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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Vaseghi v Brunel University [2006] EWCA Civ 1681 (21 November 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2006/1681.html Cite as: [2006] EWCA Civ 1681 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand London, WC2 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
LORD JUSTICE HUGHES
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VASEGHI | CLAIMANT/APPELLANT | |
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BRUNEL UNIVERSITY | DEFENDANT/RESPONDENT |
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MR S BRITTENDEN (instructed by Messrs Thompsons) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
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"The Tribunal has had careful regard to the authorities cited to it in relation to the Applicant's allegations of victimization. It notes the case of Nagarajan v London Regional Transport [1999] IRLR 572 where the Court of Appeal held that in order for there to be discrimination by way of victimization within the meaning of Section 21, the protected Act must constitute the 'reasons' for the less favourable treatment. The discriminator must have a motivation consciously connected with the Race Relations legislation."
"We are not persuaded by that argument and we cannot say that this Tribunal might not have reached a different conclusion if it had addressed the question of unconscious discrimination. We feel it possible that Mr Vickery may be right, but we cannot tell, and it must be right for the issue of unconscious discrimination to be addressed in terms, in the way this Tribunal in terms said it was not doing."
"Those submissions or questions raised included matters such as asking who complained about the Applicant's e-mails and when; on what basis it was said that the e-mails were inappropriate; consideration of the total number of complaints; why the e-mail search went beyond the parameters originally set by Professor Schwartz; and whether, and why, it accepted the Respondent's case that the Applicant had spent a 'disproportionate amount of time' sending e-mails. None of those matters appear in the Tribunal's decision. It is simply stated as a fact that some of the e-mails that were searched related to the Applicant's trade union activities and the conclusion reached that none of the prohibited motives were found to exist.
"Mr Vickery has not sought vigorously to contest his own suggestion in the Respondent's Answer, to which we have referred, that there be a referral under Burns v Consignia in this regard. He does not accept that there was inadequate reasoning, but in his submission the best way of putting the matter beyond doubt is for the Tribunal, while the matter is being referred back to them, to flesh out its own reasoning, and to give the reasons for which the Applicant asks, or at any rate, sufficient of them to show why it reached the conclusion it did.
"We accept that good sense. Consequently, we shall refer the matter back under Burns v Consignia to ask the Tribunal to give the fullness of its reasoning as to why it was satisfied that the setting up and conduct of this disciplinary inquiry into the use of e-mails, was not for a prohibited purpose, under section 146, addressing as many of the Applicant's submissions as it considers material. Of course, there is no obligation for a Tribunal to address every one of Counsel's submissions which may or may not be helpful to it; but in this case it will at least be necessary for the Tribunal to summarize what the evidence was as to the investigation, both as to its intent and to its conclusion, in order to show, over and above the fact that it was incumbent upon the University to set one up, why it is that the Tribunal is satisfied that section 146 is not breached."
"The Tribunal orders that this appeal be stayed for 56 days from the seal date of this order to allow for the reference to the Employment Tribunal of the following questions, to be answered by reference to its Notes of Evidence (and no additional evidence) but with the assistance (if so advised) of additional written submissions from the parties:
(i) whether there was less favourable treatment of the Appellant's sub consciously motivated by unlawful discrimination
(ii) what were its reasons for concluding that the detriment to the Appellant of the setting up or conduct of the email enquiry was not motivated contrary to s146 of the TULCRA 1992.
"The Tribunal should feel free if so advised to review its decision of its own initiative, but is otherwise requested, if at all possible, to answer such questions within the said 56 days. The matter will be restored for further consideration on the paper by 7 February 2005 as to whether and if so on what basis this appeal will be restored."
The balance of the appeal, that is to say grounds 2, 3, 4 and part of 5, was adjourned.
