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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Wheatstone v Blakeney News Food and Wine Ltd & Ors (DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION) [2020] UKEAT 0287_19_1102 (11 February 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2020/0287_19_1102.html Cite as: [2020] UKEAT 287_19_1102, [2020] UKEAT 0287_19_1102 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MARTYN BARKLEM
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR GEORGE YAGOMBA (Representative) |
For the Respondent | Respondent not attending |
SUMMARY
DISABILITY DISCRIMINATION
An Employment Tribunal was entitled to find, on the medical evidence before it, that the admitted disability, namely epilepsy, was not the reason for the Appellant's absence from work. Consequently, its finding that the Respondent's unfavourable treatment of her arising from the that absence was not related to the disability was not an error of law.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MARTYN BARKLEM
"EQA, section 15: discrimination arising from disability
2.13. Was the claimant treated unfavourably because of something arising in consequence of her disability.
2.14. The "something arising" is pleaded as the claimant's sickness absence from 20/07/17.
2.15. Did the respondent treat the claimant unfavourably by:
i. Dismissing the claimant
ii. Requiring her to resume her duties by 16/08/7 despite being medically certified as unfit to work (para 22 ET1)
iii. Changing her duties and roles without warning, consultation or communication see 113 him to her, 20/07/17
iv. And then replacing her altogether (para 22 ET1)
v. Failing to contact or check on her following the sick note
vi. Discussing her private life with "people in the village" including regarding her employment status
vii. Informing her that her colleagues allegedly said they were not prepared to work alongside her and threatening to sue her
viii. Stopping payment of her statutory sick pay without warning or notice.
2.17. If so, including the dismissal, was that because of that sickness absence?
2.18. If so, has the respondent shown that that unfavourable treatment was a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim?"
"Discrimination arising from disability
5.51. The disability is epilepsy
5.52. The "something arising" in consequence of the disability is pleaded as the claimant's sickness absence from 20/07/17.
5.53. The GP signs her off for work place stress. All the notes are about work-related stress (68, 70, 94).
5.54. A petit mal was reported that evening, that is the evening of 19/07/17..
Mrs Wheatstone saw the GP the following day, saying she had had lots of petit mal. In spite of that, the notes are issued on the basis of work-related stress.
5.55. GP, in his more detailed later note confirming the diagnosis, does not make a connection between the epilepsy and the absences, save to say that in March 2018 she is going through a particularly stressful time (138).
5.56. On the medical evidence, the absence is not because of the epilepsy
5.57. We cannot infer, absent medical evidence, that these events caused an exacerbation in the epilepsy.
5.58. The absence did not arise in consequence of the disability. We cannot therefore consider the list of instances of unfavourable treatment as being related to the disability."
"15 Discrimination arising from disability
(1) A person (A) discriminates against a disabled person (B) if—
(a) A treats B unfavourably because of something arising in consequence of B's disability, and
(b) A cannot show that the treatment is a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
(2) Subsection (1) does not apply if A shows that A did not know, and could not reasonably have been expected to know, that B had the disability."
"(d) The Tribunal must determine whether the reason/cause (or, if more than one), a reason or cause, is "something arising in consequence of B's disability". That expression 'arising in consequence of' could describe a range of causal links. Having regard to the legislative history of section 15 of the Act (described comprehensively by Elisabeth Laing J in Hall), the statutory purpose which appears from the wording of section 15, namely to provide protection in cases where the consequence or effects of a disability lead to unfavourable treatment, and the availability of a justification defence, the causal link between the something that causes unfavourable treatment and the disability may include more than one link. In other words, more than one relevant consequence of the disability may require consideration, and it will be a question of fact assessed robustly in each case whether something can properly be said to arise in consequence of disability."
"(e) For example, in Land Registry v Houghton UKEAT/0149/14 a bonus payment was refused by A because B had a warning. The warning was given for absence by a different manager. The absence arose from disability. The Tribunal and HHJ Clark in the EAT had no difficulty in concluding that the statutory test was met. However, the more links in the chain there are between the disability and the reason for the impugned treatment, the harder it is likely to be to establish the requisite connection as a matter of fact."