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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Perkin v St Georges Healthcare NHS Trust [2005] EWCA Civ 1174 (12 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/1174.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 1174, [2006] ICR 617, [2005] IRLR 934 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM Employment Appeal Tribunal
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANCE
and
LORD JUSTICE WALL
____________________
IAN KEITH PERKIN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ST GEORGES HEALTHCARE NHS TRUST |
Respondent |
____________________
Christopher Jeans QC and Simon Devonshire (instructed by Messrs Bevan Ashford - Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing dates : 28th July 2005
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall :
Introduction
The essential facts
"2. . Mr Perkin was employed by the Trust from September 1986 until his employment was summarily terminated on 4 December 2002. His job was Director of Finance, evidently a responsible job that required him both to manage a group of employees underneath him and to co-operate with senior colleagues at the same level and above. The chief executive was Mr Hamilton and since October 1999 the Chairman was Ms McLoughlin. It was throughout clear that no criticism whatever could be made or was made of Mr Perkin's technical competence or of his integrity. In a nutshell the difficulties that gave rise to the matters which led to his dismissal were those of personality and inter-relation with colleagues and of management style. Things came to a head in July 2002 when Mr Perkin was on holiday. On the day that he returned from holiday, Monday 29 July 2002, Ms McLoughlin held a meeting with KPMG during which it was noted that she informed KPMG that "she wanted an exit strategy in place for Mr Perkin by the end of July 2002". On the same day according to the findings of the Employment Tribunal which are not in dispute the Chief Executive Mr Hamilton summoned Mr. Perkin to a meeting without prior warning and asked him to resign with immediate effect. He declined to do so. He responded by presenting a formal grievance under the Grievance Procedure on 5 August 2002. The Trust set in motion their own disciplinary procedures. That required first of all an investigation that was initiated by Mr Hamilton who held an investigatory meeting on 8 August .
3. Following upon that investigatory meeting Mr. Perkin was suspended on 9 August. During the meeting he had made an accusation about the Chief Executive's conduct to which reference was extensively made in both the disciplinary hearing to which we will refer in due course and in the Employment Tribunal itself ..
4. A disciplinary hearing was to be convened. For its purpose the Trust prepared and submitted for Mr. Perkin's consideration a statement of case dated 6 September 2002. As noted by the Tribunal its case in brief was:
"serious concerns have arisen over the conduct and performance of Ian Perkin as the Director of Finance and as a consequent breakdown in confidence in his ability to carry out the requirements of his role to the satisfaction of myself as the Chief Executive and the Senior Executive team. The issues relate primarily to:
(i) your management style and ability to represent and advise the Trust in a positive and supportive manner; and
(ii) your ability to form the necessary quality of relationships with external advisors, stakeholders and other external agencies to ensure the Trust interests are best preserved and advanced".
5. The disciplinary hearing was initially convened on 12 September 2002. In fact it extended over four further days, 7 and 8 October and 4 and 5 November. It was chaired by Ms McLoughlin assisted by a Mrs Mark. Objection was taken to her chairing the meeting. The fact that she chaired it was in due course as we shall demonstrate to lead the Employment Tribunal to conclude that the disciplinary procedure was unfair. Evidence was presented on behalf of the Trust to the disciplinary hearing including evidence from Ms Grant, the Director of Operations and Nursing whose evidence was to the effect that she had no confidence in being able to work with Mr Perkin as an Executive colleague. Evidence was given by Professor Jones, the Professor of Respiratory Medicine and the Medical Director of the Trust to the effect that Mr Perkin was intimidating during meetings, would refuse to discuss things, would adopt the attitude that "that is my position and I am not moving from it" and would refuse to discuss matters that the medical staff had problems with. Professor Jones reported that it was the general consensus among managers of Service Centre Chairs that Mr Perkin should leave. In a document Professor Jones summed up the concerns of himself and colleagues as follows:
"I have major concerns about the attitude of the Director of Finance within the Executive team. He appears to be aloof, stubborn and at times intimidating in his frank refusal to listen to other's request. There is a continual sense of "won't do" as opposed to "I am not sure but I'll see what can be done."
6. During the hearing Mr. Perkin either personally or through his representative suggested that a fellow Finance Director of another Trust a Mr Esterman was lying. Of greater significance, he pursued the accusation about the Chief Executive that he had foreshadowed at the investigatory meeting. The Tribunal noted:
"The Chief Executive, Mr Hamilton was then questioned about his integrity and in particular his holding out that he held CIPFA (Chartered Institute of Public Finance and Accountancy) membership on his application form for Chief Executive, when it was not true. The reality was that Mr Hamilton had the qualification but was no longer a member. Mr. Perkin actually raised the matter with CIPFA who accepted that Mr Hamilton had not been dishonest."
