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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Nkengfack v London Borough Of Southwark [2001] EWCA Civ 1760 (8 November 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/1760.html Cite as: [2001] EWCA Civ 1760 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Royal Courts of Justice Strand London WC2 Thursday, 8th November 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
CECILIA NKENGFACK | ||
Claimant | ||
- v - | ||
LONDON BOROUGH OF SOUTHWARK | ||
Defendant |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Telephone No: 020 7421 4040
Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The Defendant did not attend and was unrepresented
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Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 8th November 2001
"5. The Appellant not only taught, but owned a hairdressing salon: she worked there at weekends and during holidays. In 1998 she had absences from work. The absences were for different reasons. First, a child had flu and was absent from school at home; secondly, the Appellant had back pain. She was, at that stage, eight months pregnant.
6. The acting head, Miss Penny White, thought that the appellant might be working as a hairdresser when she ought to have been working as a schoolteacher, and that she was wrongly and dishonestly claiming paid absence from her teaching duties, to the detriment of the children in her care. Accordingly, she said that she went, together with a Ms McKew, of 3 December, to see whether or not the Appellant was in her hairdressing salon cutting hair. She had reason to believe that she might be because her partner had telephoned the salon and was told that the Appellant would, that day, be available to cut his hair. However, it is common ground that she was not in the salon, working as a hairdresser that day.
7. The next day the Tribunal [the Employment Tribunal] found as a fact that:
'Miss White went again, accompanied by Mr Bernacki. They both saw the applicant working. They had previously decided not to go into the shop and confront her because they wanted to avoid embarrassment and a scene. Miss White had no doubt that the person she saw was the Applicant.'
What followed were disciplinary proceedings. On 8 January, there was a disciplinary hearing, which having heard from Mr Bernacki as a witness, and having had the case presented to it by Miss White, decided to dismiss the Appellant for gross misconduct. There was an appeal on 24th February 1999."
"5. The new evidence from Ms McKew suggests that:
(a) the Appellant's dismissal was for reasons other than that stated by the respondent;
(b) the headteacher was a bully;
(c) she never told the headteacher, Ms White, that there had been suspicions in the past that the Appellant worked at the salon while on sick leave;
(d) she regarded the headteacher as manipulative and devious;
(e) she refused to attend the tribunal hearing;
(f) she felt guilty about getting involved... and what she did was wrong; she said that when she visited the salon on 3 December 1998 and the Appellant was not there the headteacher 'was sort of... flabergasted';
(g) following the Appellant's dismissal both she and Mr Bernacki were given favourable severance terms and approved references to leave Albion school;
(h) the staff were all conned into assisting in the dismissal of the Appellant;
(i) the Appellant's dismissal 'was a put up job.'"
"25. Those set out in Mr Panton's Skeleton Argument [the points I have just recited] all save one, seem to us to be matters which are either unspecific or which were matters which could easily have been explored and which were plainly an issue before the Tribunal sat.
26. The one exception, possibly, is that it is said that Ms McKew denied ever having told Miss White that there had been suspicions in the past that the Appellant had worked at the salon whilst on sick leave. That is contained at page 41 of the bundle, in the transcript of the telephone conversation in these terms:
'CN [the applicant]
You know what she because I think it's because she re'um because you've left she then erm said that you told her that there has been suspicion in the past that I've been
B [Miss McKew] I never said that... I saw that and I never said that
CN You know
B and I asked her to change that and she never did
CN You know
B I never said that I never I don't know
CN You know
B anything about any of this stuff shealways that's one of the reasons why she doesn't want..."
"35. Note also that this was a small school with nine staff. The relationship between the Appellant and Ms McKew was plainly a close one. The transcript of the telephone conversation reveals an ability to telephone at Christmas and New Year, with no particular object in mind, save having a chat, and the nature of the chat is plainly friendly, and close. We think it reasonable to infer that the Appellant knew pretty well what Ms McKew's likely views would have been, and that she would have been readily and easily approachable. We think that if the Appellant had thought it of significance, she could have checked the facts alleged with Ms McKew, on the day of the hearing, if indeed the witness statement was so late in coming. It was not like dealing with somebody who was distant, frosty and removed."
"49. Secondly, we have had no answer, in the course of this hearing, to the central questions as to why it was that the conversation was taped; social conversation would not normally be taped. The fact that it is taped cannot be so that the Appellant would have known what was being said to her, which was the only response Mr Panton, in reply, could give. It, we think, must imply that the Appellant, who knew the person to whom she was talking, must have suspected that without there being some tape recording, the other conversant would not have been prepared to come forward and say publicly that which she might be prepared to say, after some leading, in the course of a telephone conversation.
50. Next, again, we have had no sufficient answer, we think, to the question of why, given that the preliminary hearing was now some five months ago, and there has been ample opportunity for it, the evidence is only as strong as a tape transcript. There is no written statement from Ms McKew; we would have expected to see it."
"Both panels [the internal panels of the employers] had given inadequate consideration to an alternative sanction."
"Both panels had given inadequate consideration to an alternative sanction."
"We consider that it would have been preferable for the Applicant to have been asked whether she had anything to say in mitigation after the decision of the appeal panel to uphold the finding of gross misconduct but again, we do not feel that it is sufficient to render the dismissal unfair. We accordingly dismiss the Applicant's claim of unfair dismissal on the ground that the tribunal acted fairly in accordance with section 98(4) of the 1996 Act."
"56. Although we consider there is some force in what he has said to us, and it may be that it is a pity for the Appellant that the Employment Tribunal did not have the advocacy of Mr Panton before them, nonetheless, they were made aware of the issue. The only question, it seems to us, they having indicated a view upon it, is whether they had sufficiently expressed the reason for it. Their statement is terse. However bearing in mind they had a number of difficult issues of fact to deal with, in relation to discrimination on the grounds of sex and race, and the principal focus of their case, upon the facts which gave rise to the finding of gross misconduct, we do not think that it was required that the Employment Tribunal should go so far as to set out, in detail, the reasons why they came to the conclusion that it was nonetheless fair for the internal appeal hearing to reach the decision it did, notwithstanding their not having asked the Appellant whether she had anything to say in mitigation."
(Mr Panton produced a skeleton argument dealing with alternatives to dismissal)
"The undisputed evidence was that on 3rd December 1998 the appellant had telephoned the respondent to say that she would definitely be returning to work on Monday, 7th December 1998."