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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Sovereign Food Group Ltd v. Cannings [2000] UKEAT 802_00_2610 (26 October 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/802_00_2610.html Cite as: [2000] UKEAT 802_00_2610, [2000] UKEAT 802__2610 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
MR D J HODGKINS CB
MR D J JENKINS MBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | MR RICHARD POWELL (of Counsel) Instructed by Messrs Dibb Lupton Alsop Solicitors Victoria Square House Victoria Square Birmingham B2 4DL |
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
"I was employed by the Respondent as a Farm Manager for 17 years. My duties included the rearing and welfare of up to 130,000 chickens reared primarily for the national supermarket chains.
On 24 July 1999 unusually hot weather required me to make a difficult decision concerning the welfare of the birds in my care. The action I took was intended to curb losses which were already inevitable. Unfortunately the decision I made was unable to prevent the loss of 990 birds.
At a disciplinary hearing on 4 August 1999 I was summarily dismissed for gross misconduct. I was dismissed because of my 'wilful omission and neglect'.
"It is a basic technique of poultry care to allow the birds sufficient space to feed and move. In hot weather increased space allows better circulation of air and improves the animals well being or in some circumstances their chance of survival.
Knowing the above full well, the applicant failed and after investigation by the respondent it was judged, without any reasonable excuse, to move the internal fence. Further, the applicant failed to keep in good order a series of internal fans which assisted the flow of air.
By reason of crowding, which the applicant could have prevented, 990 pullets died in Shed 3 on the applicant's farm. Whereas it is accepted that in very hot conditions some birds may die through heat stress, the level of loss and the condition of the shed could not in the respondent's expert judgement and experience, be excused as a misjudgement."
"No – both disciplinary and appeal hearings did not allow the Applicant's representative to develop a fundamental explanation for the Applicant's behaviour in failing to move the fence. Furthermore, insufficient weight was attached to the mitigation advanced."
"No – insufficient weight was given to the following factors:
i) the Applicant's decision, focused as it was on the elevation of cockerel mortality, was based upon a misjudgement honestly but erroneously held;
ii) that decision had led to the loss of livestock worth £1,000 upon a night when the inadequacies of the Respondents' own factory organisation led to much higher levels of loss – almost twice that occasioned by the Applicant's error of judgment;
iii) the work record of the Applicant, after 17 years of employment, was to all intents and purposes exemplary;
iv) the consequences of dismissal would include the loss of accommodation, what the Applicant and his family regarded as a way of life – and his pension;
v) furthermore, given the proximity of the illness suffered on the night in question to the error of judgment it was, doubtless, a factor a reasonable employer would have explored given the employee's record and the singular nature of his error."
As to that the Skeleton Argument says in its paragraph 12:
"The tribunal did not find that the Appellant had failed to give consideration to any of the factors they set out. The criticism is limited to the weight attached those factors. The Appellant submits that the tribunal have substituted their judgment upon the facts, thereby misapplying or misconstruing the statutory test under section 98(4) of the Employment Act 1996."
In our view a second arguable point emerges, namely that the Tribunal's paragraph 8 (6) represents an illegitimate substitution by the Tribunal of its own view for the view of the Company at the disciplinary stages.
"The tribunal allowed the expert evidence to be given. That evidence went to several key issues within the case, including, the Respondent's "fundamental explanation".
- which is a reference back to the reasons why the fence between cockerels and pullets was not moved. Continuing with the Skeleton:-
"The expert witnesses' evidence was in part a response to the evidence of Mr Sharp who the tribunal described as "vastly experienced in the poultry business and sensitive to the issues in the case". The Appellant submits that Mr Daniel Pearson's evidence, given that he was admitted as an expert, stood to be considered in that same context.
The tribunal make no reference whatsoever to the evidence of Mr Pearson."
A little later they say:
"The Appellant is entitled to have sufficient reasons to know why the expert witnesses' evidence was accepted or rejected. The reasons given by the tribunal are not sufficient to understand this at all."
"The Respondents also called Mr Lewson, a vet in their employment"