7. In his statement of case presented, we are told, after the first day of the disciplinary hearing but before the second he made the following statement:
"The Chief Executive is not a man of integrity, he is in fact a bully who is prepared to lie or bend the truth whenever it suits his purpose."
He went on to allege at the hearing as the Tribunal found that:
" .. these events (this was a reference to events in November 1999 concerning the reimbursement of payment of £540.00 to pay for dinner to mark the retirement from office of a former chairman) demonstrate that the Chief Executive is an individual of low integrity making him unfit to hold such a senior position and also shows 'why he is seeking to remove me as Finance Director'."
8. In summary Mr Perkin responded to the accusations against him of being a difficult colleague with whom to work by launching an attack upon the honesty and integrity of his immediate superior. Ms McLoughlin with Mrs Mark's assistance took just under a month to reach and formulate their decision. By a letter dated 4 December 2002 they set out their conclusions which resulted in their decision that Mr Perkin should be dismissed from his post as Director of Finance with immediate effect but with pay in lieu of notice of six months. The reasons they gave were as follows:
"We concluded from the evidence we heard . that you have failed to engage the Service Centre Chairs and other clinicians and this resulted in a loss of confidence in you as the Director of Finance for the Trust.
We would expect you as a senior financial executive within the organisation to contribute constructively to finding a solution to the problem but instead your disabling and negative approach has led us to conclude that your relationship with the executive team has broken down."
It was noted that he was held in high regard by staff within his own department. It went on to state:
"In relation to your relationships with external advisers, stakeholders and other external agencies, we also found that you had failed to establish the quality of relationships necessary to preserve and advance the Trust's interests."
Its conclusion was:
"In the circumstances, therefore, we have reached the view that your conduct and behaviour has been such that you are not able to discharge effectively the role of Financial Director with the Trust."
Ms McLoughlin went on to reject the submission that had been made at the disciplinary hearing that they were brought to penalise Mr Perkin for expressing his views about the Trust's financial affairs and the need to cancel operations in a previous year. The letter went on to note two further matters:
"First, at several points during the hearing you were asked if you had tape recorded conversation with Ian Hamilton and Simon Sharp and you refused to answer the question. We concluded that you did tape these conversations. To do so with an internal colleague is in our view highly questionable conduct, to do so with an external adviser (that was a reference to Mr Sharp of Price Waterhouse Cooper) is wholly unacceptable.
Second, during the disciplinary process we became increasingly concerned about the effect your conduct during the hearing was having on your relationships with the Chief Executive and others. Whilst you are of course entitled to defend yourself against allegations made against you, to have done so by engaging in personal attacks, extending on occasions to abuse, against Ian Hamilton and other witnesses with whose evidence you disagreed has resulted in the situation where we do not see you could ever work together again. Even if, therefore, we had decided that the allegations had not been made out, your conduct would still have led us to the conclusion that you cannot return to a senior position within the Trust."
On a natural reading of that letter Ms McLoughlin and Mrs Mark were stating on behalf of the Trust that the principal reason for dismissal was, to use neutral words, the events and difficulties in relationships before the disciplinary hearing; but that Mr Perkin's conduct at the disciplinary hearing would in any event have led to his dismissal.
Mr Perkin's case as formulated in his Form IT1
The Trust's response
Mr. Perkin's relationship with a wide variety of senior staff had broken down and Mr Perkin failed to engage with other managers and with clinicians (including Service Centre Chairs and general managers) beyond the presentation of financial information, identifying problems but not contributing to the provision of solutions and that he failed to form the necessary quality of relationships with stake holders and external advisers and PCTS and Ms McLoughlin and Mrs Mark concluded that Mr. Perkin's manner and style did not engage with other managers and clinicians beyond presenting information and not being proactive in assisting in the solving of problems had led to serious consequences which meant that it was no longer appropriate for the proper and effective running of the Trust to continue to employ Mr. Perkin as Finance Director."
The relevant statutory provisions
Fairness
98 General
(1) In determining for the purposes of this Part whether the dismissal of an employee is fair or unfair, it is for the employer to show
(a) the reason (or, if more than one, the principal reason) for the dismissal, and
(b) that it is either a reason falling within subsection (2) or some other substantial reason of a kind such as to justify the dismissal of an employee holding the position which the employee held.
