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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Tasneem v Dudley Group Of Hospitals NHS Trust (Contract of Employment : no sub-topic) [2010] UKEAT 0232_10_2906 (29 June 2011)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2011/0232_10_2906.html
Cite as: [2010] UKEAT 232_10_2906, [2010] UKEAT 0232_10_2906

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Appeal No. UKEAT/0232/10/CEA

 

 

EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL

58 VICTORIA EMBANKMENT, LONDON EC4Y 0DS

 

 

At the Tribunal

On 26 October 2010 &

10 January 2011

Judgment handed down on 29 June 2011

 

 

Before

HIS HONOUR JUDGE PUGSLEY

MR K EDMONDSON JP

SIR ALISTAIR GRAHAM KBE

 

 

 

 

 

MR M S TASNEEM APPELLANT

 

 

 

 

 

 

DUDLEY GROUP OF HOSPITALS NHS TRUST RESPONDENTS

 

 

 

Transcript of Proceedings

 

JUDGMENT

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

APPEARANCES

 

 

 

 

 

For the Appellant

MR MICHAEL HARTMAN

(of Counsel)

Direct Public Access

For the Respondent

MR TARIQ SADIQ

(of Counsel)

Instructed by:

Mills & Reeve LLP Solicitors

78-84 Colmore Row

Birmingham

B3 2AB

 

 


SUMMARY

CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT

UNFAIR DISMISSAL

RACE DISCRIMINATION

AGE DISCRIMINATION

FIXED TERM REGULATIONS

 

 

In this case the Claimant was a locum consultant.  The Department of Health proposed certain changes.  Because the Claimant was not on the email system, he did not receive the relevant email.  The Employment Tribunal made the express finding that he knew of the contents and his failure to apply for the new contract was the Claimant’s decision, which he made for his own reasons.  The Employment Tribunal found that the instructions for the notification of the new terms was not incorporated into the Claimant’s contract.  The EAT agreed but held in any event this was academic since the Claimant had ample knowledge of the proposed changes.  The EAT dismissed the appeal on the other grounds as well, namely that he was discriminated against by virtue of his fixed term status, his racial origin and his age.

 

 

 


HIS HONOUR JUDGE PUGSLEY

 

1.            The Employment Tribunal sitting in Birmingham dismissed claims for breach of contract, less favourable treatment on grounds of fixed term status, race discrimination and unfair dismissal.  The hearing took some eight days and the Tribunal spent a further 4 days deliberating before the decision was finally promulgated on the 9 March 2009.  The appeal was given a day’s time estimate and when we rose on 26 October 2010 we had still not concluded the Appellant’s submissions.  We reconvened on 10 January 2011.

 

2.            Mr Hartman who has appeared for the Claimant has recognised that all members of this Tribunal have found some of his arguments highly frustrating.  Every member of this Tribunal has made it clear that many of his submissions have not identified an issue of law but have been an attempt to argue issues of fact which had already been decided by the Employment Tribunal. Moreover despite having his written submissions we confess that none of us have found Mr Hartman’s oral submissions well structured or clear.  Moreover although he has cited authorities to us we have not found that such authorities have assisted us since they were not relevant to the particular factual context that we are considering. We have been alive to the danger that the plethora of issues that Mr Hartman has raised may have smothered a real issue which ought to be considered.  We should say that Mr Hartman has always treated our interruptions with great courtesy.

 

The factual background

3.            The Claimant was born in Pakistan and is of Asian ethnic origin.  He trained in Pakistan and held certain posts there before emigrating to Ireland.  In 1993 he moved to England and began a series of registrar posts during which time he passed his FRCS examinations.  The Claimant took up his post as a locum consultant with the Respondent hospital on 1 September 2003.

 

4.            During the Claimant’s employment with the Respondents there were two related issues which were to affect his employment.  In September 2003 the NHS resources department sent a letter to all NHS employing authorities indicating that they give all consultants the opportunity of indicating by 31 October whether they wished to give a formal commitment to the new contract.  The Claimant was not on the email system so this correspondence was not copied to him.

 

5.            However the Tribunal found that the Claimant was well aware of the relevant information and was free to make an application to go on to the new contract but for his own reasons only applied much later.  Further the Tribunal found that the Claimant never did accept the terms of the offer to go on to the new contract.

