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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Olenloa v North West London Hospitals NHS Trust [2012] UKEAT 0599_11_2906 (29 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2012/0599_11_2906.html Cite as: [2012] UKEAT 599_11_2906, [2012] UKEAT 0599_11_2906 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 24 February 2012 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE RS JUSTICE SLADE DBE
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR TOM BROWN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Royal College of Nursing 236 Gray's Inn Road London WC1X 8HL |
For the Respondent | MISS NADIA MOTRAGHI (of Counsel) Instructed by: Capsticks Solicitors LLP 1 St George's Road Wimbledon London SW19 4DR |
SUMMARY
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION – Reasonable adjustments
JURISDICTIONAL POINTS
Claim in time and effective date of termination
Extension of time: just and equitable
The Employment Judge erred in deciding, without making necessary findings of fact, that the Respondent's obligations to make reasonable adjustments for the Claimant, who was alleged to be a disabled person, came to an end when he went on sick leave. The evidence before the Employment Judge on which she made her decision suggested that she erred in failing to make findings of fact about the nature of any adjustments required and whether the Claimant would have been able to remain or return to work if such adjustments had been made. Such findings were necessary to determine whether the complaints of failure to make reasonable adjustments were made in time and if not, whether it was just and equitable to extend time. These issues were to be determined at a full hearing of the Claimant's claims some of which were in any event presented in time. NCH Scotland v Ms P McHugh UKEATS/0010/06/MT distinguished. Hendricks v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis [2003] IRLR 96 and Matusowicz v Kingston upon Hull City Council [2009] EWCA Civ 22 applied.
Observations on the difficulty of determining without hearing all the relevant evidence the date upon which it is to be inferred that an employer decided on an omission such that time starts to run for the purpose of presenting a complaint of failure to make reasonable adjustments.
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE SLADE DBE
"Notwithstanding the Trust is fully aware of my condition, I believe I have been unlawfully discriminated against by the Trust because of its ongoing failure to make reasonable adjustments to accommodate my condition to enable me to attend work and meet the duties of my job description.
The Trust has applied the following provisions, criteria and practices which have placed me at a substantial disadvantage as a disabled person:-
a) my job description and duties;
b) the staffing levels on the Stroke Unit;
I have suffered a detriment as a result of the application of those provisions, criteria and practices in that my condition has been exacerbated and I have been certified unfit to attend work.
I believe the Trust has failed to make the following adjustments:-
a) failed to provide ongoing support following the transfer of my employment to the Trust on the 1st April 2008;
b) failed to ensure adequate staffing levels within the Stroke Unit;
c) failed to monitor my mental health by discussing it with me and my workload on a regular basis in order to anticipate/identify/forestall/manage my mental health problems and/or help manage my workload;
d) failed to provide me with a mentor I could seek assistance from;
e) failed to provide me with counselling or any other therapeutic assistance;
f) failed to reallocate some of my duties to other employees;
g) failed to redeploy me or offer me the opportunity to take a sabbatical when it was apparent that I was beginning to show significant signs of stress again;
h) failed to protect me from disability related harassment."
"14. My first grievance highlighted the history of the Trust's ongoing failure to make reasonable adjustments within my work place to accommodate my condition as set out above. I also identified the provisions, criteria and practices that had placed me as a disabled person at a substantial disadvantage within the workplace, and I identified the adjustments that I believed the Trust had failed to make. I also identified 5 points that I believed would have enabled me to return to work, including redeployment away from Haldane Ward.
…
16. I was reviewed by Occupational Health on the 28th January 2011 and Dr Kehoe came to the following conclusions:
'a successful return to work in his own role is not likely until the grievance process has been completed… however he is well enough to return to work temporarily in a different role providing it is compatible with his training and experience'. I accepted Dr Kehoe's advice.
17. I attended a sickness review meeting on the 24th February 2011, and I confirmed that I felt I would be able to return to work if I was redeployed whilst my grievance was being investigated as was agreed by Dr Kehoe.
18. On the 3rd March 2011 I received a letter from Jonathan Davies (Matron Care of the Elderly), informing me that he could find no suitable redeployment placements and I was expected to return to Haldane Ward when my sick note expired on the 14th March 2011. This was contrary to the adjustments I had previously outlined in my first grievance and as set out above."
Relevant Statutory Provisions
"Section 4A(1)
(a) [4A Employers: duty to make adjustments
(1) Where–
(a) a provision, criterion or practice applied by or on behalf of an employer, or
(b) …..
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.
Schedule 3 Part I
3(1) (1) An employment tribunal shall not consider a complaint under section 8 unless it is presented before the end of the period of three months beginning when the act complained of was done.E+W+S+N.I.
(2)A tribunal may consider any such complaint which is out of time if, in all the circumstances of the case, it considers that it is just and equitable to do so.
(3) For the purposes of sub-paragraph (1)—
(a) ….
(b)any act extending over a period shall be treated as done at the end of that period; and
(c)a deliberate omission shall be treated as done when the person in question decided upon it.
(4) In the absence of evidence establishing the contrary, a person shall be taken for the purposes of this paragraph to decide upon an omission—
(a) when he does an act inconsistent with doing the omitted act; or
(b) if he has done no such inconsistent act, when the period expires within which he might reasonably have been expected to do the omitted act if it was to be done."
Equality Act 2010
"Section 20(3)
… where a provision, criterion or practice of A's puts a disabled person at a substantial disadvantage in relation to a relevant matter in comparison with persons who are not disabled, to take such steps as it is reasonable to have to take to avoid the disadvantage.
Section 123
(1) …. Proceedings on a complaint within section 120 may not be brought after the end of-
(a) the period of 3 months starting with the date of the act to which the complaint relates, or
(b) such other period as the employment tribunal thinks just and equitable.
