ADJUDICATION OFFICER DECISION
Adjudication Reference: ADJ-00012729
Parties:
| Complainant | Respondent |
Parties | Roberto Alamazani | Don Crotty Crotty Auctioneers |
Complaint:
Act | Complaint Reference No. | Date of Receipt |
Complaint seeking adjudication by the Workplace Relations Commission under Section 21 Equal Status Act, 2000 | CA-00016799-001 | 13/01/2018 |
Workplace Relations Commission Adjudication Officer: Brian Dalton
Procedure:
In accordanceSection 25 of the Equal Status Act, 2000, following the referral of the complaint to me by the Director General, I inquired into the complaint and in the first instance considered as a preliminary matter if I have jurisdiction to hear the complaint and if the claim is properly before me for investigation.
Background:
The complainant states that he has been discriminated against by a person, organisation, company who provides goods, services or facilities. Specifically, he brings a complaint against a witness who gave evidence at a Workplace Relations hearing arising from a complaint initiated by the respondent. He states: “I am offended that Don Crotty/Crotty Auctioneers stated and confirmed during a hearing on 13/09/2017 at WRC in Dublin 4 that I did call their office and asked for money in relation to a case for discrimination against their company. This is completely and utterly unacceptable. I feel demeaned, insulted and discriminated. It's against the law discriminating people as clearly stated under the Equal Status Acts 2000-2015. The way I have been treated is discriminating against me and victimizing me because I am black. I strongly believe that if I was white,the treatment will be different” |
Preliminary Matter
Jurisdiction:
The complaint is made against the respondent as a party to a complaint initiated by the complainant and the matters now complained of occurred during the hearing and when the respondent was giving oral evidence. At section 36 of the Equal Status Act 2000 as amended it states:
36.—(1) Where, in the course or for the purposes of any investigation, mediation or hearing under this Part, or of any inquiry under Part V of the Employment Equality Act, 1998, any person discloses information to the Authority, the Director of the Workplace Relations Commission or any other person entitled to obtain it, the disclosure shall not give rise to any liability (in contract, tort or otherwise) on the part of the person making it.
This statutory provision as detailed in the Equal Status Act 2000 gives immunity to the respondent from any liability arising from giving evidence and to disclosure of information provided in the course of the investigation. I am satisfied that the matters complained of relate to disclosure of information as referenced at section 36(1) of the Equal Status Act.
Giving evidence at a Tribunal is not a service as defined under the Equal Status Acts at section 2 and therefore the complainant incorrectly relies on the Equal Status Act to bring a complaint against the respondent.
It should be noted that at section 14 of the Act it states:
14.—(1) Nothing in this Act shall be construed as prohibiting—
( a) the taking of any action that is required by or under—
(i) any enactment or order of a court,
The disclosure of information is required so that the matter complained of can be fairly and impartially determined. It is not within scope of the Equal Status Act to ground another complaint based on the evidence and disclosures made during an investigation.
This principle of witness immunity is fundamental to a fair and impartial hearing of a legal dispute and was fully elaborated upon in the High Court Case E. O’K. v. DK [2001] 1 I.R.:
“[2001] E. O'K. v. D.K. (Witness: immunity) 644
1 I.R. O'Sullivan J. H.C.
"However, there is at issue a far more fundamental point which is the need to give witnesses (and also indeed, the judge) in court, a privilege in respect of oral testimony and also with regard to affidavits and documents produced in the course of a hearing. Such persons, either witnesses or those swearing affidavits, are given an immunity from suit. Otherwise, no judge could go out on the bench and feel that he or she could render a judgment or say anything without risk of suit. Similarly, witnesses would be inhibited in the way they could give evidence. The price that has to be paid is that civil actions cannot be brought against witnesses even in a very blatant case, which of course this case is not, but even in a case of perjury - which would be such a case - the law says that an action cannot lie …
The necessity to give immunity in respect of oral testimony and documentary evidence in courts was so well established at the time the Constitution came into force that it was not thought necessary to provide expressly for it in the way that an absolute privilege is given in respect of utterances in the chamber to all members of Dáil Éireann and Seanad Éireann; cf. Article 15.12."
The complainant brings this complaint under the Equal Status Act 2000 as amended against another party in a dispute that the complainant initiated; however, the matter complained of is not a service as defined under the Act. This complaint is misconceived as it is incapable of achieving the desired outcome by relying on the Equal Status Act. A witness both under the Act and indeed as a core principle of administering justice is immune from suit. Therefore this case is misconceived as the statutory provisions being relied upon cannot be used to bring a claim against a witness.
Section 22 of the Equal Status Act 2000 as amended states that a claim at any stage may be dismissed if an opinion is formed that the complaint is misconceived. As I have formed the opinion that the claim is misconceived pursuant to section 22, I dismiss the claim.
Decision:
Section 25 of the Equal Status Acts, 2000 – 2015 requires that I make a decision in relation to the complaint in accordance with the relevant redress provisions under section 27 of that Act. However section 22 of the Act provides that a complaint may be dismissed at any time if an opinion is formed that the claim is misconceived.
The complainant brings this complaint under the Equal Status Acts as amended against another party in a dispute that the complainant initiated; however, the matter complained of is not a service as defined under the Act. This complaint is misconceived by relying on the Equal Status Act based on evidence given at a hearing that the complainant finds objectionable. Oral evidence does not constitute a service under the Equal Status Act 2000 as amended. A witness both under the Act and indeed as a core principle of administering justice is immune from suit. Therefore this case is misconceived in law and cannot achieve the desired outcome. Section 22 of the Equal Status Act 2000 as amended states that a claim at any stage may be dismissed if an opinion is formed that the complaint is misconceived. I dismiss the claim as I have formed the opinion that the claim is misconceived pursuant to section 22 of the Equal Status Act 2000 as amended. |
Dated: 17-09-21
Workplace Relations Commission Adjudication Officer: Brian Dalton
Key Words:
Witness immunity-Service-Jurisdiction. |