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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Insaidoo v Metropolitan Resources North West Ltd (Practice and Procedure : Chairman alone) [2011] UKEAT 0365_10_2303 (23 March 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2011/0365_10_2303.html Cite as: [2011] UKEAT 365_10_2303, [2011] UKEAT 0365_10_2303 |
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EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
58 VICTORIA EMBANKMENT, LONDON EC4Y 0DS
At the Tribunal
Before
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE COX
MS P TATLOW
METROPOLITAN RESOURCES NORTH WEST LTD RESPONDENTS
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
SUMMARY
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Chairman alone
This claim of unfair dismissal for asserting a statutory right was determined, in error by an Employment Judge sitting alone. Section 4 (1) Employment Tribunals Act 1996 applies.
Appeal allowed and case remitted to be determined by a three member Tribunal.
THE HONOURABLE MRS JUSTICE COX
"2. The boxes ticked in the ET1 are:
(5) Unfair dismissal
(8) Other payments
(9) Other complaints
Unfair Dismissal
3. It seems, though the ETl does not say so, that the Claimant resigned, so the dismissal relied on is constructive: see Reasons para. 18. Box 5 pleads eight complaints which are presumably the conduct relied on as justifying the resignation; but some of them are potentially claims in their own right (see below).
4. It was the Respondent's pleaded case that the Claimant had less than a year's service so that he had no right to claim for unfair dismissal. He apparently conceded this on 10.3.09: see para. 6 of the Reasons. But no-one at the time fastened on this concession and the case went through two CMDs on the basis that unfair dismissal was in play. A two-day hearing was fixed for 16 and 17 November. At the eleventh hour the Respondent spotted the point and on 12 November e-mailed the Tribunal asking for the claim to be struck out. The next day, 13 November, EJ Reed ordered a strike-out and altered the listing to one hour on 16 November. The e-mails in question were not with the N/A and obtaining them has taken a long time - hence the delay (I am bound to say that, given the history, I think it was precipitate for Judge Reed to strike out unilaterally: it would have been fairer to allow the point to be taken as a preliminary point on 16 November. But that is water under the bridge.)
5. The Claimant was not going to attend the hearing - he was in Ghana - but he was going to send witnesses. He says - N/A para. 10 -that in consequence of the Tribunal's order he stood them down.
6. Notwithstanding the strike-out the unfair dismissal claim was considered at the hearing (before Judge Shotter) after all, on the basis that the one-year limit was not applicable insofar as the Claimant's claim could/should be read as one of dismissal for asserting a statutory right, namely some of the rights asserted under box 5 (s. 104). It's not clear who raised that. It's not even clear that the Judge was aware of the strike-out, although surely she must have been?
7. The unfair dismissal claim is addressed at paras. 26-30 of the Reasons. The language and the analysis is a bit muddled, but the reasoning seems to be (a) that the claim under s. 104 failed because the Claimant's reason for resigning was not any conduct by the Respondent associated with his assertion of a statutory right but the fact that he had been asked for proof of his immigration status; and (b) that the Tribunal had no jurisdiction to entertain any "ordinary" claim of unfair dismissal. In practice, therefore, the Tribunal did accept jurisdiction in respect of the s. 104 issue but dismissed the claim on the merits, i.e. on the basis that there had been no (constructive) dismissal.
8. What the Claimant says is that, that being so, he stood down his witnesses under a misapprehension: he was told unfair dismissal was not on the agenda, but it was.
9. That must raise an (at least) arguable case of procedural unfairness. But whether there was any substantial injustice depends on what the witnesses could have said on the dispositive issue. The issue is the Claimant's own state of mind, i.e. what he was resigning in response to; and it seems rather unlikely they could have assisted on that; but I couldn't rule 3 it on that basis. (I'm not sure also what orders there were for witness statements and whether he had complied with them.)”
6. At paragraph 3 of the judgment at that preliminary hearing the EAT said this:
“The matter must inevitably return to the Employment Tribunal for a determination by a three-person Tribunal with a different Judge. The appeal could be allowed if this were a full hearing. At the moment we do not have power to do that and, having heard Ms Bibi, what we propose to do is to order a full hearing and to give the Respondent 14 days to provide its answer and to say whether it is prepared to agree that this appeal should be allowed by consent and if so then the direction will be that this case be heard as we have said above.”