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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Dey v. Hounslow Language Service [1999] UKEAT 555_99_0812 (8 December 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/555_99_0812.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 555_99_812, [1999] UKEAT 555_99_0812 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE A WILKIE QC
MR L D COWAN
MR N D WILLIS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING – EX PARTE
For the Appellant | THE APPELLANT IN PERSON |
JUDGE WILKIE QC: This is an appeal brought by Mrs Aparupa Dey against a decision of the Employment Tribunal sitting at London (South), under the chairmanship of Mr Milton, which unanimously decided that she was fairly dismissed by the respondent, the Hounslow Language Service, and dismissed claims of race discrimination and victimisation brought against that body. The hearings took place over eight days between 1st and 11th February 1999. The full decision, which runs to 17 pages, was sent to the parties on 2nd March 1999.
"THESE ARE NOT APPROVED MINUTES AND MAY BE AMENDED"
She drew our specific attention to this document in support of her contention that the minutes of those disciplinary/grievance hearings were manipulated by the respondent and in support of her contention that the tribunal was perverse or biased in relying on the minutes of those hearing.
"Subsection (1) does not apply to treatment of a person by reason of any allegation made by him or her if the allegation was false and not made in good faith."
They recorded that the respondent had grasped the nettle of asserting that the appellant was not entitled to the protection of the act because the allegations she was making were false and were not made in good faith.
"56. The whole tenor of the Applicant's case and the sweeping and indiscriminate variety of the allegations levelled against all members of staff with whom she came into professional contact leads us to what we find is the inevitable conclusion that she must have realised that there was no truth in the allegations which she was flinging in all directions against every variety of ethnic member of staff. We are satisfied that this is one of what we suspect is a very small number of cases where there was no factual foundation at all in the allegations of racial discrimination being made by the alleged victim and furthermore the allegations were false and not made in good faith. We find therefore that that Applicant has not made out her claim of victimisation and she is not indeed entitled to the protection of the act in that regard."
"65. … So far as penalty is concerned if there is any criticism of the Respondents it is perhaps that the Applicant had been allowed to behave in an extreme and irresponsible fashion for such a lengthy period of time that there was a risk that she might have argued that she was beyond reproach. With a more junior and lower level type of employment perhaps there might have just been something in such an argument. In this case however we have no doubt at all that the Application realised that matters were coming to a head and yet she continued relentlessly to behave in an extremely irresponsible and unprofessional fashion. That stance she adopted and if anything aggravated and exacerbated by her behaviour at the hearing. There was not a hint of remorse or apology throughout that hearing as indeed has been her stance in the Tribunal proceedings before us. In all those circumstances it seems to us that dismissal was the only reasonable penalty and the result is that all the limbs of the Burchell test have been made out by the Respondents."