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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Scottish Opera Ltd v. Winning [2010] UKEAT 0047_09_0906 (9 June 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2010/0047_09_0906.html Cite as: [2010] UKEAT 0047_09_0906, [2010] UKEAT 47_9_906 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MS GINA WILSON (Solicitor) Messrs MacRoberts Solicitors 152 Bath Street Glasgow G2 4TB |
For the Respondent | MR JAMES MACDONALD (Advocate) Instructed by: Messrs Jeffrey Aitken Solicitors Fortune House 74 Waterloo Street Glasgow G2 7DA |
SUMMARY
JURISDICTIONAL POINTS – 2002 Act and pre-action requirements
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Reasonable adjustments
Claimant incapacitated from driving duties as a result of a seizure – Dismissed - Claim originally pleaded as unfair dismissal – Seeks to amend to claim under Disability Discrimination Act 1995 that dismissal was the result of a failure to make reasonable adjustments that would have permitted him to remain in employment but not undertake driving duties – Employer resists on basis that Claimant had not lodged a corresponding grievance and that claim was accordingly debarred by s.32 of Employment Act 2002 – Tribunal holds that grievance procedure did not apply by reason of reg. 6 (5) of Employment Act 2002 (Dispute Resolution) Regulations 2004 and allows amendment.
HELD: Tribunal correct to apply reg. 6 (5) – It was immaterial that as a matter of formal analysis the dismissal was the result of the acts complained of rather than being relied on as itself an act of discrimination.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
"Having suffered a single seizure on 1 September 2007 I lost my HGV licence. Scottish Opera have since dismissed me on the grounds of incapability. I believe that my dismissal is unfair since (amongst other factors) I am not incapable of doing the vast majority of the tasks involved in my job description. Indeed, only a very small percentage of my job as orchestra Technician/Driver involved driving an H.G.V. Scottish Opera have claimed that their reasons for my dismissal are based entirely on the loss of my H.G.V licence.
If Scottish Opera feel that the loss of my H.G.V licence makes me incapable of doing my job, the following points should be considered.
1. The company did not hire another driver from the date of my collapse in September 2007 until my dismissal an 30 September 2008
2. Working with one driver did not put Brian Murphey (Scottish Opera's other Orchestra Technician) over his legal driving hours.
3. Having submitted a three month advanced driving schedule to the company, it was clear that even in a very busy week, driving hours never exceeded 16.5 hours with the average being under seven hours per week. Legislation states that a driver can drive 90 hours per fortnight.
4. Other Scottish orchestras only use one driver.
5. I am perfectly capable of attending to the myriad of other tasks that I am employed to do.
Scottish Opera claimed that the reason it was impossible to continue with only one orchestra Technician/Driver plus one fully trained and experienced orchestra Technician was that they need the flexibility of having two drivers for scheduling purposes (I refer to point 1 above to disprove this) and also for the eventuality that the driver became ill. During my consultations to keep my job, I referred the company to the working practice of the BBC Scottish Philharmonic Orchestra who have a pool of part-time drivers upon whom they can call. My suggestion that this could be used as a cheap and flexible solution was ignored. The drivers charge a fixed fee of £120 per day which is not prohibitively expensive and would allow reasonable adjustment to accommodate me in my job."
The phrase "reasonable adjustment" in the final sentence might suggest that the Claimant intended to rely on alleged breaches by the Appellant of its duties under section 4A of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995, but that may not be a safe inference: the phrase had been used, though without any explicit reference to the Act, in at least one letter sent to him by the Appellant, and he may have adopted it without any awareness of its possible implications. Be that as it may, the Claimant made no entry in the part of the ET1 –box 6 – designated for claims of discrimination, and in those circumstances the pleading cannot be read as raising any claim under the 1995 Act.
"We refer to the above and write to request leave to amend the Claimant's ET1 in terms of Rule 10 of The Employment Tribunals (Constitution Etc) Regulations 2004 Schedule 1 to include a claim under the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 arising from the Respondents' failure to adhere to its duty to make reasonable adjustments under Section 6 of the Act.
Reference is made to this within the original claim submitted by the Claimant himself and this right of action arises from the facts as expressed within the original ET1."
(The reference to "section 6" is a slip. Section 6 was re-enacted, with amendments, as section 4A of the 1995 Act by virtue of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 (Amendment) Regulations 2003.) The Appellant's solicitors, MacRoberts LLP, objected; and a pre-hearing review was fixed for 21 July 2008 in order for the point to be determined. The hearing duly took place before Employment Judge MacMillan sitting in Glasgow. The Claimant was represented by Ms April Campbell of Jeffrey Aitken and the Appellant by Ms Gina Wilson of MacRoberts. The Judge decided to allow the amendment. His formal Judgment and written Reasons were sent to the parties on 28 July.
"The Respondents discriminated against me in terms of the DDA in that they failed to make reasonable adjustments in response to my request to engage drivers following my diagnosis of epilepsy and tendency to seizures."
