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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Onuegbu v Campbell [2003] EWCA Civ 858 (11 June 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/858.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 858 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
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MR VINCENT ONUEGBU | Appellant | |
-v- | ||
MISS BEVERLEY CAMPBELL | Respondent |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
THE RESPONDENT DID NOT ATTEND AND WAS NOT REPRESENTED
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Crown Copyright ©
"It is not sufficient for Ms Campbell and Ms Reith to point out that everyone in the office knew about the re-establishment of the grant and that application forms were readily available. That is not the point. TLAC [the centre] had promised in their letter of 22 December 1999 that the applicant would be 'invited to submit an application'. That promise was not fulfilled and it is not appropriate to suggest that an employee, even in a small organisation such as this, should have been aware of what was going on. It was the employer's duty to advise him and Ms Campbell failed in not doing so."
"It was quite inappropriate of Ms Campbell to tell him of this change in the way in which she did. She worked in the same room as him and should have told him verbally. Whilst we appreciate that the relationship between the two of them may have deteriorated as a result of the various events which we have recorded, this did not absolve her, as a manager, from telling him what was an extremely important piece of information. The applicant offered no specific comparator for this incident. This is a situation where we can look for a hypothetical comparator. There was no evidence that Ms Campbell was so inconsiderate to others. This must be less favourable treatment."
"We appreciate that she may well have been upset by the complaint which the applicant had made against her, but this did not absolve her from carrying out her management responsibilities in a proper way."
It then concluded as follows at paragraph 15:
"We have considered her explanations for these matters. We do not consider them to be adequate. There are too many incidents when her conduct was adverse to the applicant for us to consider that they were just errors. There must have been some reason which was personal to the applicant. In the absence of any acceptable explanation as to why this should be, the Tribunal is led inevitably to consider that the reason must be the applicant's race. We therefore find that Ms Campbell did discriminate against the applicant in respect of these matters."
"Plainly the Tribunal took the view that Ms Campbell's conduct had been in breach of her duty as his manager, but the Tribunal did not ask themselves whether Ms Campbell would have acted differently if Mr Onuegbu had been of a different race. Mr Bild was not a true comparator; he had already made known his interest in the post and was an outsider who could not have known that the post had again become available without being told. Mr Onuegbu was an insider who had not previously applied for the post. The Tribunal neither considered whether the circumstances of Mr Bild were the same or sufficiently close to those of Mr Onuegbu for him to be a comparator nor, if they were not -- as seems to us plainly to have been the case -- what Ms Campbell would have done in the same situation if Mr Onuegbu had been of a different race. Instead the Tribunal concentrated on Ms Campbell's breach of her duty as they saw it. That view is repeated and expanded upon in paragraph 14 of the decision."
"Her explanation in relation to the delayed information as to the renewed availability of the supervisor's post was, at least in part, that Mr Onuegbu was aware that the post was again available, as was everyone in the office, and that it was Ms Campbell herself who had, as the Tribunal expressly found as fact at paragraph 3(xxiii), invited him to apply for the post. Her explanation on the qualifications issue was, at least in part, that she had made enquiries in the appropriate place and genuinely believed that Mr Onuegbu was not qualified, as indeed, again, the Tribunal expressly found. It does not appear from paragraph 15 that the Tribunal considered these aspects of Ms Campbell's individual explanations. They could not be subsumed into a general explanation based on administrative error or based on a belief that nothing wrong had been done."
"Nor, in our judgment, did the Tribunal adequately set out why they rejected Ms Campbell's explanations or what findings of fact drove them to the conclusion that the differential treatment was on racial grounds. There were clear possible alternatives to that finding. The Tribunal indicated at paragraph 3(xxx) that the relationship between Mr Onuegbu and Ms Campbell was not good. At paragraph 3.1 they said:
"'The applicant is a man of considerable ability. He is, however, prone to exaggeration. It is also clear from the evidence and particularly from the correspondence that he readily adopts a bullying attitude when challenged. This appears from . . . the various complaints which he made. He appears unable to accept criticism in any form, even when quite mild. When criticised or when affairs do not take the term which he expects, he is over ready to ascribe this to discrimination.'
"Before March 2000 he had made complaints against Ms Campbell which the Tribunal decided were unfounded. The findings of fact demonstrate that there had been a poor relationship between them before the post of supervisor became available again . . .
"The case was not one in which the position was so clear that there was no need for the Tribunal to set out any findings beyond those which they set out in paragraph 15".