Food for Thought: How Food Hub’s flawed disciplinary process cost £61k

When workplace concerns arise, employers often need to act quickly, but speed must never come at the expense of fairness. The recent Tribunal case, Shah v Food Hub Limited, which resulted in £61,000 in compensation, shows just how costly it can be when disciplinary processes are rushed and not handled appropriately.

Background

The Claimant, Mr Tanveer Shah, had worked for Food Hub for nearly five years as UK Field Sales Manager. His role required him to spend significant time travelling across the country, leading his team and meeting clients face to face. However, during late 2021 and early 2022, concerns began to surface within the business, and he was not carrying out his duties as expected.

Food Hub’s suspicions focused on the possibility that Mr Shah was working remotely from Egypt rather than in the UK. The company later produced IP address data which it claimed demonstrated that he had been based abroad for several weeks. Mr Shah disputed this evidence, pointing out that the data suggested he was in Cairo and London on consecutive days, something he argued showed its unreliability. Nevertheless, he did acknowledge that there had been a period when he had worked from Egypt, explaining that he had contracted Covid while overseas and was unable to return promptly.

On 2 August 2022, Food Hub’s CEO, Mr Ardian Mula, and another senior manager, confronted Mr Shah after reviewing his expenses, which they believed confirmed he had not been travelling as required. During this meeting, the CEO accused Mr Shah of dishonesty, claimed he was “stealing money from the company” and “illegitimately taking a salary.” Mr Shah was summarily dismissed on the spot for gross misconduct.

A dismissal letter issued three days later cited three main allegations: being untruthful about his field-based role, refusing management requests to work in the field, and carrying out work from home or abroad instead of meeting his contractual obligations.

Mr Shah appealed the decision, strongly rejecting the accusations. His appeal succeeded in overturning his dismissal, but the outcome was unusual. The appeal officer reinstated him to his role but simultaneously suspended him pending further investigation. The Tribunal later criticised this approach, questioning whether the appeal had been conducted independently at all.

Tribunal Decision

The Tribunal’s decision was critical of Food Hub’s handling of this case. It found that the dismissal was not only procedurally flawed but also substantively unfair. The panel accepted that the company had legitimate concerns about Mr Shah’s working arrangements, but concluded that the way it pursued those concerns showed a disregard for fairness.

Central to its findings was the fact that Mr Shah was dismissed immediately by the CEO before a fair investigation had taken place. The Tribunal noted that the serious allegations of dishonestly were levelled against him without an opportunity to properly consider his explanations or test the evidence. While a disciplinary process was later conducted, the Tribunal was clear that this process was an “exercise in window dressing.”

The appeal process also came under significant criticism. The officer who heard the appeal reinstated Mr Shah but suspended him straightaway, a highly unusual step which undermined the purpose of an appeal. The Tribunal further determined that the appeal was not genuinely independent. Investigatory work was delegated to another manager, Mr Page, who effectively controlled the process and directed questioning, despite not being formally appointed as chair decision maker.

Taken together, the Tribunal ruled that the disciplinary steps gave the “superficial appearance of fairness” but in reality, amounted to a sham process designed to achieve a predetermined result. The panel emphasised that such a process was no better than having no process at all.

Mr Shah was awarded £61,419.50 in compensation, which included the statutory maximum compensatory award and a basic award. The Tribunal also applied a 25% uplift under the ACAS Code.

Lessons for Employers

This case highlights several key lessons:

  1. Even where misconduct is suspected, dismissals must follow a transparent and unbiased process. Predetermined outcomes will not withstand Tribunal scrutiny.
  2. Ensure independence at each stage. Appeals should be handled by individuals not previously involved, and decision makers must be free from conflicts of interest.
  3. Employees should be given full access to evidence relied upon so they can fairly respond to allegations.
How we can help

For further information, or to discuss the issues raised within this case, please contact us to speak to a member of our Employment Team.

Darren Smith
Partner, Employment
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This reflects the law and market position at the date of publication and is written as a general guide. It does not contain definitive legal advice, which should be sought in relation to a specific matter.

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