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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Owen v AMEC Foster Wheeler Energy Ltd & Anor [2019] EWCA Civ 822 (14 May 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2019/822.html Cite as: [2019] ICR 1593, [2019] EWCA Civ 822, [2019] WLR(D) 280 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
HHJ EADY QC
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SINGH
and
LORD JUSTICE BAKER
____________________
ROBERT OWEN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) AMEC FOSTER WHEELER ENERGY LIMITED (2) JAMES SHAUGHNESSY |
Respondents |
____________________
Diya Sen Gupta QC (instructed by Squire Patton Boggs) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 19 March 2019
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Singh:
Introduction
Factual and Procedural Background
"Dear colleague
I felt that I should alert you to the preliminary findings on Robert Owen.
This man is 49 years old and was diagnosed as diabetic at the age of 23. Control is apparently poor with a recent HbA1c of 11%.
He has hypertension 160/90 despite treatment.
He has had laser treatment to both eyes (most recently 4 years ago) and a vitrectomy on the left.
He has morbid obesity weighing 149kg – BMI 42.2 by approximation as height difficult to judge due to Bilateral below knee amputations 8 years ago for ? Charcot joints osteomyelitis.
He has renal impairment and is awaiting NHS assessment if [sic] the severity of it – he thinks eGFR c49.
He has ischaemic heart disease with an inferior MI 3 years ago (Still visible on ECG), stents x 2 in situ.
Treatment – insulin, ramipril, amiodipine, statin, omeprazole, ivabradine…"
"Dr Sawyer called me to discuss this case. He confirmed that in terms of the role, he is able to perform the job. However he has an appalling medical history and seems unwilling to improve his health. His diabetes and blood pressure are poorly controlled and he has already had one heart attack. He is at high risk to need medical assistance whilst he is out there".
"Called Joanne Legg [the First Respondent's Mobility Adviser] to discuss Mr Owen, confirmed to her that Mr Owen is able to carry out the role, but is at high risk of medical emergency occurring overseas. She will discuss with the project as they may want him to be regularly monitored. Offered to look into possible costs as well for risk planning".
"Member was initiated as a risk based assessment. On review of the medical questionnaire, it was decided that he should have an onshore medical. Medical was carried out at 48 wimpole street and the clinic have marked him as temporarily unfit. The doctor would like to discuss this member with AmecFW to decide whether he could be deployed depending on facilities at the location and accommodations they could make for the employee."
"Although the job that Robert will be doing is much the same as his current role in Reading, which Healix don't have a problem with, they still have concerns about Robert's health and have advised that it will only be a matter of time before something happens to him either in the UK or in Sharjah. The consultant also stressed that Robert appears not to have any motivation to sort himself out with his current issues.
Having now spoken to our HR Consultant it is our recommendation not to send Robert on an assignment and that further approval should be put in place if you wish to go ahead."
"My initial view would be that as long as Robert's own doctor formally confirms that he can go, we would sit down with Robert, voice and document our concerns and let him make the decision? As there is an increased risk of a health issue occurring we would also need to check with our insurers. The alternative is that he would be put at high risk [of redundancy]".
The decision of the Employment Tribunal
The judgment of the Employment Appeal Tribunal
Material legislation
"(1) A person (P) has a disability if—
(a) P has a physical or mental impairment, and
(b) the impairment has a substantial and long-term adverse effect on P's ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities."
"…
(2) An employer (A) must not discriminate against an employee of A's (B)—
(a) as to B's terms of employment;
(b) in the way A affords B access, or by not affording B access, to opportunities for promotion, transfer or training or for receiving any other benefit, facility or service;
(c) by dismissing B;
(d) by subjecting B to any other detriment."
Direct discrimination
"(1) A person (A) discriminates against another (B) if, because of a protected characteristic, A treats B less favourably than A treats or would treat others.
…"
"(1) A person (A) discriminates against a disabled person (B) if –
(a) A treats B unfavourably because of something arising in consequence of B's disability, and
(b) A cannot show that the treatment is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
… "
Indirect discrimination
"(1) A person (A) discriminates against another (B) if A applies to B a provision, criterion or practice which is discriminatory in relation to a relevant protected characteristic of B's.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), a provision, criterion or practice is discriminatory in relation to a relevant protected characteristic of B's if—
(a) A applies, or would apply, it to persons with whom B does not share the characteristic,
(b) it puts, or would put, persons with whom B shares the characteristic at a particular disadvantage when compared with persons with whom B does not share it,
(c) it puts, or would put, B at that disadvantage, and
(d) A cannot show it to be a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
(3) The relevant protected characteristics are— … disability".
