Cook v Building Establishment Research Ltd UKEAT/0493/12/DM

Appeal against an order for costs after the claimant withdrew his claims for contractual and statutory redundancy payments. Appeal allowed and costs order set aside.

The claimant was dismissed and he claimed it was by reason of redundancy, the respondent claimed it was on the grounds of capability. The claimant lodged claims for contractual and statutory redundancy payments with the ET. The total redundancy payment claimed was around £195,000. After receiving legal advice, he withdrew his claim for contractual redundancy pay, but still wished to pursue the statutory redundancy pay claim in the ET. The reason was the limit of £25,000 that an ET could award – no such limit applied in the County Court or High Court. In fact, it wouldn't just have been the statutory limit which made it inappropriate for the claimant to bring his claim to the ET – even if he was successful he would not have been able to claim the balance in the High Court (Fraser). One day before the ET hearing started, the Tribunal wrote to both parties and advised that, as the two claims appeared to turn on the same facts, it was not appropriate that the statutory redundancy claim should proceed on the ET in case the ET made binding findings of fact which might affect the far greater County Court claim and that it should be stayed. The claimant did not receive the message and the ET hearing started. When the EJ explained the meaning of the message, and after receiving further legal advice, the claimant withdrew the statutory redundancy pay claim too. The respondent applied for a costs order to be made against him which was upheld and the claimant was ordered to pay them £10,000. The claimant appealed.

The EAT allowed the appeal. Many people would have applauded the claimant for taking legal advice as a result of which he withdrew his claim for a contractual redundancy payment many weeks before it was due to be heard and it was not open to the employment judge to conclude that the claimant had acted unreasonably by bringing his claim for a contractual redundancy payment and not withdrawing it earlier than he did. On the statutory redundancy issue, the EAT said that he might have acted unwisely in withdrawing his claim at the ET but it could not be said that he had acted unreasonably in pursuing it until then.
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Appeal No. UKEAT/0493/12/DM

EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL

FLEETBANK HOUSE, 2-6 SALISBURY SQUARE, LONDON EC4Y 8JX

At the Tribunal

On 12 April 2013

Before

THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE KEITH (SITTING ALONE)

COOK (APPELLANT)

BUILDING RESEARCH ESTABLISHMENT LTD (RESPONDENT)

Transcript of Proceedings

JUDGMENT

**APPEARANCES**

For the Appellant
MR SIMON CHEETHAM (of Counsel)

Direct Public Access Scheme

For the Respondent
MS DANIELLA GILBERT (of Counsel)

Instructed by:
Boyes Turner Solicitors
Abbots House
Abbey Street
Reading
Berkshire
RG1 3BD

**SUMMARY**

PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE - Costs

Overlap of claims for contractual and statutory redundancy payments – employee withdrawing claim for contractual redundancy payment and later withdrawing claim for statutory redundancy payment – whether employee had acted unreasonably in bringing claims which he subsequently withdrew so as to justify an order for costs being made against him – impact of Fraser v HLMAD Ltd [2006] ICR 1395.

**THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE KEITH****Introduction**
  1. The claimant, Martin Cook, was employed by the respondent, Building Research Establishment Ltd ("the company"), as a project officer. He was dismissed on 5 May 2011 having worked for the company and its predecessor for almost 19 years. The company claimed that he had been dismissed on the grounds of capability. Mr Cook claimed that he had been dismissed by reason of redundancy. He lodged claims for contractual and statutory redundancy payments with the employment tribunal. In due course he withdrew both his claims. The company applied for an order that Mr Cook should pay its legal costs of defending those claims. Employment Judge Mahoney in the employment tribunal at Watford ordered Mr Cook to pay £10,000 towards the company's legal costs. Mr Cook appealed against that order to the Employment Appeal Tribunal, and this is the Employment Appeal Tribunal's judgment following the hearing of the appeal.
  1. The order for costs was unusual in two respects. First, in the majority of cases, employment tribunals do not make orders for costs at all. That is because Parliament has set a high threshold for an order for costs to be made, and because employment tribunals are intended to be accessible to people without the need for lawyers. Secondly, when an order for costs is made by an employment tribunal, it is normally after a full hearing on the merits, whereas the order for costs in the present case was made against a claimant who had withdrawn one of his claims several weeks before the full hearing was due to take place, and his other claim on the day of the hearing when a particular problem he was thought to face was pointed out to him. Those were two of the factors which Mummery LJ thought of significance in McPherson v BNP Paribas (London Branch) [2004] ICR 1398 at [2].
**The relevant facts**
  1. Mr Cook presented his claim for a redundancy payment to the employment tribunal on 3 August 2011. He did not specifically say that he was claiming a statutory redundancy payment in addition to a contractual redundancy payment, and the information he gave in his ET1 might have led the reader of it to think that he was only claiming a contractual redundancy payment. He asserted that the capitalised value of his claim for a contractual redundancy payment was £195,000. In due course, the hearing of the claim was fixed for 10 January 2012. However, in late November 2011, Mr Cook took legal advice, and on 3 December 2011 he informed the tribunal that following legal advice he had served a supplementary witness statement on the company informing it that he wished to withdraw his claim for a contractual redundancy payment, and that he wished "to claim only [his] statutory redundancy pay in the Tribunal proceedings." That shows that, however he had put it in the ET1, he had been intending to claim a statutory redundancy payment as well, which was no doubt why no-one took the point that his claim for a statutory redundancy payment was out of time.
  1. The employment judge was to find that the reason why Mr Cook had decided to withdraw his claim for a contractual redundancy payment, and to pursue his claim for a statutory redundancy payment, was because he had been advised that since his claim for a contractual redundancy payment was a claim for a sum due under his contract of employment, the maximum award which the tribunal could make was £25,000: see Art. 10 of the Employment Tribunals Extension of Jurisdiction (England and Wales) Order 1994. There was no such limit if Mr Cook brought his claim in the county court, which was why in his letter to the tribunal of 3 December 2011, he wrote:

"I reserve the right to bring a claim in the County Court for my contractual redundancy pay, within the usual period of statutory limitation under contract law."

I interpose here to say that the company's ET3 had not mentioned the fact that the employment tribunal could not award Mr Cook more than £25,000 for his claim for a contractual redundancy payment, even though the figure of £195,000 had been referred to in the ET1. That is not a criticism of the company or its solicitors, but the fact is that they had not done anything to alert Mr Cook to the maximum amount which the tribunal could award him on this claim.

  1. On 9 January 2012, the day before the hearing of Mr Cook's claim for a statutory redundancy payment was due to take place, the tribunal e-mailed the following message to the parties:

"Regional Employment Judge Gay has directed me to write to you as follows:-The claim for statutory redundancy pay here and the intended claim for contractual redundancy pay in the court appears to turn on exactly the same facts. In the circumstances, it does not seem appropriate that the claim should proceed here so that we make binding findings of fact which would affect the far greater county court claim. It is intended to vacate the Hearing and stay this claim - unless the parties can provide persuasive, reasoned objections by 4:00 pm today."

That e-mail was sent at 2.47 pm, and with commendable speed the company's solicitors responded by e-mail at 3.58 pm. They objected to the proposed stay on the basis that no proceedings had been issued by Mr Cook in the county court by then. They acknowledged that in [Paymentshield Group Holdings Ltd v Halstead]() (UKEAT/0470/11) the Employment Appeal Tribunal had stayed proceedings in the employment tribunal in favour of proceedings in the High Court which had not yet been issued, but in that case a letter before action as required by the Civil Procedure Rules had been sent as well as a draft of the particulars of claim which it was proposed to issue. That did not apply to Mr Cook's case. In the interests of completeness, I should add that there was subsequently a successful appeal in Halstead to the Court of Appeal (see [2012] IRLR 586), but what is important for present purposes is that on receipt of the company's solicitors e-mail, the tribunal directed the parties to attend the hearing the following day.

