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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Anya v University Of Oxford & Anor [2003] UKEAT 0294_02_0402 (4 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/0294_02_0402.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 294_2_402, [2003] UKEAT 0294_02_0402 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
MR A E R MANNERS
MR H SINGH
APPELLANT | |
(2) DR S G ROBERTS |
RESPONDENTS |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MS H WILLIAMS (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Bindman & Partners Solicitors 275 Grays Inn Road London WC1X 8QB |
For the Respondent | MR N UNDERHILL QC Instructed by: Messrs Nabarro Nathanson Solicitors Lacon House Theobald's Road London WC1X 8RW |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE ANSELL
49 "Both for our particular findings as to Dr Roberts himself, which we later refer to and our evaluation of these matters raised and the explanations given, we find nothing in them to lead us to draw an inference of a discriminatory attitude by Dr Roberts to the Applicant."
"…there is not a scintilla of evidence pointing to any discriminatory treatment by Dr Roberts to Dr Anya."
"It has on a number of occasions been made plain that the decision of an Industrial Tribunal is not required to be an elaborate formalistic product of refined legal draftsmanship, but it must contain an outline of the story which has given rise to the complaint and the summary of the Tribunal's basic factual conclusions and a statement of the reasons which have led them to reach the conclusions which they do on those basic facts. The parties are entitled to be told why they have won or lost."
"The allegations of less favourable treatment, racial discrimination and victimisation were emphatically denied. In addition to the acts of discrimination complained of in the Originating Applications, the Tribunal heard evidence of numerous incidents alleged to have occurred from 1998 onwards and relied upon by Dr Qureshi as evidence that the university had committed the alleged acts of discrimination against him on racial grounds. The Tribunal considered each of those incidents in detail in the course of the Extended Reasons, made findings of primary fact and came to conclusions as to whether Dr Qureshi had received less favourable treatment and, if so, whether it was on racial grounds. In relation to many of the incidents the members of the Tribunal failed to reach unanimous decisions. The issues and sub-issues arising on the actual allegations in the Originating Applications were set out in the form of questions and answers in paragraph 168 of the Extended Reasons.
Most of the questions posed were given a simple "Yes" or No" answer, reflecting the division of views amongst the members on the numerous allegations and incidents considered in detail in earlier parts of the Extended Reasons.
"The nub of Mr Duffy's submission on Dr Qureshi's appeal was that the Industrial Tribunal wrongly adopted a piecemeal approach to Dr Qureshi's complaints of race discrimination and victimisation. By adopting the wrong approach from the outset the Tribunal had made a difficult task for an Applicant in an institutional race discrimination case even more difficult."
Later on at letter F:
"Mr Duffy's principal criticism is of the manner in which the Industrial Tribunal then proceeded to apply the defined approach in relation to every allegation made by Dr Qureshi, rather than solely in respect of the particular acts complained of in the Originating Applications. He submitted that the stated approach was only appropriate in respect of the specific complaints in the application. As a consequence of this erroneous approach, the Industrial Tribunal made full findings in relation to each of the allegations and then, depending on the finding it had made, it concluded there and then whether any inference should be drawn from the facts underlying that individual allegation. Where the Tribunal concluded that no inference could be drawn from the primary facts surrounding the individual allegation, it did not carry forward those primary facts into the critical process of making an overall inference of the grounds of action or decisions from the totality of primary facts.
In brief, the Industrial Tribunal had adopted a fragmented approach. That failed to take account of the overall context of the complaints in the case."
Just pausing there, it is argued that the overall context of the complaints in this case relate very clearly to the alleged racial motivation or otherwise of Dr Roberts.
"It also failed to take account of the fact that there may be racial discrimination, even though race or the fact that Dr Qureshi had brought proceedings under the 1976 Act may not have been the sole cause of the less favourable treatment of which he complained."
