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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Ganase v. Kent Community Housing Trust [2001] UKEAT 1231_99_2303 (23 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/1231_99_2303.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 1231_99_2303 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE HOOPER
MISS C HOLROYD
MRS T A MARSLAND
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | Dr D Singh Representative 26 Matthews Court Highbury Grange London N5 2PD |
For the Respondent | MISS S MOOR (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Lees Lloyd Whitley Solicitors 15-19 Kingsway London WC2B 6UN |
MR JUSTICE HOOPER
"(ix) After about five minutes' walking, his heels become painful but he is able to overcome this by continuing to walk"
The Appellant had considered part-time working. Although he says that he can cope with normal work up to four or five hours a day, he gets tired by the middle of the afternoon. With part-time working, he would have had to travel on buses and trains for up to two hours a day, so he said, and this travelling time would render part-time work impracticable. The Appellant can travel on public transport, he can drive a car, although after about half an hour, his legs ache. In paragraph (xii) the Tribunal found:
"The Applicant has no problems with manual dexterity or physical co-ordination, nor does he have any problem with continence. He is able to lift and carry everyday objects and now has no problem with his speech, although when he was working prior to 1997 he told us that this became slurred during the latter part of the afternoon. The Applicant appears to have no problem with hearing or eyesight, or with the ability to concentrate, although he told us that he reads the paper for only half an hour at a time. He has no problem with the perception of the risk of physical danger."
(Underlining added)
"The Applicant did not inform Dr D'Auria that he had any difficulty with concentration or other day to day activities. Indeed, he said that he could do all the jobs required of him at work provided that he would be helped by a shorter day. He did not mention any difficulty with mobility or speech."
The Tribunal then referred to the conclusion of Dr D'Auria that the Appellant's clinical condition:
"does not have a substantial adverse effect on normal day to day activities".
"If he has a physical or mental impairment which has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on his ability to carry out normal day to day activities."
Section 1 is made subject to Schedule 1, and in paragraph 4.(1) of Schedule 1 provides:
"An impairment is to be taken to affect the ability of the person concerned to carry out normal day-to-day activities only if it affects one of the following"
There are then listed a number of day-to-day activities and they include mobility, and the ability to concentrate. Paragraph 6.(1) of Schedule 1 reads as follows:
"An impairment which would be likely to have a substantial adverse effect on the ability of the person concerned to carry out normal day-to-day activities, but for the fact that measures are being taken to treat or correct it, is to be treated as having that effect."
"In other words the question has to be decided on the basis of what symptoms Mr Ganase would have had if he had not been taking drugs. In this case the evidence was that he was taking 100mg every night of a drug called Lustral which according to the evidence before us was substantially a pain killing drug, although we have been told it is also used in certain cases for depression"
Dr Singh agreed, in argument, that the drug Lustral is used both for depression and pain. He told us that it is one of the principal drugs prescribed to deal with the condition of ME.
"9 The evidence on mobility was that the appellant was finding himself in pain in his heels after walking for five minutes , although continuing to walk got over it. The tribunal held that he had about three 10 minutes walks every day. The assumption is presumably that during the middle of each walk he had some pain in his heels and got over that pain by continuing to walk."
We agree with the Appeal Tribunal's summary of the evidence. It seems to us that the Employment Tribunal was finding that the Appellant overcame the pain by continuing to walk.
"I have already mentioned paragraph 10 of schedule 1 and it seems to us that there is an omission in the tribunal's reasoning. The tribunal were well aware that the applicant was taking regular medication but do not discuss what effect there would have been on day to day activities had the appellant not been taking it. That does seem to us to give rise to a reasonably arguable point of law."
We shall call that, in this judgment, "ground 1". Ground 1 raises the paragraph 6 of Schedule 1 point.
"We allow this case to go forward to a full hearing on the question of the effect of paragraph 6(1) of schedule 1 to the 1995 Act [ground 1] and also on questions as to whether the appellant's pain after five minutes walking and his inability to read the newspaper for more than thirty minutes should in any case have been held by the tribunal to be interference with his day to day activities."
We shall call those respectively, "grounds 2 and 3". Insofar as the alleged inability to read the newspaper for more than thirty minutes, one must bear in mind that the Tribunal had concluded in their findings, (in paragraph 6 (xii)) that the Appellant appears to have no problem with the ability to concentrate, albeit he told the Tribunal that he read the paper for only half an hour at a time.
Those are, therefore, the only grounds which the Appellant can properly argue before us, and indeed Dr Singh, faithful to that ruling, has in very large measure kept his arguments to those three grounds.
"I have read the relevant documents and I agree with the Respondent's comments in paragraph 3.6 to 3.9 of the Respondent's answer.
Neither the Applicant in evidence, nor his representative in his very brief submissions to us, suggested that the Applicant's normal day-to-day activities would have been different but for the medication or medical treatment.
The only evidence by the Applicant on the effect of the medication was when he told us:
Evidence in chief:
"I'm on drugs.
I sleep a lot."
Cross-examined:
"Medication made a difference to my life afterwards. Medication is an anti-depressant".
In relation to 3.8 of the Respondent's answer, the Applicant said:
"After 5 minutes of walking, my heels would get painful, but I would continue and go beyond it."
In relation to paragraph 3.9 of the Respondent's answer, we had no evidence that the Applicant had any difficulty in concentrating on either the television or the newspapers."
"Because this was known to ease the intensity of pain."
He referred us to page 23 which records that the Appellant takes 100 mg Lustral at night. He then referred us to page 37, paragraph 3. In response, Miss Moor also put before us paragraph 2 and we shall therefore read both paragraphs:
"2. In a letter to his general practitioner, dated 12 November 1997, Dr Sharpe indicates that there is no strong evidence for depression, but despite this she started him on Sertraline, without great effect. In the absence of any therapeutic effect, she decided to increase the dose.
3. Dr Sharpe wrote to Dr Wylie, Occupational Physician at Nunnery Fields Hospital on 21 January 1998 and a copy of this letter is on file. Dr Sharpe reports that her assessment of Mr Ganase was that he was experiencing chronic fatigue with no obvious cause, possibly triggered by stress. There were occasional periods of depression over the past few years, but the depressive features had not been so prominent. His appetite was good and weight was steady. His sleep pattern was reasonable, but he was restless at times. Sertaline helped his pain."
"normal day-to-day activities would have been different but for the medication or medical treatment."
In those circumstances, this ground fails.
"a substantial and long-term adverse effect on the Applicant's ability to carry out normal day to day activities"
"Not surprisingly, ……..concentrated on "normal day to day activities" "
and
"we have had specific regard to the modalities as expressed by Dr D'Auria, in paragraph 12.15 of his report and in paragraph S 1417 of the Guidance."
In paragraph 15, the Tribunal went on to state:
"15 In considering how the Applicant's normal day to day activities have been affected, we find that there is no substantial effect. The Applicant is mobile, he goes for three ten-minute walks a day without difficulty and is able to use public transport and can drive his car for half an hour before his leg aches. He has no problem at all with manual dexterity or physical co-ordination and effectively runs the household in the absence of his wife at work. He has no problem with continence or the ability to lift and carry, nor does he now have any problem with speech, hearing or eyesight, although we accept that his speech did become slurred at the end of the day when he was working in 1996. The Applicant has no problem with hearing or eyesight, nor with his memory or ability to concentrate, although again we accept he reads the newspapers only for half an hour at a time. There is no problem with the perception of the risk of physical danger."