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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Mackenzie v. NHS Pensions Agency & Anor [2002] UKEAT 1080_01_2002 (20 February 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/1080_01_2002.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 1080_01_2002, [2002] UKEAT 1080_1_2002 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
MS N AMIN
MRS A GALLICO
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | MISS L CHUDLEIGH (Of Counsel) Appearing under the Employment Law Appeal Advice Scheme THE APPELLANT In Person |
Mr JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
"Please give the type of complaint you want the tribunal to decide"
She says:
"The NHS Pensions Agency refuse to pay me my joint pension (occupational) compulsory deducted from wages for 27 years one month."
And there is some small writing I need not trouble with. The Respondent was described as the NHS Pensions Agency.
"The Applicant has provided no evidence to indicate that she may be eligible for membership of the NHS Pension Scheme and furthermore the matters the Applicant raises in her claim are res judicata."
The Notice of Appearance continued:
"The Applicant issued proceedings against the Secretary of State in relation to her pension entitlement and the payment of money to Mr Joseph Lester in 1994. A hearing was held on 12 July 1994 where the Industrial tribunal in Leeds found no legislation on which the claim could be based."
And so the NHS Pensions Agency asked that the matter should be struck out.
"The decision of the Tribunal is that it has no jurisdiction to consider this complaint and accordingly it is dismissed."
"The applicant had presented an originating application to this tribunal, as an industrial tribunal, on 4 February 1994. In that application she pleaded:
"My right to Government occupational pension promised and paid for by Government deducting contributions from salary plus monies held by Government to buy back years.""
So he was quoting from the 1994 IT1 and he then explained what became of that 1994 case.
"That application came on before a full tribunal chaired by Mr John Prophet on 12 July 1994. That tribunal unanimously decided that it had no jurisdiction to consider the complaint and dismissed it."
The Extended Reasons add that there had been no appeal to the Employment Appeal Tribunal in relation to that decision of 1994 and no attempt to review it and so that 1994 decision was totally invulnerable. It was to be taken as appropriate and proper.
"The applicant has agreed today that this complaint (that is to say the new one of January 2001) is the same complaint as that brought before that tribunal in 1994. The only difference claimed by her is that she has new evidence to support her claim."
So the position is that in 2001, as Mr Sneath judged it, Mrs Mackenzie was renewing the very same case which had been dismissed in 1994 and had not been appealed. Not surprisingly, in that circumstance, he found that there was no jurisdiction to consider the complaint and that it was therefore to be dismissed. But we apprehend that the difficulties in Mrs Mackenzie's path go even deeper than that because it is not, of course, every kind of civil dispute that the Employment Appeal Tribunal or indeed the Employment Tribunal can deal with.