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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Solus (London) Ltd v Matthews [2011] UKEAT 0395_10_2001 (20 January 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2011/0395_10_2001.html Cite as: [2011] UKEAT 395_10_2001, [2011] UKEAT 0395_10_2001 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE RICHARDSON
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR SEBASTIAN NAUGHTON (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Mills & Reeve LLP Solicitors 1 St James Court Whitefriars Norwich NR3 1RU |
For the Respondent | MR ABOU KAMARA (Representative) (Free Representation Unit) |
SUMMARY
JURISDICTIONAL POINTS - Extension of time: reasonably practicable
The Claimant presented his unfair dismissal claim online just within the time limit – but to the wrong Tribunal (the Northern Ireland Tribunal). After several weeks delay the Northern Ireland Tribunal rejected his claim and he then applied promptly to the Tribunal in England and Wales. The Employment Tribunal erred in law in taking into account the Northern Ireland Tribunal's delay outside the time limit in deciding whether it was reasonably practicable to bring the claim within the time limit; and did not make any sufficient findings on the real issue – viz why the Claimant made this mistake and whether it was reasonable.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE RICHARDSON
" … an employment tribunal shall not consider a complaint under this section unless it is presented to the tribunal
(a) before the end of three months beginning with the effective date of termination, or
(b) within such further period as the tribunal consider reasonable in a case where it is satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable for the complaint to be presented before the end of that three months."
"3. The Claimant on realising that his appeal had been dismissed accepts, certainly by the end of February, that there were no other processes available to him internally and that if he was to seek a remedy it would be outside of the company. Towards the end of April but within the three month time limit, he and his mother settled down to fill in an online claim to the Tribunal. They searched for and got the Industrial Tribunal. The Claimant [and his mother a senior manager] in common with even now much of the mass media got our name wrong. The site they got to was the Industrial Tribunals in Northern Ireland. The Claimant filled in the online form, a copy of which I have seen. That form, in common with all judicial forms in this country has the royal crest.
4. The Claimant filled in the form and again made it clear on that form that he had been unfairly dismissed from his employment in England giving his place of work which was not within the jurisdiction of the Northern Irish Tribunal. Clearly the Claimant was in error. One would have reasonably expected any Tribunal to have pointed his error out within days.
5. However although that claim was received on 29th April it was not until much later by a letter dated 17th June and probably received on 18th or 19th June by the Claimant that the Northern Irish office of Industrial Tribunals informed the Claimant of his mistake. The Claimant prior to that date had simply not been aware of his mistake. He immediately sought advice. The Employment Tribunal at Watford most helpful informing him of the proper place to bring a claim and the claim was received by this Tribunal on 29th June within a reasonable time from the time that the mistake was first realised."
"6. The Arguments
The Respondents put the matter succinctly. He made the original error going to the wrong Tribunal in the wrong jurisdiction. He is out of time. This Tribunal has no jurisdiction.
The Claimant accepts that his was the original error but an understandable one. He had made a claim to the wrong tribunal – which then took 2 months to point out his mistake. It was that delay that put him out of time. It was not reasonably practicable to bring the claim within the time limit because he had good reason to believe he had."
"7. Conclusion
On balance – and it is one of those cases where matters are finely balanced – I allow the Tribunal to have jurisdiction to hear the case. I accept that the original error was made by the Claimant but that error was substantially compounded by the administrative delay in informing him of that error. Given that delay it was not reasonably practicable to bring the claim within the 3 month time limit."
"Looking at the matter first without reference to the authorities, I should have thought that the meaning of the expression concerned, in the context in which it is used, was fairly clear. The performance of an act, in this case the presentation of a complaint, is not reasonably practicable if there is some impediment which reasonably prevents, or interferes with, or inhibits, such performance. The impediment may be physical, for instance the illness of the complainant or a postal strike; or the impediment may be mental, namely, the state of mind of the complainant in the form of ignorance of, or mistaken belief with regard to, essential matters. Such states of mind can, however, only be regarded as impediments making it not reasonably practicable to present a complaint within the period of three months, if the ignorance on the one hand, or the mistaken belief on the other, is itself reasonable. Either state of mind will, further, not be reasonable if it arises from the fault of the complainant in not making such inquiries as he should reasonably in all the circumstances have made, or from the fault of his solicitors or other professional advisers in not giving him such information as they should reasonably in all the circumstances have given him.
On this general view of the meaning of the expression under discussion, the present case is an example of a mistaken belief by an employee, reasonably held, constituting an impediment which prevented or inhibited him from presenting his complaint within the period of three months prescribed.
With regard to ignorance operating as a similar impediment, I should have thought that, if in any particular case an employee was reasonably ignorant of either (a) his right to make a complaint of unfair dismissal at all, or (b) how to make it, or (c) that it was necessary for him to make it within a period of three months from the date of dismissal, an industrial tribunal could and should be satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable for his complaint to be presented within the period concerned.
For this purpose I do not see any difference, provided always that the ignorance in each case is reasonable, between ignorance of (a) the existence of the right, or (b) the proper way to exercise it, or (c) the proper time within which to exercise it. In particular, so far as (c), the proper time within which to exercise the right, is concerned, I do not see how it can justly be said to be reasonably practicable for a person to comply with a time limit of which he is reasonably ignorant.
While I do not, as I have said, see any difference in principle in the effect of reasonable ignorance as between the three cases to which I have referred, I do see a great deal of difference in practice in the ease or difficulty with which a finding that the relevant ignorance is reasonable may be made. Thus, where a person is reasonably ignorant of the existence of the right at all, he can hardly be found to have been acting unreasonably in not making inquiries as to how, and within what period, he should exercise it. By contrast, if he does know of the existence of the right, it may in many cases at least, though not necessarily all, be difficult for him to satisfy an industrial tribunal that he behaved reasonably in not making such inquiries.
To that extent, therefore, it may, in general, be easier for a complainant to avail himself of the "escape clause" on the ground that he was reasonably ignorant of his having a right at all, than on the ground that, knowing of the right, he was reasonably ignorant of the method by which, or the time limit within which, he ought to exercise it."