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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> W v X & Ors [2004] UKEAT 0494_03_0502 (5 February 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/0494_03_0502.html Cite as: [2004] UKEAT 0494_03_0502, [2004] UKEAT 494_3_502 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 6 January 2004 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WILKIE QC
MR P A L PARKER CBE
MS P TATLOW
APPELLANT | |
(2) Y (3) Z |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MISS K MONAGHAN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Equal Opportunities Commission Legal Service Arndale House Arndale Centre Manchester M4 3EQ |
For the First and Third Respondents For the Second Respondent |
MR I MACCABE (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Langleys (Solicitors) Queen's House Micklegate York North Yorkshire Y01 6WG MR B CASWELL (of Counsel) Instructed By: Elmhurst & Maxton 13 Vinkle Street Selby N. Yorkshire |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE WILKIE QC:
"Although both Respondents denied that there had been any improper sexual harassment of the Applicant in relation to certain admitted comments, it was accepted that certain such comments, to which Ms Monaghan drew our attention, were made."
It is impossible from the terms of that paragraph for the reader to know what the comments were which the tribunal found had been made. As an appeal tribunal we were assisted by the representatives of the parties who had been at the tribunal hearing. In particular Ms Monaghan drew our attention to what appears to be the reference made in that paragraph to comments to which she had drawn attention. They are summarised in a footnote to the extensive written submission which she presented as the basis of her oral concluding submission at the tribunal hearing. Taking that footnote and marrying them up with the witness statements to which the footnotes apparently refer, we have been able to identify certain specific comments. It may well be that some or all of those comments were accepted by the tribunal as having been made but it is impossible from the terms of the decision to know whether all of them were accepted and, if not, which were.
"On the Applicant's own evidence and that of her supporting witnesses, there was simply no point at which such conduct was indicated as seen as offensive. For those reasons, the Applicant's complaint in relation to the alleged course of conduct prior to 9 July 2002 is dismissed."
The tribunal had been referred to the case of Driskel v Peninsula Business Services Ltd [2000] IRLR 151. That decision, in paragraph 12, contains comprehensive guidance as to the approach that the tribunal should take in a case such as the present. It emphasises that the tribunal's first task is to find all the facts that are prima facie relevant. Only once those facts have been found is the tribunal called upon to make a judgment whether the facts as found disclosure apparent treatment of the complainant by the respondents which could potentially found a claim. It goes on, in that paragraph, to set out guidance on how the tribunal should approach the judgments upon the primary findings of fact that it has to make. In particular it emphasises the fact that it may not be necessary for a person first to complain about certain comments before a persistence with such comments can be categorised as sexual harassment. It states:
"Thus, the act complained of may be so obviously detrimental, that is, disadvantageous to the applicant as a woman by intimidating her on undermining her dignity at work, that the lack of any contemporaneous complaint by her is of little or no significance."
The guidance also emphasises that in making its judgment a tribunal should not lose sight of the significance in this context of the sex of not only the complainant but also that of the alleged discriminator. It says as follows:
"Sexual badinage of a heterosexual male by another such cannot be completely equated with like badinage by him of a woman. Prima facie the treatment is not equal: in the latter circumstance it is the sex of the alleged discriminator that potentially adds a material element absent as between two heterosexual men."