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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Skinners Hastings Ltd v. Wilkin [2001] UKEAT 1023_00_1112 (11 December 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/1023_00_1112.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 1023__1112, [2001] UKEAT 1023_00_1112 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 1 November 2001 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
MR B GIBBS
MR D J HODGKINS CB
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR MICHAEL FOSTER Solicitor Instructed by Messrs Fynmores Solicitors 10-12 Parkhurst Road Bexhill on Sea TW40 1DF |
For the Respondent | MS JENNY WIGLEY (Of Counsel) Instructed by Messrs Holden & Co Solicitors Liberty Building 32-33 Robertson Street The America Ground Hastings East Sussex TN34 1HT |
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
"2. Under the Rules of Procedure you are required to enter an appearance within 21 days of receiving the application. This may be done by completing and returning the enclosed form IT3. A late Notice of Appearance may not be accepted and even if accepted may render you liable for costs - see Rule 3 (3) and (4). If you do present a late Notice of Appearance you should set out the reasons why the Notice was not presented in time."
An explanatory booklet "What to do if taken to an Employment Tribunal - England and Wales" was also sent. It said, inter alia:-
"The tribunal must receive your "appearance" within 21 days of the day you receive the [IT1]. The tribunal will assume that the copy of the [IT1] arrived on the second working day after it was sent. If you do not "enter an appearance" you will not be allowed to defend the applicant's claim. If you are late, you should write explaining why. The tribunal will decide whether to allow you to enter a late defence of the claim and if any costs are involved."
17th January 2000 was a Monday; the 21 days therefore began on 20th January and expired on the 9th February.
"A few days after the 15th February 2000 I received a Notice from the Employment Tribunal dated the 15th February stating that the matter was to be listed for hearing on Wednesday 15th March but alongside my Company's name were the words "Respondent's Appearance not entered". I knew that I had sent off the Notice of Appearance and I, therefore, telephoned the Tribunal Office.
I was then informed that the Notice of Appearance had been received but not until the 16th 2000 February and that the envelope in which it was contained was postmarked the 15th February 2000. It had, therefore, crossed in the post with the Notice from the Tribunal dated the 15th February."
Skinners' IT3 and the attached letter had thus not been posted to the Tribunal till the 15th February but had been posted before Skinners had received notice of the hearing having been fixed for 15th March on a "Respondent's appearance not entered" basis. The Tribunal received the IT3 on 16th February. The booklet earlier sent does not explain the import of that basis and it is not said that it was explained in the telephone call referred to by Mr Cavey. By sending in a late IT3 Skinners were deemed to be applying for an extension of time on such grounds as were then given, but none then were - see 1993 ET Rule 3 (3).
"Although I made enquiries in my office as to why the document I had completed and put out for posting on the 2nd February had not apparently been posted until the 15th February I was unable to discover an answer. I, therefore, on the 29th February wrote a letter to the Employment Tribunal explaining that I had completed the Notice of Appearance on the 2nd February and left it for posting. I gave an explanation as to why I had not followed the matter up personally and asked that in those circumstances I be allowed to represent the Company on the 15th March."
His letter of 29th February said:-
"It appears that you did not receive our response to the notice of appearance in the above case within the 21 days allowed. I am unsure of why this was, as I had completed the forms by 2 February 00 and left these at our Hastings office to be forwarded to yourselves. As you will no doubt appreciate, I am continually travelling between our four branches and have just received the notice stating that our response was late.
As we do not keep a daily record of individual letters posted for each day, I must assume there was a delay between the file being left at Hastings and it being posted to you, perhaps you will have a record of when you received it.
I must therefore apologise for any delay and ask that you do admit our response, as there was no intention not to comply with your timescale. Clearly we would wish to be allowed to make our case on 15 March 00."
On receipt of that letter the Tribunal had before it a deemed application for the extension of time on the grounds given in the letter. On 3rd March 2000 the Employment Tribunal wrote to Skinners noting the letter of the 29th and continuing:-
"The Chairman does not consider your explanation for entering a late Notice of Appearance to be adequate and so the case will proceed on 15/03/00 on an 'appearance not entered' basis."
