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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Brandao v. Globo International (London) Ltd [1999] UKEAT 263_99_1811 (18 November 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/263_99_1811.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 263_99_1811 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE CHARLES
LORD GLADWIN OF CLEE CBE JP
MR J C SHRIGLEY
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR N BOOTH (of Counsel) Messrs Thompsons Solicitors Congress House Great Russell Street London WC1B 3LW |
For the Respondent | MS E ANDREW (of Counsel) Instructed By: Mr N Woolf Messrs Woolf Simmonds Solicitors 1 Great Cumberland Place London W1H 7AL |
MR JUSTICE CHARLES: The parties to this appeal are a Ms Brandao who is the Appellant before us and the Applicant before the Employment Tribunal and Globo International (London) Ltd, who was the Respondent before the Employment Tribunal but also have a cross-appeal before us.
(i) "The Applicant's complaint of direct sex discrimination fails;
(ii) the Applicant was not disabled within the meaning of section 1(1) of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 and her complaint of disability discrimination fails;
(iii) the Applicant was dismissed by the Respondent;
(iv) the Applicant was unfairly dismissed by reason of capability;
(v) It is just and equitable that percentage reduction of 80% should apply to the basic and the compensatory awards;
(vi) The issue of remedy was adjourned to 25 January 1998; and
(vii) No order as to costs."
2 There are two familiar types of percentage reductions, one broadly called 'contribution', which is a convenient label to discuss the reducing mechanisms of section 122(2) and section 123(6) of the Act. It is applicable when the conduct of the complainant or some action of the complainant make it just and equitable to reduce the award – that is one class of reduction. The other, broadly called 'Polkey' by reference to the House of Lords case of that name, is where the position is that the Employment Tribunal has to reflect that even though an employee has been dismissed improperly (so as to lead to the likelihood of an award in his or her favour), there was in any event a likelihood that he or she would, after what is usually a short interval, have been able to have been and would have been dismissed properly.
3 The Tribunal here dealt only with 'contribution' and not with 'Polkey', although, in effect, Mr Booth tells us that they were addressed to some extent on that but not on contribution. It is only on the contribution side of things that Ms Brandao seeks to appeal. Mr Booth relies on a quotation from Gibson v British Transport Board and we see great force in that citation. The question of law on this part of Mr Booth's prospective appeal is whether, on the facts as found by the Employment Tribunal, it could be said that Ms Brandao had contributed to her own dismissal by way of some blameworthy or improper conduct. If all that was said against her (as seems to be the case) is that during periods when she had been given medical certificates and had supplied them to her employer, indicating general debility and panic attacks, she nonetheless made little contact with her employers and had given no indication as to when she might be in a position to return to work, could that possibly have been properly held to have amounted to blameworthy or improper conduct? We see that there a point of law emerges. It is a point of law that merits the matter going to a full hearing.
4 The second ground that Mr Booth raises is that Ms Brandao's contribution was never addressed at all by the parties before the Employment Tribunal and he draws our attention to Slaughter v C Brewer & Sons EAT (1990) ICR 730, a case which has many parallels with the case before us and which draws attention to the need for an Employment Tribunal to indicate to the parties that it is moving on to the subject of contribution if it is minded to do so and also draws attention to the fact that there can be a need for evidence directed specifically to the question of contribution. Mr Booth tells us that not only was there no argument on contribution, there was no evidence on it either. We see that also to be a proper argument of law justifying the matter going to a full hearing.
5 There does need to be some caution in going forward because, given that Polkey was not ruled upon by the Tribunal, it could be here (it is not for us to decide) that Polkey in any event would have reduced any award to Ms Brandao substantially and it is worth both sides considering, as they prepare for a full appeal, whether the game is worth the candle because if contribution is swept aside only to have Polkey in its place, it might be that the appeal has little financial content in it. But that is just a cautionary matter for both sides to take into account. We permit the matter to go to a full appeal, both on the question of law as to whether what was found as contribution could have been contribution in any case and also as to natural justice. Skeleton arguments are to be exchanged not less than 14 days before the hearing. Authorities to be relied on by either side should also be photocopied and sent to the EAT office not less than 14 days before the hearing. Non-compliance with either of those two directions may lead to an adjournment and an adjournment may lead to an Order for costs. We will invite Mr Booth to indicate whether we need to make a request for the Chairman's notes as to any argument or evidence relating to the subject of contribution in order that the negative that he wishes to assert, namely that contribution was never raised, can be pointed to.
"5 We considered the compensatory award payable to Ms Brandao pursuant to section 123 of the Act. We considered what the situation would have been had Ms Brandao not been unfairly dismissed. In view of her illness, which continues, and in respect of which she tells us she is still unable to work although she is undertaking a degree course, we considered that it was likely that had she not been unfairly dismissed she have been dismissed fairly after medical reports had been obtained. We noted from the evidence before us at the full merits hearing that the Respondent was not quick in dealing with Ms Brandao's illness and therefore we estimate that it would have taken them four months until 31 December 1997 to obtain the necessary medical reports and dismiss Ms Brandao fairly. She would then have been entitled to 12 weeks' notice based on the statutory notice provisions of section 86 of the Act which means that she would have been unfairly dismissed seven months after the date of her actual dismissal. Having taken this into account we limit the compensatory award in respect of the prescribed element to seven months pay."
"4 The Respondents cross appeal from the decision of the Employment Tribunal awarding the Respondents a compensatory award of compensation for unfair dismissal of £5,135.83.
5 The Respondent's grounds of appeal are that:-
(a) The Tribunal failed to consider as set out in Polkey v AE Dayton Services Limited [1988] ICR 142 whether any further procedural steps would have been futile and as such would not have altered the decision to dismiss.
(b) The evidence of the Appellant at the hearing was that at the time of the dismissal and at all times up to and including the date of the hearing she was not fit to resume employment. In the premises therefore the Tribunal erred in principle on the basis in which they calculated the Appellant's compensatory and/or basic award."