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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Bavin v NHS Trust Pensions Agency SOS For Health [1999] UKEAT 1211_98_1908 (19 August 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/1211_98_1908.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 1211_98_1908 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 21 & 22 July 1999 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE MORISON (P)
MRS T A MARSLAND
MR T C THOMAS CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | LAURA COX QC & MR T EICKE (of Counsel) Legal Officer Justice 59 Carter Lane London EC4V 5AQ |
For the Respondents | MR N PAINES QC & MR R HILL (of Counsel) Office of the Solicitor Department of Social Security Pensions Branch Room 418 New Court 48 Carey Street London WC2A 2LS |
MR JUSTICE MORISON: Richard is a transsexual. He was born in a female body. He was biologically and physically a female at birth. In other words, all the biological tests would, if done, have been congruent. However, he suffered from gender dysphoria, a condition of the mind [which may or may not be caused by, or attributable to, physical features within the brain]. People with this condition experience a lack of compatibility between their biological sex and the sex which they believe themselves to have. Some people with this condition undergo operative procedures [gender re-assignment] designed to bring harmony between the physical and psychological. Richard suffered from gender dysphoria, probably from birth, and underwent operative procedures. He regards himself as a man and, for most purposes within society, he is accepted as a man.
"Accordingly the scope of the Directive cannot be confined simply to discrimination based on the fact that a person is of one or other sex. In view of its purpose and the nature of the rights which it seeks to safeguard, the scope of the directive is also such as to apply to discrimination arising, as in this case, from the gender re-assignment of the person concerned.
Such discrimination is based, essentially if not exclusively, on the sex of the person concerned. Where a person is dismissed on the ground that he or she intends to undergo, or has undergone, gender reassignment, he or she is treated unfavourably by comparison with persons of the sex to which he or she was deemed to belong before undergoing gender reassignment."
"In another context, the European Court of Human rights has interpreted Article 12 of the Convention [the right to marry] as applying only to the traditional marriage between two persons of the opposite biological sex ..…
It follows that, in the present state of the law within the Community, stable relationships between two persons of the same sex are not regarded as equivalent to marriages or stable relationships outside marriage between persons of opposite sex. Consequently, an employer is not required by Community Law to treat the situation of a person who has a stable relationship with a partner of the same sex as equivalent to that of a person who is married to or has a stable relationship outside marriage with a partner of the opposite sex."
"However, although respect for the fundamental rights which form an integral part of those general principles of law is a condition of the legality of Community acts, those rights cannot in themselves have the effect of extending the scope of the Treaty provisions beyond the competences of the Community."
"… there might have been some doubt in our minds as to whether the [provisions of the Scheme] did have a discriminatory flavour about them in relation to transsexuals and homosexual couples. …. However, in the light of the lengthy and fully argued judgment of the European Court in Grant we are left in no doubt as to the position and we do not consider that this is an appropriate case to refer the further questions posed …."
This appeal largely turns on the proper interpretation of the two decisions of the European Court.
The Parties Submissions
Ms Cox QC submitted:
(1) The appellant does not contend that transsexuals are a separate and identifiable category different from male or female workers nor that they constitute some kind of third sex or third gender as was mentioned in the Employment Tribunal's decision. Further, she submitted that transsexuals are not homosexuals and that the law's attitude to whether there has been unlawful discrimination on grounds of sex must recognise this obvious distinction. The issues arising where partners are of the same sex [in a homosexual relationship] are issues of sexual orientation. Whereas, where there is a relationship between a person of one sex who is living with a transsexual who has undergone gender reassignment the issues do not concern sexual orientation but rather discrimination on grounds of the transsexual's sex. She referred to the Court's judgment in Grant where the distinction was drawn. Nor was she contending that the EAT should be concerned with rights under Article 12 of the Convention: she was not asking the EAT to say that Kathleen and Richard should be allowed to marry, as that was a family issue falling outwith the provisions of Community Law.
(2) Pensions are pay within the meaning of Article 119, and survivor's pensions also fall within that Article's scope: TenOever [1995] ICR 74. The principle of Equal Pay, enshrined in Article 199 and the Equal Pay Directive entitles the applicant to treatment free from all discrimination on grounds of sex with regard to all aspects and conditions of remuneration.
(3) According to Advocate General Elmer, "in order to be effective [Article 199 and the Equal Pay Directive] must be understood as prohibiting discrimination against employees not solely on the basis of the employer's own gender but also on the basis of the gender of the employee's child parent or other dependent." Discrimination means the application of different rules to comparable situations or the application of the same rule to different situations: Gillespie & Others v Northern Health & Social Services Board & others [1996] ECR 1-475, paragraph 16.
(4) In the context of social legislation of this kind, domestic law [both primary and secondary legislation] must be construed purposively and so as to give effect to the United Kingdom's obligations under Community Law. Where necessary, in order to avoid a conflict with the United Kingdom's obligations enshrined in the European Communities Act 1972, words might have to be added to statutory material; for example see Litster.
(5) If the EAT were in any real doubt as to the correct answer, then it should ordinarily refer the issue to the European Court of Justice: ex parte Else [1994] QB 534 at 545D-F. In making its judgment, the domestic court should recognise that arguments which might not appear attractive to it might find favour with the ECJ, whose approach to interpretation of the Treaty and European legislation is more widely based.
