I am wondering whether someone can give answers based on legal principles. Don't feel you have to answer every single on of my questions. The ones at the bottom are actually more relevant, and if they are answered in a certain way then you will find that answers for the first questions are not necessary.
I disclosed my disability to my employer, identifying my condition and specifically referring to it as a disability, who thereafter started asking whether I needed reasonable adjustments, etc. They did not request further documentation from me, e.g. diagnosis, etc. or request that I see a doctor or Occupational Health for a confirmation of my condition, but I did provide the diagnosis to them when it was available. From their behaviour at the time, I was led to believe that my employer had accepted my disclosure and that they did not require any further information.
However, in the process of the employment tribunal, which is ongoing, they claimed that they had not believed my disclosure and did not consider me a disabled person, even after I had provided proof of my diagnosis, and that the fact that they did not believe me meant that they were not obligated to provide reasonable adjustments or considered to have any knowledge of my disability. They have since conceded disability.
Does their claim that they didn't believe my disability disclosure at first mean they cannot be held responsible for not having provided me with the reasonable adjustments I requested, or for the fact that they discriminated against me because of the disability by dismissing me a few weeks after the disclosure (among other things)?
Could I have been expected to provide more information regarding my disability, even though it had not been requested? Can the fact that I did not provide them with more information than I did to support my disability disclosure be used against me?
Is it not true that they should have made all necessary inquiries once I had disclosed my disability, and that the disclosure, in these circumstances, should have been enough for them to be aware, from that point in time, that I was disabled?
Can they claim they had no knowledge of the disability after I disclosed it, just because they decided not to believe me?
Does the fact that they did not inform me at the time that my disclosure was not believed and did not seek further information or professional advice about my disability make any difference in my and their legal obligations in this regard?
Next is a question relating to a time before my official disclosure as described above. Can the employer be said to have known about my disability from the point at which one of my colleagues admitted (in his witness statement) to suspecting that I had the condition with which I was later diagnosed and that I identified as my disability? That colleague had made derogatory comments about me with reference to particular aspects of my condition. Can that be considered harassment on the basis of my disability, even though my actual disability disclosure was made after that? The condition is of a life-long nature, so there is no issue of whether I had it even before diagnosis.
I am finding the words "could reasonably have been expected to know" very confusing mostly because if the employer had referred me to occupational health or even a GP at any point, my condition would have been diagnosed and identified as a disability that much sooner. They did not do so, even though they perhaps should have done.
Even before my colleague had identified my condition as above and before the disclosure of my specific disability, I had disclosed to my line manager a related condition which is a symptom of the disability, and which was causing me difficulty in my work, which my colleagues and line manager had already noticed. I informed my line manager at the time that this related condition had been diagnosed (i.e. my disability condition had been misdiagnosed as another related condition) in the past (over one year previously) and that it had caused me difficulty with my work back then as well. I did not mention the word "disability" at that time, because I, as most people, did not have intimate knowledge of the Equality Act back then.
Was that previous disclosure enough to give my employer constructive knowledge of my disability or constructive knowledge that I may be disabled and that further investigation should have been undertaken?
If the employer should have made further inquiries but didn't, what is the point in time at which they could be considered to have constructive knowledge of my disability, at the point that they failed to make further inquiries or some other time?
After the point at which they could be considered to have constructive knowledge of the disability, can the employer be held accountable for any discriminatory or harassing acts perpetrated against me by my colleagues because of aspects of my disability, and for any failures on the employer's part to provide reasonable adjustments when I requested support with my work?*
I don't want an absolute prediction of how the employment tribunal will decide my case (well, actually, that would be nice), but I would just like some kind of feedback as to what I can possibly expect. If my questions fall into grey areas of the law, please tell me this as well, so I will know how to better make my arguments in the tribunal (I am representing myself).
Thanks for reading until the end and sorry this is so long.
I disclosed my disability to my employer, identifying my condition and specifically referring to it as a disability, who thereafter started asking whether I needed reasonable adjustments, etc. They did not request further documentation from me, e.g. diagnosis, etc. or request that I see a doctor or Occupational Health for a confirmation of my condition, but I did provide the diagnosis to them when it was available. From their behaviour at the time, I was led to believe that my employer had accepted my disclosure and that they did not require any further information.
However, in the process of the employment tribunal, which is ongoing, they claimed that they had not believed my disclosure and did not consider me a disabled person, even after I had provided proof of my diagnosis, and that the fact that they did not believe me meant that they were not obligated to provide reasonable adjustments or considered to have any knowledge of my disability. They have since conceded disability.
Does their claim that they didn't believe my disability disclosure at first mean they cannot be held responsible for not having provided me with the reasonable adjustments I requested, or for the fact that they discriminated against me because of the disability by dismissing me a few weeks after the disclosure (among other things)?
Could I have been expected to provide more information regarding my disability, even though it had not been requested? Can the fact that I did not provide them with more information than I did to support my disability disclosure be used against me?
Is it not true that they should have made all necessary inquiries once I had disclosed my disability, and that the disclosure, in these circumstances, should have been enough for them to be aware, from that point in time, that I was disabled?
Can they claim they had no knowledge of the disability after I disclosed it, just because they decided not to believe me?
Does the fact that they did not inform me at the time that my disclosure was not believed and did not seek further information or professional advice about my disability make any difference in my and their legal obligations in this regard?
Next is a question relating to a time before my official disclosure as described above. Can the employer be said to have known about my disability from the point at which one of my colleagues admitted (in his witness statement) to suspecting that I had the condition with which I was later diagnosed and that I identified as my disability? That colleague had made derogatory comments about me with reference to particular aspects of my condition. Can that be considered harassment on the basis of my disability, even though my actual disability disclosure was made after that? The condition is of a life-long nature, so there is no issue of whether I had it even before diagnosis.
I am finding the words "could reasonably have been expected to know" very confusing mostly because if the employer had referred me to occupational health or even a GP at any point, my condition would have been diagnosed and identified as a disability that much sooner. They did not do so, even though they perhaps should have done.
Even before my colleague had identified my condition as above and before the disclosure of my specific disability, I had disclosed to my line manager a related condition which is a symptom of the disability, and which was causing me difficulty in my work, which my colleagues and line manager had already noticed. I informed my line manager at the time that this related condition had been diagnosed (i.e. my disability condition had been misdiagnosed as another related condition) in the past (over one year previously) and that it had caused me difficulty with my work back then as well. I did not mention the word "disability" at that time, because I, as most people, did not have intimate knowledge of the Equality Act back then.
Was that previous disclosure enough to give my employer constructive knowledge of my disability or constructive knowledge that I may be disabled and that further investigation should have been undertaken?
If the employer should have made further inquiries but didn't, what is the point in time at which they could be considered to have constructive knowledge of my disability, at the point that they failed to make further inquiries or some other time?
After the point at which they could be considered to have constructive knowledge of the disability, can the employer be held accountable for any discriminatory or harassing acts perpetrated against me by my colleagues because of aspects of my disability, and for any failures on the employer's part to provide reasonable adjustments when I requested support with my work?*
I don't want an absolute prediction of how the employment tribunal will decide my case (well, actually, that would be nice), but I would just like some kind of feedback as to what I can possibly expect. If my questions fall into grey areas of the law, please tell me this as well, so I will know how to better make my arguments in the tribunal (I am representing myself).
Thanks for reading until the end and sorry this is so long.
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