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IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
PTA
1998/7831/3
IN
THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON
APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Royal
Courts of Justice
Strand
London
WC2
Tuesday,
25 May 1999
B
e f o r e:
LADY
JUSTICE BUTLER-SLOSS
LORD
JUSTICE PILL
SIR
CHRISTOPHER STAUGHTON
-
- - - - -
SUHAIL
AZIZ
Appellant/Applicant
-
v -
BETHNAL
GREEN CITY CHALLENGE COMPANY LIMITED
Respondent
-
- - - - -
(Computer
Aided Transcript of the Palantype Notes of
Smith
Bernal Reporting Limited, 180 Fleet Street,
London
EC4A 2HD
Tel:
0171 831 3183
Official
Shorthand Writers to the Court)
-
- - - - -
MR
M PANESAR
(Instructed by Commission for Racial Equality, London, SW1E 5EH) appeared on
behalf of the Applicant
MISS
J BROWN
(Instructed by Messrs Bindman & Partners, London, WC1X 8QF) appeared on
behalf of the Respondent
-
- - - - -
J
U D G M E N T
(As
approved by the Court
)
-
- - - - -
©Crown
Copyright
LADY
JUSTICE BUTLER-SLOSS: This is an application for permission to appeal heard
inter partes by direction of Ward LJ. The applicant applied to the Employment
Tribunal on 15 September 1995 alleging racial discrimination in respect of four
unsuccessful applications for employment with the respondent company, the
Bethnal Green City Challenge Company. The applications made by the applicant
were between 1992 and 1995.
Before
the Employment Tribunal there was a hearing over 10 days in October 1997 and
March 1998. Throughout the applicant was represented by counsel and his
application was dismissed. The Employment Tribunal sent their extended reasons
on 24 March 1998. The applicant's case had been supported by the Commission
for Racial Equality, the CRE, which received the Employment Tribunal's reasons
on 26 March, as can be seen by the date stamp of the CRE on the copy which the
court has been provided with. There is a 42 day period for appeal to the
Employment Appeal Tribunal by virtue of the 1993 Rules, rule 3(2) which
specifies:
"The
period within which an appeal to the Appeal Tribunal may be instituted is 42
days from the date on which extended written reasons for the decision or order
of the employment tribunal were sent to the appellant".
The
42 day period in this case expired on 5 May. The notice of appeal was received
by the office of the Employment Appeal Tribunal on 8 May. There was an
application to the Registrar of the Employment Appeal Tribunal to extend the
time for setting down the notice of appeal. On 2 July 1998 the Registrar
refused to extend time. There was an appeal with an oral hearing to the
President of the Employment Appeal Tribunal, Morison J, who dismissed the
appeal having heard the argument of counsel on 3 December 1998.
The
short facts relevant to the application to this court is that the respondent
company was a City Challenge Company established in 1992 for a period of five
years to promote regeneration of the Bethnal Green area. In 1992 the applicant
was short-listed for the application for a chief executive. Although
short-listed, he was not selected. In 1993 he again applied. On that occasion
he was not in the final selection nor was he appointed. In 1994 there was an
application for the job of education and training programme executive. He
again applied for that, but was not appointed. He was short-listed. In 1995
the post of chief executive again became vacant. On this occasion he was not
in the short list and the deputy chief executive was appointed.
