Employment
Tribunal Decisions Offer Increased Protection For employees Speaking Urdu and
Punjabi
In recent months
the Employment Tribunal, and Appeals Tribunal has heard two complex
discrimination cases regarding an employee’s use of their first language. Fiona
Hamor, Employment Partner at Pannone LLP, reports on the decisions.
In April, the Tribunal heard the case of Griffin v Hyder Brothers Ltd, in which
a sales assistant employed at a petrol station, brought a race discrimination
claim complaining about a number of incidents.
One of these was that the owner of the franchise and
colleagues and other persons connected to the employer often spoke in Punjabi or Urdu at work. He alleged that
this occurred in a way that excluded him and made him uncomfortable. The
Employment Tribunal dismissed his claim.
They acknowledged that conversations in a language used
deliberately to exclude an employee from participating in the conversation, or
nevertheless having that effect, could amount to ‘any other detriment' for the
purposes of a discrimination claim.
However, whilst the employee here was clear that the
conversations in Urdu/Punjabi made him uncomfortable, the Tribunal held that the way the conversations occurred did not
amount to a detriment in his case.
The Tribunal went on to suggest that “either an intent or
inadvertent effect of violating the Claimant's dignity or creating an
intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment for him”
could be an aggravating factor.
A later decision from the Tribunal, whilst in relation to
a different type of claim, brings further protection from discrimination for
those wishing to speak their first language.
In the case of Dziedziak
v Future Electronics Ltd, the employee, a Polish national, worked for the
employer for approximately three years. She was dismissed by reason of
redundancy and brought claims in respect of her dismissal; this claim was
dismissed for a number of reasons but, Ms. Dziedziack was successful in bringing a race discrimination claim.
This claim was in
respect of an incident in which her line manager reprimanded her for speaking
Polish in a work-related conversation at work with a Polish colleague. The
Employment Tribunal upheld the employee’s claim of race discrimination on the
basis that she had been instructed not to speak "in her own language"
whereas no other employees of other nationalities had been subjected to the
same restriction.
The case also illustrates the shifting burden of proof in action: the employee had established
facts from which the Tribunal could conclude that she had been subjected to
discrimination on grounds of her Polish nationality, and this left the employer
to provide an adequate non-discriminatory explanation for their instruction not
to speak Polish, a challenge they failed
to rise to.
On appeal, the EAT upheld the Tribunal’s decision; the use
by the employer of the phrase "own language" was intrinsically linked
to her nationality.
Interestingly, had all staff been directed to speak in
English, her claim would have needed to have been brought as an indirect
discrimination claim instead of the direct discrimination claim that succeeded.
A claim of indirect discrimination would open up the possibility of the
employer objectively justifying its instruction.
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