Employment law cases

All items: Equality, diversity and human rights

  • Disability discrimination: Attested reactive depression was a disability

    Date:
    15 September 1999

    An employee diagnosed as suffering from reactive depression was a "disabled person" within the meaning of the Disability Discrimination Act 1995, holds the EAT in Kapadia v London Borough of Lambeth.

  • Equal pay: Severance payment based on final salary not discriminatory

    Date:
    15 September 1999

    Calculating severance payments by reference to length of service and final pay, so that a part-time employee who had previously worked full time did not have her full-time service reflected in her severance payment, was not discriminatory, holds the House of Lords in Barry v Midland Bank plc.

  • Race discrimination: Damages for personal injury may be awarded under Race Relations Act

    Date:
    15 September 1999

    Employment tribunals have jurisdiction to award compensation for the statutory tort of unlawful racial discrimination under the Race Relations Act, including damages for physical or psychiatric injury caused by the tort, holds the Court of Appeal in Sheriff v Klyne Tugs (Lowestoft) Ltd.

  • Former detective awarded £182,000

    Date:
    1 September 1999

    In Stubbs v (1) Chief Constable of Lincolnshire Police and (2) Walker a Nottingham employment tribunal (Chair: D R Sneath) reconvenes to award compensation of £182,000, including £41,500 for injury to feelings and injury to health to a former detective retired from the police force on ill-health grounds following its ruling that she had been subject to a lengthy period of sexual harassment and discrimination by her line manager.

  • Race discrimination: Conscious motivation is not a prerequisite for victimisation

    Date:
    15 August 1999

    It was a sufficient basis for a claim of victimisation for an unsuccessful job applicant to show that those who had interviewed him were subconsciously influenced by their knowledge of the fact that he had previously done a protected act, holds the House of Lords in Nagarajan v London Regional Transport.

  • Sex discrimination: Denial of full pay to suspended pregnant seafarer was directly discriminatory

    Date:
    1 August 1999

    A pregnant employee of a ferry company, who was suspended from working on board ship in accordance with Regulations precluding those with specified medical conditions, including pregnancy, from working at sea, suffered direct sex discrimination when she did not receive full pay during the period of her suspension, holds the EAT in P&O European Ferries (Dover) Ltd and another v Iverson.

  • Sex discrimination: Pregnant employee discriminated against in redundancy selection

    Date:
    1 August 1999

    In McGuigan v TG Baynes & Sons, the EAT holds that an employee suffered unlawful direct sex discrimination when her employer failed to consult her over her impending redundancy on the ground, among others, that she was absent on maternity leave - a pregnancy-related reason.

  • Failure to assess risks may cause sex discrimination

    In Day v T Pickles Farms Ltd, the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) says that an employer should not wait for written notification of an employee's pregnancy before carrying out a risk assessment, and that its failure to carry out an assessment may have caused the employee detriment within the provisions of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975.

  • Sex discrimination: Correct approach to assessing loss of earnings flowing from discriminatory dismissal

    Date:
    15 May 1999

    In Abbey National plc v Formoso, the EAT rejects an employment tribunal's "reasonable employer" approach to calculating the financial loss flowing from a discriminatory dismissal.

  • Sex discrimination: Employer vicariously liable for sexual harassment at work-related social events

    Date:
    15 March 1999

    The Chief Constable of the constabulary to which police officers were originally appointed remained vicariously liable for acts of sex discrimination committed by his officers while they were on secondment to branches of the Regional Crime Squad, holds the EAT in Chief Constable of the Lincolnshire Constabulary v Stubbs and others.

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Employment law cases: HR and legal information and guidance relating to equality, diversity and human rights.