  1. The parties duly attended the tribunal the following day for the hearing of Mr Cook's claim for a statutory redundancy payment. It transpired that Mr Cook had not seen the e-mail exchange of the previous day, and Employment Judge Mahoney explained the effect of it to Mr Cook who was not represented. He told Mr Cook that such findings as the tribunal would make about whether his dismissal had been by reason of redundancy would bind the county court in any claim for a contractual redundancy payment which Mr Cook may choose to bring, and he provided Mr Cook with a copy of O'Laoire v Jackel International Ltd (No. 2) [1991] ICR 718 which confirmed that decisions of an employment tribunal, then an industrial tribunal, can give rise to an issue estoppel. The employment judge gave Mr Cook time to consider his position. When the parties returned to the tribunal room an hour or so later, Mr Cook informed the employment judge that he had taken further legal advice and that he wished to withdraw his claim for a statutory redundancy payment. It may be that he did not want to run the risk of jeopardising his much more valuable claim for a contractual redundancy payment by pursuing his claim for a statutory redundancy payment in the course of which there would be a risk of a finding that redundancy had not been the reason for his dismissal.
  1. After Mr Cook had withdrawn his claim for a statutory redundancy payment, the company applied for an order requiring Mr Cook to pay part of its legal costs. The employment judge required the company to make that application in writing with a detailed breakdown of the amount claimed, and he gave Mr Cook permission to respond in writing. On receipt of those representations, he would decide whether the application needed to be decided at a hearing. On receipt of the documents, he decided that a hearing was necessary. The hearing took place on 24 May 2012. The employment judge reserved his decision, and in a judgment promulgated on 5 July 2012, the employment judge ordered Mr Cook, as I have said, to pay £10,000 to the company towards its legal costs.
**The employment judge's reasons**
  1. The employment judge made four particular findings of fact which informed his ultimate decision to order Mr Cook to pay £10,000 towards the company's costs. First, Mr Cook was "an intelligent, articulate individual with a high competency in the use of computers and the internet". Secondly, Mr Cook had been "aware of the risk of dismissal for at least eight months before he was dismissed". Thirdly, "[f]or at least eight months before his dismissal [Mr Cook had been] able to go onto the internet and find out that breach of contract claims in the tribunal were limited to £25,000". And fourthly, Mr Cook had "during this period [i.e. in the eight months before his dismissal] [been] financially able to obtain legal advice about his proposed claim [for a contractual redundancy payment] but [had] deliberately chose[n] not to do so". The employment judge took the view that if Mr Cook had sought advice from a "competent employer lawyer", he would have been advised "to issue the statutory redundancy claim in the employment tribunal and ask for a stay and issue the contractual redundancy claim in the High Court". That was the basis on which he concluded that the conduct of Mr Cook had been unreasonable.
  1. I interpose here to say that it was inappropriate for the employment judge to have referred to Mr Cook's claim for a contractual redundancy payment as "a breach of contract claim". It was nothing of the sort. It was a claim for what Mr Cook claimed to be due to him under his contract of employment. That did not, of course, mean that the statutory limit which the tribunal could award for it did not apply, but it is unfortunate that the employment judge mischaracterised the nature of Mr Cook's claim in the way he did.
  1. The employment judge then went on to consider whether an order for costs should be made. He thought that Mr Cook's failure to find out about the £25,000 limit on "breach of contract claim", and his failure to obtain legal advice about his proposed claim for a contractual redundancy payment, made the unreasonableness of his conduct "particularly serious", especially as it had resulted in the company, which had acted with complete propriety throughout, incurring very substantial legal costs. Had he been assessing those costs summarily, they would have come to £12,593.40, but since £10,000 was the maximum amount which an employment tribunal could then award in respect of a claim presented before 5 April 2012 where the costs were not determined by way of a detailed assessment in the county court, he limited the award to £10,000.
**The relevant law**
  1. Rule 40 of the Employment Tribunals Rules of Procedure, which are set out in Schedule 1 to the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2004, provide, so far as is material:

"(2) A[n] … Employment Judge shall consider making a costs order against a paying party where, in the opinion of the … Employment Judge …, any of the circumstances in paragraph (3) apply. Having so considered, the … Employment Judge may make a costs order against the paying party if … he considers it appropriate to do so.

