BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £5, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Pennant v. IPC Magazines Ltd & Anor [2001] UKEAT 1308_00_2012 (20 December 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/1308_00_2012.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 1308_00_2012, [2001] UKEAT 1308__2012 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR J R CROSBY
MR R SANDERSON OBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MISS SARAH MOOR (of Counsel) Messrs Thompsons Solicitors Congress House Great Russell Street London WC1B 3LW |
For the Respondents | MR W DIAMOND (Consultant) Heald House Cottage Heald House Road Leyland Lancashire PR5 2JA |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
"1 I am black British of West Indian origin.
2 I have worked for the first Respondent since February 1992 as Retail Sales Analyst. The second Respondent is the Retail Sales Director and is responsible for the Department in which I work including determining pay rises.
3 I consider I have been less favourably treated on the grounds of my race while working for the first Respondent in relation to my pay rises for the years 1998 and 1999 and otherwise. I received the smallest pay rises in the Department. This has been to my detriment.
4 On 7 June 1999 the second Respondent said to a colleague that I was "a lazy black bastard".
5 I lodged a Grievance under Company procedures on 5 July 1999.
6 On 8 July 1999 the second Respondent demanded that I provide him with a list and print out of all schemes I had analysed to date. He shouted at me and set an unreasonable time scale for this work.
7 The second Respondent has also required that I take on extra duties without extra pay. He has also prevented me from coaching school children by withdrawing my previous arrangement where I was able to use flexi time to leave early.
8 The second Respondent continually monitors my time keeping and work load in an oppressive manner. This monitoring is not applied to other colleagues.
9 My grievance was not properly investigated by the first Respondent. The first Respondent reached conclusions in my grievance and published those conclusions before giving me an opportunity to comment. The grievance procedure has been used to produce unjustified complaints about me from my colleagues. This is the first time I have been aware of such complaints. In breach of the first Respondents procedure, I have not been allowed an appeal against the conclusions.
10 And in all the circumstances I consider I have been less favourably treated on the grounds of my race and victimised for raising a grievance about my less favourable treatment."
(1) Did the Appellant in 1998 and/or 1999 receive lower pay rises than his colleagues in the department in which he worked as a Retail Sales Analyst? If so, was there a difference in race between the Appellant and those comparators? Is so, what explanation for the difference in treatment was given by the Respondent? Was the explanation, in each instance, considered satisfactory by the Tribunal?
(2) Did Mr Clout tell a colleague, it transpires a Ms Richardson, that the Appellant was a "lazy black bastard"?
(3) Depending on the Tribunal's findings on (1) and (2) above, should they go on to draw an inference of unlawful racial discrimination?
(4) Did the Appellant do a protected act for the purposes of Section 2 of the Race Relations Act?
(5) If so, could he show less favourable treatment than that which would have been meted out to a person who had not done the protected act in that: -
(a) on 8 July 1999, after he had lodged his grievance against Mr Clout, the latter shouted at him and/or
(b) thereafter he was over-monitored by Mr Clout and/or
(c) his grievance was not properly investigated by the first Respondent?
This question will depend upon the Tribunal's findings of fact as to the incidents complained of at (a)-(c).
(1) There was a straight conflict of evidence between Ms Richardson and Mr Clout as to whether Mr Clout made the 'lazy black bastard' remark at her leaving party. The Appellant was not present and could give no evidence about it. Curiously, the Tribunal made no reference to Ms Richardson's evidence at all. They instead concentrate on the fact that Mr Levrett, who was tasked to investigate the Appellant's grievance, reached a reasonable conclusion that Ms Richardson's allegation that the remark was made by Mr Clout could not be sustained. It is right to point out that Mr Levrett did not interview Ms Richardson.
That finding is plainly relevant to the Appellant's complaint of victimisation in relation to the investigation by Mr Levrett, but it does not go to the factual issue at the Tribunal between Ms Richardson and Mr Clout. As to that, as Mr Diamond points out, there is a finding by the Tribunal that the remark was not made. But there is no reference at all to Ms Richardson's evidence and no explanation as to why her evidence was rejected. We refer to the observations of Mr Justice Morison in Tchoula v Netto Foodstores Ltd (EAT 6 March 1998 Unreported) cited with approval by Lord Justice Sedley in Anya, paragraph 24. A bald statement that X's evidence was preferred to Y's is both implausible and unreasonable. In fact, this Tribunal did not even go that far. Curiously again, at paragraph 14 of their reasons, they state that where there is a conflict in the evidence between Mr Clout, Mr Gould (the Junior Manager) and the Appellant, they prefer the evidence of Mr Clout and Mr Gould. They simply do not mention the evidence of Ms Richardson.
(2) At paragraph 13 of their reasons they refer to the 1999 pay award. They refer specifically to an explanation for the difference in treatment between the Appellant and his colleagues in his department, he received a lower increase than anyone else, given by Mr Clout in his witness statement, namely that the Appellant had caused difficulties with regard to work following the departure of a Ms Julie Russell. In fact, Ms Russell left the employment after the 1999 pay award was made, as is common ground. If that was the explanation given by the Respondent for the difference in treatment, how could it be accepted? We are not told.
(3) The Tribunal has plainly overlooked the complaint made by the Appellant, as part of the victimisation claim, that he was over-monitored after he had raised his grievance about Mr Clout's alleged racial remark. It was raised in the Originating Application at paragraph 8 of the particulars of complaint. The Appellant gave evidence to that effect; Mr Clout was, we accept from Ms Moor, cross-examined about that matter; she raised it in her written closing submissions to the Tribunal. But that part of the cross-examination is not recorded in the Chairman's notes of evidence which are before us and it is nowhere referred to in the Tribunal's reasons.