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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> J v DLA Piper UK LLP [2010] UKEAT 0263_09_1506 (15 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2010/0263_09_1506.html Cite as: [2010] UKEAT 0263_09_1506, [2010] UKEAT 263_9_1506, 115 BMLR 107, (2010) 115 BMLR 107, [2010] IRLR 936, [2010] ICR 1052 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 1 and 2 February 2010 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
MR C EDWARDS
DR B V FITZGERALD MBE LLD FRSA
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR JAMES LADDIE and MS CLAIRE DARWIN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Russell Jones and Walker 324 Gray's Inn Road London WC1X 9DH |
For the Respondents | MR DANIEL TATTON-BROWN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Morgan Lewis & Bockius Condor House 5-10 St Paul's Churchyard London EC4M 8AL |
SUMMARY
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION Disability
Job offer to Claimant withdrawn allegedly as a result of her disclosing a history of depression On a preliminary issue Tribunal holds that at the material time (June 2008) Claimant not suffering from "clinical depression" amounting to a disability within the meaning of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995.
Appeal allowed, and issue remitted, because Tribunal
(a) had wrongly declined to give weight to the evidence of Claimant's GP, on the issues both of impairment and of "deduced effect", because she was not a specialist; and
(b) had made a perverse finding as to whether the Claimant's past depression had amounted to an impairment having a substantial adverse effect on her ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities, which was material both to the question of whether she had an impairment in June 2008 and to the potential application of para. 2 (2) of Schedule 1 of the Act
(paras. 52-57)
Discussion of:
(1) correct approach to issue of "impairment" in cases involving a mental disability following the repeal of para. 1 (1) of Schedule 1 by the Disability Discrimination Act 2005 - Morgan v Staffordshire University [2002] ICR 475 considered; College of Ripon and York St. John v Hobbs [2002] IRLR 185 and McNicol v Balfour Beatty Rail Maintenance Ltd [2002] ICR 1498 held to remain good law (paras. 35-40 and 43-44)
(2) distinction between "clinical depression" and reactions to stress or other adverse circumstances producing similar symptoms (para. 42)
(3) whether claimant with a history of recurrent depressive episodes can be said to suffer an impairment in the intervals between episodes (para. 45).
Claimant refused permission to advance a point not raised before the Tribunal to the effect that even if she was not in fact disabled at the time of the acts complained of the Respondents perceived her to have been; that discrimination on the basis of such "perceived disability" was contrary to EU law; and that the 1995 Act could be construed so as to give effect to that prohibition, by analogy with EBR Attridge LLP v Coleman [2010] ICR 242 - paras. 60-64.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
INTRODUCTION
THE STATUTORY PROVISIONS
It is unlawful for an employer to discriminate against a disabled person
(a)
(b)
(c) by refusing to offer, or deliberately not offering, him employment.
(1) [A] person discriminates against a disabled person if
(a) for a reason which relates to the disabled person's disability, he treats him less favourably than he treats or would treat other to whom that reason does not or would not apply, and
(b) he cannot show that the treatment in question is justified.
(2) For the purposes of this Part, a person also discriminates against a disabled person if he fails to comply with a duty to make reasonable adjustments imposed on him in relation to the disabled person.
(3) Treatment is justified for the purposes of subsection (1)(b) if, but only if, the reason for it is both material to the circumstances of the particular case and substantial.
(4) But treatment of a disabled person cannot be justified under subsection (3) if it amounts to direct discrimination falling within subsection (5).
(5) A person directly discriminates against a disabled person if, on the ground of the disabled person's disability, he treats the disabled person less favourably than he treats or would treat a person not having that particular disability whose relevant circumstances, including his abilities, are the same as, or not materially different from, those of the disabled person.
(6) If, in a case falling within subsection (1), a person is under a duty to make reasonable adjustments in relation to a disabled person but fails to comply with that duty, his treatment of that person cannot be justified under subsection (3) unless it would have been justified even if he had complied with that duty.
The relationship of sub-sections (1) and (5) is explained in the judgment of this Tribunal in City of Edinburgh Council v Dickson (UKEATS/0038/09), at para. 32. However, as noted at para. 33 of that decision, the difference between the effect of the two sub-sections has been for practical purposes much diminished, if not altogether removed, by the decision of the House of Lords in London Borough of Lewisham v Malcolm [2008] IRLR 700.