(3) The circumstances referred to in paragraph (2) are where the paying party has in bringing the proceedings, or he or his representative has in conducting the proceedings, acted vexatiously, abusively, disruptively or otherwise unreasonably…"

It follows that there are two steps in the process. The first is for the employment judge to decide whether any of the circumstances in rule 40(3) apply, and in the context of the present case, that meant considering whether Mr Cook had acted unreasonably in bringing or conducting the proceedings. That was a matter for the employment judge's judgment. The next step in the process only arose if Mr Cook had been found to have acted unreasonably. The employment judge had then to consider whether he should make an order for costs in the light of all the relevant circumstances. That was a matter for the employment judge's discretion.

  1. Mummery LJ in McPherson had some important things to say about when a claimant should be regarded as having acted unreasonably in bringing or conducting a claim. At [28]-[30], he said:

"28. … it would be legally erroneous if, acting on a misconceived analogy with the CPR, tribunals took the line that it was unreasonable conduct for employment tribunal claimants to withdraw claims and that they should accordingly be made liable to pay all the costs of the proceedings. It would be unfortunate if claimants were deterred from dropping claims by the prospect of an order for costs on withdrawal, which might well not be made against them if they fought on to a full hearing and failed… withdrawal could lead to a saving of costs. Also … notice of withdrawal might in some cases be the dawn of sanity and the tribunal should not adopt a practice on costs which would deter applicants from making sensible litigation decisions.

29. On the other side, … tribunals should not follow a practice on costs which might encourage speculative claims, by allowing applicants to start cases and to pursue them down to the last week or two before the hearing in the hope of receiving an offer to settle and then, failing an offer, dropping the case without any risk of a costs sanction.

30. The solution lies in the proper construction and sensible application of [what is now] rule 14. The crucial question is whether, in all the circumstances of the case, the claimant withdrawing the claim has conducted the proceedings unreasonably. It is not whether the withdrawal of the claim is in itself unreasonable ..."

  1. There is one particular case which the employment judge referred to in his decision which explains why Mr Cook was right to withdraw his claim for a contractual redundancy payment. It is Fraser v HLMAD Ltd [2006] ICR 1395. Like O'Laoire, it dealt with the overlap between unfair and wrongful dismissal claims. At [31], Mummery LJ said:

"In future claimants and their legal advisers would be well advised to confine claims in employment tribunal proceedings to unfair dismissal, unless they are sure that the claimant is willing to limit the total damages claimed for wrongful dismissal to £25,000 or less. If the claimant wishes to recover over £25,000, the wrongful dismissal claim should only be made in High Court proceedings."

However, it is important to understand the context in which Mummery LJ made that observation, since the employment judge erroneously thought that in Fraser, "the Court of Appeal was dealing with a costs award in a similar case to this". In fact, Fraser was not about costs at all. In Fraser, the claimant had brought claims of unfair dismissal and wrongful dismissal against the defendant in the employment tribunal. In his ET1, he purported to reserve the right to bring proceedings in the High Court for damages for wrongful dismissal in excess of the £25,000 limit on the compensation which the employment tribunal could award. The employment tribunal found him to have been wrongfully dismissed, and although it assessed his damages at over £80,000, it limited his award, as it had to, to the statutory maximum of £25,000. His claim for wrongful dismissal in the High Court was then struck out by the High Court master, and the Court of Appeal dismissed an appeal from that order. It held that where a cause of action was the subject of a final judgment, it merged into that judgment and ceased to exist. A claim for wrongful dismissal could not be split into separate actions: one for damages up to £25,000, and another for the excess over that sum. So when the claimant's claim of wrongful dismissal was the subject of a final judgment in the employment tribunal, his cause of action for wrongful dismissal merged and was extinguished, despite the express reservation in his ET1 of the right to bring proceedings in the High Court for the excess. Since his claim in the High Court for the excess was not a separate cause of action, the claimant no longer had any cause of action which he could pursue in the High Court.

