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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> McNicholas v Care and Learning Alliance & Anor (Whistleblowing; Protected Disclosures; Compensation; Novus Actus Interveniens) [2023] EAT 127 (26 September 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2023/127.html Cite as: [2023] EAT 127, [2024] ICR 45, [2023] WLR(D) 402, 2023 GWD 41-340, [2023] IRLR 975 |
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Edinburgh EH3 7HF |
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B e f o r e :
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LINDSAY ANNE MCNICHOLAS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CARE AND LEARNING ALLIANCE CALA STAFFBANK |
Respondents |
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Mr Neil McDougall of the Scottish bar (instructed by Jackson Boyd LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 24 May 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
Whistleblowing; protected disclosures; compensation; novus actus interveniens
The appellant, a qualified teacher, was employed by the respondents. She worked at a nursery operated by the first respondent which provided nursery places for Highland Council. As a result of protected disclosures by the appellant about practices within the nursery, she was subjected to detriments by both respondents. These included inter alia a complaint by both respondents to the General Teaching Council for Scotland about the appellant's fitness to teach. The Tribunal found that the complaint to the GTCS was not made by the respondents in good faith. The respondents knew that it was retaliation against the appellant her for her disclosures. The respondents' true motive for the GTCS referral was to appease the first respondent's client, Highland Council. The Tribunal concluded, however, that a decision by the GTCS further to investigate the complaint was a novus actus interveniens that broke the chain of causation between the detriment of the complaint and the appellant's losses. It accordingly limited its awards for future loss, injury to feelings and psychiatric injury to losses which arose prior to the date of the GTCS decision. It also refused to make any awards for pension loss or legal costs incurred in defending the GTCS proceedings and refused an application for the expenses of the liability hearing before the Tribunal. The appellant submitted that the Tribunal erred in law in its conclusion about novus actus.
Held: The Tribunal erred in law in concluding that the decision by the GTCS further to investigate the referral to it by the respondents was a novus actus interveniens. On the facts found by it, that conclusion was not open to it. The appeal was allowed and the case remitted to the same Tribunal to re-assess compensation and the application for expenses.
THE HONOURABLE LORD FAIRLEY:
Introduction
Factual background
The Liability Hearing
"We have no doubt that there was a joint decision taken to make [the GTCS referral] and that it was not done in good faith but as a consequence of the disclosures made and as an attempt to pacify [Highland Council] and discredit the [appellant's] observations of the practices she found at the nursery which we found wholly credible." (LJ, para 142)
The Remedies Hearing
"Whatever the Tribunal's views on the merits of the evidence (which were set out in the merits Judgment) [the GTCS] must have been persuaded that there was sufficient material before them to proceed after they had conducted their own interim investigation on 21 February 2019. It was in their competence to lawfully act in that way presumably after an assessment of the prima facie case against the claimant" (RJ, para 28)
"Although a referral may not be made in good faith that does not necessarily mean that there is no factual basis alloying ...sic) the referral to be ultimately upheld. The evidence that led to us finding a detriment was the claimant's evidence that the respondent would know that such a referral itself would be damaging. If the referral had been disposed of in the claimant's favour then she would have been in a stronger position to succeed in this argument. We were not asked to sist the case to await the determination of the referral so we must reach our decision on the basis of what is before us which is that the current 'live' referral has a continuing effect on the claimant's ability to put these events behind her and for her condition to resolve." (RJ, para 29)
"Our view was that ending the causation of loss at the date of referral was not the correct approach given that the merits Judgment had held that the referral itself was a detriment. A better approach we concluded was to look at the point at which the continuation of the complaint was a matter in the hands of the GTCS. That properly seems to be in February [2019] after they had completed an interim report and concluded that the matter should proceed. That decision is in our view significant and is the intervening act that halts the chain of causation…We have no doubt that the continuing GTCS referral had had a significant effect on the claimant's health and mental well-being but that cannot be fully laid at the door of the respondents." (RJ, para 42)"
Grounds of appeal
Relevant law
Analysis and decision
Disposal
a. re-assess the heads of future loss, injury to feelings and psychiatric injury;
b. re-consider the claims for pension loss and legal costs incurred in defending the GTCS proceedings;
c. re-consider the application for expenses in respect of the liability hearing;
d. consider the issue of an ACAS uplift; and
e. consider the issue of grossing up for tax.