BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Adedeji v University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust [2021] EWCA Civ 23 (15 January 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/23.html Cite as: [2021] ICR D5, [2021] EWCA Civ 23 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2021] ICR D5] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Kerr J
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division))
LORD JUSTICE MOYLAN
and
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
____________________
OLUFUNSO ADEDEJI | Appellant | |
v | ||
UNIVERSITY HOSPITALS BIRMINGHAM NHS FOUNDATION TRUST | Respondent |
____________________
Ms Gemma Roberts (instructed by Mills and Reeve LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10 December 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Underhill:
(1) Section 18A (1) of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996 ("the ETA 1996") provides that before a prospective claimant presents a claim to the employment tribunal they must (in summary) notify ACAS of the dispute and the intended claim. A conciliation officer is then required to endeavour to promote a settlement within a prescribed period (subsections (2) and (3)). If he or she concludes that a settlement is not possible, or the prescribed period expires without a settlement, they must issue a certificate to that effect (subsection (4)). Proceedings cannot be issued without such a certificate (subsection (8)).(2) Where the process under section 18A has not yet run its course, section 140B of the 2010 Act provides for the automatic extension of the primary time limit by a period whose exact length depends on the circumstances. (Section 207B of the Employment Rights Act 1996 ("the ERA 1996") makes equivalent provision as regards claims under that Act, which include complaints of unfair dismissal.)
In Commissioners of Revenue and Customs v Garau [2017] UKEAT 0348/16, [2017] ICR 1121, the EAT held that once the process under section 18A had been completed no further attempt at conciliation through ACAS would have the effect of extending time under section 140B.
(1) By an e-mail sent on 20 May 2017, i.e. some five days prior to his resignation, the Appellant sought to initiate the statutory early conciliation procedure by notifying ACAS of his dispute with the Trust and his intended claim. In the e-mail he identified as his representative the BMA employment adviser who had been assisting him in his dealings with the Trust.(2) On 22 May his adviser informed him that she should not have been named as his representative because the BMA had not agreed to represent him in any proceedings. Accordingly he telephoned ACAS the next day in order, as he put it in his witness statement, "to withdraw the application so that I could wait until I could get representation".
(3) The same day, i.e. 23 May, ACAS issued an "Early Conciliation Certificate" under section 18A (4) of the ETA 1996 "to confirm that the prospective claimant has complied with the requirement under ETA s18A to contact Acas before instituting proceedings in the Employment Tribunal". The certificate was evidently issued on the basis that ACAS treated the effect of the Appellant's "withdrawal" as being that settlement pursuant to his notification on 20 May was not possible, thus triggering the first alternative under subsection (4) (see para. 8 (1) above). There is no issue before us about whether it was correct to do so, and the certificate must accordingly be treated as valid. The Appellant nevertheless maintains that that does not correspond to what a layman would expect, since no actual attempt at conciliation had occurred: he submits that the natural understanding would be that when a notification had been "withdrawn" it could simply be treated as if it had never occurred, and thus that the certificate of 23 May was a nullity.
(4) On 16 November 2017, i.e. just over a week before the expiry of the primary time limit, the Appellant telephoned the solicitors Irwin Mitchell with a view to their acting for him in his dispute and spoke to a paralegal there. According to his witness statement, he told her about his earlier "withdrawn" application to ACAS. The statement continues:
"She told me that I will still need to submit an ET1 by 24th November 2017 because I had undergone conciliation. At this time, I thought she had misunderstood what I had told her, because I had withdrawn my application and allowed [sic] to reapply at a later date. I was asked to send all my documents and the Acas certificate to her. I prepared a 600 page document which I sent over the next few days."I observe, because it is important to what follows, that it thus appears from the Appellant's own evidence that he had been advised by Irwin Mitchell to present his claim by 24 November but that he did not accept that their advice was correct.(5) On 23 November, i.e. the day before the expiry of the primary time limit, the Appellant submitted a fresh "notification" to ACAS. He said that, notwithstanding what he had been told by Irwin Mitchell, he believed that that would be effective to entitle him to an extension of time for presenting his complaint. He said in his witness statement that he had left it so late because he was awaiting the results of an investigation by the General Medical Council which he believed would vindicate him and would make it more likely that a settlement could be achieved.
(6) At 3.41 p.m. on 24 November, which was a Friday, the paralegal at Irwin Mitchell to whom the Appellant had spoken previously e-mailed him to say that, although he had not included the conciliation certificate in the papers which he had sent her, on the basis of what he had told her about it any further notification to ACAS would not be effective to extend time: she referred to Garau. She warned him that if he did not lodge his ET1 that day he risked being out of time. He says that he tried to get further advice from ACAS and from the Employment Tribunal Office but without success.
(7) It was the Appellant's case that only at that point did he appreciate that he needed to present an application that day. He at once began to prepare a claim but, for reasons to which I refer below, he did not present it until the following Monday, 27 November.
The Appellant says that that sequence of events constituted a reasonable excuse for his failure to present his application within the primary time limit and that that was highly relevant to whether it was just and equitable to extend time.
