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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Virgo Fidelis Senior School v. Boyle [2004] UKEAT 0644_03_2301 (23 January 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2004/0644_03_2301.html Cite as: [2004] IRLR 268, [2004] UKEAT 644_3_2301, [2004] ICR 1210, [2004] UKEAT 0644_03_2301 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 11 December 2003 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
MR B R GIBBS
MRS J M MATTHIAS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR SIMON DEVONSHIRE (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs DMH Solicitors 40 High Street Crawley West Sussex RH10 1BW |
For the Respondent | MS LUCY McLYNN (Solicitor) Messrs Bates Wells & Braithwaite Solicitors Cheapside House 138 Cheapside London EC2V 6BB |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
(i) that Mr Boyle had been unfairly dismissed;
(ii) that he had made a protected disclosure by writing a letter making explicit allegations against various members of the School staff to the Diocese, London Borough of Croydon and the Convent de Notre Dame de Fidelité in France;
(iii) the School's action in thereafter disciplining him and dismissing him for making that disclosure amounted to a detriment.
(i) a basic award of £750;
(ii) compensation for loss of net wages of £1,755 based on the fact that he had obtained other employment very quickly;
(iii) £45,000 injury to feelings which was said to include the sum of £2,460 representing Mr Boyle's expenses.
The Tribunal declined to make an award in respect of either exemplary damages or aggravated/punitive damages.
13 "The Applicant made a claim for exemplary damages. The basis of the Applicant's claim under this head was the conduct of the London Borough of Croydon in this matter. The London Borough of Croydon is not a party to these proceedings, and the acts cited in support of this head of claim do not relate to the Applicant's dismissal (they either precede the disciplinary/dismissal process or post-date the Tribunal's decision). For these reasons we find this head of claim inappropriate in the present circumstances and decline to make an award.
14 The Applicant also made a claim for aggravated damages. We are not aware of any statutory or case law authority which permits us to make the award in the context of an unfair dismissal or public interest disclosure claim and decline to make an award under this head. The Respondent's conduct has been taken into account in the award for injury to feelings (below).
15 This case was founded (in part) on s.47 Employment Rights Act 1996 (whistle- blowing). Under s.49 of that Act the award which the Tribunal in to make to such sum as is "just and equitable" which may include an award for injury to feelings and under s49 (3) (c) reasonable expenses incurred in consequence of the act to which the complaint relates.
16 In the present case we find that the Respondent's conduct and treatment of the Applicant as a result of his whistle blowing was a travesty of what should have been done and had resulted in grave consequences for the Applicant, his personal relationships, career, career prospects and health. We were presented with medical evidence from the Applicant's doctor and a psychiatrist which demonstrated that the Applicant had suffered a clinical depression, largely as a result of the Respondent's treatment of him.
17 Taking the above into account we feel that an appropriate award in this case would be £45,000 which includes the sum of £2,460 representing the Applicant's reasonable expenses. This is intended to reflect our findings in paragraphs 11-13 of the decision promulgated on 28 May 2003 which had a direct contributory effect on the Applicant's dismissal."
(1) The Tribunal failed to have regard to comparable awards for injury to feelings in Race/Sex Discrimination Act cases and in particular failed to have regard to the guidelines set out in Vento v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police (No. 2) [2003] IRLR 102.
(2) The Tribunal failed to have regard to comparable awards in personal injury cases and in particular failed to have regard to the complex background of Mr Boyle's clinical depression, only part of which was attributable to the School's treatment of him after he made his protected disclosure.
(3) The award was punitive and not compensatory and was both perverse and also was not justified with sufficient reasons.
(4) The Tribunal failed to distinguish between non-economic losses, i.e. hurt feelings attributable to the dismissal and those feelings which were attributable to the detriment which fell short of dismissal.
"…
- That the Applicant had sent his letter of 1 July to various Parties outside the school;
- That the Applicant had challenged Sister Bernadette's leadership;
- That the Applicant had made malicious statements;
- That the Applicant had behaved in an unprofessional manner in approaching Dr Sodhi about his doctorate in a corridor in the presence of another member of staff;
- That the Applicant had spoken inappropriately to children about his suspension;
- That the Applicant had acted in an intimidating manner towards the Head Teacher in the presence of a priest."
Do the Vento principles apply to detriment cases?
(1) "A worker has the right not to be subjected to any detriment by any act, or any deliberate failure to act, by his employer done on the ground that the worker has made a protected disclosure.
