![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Sood & Ors v. Immigration Advisory Service [2002] UKEAT 0153_01_2510 (25 October 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/0153_01_2510.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 0153_01_2510, [2002] UKEAT 153_1_2510 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE D PUGSLEY
MRS M McARTHUR
MR H SINGH
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised (Revised 19 February 2003)
For the Appellant | MR P MEAD (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Thompsons Solicitors Employment Rights Unit Congress House Great Russell Street London WC1B 3LW |
For the Respondent | MR S STANTON-DUNNE (Solicitor) Messrs Merricks 207-208 Moulsham Street Chelmsford CM2 OLG |
JUDGE PUGSLEY
"The issue of fact is whether in practice she cannot comply: see Briggs v North Eastern Education and Library Board [1990] IRLR 181. 'Detriment' means 'putting under a disadvantage' Ministry of Defence v Jeremiah (an old case) [1980] ICR 13, CA. 'Detriment' may be shown not only where a woman is forced to resign from her work, but also where she manages to continue to work, but only with difficulty or by making an extreme effort see the case of Home Office v Holmes [1984] IRLR 299, EAT."
"Our unanimous opinion under Rule 12(1) of the Employment Tribunal Rules of Procedure 1993, is that in bringing and conduct the proceedings, although Mrs Ray did not act abusively, Mrs Ray, Mrs Sood, Mrs Lawal and Ms John did act unreasonably. We accept that there was no indication by the Tribunal at the preliminary hearing that the Applicants were acting abusively or unreasonably. Nor was any indication given at the interlocutory hearing on 29 July 1999. We also acknowledge that detriment may be shown where a woman manages to continue only with difficulty or by making an extreme effort. However this was not the case for any of the four Applicants. At the hearing there was insufficient evidence to show the requirements in this was to the detriment of each of the Applicants, because she could not comply with it, albeit as we noted in our decision on liability (and which may be also be relevant on the question of costs to be paid by each Applicant), some of the Applicants got closer to showing that they could not in practice comply with the requirements that did others."
"In all the circumstances of this case, it is our unanimous conclusion that the four Applicants knew or ought to have known before they started these proceedings that they had no realistic prospect of success because the requirement in question was not to their detriment. In all the circumstances, we find it extremely difficult to come to the conclusion that the expert legal advice that they received would have led them to believe that their chances of showing detriment were anything other than, at best, very slender. However, in that regard, and in recognition of the fact that showing detriment in cases of this kind is rarely an 'all or nothing' affair, it seems to us that although none of the four Applicants got anywhere close to establishing on a balance of probabilities that the requirement was to her detriment, it would be unjust and unfair, in the exercise of our discretion in determining the amount of each award, not to take account of the fact that some of the Applicants got closer to showing that they could not comply with the requirement than others. As we said in our decision of 6 November 2000, Mrs Sood got closer to showing it than Ms John and Mrs Lawal who, in turn got closer to showing it than Mrs Ray."
Quite simply this Tribunal is surprised that the Tribunal considered this was a case for an Order of Costs. The insufficiency of evidence as to the Appellants' difficulties in complying with the new regime does not in itself give rise to the inference that it was unreasonable to bring the case. We consider it was wrong to propose an unrealistic yardstick to judge a case like this. There was nothing we have found in the findings of the first and second decision that can be reconciled with the findings in the third decision at paragraph 7; namely that the Appellants knew that they had no realistic prospect of success. There is no clear evidence of it. We are baffled, with each of us having our own area of expertise in this area, that any tribunal would say that inherently and intricinsincally this was a case that was bound to fail; or far more importantly that the Applicants would have known that.
"Ordinary experience of life frequently teaches us that that which is plain for all to see once the dust of battle has subsided was far from clear to the combatants when they took up arms."
We could go on citing the cases but w simply say this; if one awarded costs on the basis, as this Tribunal did, access to Tribunals will be severely restricted because of litigants fear of costs. We do not consider that would be a proper interpretation of the statutory provisions.