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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> London Probation Board v. Lee [2009] UKEAT 0493_08_2905 (29 May 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2009/0493_08_2905.html Cite as: [2009] UKEAT 0493_08_2905, [2009] UKEAT 493_8_2905 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HAND QC
MRS C BAELZ
MR C EDWARDS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR A ELESINNLA (of Counsel) Instructed by: Essex Legal Services New Bridge House 60-68 New London Road Chelmsford Essex CM2 0PD |
For the Respondent | MR N TOMS (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Thompsons Solicitors Congress House Great Russell Street London WC1B 3LW |
SUMMARY
CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT
Disciplinary and Grievance Procedure
The Employment Tribunal had not erred in construing the terms and conditions of employment as not permitting the employer to transfer the employee to other duties; in any event, the use of any power to transfer as a disciplinary sanction was unlawful.
UNFAIR DISMISSAL
Contributory Fault
There was no error of law when the Employment Tribunal expressed the view that there was no contributory fault on the part of the employee.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HAND QC
"It was essentially an administrative post providing a liaison between the court and the probation service and involved no 'hands on' traditional probation officer duties (described by the claimant as the 'social worker' aspects of the probation service). He played no part in managing offenders and did not wish to do so."
"Further to our recent discussions regarding the change to Court Work Officer posts, I am writing to confirm the terms and conditions of the appointment.
The appointment will be effective from 1 April 1998.
As discussed the post is graded as Scale 6."
We need not quote further from that paragraph. We omit the next paragraph and the paragraph after that reads:
"Initially you will be assigned to 39 Greenwich High Road, London SE10 although you may be required to work at any unit within the Inner London Probation Service in a post appropriate to your grade."
"In cases where dismissal is an appropriate sanction for the offence, London Probation may, in exceptional circumstances decide to, impose a different penalty including but not limited to the following:
- transfer to other duties permanently or temporarily."
"Because of the difficulties of these negotiations National Union advice to members (which included the Claimant) was that members should treat their existing job descriptions as being definitive as to their roles and should refuse to carry out tasks outside those descriptions. The Tribunal heard evidence to this effect from Mr Allwood who had been and still is involved in those negotiations since at the time of the Tribunal hearing the matter was still unresolved."
"He was accused of and admits to spending time on the intranet and reading the newspaper. Since few tasks which he considered to be within his remit were offered to him it is perhaps understandable that the Claimant should have chosen to occupy his time in this way."
"On 11 July 2007 the Claimant was informed that he had been dismissed for gross misconduct (pp208-210). The dismissal letter was prepared by the Human Resources department and signed by Ms Robinson. The basis of the reason given for dismissal was that he had breached confidentiality by putting a notice on the UNISON notice board. This was not one of the charges levied against the Claimant."
"Your hearing was heard in accordance with London Probation's disciplinary procedure, the purpose of which was to consider the allegation that -
- You continuously refused to carry out allocated duties (except office duty on a rota basis)"
"The initial stage of this process required PSOs working in Courts to train other PSOs in court duty. You refused to take part in this implementation and as such were subsequently transferred to 208 Lewisham High Street.
At Lewisham you persistently refused to undertake work allocated to you for the period June 2006 to December 2006 when you were suspended, although this work fell within the expected range of duties undertaken by Probation Service Officer staff prior to the implementation of the Offender Management Model."
"However your persistent refusal to undertake duties required of you demonstrates a complete repudiation of your role as an employee and amounts to gross misconduct. In addition your actions directly affected other staff within the Lewisham office who were required to undertake this work […] it has been decided therefore to dismiss you from London Probation with immediate effect."
"The Tribunal finds that the dismissal of the Claimant was both substantively and procedurally unfair for the following reasons."
"What in effect appears to have happened in this case is that the Claimant was given an unreasonable and unlawful order to move location and jobs and was then disciplined and dismissed for not having complied with that original unlawful order. No reasonable employer would act in such a manner."
"The Tribunal would be minded to order an uplift of 50 per cent of the relevant element of compensation to reflect this conduct."
"The Tribunal was also asked to consider whether the Claimant had contributed towards his dismissal and if so how this would reduce any award made to him."
"The Respondent's next argument, namely that the Claimant should have suggested a solution or compromise situation is not accepted by the Tribunal."
"Although we feel that in some respects the Claimant displayed a somewhat intransigent attitude towards the Respondent we do not feel that he contributed towards his own dismissal."
"As you are aware there is no requirement at this time for Court Work Officers to undertake Saturday and Bank Holiday court duty at Greenwich Magistrates' Court. However, if and when this becomes a requirement you will be required to undertake court duty on Saturdays and Bank Holidays on a rota basis."
"It is necessary, however, to consider what is included in the concept of culpability or blameworthiness in this connection. The concept does not, in my view, necessarily involve any conduct of the complainant amounting to a breach of contract or a tort. It includes no doubt conduct of that kind but it also includes conduct which, while not amounting to a breach of contract or a tort, is nevertheless perverse or foolish or if I may use the colloquialism bloody minded. It may also include action which though not meriting any of those more pejorative epithets is nevertheless unreasonable in all the circumstances. I shall not, however, go as far as to say that all unreasonable conduct is necessarily culpable or blameworthy and it must depend on the degree of unreasonableness involved."