1/ Cox v Adecco: The EAT often criticises ET decisions to strike out whistleblowing claims against LiPs. This, from HHJ Tayler is amongst the most strident & includes some interesting additions, especially on how the Respondent is expected to act
assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/607035ff… #ukemplaw
2/ The case concerned an EHCP assistant at LB Croydon's SEN department, assigned to the local authority by Adecco. He was encouraged to apply for an EHCP coordinator role even though not qualified for it. He succeeded & was then charged out as EHCP coordinator.
3/ Colleagues discovered this. C was concerned they were told by Adecco. He raised concerns by in email & in meetings about a GDPR breach re his personal data. He also emailed to allege his work was being overcharged to Croydon & unqualified staff were being put into jobs.
4/ After C was informed his assignment was being terminated, he brought whistleblowing detriment and dismissal claims. After an initial PH, the claim was set down for a hearing to decide whether to strike out his claim or to make a deposit order.
5/ That application was heard by EJ Martin, who struck out the claim. The EAT reversed that decision. Its criticism focused on the ET's lack of grappling with the issues actually raised in C's claim before reaching the decision to strike it out.
6/ The EAT started with consideration of the Equal Treatment Bench Book & Malik v Birmingham CC, both of which recognise how daunting the tribunal process may be for litigants in person & the need for the ET to do some of the work to ascertain the claims raised.
7/ As is his practice, HHJ Tayler distilled 9 proposition on strike out of LiPs' whistleblowing claims. Many are very familiar, but points 5-9 are of particular interest. 5-7 emphasise the need for the ET to get to grips with the claim, not just relying on the pleadings.
8/ Proposition 8 bears particular highlighting - that legally represented respondents are duty-bound not to take procedural advantage of LiPs & to help the ET identify the documents setting the claim out, even if not explicitly pleaded.
9/ Whilst that might seem to contradict Langstaff P's concerns in Chandhok about ETs dealing with claims not pleaded & that the case shouldn't be built on shifting sands, the answer is in proposition 9 - consider whether amendment to properly plead would give prospects of success
10/ That's a point very recently made also by Linden J in Twixt v Armes - where the surrounding documents make out a whistleblowing claim not effectively set out by a LiP in their pleadings, the EAT is giving a clear steer against taking the narrow & technical view to pleadings.
11/ HHJ Tayler rails against the convenient use of strike out to deal with a badly pleaded mess which would otherwise require extensive case management. HHJ Tayler urges EJ's to roll up their sleeves & Respondents should help them.
12/ This doesn't absolve LiPs from any responsibility to clarify the claim themselves - the more prolix the case put, the greater the sympathy for an ET failing to get to grips with all intended issues. However, asking LiPs for further information/particulars rarely sheds light.
13/ Echoing a point made in a number of EAT judgments recently, HHJ Tayler wonders whether a deposit order is a more appropriate mechanism to a strike out application in these circumstances.
14/ In grappling with the decision in Cox, HHJ criticises quite a number of failures in the EJ's reasoning. I'll just highlight a couple of more pertinent points of wider interest. 1st, there can be a disclosure of information without naming the person affected/implicated.
15/ 2nd, the 1st reliance on Twixt v Armes to the effect that a claimant needs not necessarily specify the specific legal provision of which he claims breach/likely breach. Twixt came out after the hearing in Cox, & HHJ Tayler didn't seek further submissions on its correctness.
16/ 3rd, repeating a point HHJ Tayler made in Dobbie, the fact that a disclosure is self-serving doesn't mean it can't reasonably be considered to be in the public interest.
17/ The EAT went on to consider an argument that C's agency agreement deprived him from being a worker under the extended definition in s.43K ERA because that only applied to an individual who isn't a worker as defined by s.230(3).
18/ HHJ Tayler's answer to that - following Simler J in McTigue - is that the s.43K definition has to be considered in blinkers for each respondent. The fact a claimant has a s.230(3) relationship with A doesn't deprive him of the possibility of a s.43K relationship with B.
Successful counsel for C, @b_beyzade has written a summary on LinkedIn, which can be viewed here: linkedin.com/pulse/employme…

#ukemplaw

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More from @JasonBraier

11 Apr
1/ Elliott v Dorset CC - In a case in which an EJ was found to err in finding E failed to show substantial adverse effect & thus not disabled notwithstanding his Aspergers diagnosis, HHJ Tayler makes a number of important points of determining disability. #ukemplaw
2/ The case concerned an information systems manager disciplined for false recording of timings, & who accepted redundancy on a representation that to do so would stop the disciplinary process. He explained an array of effects of his impairment:
3/ The EJ found these impairments not substantial. The EJ's judgment erred in focusing on what E could do rather than what he couldn't, compared E's abilities to the general population rather than to himself without the impairment, & failed to tackle the meaning of substantial.
Read 13 tweets
6 Apr
1/ Chief Constable of Avon & Somerset v Eckland - Who should the respondent be to a police officer's disability discrim claim against disciplinary decisions taken by the Independent Office for Police Conduct & a police misconduct tribunal? #ukemplaw assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/606c439d…
2/ The disciplinary process emanated from allegations E lied in evidence at a Crown Court, wrongly saying he visited a mortuary. The Ch. Const appointed the misconduct panel, who found E should be dismissed for gross misconduct. E appealed that decision but withdrew the appeal.
3/ E brought disability discrim claims solely against the Ch. Const reliant on depression & anxiety and events during his service & on dismissal. The claims against the Ch. Const included claims holding him liable for actions of the IOPC & the misconduct panel.
Read 21 tweets
1 Apr
1/ De Lacey v Wechseln Ltd - This is a real thread about a real case. I promise! I really do. Look, it's got a link to the judgment & everything: bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…

And it's a useful one on discriminatory constructive disimssal, so have a read.

#ukemplaw
2/ DL was a trainee hair stylist. In May 2015 she found out she was pregnant. She was on maternity leave from Oct '15 to Sept '16 & resigned the following January. She brought claims of pregnancy, maternity & sex discrim as well as unfair dismissal.
3/ DL relied on events during the period post-announcement & pre-maternity leave as well as the period between return & resignation as a course of discriminatory conduct. She relied on being made to clean up dog poo in front of other trainees as a last straw.
Read 15 tweets
1 Apr
1/ Day v Phool Industries Ltd - EAT holds BHS v Burchell non-compliant with ECHR Article 6 & Article 14 read with Article 8. Lord Summers finds reasonableness of misconduct dismissal must be objectively determined at the time of trial. #ukemplaw
2/ In a surprisingly brief judgment given the topic, Lord Summers places reliance on Lady Hale's comments in Reilly v Sandwell & the ECHR case of Denisov v Ukraine in finding Burchell should not have been relied upon once the Human Rights Act came into force.
3/ The judgment will raise eyebrows and will doubtless be appealed. If upheld, it will lead to a fundamental shift in the care with which employers will have to conduct disciplinary processes, & to far lengthier unfair dismissal trials.
Read 4 tweets
31 Mar
1/ Price v Powys CC: Is it direct sex discrimination to pay a man a lower amount for shared parental leave than a woman for adoption leave? No, held the EAT (unsurprisingly). assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/606448fa… #ukemplaw
2/ Mr Price & his wife decided that when they had their 1st child he would stay at home whilst she would return to work after the 2-week period of compulsory maternity leave. Having learned he'd be paid SMP rates, Mr Price didn't proceed with the shared parental leave application
3/ Instead he brought a claim on the basis the policy was sexually discriminatory as Powys paid higher rates to those on statutory maternity leave & on adoption leave. The ET rejected the 1st comparator in line with Capita v Ali & the 2nd in light of particularities of adoption. Image
Read 8 tweets
26 Mar
1/ As you'll know, the nub of Asfa v Brierly is whether female retail workers should be paid the same as male distribution centre workers because they do work of equal value & there's not a material factor justifying the difference in terms relating to pay. #ukemplaw
2/ This part of the case was concerned simply with the question of whether retail store workers could legitimately rely on distribution centre workers at all as comparators. It's a question contingent on interpreting EqA s.79(4) (particularly subpara (c)):
3/ It was Asda's submission that common terms were not applied & hence the distribution workers were not comparators under s.79(2), thereby scuppering the 35,000 claimants' equal pay claims:
Read 18 tweets

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