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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Gould v. Haileybury & Imperial Service College & Anor [2001] UKEAT 1057_00_0606 (6 June 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/1057_00_0606.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 1057__606, [2001] UKEAT 1057_00_0606 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
MR P DAWSON OBE
MR B M WARMAN
APPELLANT | |
IMPERIAL SERVICE COLLEGE (2) THE GOVERNORS OF LAMBROOK HAILEYBURY SCHOOL |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | IN PERSON |
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
"1. As to the applicant's breach of contract claim the respondent shall pay to the applicant the total sum of £7,417.03 including interest up to 31 July 2000 of £1,282.54.
2. The respondents shall pay to the applicant further interest at the daily rate of £1.34 from 1 August 2000 to the date of the sending of this decision to the parties.
3. As to the applicant's claim for unfair dismissal the respondents shall pay to the applicant the total sum of £8, 745.88 comprising:-
a) A basic award of £ 880.00
b) A compensatory award £7,865.88
Total ………. £8,745.88
4. The total award is £16,162.91 to be paid by the respondent to the applicant.
5. The Recoupment Regulations apply to the unfair dismissal award. The prescribed element is £5,796.28. The period of the prescribed element is from 1 May to 31 August 1998."
"As from 1 September 1998 the applicant obtained new employment with Sussex House School in London by way of a permanent contract. This was at a salary of £32,000 per annum, which was increased on 1 April 1999 to £33,700 per annum. The applicant's gross wage with the respondent was £23,046."
The new salary was some £10,000 or so higher than the previous one.
"6.1 Refusal to let the applicant give certain evidence under oath
The tribunal refused to let the applicant give evidence that he had resigned from Sussex House School before he had started there owing to his experiences at the respondent's school.
It was a submission from the respondent's counsel that prompted the applicant to mention the above fact. The tribunal refused to allow this in evidence on the basis that the applicant had not mentioned this a short time beforehand, when he had been giving evidence under oath.
The applicant was representing himself. It is submitted that the tribunal should have given him some leeway as a result, especially as tribunal procedure is less formal (see the Employment Appeal Tribunal's decision dated 13th October 1999, appeal number EAT/1070/99). It would have been very easy for the applicant to have been sworn in again to give this evidence."
"The applicant maintains that because of the conduct of the respondents he was completely disillusioned with teaching and that the Sussex House position was not intended by him to be a permanent one Indeed, although this did not feature in his evidence, at the time of making his submissions to the Tribunal, he suggested that he did in fact submit his resignation to Sussex House a year in advance when he first joined in September 1999 (they say 1999 but it should surely be 1998)."
The Tribunal goes on to say:
"Whatever his decision, and it was entirely his, the applicant did decide to take on a further position in education which to all intents and purposes was a permanent one and indeed lasted for a period of a year. In our view, there was a clear break as at 1 September 1999 (which again should be 1998)."
Later they say:
"Whilst we appreciate that it would be more expensive for the applicant to live in London than in Windsor where he had the advantages of accommodation at his School with subsidised meals, which was not the case at Sussex House, nevertheless there is such a differential in the incomes in the two establishments that we believe that the applicant did in fact receive the benefit of comparable employment in financial terms when he joined Sussex House. Therefore any loss which he claims cannot go beyond 1 September 1998 and that must be the cut-off date. Any loss which the applicant may have suffered since leaving Sussex House is far too remote from the original dismissal by the respondents and cannot be attributed to that dismissal. In effect the chain of causation was broken when the applicant commenced employment with Sussex House."