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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 >> Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy v Parry & Anor [2018] EWCA Civ 672 (28 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2018/672.html Cite as: [2018] ICR 1807, [2018] EWCA Civ 672, [2018] WLR(D) 196 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
MRS JUSTICE ELISABETH LAING
UKEAT/0088/16/JOJ & UKEAT/0089/16/JOJ
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE BEAN
and
LORD JUSTICE NEWEY
____________________
THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS, ENERGY AND INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) MS RHYAN PARRY (2) THE TRUSTEES OF THE WILLIAM JONES'S SCHOOL FOUNDATION |
Respondents |
____________________
Nicola Newbegin and Madeline Stanley (instructed by the instructed by the National Education Union (Association of Teachers & Lecturers Section)) for Ms Parry
Douglas Leach (instructed by Veale Wasbrough Vizards LLP) for the Trustees of the William Jones's School Foundation
Hearing date: 22 February 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Bean :
"Please set out the background and details of your claim in the space below. The details of your claim should include the date(s) when the event(s) you are complaining about happened. Please use the blank sheet at the end of the form if needed."
The text which is typed in that box consists of just three words: "Please see attached". Her solicitors did indeed submit a separate document with the ET1; unfortunately it gave the particulars of a different case entirely.
"I have no specific recollection of the decision made over two months ago. However my note reads: "Accept. It may be a Hogg v Dover College type of dismissal. Ask C to provide full details of the claim.""
The Employment Tribunals Rules of Procedure 2013
"8(1) A claim shall be started by presenting a completed claim form (using a prescribed form) in accordance with any practice direction made under regulation 11 which supplements this rule."
"(1) The Tribunal shall reject a claim if-
a) It is not made on a prescribed form;
b) It does not contain all of the following information
i) Each claimant's name;
ii) Each claimant's address;
iii) Each respondent's name;
iv) Each respondent's address; or
c) It does not contain all of the following information
i) An early conciliation number;
ii) Confirmation that the claim does not institute any relevant proceedings; or
iii) Confirmation that one of the early conciliation exemptions applies.
(2) The form shall be returned to the claimant with a notice of rejection explaining why it has been rejected. The notice shall contain information about how to apply for a reconsideration of the rejection."
[Rule 11 provides for rejection on the grounds of failure to accompany the form with a tribunal fee or a remission application. It was introduced before the decision of the Supreme Court in R(UNISON) v Lord Chancellor [2017] 3 WLR 409.]
"Rejection: substantive defects
(1) The staff of the tribunal office shall refer a claim form to an Employment Judge if they consider that the claim, or part of it, may be
(a) one which the Tribunal has no jurisdiction to consider;
(b) in a form which cannot sensibly be responded to or is otherwise an abuse of the process;
(c) one which institutes relevant proceedings [i.e. proceedings to which the early conciliation regime applies] and is made on a claim form that does not contain either an early conciliation number or confirmation that one of the early conciliation exemptions applies;
(d) one which institutes relevant proceedings, is made on a claim form which contains confirmation that one of the early conciliation exemptions applies, and an early conciliation exemption does not apply;
(e) one which institutes relevant proceedings and the name of the claimant on the claim form is not the same as the name of the prospective claimant on the early conciliation certificate to which the early conciliation number relates; or
(f) one which institutes relevant proceedings and the name of the respondent on the claim form is not the same as the name of the prospective respondent on the early conciliation certificate to which the early conciliation number relates.
(2) The claim, or part of it, shall be rejected if the Judge considers that the claim, or part of it, is of a kind described in sub-paragraphs (a), (b), (c) or (d) of paragraph (1).
(2A) The claim, or part of it, shall be rejected if the Judge considers that the claim, or part of it, is of a kind described in sub-paragraph (e) or (f) of paragraph (1) unless the Judge considers that the claimant made a minor error in relation to a name or address and it would not be in the interests of justice to reject the claim.
(3) If the claim is rejected, the form shall be returned to the claimant together with a notice of rejection giving the judge's reasons for rejecting the claim, or part of it. The notice shall contain information about how to apply for a reconsideration of the rejection.'
"Reconsideration of rejection
(1) A claimant whose claim has been rejected (in whole or in part) under rule 10 or 12 may apply for a reconsideration on the basis that either
(a) the decision to reject was wrong; or
(b) the notified defect can be rectified.
