![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> East Riding of Yorkshire Council v Cowton [2009] UKEAT 0432_08_1902 (19 February 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2009/0432_08_1902.html Cite as: [2009] UKEAT 432_8_1902, [2009] UKEAT 0432_08_1902 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE RICHARDSON
MR K EDMONDSON JP
MRS J M MATTHIAS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR COLIN BOURNE (of Counsel) Instructed by: East Riding of Yorkshire Council Legal Services County Hall Beverley East Riding of Yorkshire HU17 9BA |
For the Respondent | MR JASON SEARLE (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Rollits Solicitor Wilberforce Court High Street Hull East Yorkshire HU1 1YJ |
SUMMARY
UNFAIR DISMISSAL: Reasonableness of dismissal
Unfair dismissal – majority decision – majority found dismissal to be unfair only because employer treated other employees in a different way.
Held: majority substituted their own judgment on this issue instead of applying "reasonable responses" test. Finding that dismissal was not unfair substituted.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE RICHARDSON
The facts
"That on the 12th June 2007 you knowingly served food of a mashed consistency, instead of a pureed consistency, to a resident of Millside Nursing Home who has clear dietary needs consisting of a pureed diet.
It was believed that your actions were not undertaken with any malicious intent. However, you were clear that you were aware of the risks of failing to blend the food and following the care plan and the possible fatal consequences to the person for whom you were responsible. Nothing more could reasonably have been done to assist you to maintain the acceptable standards of care expected of you and determined during a period of formal capability assessment, which you yourself acknowledged. Whilst it was acknowledged that the investigation had caused you to consider your actions there was no evidence given at the hearing to give me confidence that if you return to work in a position of such responsibility that there would not be a repetition of a similar nature and my primary concern has to be the health, safety and well being of those in our care."
"21. Her conclusion on the evidence was that the claimant's case should be distinguished from that of the other care workers, who had adopted a practice of not pureeing potato cake, because the claimant alone had been taken through the capability procedure and, accordingly, should have known better. The claimant gave the impression to Yvonne Rhodes that she could not be trusted not to behave in a similar way in the future and substitute her own judgment as to how something should be done, rather than follow the care plan. She came to that view because the claimant had demonstrated herself capable of following care plans and yet, on this occasion, shortly after being signed off as capable, had lapsed. In the view of Yvonne Rhodes, that meant that the claimant could not be trusted in future. That involved a breach of trust and confidence so as to justify a label of gross misconduct on the claimant's conduct of 12 June."
The Tribunal's reasons
"29. Turning to the majority judgment in respect of the substantive issue of unfair dismissal, the non-legal members would have had no difficult finding the dismissal fair had the claimant been the only care worker who had mashed the resident's potato cake. In these circumstances, she would be the only one not following the care plan and her offence would have been compounded by the capability procedure that she had been taken through.
30. The non-legal members find that the decision to dismiss was out with the band of reasonable responses because the respondent had evidence that other care workers had fed mashed potato to residents in respect of whom their care plans stipulated that all food should be blended to a pureed consistency.
31. They find as a matter of inference from the evidence of Michelle Strathearn and Sandra O'Hara that some members of management, if not the staff nurse Pamela Johnson, would have been aware of the practice and yet had not taken steps to enforce adherence to care plans. Those members do not accept that the claimant was in a different situation to that of her care worker colleagues by virtue of having been taken through the capability procedure because all of them had put residents at risk by mashing potato cakes and should have known better.
32. Further, those members find that the respondent did not conduct as much investigation as was reasonable in the circumstances because they did not interview the other care workers to establish the extent of the practice. For example, there was evidence that the claimant had coughed the previous day. It is part of Pam Johnson's statement in her investigatory interview. In context, the coughing the previous day and on 12 June led her to suspect that feeding procedures were not being adhered to, as indeed it proved to be the case for the claimant. Be that as it may, the non-legal members find that a wider enquiry of the other care workers would have disclosed the extent of the practice and underlined the unfairness of treating the claimant differently."
Submissions
Conclusions
"… tribunals would be wise to scrutinize arguments based on disparity with particular care …there will not be many cases in which the evidence supports the proposition that there are other cases which are truly similar, or sufficiently similar, to afford an adequate basis for the argument. The danger of the argument is that a Tribunal may be led away from a proper consideration of the issues raised by section 57(3) of the Act of 1978. The emphasis in that section is upon the particular circumstances of the individual employee's case."
"..do not accept that the Claimant was in a different position to that of her care worker colleagues by virtue of having been taken through the capability procedure because all of them had put residents at risk by mashing potato and should have known better"