(2) … this section does not apply where –
(a) the worker is an employee, and
(b) the detriment in question amounts to dismissal within the meaning of Part X."
49 (1) "Where an employment tribunal finds a complaint under section 48 well-founded, the tribunal –
(a) shall make a declaration to that effect, and
(b) may make an award of compensation to be paid by the employer to the complainant in respect of the act or failure to act to which the complaint relates.
(2) The amount of the compensation awarded shall be such as the tribunal considers just and equitable in all the circumstances having regard to –
(a) the infringement to which the complaint relates, and
(b) any loss which is attributable to the act, or failure to act, which infringed the complainant's right.
(3) The loss shall be taken to include –
(a) any expenses reasonably incurred by the complainant in consequence of the act, or failure to act, to which the complaint relates, and
(b) loss of any benefit which he might reasonably be expected to have had but for that act or failure to act.
(4) In ascertaining the loss the tribunal shall apply the same rule concerning the duty of a person to mitigate his loss as applies to damages recoverable under the common law of England and Wales or (as the case may be) Scotland."
146 "Action short of dismissal on grounds related to union membership or activities
(1) An employee has the right not to be subjected to any detriment as an individual by any act, or any deliberate failure to act, by his employer if the act or failure takes place for the purpose of -
(a) preventing or deterring him from being or seeking to become a member of an independent trade union, or penalising him for doing so,
(b) preventing or deterring him from taking part in the activities of an independent trade union at an appropriate time, or penalising him for doing so, or
(c) compelling him to be or become a member of any trade union or of a particular trade union or of one of a number of particular trade unions.
(2) In subsection (l) (b) "an appropriate time" means -
(a) a time outside the employee's working hours, or
(b) a time within his working hours at which, in accordance with arrangements agreed with or consent given by his employer, it is permissible for him to take part in the activities of a trade union;
and for this purpose "working hours", in relation to an employee, means any time when, in accordance with his contract of employment, he is required to be at work.
(3) An employee also has the right not to be subjected to any detriment as an individual by any act, or any deliberate failure to act, by his employer if the act or failure takes place for the purpose of enforcing a requirement (whether or not imposed by his contract of employment or in writing) that, in the event of his not being a member of any trade union or of a particular trade union or of one of a number of particular trade unions, he must make one or more payments.
(4) For the purposes of subsection (3) any deduction made by an employer from the remuneration payable to an employee in respect of his employment shall, if it is attributable to his not being a member of any trade union or of a particular trade union or of one of a number of particular trade unions, be treated as [a detriment to which he has been subjected as an individual by an act of his employer taking place] for the purpose of enforcing a requirement of a kind mentioned in that subsection.
(5) An employee may present a complaint to an employment tribunal on the ground that he has been subjected to a detriment by his employer in contravention of this section."
149 "Remedies
(1) Where the employment tribunal finds that a complaint under section 146 is well-founded, it shall make a declaration to that effect and may make an award of compensation to be paid by the employer to the complainant in respect of the act or failure complained of.
(2) The amount of the compensation awarded shall be such as the tribunal considers just and equitable in all the circumstances having regard to the infringement complained of and to any loss sustained by the complainant which is attributable to the [act or failure] which infringed his right.
(3) The loss shall be taken to include –
(a) any expenses reasonably, incurred by the complainant in consequence of the [act or failure] complained of, and
(b) loss of any benefit which he might reasonably be expected to have had but for that act or failure.
(4) In ascertaining the loss, the tribunal shall apply the same rule concerning the duty of a person to mitigate his loss as applies to damages recoverable under the common law of England and Wales or Scotland."
65 "Remedies on complaint under section 63
(1) Where an employment tribunal finds that a complaint presented to it under section 63 is well-founded the tribunal shall make such of the following as it considers just and equitable –
(a) an order declaring the rights of the complainant and the respondent in relation to the act to which the complaint relates;
(b) an order requiring the respondent to pay to the complainant compensation of an amount corresponding to any damages he could have been ordered by a county court or by a sheriff court to pay to the complainant if the complaint had fallen to be dealt with under section 66."
Section 66 (4) provides that:
66 (4) "For the avoidance of doubt it is hereby declared that damages in respect of an unlawful act of discrimination may include compensation for injury to feelings whether or not they include compensation under any other head."
123 "Compensatory award
(1) Subject to the provisions of this section and sections 124, 126, 127 and 127A (1), (3) and (4) the amount of the compensatory award shall be such amount as the tribunal considers just and equitable in all the circumstances having regard to the loss sustained by the complainant in consequence of the dismissal in so far as that loss is attributable to action taken by the employer.
(2) The loss referred to in subsection (1) shall be taken to include-
(a) any expenses reasonably incurred by the complainant in consequence of the dismissal, and
(b) subject to subsection (3), loss of any benefit which he might reasonably be expected to have had but for the dismissal.
(3) The loss referred to in subsection (1) shall be taken to include in respect of any loss of-
(a) any entitlement or potential entitlement to a payment on account of dismissal by reason of redundancy (whether in pursuance of Part XI or otherwise), or
(b) any expectation of such a payment,
only the loss referable to the amount (if any) by which the amount of that payment would have exceeded the amount of a basic award (apart from any reduction under section 122) in respect of the same dismissal.
(4) In ascertaining the loss referred to in subsection (1) the tribunal shall apply the same rule concerning the duty of a person to mitigate his loss as applies to damages recoverable under the common law of England and Wales or (as the case may be) Scotland."
103A "Protected disclosure
An employee who is dismissed shall be regarded for the purposes of this Part as unfairly dismissed if the reason (or, if more than one, the principal reason) for the dismissal is that the employee made a protected disclosure."
65 "Employment tribunals and those who practise in them might find it helpful if this court were to identify three broad bands of compensation for injury to feelings, as distinct from compensation for psychiatric or similar personal injury.
(i) The top band should normally be between £15,000 and £25,000. Sums in this range should be awarded in the most serious cases, such as where there has been a lengthy campaign of discriminatory harassment on the ground of sex or race. This case falls within that band. Only in the most exceptional case should an award of compensation for injury to feelings exceed £25,000.
(ii) The middle band of between £5,000 and £15,000 should be used for serious cases, which do not merit an award in the highest band.
(iii) Awards of between £500 and £5,000 are appropriate for less serious cases, such as where the act of discrimination is an isolated or one-off occurrence. In general, awards of less than £500 are to be avoided altogether, as they risk being regarded as so low as not to be a proper recognition of injury to feelings.
66 There is, of course, within each band considerable flexibility, allowing tribunals to fix what is considered to be fair, reasonable and just compensation in the particular circumstances of the case.
67 The decision whether or not to award aggravated damages and, if so, in what amount must depend on the particular circumstances of the discrimination and on the way in which the complaint of discrimination has been handled.
68 Common sense requires that regard should also he had to the overall magnitude of the sum total of the awards of compensation for non-pecuniary loss made under the various headings of injury to feelings, psychiatric damage and aggravated damage. In particular, double recovery should be avoided by taking appropriate account of the overlap between the individual heads of damage. The extent of overlap will depend on the facts of each particular case."
149 (2) "However, there is a significant difference. Section 149 (2) adds the words: "having regard to the infringement complained of and…" It seems to us that those words grant the industrial tribunal a power to award compensation over and above the pure pecuniary loss suffered by the applicant. Given the scope for awards to complainants who have suffered by way of sex or race discrimination to reflect injury to feelings, we see no reason in principle why the words of the section cannot extend to such award. Put another way, what do the words add to the normal formulation of available pecuniary loss claims for unfair dismissal, if not to include an award for non-pecuniary loss including injury to feelings?
(3) It is not fatal to our construction that the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the Race Relations Act 1976 contain specific references to awards for injury to feelings, and section 149 (2) of the Act of 1992 does not. Those provisions are inserted "for the avoidance of doubt", not to create an otherwise otiose head of claim.
(4) We are unimpressed by the argument advanced by the employer in National Coal Board v Ridgway [1987] ICR 641, and implicitly adopted by Ms Pitt before us. It is nothing to the point that an award for injury to feelings cannot be recovered in a wrongful dismissal or unfair dismissal claim. They are different claims, compensated in different ways. We do not accept that a complaint under section 146 (1) of the Act of 1992 can simply be categorised as less serious and therefore cannot allow of a head of compensation not provided for in claims of unfair dismissal or wrongful dismissal. Apart from the different wording of the section, the intention behind it is clear; an employee who is unfairly dismissed will normally suffer pecuniary loss, and that, Parliament has decided, will adequately compensate him for the wrong. In a case of action short of dismissal it may very well be that he can point to no pecuniary loss; nevertheless, Parliament has decided that he should be able to recover financial compensation "having regard to the infringement complained of." That must, in our judgment, include injury to feelings occasioned by the unlawful act."
