Cunningham & Anor v Clydebank Engineering & Fabrication Ltd UKEATS/0021/11/BI

Appeal against the striking out of a claim of unfair dismissal as a result of a TUPE transfer. Appeal allowed and remitted to a fresh Tribunal.

The two claimants had been employed for many years before being dismissed by the company which, they averred, transferred its business to the respondent at or about the same time as their dismissal. They claimed that they had been dismissed by reason of the transfer and also that they were discriminated against on grounds of age. The claimants brought claims against the alleged transferee company but the ET struck out their claims as having no reasonable prospects of success because the claimants were dismissed by the alleged transferor, not the transferee. There was no need to hear evidence. The claimants appealed against the strike out.

The EAT ruled that the ET had plainly erred in law. Since the claimants were alleging that there had been a relevant transfer and that they were dismissed by reason of that transfer, any liability of the transferor had passed to the transferee company.

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Appeal No. UKEATS/0021/11/BI

EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL

52 MELVILLE STREET, EDINBURGH, EH3 7HF

At the Tribunal

On 18 October 2011

Before

THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH (SITTING ALONE)

(1) MR ROBERT CUNNINGHAM; (2) MR IAIN WILSON (APPELLANTS)

CLYDEBANK ENGINEERING & FABRICATION LTD (RESPONDENT)

Transcript of Proceedings

JUDGMENT

**APPEARANCES**

For the Appellants
MR G CUNNINGHAM (Advocate)

Instructed by:
The PRG Partnership Solicitors
12 Royal Crescent
Glasgow
G3 7SL

For the Respondent
MR B CALDOW (Solicitor)

Harper Macleod LLP Solicitors
The Ca'd'oro
45 Gordon Street
Glasgow
G1 3PE

**SUMMARY**

TRANSFER OF UNDERTAKINGS – Transfer

PRACTICE AND PROCEDURE – Striking-out/dismissal

TUPE. Strike out. Claimants claimed – relying on Spijkers v Gebroeders Benedik Abbattoir [1986] 2 CMLR 296 – that they were dismissed because of a relevant transfer. Claims presented against (alleged) transferee company, relying on Litster v Forth Dry Dock and Engineering Co Ltd [1989] SC (HL) 96 *and Stirling District Council v Allen & Ors [1995] ICR 1082.* Employment Tribunal struck out claims as having no reasonable prospects of success because Claimants were dismissed by the (alleged) transferor not by the (alleged) transferee; there was no need to hear evidence. On appeal, judgment of Employment Tribunal set aside; the Employment Judge had plainly erred in law – since the Claimants were alleging there had been a relevant transfer and that they were dismissed by reason of that transfer, any liability of the transferor had passed to the transferee company. Case remitted to a fresh Tribunal for a pre hearing review to take place at which evidence would be heard and the issue of whether or not there was a relevant transfer (for TUPE purposes) would be determined.

**THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH** **Introduction**
  1. This is an appeal by two employees who were dismissed by a company – Clydeview Precision Engineering and Supplies Limited ("Clydeview") – which, they aver, transferred its business to Clydebank Engineering and Fabrication Ltd ('the Respondent') at or about the time of their dismissal. They say that the transfer was one to which the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations 2006 ("TUPE") applied and that their dismissals were by reason of the transfer. They claim that they were unfairly dismissed and also that they were discriminated against on grounds of age.
  1. In a judgment registered on 10 January 2011, Employment Judge Roderick A MacKenzie held that the Claimants' claim had no reasonable prospects of success and struck them out under rule 18(7) of the Employment Tribunal (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2004**. He refused the Claimants' application for a review of that judgment, by letter dated 4 February 2011 and they have appealed against that refusal.
  1. For convenience, I will continue referring to parties as Claimants and Respondent.
  1. The Claimants were represented by Mr G Cunningham, advocate, before the Tribunal and before me. The Respondent was represented by Mr B Caldow, solicitor, before the Tribunal and before me.
**Background**

Averments of Fact

1) Claimants

  1. The Claimants were both employed as fabricators by Clydeview and worked principally on engineering work for one particular client, Alexander Coaches. The first named Claimant had been employed by Clydeview for 12 years prior to dismissal and the second named Claimant for 10 years. Clydeview went into administration shortly prior to the Claimants' dismissal.
  1. The Claimants' case is, essentially, that Clydeview transferred its business to the Respondent; the Respondent company was formed on 17 November 2009, they were dismissed by Clydeview's administrators on 20 November 2009 and the Respondent continued, without interruption, carrying out the same work for Alexanders at the same premises using the same equipment (which may have been owned by Clydeview's parent company), using the services of a number of the Claimants' former workmates to do so. Further, the two companies have directors in common; the man who they understand to control the Respondent was, it is said, present when the first Claimant returned to the premises to collect his tools on 21 November 2009 and refused him entry. On that basis, they say that TUPE applies, they have been unfairly dismissed (and discriminated against on grounds of age) and that the liability owed to them has passed to the Respondent.