(3) For the purposes of this section-
(a) conduct extending over a period is to be treated as done at the end of the period;
(b) failure to do something is to be treated as occurring when the person in question decided on it.
(4) In the absence of evidence to the contrary, a person (P) is to be taken to decide on failure to do something-
(a) when P does an act inconsistent with doing it, or
(b) if P does no inconsistent act, on the expiry of the period in which P might reasonably have been expected to do it."
The Judgment of the Employment Judge
"…raised issues about matters that had happened since the presentation of the first grievance, particularly complaining about delays, the failure to redeploy the claimant, the failure to grant a temporary injury allowance and a general failure to investigate the grievance."
"…that it is often better for the Tribunal which hears the whole case to decide the time points where matters are apparently intricately interlinked. However, I accept that this is a case where I can determine it on the facts before me at this PHR. The majority of the salient facts must come from the Claimant and he gave evidence before me. Whilst I accept that I have had no evidence from the respondent, the matters complained about are abundantly clear from the claimant's grievance, his Claim Forms and his witness statement."
"There is no ongoing discrimination or failure to make reasonable adjustments that I can see, as the claimant simply is unable to be at work.
…
It seems to me therefore that if the claimant is a person with a disability, the duty [to make reasonable adjustments] may have arisen on his transfer to them [the Respondent] in April 2008. However, what failures to make reasonable adjustments might flow from that knowledge is very difficult to say. In any event, the claimant's concerns about treatment of him and failures are essentially those relating to his line managers and, as I have said, this must stop when he goes on extended sick-leave. I do not accept that the matters that he complains of then and later are a part of an act extending over a period."
"putting in a claim within the time limit would have been a relatively easy thing to do."
The EJ was not satisfied that this was one of the exceptional cases where time should be extended. The EJ held that:
"Those matters that the claimant complains about before 28th September 2010 have been presented out of time. What can proceed are those matters which he put in the second claim which has now become an amendment to the first claim and, it would seem, the third claim. These are matters which post-date him submitting the grievance in October 2010."
The EJ held:
"1. Those matters complained of in the original Claim Form up to the 28 September 2010 are out of time and it is not just and equitable to extend time to proceed with those claims under the Disability Discrimination Act 1995/Equality Act 2010."
The Submissions of the Parties
"was off sick from March 1999 and was absent from the working environment does not necessarily rule out the possibility of continuing discrimination against her…"
Mr Brown contended that the observation in paragraph 44 of NCH Scotland v Ms McHugh UKEATS/0010/06/MT that:
"while [the Claimant] is incapable of all work, it does seem pointless to impose a duty on an employer to make adjustments in case she can return, unless there is some reasonable prospect of that occurring"
is to be distinguished from the Claimant's case. He had set out specific adjustments which he believed would enable him to return to work. Further, the occupational health physician, Dr Keogh, had concluded that there could be a successful return to work when the grievance process had been completed. There was no basis on which it could be concluded that the Respondent's obligation to make reasonable adjustments ceased when the Claimant went on sick leave.
"17. Those matters which he raises in the Second Claim Form which became an amendment to the First Claim Form and, as I understand it, are raised in his Third Claim Form are all matters which clearly relate to matters since his first grievance. They are not connected to those matters he raises earlier."
In light of the substance of the complaints made in the Second and Third ET1s: possible redeployment, delays in the grievance process, refusal to pay temporary injury allowance and matters in relation to statutory sick pay, Miss Motraghi submitted that the EJ did not err in so concluding. The EJ held that the complaints raised in the Second and Third ET1 were presented in time.
"The proposition, which we accept, is that if an adjustment is not going to cure or limit the substantial disadvantage in which the disabled person is placed, it cannot be reasonable under the terms of the Act to make it."
In this regard Miss Motraghi referred to the evidence the Claimant gave of the opinion of Dr Keogh that he would not return to work until his grievance had been resolved. He had not been given a date for his return to work. There was therefore no date when adjustments would have made a difference to the Claimant's ability to work.
"on the claimant to decide when something should have been done about the omission and to bring his or her claim within three months of that date."
Discussion and Conclusion
"There is no ongoing discrimination or failure to make reasonable adjustments that I can see as the claimant simply is unable to be at work"
is central to the determination of this appeal. If there were no error in reaching this conclusion, as Miss Motraghi submitted, there would have been no need for the EJ to make findings of fact on what Miss Motraghi described as the 'intervening steps' including what adjustments the Respondent should have made and when it would have been reasonable to conclude that the Respondent was to be taken as deciding against them.
"If the Trust had taken the above steps then I do not believe I would have suffered the latest relapse in my condition and I would not have been certified as unfit to attend work from the 28th September 2010 to date."
In paragraph 81 of his statement, the Claimant wrote of those adjustments he had requested in his grievance of 29 October 2010 which were set out in his ET1:
"I believed each of those adjustments would enable me to accommodate my condition within the workplace."
The Claimant also referred to the opinion of Dr Kehoe that a successful return to work would not be likely until the grievance process had been completed. The EJ observed that when the First ET1 was presented in January 2011:
"It appears that there was little progress on that grievance."
"…at all relevant times, the Claimant was presenting no willingness or ability to return to work, nor was that the medical evidence."
In such cases it can be said that it would not be reasonable to require adjustments as they would not achieve any purpose. On the material before the EJ the same could not be said in this case. In my judgment the EJ erred in concluding, without finding as a fact that he would not have remained or returned to work even if such adjustments had been made, that the Respondent ceased to be under an obligation to make reasonable adjustments for the Claimant when he went on sick leave. This error undermines the basis of the EJ's conclusion that the claims in the ET1s which were of acts or omissions before 29 September 2010 were presented out of time.
Disposal