(2) The application shall be in writing and presented to the Tribunal within 14 days of the date that the notice of rejection was sent. It shall explain why the decision is said to have been wrong or rectify the defect and if the claimant wishes to request a hearing this shall be requested in the application.
(3) If the claimant does not request a hearing, or an Employment Judge decides, on considering the application, that the claim shall be accepted in full, the Judge shall determine the application without a hearing. Otherwise the application shall be considered at a hearing attended only by the claimant.
(4) If the Judge decides that the original rejection was correct but that the defect has been rectified, the claim shall be treated as presented on the date that the defect was rectified."
"(2) The Secretary shall not accept the claim (or a relevant part of one) if it is clear to him that one or more of the following circumstances applies
(a) the claim does not include all the relevant required information;
(b) the tribunal does not have power to consider the claim (or that relevant part of it);
(3) If the Secretary decides not to accept a claim or part of one for any of the reasons in paragraph (2), he shall refer the claim together with a statement of his reasons for not accepting it to a chairman. The chairman shall decide in accordance with the criteria in paragraph (2) whether the claim or part of it should be accepted and allowed to proceed."
The Employment Tribunals Act 1996
"7(1) The Secretary of State may by regulations ("employment tribunal procedure regulations") make such provision as appears to him to be necessary or expedient with respect to proceedings before employment tribunals.
(2) Proceedings before employment tribunals shall be instituted in accordance with employment tribunal procedure regulations.
(3) Employment tribunal procedure regulations may, in particular, include provision
(f) for prescribing the procedure to be followed in any proceedings before an employment tribunal, including [examples follow]
(3ZA) Employment tribunal procedure regulations may
(a) authorise the Secretary of State to prescribe, or prescribe requirements in relation to, any form which is required by such regulations to be used for the purpose of instituting, or entering an appearance to, proceedings before employment tribunals'
(3A) Employment tribunal procedure regulations may authorise the determination of proceedings without any hearing in such circumstances as the regulations may prescribe.
(3AA) Employment tribunal procedure regulations under subsection (3A) may only authorise the determination of proceedings without a hearing in circumstances where
(a) all the parties to the proceedings consent in writing to the determination without a hearing, or
(b) the person (or, where more than one, each of the persons) against whom the proceedings are brought
(i) has presented no response in the proceedings, or
(ii) does not contest the case.
(3AB) For the purposes of subsection (3AA)(b), a person does not present a response in the proceedings if he presents a response but, in accordance with provision made by the regulations, it is not accepted.
(3B) Employment tribunal procedure regulations may authorise the determination of proceedings without hearing anyone other than the person or persons by whom the proceedings are brought (or his or her representatives) where
(a) the person (or, where more than one, each of the persons) against whom the proceedings are brought has done nothing to contest the case, or
(b) it appears from the application made by the person (or, where more than one, each of the persons) bringing the proceedings that he is not (or they are not) seeking any relief which an employment tribunal has power to give or that he is not (or they are not) entitled to any such relief.
(3C) Employment tribunal procedure regulations may authorise the determination of proceedings without hearing anyone other than the person or persons by whom, and the person or persons against whom, the proceedings are brought (or his or their representatives) where
(a) an employment tribunal is on undisputed facts bound by the decision of a court in another case to dismiss the case of the person or persons by whom, or of the person or persons against whom, the proceedings are brought, or
(b) the proceedings relate only to a preliminary issue which may be heard and determined in accordance with regulations under section 9(4).
"
"Any power conferred by this Act which is exercisable by statutory instrument includes power to make such incidental, supplementary or transitional provision as appears to the Minister exercising the power to be necessary or expedient."
The appeal to the EAT
"29. The question under Rule 12(1)(b) of the 2013 Rules is whether the EJ was entitled to conclude that the ET1 was in a form which could sensibly be responded to or was not otherwise an abuse of process. I have already described the ET1 which was presented. As I have said, the "attached" rider which the Claimant's solicitor sent to the ET, but which the ET did not send to the Respondent, related to a different case. Rule 12(1)(b) does not refer to the Respondent's subjective knowledge about the underlying facts. This is sensible, as the EJ to whom a claim form is referred will, obviously, have no means of knowing anything about the claim apart from what he can gather from the ET1. The test in Rule 12(1)(b) is an objective one. It is whether the claim is expressed in such a way as to enable the Respondent sensibly, or reasonably, to respond, or to plead, to it.
