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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Thompson v. Medicine and Healthcare Products Regulatory Agency [2005] UKEAT 0780_04_2907 (29 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2005/0780_04_2907.html Cite as: [2005] UKEAT 780_4_2907, [2005] UKEAT 0780_04_2907 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
DR S R CORBY
MR T HAYWOOD
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Transcript of Proceedings
For the Appellant | MS N SIVANANDAN (Representative) |
For the Respondent | MS SUSAN CHAN (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Office of the Solicitor DWP New Court Room 549 48 Carey Street London WC2A 2LS |
SUMMARY
Race Discrimination
Race Discrimination – claimed based on victimisation. ET1 originally alleged harassment and direct discrimination tribunal correct not to deal with allegation in detail in light of the way that case was presented to them.
Tribunal's reasons more reasons obtained and after preliminary hearing – were they sufficient – he held that they were.
.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
"Most telling of all was the statement of Ms Abram her trade union representative and a very experienced person in the Department of Health that on her observation Mrs Thompson's treatment by the Respondents was not motivated by the fact that she had complained of race discrimination."
"Was she disadvantaged because of her complaint so far as you could see?"The answer is:
"No."
Although the members note that the phrase that he used was:
"the mark of Cain is upon her"
because she had complained. And the 'mark of Cain' is the phrase that actually appears first of all in the Note from the Respondent's solicitor and we are grateful for that detailed Note where the question that was forwarded is:
"Was the mark of Cain on Margaret Thompson because she complained?
And the answer is:
"No."
Similar question recorded by Mrs Thompson's sister who has prepared a Note
"Was there a mark on Margaret because she complained?"
Answer:
"I don't think so."
So other than that slight variation in terms of the answer we are satisfied overall considering all the versions that Mrs Abram was asked about the matter and she was asked in terms:
"Was there a mark, or a mark of Cain upon her because she had complained?"
And the answer was no.
"The weight to be attached to any evidence in any case is a matter for the tribunal."
"Any of the parties who had been in charge of the particulars of her complaint to the Tribunal"
There was a reference to the submission made, not in final written submissions but in oral submissions, that certainly the two junior managers who had been involved in these matters did not have knowledge of the previous proceedings. It was not in dispute that Mr Le Fevre and Mr Savage had knowledge of the previous case. Judge McMullen thought that the tribunal should have reached a conclusion on that issue, and obviously that would provide a defence for certainly two of the alleged perpetrators. The Tribunal Chairman in his letter of 14 March 2005 when dealing with Mrs Abram's evidence also dealt with this matter, and again in a somewhat confusing and elliptical way, he said this:
"The Respondent's submissions at paragraph 27 of the Decision as set out in paragraphs 30 and 31, in particular the second and third sentences in paragraph 30 beginning 'They had found her work to do despite long periods of sickness over a period of nearly 18 months. They had approached the Department of Health, they had circulated the agency that had asked for her CV.' And the sentence in paragraph 31 'Thereafter the agency…' I hope these sentences make it clear which we accepted the Respondent's submission that there was no evidence of her managers in the finance division knew of the contents of her complaint to the Tribunal and that her treatment even if unfavourable, which we did not find, was not on account of her complaint."
"My complaint is of an on-going course of victimisation, harassment resulting from the previous tribunal claim of race discrimination made in August 2001."
Quite clearly within that document she was nailing her flag to the mast of victimization, and indeed, she also did so at the beginning of her Witness Statement, where she says this:
"I am bringing this claim on the grounds that I have been subjected to an ongoing course of victimisation and harassment resulting from a previous Tribunal…"
We understand harassment in that sense to be used rather than the specific legal sense under the regulations to be used in the more general sense of how she claims she was unpleasantly treated by members of staff.
"the particulars when reached contained no mention of items in support of claims of direct discrimination and harassment and therefore we concentrated upon the principle allegation of victimisation"
And at the very end of their case they say this:
"That they have been conscious of the need to try and as they say keep their eye on any evidence of direct discrimination or harassment, to the avoidance of doubt we should state that we found none, and therefore even if that matter had been pleaded, it would still have been dismissed."