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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Hinton v Argos Ltd (Victimisation Discrimination : Whistleblowing) [2011] UKEAT 0569_11_0710 (7 October 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2011/0569_11_0710.html Cite as: [2011] UKEAT 0569_11_0710, [2011] UKEAT 569_11_710 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR MICHAEL PAULIN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Lyons Davidson Solicitors Park House 87 Burlington Road New Malden Surrey KT3 4QP |
SUMMARY
VICTIMISATION DISCRIMINATION
Whistleblowing
Protected disclosure
The Employment Tribunal clearly found the Claimant was dismissed fairly by reason of redundancy. That finding meant that the claim that he was dismissed for whistleblowing failed. There was no error of law.
It is reasonably arguable that the claim of per-employment detriments which failed as a matter of construction of Employment Rights Act 1996 s43B and application of Cavendish Munro Professional Risks Management Ltd v Geduld was wrong.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
Introduction
Procedural background
"1.2 Unlawful detriments by a series of acts or failures to act on the ground that the Claimant made a protected disclosure within s.43A Employment Rights Act 1996. He claims that there were two protected disclosures both relating to a unilateral variation of his contract of employment by the Respondent by varying his hours of work which amounted to a breach of the contract. He claimed that this was a disclosure of information which, in his reasonable belief, tended to show that the Respondent had failed, was failing or was likely to fail to comply with a legal obligation to which it was subject.
1.3 Automatically unfair dismissal under s.103A Employment Rights Act 1996 on the ground that the reason or the principal reason for his dismissal was that he had made a protected disclosure.
1.4 Unfair dismissal under s.98 Employment Rights Act 1996. The Claimant accepted that a redundancy situation existed within the meaning of s.139 of the Act but claimed that the dismissal was procedurally unfair because the section criteria were not objective, there was no meaningful consultation and no meaningful steps taken to secure alternative employment for the Claimant."
"Grounds one and two are certainly arguable (I would say, in passing, that it is not helpful to set out supporting argument at great length as this Notice of Appeal does - the purpose of the grounds is to identify the legal error alleged, not to argue it at great length).
But even if they are successful, they face the difficulty that the Tribunal plainly found, for reasons set out particularly in paragraphs 38 to 41, that the whole process which led to the Claimant's redundancy and dismissal had nothing to do with the Claimant's grievances and was genuinely about his suitability for the CSM role and about redundancy. Ground five alleges that this conclusion at least in part was perverse, but I can see nothing perverse about it. In the end, therefore, as far as I can see from the Notice of Appeal and the reasons of the Tribunal, the protected disclosure points would lead nowhere even if they were successful.
I would add that Ground five mentions in passing that the Employment Tribunal curtailed cross examination - but it does not allege that this was an error of law or a procedural irregularity, and the amount of time allowed for cross examination is a matter of case management very much in the discretion of the Tribunal.
Ground three relates to the Tribunal's assessment of fairness on the alternative basis that this was, as the Respondent asserted, a redundancy case. The Tribunal considered this aspect fully, particularly in paragraphs 38 to 46, and I see no error of law in its reasoning.
Ground four relates to alternative employment. This is sufficiently addressed in paragraph 44 of the Tribunal's reasons. The 'subordinate employment' point was plainly a very long fall-back point, given the Claimant's primary case, and the Tribunal deal with it adequately. The Claimant had job vacancy lists - he did not provide any evidence that he had applied for any alternative roles either above or below his current grade.
For these reasons, while I accept that the points relating to protected disclosures are arguable, I do not consider that there are reasonable grounds for appealing on a question of law to the Appeal Tribunal."
The facts
"In view of this finding, neither the claim for unlawful detriment under s.47B(1) of the Act, nor the claim for automatic unfair dismissal under s.103A of the Act can succeed."
Submissions and discussion
Further steps