The letter did not explain what the "Appearance not entered" basis was, nor why the explanation was inadequate, nor whether the decision on the point was appealable, nor whether Skinners would be either permitted or denied the opportunity to amplify the reasons given or to seek a fresh determination. The booklet, without giving any technical or limited meaning to the word "decision", had said:-
"The tribunal will always send a written decision - and its reason for making that decision - to the parties or to their representatives. There are limited rights to apply for a review of the decision, or to lodge an appeal against it to the Employment Appeal Tribunal within set time limits."
Of the Tribunal's letter of 3rd March, Mr Cavey's affidavit, unchallenged, says:-
"There was absolutely no prejudice to the Applicant employee whatsoever in that there was still almost two weeks before the date fixed for hearing and even if there was any possible potential prejudice the same could have been dealt with by an Order for Costs. No explanation was given as to why the Tribunal Chairman regarded the explanation I had given as insufficient."
"Thank you for your [letter] of 3 March 00; naturally I am disappointed that The Chairman has rejected our explanation.
I fail to see how justice can be achieved in this matter should we not be allowed to represent ourselves and answer any questions, which undoubtedly will arise during the hearing. We are a respectable Company who have been in business under the current ownership, for over thirty years. We are a respecter of the employment rights of all employees and of the Employment Tribunal systems' aims and achievements; however we fail to see the rationale behind his decision.
I should also like it noted, due to staff changes within our Group, we have today, through ACAS been able to offer Mrs Wilkin a new job with our Company, at the same branch in the same role as she worked previously. Regrettably this offer has been rejected. I shall keep this position open, pending next week's outcome.
As I indicated in my original defence, we have no desire to make people redundant and our offer of re-employment clearly demonstrates there were no other issues in our original decision.
I therefore respectfully request that the Chairman reconsider his decision."
"The file has again been referred to a Chairman, who directs I reply as follows. The Respondents advance no further explanation. Whilst he is aware of his powers under Rules 3 and 15, he does not validate the Notice of Appearance. The case remains listed as "Appearance not entered by Respondent" at Brighton on Wednesday 15th March 2000 at 9.45 am."
"He said that I could, however, appeal against any decision and I gained the impression that he was encouraging me to do so but I may be wrong about that."
"Mr Cavey, the Managing Director of the Respondents, attended the hearing on the 15 March. The Tribunal explained in particular the provisions of Rules 3 and 11 of the Employment Tribunals (Constitution) Regulations 1993 to him. No application was made by or on behalf of the Respondent for any extension of time pursuant to Rule 15, and the hearing proceeded on an "appearance not entered basis"."
If the Chairman had informed Mr Cavey "quite categorically that [he] could not take part in the proceedings", as Mr Cavey's unchallenged affidavit says, the Chairman's comment that no application had been made for an extension of time, whilst true, hardly gave him a fair picture of what had occurred. In the event, Mrs Wilkin's evidence given on 15th March (which was, of course, not tested by way of cross-examination) was accepted by the Chairman. The Chairman found her to have been unfairly dismissed. There is no indication in the extended reasons that her redundancy within section 98 (2) (c) was at all explored, nor, in the computation of her loss, that any consideration was given to her being offered a new job by Skinners on 9th March 2000. In the award her loss of wages was calculated on the basis that there would be a continuing loss from 14th January 2000 to 29 May 2000.
(i) that he, the Chairman, was bound by the earlier decision that an extension of time for a Notice of Appearance was refused
and (ii) that accordingly Skinners could take no part in the proceedings that day.
Rule 3 of the Employment Tribunal Rules 1993 provides:-
"3. Appearance by respondent
(1) A respondent shall, within [21 days] of receiving the copy of the originating application, enter an appearance to the proceedings by presenting to the Secretary a written notice of appearance -
(a) setting out his full name and address and, if different, an address within the United Kingdom to which he requires notices and documents relating to the proceedings to be sent;
(b) stating whether or not he intends to resist the application; and
(c) if he does intend to resist it, setting out sufficient particulars to show on what grounds.
Upon receipt of a notice of appearance the Secretary shall send a copy of it to each other party.
