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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Earl Shilton Town Council v Miller (Re SEX DISCRIMINATION) [2023] EAT 5 (31 January 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2023/5.html Cite as: [2023] EAT 5 |
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Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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EARL SHILTON TOWN COUNCIL |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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MS K MILLER |
Respondent |
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SINEAD KING (instructed by Lawson West Solicitors Limited) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 2 December 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
SEX DISCRIMINATION
The employment tribunal did not err in law in holding that the respondent's provision of inadequate toilet facilities for women subjected the claimant to direct sex discrimination.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE JAMES TAYLER
Introduction
The facts
The claim
4…Did the Respondent between August 2016 and 18 June 2018 make inadequate arrangements for the Claimant to share male toilets and/or otherwise provide inadequate toilet facilities for the Claimant? …
8.1…did the Respondent by the alleged conduct referred to at...paragraph 4 subject C to a detriment or detriments?
8,2 If it did, did it treat the Claimant less favourably than it treated or would have treated a hypothetical male comparator in materially similar circumstances?
8.3 If so, was the treatment because of sex?
The decision of the employment tribunal
166. We are in no doubt that the arrangements we have summarised above subjected the Claimant to a detriment. We firmly reject Mr Brown's submission that the use of the male toilet not being a requirement for female employees or the fact that failure to provide a bin was an oversight, means that there was no detriment as interpreted in Shamoon. Any reasonable person could reasonably consider not having immediate direct access to toilet facilities, the risk of seeing a person of the opposite sex using toilet facilities (the risk need not have materialised to be a detriment in our judgment) and not having a bin in which to dispose of sanitary products as a series of detriments. They were all matters of practical impact on a daily basis and we note that Mrs Coe's email to Mr Jackson of 20 May 2018 (pages 94 to 95) expressly referred to the need to put a bolt on the door to prevent male access to the urinal whilst the toilet cubicle was in use. The same reasonable person could also reasonably consider that having to tell a caretaker of the opposite sex that the bin needed emptying of sanitary products was similarly a detriment, being both demeaning and (as the Claimant described it) an invasion of privacy. We do not think that Mrs Burton's being more comfortable with the arrangements detracts from those conclusions. She agreed that there was no immediate access to facilities until May 2017. As for the other matters, the test is whether a reasonable worker would or might take the view that in all the circumstances the situation was to her detriment, not whether every person in the same circumstances would take the same view.
167. It is also plain that the Claimant was less favourably treated in these respects than a man. At no point until May 2017 was Mr Jackson, or indeed any other man working for the Respondent, in the position of not having immediate access to toilet facilities. Thereafter, at no point was he at risk of seeing a member of the opposite sex using toilet facilities nor did he experience any disadvantage by the absence of a bin within those facilities. (It might be argued that a man was at risk of being seen using the toilet facilities and a woman was not, but that was not an argument pursued by the Respondent and in any event would not detract from the less favourable treatment of women in respect of the risk of what they might experience). The bin was provided in June 2018, but at no point did Mr Jackson have to inform a caretaker, still less one of the opposite sex, that the bin needed emptying of intimate waste.
168. The remaining question therefore is whether the less favourable treatment was because of sex. It is clear in our judgment that this is a case of inherent discrimination, referred to in Nagarajan and Amnesty and exemplified in James. The absence of and subsequent arrangements with the bin make this particularly clear; they simply did not arise as an issue as far as men were concerned. It is not difficult to see that the same is the case in relation to the immediate access to facilities prior to May 2017 and the risk for women of seeing a man using the facilities thereafter. Sex was more than part of the context or circumstances in which these issues arose. Where, as here, all women are in a less favourable situation than all men, sex being the reason for the treatment is in the nature of the arrangements.
169. As a result, the question of the reason for the treatment in the usual sense of exploring the mental processes of the alleged discriminator (which in his written submissions Mr Brown summarised as safeguarding children or, in relation to the bin, an oversight on the Respondent's part) does not arise. Nor therefore does the application of the burden of proof provisions as would be required in a mental processes case.
170. We will however deal briefly with one submission made by Mr Brown. He argued that short of carrying out building work, which was not within the Respondent's control, there were limits to what it could do to rectify the situation, his implicit point being that it would be unfair to find against the Respondent in these circumstances. Cases of this nature can on some occasions seem unfair – Amnesty seems a good example of this where essentially the employer was seeking to protect the employee from the safety implications of travel to a certain country because of her particular nationality. It was still direct discrimination. In this case however, in June 2018 the Respondent essentially found a straightforward solution to most of the issues on which the complaint depends. We have been told of no reason why those arrangements could not have been made before, nor indeed why the Respondent could not have arranged for the bin to be emptied regularly thereafter without the Claimant having to request it.
171. The Claimant's complaint of sex discrimination in respect of toilet facilities for the duration of her employment therefore succeeds. [emphasis added]
The appeal
The law
(2) An employer (A) must not discriminate against an employee of A's (B)— …
(d) by subjecting B to any other detriment.
13 Direct discrimination
(1) A person (A) discriminates against another (B) if, because of a protected characteristic, A treats B less favourably than A treats or would treat others.