"8. … That section provides a broad discretion for the Court to extend the limitation period of three years in cases of personal injury and death. It requires the court to consider the prejudice which each party would suffer as the result of the decision to be made and also to have regard to all the circumstances of the case and in particular, inter alia, to –
(a) the length of and reasons for the delay;
(b) the extent to which the cogency of the evidence is likely to be affected by the delay;
(c) the extent to which the party sued had cooperated with any requests for information;
(d) the promptness with which the plaintiff acted once he or she knew of the facts giving rise to the cause of action;
(e) the steps taken by the plaintiff to obtain appropriate professional advice once he or she knew of the possibility of taking action.
9. The decision of the EAT was not appealed; nor has it been suggested to us that the guidance given in respect of the consideration of the factors mentioned in s. 33 was erroneous."
The Judge summarises the points made by Smith J, though she also notes that in London Borough of Southwark v Afolabi [2003] EWCA Civ 15, [2003] ICR 800, this Court had observed that it was not necessary to go through the full section 33 checklist in every case. I say something more about Keeble at paras. 37-38 below.
"The claimant is … a well-educated man. He is intelligent and had a sophisticated understanding of his ability to make a claim to the tribunal, and of the relevant time limit having had access to lawyers and his trade union and taking advice from lawyers. He had been advised in terms of when to present his claim and still failed to do it. … He left matters too long waiting for the GMC to respond positively. That was a high risk strategy. He thereby put himself in the position where if there was any problem in presentation it would not be possible to remedy it in time. He has to bear the consequences of his choices."
"32. In the case of any complaint in respect of the allegedly constructive unfair dismissal the delay is not substantial. If however the complaints are the alleged acts on 30th November 2016 and 8th December 2016 and the alleged act of harassment on 5 June 2017 the complaints are substantially out of time. There was no evidence before me about why the claimant did not present his complaints about the latter within time. He was not ignorant of his rights or any facts relating to the claim. He had access to advice and information and was not suffering from any relevant ill health. The reasons for the delay were of his own making; he was entirely the victim of his own misfortune having consciously resolved to leave matters to 16 November 2016 [this is evidently a slip for 2017] before obtaining legal advice and then either not following it or leaving it too late to do so spending a further three days working on the claim form before presenting it although he knew (or ought reasonably to have known) on 24 November 2017 that he had not sent it to the tribunal. The drafting process could and should have been put in train in good time in preparation for a claim he had had in mind since May 2017.
33. In my judgment there is an inevitable impact on the cogency of evidence given the historic nature of the claim of constructive unfair dismissal (if that is said to be an act of race discrimination) and the time which has elapsed in relation to the other allegations of race discrimination allegations [sic].
34. The claimant would be unable to pursue a claim of race discrimination (which may or may not have any merit) if I were not to exercise discretion in his favour. If I decide to exercise my discretion in his favour the respondent will be put to the cost and expense of defending such a claim and its ability to do so is likely to have been affected.
35. There is a public interest in the enforcement of time limits which are exercised strictly in employment tribunals.
36. Having considered all of the above, the claimant has not persuaded me that it would be just and equitable to extend time in his favour and allow his claim of race discrimination to proceed. It is dismissed."
I think I should spell out the essential elements in that reasoning.
"The point that I conclude is – just – arguable, is that the Judge failed to take into account (or to explain if, or how, she had) that, if the claim form had been presented just three days earlier, then the (possible) discriminatory constructive dismissal claim would have been in time, and would have had to have been considered, notwithstanding that it relied, evidentially, on historical allegations in respect of which there might be memory issues, and hence she did not sufficiently consider or address whether the additional impact on such issues of an extra three days should have been regarded as not material in relation to that claim (as opposed to the claims about such alleged incidents in their own right)."
"With some hesitation, I think it is arguable, with a real (in the sense of not insignificant or fanciful) prospect of success, that the EJ was wrong in law to refuse the necessary extension of time for the discriminatory constructive dismissal claim and/or that she failed to explain her reasons for doing so with sufficient clarity. She nowhere expressly addressed the additional impact (if any) of the extra three days' delay, which she rightly found at [32] to be 'not substantial', nor did she expressly consider the relevance of her important findings of fact in [4.3] and [4.7] that the Appellant believed he had effectively withdrawn his first notification to ACAS, and believed the Early Conciliation Certificate ('ECC') purportedly issued on 23 May 2017 to be a nullity, until receipt by him of the email from Irwin Mitchell at 15.41 on 24 November 2017. Had the May 2017 ECC been a nullity, or at least not a valid certificate within section 18A (4) ETA 1996, he would have been unable to present any relevant claim to the ET (see section 18A (8)), let alone been nearly out of time for doing so."
There are two distinct aspects to those grounds. The first concerns the impact of the three days' delay and is essentially the same as had been permitted to proceed in the EAT. The second, relating to the Appellant's misunderstanding of the position about the ACAS certificate, does not seem to me to fall easily within the limits of the basis on which Judge Auerbach permitted the appeal to the EAT to proceed, and it is not addressed by Kerr J; but Ms Roberts took no point on this.
