1/ Sullivan v Bury Street Capital: CA doesn't take opportunity to clarify likelihood/recurrence tests, holding it's all a question of fact.

#ukemplaw
2/ S was a senior sales exec with a small capital-raising/advisory firm. He entered a personal relationship with a Ukrainian lady. They split up & he then became convinced he was being continually monitored by a Russian gang to whom she had connections.
3/ S's concerns were found to be paranoid delusions. They resulted in him making wholesale changes to various aspects of his life, including installing CCTV, changing the locks, refusing on occasion to go home & a real nervousness about use of communications tech.
4/ The ET found that from May-Sept 2013 S suffered substantial adverse effects on ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities as a result of his paranoid delusions, & that he also did so 3.5 years later, from Apr/Jul 2017.
5/ In Sept 2017, S had a GP appointment re his condition & was advised to stay off work for 4 weeks. He was sacked the following day - after 8 years - for his attitude and lacking the skills to carry out his role effectively.
6/ S presented a claim which included s.15 EqA & indirect disability discrim claims. The ET concluded S wasn't disabled & that in any event the employer lacked requisite actual or constructive knowledge of disability.
7/ Whilst S claimed the impairment with SAE continued throughout 2013-2017, the ET found the 1st episode stopped in Sept 2013, placing reliance in part on the lack of observation of colleagues of the effects. The ET had accepted delusional belief persisted throughout.
8/ The ET found the delusional beliefs persisted but not the SAE. In respect of the 2017 SAE, the ET found it not likely it would have continued for at least 12 months, placing considerable reliance on a temporary state of stress resulting from remuneration negotiations.
9/ The ET found the SAE not likely to recur either in 2013 nor 2017, & disability wasn't established. The ET went on to find a lack of knowledge of the disability, if wrong about its existence, noting in particular its findings on the lack of observation of SAEs by S's colleagues
10/ The CA decision doesn't set out in any detail the EAT judgment, but you can find my thread on that here:
11/ The essence of the CA's rejection of S's appeal can be found in para 36 (& is repeated a number of times throughout) - the CA treats the matter as being a decision on its own facts rather than 1 of an error of law.
12/ It's worth noting that although there was no perversity appeal, the CA was clear that they wouldn't have been minded to allow an appeal on that ground anyway.
13/ The CA was clear that whilst a structured approach to determining disability may be useful, there's no error per se in not following it. The CA also accepted Goodwin guidance on focusing on impairment rather than inability to carry out activities, but found the ET did this.
14/ As regards arguments that it was unsustainable to find the continuous existence of paranoid delusions whilst not finding that amounted to a continuous SAE, the CA once more reverted to the 'it's just a question of fact' analysis.
15/ Arguments based on EC & domestic case law on the width of the definition of 'normal day to day activities' & the lowness of the threshold for substance were given short shrift, once more because the case turned on its particular finding of facts.
16/ The CA turned to S's reliance on the SoS guidance on the definition of disability, which Sch 1 para 12 EqA requires an ET to take into account if it thinks relevant. The CA notes that the guidance imposes no legal obligations nor does it claim to be authoritative on the law.
17/ S placed particular reliance on the fact that an appendix containing an illustrative list of factors which it would be reasonable to regard as having a SAE on normal day-to-day activities includes delusions as an example.
18/ The CA noted that paragraph hadn't been drawn to the ET's attention & held the ET couldn't reasonably be criticised for not referring to it in its decision. This was notwithstanding that Sch1 para 12 is in terms of 'must' nor that Goodwin reinforced that.
19/ A key part of letting the ET off the hook there was that Goodwin focused on the 'early period of the DDA 1995's operation' whereas we're now 25 years further on, but surely if there's something of relevance why should time passed matter?
20/ Moving to the medical evidence, the CA seemingly considered a lay person could be excused for not being able to identify easily the symptoms of a mental health disorder, arguably weighing the dice in an employer's favour in avoiding imputation of constructive knowledge.
21/ The CA turned next to the question of recurrence, once more considering the complaint one on the facts rather than amounting to a question of law. I struggle to see that's a fair analysis of the arguments, which sought carefully to turn attention to construction of 'likely'.
22/ Submissions were made by S that the EqA needed to be read in line with DDA 1995 provisions on past disability that recognised that a disability should be treated as continuing where an impairment ceases to have an SAE & then that SAE recurs.
23/ S noted Jessemey & Blackwood held the EqA to be intended to carry through protections under the legacy acts even though not formally a consolidating act, but the CA held here that those ratios didn't have the force of statute & that it may be that Parliament changed the law.
24/ It's a surprising departure, given how central that understanding of the EqA was to the decisions in those cases. I struggle to see how the decisions could have been justified otherwise, especially in the statutory construction in Jessemey (on which I was on the losing side).
25/ In any event, the CA noted that the provisions relied upon & which had disappeared related to past disabilities, which wasn't the basis of this case. The recurrence provisions under the EqA mirrored those for present disabilities under the DDA.
26/ Unusual features of this case in re likelihood of recurrence were that there was in fact recurrence & also that likelihood of recurrence needed to be considered at 2 time points, unlike in McDougall & in All Answers.
27/ The CA considered as a question of fact the relevance of the 2013 events to whether recurrence was likely in the midst of 2017. They accepted the EAT observation that it may strongly suggest a further episode 'could well happen' but the ET could find otherwise. on the facts.
28/ On knowledge, given that the employer itself knew/reasonably should have known of S's delusions, S asserted it should have been treated as a legal irrelevance that one of his colleagues didn't. The CA disagreed, especially in a small business. I struggle to understand why.
29/ Finally, the CA rejected a suggestion that the ET had asked itself the wrong question. Whilst S relied on the detailed guidance in A Ltd v Z, the CA was satisfied that the very short consideration of the point sufficed.
30/ I believe S is seeking leave to appeal further. The CA judgment is a frustrating one in that it rests on an approach to the appeal as one all turning on questions of fact, whereas I can see it as raising substantive issues of law as to the approach to determining disability.
31/ It will be difficult to get permission (it always is at this stage!), especially given the CA's focus. It will likely be difficult to persuade the SC that there's an arguable point of law of general public importance regardless of S's understandable frustration.
32/ Anyway, for those who have reached tweet 32 in this little thread, here's your reward, a link to the judgment: bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/…

