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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Pawlicka v Gregory Park Holdings Ltd (t/a Four Seasons Hotel (Practice and procedure) [2024] EAT 27 (06 February 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2024/27.html Cite as: [2024] EAT 27 |
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Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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MISS B PAWLICKA |
Appellant |
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GREGORY PARK HOLDINGS LTD T/A FOUR SEASONS HOTEL |
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Mr Benjamin Phelps (instructed by Couchman Hanson) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 6 February 2024
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Crown Copyright ©
SUMMARY
Practice and procedure
The claimant filed an ET1 in which she advanced health and safety related claims under sections 44 and 100 Employment Rights Act ("ERA"). Those claims were struck out as she was not an employee within section 230(3)(a) ERA. She claimed however that the ET should have recognised that she had whistleblowing claims which she was entitled to advance on the basis that she was a worker within section 230(3)(b). However, given that such claims were not clearly advanced at any stage by the claimant prior to her health and safety claims being dismissed, the ET had not made any error of law in failing to recognise or acknowledge the existence of such claims.
BRUCE CARR KC, DEPUTY JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT:
Introduction
Relevant facts and procedural background
"I feel I was dismissed for the assertion of a statutory right relating to health and safety after an accident at work not to my own negligence.".
"It has been reported to me that the local GP had concerns with Four Seasons Hampshire with regard to its employees being pressurised to work while sick. This convinced me that I should make a claim upon ACAS reassurance that any dismissal for health and safety reasons is automatically unfair.".
"I am aware of the implications of health and safety for employers but I so far requested nothing but my employer telling me they were sorry for what happened to me. I was injured at work, not due to my own negligence. I was pressurised to continue while injured. I was then dismissed on H&S grounds.".
"Dear sirs, I identified breaches of section 44 of the Employment Rights Act and health and safety legislation. I suffered detriment after I had to bring up health and safety matters after my accident as contrary to legislation. My employer did not provide me with an accident reporting form nor first aid report was made.".
"Legal base are Employment Rights Act 1996, section 44, which gives me the right to bring this claim in an event of suffering as a result of H&S procedures. Section 100 I have brought to the employer's attention with my work which I believed potentially harmful to health and safety.".
"The email and previous correspondence in respect of this claim were then discussed with Mr Phelps [counsel for the respondent]. He confirmed that he was unaware of the other Tribunal claims the claimant may have made and was also unclear on what basis she relied upon section 44 and/or section 100 of the Employment Rights Act.".
"It was not possible to agree the issues with the parties at this hearing as the claimant did not attend. The Employment Judge suggests the issues in this claim appear to be as follows …".
"Where the decision will be held that the claimant was an employee I request a liability only judgment under rule 21 with regards to my claims including the right to a protected disclosure under Public Interest Act.". (sic).
The Legal Framework
"In essence, the Appellant submits that having decided that the Appellant was a worker within section 233 of the Employment Rights Act 1996, they should have gone on to decide that she made a protected disclosure under section 47(b) of the 1996 Act and was therefore entitled to compensation. The Appellant's case is that such a contention was clear in the light of the language used by her in paragraph 5.1 of her complaint form.".
"…a failure (if that it be) by the Employment Tribunal in this case to flag up or raise the question of whether or not the Appellant was seeking to make out a case that if the Employment Tribunal found that she was a worker within section 230(3) of the 1996 Act she was also making a claim for compensation for making a protected disclosure under section 47B of the same Act does not give rise to an error of law. To hold otherwise would be to put an intolerable duty upon an Employment Tribunal."
"29. In my judgment, there is no substance to this ground of appeal. First, as regards Mr Hopkin's point that the employment Judge had a duty towards Mr Muschett, as a litigant in person, to engage in an inquisitorial investigation of the background facts with a view to assisting Mr Muschett to make a case before the tribunal, I consider that Mr Hopkin overstated the employment Judge's duties.
30. In Lemas and Another v Williams [2009] EWCA Civ 360, in a judgment with which Sullivan and Mummery LJ agreed, I said this:
'57. … Mr Lemas represented himself and, like any litigant in person, he enjoyed a degree of autonomy as to the manner in which he conducted his case. Trying cases in which a party is representing himself can be amongst the more difficult judicial tasks. Judges should be, and are, properly sensitive to the disadvantages that such litigants face; and will ordinarily do their best to ensure that the unrepresented litigant has a proper opportunity to present his case fully. This may, for example, require the granting of adjournments in circumstances in which no like adjournment would be granted to a represented litigant. It may require a degree of indulgence during the litigant's examination of witnesses. It may require the Judge to take a firm line in keeping the litigant to the relevant issues.
