MENUMENU
  • About us
    • Quality commitment
      • Our mission, vision and values
      • Social value
      • Environmental Commitment
      • Carbon Reduction Plan
      • Diversity & Inclusion
      • Modern Slavery and Human Trafficking Statement
    • Awards
      • Chambers UK Guide and the Legal 500
    • Our history
      • Historical staff pension schemes
    • SRA
      • Price transparency - ET claims
      • Price transparency - probate
    • Cookies and privacy
      • Information governance for data controllers
    • Legal notice
  • Sectors
    • NHS
      • NHS SubCos
      • NHS legal services procurement frameworks
    • Healthcare practitioners
      • GPs
      • GP partnership agreements
      • GP mergers and acquisitions
      • GP premises
      • Primary Care Networks
      • Dentists
      • Private practitioners and consultants
    • Regulatory and crime
      • Regulatory defence
      • Criminal defence
      • Coroners & Inquests
      • Indemnifiers and insurers
      • Clinical negligence
    • Social care
      • Fundamental standards of care
      • CQC advice for health & social care providers
      • Legal resources for social care providers
    • Charities and social enterprise
      • Academies
      • Independent schools
      • Nurseries
      • Social enterprise
      • Trustee training for boards of charities and other not-for-profit organisations
    • Private sector health
  • Services
    • Commercial
      • Buying and selling professional practices
      • Charities and trading
      • Charity mergers
      • Commercial dispute resolution
      • Competition law
      • Constructions and projects
      • Dentists
      • General practitioners
      • Governance and constitutional
      • GP partnership agreements
      • GP mergers and acquisitions
      • Healthcare commissioning
      • Healthcare startups
      • Integrated Care Resource Centre
      • Intellectual property
      • NHS SubCos
      • Primary Care Networks
      • Public procurement
      • Public procurement legal resources
      • Setting up GP federations
      • Start-ups for charities and CICs
    • Health and social care
      • Care standards
      • Cell and gene therapy
      • Clinical governance
      • Clinical negligence
      • CQC
      • Dentist Performers List issues
      • GDPR
      • Health and safety
      • Information Law and Data Protection
      • Inquests
      • Mental health
      • Policies and procedures
      • Prison healthcare
      • Social care
      • The Court of Protection
    • Regulatory and crime
      • Regulatory defence
      • Criminal defence
      • Coroners & Inquests
      • GDC investigations
      • GMC investigations
      • NMC investigations
      • HCPC investigations
      • GOsC investigations
      • Defending alleged sexual offences
      • Pharmacy law
      • Defending fraud allegations
      • Performers List issues
      • Bribery defence
      • Judicial review
      • Gross negligence manslaughter
      • Police officer representation
      • Sport
    • Commercial real estate
      • Charity property
      • Construction and projects
      • Corporate support
      • Disposals and acquisitions
      • Environment and sustainability
      • Estate investment and management
      • Healthcare site redevelopments
      • Landlord and tenant
      • GP premises
      • Jointly funded and multi-stakeholder developments
      • Property dispute resolution
      • Secured lending and property finance
      • Strategic estates development
      • Town and country planning
    • Employment
      • Employment law
      • Employment blog
    • Private client
      • Wills and tax planning
      • Probate administration
      • Contested estates
      • Trusts
      • Financial and welfare arrangements
  • People
  • News
  • Insights & events
    • Subscribe to our mailing list
    • Free public procurement resources
    • Register for our webinars and events
    • Free legal resources for GPs
    • On demand webinars
    • Free legal resources for social care providers
    • Publications
    • Employment blog
    • Podcasts
    • Did You Know? Series
    • Inquests handbook: a guide for witnesses
  • Careers
    • Contact HR
    • Vacancies
    • Training contracts
    • Graduate solicitor apprenticeships
    • Career development
    • Working at Hempsons
      • Benefits package
      • Day in the life of…
  • Contact us
    • London
    • Harrogate
    • Manchester
    • Newcastle
    • Southampton
    • Join us
    • Advice lines
    • Client testimonials
    • Complaints
  • Home
  • News articles
  • Can a disability account for bad behaviour?
10 October 2018

Can a disability account for bad behaviour?

A recent Employment Tribunal decision serves as a timely reminder that where conduct issues are said to arise from an underlying mental health condition, employers should be cautious of departing from medical opinion.

Facts

Ms Wheeley was a long-standing employee of University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust and held a senior management role. She had suffered from recurring periods of depression, managed by medication, since she was a teenager but this had not led to any absences from work. The Trust was unaware of any mental health concerns until the disciplinary process at the heart of this case was underway.

Ms Wheeley had a clean disciplinary record but she had been a challenging employee. Her behaviour was difficult and inappropriate at times, such as banging her fists on the table or walking out of meetings. However, this behaviour was not formally addressed by the Trust and there was no suggestion that it was related to her health.

