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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Tchoula v. Icts (UK) Ltd [1999] UKEAT 465_99_2709 (27 September 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/465_99_2709.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 465_99_2709 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 28 July 1999 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE CHARLES
MRS D M PALMER
MR N D WILLIS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant |
IN PERSON |
"Although there have been exchanges which demonstrate that there is still considerable rancour between the parties, they have conducted themselves throughout a long hearing with a degree of dignity."
"1. Each of the Applicant's complaints that the Respondent racially discriminated against him contrary to section 1(1)(a) and 1(1)(b) of the Race Relations Act 1975 fails; and they are dismissed.
2. The Applicant's complaints of racial discrimination by way of victimisation contrary to section 2 of the Race Relations Act 1975 succeeds in respect of:
(i) Mr Dewane's acts on 5 August 1997; and
(ii) Mr Lewis' conduct of the subsequent disciplinary hearing and his decision to dismiss the Applicant.
3. The Applicant's contractual claims succeed in the total sum of £909.32.
4. The Applicant's claim under section 44 of the Employment Rights Act 1996 fails and is dismissed.
5. The Applicant's claim for unfair dismissal is stayed pending the decision of the House of Lords in R. v Secretary of State ex parte Seymour-Smith. Once that case has been determined, further directions will be given.
6 The remedy hearing in respect of the successful claims is to be heard on a date to be fixed.
(a) that in respect of them the Extended Reasons contain no reasoning or no proper reasoning, and
(b) perversity or, as Mr Tchoula puts it, some of the conclusions are "beyond belief".
(i) that the parties are entitled to know from the Extended Reasons why they have won or lost and what the Employment Tribunal has concluded in relation to the principal important controversial points,
(ii) the Extended Reasons should contain a sufficient explanation as to why the Employment Tribunal has preferred the evidence of one party to another and why it has made or has refused to make inferences, but
(iii) Extended Reasons should not be subjected to a close or linguistic analysis and should thus be read generously.
"1(xii) In the factual findings that follow, we have indicated the race and, where relevant, religion, of the witnesses and other personnel. We also need to make clear that we cannot embark on the exercise of resolving every disputed fact that has arisen in the course of a long hearing. This is not our function. We set out below the relevant factual findings in relation to those issues that the parties have raised."
(a) in applying the approach set out by the Court of Appeal the Employment Tribunal were applying authority that was binding upon them at the time, and
(b) it would be wrong for us to allow an argument based on the decision of the House of Lords in Nagarajan to be raised for the first time on this appeal, because we cannot be satisfied beyond doubt that this Tribunal would have before it all the facts bearing upon the point that a claim to victimisation can now be based upon subconscious motivation (see RSC Order 59/10/10 and the cases referred to therein and also Jones v Governing Body of Burdett Couttes School [1998] IRLR 521).
"The two supervisors claim that they watched him through a glass door for 8 - 10 minutes."
"Mr Dewane had earlier in the evening caught another guard asleep at London Road (R1, page 100)."
(1) Mr Ben Kalifa had a disciplinary record,
(2) Mr Ben Kalifa had been found asleep,
(3) Mr Ben Kalifa had the same contract terms, and
(4) although he was removed from the South Bank University site Mr Ben Kalifa was permitted to carry on working elsewhere.
"There is no avoiding the express allegation that he [Mr Tchoula] makes, namely that the selection process was 'rigged'."
"---- the interviewers genuinely selected Mr Harris on their appreciation of the respective merits of the candidates."
"From the outset of Mr Dewane's employment, he realised that the Respondent's recruitment system needed to be changed. The first occasion when a new procedure was used for a promotion was in April 1997, in connection with the post of Supervisor at Borough Road, one of the campus sites at SBU. We would note that the Respondent purports to operate an equal opportunities policy. This is set out in only the most general terms in the Introduction to their Employee Handbook: R2, page 11. ..."
"He [Mr Jones] had also worked at the site in the past, for the contractor (Shield) that the Respondent had replaced."
"An especially important factor is that Mr Jones worked for Shield and he therefore knew the client".
(a) the Respondent company wished to have a meeting with Mr Tchoula, which he told us took place on 24 July 1997, and
(b) the Respondent company were advised that they were under no obligation to answer the questionnaire.
(a) the other circumstances raised in paragraph 36 provide clear indications which support a view that the inferences of discrimonatory conduct Mr Tchoula invited the Employment Tribunal to make should not be drawn, and
(b) section 65 is only one of the factors to be taken into account in the consideration of what (if any) inferences should be drawn in respect of Mr Tchoula's claims and, in our judgment, the Employment Tribunal have not erred in law and cannot be said to have reached perverse conclusions in respect of the individual claims made by Mr Tchoula because, in all the circumstances, they did not draw the inferences Mr Tchoula invited them to draw.
"does not give reason why it thinks Ms Sara Bivens (and the two other senior managers) were not sheltering behind wrong advice".