6 minute read | March.02.2026
In this month’s highlights, our team summarises the latest developments in UK employment law and their implications for employers. Catch up on January’s highlights here.
In Milrine v DHL Services Limited, the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) held that significant procedural defects in an employer's internal appeal process can render a fair dismissal unfair.
What led to the dispute, and why is the outcome significant for employers?
The appellant Mr Milrine was dismissed with notice for medical incapability on 3 June 2022 by the respondent DHL Services Limited.
Mr Milrine exercised his right to appeal the decision to dismiss him in accordance with DHL's internal appeals procedure. However, Mr Milrine abandoned the internal appeal process due to confusion arising from several procedural failings:
Initially, the Employment Tribunal (ET) dismissed Mr Milrine's complaint of unfair dismissal. It criticised the procedural failings of DHL’s internal appeal process but ultimately concluded that the dismissal was fair as Mr Milrine had been offered a right of appeal but elected not to pursue it. The ET’s criticisms of DHL’s appeal process were merely observations that the conduct failed to accord with good industrial practice. The ET did not account for the procedural failings in assessing the fairness of the dismissal.
The EAT allowed the appeal and held that Mr Milrine was unfairly dismissed. The EAT set out the following key principles in determining fairness:
Takeaways
This decision serves as a stark reminder to employers that a functioning internal appeals process is crucial in ensuring a fair dismissal. A defective process can undo what might otherwise be a substantively defensible dismissal decision. This is particularly important in light of the incoming reduction of the unfair dismissal qualifying period to six months and the removal of the compensatory cap from 1 January 2027.
In Ngole v Touchstone Leeds, the EAT considered whether an employer was unlawfully and directly discriminatory in withdrawing a conditional job offer after discovering a job applicant’s past social media posts expressing traditional Christian beliefs that homosexuality is a sin.
What led to the dispute, and why is the outcome significant for employers?
The appellant Mr Ngole applied for a role with the respondent Touchstone Leeds. He was successful and received a conditional job offer.
While reviewing Mr Ngole’s references, Touchstone discovered that Mr Ngole had made Facebook posts in the past expressing traditional Christian beliefs that "homosexuality is a sin". Touchstone then withdrew the job offer, stating that Mr Ngole’s views did not align with Touchstone’s ethos and values as an LGBTQ+ community ally.
Mr Ngole challenged the withdrawal decision, and in response, Touchstone offered a further meeting to allow Mr Ngole to provide assurances that his beliefs would not affect his ability to perform the role. Following the meeting, Touchstone confirmed the offer withdrawal, stating that Mr Ngole failed to provide assurances that he was suitable for the role.
Mr Ngole brought a claim on the grounds of direct discrimination under the Equality Act 2010. The ET held that the initial job offer withdrawal was disproportionate as it did not give Mr Ngole a chance to respond. However, the ET held that Touchstone’s subsequent actions of providing a second interview and thereafter confirming the offer withdrawal were proportionate responses as Touchstone needed to ensure that the role was taken on by an individual suitable to servicing the needs of vulnerable service users and Mr Ngole had not given the necessary assurances proving that he was suitable to the role.
On appeal, the EAT agreed that the initial job offer withdrawal was unlawful and that requiring a second meeting to review Mr Ngole’s suitability was lawful. However, the EAT found errors of law in the ET’s analysis regarding whether Touchstone’s decision to not reinstate the job offer was lawful.
The EAT stated that dismissing an employee or treating them less favourably just because they expressed a religious or other protected belief, even if the belief is offensive to many, constitutes unlawful direct discrimination. Where a dismissal or less favourable treatment is motivated not by the expression of the belief itself but rather by something objectionable in the way it was expressed, the dismissal or treatment is lawful where the employer can show that it was a proportionate response to the objectionable feature. To decide whether the employer’s actions are justified, the employer must show:
The EAT held that the ET did not properly analyse whether Touchstone’s concern was an objection to the beliefs themselves rather than to the manifestation of the beliefs. The EAT stated that it was unlikely that a service user’s objection would be to the manifestation of Mr Ngole’s beliefs by way of past Facebook posts. Rather, the objection would likely be towards Mr Ngole’s holding of the belief that “homosexuality is a sin”. Treatment based on a concern about service users’ reactions to the mere holding of a religious belief is not justifiable.
The complaint about the decision not to reinstate the job offer was therefore remitted back to the ET to be considered against the framework set out above.
Takeaways
This decision is an important reminder for employers navigating protected belief discrimination in recruitment and employment. Indeed, employers should be careful not to treat employees or job applicants less favourably because they hold a protected belief, even if that belief is controversial or offensive to others.
In Anne & Ors v Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust, the appellants were a group of cleaners who had originally worked for the respondent Great Ormond Street Hospital for Children NHS Foundation Trust (GOSH) as contract workers. They were transferred in-house under the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 (TUPE).
Prior to the transfer, the cleaners were paid the London Living Wage rate of £10.75 per hour. In contrast, GOSH’s directly employed cleaning staff received the higher NHS Band 2 rate of £11.50 per hour. Following the transfer, the cleaners were kept on the London Living Wage.
The cleaners argued that the pay differential constituted indirect race discrimination because the post‑transfer pay policy, although applied neutrally, disproportionately disadvantaged them. 78% of the cleaners were from BAME backgrounds compared with 51% of GOSH’s directly employed cleaners, meaning the pay differential had a particular adverse impact on a protected group. The ET dismissed the claims at first instance, relying on the EAT's decision in Royal Parks Ltd v Boohene, which held that section 41 of the Equality Act 2010 does not allow a contract worker to bring a discrimination claim against a principal about pay that is due under the worker’s employment contract with their employer.
The EAT overturned the ET’s decision in relation to the post‑transfer period, holding that section 41 of the Equality Act 2010 (which applies only to contract workers) no longer applied once the cleaners had transferred to GOSH under TUPE and become direct employees. Because the cleaners were employees from the transfer date, the correct statutory provision was section 39 of the Equality Act 2010, which governs discrimination by employers towards their own staff, not contract workers.
The EAT also emphasised that TUPE regulation 4(1) meant that GOSH became fully responsible for the cleaners’ terms and conditions from day one, even though those terms had originally been set by the previous contracting company. This meant GOSH could not rely on the Royal Parks principle (which limits discrimination claims by contract workers) because the cleaners were no longer in that category. As a result, the ET should have assessed the pay disparity as a potential act of indirect discrimination by an employer, not a principal, and GOSH's liability had to be determined accordingly.
Takeaways
Employers bringing services in‑house should carefully assess whether maintaining post‑transfer pay differentials could create an indirect discrimination risk, particularly where the transferring group has a different demographic profile. This assessment should form part of the decision‑making process around whether to insource and should also inform how the employer structures onboarding under TUPE including the timing of any contractual changes and the consultation required where amendments to terms are necessary.
Employees taking part in industrial action now benefit from unlimited protection from unfair dismissal. Previously, the law only safeguarded employees from dismissal for the first 12 weeks of protected industrial action. Once that 12‑week period elapsed, an employer could lawfully dismiss striking employees in certain circumstances, and the dismissal would not automatically be unfair. This time‑limited protection has now been removed entirely. The effect is that:
Employers will therefore need to manage prolonged industrial action more carefully, as dismissal as a tactic to end or deter participation is now effectively unavailable.