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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Fordyce v Hammersmith & Fulham Conservative Association [2006] UKEAT 0390_05_1301 (13 January 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2006/0390_05_1301.html Cite as: [2006] UKEAT 0390_05_1301, [2006] UKEAT 390_5_1301 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE REID QC
MISS S M WILSON CBE
MR R A LYONS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MS NAOMI CUNNINGHAM (of Counsel) Instructed by: North Kensington Law Centre 74 Golborne Road London W10 5PS |
For the Respondent | MS ESTHER MORRIS (of Counsel) Instructed by: Bailey & Croft St James House 53-55 Spital Street Dartford DA1 2EB |
SUMMARY
Practice & Procedure: Bias, Misconduct & Procedural Irregularity
One of the lay members appeared to be asleep. Parties raised the issue with Tribunal and then agreed to continue the hearing. The lay member then appeared to resume his slumbers. No further objection made at the hearing but the losing employee, then raised issue as ground of appeal. Re-hearing ordered following Stansbury v Datapulse plc.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE REID QC
"does tend to sit with his eyes closed or seemingly closed. Even after the comments from the parties, this does not change which led me to think that this was his way of concentrating on the proceedings. In our discussions as a panel, I did not form any impression that he had missed an important point of evidence".
Perhaps surprisingly, there is no comment whatsoever from the wing member said to have been asleep.
"26. That brings me to the second point on which Mr Stansbury was given permission. Were the EAT, on those factual assumptions, correct to find that the hearing was fair? In reaching their conclusion, the EAT appear to have been heavily influenced by the considerations that (i) the ET decision was unanimous and reserved, and (ii) the correctness of that decision was upheld by the EAT at the primary hearing of the appeal. With respect to the EAT, neither point was relevant to the fairness of the hearing. A hearing by the ET may be unfair by reason of one member not being able, through the consumption of alcohol or falling asleep, to give the hearing his full attention. If the hearing was unfair because of the misbehaviour of a member of the ET, the decision is not saved from being unfair by the fact that the decision was unanimous and reserved or by the fact that, on the findings made by the ET at the flawed hearing, there could be no successful appeal. If there was an unfair hearing such that there had to be a retrial by a differently constituted ET, then at the retrial the new ET could make quite different findings.
27. The question is whether, on the factual assumptions by the EAT, there was a proper hearing. In Whitehart v Raymond Thomson Ltd, an unreported decision on 11th September 1984 of the EAT, Popplewell J presiding, this was said by the EAT in relation to a case where a member of the tribunal had dozed off once, if not twice:
'It is axiomatic that all members of a tribunal must hear all the evidence and to have a trial in which one member of the tribunal is asleep even for a short part of the time, cannot be categorised as a proper trial. Justice does not appear to have been done.'
That is cited in the Red Bank case [1992] ICR 204 at page 209. No less strong a comment might be made of an ET member who has fallen asleep and is known to have consumed alcohol. That might well have impaired the member's ability to attend to the evidence and submissions before the Tribunal.
28. The EAT in Kudrath were, in my judgment, right to say that it was the duty of the Tribunal to be alert during the whole of the hearing, and to appear to be so. It seems to me that an analogy with cases of bias is appropriate. In cases of bias the appearance of bias, as observed through the eyes and ears of a fair-minded and informed observer, will vitiate a hearing: see, for example, Porter v Magill [2002] AC 357 at 394 per Lord Hope. A member of a tribunal who does not appear to be alert to what is being said in the course of the hearing may cause that hearing to be held to be unfair, because the hearing should be by a tribunal each member of which is concentrating on the case before him or her. That is the position, as I see it, under English law, quite apart from the European Convention on Human Rights. It is reinforced by Article 6(1) of the Convention. As was said by the European Court of Human Rights in Kraska v Switzerland [1993] 18 EHRR 188 at page 200, paragraph 30:
'The effect of Article 6(1) is, inter alia, to place the 'tribunal' under a duty to conduct a proper examination of the submissions, arguments and evidence adduced by the parties without prejudice to its assessment of whether they are relevant to its decision.'
And at page 201, paragraph 32:
"The Court had already stressed on numerous occasions the importance of appearances in the administration of justice, but it has at the same time made clear that the standpoint of the persons concerned is not in itself decisive. The misgivings of the individuals before the courts, for instance with regard to the fairness of the proceedings, must in addition be capable of being held to be objectively justified"
and then on to paragraph 33:
"33. Finally, what should this court decide in these circumstances [the circumstances in that case being a wing member who had apparently taken alcohol and fallen asleep]? Did Mr Stansbury [that is the party] have the fair hearing to which he was entitled both under the general law and under Article 6? In my judgment, a hearing by a tribunal which includes a member who has been drinking alcohol to the extent that he appeared to fall asleep and not to be concentrating on the case does not give the appearance of the fair hearing to which every party is entitled. Public confidence, as Mr Kibling [that was Counsel for the Appellant] pointed out, in the administration of justice would be damaged were we to take the view that such behaviour by a member of the ET did not matter. In my judgment we should say firmly that the conduct of [the lay member in question] at the hearing was wholly inappropriate for any member of a tribunal.
34. In the result, Mr Stansbury, not having had the fair hearing to which he was entitled, this appeal should be allowed. The decision of the ET must be set aside and the case should be remitted for a rehearing before a differently constituted ET"
and the judgment then goes on to the issue of practicalities.