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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Phipps v Priory Education Services Ltd [2023] EWCA Civ 652 (09 June 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/652.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 652, [2023] WLR(D) 260, [2023] ICR 1043 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
THE HON MR JUSTICE GRIFFITHS
EA-2021-000491-VP
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE NICOLA DAVIES
and
LADY JUSTICE SIMLER
____________________
MRS LYNN PHIPPS |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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PRIORY EDUCATION SERVICES LTD |
Defendant/ Respondent |
____________________
Piers Martin (instructed by Knights PLC) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 10 May 2023
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean:
History
"Dear Sir/Madam.
STRIKE OUT WARNING
Employment Tribunals Rules of Procedure 2013
Rule 37
On the application of the respondent, Employment Judge Dean is considering striking out the claim because
- You have not complied with the Order of the Tribunal dated 18/09/17
- It has not been actively pursued.
If you wish to object to this proposal, you should give your reasons in writing or request a hearing at which can make them by 27/12/18."
"1. By a letter dated 17 December 2018 the Tribunal gave the claimant an opportunity to make representations or to request a hearing, as to why the claim should not be struck out because:
• the claimant had not complied with the Order of the Tribunal dated 18 September 2017.
• it has not been actively pursued.
2. The claimant has failed to make representations in writing, or has failed to make any sufficient representations, why this should not be done or to request a hearing. The claim is therefore struck out.
3. The hearing fixed for 07, 08, 09 and 10 January 2019 will not take place."
The ET decision of 3 July 2019
"13. The claimant's evidence was that OASL did not take any steps to prepare for the hearing which was due to start on 12 Mar 2018, and that she did not know about this hearing. She said she did not know about the application to postpone the hearing of 12 Mar 2018. She said she was aware of the hearing listed in Jan 2019 but was not expecting to attend it. She said she was unaware of Tribunal's order of 9 Mar 2018, OASL's failure to comply with the tribunal's order and she was unaware of the strike out warnings and OASL's failure to respond to it. The first she was aware what was happening was when she received a judgment striking out her claim. She complained that OASL deceived her and constantly fed her lies and then made it impossible for her to speak to them. We accept all the claimant's evidence on this."
14. The respondent submitted that it could be inferred from this that OASL's real motivation for applying for a postponement of the March 2018 hearing was that it was not ready for trial and that the postponement application made was dishonest………
17. Under Rule 70 of the ET Rules, a judgment may be reconsidered where it is necessary on the interests of justice to do so. Judicial discretion as to reconsideration should be exercised having regard to the interests of both parties and the public interest in finality in litigation (Outasight VB Ltd v Brown 2015 ICR D11). Failings of a party's representative will not generally constitute grounds for review (Lindsay v Ironsides Ray and Vials 1994 ICR 381)………..
...
21. We do not consider it in the interests of justice to reconsider the Tribunal judgment of 4 Jan 2019 striking out her claim. The claimant did not comply with the Order of the Tribunal of 9 Mar 2018 and failed to respond to a strike out warning from the respondent. The claimant relied on the default of her representative, OASL. However, under the principles in Lindsay, failings of a party's representative will not generally constitute grounds for review."
"22. There was unreasonable conduct of the claimant or her representative under Rule 76(1)(a) of the Regulations in that the claimant or her representative failed to comply with an order of the Employment Tribunal of 9 March 2018, and a breach of the said order under Rule 76(2) of the Regulations.
23. We are not persuaded that the claimant is implicated in the unreasonable conduct and the breach of the order. It was her representative who failed to provide evidence of his inability to attend the hearing listed for 4 March 2018, not the claimant. We accept the claimant's evidence that her representative did not keep her informed on developments in her case and that she did not know of the Tribunal's order of 9 Mar 2018 or the strike out warning nor her representative's failure to respond to it. The fact she was told in or after April 2018 that there was a hearing listed for January 2019 does not mean that she was told of the requirement for her representative to provide medical evidence or of its failure to do so.
24. We find that the claimant's representative acted improperly, unreasonably and negligently. The only reasonable inference from its failure to provide the medical evidence ordered is that there was none and it had mislead the tribunal into postponing the hearing listed for with an untrue reason 12 March 2018. If in fact there was no deception and medical evidence was available, the failure of OASL to provide it was improper, unreasonable and negligent.
25. OASL's conduct caused the respondent to incur unnecessary costs because it had to defend a claim and prepare for its hearing listed on two different dates when, in fact, the hearing never went ahead.
