The EAT has held that the dismissal of an employee “vanished” as a consequence of her successful internal appeal of a dismissal decision. To avoid this outcome, the employee should have withdrawn her appeal in no uncertain terms. Merely stating that she did not wish to return to work was not enough to constitute the retraction of an appeal.
The Claimant was a Sales Assistant who worked in an Iceland store. She was dismissed in January 2019 for alleged gross misconduct. She appealed the decision and asked to be reinstated. An appeal hearing took place but was adjourned so that further investigations could take place. In the meantime, the Claimant emailed Iceland to say she had lost trust and confidence in them and no longer wished to return to work. During the reconvened appeal hearing, the Claimant said that she did not wish to be reinstated but wanted an apology and compensation.
Iceland upheld the appeal against the dismissal. The Claimant was told that she would be reinstated with continuity of service restored, backpay and a final written warning. However, she refused to return to work. Three months later, in July 2019, Iceland dismissed the Claimant for her failure to attend work. The Claimant brought a claim of unfair dismissal in respect of the January dismissal. She did not bring a claim about the July dismissal.
Iceland said that the claim was not well-founded because the January dismissal had “vanished” when the appeal was upheld and the Claimant had been reinstated. The Employment Tribunal agreed, holding that the fact that the Claimant had said she did not want to be reinstated was not enough. She should have gone further and withdrawn her appeal altogether. She did not, which meant that she could not escape the consequences of a successful appeal. The Claimant appealed to the EAT.
The Claimant argued that her statements that she did not wish to work for Iceland, and that she only wanted an apology and compensation, were tantamount to a withdrawal of her appeal.
The EAT held that it was well-established that when a contractual right of appeal is exercised, the agreement between the parties is that should the appeal succeed, the employee will be treated as never having been dismissed and will be reinstated with backpay. This is the objective position, and it does not turn on the employee’s personal motives for appealing, however legitimate (e.g. a desire to “clear their name” or a concern not to risk a deduction to a compensation award for failing to comply with the provisions of the Acas Code of Practice on Disciplinary and Grievance Procedures).
Turning to the question of whether the Claimant’s words were clear enough to amount to a withdrawal, the EAT said they were not. Although excessive formality was not required, at the very least she could have said “I wish to withdraw my appeal”. Moreover, the Claimant had accepted before the Tribunal that she had not withdrawn her appeal.
The EAT also noted that the Claimant’s wish not to return to work for Iceland and the pursuit of the appeal were not mutually exclusive. An employee may pursue an appeal in order to clear their name and/or receive back pay and then resign once they have been reinstated (and potentially claim constructive dismissal).
The outcome was that the Claimant was not dismissed in January 2019 and her claim of unfair dismissal could not proceed.
Source: Lexology
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