(1) Subject to the provisions of Schedule 1, a person has a disability for the purposes of this Act if he has a physical or mental impairment which has a substantial and long-time adverse effect on his ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities.
(2) In this Act "disabled person" means a person who has a disability.
As a matter simply of verbal analysis that definition breaks down into two elements (1) whether the claimant is suffering from an impairment (physical or mental) "the impairment issue"; and (2) whether that impairment has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on his or her ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities "the adverse effect issue". We consider below to what extent that verbal distinction reflects a substantive distinction; but, as will appear, it is clearly enshrined in the jurisprudence, and we should observe it in the structure of this judgment.
(1) Para. 1 relates to the term "impairment". In the Schedule as originally enacted, sub-para. (1) provided that:"Mental impairment" includes an impairment resulting from or consisting of a mental illness only if the illness is a clinically well-recognised illness.However, that provision was repealed, with effect from 5 December 2005, by the Disability Discrimination Act 2005. In the result, therefore, there is now no statutory gloss on the meaning of "impairment", either generally or in the case of a mental illness. Sub-paras. (2) and (3) empower the Secretary of State to make regulations requiring "prescribed conditions" either to be or not to be treated as amounting to impairments. The Disability Discrimination (Meaning of Disability) Regulations 1996 were made under those powers and exclude various conditions, e.g. certain addictions and personality disorders.(2) Para. 2 relates to the phrase "long-term effect". Sub-paras. (1) and (2) read:
(1) The effect of an impairment is a long-term effect if (a) it has lasted at least 12 months;(b) the period for which it lasts is likely to be at least 12 months; or(c) it is likely to last for the rest of the life of the person affected.(2) Where an impairment ceases to have an substantial adverse effect on a person's ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities, it is to be treated as continuing to have that effect if the effect is likely to recur.(3) Para. 4 is concerned with the phrase "normal day-to-day activities". Sub-para. (1) provides that:
An impairment is to be taken to affect the ability of the person concerned to carry out normal day-to-day activities only if it affects one of the following - .There follows a list of "capacities"[1]. The relevant capacity for the purpose of this appeal is (g) "memory or ability to concentrate, learn or understand".(4) Para. 6 contains an important gloss on the question of adverse effect. It provides (so far as material) as follows:
(1) An impairment which would be likely to have a substantial adverse effect on the ability of the person concerned to carry out normal day-to-day activities, but for the fact that measures are being taken to treat or correct it, is to be treated as having that effect.(2) In sub-para. (1) "measures" includes, in particular, medical treatment and the use of a prosthesis or other aid.(3) .An adverse effect found on the basis of para. 6 has come to be referred to in the jurisprudence as a "deduced effect". We do not find this phrase particularly apt, and counsel were unable, despite some research, to explain its origin; but it is now too well-established to be dispensed with.
(5) Para. 6A provides for persons with "cancer, HIV infection or multiple sclerosis" to be deemed to have a disability.
THE CASE AS PLEADED
The Claimant is a disabled person under the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 ("DDA"). The condition is long-term and, if left uncontrolled through treatment, has a substantial effect on her ability to carry out day to day activities (i.e. the condition has a more than trivial effect on our client's ability to concentrate), thus amounting to a disability within the meaning of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995.
(1) Strictly speaking, it should have been pleaded not that the Claimant "is" disabled but that she was disabled at the material time. What that time is said to have been is not specified, but the natural reading, in the absence of any reference to section 2, would be that it was meant to be the date of the acts complained of, i.e. May/June 2008; and that is the basis on which the Tribunal and the parties proceeded.(2) The nature of the condition causing the disability is not explicitly pleaded, but the Claimant had pleaded at para. 3 of the Grounds that she had been diagnosed with "clinical depression"; and it will have been clear that that was the condition alleged.
(3) The particular capacity relied on for the purpose of the averment of a substantial adverse effect on the Claimant's ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities is her ability to concentrate.
(4) The Claimant does not aver that her impairment in fact had at the material time a substantial adverse effect on her ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities but only that it would have done so but for the treatment which she was receiving: in other words, this is pleaded as a "deduced effect" case (see para. 8 (4) above).
DISABILITY-RELATED DISCRIMINATION
S. 3A (1)
The Respondent's less favourable treatment of the Claimant was for a reason related to her disability which cannot be justified in the circumstances. In particular:
- The Respondent asked the Claimant to re-consider her suitability for a high pressured job;
- Advised the Claimant that the Respondent was unlikely to consider her allowing her to work from home occasionally by way of a reasonable adjustment; and
- Withdrew the role from the Claimant.