The
applicant sought to appeal the decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal, both
in relation to a finding that he had not been racially discriminated against
and also that he should pay part of the costs assessed at £250 occasioned
by a postponement of the hearing in October 1997. The reason for the delay
beyond the permitted 42 days was based upon the insertion in manuscript of the
date of the reasons. Looking at the photocopy which we have it is right to say
that on the final page of the decision, signed by the chairman and the
secretary of the Tribunals, the date of the decision is clearly March 1998 and
the first figure is clearly a 2. It is unclear, and, if I may say so,
manifestly unclear what the second figure is. I would find difficulty in
thinking it was either 4 or 7; I had difficulty in seeing what the figure was
at all. However, it appears that the CRE were quite certain, rather
surprisingly, that this date was 27th and did not refer back to the first page
of the decision which shows the date stamp, Commission of Racial Equality,
Registry, 26 March 1998, which is entirely clear. So the confusion, as
undoubtedly there is, in the manuscript insertion of the date was easily
resolved by the CRE had they looked at the first page. But, according to the
information supplied in correspondence between the CRE and the Employment
Appeal Tribunal, there was no confusion in the minds of those who looked at it
and presumably in the mind of counsel. Consequently they went on the
assumption that it was 27 March and they put it into their diaries, so Mr
Panesar, who has appeared for the applicant before us today, has told us and
they worked to that date. The CRE has pointed out the mistake was not the
fault of the applicant and they do not really consider it was the fault of the
CRE. The application for an extension of time was opposed by the respondents,
who were kept informed of this mistake. The extension required, in order for
the notice of appeal to be set down, is three days.
The
President, after the oral hearing and no doubt having had the benefit, as we
undoubtedly have had today, of admirable and very well expressed arguments from
Mr Panesar on behalf of the applicant, took the view that this was a difficult
case. He was concerned by some matters. He says at page 52 in the final
paragraph of his decision:
"I
have found this an extremely difficult case to reach an adjudication on. I
have had regard to the guidelines set out in the Abdelgefar(sic) decision, to
which my attention was drawn by both parties. The Employment Appeal Tribunal
takes what might be described as a very hard line as to the need for appeals to
be presented in time and it was I think because of that, that in the
Abdelgefar(sic) case it was said that it would be likely to be only in a rare
and exceptional case that time should be extended. I have to say that whilst I
am fully satisfied that I have been provided with an honest and full
explanation for the delay in this case, I cannot say that it excuses the delay
so that I ought to extend time. I weigh the various factors, I am troubled by
the decision itself and the part in particular in relation to demeanour, to
which I have referred but on balance I am not able to say that the merits of
the notice of appeal can be ascertained sufficiently clearly to enable me to
give much weight, if any, to that fact. It is therefore with somewhat heavy
heart that I must dismiss this appeal."
It
is not entirely surprising, in the light of the way that Morison J expressed
himself in the final paragraph of that decision, that Mr Panesar on behalf of
the applicant should seek to appeal to this court. He raises three questions:
Is there a difference of approach between the Court of Appeal and the
Employment Appeal Tribunal on leave to appeal? If there is, is there a
justified decision for that difference of approach? If the difference of
approach is without justification then the decision of Mummery J in the
Abdelghafar
case must be wrong in law and consequently Morison J has followed a decision
which has led him to give too restrictive an interpretation in the exercise of
his discretion whether to allow an extension of time. The third matter is that
therefore this court should say that this appeal should be allowed and the
Employment Appeal Tribunal should reconsider whether or not leave should be
given to set down the notice of appeal out of time.
That
takes us immediately to the decision of the
United
Arab Emirates v Abdelghafar
[1995] ICR 65, a decision of Mummery J as the President of the Employment
Appeal Tribunal. In that case the judge had to look at an extension of time.
He set out the basis upon which the exercise of discretion should be applied in
these applications to extend time and he set out guidelines in which he relied
upon two recent decisions of the Court of Appeal outside the area of employment
law. He said at page 70:
"In
the light of the guidance contained in these authorities it is possible to
state, with reasonable precision, the principles which govern the exercise of
the appeal tribunal's discretion to extend time and to identify those factors
regarded as relevant."
I
summarise his four points: first the grant or refusal of an extension of time
is a matter of judicial discretion and that should be exercised in a principled
manner in accordance with reason and justice. He then referred to the judgment
of Sir Thomas Bingham MR in
Costellow
v Somerset County Council
[1993] 1 WLR 256 in which he set out:
"The
first principle is that the rules of court and the associated rules of
practice, devised in the public interest to promote the expeditious dispatch of
litigation, must be observed. The prescribed time limits are not targets to be
aimed at or expressions of pious hope but requirements to be met ... The second
principle is that a plaintiff should not in the ordinary way be denied an
adjudication of his claim on its merits because of procedural default, unless
the default causes prejudice to his opponent for which an award of costs cannot
compensate."