14 "There is a similar distinction to be found in the wording of s.49 of the 1996 Act, which provides a remedy where a complaint has been proved that an employee has been subjected to a detriment in the context of his having made complaints or claims relating to health and safety, Sunday working and time off for reasons dealt with in ss.44, 45, 46, 47, 47A and 47C of the 1996 Act. In such circumstances s.49(2) provides in material terms that:
'The amount of the compensation awarded shall be such as the Tribunal considers just and equitable in all the circumstances having regard to –
(a) the infringement to which the complaint relates, and
(b) any loss which is attributable to the act, or failure to act, which infringed the complainant's right.'
In such circumstances too there may be no economic loss suffered. Once again there are clear words following a wider ambit of recovery."
9 "Personal injury comparisons
Again, although the tribunal made no express reference to any specific award in personal injury cases, the reference to the Tchoula case in paragraph 39.3 of their decision indicates that they had well in mind that their award should have 'a broad general similarity' to the range of awards in such cases. In our view, there is no need for a tribunal expressly to seek to locate where it would place the facts of the case before it in the framework of the awards given for injuries in personal injury cases. The court in Vento approved certain observations of Smith J in HM Prison Service v Johnson [1997] IRLR 162, when she said: -
'Awards should bear some general broad similarity to the range of awards in personal injury cases. We do not think that this is done by reference to any particular type of personal injury award, rather to the whole range of such awards.'
10 Compensation depends on the ground of discrimination
As to the third ground, in our view, there are no grounds for asserting that discrimination on trade union grounds will justify lower awards of compensation to other forms of discrimination, such as race or sex discrimination. In each case it is necessary to establish the loss by focusing on the particular injury suffered. If the injury in two cases is the same, it would not be just to award different levels of compensation simply because the source of the injury was different forms of discrimination. Ms Tether referred us in this context to certain observations of Sir Robert Car- swell, giving judgment in the Northern Court of Appeal in McConnell v Police Authority of Northern Ireland [1997] IRLR 625. He held that the employment tribunal had been wrong to hold that the award of compensation for injury to feelings in cases of political or religious discrimination should be greater than the awards made for other forms of discrimination in the following terms:
'In plain language, the tribunal is there saying that the feelings of persons who are the subject of religious or political discrimination in Northern Ireland merit higher compensation than those of persons subject to the same discrimination in Great Britain on grounds of sex or race. I am unable to accept that approach. Discrimination is equally pernicious, whether it is on religious grounds, sexual grounds or racial grounds, and those who suffer from it on any of these grounds must feel equally distressed and hurt. I can discern no basis for saying that the distress and hurt caused by it varies with the type of discrimination rather than with the treatment of the victim.'
11 That is not to say, however, that it will in all cases be just as easy to establish injury to feelings in relation to one form of discrimination as another. We doubt whether that can be right. Sometimes such injury will be the almost inevitable concomitant of the discrimination having occurred. For example, it can readily be assumed where someone has suffered an act of race or sex discrimination that will by its very nature have caused injury to feelings: it is demeaning to the individual and offensive to his or her dignity to be so treated. A tribunal will readily infer some injury to feelings from the simple fact of the discrimination having occurred. Such injury may of course be compounded by the particular manner in which the discriminatory conduct itself is made manifest. For example, harassment over a lengthy period will plainly result in more considerable distress than a single act of discrimination and should be compensated for accordingly. There will, however, have to be evidence of the nature of the discriminatory conduct.
12 By contrast, other forms of discrimination may leave the victim relatively, if not wholly, unscathed from any real distress. For example, it is unlawful to discriminate against someone on the grounds that he or she is a non-unionist. It seems to us that it is far from self-evident that, for example, someone refused employment on those grounds will necessarily suffer any injury to feelings at all. The status of not being a trade union member is not likely, at least in most cases, to be an essential part of an individual's make-up, or to be a characteristic which is central to a person's sense of self-respect and self-esteem. Making good the financial loss actually suffered may in such a case be adequate compensation. Even if there is any injury to feelings, the distress is likely to be less severe than with forms of discrimination which engage the core of a person's being. Of course, that is not to say that there may not be particular cases where such injury cannot be established, such as a non-unionist who for that reason suffers harassment in a trade union shop. But it ought not readily to be assumed that injury to feelings inevitably flows from each and every unlawful act of discrimination. In each case it is a question of considering the facts carefully to determine whether the loss has been sustained. Some persons discriminated against on trade union grounds may feel deeply hurt by that affront, particularly where union membership is an important feature of their lives; other more robust characters may consider it a matter of little consequence and suffer little, if any, distress. Since the aim is to compensate and not to punish, the compensation to be awarded ought not to be the same in each case."
