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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Trimble & Anor v North Lanarkshire Council & Anor (Equal Pay Act : no sub-topic) [2012] UKEAT 0048_12_2011 (20 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2012/0048_12_2011.html Cite as: [2012] UKEAT 0048_12_2011, [2012] UKEAT 48_12_2011 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH
(SITTING ALONE)
(1) MRS CATHERINE TRIMBLE
(2) MISS CATRIONA THOMSON |
APPELLANT |
(2) NORTH LANARKSHIRE LEISURE LTD |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellants | MR J MORGAN (Barrister) Instructed by: Thompsons Solicitors Berkeley House 285 Bath Street Glasgow G2 4HQ |
For the First Respondent For the Second Respondent |
No appearance MR M MCLAUGHLIN (Solicitor) DWF Biggart Baillie Dalmore House 310 St. Vincent Street Glasgow G2 5QR |
SUMMARY
EQUAL PAY ACT
PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Amendment
Equal Pay. Amendment to add a respondent. TUPE. Whether or not Tribunal erred in refusing the amendment.
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH
Introduction
Background
"We have been advised by the respondent that the following claimants have transferred from the council to North Lanarkshire Leisure Trust: -
- Catherine Trimble 108930/2006
- Catriona Thomson 108623/2007
We have now confirmed the position with our clients and it is agreed that our clients did transfer to the Trust.
In these circumstances, we apply herewith to amend these claims to include a second Respondent at part 2 of the ET1. The second Respondent is:
North Lanarkshire Leisure Trust …"
The Tribunal's Reasons
• Under rule 10(1) of the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2004 Sch 1, she had power to allow the amendment, power to revoke her orders in relation to the application to amend and she had a discretion in the matter;
• Her earlier orders were made in the absence of the Second Respondents and before she was provided with all the relevant information;
• The Claimants' representatives provided no explanation for having failed to act on the information provided by their clients, in 2007, that their employment had transferred to the Second Respondents;
• Regard should be had to the guidance in Selkent Bus Co. Ltd v Moore [1996] IRLR 661 which meant that she should take account of the following:
- The amendment would not be a new cause of action – it would be a claim for the enforcement of the equality clause in the transferred contracts of employment and the change in identity of respondent employer did not mean that it was a new claim;
- The issue of time bar did not arise in relation to the Claimants' claims that the First Respondents had not paid them equal pay because the Claimants had presented claims for enforcement of that equality clause – albeit against the wrong employer – in time; and
- The timing and manner of the application was such that there had been unexplained delay between the Claimants' solicitors being advised by their clients of the TUPE transfer in 2007 and their applying to amend the claims in 2011.
• Turning to considerations of relative prejudices, she recognised that the Claimants would be prejudiced by losing the ability to prosecute their claims in relation to their allegations that they had not received equal pay when in the employment of the First Respondents;
• The Employment Judge considered that the Second Respondents would also be prejudiced in respect that they would, at this stage, have to defend claims dating back as far as 2001 (five years prior to the date of transfer – see: EPA s.2ZC(2)) which would inevitably be difficult – obtaining the relevant information and documents in such circumstances would not be straightforward;
• The Second Respondents' difficulties in that event were not to be laid at the door of the First Respondents – rather, the Employment Judge was critical of the failure by the Claimants' solicitors to act once they were told about the transfer and their failure to provide any explanation for that failure. That is, she gave more weight to the prejudice on the Second Respondents' side because of the failings of the Claimants' solicitors; and
• The Employment Judge also evidently gave less weight to the potential prejudice to the Claimants in respect that she referred to the Claimants not being wholly without a remedy, given the fault of her advisers. At paragraph 23, she stated:
"…The claimants have been legally represented throughout the proceedings. I recognise that a claim against a representative is not equivalent to a remedy against the correct respondent. In this case, however, the fact that the representatives were informed of the transfer as far back as 2007 and failed to act on receipt of that information are factors to which I consider it is appropriate to attach some weight. In all of the above circumstances, I am satisfied that the relative injustice and hardship to the second respondents in refusing the applications to revoke the Orders outweighs the injustice and hardship to the claimants in granting them."
Relevant Law
"Such decisions are, essentially, challengeable only on what loosely may be called Wednesbury grounds, when the court at first instance exercised the discretion under a mistake of law, or disregard of principle, or under a misapprehension as to the facts, where they took into account irrelevant matters or failed to take into account relevant matters, or where the conclusion reached was 'outside the generous ambit within which a reasonable disagreement is possible,' see G V G [1985] 1WLR 647."
The Appeal
Discussion and Decision
"… the imposition of a limitation period of six months, as laid down in section 2(4) of the EPA, even if, by definition, expiry of that period entails total or partial dismissal of their actions, cannot be regarded as constituting an obstacle to obtaining the payment of sums to which, albeit not yet payable, the claimants are entitled under Article 119 of the Treaty. Such a limitation period does not render impossible or excessively difficult the exercise of rights conferred by the Community legal order and not therefore liable to strike at the very essence of those rights."
Disposal
Note 1 Six years would be the relevant period in England and Wales but these being Scottish claims, the relevant period is five years. [Back]