Then
Mummery J pointed out in the third of his general guidelines that the approach
is modified according to whether it is an interlocutory matter which ought not
to prevent a hearing on the merits or whether it is an appeal where there
should be a more stringent approach. He said that an extension may be refused
in relation to an appeal even though the default in observing the time limit
has not caused prejudice to the party successful in the original proceedings.
Then he said as point 4:
"An
extension of time is an indulgence requested from the court by a party in
default. He is not entitled to an extension. He has no reasonable or
legitimate expectation of receiving one. His only reasonable or legitimate
expectation is that the discretion relevant to his application to extend time
will be exercised judicially in accordance with established principles of what
is fair and reasonable. In those circumstances, it is incumbent on the
applicant for an extension of time to provide the court with a full, honest and
acceptable explanation of the reasons for the delay."
Perhaps
I might just interpose there that it appears to me at least that Morison J
found that the explanation given by the CRE was full and honest but it was not
an acceptable one.
Returning
to the
United
Arab Emirates
'
case, Mummery J at page 71 set out the application of the principles by the
Appeal Tribunal. I extract from that under paragraph 1:
"The
limit will, therefore, only be relaxed in rare and exceptional cases where the
appeal tribunal is satisfied that there is a reason which justifies departure
from the time limit laid down in the Rules."
Then
he dealt with the fact that if there is a full and honest explanation and a
good excuse the extension of time may be granted. He then set out the various
excuses that may be given. He said under 3:
"If
an explanation for the delay is offered, other factors may come into play in
the exercise of the discretion."
He
did not give an exhaustive list. He said:
"The
tribunal will look at the length of the delay which has occurred, though it may
refuse to grant an extension even where the delay is very short. Extensions
have been refused, even where the notice of appeal was served only one day out
of time."
That
was a decision of Popplewell J in
Duke
v Prospect Training Services Ltd
[1889] IRLR 198. Interestingly, that case was not appealed. Mummery J in
United
Arab Emirates
then said, and it is something to be remembered by those who regularly deal
with the Employment Appeal Tribunal.
"Parties
who have decided to appeal are also strongly advised not to leave service of
the notice of appeal until the last few days of the 42-day period. If they do,
they run the risk of delay in the delivery of post or of the misdirection of
mail [or getting the date wrong]. That risk can be avoided by service of the
notice of appeal well within the period. The merits of the appeal may be
relevant, but are usually of little weight. It is not appropriate on an
application for leave to extend time for the appeal tribunal to be asked to
investigate in detail the strength of the appeal ... Lack of prejudice or of
injustice to the successful party in the original proceedings is also a factor
of little or no significance."
Mr
Panesar has said to us that there is no justification for the difference of
approach between the Court of Appeal and the Employment Appeal Tribunal in
hearing applications out of time. He referred us to the decision of Griffiths
LJ, sitting as a single judge, in
CM
Van Stillevoldt BV v El Carriers Incorporated
where he adopted the judgment and reasons of the Registrar, Mr Registrar Adams,
who said:
"In
my judgment, all the relevant factors must be taken into account in deciding
how to exercise the discretion to extend time. Those factors include the
length of the delay, the reasons for the delay, whether there is an arguable
case on the appeal, and the degree of prejudice to the defendant if time is
extended."
Mr
Panesar has put forward a spirited argument that it is quite wrong for the
Employment Appeal Tribunal to have more restrictive rules. I recognise the
force of the argument he has put forward. In my view that is not the correct
approach to the Employment Appeal Tribunal. The first matter is that the Court
of Appeal, although it certainly discourages the rehash of facts which have
been found in the court below, does have the jurisdiction to deal with facts if
it can be shown the court went plainly wrong on the facts that have been found.
There is not that jurisdiction in the Employment Appeal Tribunal. The
Employment Tribunal is the court of fact; it is the final court of the facts.