26. Given the claimant's lack of culpability and her representative's entire culpability, it is just for the respondent's costs to be paid entirely by the claimant's representative, OASL…….."
The appeal to the EAT
"The ET made no error of law when deciding on an application for reconsideration not to vary or revoke an earlier order striking out claims of unfair dismissal and age and disability discrimination on the grounds of non-compliance with existing orders and the claimant apparently not actively pursuing the claim.
Although at a full hearing of the application for reconsideration new information was provided, indicating that the fault lay with the claimant's representative rather than herself, the ET was entitled to decide that the interests of justice and the broad discretion it had under Rule 70 made it appropriate for the claim to be struck out. The claimant had a remedy against her representative, and the findings of the ET made that remedy even more promising for her by accepting her evidence, examining the facts and the circumstances, and making strong findings against the representative, leading to a wasted costs order against it. The interests of justice included also the interests of the other party, who had prepared for two full hearings neither of which had been effective, and to the public interest in finality of litigation."
"The assessment of what is in the interests of justice is pre-eminently a first instance exercise and it is not to be done afresh by an appellate tribunal or court in the absence of an error of law, or an assessment which is extreme in its unreasonableness, or which fails to take into account or apply the relevant considerations, such that it constitutes an error of law. There would be no finality in litigation if the interests of justice test was one to be re-examined in the light of the appellate court's own opinion and assessment. The cases in this area all agree that finality is an important factor when considering the jurisdiction to reconsider a decision which has already been made under rule 70."
"42. I do not think that is a fair reading of the ET's decision. Paragraph 21 is preceded by a very detailed consideration of the relevant history, between paragraphs 1 to 16 of the Reasons. In the course of that review of the history, the tribunal made important findings of fact, notably at paragraph 13, which demonstrated that it was not inflexibly applying Lindsay. Lindsay, in the passage I have read, gave as a reason for not allowing failings of the party's representatives to constitute a ground for review, the risk of involving a tribunal in inappropriate investigations into the competence of the representative who was not present or represented at the review. However, in this case, the tribunal conducted just such an investigation and one understands why. It was not inappropriate in that case because the wasted costs order meant that the representative was in a sense a party to the hearing. He had been put on notice of the allegations of misconduct against him and he had been urged to attend and to put his side of the case before a decision was made. The fact that he did not attend does not mean that he was not in that sense a party to the decision."
43. The tribunal clearly had very much in mind those factors, having carefully not only rehearsed but established them. It then, at paragraph 17 of the decision, referred to the relevant law. In doing so, it did not limit itself to the case of Lindsay; it correctly stated the full breadth of its power and its duty by saying, "a judgment may be reconsidered where it is necessary in the interests of justice to do so." It also referred to the need to have regard to the interests of both parties, and the public interest in finality of litigation. It seems to me wrong to say that paragraph 21, which follows subsequently, is to be read in isolation; it is all part of the whole.
44. Moreover, the tribunal, in giving its full written Reasons, some time after making its decision based on those Reasons following the hearing of 3 July 2019, no doubt had in mind that building upon its findings of fact about the outright misconduct of the representative, it had gone on to mitigate the effects of the refusal to reconsider, and therefore the shutting out of the claimant from further pursuing her claim, by ensuring, first of all, that the whole costs penalties of those proceedings fell on her representative and not on herself and, secondly, by very much improving the strength of her alternative remedy, in any proceedings she might choose to take against her representative, by making their findings of fact against him, which might be said, in the context in which they were made, to be binding on Mr Johnstone, who was party to the hearing, as the respondent to a wasted costs order, and who had been given a full opportunity to give evidence and make submissions, albeit that he did not avail himself of that opportunity.
45. It is therefore, in my judgment, incorrect to say that the tribunal was applying a blanket rule in its Second Decision or to read the decision not to revoke the Original Decision as being based entirely on the points made in the last two sentences of paragraph 21 of the Reasons.
46. It is said that the Reasons should have stated the potential exceptions to the general rule stated by Lindsay, and that the failure to do so demonstrates a lack of appreciation of the breadth of the discretion. It is said that the full Reasons should have explored the circumstances of the case. It is said that they should have discussed the interrelation between their findings of fact in paragraph 13 and their decision that it was not in the interests of justice to reconsider the Tribunal Judgment striking out the claim in paragraph 21.
47. All of this seems to me, however, to encourage precisely that formulaic recital of authorities decided on particular facts of particular cases, and to add encrustations into the interests of justice exercise in rule 70, which is discouraged in the judgment of Underhill J. Once one reads the decision as a whole, one sees that it was a flexible, conscientious and just decision, applying the correct principles of law, based on the facts of the case.
