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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> London Borough of Southwark v Afolabi [2003] EWCA Civ 15 (24 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/15.html Cite as: [2003] IRLR 220, [2003] EWCA Civ 15, [2003] ICR 800 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT
APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL Friday 24 January 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LORD JUSTICE RIX
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LONDON BOROUGH OF SOUTHWARK |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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AFOLABI |
Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr. Afolabi was unrepresented and appeared in person
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Crown Copyright ©
Peter Gibson L.J.:
"The issues to be determined by the Tribunal are:
(i) whether the Respondent unlawfully discriminated against the Applicant when it failed to appoint him to the post of Auditor, Grade SO2, in or about June 1990.
Comparator Mr. Welsh.
(ii) Whether the Applicant's complaint was presented outside of the applicable time limits and, if it was, whether it is just and equitable for a tribunal to consider the complaint.
(iii) Whether the Respondent treated the Applicant less favourably when it took the decision to transfer his post to an outside contractor in or about May 1999; if it did, whether the Respondent unlawfully discriminated against the Applicant by way of victimisation.
The protected act is the complaint of discrimination presented to the Tribunal in February 1999.
(iv) Whether the Respondent unlawfully discriminated against the Applicant when it failed to re-grade his post of Departmental Auditor to HAY Grade 10, on or about April 1999.
Comparators Mr W Jordan, Mr K Draper, and Mr D Coombes."
"The Complainant concludes that the evaluation exercise did not comply with equal opportunities practice, and it is in effect an act of discrimination."
He named the three comparators as Mr. Jordan, Ms. Draper and Mr. Coombes.
"(2) It is unlawful for a person, in the case of a person employed by him at an establishment in Great Britain, to discriminate against that employee
(a) in the terms of employment which he affords him; or
(b) in the way he affords him access to opportunities for promotion, transfer or training, or to any other benefits, facilities or services, or by refusing or deliberately omitting to afford him access to them; or
(c) by dismissing him, or subjecting him to any other detriment".
"A . tribunal may nevertheless consider any such complaint . which is out of time if, in all the circumstances of the case, it considers that it is just and equitable to do so."
Decision to extend time
"The Applicant had no reason to inspect his personal file and was not under any obligation to inspect it. He brought his claim within three months of first sight of the file which revealed that he might have an arguable case of racial discrimination. We noted that more than nine years had passed since the events in question, but that this would be equally prejudicial to the Applicant, who has to prove racial discrimination, as it would be to the Respondent. It is therefore our unanimous decision that although the complaint was presented out of time it is just and equitable that the Tribunal should consider the complaint."
"It was Mr. Dusu's evidence that they agreed that the Applicant was the best candidate and should be appointed at Scale SO2; that he and Mr. Dusu recommended Mr. Welsh for appointment at Scale 6 as he was inexperienced and performed less well at interview. Mr. Bassett's reactions he said was "but Mr. Welsh had Part I CIPFA" and Mr. Bassett stormed out of the meeting. Mr. Dusu recommended the Applicant for appointment at Grade SO2 and Mr. Welsh at Scale 6.
While Mr. Bassett's recollection was less than clear he agreed the Applicant was the best candidate but the lack of qualification disqualified him from Grade SO2 and therefore any appointment had to be Scale 6. He did not recall any disagreement with Mr. Dusu.
It was Mr. Dusu's evidence that subsequently Mr. Brown the Head of Financial Services decided not to appoint anyone at Grade SO2 .
We find that there was a disagreement between Mr. Dusu and Mr. Bassett Mr. Dusu recommending the Applicant for Grade SO2 and Mr. Bassett for Scale 6 but that this was not a matter of great moment to Mr. Bassett. Both recommended Mr. Welsh for Scale 6. Mr. Brown decided that the Applicant should be appointed at Scale 6."
"We do not accept the Respondent's explanation. The Applicant was short-listed and invited for interview for a Grade SO2 post at which time the Respondents knew very well that he did not have the qualification that they asserted to us was a condition of Grade SO2 appointment. It was not disputed that the Applicant was the best and most experienced candidate and we have found as a fact that he was recommended for Grade SO2 by Mr. Dusu. The Respondent was seeking to improve the quality of its audit staff.
We then considered whether the inference that we should draw from these primary facts was that this was a matter of administrative error or some other reason rather than a matter of discrimination on grounds of race. It is our decision that it was on the grounds of race because we are unable to believe that if Part I CIPFA qualification was in reality such an essential element for grading at SO2, this would not have been mentioned at some time to Mr. Afolabi either during the interview or at any other time in explaining why he was offered Scale 6 rather than Grade SO2 for which he had been invited for interview, in particular when the letter of invitation to interview anticipated that possibility.