The Respondent treated the Claimant less favourably than he treats or would treat other to whom that reason does not apply and the Respondent cannot justify the treatment.
DIRECT DISCRIMINATION
S. 3A (5) DDA
The Respondent directly discrimination against the Claimant on the ground of her disability. The Respondent treated the Claimant less favourably than he treats or would treat a person without clinical depression whose relevant circumstances, including abilities, are the same as, or not materially different from those of the Claimant. In particular the Claimant will rely upon the following detriments:
- The Respondent asked the Claimant to re-consider her suitability for a high pressured job;
- Advised the Claimant that the Respondent was unlikely to consider her allowing her to work from home occasionally by way of a reasonable adjustment; and
- Withdrew the role from the Claimant.
A. THE CONVENTIONAL CASE
THE NATURE OF THE EVIDENCE BEFORE THE TRIBUNAL
(1) The Claimant's own evidence in her witness statement and in her oral testimony to the Tribunal. Both the witness statement and an agreed note of the Claimant's oral evidence were before us.(2) Her GP notes for the period from 2005 to 2008. These were not produced in full until the second day of the hearing, before the Claimant gave evidence.
(3) An extensive bundle of contemporary documents. Most of these were concerned with other aspects of the case; but they included correspondence between the HR Department at the City firm and its occupational health consultants, Rood Lane Ltd. Dr MacLeod, a GP employed by Rood Lane, saw the Claimant on more than one occasion; and a report was also obtained, on Dr MacLeod's recommendation, from a consultant psychiatrist, Dr Brener, who saw the Claimant on 20 May 2008.
(4) Two reports prepared for the purpose of the proceedings:
(a) a report prepared for the Claimant by her GP, Dr Morris, dated 4 December 2008, which exhibited her notes for May and June 2008[2];
(b) a report obtained by the Respondents from a consultant psychiatrist, Dr Gill, dated 27 January 2009: Dr Gill had not himself seen the Claimant, for reasons into which we need not go, and his views were based only on Dr Morris's report and on the Rood Lane material.
THE FACTS
Full-time in new job which is going pretty well. Still symptoms of tiredness, [occasionally] low mood and anxiety. Still counselling every 2 3 weeks but therapist doesn't sound very positive about continuing and sounds more supportive than anything else.
She was seen again (so far as her depression was concerned) in January and April 2007 and reported on both occasions that there were no problems at work, although she did continue to report some tiredness and occasional low mood and anxiety. She remained on sertraline at a dosage of 100mg.
I believe that [the claimant] is still suffering symptoms of anxiety and depression which are impairing her function at work and that this is a condition which has been ongoing for the last two and a half years. She was significantly unwell in the six months before she joined [the City firm]
She is currently, I believe, a little under treated. She wishes to self-fund therapy and I have arranged for her to see a therapist who I think will work well with her. We discussed the possibility of increasing her medication but she will discuss this with her GP.
She recommended that the Claimant work reduced hours and only four days a week. After discussion with Dr Morris, the Claimant remained on 100mg. sertraline.
In my opinion [the Claimant] has done very well and as far as I am able to ascertain from her report of the situation she has achieved a reasonably consistent recovery from her recent depressive illness. Most of her symptoms are now resolved and she is functioning at or close to her normal level.
I have emphasised to her the importance of maintaining medication for a decent period of time to allow consolidation in this improvement. She had been considering stopping in view of the improvement but medical opinions suggest she should continue for 6 months at least to ensure the improvement is maintained.
She was formally discharged by Dr MacLeod, on the basis that no further medical intervention was indicated.
She was very clear that she had been feeling much better in December, January and February prior to this feedback and that the reason for the deterioration in her mood state has been that feedback. Negative feedback will affect mood in most people.
In examining her mood state I covered her current symptoms which are largely related to worry and concern about her appraisal and poor sleep to the degree that she avoids going to bed for fear of not being able to sleep. This in turn makes it difficult for her to wake in the morning.
On her recent holiday to Mexico she was able to sleep and to get up reasonably early for activities but felt that this was because she was in a pleasurable and stress free environment.
At the present time [the Claimant] feels that she is fit to attend work and to do so punctually and reliably but she feels that her mental health should be taken into consideration by you in dealing with her situation.