...
53. Rule 70 confers a broad discretion. I see no error of law in the ET's approach to this case. In the absence of an error of law there is no reason in this case to overturn the ET's decision that the interests of justice did not require it to revoke the Original Decision. The claimant had a remedy against her representative, and the findings of the ET made that remedy even more promising for her by accepting her evidence, examining the facts and the circumstances, and making strong findings against the representative leading to the wasted costs order. The respondent had prepared for two full hearings and, although it receive an order for costs, it could never recover the time lost in preparation, or the burden on witnesses who expected a hearing and then found it postponed, and then postponed again, before the case was struck out.
54. It was also the case that no steps at all had apparently been taken towards making the case ready on the claimant's side. The claimant was aware of the hearing fixed for January 2019 but was not intending or expecting to give evidence or to attend (Reasons paragraph 13). By the date of the hearing on 3 July 2019 which led to the Second Decision, the claimant's effective date of termination was already more than two years in the past. Given the claimant's remedy against her representative, the ET cannot be criticised for leaving the strike out in place in the Second Decision rather than saying that the case should be reinstated and restarted on a path to a third listing of the full hearing."
Grounds of appeal
i) The ET erred in treating Lindsay v Ironsides Ray and Vials [1994] ICR 381 as a rule of law giving a conclusive answer in every apparently similar case. The ET erred in failing to explore whether the facts found by it (at §13 ET Reasons) amounted to exceptional circumstances, taking the case outside of the general rule (that failings of a party's representative will not generally constitute grounds for review) or are not Meek compliant in that respect.
ii) The ET erred in failing to apply the principles set out by Sedley LJ in Bennett v London Borough of Southwark [2002] IRLR 407. (In the light of the view I take of the first and third grounds it is unnecessary to consider ground 2.)
iii) The ET's refusal to grant the Claimant's application for reconsideration was perverse.
Discussion
Three previous decisions of the EAT
"As it seems to us the fundamental question is whether or not the industrial tribunal's decision that the employee had failed to mitigate her loss was reached after she had had a fair and proper opportunity to present her case on the point, being aware that it was a point which was in issue. We do not think that it is appropriate for an industrial tribunal to review their decision simply because it is said there was an error of law on its face. If the matter has been ventilated and properly argued, then errors of law of that kind fall to be corrected by this appeal tribunal. If, on the other hand, due to an oversight or to some procedural occurrence one or other party can with substance say that he has not had a fair opportunity to present his argument on a point of substance, then that is a procedural shortcoming in the proceedings before the tribunal which, in our view, can be correctly dealt with by a review under rule 10 of Schedule 1 to the Industrial Tribunals (Rules of Procedure) Regulations 1980, however important the point of law or fact may be. In essence, the review procedure enables errors occurring in the course of the proceedings to be corrected but would not normally be appropriate when the proceedings had given both parties a fair opportunity to present their case and the decision had been reached in the light of all relevant argument."
"The Industrial Tribunal erred in law in holding that it had jurisdiction to grant a review of the earlier decision and to vary it. The power to grant a review on the grounds "that the interests of justice require such a review" is in very wide terms. It is, however, a power which should be cautiously exercised. As was observed by Phillips J. in Flint v. Eastern Electricity Board [1975] 10 ITR 152 at 160, the interests of justice include not only the interests of the person seeking a review, but also the interests of a person resisting a review on the grounds that "once a hearing which has been fairly conducted is complete, that should be the end of the matter". There are also the interests of the general public in finality of proceedings of this kind. Mr Justice Phillips said at p.161 that "It should only be in unusual cases that the appellant, the applicant before the Tribunal, is able to have a second bite at the cherry".
"In our judgment, the Industrial Tribunal, in granting the review sought by Miss Lindsay, misapplied the provisions of Rule 10, as interpreted in the Trimble case. The facts in this case cannot be properly viewed as a "procedural mishap" or "procedural shortcoming", or "procedural occurrence" of a kind which constitutes a denial to a party of a fair and proper opportunity to present a case. The facts, as they appear to us, are that Miss Lindsay was represented at the first hearing by Mrs Grenham. The solicitor representing Ironsides Ray & Vials clearly raised before the Tribunal in his opening, as well as in his closing remarks, that there was an issue of extension of time under S.68(6). The Tribunal was aware of this and made a decision on the point. The failure of Mrs Grenham to make any submissions on the point and the failure of the Tribunal to identify to Mrs Grenham the way in which it was considering its exercise of discretion did not, in our view, amount to denial of a fair opportunity to present an argument on a point of substance. The fact that the Tribunal thought it necessary, in its review decision, to make criticisms of Mrs Grenham's ability indicated that the reason for granting a review was that, in the view of the Industrial Tribunal, Miss Lindsay's case was not properly argued as a result of Mrs Grenham's shortcomings. Failings of a party's representatives, professional or otherwise, will not generally constitute a ground for review. That is a dangerous path to follow. It involves the risk of encouraging a disappointed applicant to seek to re-argue his case by blaming his representative for the failure of his claim. That may involve the Tribunal in inappropriate investigations into the competence of the representative who is not present at or represented at the review. If there is a justified complaint against the representative, that may be the subject of other proceedings and procedure."