It is therefore our unanimous decision that the Respondent discriminated against the Applicant by treating him less favourably than they would have treated a white man with equal experience in deciding not to appoint him to Grade SO2."
"My recollection of this appointment is very vague as you would expect after more than 9 years.
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I do not remember taking any part in the interview or the decision. The interview panel . would have taken the decision."
Failure to appoint to Grade SO2
The Hay grading exercise
"14.2.4 Almost immediately upon receipt of the Hay evaluation and its acceptance by the Respondent's Personnel Department the Education and Leisure Department restructured the positions held by Mr. Jordan and Ms. Draper to Grade 9 (i.e. to the same as the Hay evaluation of the Appellant). However both the individuals concerned were individually regraded or promoted Grades 10 and 11 respectively in an extraordinarily short space of time. In the case of the promotion to Grade 11 this was, contrary to the Respondent's normal policy, not advertised (so that the Applicant was in effect not allowed to apply) but closed so that only Mr. Jordan and Ms. Draper could apply.
14.2.5 It is our unanimous finding that this restructuring was a sham designed to preserve the grading of Mr. Jordan and Ms. Draper at Grade 10 at the least."
"14.2.6 The inescapable inference we draw from these primary facts is that there was a culture of prejudice against the Applicant on the grounds of his race (it being accepted that he was an excellent employee) and in favour of white employees within the Respondent's organisation which manifested itself in this case over a period from at least November 1998 to at least December 1999.
That when the Respondent accepted in April that the Applicant's position was properly Grade 9, contrary to its normal policy, this information was kept from the Applicant and was not implemented for some eight months.
That when the Hay evaluation showed that the posts occupied by Mr. Jordan and Ms. Draper (both white employees) were in fact equivalent to that occupied by the Applicant steps were taken to preserve their grading at at least Grade 10 and to exclude the Applicant from the possibility of applying for the Grade 11 vacancy. This was virtually the opposite of the way in which the Respondent treated the Applicant."
Sedley L.J.:
The enlargement of time
The appointment in 1990
"How many of the Departmental Auditors' posts across the Council are filled by permanent members of staff? Please give the names and ethnic origin of those occupying these posts."
Southwark chose not to reply to a single question in this questionnaire. I do not accept Mr Fletcher's explanation that Mr Bassett's witness statement was the response to it. By s.65 the tribunal is empowered to draw an adverse inference from such a failure to respond, including an inference that the respondent has committed an unlawful act. This power was not overtly invoked in the present case; in fact I am not certain that the tribunal's attention was even drawn to the questionnaire and the silence which had greeted it. But it reinforces my view that this is a bad point and that Southwark has all along known it to be a bad point. Everyone accepted, and the case was allowed to proceed on the understanding, that there was a relevant difference in race.
Natural justice
"Whether the Respondent unlawfully discriminated against the Applicant when it failed to re-grade his post of Departmental Auditor to Hay grade 10, on or about April 1999."
This, it is submitted, is not the same question as whether (as the tribunal held) "this restructuring was a sham". In my judgment the submission is misconceived.
Perversity
Conclusion
Lord Justice Rix:
The decision to extend time
"The panel heard a dissenting view from Mr Dusu, who along with Mr Bassett had interviewed for these posts. He asserted that the panel originally recommended to appoint you at SO2 but that this was reversed by the Head of Finance [Mr Brown]. This is clearly contradictory to Mr Bassett and Mr Brown's evidence."
Failure to appoint to grade SO2 in 1990
The Hay grading exercise "on or about April 1999"
"Whether the Respondent unlawfully discriminated against the Applicant when it failed to re-grade his post of Departmental Auditor to HAY Grade 10, on or about April 1999.
Comparators Mr W Jordan, Mr [sic, in fact Ms] K Draper and Mr D Coombes."
"It is the panel's view that the Department apologises to you for the less than satisfactory way in which your management, support and guidance has been provided over the past two years, and the consequent difficulties in reaching an early satisfactory conclusion with regard to your grading and remuneration, and that it confirms your substantive grade as being Hay 9, from April 1998 with appropriate annual progression from that date, and that you receive a backdated honorarium payment equivalent to an appropriate point on Hay 10 for the period since Graham Brown's departure from the Council in January 1998."
"14.2.6 The inescapable inference that we draw from these primary facts is that there was a culture of prejudice against the Applicant on the grounds of his race (it being accepted that he was an excellent employee) and in favour of white employees within the Respondent's organisation which manifested itself in this case over a period from at least November 1998 to at least December 1999."
"In our judgment there was material upon which the Employment Tribunal could base its conclusion, and draw inferences of racial discrimination as a result of the facts which it found relating to the Applicant and Mr Jordan. That finding and the finding that the restructuring was "a sham" in our view survive the Chairman's qualification about Ms Draper, that her ringfencing may have been explained by reasons other than racial discrimination."