I think it is very difficult to reliably differentiate between a fundamental mental illness and a sense of despondency, de-motivation and anxiety which can be a natural response to negative appraisal feedback. [The Claimant] was comparatively in a good mood state prior to that feedback and that together with her successful recent holiday in Mexico suggests to me that there may be a strong reactive component to her present mood state. That in turn is unlikely to improve until the negative cycle or poor attendance and late attendance is rectified.
Dr MacLeod recommended obtaining a specialist psychiatric opinion and also that the Claimant resume seeing a psychotherapist.
[The Claimant] has no symptoms of OCD, eating disorder or psychosis. She has some biological symptoms of depression. She has difficulty sleeping. She said her mood is worse in the morning. She is tired, she can't concentrate, she is always tearful, she is not suicidal and she says that everything is an effort. She says that she lives in constant "Sunday night syndrome".
He continued:
[The Claimant] made it quite clear to me that the quality of work has been fine just the quantity has been difficult. She enjoys the business development. What she is asking for is at times to come in late and make up the time staying later to work from home occasionally and a positive response if the work is good.
I talked to this lady about different options, therapy of a CBT type approach, learning some tools to cope with what's going on at work. I would suggest someone like Sue Camm or Stefania. We could look at leaving her on the Sertraline or converting her to Citalopram that might be another option that might help reduce some of the anxiety. The way [the Claimant] is feeling at present, I think she wanted me to say that she wasn't well enough to work at present, but I think she needs to stay in the workplace and focus on some of these issues with her therapist.
She has agreed to go away and think about these treatment options and I will be happy to review it later with her.
12. I still however continued to have certain days when I did not feel well enough to go to work and so I would call in sick. I started to sleep badly and felt tired all the time. My only focus was catching up on sleep and I would cancel social engagements after work as I felt too tired, and would not arrange any plans for the weekend.
13. On days when my medical condition was symptomatic I would find it a struggle to concentrate on even the simplest tasks, for example, proof-reading a client bulletin. I tried to manage this by avoiding doing anything technical when I felt foggy. I also suffered from anxiety at the time. Sometimes my anxiety would be so bad that I would find it paralysing and I would end up in tears and not be able to leave the house. Normally I enjoy the interaction of the office or a social situation but on those days I would feel scared of facing people.
THE EXPERT EVIDENCE
Depression is known to have an adverse effect on memory, cognitive ability and concentration. I would expect that depression requiring treatment with both an antidepressant and psychological therapy would have an adverse effect on anybody's day to day activities.
Thirdly, the Claimant had "asked me to deduce the effects of your condition if you were not receiving any treatment." As to that, she said:
It's clear to me that the symptoms [the Claimant] would suffer from without treatment would be much worse.
The fourth question "asked me to be specific with regard to your condition in May and June of 2008". She said:
I saw [the Claimant] specifically twice during that period. I discussed with her at that stage issues around taking time off for symptoms of depression. We discussed trying to encourage her employers to be flexible in terms of her working pattern. Please find enclosed a copy of both consultations from that period.
Dr Morris's report is distinctly summary and not quite explicit on the key points. Nevertheless, taking her answers together, it seems reasonably clear that she intended to express the opinion that the Claimant was in June 2008 suffering from a depression which had a substantial adverse effect on her ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities and which (though if that reading is correct this point is unnecessary) would have had a much more substantial effect but for the treatment which she was receiving.
As I understand it, whether someone is disabled under the Disability Discrimination Act is finally a legal not a medical decision. However, I can say that the medical evidence I have seen thus far does not point clearly one way or the other.
Overall, it seems possible that this is a case where what are in fact employment problems have been as it were medicalised and the diagnosis of some form of mild depression has been reached.
Certainly, I am not aware of any mental illness which produces lateness as a specific symptom.[3]
Nevertheless, this may still constitute a mental impairment because of the weak test in the Act, where, as I understand it, the condition does not have to be "clinically well recognised".
It sounds as though the problems, whatever they were, have been "long-term".
In respect of day to day activities, the general practitioner says that memory or ability to learn, concentrate or understand is affected adversely, although the very letter in which she does so seems to be in reply to a letter from the Claimant which would imply good intellectual functioning.
In summary therefore it would be likely that the debate about disability in this case would be about the strength of the medical evidence she has provided of adverse effect on normal everyday activities. My view would be that this evidence is weak from the psychiatric point of view.