He then went on to apply the Vento guidelines to that case and approved the Tribunal's award of £5,000 although stating that it was on the high side.
(a) Under the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, in common with other discrimination litigation, as we have already pointed out, it is expressly stated that damages must correspond with the award which would be made in the County Court. Paragraph 47 of Vento refers to:
"…concern as to whether some recent tribunal awards in discrimination cases are in line with general levels of compensation recovered in other cases of non-pecuniary loss, such as general damages for personal injuries, malicious prosecution and defamation."
However, there is no similar restriction under section 49 of the Employment Rights Act 1996 where the Tribunal are required to have regard to the infringement to which the complaint relates; and any loss which is attributable to the act or failure to act which infringed the complainant's rights. She argues that, therefore, the nature of the infringement taken by itself, irrespective of the injury to feelings, may have an impact on the level of damages.
(b) She argues that injury to feelings is only one element of non-pecuniary compensation in discrimination legislation where the cases have established that an employee in discrimination case is also able to claim aggravated damages and damages for personal injury, whereas, she argues, there is no such ability in a 'whistle-blowing' case, where the separate heads of loss need to be subsumed within an award for injury to feelings as part of the employee's loss. She argues that in this case both the Appellant's conduct and the psychiatric harm caused to the Respondent, which was set out in a psychiatric report, were taken into account by the Tribunal.
(c) She argues that it is Parliament's wish to provide additional protection for those raising concerns in the public interest who have in effect acted in a pro-active way, rather than those who have been subjected to detriment in a reactive way, because of their race, sex or disability. She reminds us that the cap on unfair dismissal damages is only disapplied by section 124 (1) (a) ERA 1996 in health and safety and 'whistle-blowing' cases. She argues, therefore, that it is Parliament's wish that a Tribunal should mark its disapproval of employer's conduct in a 'whistle-blowing' case even more strongly than in a discrimination case since it is not merely the case that an employee has behaved unlawfully but that an employee has taken appropriate steps to alert the appropriate people to unlawful conduct by the employer and the employer then compounds any earlier wrongdoing by further unlawful conduct towards the 'whistle-blowing' employee.
(d) In answer to the criticism that section 149 TULR(C)A 1992 has almost identical wording to section 49 and that it did not seem to be argued either in the Cleveland or the Hackney cases, that the nature of the offence taken by itself should result in increased damages, she argues that the main concern in Cleveland was whether damages for injury to feelings could be awarded at all in this type of case and in the Hackney case the court was primarily concerned to reject the suggestion that trade union discrimination justified lower awards than other forms of discrimination.
(a) to compensate simply for the offence rather than the resulting injury or psychiatric damage would seem to offend against the general principle which was repeated in the Hackney case, that "the aim is to compensate and not to punish." Mr Devonshire reminds us that whilst section 49 deals with the level of awards in 'whistle-blowing' cases, it also covers detriment for less serious reasons, as we have set out above. Clearly the nature of the offence or its repetition may have impact on the level of the award for injury to feelings and indeed the Vento guidelines set out in paragraph 65 of Mummery LJ's judgment are primarily based on the nature of the discrimination or its repetition, the argument being that the worse the offence the more likely it is that the victim will suffer injury to feelings. Indeed, the reference in section 49 (2) (a) to the Tribunal having regard to the 'infringement' to which the complaint relates appears to us to be no more than a reminder to Tribunals to have some regard to the nature of the complaint when assessing the resulting loss simply to state what might be regarded as the obvious, namely more serious offence, the more likely it is that feelings have been injured.
(b) Secondly, detriment suffered by trade union members was clearly accepted in the Hackney case as another species of discrimination and it is therefore important as far as possible there is consistency in awards throughout all areas of discrimination adopting the principles set out by Smith J in Armitage, Marsden and HM Prison Service v Johnson [1997] IRLR 162 where, at paragraph 27 she said thus:
27 "We summarise the principles which we draw from these authorities:
(1) Awards for injury to feelings are compensatory. They should be just to both parties. They should compensate fully without punishing the tortfeasor. Feelings of indignation at the tortfeasor's conduct should not be allowed to inflate the award.
