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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Taylor v XLN Telecom Ltd & Ors [2009] UKEAT 0385_09_0911 (9 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2009/0385_09_0911.html Cite as: [2010] ICR 656, [2009] UKEAT 385_9_911, [2010] IRLR 499, [2009] UKEAT 0385_09_0911 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
MR I EZEKIEL
MR A HARRIS
APPELLANT | |
(2) MR T FITZPATRICK (3) MS T PINFOLD (4) MRS S HUTCHINSON |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
REVISED 2
For the Appellant | MR G TAYLOR (The Appellant in Person) |
For the Respondents | MR ROBERT CATER (Legal Representative) Peninsula Business Services Ltd Litigation Department Riverside New Bailey Street Manchester M3 5PB |
SUMMARY
RACE DISCRIMINATION: Injury to feelings
Tribunal found Claimant to have been dismissed partly because he had made a complaint of racial discrimination – it declined to make any award of injury to feelings or personal (psychiatric) injury because although there was evidence that he had suffered both the Claimant had in his evidence attributed his distress to the dismissal and its manner generally and not to the element of victimisation (of which indeed he was arguably unaware at the time) – it reached that conclusion reluctantly but believed it was bound by the observation of Lawton LJ in Skyrail Oceanic Ltd v Coleman [1981] ICR 864 that "any injury to feelings must result from the knowledge that it was an act of sex discrimination …"
Held that the Clamant was entitled to recover for any injury to feelings and personal injury attributable to the act complained of, namely, the dismissal, without the need to attribute the injury specifically to knowledge of the element of discrimination, and that Skyrail was not authority to the contrary.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
"6. That leaves the question of an award to the Claimant of injury to feelings in respect of unlawful victimisation. In Coleman v Skyrail Oceanic Limited [1981] IRLR 398 the Court of Appeal held that an award in respect of injury to feelings had to result from knowledge that it was an act of discrimination which brought about a dismissal. In the context of the claim of unlawful sex discrimination Lawton LJ stated (in paragraph 13):
'compensation is to be awarded for foreseeable damage arising directly from an unlawful act of discrimination. It follows that an applicant can claim for any pecuniary loss properly attributable to an unlawful act of discrimination …
Any injury to feelings must result from the knowledge that it was an act of … discrimination which brought about a dismissal. Injury to feelings unrelated to … discrimination such as in this case, the circumstances that leakages of information had taken place in July 1978 and that others might have reasonably have suspected Mrs Coleman to have been responsible for them is not properly attributable to an unlawful act of sex discrimination.'
7. The above principle was approved by the Court of Appeal in the later case of Alexander v The Home Office [1988] IRLR 190.
8. The difficulty facing the Tribunal in this case is that the Claimant has failed to provide the Tribunal with any evidence that his feelings were injured in any respect because of any knowledge on his part that his dismissal amounted to an act of unlawful victimisation. The Tribunal heard extensive evidence and arguments as to the extent of the Claimant's anxiety and depression and the treatment to which he has received. Mr Berry on behalf of the Claimant further argued that any award of injury to feelings should include an element of aggravated damages on account of the Respondent's treatment of the Claimant. The Tribunal's difficulty springs from the fact, however, that the Claimant both in his witness statement and oral evidence to the Tribunal ascribes any injured feelings he has not to his knowledge of any act of victimisation but the Respondent's failure to comply with the statutory grievance and disciplinary procedures. In paragraph 6 of his witness statement the Claimant states:
'despite being signed off, I pursued work vigorously as I have a Mortgage and a family to support. During the dismissal appeal with Mr Karibian; what really aggravated me was that the main basis for the appeal was that they did not follow the statutory grievance and disciplinary procedures as stipulated in the Employment Rights Act 2002.'
9. Nowhere in the witness statement quoted from above does the Claimant state that his feelings were injured on account of his knowledge (whenever it was acquired) that his dismissal was partly attributable to the doing of the protected act. The Claimant was given further opportunities to clarify the source of any injury to feelings and associated depression in his oral evidence in response to questions from Mr Cater on behalf of the Respondent and from the Tribunal. In response to Mr Cater the Claimant reiterated that what had "really really hurt [him]" was the Respondent's failure to comply with the Employment Act 2002. The Tribunal received the same response when posing a question to the Claimant.
10. In these exceptional circumstances the Tribunal is driven to the conclusion that it is impossible to make any award for injury to feelings for the simple reason that the Claimant has failed at any stage (including this remedy hearing for which he provided a fresh witness statement) that the act of unlawful racial victimisation found by the Tribunal played any part in contributing to any distress, anxiety, depression or hurt feelings which his dismissal caused him. For these reasons the Tribunal has reluctantly concluded that no award in respect of injury to feelings is possible, including any associated award for psychiatric injury or aggravated damages."
"All of the negative mixed emotions I had experienced since this whole witch hunt began intensified after receiving this letter. I was shocked, angry, distressed, embarrassed, humiliated and anxious all at once. My family life suffered deeply; I began shouting at my wife (who was heavily pregnant at the time) and my young children. I became very withdrawn and disengaged from family activities: meal times and church attendance were especially picked up on by the children who I almost totally ignored. It became unbearable."
He goes on to explain how he went to see his doctor, whom he had already seen once immediately following the suspension; and there were before the Tribunal two medical reports from his general practitioner, one dated 4 November 2008 and the other dated 26 February 2009, together with a short report from the Newham Psychological Treatment Centre. It is apparent from those materials that he saw his GP on four occasions. He was diagnosed as suffering from "stress, anxiety and some depression" and was prescribed sleeping pills, medication for heart palpitations and anti-depressants. He was referred for cardiac investigations because of the palpitations, but fortunately those were confirmed to be purely stress-related. He was also referred for cognitive behavioural therapy, which appears to have been very helpful in his case.
