LRD guides and handbook June 2016

Law at Work 2016

Chapter 10

The compensatory award 


[ch 10: pages 354-355]

The compensatory award (section 123, ERA 96), paid on top of the basic award, is intended to cover financial losses resulting from the dismissal. The tribunal has a discretion to award an amount it considers “just and equitable”. However, it cannot award compensation beyond the financial loss actually caused by the dismissal (Dunnachie v Kingston upon Hull City Council [2005] ICR 1052).


It is not possible to claim compensation for injury to feelings or personal (psychiatric) injury in unfair dismissal cases, no matter how bad the employer’s behaviour (Dunnachie v Kingston upon Hull City Council [2004] IRLR 727). The position is different in a claim for discriminatory dismissal (see Chapter 7).


A claimant can only recover losses that result from the employer’s actions. For example, a hospital consultant was not entitled to recover earnings from external private work, because these were not earnings he was entitled to under his contract with the NHS Trust. This remains the case even if the extra earnings were dependent on the existence of the lost job (Schlesinger v Swindon & Marlborough NHS Trust EAT/0072/04).