(2) A reason falls within this sub-section if it -
(a) relates to the capability or qualifications of the employee for performing work of the kind which he was employed by the employer to do,
(c) relates to the conduct of the employee, ..
(3) In sub-section 2(a)
(a) "capability", in relation to an employee, means his capability assessed by reference to skill, aptitude, health or any other physical or mental quality, and
(b) "qualifications", in relation to an employee, means any degree, diploma or other academic, technical or professional qualification relevant to the position which he held.
(4) Where the employer has fulfilled the requirements of subsection (1), the determination of the question whether the dismissal is fair or unfair (having regard to the reason shown by the employer) -
(a) depends on whether in the circumstances (including the size and administrative resources of the employer's undertaking) the employer acted reasonably or unreasonably in treating it as a sufficient reason for dismissing the employee, and
(b) shall be determined in accordance with equity and the substantial merits of the case.
The issues as formulated by the Tribunal
1. If Mr Perkin was not automatically unfairly dismissed contrary to Section 103A ERA 1996
what was the reason or principal reason for dismissal i.e. the set of facts known to the Trust or the set of beliefs held by it that caused it to dismiss and was it a potentially fair reason?
(Conduct / SOSR is the reason relied upon by the Trust).
2 Was dismissal for that reason fair and reasonable in all the circumstances, having regard to the Trust's size and administrative resources, and in particular:-
(1) did the Trust have reasonable grounds for the beliefs that caused it to dismiss?
(2) Were those beliefs formed after a reasonable/sufficient investigation?
(3) Was a fair disciplinary procedure followed, in particular having regard to (i) Mr. Perkin's suspension, (ii) Mr. Perkin's pending grievance, (iii) the fact that Ms McLoughlin was the officer who took the disciplinary hearing, (iv) the Code of Conduct for NHS Managers published on 9 October 2002, and (v) the absence of an appeal?
(4) Did Ms McLoughlin take into account irrelevant matters in determining the issues at the disciplinary hearing (in particular that Mr. Perkin had challenged the credibility of Mr Hamilton as part of his defence);?
(5) Was dismissal within the range of reasonable responses?
If Mr. Perkin's dismissal was unfair (whether automatically or otherwise)
3 Did Mr. Perkin by his blameworthy conduct cause or contribute to his dismissal?
4. What was Mr. Perkin's percentage (Polkey) chance of retaining a job had a different (fair) procedure been followed?
5. How long could Mr. Perkin have reasonably expected to retain his job, but for his unfair dismissal?"
The Tribunal's decision
40. The Tribunal has however to look at the procedure that was followed. We make no criticism of the Trust for suspending Mr. Perkin, we are however critical of the Respondent's decision that Ms McLoughlin should chair the disciplinary hearing.
41. Ms McLoughlin was not the appropriate person. Ms McLoughlin had expressed views to the KPMG interview that an exit package strategy would be in place by the end of July. Ms McLoughlin had clearly discussed that matter with the Chief Executive, as at about the same time the Chief Executive was informing Mr. Perkin "out of the blue" on 29 July that the Trust wanted him out.
42. We do not consider that Ms McLoughlin was impartial and the Trust's attempt to square things by appointing Mrs Mark to sit with Ms McLoughlin, did not in our opinion remedy that difficulty.
43. The NHS Code of Conduct itself published on 9 October after the disciplinary proceedings was underway envisages the possibility of using external persons to deal with disciplinary matters with senior staff. The Trust are part of the NHS it would have been very easy for them to have arranged for an independent neighbouring authority or someone nominated by the NHS, that was not done. Mr. Perkin had no right of appeal, that again was unfair and unjust and whilst accepting that in the circumstances the decision was made by the most senior individual within the Trusts the appeal could have been to an outside individual.
44. The Trust failed to observe the ACAS Code of Practice for dealing with dismissals and it was arguable that the concerns relate to capability there had been no warning as such that if no improvement then it may lead to dismissal. At Mr. Perkin's level of employment the request to go down such a path is not in our view strictly required we are satisfied that Mr. Perkin knew the concerns and did nothing to address them. We find that the raising of the grievance on 5 August 2002 was used by Mr. Perkin to deflect criticism away from him it was evident throughout the proceedings that rather than actually deal with criticism Mr. Perkin would accuse his complainant in some way. It was appropriate to continue with the disciplinary process and not to await resolutions of the grievance and we are satisfied that all matters were looked at."