57. There are, however, limits to what a Judge can and should do in order to assist such a litigant. It is for the litigant himself to decide what case to make and how to make it, and what evidence to adduce and how to adduce it. It is not for the Judge to give directions or advice on such matters. It is not his function to step into the arena on the litigant's side and to help him to make his case….'
31. Those observations were made in the context of a challenge to a decision of a Circuit Judge but I consider that essentially similar considerations apply to Employment Judges. It is not their role to engage in the sort of inquisitorial function that Mr Hopkin suggests or, therefore, to engage in an investigation as to whether further evidence might be available to one of the parties which, if adduced, might enable him to make a better case. Their function is to hear the case the parties choose to put before them, make findings as to the facts and to decide the case in accordance with the law. The suggestion that, in the present case, the Employment Judge committed some error of law in failing to engage in the sort of inquiry that Mr Hopkin suggested is, in my judgment, inconsistent with the limits of the role of such Judges as explained by this court in Mensah v East Hertfordshire NHS Trust [1998] EWCA Civ 954; [1998] IRLR 531 (see paragraphs [14] to [22] and the cases there cited by Peter Gibson LJ). Of course an Employment Judge, like any other Judge, must satisfy himself as to the law that he must apply to the instant case; and if he assesses that he has received insufficient help on it from those in front of him, he may well be required to do his own homework. But it is not his function to step into the factual and evidential arena.
32. I would not therefore accept Mr Hopkin's submission that the Employment Judge failed to perform some supposed duty to help Mr Muschett to unearth and advance all facts that might have been available to him to aid his case. In any event, Mr Hopkin gave us no indication of what those further facts might have been. Mr Muschett did of course give oral evidence and for all I know he may in doing so have expanded on the contents of his written evidence. As, however, we have no note of that evidence, we have no idea what it was.".
" The Appellant applied to the ET for a review of its decision (see paragraph 33 below), which was refused on 7 December 2011. On 28 March 2012 the Employment Appeal Tribunal ("EAT") (The Hon Mrs Justice Slade) granted the Appellant permission to appeal against the original decision of the ET. The EAT gave its judgment on 13 February 2013, dismissing the appeal. Permission to appeal that decision was refused on the papers, first by the EAT itself and then by a single Lord Justice. At a renewed oral hearing on 3 December 2013 Lord Justice Elias granted permission on the following ground:
"whether having regard in particular to the overriding objective and the fact that neither the claimant nor his representative were legally qualified, the Employment Tribunal erred in law in failing to take adequate steps to ensure that the claimant had taken a properly considered decision to withdraw the claim."
In his ruling Lord Justice Elias emphasised that he was granting permission only on this single limited point, and not on any of the other proposed grounds of appeal. That is the sole question now before us.".
"49. From the authorities to which Mrs Drysdale referred (see above) I derive the following general principles:
(1) It is a long-established and obviously desirable practice of courts generally, and employment tribunals in particular, that they will provide such assistance to litigants as may be appropriate in the formulation and presentation of their case.
(2) What level of assistance or intervention is "appropriate" depends upon the circumstances of each particular case.
(3) Such circumstances are too numerous to list exhaustively, but are likely to include: whether the litigant is representing himself or is represented; if represented, whether the representative is legally qualified or not; and in any case, the apparent level of competence and understanding of the litigant and/or his representative.
(4) The appropriate level of assistance or intervention is constrained by the overriding requirement that the Tribunal must at all times be, and be seen to be, impartial as between the parties, and that injustice to either side must be avoided.
(5) The determination of the appropriate level of assistance or intervention is properly a matter for the judgment of the Tribunal hearing the case, and the creation of rigid obligations or rules of law in this regard is to be avoided, as much will depend on the tribunal's assessment and "feel" for what is fair in all the circumstances of the specific case.
(6) There is, therefore, a wide margin of appreciation available to a Tribunal in assessing such matters, and an appeal court will not normally interfere with the Tribunal's exercise of its judgment in the absence of an act or omission on the part of the Tribunal which no reasonable Tribunal, properly directing itself on the basis of the overriding objective, would have done/omitted to do, and which amounts to unfair treatment of a litigant.".
Submissions - The Claimant's case
Submissions - The Respondents' case
Discussion