The duty to make reasonable adjustments
"…
(2) The duty comprises the following three requirements.
(3) The first requirement is a requirement, where a provision, criterion or practice of A's puts a disabled person at a substantial disadvantage in relation to a relevant matter in comparison with persons who are not disabled, to take such steps as it is reasonable to have to take to avoid the disadvantage. …"
"(1) On a comparison of cases for the purposes of section 13, 14, or 19 there must be no material difference between the circumstances relating to each case.
(2) The circumstances relating to a case include a person's abilities if—
(a) on a comparison for the purposes of section 13, the protected characteristic is disability;
(b) on a comparison for the purposes of section 14, one of the protected characteristics in the combination is disability."
Grounds of Appeal
Submissions for the Respondents
Grounds 1 and 2: direct discrimination
"… The Tribunal in this paragraph seems to consider that if the claimant could show that his treatment was on the grounds of his disability, he would necessarily prove direct discrimination. But the missing element is that the treatment was less favourable. …"
The EAT went on to say that simply establishing a causal connection between the disability and the treatment complained of was insufficient to found a claim for direct discrimination on grounds of disability. If someone else with a medical illness or injury of the same gravity as the claimant's but not having his or her particular disability would have been treated no more favourably, direct discrimination will not have been established.
"… As the identity of the comparator for direct discrimination must focus upon a person who does not have the particular disability, that disability must, as directed in section 3A(5), be omitted from the circumstances of the comparator. In other respects the circumstances of the claimant and of the comparator must be the same 'or not materially different'. The claimant's abilities … must be attributed to the comparator. Although the comparator is not required to be a clone of the claimant, failure by the Employment Tribunal to attribute other relevant circumstances to the comparator may be an error of law on the part of the Tribunal … However, … there is no obligation on the Employment Tribunal to construct a hypothetical comparator in every case and failure to do so does not necessarily lead to an error of law …"
"Under the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the Race Relations Act 1976, direct discrimination was defined as treating a person less favourably than another 'on the ground of her sex' or 'on racial grounds'. Under section 13(1) of the Equality Act 2010, this has become treating someone less favourably 'because of' a protected characteristic. The characteristic has to be the reason for the treatment. Sometimes this will be obvious, as when the characteristic is the criterion employed for the less favourable treatment: an example is Preddy v Bull (Liberty intervening) [2013] 1 WLR 3741, where reserving double-bedded rooms to 'heterosexual married couples only' was directly discriminatory on grounds of sexual orientation. At other times, it will not be obvious, and the reasons for the less favourable treatment will have to be explored: an example is Nagarajan v London Regional Transport [1999] ICT 877; [2000] 1 AC 501, where the tribunal's factual finding of conscious or subconscious bias was upheld in the House of Lords, confirming the principle, established in R v Birmingham City Council, Ex p Equal Opportunities Commission [1989] AC 1155 and James v Eastleigh Borough Council [1990] ICR 554; [1990] 2 AC 751, that no hostile or malicious motive is required. James v Eastleigh Borough Council also shows that, even if the protected characteristic is not the overt criterion, there will still be direct discrimination if the criterion used (in that case retirement age) exactly corresponds with a protected characteristic (in that case sex) and is thus a proxy for it."
"[33] In some cases the ground, or the reason, for the treatment complained of is inherent in the act itself. If an owner of premises puts up a sign saying 'no blacks admitted', race is, necessarily, the ground on which (or the reason why) a black person is excluded. James v Eastleigh Borough Council [1990] ICR 554 is a case of this kind. There is a superficial complication, in that the rule which was claimed to be unlawful—namely that pensioners were entitled to free entry to the council's swimming-pools—was not explicitly discriminatory. But it nevertheless necessarily discriminated against men because men and women had different pensionable ages: the rule could entirely accurately have been stated as 'free entry for women at 60 and men at 65'. The council was therefore applying a criterion which was of its nature discriminatory: it was, as Lord Goff put it, at p 574F, 'gender based'. In cases of this kind what was going on inside the head of the putative discriminator—whether described as his intention, his motive, his reason or his purpose—will be irrelevant. The 'ground' of his action being inherent in the act itself, no further inquiry is needed. It follows that, as the majority in James v Eastleigh Borough Council decided, a respondent who has treated a claimant less favourably on the grounds of his or her sex or race cannot escape liability because he had a benign motive.
