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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 >> Newbound v Thames Water Utilities Ltd [2015] EWCA Civ 677 (03 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2015/677.html Cite as: [2015] EWCA Civ 677, [2015] IRLR 734 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
MRS JUSTICE SLADE, MRS C BAELZ, MS G MILLS
UKEAT/0011/13/SM
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
LADY JUSTICE KING
____________________
ROBERT NEWBOUND |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THAMES WATER UTILITIES LIMITED |
Respondents |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Philip Jones (instructed by Ashfords LLP, Taunton) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 25 June 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean :
The facts
"An annual inspection is required on two Trunk Sewer assets in the Albert Road Connecting Sewer Chamber. The sewer is C Class and must be completed in full BA in accordance with the Thames Water Confined Space Code of Practice."
The employers' investigation
"Shaun was responsible for H&S and CP2 in charge. He should have read the relevant paperwork (SHE4 and C permit), and thus been aware of the BA requirement. He should also have briefed his team on the special requirements. In mitigation he is a fairly inexperienced CP2 in charge, was clearly fully committed to correcting his mistake when observed by myself, and could have been the subject of pressure to get the job done from more experienced staff members in the team. l feel potential gross misconduct could apply here."
In relation to the claimant he wrote:
"Bobby [the appellant] was the most experienced and senior operative on site. He had signed the SHE4 document which stated that full BA was to be used for the entry. He entered the sewer using just a dust mask accompanied by the Delphini operator who also wore a dust mask. No breathing apparatus was used. I can find no mitigating behaviour. I feel potential gross misconduct could apply here.
The disciplinary proceedings
"After considering all the information presented by Rob Nason and yourself, I have concluded that you failed to follow a safe system of work which you confirmed you clearly understood by signing your name at the foot of the document.
You failed to follow the methodology outlined in the safe system of work by carrying out the C class entry work without breathing apparatus or the Didsbury, in spite of this being a requirement of the safe system of work on two "back to back" separate occasions.
You are fully qualified and you have had full and refresher CP2 training on numerous occasions over the last 10 years. By your own admission, you understand the risks associated with C class sewer and subsequent entry.
Despite you admitting your understanding of this, you continued to carry out the entries on this day and repeatedly implied to me at this hearing that it was not your responsibility to identify health and safety omissions as you were not the CP2 in charge. You were the senior employee on site with 35 years' experience, working alongside a contractor as the leader of a two man working party.
I deem this act as a serious infringement of health and safety rules and a serious breach of the company's health and safety policy.
In reaching this decision, l felt that the evidence presented is clearly viewed by the company as being acts of gross misconduct. Therefore, l have no alternative but to summarily dismiss you from the company with immediate effect, I5 September 2011. You have the right to appeal against the decision and if you were to do so it must be made in writing to Teresa Lennon, employee relations specialist, within seven working days of receipt of this letter."
"The company has found some other substantial reason, by virtue of the loss of trust and confidence, to proceed to dismissal".
Reference to a loss of trust and confidence amounting to "some other substantial reason" was clearly an afterthought by the respondent's legal advisers. It was not an allegation the claimant previously had to meet. But I do not consider that anything turns on this in the present case: it is simply another label attached to the same set of facts.
"I now understand from this situation that the company, rather than rely upon individuals experience are now required just to follow chapter and verse. This is especially highlighted by the fact that very recently everyone has now been trained in the new system of work. This would suggest that the method I employed is not an individual occurrence but commonplace practice. It also implied that knowledge of the new health and safety system is at best "scant" within the business, yet I find myself dismissed for this shortcoming."
Health and safety and disciplinary policies of the respondent
"All employees, regardless of grade or seniority, have responsibilities for health and safety at work. This includes:-
- Taking reasonable care for the health, safety and welfare of themselves, their colleagues and other persons so employed by Thames Water.
- Complying with health and safety instructions and procedures provided for the purposes of safety, health and welfare, together with making full and proper use of protective clothing and safety equipment.
- Seeking advice if in doubt about the adequacy of any health and safety arrangement."
"(Note: individuals have the authority to immediately stop work on any activity that they consider is unsafe. No employee, at any level, is authorised to initiate, or continue any activity that places themselves or others in danger. Any such deliberate act or action will be viewed as a disciplinary matter with appropriate measures taken to secure the interests of Thames Water, its employees and stakeholders).
The employment judge's findings
"46. ….I have come to the conclusion that the SHE4 document was a comparatively recent introduction. I was not satisfied that the claimant and his colleagues had been trained in its significance. I am supported in that view because when this was raised by the claimant and his representative during the appeal it was not challenged that there was training given to supervisors and CP2s at Abbey Mills. In other words if the claimant was not the subject of disciplinary proceedings he too would have been on the training. I was also not satisfied that Mr Dennis had explained to the claimant that the failure to wear breathing apparatus would lead to disciplinary action, possibly dismissal. The evidence before me was that the claimant had in the past exercised his discretion in deciding whether or not to use breathing apparatus, hence his genuinely held belief that the SHE4 was a method statement. Such earlier decisions did not lead to disciplinary action as the respondent was prepared to rely on his skill, knowledge and experience. The respondent failed to take into account that both the claimant and Mr King were in a rush to get to the Albert Road sewer and had only scanned through the SHE4 in Mr Dennis' presence.
47. Much has been remarked on the claimant's failure to show remorse at the earliest opportunity. This is misleading. The claimant was called to a meeting with Mr Nason and answered questions put to him without their purpose or significance being explained to him. He showed considerable remorse during the appeal and offered to go on training and be given a second chance after 34 years' service. This was not given any credence.
48. The respondent asserted that during the disciplinary hearing he did not own up to his guilt. Again this could not be further from the truth. He admitted to Mr Nason prior to his suspension that he did not wear breathing apparatus. At the disciplinary hearing he gave an account of events. He said that it was Mr Andrews who gave him and Mr King the green light to enter the sewer without the apparatus. This was precisely the evidence Mr Andrews gave to Mr Gunn on the 5 August 2011. Mr Andrews was aware that breathing apparatus was required yet allowed the claimant and Mr King to use their discretion. The claimant was not seeking to deflect blame but gave his account of events supported to a large extent by Mr Andrews.
…..50. I do take into account Mr Nason's evidence before me that the CP2 in charge is responsible for any part of an operation going wrong if it could be avoided. Mr Andrews was the CP2 in charge."
"Both men were employed in the same operation. Mr Andrews was in charge, the claimant was not. Mr Andrews allowed both men to enter the sewer without a Didsbury winch being on site and without breathing apparatus. Yet Mr Andrews was given a written warning and had to undergo training. This was not an appropriate case for disparity in treatment notwithstanding that on the day they performed different roles."
The decision of the EAT
"74. Having decided the reason for the Claimant's dismissal and that the enquiry into the Claimant's conduct was reasonable, the reasoning of the EJ on the reasonableness of the decision to dismiss concentrated on the factors advanced by the Claimant in mitigation at his appeal hearing.
75. Mr Jones contended that on such a serious health and safety issue as arose in this case it is:
"…only in the most exceptional of circumstances and on the most urgent of grounds should a Tribunal be permitted to override the Respondent's view of the seriousness of the conduct and the appropriate sanction."
In this case in our judgment the EJ failed to consider the reasonableness of the gravity with which the Respondent viewed the conduct of the Claimant. The Respondent considered that the Claimant had deliberately entered a C Class sewer without breathing apparatus using his own assessment of the situation rather than complying with the instruction given to him by Mr Dennis. The Respondent considered that the acquiescence of the less experienced CP2 at the site, Mr Andrews, did not negate that instruction or relieve the Claimant from responsibility to take care of his own safety when working in a confined Class C sewer which could present serious risks to his safety. If the EJ considered that the Respondent formed a view of the seriousness of the Claimant's actions which fell outside that which could be taken by a reasonable employer he failed to give reasons for so concluding…………….
