Make a Tribunal claim for age based harassment
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How to make a Tribunal claim
You can make a Tribunal claim at no cost to the Employment Tribunal, using the ET1 form. Before you submit your claim, you must contact ACAS, the public body who can help to resolve your claim through Early Conciliation. You can read more about this and how to fill in your claim form here.
This guide will walk you through making an age based harassment claim.
How to complete Section 8.2 of the ET1 form
The ET1 form will ask in section 8.2 for the background and details of your claim. The best way to approach this is to write your Particulars of Claim (called a Paper Apart if you are in Scotland). This is where you lay out what happened, what legal claims you’d like to make and your reasoning.
This section is the heart of your Tribunal claim and is very important and difficult to change later on, so it’s worth spending some time to make sure it’s clear.
How to create your particulars of claim:
- Write your ET1 section 8.2
You’ll normally do this by creating a separate document called the Particulars of Claim (or Paper Apart in Scotland). This sets out the background and details of your claim. Valla offers step-by-step guidance to help you make sure your claims are clear and laid out in the right way.
- Convert the file to Rich Text Format (RTF)
Convert your file to RTF and attach it to the online ET1 form. If you’re not sure how to do this, you can purchase Valla’s Peace of Mind Check and we will sort this out for you.
- Submit your ET1 form
Wait for the Tribunal to acknowledge your claim. They will also send a copy to the Respondent, who will have 28 days to respond.
Specific things to consider in your age based harassment claim
Laying out your claim
When you are claiming harassment based on age at Tribunal, you want to clearly argue that you have been subjected to unwanted conduct related to age (whether or not you are in that age group yourself). This needs to have the purpose or effect of violating your dignity or creating an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment for you.
Some examples of harassment related to age are:
- A 62-year-old works as a fashion magazine writer and has 40 years’ experience. They have also recently won a prestigious award for their online work. However, their manager often tells them they are “behind the times” and that the magazine needs to recruit more “millennials and Gen Z”.
- A team leader is talking at a team meeting about a new computer system that is going to be introduced. The team leader keeps making comments about the oldest team member, saying that they might need help from some of the younger employees to get used to the new system, and that they might be a bit slow on the uptake.
- An older colleague makes jokes about an 18-year-old employee’s age.
With age harassment, your employer can be liable for the acts of its employees, as well as the employees being personally responsible.
Proving your claim
You don’t need to attach evidence to a Tribunal ET1 claim, but it’s a good idea to back up your claims by mentioning the evidence you intend to use. For harassment on the basis of age claims, people typically refer to evidence such as text messages, emails, letters, meeting notes and witness evidence.
What you can ask for in your harassment based on age claim
If you’re successful in a Tribunal claim, you will be awarded a “remedy”. This mainly includes financial compensation, like loss of earnings. It can also include some non-financial remedies too.
Common remedies people ask for at Tribunal
Some of the key remedies you can ask for at Tribunal are:
- The money you have lost from being out of work, or working in a lower-paid job.
- The money that you expect to lose in the future from being out of work, or working in a lower-paid job.
- Wages that you are owed, including holiday pay and notice pay.
Discrimination-specific remedies
As well as the common remedies that you can ask for, discrimination-specific claims also have the option to include an “injury to feelings” remedy. This is compensation which you can be awarded when you have been hurt or distressed because you have been discriminated against.
Injury to feelings is generally awarded within one of three “Vento bands” depending on severity:
- for less serious cases - £1,200 to £11,700
- for more serious cases - £11,700 to £35,200
- for the most serious cases - £35,200 to £58,700
For example, Mina was subjected to age-related and sexual harassment. This came after a number of comments and actions over a period of time, including when her boss told her she was thick and old because she did not have an iCloud account. She was awarded a sum of £8,000, plus interest, in compensation for injury to feelings. She was also successful in a number of other claims, some of which failed and some of which she won - including a successful claim for unfair dismissal.
Real age harassment cases you can learn from
Summary: a trainee Administrative Officer was much older than the other trainees in her cohort, and was the only non-white trainee. Some of the other trainees made fun of her and made nasty remarks.
Total award: £233,635.84
Outcome: the Tribunal found that the treatment of her was harassment related to her age and race. As well as her claims for age and race harassment, she was successful in claims for direct age and race discrimination, and victimisation. She also made complaints of sex discrimination, which were not successful.
Summary: an Estate Administrator, who was 24 years old, was successful in two allegations of age harassment. The first successful allegation related to a colleague saying she "did not find her beautiful at all and did not see what men saw in her". The other successful allegation related to her colleague's comment that she hoped her having a new baby helped her to become a "better person".
Total award: £13,860
Outcome: the Tribunal accepted that these comments were related to her working friendship with an older male colleague, and therefore were related to age. Her other age harassment claims and unfair dismissal claim were not successful.
Further reading
- Equality Act 2010 section 26
- Equality Act 2010 section 40
- Employment Statutory Code of Practice (pages 92-98)
Related Tribunal claims
If you’ve faced racial harassment at work, there are potentially a number of other discrimination claims that could apply to you:
- Direct discrimination - where you’ve been treated badly because of your age.
- Victimisation - where you’ve been treated badly because you made or helped with an age discrimination complaint.
- Indirect discrimination - where a company policy or practice negatively affects people of a certain age group.
- Sexual harassment - where you have experienced unwanted conduct of a sexual nature, or been treated less favourably because you have either submitted to or rejected sexual harassment, or harassment related to sex or gender reassignment.
- Failure to make reasonable adjustments (note that this only applies to disability) - where your employer has failed to make a reasonable change to help you to do your job, or apply for a job, to reduce the impact of your disability.
- Discrimination arising from disability (note that this only applies to disability) - where you’ve been treated unfairly because of something connected to your disability rather than the disability itself.
You may also be able to make a claim for unfair dismissal, constructive dismissal or another type of employment law. You can download your free Action Toolkit to find out more.