 

6.            The Respondents were worried that General Practitioners were expressing concern about the quality of the service which the hospital was providing.  There were real fears that the hospital might lose its teaching status and this would lead to a further deterioration in reputation with the consequent difficulty of attracting high quality staff.  The hospital was keen to redress the balance between the small number of substantive consultants and the larger number of locum consultants.  In the summer of 2006 permission was given to appoint a further two consultants.  There was a delay in the recruitment process.  The Claimant was short listed but was not appointed.  The Respondents, having appointed substantive consultants, then reduced the number of locum consultants as there was no increase in work which would have justified the same number of locums. The object of the exercise was to redress the balance of locum to substantive consultants and not to increase the overall number of posts.  The Tribunal found that the dismissal of the Claimant was fair as being for a permissible reason namely for some other substantial reason.

 

The Appeal; general principles

7.            On reading this decision there is no obvious misdirection of law.  The path by which the Tribunal reaches its destination is well marked.  The findings of fact it makes are clear and comprehensive. The conclusions it reaches are justified by the findings of fact it makes. It avoids the error of circular reasoning which allows conclusions to become reasons.  The tone of the decision is well balanced.  The Tribunal decision does not give a blanket endorsement of managerial decisions; it voiced its concern at certain aspects of the procedure at the interview for the substantive consultant (see Para 7.10).

 

8.            The central thrust of Mr Hartman’s argument rests on an implicit premise, which has never quite surfaced as an explicit submission, namely that the Claimant was cheated of a job to which he was entitled, and the fact he was not appointed is in itself conclusive evidence that he was the victim of discriminatory practices.

 

9.            Before dealing with the specific grounds of appeal we consider it appropriate to take an overview of the whole decision. The Tribunal had to deal with specific issues and it made detailed findings of fact about these issues.  However the myopic scrutiny of particular issues can blur the bigger picture.  Implicit in the way this decision has been drafted is that the Tribunal accepted that the hospital had real problems in improving the quality of the service it provided.  The Tribunal examined in detail the actions which were taken.  It is clear from the reasoning of its decision that it rejected the suggestion that the cumulative effect of the various decisions the Respondents made were dictated by discriminatory assumptions or attitudes.  On its findings the changes were inspired by the legitimate concerns of the Respondents to improve the quality of its service.

 

10.         It is understandable that the Claimant should be hurt and upset. It is humiliating not to be promoted within an institution in which one has worked for many years. Yet the disappointed candidate still has a job even though it may rankle that he is now subordinate to a former colleague or may have to induct an outsider to do the job to which he was not appointed. In this case the Claimant has had to swallow a much more bitter pill in that by not being selected to be a substantive consultant the locum post he had carried out for years disappeared.

 

11.         Whilst this Tribunal is mindful of the sense of injustice that the Claimant must feel it is pertinent to reiterate the trite point that this Tribunal can only intervene if there is an error of law.  It is not for this Tribunal to substitute its own judgement on the facts for that of the Employment Tribunal.  In the case of Piglowska v Piglowski [1999] WLR 1360 Lord Hoffman (with whose speech all of the court concurred) laid down the principles on which an appellate court should act.  He pointed out that the fact that the judge at first instance had the advantage of seeing the parties is well understood as regards to credibility but it was not as well appreciated that this rule applies as to the judge’s evaluation of those facts.

 

12.         Secondly, Lord Hoffmann noted that all judgements will be capable of being better expressed and that the reasons given in a judgement should be read on the basis that the judge, unless he has demonstrated to the contrary, knew how to perform his functions and what matters he should take into account and an appellate court should resist the temptation to subvert the rule that they should not substitute their own discretion for that of a judge by a narrow textual analysis which enables them to claim that he misdirected himself.

 

13.         Thirdly, Lord Hoffmann pointed out that courts are making value judgements about issues and this means there must be an ambit of latitude for the exercise of discretion.  The final point is that there must be some proportionality between the issues at stake and the legal resources of the parties and the community which it is appropriate to spend.

