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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Shipman v B & Q Plc [1999] UKEAT 593_97_1509 (15 September 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/593_97_1509.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 593_97_1509 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 16 March 1998 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE MORISON (P)
MRS E HART MBE
MR R H PHIPPS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MS TESS GILL (of Counsel) Messrs Eversheds Solicitors Fitzalan House Fitzalan Road Cardiff CF2 1XZ |
For the Respondents | MR ELDRED TABACHNIK QC MISS CECILIA IVIMY (of Counsel) Messrs Hepherd Winstanley & Pugh Solicitors 22 Kings Park Road Southampton SO15 2UF |
MR JUSTICE MORISON (PRESIDENT): This is an appeal by Yvonne Shipman ["the Appellant"] from a tribunal sitting at Cardiff who in a unanimous decision, promulgated on 19 March 1997, dismissed her claims of sex discrimination, victimisation and constructive unfair dismissal which she had brought against her former employers, B&Q plc ["B&Q"].
Background Facts
"13. The respondent's [B&Q] decisions in relation to the five appointments identified by the applicant were taken solely on the basis of business need and business efficacy, and on the merits, experience and professional competence of those appointed. The decisions were not taken for any reasons of gender. We find in relation to those five appointments that the applicant did not receive any less favourable treatment and was not subjected to a detriment within the provisions of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975."
On the employer's requirement for mobility the tribunal made the following finding:
"14. We find that for reasons of efficiency and continuing commercial development, the respondent moves its store managers and assistant managers within the South Wales area on approximately a two year rotation. This is legitimate and justifiable as part of a business management policy and such practice and movement of staff which it involves was not based on any reasons of sex discrimination. Also, as a consequence of such policy, it is accepted by the tribunal that some store management appointments were not formally advertised but rather were filled by what has been termed a "re-shuffle". Specifically, of the opportunities identified by the applicant, the following were not advertised. Cwmdu in November 1995; Newport in November 1995 and Caerphilly in November 1995. The tribunal find that the failure on the part of the respondent to advertise these particular posts was not directly or indirectly discriminatory to the applicant."
"That Mr Tarlyn was an external candidate who had not held a first appointment store and that the length of his experience was not considerable could be viewed as unfair. However, such unfairness could affect equally male and female employees of the respondent and not merely the applicant."
The tribunal made the following findings in respect of the District Manager, Mr Evans:
"19. The tribunal finds that Mr Mike Evans, the respondent's area manager, applied that same basis of assessment to all his assistant managers in terms of assessing their suitability for further promotion. We accept Mr Evans' evidence that the applicant still needed some six to nine months' development at the time of her resignation before being ready in his view to undertake a store manager appointment…That Mr Mike Evans did not seriously address the applicant's application for the vacant Caerphilly post during April 1996 was based not on the fact that she was a woman applicant but rather upon the expertise which she was able to offer relative to other candidates…
20. …we are satisfied on the evidence brought before us that Mr Evans' approach was intended to make the applicant a stronger store manager contender and not in any way to suppress or frustrate her ambitions to a store manager appointment because she was a woman."
On the matter of indirect discrimination the tribunal made the following findings:
"23. It is common ground that because of her family commitments the applicant was not mobile outside the respondent's South Wales area. The evidence is that there is a mobility requirement for the post of store manager designate since the costs of such posts are borne on a regional rather than an area basis…The tribunal finds that the requirement of mobility in those cases meant potentially that the proportion of women able to comply with that requirement was smaller than the proportion of men. However, the tribunal finds that such requirement was a genuine commercial and organisational requirement of the respondent arising from the regional funding of store manager designate posts."
Parties' Submissions