Hi all,
I am considering pursuing a victimisation claim. Essentially, I served a letter before claim alleging contraventions of the Equality Act 2010 on a party (which, for the avoidance of doubt, are not a firm of solicitors) by way of e-mail.
The party in question then demanded I service my letter before claim in the post, thus subjecting me a detriment, particularly as I suffer from debilitating health problems.
I understand there is no need to prove any motivation or intent on the part of the alleged victimiser in order to establish liability. A person can apply a detriment to another without deliberately, intentionally and/or maliciously doing so. Indeed, the perpetrator could be totally unaware that the reason he/she subjected the person to the detriment is because of their protected act. (See Nagarajan v London Regional Transport).
Is there a cause for action here?
Sincere thanks for any input.
I am considering pursuing a victimisation claim. Essentially, I served a letter before claim alleging contraventions of the Equality Act 2010 on a party (which, for the avoidance of doubt, are not a firm of solicitors) by way of e-mail.
The party in question then demanded I service my letter before claim in the post, thus subjecting me a detriment, particularly as I suffer from debilitating health problems.
I understand there is no need to prove any motivation or intent on the part of the alleged victimiser in order to establish liability. A person can apply a detriment to another without deliberately, intentionally and/or maliciously doing so. Indeed, the perpetrator could be totally unaware that the reason he/she subjected the person to the detriment is because of their protected act. (See Nagarajan v London Regional Transport).
Is there a cause for action here?
Sincere thanks for any input.
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