(2) Awards should not be too low, as that would diminish respect for the policy of the anti-discrimination legislation. Society has condemned discrimination and awards must ensure that it is seen to be wrong. On the other hand, awards should be restrained, as excessive awards could, to use Lord Bingham's phrase, be seen as the way to untaxed riches.
(3) Awards should bear some broad general similarity to the range of awards in personal injury cases. We do not think this should be done by reference to any particular type of personal injury award; rather to the whole range of such awards.
(4) In exercising their discretion in assessing a sum, tribunals should remind themselves of the value in everyday life of the sum they have in mind. This may be done by reference to purchasing power or by reference to earnings.
(5) Finally, tribunals should bear in mind Lord Bingham's reference to the need for public respect for the level of awards made."
We see no reason for detriment under section 47B to be treated differently; it is another form of discrimination.
(c) Thirdly, whilst section 49 (2) refers to any loss which in common with other areas of discrimination would allow Tribunals to make awards for injury to feelings, personal injury, i.e. psychiatric damage, and aggravated damages; and whilst the Tribunal in this award made reference to the Appellant's conduct and the psychiatric harm suffered by the Respondent, the award of £42,500 was still expressed at the conclusion of the judgment to represent injury to feelings; a figure far in excess of the top range of £15 - £25,000 set out in Vento.
The Level of Award for Injury to Feelings
Aggravated Damages
40 "In Rookes v Barnard at p.1221, Lord Devlin said:
'Moreover, it is very well established that in cases where the damages are at large the jury (or the judge if the award is left to him) can take into account the motives or conduct of the defendant where they aggravate the injury done to the plaintiff. There may be malevolence or spite or the manner of committing the wrong may be such as to injure the plaintiff's proper feelings of dignity or pride. These are matters which the jury can take into account in assessing the appropriate compensation.'
We consider that, as a matter of principle, aggravated damages ought to be available to plaintiffs or applicants for the statutory torts of sex and race discrimination. Damages are at large and, at least so far as direct discrimination is concerned, the torts may be sufficiently intentional as to enable the plaintiff to rely upon malice or the defendant's manner of committing the tort or other conduct as aggravating the injury to feelings. Although there is as yet no direct authority to support this proposition, the Court of Appeal has assumed that aggravated damages are available in discrimination cases: see Alexander v Home Office and Noone's case, supra. Also in Ministry of Defence v Meredith [1995] IRLR 539, the availability of aggravated damages was conceded by Treasury Counsel before the EAT in a sex discrimination case. We are satisfied that aggravated damages are available in discrimination cases.
41 We turn to deal with Lord Meston's submission that, even if available, the award of aggravated damages was excessive. He cited the case of W v Meah [1986] 1 AER 935, in which Woolf J said that aggravated damages must be moderate. However, that case is not of any great assistance to us as no separate award was made.
42 It seems to us that there were here factors which entitled the tribunal to make an award of aggravated damages. In particular they identified the third appellants' conduct of the investigation of the complaints of race discrimination. The tribunal described this as a travesty of what it should have been. Instead of providing the respondent with a remedy for the wrongs which he had suffered, the third appellants added to his injury by attributing all his problems to his own defects of personality. We think that this was a true case of aggravation: a case where the appellant's actions rubbed salt in the respondent's wounds.
43 Lord Meston submitted that features of mitigation could and should be taken into account in reduction of aggravated damages, if any. We agree, and we observe that the tribunal accepted as mitigation that the Prison Service had sought to learn from the circumstances of this case. However, we would think that the greatest mitigation would have been an apology, which we are told has never been offered.
44 There is very little authority on the quantum of aggravated damages. We have to ask ourselves whether the 7 award of £7,500 reveals an error of law or is manifestly excessive. Here again, we say that, if left to ourselves, we would probably have awarded somewhat less. But we are unanimously of the view that this award is not outside the bracket of reasonable awards and is not so high as to permit us to interfere.
45 Finally, we deal with Lord Meston's submission that the award is too high in total. We cannot accept this submission. We do not detect any element of overlap or double recovery. We think that both awards are generous but within the appropriate bracket for such a serious case. Added together, the total remains an appropriate result.
