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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Murrain v London Borough Of Hackney [2003] UKEAT 0114_02_2002 (20 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/0114_02_2002.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 114_2_2002, [2003] UKEAT 0114_02_2002 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J McMULLEN QC
MRS C BAELZ
MR P R A JACQUES CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MS C RAYNER (of Counsel) APPEARING UNDER THE EMPLOYMENT LAW APPEAL ADVICE SCHEME |
For the Respondent | MISS C MACLAREN (of Counsel) Instructed by: London Borough of Hackney 183-187 Stoke Newington High Street London N16 OLH |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J McMULLEN QC
The facts
"I enclose a copy of the report of the investigation commissioned by the Play Service into incidents involving Alan Murrain.
In my view having resigned his post with the Play Service, Alan Murrain has in effect resigned his post with you, given the contractual status of his employment with you.
Should you wish to continue employing Alan it would have to be on an independent basis, with your service taking and managing any consequences. I would say that the issues with Alan never involved his competence as such, however, as the report, makes clear dismissal was recommended because of dishonesty and the risk to children and others.
I have taken the liberty of copying this fax to Neil Henderson, the HR Consultant who advised us on this case. I have also spoken to Jackie Hopfinger who will be contacting you shortly because she is unaware of the various arrangements between your two services."
The Legal Issue
2 (1) "A person ("the discriminator") discriminates against another person ("the person victimised") in any circumstances relevant for the purposes of any provision of this Act if he treats the person victimised less favourably than in those circumstances he treats or would treat other persons, and does so by reason that the person victimised has - …
(c) otherwise done anything under or by reference to this Act in relation to the discriminator or any other person; or
(d) alleged that the discriminator or any other person has committed an act which (whether the allegation so states) would amount to a contravention of this Act.
or by reason that the discriminator knows that the person victimised intends to do any of those things, or suspects that the person victimised has done, or intends to do, any of them."
(a) What are the relevant circumstances?
(b) Was there less favourable treatment than others in the control group?
(c) Was the treatment by reason of a protected act?
30 "A situation closely comparable to that in the present case arose in Cornelius…This was a decision of the Court of Appeal, comprising Sir John Donaldson Fox and Bingham LJJ. Like the present case, Cornelius concerned steps taken by employers to preserve their position pending the outcome of proceedings. A college declined to act on an employee's transfer request or to operate their grievance procedure while proceedings under the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 brought by the employee against the college, were still awaiting determination. Giving the only reasoned judgment, Bingham LJ said, at pp 145-146, para 33:
"There is no reason whatever to suppose that the decisions of the Registrar and his senior assistant on the Applicant's requests for a transfer and a hearing under the grievance procedure were influenced in any way by the facts that the Appellant had brought proceedings or that those proceedings were under the Act. The existence of proceedings plainly did influence their decisions"."
It is clear that the House of Lords was approving, in terms, the approach of the Court of Appeal to the issue of victimisation.
55 "Of course in one sense the fact that he had brought proceedings was a cause of his being treated less favourably. If he had not brought proceedings, he would have been given a reference. In some contexts, a causal link of this kind will be enough. For example, in Crown v Birmingham City Council, Ex Parte EOC [1989] IRLR 173 the question was whether the Council had treated a girl less favourably "on the ground of her sex", contrary to section 1 of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975. The House of Lords decided that her sex did not have to be the reason why the Council had decided to treat her in that way. It was sufficient that she would have been treated differently if she had been a boy: see also James v Eastleigh Borough Council [1990] IRLR 288.
59 [Cornelius], with which I respectfully agree, shows that once proceedings have been commenced, a new relationship is created between the parties. They are not only employer and employee but also adversaries in litigation. The existence of that adversarial relationship may reasonably cause the employer to behave in a way which treats the employee less favourably than someone who had not commenced such proceedings. But the treatment need not be, consciously or unconsciously, a response to the commencement of proceedings. It may simply be a reasonable response to the need to protect the employer's interest as a party to the litigation. It is true that an employee who had not commenced proceedings would not have been treated in the same way. Under section 1, one would have needed to go no further. Under section 2, however, the commencement of proceedings must be a reason for the treatment and in Cornelius's case it was not.
60 A test which is likely in most cases to give the right answer is to ask whether the employer would have refused the request if the litigation had been concluded, whatever the outcome. If the answer is no, it will usually follow that the reason for refusal was the existence of the proceedings and not the fact that the employee had commenced them. On the other hand, if the fact that the employee had commenced proceedings under the Act was a real reason why he received less favourable treatment, it is no answer that the employer would have behaved in the same way to an employee who had done some non-protected act, such as commencing proceedings otherwise than under the Act."
39 "In order that discrimination by way of victimisation under section 2 should occur it is necessary that there should be "circumstances relevant for the purposes of any provision of this Act". Secondly, it is necessary that the discriminator treats the person victimised less favourably than in those circumstances he treats or would treat other persons; and, thirdly, it is necessary that he does so by reason that the person victimised has done one of the protected acts. In my view, in order to ascertain who are the "other persons" with whom comparison should be made in any particular case one must identify the circumstances relevant for the purposes of the provision of the Act in which the discrimination is said to have occurred and then to consider how other persons in those circumstances have been treated.
The Applicant's Case
Conclusion
38 "…we do not think that that could possibly be attributed to a difference of treatment on the ground of race.
[the Applicant] did not suggest any other employee of whatever ethnic origin would have been treated differently."
Disposal of the appeal