Happy reading!

#ukemplaw

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More from @JasonBraier

17 Nov
1/ Emuemukoro v Croma Vigilant (Scotland) Ltd: A claim/response can be struck out at the start of trial if the party's actions mean no fair trial is possible within the trial window even if it could have been possible at a later date.

assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6194fd7e…
#ukemplaw
2/ In this case, the matter got to day 1 of a 5 day trial without CV having prepared witness statements & with it preparing a bundle excluding most of the relevant documents. CV had ignored lots of ET orders & hadn't engaged with E in preparing for the hearing.
3/ On the morning of the 1st day, the EJ struck out the response, finding that a fair trial wasn't possible within the time & that the only reasonable course was strike out rather than an adjournment of many months. Blockbuster v James was relied upon. ImageImageImage
Read 8 tweets
15 Nov
1/ Oxford Said Business School v Heslop: A well-written EAT rejection of various causation grounds of appeal by the employer in a whistleblowing context in which a s.103A claim failed but the detriment claim succceeded.

bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…
#ukemplaw
2/ H was director of custom programmes at OSBS. She raised concerns about the legality of procurement practice & alleged breaches of contract to the Cabinet Office in respect of a customised leadership programme, which the ET found to be protected disclosures.
3/ H had been highly appraised prior to these disclosures, but she went on holiday after making them & during that holiday a direct report complained about H's leadership & its impact on the atmosphere in the office & on the team. No specifics were provided at this point.
Read 19 tweets
15 Nov
1/ Windle v West Yorks Police: EAT allows a Meek challenge against some findings that some detriments complained about weren't detriments & that other detriments didn't result from the making of protected disclosures.

bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…
#ukemplaw
2/ Dr Windle is a professional interpreter (presumably the same one as of Windle v SoS of Justice fame). She provided services to 2 police forces through a service supplier & raised concerns re procurement & provision of those services, including provision of unqualified people.
3/ After these & other concerns were raised, there were various internal emails questioning whether W had been properly vetted herself & whether she had Home Office clearance. Inquiries suggested a lack of vetting records & thus W was removed from future bookings.
Read 7 tweets
3 Nov
1/ Altes v Essex Uni: An appeal on contractual construction of the termination clauses of A's contract of employment, with the EAT dismissing the appeal & holding the uni entitled to terminate as it did.
bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…
#ukemplaw
2/ A was employed as a lecturer in French. She was given notice of termination during her probation period due to unlikelihood she'd achieve satisfactory progress against her probation targets before probation ended. A claimed she could only be dismissed for good cause.
3/ The EAT set out agreed principals of contractual construction from West Bromwich, Arnold v Britton & Wood v Capita related to relevant facts imputed to the reasonable man construing the term, the limits of commercial common sense as a construction tool, & natural meaning.
Read 6 tweets
3 Nov
1/ Ameyaw v PWC has returned to the EAT yet again (I think it's the 5th time), returning empty-handed once again. This time it was 2 appeals combined (so perhaps the 5th & 6th times) & primarily concerned a reconsideration, adjournment & r.50.
bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT…
#ukemplaw
2/ As you may know, A was a senior manager at PWC. She brought a number of discrim/victimisation/harassment claims. At a PH in early 2017, A and her mother behaved appallingly, leading to a subsequent application to strike out A's 1st 3 claims under both ET r.37(1)(b)&(e).
3/ That application was dismissed, the EJ finding a fair trial was still possible. The EJ hearing the strike out application took the events at the previous PH from the previous EJ's judgment, refusing to allow A to adduce witness evidence in dispute.
Read 22 tweets
2 Nov
1/ Werner v Southampton Uni: a sigh of relief for the uni as the EAT finds no bias in the ET's grant of an extension of time to enter the ET3, which they'd failed to enter through a litany of errors, & which had led to a £3.5m compensatory award!
assets.publishing.service.gov.uk/media/6177e1dd…
#ukemplaw
2/ W was a Professor of International Banking from 2005 to resignation in 2018. He brought unfair dismissal, race & religion/belief discrim, holiday pay, arrears & other payments claims to the ET, complaining of career obstruction.
3/ In his ET1, W sought compensation of £4,375,000 - around 64 times his gross annual salary! His claim centred on his assertion his treatment was because he was a German Christian who believed banking concentration is a cancer to society.
Read 22 tweets

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