(4) "Inferences
…
In the present case, it was necessary for the Tribunal to examine all the allegations made by Dr Qureshi of other incidents relied upon by him as evidentiary facts of race discrimination in the matters complained of. There is a tendency, however, where many evidentiary incidents or items are introduced, to be carried away by them and to treat each of the allegations, incidents or items as if they were themselves the subject of a complaint. In the present case it was necessary for the Tribunal to find the primary facts about those allegations. It was not, however, necessary for the Tribunal to ask itself, in relation to each such incident or item, whether it was itself explicable on "racial grounds" or on other grounds. That is a misapprehension about the nature and purpose of evidentiary facts. The function of the Tribunal is to find the primary facts from which they will be asked to draw inferences and then for the Tribunal to look at the totality of those facts (including the Respondent's explanations) in order see whether it is legitimate to infer that the acts or decisions complained of in the Originating Applications were on "racial grounds". The fragmented approach adopted by the Tribunal in this case would inevitably have the effect of diminishing any eloquence that the cumulative effect of the primary facts might have on the issue of racial grounds.
"On none of these issues [namely the preliminary allegations in this case], from first to last, did the Industrial Tribunal record any conclusion as to where the truth lay in what, if anything, it indicated in terms of racial bias."
and again at paragraph 23:
"It is precisely because a witness who by himself comes across as essentially truthful may be shown by documentary evidence or by inconsistency to be less reliable than he seems that the totality of the evidence in a case like this has to be evaluated; and there was in this case no useful way of approaching the totality except through its parts. If, to take one instance from the foregoing, the Industrial Tribunal had accepted to any significant extent Dr Anya's evidence that Dr Roberts had not given him the academic and professional support that he was entitled to expect between 1994 and 1996, they would have to ask why this was so. In answering that question they might or might not have derived help from the conversations that Dr Roberts had had with Mr Briant about Dr Anya and the differing terms in which Mr Briant wrote about the new post to Dr Anya and Dr Lawrence respectively. They might then have needed to consider whether these were isolated events or part of a pattern; if part of a pattern, whether academic differences sufficiently explained it; if they did not, whether it was justifiable to infer the presence of a racial element. To the extent that Dr Czernuska had been the first to express his preference for Dr Lawrence, the Industrial Tribunal might have been concerned to establish what had been said in discussion before he did so."
"…there is not a scintilla of evidence pointing to any discriminatory treatment by Dr Roberts to Dr Anya."
"…a general antipathy amongst some academics to adhere to administrative procedures. We regard this as a non-adherence to procedures through sloppiness as opposed to any malevolent intention although we do have to say that the Administrator Mr Briant could have been expected to have been more focused on this issue."
Later on in that paragraph they say this:
"The failure to provide a person specification we regarded as poor administration and indeed a matter of some seriousness. Nevertheless, both candidates had the project documentation the day before the interviews and the Applicant did not seem on the backfoot of this because he merely glanced at it for 40 minutes."
Finally, at the end of that paragraph there is this passage:
"We conclude that the non-adherence to parts of the university's equal opportunities policy while being regrettable, did not play any significance in the overall theme of things in relation to the interview process. Particularly we would state that it was laxity as opposed to any intention to have a detrimental effect on the Applicant."
"Whilst not delving into specific matters, we are bound to take into account evidence submitted on scientific matters and the reservations expressed by Dr Warren, Dr Roberts, Dr Czernuszka and Professor Cantor regarding certain aspects of the Applicant's scientific understanding, particularly the Griffiths/Orowan principle. Even Professor Hendry had to concede that the end of (D81) was an incorrect scientific statement by the Applicant."
"We also note that Dr Warren in his statement referred to some fundamental misconceptions in relation to the underlying scientific theory in the Applicant's papers. Amendments to papers are part and parcel of academic life. Dr Ahmed viewed any criticism of his work as constructive. Having regard to clear evidence that on certain scientific principles the Applicant was on shaky ground…"