77. The EJ referred to the evidence before him in concluding that the Claimant had in the past exercised his discretion whether or not to use breathing apparatus and had not been disciplined for not doing so. Hence he believed that the SHE4 was a method statement. However the notes of the disciplinary hearing show that the Claimant said that whilst breathing apparatus was listed on the SHE4 document "in the past we have not had to follow every step". They do not record that the Respondent knew that he had entered a C Class sewer in the past without breathing apparatus contrary to a written instruction and had not been disciplined. The EJ appears to have accepted that these earlier failures to use breathing apparatus did not lead to disciplinary action. By relying on evidence given to him at the hearing rather than the evidence before the Respondent when taking the decision to dismiss in our judgment the EJ erred in placing any weight on this factor in the absence of any findings as to whether the Respondent was aware of such failures, and if so the circumstances in which they occurred and, if it was not, why no disciplinary action was taken.
78. Further in our judgment the EJ impermissibly substituted his view of the importance of training on the SHE4 document rather than considering whether the Respondent acted unreasonably in not regarding this as a significant mitigating factor. Such an assessment should have been made by the EJ in the light of his finding that Mr Dennis had read the SHE4 document to the Claimant, and that it stated that breathing apparatus was to be used in the Albert Road sewer. The unchallenged statement by Mr Dennis at the conclusion of the disciplinary hearing was that the Claimant admitted that he understood this requirement. In commenting that he was not satisfied that Mr Dennis had explained to the Claimant that failure to wear breathing apparatus would lead to disciplinary action the EJ failed to refer to the statement in the health and safety policy that such action would result in such action.
79. In our judgment the EJ erred in characterising the Respondent's view that the Claimant had failed to show remorse as "misleading". The unchallenged statement of Mr Kemp at the conclusion of the disciplinary hearing set out in paragraph 9.38 of the judgment of the EJ and the findings of fact made by him established that he recorded that at the disciplinary hearing the Claimant agreed he had entered the sewer twice without breathing apparatus but he did not then acknowledge he had done anything wrong.
The Claimant's ground of appeal from the decision to dismiss set out in the judgment of the EJ is based on the assertion that he "now" understood that rather than rely on experience employees "are now required just to follow chapter and verse". The Claimant did not acknowledge that he had done anything wrong until after he had been dismissed and was appealing the decision. For the same reason that his characterisation as "misleading" was made in error, the conclusion of the EJ that it "could not be further from the truth" for the Respondent to say that the Claimant did not own up to his guilt at the disciplinary hearing was also unsustainable. The Claimant admitted that he had entered the sewer twice not using breathing apparatus but on the material referred to by the EJ including the statement of Mr Kemp at the conclusion of the disciplinary hearing it is clear that at that hearing he did not acknowledge he had done anything wrong. The EJ substituted his own view rather than assessing the reasonableness of that of the Respondent when he commented at paragraph 48:
"The claimant was not seeking to deflect blame but gave his account of events supported to a large extent by Mr Andrews."
80. The EJ also considered the Claimant's length of service to be significant. He made his own observation on its importance saying:
"It is very rare nowadays to have an employee with so many years service."
Further, the EJ made his own assessment when finding:
"His contribution towards the respondent's own health and safety practice was considerable."
81. The EJ also referred to the fact that Mr Andrews was the CP2 in charge and was responsible for any part of the operation going wrong if it could be avoided. The EJ does not appear to have considered whether the view of the Respondent that Mr Andrews was less experienced than the Claimant and as Mr Gardner has been informed, did not feel able to challenge the more experienced members of the team, was one which they could reasonably take.
82. In our judgment the factors relied upon by the EJ to reach his conclusion that the dismissal of the Claimant was unfair were based on a misunderstanding of the facts and in certain respects represented his own views of the blameworthiness of the Claimant's conduct. Despite a correct self direction, the EJ fell into error by assessing the fairness of the dismissal on his own view of the facts and their significance rather than considering whether dismissal was within the range of reasonable responses of a reasonable employer in the circumstances. Notwithstanding that different employers may take different views of the blameworthiness of the Claimant, the EJ could only find the dismissal to be unfair if no reasonable employer taking into account all the relevant circumstances would have dismissed the Claimant.
83. In the alternative the EJ concluded that the dismissal of the Claimant was unfair because he was dismissed and Mr Andrews, the CP2 in charge, was only given a warning. The introduction to his consideration of disparate treatment indicates that the approach adopted by the EJ was to consider how Mr Andrews should have been treated and to decide on the relative culpability of the Claimant and Mr Andrews. The EJ started his account by saying at paragraph 52:
"I had all the relevant evidence before me in relation to Mr Andrews' case."
In our judgment the EJ erred in observing that the Claimant was not given the opportunity prior to any disciplinary investigation to apologise to Mr Nason or Mr Gunn. The conclusion of the EJ that:
"The assertions that Mr Andrews had shown remorse and was inexperienced were not sufficient grounds for treating them differently as the claimant was not given the opportunity prior to any disciplinary investigation to express himself to Mr Nason or Mr Gunn."
is not supported by the findings of fact. Those findings do not establish that the Claimant was prevented from apologising for his conduct, whether when he was suspended or at any other time. Further, later at the disciplinary hearing the Claimant did not acknowledge that he had been at fault.
84. The EJ failed to explain why the difference in the attitude of the Claimant and Mr Andrews to their wrongdoing did not reasonably justify the Respondent in taking different action against them. Mr Andrews accepted at an early stage that he should have taken steps to ensure the Claimant and Mr King wore breathing apparatus. He explained his inexperience compared to that of the Claimant. The judgment of the Court of Appeal in Paul is an example that acknowledgement of wrongdoing can justify a Respondent treating one employee more leniently than another involved in the same incident.
85. In our judgment the alternative basis for holding the dismissal to be unfair was erroneously based on the EJ's own view of the relative culpability of the Claimant and Mr Andrews rather than a consideration of whether it was within the range of reasonable responses for the Respondent to form that view in the circumstances."
The UNISON letter
"The company dismissed you for a very significant and potentially very dangerous breach of health and safety, to both yourself and others, health and safety breach [sic]. Despite the mitigation that you raised, the failure to abide by the requirements as set out by the on site briefing is totally damning."
"Given the contents of the respondent's policies, there was no realistic argument that the claimant was not or ought not to have been aware that contravention of an express requirement to wear breathing apparatus would result in a disciplinary charge.
Strong support for that proposition was received from the claimant's own trade union and their solicitors – in a piece of evidence which the employment judge ought to have taken into account but did not. In its letter of 18 January 2012 refusing to support the claimant's tribunal claim, UNISON made it clear that it considered the claimant's failure to abide by the requirement for breathing apparatus "totally damning" and pointed out that the claimant had been dismissed for "a very significant and potentially dangerous breach of health and safety, to both yourself and others". Again, given the views of even the claimant's own union as to the seriousness of the incident, it was not open to the employment judge to find that it should have been explained to the claimant that a failure to obey his manager's instruction might result in disciplinary action."
The appeal to this court
The law
"… the determination of the question whether the dismissal is unfair (having regard to the reason shown by the employer) –
a) depends on whether the circumstances (including the size and administrative resources of the employer's undertaking) the employer acted reasonably or unreasonably in treating it as a sufficient reason for dismissing the employee,
b) shall be determined in accordance with equity and the substantial merits of the case."
"In the case of British Home Stores v Burchell [1980] ICR 303, EAT approved in the Court of Appeal case of Weddell & Co Ltd v Tepper [1980] ICR 286, [it was held that] the employer must show that the misconduct was the reason for the dismissal. In other words, did the employer genuinely believe in the misconduct alleged? As to section 98(4), the Tribunal has to consider whether there was a reasonable investigation and reasonable grounds for the belief. Finally, was the dismissal within the range of reasonable responses.
A judge or Tribunal must consider whether the employer has acted in a manner a reasonable employee might have acted: Iceland Frozen Foods Ltd v Jones [1982] IRLR 439, EAT.
It is not the role of the Tribunal to put itself in the position of the reasonable employer: Sheffield Health and Social Care NHS Trust v Crabtree UKEAT/0331/09/ZT, and London Ambulance Service NHS Trust v Small [2009] IRLR 563…….
The range of reasonable responses test applies to the investigation as it does to the decision to dismiss for misconduct, Sainsbury's Supermarkets Ltd v Hitt [2003] ICR 111, CA."