It is for the Employment Appeal Tribunal to hear appeals based on law. That is
a very marked distinction between the two courts. Secondly, the Employment
Appeal Tribunal has the power to regulate its own procedure under Section 30(3)
of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996. It is a statutory body set up under a
framework of employment legislation. It has its own good reasons for requiring
the parties to deal with proposed appeals expeditiously. I do not see that it
is necessary for them to follow exactly the way in which the Court of Appeal
deals with prospective appeals. Our procedure is, in any event, different
because everything nowadays requires permission and we are living in a changing
world where the rules of the Court of Appeal may well change in the future and
where we may become even more strict and may in future become closer to the
strict approach of the Employment Appeal Tribunal. I do not know; it is
impossible to say at this stage. But the Employment Appeal Tribunal is
providing, and Mummery J has set out in his judgment in the
United
Arab Emirates
'
case and indeed in the practice direction that set out the guidance based upon
that case, a perfectly acceptable formula. It is right that on appeals on law
people must get their cases in in time. In this particular case I agree with
Morison J that this is an honest explanation of mistake but it is not an
acceptable one. Merits may be relevant and there will be cases where it would
be right to extend time because the merits of the case require it. That is
well within the general propositions expressed by Mummery J that the merits of
the appeal may be relevant. Morison J did look at the merits and I have myself
looked at the notice of appeal which does not disclose on the face of it, I
have to say, any clear propositions of law in which it is suggested that the
Employment Tribunal erred. There are a number of criticisms of their approach
to the evidence and I would, for my part, find it very difficult to say that
those can be translated into points of law. I do not myself think therefore
that there are strong merits in this case, but in any event I see no fault in
the way in which this case was dealt with. Three days may not be a long time.
One day was not a long time in the case of Popplewell J. But in each case it
seems entirely clear that the refusal to extend for three days or one day was
entirely within the exercise of discretion of the President of the Employment
Appeal Tribunal.
I
would refuse permission to appeal.
LORD
JUSTICE PILL: I agree. The President of the Employment Appeal Tribunal was
entitled to hold that the explanation for the delay, though honest and full,
did not excuse that delay, for reasons given by my Lady. He was entitled in
all the circumstances to refuse an extension of time and I too would refuse the
application to this court.
SIR
CHRISTOPHER STAUGHTON: In the case of
CM
Van Stillevoldt BV v El Carriers Inc
it is recorded that I regarded a delay of three days as not a serious matter,
and described it as a peccadillo. That, however, was in the entirely different
context of the time allowed for appointing an arbitrator.
I
would agree with what Mummery J said in the
United
Arab Emirates
'
case at page 71 that the time limit ought only to be "relaxed in rare and
exceptional cases where the appeal tribunal is satisfied that there is a reason
which justifies departure from the time limit laid down in the Rules".
That
seems to me a very proper rule for the Employment Appeal Tribunal to adopt.
As
my Lady has explained, the excuse put forward in this case and accepted as
honest is that the date in the last page of the Industrial Tribunal's decision
was equivocal. There is the figure 2 in the place for a date followed by a
symbol which, as she has said, does not look like a 4 or a 7. It consists of
two diagonal lines of the same length crossing each other more or less at the
mid-point of each. No sensible person would, in my judgment, act on that in a
matter of any importance. So it was necessary to make further inquiries. If
the Commission had done so they would have seen from their own date stamp that
the decision must have been sent to the parties on 26 March or earlier. I,
accordingly, agree that there was no sufficient ground for an extension here.
I
would only add this in relation to the merits. Mummery J said at page 72 of the
United
Arab Emirates
'
case, in a passage which my Lady has read, that the merits are usually of
little weight and they should not be investigated in detail. I agree with
that. But I would however say that if it is
plain
that the appeal has no prospect of success that must be a matter which should
be taken into account. There can be no point in giving an extension of time
for an appeal which is bound to fail. I have had great difficulty in seeing
any point of law in this proposed appeal and the jurisdiction of the Employment
Appeal Tribunal is confined to hearing appeals on points of law. So that too
would, in my judgment, very probably have been a proper ground for refusing the
application for leave to appeal to the Employment Appeal Tribunal.
I
would dismiss this present application.
Order: Application
for permission to appeal refused with costs, but those costs not to include the
hearing before Ward LJ of 25 March.
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