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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Furness v. TBF The Teacher Support Network [2004] UKEAT 0161_04_1708 (17 August 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2005/0161_04_1708.html Cite as: [2004] UKEAT 0161_04_1708, [2004] UKEAT 161_4_1708 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
MR K EDMONDSON JP
MRS R A VICKERS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
- and -
For the Appellant | MR ANTONY SENDALL (of Counsel) Bar Pro Bono Unit |
For the Respondent | MR SIMON DEVONSHIRE (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Bates Wells & Braithwaite Solicitors Cheapside House 138 Cheapside London EC2V 6BB |
SUMMARY
Practice and Procedure: Striking Out/Dismissal
Issue whether s203 ERA 1996 (a) applicable (b) breached, in relation to agreement settling case, signed by advocates on each side, during hearing of Applicant's claim at the ET. The agreement was enforceable.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
Introduction
The issue
Directions
The legislation
"203(3) For the purposes of subsection (2)(f) the conditions regulating compromise agreements under this Act are that :-
(a) the agreement must be in writing,
(b) the agreement must relate to the particular {proceedings},
(c) the employee or worker must have received [advice from a relevant independent adviser] as to the terms and effect of the proposed agreement and, in particular, its effect on his ability to pursue his rights before an [employment tribunal];
(d) there must be in force, when the adviser gives the advice, a [contract of insurance, or an indemnity provided for members of a professional body,] covering the risk of a claim by the employee or worker in respect of loss arising in consequence of the advice,
(e) the agreement must identify the adviser, and
(f) the agreement must state that the conditions regulating compromise agreements under this Act are satisfied."
The facts
"1) The Respondent do pay the Applicant £5,000 (five thousand pounds) in 14 (fourteen) days in full and final settlement of all claims arising from her employment and termination thereof excluding any accrued rights in respect of pension entitlement and personal injury, claims of which she is not aware.
2) The parties agree that they shall not make any comments that are in any way damaging to the good reputation of the other party.
3) The terms and existence of this agreement shall remain confidential as between the parties and the Respondent's Chief Executive.
4) Upon reaching this agreement, the Applicant withdraws her complaint in case No.2203552/2001,
Signed by Counsel for Applicant – 26th July 2002
Signed by Solicitor for Respondent"
"1) The Tribunal stays this application until 26th August 2002.
2) In default of further application on the 26th August 2002, these proceedings are dismissed as withdrawn."
"11 (iii)
The undisputed purpose of the stay was to ensure that the Respondent made payment in accordance with the agreement, and allow it time to do so, as is common practice when settling a claim. That is why the dates of the Order, for payment, and for any "further application" are linked, and that is why it was agreed that, "Upon reaching this agreement, "the Applicant withdrew her complaint. The Respondent made payment within the deadline."
"The application by the Applicant to lift the stay is refused. The Order was not predicated on a valid compromise agreement, but was made by consent of the parties, and was predicated on the parties@ agreement to end the proceedings unless the Respondent failed to comply with the terms set out in the signed agreement. The Respondent fully complied with those terms."
"The parties could not have contemplated that the Applicant could reinstate the proceedings on the basis only that she changed her mind about the agreement after the Respondent had complied."
"The purpose of the Agreement and the Order, was to stay the proceedings so that the Agreement could come into effect i.e. the Applicant would withdraw her claim, and the Respondent would make payment. Accordingly, the Tribunal should construe the Order in that way, and thus should not permit the Applicant to continue with these proceedings."
"Upon the Applicant's return, I asked Mr Horan whether or not it was being contended that there were any documents that were in dispute. He said that it was no longer being contended that this was the case. Mr Horan, Counsel for the Applicant, approached me to say that his client wished to settle the proceedings. The figure of £5,000 was agreed after a little negotiation, with a further term being that the terms of settlement would remain confidential. There was absolutely no question but that this was intended to be a binding settlement to come into effect immediately. Understandably, the Applicant wished to ensure that she received her cheque before going through the formality of withdrawing the proceedings. Mr Horan drafted the Agreement in the presence of the Applicant, Mr Horan's trainee and myself. We discussed it and agreed the terms. Having signed the Agreement, we appeared in front of the Tribunal with a copy, to explain that we had in fact settled the case and that we were happy to provide the Tribunal with the terms of settlement."
"The Tribunal asked what mechanism we wished to use to implement settlement and we produced an order to the Tribunal."
"Not unusually, the terms of the agreement, which was for the payment of £5,000 in 14 days in full and final settlement, because the money was not to be paid over that day, or because, even if it had been paid over, any cheque would need to have been cleared, provided that there was a period of time in which to allow compliance with that agreement, and therefore there was a separate stay order until 26 August 2002. The Tribunal concluded, and we are entirely satisfied the Tribunal was right, that this was simply a mechanical stay in order to allow for performance of the compromise agreement. It did not incorporate in it any other circumstances in which the Applicant should be entitled not to withdraw the complaint which by virtue of the agreement, was intended to be withdrawn on such settlement".
"We have read the evidence before us that Mrs Furness has put forward, which of course has not been answered by Counsel whom she instructed at the original hearing. And we are satisfied that no material case in fraud of misrepresentation, such as to begin to bring this case within those exceptional circumstances, has been put forward. Consequently, insofar as her appeal depends upon setting aside this agreement at common law, it must fail.
The Applicant's case
The Respondent's case
The legal principles
"…In our view the same considerations apply to a consent decision made in the industrial tribunal as to any consent order. On analysis, the position seems to us to be this. Once an order has been made and perfected a party seeking to alter it must show that he has some right to have it altered. If the order was made by consent pursuant to an agreement, neither party can have such right so long as that agreement is valid and binding: hence the need to set aside the agreement. But it does not follow that because a consent order was made pursuant to a void agreement, the parties have an automatic right to have the order amended. In our judgment, when a consent decision has been made by an industrial tribunal with the consent of a party's solicitor, that party has no right to have that order altered. He is bound by the acts done by his agent within the ostensible authority of the agent and has no equity to have the consent decision amended.
To decide otherwise would be to strike at the roots of finality in these cases. In very many cases which are compromised before industrial tribunals, the conciliation officer plays no part. Once a decision has been properly made by the industrial tribunal on the information before it at the time, in the absence of fraud or misrepresentation that should be the end of the matter. Section [203] is designed to protect employees from entering into perhaps misguided bargains before their claim is heard by the industrial tribunal. But once the case has come before the industrial tribunal and been disposed of, the purpose of section [203] is exhausted".
"…the agreed order gave the Tribunal a discretion whether or not to make a further order lifting the stay…It was not 'simply adjourned' with liberty for the applicant to restore if he desired. He could only apply if there had been a breach of the [section 203 non-compliant] Agreement, and then it would be a matter of discretion. In the normal way, the Courts seek to enforce settlement agreements and so bring finality to litigation and will only lift a stay in exceptional circumstances…and… the discretion to lift the stay should not be exercised if the other party has remedied his breach…
…the only matters of any substance which should be taken into account in deciding whether or not to lift the stay are whether the [other party] has been and remains in breach of the agreement…"
Conclusions