 

The grounds of appeal

14.         There are essentially four issues which the Appellant invites us to consider:-

 

(1) Breach of Contract (Grounds 1-3): namely that the Tribunal incorrectly construed the Claimant’s contract.

 

(2) Less favourable treatment on grounds of fixed term status (grounds 4 and 5), namely that the Tribunal was in error in concluding that the failure to inform the Claimant of the opportunity to be transferred to the new contract was not on the grounds of his fixed term status.

 

(3) Time Limit; (Ground 6) a complaint was in error in failing to consider whether the Claimant’s claim was in time.

 

(4) Discrimination on grounds of age and race and unfair dismissal (Grounds 7 and 8).

 

15.         The third issue casts an interesting insight as to the conduct of this case.  The Tribunal decided to hear the case on its merits and leave open the issue of jurisdiction. It is not immediately obvious why a Claimant should seek to appeal against a procedure which was not detrimental to his interest.  This ground of appeal was not pursued.

 

The breach of contract

16.         This Tribunal is mystified by this ground of appeal.  No one is disputing because the Claimant was not on the email system he did not receive the correspondence from the Department about transfer to the new contract.  However it is clear from the decision that the Claimant knew all about the terms of the new contract from colleagues; he had the means to find out more and that he consulted a BMA adviser about the position.  The Tribunal noted that the Claimant did not suggest that he had been ignorant of the existence of the new contract (paragraph 6.3).

 

17.         The Tribunal observed that there was no suggestion that the Respondents had suppressed any information.  In paragraph 3.12 the Tribunal made the finding that the Claimant knew of his right to apply to be transferred to the new contract and the potential benefits in doing so. Although he was in direct contact with the appropriate representative of the Respondents on issues concerning his contract the Claimant elected for reasons unconnected with any failing on the part of the Respondents not to pursue his application to transfer to the new contract until 2006.

 

18.         Assume, by way of example, that it is a term of an employment contract that all employees will be notified of internal vacancies.  The employer fails to comply with this requirement but an employee learns about a vacancy from a colleague.  If the employee decides not to apply for the post there are no practical consequences in the breach of contract.  If the employee decides to apply for the job but is not appointed the only relevance of the fact that he learnt about the vacancy from a colleague rather than his employer is if the failure of the employer can be construed as a deliberate act of the employer from which an inference of a lack of good faith or a discriminatory attitude could be drawn.

 

19.         The findings of the Tribunal as to the knowledge and behaviour of the Claimant are such that in our view whether the Respondents were in breach of contract is somewhat academic.  In deference to the arguments put before us we should deal with this ground of appeal.  The issue is whether the Respondents were under a contractual duty to inform the Claimant of the provisions of the new contract.

 

20.         The Tribunal reviewed the correspondence that passed between the Department and the NHS employing authorities.  The Tribunal considered the letter of 11 September 2003 and came to the view that it gave a recommended timetable for the implementation for the new contract and concluded that it was not intended to impose a contractual obligation (see paragraphs 3.2, and 6.2).  We do not consider that the Tribunal can be said to be in error. Of course every case has to be decided in its particular context but it would be a somewhat surprising position if every missive from Whitehall about the implementation of staffing changes were to be incorporated into an individual contract of employment.

 

21.         The Tribunal did consider whether it could imply a term that the Respondents should have formally informed the Claimant of the pending changes.  The Tribunal noted in paragraph 3.12 that neither the Claimant nor his counsel identified any implied term that had been breached by the failure to inform the Claimant of the outcome of the negotiations concerning the new contract.  The Tribunal directed themselves in accordance with the guidelines of the House of Lords authority in Scally v Southern Health and Social Services Board [1999] IRLR 215.  The Tribunal’s direction of the law was impeccable. An employee cannot reasonably be expected to be aware of a change in pension arrangements.  The consequence of the failure is that an employee is not informed he or she may lose a valuable right to take advantage of the change.  In the context of this case on the Tribunal‘s findings the affected employees could reasonably be expected to know about the changes and as a matter of fact the Claimant very obviously did know.