In May 2015 Ms Wheeley learned that her department was to be restructured and she made clear her hopes for a promotion. Following the restructure, she was unhappy about a number of matters, including that she was not promoted, and she sent an email to the medical director in which she refused to report to a new line manager. She also threatened to write to her team “informing them that the announced change would not be happening and why”. She was given an express management instruction not to do so.

Despite this instruction, Ms Wheeley later responded to a group email which included members of her team and the Trust’s executive directors stating that she had not been aware that communication about the restructure would be sent and that she was “considering her position”.

Ms Wheeley was suspended for responding angrily, failing to follow a management instruction and communicating and acting inappropriately. An investigation commenced, following which an additional allegation was added because Ms Wheeley went to the medical director’s house outside working hours in an attempt to discuss the issues. Ms Wheeley accepted she should not have done so and apologised, but largely sought to justify her other actions throughout the course of the investigation. She also reported symptoms of stress and depression and the disciplinary hearing was postponed because she was deemed unfit to attend.

Ms Wheeley remained unrepentant and issued a lengthy grievance. She also changed her trade union representative, at which point concerns about her mental health were raised. Ms Wheeley was referred to Occupational Health, who subsequently referred her to a psychiatrist. The psychiatrist was unable to reach a definitive conclusion about whether or not Ms Wheeley had bipolar disorder but he felt it was “certainly possible”.

Shortly after the grievance was heard (her complaints were rejected), Ms Wheeley made a private appointment with another consultant psychiatrist, who felt that a bipolar diagnosis was not supported. Occupational Health later arranged a referral to an independent psychiatrist, Professor Oyebode.

Professor Oyebode reported that Ms Wheeley presented with the cardinal features of bipolar disorder and took the view that there was clear evidence of periods of depression and mania. He reported that it is well recognised, in manic phases, that people can exhibit behaviours that are out of character and which demonstrate irritability, hostility, recklessness and poor judgement. He referenced Ms Wheeley’s threatening and insubordinate emails and said she regretted these behaviours and considered them to be out of character. Professor Oyebode’s opinion was that Ms Wheeley was in a manic phase during the period in question and that her behaviour, which formed the basis of the disciplinary allegations against her, was compromised by severe mental illness.

The Trust’s disciplinary panel considered this opinion in the context of mitigation but was not convinced that Ms Wheeley’s behaviour had been out of character, due to the history of her challenging behaviour. The allegations were therefore upheld and Ms Wheeley was dismissed for gross misconduct.

Employment Tribunal

She brought a claim for unfair dismissal and discrimination arising from disability in the Employment Tribunal. The ET found that absent any mitigation, Ms Wheeley’s behaviours amounted to “gross insubordination on a grand scale”. It also found that notwithstanding her long service and clean disciplinary record, dismissal would ordinarily have been well within the band of reasonable responses.

However, the ET went on to find that the disciplinary panel had departed from the medical opinion of Professor Oyebode by essentially finding that Ms Wheeley’s mental health did not substantially cause or exacerbate her misconduct, since the behaviours were not seen to be out of character. The Trust had reached this conclusion without raising further questions with Professor Oyebode and it could not produce cogent evidence before the ET that Ms Wheeley’s mental health had played no more than a trivial part in the events under consideration. The ET therefore determined that her condition did in fact have a significant impact on her actions, which arose in consequence of her disability.

The ET went on to consider the Trust’s justification for its actions and agreed that its aims had been legitimate. However, it found that summary dismissal had not been a proportionate response in circumstances where the Trust had simply rejected a key medical finding that Ms Wheeley’s actions were compromised by severe mental illness. This had been unreasonable and the ET concluded that no reasonable employer would have done so.

Ms Wheeley therefore succeeded in her claim, but her compensation was reduced by 25 per cent to reflect her contributory conduct.

Continue reading other newsbrief articles:

Supreme Court judgment on withdrawing clinically assisted nutrition and hydration, Fit and proper persons requirement, Summary of the Dr Bawa-Garba case, Big Data, Health Data, Inadequate record keeping invalidates contract award

Sectors

NHS

Services

Employment law
What next?
Find a lawyer Get in touch
  • Events
  • Services
  • Sectors
follow us on twitter follow us on linkedin
Hempsons LLP © 2025. All rights reserved.
Hempsons LLP is a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales under registered number OC441646. Registered office Third Floor, 3 Dorset Rise, London EC4Y 8EN. VAT registration number 238 5071 61.
Hempsons LLP is registered with the Law Society of England & Wales and is authorised and regulated by the Solicitors Regulation Authority No 8000811.

Hempsons LLP works in accordance with the professional rules which can be viewed here.

Staff email login

Send message

    Name (required)

    Email (required)

    Phone number

    Organisation

    Subject

    Message

    Our Spring Sale Has Started

    You can see how this popup was set up in our step-by-step guide: https://wppopupmaker.com/guides/auto-opening-announcement-popups/

    Download Form

      Click here to download your file.