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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Cordiant Communications Group Plc & Ors v. Bamber & Anor [2003] UKEAT 0810_03_1710 (17 October 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/0810_03_1710.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 810_3_1710, [2003] UKEAT 0810_03_1710 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
(3) BAMBER FORSYTH LIMITED (1) KEITH BAMBER |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
INTELOCUTORY HEARING
For the Appellants | MR P GOULDING (One of her Majesty's Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs MacFarlane Solicitors 10 Norwich Street London EC4A 1BD |
For the Respondents | MR C SAMEK (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Campbell Hooper Solicitors 35 Old Queen Street London SW1H 9JD |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
"We refer to Campbell Hooper's [the Applicants' solicitors] letter to the Tribunal dated 8 August 2003 in which the Applicants requested leave to amend their particulars. We have not received any further correspondence in relation to this matter and have not been invited to give our views. We would appreciate it if you could let us know whether or not such application has been granted and whether our views will be sought."
(1) The Employment Tribunal still had not ruled on the amendment application, despite the enquiry of 28 August; the Respondent therefore did not know what case they had to defend
(2) Witness statements had not been exchanged and the Employment Tribunal directions order of 21 July 2003 did not deal with the exchange of witness statements. Pausing there, that is incorrect. One of the letters of 21 July dealt with the exchange of witness statements; the other did not.
(3) The Employment Tribunal had not requested dates to be avoided. It was said in that application by the Respondents' solicitors that one of the Respondents' key witnesses, not there named, lived in the United States of America and would be unable to attend the hearing during the week commencing 20 October. What evidence that witness would give or why he was unable to come to this country to give that evidence, was not explained at the time, but for completeness Mr Goulding tells me today that the witness in America was the chief executive of Cordiant, Mr Herne and that in the event, happily he is available to attend the Employment Tribunal next week if required.
(4) Leading Counsel, Mr Goulding who had been advising the Respondents, would not be available to conduct their case during the week of 20 October.
"1. I refer to your recent request for a postponement of the hearing in this case.
2. A Chairman of the Tribunals has considered carefully all you say and has balanced that against the desirability of bringing this case to a hearing without delay
Pausing there the letter was addressed to Macfarlanes, the Respondents' solicitors.
3. The Chairman refuses your request for the following reason(s)
(1). Mere inconvenience to witnesses is not a sufficient reason to grant a postponement; please state the reason for the inconvenience.
(2). You have not stated:
(a). the name of the witness
(b). what the witness can give evidence about
(c). how that evidence is relevant to the issue(s)
Have you considered whether some other witness can give the necessary evidence?
(3). It is no longer practicable to consult parties about convenient dates of hearing. Please see the President's practice direction No. 1 of 11 November 1994 about this.
(4). It is not normally the practice of these Tribunals to postpone hearings because a particular representative is unable to attend. The Chairman expects the representative to ensure that alternative representation is arranged.
(5) The Chairman agrees with the Applicant's representative that there has been sufficient time to prepare for this case to be heard for the reasons given by the Applicant's representative in their letter of 8 October 2003.
(6) Moreover your opponent has objected to the postponement requested.
The application for a stay should be agreed before the Tribunal hearing the matter."
The stay application
that submission. As Mr Samek put it, it is "blindingly obvious" that where a Chairman refuses an application for a postponement of a substantive hearing and at the same time orders that a stay application be heard at the beginning of that hearing that he must realise if the stay application is granted that would be end of the hearing fixed for this case for 4 days.
I do not accept the Chairman failed to take it into account but for the reason given earlier it seems to me entirely proper that he should make the stay application the first order of business before the full Tribunal.
(1) that he failed to take into account the fact that the Applicants' application to amend the particulars of complaint made on 8 August remains outstanding. He submits that that places the Respondents at a significant disadvantage in knowing the case they have to meet.
True it is that the point is not specifically mentioned in the list of reasons given by the Chairman for refusing the postponement request at paragraph 3 of his letter dated 13 October. However that letter recites at paragraph 2:
"2. A Chairman of the Tribunals has considered carefully all you say and has balanced that against the desirability of bringing this case to a hearing without delay."
All that the Respondents said includes, in the fax of 7 October the clearly stated submission that a postponement should be allowed for among other reasons the fact that the adjournment application had not been formally adjudicated on. I am quite satisfied that the Chairman did take that into account.
I therefore conclude that this was one of the factors which he took into account in the overall balancing exercise but that it did not sway him towards allowing the postponement does not altogether surprise me. The application to amend to add a new cause of action was made within the 3 months time limit for complaining of unfair dismissal. When raising the question as to permission in their letter of 28 August the Respondents' solicitors did not volunteer any objection to the proposed amendment and today Mr Goulding has very fairly accepted that, but for the shortness of time, no opposition would have been raised to the proposed amendment.
(2) It is said that the Chairman failed to take into account that witness statements had not been exchanged and that the Employment Tribunal's Order of 21 July provided for exchange at least 14 days before the hearing date. The Notice of Hearing arriving with just 14 days to go. I repeat, the Respondents' application stated incorrectly that there had been no order for exchange of witness statements. Indeed that error was repeated in their solicitors' fax of 10 October which may or may not have arrived after the Chairman finally reached his decision. It seems to me that he can hardly be criticised for failing to take into account any tension between the order for witness statements exchange on 21 July and the receipt by the Respondents' solicitors of the Notice of Hearing 14 days before the hearing at fixed date, if he was told in terms by those solicitors that no Order had been made for exchange. More generally I have been impressed by the speed and efficiency with which this interlocutory appeal has been prepared by the parties' solicitors. The Notice of Appeal was lodged on 14 October. I saw the file on the afternoon of 15 October and gave directions for a hearing today at 2 pm which required skeleton arguments and bundles to be prepared within a 24 hour time frame. The Respondents' solicitors lodged immaculately prepared bundles precisely at 4.30 pm yesterday and I am therefore not persuaded that this case could not prepared on both sides for a substantive Employment Tribunal hearing this coming Monday. That was the view of the Chairman, accepting the Applicants' submission on the point. See paragraph 3(5) of the letter of 13 October.
(3) The question of the availability of Counsel. Mr Goulding submits that at paragraph 3(4) of the letter of 13 October the Chairman was saying in effect that it was an irrelevant factor for his consideration that a representative was unable to attend the hearing. I cannot accept that interpretation of the words used. It seems to me that the Chairman took into account that in perhaps exceptional cases the unavailability of the representative will be a factor which leads to a postponement request being granted. It is not that the point was immaterial to the Chairman's consideration rather that it did not sway him in this particular case in favour of granting the postponement. Again I am pleased to learn that Mr Epstein, who is retained in the High Court Proceedings, is available to conduct the Respondents' case before the Employment Tribunal next week.
(4) Finally it is said that the decision to refuse the postponement application is perverse. I bear in mind the high hurdle faced by Mr Goulding in making good that submission. It has been repeated many times by the Court of Appeal and recently in the case of Andreou v The Lord Chancellors Department [2002] IRLR 728. In the course of this judgment I have made some observations of my own on the strength of the submissions made in support of these applications. The purpose was not to carry out an impermissible review de novo of the Chairman's Order, but to explain, if further explanation were necessary, why I have concluded that, all other grounds of appeal having failed, the perversity ground fails also.