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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Johnson v Edwardian International Hotels Ltd [2008] UKEAT 0588_07_0205 (2 May 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2008/0588_07_0205.html Cite as: [2008] UKEAT 588_7_205, [2008] UKEAT 0588_07_0205 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 2 April 2008 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
APPEARANCES
For the Appellant | MR S JOHNSON (The Appellant in Person) |
For the Respondents | MR J JUPP (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Davies Arnold Cooper Solicitors 6-8 Bouverie Street London EC4Y 8DD |
SUMMARY
Practice and Procedure – Case management – Postponement or stay
Respondent in unfair dismissal case alleged that claimant was evidently "delusional" - Sought and granted a stay pending to enable a request to be made to the Official Solicitor to report on his mental capacity - Official Solicitor subsequently declined to intervene on the basis that he had no role in Employment Tribunal proceedings - Appeal allowed - Observations on the powers of the Tribunal in cases of suspected mental incapacity
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE UNDERHILL
"The Claimant made repeated references in his claim form to secret video recordings carried out on behalf of the Watch Tower Society; he talked about the Watch Tower Society instigating his dismissal; coming into the Hotel to turn staff against him; spreading rumours about his sexuality; preventing witnesses from assisting him; installing secret cameras in changing rooms and in his room; falsely imprisoning him in a Psychiatric Hospital; and showing the tapes to the then Prime Minister, Tony Blair."
Against that background the Respondents sought an order that the claim should be struck out pursuant to rule 18(7)(b) of the Employment Tribunal Rules; but in the alternative they submitted that the Tribunal should invite the Official Solicitor to investigate whether the Appellant had sufficient capacity to litigate the proceedings and should adjourn the claim in the meantime. Mr. Jupp acknowledged that there were no express rules providing for such a course in the Employment Tribunal; but he referred the Chairman to the available procedures in the High Court, in particular under Part 21 of the Civil Procedure Rules, and to a procedure which has been available since at least the late 19th century under which the Court could invoke the assistance of the Official Solicitor in the manner proposed (see Harbin v Masterman [1895] 1 Ch. 351). (A third proposed alternative was that the Tribunal should order the payment of a deposit pursuant to rule 18(2)(c); but I need not pursue that aspect.)
"The Official Solicitor will be invited to investigate whether the Claimant had sufficient capacity to litigate these proceedings; and the claim was stayed pending that investigation."
The Chairman gave her reasons for that decision at para. 27 of the Reasons as follows:
"The Tribunal is under duty to act in a way which is consistent with the overriding objective in the Employment Tribunals' Rules of Procedure. The Tribunal took on board the points made on behalf of the Respondent about the difficulties of conducting litigation against a party in respect of whom mental capacity was an issue. In addition the discussion at the Pre-Hearing Review with the Claimant about what matters were relevant and his ostensible abandoning of the points relating to the Watch Tower Society and then shortly thereafter continuing to refer to them illustrated difficulty in due course of defining the parameters of the hearing. Finally however it was important to safeguard the interests of the Claimant himself. The Tribunal was unable to say whether the unfair dismissal claim was likely to succeed or not. It appeared to the Tribunal that there were points that could be made in the Claimant's favour. His discrimination claims were not clear. In the circumstances it was important that they should not be struck out because of the way in which the Claimant put his case if this was related to his mental capacity. The Tribunal considered that by reason of the nature of the allegations brought by the Claimant, it was put on notice as to whether the Claimant had the mental capacity to conduct this litigation. It was in those circumstances inappropriate to decide the Respondent's application to strike out any part of the Claimant's claim. In those circumstances the Tribunal considers that it is an appropriate case in which to invite the Official Solicitor to give confidential advice to the Tribunal by way of preparing a Harbin v. Masterman enquiry into the mental capacity of the Claimant. The proceedings will be stayed until that enquiry is conducted."
"(1) Chairperson ruled after "PHR" that Respondent pays compensation for allegations they are guilty of. She concluded that we await her order to that effect. Claim was not stayed. Judgment is in total variance to what transpired during the hearing. Therefore a forgery.
(2) I am litigating in person in about seven different proceedings in the High Court "RCJ" London since July 2005. No Judge or Lord Justice raised any issue concerning my mental capacity to litigate. "Doctored" judgment is therefore an insult to the intelligence of the High Court.
(3) Respondent could not provide any evidence to question my mental capacity to self -litigate.
(4) A consultant psychiatrist, Dr. Bogdan Banjac of the Oxleas NHS Trust, wrote on the 9/3/07 that there is no reason for me to go undergo any psychiatric assessment at his clinic. Judgment of the Tribunal is therefore an abuse of the Tribunal process."