19 "It follows from these principles that an award of aggravated damages should not be an extra sum over and above the sum which the tribunal of fact considers appropriate compensation for the injury to the claimant's feelings. Any element of aggravation ought to be taken into account in reckoning the extent of the injury to his feelings, for it is part of the cause of that injury. It should certainly not be treated as an extra award which reflects a degree of punishment of the respondent for his behaviour. If Smith J intended to express approval of any different approach in Armitage, Marsden and HM Prison Service v Johnson [1997] IRLR 162, where separate awards were made for injury to feelings and for aggravated damages, I should not find it possible to agree with that decision."
13 "Mr Martin submits that the tribunal failed to apply the correct principles in making an extra award of aggravated damages to the applicant over and above that for injury to feelings. There was no finding by the tribunal that the respondent had acted maliciously towards the applicant. Following McConnell, paragraph 26, it cannot be said, at the highest, that the respondent had conducted the tribunal proceedings in other than an honest, if unfounded or even misguided, advancement of its case. There is no explanation in the tribunal's reasons as to why the respondent has been ordered to pay £5,000 aggravated damages: Meek v City of Birmingham District Council [1987] IRLR 250.
Dealing with those points, it is of interest to note that tribunals sometimes include an element of aggravated damages in their award for injury to feelings (see, e.g. Williams and Chan above); sometimes the awards are expressed separately. In our view, that is a matter of form rather than substance. However expressed, the principle stated by Carswell LCJ at paragraph 19 of McConnell is correct. We do not understand Smith J to have been saying anything different in Armitage. The first question must always be, do the facts disclose the essential requirements for an award of aggravated damages?"
Exemplary Damages
"As regards the meaning of the particular categories, I have come to the conclusion that what Lord Devlin said was never intended to be treated as if his words were verbally inspired, and much of the criticism of them which has succeeded reports of the case has been based on interpretations which are false to the whole context and unduly literal even when taken in isolation from it.
The only category exhaustively discussed before us was the second, since the first could obviously have no application to the instant case. But I desire to say of the first that I would be surprised if it included only servants of the government: in the strict: sense of the word. It would, in my view, obviously apply to the police, despite A-G for New South Wales v Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd, and almost as certainly to local and other officials exercising improperly rights of search or arrest without warrant and it may be that in the future it will be held to include other abuses of power without warrant by persons purporting to exercise legal authority. What it will not include is the simple bully, not because the bully ought not to be punished in damages, for he manifestly ought, but because an adequate award of compensatory damages by way of solatium will necessarily have punished him. I am not prepared to say without further consideration that a private individual misusing legal powers of private prosecution or arrest as in Leith v Pope, where the defendant had the plaintiff arrested and tried on a capital charge, might not at some future date be assimilated into the first category. I am not prepared to make an exhaustive list of the emanations of government which might or might not be included. But I see no reason to extend it beyond this field, to simple outrage, malice or contumelious behaviour. In such cases a properly directed jury will not find it necessary to differentiate between what the plaintiff ought to receive and the defendant ought to pay, since the former will always include the latter to the extent necessary to vindicate the strength of the law."
Lord Reid put the position thus at page 838C:
"Lord Devlin's first category is set out in the passage where he said:
'The first category is oppressive, arbitrary or unconstitutional action by the servants of the government. I should not extend this category,-I say this with particular reference to the facts of this case,-to oppressive action by private corporations or individuals.'
This distinction has been attacked on two grounds; first. that it only includes Crown servants and excludes others like the police who exercise governmental functions but are not Crown servants and, secondly, that it is illogical since both the harm to the plaintiff and the blameworthiness of the defendant may be at least equally great where the offender is a powerful private individual. With regard to the first I think that the context shows that the category was never intended to be limited to Crown servants. The contrast is between 'the government' and private individuals. Local government is as much government as national government, and the police and many other persons are exercising governmental functions. It was unnecessary in Rookes v Barnard to define the exact limits of the category. I should certainly read it as extending to all those who by common law or statute are exercising functions of a governmental character."
46 "I add some further considerations in respect of legislation such as the discrimination legislation and the data protection legislation. Exemplary damages would be available only if the legislation expressly authorises exemplary damages in relation to any particular breach."
At paragraph 92 Lord Hutton in raising the issue of whether exemplary damages could be awarded under discrimination legislation, reserved his opinion "until the matter arises directly for decision".
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