(Although it is helpful to have that note, and I have no reason to doubt its accuracy, I am bound to observe that it is unsatisfactory not to have an authoritative record. Clear and accurate pleadings are of importance in all cases, but particularly in discrimination claims. It is essential that parties seeking permission to amend to introduce such a claim formulate the proposed amendment in the same degree of detail as would be expected had it formed part of the original claim; and tribunals should ensure that the terms of any such proposed amendments are clearly recorded.)
"I was discriminated against in terms of section 3A(2) of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 by reason of the failure by the Respondents to make reasonable adjustments in response to my requests that it do so. In particular, they failed to engage other drivers, or to engage me on other duties which I was capable of performing. My dismissal, and the dismissal process, occurred because of this failure to make reasonable adjustments, and amounts to a culmination of an ongoing failure on the part of the Respondents. The dismissal itself was accordingly part of the failure to make such reasonable adjustments."
He also sought permission to add a sentence to the pleading in box 5 expressly asserting that "the dismissal and the procedure followed in relation to same were unreasonable".
"Where -
(a) a provision, criterion or practice applied by or on behalf of an employer, or
(b) any physical feature of premises occupied by the employer,
places the disabled person concerned at a substantial disadvantage in comparison with persons who are not disabled, it is the duty of the employer to take such steps as it is reasonable, in all the circumstances of the case, for him to have to take in order to prevent the provision, criterion or practice, or feature, having that effect."
That duty is generally referred to as the duty to make "reasonable adjustments", though that actual phrase does not appear in the text of the section. The Act provides no sanction for breach of the duty as such, but enforcement is provided for by the combination of sections 3A and 4. Section 3A (2) provides that an employer discriminates against a disabled person if he fails to comply with the duty to make reasonable adjustments; and section 4 renders discrimination in the employment field unlawful. The relevant part of section 4 would in the present case be sub-section (2) (b), which provides that:
"It is unlawful for an employer discriminate against a disabled person whom he employs … by dismissing him, or subjecting him to any other detriment."
An unreasonable failure to re-balance an employee's duties and allow those for which his disability rendered him incapable to be done by others would plainly be a detriment to him insofar as it rendered him liable to be dismissed.
(a) that the Claimant had never lodged any grievance with the Appellant complaining of disability discrimination, and accordingly that the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to entertain such a claim by virtue of section 32 (2) of the Employment Act 2002;
(b) that "there was no obvious causative link between the amendment and the facts as argued in the originating application" (see Housing Corporation v Bryant [1999] ICR 123); and
(c) that the claim being sought to be raised by way of amendment would be out of time if advanced in fresh proceedings.
"An employee shall not present a complaint to an employment tribunal under a jurisdiction to which this section applies if –
(a) it concerns a matter in relation to which the requirement in paragraph 6 or 9 of Schedule 2 applies, and
(b) the requirement has not been complied with."
Paras. 6 and 9 of Schedule 2 as there referred to are the operative paragraphs of, respectively, the standard and modified forms of the statutory grievance procedures. It is common ground that a claim of disability discrimination is a complaint under a jurisdiction to which section 32 applies.
"Neither of the grievance procedures applies where the grievance is that the employer has dismissed or is contemplating dismissing the employee."
If by virtue of that provision the statutory grievance procedure does not apply, then section 32 (2) is not engaged.
"2. The appellant worked as an officer support grade at HM's Prison in Norwich. He suffered from eczema which caused intermittent absences from work. He was dismissed because of these absences (the dismissal taking the form of the termination without renewal of a fixed-term contract).
3. He submitted an ET1 claiming that his dismissal was wrongful and that it was unfair, either on general principles or because it involved discrimination contrary to the Disability Discrimination Act …
4. It is common ground that he raised no grievance prior to lodging this claim and that if he was under an obligation to lodge a grievance, the tribunal was not entitled to hear his disability discrimination claim until he had done so: see s. 32 (2) read with s. 32 (6) of the Employment Act 2002. The issue in this case is whether he ought to have done so. That, it is agreed, turns on the proper construction of reg. 6 (5) of the Employment Act 2002 (Dispute Resolution) Regulations 2004."
The employment tribunal held that it had no jurisdiction to entertain any claim. It held that reg. 6 (5) applied only to cases where dismissal was a necessary part of the wrong complained of (i.e., in practice, claims of unfair dismissal), and not to claims under other jurisdictions, notwithstanding that dismissal might ("by happenstance") be the act complained of in a particular case. Elias P rejected that submission and allowed the claimant's appeal. He held that reg. 6 (5) was not concerned with the legal nature of the employee's cause of action. All that mattered was whether what he was complaining of was that he had been dismissed or that his dismissal was contemplated. He said, at para. 26 (p. 470):
"In my judgment, reg. 6 (5) on its natural construction simply provides that the grievance procedure will not apply where the complaint is about one particular kind of action, namely dismissal or a proposed dismissal."
Applying that approach to the facts of the case before him, he said, at para. 30 (p. 471):
"… The grievance in this case was that the employer had dismissed the employee."
"The Claimant' grievance is that he was dismissed: that is abundantly clear."