 

22.         The subsidiary grounds of appeal under this head are in our view simply unarguable.  The contention that the Claimant accepted the terms of the Respondent in respect of the new contract and the Respondent breached those terms is not sustained on the basis of the Tribunal’s findings.  The Tribunal decision chronicles the negotiations surrounding the new contract in paragraph 3.14 through to 3.19.  In brief the Claimant was sent a revised offer of the Respondent’s terms and conditions and was asked to sign it and return it.  He failed to do so. No contract was agreed.  The Tribunal was quite correct to conclude that the Claimant had not been transferred to the new contract.  The Claimant had not given his assent to his terms of the offer.

 

23.         The Claimant’s contention that he should have been offered a new contract on each occasion that his locum contract was renewed as he was being offered a new post is based on there being a contractual duty imposed by the letter of 11 September 2003.  In any event as the Tribunal found at paragraph 6.5 on its true analysis all that was happening was that an existing contract was being renewed.

 

Less favourable treatment on grounds of fixed-term status (grounds 4 &5)

24.         These grounds of appeal are in large part subsumed within the other grounds of the appeal and the findings of fact made by the Tribunal in other contexts.  The Tribunal made the finding that the failure to inform the Claimant arose from the fact that the Claimant was not on the email system.  The Tribunal accepted Ms Clarke’s evidence that the letter was intended to be sent to all consultants and the Tribunal found that there was no evidence to suggest there was a policy to exclude locums from the receipt of such information (para 6.7).  Moreover the Tribunal found that the issues concerning seniority and back pay was not due to any discriminatory policy (see paragraph 6.8; 6.9; 6.10).  We cannot see that in these carefully crafted paragraphs there is any error of law.

 

Race and age discrimination

25.         The central plank of the Claimant’s case is that there was a deliberate series of discriminatory actions against him which were evidence of a plot to ensure that young Christians were appointed rather than a more mature Asian. The Tribunal identified with great precision the arguments which were put both in written and verbal submissions.  As we have already observed the Claimant’s case before us and the Employment Tribunal rests on this fundamental premise.  In paragraph 7 the Tribunal set out its conclusions.  In paragraph 7.1 the Tribunal notes that the Claimant was short-listed for a substantive consultant post.  There were 5 white candidates who were short- listed.  There were 8 white candidates who were not shortlisted.  Of the 8 white candidates who were not short-listed 6 were younger than the Claimant.  As the Tribunal observed if the selection panel had been intent on pursuing the agenda of appointing young Christians it is not explicable that the selection panel should have proceeded  to carry out the shortlisting in this way and then to select 2 Asian candidates out of the 4 successful candidates.

 

26.         The Tribunal went into meticulous detail in paragraph 7.2 in considering the argument that Mr Mifsud, Mr Ahmed and Mr Brennan were the three members of the panel who had conspired to ensure that the Claimant was not appointed.  Ironically Mr Mifsud scored the Claimant more highly than one of the successful candidates a Mr Quraishi.  The Tribunal accepted that Mr Quraishi was appointed on merit and that his appointment was not, as claimed by the Claimant, automatic.

 

27.         The Tribunal considered at lengths the remarks and emails upon which the Claimant relied and whether talk about the need for new blood were euphemisms for discriminatory attitudes to age or race.  The Tribunal made specific findings that the management had real and genuine fears about the quality of the service offered and the emphasis on the quality of the candidates was not an indirect way of referring to race or age.

 

28.         The Tribunal rejected the suggestion that the Claimant was disadvantaged by being the first candidate as devoid of merit making the obvious point that it could equally be said that the first candidate had the benefit of an interviewing panel which would have been fresh and more receptive than being the last candidate on the second day of interviewing.

 

29.         We are well aware that those who apply for positions in institutions in which they have worked for many years feel frustrated that their performance in an interview over an hour or so can seem more important than years of faithful service. This is understandable. Yet the importance given to an interview applies to all candidates and is not in itself discriminatory.  In paragraph 7.11 the Tribunal found that the overwhelming evidence was that the Claimant had interviewed badly. He appeared to lack insight into absorbing the question and giving a considered response. The Tribunal pointed out that a substantive consultant had managerial responsibilities which did not fall on the shoulders of locum consultants. Other candidates clearly demonstrated that they had given some thought to how the department might develop and how they saw their involvement in that process.