"It is all too easy, even for an experienced ET, to slip into the substitution mindset. In conduct cases the claimant often comes to the ET with more evidence and with an understandable determination to clear his name and to prove to the ET that he is innocent of the charges made against him by his employer. He has lost his job in circumstances that may make it difficult for him to get another job. He may well gain the sympathy of the ET so that it is carried along the acquittal route and away from the real question – whether the employer acted fairly and reasonably in all the circumstances at the time of the dismissal."
"The appellant's conduct was rightly made the subject of disciplinary action. It is right that the ET, the EAT and this court should respect the opinions of the experienced professionals who decided that summary dismissal was appropriate. However, having done so, it was for the ET to decide whether their views represented a reasonable response to the appellant's conduct. It did so. In agreement with the majority of the ET, I consider that summary dismissal was wholly unreasonable in the circumstances of this case."
Disparity
"I would endorse the guidance that ultimately the question for the employer is whether in the particular case dismissal is a reasonable response to the misconduct proved. If the employer has an established policy applied for similar misconduct, it would not be fair to change the policy without warning. If the employer has no established policy but has on other occasions dealt differently with misconduct properly regarded as similar, fairness demands that he should consider whether in all the circumstances, including the degree of misconduct proved, more serious disciplinary action is justified.
An employer is entitled to take into account not only the nature of the conduct and the surrounding facts but also any mitigating personal circumstances affecting the employee concerned. The attitude of the employee to his conduct may be a relevant factor in deciding whether a repetition is likely. Thus an employee who admits that conduct proved is unacceptable and accepts advice and help to avoid a repetition may be regarded differently from one who refuses to accept responsibility for his actions, argues with management or makes unfounded suggestions that his fellow employees have conspired to accuse him falsely."
The role of the EAT
"A summary of the allocation of powers and responsibilities in unfair dismissal disputes bears repetition: it is for the employer to take the decision whether or not to dismiss an employee; for the ET to find the facts and decide whether, on an objective basis, the dismissal was fair or unfair; and for the EAT (and the ordinary courts hearing employment appeals) to decide whether a question of law arises from the proceedings in the ET. As appellate tribunals and courts are confined to questions of law they must not, in the absence of an error of law (including perversity), take over the ET's role as an 'industrial jury' with a fund of relevant and diverse specialist expertise…………..
The appellate body, whether the EAT or this court [the Court of Appeal], must be on its guard against making the very same legal error as the ET stands accused of making. An error will occur if the appellate body substitutes its own subjective response to the employee's conduct. The appellate body will slip into a similar sort of error if it substitutes its own view of the reasonable employer's response for the view formed by the ET without committing error of law or reaching a perverse decision on that point.
Other danger zones are present in most appeals against ET decisions. As an appeal lies only on a question of law, the difference between legal questions and findings of fact and inferences is crucial. Appellate bodies learn more from experience than from precept or instruction how to spot the difference between a real question of law and a challenge to primary findings of fact dressed up as law.
Another teaching of experience is that, as with other tribunals and courts, there are occasions when a correct self-direction of law is stated by the ET, but then overlooked or misapplied at the point of decision. The ET judgment must be read carefully to see if it has in fact correctly applied the law which it said was applicable. The reading of an ET decision must not, however, be so fussy that it produces pernickety critiques. Over-analysis of the reasoning process; being hypercritical of the way in which the decision is written; focusing too much on particular passages or turns of phrase to the neglect of the decision read in the round: those are all appellate weaknesses to avoid."
Discussion
Conclusions
Lady Justice King:
The Chancellor (Sir Terence Etherton)
"The Company dismissed you for a very significant and potentially dangerous breach of health & safety, to both yourself and others, health & safety breach. Despite the mitigation that you raised, the failure to abide by the requirements as set out by the onsite briefing is totally damning. It is therefore my view, and it is supported by UNISON's solicitors, that your Tribunal claim will not stand a reasonable chance of success at an Employment Tribunal. UNISON will therefore not support your Tribunal claim nor will it represent you in these matters. You have the legal right to continue to pursue your claim at Tribunal, however, UNISON would not recommend this."