News and INsights
Tribunal erred in rejecting Shared Parental Leave claim
EAT allows appeal: ET erred in its dismissal of indirect discrimination claim. Rachel Crasnow QC, specialist in workplace rights, considers the latest appeal in the Shared Parental Leave saga.
New instruction for Cloisters from the Labour Party
The Labour Party has instructed Tom Gillie, Rachel Barrett and Nathan Roberts from Cloisters to advise it in relation to ongoing sensitive internal complaints of alleged anti-semitism and sexual harassment against party members.
Patricia Hitchcock QC and Jacques Algazy QC appointed recorders
Patricia Hitchcock QC and Jacques Algazy QC have both been appointed to sit in the Crown Court.
Such a clear dividing line? Maternity Leave and Shared Parental Leave: the EAT judgment in Ali v Capita
On 11 April 2018 the EAT overturned the direct discrimination finding of the Tribunal in Ali v Capita Customer Management Ltd concerning whether employers who offer enhanced maternity pay must also offer enhanced Shared Parental Pay. Rachel Crasnow QC considers the judgment in this blog. Cloisters' Chris Milsom acted for the intervener Working Families in the appeal.
Acas early conciliation effect on tribunal time limits and the decision of Luton BC v Haque
Navid Pourghazi considers today’s judgment by the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) in Luton BC v Haque, which concerned how the ACAS early conciliation provisions affect Tribunal time limits, and summarises the simple approach to take in calculating time limits following the most recent case law, drawing from submissions made by the appellant’s counsel in the case.
Catherine Casserley represents 11 year old Ben Gleeson in £42,000 disability discrimination claim
Catherine Casserley represented Ben Gleeson and his family after Ben was told by his scout group that he could not go to camp or take part in athletics without supervision.
The end of the ‘sex taint’ argument in equal pay: McNeil v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs
Robin Allen QC and Anna Beale consider the implications of the EAT’s decision in McNeil v Commissioners for HM Revenue and Customs, one of the first appellate cases to consider what is required to show “particular disadvantage” in an equal pay claim based on indirect discrimination under the Equality Act 2010.