30. The necessary inference from EJ1's refusal to reject of the claim is that he considered that the ET1 could "sensibly be responded to". Mr Leach rightly accepts that on an appeal on a point of law, he can only challenge that refusal if it was "perverse" (in the technical sense). I accept Ms Newbegin's submission that an EJ should only reject a claim if he is sure that it cannot be sensibly responded to. If he is in any doubt, he must accept it.
31. An EJ looking at this ET1 could only have concluded that a Respondent faced with this ET1 would have had no idea of the basis on which the Claimant was making either of her claims, and that there was no way in which the Respondent in this case could sensibly respond, other than to say "I deny/accept that the Claimant was unfairly dismissed and is owed arrears of pay". Mr Leach relies on the tentative observations of Slade J in Fairbank v Care Management Group UKEAT/0139/12/JOJ at paragraph 13 as explaining what sort of details should be in an ET1. I accept, as Ms Newbegin submitted, they were made in the different context of a claim alleging discrimination on grounds of race. I reject her submission that that difference of context makes these observations irrelevant. They are of some analogical help. I have no hesitation in holding that no reasonable EJ properly directing himself in law could have concluded that an ET1 in this form could sensibly be responded to.
32. Before I leave this aspect of the argument, I must deal with various submissions made by Ms Newbegin, based on earlier authorities (for example Burns International Security v Butt [1983] IRLR 438), and on earlier iterations of the procedure Rules, about the basic minimum which an ET1 should contain, and the consequences of a failure to comply with any minimum requirements. The extent to which those authorities can help me is much limited by two factors. First, they concern the construction of different words in different procedure Rules. Second, and more importantly, they are based on the misapprehension that a failure to comply with a prescriptive procedure Rule made in delegated legislation cannot take away a right to make a claim which is conferred by primary legislation. At any rate since the EPCA, the primary legislation has provided that claims must be "made", or "instituted" in accordance with procedure regulations. These provisions provide statutory authority for Rules which derogate from the statutory right to bring a claim if that claim is not "made" or "instituted", as the case may be, in accordance with procedure Rules. The cases on which she relied do not refer to section 128 of the EPCA or to section 7(2) of the ETA, as the case may be. I accept Mr Leach's submission that section 7(2) is highly significant."
"The Judge has asked me contact you about this case. She has been doing some preparatory reading. She would be grateful if you could please consider the question whether rule 12(1)(b) of the 2013 Rules of Procedure is authorised by section 7, and, in particular, by section 7(3B), of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996. She would be grateful for any submissions you would be able to make on this point at the hearing."
"36. Section 7(1) confers a wide power on Secretary of State to make procedure regulations. Section 7(2) requires proceedings before ETs to be instituted in accordance with procedure regulations. I have explained above why I accept the submission that this provision cuts across and restricts the right of access to the ET, conferred by various statutes, to bring proceedings before the ET to vindicate different statutory rights. The institution of such proceedings must conform with the material provisions of the procedure regulations (provided that those provisions are, themselves, authorised by the primary legislation).
37. Section 7(3) authorises certain general types of provision. I do not consider that it is necessarily an exhaustive statement of the regulations which the Secretary of State may make under the wide power conferred by section 7(1). The regulations which the Secretary of State has power to make can authorise him to prescribe requirements in relation to any form "which is used for the purpose of instituting proceedings in" the ET for any form to be used as a claim form or notice of appearance (section 7(3ZA)). I accept Mr Leach's submission that section 7(3ZA) is authority for the requirements which are imposed by Regulation 12(1).
38. The scheme of section 7 is, however, to confer on the Secretary of State express powers to make procedure regulations which interfere in an unusual way with rights of access to the ET, and, in particular, those which interfere with the right to have a hearing. Thus section 7(3ZB) expressly authorises the Secretary of State to make regulations which limit the number of postponements which a party may have. Section 7(3A) read with section 7(3AA) authorises the Secretary of State to make regulations which provide for the ET to make a determination in proceedings without any hearing (in very limited circumstances only). Similarly, section 7(3B) authorises the Secretary of State to make procedure regulations which enable the ET to determine a claim without hearing from anyone other than the Claimant or his representatives. The relevant circumstance, provided for in section 7(3B)(b), is very narrow; it is where it appears from the application that the Claimant is not seeking any relief which the ET has power to give, or is not entitled to any such relief.