1) Respondent

  1. The Respondent's response is that the Claimants were dismissed by Clydeview's administrators and were never employed by them, there was no relevant transfer – the Respondent was not incorporated and 'set up' until after the dismissals - there was no assignation or transfer to them of Clydeview's lease, no tools or equipment were transferred to them by Clydeview (they purchased tools and equipment from the parent company), they acquired but "some" unspecified assets and raw materials from Clydeview, there was no contract between Clydeview and Alexanders Coaches and no contracts of employment transferred to the Respondent from Clydeview. They have an esto case that if there was a relevant transfer, they had no legal obligation to the Claimants because they were dismissed by Clydeview's administrators and not employed by Clydeview immediately before the transfer took place and, further, the exceptions provided for in regulation 7(1)(b) of TUPE applied.

Procedure in Employment Tribunal

  1. There was a case management discussion ("CMD") on 29 April 2010 before Employment Judge Shona McLean. In her note of the CMD, dated 5 May 2010, she recorded parties' respective positions and observed:

"At the Case Management Discussion it was apparent that since the claim form and response had been presented the representatives had been liaising and exchanging information. What was not entirely clear to me was the extent to which a Pre- Hearing Review could take place on the basis of an agreed statement of facts without the necessity of witnesses having to give evidence."

  1. Parties had agreed that they required fourteen days to consider their respective positions in the light of information exchanged and so Employment Judge McLean decided:

"The parties would then have a further period of 14 days in which to consider the legal issues that are to be determined by the tribunal; the extent to which these are apt for discussion at a Pre-Hearing Review and if so are witnesses to be called and what is the likely duration of the hearing."

  1. Parties' agents sent notes to the Employment Tribunal containing their submissions and proposals for further procedure.
  1. The Claimant's solicitor sent in the first note. She set out clearly, over 3 A4 size pages, the various facts of which the Claimants were aware which, in their submission, showed directly and by inference that there had been a relevant transfer, applying the case of Spijkers v Gebroeders Benedik Abbattoir [1986] 2 CMLR 296. She submitted:

"It is the Claimant's position that, although no formal process has been applied and no contractual documents have changed hands to effect a purchase or other transfer of a business, nonetheless it can be seen by the pre and post transfer activities that there has been a de facto relevant transfer. In order to demonstrate this the Claimants would seek to show that all six considerations as laid down in the case of Spijkers have been met."

  1. That is, she made it plain that it was the Claimants' position that there required to be a hearing with evidence to determine the issue of whether or not there had been a relevant transfer.
  1. The Respondent's agent, after some delay, sent a note to the Employment Tribunal proposing that a PHR should be set down to determine whether the Claimants' claims had any reasonable prospects of success and that no evidence would be necessary. He submitted that the relevant questions for determination were:

"A1 Did the respondent to these proceedings ever employ the claimants?

A2 Did the respondent ever dismiss the claimants?

A3 Did the respondent ever refuse to employ the claimants?

A4 In the absence of ever employing or dismissing the employees, in circumstances where the claimants accept that they were dismissed by the administrator of another company, who was acting in his role as administrator, is there a respondent named in these proceedings who could answer the allegations regarding the dismissal of the claimant?

A5 Does the claim brought against the respondent stand any reasonable prospects of success given that (i) the respondent at no point in time employed the claimants; (ii) the respondent at no time dismissed the claimants; (iii) the respondent at no point in time refused to employ the claimants and (iv) none of the preceding points of (i) to (iii) appear to be disputed by the claimants as a matter of fact?**

A6 Should a pre hearing review be set down to consider whether or not a relevant transfer took place?

A7 Does the note provided by the claimants' representative identify the questions that an employment tribunal would require to determine to decide if a relevant transfer were to have occurred in the circumstances complained of?

