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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Meakin v. Liverpool City Council Leisure Services Directorate [2001] UKEAT 142_00_2809 (28 September 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/142_00_2809.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 142__2809, [2001] UKEAT 142_00_2809 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 12 June 2001 | |
Before
SIR CHRISTOPHER BELLAMY QC
MS N AMIN
MR J HOUGHAM CBE
APPELLANT | |
LEISURE SERVICES DIRECTORATE |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR MOHINDERPAL SETHI (of Counsel) Instructed By: Mr K E Robinson Messrs Jackson & Canter 3rd Floor Merseyside House 9 South John Street London L1 8BN |
For the Respondent | MR T KENWARD (of Counsel) Instructed By: Mr J S Wardle Solicitor Legal Services Agency Personnel & Administration Directorate Liverpool City Counsel PO Box 88 Solicitors Business Unit Room 130, First Floor Municipal Buildings Dale Street, Liverpool L69 2DH |
SIR CHRISTOPHER BELLAMY QC:
"That the Applicant and Mr Forde had a violent struggle in the corridor outside the supervisor's office, wrestled with each other while on the floor. It was not possible to identify the applicant or Mr Forde as the single instigator of the alleged fight, equally neither appeared to have acted simply in self defence. [The report] records that fighting on City Council premises is gross misconduct and Mr Parrott recommended that a disciplinary hearing should be convened to consider the allegation."
"In the present case the reason for the dismissal was quite clear. It was because on the evidence before him Mr Green entertained a reasonable suspicion amounting to a belief that the applicant had assaulted Mr Forde on the Council's premises during working hours. Paragraph 25 for the Respondents' disciplinary procedure dated February 1997, provides that gross misconduct is where the act or omission by the employee is of such seriousness that his/her presence in the place of employment can no longer be tolerated and assault is one of the examples of the type of misconduct that could fall within the parameters of that definition."
"8 The question then is whether the respondent acted reasonably or unreasonably in deciding to dismiss for that reason. The guidelines for our consideration of a case such as this are those suggested by the Employment Appeal tribunal in the case of British Home Stores Ltd –v– Burchell (1978) IRLR 379 as approved and expanded by the Court of Appeal in the case of Weddel –v– Tepper (1980) IRLR 1996. Put shortly the questions which we had to ask ourselves are: (i) did the employer believe, as distinct from merely suspecting, that misconduct had occurred (ii) was that a reasonable belief in the light of what was known to the employer at the time (iii) was it a belief arrived at after as much investigation as was reasonable in the circumstances and (iv) was it reasonable to dismiss having regard to the gravity of the misconduct which the employer believed had occurred? In all the cases the belief is to be on the balance of probabilities. An employer does not have to prove beyond reasonable doubt that an employee has been guilty of industrial misconduct. The employer is not conducting a criminal investigation but assessing the probability of industrial misconduct having occurred. Moreover the question is not whether we ourselves would have dismissed in the circumstances which the employer believed had occurred, but whether dismissal was within the range of options open to a reasonable employer in the light of that belief.
9 Mr Benson on the applicant's behalf fairly and formally conceded that there was no issue with regard to the investigation or its reasonableness nor Mr Green's conclusion that the applicant had assaulted Mr Forde. However he contended that a different sanction should have been applied to the applicant, having regard to his length of service and disciplinary record which were respectively longer and better when compared with those of Mr Forde. He admitted that it was unusual in a case of gross misconduct to find the dismissal was not a reasonable response, but the test was whether it was a reasonable response to what had occurred. It was a matter of discretion for the employer with which in principle the tribunal should not interfere. It was contended on behalf of the application that no reasonable employer would have dismissed the applicant; Mr Green knew the applicant had 28 years unblemished service. It was a tragedy and the incident should be regarded as a wholly isolated and exception incident. Although Mr Forde had been dismissed there was material for the reasonable employer reasonably to have distinguished the two cases leading to different disciplinary sanctions. Mr Benson questioned what was the initial information which Mr Green had on which he based his findings? He gave as examples firstly that Mr Forde had alleged racist behaviour which had been rejected, secondly the cause of tension was believed by Mr Green to be suggestions made by Mr Forde about the applicant's sister which were unwarranted and thirdly Mr Forde had alleged an incident in the kitchen on which Mr Green was unpersuaded, but Mr Forde had armed himself with a table leg immediately after. Mr Benson invited the tribunal to consider Mr Green had concluded both were equally blameworthy, there being statements both ways. He did not criticise that but violence had occurred on the floor and no reasonable employer could have concluded what happened on the floor was six-of-one and half-a-dozen of the other. Mr Green knew or ought to have known that Mr Forde was on top and had his hands round the applicant's neck. He had information that Mr Forde had taken the more active and more culpable role and was the instigator. A reasonable employer would have so concluded. It was a dangerous exercise to compartmentalise the incidents. Mr Green ought to have had regard to the fact that Mr Forde's behaviour led to tension and that the way Mr Forde defended himself was spurious. The applicant made a clean breast, not a fanciful explanation. Once Mr Green had decided there had been violence in the workplace amounting to gross misconduct he became tram-lined and dismissed. He was the dismissing officer but had not made a detailed investigation into the background of both individuals and to that extent had failed to investigate fully. Further not much consideration had been given to any alternative penalty, and this was a classic example of an isolated occasion with no lingering animosity where a reasonable employer would have considered it appropriate to impose a lesser sanction, in particular a final warning to both men. Even if Mr Green took the view that Mr Forde should be dismissed it did not necessarily follow that the applicant should be. He invited the tribunal not to shirk from a robust decision and to find for the applicant.
10 We are satisfied that Mr Green, whose evidence was accepted, in the light of the relevant facts which were not materially in dispute, believed that there were reasonable grounds on which to suspect the applicant of gross misconduct in fighting on Council property with another employee. There were reasonable grounds on which to sustain that belief and at the stage at which Mr Green formed that belief the respondent had carried out as much investigation into the matter as was reasonable in all the circumstances of the case. Accordingly we are unanimously satisfied that it was reasonable for the respondent to take the view that the applicant had been guilty of gross misconduct."
"A reasonable employer would have dismissed the Applicant after taking account of all the facts known at the time of dismissal. The Respondents' disciplinary procedure is clear. Both men had been employed by the Respondents for many years, the Applicant for 28 years without any disciplinary action being taken against him, which was recognised for two of the matters relied on as meriting leniency when dismissing him for this incident. We concluded that the differences as between the two men were matters of emphasis rather than substance and did not affect the gross misconduct on which the dismissal was based and would not have led a reasonable employer to impose anything other than dismissal on this Applicant – albeit that we recognise that some may think that in all the circumstances the Respondents' decision may not have been to dismiss either man."