**The reasonableness of the withdrawal of the claims**
  1. The warning which Mummery LJ gave in Fraser was to ensure that unwary employees did not fall into the trap of thinking that if they pursued their claim for wrongful dismissal in the employment tribunal, they could recover other damages in excess of the statutory maximum in proceedings in the High Court. That must have been what lay behind Mr Cook's decision to withdraw his claim for a contractual redundancy payment. If the tribunal upheld his claim for a contractual redundancy payment and awarded him £25,000 for it, he would have lost the opportunity of recovering the balance of his claim of £170,000. It follows that the withdrawal of his claim for a contractual redundancy payment was not merely reasonable. It was the only sensible course open to him.
  1. What about the claim for a statutory redundancy payment? Was it reasonable for Mr Cook to withdraw that claim? It is necessary here to put oneself into Mr Cook's position. He was being told that if he lost his claim for a statutory redundancy payment in the employment tribunal on the basis that redundancy had not been the reason for his dismissal, his proposed claim in the county court for a contractual redundancy payment would have been scuppered. He was being told that by an employment judge who was himself reinforcing what the regional employment judge had said the previous day. There was, of course, no question of any improper pressure being placed on Mr Cook, and any such suggestion to that effect was expressly disavowed today by Mr Simon Cheetham who represents him. Indeed, both the employment judge and the regional employment judge were acting out of a laudable desire to ensure that if Mr Cook decided to pursue his claim for a statutory redundancy payment, he would be doing so on an informed basis. But it may be that Mr Cook thought that they thought that withdrawing his claim for a statutory redundancy repayment was the sensible thing for him to do. After all, Mr Cook had no reason to suppose that there would be a downside for him if he withdrew his claim for a statutory redundancy payment. If he had not withdrawn his claim and it had succeeded, any future award he obtained for a contractual redundancy payment would have to be reduced by that amount to avoid double recovery. Moreover, the company's legal team did not say that if he withdraw his claim for a statutory redundancy payment, they would be applying for costs. Nor did the employment judge warn Mr Cook of that possibility. That is not a criticism of anyone, of course, but looking at things from Mr Cook's perspective, I can well understand why he decided to withdraw his claim for a statutory redundancy repayment. Whether it was sensible for him to do so is something which I shall return to later.
**The reasonableness of the bringing of the claims**
  1. But as we have seen, the question is not whether it was reasonable for Mr Cook to withdraw his claims, but whether he had acted reasonably in bringing the claims in the first place and in not withdrawing them earlier. It is here necessary to consider the two claims separately, which is something the employment judge sensibly recognised by addressing separately the costs incurred in the period up to the withdrawal of his claim for a contractual redundancy payment and the costs incurred thereafter. I deal first with whether Mr Cook acted unreasonably in bringing a claim in the employment tribunal for a contractual redundancy payment and in not withdrawing it until 3 December 2011. In my opinion, it was open to the employment judge to conclude that Mr Cook had been perfectly capable of finding out that there was a £25,000 limit on what the tribunal could award Mr Cook on his claim for a contractual redundancy payment. But the flaw in the employment judge's reasoning was that it was not just the statutory limit on what the tribunal could award which had made it inappropriate for Mr Cook to bring his claim for a contractual redundancy payment in the employment tribunal. What really made it inappropriate was that even if he was successful on the claim, the employment tribunal's judgment on it would have prevented him from claiming the balance in the High Court. That was not the effect just of the statutory limit on what the tribunal could award, but the combined effect of that and the Court of Appeal's decision in Fraser. It was not suggested by the employment judge, nor could it sensibly have been, that an unrepresented litigant, even an intelligent one with access to and familiarity with the internet, could be expected to have discovered the impact of Fraser.
  1. That leads me to ask this question. If you take Fraser out of the equation on the basis that Mr Cook could not have been expected to have been aware of what it decided, would it then have been unreasonable for Mr Cook to bring his claim for a contractual redundancy payment in the employment tribunal? In my opinion, the answer is no. He knew, of course, that there was an important issue over whether redundancy had been the reason for his dismissal. If it had not been, neither of his claims would have succeeded. It could strongly be argued that it would have been better for this issue to have been decided by the employment tribunal than the county court, because the case was likely to have been heard sooner in the employment tribunal, and Mr Cook would not have been at serious risk of being ordered to pay the company's legal costs if he had lost. If he had won, he could then have issued proceedings in the county court for the excess of the contractual redundancy payment over the maximum sum which the tribunal could have awarded, which had been the very strategy adopted by the claimant in Fraser.
