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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Pereira v GFT Financial Ltd (SEX DISCRIMINATION AND UNFAIR DISMISSAL) [2023] EAT 124 (06 October 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2023/124.html Cite as: [2023] EAT 124, [2024] ICR D1 |
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Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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DR GLAUCIA PEREIRA |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GFT FINANCIAL LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Mr Thomas Kibling (instructed by Orrick Harrington & Sutcliffe UK LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 15 September 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
SEX DISCRIMINATION AND UNFAIR DISMISSAL
The ET considered at the sift stage an application for reconsideration of a refusal to permit amendments to a claim form to add dismissal for pregnancy and/or asserting a statutory right. The ET refused reconsideration. The ET wrongly focused on whether the claims raised by amendment by the claimant were in time. It should have first asked itself whether these were new claims at all or whether, having regard to the whole of the claim form, they were already part of the claim or at least the same facts relied on were already in the claim. Any ET properly reading the claim form including its attachments would have concluded that the substance of the amendments were already part of the claim.
The ET also failed to consider the balance of prejudice in considering the interests of justice in failing to take into account the need for a full hearing about these events and facts in any event, the medical evidence submitted by the Claimant at the previous preliminary hearing about her illness at the time of presenting the claim and the new medical evidence supplied by the Claimant for the reconsideration hearing about her capabilities as a result of her illness.
It was an error for the ET to reach its own contrary conclusions on her capabilities without consideration of this medical evidence and as an impermissible exercise of discretion to exclude such relevant matters from the interests of justice consideration.
ANDREW BURNS KC, DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT:
The Claim
Proceedings before the ET
22. I could find nothing in the account that the Claimant provided to me of any reason why I should exercise discretion in her favour and extend the time limit on the basis that it is just and equitable so to do. I do not accept that a highly educated woman recently finding herself pregnant but also losing her job some ten days after disclosing that fact to her employer would need the guidance of a lawyer before being able to assert she had been discriminated against if she actually thought the two events were connected. She was able to research her employment rights in August and she was able to find out about the early conciliation procedure and contact ACAS within 10 days of her dismissal. In the absence of facts establishing a case as to why it would be just and equitable to extend time, I follow the guidance of Auld LJ and accept the default position to be that the claim is out of time.
23. In respect of the automatic dismissal claim it clearly was reasonably practicable for the claimant to have brought the claim within the requisite time period because she was able to research and bring to other claims within that time.
24. I therefore rule that both new claims are out of time and refused to allow the amendment.
The Reconsideration Judgment
"I do not accept that a highly educated woman recently finding herself pregnant but also losing her job some 10 days after disclosing that fact to her employer would need the guidance of a lawyer before being able to assert she had been discriminated against if she actually thought the two events were connected she was able to research her employment rights in August and she was able to find out about the early conciliation procedure and contact ACAS within 10 days of dismissal."
16. The Claimant in her email of 11 September 2019 asserts there to be medical evidence that she would wish to present that would, she says, establish that medical health issues of the type she asserts herself to have suffered from can negatively affect cognition, including memory loss and deficit of attention.
17. If I allow, for the moment, there to be medical evidence that the claimant could present that would indicate that she suffered mental health problems and for there to be research indicating the possibility that mental health could have negatively affected her cognition, her ability to research the exceptions to the requirement that she have two years' service to claim unfair dismissal suggests strongly that her attention to detail was unimpaired. Furthermore as Point number 5 was included in the list of exceptions it could have acted as a prompt to her memory and thus any cognitive deficit in the form of memory loss would have been counted.
18. Thus, I consider that there is no reasonable prospect of my original decision being varied or revoked. In such circumstances I must and do refuse the application.
The Appeal
a. Ground 1 - That the ET erred in law in its approach to the reconsideration application in failing to engage with issues which straddled both the reconsideration application and the application to amend. Judge Stewart has not seen the medical evidence which the C seeks to rely on in having the decision reconsidered. In that [1] failed to consider at all the hardship/prejudice between the parties; [2] failed to clarify or identify the legal and factual issues in the existing Claim Form before considering the applications to amend and the reconsideration application, [3] procced on the basis that the amendment had been presented out of time without first clarifying the factual and legal issues in the claim, and [4] erroneously introduced an 'exceptionality test';
b. Ground 2 - The ET erred in failing to admit the medical evidence adduced in the reconsideration application and/or in failing to consider the impact of that evidence to the question of prejudice between the parties; and
c. Ground 3 - To the extent that the ET applied the correct legal approach, it nonetheless erred in the exercise of any discretion. In refusing the application for reconsideration, the ET impermissibly excluded relevant consideration, namely the contents of the original claim and the fact that a five-day hearing was required in any event and included irrelevant considerations (namely the C's educational credentials which has no relevance to legal expertise or qualifications).
Legal principles
'A Tribunal may … on the application of a party, reconsider any judgment where it is necessary in the interests of justice to do so. On reconsideration the decision ("the original decision") may be confirmed varied or revoked if it is revoked it may be taken again."
'Except where it is made in the course of a hearing, an application for reconsideration shall be presented in writing (and copied to all the other parties) … and shall set out why reconsideration of the original decision is necessary.'
"The employment tribunal can therefore only reconsider a decision if it is necessary to do so 'in the interests of justice.' A central aspect of the interests of justice is that there should be finality in litigation. It is therefore unusual for a litigant to be allowed a 'second bite of the cherry' and the jurisdiction to reconsider should be exercised with caution. In general, while it may be appropriate to reconsider a decision where there has been some procedural mishap such that a party had been denied a fair and proper opportunity to present his case, the jurisdiction should not be invoked to correct a supposed error made by the ET after the parties have had a fair opportunity to present their cases on the relevant issue. This is particularly the case where the error alleged is one of law which is more appropriately corrected by the EAT."
Discussion
"whenever the discretion to grant an amendment is invoked the tribunal should take into account all the circumstances and should balance the injustice and hardship of allowing the amendment against the injustice and hardship of refusing it."
Disposal