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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Mitchell v. David Evans Agricultural Ltd [2006] UKEAT 0083_06_1503 (15 March 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2006/0083_06_1503.html Cite as: [2006] UKEAT 83_6_1503, [2006] UKEAT 0083_06_1503 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE ELIAS (PRESIDENT)
MR B BEYNON
MR M WORTHINGTON
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MS TRACEY MOSS (Representative) Vale of Glamorgan CAB West House Cottage Stanwell Road Penarth CF64 2ZA |
For the Respondents | MR MARTYN WEST (Representative) Peninsula Business Services Riverside New Bailey Street Manchester M3 5PB |
SUMMARY
4C
Sex Discrimination – indirect
Indirect sex discrimination. Did the Employment Tribunal properly analyse whether there was objective justification? Request for job sharing turned down by employers.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE ELIAS
"Further to our recent discussions when you were offered the above position which you subsequently declined, so you have been made aware that the part time position has now been closed"
"16.
Then the panel move on to the question of justification. We ask ourselves can the Respondent justify applying the provision. Here the approach of the Tribunal is this: although the panel were split in reaching the decision whether there had been an application of a provision criterion or practice the minority member has contributed to this discussion by saying that had he taken a different view then he has evaluated whether or not justification would apply. In looking at the question of justification we have reminded ourselves, as is set out in the skeleton argument of the Claimant, that what we have to look at is whether it is objectively justifiable regardless of sex and related to the real business need whether it is objectively justifiable in economic or other terms such as administrative efficiency. We have had particular regard to the Bilka Kaufhaus case.
17.
Applying the law to the facts and vice versa it is the unanimous judgment of the Tribunal in relation to the issue of justification that the justification argument submitted by the Respondent does succeed. We make a finding that there was justification which is completely gender neutral for the Respondents to have a requirement for a full-time member of staff undertaking the role. One of the many reasons for that is that there had been the introduction of a new computer system which the Respondents expected to take them to another level of business operations and efficiency. They had a justifiable requirement for greater administrative efficiency. They had recently won a new contract to supply tractors made by another company. They had a justifiable need to have greater consistency with customers, a justifiable need to have telephone answering by one person rather than a group of individuals, particularly in view of the fact that the Respondent is a small company offering a bespoke service to its customers.
18.
For those reasons it was justified for the Respondents to require that the role in the future be a full-time one. For the same reasons it was justifiable for the Respondents not to consider the question of job share, although had this been an unfair dismissal the outcome may have been different because the Respondents chose not to apply their own procedure in relation to consideration of job share. But the Tribunal are satisfied that the justification for not implementing job share is very similar to the reasons given for the justification in requiring a full-time appointment."
"…If the national court finds measures chosen by Bilka correspond to a real need on the part of the undertaking, are appropriate for the view to achieving the objective's pursuit and are necessary to that end, the fact that the measures affect a far greater number of women than men is not sufficient to show that they constitute an infringement of Article 119."
"27 The major error, which by itself vitiates the decision, is that nowhere, either in terms or in substance, did the tribunal seek to weigh the justification against its discriminatory effect. On the contrary, by accepting that 'any decision taken for sound business reasons would inevitably affect one group more than another group', it fell into the same error as the EAT in Brook and Enderby and disabled itself from making the comparison.
28 Secondly, the tribunal accepted uncritically the college's reasons for the dismissals. They did not, for example, ask the obvious question why departments could not be prevented from overspending on part-time hourly-paid teachers without dismissing them. They did not consider other fairly obvious measures short of dismissal which had been canvassed and which could well have matched the anticipated saving of £13,000 a year. In consequence, they made no attempt to evaluate objectively whether the dismissals were reasonably necessary - a test which, while of course not demanding indispensability, requires proof of a real need.
29 In this situation it is not enough that the tribunal should have posed, as they did, the statutory question 'whether the decision taken by the college was justifiable irrespective of the sex of the person or persons to whom it applied'. In what are extended reasons running to 15 closely typed pages, there has to be some evidence that the tribunal understood the process by which a now formidable body of authority requires the task of answering the question to be carried out, and some evidence that it has in fact carried it out. Once a finding of a condition having a disparate and adverse impact on women had been made, what was required was at the minimum a critical evaluation of whether the college's reasons demonstrated a real need to dismiss the applicant; if there was such a need, consideration of the seriousness of the disparate impact of the dismissal on women including the applicant; and an evaluation of whether the former were sufficient to outweigh the latter. There is no sign of this process in the tribunal's extended reasons. In particular, there is no recognition that if the aim of dismissal was itself discriminatory (as the applicant contended it was, since it was to deny part time workers, a predominantly female group, benefits which Parliament had legislated to give them) it could never afford justification."
"32 Section l(2)(b)(ii) requires the employer to show that the proposal is justifiable irrespective of the, sex of the person to whom it is applied, It must be objectively justifiable (Barry) and I accept that the word 'necessary' used in Bilka is to be qualified by the word 'reasonably', That qualification does not, however, permit the margin of discretion or range of reasonable responses for which the appellants contend, The presence of the word 'reasonably' reflects the presence and applicability of the principle of proportionality. The employer, does not have to demonstrate that no other proposal is possible. The employer has to show that the proposal, in this case for a full-time appointment, is justified objectively notwithstanding its discriminatory effect. The principle of proportionality requires the tribunal to take into account the reasonable needs of the business, But it has to make its own judgment upon a fair and detailed analysis of the working practices and business considerations involved, as to whether the proposal is reasonably necessary, I reject the appellants' submissions (apparently accepted by the EAT) that, when reaching its conclusion, the employment tribunal needs to consider only whether or not it is satisfied that the employer's views are within the range of views reasonable in the particular circumstances.
33 The statute requires the employment tribunal to make judgments upon systems of work, their feasibility or otherwise, the practical problems which mayor may not arise from job sharing in a particular business, and the economic impact, in a competitive world, which the restrictions impose upon the employer's freedom of action, The effect of the judgment of the employment tribunal may be profound both for the business and for the employees involved. This is an appraisal requiring considerable skill and insight. As this court has recognised in Allonby and in Cadman, a critical evaluation is required and is required to be demonstrated in the reasoning of the tribunal. In considering whether the employment tribunal has adequately performed its duty, appellate courts must keep in mind, as did this court in Allonby and in Cadman, the respect due to the conclusions of the fact finding tribunal and the importance of not overturning a sound decision because there are imperfections in presentation. Equally, the statutory task is such that, just as the employment tribunal must conduct a critical evaluation of the scheme in question, so must the appellate court consider critically whether the employment tribunal has understood and applied the evidence and has assessed fairly the employer's attempts at justification.
34 The power and duty of the employment tribunal to pass judgment on the employer's attempt at justification must be accompanied by a power and duty in the appellate courts to scrutinise carefully the manner in which its decision has been reached. The risk of superficiality is revealed in the cases cited and, in this field, a broader understanding of the needs of business will be required than in most other situations in which tribunals are called upon to make decisions."
"55 Where the economics of the business of the enterprise or its working practices forms part of the justification, then I would expect the reasons to set out at least a basic economic analysis of the business and its needs; the emphasis in Bilka was on 'objectively justified economic grounds'. Although the extent of the analysis of the economics of the business and its working practices must depend on the nature of justification advanced and of the enterprise being considered, the analysis must be through and critical and show a proper understanding of the business of the enterprise."