THE TRIBUNAL'S REASONS
The only evidence that we have of deduced effect is the evidence of one line of Dr Morris's report in November 2008 and expanded slightly in December 2008, where she says that the symptoms that the Claimant would suffer from without treatment would be much worse. We remind ourselves that Dr Morris is a GP and not a specialist in any sense in psychiatric matters, and also she is in fact giving a view in November/December 2008 when the Claimant had not been taking Sertraline for about 4 or 5 months.
(1) It referred in general terms to section 1 and Schedule 1 of the Act and to the Guidance. It identified and summarised the relevant paragraph of Schedule 1, including para. 6.(2) It referred to the decision of this Tribunal in Goodwin v Patent Office [1999] ICR 302 and specifically to the observation of Morison P. in that case (at p. 309E) that:
The focus of attention required by the Act of 1995 is on the things that the applicant either cannot do or can only do with difficulty, rather than on the things that the person can do.We should also refer to a passage at p. 308 A-D, in which Morison P identified four "conditions" which the tribunal was required to consider, as follows:(1) The impairment condition. Does the applicant have an impairment which is either mental or physical?(2) The adverse effect condition. Does the impairment affect the applicant's ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities in one of the respects set out in paragraph 4(1) of Schedule 1 to the Act, and does it have an adverse effect?(3) The substantial condition. Is the adverse effect (upon the applicant's ability) substantial?(4) The long-term condition. Is the adverse effect (upon the applicant's ability) long-term?He continued:Frequently, there will be a complete overlap between conditions (3) and (4) but it will be as well to bear all four of them in mind. Tribunals may find it helpful to address each of the questions but at the same time be aware of the risk that disaggregation should not take one's eye off the whole picture.(3) It referred to the decision of this Tribunal in Morgan v Staffordshire University [2002] ICR 475, which concerned a claim of mental impairment, as authority for the proposition that "vague references to stress, anxiety and depression are unlikely to be sufficient".
(4) It referred to the decision of the Court of Appeal in Woodrup v London Borough of Southwark [2003] IRLR 111, which it said established that in a "deduced effect" case "clear medical evidence would be expected, not just the Applicant's own testimony".
Having regard to our findings of fact, and applying the appropriate law, and taking into account the parties' submissions, we have reached the following conclusions:
4.1 The first matter we have to decide is whether the Claimant has established that she is suffering from a mental impairment at the material time, which is June 2008. We have Dr MacLeod's contemporaneous or near contemporaneous evidence for February and April 2008 which we have found particularly helpful. As at February 2008, most of the Claimant's symptoms had resolved and she was functioning at or close to her normal level, and she was discharged by Dr MacLeod. However, although there were continuing problems when Dr MacLeod saw her again in April 2008, it would appear that it was the appraisal that had caused the problems, and Dr MacLeod could not differentiate reliably or found it very difficult to do so between some sort of impairment, such as a depressive illness, and just generally a sense of despondency, demotivation and anxiety, which was a natural response to that negative appraisal. That it is a difficulty we find generally with this case. The Claimant's symptoms of extreme tiredness, anxiety because of work difficulty, getting up in the morning, not wanting to socialise with larger groups are these reliable and consistent symptoms of clinical depression or, as Dr Brener puts it, Sunday night syndrome, or, as Dr Gill puts it, possible medicalisation of employment problems? We have to decide whether the Claimant has established, and the onus is on her, that she had at the relevant time, if not clinical depression some form of mental impairment, not just stress or anxiety which is not likely to be enough. We note that the Claimant was fit to work at the material time, according to Dr Brener, and could indulge in a wide range of other activities, travelling, studying, living on her own etc. We accept, of course, that the focus is what she could not do rather than what she could do. There is very little evidence really about what she could not do, save difficulty in getting up in the morning, socialising with large groups (except apparently large groups of lawyers), some tearfulness, reading books or watching whole films. We have had to ask ourselves whether this is sufficient to establish that she suffered an impairment within the meaning of the Act. We have come to the conclusion that the Claimant has not established that she had, at the material time, a sufficiently well-defined impairment to qualify for protection under the statute. That could be the end of the matter. However, if we are wrong about this we are going to reach conclusions about other matters as well.