39. I do not consider that the wide power conferred by section 7(1) authorises the Secretary of State to make procedure regulations which provide for a claim to be determined without any hearing in circumstances other than those described in section 7(3AA). The correct approach in my judgment is that that wide power is constrained by section 7(3A) and (3AA). They are an exhaustive statement of the circumstances in which the Secretary of State is authorised to make procedure regulations which make the unusual provision that a claim may be determined without any hearing. Similar reasoning applies, in my judgment, to section 7(3B). It is an exhaustive statement of the circumstances in which the Secretary of State is authorised to make procedure regulations which enable an ET to determine a case having heard only from the Claimant.
40. I have considered what weight I should give to the fact that word "only" is present in subsection (3AA) and absent from subsection (3B). I have decided that this is not significant, for two reasons. First, its presence in subsection (3AA) reflects the legislative history. Subsection (3AA) was inserted later than subsection (3A) in order to cut down the wide power originally conferred by subsection (3A). Second, since subsection (3B) has been expressly inserted to authorise regulations restricting the right to a hearing, I consider that the maxim expressio unius exclusio alterius applies. In other words, the express provision Parliament has made excludes the implication of additional provision of a similar character.
41. Rule 12(1)(b) was in the 2013 Regulations as first promulgated. It restricts access to justice and is an unusual provision in at least three ways. First, it enables a claim to be rejected in limine, without the ET hearing from any party at all. If that stood alone it is doubtful whether it would be authorised by section 7; see section 7(3A) read with section 7(3AA). The ET will only hear from one party, the Claimant, if the Claimant exercises the right, conferred by Rule 13, to ask for the rejection to be reconsidered. So the second unusual feature, which is authorised by section 7, is that a final determination will potentially be made after hearing from only one party. The third is that this Rule restricts access to justice by purporting to authorise the ET to reject a claim if "it cannot sensibly be responded to or is otherwise an abuse of process". The parties agreed that the draftsman has assumed that presenting a claim in such a form is an abuse of process, and that the Rule requires an EJ to reject such a claim and any other claim which is "otherwise an abuse of process".
42. As I have indicated, Rule 12(1) makes requirements about the contents of the ET1. To the extent that it does that, it is authorised by section 7(3ZA). I reject Miss Newbegin's submission that section 7(3ZA) only authorises requirements "relating to the form itself" and does not authorise stipulations about what information should be in, or with, the form. I do not consider that the explanatory note on which she relies supports this submission; it is to a contrary effect.
43. But Rule 12(1)(b) does more than to prescribe requirements. It also prescribes a procedure for enforcing those requirements. That procedure, except and in so far as it coincides with subsection 3(B), is not authorised by the primary legislation. Mr Leach submitted that the procedure was authorised, because a power to make requirements implied a power to provide for sanctions if the requirements are not complied with. He relied on a broad statement in the judgment of Lord Selborne LC in Attorney General v Great Eastern Railway Company LR 7 HL 653 that the ultra vires rule is to be applied reasonably. The actual decision in that case was that the impugned transaction was expressly authorised by the legislation. In any event, Rule 27 provides a mechanism for enforcing these requirements. Mr Leach's submission is not an answer to this point. The drafting of section 7 shows in my judgment that Parliament appreciated that provisions curtailing the right to a hearing are unusual and wished to provide specific (but limited) authority for such procedures in the ET.
44. There is an overlap between a claim "which the Tribunal has no jurisdiction to consider" (in Rule 12(1)(a)) and the test in section 7(3B) ("it appears from the application that the [Claimant] is not seeking any relief which an [ET] has power to give or that he is not entitled to it"). The difficulty for the Respondent is that it is clear from the ET1 that the Claimant is seeking relief which the ET has power to give, and there is nothing to indicate that she is not entitled to it. It is also clear that her claims are claims over which the ET has jurisdiction. I bear in mind Ms Newbegin's correct submission that an EJ should not reject a claim unless he is sure that the applicable test is met. I consider that an EJ applying the test which is authorised by statute would have been bound to conclude that the claim should not be rejected.
