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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Surrey County Council v Henderson [2005] UKEAT 0326_05_2311 (23 November 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2005/0326_05_2311.html Cite as: [2005] UKEAT 0326_05_2311, [2005] UKEAT 326_5_2311 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 3 November 2005 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MRS A GALLICO
MR B R GIBBS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR PAUL GREATOREX (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Surrey County Council Legal & Committee Services County Hall Penrhyn Road Kingston upon Thames Surrey KT1 2DN |
For the Respondent | MRS HILARY WINSTONE (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Department of Employment Rights UNISON Employment Rights Unit 1 Mabledon Place London WC1H 9AJ |
SUMMARY
Contract of Employment and Unfair Dismissal
Confidentiality of Complainants – need to inform employee of case against him. Application of HSBC v Madden; Sainsbury v Hill. Range of reasonable responses. Appeal allowed. Whether Wrongful Dismissal finding should also be set aside.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
Background
"During the course of employment you have:
(i) threatened violence against a number of people;
(ii) put a number of individuals in fear of their physical safety;
(iii) conducted yourself in an aggressive manner causing various parties to feel at risk of potential violence."
(a) that the Claimant had not been shown the evidence on which the allegations against him were based, and(b) that he was medically unfit to attend any meeting before 25 March.
The Issues
The Tribunal Decision
(1) The Respondent's reason for dismissal, namely their belief that the Claimant had subjected the five complainants to threats of serious violence, amounted to a potentially fair reason for dismissal relating to his conduct.(2) Dismissal for that reason was unfair, applying section 98(4) ERA because:
(a) the Respondent had denied the Claimant details of the charges made against him. Their reason for so doing, confidentiality of the complainants, was patently invalid since if the complaints had substance, the Claimant would know their identity. He was not given an opportunity to present an effective defence,(b) there was a rush to judgment by Mr Findlay, giving the Claimant and his representative no opportunity to put forward any defence in the window 19-25 March.
(3) There would be no deduction under the Polkey principle since the Tribunal were not provided with the information which was before Mr Findlay and the appeal panel. The Tribunal was not prepared to speculate as to the possible outcome of a fair procedure in these circumstances.
(4) Similarly, there was no evidence led to support the conduct alleged against the Claimant, either for the purposes of a finding of contributory conduct or to establish cause in answer to the claim of Wrongful Dismissal.
Further Conduct of the Proceedings
The Appeal
Having pre-read the papers and the helpful skeleton arguments lodged by both counsel the argument before us focused first on the question as to whether, in relation to the Tribunal's finding of Unfair Dismissal, the Tribunal had properly applied the law in asking itself and answering the fairness question under section 98(4) ERA.
"9.2 The Respondent's did not, however, act reasonably in treating the reason as sufficient to justify dismissal. There was no sustainable ground on which to deny the Claimant details of the charges against him The ground relied upon, namely the need to protect confidentiality, was patently invalid since, if there was any substance in the allegations, the Claimant must know the identities of those raising complaints against him. Natural justice required that he be made aware of when, how and against whom the threats were said to have been made. Had details of the charges been given, he would have been able to mount a proper defence. As it was, he was left with bare denial, reliance upon his record to date and some character evidence. The failure to inform the Claimant of the case against him was, in our view, grossly unfair. Moreover, the Respondents (by Mr Findlay) compounded the unfairness of the disciplinary process by ignoring the observations in the letter of 24 March concerning the Claimant's medical state and rushing to judgment on 29 March without giving him any opportunity at all to be heard. There was no need to decide his fate so soon, and every reason to believe (given the series of recent events summarised above) that the Claimant was, as his representative had said in terms, not fit to attend a meeting in the limited period which Mr Findlay had proposed in his letter of 19 March, or to take any other effective step to defend his interests."
"…there are both substantive and procedural elements to the decision to both of which the "band of reasonable responses" test should be applied."
"He is constantly getting aggressive with members of his family, his work mates and more significantly he is exhibiting severe examples of road rage."