A8 If the Employment Tribunal moved to determine whether or not a relevant transfer had occurred by listening to the evidence from the claimants and the respondent's witnesses, if it were decided that a relevant transfer had occurred, would that be an end of the matter? **

Separately, we would observe, as an aside, the question of whether there was a relevant transfer is not determinative in a dispute involving TUPE because the dismissing employer can have a defence to dismissal, e.g. through TUPE Regulations 7 and in the instance of insolvency, Regulation 8."

  1. There then followed certain questions which related to s.218 of Employment Rights Act 1996 which are not relevant to the issues raised on appeal.
  1. The Claimants' solicitor wrote promptly to the Employment Tribunal responding to the Respondent's note, by letter dated 20 July 2010, in which she stated:

"We remain of the view however that the first question to be answered by the Tribunal is whether a relevant transfer in terms of the TUPE Regulations has taken place. The Claimant's Note advances the basis of the evidence the Claimants would propose to lead to show that such a transfer had indeed taken place. We note that the Respondent's own note does not address any of the issues in the Claimant's Note."

  1. In that letter she also set out six reasons why the Respondent's proposal should be rejected including that any question of whether or not the Respondent had refused to employ the Claimants was irrelevant, that question A4 disclosed that the Respondent's understanding of the relevant law was misconceived, that there was a fundamental contradiction in their position in respect that whilst saying that the relevant transfer issue could be decided without evidence, they were saying that the purpose of the PHR should be to consider strike out and that question A8 appeared to ignore that, in an unfair dismissal case, the onus of establishing the reason for the dismissal lies on the employer.
  1. The Claimants' solicitor proposed that there be a three stage approach:

"1. Pre hearing review to determine whether a relevant transfer under the TUPE Regulations has taken place.

2. If it is established that a relevant transfer has taken place, the Tribunal is required to consider any defence advanced by the Respondents as to whether the TUPE Regulations ought to be dis–applied.

3. Where there has been a relevant transfer and the Tribunal finds there is no defence, the Tribunal would require to hear evidence on quantum."

  1. Also, at the third stage, if the Respondent was successful in their opposition to the application of TUPE, evidence and submissions would, it was proposed, require to be heard as to whether or not there had been a transfer which fell within the provisions of s.218 of the Employment Rights Act 1996.
  1. The matter was put before the Employment Judge again. By letter dated 30 July 2010, the Employment Tribunal advised that:

"Employment Judge McLean has directed that a Pre-hearing Review (PHR) will be arranged for this case. The issues to be determined are whether the claims further to TUPE and s.218 of the Employment Rights Act 1996 stand any reasonable prospect of succeeding having regard to questions A1 to A5 and B1 and B2 of the respondent's note on preliminary issues."

  1. No reasons were given for the apparent wholesale rejection of the Claimants' submissions and adoption of the procedure proposed by the Respondent. Nothing was said about whether or not parties were to be allowed to lead evidence at the PHR notwithstanding (a) there being no agreed statement of facts; (b) the Employment Judge having, in her note following the CMD, indicated that it remained to be determined whether or not evidence would be required; and (c ) that the Respondent's questions A1 to A4 plainly could not be addressed without resolving the issue of whether or not there was a relevant transfer which, in turn, required exploration of the factual averments in the Claimants' note, none of which had been admitted by the Respondent in their note in response. Before me, Mr Cunningham, who was instructed less than 24 hours prior to the PHR, very frankly stated that, in retrospect, it would have been better if the Claimants had sought a further CMD in advance of the date of the PHR at which that could have been clarified. Equally, I observe that it would have been open to the Employment Judge to fix one; if she had done so, matters may well have turned out differently - it is difficult to see how it would have been open to her, in the circumstances, to refuse to allow evidence to be led.

The PHR on 2 December 2010

  1. The Employment Judge records that, at the start of the hearing, Mr Cunningham explained that the Claimants' position was that evidence was required. He did not have witnesses in attendance and sought an adjournment. That was opposed by Mr Caldow who submitted that the purpose of the PHR had clearly been set out by Employment Judge McLean and no evidence required to be given.
  1. Employment Judge MacKenzie declined to allow the adjournment. At paragraph 6 of his written reasons he states:

"It was clear from the questions to be considered at the Pre–Hearing Review that no evidence need be given and the purpose of leading evidence could only be to establish if a relevant transfer in terms of TUPE had taken place and that approach had already been rejected by the Employment Judge. I therefore refused the claimants' representative (sic) motion to discharge the Pre-Hearing Review and fix a case management discussion to consider further procedure."

