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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Fairmile Kindergarten v. MacDonald [2006] UKEAT 0069_05_2001 (20 January 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2006/0069_05_2001.html Cite as: [2006] UKEAT 69_5_2001, [2006] UKEAT 0069_05_2001 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | Mr Ian Kennedy Solicitor Ian Kennedy WS Glebe End 23 Cramond Village EDINBURGH EH4 6NT |
For the Respondent | Mr N MacLeod Solicitor Messrs Anderson Strathern Solicitors 1 Rutland Court EDINBURGH EH3 8EY |
The parents of a child at a nursery where the claimant was employed complained to the respondent, the claimant's employer, that she had struck their child. They and their child were interviewed by the respondent's solicitor who promised to preserve their anonymity. He provided a report to the respondent which was copied to the claimant. The identities of the child and its parents were duly anonymised. The claimant was dismissed. She had been pregnant at the time and she claimed in respect of automatic unfair dismissal on grounds of pregnancy. She also asserted that her claim covered a claim for unfair dismissal simpliciter. At a case management hearing, a tribunal chairman had ordered disclosure of the identities of the parents and their child. The respondent appealed the order and the Employment Appeal Tribunal upheld the appeal in respect that it was not necessary for either aspect of the claimant's claim that she know those identities. The issue of whether or not the claimant had in fact struck the child was irrelevant. In these circumstances, the tribunal should have been slow to interfere with the promise of anonymity. The interests of justice did not require that it be breached.
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH
daily care for pre-school aged children. The Claimant was employed by them as a nursery nurse until her dismissal on 28 January 2005. The case has not yet reached a full hearing before the Employment Tribunal. A case management discussion took place on 17 May 2005 at Edinburgh before the Chairman Mr N Hosie, sitting alone. Following that discussion he issued an Order which is set out in his note dated 23 June 2005 which is in the following terms:
"Firstly, the Respondents will disclose to the Claimant's solicitor within the next 7 days the identity of the parents who it is alleged to make the allegation against the Claimant which led to her dismissal. Secondly, the identity of the parents is to be kept private by the parties and their representatives. Thirdly, at all times after disclosure they will be referred to as Mr X and Miss or Mrs Y and fourthly, in the event of the parents giving evidence at a Hearing that part of the Hearing will be conducted in private."
The Appeal
Discussion
"It seems to me that in these rather unusual circumstances the claimant's solicitor is entitled to establish that the Report which the respondents' solicitor prepared, and on which I understand the decision was taken to dismiss, properly reflects the evidence of the parents. In my view this is necessary for the fair disposal of the proceedings."
I disagree. The Chairman has clearly misapprehended the relevant issues in this case and has thus fallen into error. I cannot see that the accuracy of Mr Kennedy's report would be a relevant issue in the case at all on either ground of claim. The issue at the final hearing will not be what in fact the parents of the child or the child said to the Respondents' solicitor but in respect of the sex discrimination claim, whether the Claimant was in fact dismissed on grounds of pregnancy or not and if she is successful in advancing Section 98 unfair dismissal claim whether it was fair for the Respondents to dismiss her on the basis of hearsay evidence in circumstances where the identity of her accusers was being withheld from her yet she was called upon to answer the allegations made.