Gill and Coote v El Vino Co Ltd
Gill and Coote v El Vino Co Ltd | |
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Sir Roger Ormrod | |
Keywords | |
Sex discrimination |
Gill and Coote v El Vino Co Ltd was a case heard in the
Solicitor Tess Gill and journalist Anna Coote instigated legal action against El Vino at the
The case was appealed and was heard in November 1982. El Vino was represented by
Background
Women who sought to break the rule were shouted at by the bar's manager or else banned from the premises. El Vino's owner Frank Bower, was known to have conservative views about women in the bar and also imposed a strict dress code of jacket, shirt and tie for male customers. The bar defended the policy as upholding the "old-fashioned ideas of chivalry".[1] Women comprised around 15 per cent of the bar's customers.[4]
In summer 1970 a group of female journalists had walked into the bar and demanded to be served but they were ejected and the protest mocked by some men in the newspaper industry as "a storm in a sherry glass". Morning Star photographer Sheila Gray tried to get served at the bar on the day the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 came into force on 29 December 1975.[1] She was refused and brought a case against El Vino at the Westminster County Court, supported by the Equal Opportunities Commission, a statutory body set up by the act and required, under section 75 of it, to provide legal advice to complainants.[1][5]
The case was decided against Gray in 1978. The court's Judge Ruttle cited a judgment by Lord Denning in an appeal case in which Denning stated that it was wrong for the act to obliterate all differences between men and women or to remove chivalry shown by men to women. By 1980 El Vino had won three legal challenges brought against it under the Sex Discrimination Act.[1]
Attempted injunction
The
The women applied for an injunction against El Vino at the
County Court case
A formal civil case was brought against El Vino under article 29 of the Sex Discrimination Act concerning "less favourable treatment in the provision of services to women".[8] Gill and Coote were represented pro bono by the solicitors Seifert, Sedley and Company whose Michael Seifert also acted as a witness in the case.[9] The case was heard by Ranking at the Mayor's and City of London Court and was decided on 3 July 1981.[8]
In a
Gill and Coote stated their intention of appealing the case to higher courts, potentially as far as the House of Lords which was then the nation's highest appellate court.[8] Mitchell described the use of public funds, via the Equal Opportunities Commission, to provide advice on the case as "monstrous".[5]
Court of Appeal case
Anthony Lester QC served as advisor to the Equal Opportunities Commission during this period. He considered the Gill and Coote case unlikely to succeed and that it raised no important matter of principles, so advised the Commission not to proceed with an appeal. The Commission decided to act against this advice and provided funding for the case.[11]
The case came before the
Tabachnik argued that the policy benefitted women and that the alternative, of women standing in the bar, was less favourable.[13] Tabachnik stated that women in the bar would be subject to "pushing and jostling", which he described as like being on a rush hour train.[1] Ormrod then asked Tabachnik: "are you saying it is a sexual characteristic to enjoy being crushed at the bar?".[3] Tabachnik also stated that women at the bar would be embarrassing for staff who might have to "procure wine from floor level through the legs of a lady who happens to be standing by the wine racks". Tabachnik's summing-up lasted for three-and-a-quarter hours.[14]
The judges deliberated for only five minutes before finding in favour of Gill and Coote.[15] Griffiths said that the bar's position as one of the "gossip shops of Fleet Street" meant that women, confined to tables in a back room, were disadvantaged, being unable to pick up the gossip of the day.[1] He thought that women were "refused facilities that are accorded to men, and the only question that remains is: is she being treated less favourably than men? I think that permits of only one answer: of course she is".[16] Eveleigh stated that "in this case a woman was denied certain things which a man could have. She was denied the opportunity to drink where others drank, and to mix with others who were drinking in that area. She was denied a flexibility of choice. There might be only one or two seats vacant at a table and she might have to wait a considerable time before being joined by companions with whom she wished to converse. She might prefer to stand and talk but she could not do so if she was obliged to sit at a table where there was no room for all in the group".[3] It was noted that the court determined that women were being discriminated against because they were not offered a choice of how they were served, which was available to men.[13]
