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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Fox v. Betesh Fox & Co Solicitors (A Firm) [2002] UKEAT 0363_01_0710 (7 October 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/0363_01_0710.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 0363_01_0710, [2002] UKEAT 363_1_710 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MS G MILLS
MR J C SHRIGLEY
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MS TESS GILL (of Counsel) Oldham Law Centre First Floor Archway House Bridge Street Oldham |
For the Respondent | MR JAMES BOYD (of Counsel) Betesh Fox & Co Solicitors (A Firm) 1617 Ralli Court West Riverside Manchester M3 3FT |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
"In respect of the applicant's complaint of sex discrimination, the Tribunal noted that the applicant's complaint was based upon indirect sex discrimination and that it was conceded by the respondent that the ingredients of indirect sex discrimination were satisfied but for the question of justification. Accordingly, the Tribunal focused upon the requirement of justification in section 1(1)(b)(ii) of the 1995 Act [sic]. The question of whether the respondent's requirement that the applicant return to full-time working (and its refusal to allow her to return on a flexible working basis) is to be decided objectively by reference to why the respondent decided to impose the requirement in question. The majority of the Tribunal is satisfied that the applicant's position as a legal secretary involved considerably more than her evaluation of her position (as being 97% audio typing). The majority of the Tribunal is satisfied that the respondent required its legal secretaries to be engaged in full-time positions because of its need to ensure that there was adequate secretarial support for fee-earners and proper continuity in the servicing of clients and files. Having objectively balanced the discriminatory effects of the respondent's requirement and the reasonable needs of the respondent in applying that requirement, the majority finds that the respondent's requirement that the applicant's return as a full-time legal secretary corresponded to a real need on the part of the respondent's undertaking, was appropriate with a view to achieving the objectives being pursued and was necessary to that end. Taking account of the size of the respondent's undertaking, the number of staff it employed, the type of work which the applicant did and how the work was organised, the majority is satisfied that the respondent was justified in insisting that she return on a full-time basis. The minority member was not satisfied that the respondent had demonstrated objective justification in those terms. It follows that the applicant's complaint of sex discrimination is not well-founded and that complaint is also dismissed."
"61 For my part, I cannot find any real assistance in the concept of subjective or objective assessment of the discriminatory effect of the requirement in a case of this nature. The IT [Industrial Tribunal] is required to determine the discriminatory effect of the requirement. That seems to me to require the IT to ascertain both the quantitative effect, ie how many men and how many women will or are likely to suffer in consequence of the discriminatory effect; and, also, what is the qualitative effect of the requirement upon those affected by it, ie how much damage or disappointment may it do or cause and how lasting or final is that damage?
62 I therefore do not agree that it is improper in the balancing exercise to take into account the particular hardships which have lain in the way of the particular applicant, provided that proper attention is paid to the question of how typical they are of any other men and women adversely affected by the requirement. That, I think, is what the IT did. I have cited the passage from the IT judgment in full as set out above.
63 Nevertheless, in my judgment, the IT did misdirect itself in carrying out the balancing exercise. As against the reasonable needs of the University, the IT must set the discriminatory effect of the application by the University of the requirement to Miss Jones and any others excluded by it."
In Allonby, Sedley LJ said at paragraph 29:
"In this situation it is not enough that the tribunal should have posed, as they did, the statutory questions "whether the decision taken by the college was justifiable irrespective of the sex of the person or persons to whom it applied". In what are extended reasons running to 15 closely-typed pages, there has to be some evidence that the tribunal understood the process by which a now formidable body of authority requires the task of answering the question to be carried out, and some evidence that it has in fact carried it out. Once a finding of a condition having a disparate and adverse impact on women had been made, what was required was at the minimum a critical evaluation of whether the college's reasons demonstrated a real need to dismiss the applicant; if there was such a need, consideration of the seriousness of the disparate impact of the dismissal on women including the applicant; and an evaluation of whether the former were sufficient to outweigh the latter. There is no sign of this process in the tribunal's extended reasons."
"First of all, where there is a majority decision it is very desirable that the views of the majority and those of the minority should be set out clearly and distinctly in separate paragraphs. Unless that is done neither the parties nor the Appeal Tribunal can really get a clear idea of precisely what are the views of the majority and the minority respectively."
Palmer was a comparatively straightforward unfair dismissal case. We think that the desirability of the majority and minority views being clearly and fully expressed in the Tribunal reasons is, if anything, greater in a case such as the present where the Tribunal is required to carry out a careful balancing exercise between the extent of the detriment to employees on the one hand and the needs of the employer's business on the other.