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Young tech boss sues company after they wouldn't let him travel first class to help his 'fear of flying'

تكنولوجيا
Daily Mail
2026/06/11 - 09:56 501 مشاهدة
By CLAIRE DUFFIN, SENIOR REPORTER Published: 10:55, 11 June 2026 | Updated: 10:56, 11 June 2026 A young tech CEO quit and sued a laser company for discrimination - claiming they wouldn't let him fly first class to help his 'fear of flying'. Ben Szutor, who earned £110,000 a year, upgraded himself to first class when making international business trips without telling the company's investors, a tribunal heard. The 31-year-old CEO - who was recognised by Forbes on their '30 under 30' list - wanted 'more space and seating that reclines', it was heard. He was later questioned about why he needed upgraded flights because the company's policy required a medical reasoning. Mr Szutor eventually got a doctor to rubber-stamp the expenditure because his 'fear of flying' allegedly gave him 'migraines' and 'panic attacks'. But he later quit the company complaining of age and disability discrimination accusing the board of putting him 'under tremendous amounts of stress' and 'forcing' him to go through an 'unnecessary occupational health examination to prove my conditions'. He took legal action but his claims were dismissed at an Edinburgh employment tribunal. Ben Szutor, 31, who earned £110,000 a year, upgraded himself to first class, a tribunal heard Mr Szutor joined Skylark Lasers Limited in February 2020 as a Laser Engineer after graduating from Heriot-Watt University in Edinburgh. The Hungarian-born engineer boasts on his LinkedIn that he was 'recognised in Forbes 30 Under 30 for contributions to photonics and quantum technologies'. Edinburgh-based Skylark Lasers is a leading designer and manufacturer of specialised UV lasers, founded in 2013. Less than two years after joining the company, in January 2023, he was appointed as Chief Technical Officer and then in June was promoted to CEO. Though a 'highly motivated and skilled engineer', Mr Szutor had 'no prior experience' of being a CEO so training was offered by the company to get him up to scratch, the tribunal heard.  The engineer's salary was increased to £110,000 with a £40,000 bonus on the table if he could hit revenue targets and budget effectively. However he struggled to meet those targets and the company was operating at a loss, the tribunal heard.  Despite the difficult financial situation, he upgraded himself to business class and first class on flights to Japan and China without discussing it with his colleagues, it was alleged.  In April 2024, Paul Atkinson, a partner at Par Equity - Skylark's financial backers - raised his concerns about the CEO's indulgences at meeting.  After the meeting, Mr Szutor emailed Mr Atkinson regarding his concerns and explaining why he needed more space.  He wrote: 'As I said, I have a fear of flying and I get very ill on long-haul flights. 'I still flew out to San Francisco three times for business and never even considered upgrading myself as the business could not afford it. 'I was also not short on time, so I could afford to just feel nauseous for a day or two when flying. 'This year I've flown on three long-haul flights within three months over weekends with an extreme amount of work on my shoulders. 'I filled out 12 appraisal documents, submitted a grant proposal and prepared a board pack among many other things on these flights, which I couldn't have done any other way.'  He said on a flight to China, upgrading from business to first class made the flight cheaper and on a flight to Tokyo the pricing was similar if not lower. He concluded: 'I understand your points, and given my situation with the board I should have at least notified you.' But at a meeting in May 2024 the Chair of Par Equity's board Ewan McLellan again raised concerns about Mr Szutor's travel arrangements. He was said to be 'anxious about the impression which this would give to investors.' Mr Szutor replied it was because of a medical issue, which was allowed under company policy, but he did not give any further information on what that issue was. In July 2024, responding to 'significant turmoil' among the board of directors, Mr Szutor sent another email to Mr Atkinson addressing the concerns on his upgraded flights. He said: 'Accusations were made for misuse of funds, flying on higher class to business meetings. 'The extra cost of these were £5,800, yet these travels secured the company over £180,000 of sales. 'As I said to you, I decided to fly on higher class for medical reasons, which I will be able to prove in due course.' Later that month, Mr Szutor emailed the board that he would be travelling to Taiwan and Hong Kong with another colleague for work. Mr McLellan replied that while the trips were important, 'the company policy is economy class travel and this policy will not be changing while we are relying on investor funds to support the business'. Mr Szutor replied: 'As discussed previously, due to an existing medical condition, I am unable to fly long-haul without meeting certain requirements… 'Please let me know if you and the board are unable to support my medical needs to attend these meetings.' To this, Mr McLellan repeated the company policy, and Mr Szutor accused him of a 'complete disregard of his medical needs'. A meeting was organised for August 2024 to discuss these issues and have a capability review for Mr Szutor as CEO. At this meeting, Mr Szutor made a presentation about the trips, which the board agreed were 'essential', and even said they were 'happy' for him to travel business class - provided he presented his medical reasons to HR. The board showed Mr Szutor the company policy that stated this needed to be done, but he was sceptical and thought it could have been 'edited'. In October 2024, an occupational health physician concluded after a meeting with the CEO that 'premium flight travel may be deemed a reasonable adjustment' in 'preventing migraines' and 'panic attacks'. However, just a month later Mr Szutor confirmed he would be resigning from the company. He said of the board: 'They have repeatedly burdened me with HR decisions concerning my employment during my international travels,' he said.  The former CEO took the company to an employment tribunal in Edinburgh, alleging that he had been unfairly dismissed and discriminated against on the grounds of age and disability. However Employment Judge Murdo MacLeod KC dismissed the claims, finding that he was permitted to travel first class and that the board had merely asked for medical reasoning. The judge concluded: 'He was, on each occasion, permitted to travel first or business class. 'The evidence does not prove that the [policy] was applied to [Mr Szutor] in the manner alleged. 'They [the board] wanted to obtain medical evidence to support his contention that travelling other than by first or business class air travel was detrimental to his health. 'In our judgement, the [board] did permit [him] to travel first or business class on long-haul flights, and in particular the trip to China. 'With regard to the USA trip in October 2024, [Mr Szutor] undertook the booking for that trip himself, and the [board] was unaware as to the class of travel he booked. 'In our judgement, it is not demonstrated that the [board] required [him] to travel economy class on that trip, and accordingly it cannot be said that the [board] failed to make such an adjustment. 'Mr McLellan's evidence was that he assumed that [Mr Szutor] had booked the flight business class. 'We accepted that [he] was not forced to travel economy class by the [board]. [His] claim that the [board] failed to make reasonable adjustments must therefore fail, and it is dismissed.' No comments have so far been submitted. Why not be the first to send us your thoughts, or debate this issue live on our message boards. By posting your comment you agree to our house rules. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to MailOnline as usual. Do you want to automatically post your MailOnline comments to your Facebook Timeline? Your comment will be posted to MailOnline as usual We will automatically post your comment and a link to the news story to your Facebook timeline at the same time it is posted on MailOnline. To do this we will link your MailOnline account with your Facebook account. We’ll ask you to confirm this for your first post to Facebook. 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