"The Chairman and members of the Employment Tribunal whose decision is the subject of the above Appeal met on 3 March 2005 to consider by reference to its notes of evidence (and no additional evidence) but with the assistance (if so advised) of additional submissions from the parties, the questions posed by the Employment Appeal Tribunal pursuant to its Order staying the appeal dated 8 December 2004 as amended by its further Order dated 14 February 2005. Both upon the occasion of its consideration of the questions and in advance of that consideration the chairman and members read the parties' additional submissions.
"Question (i): Whether there was less favourable treatment of the Appellant subconsciously motivated by unlawful discrimination:
"Answer: The Tribunal had found no less favourable treatment of the Applicant subconsciously motivated by unlawful discrimination. All three members of the Tribunal clearly recall that during its consideration of the case over a period of some five days they were fully aware of, discussed and rejected the possibility of a finding subconsciously motivated discrimination as submitted by the parties and in the light of dicta in the authorities of Nagarajan v London Regional Transport [1999] IRLR 572 HL and Law Society v Bahl [2003] IRLR 640 EAT.
"In reaching its conclusion on the absence of subconsciously motivated unlawful discrimination it was particularly mindful of the comments of Elias J in Bahl at paragraph 176 as urged upon it by the Respondent in its final submission and again cited in its 'Review Submissions'.
"Regrettably the Tribunal's actual conclusion upon the question of subconsciously motivated discrimination as above set out was not specifically reflected in the Tribunal's written decision. The reference to Nagarajan was, through the chairman's error, a reference to the decision of the Court of Appeal and not to that of the House of Lords when it had been to the latter that the Tribunal had directed itself during its discussion upon the possibility of a finding of subconsciously motivated discrimination.
"Question (ii): What were the Tribunal's reasons for concluding that the detriment to the appellant of the setting up or conduct of the email inquiry was not motivated contrary to Section 146 of TULCRA 1992?
"Answer: The Tribunal's reason for concluding that any detriment to the Appellant from the setting up or conduct of the email inquiry was not motivated contrary to Section 146 of TULCRA 1992, was because of its acceptance of evidence that the Respondent had a reasonable concern that the Applicant was continuing to abuse the Respondent's email system despite a previous warning in that regard. This reason did not, additionally, appear to the Tribunal upon the evidence, in particular that from Mr Dempster, to be linked to any of the protected Acts set out at Section 146".
"The fact that in its first Decision, there was no hint of the claim made in the second decision but all three members of the Tribunal clearly recall that they were fully aware of, discussed and rejected the possibility of a finding of subconsciously motivated discrimination, as submitted by the parties in the light of the dicta of the authorities in Nagarajan v London Regional Transport [1999] IRLR 572 HL.
"We say right away that we are not challenging the integrity of the members of the Tribunal, but we have to say that in all the circumstances of this case, we are extremely uncomfortable by a decision which does not focus on the issues raised in the House of Lords, being in any shape or form set out in the first Tribunal, nevertheless being assured that those matters were considered. The old adage about justice not only being done but seen to be done, in our view does apply, and all we can say is that we really do not feel that if we were litigants, we would feel that the matter had been properly considered. There is no reference at all in the first decision to subconscious motivation, and in view of the patent misdirection, we consider that this decision must be regarded as fatally flawed on the basis of the old adage that justice must not only be done but be seen to be done.
"There is no trail of reasoning in the second judgment which enables an applicant to see how it was that there was no subconscious motivation in respect of the victimisation complaints in its judgment of 16 March 2005."
"We cannot rewrite history, but if it had been the case that the Tribunal examining the judgment of the Employment Appeal Tribunal in this case had said, if it had been the case, 'we got it wrong, we misdirected ourselves, we have now reconsidered it and we still find there was no subconscious motivation' and had then proceeded to give its reasons for that finding, then it is difficult to see how the Tribunal could have been criticised, but the converse to say 'we did consider it' when that does not surface means that even if that is the case, the integrity of the system is called into question."
"The discriminator must have a motivation consciously connected with the race relations legislation."
Order: Appeal dismissed.