents' failure to make one or more reasonable adjustments all of which, on the face of it, had the potential to have an impact on the earnings that his job would command. There was, though, no evidence about that. In those circumstances, the best the tribunal could do, in our view, was to do as they did. That was to proceed on the basis of what they knew the claimant had been earning prior to his departure, not to use as their first building block in the calculation of compensation a salary that he had never earned and in respect of which there was no evidence that he was ever likely to have earned".

[11] We have come to the view that this reasoning discloses an error of law. We have already narrated the basis upon which the first employment tribunal reached the conclusion that the respondents had failed in their duty under section 6(1) to make adjustments. The tribunal then went on to calculate loss of earnings on the basis of the appellant's prospective earnings in the job held by him prior to April 1999. The tribunal did not explain why it used that basis, rather than take his prospective earnings for the job in respect of which he had been discriminated against. It may be that it did not do so because no argument to that effect was presented to it (no argument that the first tribunal had erred in this respect was presented in the course of the first hearing before this court). However that may be, such an argument was presented before the second tribunal and thereafter on appeal.

[12] In our view the proper measure of loss, in accordance with general principles of damages (see section 8(3)), is with reference to prospective earnings in the job in the respondent's employ which was available to be filled from April 1999. The obtaining of that job would have involved for the appellant a transfer or promotion in that employ. It was unlawful for the respondents to discriminate against the appellant in the opportunities which they afforded him for such promotion or transfer (section 4(2)(b)) or by refusing to afford him or deliberately not affording him any such opportunity (section 4(2)(c)). The travelling arrangements and the hours of employment incidental to the job at Dumfries placed the appellant at substantial disadvantage in comparison with persons who were not disabled. It was accordingly the duty of the respondents to take such steps as were reasonable, in all the circumstances of the case, for them to have to take to prevent those arrangements having that effect (section 6(1)). The tribunal, having considered possible adjustments to the job at Dumfries, concluded that the respondents had failed to make such adjustments as were reasonable; indeed they had failed to consider what adjustments to that job were reasonable. In determining whether it was reasonable for the respondents to have taken any of the particular steps envisaged by it, the tribunal must be taken to have had regard, among other things to the financial and other costs (including the payment of a gross annual salary of £11,500 to a person who by reason of his disablement was unable to fulfil the whole requirements of the job) which would be incurred by the respondents in taking such a step (section 6(4)). As regards the options which the tribunal thought should at least have been considered, there is nothing which expressly or by necessary implication indicates that any accompanying reduction in salary would have been reasonable or capable of being justified. By having failed in their duty to make such adjustments and having been unable to show that their failure to comply with that duty was justified, the respondents discriminated against the appellant. The job in respect of which they discriminated was that which carried that higher salary. No other job was in issue. The loss which the appellant sustained was not only his previous remunerated employment but the opportunity to obtain a job which commanded that higher salary. The compensation to which he is entitled must be calculated accordingly.

[13] The second of the grounds of appeal before us concerns the period of time over which the appellant's loss of earnings should be calculated. The hearing before the second tribunal took place in October 2005, its decision being issued in November of that year. The appellant had attained 65 years of age (his ordinary retirement age) in March 2005. The appellant submitted to us that in these circumstances the issue of his capacity to fulfil the (adjusted) duties of his employment in the years immediately preceding his 65th birthday was a matter of fact, not one of conjecture. He had put before the tribunal evidence that he would have been capable, at least until January 2005, of fulfilling these duties. A statement by him that, by reason of worsening of his illnesses in 2003, he would by that time have been absent from work for approximately 50% of the time had been taken out of context. The tribunal had failed to address and to make findings on the question of what further adjustments might reasonably have been required to allow him to continue in post notwithstanding any deterioration in his health. Reference was made to the Code of Practice at paragraphs 6.19 and 6.21 and to Callagan v Glasgow City Council [2001] IRLR 724. In that case the facts had been quite different from those in the present. Even if, as at 2003, he would have been so ill as to be unable to fulfil even any further adjusted duties of his employment, he would have been entitled to full sickness pay for six months and to half pay for a further six months. The benefits of the employment to which he would, if not discriminated against in 1999, have been entitled would in practice have amounted to full pay until aged 65. The Employment Appeal Tribunal had failed to identify the errors of law of the employment tribunal, including its errors as to where the onus of proof lay. It had itself made a similar error.

[14] We are not persuaded that the second tribunal or the Employment Appeal Tribunal erred in this respect. As the appellant accepted, an appeal lies to this court only on the basis of an error of law. Although by the time of the hearing before the second tribunal the appellant had passed the age of 65 and there could accordingly be taken into account his actual state of health up to that age, the tribunal nonetheless had to make an assessment of how that state of health would have impacted on his capacity to work in the Dumfries-based job which, in the event, he had never had. That assessment inevitably involved some imponderables. On the evidence before it the second tribunal was entitled to conclude that by 2003 the appellant's health had deteriorated to an extent that, had he been employed in the Dumfries-based job (as originally adjusted to allow for his disabilities), he would have been off work for about 50% of the time. It was also entitled to accept that in such circumstances his employers would have seriously considered terminating his employment. To do so lawfully, the respondents would have had first to consider whether there were any further adjustments which they could and ought to make to allow him to continue. But it is clear, from its reference (page 15 lines 26-28) to the appellant's mentioning in this context the Disability Discrimination Act, that the tribunal recognised that the possibility of further adjustment would require to have been considered. The tribunal concluded, however, that if absences reached a level of 50%, the respondents had much less flexibility to consider alternatives to dismissal. In our view the tribunal was entitled, on the material before it, to conclude, as it did, that there was, at the end of June 2003, a high probability that the appellant's employment would have been (lawfully) terminated by that time. Their decision does not conflict with any principle of law noted in Callagan v Glasgow City Council. In these circumstances the appellant's loss of earnings from his employment is properly calculated up to and not beyond June 2003.

[15] The appellant placed before us certain calculations of his net loss of earnings based on a gross salary of £11,500 per annum (with annual increments of 3% per annum thereafter). Although it appears that there was a minor error in the method of calculation, Mr. Ross for the respondents stated that the end results of the calculation could be accepted for present purposes. According to these calculations the net figures for the (presumably fiscal) years 1999/2000, 2000/2001, 2001/2002, 2002/2003 and 2003/2004 were respectively £9,360, £9,498, £9,586, £9,667 and £9,564. The second tribunal calculated compensation by reference to calendar years, taking the figures £7,536, £7,686, £7,838, £7,994 and £8,152 for the years 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002 and 2003 respectively. The years 1999 and 2003 were adjusted to respectively 5/7th and one half to reflect the relative proportions of these years for which loss fell to be calculated. Each figure was then subject to deduction of invalidity benefit received. If the agreed figures (albeit apparently for fiscal rather than for calendar years) are substituted for those adopted by the Tribunal, the resulting figures for the years 1999-2003 appear to be as follows: £6,686 (5/7ths of £9,360), £9,498, £9,586, £9,667 and £4,782 (half of £9,564), giving a total of £40,219. From that total falls to be deducted the total figure for invalidity benefit received during the relevant period, namely, £14,421, giving an award by way of compensation for loss of earnings of £25,798.

[16] For the reasons given above we shall allow the appeal to the extent of substituting the figure of £25,798 for that of £18,558 awarded by the second tribunal. Quoad ultra we shall refuse the appeal. Thereafter we shall remit to the second tribunal the issues in the cross-appeal identified by the decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal dated 15 August 2006.

 


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