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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Williams v Carmarthenshire Country Council [2002] EWCA Civ 1127 (11 July 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2002/1127.html Cite as: [2002] EWCA Civ 1127 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
THE ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Centre Thursday, 11th July 2002 |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
MR WILLIAMS | (applicant) | |
-v- | ||
CARMARTHENSHIRE COUNTRY COUNCIL | (respondent) |
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Smith Bernal Reporting Limited,
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Telephone No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
The respondent did not appear and was not represented
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Crown Copyright ©
Thursday, 11th July 2002
"Mr Williams also sent letters to other persons whom he thought might have authority or influence but nothing materialised until, as already mentioned, in March this year there was received from his solicitors the originating application which is now before us. This outlines the previous procedural history and concludes with a prayer for justice. So far as it embodies a request to reopen the earlier case, we are not prepared to entertain it and refer to the two review decisions in that case ... It has accordingly been listed for a preliminary hearing on two points, but in this decision we need deal with only one of them. The two points were first whether we could be satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable for Mr Williams to present his application within the statutory period and further in that case whether he presented this application within a reasonable time thereafter; and secondly, whether Mr Williams is debarred from taking proceedings all together by the existence on the register of a decision dismissing his application and which there is apparently no procedural means to revoke".
"Whether one could reasonably expect a man in Mr Williams' position to have brought this application or an application like it within the period ending on 30th November 1976 or to put it roughly by the end of that year".
"By letters dated 28th November 2000, 22nd December 2000 and 25th January 2001, sent to the applicant, it was explained to him that the case had been decided and that it was not possible to resurrect it. Every document and letter sent by the applicant to the Tribunal was read. In the letter from the Tribunal dated 25th January 2001, the applicant was warned, conditional upon any argument that he wished to put forward, that the intention of the Chairman was to dismiss the application. In considering the background and facts of the application, the Tribunal in pursuit of its powers under regulation 13(2)(e) of the Industrial Tribunal Constitutions of Procedure Regulations 1993 dismisses the application".
"I have never stated that I sought 'Compensation', but I do want to restore my professional reputation: my good name as a Schoolmaster -- especially as a teacher of Welsh, after false evidence was presented to the School Governors, without any opportunity for me to rebut the allegations of incompetence made against me. I was not surprised, therefore, that the School Governors recommended my dismissal.
I would like to question three witnesses to corroborate my own evidence and I will be willing to be cross-examined in turn. My professional career has been destroyed and I have never been in full time employment, despite many applications for employment, not only in the teaching profession, since I was forced to resign my last appointment".
"As we explained to Mr Williams, these are events which are now coming up to, and in some cases exceeding, 25 years old. It is simply not possible to reopen them. Even if it were within our power, we would think it undesirable to do so, but as we explained to Mr Williams, it is simply not within our power in any event. Our power is limited to deciding whether or not the Chairman of the Tribunal on 15th March erred or made a mistake in law when he refused to entertain Mr Williams' application. We can see no error of law. There is a well known Latin phrase, which translates into English as: 'it is in the interests of justice that there should be an end to litigation'.
We have considerable sympathy for Mr Williams in the objectives which he seeks. I am very sorry that he labours under a sense of injustice that his professional reputation has been besmirched and there is no means to remedy that. I regret very much that he feels his case has never been heard, but he must understand that we simply cannot reopen questions that are 25 years old. The appellant had his opportunity for the matter to be heard in 1976 when the application was withdrawn in circumstances which he has told us about. There was plainly no error of law then or in 1978 when the Tribunal refused to reopen the matter. If that was the case then, how much more must it be in the year 2001. As we tried to make clear to Mr Williams, as sympathetically as we could, the Employment Appeal Tribunal is a tribunal of law, not of fact, and we simply cannot help him. In our judgment, the Tribunal had no choice but to dismiss this application. The appeal stands no prospect of success. In our judgment, it would be quite wrong to allow it to go forward. It must therefore be dismissed at this stage".