"I turn now to the award of £1,000 for injury to feelings. Two problems arise for consideration: first, what factors should be taken into account by an industrial tribunal when making an award for injury to feelings; secondly, when and on what principles should an appellate court interfere with such an award?
The jurisdiction of the industrial tribunals to make awards of compensation derives from sections 65 and 66 of the Act of 1975. A claim for compensation should be dealt with in like manner as a claim in tort: see sections 65(1) (b) and 66(1). Section 66(4) provides:
"For the avoidance of doubt it is hereby declared that damages in respect of an unlawful act of discrimination may include compensation…… under any other head."
Compensation is to be awarded for foreseeable damage arising directly from an unlawful act of discrimination. It follows that an applicant can claim for any pecuniary loss properly attributable to an unlawful act of discrimination. This is a head of damage for which the appellant did claim and was awarded £666. Any injury to feelings must result from the knowledge that it was an act of sex discrimination that brought about a dismissal. Injury to feelings unrelated to sex discrimination, such as, in this case, the circumstance that leakages of information had taken place in July 1978 and that others might reasonably have suspected the appellant to have been responsible for them, is not properly attributable to an unlawful act of sex discrimination. The industrial tribunal thought that the circumstances in which the appellant had been dismissed might have damaged her reputation. That would not have been a consequence of sex discrimination and should have been disregarded."
The key sentence for the purpose of the present appeal is the observation that "any injury to feelings must result from the knowledge that it was an act of sex discrimination that brought about a dismissal". Sir David Cairns agreed with the judgment of Lawton LJ, but without adding anything on the question of the amount of the award. Shaw LJ dissented on the question of liability. He did say a little about the award, on the basis that the majority were against him on the question of liability, but there is nothing in his discussion which addresses the present point.
(1) If in a discrimination case a claimant could only recover compensation for injury to feelings if and to the extent that he could prove that he knew of the particular factor that rendered the act complained of unlawful, that would be an exception to the general approach in tort as we have outlined it above. It would be surprising if different rules governed the recoverability of compensation for injury to feelings and injury to health, particularly where they commonly overlap.
(2) We can see no reason in principle for making an exception in the case of awards for injury to feelings in discrimination cases. Certainly there is nothing in section 57 (4) of the Act (which is the subsection making it clear "for the avoidance of doubt" that compensation for injury to feelings is awardable) to suggest that it should be governed by any special principles. Of course one of the purposes of the discrimination legislation is to provide for compensation for the distress and the affront to dignity caused by overtly discriminatory conduct. But distress and humiliation may also be caused by conduct which is not overtly discriminatory, and if such conduct is in fact on the grounds of, or by reason of, the relevant protected characteristic or protected act, it would seem artificial and arbitrary to withhold compensation for it, even though the victim may not at the time have known of, or indeed even suspected, the respondent's discriminatory motivation: it is, after all, still an injury attributable to the discriminatory conduct. No doubt as a general rule the distress and humiliation suffered by the victim will be greater where the discrimination is overt, or where, even in the absence of overt signs, the victim understands the motivation at the time to be discriminatory; and in such cases the compensation may be correspondingly higher. But that is a different point and does not justify the conclusion that there should be no compensation in other cases.
(3) If the rule were as the Tribunal believed, it would involve employment tribunals in some very fine distinctions and some very unsatisfactory inquiries. What, for example, exactly is meant by "knowledge" of the discriminatory motivation? Or, in a case where it is clear that the claimant has been caused distress by which is motivated partly by a proscribed characteristic and partly by other considerations, does the Tribunal have to apportion or distinguish between the degree of distress attributable to the proscribed element on the one hand and, on the other, to the distress attributable to other elements for which compensation for injury to feelings cannot be awarded?
(4) We do not think that these issues in fact arose on the actual points that were argued in Skyrail or therefore that this was the question that Lawton LJ had in mind in making the single-sentence observation on which the Tribunal relied. It is important to read the entirety of the passage in which that observation falls, and to be aware also of what, so far as it can be gleaned from the report and from the report of the decision in the Employment Appeal Tribunal ([1980] ICR 596), the real argument in the case was about. As it seems to us, the criticism being made of the tribunal's decision in that case appears to have been, not that it had taken into account the distress caused by the dismissal at a time when the claimant had no reason to suppose that it was discriminatory, but rather that it had taken into account distress which the claimant felt at the credence that she thought her dismissal gave to the belief that she had been responsible for the earlier leaks. Read that way, Lawton LJ was in fact positively allowing compensation for damages "attributable to an unlawful act of sex discrimination" - that is, the dismissal - but was making the point that it could not be allowed for anything else. This frankly makes more sense. Granted that these were the early days of the legislation, we would nevertheless have expected a much more elaborate analysis on the part of the Court of Appeal if it had been intending to advance a rule of the kind understood by the Tribunal.
"That the injury to feelings for which compensation is sought must have resulted from knowledge of the discrimination is clear from the decision of this court in Coleman v Skyrail Oceanic Ltd."
But that was an obiter observation on an issue which did not arise on the facts before the court, and May LJ was doing no more than quote verbatim what Lawton LJ had already said in Skyrail. There is no discussion of the point, and we do not believe therefore that Alexander takes matters any further.