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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Scott v Russell [2013] EWCA Civ 1432 (12 November 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/1432.html Cite as: [2014] 1 Costs LO 95, [2013] EWCA Civ 1432 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
HHJ Peter Clark QC and Members
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MCFARLANE
and
LORD JUSTICE BEATSON
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John Scott |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Sir Bob Russell, MP |
Respondent |
____________________
Stephen Goodfellow (instructed by Ellisons Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date : 22 October 2013
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Beatson:
Introduction
The Proceedings in the Employment Tribunal
"(1) … [t]he reason for dismissal related to the Beedell complaint. It had nothing to do with any protected disclosure. Thus, the section 103A [of the Employment Rights Act 1996] had 'not the remotest prospect of succeeding'. (para. 64);
(2) [T]he claimant raised no prima facie case of less favourable treatment than an actual or hypothetical woman in connection with his dismissal. This claim had no realistic prospect of success. (para. 70);
(3) Having considered the standard House of Commons terms and conditions applicable to the claimant's employment, that the claimant was, at the time of dismissal, on a six month trial. During that probationary period it was open to the respondent to dismiss the claimant on four weeks notice (clause 47) in accordance with clause 2, without going through the disciplinary procedure provided for in clauses 29 – 40. Since the claimant had received four weeks pay in lieu of notice there was no prospect of his breach of contract claim succeeding (paras. 58 – 59)."
The application to adduce fresh evidence for the appeal
The decision of the EAT: substance
"18. We have considered the allegations…under the heading 'Bias' and have concluded that there are no grounds for believing that a reasonable observer would conclude that the [ET] in this case was biased. The complaints there raised by the claimant against Employment Judge Skinner relate to perfectly proper case management decisions taken by the Employment Judge in conducting the proceedings below. We reject this complaint without requiring the procedure under para. 11 PD to be deployed.
19. We agree with the Employment Tribunal that no prima facie case of direct sex discrimination was raised by the claimant. Having found as a fact that the respondent's reason for dismissal was the complaint by Ms Beedell, that answered the 'reason why' question. His dismissal had nothing to do with his sex.
20. We have considered the terms and conditions of the claimant's employment with the respondent. The respondent accepted that he summarily dismissed the claimant without going through the disciplinary procedure provided for in the terms and conditions, nor the ACAS code of practice expressly incorporated at clause 29. The question is whether, on its proper construction, the terms and conditions provided for such a procedure to be circumvented where dismissal occurs during the initial six month probationary period. The House of Commons Guidance on Disciplinary Matters, forwarded to us by the claimant following our hearing, does not affect that question.
21. The claimant submits that it does not. In written submissions for the purposes of the preliminary hearing, the respondent argues that it does. We agree with the respondent and the Employment Tribunal (paras. 58 – 59). It is clear that clause 2 provides for dismissal on notice under clause 47 without recourse to the disciplinary procedures set out between those provisions. Those procedures are designed to deal with procedurally unfair dismissal claims, which cannot arise during the first six months of employment. Accordingly, the Employment Tribunal was entitled to strike out this head of claim. The 'Gunton' extension claim does not arise here: see Gunton v Richmond [1980] ICR 755, considered by the Supreme Court in Edwards v Chesterfield [2012] IRLR 129."
The decision of the EAT: costs and rejection of application to adduce fresh evidence
"23. Although an order for costs remains an exceptional order in the Employment Tribunal, we remind ourselves that since costs are in the discretion of the Employment Tribunal we can only interfere on appeal where an error of legal principle is made out: Barnsley MBC v Yerrakalva [2012] IRLR 78.
24. In the present case, the Employment Tribunal had a very full opportunity to make a judgment on the claimant's commencement and conduct of these proceedings. Having permissibly found the claims to be misconceived and considering his conduct of the matter, they were entitled, in our judgment, to order that pay the respondent's full costs incurred subject to a detailed assessment. We are unable to see any prospect of the claimant's perversity grounds of appeal succeeding at a full hearing; nor do his bias grounds raise any arguable point of law."
"10. The principles on which fresh evidence is admitted for the first time on appeal are well established. The threefold test to be found in Ladd v Marshall [1954] 1 WLR 1489, adopted in this jurisdiction by Popplewell P in Wileman v Minelec Engineering Ltd [1988] ICR 318, is contained in para. 8.2 of the current EAT Practice Direction. First, the evidence could not have been obtained with reasonable diligence for use at the Employment Tribunal hearing; secondly, it is relevant and would probably have had an important influence on the hearing below; and, thirdly, it is apparently credible.
