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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Drury v. Bedford Hospital NHS Trust [2002] UKEAT 1402_00_2503 (25 March 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/1402_00_2503.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 1402_00_2503, [2002] UKEAT 1402__2503 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 20 February 2002 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE HOLLAND
MS N AMIN
MRS A GALLICO
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MISS J BROWN (of Counsel) Instructed By: Disability Rights Commission 2nd Floor Arndale House The Arndale Centre Manchester M4 3AQ |
For the Respondent | MR A FRASER-URQUHART (of Counsel) Instructed By: Capsticks 77-83 Upper Richmond Road London SW15 2TT |
MR JUSTICE HOLLAND:
Introduction
a. 28th May 1988. The Appellant, Mrs. Pauline Drury, took up employment with the Respondents as Senior Sister of a busy surgical ward at their Bedford Hospital.
b. 22nd May 1999. She became ill, with sick leave starting two days later.
c. 2nd July 1999. Her condition was diagnosed as rheumatoid arthritis.
d. 8th July 1999. The fact of that diagnosis was communicated to her manager.
e. 12th July 1999. She was seen by Dr. Odunis of Bedford Occupation Health Services. He advised re-deployment or ill-health retirement.
f. 13th July 1999. There was a meeting with the Senior Nurse Manager. There were similar proposals for redeployment or retirement. The applicant made it clear that she wanted to retain her employment in the ward and her representative suggested re-organisation or job-sharing respectively so as to make her continued ward involvement feasible.
g. 2nd August 1999. By a letter of this date, the Appellant's consultant, Dr. Sarah Ray, wrote to the Senior Nurse Manager asking her to consider deferring any definite decision about the Appellant's job for the time being: "there is a possibility that steroids will control the symptoms to a point where she may be able to take up her previous post."
h. 3rd August 1999. There was a further meeting with the Senior Nurse Manager. It was made clear there was now a need to recruit a replacement for the Appellant, albeit on a temporary basis. No further progress was made in arranging the Appellant's own future. Per the Employment Tribunal: "(The appellant) tells us that at the date of those meetings she was completely unable to work at all. There was no definite prognosis of her condition, it was not known whether she would be able to return to work, it was not known when, if ever, she would be able to return to work and it was not known what tasks she would be able to perform on her return."
i. A replacement was advertised for in the Nursing Times. The subsequently compiled job description included: " the current post holder is on sick leave. Should the present post holder be fit to return to work in the next 12 months, you will be redeployed to a post of the same grade within the Trust."
j. 11th September 1999. The Appellant's entitlement to sick pay was due to terminate. At some earlier stage it had been decided to extend the entitlement for a further month.
k. 14th September 1999. The Appellant intimated a decision to apply for ill-health retirement. Per the Employment Tribunal: "The reason, or principal reason, for (the Appellant's) decision to apply for ill-health retirement was that she was under financial pressure and the lump sum payment which she would receive and which we were told amounted to £20,000 and the monthly pension thereafter would, to a large extent, have relieved that pressure."
l. 4th October 1999. A further meeting to discuss the Appellant's future had to be cancelled: she was still ill and she thought that she might have contracted tuberculosis.
m. 15th January 2000. Her employment ended, her application for ill-health retirement having been pursued and accepted.
n. 8th March 2000. Her ET1 complaining, inter alia, of unfair dismissal and disability discrimination.
The Employment Tribunal
"This section does not apply in relation to any benefit payable in money under a scheme or arrangement for the benefit of employees in respect of
(c) Sickness."
Seemingly the Respondents written final submissions invoked this sub-section; no attempt was made to distinguish its ambit.
The Appeal
a. It is arguable that the issue now raised by the Re-Amended Notice of Appeal is not a new one. True, the Extended Reasons do not in terms advert to the sickness pay issue in the context of Section 6 adjustments, but the fact of an extension limited to one month was raised by the Appellant in her ET1 in the context of Unfair Dismissal and, as Miss. Brown had pointed out, the Respondents' written final submission to the Employment Tribunal included what was presumably then perceived to be a relevant submission, namely that Section 6(11) precluded consideration of extension of sick pay as a potential Section 6 adjustment. However, so Mr. Fraser-Urquhart submits, on this premise there is the already cited finding of fact against the Appellant: "(The Appellant's) contractual entitlement to sick pay would have expired on the 11th (September) 1999. The Respondents agreed to extend (the Appellant's) sick pay for a further month and it was not unreasonable for the Respondents to refuse a request for a further extension of (the Appellant's) entitlement", see paragraph 8(iv).
b. It is arguable in the alternative that this issue is a new one, not ventilated before the Employment Tribunal, hence the silence on the point in so much of the Extended Reasons as relates to Disability Discrimination. On that premise, he submits, there is authority to the effect that save in exceptional circumstances it would be wrong for this Tribunal to consider a point of law that had not been raised before the Employment Tribunal, and particularly so when proper consideration of the point required further factual investigation to be made: Kumchyk v. Derby City Council (1978) ICR 1116 and Jones v. Governing Body of Burdell Coutts School (1998) IRLR 521. If the factual finding cited above does not dispose of this issue then there is a need , he submits, for further evidence and findings and it is not in point that as then represented the Appellant did not make the submission as to the meaning of Section 6(11) that found favour in London Clubs Management v. Hood op. cit. Again, he submits, it is not in point that the Employment Tribunal did not on its own initiative pick up and pursue this point: Kumchyk v. Derby City Council op. cit. at page 1123 and Mensah v. East Hertfordshire NHS Trust (1998) IRLR 531.
Judgment