  1. It may be, of course, that if Mr Cook had obtained legal advice before the end of November 2011, he would have been advised about the effect of Fraser, and why it would not be sensible for him to proceed with his claim for a contractual redundancy payment in the employment tribunal. But the employment judge did not say in so many words that Mr Cook had acted unreasonably by not seeking legal advice earlier. It would have been a little difficult for the employment judge to say that when employment tribunals are designed to be accessible to people without the need for lawyers. In any event, many people would have applauded Mr Cook for taking legal advice as a result of which he withdrew his claim for a contractual redundancy payment many weeks before it was due to be heard. For these reasons, I do not think it that it was open to the employment judge to conclude that Mr Cook had acted unreasonably by bringing his claim for a contractual redundancy payment and not withdrawing it earlier than he did.
  1. I turn to Mr Cook's claim for a statutory redundancy payment. Was it open to the employment judge to conclude that Mr Cook had acted unreasonably by bringing such a claim and not withdrawing it before 10 January 2012? The employment judge himself recognised that it was reasonable for Mr Cook to have brought such a claim. What he said was that Mr Cook should then have asked for it to have been stayed until his claim in the High Court for a contractual redundancy payment had been heard and determined. That, said the employment judge, was what any competent employment lawyer would have advised.
  1. I think that that puts things far too high. There is a very respectable argument for saying that a competent employer lawyer might well have given different advice. I go back to what I said before in the context of Mr Cook's claim for a contractual redundancy payment. There was the critically important question of whether redundancy had been the reason for Mr Cook's dismissal. If it had not been, both his claim for a statutory redundancy payment in the employment tribunal and his claim for a contractual redundancy payment, which by then could only be pursued in the High Court or the county court because he had withdrawn such a claim in the employment tribunal, would have failed. Proceeding with his claim for a statutory redundancy payment would have meant that the issue over whether redundancy had been the reason for his dismissal would have been decided in the near future rather than many months or even years later in the county court, and crucially he would not have been at serious risk of being ordered to pay the company's costs if he lost. If he had won, he could have issued his claim for a contractual redundancy payment in the county court in the knowledge that it would no longer be open to the company to assert that redundancy had not been the reason for his dismissal. Indeed, the irony here is that if he had pursued his claim for a statutory redundancy payment and had lost, there is unlikely to have been any basis for saying that the proceedings were so misconceived that he would then have been faced with an application for the company's legal costs of defending the claim.
  1. For these reasons, I do not think that Mr Cook could fairly have been criticised for not seeking a stay of his claim for a statutory redundancy payment until his claim in the county court for a contractual redundancy payment had been heard and determined. But the fact remains that he did indeed withdraw his claim for a statutory redundancy payment, and it is here that I return to whether it was reasonable for him to do that. I have already said that I understand entirely why he did that, but for the reasons I have given, I think that it would have been better for him to "hang in there", to resist the pressure which he may have thought he was under to withdraw his one remaining claim in the employment tribunal, and to let the employment judge, with his experience of employment law, decide whether redundancy had been the reason for his dismissal, rather than let the issue be determined, perhaps years later, by a judge in the county court who may not have experience of employment cases, and thereby expose himself to the risk of being ordered to pay a huge bill of costs if he lost. The point therefore is that even if he could be said to have acted unwisely in withdrawing his claim for a statutory redundancy payment, I do not believe that it can fairly be said that he had acted unreasonably in pursuing it until then.
**Conclusion**
  1. There are a number of other grounds of appeal, for example those relating to the failure to warn Mr Cook of the consequence in terms of costs if he withdrew his claims, and to his ability or otherwise to pay those costs, but in the light of the view I have reached about the core issues which this appeal has raised, it is unnecessary for me to address them further. It follows that this appeal must be allowed, and the order of the employment judge requiring Mr Cook to pay the sum of £10,000 towards the company's legal costs must be set aside.

Published: 14/06/2013 16:38

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