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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Nicholas v. Plummers Restaurant Ltd [2000] EAT 1111_99_1205 (12 May 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/1111_99_1205.html Cite as: [2000] EAT 1111_99_1205 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
(AS IN CHAMBERS)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
MEETING FOR DIRECTIONS
For the Appellant | NO APPEARANCE OR REPRESENTATION BY OR ON BEHALF OF THE APPELLANT |
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT):
"Moreover, I insist that today, 12 May, for this case to be transferred to an open High Court with a jury."
That is quite impossible.
"Under Practice Direction 2(3) it says:
'The Notice of Appeal must clearly identify the point of law which forms the ground of appeal from the decision of the Industrial Tribunal to the EAT. It may also state the Order which the Appellant will ask the EAT to make at the hearing.'
It cannot be over-emphasised that the Notice of Appeal must identify points of law to form the grounds of appeal. I have looked at the present Notice of Appeal, of course, chiefly to see how far it contains references to instances of bias and improper conduct alleged to have occurred on the part of Mr Ingham, but I have inevitably formed views whilst looking at it. As I mentioned earlier; a remarkable feature is that the Notice of Appeal is some three times longer than the decision which is under appeal. It seems to me at the moment to be a loose ramble through the evidence given or evidence which seems to have been given or is alleged to have been given. It is not a Notice of Appeal that simply identifies the points of law sought to be relied upon. What I am going to do is to direct that there should be a directions hearing, not earlier than 28 days after today, at which only Mr Nicholas need attend, and I shall invite Mr Nicholas in the meantime to give very careful consideration to what are the points of law which he wishes to raise at the hearing of his appeal. It is quite unfair upon the respondents and the EAT to require them to find their way through the 32 plus pages of the present Notice of Appeal trying to see where are any points of law identified. Practice Direction 2(3) emphasises that the Notice of Appeal must identify the points of law. If at this return date, not less than 28 days hence, Mr Nicholas wishes to invite me to allow him to reframe his Notice of Appeal in accordance with some new form of words which he shall have devised and which identify points of law and do no more than that, I shall welcome that and will try an give him such assistance as I can in concentrating the matter into points of law. But if, at that restored hearing, the matter is still a jumble of evidence as well as of possible points of law that might somewhere be found like gold amongst dross, well then, the risk will be, if that is the case, that I will adjourn the matter for an inter partes hearing at which both sides can address me and at which what will be issue is whether the whole Notice of Appeal rather than just the small bits that I have been dealing with today, are appropriate to be struck out."
And a little later, I said:
"There will be, not less than 28 days hence, a directions hearing which Mr Nicholas alone need attend. He should concentrate on reformulating his Notice of Appeal in the interval. I will be very willing to entertain an application to amend his Notice of Appeal at that hearing, but if, by then, he has failed to comply with Practice Direction 2(3), well then, the risk will be that at this next hearing I shall simply adjourn the matter for a hearing at which both sides address me and on which occasion what will be in jeopardy, so far as concerns Mr Nicholas, will be the striking out of the whole of the Notice of Appeal."