(6) The decision in P v S [paragraph 21] confirms that the European Court accepted that discrimination against a transsexual was discrimination on grounds of sex. The Grant case did not, expressly or by implication, overrule P v S; on the contrary, Grant was concerned with sexual orientation and P v S with transsexuals. The fact that discrimination on grounds of sexual orientation is not, as yet, embraced by European legislation does not compel the conclusion that discrimination against transsexuals is also excluded.
(7) In Grant, the comparator taken by the court was a male employee living with another male; whereas in P v S the court compared P's position with the sex he or she had before the gender re-assignment. Thus, the appropriate comparator in this case should be between Richard as a woman [the sex he had at birth] living in a married relationship with a male nurse member of the Scheme. If he had been a woman, Richard could have married a male nurse and become a widow entitled to benefit; because Richard is a transsexual he has been deprived of the opportunity to become a widow entitled to benefit.
(8) Alternatively, there has been indirect discrimination: the requirement or condition of the Scheme applies so as to exclude all transsexuals from derived benefits. Such a condition cannot be justified. If the Court were to conclude that Richard had no right to derived benefit it would amount to "a moral condemnation" of the position of transsexuals within the law. The EAT are invited to take a bold approach, or a functionalist approach such as was adopted by Ward LJ, in a dissenting judgment, in Fitzpatrick v Sterling Housing Association Limited [1998] Ch 304. There the Court was concerned with the issue whether a same sex partner could 'succeed' to a Rent Act Protected tenancy. That case is, we were told, to be considered by the House of Lords.
(9) To give effect to the overriding principle of fairness and justice, the EAT were invited to supplement the words of the Scheme to add after the word 'widow' or 'widower' words to the effect "or would have been a widow(er) save for the inability to marry due to the partner's inability (in law) to amend his or her birth certificate to show his or her true gender".
Mr Nicholas Paines QC submitted
(1) The words 'widow' and 'widower' should be given their ordinary and natural meaning. As was stated in the case of Rees v United Kingdom [1986] 9 ECHR 56, a decision of the Strasbourg Court of Human Rights, it is a necessary condition for there to be a valid marriage that the spouses should be of different biological sexes. As the law presently stands, it would be unlawful for a transsexual to marry otherwise than as a person of the biological sex contained in the birth certificate, unless it could be shown, on medical grounds, that the gender was wrongly recorded. Gender re-assignment does not alter the biological sex of the individual who has undergone it. Thus, Richard may not lawfully or validly marry a woman although he could validly marry a man. Although transsexuals may well not be properly classified as homosexual, and their condition should not be equated with homosexuality, in practice they are in no different position in the eyes of the law, whether or not they have undergone gender re-assignment.
(2) The rule in the Scheme is non-discriminatory. As the Employment tribunal found, the rule applies equally to men and women.
(3) The ratio of P v S did not require transsexuals to be accorded the full legal rights of their psychological sex, whether or not they had had surgery. As such, transsexuals have no special or separate status in the eyes of European Law.
(4) In the Grant case, the ECJ referred to the case-law of the European Court of Human Rights and concluded that European Law did not require member States to treat a homosexual relationship as equivalent to marriage or a stable heterosexual relationship. One of the cases cited by the ECJ was Rees, a case concerning a transsexual. It is clear that the Court was not just referring to people of the same sex who were unable to marry, but also to a transsexual who is unable to marry otherwise than as a person with their gender assigned at birth.
(5) P v S was concerned with an act of discrimination against a person who had proposed to undergo gender re-assignment surgery. It was clear from the Court's decision in that case and from the case of Grant that the transsexual succeeded because he was treated less favourable than he would have been had he not proposed to undergo that surgery. To treat someone less favourably on grounds that they were undergoing a 'sex change operation' was to treat him less favourably by reason of his sex. It was not an answer to say that another transsexual, who was a woman changing to a man, would have been treated the same: she, too, would have been disadvantaged by reason of her gender. In effect, P v S was a case where, as with pregnancy, there is no need to look for a comparator.
(6) It cannot make any difference why Kathleen is unable to marry her partner. Richard would not have been entitled to any derived benefit if Kathleen was already married and not divorced, or he or she had some philosophical or other objection to the status of marriage. The same problem would arise for those in a homosexual relationship.
(7) As recently as 30 July 1998, the European Court of Human Rights refused to depart from its earlier decisions relating to transsexuals in the context of their right to marry or to respect for their private lives. In Sheffield & Horsham v United Kingdom [1999] 27 EHRR 163 the Court said (in relation to the article 8 claim):
"The Court is … not persuaded that it should depart from its Ress and Cossey decisions and conclude on the basis of scientific and legal developments alone the respondent State can no longer rely on a margin of appreciation to defend its continuing refusal to recognise in law a transsexual's post operative gender. For the Court, it continues to be the case that transsexualism raises complex scientific, legal, moral and social issues, in respect of which there is no generally shared approach among the contracting States."
(8) As to indirect discrimination, there was no evidence before the tribunal to suggest that a considerably higher proportion of female members of the Scheme than male members of the Scheme have a transsexual partner.
Decision