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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Thackeray v. Acequip Ltd [2003] UKEAT 0396_03_1809 (18 September 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/0396_03_1809.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 396_3_1809, [2003] UKEAT 0396_03_1809 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HER HONOUR JUDGE WAKEFIELD
MRS M V McARTHUR
MRS M T PROSSER
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised 20 November 2003
For the Appellant | THE APPELLANT In Person |
For the Respondent | THE RESPONDENT NEITHER PRESENT NOR REPRESENTED |
JUDGE WAKEFIELD
"4. The Applicant's constructive dismissal case was based on a last straw scenario. The Applicant alleged that there were various incidents of an undermining nature prior to the disciplinary action and that the "catalyst that finally brought matters to a head" was the imposition of the final written warning when he had committed no disciplinary misconduct.
10. The Applicant's principal complaint before the Tribunal was that he should never have been disciplined. His argument ran that he was carrying out the instructions given to him by his immediate line manager, Mr Dymock. That was his principal line of argument both at the disciplinary hearing and at the appeal hearing."
In paragraph 11 of the Employment Tribunal's reasons there is an important finding of fact in the following terms:
"11. The Tribunal members note that neither Mr Copeland nor Mr Marshall (and they are the two members of the Respondent's staff who conducted respectively the disciplinary and appeal hearings) asked Mr Dymock whether he had given the Applicant any instructions which conflicted with the written instructions. The Applicant was disciplined and his appeal rejected without Mr Dymock having been asked to comment upon the Applicant's explanation as to his departure from the written instructions."
14. "…considered that there was potentially a fundamental breach of contract by the Respondent ie a breach of the implied duty of trust and confidence when the Respondent dismissed without further investigation the Applicant's claim that he had been following conflicting instructions given to him by his manager, in particular without asking the manager whether such conflicting instructions had been given. Those Tribunal members (that is the two in the majority) considered that the fundamental duty of an employer in carrying out a disciplinary process must be to act fairly including investigating whether an explanation given by a member of staff has any credence. The failure by the Respondent in this case in making enquiries of the Applicant's line manager in the view of Mr Bluestone and Mr Peters, could amount to a breach of contract and a fundamental breach which could justify a resignation amounting to constructive dismissal."
"15. However in this case the Applicant did not know that the Respondent had made no enquiries of Mr Dymock. What the Applicant knew was that his explanation had not been accepted and he had been issued with the final written warning. The issue of a final written warning by itself does not amount to a fundamental breach of contract. As the Applicant was not aware of the failure to make enquiries of Mr Dymock, Mr Bluestone and Mr Peters conclude that the Applicant cannot have resigned in response to such a fundamental breach of contract."
And they go on in paragraph 16 to refer to the resignation letter as confirming their opinion.