 

30.         Moreover it was clear that, as the Tribunal found in paragraph 3.39 of the decision, there was a fundamental clash in the Claimant’s agenda and that of the interviewing committee.  The Claimant’s position was that he was a skilled and experienced orthopaedic surgeon who had demonstrated his ability over three years.  It was natural that the Claimant should think that he was the obvious candidate who should have been appointed.

 

31.         The panel’s starting point was very different.  In their view all the candidates who were shortlisted were competent surgeons.  Mr Ahmed’s evidence was that the panel were concerned at the quality and duration of a candidate’s training. Specialised training at a centre of excellence would be likely to carry more weight than short periods of training interspersed with periods at more generalised centres.  Whilst obviously technical questions were asked by the medically qualified the whole panel was concerned to see what communication skills each candidate had and the extent to which the candidate would contribute to the team.

 

32.         The Tribunal pointed out, at paragraph 7.9, that the Claimant was hard pressed to point to evidence of less favourable treatment in the selection process for substantive appointments of orthopaedic surgeons.  We agree with HHJ Richardson’s comment in dismissing this appeal that the complaints are an attempt to re-argue conclusions of fact that the Tribunal had reached.

 

33.         Discrimination cases have developed a body of case law.  HHJ Richardson described the directions of law as being impeccable.  Before us it has been argued that this Tribunal that the decision gives no direction as to the cumulative weight of evidence and Qureshi v University of Manchester [2001] ICR 863 has been cited to us as authority.  We reject the suggestion that there is a duty on those writing decisions to set out every authority which has informed the decision.  In the context of this decision it is clear, as we have already observed, that the Tribunal were not looking merely at a shopping list of complaints and adjudicating upon each matter without taking in the overall context of its findings and seeing whether on the totality of its findings of fact an inference of discriminatory attitudes could be drawn.  This is not a case in which the Tribunal adopted a piecemeal, narrow, compartmentalised approach which made it impossible for them to draw any inference from the totality of the evidence.

 

The unfair dismissal claim

34.         Ground eight of the appeal, namely that the decision to dismiss the Claimant was on grounds of race and age, is in some respects a variation of the same theme that there was a plot to discriminate against the Claimant on the grounds of race and age. 

 

35.         In March 2007 Mr Ahmed had written to the Claimant alerting him to the fact to the possibility of his locum appointment ending as a result of the appointment of a substantive consultant.  The subsequent course of events is chronicled in the Tribunal’s decision in paragraph 3.44 onwards culminating in the dismissal of his appeal.

 

36.         As we have indicated we have considerable sympathy for the Claimant.  Not only did the Claimant fail to secure a substantive post; the creation of that substantive post led to his locum job being absorbed and therefore to his dismissal. The Tribunal deal with the matter in paragraph 8 of the decision.

 

37.         The Tribunal pointed out that it was common practice in the NHS when a substantive post is created for the locum position not to be renewed unless there was growing demand.  It noted that the Claimant had not claimed the reason was redundancy.  On the analysis of Mrs Justice Slade in Shrewsbury & Telford Trust UKEAT/0499/08 the Tribunal were correct in finding there was no redundancy.  The work the Claimant had done was predominantly lower limb work and this work was now covered by substantive consultants.

 

38.         In the case of Terry v East Sussex County Council [1976] ICR 536 (EAT) Phillips J held that dismissal by non renewable of a fixed term might, but did not necessarily constitute, a substantial other reason.  The matter is not extensively analysed in this decision.  One does not need to have an extensive education in the classics to appreciate that locum tenens, abbreviated in common parlance to locum, means holding the place.  In the context of hospital medicine we consider that the Tribunal had abundant evidence before it to conclude that this dismissal was fair and that the dismissal was for a substantial other reason.

 

39.         The Tribunal accepted the need the hospital had to reassure general practitioners as to the quality of the service it provided and that altering the balance between substantive and locum consultants was an important part of that process.  The Tribunal were meticulous in examining the evidence and they reached a careful and considered conclusion. Whilst we have every sympathy for Mr Tasneem we simply cannot allow that sympathy to blind us to the fact that in our view none of the grounds of appeal raise issues of law.  In these circumstances we have no alternative but to dismiss this appeal.

 

 


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