The rail regulator is being urged to launch an investigation into claims that Southern Railway cancelled trains, blaming staff shortages, when drivers and guards were available to work.

Union leaders accused the company of "deliberate sabotage" and called for action by the Office of Rail and Road (ORR ).

Southern, which strongly denied the allegation, is taking a legal case to the Court of Appeal on Monday in a bid to stop strikes by drivers this week and in the new year which will halt all its services.

Union officials claimed that a number of trains from Eastbourne were cancelled throughout the day on Saturday, even though drivers were available.

Aslef official Graham Morris told the Press Association: "Southern is deliberately sabotaging the service to strengthen its argument in court by suggesting that Aslef is responsible for the cancellations.

"Drivers and other crew were sitting around in Eastbourne available to work."

A Southern spokesman said: "This is absolute fabricated nonsense. It is the unjustified industrial action by the union which is causing disruption for passengers.

"We are trying to provide the best possible service under very challenging circumstances. If anyone is sabotaging services it's the union."

Mick Cash, general secretary of the Rail, Maritime and Transport union said: "Southern have moved from a position of just peddling lies to one of deliberate sabotage of services just to give them another excuse to stick the boot into their own staff.

"That is a disgraceful and cynical development that proves that the company could not give two hoots about the travelling public, running a safe and reliable rail service or resolving the current dispute.

"Throughout the past year the Office of Rail and Road, supposedly an independent regulator, have either sat on their hands or sided with Southern Rail.

"It is now time for the ORR to get off their backsides and thoroughly investigate this scandal on Britain's biggest rail franchise."

One rail worker in Eastbourne said: "There is a crew room full of frustrated drivers and guards who are puzzled as to why the company would create this disruption and blame it on us."

Aslef officials are due to meet the ORR on Monday to explain its opposition to driver-only trains.

The RMT is embroiled in a separate dispute over changes to the role of conductors.

Southern's services have been disrupted for months because of industrial action, staff shortages and other problems.