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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Minis Childcare Ltd v Hilton-Webb (Disability Discrimination) [2024] EAT 108 (10 July 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2024/108.html Cite as: [2024] EAT 108 |
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Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Minis Childcare Ltd |
Appellant |
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Ms Z Hilton-Webb |
Respondent |
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Jonathan Cook (instructed by Leigh Day) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 4 June 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
Disability Discrimination
The respondent produced standard documentation in font sizes that may have been, on occasion, as small as 10 point, but, it appears, generally were 11 or 12 point. The Employment Tribunal described this as the "small font" PCP. The claimant is disabled because she has Apert Syndrome, which results in impaired vision. The Employment Tribunal dismissed a claim of failure to make reasonable adjustments because the respondent lacked requisite knowledge; but upheld an indirect disability discrimination claim. The reasoning was insufficient to understand what the Employment Tribunal meant when it said that there was "no legitimate aim" for the "small font" PCP, in circumstances in which the respondent had asserted that the legitimate aim it pursued was "efficient management". This complaint was remitted to the same Employment Tribunal to be redetermined in accordance with the approach to the law set out in this judgment.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE JAMES TAYLER
Introduction
77. In respect of the practice of providing documentation with small font sizes, documents are provided in standard font sizes, generally 11 or 12. Zoe has been able to read the same as set out above. Once Zoe made us aware that she required larger font, this was accommodated.
The finding of the Employment Tribunal
356. With regard to paragraph 16.4, small font sizes, there is simply no objective justification for this. There is no legitimate aim, and it cannot be proportionate when the simple thing to do would be to provide documents in larger font. It is unfortunate that the Claimant simply did not explain her difficulty with documents in small font size to the Respondent at the time of the events in question. [emphasis added]
The appeal and response
( 1) Legitimate aim
(1)(a) Wrong test
(1)(b) Lack/insufficiency of reasons
(1)(c) Perversity
(2) Proportionality (wrong test)
The Law
19 Indirect discrimination
(1) A person (A) discriminates against another (B) if A applies to B a provision, criterion or practice which is discriminatory in relation to a relevant protected characteristic of B's.
(2) For the purposes of subsection (1), a provision, criterion or practice is discriminatory in relation to a relevant protected characteristic of B's if—
(a) A applies, or would apply, it to persons with whom B does not share the characteristic,
(b) it puts, or would put, persons with whom B shares the characteristic at a particular disadvantage when compared with persons with whom B does not share it,
(c) it puts, or would put, B at that disadvantage, and
(d) A cannot show it to be a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim.
17 It will be seen that section 19(2)(d) requires the putative discriminator to show two things - (a) that the purpose of the PCP was to achieve a legitimate aim; and (b) that it represented a proportionate means of achieving that aim. The distinction between the two is in principle important since the aim, so long as "legitimate", must be a matter for the choice of the employer whereas the proportionality of the means chosen must be assessed by the tribunal. A recent example of that distinction being applied was the decision of this court in Chief Constable of West Midlands Police v Harrod [2017] ICR 869 (per Bean LJ at para 30, myself at para 41 and Elias LJ at para 48); but see also Chief Constable of West Midlands Police v Blackburn [2009] IRLR 135. Having said that, it has to be recognised that the case law sometimes slurs over the distinction between aim and means, perhaps because it is not always easy, or necessary, to draw it.
4.28 … The aim of the provision, criterion or practice should be legal, should not be discriminatory in itself, and must represent a real, objective consideration.
8.3 Whether the tribunal erred in rejecting the respondent's case of justification. It is important to make clear that the respondent did not refuse the claimant's request for 50%, did not apply the PCP, by reference to safety considerations, but only to 'resource' considerations. The respondent sought before the tribunal to rely, not only on such resource considerations, upon which it did rely at the time, but also on safety considerations, which it did not have in mind at the time. There was and is no issue as a matter of law that justification of an otherwise discriminatory PCP can be put forward by reference to consideration not in mind at the time of application of the PCP (see Schönheit v Stadt Frankfurt am Main [2004] IRLR 983 at paragraphs 86–87).
4.31 Although not defined by the Act, the term 'proportionate' is taken from EU Directives and its meaning has been clarified by decisions of the CJEU (formerly the ECJ). EU law views treatment as proportionate if it is an 'appropriate and necessary' means of achieving a legitimate aim. But 'necessary' does not mean that the provision, criterion or practice is the only possible way of achieving the legitimate aim; it is sufficient that the same aim could not be achieved by less discriminatory means.
32. Section 1(2)(b)(ii) requires the employer to show that the proposal is justifiable irrespective of the sex of the person to whom it is applied. It must be objectively justifiable (Barry v Midland Bank plc [1999] ICR 859 ) and I accept that the word "necessary" used in Bilka-Kaufaus [1987] ICR 110 is to be qualified by the word "reasonably". That qualification does not, however, permit the margin of discretion or range of reasonable responses for which the appellants contend. The presence of the word "reasonably" reflects the presence and applicability of the principle of proportionality. The employer does not have to demonstrate that no other proposal is possible. The employer has to show that the proposal, in this case for a full-time appointment, is justified objectively notwithstanding its discriminatory effect. The principle of proportionality requires the tribunal to take into account the reasonable needs of the business. But it has to make its own judgment, upon a fair and detailed analysis of the working practices and business considerations involved, as to whether the proposal is reasonably necessary. …
64. The answer given in the Employment Appeal Tribunal [2009] 3 All ER 435, para 58, with which the Court of Appeal agreed [2011] ICR 60, para 36, was:
"Typically, legitimate aims can only be achieved by the application of general rules or policies. The adoption of a general rule, as opposed to a series of responses to particular individual circumstances, is itself an important element in the justification. It is what gives predictability and consistency, which is itself an important virtue."
Thus the appeal tribunal would not rule out the possibility that there may be cases where the particular application of the rule has to be justified, but they suspected that these would be extremely rare.
65. I would accept that where it is justified to have a general rule, then the existence of that rule will usually justify the treatment which results from it.
Reality Check
Approach to appeals
Analysis
356. With regard to paragraph 16.4, small font sizes, there is simply no objective justification for this. There is no legitimate aim, and it cannot be proportionate when the simple thing to do would be to provide documents in larger font. It is unfortunate that the Claimant simply did not explain her difficulty with documents in small font size to the Respondent at the time of the events in question.
35.1. the respondent did not identify an aim
35.2. the aim the respondent identified, "efficient management", could not be legitimate in any circumstances
35.3. the aim the respondent identified could not be a legitimate reason for applying the "small font" PCP
35.4. the respondent did not establish in evidence that the PCP achieved the legitimate aim