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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> McGrath v. Elliotts Bond & Banbury [1999] UKEAT 778_99_1207 (12 July 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/778_99_1207.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 778_99_1207 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR L D COWAN
LORD GLADWIN OF CLEE CBE JP
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR P WARD (of Counsel) Messrs Arora Lodhi & Heath Solicitors 110 Uxbridge Road Shepherds Bush London W12 8LR |
For the Respondents | MR D ISRAEL (Solicitor) Messrs Wedlake Bell Solicitors 16 Bedford Street Covent Garden London WC2E 9HF |
JUDGE PETER CLARK:
"(1) You [the respondent] have not stated:
(a) what the witness can give evidence about
(b) how that evidence is relevant to the issue(s)
Have you considered whether some other witness can give the necessary evidence?
(2) The dates were fixed at the Interlocutory Hearing on 23 April 1999 and no explanation has been given as to why the application was not made earlier.
(3) No documentary evidence has been provided as to when the holiday was booked.
(4) Moreover your opponent has objected to the postponement requested."
A copy of that letter was sent to both parties.
"However, given that Mr Reinold is an important witness, we think it is very important that he should be present at the hearing."
"Finally we reserve a right to produce this letter to the Court should it suit our purposes."
(1) Looking at the four reasons for originally refusing the postponement application on 2nd June, grounds (2) and (3) still stood. That may be so, but the Chairman was required to exercise his discretion afresh. His judgment was no doubt materially influenced by the relevance of Mr Reinold's evidence, which is now common ground, and the applicant's apparent non-opposition to the postponement.
(2) The respondent's solicitors misled the Employment Tribunal as to the applicant's position. We cannot accept that. It was for the applicant to make his objection known to the Employment Tribunal. He did not do so. Further, the applicant's initial change of position indicated in the fax of 1st July to the respondent's solicitors was conditional. It was not repeated in the applicant's solicitors fax of 5th July. By the time is had crystallised in their fax of 6th July, the respondents had earlier that day already sent their fax to the Employment Tribunal. In our view, they did not mislead the tribunal.
(3) This is an old case. Justice delayed in justice denied. The holiday arrangements of Reinold ought not to take precedence over the needs of justice. See Newsquest Ltd v Powers (EAT/877/97 – 29th July 1997 – Unreported – per Judge Hull QC – Transcript paragraph 7F). We note that in Newsquest this EAT declined to interfere with the exercise of the Chairman's discretion to refuse a postponement on the grounds that the respondent's managing director, a material witness, would be on holiday abroad at the time of the hearing. It seems to us that it was open to this Chairman to refuse or allow the postponement; either decision would fall within the proper exercise of his discretion on the facts of this case.
JUDGE PETER CLARK: Having delivered our judgment in this appeal, Mr Israel on behalf of the respondent, applied for the costs in the appeal. That application had been foreshadowed in the respondent's answer.
Our powers to order costs in appeals are circumscribed by Rule 34(1) of the EAT Rules which provides:
"Where it appears to the Appeal Tribunal that any proceedings were unnecessary, improper or vexatious or that there has been unreasonable delay or other unreasonable conduct in bringing or conducting the proceedings the Tribunal may order the party at fault to pay any other party the whole or such part as it thinks fit of the costs or expenses incurred by that other party in connection with the proceedings."
Mr Israel submits that this interlocutory appeal was a non-starter, to use the expression of Bristow J in Redland Roof Tiles Ltd v Eveleigh [1979] IRLR 11. He submits that the history of the matter shows that no point arose under the principle in the case of Bowater and further, that this was a proper exercise of the Chairman's discretion, such that no perversity argument could succeed.
Mr Ward counters that he had relied on two authorities; that the respondent's solicitors have not conducted themselves in a way that could be described as exemplary; in particular, there had been delay in providing the receipts for Mr Reinold's holiday until the very last minute.
Litigants who bring appeals against interlocutory orders of Chairman which are necessarily listed as inter partes hearings because very often they are urgent, should think long and hard before doing so. We are quite satisfied that this appeal was both unnecessary and unreasonable within the meaning of Rule 34(1). We consider that it raised no arguable point of law; that it was pursued for purely tactical reasons and, in these circumstances, we shall uphold the respondent's application. We have been given an estimated figure for the respondent's costs in the appeal, but we think that the proper course is to order the applicant, who is a solicitor, and therefore not without means and not without some perception of his own case to pay the respondent's costs in the appeal to be taxed if not agreed.