![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Dolby v Sheffield City Council [2012] EWCA Civ 1474 (15 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1474.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 1474 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM
EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MCMULLEN QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE TOULSON
and
LORD JUSTICE MUNBY
____________________
Jane Dolby |
Appellant |
|
- and - |
||
Sheffield City Council |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr P Oldham QC and Mr C Bourne (instructed by Sheffield City Council) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 17 October 2012
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill :
The Statute
"Step 1: Statement of Grievance
6. The employee must set out the grievance in writing and send the statement or a copy of it to the employer.
Step 2: Meeting
7. (1) The employer must invite the employee to attend a meeting to discuss the grievance.
(2) The meeting must not take place unless-
(a) the employee has informed the employer what the basis for the grievance was when he made the statement under paragraph 6, and
(b) the employer has had a reasonable opportunity to consider his response to that information.
(3) The employee and employer must take all reasonable steps to attend the meeting.
(4) After the meeting, the employer must inform the employee of his decision as to his response to the grievance and notify him of the right to appeal against the decision if they are not satisfied with it.
Step 3: Appeal
(1) If the employee does wish to appeal, they must inform the employer.
(2) If the employee informs the employer of their wish to appeal, the employer must invite the employee to attend a further meeting.
(3) The employee or employer must take all reasonable steps to attend the meeting.
(4) After the appeal meeting, the employer must inform the employee of their final decision.
(5) Employees have the right to be accompanied at the appeal hearing."
"(2) An employee shall not present a complaint to an employment tribunal under a jurisdiction to which this section applies if -
(a) it concerns a matter in relation to which the requirement in paragraph 6 or 9 of Schedule 2 applies, and
(b) the requirement has not been complied with.
(3) An employee shall not present a complaint to an employment tribunal under a jurisdiction to which this section applies if -
(a) it concerns a matter in relation to which the requirement in paragraph 6 or 9 of Schedule 2 has been complied with, and
(b) less than 28 days have passed since the day on which the requirement was complied with."
The requirement in paragraph 6 applied and, if it was not complied with, the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to hear the complaint. If it was complied with, sub-section (3) did not bar the appellant.
The facts
"Those complaints, and my grievances, include the following individual grievances, which I hereby submit and/or re-submit as appropriate."
The list included the paragraph:
"I have been subjected to detriments as a result of the protected disclosures I made regarding my disabilities and as regards Case R – where the Council actually forbade me from reporting the matter to the police and/or other proper authorities."
"Our client remains wholly dissatisfied with your response to her longstanding grievances and in particular to the issues surrounding her return to work on 18 July 2008 and it is for these reasons that she tendered her resignation with effect from 30 July 2008.
Our client has instructed us to pursue a claim for compensation for constructive dismissal and discrimination on the grounds of her disability and under the Public Interest Disclosure Act but before we do so please treat this letter as a formal grievance in relation to the matters referred to therein."
In a letter of 5 September 2008, the solicitors declined to provide further details about the grievance, stating:
"With reference to your request for further information to enable you to deal with our client's grievance dated 8 August 2008 we are of the view that you already have sufficient information to address the issues raised."
There was an agreement that the grievance be dealt with under the modified grievance procedure but the case has proceeded on the basis of the standard procedure in Chapter 1 of Schedule 2 and no point is or has been taken on the reference in the correspondence to the modified grievance procedure under Chapter 2 of Schedule 2.
Tribunal findings
"As a matter of law therefore I find that the Claimant has raised a grievance by that appeal document [8 May 2008] in relation to all previous complaints and identifies those as being because she had made a public interest disclosure, including in relation to case R. That being the case therefore I make the determinations below that the matters complained of to that date by the Claimant are complained of as detriments for making a public interest disclosure by reference to the appeal grievance."
"So far as dismissal is concerned the only potential grievance is within the solicitors' letter."
and concluded, at 4.1:
"I conclude therefore that the Claimant has raised a grievance about dismissal being for reason of a public interest disclosure. I reach that conclusion applying the guidance in Edebi [below] that the letters in context can be fairly read in a non technical and unsophisticated way as raising a grievance as to constructive dismissal and that the background to this is the Claimant's again unsophisticated and non technical complaint of detriments within her appeal letter. The Claimant in my view has on a fair reading of those documents raised sufficient information so as to raise an expectation that the Respondent should appreciate that the relevant complaint is being made. To do otherwise would in my view require me to require the grievance to be made in an unduly legalistic or technical manner and that according to Edebi is not what the statute requires."
