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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Lennon v Birmingham City Council [2001] EWCA Civ 435 (27 March 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2001/435.html Cite as: [2001] IRLR 826, [2001] EWCA Civ 435 |
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE BIRMINGHAM COUNTY COURT
(His Honour Judge Griffiths-Jones)
Strand London WC2 Tuesday, 27th March 2001 |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MANTELL
LORD JUSTICE BUXTON
____________________
HELEN LENNON | ||
Appellant | ||
- v - | ||
BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL | ||
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Reporting Limited, 190 Fleet Street,
London EC4A 2AG
Tel: 0171 421 4040
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
appeared on behalf of the Appellant
MR A GLENNIE (Instructed by Birmingham City Council, Legal Services, Ingleby House, 11-14 Cannon Street, Birmingham B2 5EN)
appeared on behalf of the Respondent
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Tuesday 27th March 2001
"Harassment/Discrimination
Bullying
Vicarious liability of employer
Health and Safety - Duty of Care."
"The Respondent denies that it has discriminated and/or harassed the Applicant on the grounds of sex. The Respondent denies that this Tribunal has jurisdiction to deal with any other purported claim being brought by the applicant."
"(1)The application does not allege only discrimination/harassment on the grounds of sex, it includes bullying etc."
"We have recently spoken to our client at length in relation to this matter and she has instructed us that she wishes to withdraw the Application to the Industrial Tribunal.
We should accordingly be grateful if the claim could be marked withdrawn and the Interlocutory/Directions Hearing listed for Friday 27 November 1998 ... could be vacated."
"The application is dismissed on withdrawal by the applicant."
"3.Prior to in or about January 1996 the said other servants or agents of the Defendants and the said Geer..."
"...habitually behaved towards the Plaintiff in an abusive and/or unpleasant and/or offensive and/or intimidatory manner.
4.By reason of the said behaviour the Plaintiff suffered physical and mental ill health and was caused thereby to be absent form her employment."
5.In or about January 1996 the Plaintiff was subjected to abusive and/or unpleasant and/or offensive and/or intimidatory behaviour by the said other servants or agents of the Defendants and the said Geer."
6.The said behaviour caused the Plaintiff to suffer physical and mental ill health and, by reason of it, to be absent from her employment between the 19 and 26 days of January 1996."
"The claim be struck out pursuant to CPR 3.4(2)(b) as an abuse of process"
and then particulars were given.
"The claimant included a claim for stress related illness in industrial tribunal proceedings which proceedings were based upon the same facts as the present case and have been dismissed. As a matter of law the claimant is thereby estopped from bringing the present claim."
"I do not think this is a case of res judicata in the strict sense, because the cause of action is not the same in both proceedings. However, the principle applies to matters which could have been raised in previous proceedings, but were not."
"For the reasons I have already given, the appellant could have brought forward the whole of his claim for compensation in the tribunal. He did not do so."
"In 1992 B was dismissed from her employment as a part-time teacher at two of the local authority's schools. She lodged a claim with the industrial tribunal seeking a redundancy payment, but did not seek compensation for unfair dismissal. In order to satisfy the relevant statutory conditions relating to the minimum hours of work per week required to support a claim, B aggregated her hours of work from the separate contracts of employment. However, before the hearing B was advised that she was not entitled to aggregate the hours under separate concurrent contracts with the same employer. B therefore elected to withdraw her claim and at the hearing in May 1993 the industrial tribunal dismissed the proceedings without hearing any evidence or argument. In May 1994, following a House of Lords decision that the relevant statutory provisions were incompatible with provisions of Community law relating to part-time workers, B presented a further application, seeking a redundancy payment and also compensation for unfair dismissal. The tribunal held that the principle of res judicata did not prevent B from proceeding with her claim. The Employment Appeal Tribunal allowed the local authority's subsequent appeal, holding that the principles of cause of action and issue estoppel applied to an application which had been withdrawn and that B was precluded from pursuing her claim for unfair dismissal by the doctrine of res judicata in the wider sense, namely that it would be an abuse of the process of the court to raise in subsequent proceedings matters which could and should have been litigated in earlier proceedings. B appealed."
"The argument for Mrs Barber was that on 5 May 1993 the industrial tribunal made no relevant determination; it simply dismissed her claim by means of an administrative action or, at any rate, without any consideration of its merits.
In my judgment, however, Mummery J was correct when he said that there was nothing in the principles of cause of action or issue estoppel which stipulated that they could only apply in cases where a tribunal has given a reasoned decision on the issues of fact and law in the previous litigation. Section 140 of the 1978 Act contains provisions which render void any agreement to preclude a person from bringing proceedings before an industrial tribunal. A tribunal has therefore to be satisfied that a withdrawal is properly made. I am satisfied that that order which was made by the Industrial Tribunal on 5th May was a judicial decision made by the Industrial Tribunal in the exercise of its powers under the 1978 Act. It was not a mere administrative act. It is true that no evidence was heard by the tribunal, but that fact does not prevent a decision operating by way of res judicata."
"If a party puts forward a positive case, as the basis of asking the court to make the order which that party seeks, and then at trial declines to proceed and accepts that the claim must be dismissed, then that party must, in our view, save in exceptional circumstances, lose the right to raise again that case against the other party to those proceedings."
"In my judgment, it is important to distinguish clearly between res judicata and abuse of process not qualifying as res judicata, a distinction delayed by the blurring of the two in the courts' subsequent application of the above dictum. The former, in its cause of action estoppel form, is an absolute bar to relitigation."