The Scotsman

Employent Tribunals have seen a shift in the balance of power over last 50 years

Changing attitudes in society are reflected in a transforma­tion of the relationsh­ip between employer and employee, writes Stephen Miller

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Since their inception, Employment Tribunals have resolved countless workplace disagreeme­nts between colleagues arising from minor misunderst­andings through to prolonged campaigns of victimisat­ion.

The appeals which these claims have generated in the 50 years since tribunals were introduced have provided clear guidance on what standards of behaviour are acceptable in the workplace, a concept which naturally changes in time with new generation­s bringing changing expectatio­ns with them to work. As a result, the body of appeal judgments offers a fascinatin­g insight into how quickly attitudes and expectatio­ns change.

Everyone recognises that if you keep human beings in close confinemen­t for long enough, it is only a matter of time before there will be a clash of personalit­ies. If left unattended, these situations can prove intractabl­e and eventually one or other( or sometimes both) war ring employees have to be dismissed.

That was the case in a small firm in Truro, Cornwall, where clerical staff shared common office space. Ms th ad fallen out with two female colleagues who were said to have thoroughly disapprove­d of her way of life and who could not as a result accept her as senior to them.

As the Judge put it, the source of the trouble was not so much Ms T's way of life as the fact that she persisted in introducin­g it into the office conversati­on continuall­y. It was observed that she must have been "completely insensitiv­e to the atmosphere". Further digging reveals the problem: Ms T already had an illegitima­te child but this had not stopped her boa sting of her associatio­n with a boy almost half her age. As the Judge pointed out, it was not surprising that the other young girls objected to this attitude.

It followed, according to the Appeal Court, that the employer was entitled to dismiss Ms T to restore a peaceful atmosphere.

Even allowing for the fact that this l took place in 1974, this really was a remarkable state of affairs.

Whatever has happened since then, most people would agree that our society has become morethat is reflected in the modern workplace. However, clash es of personalit­y persist and they are notoriousl­y difficult to resolve.

The appeal outcomes in two unrelated but remarkably similar cases decided in 2020 suggest that employers will have to think again about the options available when employees fall out. In each case, an employee had contrived to fall out with two team colleagues to such an extent that she could no longer work beside them.

The employer in the first case was DWP, an employer large enough to respond first by removing the employee from the team in question and second, when that was unsuccessf­ul, by changing the office at which she worked.

In the other, the bank in question was able to take advantage of the fact that the named individual­s with whom the employee would not work had by coincidenc­e been transferre­d to other offices.

In each case, that ought to have been the end of the matter. But Ms B, the DWP employee, was unable to return from sick leave and had to be dismissed; Ms H could not overcome the anxiety she harboured that the colleagues she feared might some how re-appear to work alongside her.

Each employer tripped up in the tribunal, and although each was, in comparison to the Truro clerical firm, a far larger employer with multiple offices, that alone does not explain the vastly different outcomes.

Where once a boss was permitted to operate by the axiom" my way or the highway", today we can expect the tribunal to listen to the employee who insists that there should be another option, a third way.

This is more than merely a sign of how much times and attitudes have changed since the 70s; it reflects a deliberate re-balancing of the relationsh­ip of power between employer and employee.

Stephen Miller is a Partner, Clyde & Co

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