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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Omilaju v. Waltham Forest & Ors [1999] UKEAT 986_99_0112 (1 December 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/986_99_0112.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 986_99_112, [1999] UKEAT 986_99_0112 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
MR R SANDERSON OBE
MR J C SHRIGLEY
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR F EDWARD JNR (Barrister - Non Practising) Cain and Abel Law Firm 239 Missenden Inville Road London SE17 2HX |
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT): We have before us by way of a full hearing the appeal of Mr F Omilaju in the matter Omilaju against the London Borough of Waltham Forest. Mr Omilaju appears by Mr Edward junior and no one appears for the London Borough of Waltham Forest.
"6. Before these latest acts, I have in the past been treated less favourably and victimised because of Health and Safety and Trade Union activities and because of my race; I set out below those other instances."
"… that paragraph 6 of the particulars to the complaint be struck out in its entirety as frivolous and vexatious. The Tribunal gave directions as set out in the reasons to this decision."
"2 This hearing has been fixed at the direction of a chairman to consider whether the complaint should be struck out as frivolous and vexatious and whether or not it was presented in time.
"9 The submission of the second case is attacked by the respondent principally on two grounds; first it is said that it is an abuse of the process to seek to re-open an issue already decided by this Tribunal, a decision confirmed on appeal and second that it is objectionable in principle that an applicant assert exactly the same facts and matters in support of a new cause of action when that was available to him as at the date of presentation of his first complaint."
"3 … That complaint was based upon an alleged refusal by the respondent to appoint him to a post as Contract Monitoring Officer, an act said to have continuing consequences".
"The Chairman refuses to grant the other amendments requested in the letter of 19 November as they do not comply with the principles set out in Selkent Bus Co v Moore. Should the Applicant wish to proceed with these two additional matters he will have to issue fresh proceedings."
"5 Pursuant to the Order of the Tribunal, Mr Omilaju provided further and better particulars of the grounds of his complaint in a document submitted to the Tribunal by letter dated 8 March 1999."
"Mr Edward has referred us to further and better particulars of the Originating Application now drafted on behalf of the appellant. They follow the form of order made by the Chairman, except that there are added wholly new particulars relating to the appellant's health and safety and trade union activities during the employment, going back to 1997. Mr Edward submits that since, in the Notice of Appearance the respondents sought further and better particulars of the Originating Application, these particulars should be treated as forming part of form IT1. He further relies upon certain documents listed in a list served by the appellant and dated 3rd November 1998. We are unable to accept that submission. The request for particulars in the Notice of Appearance relates to the claim of racial discrimination which the respondents unsurprisingly understood this to be. This is an attempt, in our judgment, to raise the new claims of victimisation due to health and safety and trade union activities out of time, in circumstances where they simply are not foreshadowed at all in the form IT1 particulars of complaint, making all allowances for the fact that at that time the appellant was unrepresented.
It seems to us that this case falls fairly within the principles set out by Buxton LJ in the Bryant case. We can discern no error of the law on the part of the Chairman in the orders which he made in this case, and accordingly, the appeal must be dismissed."
"These paragraphs repeat verbatim the Applicant's response to a request for Further and Better Particulars of the Applicant's complaint dated 26 August 1998 filed with the Tribunal on 8 March 1999 pursuant to an Order of the Tribunal dated 14.12.98.
The Respondent submits that the alleged acts complained of are out of time."
"It is clear that the present application duplicates matters raised in the first Notice of Application dated 26 August 1998 and also seeks to resurrect matters the subject of appeal to the EAT."
"This is an attempt, in our judgment, to raise the new claims of victimisation due to health and safety and trade union activities out of time, in circumstances where they simply are not foreshadowed at all in the form IT1 particulars of complaint, making all allowances for the fact that at that time the appellant was unrepresented."
"10 Mr Edward adopts a graphic analogy in support of his case. He points to the two doors by which persons may be admitted to the hearing room. He accepts that the decision to refuse leave was correctly made but that it amounted to no more than an indication that one door was barred and that, if he was to enter, it must be by the other door. The door barred to him bore the sign 'Amendments', the door open to him the sign 'Fresh complaints'. That above represents a summary only of his careful argument and is adopted as a helpful focus on the immediate issue. Reliance is placed on the letter from the Tribunal dated 14 December 1998 and referred to in paragraph 4 above."
"11 We consider that Mr Edward is seeking to re-open an issue already decided and that is frivolous and vexatious. Accordingly, we strike out the whole of paragraph 6 of the second complaint."