".. the claimant specifically asked if he needed to attend the prehearing review and was told by counsel that he need not. Very regrettably Counsel failed to inform me of this fact at the pre-hearing review. I do not wish to be unnecessarily critical of Counsel but it is a cardinal principle of both sides of the legal profession that if a representative makes an error of this kind, in the interests of his client he should admit it at the earliest possible moment. He should have informed the Tribunal and made an application for a postponement on that ground. If he had done so, as I indicated in paragraph 3 of my reasons I would very probably have allowed it subject to an order for costs which should not in this event have been disputed and should not have been paid by the claimant."
"(i) Having read the claimant's witness statements, one undated and another dated 29 April 2009 I think it is highly likely that had he been present at the pre-hearing review and given evidence, subject to it being believed, he would have succeeded on the long term effect principle which was the decisive factor upon which I was not satisfied at the pre-hearing review. The non-calling of the claimant was a fundamental reason for his failure.
(ii) No fault whatsoever can be attributed to the claimant personally in this respect.
(iii) If the application for a review is refused the claimant's claim in its entirety (including the unfair dismissal claim) is likely to fail. I am far from satisfied that the claimant would be adequately compensated by his right to bring a claim against his former Counsel's insurers. There might for example be an argument that negligence actually during the course of a Hearing is not actionable. Certainly there would be considerable delay in dealing with the matter. That is a relevant factor which I am entitled to take into account. It is not one to be ignored as occurred in Flint v Eastern Electricity Board [1975] ICR page 395………..
(iv) Any injustice to the respondent could be adequately cured by an appropriate order for costs. The costs of the hearing on 27 March have already been recovered by the respondent from Counsel's insurers. There is no injustice in refusing to allow the respondent to benefit from a fundamental error by the claimant's Counsel which led to the respondent succeeding in a submission on which it would, in my view, have probably failed if the error had not occurred and the claimant had attended to give evidence. The benefit to the respondent was an unmerited windfall."
"15. ... There is in this field as in others a tendency – often denounced but seemingly ineradicable - for broad statutory discretions to become gradually so encrusted with case-law that decisions are made by resort to phrases or labels drawn from the authorities rather than on a careful assessment of what justice requires in the particular case. Thus a periodic scraping of the keel is desirable. (The exercise would indeed have been justifiable even apart from the introduction of the over-riding objective. It is not as if the principles of the over-riding objective were unknown prior to their explicit incorporation in the Rules in 2001: rule 34 (3) (e) itself is based squarely on the interests of justice. But I can see why its introduction has commended itself to judges of this Tribunal as a useful hook on which to hang an apparent departure from a long stream of previous authority.)
16. But it is important not to throw the baby out with the bath-water. As Rimer LJ observed in Jurkowska v Hlmad Ltd. [2008] ICR 841, at para. 19 of his judgment (p. 849), it is "basic"
"… that dealing with cases justly requires that they be dealt with in accordance with recognised principles. Those principles may have to be adapted on a case by case basis to meet what are perceived to be the special or exceptional circumstances of a particular case. But they at least provide the structure on the basis of which a just decision can be made."
17. The principles that underlie such decisions as Flint and Lindsay remain valid, and although those cases should not be regarded as establishing propositions of law giving a conclusive answer in every apparently similar case, they are valuable as drawing attention to those underlying principles. In particular, the weight attached in many of the previous cases to the importance of finality in litigation – or, as Phillips J put it in Flint ...at a time when the phrase was fresher than it is now), the view that it is unjust to give the losing party a second bite of the cherry – seems to me entirely appropriate: justice requires an equal regard to the interests and legitimate expectations of both parties, and a successful party should in general be entitled to regard a tribunal's decision on a substantive issue as final (subject, of course, to appeal). Likewise, I respectfully endorse, for the reasons which he gives, the strong note of caution expressed by Mummery J in Lindsay about entertaining a review on the basis of alleged errors on the part of a representative…………………
18. To the extent, therefore, that the Judge felt free to ignore Flint and, in particular, Lindsay on the basis that the over-riding objective had made them irrelevant, I believe that he went too far. Other errors can also be detected in his detailed reasoning on the alternative remedy issue. In particular……the suggestion in the same sub-paragraph that the possibility of recovery against a third party was inherently of little or no weight seems to me to go further than the authorities would support.
