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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Wiggan v R N Wooler & Company Ltd [2007] UKEAT 0542_06_2203 (22 March 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2007/0542_06_2203.html Cite as: [2007] UKEAT 0542_06_2203, [2007] UKEAT 542_6_2203 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
MR P GAMMON MBE
MR P R A JACQUES CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
APPEARANCES
For the Appellant | MR JOEL DONOVAN (Of Counsel) On behalf of the Appellant |
For the Respondents | MR DAN NORTHALL (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Milners Solicitors Crown House Great George Street Leeds LS1 3BR |
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE
Striking-out/dismissal
No case to answer
Tribunal erred in acceding to application to strike out at close of Claimant's evidence – the restrictive attitude to 'no case to answer' applications endorsed by the Court of Appeal in Logan [2007] ICR 1 applies equally to strike-out applications under the 2004 Rules made in similar circumstances.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
"(1) There is no inflexible rule of law and practice that a tribunal must always hear both sides, although that should normally be done. Ridley v GEC Machines Ltd [1977] 13 ITR 195 (Phillips J), a case of constructive dismissal.
(2) The power to stop a case at "half-time" must be exercised with caution. Coral Squash Clubs v Matthews [1979] ICR 607, 611H (Slynn J).
(3) It may be a complete waste of time to call upon the other party to give evidence in a hopeless case. Ridley 197B-C.
(4) Even where the onus of proof lies on the applicant, as in discrimination cases, it will only be in exceptional or frivolous cases that it would be right to take such a course. Oxford v Department of Health and Social Security [1977] ICR 884, 887 A-B (Phillips J). Owen & Briggs v James [1981] ICR 377 (Slynn J). British Gas PLC v Sharma [1991] IRLR 101, 106 (Wood J).
(5) Where there is no burden of proof, as under s.98(4) of the Employment Rights Act 1996, it will be difficult to envisage arguable cases where it is appropriate to terminate the proceedings at the end of the first party's case, as I said in Hackney LBC v Usher [1997] ICR 705, 713C."
That summary was expressly approved by Ward LJ in the Court of Appeal in Logan v Commissioners of Customs and Excise [2004] IRLR 63: see paragraph 18. Ward LJ spelt out at paragraph 19 that Judge Clark's point (4)
"… applies not only in discrimination cases, but in cases like this of constructive dismissal".
"Mr Stilitz advances a further submission. Since the matter was before the employment tribunal, the Employment Tribunals (Constitutions Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2001 came into force on 18 April 2001 which, pursuant to reg 10, introduced the overriding objective into the practice of the employment tribunal. This opens the way, submits Mr Stilitz, to a more robust stance being taken in the interest of saving expense in dealing with cases expeditiously and fairly. He submits that respondents ought not to have endure days of hearing at their own expense if the case has no realistic prospect of success. The question does not truly arise before us because we are considering the exercise of discretion by the employment tribunal before the new rules are binding upon them. Nonetheless I would urge some caution. In paragraph 12 of his judgment in Miller (t/a Waterloo Plant) v Cawley [2002] EWCA Civ 1100, Mance LJ was careful to distinguish between the submission of no case to answer and an application for summary judgment. In paragraph 13 he said:
'… considerable caution is necessary before a judge entertains such a submission [of no case to answer] or undertakes such determination without requiring an election [by the defendant not to call evidence]. The trial is now in progress, and although the test (no real prospect) differs from that applicable after hearing all possible evidence (balance of probability) caution is dictated … The submission interrupts the ordinary trial process, and it is not desirable that, during that process the judge of fact should be put in a position where he may find himself having to express first an initial view on the basis of taking the claimant's evidence alone and then (if he allows the claim to proceed) a further final view after taking into account further evidence, even though he does so by reference to different tests.'"
That passage is strictly obiter but it gives a fairly clear indication, after argument, that the introduction of the 2001 Rules and the change of philosophy which they were intending to bring in cannot be taken as undermining the very cautious approach to submissions of no case to answer enjoined by the previous case law. We respectfully agree. The considerations underlying the previous approach remain applicable in the new climate. We will not attempt an exhaustive statement of those considerations, which are reviewed in several of the cases referred to by Judge Clark. But they include:
(a) the fact that even in a case where the burden of proof is on the claimant it may well be legitimate for him to expect to be able to extract useful evidence from the defendant's witnesses;
(b) the importance of the claimant feeling that the tribunal has heard the entirety of the story before reaching a conclusion - this may be a matter of perception, but it is important to the appearance of justice;
(c) the point made by Mance LJ in the passage from his judgment in Miller quoted by Ward LJ in Logan; and
(d) the danger that a half-time strike-out will prove a false economy, both because it will take up time which could more profitably have been devoted to hearing the defendant's evidence and because of the risk that it will simply encourage an appeal.
All those points seem to us to remain good points under the post-2001 regime just as much as under the pre-2001 regime. Indeed, their force is if anything increased because of the greater availability under the new regime of other procedures for weeding out hopeless claims before they get to a hearing.