45. Although I have held that, applying Rule 12(1)(b), the EJ was bound to reject the ET1, for the reasons I have given, I consider that the test in Rule 12(1)(b) is not authorised, in the context of the procedure provided for by Rule 12, by any of the provisions of section 7, or by the general power conferred by section 41(4). Such a drastic interference with the right to bring a claim cannot be characterised as "incidental, supplementary or transitional provision". The application of that test, however, is not problematic in the context of the Rule 27 procedure, and, that, it seems to me, is the correct procedure for enforcing compliance with the requirements imposed by Rule 12.
46. Thus the EJ erred in concluding that the claim could sensibly be responded to. So he erred in applying that test incorrectly to the facts. However, the only provision in Rule 12 which is authorised by section 7 is Rule 12(1)(a). The claims were indisputably claims which the ET had jurisdiction to consider, as they were claims for unfair dismissal and for arrears of pay. So his error is an immaterial error.
47. Ms Newbegin made some submissions about Article 6. Because of the view I have taken on the effect of section 7(3B) I do not need to decide them. I would have been minded to reject them, by analogy with the reasoning in Anderton v Clywd County Council [2002] EWCA Civ 933, [2002] 1 WLR 3174, a case on the relationship between the Civil Procedure Rules and Article 6, which Mr Leach relied on.
48. It follows that I must dismiss the appeal against the Decision not to reject the claim."
The appeal to this court
i) Whether the form ET1 in this case was (as Employment Judge Cadney held) in a form which could sensibly be responded to. Mr Leach argued that it was not; Ms Newbegin and Ms Stanley argued that it was. Mr Purchase, for the Secretary of State, did not seek to address us on this issue.
ii) Whether rule 12(1)(b) is (as Elisabeth Laing J held) ultra vires. Mr Purchase, supported by Mr Leach, argued that it was not. Ms Newbegin and Ms Stanley argued that it was.
Was the ET1 in this case in a form which could sensibly be responded to?
Is rule 12(1)(b) ultra vires?
The Secretary of State's grounds of appeal
"(1):A 'rejection' is not a 'determination of proceedings'
The EAT erred in treating a 'rejection' of a claim under rule 12(1)(b) as a 'determination of proceedings' to which section 7(3AA) and/or section 7(3B) of the 1996 Act apply. Any restrictions set out in section 7 on the power to make provision for such determinations do not apply to a 'rejection', which is a qualitatively different sort of judicial act.
(2): Section 7(3B) does not prohibit rule 12(1)(b) read with rule 13
The EAT correctly considered rule 12(1)(b) together with rule 13, which makes provision for a claimant to have a hearing upon making an application for a reconsideration of a rejection of a claim form. However, the EAT erred in treating section 7(3B) of the 1996 Act as setting out exhaustively the circumstances in which the 2013 Rules can provide for the determination of proceedings upon hearing only the claimant. Further or alternatively, rule 12(1)(b) falls within the scope of section 7(3B) in any event. Accordingly, there is no material restriction on the general powers set out in sections 7(1), 7(2), 9(1) and/or 41(4) of the 1996 Act, which authorise rule 12(1)(b).
(3): Section 7(3AA) does not prohibit rule 12(1)(b).
Insofar as rule 12(1)(b) is to be considered in isolation from rule 13, and is to be treated as providing for a determination of proceedings without a hearing, section 7(3AA) of the 1996 Act permits such a determination where the respondent to a claim 'has presented no response to the proceedings'. Since rule 12(1)(b) applies before the respondent would or could have represented a response, it is accordingly authorised by rule 7(3A) and 7(3AA) of the 1996 Act. Further or alternatively, there is accordingly no material restriction on the general powers set out in sections 7(1), 7(2), 9(1) and/or 41(4) of the 2013 Rules, which authorise rule 12(1)(b) of the 2013 Rules."
Was the rejection of the ET1 in this case a "determination of proceedings"?
If the rejection of the ET1 was a determination of proceedings, did it require a hearing?
Can rule 12(2) be read together with rule 13 and thus be validated by section 7(3B)?
Time limits and the effect of rule 13(4)
Conclusion
Lord Justice Newey:
Lady Justice Arden: