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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Sivanandan v. Hackney Action for Racial Equality & Ors [2004] UKEAT 0472_04_0607 (6 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2004/0472_04_0607.html Cite as: [2004] UKEAT 0472_04_0607, [2004] UKEAT 472_4_607 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE BURTON (PRESIDENT)
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
(2) LONDON BOROUGH OF HACKNEY & OTHERS |
RESPONDENTS |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | THE APPELLANT IN PERSON |
For the First Respondents For the Second Respondents |
No appearance or representation by or on behalf of the Respondents MR S SOOR (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Davenport Lyons Solicitors 1 Old Burlington Street London W1S 3NL |
Employment Tribunal erred in not ordering disclosure pursuant to request (considerably slimmed down during the appeal) for documentation relating to remedy hearing: disclosure of such (slimmed down) documentation, whether or not relevant to liability, was or might be relevant to potential issue of aggravated damages and apportionment, and was not intrinsically inconsistent with the liability findings.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE BURTON (PRESIDENT)
"(ii) all documents relating to "the service level agreement" held between London Borough of Hackney and HARE.
(iii) All documents showing the contract for services and the monitoring procedures and returns for monitoring contact compliance between LBH and HARE between 1998 and 2001.
(vii) All documents relating to the financial problems of HARE between 1999 and 2001 and notified to LBH."
"These documents are held electronically and we would hope to forward these to you early next week"
As far as (iii) is concerned, it said, as stated above:
"The files are unfortunately missing.
We will forward recent monitoring information, namely 2000/2001 early next week"
As for (vii) the answer was:
"As stated to you, the files are missing. We would however suggest that you may wish to obtain audited accounts directly from HARE which will detail their financial position."
"5 The position can be simply stated. The Respondents accept that there are documents which they have not disclosed. Their explanation is simply that they do not have those documents in their possession.
6 The Tribunal accepts that it is wholly understandable that the Applicant should be deeply suspicious of that contention by the Respondent. However, the Tribunal has no basis upon which to decide in favour of the Applicant that what the Respondents say is untrue. Where such a complaint about non disclosure arises, the normal procedure, and that which will apply in this case, is to put evidence before the Tribunal at the merits hearing to persuade the Tribunal that the claim that documents are not in existence is a false claim. Alternatively, if the Tribunal is satisfied that important documents have existed for some time and have then been disposed of, that is conduct from which an inference might be drawn in favour of the Applicant.
7. The Tribunal therefore refuses the Applicant to strike out on that first basis."
"there would need to be separate disclosure on such issues. The Tribunal decided that the best course was to restrict this hearing to liability issues, and if there is a finding in favour of the Applicant, then the Tribunal will give directions for a separate remedy hearing".
- "A copy of all quarterly monitoring returns and all documents relating to the LBH/HARE Service Level Agreement from 1 January 1999 until the present day.
- All financial accounts and returns provided to the LBH by HARE from 1 January 1999 until the present day.
- All documents including correspondence, regarding HARE finances, including the use of public funds for legal advice and representation from 1 November 1998 until the present day.
- All documents including correspondence, regarding my ET claim against HARE, (i.e. the Buckley ET) all documents including correspondence regarding the CRE investigation of HARE, from 1 January 2002 to the present day, all documents regarding funding for the HARE case worker, including details of salary and pension from 1 January 1999 until the present day.
- All documents regarding the closure of HARE.
- HARE financial accounts for the year ending 31 March 2003."
All those, seriatim, were refused by Mr Haynes. It is unclear to me whether any exercise was carried out of going through each of the categories sought, but Mr Haynes refused the entirety of the disclosure sought.
(1) a non-acceptance that any of the documents were required for the purpose of establishing aggravated damages; certainly if the issue of apportionment was raised in some letter or other, it was not addressed by him in the Decision.
(2) His concern that what was being sought was to second-guess or to re-run findings which had been made in the Liability Decision.
(1) a copy of all quarterly monitoring returns, and of all and of any documents containing or evidencing the LBH/HARE service level agreement, between 1 January 1997 and 31 December 1999.
(2) All or any documents evidencing or containing communications between the London Borough of Hackney and HARE and/or Ms White, relating to the Buckley ET proceedings, and/or the County Court proceedings brought by the Appellant against HARE and/or the London Borough of Hackney, between 1 July 1998 and 31 July 1999.
