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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Riley v Crown Prosecution Service [2013] EWCA Civ 951 (30 July 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/951.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 951, [2013] IRLR 966 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE WILKIE
UKEAT004312M
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE RIMER
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MS TYICA RILEY |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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THE CROWN PROSECUTION SERVICE |
Respondent |
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Mr Jonathan Cohen (instructed by Simon Muirhead and Burton) for the Respondent
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Longmore:
Introduction
"The crucial point of difference from Terluk's case is that decisions of the employment tribunal can only be appealed on questions of law, whereas under the CPR the appeal is normally by way of review and the decision of a lower court can be set aside, if it is wrong, or if it is unjust by reason of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings. In relation to case management the employment tribunal has exceptionally wide powers of managing cases brought by and against parties who are often without the benefit of legal representation. The tribunal's decisions can only be questioned for error of law. A question of law only arises in relation to their exercise, when there is an error of legal principle in the approach or perversity in the outcome. That is the approach, including failing to take account of a relevant matter or taking account of an irrelevant one, which the Employment Appeal Tribunal should continue to adopt rather than the approach in Terluk as summarised in the headnote [2012] ICR 561 quoted above. It is to be hoped that this ruling will put an end to the "apparent confusion in authority" on the point pointed out by Wilkie J in Riley v Crown Prosecution Service (unreported) 13th June 2012, at paras 55-56."
i) eight months had elapsed since Elias LJ had given permission to appeal during which time there had been ample opportunity to instruct fresh counsel if Ms Riley had desired to do so;
ii) grounds of appeal had been settled with legal advice and two skeleton arguments for the appellant had been served one of which had been "prepared for the appellant";
iii) the interesting point, for the resolution of which Elias LJ gave permission to appeal, no longer arose, so that legal argument no longer needed to be submitted; and
iv) fairness to the respondent required the appeal, which related to events starting in 2006 and continuing thereafter, to be resolved.
Factual and Procedural History
The Medical Evidence
"Is Miss Riley now well enough to conduct a trial starting on or after the 12th May 2011, if not why not?"
His answer was that she was not well enough to conduct the trial starting on or after the 12th May 2011 by reason of her severe depression without psychotic symptoms. He was also asked whether he agreed with Dr Naguib's report of 27th April 2011 and whether he could provide any firm prognosis for Ms Riley so as to be able to identify a date upon which she is likely to be ready to commence a trial or whether it was his view that she was unlikely to recover until after such a trial. He responded agreeing with what Dr Naguib had said to the effect that Miss Riley's depression was disabling her from moving on with her plans and that she felt stuck until justice happens. He added that by reference to the STAR*D protocol about 70% of patients had a remission of their illness by the time the fourth tier of the protocol was completed, which would take 24 months on the NHS but, due to the presence of PTSD in the past and the presence of ongoing psychosocial stressors, namely financial issues and the on going litigation, probabilities were less than those "stated above". He concluded that "As litigation is a major stressor it may well be the case that recovery is unlikely until after there is a solution in one manner or another".
The Employment Judge's decision
"24. Both experts agreed that litigation was a significant stress and that the determination of the litigation would be a step in the possible recovery of the claimant. The difficulty I am faced with, what Mr Cohen described as the chicken and the egg situation, is that the claimant is not fit to attend the hearing to achieve determination of finality of the litigation and accordingly she will continue to be affected by the stress or worry associated with litigation which, until it is resolved one way or another, will not form part of the process towards her recovery. Dr Wise's view, that the claimant's probability of entering remission is less than the 70% probability of achieving remission, when looking at clinical population, was not essentially challenged.
25. In my judgment, on the basis of the totality of the medical evidence the claimant will not be fit enough to attend the hearing in 12 months, and on the balance of probabilities, not before the expiry of 2 years, having regard to the severity of her condition and Dr Wise's opinion that she falls outside the statistical bases of a conclusion 70% of the public would achieve recovery by the end of the fourth tier of the STAR*D protocol."
i) the mounting costs;
ii) the dimming of recollections of the respondent's witnesses, which the judge thought had some substance;
iii) the worry and stresses of the respondent's witnesses, which, to some extent, the judge thought had merit;
iv) the fact that some witnesses had left the respondent's employment, which the judge did not regard as presenting an insuperable difficulty; and
v) the absence of any definite prognosis of any recovery sufficient to take part in the proceedings in the foreseeable future.
Disposal
"The Tribunal in deciding whether to refuse an adjournment had to balance a number of factors. They included not merely fairness to Mrs Andreou (of course an extremely important matter made more so by the incorporation into our law of the European Convention on Human Rights, having regard to the terms of Article 6): they had to include fairness to the respondent. All accusations of racial discrimination are serious. They are serious for the victim. They are serious for those accused of those allegations, who must take very seriously what is alleged against them. It is rightly considered that a complaint such as this must be investigated, and disputes determined, promptly; hence the short limitation period allowed. This case concerned events which took place very many years ago, well outside the normal three months limitation period. The Tribunal also had to take into account the fact that other litigants are waiting to have their cases heard. It is notorious how heavily burdened Employment Tribunals are these days."
Lord Justice Rimer:
Lord Justice Mummery: