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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Eildon Ltd v. Sharkey [2004] UKEAT 0109_03_2807 (28 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2004/0109_03_2807.html Cite as: [2004] UKEAT 109_3_2807, [2004] UKEAT 0109_03_2807 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN Q.C.
MISS J A GASKELL
MR P M HUNTER
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellants | Miss M Kerr, Solicitor Of- Messrs Harper Macleod 8 Melville Street EDINBURGH EH3 7NS |
For the Respondent |
Mr R McDonald, Solicitor Of- Messrs Stronachs Solicitors 46 Church Street INVERNESS IV1 1EH |
Employment Tribunal made adverse findings against Respondent when the point had not been put to its 3 witnesses in XX. Remit to new Employment Tribunal.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC:
Introduction
The Issues
"The applicant claimed she was unfairly dismissed from her employment as a barmaid by the respondents for a reason connected with her pregnancy. The respondents admitted dismissing, contending they did so by reason of her conduct and claiming they were unaware of her pregnancy at the date of dismissal.
ISSUES FOR THE TRIBUNAL
The issue for the tribunal was to determine what the reason for the applicant's dismissal was and whether it was a reason connected with her pregnancy."
The Legislation
"Only if the reason for the applicant's dismissal was found to be pregnancy or a reason connected with her pregnancy, could she competently complain of unfair dismissal, since she did not have the necessary qualifying service to bring a complaint otherwise. Under section 99 of the Employment Rights Act as amended, an employee who is dismissed is to be regarded as unfairly dismissed if the reason or the principal reason for the dismissal is of a prescribed kind, or takes place in prescribed circumstances. Under subsection (3) of that section -
"A reason or set of circumstances prescribed under this section must relate to-
(a) pregnancy …""
The Facts
"i Facts material to the Tribunal's decision
The respondents are the owners of the Grosvenor Hotel in Inverness, of which Harleys Bar forms part, and in which they employ around 40 employees.
The applicant first worked at Harleys Bar for the respondents from December 2001 until March 2002, when she resigned without notice, giving as her reason difficulties she was experiencing with a few customers (R1). Sometime in April, she returned to request a further opportunity to work at Harleys Bar, where a friend of hers was also then employed. She was then newly 19. The respondents agreed to her resuming employment, which she commenced on 1 May 2002. The respondents did not give her any letter of offer or written terms and conditions of employment. Her line manager was John Wilson, the bar manager."
"On 13 or 14 June, the applicant went to look at the rota for the coming week. She discovered her name was not on it. Colleen Brown was unable to explain why not, so she asked Mr MacIver. He told her he did not know anything about it and suggested she return on Monday 16 June and speak to Nina, his daughter, who had been on holiday the previous week. The applicant returned on the Monday, accompanied by Mrs Sharkey, her mother, who waited for her while she went to speak to Mrs Cooper. Mrs Cooper told the applicant it was John Wilson who had dismissed her, that she would be paid what was owing to her and to clear her belongings from her room. Mr Wilson at no time informed the applicant she was dismissed. Mrs Sharkey later telephoned Mr MacIver to ask what the reason for dismissing her daughter was, adding, "You know she is pregnant".
Her baby was born on 31 January 2003."
"The attempt to pin to the applicant the blame for storing spirits stolen by someone else in the flat of her partner, then disclosing the theft to Mrs Cooper, in her version, and to the police, in Mr MacIver's version, could not either way, in our view, constitute a reason for dismissal. Accordingly, as the respondents' reasons were not genuine, the tribunal concluded the real reason for dismissing her was her pregnancy, which is an automatically unfair reason."
It awarded compensation based on, in part, an entitlement to maternity allowance.
The Respondent's Case
The Applicant's Case
The Legal Principles
"The section of the Act relied upon for the purposes of this claim, it seems to us, makes quite clear that there is to be a finding of unfair dismissal, without more, if either the reason or the principal reason for the dismissal is that the woman is pregnant or is for some other reason connected with her pregnancy. It must be shown in this case that the dismissal was because of the pregnancy or for another reason connected with the pregnancy. If this section is relied on, it seems to us essential that it be shown that the employers knew or believed that the woman was pregnant or that they were dismissing her for a reason connected with her pregnancy. If they do not know of the pregnancy, or do not believe that the pregnancy exists, it does not seem to us that it is possible for the employers to have as their reason for dismissal that the woman was pregnant. In a case where it is said that the reason for the dismissal is another reason connected with her pregnancy, not the pregnancy itself, it seems to us that the employers have to know the facts alleged by the employee as grounding the reason and also to know or believe that those facts relied upon are connected with the woman's pregnancy."
Conclusions
(a) Who, on behalf of the company dismissed the Applicant?
(b) Did that person at the time know she was pregnant?
(c) If so, did that person dismiss her for a reason which relates to her pregnancy?