Reed Smith Newsletters

Welcome to our monthly update, with a summary of the latest news and current trends and developments in UK employment law.

With the legislative agenda quiet due to the summer recess, our September update examines some interesting discrimination claims, including a landmark equal pay decision impacting the private sector, a case on the scope of positive action, and a case examining whether indirect discrimination can be claimed by someone who does not share the protected characteristic of a disadvantaged group but who is nonetheless disadvantaged in the same way.

Case law updates

Positive discrimination: The Employment Tribunal (ET) has found that the decision to promote a minority ethnic employee without any competitive exercise was unlawful positive discrimination, finding in favour of three white claimants who had expressed an interest in the vacancy and alleged direct race discrimination for failing to be considered. Although the employer, a police force, had a ‘Positive Action Progression Program’, the ET concluded that their actions were not positive discrimination, going beyond encouragement to the disadvantage of others, and that their approach was not a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim of improving diversity at more senior levels. (Turner-Robson and others v. Chief Constable of Thames Valley Police)

Constructive unfair dismissal: The Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) has been considering whether the fact an employee did not exhaust a grievance process is relevant to the issue of whether an employee is entitled to resign and claim constructive unfair dismissal. In this case, the claimant resigned in response to aggressive and intimidating behaviour by a colleague, and dissatisfaction with how her employer was handling a grievance she had raised about that behaviour. She alleged this amounted to a repudiatory breach of contract by employer entitling her to resign and claim constructive dismissal. At the time of her resignation, the claimant had not exhausted the grievance process, with two more stages to go. The original ET rejected her claim, finding that the potential of the employee’s complaint to be resolved by the remaining stages of the grievance process was enough to mean that the relationship of trust and confidence had not been damaged sufficiently seriously to found a claim for constructive dismissal. On appeal, the EAT was critical of this approach – the fact that the grievance process had not been concluded, or that had she completed it, a favourable outcome may have been made in the employee’s favour, is irrelevant in determining whether there had been a repudiatory breach of contract entitling the employee to claim constructive dismissal; it is the employer’s conduct which is relevant. The case will be reconsidered by the ET. (Nelson v. Renfrewshire Council)