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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> N Aslam v. Barclays Capital Services & Others [2011] UKEAT 0405_10_0302 (3 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2011/0405_10_0302.html Cite as: [2011] UKEAT 405_10_302, [2011] UKEAT 0405_10_0302 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE RICHARDSON
MR R LYONS
MR B M WARMAN
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR N ASLAM (The Appellant in Person) |
For the Respondents | MR DAVID PIEVSKY (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Allen & Overy LLP Solicitors 1 Bishop's Square London E1 6AD |
SUMMARY
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
Review
New evidence on appeal
Admission of fresh evidence – failure to disclose document of relevance and significance in a race discrimination claim – whether to stay pending review or determine the application and deal with the appeal – consideration of Adegbuji v Meteor Parking [2010] UKEAT/1570/09 – whether in the light of fresh evidence hearing below was fair – whether review could cure unfairness. Appeal allowed and case remitted for a fresh hearing before a different Tribunal.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE RICHARDSON
The background facts
"I have concerns that Rajesh Shah has been made redundant and that Paul Emmett has been handpicked to lead the team in the interim without presenting the same opportunity to me. The role also feels very similar to one occupied by Rajesh Shah previously."
"You confirmed that I was not known to you prior to our meeting and the fact that Paul has been selected in the interim position will not disadvantage me in any way should the role become permanent at a later stage. However I disagree with your comments and would state that an equal opportunity has not been provided to me for this interim position and that your actions have been ones of discrimination against me. Paul Emmett will definitely be a front runner compared to me because he has received more favourable treatment than me."
The Tribunal hearing and reasons
"The interim new role issue. Did the Respondents treat the Claimant less favourably on grounds of race than Mr Emmett .... by asking Mr Emmett to undertake this role on or around 5th March 2008?"
"48. In order to assist Mr Cay, his line manager, Mr Broyden, having consulted Ms Kent Phillips, decided to create an interim position to co-ordinate and communicate the non-IT team's views to Mr Cay as he conducted his duties in North America and, for a short period, upon his return whilst he orientated into his new role. This was effectively a conduit facility during which it was envisaged that the duties would last for no more than four to six weeks.
49. The role involved no line management responsibilities, no decision-making powers and no salary increase. The pool that he considered for selection was that of Mr Emmett and Mr Aslam. Ms Blackler-Roberts was in it initially but she was to be away on maternity leave. Accordingly, Mr Broyden called for the appraisal records of both Mr Aslam and Mr Emmett and studied the work history of the two men and in particular the appraisals, gradings and comments provided by Mr Shah who line managed and appraised the pair of them. Accordingly, Mr Broyden decided to select Mr Emmett as having a more impressive appraisal record but before confirming his choice he spoke to his predecessor, Ms Kent Phillips, who confirmed Mr Emmett's suitability. Ms Kent Phillips was aware that Mr Emmett had occasionally accompanied Mr Shah to various meetings whereas Mr Aslam had not. As this was considered to be a sign of confidence in an employee, she took the view that Mr Aslam was not "a highflier"."
"53. At the meeting Mr Cay … clarified Mr Emmett's role making it clear that it was of an interim nature and designed to provide a conduit service to him through which the non-IT team's concerns could be 'escalated' as he familiarised himself with his new role with the two merged teams. At no stage was it indicated to the team that Mr Emmett had replaced Mr Shah nor was it indicated to the team that they were reporting to Mr Emmett in any line management sense of the term."
"118. It is worth remembering in our unanimous view that the selection of Mr Emmett had nothing to do with Mr Cay. The decision was Mr Broyden's. It is right that the two potential candidates were not interviewed and given the opportunity to make a case for their selection. The facts disclose, however, that Mr Broyden's purpose was to find, upon an interim basis of not more than four to six weeks, a conduit to assist Mr Cay during the transition period when the IT and non-IT sourcing teams were being merged. The role, we are satisfied, had no line management, power or responsibility associated with it. Rather it was as described an 'escalation' role which means in ordinary language that Mr Emmett was to become somebody who could act in order to collate and channel information from the non-IT team members up to Mr Cay rather than Mr Cay having to take soundings from individuals.
119. The selection was made, we are satisfied, on the 2007 performance appraisal records in which Mr Emmett was the only one of the candidates to get an A grade. It is significant not only that Mr Shah, an Asian manager, had graded both Mr Emmett and Mr Aslam but also that he recommended Mr Emmett for promotion in the future. This he had not done in respect of Mr Aslam. Also, Mr Broyden checked the selection with Ms Kent Phillips which is entirely consistent with a fair, balanced and non-discriminatory approach. We attach no weight to the remark that Mr Aslam was not regarded in her eyes as being a highflier as clearly given the comparative appraisals Mr Emmett was and had accompanied Mr Shah to meetings at which he had been noticed by Ms Kent Phillips.
120. There were other differences but although all these were in favour of Mr Emmett, they were not material to the decision to appoint him to this temporary role without any managerial responsibility.