"We add observations with respect to the discretion that is yet to be exercised. Such requires findings of fact which must be based on evidence. The task of the Tribunal may be illuminated by perusal of Section 33 Limitation Act 1980 wherein a check list is provided (specifically not exclusive) for the exercise of a not dissimilar discretion by common law courts which starts by inviting consideration of all the circumstances including the length of, and the reasons for, the delay. Here is, we suggest, a prompt as to the crucial findings of fact upon which the discretion is exercised."
The industrial tribunal followed that suggestion and, as we have seen, when there was a further appeal Smith J as part of her analysis of its reasoning helpfully summarised the requirements of section 33 (so far as applicable). It will be seen, therefore, that Keeble did no more than suggest that a comparison with the requirements of section 33 might help "illuminate" the task of the tribunal by setting out a checklist of potentially relevant factors. It certainly did not say that that list should be used as a framework for any decision. However, that is how it has too often been read, and "the Keeble factors" and "the Keeble principles" still regularly feature as the starting-point for tribunals' approach to decisions under section 123 (1) (b). I do not regard this as healthy. Of course the two discretions are, in Holland J's phrase, "not dissimilar", so it is unsurprising that most of the factors mentioned in section 33 may be relevant also, though to varying degrees, in the context of a discrimination claim; and I do not doubt that many tribunals over the years have found Keeble helpful. But rigid adherence to a checklist can lead to a mechanistic approach to what is meant to be a very broad general discretion, and confusion may also occur where a tribunal refers to a genuinely relevant factor but uses inappropriate Keeble-derived language (as occurred in the present case – see para. 31 above). The best approach for a tribunal in considering the exercise of the discretion under section 123 (1) (b) 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 (as Holland J notes) "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.
"Nor do I accept that the ET erred in not going through the matters listed in s. 33 (3) of the 1980 Act. Parliament limited the requirement to consider those matters to actions relating to personal injuries and death. Whilst I do not doubt the utility of considering such a check-list … in many cases, I do not think that it can be elevated into a requirement on the ET to go through such a list in every case, provided of course that no significant factor has been left out of account by the ET in exercising its discretion."
In Department of Constitutional Affairs v Jones [2007] EWCA Civ 894, [2008] IRLR 128, Pill LJ at para. 50 of his judgment referred to Keeble as "a valuable reminder of factors which may be taken into account" but continued:
"Their relevance depends on the facts of the particular case. The factors which have to be taken into account depend on the facts and the self-directions which need to be given must be tailored to the facts of the case as found."
That point was further emphasised by Elisabeth Laing J, sitting in the EAT, in Miller v Ministry of Justice [2016] UKEAT 0004/15: see paras. 11 and 29-30 of her judgment. In Abertawe Bro Morgannwg University Local Health Board v Morgan [2018] EWCA Civ 640, [2018] ICR 1194, Leggatt LJ, having referred to section 123, says, at paras. 18-19 of his judgment:
"18. … [I]t is plain from the language used ('such other period as the employment tribunal thinks just and equitable') that Parliament has chosen to give the employment tribunal the widest possible discretion. Unlike section 33 of the Limitation Act 1980, section 123(1) of the Equality Act does not specify any list of factors to which the tribunal is instructed to have regard, and it would be wrong in these circumstances to put a gloss on the words of the provision or to interpret it as if it contains such a list. Thus, although it has been suggested that it may be useful for a tribunal in exercising its discretion to consider the list of factors specified in section 33(3) of the Limitation Act 1980 (see [Keeble]), the Court of Appeal has made it clear that the tribunal is not required to go through such a list, the only requirement being that it does not leave a significant factor out of account: see [Afolabi]. …
19. That said, factors which are almost always relevant to consider when exercising any discretion whether to extend time are: (a) the length of, and reasons for, the delay and (b) whether the delay has prejudiced the respondent (for example, by preventing or inhibiting it from investigating the claim while matters were fresh)."
Although the message of those authorities is clear, its repetition may still be of value in ensuring that it is fully digested by practitioners and tribunals.
Lord Justice Moylan:
Lord Justice Newey:
Note 1 There is also reference to an incident in June 2017 which could be understood as an allegation of harassment in the statutory sense, but that is not now pursued, and I mention it only because there is a reference to it in a passage from ET’s Reasons which I quote below.
[Back] Note 2 I am not myself persuaded that that approach was correct, but since the point was not argued before us I should accept the basis on which the parties proceeded. [Back] Note 3 Paraphrase was desirable in order to strip out some of the language of section 33 which is specifically relevant to the personal injury context. But Smith J carefully preserves the important points (a) that the five particular factors which are identified as (a)-(e) (which broadly reflect section 33 (3)) are not intended as an exhaustive list but simply as particular aspects of “all the circumstances of the case”; and (b) that the court also has to consider “the prejudice which each party would suffer as the result of the decision to be made” (which reflects section 33 (1)). Those points are sometimes overlooked, with tribunals focusing only on the five particular factors.
[Back]