"It is not possible in order to understand the letter of appeal by the claimant [8 May] and the details sent by the solicitor [8 August] to interpret them in any other reasonable way in my view and the letter from the solicitors therefore does complain of a constructive unfair dismissal by reason of making a public interested disclosure . . . The combination of correspondence from the complainant and her solicitors does identify the cause as being the public interested disclosure".
"The [Council] asks me to find that this letter [8 August] means that the Claimant is not complaining of a dismissal or these matters as being caused by public interest disclosure. I think that it is an over technical interpretation of that letter even though it is written by solicitors and that the [Council] should have been aware that the Claimant's view is that a public interest disclosure has been made because of the correspondence it had already received from her and that she complains that actions on the [Council's] part are as a result of a public interest disclosure."
". . . the only issue is whether it constitutes a grievance under the statutory regime."
He held that it did not, stating that the appellant had already been given a step 2 meeting and that the public disclosure point was a new matter which did not fall within the remit of an appeal against the grievance actually heard (paragraph 21). The step 2 meeting was not held to consider that point. "The [protected disclosure] point was a new matter and did not fall within the remit of an appeal against the grievance which was actually heard."
"Grievance in the context of a formal solicitors' letter means the two lodged by the Claimant under the [Council's] policies and not a new point sought to be taken on appeal."
"Neither of the solicitors' letters makes clear that the Claimant is resigning because of her [protected disclosure] complaint"
Submissions
"(2) In determining whether a meeting or written communication fulfils a requirement of Schedule 2, it is irrelevant whether the meeting or communication deals with any other matter (including a different matter required to be dealt with in a meeting or communication intended to fulfil a requirement of Schedule 2)."
That establishes, it was submitted, that a written communication may fulfil a requirement of Schedule 2 even if included within a letter pursuing an appeal.
The Law
"24. . . . The law in this area is directed at employees who in many cases - perhaps most – will have no knowledge at all of the relevant law. The aim is to promote the use of appropriate procedures. It would be quite wrong to require the grievance to be made in any unduly legalistic or technical manner. At the same time, it must not be forgotten that an employer who receives a grievance and is at fault in failing to take matters further is at risk of paying additional compensation if the claim ultimately succeeds. Indeed, if it succeeds he will have to pay additional compensation to the extent of at least 10% (save in exceptional circumstances: see section 31(4)). But he cannot fairly be expected to take matters further if he is unaware that a relevant complaint has been lodged.
25. It seems to me that the objective of the statute can be fairly met if the employers, on a fair reading of the statement and having regard to the particular context in which it is made, can be expected to appreciate that the relevant complaint is being raised. I do not think this formulation is essentially different to that urged upon me by Mr Solomon for the employers, namely 'how a reasonable employer, with the actual or constructive knowledge of the employer at the time he received the grievance, would have understood it', although I would prefer to avoid concepts of actual or constructed knowledge. . ."
"This appeal is concerned with whether some 130 Claimants . . . satisfied the requirements of the dispute resolution regime under the Employment Act 2002, which was still in force at the time that their claims were presented. The effects of these ill-considered and ill-drafted provisions are mostly exhausted, but they continue to throw up problems in the context of the mass equal pay litigation because of the slow pace at which perforce these cases move. The present appeal illustrates yet again the plethora of satellite issues to which they can give rise. There is now a wealth of authorities – most authoritatively the decision of the Court of Appeal in Hurst [below] . . . emphasising that it is the duty of tribunals who have to interpret and apply these provisions to do so, so far as possible, in a way which minimises the risk of claimants foundering on the rocks of technicalities which have nothing to do with the justice of the case – though we accept that there are cases where that has proved impossible."
"(a) The 2002 Act has the admirable purpose of discouraging the precipitate issue of proceedings and encouraging negotiation, conciliation and settlement (Shergold v Fieldway Medical Centre [2006] ICR 304). That purpose may, however, be frustrated if the procedure leads to satellite litigation on technical issues about whether a statement amounts to a grievance under paragraph 6 and whether a claim subsequently made to a Tribunal is the same claim as was included in the statement of grievance."
Conclusions
Lord Justice Toulson :
Lord Justice Munby :