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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Bone v London Borough of Newham [2008] EWCA Civ 435 (30 April 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2008/435.html Cite as: [2008] IRLR 546, [2008] EWCA Civ 435, [2008] ICR 923 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM
EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SMITH
and
LORD JUSTICE WALL
____________________
CAROLINE ELIZABETH BONE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE MAYOR AND BURGESSES OF THE LONDON BOROUGH OF NEWHAM |
Respondent |
____________________
Jude Shepherd (instructed by London Borough of Newham) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 15th April 2008
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Wall: -
The appeal
In addition to these breaches the claimant says that her dismissal/resignation on 23 May 2005 was in itself an act of direct sex discrimination, victimisation, constructive unfair dismissal and a breach of contract.
(1) (Newham) and (Mr. Abdul Qureshi) (Newham's head of property services) directly discriminated against the claimant on grounds of sex as alleged in issues (i) and (iii) and victimised the claimant to her detriment contrary to the provisions of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 as alleged in issue (vii) of the issues set out herein.
(2) (Newham) and (Mr Eric Abu) (the appellant's team leader and immediate line manager) victimised the claimant to her detriment contrary to the provisions of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 as alleged in issues (vi), (vii), (ix) in part, (xv)-(xvii), (xx) and (xxii) of the issues set out herein.
(3) the claimant's other complaints of direct sex discrimination and victimisation contrary to the Sex Discrimination 1975 fail and are dismissed.
(4) the claimant was dismissed; she resigned in response to (Newham's) breach of the implied term of trust and confidence.
(5) Her dismissal was unfair.
(6) A date will now be fixed for a remedy hearing if required.
5. When invited to do so, the Tribunal agreed to consider whether to review of its own accord its judgment to clarify there was a finding of sex discrimination in respect of the dismissal and to say against whom this finding was made.
6. Having re-read its judgment, the Tribunal decided to issue a certificate of correction pursuant to rule 37(1) of (the Regulations). The certificate of correction and corrected judgment are attached to this judgment.
Dismissal
136. The facts found by the Tribunal show the claimant was subjected to a course of conduct by (Newham) and (Mr Abu) which amounted to sex discrimination by way of victimisation after she alleged, and the Tribunal has found she was, directly discriminated against on grounds of sex by (Newham) and (Mr Qureshi). By their conduct the Respondents breached the implied term of trust and confidence between the parties. The Respondent has sought to argue the claimant has waived the breach or breaches of this implied term. It is hard to see when the claimant has waived any breach. She pursued a grievance, she commenced proceedings, and when an attempt to resolve the proceedings broke down and no real effort was made to assist her to return to work she became ill again and resigned when she received the unreasonably delayed outcome of her Stage 3 grievance. The Tribunal finds the claimant was dismissed.
The decision of the EAT
Clerical mistakes in any order, judgment, decision or reasons, or errors arising in those documents from an accidental slip or omission, may at any time be corrected by certificate by the chairman, Regional Chairman, Vice President or President.
The so-called "slip rule" is one of the most widely known but misunderstood rules. The rule applies only to "an accidental slip or omission in a judgment or order". Essentially it is there to do no more than correct typographical errors (e.g. where the order says claimant when it means defendant; where it says 70 days instead of seven; where it says "January 2001" instead of "January 2002". Of course, such errors ought not to occur in important documents like a court order but they are regrettably common). Although not limited to errors by the court or court officers, the rule is limited to genuine slips and cannot be used to correct an error of substance nor in an attempt to get the court to add to its original order (e.g. to add a money judgment where none was sought, and none given at the trial).
We have no doubt in concluding that it was in the mind of the Tribunal that, in all likelihood, the constructive dismissal by reason of the breach of the implied term of trust and confidence described in paragraph 136 was not only unfair but was by reason of sex discrimination and victimisation. Had the Tribunal added (at) the end of paragraph 136 the words which they added by way of the certificate of correction on 5 January 2007, we can see no sensible basis upon which the correctness of that conclusion, as a matter of law, could have been questioned. That, however, is not the question for us. The fact is that the Tribunal in its original decision, and again by the first certificate of correction specifically stated that the complaint of direct sex discrimination and victimisation constructive dismissal was not found proved but failed and was dismissed not being a claim which was featured in the specific findings in her favour at paragraphs 1 and 2 of the summary. Furthermore, in a reasoned decision paragraph 136 stopped short of making any finding beyond the fact that she was dismissed. The Tribunal went on to deal with the legal consequence of its findings in paragraph 137, solely by reference to unfair dismissal, consistent with the summary to which we have already referred.
