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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Catt v. & Kaschewski (t/a Porters Wine Bar) [2001] UKEAT 170_00_0603 (6 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/170_00_0603.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 170_00_0603, [2001] UKEAT 170__603 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
MISS RECORDER ELIZABETH SLADE QC
MR D NORMAN
MR J C SHRIGLEY
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | MISS K GIBBS (of Counsel) instructed by Messrs Raymond Saul & Co Solicitors 34 Commercial Road London E1 1LN |
For the Respondent | MR I McGLASHAN Representative Peninsula Business Services Ltd 2nd Floor Stamford House 361 / 365 Chapel Street Manchester M3 5JY |
MISS RECORDER SLADE QC
We have before us an application to amend the grounds of appeal in this case by substitution of new grounds which raise a point which has not been raised before, namely that the Tribunal erred in law in failing to give reasons for its decision.
What is also retained in the proposed substituted grounds is an attack on the finding of the employment Tribunal that the applicant, the appellant before us, resigned on 16th May. It is said that in failing to address a conflict of evidence in relation to the date of the alleged resignation the Tribunal's finding was perverse. If we were to allow this application by substituting those grounds which have been dictated to us the appeal would proceed on the third grounds of appeal put forward in this fairly simple case. We are somewhat disquieted and surprised that this application is being made at a very late stage indeed.
Following a hearing on 6th December 1999 the extended written reasons for the decision were sent to the parties on 15th December 1999. Notice of appeal was served on 24th January of last year. The ground of appeal which is principally being pursued now, namely failure to give reasons, was not raised in that Notice of Appeal.
The appeal came before a division of this Employment Appeal Tribunal for a preliminary hearing. It appears from the judgement of the Employment Appeal Tribunal and on the basis upon which this appeal was permitted to go forward, the Meek point, if I can call it that for shorthand, does not feature. The Employment Appeal Tribunal we were told, had before it a substituted notice of appeal or amended notice of appeal which had been settled the day before the hearing. That notice of appeal which was the notice of appeal before us, does not raise the Meek point.
The first time when the Meek point was raised, was in the skeleton argument served on behalf of the appellant on the 19th February 2001. There was no attempt at the time of serving the skeleton argument to seek leave to amend the grounds of appeal. Indeed when this appeal was opened before us there was no attempt to amend the grounds of appeal. It was only on enquiry as to where to the point was in the grounds of appeal that the application eventually was made.
It appears that the skeleton argument which raises this point was served in good time on Mr McGlashan who appears for the Respondent in this case. To that extent he is not taken by surprise by the point, in that it is in the skeleton argument. However, this is not a ground which had been raised in the history of this case up to this point.
We are somewhat concerned and displeased by the way in which this ground of appeal has arisen but we are not satisfied that any real prejudice would be suffered by the point now being taken. Mr McGlashan of course will have any reasonable time that he wishes today to have access to Meek if hasn't already and to consider the point if he needs to consider it further. This is a situation which really should not arise, particularly where a party has legal representation. Points which are not points taken in the notice of appeal cannot be raised in the course of an appeal. The whole point of such pleadings as there are in this jurisdiction is to give parties full and proper notice of points that will be taken. That was not done in this case, and it was done by a side wind in the skeleton argument. That should not occur.
"Mr McGlashen, do you wish to have further time to consider the point or are you prepared to proceed with it now?" Mr McGlashen replied, "Carry on." "So be it."
"We find that Miss Catt went to work on 16th May 1999 and handed to Mr Kaschewski a medical certificate for four weeks' absence and said "After this, I'm not coming back. I'm through with it." "
The date of 16th May is also referred to by the Tribunal in paragraph 17 of its decision, in which it states:
"It is our finding that the applicant resigned from the respondent's employment when she gave Mr Kaschewski a sick note on 16th May."
However there are other passages in the Tribunal's decision in which it makes clear that the date of those events was 17th May. At paragraph 6 the Tribunal record that Miss Catt went home early on 15th May, she did not go into work the next day, the 16th. Further, they set out a letter from Mr Kaschewski which he wrote to Miss Catt on 18th June in which he referred to 17th May of 1999 as being the date on which she gave notice to quit her job. In paragraph 17 of the decision, the very paragraph in which the Tribunal refer to the events having occurred on 16th May, the Tribunal record that it was 17th May when Mr Kaschewski considered that Miss Catt had given her notice. In the following paragraph, paragraph 18 of the decision, the Tribunal record:
"It is our finding that the applicant's employment terminated when the sick note, which she gave to Mr Kaschewski on 17th May expired, 4 weeks later."