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Webb v EMO Air Cargo (UK) Ltd (No 2)

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Webb v EMO Air Cargo (UK) Ltd
CourtEuropean Court of Justice
Citations(1994) C-32/93, ECR I-3567, ICR 1021
Keywords
Pregnancy discrimination

Webb v EMO Air Cargo (UK) Ltd (No 2) (1994) C-32/93 is a UK labour law and EU labour law case, concerning discrimination against a pregnant woman. It held that no comparator (for instance to a sick man) is necessary to establish discrimination against a pregnant woman. It was unusual in that Carol Louise Webb, the applicant, was represented throughout by a community law centre, the Hillingdon Legal Resource Centre (HLRC), later renamed the Hillingdon Law Centre, the only time that a British law centre case went to the European Court of Justice. The law centre's in-house barrister Michael Shrimpton argued the case before the Industrial Tribunal at London North in February 1988. He was also junior counsel to the late John Melville Williams QC in the Employment Appeal Tribunal and, by then in private practice, appeared at the compensation hearing in 1999. The case was one of the longest-running in British legal history.

Facts

EMO Air Cargo had an employee called Mrs Stewart who had taken maternity leave. Miss Webb was hired to replace Mrs Stewart, though it was envisaged that she would stay on working after Mrs Stewart came back. Then, however, it transpired that Miss Webb was also pregnant and due to give birth at around the same time as Mrs Stewart. Miss Webb was dismissed. She claimed this was sex discrimination under SDA 1975 s 1(1). The employer argued she was unable to carry out the tasks for which she was recruited.

The Court of Appeal held that a sick man, who was the appropriate comparator, would have been treated similarly. The House of Lords referred to the ECJ.

Judgment

European Court of Justice

The ECJ referred to the Dekker case and reaffirmed that pregnancy discrimination was sex discrimination. There is no need for a comparison with a man who is ill. This followed from article 2(1) and article 5(1) of Directives 76/207/EEC and 92/85/EC. The ECJ's ruling was mutatis mutandis along the lines of the argument put before the Industrial Tribunal and prepared entirely in-house by Hillingdon law centre.

House of Lords

The House of Lords applied the decision of the ECJ. Lord Keith had said, ‘The relevant circumstance for purposes of the comparison required by section 5(3) to be made is expected unavailability at the material time… precise reason for the unavailability is not a relevant circumstance, and in particular it is not relevant that the reason is a condition which is capable of affecting only women or, for that matter, only men’. However, now Lord Keith said when the answer had returned from the ECJ the following.

... in a case where a woman is engaged for an indefinite period, the fact that the reason why she will be temporarily unavailable for work at a time when to her knowledge her services will be particularly required is pregnancy is a circumstance relevant to her case, being a circumstance which could not be present in the case of the hypothetical man.

See also

Direct discrimination cases
Equality Act 2010 ss 13 and 136
Stefanko v Doherty and Maritime Hotel Ltd IRLR 322
Horsey v Dyfed County Council ICR 755
R (EOC) v Birmingham City Council AC 1155
James v Eastleigh BC UKHL 6
Webb v EMO Air Cargo (UK) Ltd (No 2) UKHL 13
Smith v Safeway plc ICR 868
Grant v South-West Trains Ltd ICR 449 (C-249/96)
Chief Constable of Yorkshire Police v Khan UKHL 48
Shamoon v Royal Ulster Constabulary UKHL 11
Roma Rights Centre v Prague Immigration UKHL 55
Homer v Chief Constable of West Yorkshire UKSC 15
Coleman v Attridge Law (2008) C-303/06
English v Sanderson Blinds Ltd EWCA Civ 1421
Grainger plc v Nicholson IRLR 4 (EAT)
see UK labour and equality law
Sources on justifying discrimination
Equality Act 2010 Sch 9
Etam plc v Rowan IRLR 150
Johnston v Royal Ulster Constabulary (1986) C-222/84
R (Amicus) v SS for Trade and Industry EWHC 860
Sirdar v The Army Board (1999) C-273/97
Kreil v Germany (2000) C-285/98
Lambeth LBC v Commission for Racial Equality ICR 768
Tottenham Green Nursery v Marshall (No 2) ICR 320
Equality Act 2010 s 19(2)(d)
Bilka-Kaufhaus GmbH v Weber von Hartz (1984) C-170/84
Kontofunktionaerernes Forbund v Danfoss (1989) C-109/88
Rinner-Kühn v FWW Gebäudereinigung KG (1989) C-171/88
Nimz v Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg (1991) C-184/89
Kutz-Bauer v Freie und Hansestadt Hamburg (2003) C-187/00
Allonby v Accrington & Rossendale College (2004) C-256/01
see UK labour law

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