4.2 We turn to substantial adverse effect on normal day to day activities, assuming for this purpose that the Claimant has established a mental impairment. We feel we have to look at all the activities, including work-related activities, in the round. The fact is that the Claimant could do her work so far as the quality of it was concerned, even if she had some difficulty with her attendance. In other words she could in fact concentrate on difficult work because she could do it; and she could concentrate on language studies, she could travel, she could arrange and attend conferences, all requiring those aspects of normal day to day activities that we particularly have to look at; namely, memory, concentration, and the ability to learn and understand. There is minimal evidence that there was any substantial adverse effect on any of this, or of what the Claimant could not do. If the Claimant struggled with technical documents, and really there is not much evidence that she did, then this was not a normal day to day activity, according to the guidance that we have read. We note further that the Claimant was able to and did make job applications to [the other City firm], and indeed to the Respondent, so she was able to go through with this; and she was successful with the Respondent, up to withdrawal of the offer, so she must have performed well both in her application form and presumably at interview. So far as mobility is concerned, if that is in fact something that we have to look at, the Claimant is not saying that she could not leave the house. She sometimes had difficulty getting moving in the morning, but that is another matter. Usually she was able to function normally; she was able to go shopping, look after herself, go to work, travel etc. We do not find there was any substantial adverse impact with respect to mobility. So far as deduced effect is concerned, and of course we note that the case was pleaded as a deduced effect case, we conclude the Claimant did not adduce any clear and cogent evidence of this, as is required following the case of Woodrup, as we have already referred to in our findings of fact. We are therefore quite satisfied that the Claimant has not established that there was a substantial, in other words more than minor or trivial, adverse effect on her ability to carry out normal day to day activities.
4.3 So far as long term effect is concerned, it is not really necessary for us to deal with this. However, we would say that we are not persuaded that, even in 2005, the Claimant has established that she had an impairment that had a substantial adverse effect on her ability to carry out normal day to day activities. If we had been, we would have concluded that depression is long term because it is likely to recur.
(1) It was evidently seeking to address systematically the four questions identified by Morison P in Goodwin (see para. 31 (2) above), although it has unobjectionably elided his questions (2) and (3).(2) As regards Morison P's question (1) impairment it held in para. 4.1 that the Claimant had not shown that she was suffering from clinical depression, or any other impairment, as at June 2008.
(3) In reaching that decision it made a distinction between, on the one hand, "clinical depression", which would be an impairment, and on the other hand, "as Dr Brener puts it, Sunday night syndrome, or as Dr Gill puts it, a possible medicalisation of employment problems", which would not. That "non-impairment" alternative is not very well expressed[4]; but in our view it is adequately clear that what the Tribunal meant was a situation where the Claimant was suffering symptoms of low mood in its phrase, "despondency, demotivation and anxiety" - not because of "clinical depression" but simply as a reaction to problems at work. We return to this distinction below.
(4) It seems, though this is not explicit and is arguably contradicted by the observation in para. 4.3, that the Tribunal accepted that the Claimant was, or at least may have been, suffering from a clinical depression prior to February 2008. But if so it was satisfied that she had recovered from that depression by that date - hence the importance attached to Dr MacLeod's letter of 5 February 2008 discharging her (see para. 19 above) and that her symptoms thereafter were not the result of depression. The previous history was thus, in effect, irrelevant.
(5) At para. 4.2 it considered by way of alternative Morison P's questions (2) and (3) and held that even if the Claimant was suffering from an impairment it did not have a substantial adverse effect on her ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities. It dealt with the question of "deduced effect" see para. 8 (4) above by cross-referring to the passage quoted at para. 30 above, which questions the weight to be given to Dr Morris' evidence.
(6) At para. 4.3 it briefly addressed the question of long-term effect Morison P's question (4) but avowedly on the basis that it did not arise. The reasoning is somewhat telescoped but it can be spelt out as follows. If contrary to the Tribunal's previous findings the Claimant was suffering in June 2008 from an impairment which had a substantial adverse effect on her ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities, the essential question was whether that condition should be treated as going back into the period 2005-2007, which would necessarily make it "long-term" because, as the Tribunal put it, "depression is likely to recur". The Tribunal held that it should not be so treated, because it was not satisfied that at any time during that period any impairment that she may have suffered had a sufficiently substantial adverse effect.
THE APPEAL
Introduction
(1) The correct approach to the impairment issue(2) "Clinical depression"
(3) The sustainability of the Tribunal's findings and reasoning
(4) Conclusion.
