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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> London Underground Ltd v. Famakinwa & Anor [2003] UKEAT 1488_01_1702 (17 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/1488_01_1702.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 1488_1_1702, [2003] UKEAT 1488_01_1702 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 13 January 2003 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J McMULLEN QC
MR B BEYNON
MR P A GAMMON MBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MISS KATIE GOLLOP (Of Counsel) Instructed by: London Underground Limited 55 Broadway London SW1H OBD |
For the Respondent | MISS SUSAN DONS (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Wedlake Saint 14 John Street London WC1N 2EB |
JUDGE J McMULLEN QC
i. Unfair dismissal: whether the Respondent dismissed the Applicant for a reason connected with conduct and whether it had acted fairly.
ii. Sex discrimination: whether the Respondent or Ms Gormally (a Second Respondent) discriminated against the Applicant on the grounds of gender. The Tribunal dismissed the Applicant's claim of sex discrimination and having dismissed the Applicant's claim against Ms Gormally dismissed her from the proceedings.
iii. Race discrimination: whether the Respondent or Ms Gormally discriminated against the Applicant in relation to his dismissal; whether the Respondent discriminated against him in relation to a grievance brought by him; and whether the latter was out of time.
"During the course of the hearing the Applicant's Counsel seemed to agree that if it was gross misconduct dismissal was the correct sanction. However this Tribunal does not believe, taking all the circumstances into consideration, that this was a reasonable sanction bearing in mind what had happened."
"We conclude that we can draw an inference that the dismissal occurred following the Applicant's car crash in Nigeria and because he was Nigerian. The way that he was treated regarding his sick pay and the insistence of Ms Lloyd on the proper procedures regarding sick certificates being followed, her insistence on a home visit and the reason she insisted on an Occupational Health visit, in addition, the way that she treated him in relation to the sick pay and the absence warning, all point to the fact that we can draw an inference that the reason she behaved like this was that she did not truly believe that he had had a car crash and was sick in Nigeria, and this was because he was Nigerian."
"The Applicant argued that this was a continuing act of discrimination, and referred us to Barclays Bank Plc -v- Kapoor [1991] ICR 208. We conclude that the acts that were complained of were discrete acts occurring over a period of time and therefore the earlier acts are not acts that can be separate acts of discrimination as they occurred more than three months before the presentation of the IT1."
The word 'this' refers to the dismissal. It is unclear from the passage we have cited whether the Tribunal was deciding that the complaint of discriminatory treatment in relation to his absence as compared with Ms Gormally was within time. The 'acts' appear to include the grievance for the Tribunal went on to say (reasons paragraph 12):
"The acts that he complained of regarding the grievance brought in March 2000 and the time warning which was later resolved were outside the three-month time limit set out in Section 68 of the Race Relations Act 1976 and we have regarded them as background leading to the ultimate dismissal of the Applicant in September 2000."
Putting those two citations together, it seems that the Tribunal was declining jurisdiction to hear the Applicant's complaint of direct discrimination earlier in 2000 in relation to his absence in Nigeria, but treating the matter as one of background to the principal complaints of unfair dismissal and race discrimination in the form of dismissal on 7 November 2000.
"In this case there was a difference in race and the explanation given by the Respondents the Tribunal considered to be inadequate and unsatisfactory on the grounds that Ms Gormally had not been treated in the same way and dismissed when she had committed an act of gross misconduct."
It was submitted on behalf of the Respondent that this is not a true comparison. The case against the Applicant was that he had committed an assault at night on a female employee in her own room on company premises. He physically overpowered her. He took hold of her. He put his hand on his private parts. He made suggestive remarks. The victim was put in fear and went for support to another member of staff. The case against Ms Gormally was that she harassed a male and a female who were in a relationship. Mr Henbury said this deserved the lowest level of sanction and contrasted that with the sanction of dismissal against the Applicant.