23 Comparison by reference to circumstances
(1) On a comparison of cases for the purposes of section 13, 14, or 19 there must be no material difference between the circumstances relating to each case.
56. The basic difference between direct and indirect discrimination is plain: see Mummery LJ in R (Elias) v Secretary of State for Defence [2006] 1 WLR 3213 , para 119. The rule against direct discrimination aims to achieve formal equality of treatment: there must be no less favourable treatment between otherwise similarly situated people on grounds of colour, race, nationality or ethnic or national origins. Indirect discrimination looks beyond formal equality towards a more substantive equality of results: criteria which appear neutral on their face may have a disproportionately adverse impact upon people of a particular colour, race, nationality or ethnic or national origins.
In my judgment, the correct way to approach this case is to take the simple words of the statute and try to apply them. It sometimes is helpful in judgments to substitute some other phraseology which the judge thinks is more apposite in the particular case under consideration, but that is by no means always necessary and if it can be avoided it is desirable to do so. It is also, in my view, desirable to avoid looking at cases where substituted phraseology has been evoked, because the next step is that one goes on to rephrase the substituted phraseology, and on and on one goes and departs further and further from the approach which the statute indicates. Now this is not a technical statute and, therefore, is not of a kind where one should or need go for the meaning of words to other decided cases. It is a simple statute seeking to deal with ordinary everyday behaviour and the relative positions of men and women.
If discrimination is to be established, it is necessary to show not merely that the sexes are treated differently, but that the treatment accorded to one is less favourable than the treatment accorded to the other.
The starting point is that EA 2010 s13 specifies what is direct discrimination by reference to a "person". There is no reference to "group" discrimination or comparison. Each girl pupil and each boy pupil is entitled to freedom from direct discrimination looking at the matter from her or his individual perspective.
Whether there has been discrimination on the ground of sex or race depends upon whether sex or race was the criterion applied as the basis for discrimination. The motive for discriminating according to that criterion is not relevant.
21 The observations of Lord Nicholls in Nagarajan v London Regional Transport [1999] IRLR 572 and Chief Constable of West Yorkshire Police v Khan [2001] IRLR 830, cited by Lord Hope at paragraphs 193 and 194 of his judgment, throw no doubt on these principles. Those observations address the situation where the factual criteria which influenced the discriminator to act as he did are not plain. In those circumstances it is necessary to explore the mental processes of the discriminator in order to discover what facts led him to discriminate.
James v Eastleigh Borough Council also shows that, even if the protected characteristic is not the overt criterion, there will still be direct discrimination if the criterion used (in that case retirement age) exactly corresponds with a protected characteristic (in that case sex) and is thus a proxy for it.
However, as Ms Rose correctly points out, the "exact correspondence" test is only relevant where the actual criterion used by the alleged discriminator is not a protected characteristic but something else. In Patmalniece it was not having the right to reside in the United Kingdom; in Preddy v Bull, it was not being married. The question is whether some other criterion is in reality a proxy for the protected characteristic. The best-known example is James v Eastleigh Borough Council [1990] 2 AC 751, where people who had reached the state retirement age were allowed free entry to the council's swimming pool. The differential state retirement ages for men and women meant that a 61-year-old woman got in free whereas her 61-yearold husband did not. This was held to be direct discrimination on grounds of sex.
26. The claimant's case on direct discrimination is a simple one. Being required to live in an AP a long way away from home is a detriment. A woman is much more likely to suffer this detriment than is a man, because of the geographical distribution of the small number of APs available for women. This is treating her less favourably than a man because of her sex.
27. Ms Rose QC, on behalf of the claimant, argues that this case is on all fours with the well known case of R v Birmingham City Council, Ex p Equal Opportunities Commission [1989] AC 1155. Birmingham City Council maintained a system of selection for secondary school places but, for historical reasons, it had fewer places at selective schools for girls than for boys. This meant that the pass mark for girls in the entrance examinations was higher than for boys. This was treating the girls less favourably than the boys because of their sex. The council had not deliberately set out to discriminate against girls; it was a historical accident. But "whatever may have been the intention or motive of the council, nevertheless it is because of their sex that the girls in question receive less favourable treatment than the boys, and so are subject to discrimination under the [Sex Discrimination Act 1975 ]": per Lord Goff of Chieveley, at p 1194.
In this case, there is no doubt what the criterion is. It is sex, which is itself a protected characteristic.
Furthermore, it cannot be a requirement of direct discrimination that all the people who share a particular protected characteristic must suffer the less favourable treatment complained of. It is not necessary to show, for example, that an employer always discriminates against women: it is enough to show that he did so in this case. In the Birmingham case, some of the girls achieved a high enough pass mark to gain a place at a selective school. What all the girls suffered from was the risk that if they did not get a high enough mark, they would not get a place—just as, in the recent case of Essop v Home Office (UK Border Agency) [2017] 1 WLR 1343, all the BME candidates suffered from the greater risk of failing the core skills assessment required for promotion, but of course some of them passed it. In the Birmingham case, some of the girls did of course achieve a high enough mark to get a place. But there were some who achieved a mark which would have been high enough had they been boys but was not high enough because they were girls. That is direct discrimination on grounds of sex.
Conclusions