(1) The Correct Approach to the Impairment Issue
[This] appeal raises a point of importance relating to the meaning of "impairment", particularly since the repeal of Sch. 1, s. 1(1). It is submitted that the effect of the repeal of Sch. 1, s. 1(1), is to remove any requirement that a claimant prove the existence of an impairment will be deduced from whether or not there is a substantial adverse effect on the claimant's ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities. If there is such an effect, then the claimant will necessarily have an impairment.
(a) where the impairment is excluded under the 1996 Regulations (see para. 8 (1) above);(b) where the case falls under para. 6A of Schedule 1 (see para. 8 (5) above); and
(c) where it is necessary to identify the underlying impairment in order to determine the issue of long-term effect.
Mr Laddie accepted that in many or most cases asking the two questions separately may create no actual difficulty, because identifying the impairment will generally be uncontroversial and any issue is likely to relate to the nature and extent of the adverse effect. But in other cases and specifically in some cases of mental impairment addressing the impairment question first carries the risk of the tribunal getting bogged down in difficult medical, or indeed metaphysical, questions where clear answers may simply be unavailable: precise diagnosis and/or aetiology are notoriously difficult in cases of mental ill-health or incapacity. Provided there is an impairment, recognised in a common-sense way by the effects which it has produced, such questions simply do not need to be answered. As he and Ms Darwin put it in their skeleton argument:
by elevating impairment into a separate hurdle for a claimant to jump a tribunal runs the risk of requiring the claimant to prove too much.
A3. The definition requires that the effects which a person may experience must arise from a physical or mental impairment. The term mental or physical impairment should be given its ordinary meaning. In many cases, there will be no dispute whether a person has an impairment. Any disagreement is more likely to be about whether the effects of the impairment are sufficient to fall within the definition. Even so, it may sometimes be necessary to decide whether a person has an impairment so as to be able to deal with the issues about its effects.
A4. Whether a person is disabled for the purposes of the Act is generally determined by reference to the effect that an impairment has on that person's ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities .
Paras. A7-A8 read:
A7. It may not always be possible, nor is it necessary, to categorise a condition as either a physical or a mental impairment. The underlying cause of the impairment may be hard to establish. There may be adverse effects which are both physical and mental in nature. Furthermore, effects of a mainly physical nature may stem from an underlying mental impairment, and vice versa.
A8. It is not necessary to consider how an impairment is caused What it is important to consider is the effect of an impairment not its cause provided that it is not an excluded condition.
(1) It remains good practice in every case for a tribunal to state conclusions separately on the questions of impairment and of adverse effect (and, in the case of adverse effect, the questions of substantiality and long-term effect arising under it) as recommended in Goodwin.
(2) However, in reaching those conclusions the tribunal should not proceed by rigid consecutive stages. Specifically, in cases where there may be a dispute about the existence of an impairment it will make sense, for the reasons given in para. 38 above, to start by making findings about whether the claimant's ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities is adversely affected (on a long-term basis), and to consider the question of impairment in the light of those findings.
(3) These observations are not intended to, and we do not believe that they do, conflict with the terms of the Guidance or with the authorities referred to above. In particular, we do not regard the Ripon College and McNicol cases as having been undermined by the repeal of para. 1 (1) of Schedule 1, and they remain authoritative save insofar as they specifically refer to the repealed provisions.
(2) "Clinical Depression"
(3) The Sustainability of the Tribunal's Findings and Reasoning
The Period at the Department: 2005 May 2006
I invite the Tribunal not to be distracted by evidence at earlier period Certainly 2005 C suffering from depression - Question was she suffering in June 2008
That is not, we accept, a concession that the Claimant was suffering in 2005/6 from an impairment which satisfied the adverse effects condition; but it reflects a realistic acceptance that on the evidence her condition in 2005 was substantially worse than it was in 2008.)
The Period at the City firm: up to mid-2008
April June 2008
(a) The Claimant had, on the Tribunal's findings, recovered from that previous illness. That did not of course mean that she could not suffer a further similar illness; but it makes the natural assumption referred to above less straightforward.(b) The fresh symptoms were very clearly triggered by a specific adverse event namely the unfavourable assessment. Again, that does not mean that they might not constitute, or evidence, a clinical depression; but an adverse appraisal is, as Dr MacLeod said, something which would be liable to produce a reaction of despondency and anxiety even in the absence of any history of depression.
(c) Neither Dr MacLeod (who had readily diagnosed depression in 2007) nor Dr Brener made an unequivocal diagnosis of depression at the time. Dr MacLeod discussed explicitly the possibility that the Claimant's current symptoms had "a strong reactive component": see para. 20 above. It is true that Dr Brener's report (para. 21) refers to "some biological symptoms of depression" and suggests treatment with (different) anti-depressants; but it falls short of a clear diagnosis.