[34] But that is not the only kind of case. In other cases—of which Nagarajan [1999] ICR 554 is an example—the act complained of is not in itself discriminatory but is rendered so by a discriminatory motivation, ie by the 'mental processes' (whether conscious or unconscious) which led the putative discriminator to do the act. Establishing what those processes were is not always an easy inquiry, but tribunals are trusted to be able to draw appropriate inferences from the conduct of the putative discriminator and the surrounding circumstances (with the assistance where necessary of the burden of proof provisions). Even in such a case, however, it is important to bear in mind that the subject of the inquiry is the ground of, or reason for, the putative discriminator's action, not his motive: just as much as in the kind of case considered in James v Eastleigh Borough Council, a benign motive is irrelevant. This is the point being made in the second paragraph of the passage which we have quoted from the speech of Lord Nicholls in Nagarajan: see para. 29 above. The distinctions involved may seem subtle, but they are real, as the example given by Lord Nicholls at the end of that paragraph makes clear.
[35] Lord Goff himself in James v Eastleigh Borough Council [1990] ICR 554 recognised the distinction between the two types of case. In the passage from his speech quoted at para 28(3) above he characterised them as, on the one hand, cases where a 'gender-based criterion' was applied and, on the other, cases where the complainant's sex is 'the reason why the defendant acted as he did' or where the treatment occurs 'because of his or her sex': he gives as an example of the latter case where 'the defendant is motivated by an animus against persons of the complainant's sex' (p 574F). (The distinction is again referred to in the second passage, quoted at para. 28(4).) Although the terminology used is not entirely consistent with Lord Nicholls's, it is clear that the distinction intended is essentially the same as we have identified above: in the former case, the grounds for the putative discriminator's action can be found in the 'criterion' itself, whereas in the latter it is necessary to look into his mental processes (which will include his motivation though not his motive)."
Ground 3: the claim for breach of the duty to make reasonable adjustments
"…so far as reasonable adjustment is concerned, the focus of the Tribunal is, and both advocates before us agree, an objective one. The focus is upon the practical result of the measures which can be taken. It is not — and it is an error — for the focus to be upon the process of reasoning by which a possible adjustment was considered. As the cases indicate, and as a careful reading of the statute would show, it is irrelevant to consider the employer's thought processes or other processes leading to the making or failure to make a reasonable adjustment. It is an adjustment which objectively is reasonable, not one for the making of which, or the failure to make which, the employer had (or did not have) good reasons."
Ground 4: the claim for indirect discrimination
"I understand the Claimant's objection to that evidence and note that the ET majority did not suggest its reasoning on indirect discrimination was dependent upon that material."
"If I had been consulted at the time, I would have wholeheartedly agreed with the decision that there were serious concerns with his health and the Claimant was 'high risk'. …"
"There is absolutely no way that I would have considered that it is appropriate to send the Claimant to work in Sharjah with the medical information available at that time. …"
"… The risks from the effects of heat and humidity is another factor, which would have prevented me from clearing the Claimant to take up the assignment in Sharjah at the time given his poor control of his diabetes. It is a hot country and there are well recognised increased risks associated with living in hot countries for individuals with pathologies such as the Claimant's. Becoming dehydrated can lead to further kidney damage if not acute kidney failure in addition to further complications associated with the Claimant's already poorly controlled diabetes. Given the documented inability to manage his diabetes adequately, as per the report from Dr Sawyer and the GP and Specialist reports, in my opinion the risk of deploying to Sharjah would have been an unacceptable risk at the time."
"In summary, I completely agree that the Claimant was high risk for assignment and I agree that Mr Shaughnessy made the right decision not to send him on assignment at that time especially given the need to investigate as documented his conditions further. If I had been asked my opinion at the time and, if I had been asked to look at the documentation relevant to his medical process, then this is what my view would have been then and this remains my view now."
Conclusion
Lord Justice Baker:
Lord Justice Newey: