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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Amedzo v Bidvest Noonan (UK) Ltd (Re Appeal from Registrar's Order) [2024] EAT 148 (20 September 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2024/148.html Cite as: [2024] EAT 148 |
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Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MR F AMEDZO |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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BIDVEST NOONAN (UK) LIMITED |
Responden |
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Mr Matthew Bignell (instructed by Fieldfisher LLP) for the Respondent
APPEAL FROM REGISTRAR'S ORDER
HEARING DATE: 04 July 2024
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
HIS HONOUR JUDGE JAMES TAYLER:
1. A copy of the Judgement and its reasons was received on the 16th December 2022. This was a week to Christmas break for 2022
2. Soliciting for an appointment date for a professional legal consultation and advise was a challenge in the week to Christmas 2022
3. The earliest date obtained for an initial professional legal consultation was in the new year 13th January 2023. A full advise was then presented to me on 20th January 2023 from the initial legal consultation held.
4. A final writeup was done and submitted my Notice of Appeal on 26th January 2023. The actual grounds for both ET1 and ET3 was submitted but the forms for ET1 and ET3 was mistakenly missing
5. I did responded promptly the very day the court replied on 2nd February 2023.
6. In the interest of justice I wish to state that it was not deliberate but again due to the Christmas and the new year holiday break.
7. As I can only appeal on questions of law it was proper to seek advise hampered by the Christmas holiday into the new year. [emphasis added]
The Appellant's ground of his application for an extension are principally summarised as:
(a) Struggling to get legal representation during the Christmas holiday period in 2022; and
(b) Unintentional and mistaken omission of the ET1 and ET3 Forms when the Claimant submitted his Notice of Appeal on 26 January 2023. [emphasis added]
The Appellant did not submit his Notice of Appeal until the day before the deadline to institute any appeal. The ET1 and ET3 forms were missing. The Appellant's prospective Appeal (properly constituted) has been filed 7 days out of time.
The Appellant has not provided any information for the EAT to reasonably conclude that the circumstances are exceptional and warrant an extension of time. We submit that the Claimant has not shown a good excuse for the delay at set out in paragraph 4.7 of the Practice Direction. Further, we submit that the test set out in paragraph 38 of United Arab Emirates v Abdelghafar [1995] ICR 65 has not been met, in particular a full explanation for the delay has not been provided, the Appellant has not provided a good excuse for the default and there are no exceptional circumstances which justify the EAT taking the exceptional step of
extending time.
1 . Firstly I have attached to this communication evidence that demonstrate respondent had requested not once but twice "Extension of Time" all granted by the employment Tribunal in this matter
2. Respondent legal representative are distinguished among the UK top 200 law firm but yet still in the second extension of time requested and its reasons presented to the tribunal, claimed covid 19 with no supported evidence when as a matter of fact the Government had already lifted covid restrictions at the time but in the interest of justice the tribunal found reason in granting both extensions of time requested
3. The respondent is therefore not candid stating I had not provided evidence to support my extension of time request when as a matter of fact the Christmas and new year holiday breaks are public statutory holidays observed in the UK which hampered timely intervention for legal advice.
4. The respondent had not appreciated in its objection that I am still a self litigant and the legal advice sort is as a result of the narrow window on grounds of appeal the EAT will grant consideration hence I did the writeup myself within the limited time and still managed to make a full submission within the 42 days window on 26/01/2023
5. I am respectfully inviting the court to consider the documents attached in its full effect in the circumstances of the two extensions granted earlier by the tribunal to the respondent juxtaposed to my request in the interest of justice in granting me extension of time to this appeal
6. I am respectfully also inviting the court to exercise its discretionary powers in that although some documents mistakenly missing in the 26/01/2023 filing, immediate steps was taken the very day the court informed me on 02/02/2023 which was remedied and fully constituted. The respondent respectfully should not rely on this as a reason to deny justice in granting this request. [emphasis added]
3 (1) Every appeal to the Appeal Tribunal shall, subject to paragraphs (2) and
(4), be instituted by serving on the Tribunal the following documents–
(a) a notice of appeal in, or substantially in, accordance with Form 1, 1A or 2 in the Schedule to these rules;
(b) in the case of an appeal from a judgment of an employment tribunal a copy of any claim and response in the proceedings before the employment tribunal or an explanation as to why either is not included; and
(c) in the case of an appeal from a judgment of an employment tribunal a copy of the written record of the judgment of the employment tribunal which is subject to appeal and the written reasons for the judgment, or an explanation as to why written reasons are not included; … [emphasis added]
37(5) If the appellant makes a minor error in complying with the requirement under rule 3(1) to submit relevant documents to the Appeal Tribunal, and rectifies that error (on a request from the Appeal Tribunal or otherwise), the time prescribed for the institution of an appeal under rule 3 may be extended if it is considered just to do so having regard to all the circumstances, including the manner in which, and the timeliness with which, the error has been rectified and any prejudice to any respondent. [emphasis added]
35. The ordinary meaning of 'minor' is something that is comparatively unimportant. In the context of this rule it can be contrasted with a serious or substantial error. Rule 37(5) is designed to forgive errors which are negligible or of no real importance to the proper progress of an appeal.
36. The EAT Rules did and still do require an appellant to serve a Notice of Appeal substantially in accordance with the standard forms. It requires a written record of the ET's Judgment or Order and Written Reasons for it (or an explanation why they are not included). These are core documents in an appeal. Without the Notice the EAT cannot understand the complaint. Without the Judgment and/or Reasons the EAT cannot normally assess whether there has been an arguable error of law. It would be a rare case in which it could be said that the omission of one of these documents was a minor error. Such an error would normally be serious and of real importance to the proper progress of the appeal.
37. The other end of the spectrum is where all the required documents have been attached but just one or two pages are missing. It is likely to be a minor error to omit a single page of a document that is otherwise intelligible. Indeed even under the existing stricter test there were extensions granted where a single irrelevant page was omitted (Sud v London Borough of Ealing [2011] EWCA Civ 995 and HHJ Auerbach mentioned further examples of omission of isolated pages in Fincham v Alpha Grove Community Trust UKEATPA/0993/18 (2 March 2020, unreported)).
38. HHJ Auerbach in Anghel v Middlesex University [2022] EAT 176 at [28] said that the grounds of claim or resistance are essential documents. They set out the substance of the claim and the defence to it which are likely to be essential in understanding the decision appealed. I agree. The EAT is likely to be more interested in the substance of the claim or the response set out in the grounds rather than the information in the formal parts of the ET1 and ET3 forms which record the personal and contact details of the parties, the dates of employment, earnings and representatives' details. The core elements of the claim and defence as set out in the grounds will often be relevant when assessing a judgment. The contact details of the parties and their representatives are not needed as they are contained in the opening paragraphs of the Form 1 Notice of Appeal. There may be some appeals were the ACAS Early Conciliation information or earnings information is a central issue in the appeal in which case the formal information may be important. However in many other appeals that formal information may have no bearing on issues in the appeal as all the important information about the parties' respective positions below will be contained in the Grounds of Claim and Grounds of Resistance.
39. It may amount to a minor error to omit one or even more pages of a document required by rule 3(1) but that it is unlikely to be a minor error to omit the whole document or a substantial or important part of the document unless there are circumstances in which it can be said that the document is irrelevant to the appeal. One example of this might be as in the recent appeal in Shah v Home Office [2024] EAT 21. Jason Coppel KC, sitting as a Deputy High Court Judge, allowed an appeal from the Registrar refusing an extension where the Appellant had filed the complete ET1 and ET3 forms relating to the claim under appeal, but not the equivalent documents for his six other claims which were heard at the same time. The EAT held that there was room for confusion between the old rule 3 read together with Form 1, the Practice Direction and a guidance leaflet. The Deputy Judge went on to say:
"The default which caused the time limit to be missed was minor and technical. The claim form and response for the claim that was under appeal were included with the notice of appeal; the claim and response for the other claims was, at best, of little relevance to the appeal. In this regard, I place some weight upon the fact that the EAT Rules were subsequently amended so as to remove the requirement for any claim form or response to be included with a notice of appeal."
Conclusion on Minor Error
40. I must judge the error at the date when it was made. At that date it was a requirement that the Notice of Appeal included the ET3 Response form including the Grounds of Resistance. At the time that was held to be an 'essential document' (Anghel, above) which was mandatory to serve with the appeal. The Practice Direction then in force quoted above (and available online to all parties) made it clear that the grounds must be included and without such documentation the appeal would not be validly presented. It cannot be a minor error to omit the whole of a document that was 'essential' to an appeal.
41. Reinforcing this conclusion is that without the Grounds of Resistance the EAT could not have a complete understanding of this Appeal. The EAT had to assess the Claimant's grounds of appeal that the ET was unfairly biased in accepting the Respondent's case. To do so it needs not only the ET's Reasons, but also an understanding of the Respondent's contentions in the Grounds of Resistance. That contains a detailed section about the background to the claim which is important to understand the Appeal. It also sets out the defences to direct race discrimination and harassment which is important context.
42. In those circumstance I do not regard the Claimant's error as a minor one and so I do not have a discretion to extend time under rule 37(5).
30. What I take from this, and with which I respectfully agree, is that the question of whether the error is minor is to be judged in particular by reference to the significance or not of what has been omitted, for the appeal in hand, and the issues to which it gives rise. This is a fact-sensitive matter to be decided case by case. It does not follow that in every case a failure to include the ET1 and ET3 forms will be a minor error and Judge Burns himself made some points about that. It will depend upon what is in those forms in the given case, and what issues are raised by the appeal in the given case, as well, possibly, as whether information contained in those forms is also to be found in the submitted documents.
31. In this case Ms Reilly has demonstrated that all of the information contained in the missing ET1 and ET3 was to be found in the documents that were submitted with the Notice of Appeal. I do not need to go through the analysis in detail, because Ms Dervin did not, I think, dispute this, as such. But, in particular, as well as the basic information about the identities of the parties, and so on, being available from the submitted documents, the substance of what the claimant was claiming could be gleaned from the other documents that were provided, including both his Particulars of Claim and also the respondent's Grounds of Resistance, the latter of which also included a summary of what he was claiming. I conclude that, on the particular facts of this case, the error was minor.
143. The principles and guidance set out in Abdelghafar [1995] ICR 65 concerning the EAT's approach to applications to extend the time limit for appeals have been approved by this Court on several occasions. It is perceived as being a strict, perhaps 'hard-hearted', approach. But it is not inflexible. It involves the exercise of a discretion in a way which is 'judicial', 'even-handed' and, above all, fair.
144. We conclude that the exercise of the discretion involves recognising a material distinction. There is a legally significant difference between the case of an appellant who lodges a notice of appeal and nearly all of the documents required by rule 3(1) inside the time limit, and an appellant who lodges nothing until after the time limit has passed. The first such appellant has not fully met the requirements of rule 3(1), but has, nevertheless, substantially complied with them. How substantially depends on what document/documents is/are missing, how much of any document is missing, and how important the document is to the appeal. That appellant has also, on the face of it, complied with the time limit in rule 3(3). That difference is obviously material to the exercise of the discretion to extend time. It follows that that difference should, in principle, be reflected in the EAT's approach to the exercise of its power to extend time. We accept that the authorities about cases in which documents were missing do not refer to this distinction, and, it follows, do not consider it whether or not it is material to the exercise of the discretion. But we see nothing in the reported decisions in this Court to suggest that we are wrong to hold that the distinction we have identified is material to the exercise of the discretion.
145. The express recognition of the importance of that distinction is consistent with, and does not conflict with, the guidelines in Abdelghafar, by which we are bound. The basis of those guidelines is that the EAT takes a strict view of the importance of submitting an appeal within the time limit in rule 3(3). The three appeals with which we are concerned, however, are all cases in which an appellant has substantially complied with that rubric. Moreover, the guidelines are just that. They are not rigid rules of thumb. Rather, they are intended to guide the exercise of a very wide discretion, not to dictate the outcome of that exercise, as Mummery J made clear in Abdelghafar and as Rimer LJ repeated in Jurkowska (see paragraphs 24-28 and 53, 57 and 61-63, above). …
147. Three further points follow. First, a case in which an appeal is lodged in time but a document or part of a document is missing is very likely to be a case in which the appellant has made a mistake. The mistake is the reason for invoking the discretion conferred by rule 37(1). The fact that a mistake has been made cannot, therefore, be used as a reason for barring the exercise of that discretion (and see paragraph 152.ii., below). An understandable or reasonable mistake about the documents cannot necessarily be discounted simply on the basis that, had the litigant filed the papers earlier, the mistake might have been picked up and corrected before the expiry of the time limit. That would be to exercise the discretion in a 'programmed' way. Second, before it can lawfully consider the exercise of its discretion in such cases, the EAT must clearly understand the appellant's explanation for her mistake, because, unless it does so, it cannot properly consider whether that explanation is satisfactory or not. Third, while the EAT has no duty to correct an appellant's mistakes, when the EAT in due course tells the appellant the she has made a mistake, the delay which is relevant to the exercise of the discretion to extend time is the delay between when the EAT tells the appellant of her mistake, and when she corrects it, a point recognised by Judge 1 (see paragraph 109, above). [emphasis added]