The Tribunal's reasons
"We remind ourselves that the principal reason put forward by the Trust is for the dismissal is (sic) Mr. Perkin's style of working, his manner of dealing with the requests for information and his style of working which resulted in his not only being perceived as not being a corporate/team player but actually not playing a proactive part in effectively assisting the managers to suggest and implement a cost saving programme. We accept as put forward by the Trust's counsel the problems of personality approach and trust and confidence do not always lend themselves to detailed and specific particularisation. Nevertheless such problems can present difficulties in the work place which need to be addressed and that making findings about the existence and seriousness of such problems would often be informed by nuance and impression a proposition which was generally accepted by Mr. Perkin."
34. On the evidence before it there was ample evidence to lead Ms McLoughlin and Mrs Mark to the conclusion that Mr. Perkin did not engage with managers and clinicians beyond presenting financial information and that Mr. Perkin's style had resulted in the loss of confidence in Mr. Perkin as a Director of Finance for the Trust. That Mr. Perkin was the Director of Finance had a responsibility as a member of the Executive Team to contribute to the decisions and action planning which involved more than giving an accurate uncoloured picture of the Trust's financial affairs. That Mr. Perkin should also be party to finding solutions to the identified problems that Mr. Perkin had not and instead rather than contribute constructively to finding a solution to the problem Mr. Perkin had a disabling and negative approach. This finding led Ms McLoughlin and Mrs Mark to conclude that Mr. Perkin's relationship with the Executive Team had broken down and matter had been raised with Mr. Perkin over a period, the concerns had been pointed out to Mr. Perkin there had been no change after problems had been identified. "
39. We are satisfied that the Trust had a reasonable belief that Mr. Perkin's style of management was such that it was seriously adversely effecting the proper running of the Trust and it was that belief that caused it to dismiss Mr. Perkin, and that those beliefs were formed after a reasonable investigation, at the disciplinary hearing. The investigation was not the work done by Mr Hamilton leading up to the disciplinary hearing but there was a full hearing of all the evidence at the disciplinary hearing. Was dismissal within the range of reasonable responses? We remind ourselves that it is not for us to substitute our view for that of the reasonable employer. There was ample evidence that Mr. Perkin's style was adversely affecting the operation of the Respondent Trust at a most senior level and adversely reflected on the Trust both internally and externally."
45. The Tribunal went on to consider whether or not had a fair procedure been adopted what is the percentage chance that Mr. Perkin would not have been dismissed.
46. This Tribunal has been able to look at matters as an independent panel. We are satisfied that the disciplinary process itself was not flawed to the extent that Mr. Perkin knew the allegations against him, had an opportunity to bring witnesses and documentation to support his case and to contest the allegations against him. The fact that he was not able to tape record the proceedings does not in our view make them unfair.
47. This Tribunal concludes that had Mr. Perkin's disciplinary proceedings have been conducted by an independent person and that the evidence which was before Ms McLoughlin and Mrs Mark was before that independent panel that there is a 100% chance that Mr. Perkin's employment would have been terminated, i.e. a nil percentage chance he would have remained in post.
48. Operating at the senior level at which Mr. Perkin was and being a member of an Executive Team requires an individual to operate as an integral and effective part of that team. It is clear, for whatever reason that Mr. Perkin was unable to function that way and it is clear that in the way in which he operated in the organisation the way in which he conducted himself at the disciplinary hearing which was illustrative of the concerns and complaints that had been raised by colleagues and others. Indeed at the hearing before the Tribunal Mr. Perkin often made unfounded allegations against colleagues and others of fraud and lack of integrity which itself was conduct which on its own seriously adversely affects Mr. Perkin's relationship working with those he unjustly criticises. Conduct which would distance Mr. Perkin from others and prevent a positive working relationship.
49. Mr. Perkin's conduct and his representative's conduct during the disciplinary process and especially his attacks on the Chief Executive and the HR Director, Mr Watts would have so seriously damaged the relationship between those three at that level that that too would have made it not possible for Mr. Perkin to work as part of the team.
50. We also would find Mr. Perkin by his conduct contributed to his dismissal to the extent of 100%. "
The appeal to the EAT
The decision of the EAT
17 .. It is the duty of the Tribunal to identify the set of facts known to the employer or beliefs held by him if appropriate, and then to go on to state into which single category that reason falls. If unable to identify a relevant category within those in ss 98(2) then the Tribunal should say so. It should then go on to ask whether it amounts to "some other substantial reason of a kind such as to justify the dismissal of an employee holding the position which the employee held."
