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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Minakova v Brownlow Properties Ltd (Practice and Procedure : Admissibility of evidence) [2011] UKEAT 0381_11_1210 (12 October 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2011/0381_11_1210.html Cite as: [2011] UKEAT 0381_11_1210, [2011] UKEAT 381_11_1210 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MS G MILLS CBE
MR B WARMAN
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MS S MINAKOVA (The Appellant in Person) & MRS E G ADDISON (Interpreter) |
For the Respondent | MR LACHLAN WILSON (of Counsel) Instructed by: Curwens LLP Gladbeck Way Enfield EN2 7HT |
SUMMARY
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Admissibility of evidence
UNLAWFUL DEDUCTION FROM WAGES
Claimant sought to introduce documentary evidence for first time during closing submissions at end of three day hearing. Properly ruled inadmissible. In any event, unlikely to advance Claimant's case on unlawful deductions which she was unable to establish.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
Introduction
"3. The Claimant also claimed unpaid wages. She did not claim wrongful dismissal. Her claim for unpaid wages was not particularised. She sought to put before the Tribunal a set of papers which she had previously sent to the Tribunal office and which the Tribunal staff had returned, with a covering letter making it clear that it was for the parties to prepare an agreed bundle of papers for the Hearing. In that set of papers, there were wage slips and timesheets. However, there was in the papers no statement of the manner in which the Claimant said that she had been underpaid, or to what extent. Furthermore, the Respondent had not seen those papers before the hearing. Mr Wilson on behalf of the Respondent objected to them being admitted on that basis. The Tribunal would have been willing to admit them and adjourn the proceedings to allow Mr Wilson to consider them and take instructions on them, but for the facts that
3.1 the claim would still not have been stated in terms which the Tribunal and the Respondent could understand;
3.2 the claim could and should have been stated in sufficient detail before the hearing started; and
3.3 the Claimant would have been unable (as she admitted) to pay any costs to the Respondent which the Respondent would have incurred as a result of the adjournment.
Thus, the Tribunal declined to admit those papers in evidence."
"39. As for the claim of unpaid wages, the Tribunal concluded that it could not make a finding in favour of the Claimant since there was simply insufficient evidence before it to do so."
"1. The fresh Notice of Appeal discloses no point of law with a reasonable prospect of success insofar as it relates to unfair dismissal. The procedure in paragraph 3 of the Employment Tribunal Judgment relates only to deductions.
2. The deductions point in paragraphs 3 and 39 of the Employment Tribunal Judgment will go to a full hearing as it is reasonably arguable that the Claimant did what was required in submitting the documents to the Employment Tribunal which were returned, they must have been known to the Respondent since they purport to be records of wages paid by it, and the insurance of the Respondent against costs should have been made known to the Employment Tribunal. Although this is a case management point, the discretion may have been exercised in error."
i the application to put in further documentary evidence was made very late in the Tribunal hearing, indeed after evidence had closed. The additional documents, it seems to us, allowing for the fact that the Claimant was effectively a litigant in person and that English is not her first language should, and could nevertheless, have been included in the trial bundle;ii the wages claim was never properly particularised by the Claimant and still has not been to this day;
iii the wages claim was plainly before the Tribunal. There was a conflict of evidence between the Claimant and Mr Hennegan;
iv it is unlikely that the additional documents which the Tribunal saw would have advanced the Claimant's case over and above the documents already in the trial bundle and the oral evidence which was before the Tribunal;
v it was for the Claimant to prove the wages claim. She failed to do so, hence it was dismissed.