"The Applicant may have grounds to suspect the London Borough of Hackney of such ill intentions, especially after the events surrounding the recreation of MARIP, recorded hereafter, but the evidence falls far short of proof. There is no chain of evidence which shows that Ms White had any of these matters in her mind when she attended the interviews. The Applicant asks us to find that the proven animosity of a number of senior officers can also be attributed to Ms White. She suggests that the institutional discrimination existing in the London Borough of Hackney makes this inevitable. This is too broad a leap for us to take. Because there is genuine cause for suspicion we have looked very carefully at the evidence, but, even so, can find not the slightest evidence that Ms White was influenced in any way by the senior officers who had cause to be concerned about the Applicant's activities. In reaching this conclusion, we have considered all of the evidence before us, particularly that of Mr Bhattacherjee, whom we have found entirely credible.
"18.11 ….On 21 January 2002 after a lengthy hearing"
[before the Central London County Court in relation to a complaint made by the Appellant against the London Borough of Hackney under the Race Relations Act]
"there was a judgment in favour of the Applicant in the sum of £2,500. Unfortunately, as the County Court does not give reasoned decisions, and no transcript of the judgment was available, we can make no detailed findings as the basis upon which this decision was arrived at. Both Ms White and Mr Bhattacherjee gave evidence that they were not aware of these proceedings having been issued, or of the events to which they relate, at the time that the interviews were held. We find this evidence compelling and have decided that neither Ms White nor Mr Bhattacherjee knew of the County Court proceedings or anything about them. In reaching this decision the Tribunal were conscious that whilst neither Ms White nor Mr Bhattacherjee may have been personally involved in the proceedings or other complaints by the Applicant, it is possible that rumour of the Applicant's activities may have reached them as gossip. Both denied that this was so when it was put to them by the Tribunal. After careful consideration the Tribunal was prepared to accept that was the case."
"[Ms White's] conduct was also less favourable to the Applicant. It is difficult for the Tribunal to understand why she should have behaved in this way to the Applicant. There were no personal difficulties between them. Prior to these interviews she had not met the Applicant or had knowledge of her. The only inference that the Tribunal is able to draw is that she was influenced by the general attitude within HARE which was entirely antagonistic to the Applicant. Her explanation was not satisfactory. To questions on the detail of her marking, she repeatedly replied that she no longer had any recollection. She claimed to be handicapped by the lack of her detailed notes, which had been mislaid by HARE. A careful consideration of the evidence lead us to find that these notes had never existed. We had other concerns about her evidence which we have referred to. In those circumstances the Tribunal find that her less favourable treatment of the Applicant was carried out knowingly in the sense that she understood the implications of her marking of the Applicant and intended, as did the other committee members, that the Applicant should not obtain either post."
Mr Soor submits that those are findings of fact by the Tribunal and that what is now sought by way of disclosure is to go behind those findings and seek, once again, to achieve disclosure for the purpose of quantum, which was granted but not complied with, in relation to liability.
(1) It appears to me that those findings are not in fact at all central to the Decision of the Haynes Tribunal. The Haynes Tribunal was deciding the issue of vicarious liability by the Council for the aiding and abetting by Ms White, and it found that Ms White knowingly aided and abetted, in the sense described at paragraph 38. The state of mind of the London Borough of Hackney, and/or of Ms White wider than that, was not a relevant factor for the determination of liability. Mr Lamb had expressly reserved the possibility of further disclosure on the question of quantum, as I have recited by reference to his order of March 2003. The Appellant has pointed out that when he made that latter order, he knew that there had been inadequate compliance with his earlier order. In those circumstances, it appears to me to be quite unjust and unacceptable that an issue which was not necessary to resolve for the purposes of the liability hearing, and in respect of which Mr Lamb both knew that there had been inadequate disclosure and preserved the possibility of further requests for disclosure, should be foreclosed in those circumstances.
(2) Perhaps more significantly, I am not convinced that there has in fact been a relevant finding of fact, certainly an unambiguous finding of fact, by the Haynes Tribunal, in any event. Whereas there was indeed the finding in two paragraphs of a very long and involved Decision by the Haynes Tribunal, namely paragraphs 18.10 and 18.11, which I have quoted, there was also a passage in paragraph 38 of the Decision to which in reply the Appellant took me, and that said as follows:
" She [Ms White] was of course aware from the application forms and from remarks made by the Applicant at the commencement of each interview, that there were other proceedings in place against HARE and against the London Borough of Hackney. Whilst we have found that she was not aware of the proceedings against Hackney, previously, she was certainly aware from that moment onwards."
That suggests therefore that at least in relation to the second interview, she had such knowledge very considerably earlier than the start of the interview. That appears not to sit comfortably with the findings in paragraph 18.10 and 18.11 and to leave open question marks which will need resolving.