18. There are not uncommonly cases in which it is not possible to pigeon hole the employer's reason into one of the sub-section 2 categories. In such eventuality it is necessary to look to some other substantial reason to see whether or not the reason is one which falls within Section 98. In this case the Tribunal did compendiously set out the reason or reasons why the Trust had decided to dismiss Mr. Perkin. They identified them in paragraph 36 as those set out in the letter of dismissal to which we have already referred. Any ordinary construction of the letter of dismissal as we have already indicated leads to the conclusion that it was the actions and in a non-technical sense behaviour and management style of Mr. Perkin before the disciplinary proceedings which led to his dismissal.
19. Having thus identified the Trust's reason for dismissal the Tribunal had then gone on to ask itself into which category that reason fell would in our view inevitably have come to the conclusion that it fell into the category of some other substantial reason. The fact that the Tribunal did not thus categorise the reason is not in our view fatal to its reasoning or to the safety of its decision. It is trite law that having reached the conclusion that the dismissal was unfair procedurally the Tribunal was entitled to go on to consider whether or not, notwithstanding that fact, the Trust could have and would have dismissed Mr. Perkin fairly had it followed a fair procedure. Mr Langstaff criticises the Tribunal for focussing upon the partiality of the chair person of the disciplinary Tribunal Ms McLoughlin and not of examining the disciplinary procedure up to but including that fact. In our view that criticism is misplaced. There is nothing in the decision of the Tribunal to indicate that there was any other element of unfairness in the procedure apart from the lack of impartiality of Ms McLoughlin. The Tribunal were perfectly entitled to pose the question, 'Would the conduct of the disciplinary proceeding by an independent chair person have arrived at the same result by focussing simply upon that question?' The test was that approved by the House of Lords in Polkey v A E Dayton Services [1988] AC 344 first propounded by Browne-Wilkinson J as he then was in Sillifant v Powell Duffryn Timber Ltd [1983] IRLR 91 in which he observed:
"Where, in the circumstances known at the time of dismissal, it was not reasonable for the employer to dismiss without giving an opportunity to explain but facts subsequently discovered or proved before the Industrial Tribunal showed that dismissal was in fact merited, compensation would be reduced to nil".
Lord MacKay adopted the longer passage from which a short extract was taken and Lord Bridge approved another passage at page 96 of Browne-Wilson son J's judgment:
"There is no need for an 'all or nothing' decision. If the Industrial Tribunal thinks there is a doubt whether or not the employee would have been dismissed, this element can be reflected by reducing the normal amount of compensation by a percentage representing the chance that the employee would still have lost his employment."
20. The reasoning of the Tribunal in this case is in our view adequately set out in paragraphs 47, 48 and 49 of its decision. The conclusion which the Tribunal reaches namely that Mr. Perkin was unable to function in the way required by membership of the senior management team to permit that team to function effectively in our view is beyond criticism. It is clear that in paragraph 48 the Employment Tribunal treated the conduct of Mr. Perkin before the disciplinary hearing as illustrative of the difficulties that his colleagues had experienced before that hearing for this purpose.
21. Mr Langstaff submits that given that on a proper analysis up to the disciplinary hearing this was not strictly defined a conduct case means that a different outcome might have been possible had Mr. Perkin been treated differently. The answer to that proposition is as the Tribunal found to be given by his conduct at the disciplinary hearing. In essence he demonstrated by his conduct at the hearing that there was no possibility that if he had been given a chance he would have mended his ways because he either was incapable of recognising or unwilling to recognise that there was anything wrong in his own actions or anything that made it difficult for his colleagues to work as part of a team with him.
22. The answer to that is two-fold. First, as regards the allegation of lack of integrity on the part of the Chief Executive he had already made it at the investigatory hearing and secondly he did not know that Ms McLoughlin had reached the view that an exit strategy was needed for him before the hearing. He made his accusations against the Chief Executive and for that matter others regardless. The Tribunal concluded, as in our view it was plainly entitled to, that his conduct during the disciplinary hearing would have so seriously damaged the relationship between Mr. Perkin and Mr Hamilton and Mr Watts that it would not have been possible for him to work with them as part of the management team. It seems to us to be utterly self evident that that was so: for a Finance Director to accuse his Chief Executive of personal dishonesty and/or his fellow Human Resources Director of preparing false notes of a meeting which he has attended, in other words of lying, would make it impossible for them to work ever again with them.