19. But it does not follow that the Judge's decision, or his fundamental reasoning, were wrong. It is clear that he attached decisive weight to the (related) facts (a) that the Claimant's counsel misled the Tribunal and (b) that by doing so he deprived him of the opportunity of an adjournment which would otherwise have been granted: see para. 12 (2) above. Those are an exceptional circumstance. They take the case outside the straightforward "fresh evidence" category which, as Phillips J accepted in Flint, falls to be dealt with under head (d). They also take it outside the ordinary run of cases where a party suffers from the wrong, or indeed incompetent, advice of his representative. Whereas in a case of that kind the overall interests of justice, and in particular the weight to be attached to finality in litigation, may well require that a party bear (as between himself and the other party) the consequences of the errors of his own representative, the Judge was entitled to take a different view on the particular facts of the present case. It was peculiarly hard on the Claimant to have to bear the consequences of what the Judge found to be plain misconduct - at least where, as here, the Council suffered no prejudice beyond the fact that a case which they believed to be done with would have to be re-opened; and the importance of maintaining finality in litigation could reasonably be judged to be outweighed by the peculiar injustice to him. That does not necessarily dispose of the concern identified by Mummery J in Lindsay about the tribunal having to conduct an "inappropriate investigation" into counsel's advice; but in the present case the relevant investigation was confined to the narrow factual question of whether counsel had indeed advised the Claimant that he need not attend: once that were established, it was within the Judge's own knowledge that he had been misled.
20. As regards the errors in the Judge's reasoning on the alternative remedy point noted at para. 18 above, although the Judge may have gone too far in discounting this point altogether, the trend of the modern authorities in this and analogous situations is to emphasise the inherently less satisfactory nature of such a remedy. In this connection I should mention a contention by Mr Anderson to the effect that the Judge failed to address submissions made by him about the availability of a remedy through the Bar Standards Board. There is in fact considerable doubt whether any remedy available through the Board's procedures would be adequate; but in any event I am satisfied that the point was not of such substance that it required to be specifically addressed.
21. I would accordingly uphold the Judge's decision. Further, even if I took the view that the errors to which I have referred above were sufficient to vitiate the exercise of his discretion, the parties were agreed that I should in that case determine the issue myself, exercising my powers under s. 35 (1) of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996; and I would on balance reach the same decision as the Judge, for the reasons given in the previous two paragraphs."
(1) The interests of justice test is broad-textured and should not be so encrusted with case law that decisions are made by resort to phrases or labels drawn from the authorities rather than on a careful assessment of what justice requires. The ET has a wide discretion in such cases. But dealing with cases justly requires that they be dealt with in accordance with recognised principles.
(2) Failings of a party's representative, professional or otherwise will not generally constitute a ground for review where the disappointed party has had an opportunity to argue the case and wishes to reargue it. This is because considerable weight must be given to the public interest in the finality of judicial decisions, both to protect the opposing party and to avoid over-burdening the employment tribunal system. A typical example of this is a case where a full hearing has been conducted but an argument was not put, or a witness was not called. In most such cases reconsideration will be refused on the grounds that the claimant has had a fair opportunity to put her case.
(3) However, the general rule that a party to tribunal proceedings cannot rely on the default of her representative as the basis for an application for reconsideration is not a blanket rule. In the exceptional circumstance where a party has not had a fair opportunity to present her case, that is a significant procedural shortcoming which may be appropriately dealt with by reconsideration.
The alternative remedy argument
The Rule 70 decision in the present case
(1) The strike-out occurred entirely because of the improper conduct of the Claimant's representative.
(2) As the ET found, the Claimant was not implicated in this misconduct and had no knowledge of what was happening until she received the strike-out decision.
(3) The application for reconsideration was made within 10 days of the strike-out decision.
(4) The Claimant had not at any stage been given a fair opportunity to present her case.
(5) Any supposed alternative remedy was fanciful.
Footnote
Lady Justice Nicola Davies:
Lady Justice Simler: