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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> IPC Magazines v. Clements [1999] UKEAT 456_99_1312 (13 December 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/456_99_1312.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 456_99_1312 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR D CHADWICK
MR S M SPRINGER MBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellants | MR W DIAMOND (Representative) Peninsula Business Services Limited Advocacy & Litigation Department 2nd Floor Stamford House 361-365 Chapel Road Salford Manchester M3 5JY |
For the Respondent |
MS OMAMBALA (of Counsel) Messrs Thompsons Solicitors Congress House Great Russell House London WC1B 3LW |
JUDGE PETER CLARK: By an Originating Application presented to the London (South) Employment Tribunal on 2nd July 1998 the applicant, Miss Clements, complained of unfair dismissal by her former employer, the respondent IPC Magazines Limited ['IPC']. That claim was resisted; the respondent contended that she had been fairly dismissed on grounds of her misconduct.
The Facts
"Dear Janet,
I have it on good authority that flat plans for issues of That's Life magazine are being passed to Women's Own.
Clue1 – sub
Clue 2 can number 2 believe it."
A few days later a second anonymous letter was received by Tanya Spriggs at her home address. It was posted second class on 1st April and read:
"Sorry to say love you should know that your husband has a dirty habit of sleeping with other women which doesn't seem right. In Australia he had a liaison with your friend Julia …"
The letter goes on and is then signed "a friend".
The Employment Tribunal decision
The tribunal accepted that IPC had a genuine belief that the applicant had written the two anonymous letters, but that they did not have reasonable grounds for that belief. The applicant was not given sight of the offending letters nor given a proper opportunity to rebut the charge against her. Further, they found that the employer's investigation was similarly flawed.
The tribunal further accepted that IPC genuinely believed that the applicant had acted in a hostile manner to other members of staff, but again, found that she had not been given a proper opportunity to deal with that charge.
In these circumstances the tribunal held that the dismissal procedure used in this case was substantially flawed. The dismissal was unfair.
(2) Remedy
In deciding to make an order for re-engagement the tribunal expressed their view of the matter at paragraphs 25 to 29 of their reasons in this way:
"25. The Applicant opted for re-instatement or in the alternative re-engagement as she had indicated in her Originating Application. She told us that four weeks after her dismissal she began working for the Respondents as a freelance writer for another magazine Options, and there had been no problem. This arrangement only ended because Mr Leverett found out and immediately put a stop to it. Mr McKellan [McNeil] had unfortunately died and Ms Spriggs was no longer attached to Women's Own magazine and therefore there should be no problem for her to return to her old job.
26. The Respondent stated starkly that under no circumstances would they ever employ her again. Their belief that she had written the anonymous letters was genuine and in those circumstances the order should not be made.
27. We decided that re-instatement should not be ordered. The Applicant had clearly had complaints about many other people than Mr McKellan [McNeil] and Ms Spriggs who would have knowledge of the bitter complaints, and they had already threatened to resign if she went back to Women's Own.
28. We thought re-engagement was much more practicable. The Applicant had worked on another title without problems and in an organisation with 2,000 staff and discrete departments built around titles she should be able to be accommodated without difficulty.
29. Mr Leverett and Mr Tanner are experienced personnel professionals. They would not come into day-to-day contact with the Applicant and should be expected to contain their feelings about her and deal with her objectively."
At no stage in the reasons did the tribunal expressly deal with IPC's contention that the applicant had contributed to her dismissal by her own conduct.
The Appeal
"The appellant's grounds of appeal are:
a) that the Tribunal erred in law in that no reasonable Tribunal properly directing itself could have reached the decision it did having regard to the findings of fact made;
b) that the Tribunal erred in law in failing to address at all the appellant's submission that the Tribunal was required to consider the question of the extent to which the employee contributed to her own dismissal and to further consider the implications of their finding on contributory fault in the context of a request for reinstatement or reingagement.
c) the Tribunal erred in law in concluding that reingagement was a just and equitable remedy taking account of the finding at paragraph 23 [the finding that IPC had a genuine belief in the misconduct alleged].
d) the Tribunal further erred in failing to consider the question of the difference if any which would have been made by a fair procedure."
(1) The contribution point.
It is common ground before us that the four-day hearing before the Employment Tribunal took the following course. On the first day the tribunal adjourned to read the documents in the case before hearing oral evidence. The witnesses whom we have mentioned for both sides were then heard on the second and into the third day. Thereafter, on the third day, both representatives who appear before us today addressed the tribunal in closing on the issue of liability. The tribunal then adjourned to the following fourth day to consider their decision on liability. On the fourth day Ms Omambala was unable to attend and her brief was held by another member of her chambers. On the morning of the fourth day the Chairman orally delivered the Employment Tribunal's decision on liability, with reasons. Immediately thereafter both representatives addressed the tribunal on remedy. No further evidence as to remedy was called on behalf of IPC. In particular, Mr Diamond accepts that there was no evidence led before the tribunal to the effect that the employers believed that the necessary trust and confidence in the applicant had been destroyed, and no such evidence had been led at the liability hearing stage.
That sequence of events is material to our conclusions on both points taken in this appeal, as we shall endeavour to explain.
Mr Diamond first submits, correctly, that the tribunal make no reference to the submission which, it is common ground, he made at the remedies stage, that the applicant had contributed to her dismissal by her own conduct for the purposes of ss.123(6) and 116(3)(c) of the Employment Rights Act 1996. The meaning of contribution is the same for the purpose of both those subsections. Following the judgment of Brandon LJ in Nelson v British Broadcasting Corporation (No. 2) [1980] ICR 110 it is for the employer to show that the applicant was guilty of culpable or blameworthy conduct which caused or contributed to the dismissal. It will then be for the tribunal to assess the percentage deduction which it is just and equitable to make in respect of any contribution found on the part of the applicant.
We emphasise that it is for the employer to show that in fact the applicant was guilty of causally relevant culpable or blameworthy conduct. It is not enough that the employer had a reasonable belief based on reasonable grounds following a reasonable investigation in the applicant's guilt; the test of reasonableness when considering the fairness of a conduct dismissal under s.98(4).
We have no doubt that the tribunal ought to have dealt expressly with this submission and given a reasoned ruling on it. A finding of contribution is a material factor which must be taken into consideration by the tribunal when considering whether or not to order the remedy of re-engagement. S.116(3)(c). It follows, in our judgment, that in failing to make an express finding on the question of contribution the tribunal fell into error. See Portsea Island Mutual Co-operative Society Limited v Rees [1980] ICR 260.
However, that is not the end of the matter. It is open to this Appeal Tribunal to dismiss an appeal, or ground of appeal, notwithstanding that an error of law in the tribunal's decision is disclosed, if the tribunal's decision is nevertheless plainly and unarguably right. Dobie v Burns International [1984] ICR 812.
We return to the evidence led before the Employment Tribunal. No direct evidence was called on behalf of IPC to show that the applicant had in fact sent the two anonymous letters, or that she had behaved in a hostile manner towards her colleagues. In these circumstances there was no evidence on which the tribunal could base a finding that the applicant was in fact guilty of the culpable and blameworthy conduct for which she was dismissed,
However, Mr Diamond puts the case rather differently. He submits that by failing to deny the charge in relation to the authorship of the two anonymous letters the applicant did an act which caused or contributed to her dismissal and that that amounted to culpable or blameworthy conduct.
We reject that argument. An admission of guilt by the applicant would plainly have been the best evidence of culpable or blameworthy conduct on her part. However, she made no admissions at the first two disciplinary hearings before Mr Leverett and then Ms Day. At the third hearing before Mr Tanner, though her union representative, she denied the charge.
Further, this sequence of events must be seen against the background that IPC deliberately withheld the offending letters from the applicant until after tribunal proceedings were commenced and the evidence given by the applicant to the Employment Tribunal in relation to those two letters to which we have earlier referred.
In these circumstances we are satisfied that the tribunal's implicit rejection of the employer's argument on contribution was plainly and unarguably right and accordingly we dismiss this ground of appeal.
(2) The practicability point
Mr Diamond places reliance on the Scottish EAT judgment, delivered by Lord Johnson, in Wood Group v Crossan [1998] IRLR 680. There the applicant was dismissed on the grounds that he had engaged in drug dealing at the workplace and for timekeeping and clocking offences. The Employment Tribunal found the employer had a genuine belief that the applicant had misconducted himself in the ways alleged, and that they had reasonable grounds for that belief based on various witness statements which they had collected and in circumstances where the makers of those statements wished to remain anonymous. However, the tribunal went on to find that the employer had not carried out a reasonable investigation and on that ground held the dismissal to be unfair. The tribunal went on to make an order for his re-engagement.
On appeal the finding of unfair dismissal was upheld but the re-engagement order set aside. The EAT held that on the facts the essential bond of trust and confidence had been broken and it was not practicable to order re-engagement.
Mr Diamond submits that the same result must inevitably follow on the facts of this case. We disagree. The factual circumstances are quite different. Here, the tribunal expressly found that IPC did not have reasonable grounds for their belief in the applicant's misconduct. There was no evidence before them that the necessary trust and confidence was destroyed. In these circumstances we are satisfied that on the question of practicability, which is essentially a question of fact for the Employment Tribunal, there are no grounds for interfering with this decision.