£30K compo for being compared to Darth Vader
Discussion
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hstewie said:
I think you might have, Stewie, if you're so short of topics to keep your post count up that you've needed to start this thread 

The tribunal decision is lengthy, but it's clearly due to much more than what is in the story:
https://www.gov.uk/employment-tribunal-decisions/m...
edit: I asked ChatGPT to summarise the decision:
https://www.gov.uk/employment-tribunal-decisions/m...
edit: I asked ChatGPT to summarise the decision:
ChatGPT said:
Main Reasons for Decision:
1. Constructive Unfair Dismissal Claim:
The tribunal found no fundamental breach of Mrs Rooke’s employment contract.
Some job duties were changed, but mostly because of COVID-19 adjustments.
Comments (like the "Darth Vader" joke) were linked to a team-building exercise, not an intent to humiliate or alienate her.
Her resignation email cited "personal circumstances", and she gave notice (rather than resigning immediately), suggesting she was not responding to a repudiatory breach.
She continued to work normally after the alleged incidents (e.g., volunteering for training) — implying she affirmed her contract rather than treating it as breached.
2. Direct Disability Discrimination Claim:
Although Mrs Rooke had anxiety and low mood (accepted as a disability), the people who rejected her attempt to retract her resignation did not know she was disabled at the time.
Therefore, they couldn't have treated her less favourably because of disability.
3. Failure to Make Reasonable Adjustments Claim:
The adjustment Mrs Rooke sought — to be allowed to retract her resignation late — was not a reasonable adjustment required by law.
The employer had operational reasons for pausing recruitment into her role (a service review), unrelated to her health.
There was no solid evidence that her disability affected the timing of her retraction request.
4. Detriment for Protected Disclosures (Whistleblowing):
Mrs Rooke made protected disclosures raising concerns about safety (lack of PPE, shortcuts in training, donor safety checks).
The tribunal found she was subjected to detriment — notably being refused the chance to retract her resignation — because she had made protected disclosures.
Although the employer denied a link, the tribunal concluded there was enough connection between her whistleblowing and how she was treated.
Constructive Unfair Dismissal: Dismissed – not well-founded.
Direct Disability Discrimination: Dismissed – not well-founded.
Failure to Make Reasonable Adjustments: Dismissed – not well-founded.
Detriment for Protected Disclosures (Whistleblowing): Upheld – well-founded.
1. Constructive Unfair Dismissal Claim:
The tribunal found no fundamental breach of Mrs Rooke’s employment contract.
Some job duties were changed, but mostly because of COVID-19 adjustments.
Comments (like the "Darth Vader" joke) were linked to a team-building exercise, not an intent to humiliate or alienate her.
Her resignation email cited "personal circumstances", and she gave notice (rather than resigning immediately), suggesting she was not responding to a repudiatory breach.
She continued to work normally after the alleged incidents (e.g., volunteering for training) — implying she affirmed her contract rather than treating it as breached.
2. Direct Disability Discrimination Claim:
Although Mrs Rooke had anxiety and low mood (accepted as a disability), the people who rejected her attempt to retract her resignation did not know she was disabled at the time.
Therefore, they couldn't have treated her less favourably because of disability.
3. Failure to Make Reasonable Adjustments Claim:
The adjustment Mrs Rooke sought — to be allowed to retract her resignation late — was not a reasonable adjustment required by law.
The employer had operational reasons for pausing recruitment into her role (a service review), unrelated to her health.
There was no solid evidence that her disability affected the timing of her retraction request.
4. Detriment for Protected Disclosures (Whistleblowing):
Mrs Rooke made protected disclosures raising concerns about safety (lack of PPE, shortcuts in training, donor safety checks).
The tribunal found she was subjected to detriment — notably being refused the chance to retract her resignation — because she had made protected disclosures.
Although the employer denied a link, the tribunal concluded there was enough connection between her whistleblowing and how she was treated.
Constructive Unfair Dismissal: Dismissed – not well-founded.
Direct Disability Discrimination: Dismissed – not well-founded.
Failure to Make Reasonable Adjustments: Dismissed – not well-founded.
Detriment for Protected Disclosures (Whistleblowing): Upheld – well-founded.
Edited by Gareth79 on Wednesday 7th May 18:42
768 said:
The country's cooked.
I've no idea why you'd employ anyone anymore, except in the public sector where the money fountain never runs dry.
I know of a guy that brought in his own ladder to his workplace. He didn't really need it, he was trying to cut corners. Then fell off that ladder when he put it down on a slightly slippery floor. (caused by his mess!) No broken bones, he didn't actually fall very far he was only 2 steps up. Then raised a case against his employer about the accident.I've no idea why you'd employ anyone anymore, except in the public sector where the money fountain never runs dry.
He WON as the employer apparently should have told him to take it hope and not use it! A few grand payout.
But I guess that's what happens when companies employ total weirdo


b
hstewie said:
Oi, victim blaming is shameful you horror.
Even members of the dark side have feelings.
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