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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Oko-Jaja v. Lewisham [2001] UKEAT 417_00_0805 (8 May 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/417_00_0805.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 417_00_0805, [2001] UKEAT 417__805 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
MRS RECORDER COX QC
MR P A L PARKER CBE
MR S M SPRINGER MBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | The Appellant in person |
For the Respondent | No appearance or representation by or on behalf of the Respondent |
MRS RECORDER COX QC
" an applicant who acts precipitately and comes to the Tribunal before taking reasonable steps to enquire of the Respondent whether their suspicions have any basis may well face a Costs Order if unsuccessful."
"After taking most particularly detailed evidence of the process, the Tribunal accepts the Respondent's evidence as to the manner in which the interviews were carried out and marked."
"The Tribunal in application of Rule 12 has come to the view that this is a case where the Applicant has acted unreasonably. At the hearing of the previous matter he had been given a warning in unequivocal terms, even though at that stage no order was made against him. In these present circumstances it is the Tribunal's view that all material potential evidence was available to him from an early stage and that it was open to him to get legal advice. He has declined to explain what the nature of that advice was. The Applicant's case has not rested on sound legal principles given the nature of the evidence that has been clearly stated to him from initially straight after the interview or soon after the interview: he has nonetheless persisted with the claim, which has involved significant expense on behalf of the Respondent."
(Paragraph 28)
In paragraph 29 they go on to say that they have decided to make an award in the specified sum of £250. Originally, the Appellant appealed against the Tribunal's Decision on his complaint of victimisation, as well as against the Order made against him for costs. At the preliminary hearing before this Appeal Tribunal however, the substantive appeal was dismissed upon withdrawal by the Appellant and the matter was permitted to proceed to a full hearing only on this issue, as to the award of costs.
"12 Costs
(1) Where, in the opinion of the tribunal, a party has in bringing or conducting the proceedings acted frivolously, vexatiously, abusively, disruptively or otherwise unreasonably, the tribunal may make -
(a) an order containing an award against that party in respect of the costs incurred by another party."
Some assistance as to this power is to be gained from a decision of this Appeal Tribunal in 1999 Beynon v Scadden [1999] IRLR 700, in which the Employment Appeal Tribunal held that the proper test for the Employment Tribunal was not whether its Order accorded with any particular authority but ultimately whether it was just to have exercised, as it did, the power conferred upon it by the Rule. We must remember too that the test for us is different from that which is appropriate in the Employment Tribunal. We must not consider whether we would have ordered as the Chairman did, but instead ask ourselves whether the Employment Tribunal took into account matters which it should not have done, or failed to take into account that which it should have done, or whether in some other way it came to a conclusion to which no Employment Tribunal, properly directing itself, could have come.