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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Taunton Association for The Homeless Ltd v. Boswell [2001] UKEAT 0458_00_2410 (24 October 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/0458_00_2410.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 0458_00_2410, [2001] UKEAT 458__2410 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HER HONOUR JUDGE A WAKEFIELD
MR D CHADWICK
LORD DAVIES OF COITY CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR MARTYN WEST (Advocacy Manager) Peninsula Business Services Ltd 2nd Floor Stamford House 361/365 Chapel Street Salford Manchester M3 5JY |
For the Respondent | MS I OMAMBALA (of Counsel) UNISON Employment Rights Unit 1 Mabledon Place London WC1 9AJ |
HER HONOUR JUDGE A WAKEFIELD
"I need to get this matter out of the way before looking for other work. I haven't really been looking."
"We then turn to the Compensatory Award. The applicant was dismissed in May 1999. Some point was made in the evidence that she did not immediately sign on for state benefits. We attached no weight to that. She was appealing against the decision to dismiss her and it took some time for that to be resolved. Thereafter she had hanging over her a dismissal on the grounds of theft. That was not resolved in her favour until the beginning of January of this year. In fact in September 1999 the applicant obtained a job as a telephone canvasser, not very well paid employment, but we accept probably the best that she was able to get at the time. That was full time for a while and then for a time before Christmas she was reduced to part-time working. After Christmas she was promoted and she is now a customer services officer and has so worked since 4 January 2000. She is paid a basic wage of £140 on top of which she receives some commission. This is paid 3 monthly in arrears and she has not yet received her first payment. Some days she earns more than others as might be expected. She thinks that she might earn as much as £15 per day but feels that an average at the moment of about £10 per day is probably most accurate. In our view we should regard her current gross earnings as being in a total order of £190 per week, that is £140 basic plus £50 a week commission. That falls someway short of the gross earnings of £15,200 that the applicant enjoyed with the respondent. Plainly the applicant does not regard her current employment as being particularly satisfying. She would prefer to regain employment in some field where she could work with people who as she puts it "people who need help". She told us, and we accept, that she applied to the mental health services but was turned down for a post that would have paid her between £14,000 and £15,000 per year. We accept that she will probably continue to apply for posts of that sort. However, she is aged 50 and her experience in that field is limited. She worked as a checkout operator before working with the respondent. Our conclusion is that on the balance of probabilities the applicant will have difficulty in getting her earnings back up to the sort of level that she was earning with the respondent by the time she comes to retire at the age of 60. At present on the basis of the calculation that we have set out she is earning a little less than £10,000 per year. In very round figures she probably has a net loss at present compared with her previous earnings in the order of £4,000 per annum. We do not think necessarily that that loss will continue at that rate until she retires but we think that it will continue for some time and that she will probably have some continuing net loss until she retires at the age of 60."
It is said by the Appellant that in this paragraph the Tribunal erred in law in that they failed to assess properly the compensation and in particular failed to limit the award in view of the Respondent's lack of effort to mitigate her loss. It is further contended that no reasonable Tribunal could conclude that the Respondent had mitigated her loss in the circumstances set out in the decision.
"Questions of mitigation are questions of fact. When one party seeks to allege that another party has failed to mitigate a loss, the burden of proof is upon the party making the allegations."