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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Flatley v. Society of Motor Manufacturers And Traders Ltd [2002] UKEAT 919_01_1610 (16 October 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/919_01_1610.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 919_01_1610, [2002] UKEAT 919_1_1610 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 29 August 2002 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J R REID QC
MR D CHADWICK
MS J DRAKE
APPELLANT | |
AND TRADERS LTD |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR ANGUS PIPER (of Counsel) Instructed By: Messrs Kidd Rapinet Solicitors Western House 14 Rickfords Hill Aylesbury Bucks HP20 2RX |
For the Respondent | MR JASON N GALBRAITH-MARTEN (of Counsel) Instructed By: The Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders Ltd Forbes House Halkin Street London SW1X 7DS |
JUDGE J R REID QC:
Introduction
The Facts
"If action is to be taken after investigation, you will receive a first and final warning in the case of serious misconduct or be summarily dismissed for gross misconduct. SMMT reserves the right to vary the procedure as it deems appropriate and there may be occasions when serious misconduct warrants dismissal without notice."
The Tribunal's conclusions
"… had little difficulty in agreeing with the Respondent's perception that the Applicant had clearly fallen well short of professional standards in his managing of the expenses for the particular trip in question and had aggravated that in his subsequent attempts to justify his position on the one hand and his failures to provide satisfactory explanations and/or documentation on the other. Some of the documentation produced by the Applicant was very unimpressive consisting for example of an apparently ordinary piece of hotel note paper in respect of an international chain of hotels. We entirely agreed with the decision to dismiss the Applicant."
"We came to the conclusion that for misconduct of this kind in relation to expenses, to amount to gross misconduct for a person of the Applicant's seniority and budget, the Respondents would have to show in effect that there had been deliberate deception or dishonesty. Whilst we accept that there was a degree of evasiveness and unsatisfactory explanation and approach by the Applicant, we were not persuaded that the Respondents had gone sufficiently far in their evidence to establish the level of mens rea to warrant a finding of gross misconduct, and we therefore concluded that the Applicant was entitled to his due notice pay."
Mr Flatley's case
SMMT's case
Discussion
"We came to the conclusion that for misconduct of this kind in relation to expenses, to amount to gross misconduct for a person of the Applicant's seniority and budget, the Respondents would have to show in effect that there had been deliberate deception or dishonesty."
But this was in the context of a man with a very substantial budget whose misdemeanours related to comparatively small amounts of expenses. It was not any statement of any general proposition of law: it was specific to the circumstances of the particular case. In the absence of dishonesty, in the view of the Tribunal, Mr Flatley was guilty of serious rather than gross misconduct. It was also, in the view of the Tribunal, not of such gravity as to justify dismissal without notice. The Tribunal no doubt had in mind that in the words of Lord Maugham in the Jupiter case at p73H "the immediate dismissal of an employee is a strong measure". The Tribunal did not think the case warranted it, though it accepted that it was within the employer's range of reasonable responses. In so deciding the Tribunal was deciding a question which was essentially one of fact. The Tribunal's decision cannot be said to have been perverse and it displays no error of law.
Conclusion