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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Greater Glasgow Health Board v Mullen (Unfair Dismissal; range of reasonable responses) [2023] EAT 122 (12 September 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2023/122.html Cite as: [2023] EAT 122, [2024] IRLR 31, 2023 GWD 38-314 |
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Edinburgh EH3 7HF |
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B e f o r e :
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GREATER GLASGOW HEALTH BOARD |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MR STEPHEN MULLEN |
Respondent |
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Mr Stephen Mullen – no appearance
Hearing date: 31 May 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
TOPIC: Unfair Dismissal; range of reasonable responses
In a claim of unfair dismissal, the Employment Tribunal found that the employer's reason for dismissing the employee was a belief by it in the existence of misconduct consisting of aggressive and threatening behaviour by him to one of his line reports on 11 March 2021. The Tribunal further also concluded that the employer's belief in the existence of that misconduct was genuinely held and reached after reasonable investigation. Having made those findings, it was not then open to the Tribunal then to base its conclusion about the fairness of the dismissal in terms of section 98(4) of the Employment Rights Act, 1996 on a factual hypothesis that the "real reason" for the dismissal was (or may have been) something different to the established reason. On the findings in fact made by it, the only conclusion to which the Tribunal could properly have come was that dismissal was within the range of reasonable responses open to the employer and was fair.
The Employment Tribunal's Judgment was set aside, and the claim of unfair dismissal was thereafter dismissed.
THE HONOURABLE LORD FAIRLEY:
Introduction and overview
Summary of relevant findings in fact
The ET's findings as to the reason for and fairness of the dismissal
"…the claimant and all witnesses to the incident on 11 March 2021 were interviewed at their respective investigatory meetings, the witness evidence was tested at both the conduct and the appeal hearings, and the claimant and his representative asked questions of the witnesses."
"Mr McIvor did have prior involvement in the case and control over the direction it would take, in that it was he who decided to commission the formal investigation and endorsed Ms Watt's recommendations made in the investigation report that the case should proceed to a formal conduct hearing. "
The Tribunal noted that Mr McIvor had played an equal part with the other panel members in the decision to dismiss.
"…found that there were inconsistencies in Mr Hunter's evidence as to whether the pattern of the claimant's behaviour…was a contributory factor in the decision to dismiss him which… raised doubts about the real reason for the dismissal and the sufficiency of that reason" (ET, para 127)
"130. I have carefully assessed all of the evidence in the round. In doing so, I have found that there were procedural defects in the process leading to the claimant's dismissal…I considered that [the appellant's] failure to inform the claimant of the allegations against him until he was told about the formal investigation on 29 March 2021, the lack of impartiality in the conduct process due to Mr McIvor being a member of the conduct panel and the lack of certainty surrounding the real reason for dismissal were material procedural deficiencies that fell out-with the band of reasonable responses which a reasonable employer might have adopted.
131. In reaching this view and applying the authority of Cabaj, I am satisfied that [the appellant] did not act reasonably in treating the reason shown as a sufficient reason for dismissing the claimant. This is because these material procedural deficiencies impeded the claimant in demonstrating that the real reason for his dismissal was not sufficient and that there was no reason given by [the appellant] for deciding to dismiss the claimant in spite of these procedural deficiencies that I could consider, as the evidence indicated they did not accept these were such deficiencies.
132. I have therefore concluded that these procedural deficiencies had such impact that they rendered the whole process unfair and that [the appellant] did not act reasonably in dismissing the claimant."
The Grounds of Appeal
Analysis and decision
Conclusion and disposal