"I …regret to say that the Official Solicitor is not able to accept the invitation to investigate the mental capacity of the claimant to pursue his application. Although the Official Solicitor's functions are various, as provided for by statute and by direction of the Lord Chancellor, they do not extend to tribunals, where the Official Solicitor has no role. He is not therefore able to accept your request."
Mr. Jupp has not sought to challenge the Official Solicitor's view that he has no power to carry out the investigation requested by the Chairman; and, so far as I have been able to investigate the point, it seems to me to be correct.
(1) The Employment Tribunal must have the power to dismiss proceedings maintained by a person who does not have the requisite mental capacity. He accepts that neither the Employment Tribunals Act 1996 nor the Employment Tribunals Rules of Procedure contain any express provision to this effect, but he submits that it must follow from first principles: the commencement and maintenance of legal proceedings is a legal act which – like any other such act – can only be done by a person who understands what he is doing.(2) The question whether a person has such capacity is now to be determined in accordance with the provisions of the Mental Capacity Act 2005. This came into force on 1 October 2007, i.e. about two months after the order under appeal; but such differences as there may be between the statutory test of capacity and that previously applicable at common law are immaterial for present purposes.
(3) In the present case there was ample material before the Chairman to raise a question as to the Appellant's mental capacity; but not, Mr. Jupp accepted, sufficient by itself to prove absence of capacity.
(4) In such circumstances, he submitted, it was legitimate for the Chairman to impose a stay while investigations were carried out for the purpose of obtaining an authoritative assessment of the Appellant's capacity.
(5) Although it was initially envisaged that that assessment would be provided by the report of the Official Solicitor as requested by the Chairman, that was not necessarily the only possible source. Now that it appears that the Official Solicitor will not be prepared to provide a report at the invitation of the Employment Tribunal, the necessary authoritative assessment can still, he submitted, be obtained by this Tribunal issuing a similar invitation. He submitted that the position of the Employment Appeal Tribunal is fundamentally different from that of an Employment Tribunal because of the provisions of sec. 29 (2) of the 1996 Act, which is in the following terms:
The Appeal Tribunal has in relation to –
(a) …
(b) …
(c) all other matters incidental to its jurisdiction
the same powers, rights, privileges and authority (in England and Wales) as the High Court …".Mr. Jupp also referred me to the observations of Lindsay J in Chief Constable of West Yorkshire v A [2000] IRLR 465, at para. 29, to the effect that sec. 29 (2) of the 1996 Act meant that the Employment Appeal Tribunal has "as the ordinary incidental right of the High Court … an inherent jurisdiction to protect due access to and the due administration of justice …". It followed, he submitted, that the Official Solicitor was obliged to carry out the same role in support of proceedings in the Appeal Tribunal as he did in support of proceedings in the High Court; and, accordingly, that he would, if asked, carry out the necessary investigations and make a report in response to such an invitation. His report, once obtained, could then be used by the Employment Tribunal as an authoritative basis for deciding how to proceed.
In short, therefore, Mr. Jupp invited me to use the powers of this Tribunal to fill the gap left by the absence of any relevant power at the level of the Employment Tribunal.
"Subject to the following rules, the chairman may at any time either on the application of a party or on his own initiative make an order in relation to any matter which appears to him to be appropriate. Such orders may be any of those listed in paragraph (2) or such other orders as he thinks fit."
I cannot accept that submission. The appointment of a litigation friend seems to me a very different matter from the kinds of power which would have been envisaged by the Secretary of State in making a rule giving Chairmen (now Employment Judges) a "general power to manage proceedings"; and the same indeed goes for Parliament in creating the rule-making power itself (see sec. 7 of the Employment Tribunals Act 1996). A litigation friend of his or her nature has wide authority to dispose of a party's legal rights, either directly by bringing and/or compromising proceedings, or indirectly by the way in which he or she conducts those proceedings. I do not believe that a power to confer such rights could be created otherwise than expressly, and indeed by primary legislation. (As to this, I accept that – so far as my and Mr. Jupp's researches were able to establish - although authority for the provisions of CPR 21 now derives from para. 1 of Sch. 1 to the Civil Procedure Act 1997 there may originally have been no statutory authority for the power to appoint a next friend in the High Court, or the superior Courts from which it was created. However, such authority appears to have been regarded as inherent in the historical jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery. The position of the Employment Tribunals is of course in no way analogous to that.) It follows that a finding of mental incapacity would create a very unsatisfactory situation, in which the Tribunal would be concluding that a claimant could not advance his claim but no means existed for it to be advanced by someone else on his behalf. Sometimes the possibility might exist of obtaining the intervention of the Court of Protection, but there is no mechanism available to assure such intervention. There could thus be a serious injustice. Of course in many cases the circumstances which led the Tribunal to conclude that the claimant had no capacity might also suggest that the claim was misconceived; but that would by no means always be so.