In those circumstances the change which was purported to be affected by the correction, by the second certificate of correction went a good distance beyond the kind of accidental slip or omission which may be covered by the slip rule. It was an adding, by the court, to its original order a finding which it had not originally made which it perhaps intended to make, but in error failed to make. We do not think that one can go so far as to say that it was evidence of second thoughts because we accept at face value what the Tribunal said in its reasoned decision of 5 January that it had, by implication, intended to make that finding but had failed to do so. Nonetheless, we are constrained, somewhat reluctantly, to conclude that the decision which the Tribunal made was the one which must stand and that it erred in law when it went beyond its jurisdiction by purporting to make a fresh finding on an important matter of substance in the way that it did by issuing a certificate of correction. That being so, in my judgment, the main appeal must succeed.
The decision of this court in Barke v Seetec Business Technology Centre Limited [2005] EWCA Civ 578, [2005] IRLR 633 (Barke)
This appeal concerns the lawfulness of a practice adopted by the Employment Appeal Tribunal since 2002 which has been most fully explained by the President (Burton J) in Burns v Royal Mail Group [2004] ICR 1103 ('the Burns procedure') (this decision is also reported as Burns v Consignia (No.2) [2004] IRLR 425). This procedure has since been incorporated in the Employment Appeal Tribunal Practice Direction 2004. It involves the Employment Appeal Tribunal, in a case where an employment tribunal is alleged to have failed in its judgment to deal with an issue at all, or to have given no reasons or no adequate reasons for a decision, inviting the employment tribunal to clarify, supplement or give its written reasons before proceeding to a final determination of the appeal. It is to be distinguished from the practice of remitting a case for re-consideration by an employment tribunal after the final determination of an appeal.
Jurisdiction outside the rules
29. Even if there were no power to request further reasons pursuant to rule 30, the Employment Appeal Tribunal would in our view be acting lawfully in inviting the employment tribunal to clarify, supplement or give its written reasons. As we have said, there is no prohibition in the statute or rules against such a request. Indeed, s.30(3) of the 1996 Act provides that 'Subject to Appeal Tribunal procedure rules, the Appeal Tribunal has power to regulate its own procedure.' The Burns procedure (now codified in the 2004 practice direction) is an example of such regulation. The only contrary argument advanced by Mr Green is not based on the proposition that it is not open to the Employment Appeal Tribunal to request further reasons. His argument is that such an invitation would be futile because the employment tribunal, being functus officio, could not respond to such an invitation. But for the reasons that we have given, the employment tribunal would not be functus officio. It follows that the Employment Appeal Tribunal is lawfully entitled to invite clarification etc of the reasons of the employment tribunal. That is the view that Stanley Burnton J took in VK v Norfolk County Council and The Special Educational Needs and Disability Tribunal [2004] EWHC 2921 (Admin). That case concerned an appeal to the high court against a decision of a SENDIST on the grounds that its reasons were inadequate. The county council submitted that the court should adopt the procedure suggested by this court in English. Stanley Burnton J said at paragraphs [70]–[71] that the court had no statutory power to remit the appeal to the tribunal to require or compel it to supplement its reasons, but that it could invite the tribunal to supplement its reasons. We agree with him.
30. We conclude, therefore, that the Employment Appeal Tribunal has the power to invite the employment tribunal to amplify its reasons.
The overriding objective would be frustrated by an unduly restrictive application of the Burns procedure and the jurisdiction explained in English. As Mr Underhill points out, from time to time employment tribunals will fail to give adequate reasons for an aspect of their decision or fail to deal with a point, not because they had no reasons or had not reached a decision on the point not dealt with, but because in the drafting process the reasons were inadequately articulated or the point was overlooked. The Burns procedure allows the employment tribunal to address the lacuna, thereby enabling the appeal to be disposed of economically. In the light of the employment tribunal's response, the appellant may withdraw the appeal (because the appellant considers that the reasons fatally undermine his or her grounds of appeal) or the appeal may be settled (because the reasons given tend to support the appellant's case). Alternatively, if on receipt of the amplified reasons the sift judge believes that the appeal is not arguable, either a rule 3(7) direction may be given or a preliminary hearing directed.
Conclusion
Lady Justice Smith:
Lord Justice Buxton: