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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Issa v. Sandwell Healthcare NHS Trust & Ors [2002] UKEAT 0929_01_1207 (12 July 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/0929_01_1207.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 0929_01_1207, [2002] UKEAT 929_1_1207 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 4 July 2002 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR K EDMONDSON JP
MR J C SHRIGLEY
APPELLANT | |
3) HUGH BRADBY & OTHERS |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR S MUNASINGHE (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Commission for Racial Equality Third Floor Lancaster House 67 Newhall Street Birmingham B3 1NA |
For the Respondent | MR C FREEDMAN One of Her Majesty's Counsel Instructed by: Messrs Higgs & Sons Solicitors Inhedge House 31 Wolverhampton Street Dudley West Midlands DY1 1EY |
JUDGE PETER CLARK
Background
"I will start with the conclusion of my response:
I accept the recommendations and I will fully co-operate one hundred per cent in executing and implementing the recommendations."
"However, Part II of the recommendations were most unfair, unjust and not based on the proper assessment and, in my view, were racially motivated which I will be explaining later. These recommendations were changed even further without any obvious reason or proper assessment other than to destroy my career bit by bit. In the process they are damaging the patients interest and welfare.
I accepted the recommendations so I could go back to work to access the correct statistics and the proper figures to which I was previously denied access."
"Dear Mr Clothier
Further to various communications, interviews and exchanges of letters, I conclude that serious professional misconduct has been committed on your part. The rules of the General Medical Council have been broken (including dishonesty and intimidating of witnesses before interviews), medical ethics have not been followed, insufficient care has been taken in the compilation and presentation of reports, as well as by accepting these inaccurate reports and assessments. Also racism (both direct and indirect). I have evidence to support my claims, together with independent evidence which substantiates my position.
I ask you to consider the false allegations that have been committed against me, and to refute them, even at this late stage.
If I do not hear from you within seven days, I have no alternative but to take my case to the General Medical Council for professional misconduct, and will also pursue other measures including civil action. You must be aware that I will not cease in my efforts to clear my professional reputation.
Yours sincerely
Fauzy M Issa
CONSULTANT ORTHOPAEDIC SURGEON"
The Employment Tribunal decision
(1) Direct race discrimination
The Appellant was not subjected to less favourable treatment than an actual or hypothetical comparator. The treatment afforded to the Appellant between 1 September 1997 and his dismissal would have been the same for any Consultant Orthopaedic Surgeon employed by Sandwell in the circumstances which arose, regardless of race. Further, the Employment Tribunal accepted Sandwell's explanation for their treatment of the Appellant.
(2) Victimisation
The Appellant was not re suspended on 19 November 1999 by reason that he had presented his first complaint to the Employment Tribunal, a 'protected act'. It was because that document made it clear that the Appellant was not accepting the recommendations of the Assessors, the pre-condition to his suspension being lifted.
(3) Unfair Dismissal
Sandwell had established a potentially fair reason for dismissal, namely conduct. There were no procedural irregularities. Dismissal for the breakdown in the employment and professional relationship caused by his threatening letters dated 18 March 2000 alone justified his dismissal, absent, the taint of racial discrimination by Sandwell, an allegation rejected by the Employment Tribunal.
It was a sanction well within the band of reasonable responses open to this employer. Foley v Post Office [2000] IRLR 827.
The Appeal
(1) Mrs Riddington's Audit
Mr Munasinghe challenges the Employment Tribunal's express finding that the audit was not specifically targeted at the Appellant and was not manipulated to show that he had a higher complication rate than that of his colleagues in the orthopaedic department.
It is submitted that in arriving at those conclusions, rejecting the Appellant's case, the Employment Tribunal failed to have regard to the totality of the evidence and in particular evidence given by the Appellant. Various aspects of the evidence are referred to.
Accordingly we reject this head of complaint.
(2) Failure to adjudicate upon a live allegation by the Appellant of less favourable treatment than that afforded to a named comparator from a different racial group.
"Why I believe there is a racial issue here
1. One of my colleagues, a consultant orthopaedic surgeon, Mr John Clothier, had two deaths on the operating table during revision hip surgery. This was due to bleeding as a direct result from surgery when the surgeon breached the pelvic wall. None of these cases have even been even (sic) investigated. Clearly, as a matter of fairness and equal treatment something as unusual as that should be investigated for the sake of patient welfare."
"There are no complaints whatsover regarding treatment of Mrs C at Sandwell District General Hospital."
a) Comparator evidence
(1) it was an essential part of the Appellant's case on less favourable treatment that the death of his patient M was used by the Respondents as a pretext to target the Appellant in the Orthopaedic Department's audit; the Employment Tribunal expressly rejected that contention as a matter of fact. Accordingly he failed to make out the treatment which he complained of as having been afforded to him. On this ground alone the specific complaint failed.
(2) It was his complaint that neither of Mr Clothier's deaths were even investigated (see his first IT1). That was simply incorrect. There was an external public investigation by way of a Coroner's Inquest in each case. Thus there was no difference in treatment.
(3) Given the material findings of fact by the Employment Tribunal to which we have referred it is implicit in their reasons that they rejected this specific complaint of less favourable treatment on racial grounds.
(4) Given those findings their conclusion that the complaint of direct racial discrimination failed was 'plainly and unarguably right'. Dobie v Burns International [1984] ICR 812.
(5) Even had we concluded that the Employment Tribunal had fallen into error such that this specific complaint ought to be remitted for re hearing by the same Employment Tribunal, the result would, on their earlier findings of fact, inevitably be the same.
For all and each of these reasons we reject this ground of appeal.
(3) Victimisation
(4) Unfair Dismissal
Conclusion