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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> William Hicks & Partners (A Firm) v Nadal [2005] UKEAT 0164_05_1608 (16 August 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2005/0164_05_1608.html Cite as: [2005] UKEAT 164_5_1608, [2005] UKEAT 0164_05_1608 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
MR M CLANCY
MR T STANWORTH
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR COLIN BOURNE (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs William Hicks & Partners Solicitors Empire House 8-10 Piccadilly Bradford BD1 3LW |
For the Respondent | MR PHILIP ENGELMAN (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Walker Morris Solicitors 12 King Street Leeds LS1 2HL |
SUMMARY
Unfair Dismissal
Tribunal did not apply our views on unfair dismissal. But applied range of reasonable responses. Denial of opportunity to employee to attend disciplinary hearing rendered procedure unfair.
Polkey decision incorrect – Tribunal should have considered if employee intended to attend any disciplinary hearing and also strength of employer's case.
.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
13.2.3 The failure by the Respondents to give the Claimant an opportunity to defend herself in the face of detailed and serious allegations is about as serious a deprivation of natural justice as can be imagined. Doubtless there are situations in which employers are entitled to proceed in a disciplinary hearing in the absence of the claimant, but this Tribunal finds that this is not such a case. The Respondents were in possession of a letter from the Claimant's doctor. It was a letter that they themselves commissioned. It set out, in some detail, the lengthy involvement the Claimant had had with her general practitioner over matters of stress. It went on to say that the allegations had caused the Claimant an acute stress reaction. It went on to add that the Claimant was, for medical reasons, incapable of attending a disciplinary hearing to respond to the allegations against her and incapable of dealing with those matters in writing. That letter supported a request for an adjournment of the disciplinary hearing of 6 November. In that application, Mr Green for the Claimant pointed out that the Claimant was to see her doctor the following day and would be able to give a more detailed prognosis after that. By that stage, the Claimant had already given her opinion, albeit an opinion which was not a medically-based one, that she might be fit in a fortnight's time. Mr Hudson, advised by Mrs Singleton, decided, however, that he ought to proceed. In proceeding he told us, and we accepted, he bore a number of factors in his mind. Our first serious criticism of Mr Hudson is that he does not appear to have considered that adjournment on the basis of seeing the relevant documentation himself. For his decision, Mr Hudson appears to have relied entirely on what he was told by Mr Hicks and Mrs Singleton about the contents of various documents. The first matter of import was that Mr Hudson was told by Mr Hicks that the Claimant had been able to attend a conference with Mr Couch and counsel. We now know that that conference was on 22 October and, although it was after her suspension, it was before the Claimant had received the letter setting out the allegations against her and before she saw her doctor on 24 October 2003. Mr Hudson also bore in mind the fact that the Claimant had been involved in job nego1tiations and had been able to give Mr Green instructions about the compromise agreement. These were matters which Mr Hicks had already been aware of and it is evident that Mr Hicks had adopted an entirely sceptical view about the Claimant's claimed unfitness for work, even before he had commissioned Mrs Singleton to obtain further details from the Claimant's doctor about that. Given Mr Hick's very limited state of knowledge, that scepticism was itself unreasonable. Mr Hudson also relied on the fact that there were staff members who were very concerned about the outcome of the disciplinary hearing, having made allegations against the Claimant. The Tribunal takes the view that this was a matter that Mr Hudson was entitled to consider but could not on its own outweigh the Claimant's entitlement to a fair hearing on allegations which were almost bound to lead to her dismissal if found true. The Tribunal finds that Mr Hudson shared Mr Hicks' scepticism about the Claimant's assertion that she was unfit, and he took the view that her involvement with the compromise agreement negotiations and her job negotiations showed that she was not unfit. The Tribunal takes the view that this was a conclusion to which Mr Hudson, who is not medically qualified, who had not seen the Claimant and who had not put these matters of doubt to the Claimant's doctor or to any other doctor, was entirely unentitled to. Mrs Singleton had gone to the trouble to get Dr AI- Timman to explain at greater length his views of the Claimant's unfitness. Having commissioned such a letter, if the Respondents were to be reasonable in ignoring it, they would either, in our view, have to have ad compelling evidence that the Claimant was pulling the wool over her own doctor's eyes, and they did not, or had to have authoritative contrary medical evidence about the Claimant's fitness. Moreover, the Tribunal is unable to see what the particular urgency in the situation was. The Respondents had no need to rush to a decision; they could have postponed the matter further and sought a prognosis from the Claimant's doctor. Had such a prognosis pointed to an unacceptable delay in proceeding with the disciplinary hearing, then no doubt further consideration could have been given, bearing the undesirability of lengthy delay. That did not happen. Finally, there is the fact that Mr Hudson purported to make the decision to proceed on the basis that it was actually in the Claimant's best interests so to do. In doing so, he relied on Dr AI- Timman's letter where it said that he was confident that once the stress of the immediate accusations was over, she would be able to perform her normal duties up to her high standard. This, Mr Hudson told us, justified his decision to proceed and he said as much in his letter to the Claimant's solicitor. The Tribunal takes the view that this was entirely disingenuous on Mr Hudson's part. He was not entitled to divorce that sentence from the sentence that follows it, which was that in Dr AI- Timman's view the Claimant was not fit for the time being to attend a disciplinary hearing. Mr Hudson, in effect, was not entitled to pick and choose which bits of Dr AI- Timman's letter he accepted and which bits he rejected. Either Dr AI- Timman's letter, including its conclusion as to the Claimant's fitness to attend the Hearing, was an authoritative statement of the medical position or it was not. Finally, we find that, given the detailed and damaging nature of the allegations against her the claimant was entitled to defend them in person. The offer to permit written submissions, even had the claimant been able to take it up, would not, in our view, have been an adequate substitute."
"The tribunal takes the view that this was a conclusion to which Mr Hudson, who is not medically qualified, who had not seen the Claimant, and who had not put these matters of doubt to the Claimant's doctor, or to any other doctor was entirely unentitled to. Mrs Singleton had gone to the trouble to get Dr Al-Timman to explain at greater length his views of the Claimant's unfitness having commissioned such a letter if the Respondents were to be reasonable in ignoring it, they would either in our view have to have compelling evidence that the Complainant was pulling the wool over her doctor's eyes, and they did not, or had to have authoritative contrary medical evidence about the Claimant's fitness."
"The failure by the Claimant ever to give her version of events means that the tribunal are not able to say how the dismissal would have been affected by a fair procedure. It is possible for us to know how such a hearing would have turned out, whether the Claimant's explanation would have been acceptable and whether she was likely in the event to have retained her employment, or to have been dismissed in any case. The breach of procedure is so fundamental and so central to the fairness of the decision that it would not be appropriate to consider making any deduction contemplated by Polkey.