24. Mr Langstaff submits that it is not at all clear to what the Tribunal were referring in its short sentence by which it made it reach the conclusion (sic) that he had contributed to his dismissal to the extent of 100%. He draws attention to the fact as is self evident that the Tribunal has not gone through the process identified by Brandon LJ in Nelson at least expressly. Mr Cavanagh submits that the omission could be rectified by putting the words such as 'in the light of our conclusions above' or some similar in front of the sentence then sense can be made of it. That in our view is not a wholly sufficient answer. It is not in fact clear whether the Tribunal were referring to the totality of the behaviour of Mr. Perkin before and including the disciplinary hearing or his conduct properly so described at the disciplinary hearing itself. Applying Brandon LJ's observations it would in our view be difficult to describe difficulty in getting on with colleagues or management style as conduct in the sense in which that word is used in Sections 123(6) and 122(2) of the 1966 Act. Conduct in that context means deliberate actions of a kind identified by Brandon LJ which would be capable of falling within the definition of conduct in Section 98(2).
25. In our view the only conduct to which the conclusion could properly have related was the conduct of Mr. Perkin at the disciplinary hearing. That as we have indicated was undoubtedly conduct: to make as the Tribunal found an accusation of fraudulent conduct on the part of the Chief Executive otherwise than in good faith was clearly a deliberate action. It was conduct which as the Tribunal held would have made it impossible for Mr. Perkin to work with Mr Hamilton again. Likewise the accusation against Mr Watts found expressly by the Tribunal to be wholly unfounded that he had produced false notes of the investigative meeting was likewise a deliberate action, properly categorised as conduct, which would have made it impossible for Mr Watts to work with Mr. Perkin again.
26. If, therefore, the conclusion of the Tribunal that Mr. Perkin by his conduct contributed to his dismissal to the extent of 100% had been confined to conduct at the disciplinary hearing it would have been a conclusion which it was undoubtedly entitled to reach. Indeed in our view any other conclusion would at least arguably have been perverse. If contrary to our view of what the Tribunal had in mind, it did have in mind Mr. Perkin's behaviour before the disciplinary hearing then that would have amounted to an error of law but it is an error of the law for the reasons which we have given would be entirely immaterial. For those reasons the two aspects of the Employment Tribunal's decision which are criticised in this appeal are on proper analysis unjustly criticised and for the reasons which we have given this appeal is dismissed.
The argument for Mr. Perkin in this court
The Trust's case in this court
Discussion
It is a fair criticism of the ET that in the course of 65 pages of reasons they appear in certain respects to have lost sight of the wood for the trees. But their findings seem to me to make the Polkey answer ineluctable.
Although capability might have been an appropriate statutory category for their findings, it was not the only one. Before the proceedings were initiated, Mr. Perkin had conducted himself unacceptably towards colleagues and others. I accept that if all that was at issue was his aggressive reaction to the proceedings, the decision might be unsustainable. But the reaction amounted to corroboration of the accusation that he had already shown himself near-impossible to work with (rather than for).
For my part, however, I would think this was an "other substantial reason" case: an employee in a senior position who could not or would not work harmoniously with colleagues and outsiders with whom a harmonious relationship was essential.
While the absence of a warning and guidance is relied on only, as I understand it, on the premise that this was a conduct case, I would have thought it capable of having a bearing on both of the two grounds founded on by the ET. But their view, and that of the EAT, was evidently that Mr. Perkin was too entrenched in his attitude to respond positively ...
Polkey Deduction and Contributory Fault
I accept that the EAT's reasons for upholding the finding of 100% contributory conduct are shaky; but I see no realistic prospect that this court will second-guess two specialist tribunals on the finding that a dismissal was inevitable even before an impartially chaired body.
Conclusion
Footnote
It is unusual to hold that there was a hundred percent chance that employment would have been terminated, even if the procedure had been fair. It is also unusual, but legally possible, to find a conclusion that an applicant who succeeds in establishing that there was procedural unfair dismissal has contributed to his dismissal to the extent of a hundred per cent. Even more unusual, in my experience, is the situation which existed in this case, in which, when no misconduct was alleged against him, Mr. Perkin was, following the disciplinary tribunal, summarily dismissed. There must be a real question as to whether there was here a potentially fair reason for his dismissal, quite apart from the findings in his favour by the Employment Tribunal about the procedural unfairness of the dismissal process.