El Vino was ordered to pay legal costs, estimated at £8,000–9,000, and refused leave to appeal to the House of Lords.[15][12]
Aftermath
On the night of the decision there was a rush of women to the bar at El Vino to celebrate victory. One observer noted "there are more women at the bar than men - it's chaos".[1] The bar staff served the first woman there, Press Association journalist Heather Mills, but then refused to serve any other women; they were ignored in favour of men at the bar.[15][2] Around an hour after opening the bar staff began to serve other women.[15] Coote and Gill arrived at the bar but were refused service and were barred from the premises by the manager.[1] They protested against this on the pavement outside.[15] El Vino stated that they would serve any woman who "genuinely wanted to drink at the bar" but not those who were just making a "feminist point".[17] The ban against Coote and Gill entering the premises was lifted by 16 November, though bar staff refused to serve them drinks, claiming it was a landlord's right to do so, without reason, under common law. Seifert wrote to El Vino warning of potential further legal action if they were not served.[18]
Gill and Coote v El Vino Co Ltd demonstrated that cases brought under the Sex Discrimination Act could act effectively to end discrimination.
References
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Rodrigues, Jason (15 November 2012). "30 years ago today: El Vino lifted ban on women standing with male colleagues at bar". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f Baksi, Catherine (16 November 2017). "Banning women from bar 'regrettable' says manager of infamous Fleet Street watering hole". Legal Hackette's Brief. 16 November 2017. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
- ^ a b c d "Women Win Right to Stand, Sip at Bar". Edmonton Journal. 10 November 1982. p. 76.
- ^ "No Room at the Bar for Women". Birmingham Evening Mail. 16 July 1981. p. 20.
- ^ a b c "Cash Poser for El Vino Appeal". Daily Telegraph. 18 July 1981. p. 8.
- ^ Nicholson, David (30 June 1981). "Women renew fight over El Vino bar". The Times. p. 4.
- ^ "Appeal Against Wine Bar Sex Rule Fails". The Guardian. 4 March 1981. p. 5.
- ^ a b c d Nicholson, David (16 July 1981). "Court blow to wine bar feminists". The Times. No. 60981. p. 5.
- ^ Gill, Joe; Gill, Tom (28 February 2018). "Michael Seifert: Communist lawyer extraordinaire (1942-2017)". Morning Star. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
- ^ "El Vino Wins Case - Again". The Guardian. 16 July 1981. p. 3.
- ^ "Matter of Opinion". The Times. No. 61410. 9 December 1982. p. 10.
- ^ a b Perera, Shyama (9 November 1982). "Sour Grapes Verdict at El Vino". The Guardian. p. 1.
- ^ .
- ^ "Women Hope for Call to the Bar at Last". Daily Telegraph. 4 July 1981. p. 17.
- ^ a b c d e "Time, ladies, please, as a last bastion of male chauvinism falls". The Times. No. 61384. 9 November 1982. p. 3.
- ^ Brenda Hale, Baroness Hale of Richmond. "Women in law – the next 100 years BACFI Denning Lecture 2019" (PDF). Retrieved 8 September 2022.
- ^ Woolfson, Amy (6 March 2015). "Three cases that have defined women's rights in the UK and beyond". The Lawyer. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
- ^ "El Vino's Lifts Ban on Women". The Guardian. 16 November 1982. p. 2.
- ^ Morris, Anne (7 August 2017). "Gill and Another v El Vino Co Ltd [1983]". Women's Legal Landmarks. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
- ^ "El Vino Case 'Guide for Women'". Daily Telegraph. 5 April 1983. p. 8.
Further reading
- Rackley, Erika; Auchmuty, Rosemary (27 December 2018). Women's Legal Landmarks: Celebrating the history of women and law in the UK and Ireland. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 369-. ISBN 978-1-78225-979-4.