(2) A respondent who has not entered an appearance shall not be entitled to take any part in the proceedings except -
(a) to apply under rule 15 for an extension of the time appointed by this rule for entering an appearance;
(b) to make an application under rule 4 (1) (a);
(c) to make an application under rule 11 (4) in respect of rule 11 (1) (b);
(d) to be called as a witness by another person;
(e) to be sent a copy of a document or corrected entry in pursuance of rule 10 (5), 10 (10) or 10 (11);
and in the rules which follow, the word "party" only includes such a respondent in relation to his entitlement to take such a part in the proceedings, and in relation to any such part which he takes.
(3) A notice of appearance which -
(a) is presented to the Secretary of State after the time appointed by this rule for entering appearances, and
(b) sets out the reasons why the notice has been presented after that timeshall be deemed to include an application under rule 15 for an extension of the time so appointed on the grounds disclosed by those reasons.
(4) Where a chairman grants an application under rule 15 for an extension of the time so appointed (including an application deemed to be made by virtue of paragraph (3) he shall determine whether, having regard to the grounds of his application, it would have been reasonably practicable for the respondent to present his notice of appearance within the time so appointed. If the chairman determines that it would have been so practicable, the respondent shall be treated as having acted unreasonably for the purposes of rule 12 (1) and the chairman shall make an order under that rule if he considers it appropriate.
(5) ....."
Thus if, in answer to our question (i) above, the answer is that there was no error and that the Chairman was so bound, it seems inevitable that (ii) could only be answered that there was no error of law in (ii). Save as is provided for in the express cases described in section 3 (2) (a) to (e), which Skinners do not fall into, Rule 3 (2) allows no escape from its provision that a respondent who has not entered an appearance is not entitled to take any part in the proceedings. We thus concentrate on question (i), which first requires us to see whether the Chairman, as a matter of jurisdiction, had to decline to hear Mr Cavey to ask for an extension of time on 15th March because of the earlier ruling or rulings.
"This appeal is against the ruling that the Tribunal had no power to grant the subsequent application to extend the time after the refusal of the first application on 23rd October 1992."
The Employment Tribunal had also said in RAM that if it did have jurisdiction to extend time, which it held it had not, then (presumably then treating the matter as one of discretion) it would have refused the application as RAM had relied on nothing more than mere oversight in not entering a timely appearance and for its failure even to ask for an extension till the very day of the hearing. The Employment Appeal Tribunal in RAM ruled that the tribunal below had been right on jurisdiction saying:-
"Prima facie a person is entitled to only "one bite of the cherry" at each level. He makes an application. It is argued. It is decided. Once it is decided the tribunal which makes the decision in functus officio. The remedy of a person aggrieved by the decision is to bring an appeal to [the EAT] on a question of law under ..."
the then requirement of s. 21 of the Employment Tribunals Act and the EAT added that Counsel for RAM's argument
".... that there is a right to go back to the tribunal and make another such application runs counter to the scheme of the Rules and the legislation."
Apart from that suggested inconsistency with that scheme, the Employment Appeal Tribunal relied on a number of further considerations as follows:-
(i) it would be odd and unfair if the applicant for an extension could make repeated applications, heard as to both fact and law, whereas if an application were granted, the respondent to it could only appeal and could only do so on a point of law; related to that -
(ii) an applicant for an extension could even gain by not appealing its refusal (because of the difficulty on appeal in finding an error of law) and by instead applying afresh, and thus being heard again on the facts;
(iii) several applications could be made, putting the respondents to them and the tribunal to time and expense.
" .... should not in the ordinary way be denied an adjudication of his claim on its merits because of procedural default, unless the default causes prejudice to his opponent for which an award of costs cannot compensate ...."
At least where a defendant has the possibility of a merits-based defence, that principle must equally apply to such a defendant. As the Chairman on 15th March saw the matter as one of jurisdiction he did not inquire into the nature of prejudice to Mrs Wilkin but there is no reason to suppose that an adjournment on 15th March would have caused any material prejudice to her not compensatable by an award of costs which Skinners would have been able to meet. In written argument Mrs Wilkin's advisers describe Skinners as "well-to-do". Still less material prejudice would have been caused to her had there been no immediate adjournment but had Mr Cavey been enabled to take part with Mrs Wilkin being protected as we have mentioned.