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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Owen v Network Rail Infrastructure Ltd (JURISDICTIONAL/TIME POINTS) [2023] EAT 106 (01 August 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2023/106.html Cite as: [2023] EAT 106 |
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Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
DR GILLIAN SMITH MBE
MISS N SWIFT
____________________
MS ROWENA OWEN |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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NETWORK RAIL INFRASTRUCTURE LIMITED |
Respondent |
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Orlando Holloway (instructed by Dentons UK and Middle East LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 June 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
JURISDICTIONAL / TIME POINTS
In considering whether to grant a just and equitable extension of time in relation to Equality Act 2010 complaints, the employment tribunal erred in law in its approach. In particular, it considered that, if no explanation or reason for the late submission of the tribunal claim could be found in the evidence, this necessarily meant that an extension of time should be refused, as opposed to that being a relevant, but not necessarily decisive, consideration to weigh in the balance. Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Local Health Board v Morgan [2018] EWCA Civ 640; [2018] ICR 1194 and Concentrix CVG Intelligent Contact Limited v Obi [2022] EAT 149; [2023] ICR 1 considered.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE AUERBACH:
Introduction – the Tribunal Claim
The Employment Tribunal's Decision
"In December 2021, the Respondent had applied to extend the hearing to 20 days as there were allegations against 22 individuals at the Respondent. on 11 March the Respondent sent a further letter withdrawing its application to extend the length of the hearing. It explained that to call the witnesses would cause operational and safety critical difficulties for the signalling operations at the Respondent's Wimbledon Area Signalling Centre and that on reflection the Respondent opted to limit itself to calling four witnesses. This meant that there was no live evidence from the Respondent about the individual allegations made by the Claimant."
"The Tribunal has made the following findings of fact having heard the evidence and considered the documents and submissions. All evidence was considered even if not specifically referred to here. These finding are confined to those that are relevant to the issues, and necessary to explain the decision reached. One of the issues relates to whether the Tribunal has jurisdiction to hear the Claimant's claims as they are out of time. To determine this, the Tribunal must make findings first. Therefore, the Tribunal considered each item in the Scott Schedule to determine if the things happened as the Claimant said they did and if so, whether they were discriminatory on the grounds of sex. We then considered the question of jurisdiction."
"51. The Tribunal therefore finds that all the events happened as set out in items 1 – 25 of the Scott Schedule. The question is whether these amounted to discrimination on the protected characteristic of sex. For the purposes of this decision at this stage, the Tribunal has taken the Claimant's claims at their highest namely that all events happened, and all events were discriminatory on the grounds of sex.
52. Whether the matters in items 1-25 were brought in time depends on the Tribunal's findings in relation to the allegations from the grievance onwards (items 26 - 34 on the Scott Schedule). On the face of it, the first 25 allegations are out of time, and it is only if they can be linked to the remaining allegations to form a continuing act of discrimination that they will be deemed to be in time and give the Tribunal the jurisdiction to consider them. Had the Tribunal found them to be part of a continuing act it would have gone on to consider each allegation individually to consider if they were acts of discrimination, or other non-discriminatory actions."
"53. The Tribunal considered the evidence which was given in relation to items 26 – 34 of the Scott schedule. Ms Styles was candid in her evidence, accepting that she had got matters wrong, and accepting her limitations in being able to deal with such an extensive and wide-ranging grievance. Ms Styles was very inexperienced in conducting grievances having only dealt with one before. What was apparent from her evidence and the documents relating to the grievance process, is that she did not fully understand her role. This is not surprising, as she was given little or no guidance or support and was expected to do her full substantive role at the same time. She said that if she were presented with a grievance of this magnitude again, she would insist on being taken off her substantive duties to enable her to devote sufficient time and resource to the grievance process.
54. On reading the minutes of the interviews it is striking that Ms Styles took what was said at face value without any follow up or probing. This is despite her evidence that she believed in much of what the Claimant had alleged. She appeared to be unaware of the burden of proof to be applied, and that she should make her findings on the balance of probabilities. She appeared to consider that she had to make findings beyond reasonable doubt and that she needed corroborating evidence from those she interviewed. No doubt this was because of inadequacies in the training and support she was given.
55. What was also striking was the number of allegations made by the Claimant which were not investigated at all. This was spelt out clearly by the questions Mr Kohanzad asked in cross examination. There was a long list of allegations in the grievance put to Ms Styles which she agreed she had not investigated or considered. From the Judge's notes of evidence there were 21 matters not considered. The Respondent commented on the Scott Schedule and says frequently that there was no evidence to back up the Claimant's claims. This is not surprising, because a significant number of witnesses were not called, and even if they were, were not asked questions about many of the allegations made by the Claimant.
56. The investigation was a shambles, and the conclusions reached were inadequate. Whilst this was unreasonable, the Tribunal is mindful that this is not a claim of unfair dismissal. It is a claim of discrimination. The question to be answered is whether the actions of Ms Styles amounted to less favourable treatment on the grounds of sex. There needs to be a causal connection between the two. Not only this, but parts of documents were lost, for example, the statement made by Mr Wiggs. The Tribunal finds that whatever the failings of the grievance investigation and outcome, this was not because of the Claimant's sex but was because Ms Styles was overwhelmed by the grievance, was not adequately trained, and not properly supported. The Claims of direct sex discrimination and victimisation by Ms Styles are not made out."