(d) It is noteworthy that the Claimant herself sought no treatment for depression after 16 June and stopped taking anti-depressants shortly afterwards. She explained that by saying that the stresses on her diminished when she stopped work, but that explanation is by no means unequivocally helpful to her on this point.
(e) Dr Gill thought it questionable whether she was suffering from depression.
In those circumstances it is impossible to say that the Tribunal's conclusion was perverse or, therefore, for us to substitute a decision that the Claimant was suffering from an impairment in June 2008.
(4) Conclusion
(B) THE PERCEIVED DISABILITY CASE
(1) The persons responsible for the pleaded acts complained of (see para. 13 above) believed that the Claimant was disabled and acted on that ground. (This of course is a factual contention which has not yet been adjudicated.)(2) To subject an employee (or potential employee) to a detriment on that ground is prohibited by EU Council Directive 2000/78/EC (the so-called "Framework Directive"), which proscribes, among other things, discrimination "on the grounds of disability" (see art. 1). Although the Directive does not explicitly extend to cases of perceived disability that is, cases where the putative victim is not in fact disabled but the putative discriminator acts on the basis that he is it can be inferred that such discrimination is covered, not only from the language of art. 1 but also from the reasoning of the European Court of Justice in Coleman v Attridge Law [2008] ICR 1128, which was concerned with the analogous case of "associative discrimination".
(3) Although on its face that prohibition cannot be given effect to in domestic law because the 1995 Act confers rights only on "disabled persons" see section 4, quoted at para. 5 above - the statute is capable of being construed, taking the broad approach endorsed by the House of Lords in Ghaidan v Godin-Mendoza [2004] 2 AC 557, so as to dispense with that requirement. Again, the Claimant relies on the analogy with the case of associative discrimination: see EBR Attridge LLP v Coleman [2010] ICR 242.
CONCLUSION
Note 1 This term does not appear in the Schedule, but it is used in the Secretary of States Guidance to which we refer below. [Back] Note 2 We should mention, because the Tribunal refers to it in a passage which we quote below, that there were in fact two versions of Dr Morriss report, the earlier being from November 2008: the differences are of no significance for our purposes. [Back] Note 3 We are bound to say that this comment has a snide tone which we hope was unintended. It appears from the Rood Lane material that depression can cause disturbance of sleep patterns, which may make it difficult for a patient to get up in the morning. [Back] Note 4 Sunday night syndrome was not Dr Breners term but his quotation of something said by the Claimant. It is not in fact a phrase with which we are familiar, but we take it to refer to a dread of having to return to work typically experienced at the end of the week-end, but which the Claimant said that she now felt all the time. On that basis it is not really apt as a description of the alternative explanation for the Claimants symptoms: it describes the symptom but says nothing about the cause.
[Back] Note 5 But NB that clinical depression may also be triggered by adverse circumstances or events, so that the distinction can not be neatly characterised as being between cases where the symptoms can be shown to be caused/triggered by adverse circumstances or events and cases where they cannot. [Back] Note 6 As noted above, we were sent subsequent to the hearing the Report of the Joint Committee on the bill which became the Disability Discrimination Act 2005. Paras. 71-75 consider the proposed repeal of para. 1 (1). The Committee summarises a number of submissions made to it. Although various points are made, the main thrust of the case for repeal is indeed that question of whether a mental impairment constituted a clinically well-recognised illness too often involved disagreement between psychiatric experts, particularly in controversial areas such as autistic spectrum disorder, and that the increased costs and uncertainty thereby generated were a disincentive to genuinely disabled persons bringing claims. The Committee thought that the focus should be on what effect the condition is having on the person
, not to find a clinically well-recognised name for the condition (para. 79). [Back] Note 7 It appears from the Report of the Committee and the evidence referred to in it that psychiatrists recognise in principle the existence of a condition producing recurrent episodes of this kind but that there may be controversy as to questions of aetiology and classification; and inevitably diagnosis in particular cases may be difficult. [Back] Note 8 It would seem, though the point was not in issue before us, that the construction of likely adopted by the House of Lords in Boyle v SCA Packaging Ltd [2009] ICR 1056 in considering para. 6 (1) of Schedule 1 would apply equally to para. 2 (2). [Back]