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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Madhewoo v. NHS Direct [2006] UKEAT 0030_06_0103 (1 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2006/0030_06_0103.html Cite as: [2006] UKEAT 0030_06_0103, [2006] UKEAT 30_6_103 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
MARION HENRY
For the Appellant | MR DAVID MASSARELLA (of Counsel) Instructed by: Royal College of Nursing Legal Services 20 Cavendish Square London W1G 0RN |
For the Respondent | MR BEN COLLINS (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Capsticks Solicitors 77-83 Upper Richmond Road Putney London SW15 2TT |
SUMMARY
Practice & Procedure: 2002 Act and Pre-Action Requirements
Regulation 18(a) 2002 EA (DR) Regulations. Transitional Provisions. Meaning of employer first contemplating dismissal. Who is the employer? Test subjective or objective. Need for communication to Claimant. Perversity. Appeal dismissed.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
Background
"I have concluded my investigation and will be proceeding to a formal disciplinary hearing. You will shortly be receiving a management statement of case and details of a hearing date".
It was not until receipt of a letter dated 25 October from Anne Byles, head of Human Resources, that the Claimant heard further about the process followed by the Respondent. She then informed him that a disciplinary hearing would be held on 4 November before Steven Wibberley, Regional Director, accompanied by Ms Byles who would advise on procedure. The management case would be presented by Ms McKenzie and a copy of the written management statement of case prepared by her was enclosed with Ms Byles' letter. Ms McKenzie's conclusion at the end of the statement of case was expressed thus:
"The [Claimant's] actions in handling this call constitute gross misconduct in accordance with section 8.3.5 of the NHS Direct Disciplinary Procedure. The ultimate penalty for gross misconduct is dismissal".
The Statutory Framework
"These regulations shall apply
(a) in relation to dismissal…where the employer first contemplates dismissing…the employee after these regulations come into force".
The relevant date is 1 October 2004.
The Chairman's Decision
(i) Anne Byles discussed the case with Frances McKenzie but not after the investigation meeting on 26 August as she knew she would be on the disciplinary panel and wanted to keep back from it (corrected reasons paragraph 4);
(ii) The letter from Ms Byles dated 25 October was the first time that the Claimant knew that his conduct, as against his capability, was under review or that the outcome might be dismissal rather than as before, a period of monitoring or training.
Her reasoning is set out at paragraphs 14-16 as follows:
"14. Did the employer contemplate dismissing the Claimant before 1 October 2004? The use of the word 'contemplates' in the Regulations is, so far as is known, novel, and no assistance in the section defining terms or in other legislation has been found. In the view of the Tribunal, the normal meaning of the word 'contemplate' as in 'contemplates dismissal' means less than "the employer decided to dismiss" (as the claimant urges), and something more like 'considered a course of action which might result in dismissal. In ordinary language, if an employer contemplates an action he is thinking about it, indeed it probably means even less than he is considering it. This might be as early as the start of the investigation process, but more likely means that dismissal was being 'contemplated' at the conclusion of the investigation process when the decision was made that there was sufficient evidence to hold the disciplinary hearing at which would be one of a range of potential outcomes. When was that decision made? The answer would best be given by Miss McKenzie, but the Respondents have not called her to give evidence, and so that has to be deduced from documents.
15. On 24 September, Miss McKenzie wrote that she had concluded her investigation process and that there would be a disciplinary meeting, so at least by that date on 24 September had reached a conclusion of some kind. She referred to the Claimant receiving a management statement of case "shortly" although in fact the statement of case was not sent for another month. Ann Byles thought there may have been delay while consulting about the date for the hearing which had to appear in the letter of 24 October. It seems likely to the Tribunal that Frances McKenzie contemplated dismissal as an outcome at least by 24 September 2004 when she had considered the evidence and its implications enough to decide that disciplinary action (which might include dismissal) should be considered at a disciplinary hearing; she had almost certainly prepared at least a draft of the management statement of case which in its 24 October version clearly said the dismissal was possible.
16. Counsel for the Claimant has argued of "contemplates" that the test is not a subjective issue wholly for the employer, but also comprises the fact that dismissal had been contemplated being communicated to the employee. While the Tribunal agrees that that would perhaps, especially in the light of the facts of this case, be clearer and fairer, it is not what the Regulation actually says. The natural meaning of the word contemplate includes contemplation being an interior thought process and does not, of itself, imply any communication of the subject matter of that thought process to any other person, and therefore not without some sympathy to the Claimant, the Tribunal concluded that the Regulations do not apply in this case. It follows that the Claimant cannot use the extension under Regulation 15."
The Appeal
(i) The test as to when dismissal is first contemplated by the employer under Regulation 18(a) must be an objective one. It cannot be wholly subjective on the part of the employer. I disagree. What is contemplated by the employer is what is in his mind. just as the reason for dismissal for the purposes of s98 ERA is the set of facts in an employer's mind which leads him to dismiss. Equally, I am not persuaded that an element of communication to the employee, whether actual or constructive, is to be imported into the plain wording of Regulation 18(a) as to when the employer first contemplated dismissal. I therefore reject the submission that the relevant date is the date on which the Claimant received Ms Byles' letter of 25 October (actual knowledge) or as being the date when a reasonable employee would have concluded that the employer had first contemplated dismissal on that date. To find otherwise would, in my judgment, be a bridge too far in the so-called purposive approach to this legislation. On this aspect of the case, I was initially troubled as to who was the employer for these purposes. Having canvassed that concern with Counsel, I accept Mr Collins' submission that Ms McKenzie is to be included within the meaning of the employer for present purposes. She carried out the investigation and determined that a disciplinary hearing would take place at which, as effectively the prosecutor, she would be pressing for a decision to dismiss by the ultimate decision maker, Mr Wibberley. The fact that later Ms Byles wrote the letter of 25 October which represents step 1 of the Statutory Disciplinary Procedure for the purpose of Regulation 3 of the Regulations, read with Schedule 2 of the Act (had they applied) does not prevent Ms McKenzie from being treated as the employer, as the Chairman did for these purposes.
(ii) Perversity. The Chairman's reasoning at paragraph 15 is challenged on the evidence called and the findings of fact. True it is that Ms McKenzie did not give evidence. Accordingly, there was no direct evidence as to when she first contemplated dismissal. However, the Chairman had before her the letter of 24 September and Ms McKenzie's conclusion in her written statement of case. Subject to the burden of proof point, which I shall come to next, it seems to me that it was open to the Chairman to conclude on that material that Ms McKenzie first contemplated dismissal on or before 24 September. Such a finding was not, as Mr Massarella submits, an impermissible option, given my earlier conclusion, that Regulation 18(a) does not require actual or constructive communication of first contemplation to the Claimant.
(iii) Burden of Proof. It is common ground between Counsel that the burden lay on the Respondent within whose exclusive knowledge the fact of first contemplation lay to establish the relevant date. I am not persuaded that the Chairman overlooked the correct burden of proof here. She found it likely (that is more probable than not) that Ms McKenzie first contemplated dismissal at least by 24 September. Thus the Respondent had, despite not having called Ms McKenzie, discharged the burden placed upon it.
Conclusion