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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Ashton v. Chief Constable of West Mercia Constabulary [2000] EAT 1381_99_2707 (27 July 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/1381_99_2707.html Cite as: [2000] EAT 1381_99_2707 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 29 June 2000 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR P DAWSON OBE
MR A E R MANNERS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR D O'DEMPSEY (of Counsel) Instructed by: Mr A Creme Head of Employment Rights UNISON 1 Mabledon Place London WC1H 9AJ |
For the Respondent |
MR M KURREIN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Ms P Fishwick Assistant Solicitor West Mercia Constabulary West Mercia Headquarters Hindip Hall PO Box 55 Worcester WR3 8SP |
JUDGE PETER CLARK: This is an appeal by the applicant before the Shrewsbury Employment Tribunal, Ms Claire Ashton, against that tribunal's reserved decision promulgated with extended reasons on 27th September 1999, dismissing her complaints of both sex and disability discrimination brought against her employer, the Chief Constable, West Mercia Constabulary.
The Facts
Medical treatment
The employment position
Employment Tribunal decision
Sex Discrimination
(1) They rejected the respondent's submission that the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 had no application to allege discrimination against a transsexual. P v S & Cornwall County Council [1996] IRLR 347; Chessington World of Adventures Ltd v Reed [1998] ICR 97. Further, they found that EC Directive 76/207 applied directly to the respondent as an emanation of the State. In so holding they did not accept the submission that the Sex Discrimination (Gender Reassignment) Regulations 1999, amending the 1975 Act by adding s.2A, and a definition of GRA in s.82, which came into force after this appellant's dismissal, would not have been necessary if the 1975 Act and the Directive as originally drafted covered discrimination against transsexuals. That legal conclusion is not challenged by the respondent in this appeal.
(2) On the facts, the appellant was consistently performing below the standard to be expected of successful probationer in the post of Communications Operator.
(3) In answer to the question, but for her declared intention to undergo GRA would the appellant have received the same treatment (i.e. dismissal) from the respondent, the tribunal gave an unequivocal reply in the affirmative (reasons paragraph 24).
(4) In these circumstances they rejected the complaint of sex discrimination under the 1975 Act and the Directive.
Disability Discrimination
The tribunal found that the appellant suffered from two distinct mental impairments for the purposes of S.1(1) of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 ['DDA'], GID and depression. In this appeal we are concerned only with the tribunal's findings in respect of GID. The finding, adverse to the appellant that she was not disabled within the meaning of s.1(1) in relation to her depression is not challenged on appeal.
Their findings in relation to GID were that, although long-term, that impairment did not have a substantial effect on her ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities.
Accordingly, the disability discrimination complaint was dismissed on the grounds that she was not suffering from a disability.
The Appeal
Sex Discrimination
(1) Did the tribunal ask themselves the wrong question in law at paragraph 24 of their reasons?
Mr O'Dempsey submits that the question, following James v Eastleigh Borough Council [1990] ICR 554, was not whether the respondent's treatment of the appellant was by reason of her sex (GRA), which involved looking at the respondent's motives for the treatment, but whether it was on grounds of her sex.
We are not satisfied that the tribunal did fall into error in this way. Although the word "reason" is used in the tribunal's decision, we accept Mr Kurein's submission that at paragraph 24 they asked themselves and permissibly answered the correct question.
(2) Did the tribunal impermissibly narrow their focus to the appellant's intention to undergo GRA as opposed to considering whether the treatment of the appellant was a direct result of the effects of her treatment in undergoing GRA and therefore on the grounds of her sex?
Mr O'Dempsey took us at great length through the case of P v S. That was a case immediately concerned with less favourable treatment directly attributable to the applicant's stated intention to undergo GRA.
He has sought to draw a parallel with the case of a pregnant woman, incapable of work through pregnancy-related illness. We do not accept that comparison. Special provisions have been made for pregnant workers that do not yet arise in the case of transsexuals.
It is a bridge too far to submit that where the cause of this appellant's poor work performance is, on the tribunal's findings, linked to the side effects (depression) of medical treatment prescribed to her whilst undergoing GRA, that the necessary causative link is established between the treatment complained of, dismissal and her sex.
In this case, unlike pregnancy-related illness which is gender specific, the medical conditions from which the appellant suffered are not. The true comparison is between the appellant and a probationer who performed unsatisfactorily during his or her probation period. Both would, on the tribunal's findings, have been dismissed.
In these circumstances we can find no grounds in law in interfering with the tribunal's conclusion on sex discrimination.
Disability Discrimination
First, Mr O'Dempsey submits that the tribunal's findings at paragraph 14 of their reasons, that the appellant's GID did not have a substantial adverse effect on her day-to-day activities in that her mobility was not affected by her decision not to socialise outside work taken in June 1996, was an impermissible finding. He argues that an adverse effect may be an indirect effect, here of the treatment undergone with a view to GRA.
We accept Mr Kurein's submission that the tribunal was entitled to find, on the evidence, that her decision not to socialise was her choice; she preferred to keep herself to herself. In these circumstances the tribunal was entitled to conclude that her GID condition did not have a substantial adverse effect on her mobility. We reach that conclusion having considered, in particular, paragraphs C6 and C14 of the Guidance issued under s.3 DDA.
Secondly, and for similar reasons, we reject Mr O'Dempsey's further submission that the tribunal was wrong to discount the appellant's conscious decision to alter the way in which she spoke. They found that there was no evidence that her ability to speak was in any way affected. That is a finding of fact with which we shall not interfere.
Accordingly we uphold the tribunal's decision that the appellant was not disabled within s.1 DDA.
Conclusion