"67. In Robertson v Bexley Community Centre t/a Leisure Link 2003 [IRLR] 434 CA, it was noted that, while Tribunals have a wide discretion to extend time in discrimination cases, it should only be exercised in exceptional circumstances. 'time limits are exercised strictly in employment and industrial cases. When tribunals consider their discretion to consider a claim out of time on just and equitable grounds there is no presumption that they should do so unless they can justify failure to exercise the discretion.'
68. In O'Brien v Department for Constitutional Affairs [2009] IRLR 294, the Court of Appeal held that the burden of proof is on the Claimant to convince the Tribunal that it is just and equitable to extend time. In most cases there are strong reasons for a strict approach to time limits.
69. Throughout the matters complained of the Claimant was a member of the RMT. She sought advice from the RMT from an early stage. She then sought advice from another union. The Claimant had union representation at the grievance hearing. The Claimant did not provide any information about why she delayed bringing her claim to the Tribunal. Waiting for an internal process to complete is not sufficient. There was no evidence adduced either by oral testimony or documentary evidence that the Claimant was unwell such that she was prevented from bringing a claim or any other reason given. It is not known what steps if any the Claimant took to obtain advice other than via her union.
70. The Respondent submitted that it was for the Claimant to show why time should be extended. The Tribunal was referred to s33(a) Limitation Act 1980 which states that the Tribunal must look at the length of the delay and the reasons for the delay. It was submitted that there was a substantial delay with no reasons given for it. Given this, it was submitted that the cogency of evidence was likely to be affected on both sides as the allegations related largely conversations only. It was submitted that the Claimant acted very slowly, and that she should have known from November 2015 about the facts giving rise to this claim yet there was no evidence as to what she did to enforce her rights, prior to contacting ACAS on 20 March 2020.
71. The Respondent referred to the case of Adedeji v University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust [2021] EWCA Civ 23, CA. In this case, the claim was presented three days out of time, and it was held not to be just and equitable to extend time. It was said: "The best approach for a tribunal in considering the exercise of the discretion under section 123(1)(b) Case No: 2302233/2020 13 [Equality Act] is to assess all the factors in the particular case which it considers relevant to whether it is just and equitable to extend time, including in particular, "the length of, and the reasons for, the delay". If it checks those factors against the list in Keeble, well and good; but I would not recommend taking it as the framework for its thinking."
72. The Claimant submitted that if the investigation was discriminatory, then jurisdiction was not in question. However, the Tribunal has found that the investigation was not discriminatory. The Tribunal was invited to start from the unvarnished question of whether it is just and equitable to extend time and must consider all the matters. It was suggested that the question of prejudice can be decisive. It was submitted that the only prejudice to the Respondent is its failure to call witnesses which was a choice it made. The Respondent does not say that the passage of time was a reason for not calling a witness. It was submitted that it was known why the Claim was late and it does not need an explanation in a witness statement. It is not expected that she would address any single permutation. Here there is a broad chronology that the Claimant went off sick, dealt with the issues internally and then she complained to the Tribunal which is not unreasonable.
73. In response the Respondent submitted that it is difficult for the Claimant to get around the fact that she has provided no explanation as to why she submitted her claim late. If reasons had been put forward there would have been a range of questions for her for example, what advice did she get, when did she seek it, why did she decide not to put claim in earlier when she knew of time limits. It was accepted that the Clamant did go off work, but she returned to work in November 2017, so this was not a valid explanation. It was emphasised that it is of relevance to consider the length or reason for delay. The Tribunal was reminded that the allegations ran November 2015 to May 2017.
74. The Tribunal has reluctantly concluded that the Claimant has provided no evidence on which it can exercise its discretion to extend time. It accepts the submissions made by the Respondent that the Claimant must give some explanation. It is not sufficient for her representative to give reasons in submissions, this is not evidence. The Tribunal accepts that the Respondent chose not to call witnesses and the reasons for this are set out earlier in this judgment. However, this does not detract from the fact that the Claimant has not provided any explanation as to why she did not present her claim earlier. It is inevitable that the length of time between the allegations and the presentation of the claim will prejudice witnesses. For the Claimant, the matters were significant and memorable. For the other witnesses it is likely that the matters were not of significance given it appears that this type of behaviour had been common for some time. Without explanation from the Claimant, it is not possible for the Tribunal to extend time. Therefore, the Claimant's claims are dismissed."
The Grounds of Appeal
"Whilst there must be evidence before the Tribunal, upon which they can make findings as to the reason for the delay, and be satisfied that it is just and equitable to extend time, that evidence can come from a variety of sources and not just from the claimant in a witness statement or in the witness box. This is likely to be the case where, as here, there are many allegations of victimisation made on a "continuing act" basis, involving different events and personnel over a lengthy period of time, but where eventually only one of them succeeds. It is in our view unrealistic, in such circumstances, to expect a claimant, in evidence, to have dealt with the extension of time point separately, in respect of each, discrete allegation, on the somewhat artificial and entirely hypothetical basis that only one of them might succeed."
"There is no justification for reading into the statutory language any requirement that the tribunal must be satisfied that there was a good reason for the delay, let alone that time cannot be extended in the absence of an explanation of the delay from the claimant. The most that can be said is that whether there is any explanation or apparent reason for the delay and the nature of any such reason are relevant matters to which the tribunal ought to have regard."
Discussion and Conclusions
Outcome