121. In evidence Mr Aslam even conceded that Mr Shah had a particularly good opinion of Mr Emmett and this is borne out by all the evidence in the case.
122. On that basis, as the evidence clearly at this stage points to a non-discriminatory reason for the selection, the claim for direct discrimination must fail in this regard.
123. It is clear to us that Mr Aslam took offence as he felt that he had lost status when he misconstrued the position to which Mr Emmett was requested to fill as being a line management appointment which required him to be a subordinate report as a consequence. Satisfied also that the role did not involve additional status, revised grading or salary adjustment we are unanimously content that the assurances given by Mr Cay to Mr Aslam were genuine when he raised his informal complaint, albeit in writing.
124. It is certain to us that Mr Aslam over-reacted when he instructed some 50 agencies to seek alternative employment for him and we have no doubt that he felt unsettled thereafter, even though the issue was appropriately addressed."
The application to adduce further evidence
"Also, with immediate effect, Paul Emmet assumes responsibility as Head of Non IT Sourcing categories reporting to …. Paul joined the firm in ….. and has successfully managed the HR and ….. Category to date."
"There was, in fact, no document in evidence (and certainly none mentioned in the Notice of Appeal or at the 3(10) hearing) which stated or suggested that the role which Mr Emmett had been asked to carry out was permanent"
"8.1 Where an application is made by a party to an appeal to put in, at the hearing of the appeal, any document which was not before the Employment Tribunal, and which has not been agreed in writing by the other parties, the application and a copy of the documents sought to be admitted should be lodged at the EAT with the Notice of Appeal or the respondent's Answer, as appropriate. The application and copy should be served on the other parties. The same principle applies to any oral evidence not given at the Employment Tribunal which is sought to be adduced on the appeal. The nature and substance of such evidence together with the date when the party first became aware of its existence must be disclosed in a document, where appropriate a witness statement from the relevant witness with signed statement of truth, which must be similarly lodged and served.
8.2 In exercising its discretion to admit any fresh evidence or new document, the EAT will apply the principles set out in Ladd v Marshall [1954] 1 WLR 1489, having regard to the overriding objective, i.e.:
8.2.1 the evidence could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence for use at the Employment Tribunal hearing;
8.2.2 it is relevant and would probably have had an important influence on the hearing;
8.2.3 it is apparently credible.
Accordingly, the evidence and representations in support of the application must address these principles."
"Appeals from the employment tribunal are limited to questions of law. Questions of fresh evidence falling within regulation 11(1)(d) would normally be dealt with more appropriately by an application for a review to the chairman of the tribunal responsible for the original decision reached without that fresh evidence."
"7. I should start by making this observation, though it will not be the basis on which I decide the case. In my judgment the right course for a party who seeks to have a decision of an employment tribunal overturned on the basis of fresh evidence will almost always be to apply to the original Tribunal for a review under rules 34 to 36 of the Employment Tribunal Rules of Procedure, relying on rule 34(3)(d). This Tribunal only has jurisdiction to correct errors of law on the part of an employment tribunal: see section 21(1) of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996. As at present advised, I find it hard to see how an employment tribunal which decides a case properly on the evidence before it can be said to have made an error of law simply because evidence is subsequently produced which suggests that its decision was wrong. (Any analogy with fresh evidence appeals in the Court of Appeal on appeals from the High Court seems to me flawed, because the Court of Appeal has in principle jurisdiction to entertain an appeal on an issue of fact: also, there is no review procedure available in the High Court.) This appears however to be a novel point, and I have not however heard argument on it. I am accordingly prepared to assume for present purposes that this Tribunal has jurisdiction to entertain fresh evidence appeals, while flagging it up as a point which may need to be decided on a future occasion. (In some circumstances, where a new evidence point is only part of an appeal also proceeding on other grounds, section 35 of the 1996 Act may give this Tribunal the relevant jurisdiction.) However, even on that basis, the review procedure of the employment tribunal will normally be much more appropriate for deciding a fresh evidence issue. The employment tribunal will normally be better placed to decide at least the second and third questions arising under Ladd v Marshall [1954] 1 WLR 1489 - that is, whether the evidence in question would probably have had an important influence on the outcome of the case and whether it is apparently credible. Time limits in the employment tribunal are rather tighter for an application for a review than they are for an appeal to this Tribunal, but there is power to extend time in both cases and in truth, in a genuine fresh evidence case, the tribunal will generally be disposed to grant an extension because if the evidence could genuinely not have been obtained earlier it would not normally be just to refuse it.
8. For those reasons, it is already very common for fresh evidence appeals to be stayed pending a review application made, or to be made, in the employment tribunal. That course, however, was not taken in this case, and it does not appear to be the universal practice. I hope that henceforth it will become general practice, at least in cases where the fresh evidence issue stands alone or is easily separable from any other issues that may be raised."