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Employer Not Liable for Remark Made by Agency Worker

Employers should be aware that problems may arise during major sporting events as a result of employees supporting different national teams.

In a recent case, a woman claimed that remarks made to her by a colleague during the 2006 FIFA World Cup amounted to direct discrimination under the Race Relations Act 1976 (RRA). Mrs Okerago told the Employment Tribunal (ET) that Ms Dower, an agency worker, told her to go back home after Mrs Okerago replied ‘my country’ when asked which team she would be supporting in the competition. By not specifically investigating her grievance on this issue, she claimed that her employer had aided and abetted the discrimination.

The ET judged May and Baker liable for Ms Dower’s discriminatory remarks but this decision was overturned on appeal.

The Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) found that there were no adequate findings of fact in the ET’s judgment to support the finding that Ms Dower was an employee of May and Baker, which was necessary for a finding of liability under Section 32(1) of the RRA. The ET’s finding that ‘to all intents and purposes she was treated as an employee on a day-to-day basis and acted as one’ was not a sufficient basis for finding the company liable.

In addition, the EAT ruled that there were no adequate findings of fact to support a conclusion that Ms Dower acted as an agent of May and Baker, for the purposes of RRA Section 32(2). Also, a person cannot aid another to do something that the other person has already done. The failure to investigate Mrs Okerago’s grievance and the other matters referred to by the ET all took place after the World Cup incident had already occurred and there were no findings that the company knew about Ms Dower’s remark at that time to suggest that it had assisted the incident to occur.

The EAT went on to say that although the ET’s finding that by its conduct May and Baker was ‘compliant in allowing an environment to continue where such conduct could take place’, there were no findings by the ET that the company had allowed such an environment to exist prior to, or at the time of, the World Cup incident.

This case hinged on the fact that the complaint concerned the conduct of an agency worker, not an employee. The claimant’s case was not advanced on the basis that her employer was vicariously liable for the agency worker’s actions. The ET made no findings of fact on that point and it was not therefore open to Mrs Okerago to argue it in the EAT.
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Nigel Harrison
Partner/Team Manager
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The contents of this article are intended for general information purposes only and shall not be deemed to be, or constitute legal advice. We cannot accept responsibility for any loss as a result of acts or omissions taken in respect of this article.