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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Letherbarrow v Kindergarten UK Ltd [2006] UKEAT 0258_06_0610 (6 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2006/0258_06_0610.html Cite as: [2006] UKEAT 258_6_610, [2006] UKEAT 0258_06_0610 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
APPEARANCES
For the Appellant | Mr D Bain (Representative) Messrs Morgan Cole Solicitors Apex Plaza Forbury Road Reading Berkshire RG1 1AX |
For the Respondent | Mr V Fullagar (Solicitor) Messrs Fullagar Brooks Solicitors 4 Cricklade Court Cricklade Street Swindon Wiltshire SN1 3EY |
Summary
Practice and Procedure
Striking-Out/dismissal
Chairman wrong to strike out unfair dismissal claim at pre-hearing review in view of issues of fact which he was not in a position to determine.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
"In essence, these claims arise following the Claimant's dismissal effective on 10 September 2005. The stated reason for dismissal was gross misconduct. The Claimant does not dispute that he took, without consent, from the Respondent's safe, approximately £600 and that those monies were not repaid to the Respondent until sometime in October after the dismissal. It seems to me that no reasonable Tribunal presented with those facts and the admission from the Claimant that he did that, would consider that the Respondent considered it as anything other than gross misconduct and further that in those circumstances dismissal was within a reasonable range of responses."
There then followed two sentences dealing with the sex discrimination claim, which I need not set out. The paragraph then continues:-
"The claim of entitlement to a redundancy payment appears doomed to failure in the light of what clearly seems to me a dismissal on the grounds of gross misconduct. The breach of contract notice pay claim is argued on the basis that the dismissal for gross misconduct was unjustified and that any dismissal should have been on notice. Accordingly I strike all those claims out, because in my view they have no reasonable prospect of success."
"55. The major contention is that the case raised issues of fact which could not properly be determined at the strike out stage.
"56 Mr Pitt-Payne accepts that the test for striking out is still a very high one. It is true that the power to strike out was amended in 2001 so as to be less rigorous. It used to be necessary to establish that the claim was frivolous, vexatious or scandalous, whereas now a claim can also be struck out where there is no reasonable prospect of success, but this is still a significant hurdle for the Respondent to cross as the authorities demonstrate. Mr Pitt-Payne emphasised, and I accept, that the test is not whether there is absolutely no chance of success - that was encompassed within the old test of scandalous proceedings (see Aldous LJ in Care First Partnership Ltd v Roffey [2001] IRLR 85 (CA) at paragraph 22) - but whether there is no real or reasonable chance of success. As Ward LJ expressed it in Balamoody v United Kingdom Central Council for Nursing Midwifery and Health Visiting [2002] IRLR 289, at para 39, this means that they are not fanciful.
"57. The classic example where striking out may occur is where the Tribunal reaches a conclusion that even on the facts advanced by the claimant the case has no prospect of success as a matter of law. In such a case one would expect a decision to set out the allegations of the claimant, analyse the relevant legal principles and indicate why the claim is bound to fail.
"58. However, where the facts themselves are in issue, in my judgment it can only be in the most extreme case that the Chairman can say without any evidence being tested in cross examination that the disputed facts will inevitably or almost inevitably be resolved against a claimant. Such a finding involves a ruling that the claimant is either dishonest or very fundamentally misguided. The evidence suggesting that may sometimes be strong, but that is a far cry from justifying an inference from such facts as are revealed in the papers alone that the claimant's case has no real merit."
The President also said this, at paragraph 64:
"Mr Pitt-Payne submits that it must in principle be possible for a tribunal in a clear case to make a finding that a claimant has no chance of establishing the facts alleged. I would not discount the possibility that very exceptionally it might be. But it seems to me that at the very least if such a step is going to be taken then the primary factual basis on which a tribunal infers that the dismissal must have been for the reason advanced by the employer, and not the countervailing reason advanced by the employee, must itself be undisputed."