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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Ministry of Justice v Burton & Anor [2016] EWCA Civ 714 (12 July 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2016/714.html Cite as: [2016] ICR 1128, [2016] WLR(D) 383, [2016] EWCA Civ 714 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
THE HON MR JUSTICE LANGSTAFF, PRESIDENT
UKEAT021015
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE KITCHIN
and
LADY JUSTICE KING
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MINISTRY OF JUSTICE |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) Ms BURTON & (2) Mr ENGEL |
Respondent |
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Saul Margo (instructed by Leigh Day Solicitors) for the First Respondent
Mr Engel appeared in Person
Hearing date : 6 July 2016
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Elias:
The judgment of the Employment Tribunal
"3. At paras 60 and 61 of Edge I rejected a submission by Mr Bourne that I should take into account the nature of the different cases heard in the two jurisdictions when determining whether the work of the RPTS judges and the tax judges was broadly similar and there has been no appeal from that decision. But in this new context it seems that, implicitly, Mr Margo accepts that I must do so and in my judgment that is correct. Different jurisdictions impose different demands on their judges whether arising from the rules of procedure or simply the nature of the work of the jurisdiction, in particular when it comes to the question of how long it takes to do a task which is given the same label across jurisdictions but which in reality is markedly different. For that reason, although at first sight, the claimants' contention that they have been treated less favourably because they have not been allotted (roughly speaking) ½ X as paid time for decision writing appears anomalous, it is in fact the only sensible approach to adopt. My task verges on the impossible (at least in the absence of sound empirical evidence) because it appears to involve a requirement to establish in the tax chamber how much time salaried judges are allocated for decision writing in normal working hours for which they are remunerated, how much, if any, additional time they reasonably require to write decisions outside of normal working hours for which they are not remunerated and how much time it is reasonable for the average RPTS judge to take to write the average LVT decision as (almost by definition) neither actually exist. The comparison is of course made even more difficult by the fact that tax judges are not merely full time they are salaried and therefore do not have specified normal working hours as far as I am aware.
4. I suggested prior to closing submissions that it was necessary for the claimants to do four things: (a) identify the less favourable treatment complained of: (b) specify what they say is required to prevent the less favourable treatment: (c) explain why that has the effect of eliminating the less favourable treatment: and (d) point to the evidence which supports that contention. Mr Bourne agreed that that was the correct approach and Mr Margo and Mr Engel did not submit that it was not. It is also common ground that if I am against the claimants in their contention that ½ X is the correct amount of time for which they should be remunerated for decision writing that is not necessarily the end of the matter. Provided I am satisfied that there is less favourable treatment in the matter of paying remuneration for decision writing I am at liberty, in fact required, to identify a different amount of time necessary to eliminate the less favourable treatment. It is, as Mr Bourne submitted, all a question of quantification.
5. I have stated my task in paragraph 3 as I have because of Mr Margo's answer to point (b) in paragraph 4. Mr Engel adopts the same position. The answer to point (b) is not that the RPTS judges should be remunerated for the time which they actually spend in decision writing but for a notionally reasonable amount of time for writing the notionally average decision or decision of median complexity and that that should not be on the basis of a claim which must be justified but as an automatic adjunct to the daily sitting fee. More precisely each days sitting determining anything other than a rent case where only summary reasons are required, should be remunerated on the basis of 1 day sitting and 1 day decision writing. The swings and roundabouts principle copes with decisions which are both easier and more complex and in consequence shorter or longer than the median to write ...".
The review application
"The conclusion to which I came … is necessarily a rather rough and ready assessment of what the daily decision writing fee should be. It is a figure arrived at taking account of all the factors which Mr Bourne now says I have given insufficient weight to and giving them such weight as it felt appropriate to give. None are capable of accurate quantification. I have therefore already undertaken the exercise which Mr Bourne says I have not done, or rather have not done appropriately, and I am not persuaded that I have given these factors inadequate weight."
"Further, the Respondent asks the Tribunal to reconsider its finding that the "additional fee" is payable in respect of every Leasehold Valuation Tribunal sitting occasion when a full day's sitting fee is payable. This would significantly over-compensate claimants in respect of multi-day Leasehold Valuation Tribunal hearings. This is demonstrated by the example of Mr Engel. Paragraph 39 of the reasons discusses Mr Engel spending 6.5 days to write up a 10-day hearing (probably including Chambers days). The Tribunal properly noted that it could not understand how the judgment took this length of time to write up and it found that the paradigm judge would take much less time. However, if Mr Engel received the "additional fee" for each of those 10 hearing days then he would receive 6 2/3 sitting day fees. This is more than the 6.5 days that he actually spent writing up the judgment and which was a disproportionate amount of time. For this reason, the Tribunal is invited to find that the "additional fee" is payable only in respect of the first day of a multi-day Leasehold Valuation Case and that a lower or tapering sum is payable for any further hearing day(s) and/or that there is a cap on the total fee to be paid for any one judgment."
"I am next asked to reconsider my finding that the additional fee is payable in respect of every Leasehold Valuation Tribunal sitting occasion when a full day's sitting fee is payable as this would significantly over compensate the claimants in respect of multiday Leasehold Valuation Tribunal claims. This is a point which could and should have been taken during the hearing and I heard no evidence specifically directed to it. As Mr Margo points out in his written submissions, the current pro rata system of discretionary fees for decision writing allows for half a day's fee for each day of a five day hearing rather than a tapering arrangement. It is now too late for the respondent to raise this point and I decline to reconsider the Judgment in this respect."
The judge did not in terms refer to the submission on chambers days, but then that issue had not been raised specifically with respect to multi-day cases.
The appeals to the Employment Appeal Tribunal
Discussion
Refusal to review
The quantification argument
Lord Justice Kitchin:
Lady Justice King: