Pub worker loses discrimination claim after being laughed at by boss after slipping on oil and falling

In the case of Mr K S Perera v Stonegate Pub Company Ltd a worker at The George pub in Harrow was laughed at by his boss when he slipped over on a patch of oil in the kitchen. He then sued his employer for racial and religious harassment, after being sacked from the pub in October 2022 over an unrelated matter, following his failure to produce documentation for his proof of right to work in the UK.

In the case of Mr K S Perera v Stonegate Pub Company Ltd a worker at The George pub in Harrow was laughed at by his boss when he slipped over on a patch of oil in the kitchen. He then sued his employer for racial and religious harassment, after being sacked from the pub in October 2022 over an unrelated matter, following his failure to produce documentation for his proof of right to work in the UK.

Mr Perera claimed that his boss’ laughter at his tumble amounted to solid evidence of harassment. But the claims were dismissed, with employment judge David Maxwell saying the “slapstick element” of someone falling over was likely to cause laughter. Mr Perera also alleged that the oil was put there on purpose by his boss, which the judge branded “ridiculous”.

The Judge wrote: “We accept that Mr Bandara laughed when the [Mr Perera] slipped and fell over. Whilst it might be tempting to hope that one colleague would only ever react in a sympathetic way towards the misfortune of another, common experience suggests this is not always the case.

“The slapstick element of a fall may prompt laughter. We do not find, as Mr Perera suggested that Mr Bandara put oil on the floor deliberately to cause this fall. The suggestion is a ridiculous one and without any evidence whatsoever. Unfortunately, it appears to us, the claimant (Mr Perera) has a tendency to jump to conclusions when he encounters misfortune. Furthermore, the claimant’s allegation was undermined his own evidence, which was to the effect that the location where he fell was one prone to spillages.”

The tribunal, held in Watford, heard that Mr Perera started working at the pub in January 2020 as a member of the kitchen team, and had the fall in March. The panel concluded that the laughter had nothing to do with Mr Perera’s race or religion.

The hourly rate offered to the Claimant was £8.31, being the national minimum wage rate at this time. The panel did rule in Mr Perera’s favour regarding unlawful deductions of wages and awarded him £1,426.11. He was also given £908.91 for the pub’s “abysmal” paperwork after he was not given  written particulars of employment.

Read more

Latest News

Read More

Learning velocity: The metric HR isn’t measuring

20 August 2025

Resilience

19 August 2025

95% of cyber-attacks exploit human error. CISOs recognise this as the biggest threat, yet breaches persist. Is training enough – and are organisations guilty of...

Career Development

19 August 2025

Working in global markets not only promises a desirable competitive advantage for organizations but also a material career boost to leaders who take the plunge...

Newsletter

Receive the latest HR news and strategic content

Please note, as per the GDPR Legislation, we need to ensure you are ‘Opted In’ to receive updates from ‘theHRDIRECTOR’. We will NEVER sell, rent, share or give away your data to third parties. We only use it to send information about our products and updates within the HR space To see our Privacy Policy – click here

Latest HR Jobs

UCL – Human Resources Salary: £43,981 to £52,586 This provides summary information and comment on the subject areas covered. Where employment tribunal and appellate court

University of Oxford – NDM HR Centres of Excellence, located within the Centre for Human GeneticsSalary: £31,459 to £36,616 per annum (pro rata) : Grade

University of Cambridge – Department of Clinical NeurosciencesSalary: £33,951 to £39,906 This provides summary information and comment on the subject areas covered. Where employment tribunal

University of Oxford – HR Centres of Excellence based within the Centre for Human GeneticsSalary: £34,982 to £40,855 per annum (pro rata). Grade 6 This

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE

Read the latest digital issue of theHRDIRECTOR for FREE