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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Birmingham City Council v Barker & Ors [2009] UKEAT 0447_09_2910 (29 October 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2009/0447_09_2910.html Cite as: [2009] UKEAT 0447_09_2910, [2009] UKEAT 447_9_2910 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
MS B SWITZER
APPELLANT | |
(2) ADSHEAD & OTHERS (3) SAGOO & OTHERS (4) DRINKWATER & OTHERS (5) ATTWALL & OTHERS (6) STUBBINS & OTHERS |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR P EPSTEIN (One of Her Majesty's Counsel) MS L CHUDLEIGH (of Counsel) Instructed by: Birmingham City Council (Legal Services) Ingleby House 11-14 Cannon Street Birmingham Warwickshire B2 5EN |
For the Respondents For the Respondents |
MR A SHORT (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Thompson Solicitors The McLaren Building 35 Dale End Birmingham B4 7LF MS D ROMNEY (One of Her Majesty's Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Stefan Cross Solicitors Buddle House Buddle Road Newcastle Upon Tyne Tyne and Wear NE4 8AW |
SUMMARY
PRACTICE & PROCEDURE: Chairman Alone
An Employment Judge decided, contrary to the usual practice and the expectations of the parties, to sit alone on a forthcoming PHR to determine the 'material factor' defence in two major equal pay multiples.
Held:
(a) that the reasons for his decision were flawed, and that the usual practice of hearing such an issue with lay members was sound; and
(b) that the right decision at the time that it was taken would have been to direct a hearing by a full tribunal; but
(c) since the effect of now substituting such a decision would be to necessitate a substantial adjournment, the lesser of two evils was to allow the decision to stand.
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL (PRESIDENT)
"Pre-hearing reviews are interim hearings and shall be conducted by an Employment Judge unless the circumstances in paragraph 3 are applicable ..."
We can pass over paragraph 2. Paragraph 3 reads as follows:
"Pre-hearing reviews shall be conducted by a tribunal composed in accordance with section 4(1) of the Employment Tribunals Act if -
(a) a party has made a request in writing not less than 10 days before the date on which the pre-hearing review is due to take place that the pre-hearing review be conducted by a tribunal instead of an Employment Judge; and
(b) an Employment Judge considers that one or more substantive issues of fact are likely to be determined at the pre-hearing review, that it would be desirable for the pre-hearing review to be conducted by a tribunal and he has issued an order that the pre-hearing review be conducted by a tribunal."
(A "tribunal composed in accordance with section 1 of the Employment Tribunals Act" - that is, the Employment Tribunals Act 1996 - is a tribunal consisting of an Employment Judge and two lay members.) None of the parties had, at the date of the hearing before Judge Goodier, made a request in writing of the kind referred to at rule 18(3)(a) because of their understanding that the PHR was to take place before a full tribunal in any event. But they were still in time to do so, and the matter proceeded before the Judge on the basis that such a request would be made, as indeed it now has been.
"I am against you for this reason. 18(3) provides, it seems to me, that although there is a balancing exercise between on the one hand the value that the lay members will bring and on the other hand the inevitable delay and additional cost that is occasioned by the involvement of lay members. The issues in this case are going to include numerous questions of fact but they are not particularly the sorts of questions of fact on which lay members are likely to have expertise. They are the sort of thing determined in the High Court by a judge sitting alone so the PHR will be conducted by me sitting alone."
"12.1 I raised with the parties the question of mode of trial. By Employment Tribunals Rules of Procedure Rule 18(1), a PHR is to be conducted by an Employment Judge alone "unless the circumstances in paragraph (3) [of Rule 18] are applicable." Those circumstances are:
"(a) a party has made a request in writing not less than 10 days before the date on which the pre-hearing review is due to take place that the pre-hearing review should be conducted by a tribunal instead of an Employment Judge; and
(b) an Employment Judge considers that one or more substantive issues of fact are likely to be determined at the pre-hearing review, that it would be desirable for the pre-hearing review to be conducted by a tribunal and he has issued an order that the pre-hearing review be conducted by a tribunal."
12.2 The parties expressed a preference for hearing by a full tribunal. I considered their submissions but decided that the hearing should be conducted by me as Employment Judge alone. My reasons were as follows.
12.3 In this case, the formal requirement for trial by a full tribunal under Rule 18(3)(a) (request by a party with 10 day's notice) had not been met before the CMD, but could (just) be complied with before the start of the PHR. The final requirement under Rule 18(3)(b) (an order for such trial) could also be complied with. The question was, how should the remainder of Rule 18(3)(b) be applied? There is no doubt that on this PHR there will be numerous disputed issues of fact. There will also, it seems certain, be complex and weighty issues of law. In my view the first and second requirements of Rule 18(3)(b) (substantive issues of law, and desirable for hearing by full tribunal) are separate and cumulative. The fact that there are substantive issues of fact may point to its being desirable for the hearing to be by a full tribunal, but cannot be determinative of that question, or there would have been no point in the recital of the second requirement. There is therefore a discretion to be exercised. In the exercise of it, I must identify and balance the relevant factors.
12.3 Factors in favour of a full tribunal seem to me to be that:
(a) there is generally a presumption in favour of a full tribunal where there is likely to be a dispute of fact (see Employment Tribunals Act 1996 s4(5));
(b) the lay members together with the Employment Judge make up "the industrial jury", and participate in a collegiate decision; and
(c) lay members may contribute valuable knowledge of the principles of good industrial relations practice.
12.5 Factors against are that:
(a) in a case such as this, the issues of fact are likely to be mainly matters of detail, such as are tried by Judge alone in the civil courts every day without difficulty, rather than questions turning on the truthfulness of witnesses, or more emotive matters which commonly arise for example in non-Equal Pay discrimination cases;
(b) the issues of law are likely to be ones on which most lay members would rely heavily on the Employment Judge, so that the extent of their participation would in truth be limited;
(c) with great respect to lay members, one can overstate the proposition that an Employment Judge alone is a resident of an ivory tower – many, myself included, have been full-time Employment Judges for some years, and before that had many years experience of employment and industrial relations matters as practitioners specialising in employment law; and
(d) the involvement of lay members would inevitably (and, in the light of my experience, very considerably) slow down the hearing, so adding to the cost of the litigation to the parties and to the community at large, and the risk of further delay in this already very protracted litigation.
12.6 Weighing the above factors against each other, and even taking into account the expressed preference of the parties, I was firmly of the view that trial by judge alone is the better option."
"the quality of justice must not be allowed to deteriorate because of resource implications."