11. The material which the claimant sought to adduce in this way on appeal consisted of (a) local press reports of the PHR hearings held on 11 October and 7 December 2010, and (b) Mrs Scott's of the evidence given on those two occasions.
12. The correspondence between the claimant and the respondent and the EAT is listed in the respondent's costs application. I need not repeat it. Suffice it to say that, in refusing the fresh evidence application, the Registrar made clear, in her letter dated 22 December 2011, that neither the press reports nor Mrs Scott's notes of evidence would have had an important effect on the outcome of the PHR hearing. That is plainly correct. The Employment Judge keeps a note of evidence to which all members of the Tribunal can be referred when considering their determination. Thus, the application failed on the second limb of the Ladd v Marshall test, leaving aside the fact that the first press report and the first set of Mrs Scott's notes could have been referred to at the later PHR hearing held on 7 December 2010.
13. Further, the Registrar went on to point out that where notes of evidence given below were necessary for the determination of the substantive appeal, the proper course was to seek to agree a relevant note under para. 7 Practice Direction. Failing which, an application for the Employment Judge's notes could be made at the preliminary hearing.
14. Rather than follow that route, the claimant stubbornly appealed the Registrar's order. For the principal reason which he gave, that appeal was misconceived. The press reports and Mrs Scott's notes of evidence would have had no influence on the proceedings below. Consequently, I dismiss this appeal and have since dismissed the claimant's review application."
"15. …Although the claimant acts in person, he plainly has considerable litigation experience following his claim against HMRC. He was warned repeatedly by the EAT, and the respondent, that his application under para. 8 Practice Direction was inappropriate, yet he persisted, thereby putting the respondent to the expense of defending a hopeless appeal."
The grounds of Appeal to this Court
a) The ET erred in law and/or reached a perverse decision in awarding costs against the appellant in respect of his bringing and pursuit of his claim of sex discrimination. That claim could only be dismissed once evidence had been heard from the respondent and a finding made by the ET as to the actual reason for the appellant's dismissal (of the three different reasons asserted by the respondent) and that the appellant's dismissal was not on grounds of his sex. Those findings were only made following the PHR in the ET's decision dated 4 January 2011. The appellant had understandable concerns about the reason for the dismissal given the way in which it was carried out and the different reasons given for the dismissal.
b) The ET erred in law and/or reached a perverse decision in awarding costs against the appellant in respect of his bringing and pursuit of his claim of victimisation (by dismissal) on grounds that he had made a protected disclosure. As above, that claim could only be dismissed after the ET had made factual findings as to whether the appellant had made a protected disclosure, the actual reason for the dismissal – of the various reasons suggested by the respondent – and that the dismissal was not because the appellant had made a protected disclosure.
c) The ET erred in law and/or reached a perverse decision in awarding costs against the appellant, a litigant in person, in respect of his bringing his claim of breach of contract. The claim revolved around a point of contractual construction of considerable complexity that required determination by the ET. It was not unreasonable for the appellant, as a litigant in person, to bring the claim and seek such determination by the ET. This is particularly so given the guidance given in the MPs' fact sheet [on handling disciplinary matters].
d) The ET erred in law and/or reached a perverse decision in ordering the appellant to pay all of the respondent's costs on the basis that he had acted vexatiously and/or unreasonably in conducting the proceedings. The ET made no attempt to attribute any aspect of the wasted costs to its findings as to the appellant's unreasonable conduct and to award only those amounts. Further, the PHR process was entirely under the direction and control of the Employment Judge at all times.
e) The EAT erred in law and/or reached a perverse decision in ordering to pay the assessed sum of £2,500 in respect of his appeal against the decision of the Registrar.
Discussion
"[T]he hallmark of a vexatious proceeding is … that it has little or no basis in law (or at least no discernible basis); that whatever the intention of the proceedings may be, its effect is to subject the defendant to inconvenience, harassment and expense out of all proportion to any gain likely to accrue to the claimant, and that it involves an abuse of the process of the court, meaning by that a use of the court process for a purpose or in a way which is significantly different from the ordinary and proper use of the court process." (emphasis added)
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Lord Justice Laws:
Note 1 See Employment Rights Act 1996, section 108(1). [Back]