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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Lehman Brothers Ltd v. Smith [2005] UKEAT 0486_05_1310 (13 October 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2005/0486_05_1310.html Cite as: [2005] UKEAT 0486_05_1310, [2005] UKEAT 486_5_1310 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 29 September 2005 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR RICHARD COLEMAN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Clifford Chance LLP 10 Upper Bank Street London E14 5JJ |
For the Respondent | MR JEREMY LEWIS (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Tarlo Lyons Solicitors Watchmaker Court 33 St John's Lane London EC1M 4DB |
SUMMARY
Practice & Procedure: Amendment
Permission to amend claim form to add new claim. Whether permission may be given notwithstanding that new claim is out of time when application is made, or whether the balance of hardship/prejudice test is to be applied.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
"By no later than 14 September 2005 the Respondent must lodge with the Employment Appeal Tribunal and file an Answer, and if such Answer includes a cross-appeal shall forthwith apply to the Employment Appeal Tribunal on paper on notice to the Appellant for directions as to the hearing or disposal of such cross-appeal".
"The Respondent (Claimant) makes no cross-appeal".
Background
The Bonus Claims
"Yet further in relation to 2003, when the Claimant received a bonus of £25,678, it was acknowledged that this was a low level for bonus".
The Proposed Amendment
The Employment Tribunal Reasoning
(i) This was an application to add to an existing claim; it was not a re-labelling exercise; it referred to existing cause of action where some primary facts had already been pleaded (Reasons paragraph 52);
(ii) The balance of hardship came down in favour of granting the amendment (paragraph 56);
(iii) Had the original claim included a complaint relating to both the 2003 and 2004 bonuses, these would have constituted a series of deductions for the purposes of section 23(3)(a) ERA; however, by seeking to add a new claim (the 2003 bonus claim) by amendment, that was out of time. There was no series of deductions (paragraphs 40-41);
(iv) Alternatively, it was not reasonably practicable to bring the 2003 bonus claims within time. The Claimant did not know that the circumstances of the 2003 bonus payment would be in issue until receipt of the Respondent's Notice of Appearance, putting an issue the Claimant's performance and its effect on his 2003 bonus (paragraph 57).
The Appeal
(i) That the Chairman wrongly applied the test of balance of prejudice/hardship in determining whether or not to allow the amendment. She ought to have focused on the application of time limits, particularly the test of reasonable practicability, the "escape clause" equally applicable to the Wages Act and breach of contract claims;
(ii) The Chairman's finding that it was not reasonably practicable to bring either claim relating to the 2003 bonus in time was perverse, in that it was an illogical finding with no evidential basis.
Amendment
The Rules
"Giving leave to amend a claim…."
"Subject to the provisions of these Rules and any Practice Directions, a Tribunal or Chairman may regulate its own procedure".
CPR
The Earlier Cases
(i) That although Parliament has laid down rules covering the lodging of Originating Applications to Employment Tribunals, it has not laid down rules for time limits in relation to amending applications which have already been made, and
(ii) Following Cocking, it is necessary for tribunals to ask themselves what are the relevant hardships to the respective parties if the amendment is or is not allowed.
"(4) Whenever the discretion to grant an amendment is invoked, the Employment Tribunal should take into account all the circumstances and should balance the injustice and hardship of allowing the amendment against the injustice of refusing it".
"If a new complaint or cause of action is proposed to be added by way of amendment, it is essential for the tribunal to consider whether that complaint is out of time and, if so, whether the time limit should be extended under the applicable statutory provisions, e.g. in the case of unfair dismissal, s67 of the Employment Protection (Consolidation) Act 1978 [now s111(2) ERA; including the reasonable practicability escape clause]".
"We have been referred to the Court of Appeal judgment in British Newspaper Printing Corporation (North) Limited v Kelly [1989] IRLR 222 and Selkent Bus Co Ltd v Moore [1996] ICR 836, both of which cases approve and follow the test laid down by the National Industrial Relations Court in Cocking v Sandhurst Ltd [1974] ICR 650, namely, in determining whether or not to grant leave to amend what are the relevant hardships to the parties if leave to amend is or is not granted. It is pointed out in the cases that there is no statutory time limit on leave to amend.
Thus, the Industrial Tribunal may take into account, as one of the relevant circumstances, whether the proposed amendment raises a new cause of action out of time, and if so, whether time should be extended under the proviso (here, contained in s23(4) of the 1996 Act).
The Chairman in this case considered that question and decided not to extend time. However, he does not appear to have gone further to weigh the relative hardship of refusing the amendment. In failing to carry out that exercise, he did, in our judgment, fall into error".
"It seems to us, therefore, that we have to reject the submission that the only consideration to which the Tribunal should have had regard was the question of the time limits which would otherwise be appropriate. We are not unhappy to do so because if it were otherwise, those time limits would be conclusive and there would be no basis for providing, in any case, that an amendment might be made without those time limits being directly applicable. They will, of course, almost always be an important consideration".
I respectfully agree with that analysis.
The Present Case
(i) New Claims
It is, as I have observed, common ground that the 2003 bonus claims are new claims, in the sense that the amendment adds new causes of action unconnected with the original claim (see the third category of amendment, applying the formulation set out in Harvey on Industrial Relations and Employment Law, volume 5, paragraph T311.03).
(ii) Were the new claims time-barred at the time when the original claim form was lodged?
The 2003 bonus claim was put in two ways; as a claim for breach of contract, alternatively as a Wages Act claim.
As to the former, no claim for breach of contract could arise under the Extension of Jurisdiction Order 1994 until after the termination of the Claimant's employment on 14 December 2004 (Article 3(c). See also Capek v Lincolnshire County Council [2000] IRLR 590 (CA)). Thus the primary three month limitation period under the 1994 Order had not expired when the claim form was presented on 11 March 2005.
As to the Wages Act claim, I agree with the Chairman (Reasons paragraph 40) that had both the 2003 and 2004 bonus claims been presented on 11 March (not April, as the Chairman mistakenly states in paragraph 40) 2005, they would have represented a series of deductions and hence been presented within the primary limitation period. See Group 4 Nightspeed Ltd v Gilbert [1997] IRLR 398.
(iii) Balance of Hardship
The Chairman found (Reasons paragraph 56) that the balance of hardship lay in favour of granting the amendment. There is no appeal against that finding if, as I have held, the Chairman applied the correct test.
(iv) Reasonable Practicability
It follows that it is unnecessary for me to rule on Mr Coleman's second point in the appeal, challenging the Chairman's alternative finding that it was not reasonably practicable for the Claimant to present the new claims within time.
(v) Series of Deductions
Equally, it is unnecessary for me to rule on Mr Lewis' alternative ground for supporting the Chairman's conclusion, challenging the Chairman's finding at paragraph 41 of her reasons, it being sufficient in my view that, as the Chairman found, had the 2003 bonus Wages Act claim formed part of the original claim that, together with the 2004 bonus claim, would have constituted a series of deductions rendering both within the primary limitation period.
Conclusion