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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Mayo-Deman v. Lewisham College [2003] UKEAT 0104_02_0812 (8 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/0104_02_0812.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 0104_02_0812, [2003] UKEAT 104_2_812 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 5 November 2003 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J BIRTLES
MR P A L PARKER CBE
MRS M T PROSSER
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MS E MISRA (of Counsel) Instructed by: The Council for Ethnic Minority 11 Brocklesbank Road Bugsey Way Charlton London SE7 7SX |
For the Respondents | MR C QUINN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Evans Butler Wade Solicitors 165 Greenwich High Road London SE10 |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE BIRTLES
Introduction
(i) did not unlawfully discriminate against the Applicant on racial grounds;
(ii) did not unlawfully victimise the Applicant on racial grounds.
The Employment Tribunal's Decision was sent to the parties and entered in the register on 6 November 2001.
Grounds of appeal
"1 The Appellant abandons all grounds of appeal set out in his Notice of Appeal dated 16 December 2002 except that set out below.
2 There was a breach of natural justice in the manner in which these proceedings were conducted before the Employment Tribunal in that copies of the parties' final submissions were not exchanged and no opportunity arose to permit comment on those submissions by the Appellant. (See paragraph 66 of the Chairman's notes (page 51 of the first bundle before this Tribunal)."
The Employment Tribunal Decision
The grounds of appeal
"33 There remains the appellant's last ground of appeal. There will be occasions when it will be greatly to the convenience of the parties and of the tribunal that the parties' closing submissions should be made in writing after the hearing and lodged with the tribunal. If this procedure is to be adopted, it should be implemented only with the consent of the parties. Once such consent has been secured, then in our judgment the tribunal chairman must take responsibility of ensuring that the procedure is implemented in accordance with the rules of natural justice. This will require that, upon receipt of both sets of submissions, the tribunal will serve each party with the written submission of the other. Each party should be informed that if they have any appropriate comment to make on the submission of their opponent, they should send those comments to the tribunal within, say, a further 14 days. They should be warned that if, within that time, no comment is received back by the tribunal, it will be assumed that they have no comment to make and the tribunal will proceed to make their decision on the basis of the submissions already tendered. Appropriate comments in reply should be limited, as would be the case had oral submissions been made, namely to correction of factual errors and legal submission on a new point of law not previously raised. The tribunal should not proceed to the decision making stage until the chairman is satisfied that each of the above steps has been taken.
34 In this case, we think the probability is that the tribunal failed to cross-serve the written submissions, and so neither party had the opportunity to comment before the meeting of the tribunal members on 20 April. In our judgment, this amounted to a breach of the rules of natural justice. Whilst Mr Hawthorne clearly had in mind the need to see the other side's submission when he wrote his letter dated 9 February 1998, we do not think the ultimate responsibility for ensuring he had the opportunity to comment rested with him. The chairman should have checked before he and his members proceeded to making their decision. The fact that, in this instance, the tribunal administration had omitted to send the written submissions to each side serves to underline the importance of the chairman's verification at this stage that all which has to be done, has been done.
35 However, it is our view that any breach of the rules of natural justice was remedied when the tribunal solicited the comments of each party at the stage when Mr Hawthorne sought a review. The latter does not challenge the bona fides of the process in which the tribunal engaged upon his application. Indeed, there is no appeal from the refusal of the application. We are concerned with a scrutiny of the procedures adopted, and are satisfied that the opportunity to comment afforded the parties at that late stage, and the reconsideration of the decision undertaken by the tribunal in view of those comments, rectified the earlier procedural draft."
The parties' submissions
paragraphs 28 - 32 and 38.
"28. Not to be afforded a fair hearing would be an obviously serious procedural irregularity sufficient to allow the appeal. The real question is, however, whether what happened was seriously irregular and unfair .
29. It is not contended, and rightly so, that there is a serious irregularity simply because a judge (and for present purposes that includes the tribunal) cites in his or her judgment decided cases which had not been referred to in the course of the hearing. Judicial research would be stultified if that were so and if the parties had to be given the opportunity to address each and every case eventually set out in the judgment.
30. The test applied by His Hon Serota Q.C. in Albion was this:-
31 Dr Cohen sums up that test of relevance, significance and materiality as meaning that the authority must be central to the decision. In my Judgment I can accept those epithets insofar as they convey the meaning that the authority must be shown to be central to the decision and not peripheral to it. It must play an influential part in shaping the judgment. If it is of little or no important and serves only to underline, amplify or give greater emphasis to a point that was explicitly or implicitly addressed in the course of the hearing, then no complaint can be made. If the point of the authority was so clear that a party could not make any useful comment in explanation, then it matters not that the authority was not mentioned.
32 Thus it seems to me, the authority must alter or affect the way the issues have been addressed to a significant extent so that it truly can be said by a fair-minded observer that the case was decided in a way which could not have been anticipated by a party fixed with such knowledge of the law and procedure as it would be reasonable to attribute to him in all the circumstances.
….
38 The vital question, in my judgment, is whether it would have made any difference to the outcome if Dr Cohen has been armed with this authority. That is a question for this court to answer. It is not a matter we must refer back to the original tribunal."
The Employment Appeal Tribunal Decision
"It is submitted that the Applicant did not clearly identify a "Protected Act" by reference to her claim against the Respondents"
The simple answer to this is that in order to sustain a claim for victimisation the Applicant has to identify a protected act: Race Relations Act 1976 section 2(1) and Aziz -v- Trinity Street Taxis Ltd [1988] IRLR 204. Both these were referred to by the Employment Tribunal: Decision paragraphs 45 - 46. The Employment Tribunal went on to consider the evidence and found that the Appellant had failed to establish that she had carried out a protected act within the meaning of section 2 of the 1976 Act: Decision paragraphs 50 - 55. Accordingly, her claim for victimisation failed. The onus of proof in a victimisation claim is upon the Appellant to prove that she has carried out a protected act. All the passage cited from the Respondents' closing submissions says it is a simple denial that any protected act was carried out by the Appellant. We find no serious irregularity or unfairness or substantial unfairness here.
"It is submitted that the Applicant failed to produce any evidence that Mr Brar knew of her application to Lewisham College before the decision was taken not to shortlist her for the position. Mr Brar gave clear evidence that he did not know of her application and that it would have been most unlikely that it would have been brought to his attention."
This is simply a reference to Mr Brar's evidence that was given to the Employment Tribunal. It is also a submission that the Appellant herself produced no evidence to contradict it. If the Appellant could not prove that Mr Brar knew of her application to Lewisham College before the decision was taken not to shortlist her for the position, then Mr Brar (as the agent of Lewisham College) could not have been involved in an act of victimisation. Essentially this was an issue of evidence. The evidence was concluded at the end of the second day of the hearing and before written submissions came in. Mr Brar was central to the Appellant's case: see the Originating Application pages 55 - 56 of the bundle. All the Respondents have done in the passage cited above is to make an assertion. It was for the Appellant to prove her case. She manifestly failed to do so. Applying the test in Stanley Cole (Wainfleet) Ltd, there was not serious irregularity or substantial unfairness.
Conclusion