  1. The PHR proceeded, accordingly, on the basis of submissions only.
**The Tribunal's Judgment and Reasons following the PHR**
  1. As above noted, the Tribunal struck out the Claimants' claims as having no reasonable prospects of success. The reasoning would appear to be in short compass. It was noted that the right not to be unfairly dismissed can only be asserted by an employee against his employer (Employment Rights Act 1996 s.94) and that, in terms of s.230(4) of the 1996 Act, employer means the person by whom the employee was employed. Then, the Employment Judge explains:

"15. The claimants' employers were Clydeview and Clydeview dismissed the claimants. In their claim forms the claimants do not maintain the respondents refused to employ them. In these circumstances the claimants claim of unfair dismissal are claims that can only be made against Clydeview and not the respondents."

  1. On that basis, he concluded that the Claimants' claims had no reasonable prospects of success and struck them out in terms of rule 18(7)(b) of the 2004 Regulations. He cited, in support of his conclusion, the passage at paragraph 57 of Ezsias v North Glamorgan NHS Trust UKEAT/0705/05/SM, where Elias P states:

"The classic example where striking out may occur is where the Tribunal reaches a conclusion that even on the facts advances by the claimant the case has no prospect of success as a matter of law. In such a case, one would expect a decision to set out the allegations of the claimant, analyse the relevant legal principles and indicate why the claim is bound to fail."

  1. He does not explain why, as a matter of law, the Claimants' factual averments could not lead to the conclusion that their claims were well founded.
  1. The Employment Judge had been referred to a number of authorities including Litster v Forth Dry Dock and Engineering Co Ltd [1989] SC (HL) 96 but, apart from quoting the above passage from Ezsias, he does not discuss any of them.
**The Claimants' application for review**
  1. The Claimants sought a review of the Tribunal's judgment striking out their claims. In a written application prepared by counsel, it was submitted that the interests of justice required a review. The Employment Judge had fallen into error and that, in the circumstances, it was wrong to have struck out the claims without having heard evidence. On the facts averred by the Claimants, which satisfied the test in Spijkers, there had been a relevant transfer and that meant that, as a matter of law, their claims of unfair dismissal and for age discrimination had passed to the respondent: Allen & Ors v Stirling District Council [1995] ICR 1082. Further, claims for discrimination were fact sensitive and tribunals should be slow to dismiss them without hearing evidence: Anyanwu v South Bank Student Union [2001] ICR 391 at 404. The test for strike out as discussed in Ezsias had not been met. Even proceeding on the basis of the Respondent's questions, it was clear that evidence was required.
  1. By email dated 2 February 2011, the Respondent's solicitor intimated that the application was opposed, without advancing any reasoned opposition.
  1. The application for review was considered in chambers and by letter dated 4 February 2011, the Employment Tribunal advised:

"The Employment Judge (R MacKenzie) has considered the application in terms of Rule 34 in Schedule 1 to the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure Regulations 2004) (sic) for a review of his Judgment dated 10 January 2011.

The matters to be determined at the Pre- hearing Review were clearly set out in the notice fixing the Pre – Hearing Review. It was clear that no evidence required to be heard at the hearing to determine these matters. If the claimants considered that other matters required to be addressed at the Pre-hearing Review then a case management discussions should have been requested prior to the Pre-Hearing Review.

The Employment Judge considers that the effect of Regulation 4(1) of TUPE is that liability for compensation passes to the transferee in certain circumstances but the claim that there has been a dismissal is a claim that can only be made against the party dismissing the claimants."

**Relevant Law**

TUPE

  1. The relevant TUPE Regulations were those which came into force on 6 April 2006 (TUPE Regulations 2006). Regulation 3 provides that the transfers to which they apply – relevant transfers - include:

"(1)(a) a transfer of an undertaking, business or part of an undertaking or business situated immediately before the transfer in the United Kingdom to another person where there is a transfer of an economic entity which retains its identity.."

  1. In Spijkers the ECJ made it clear that the question of whether or not there had been a transfer of an undertaking was one of fact which required to be determined in the light of the whole surrounding circumstances which characterised the transaction including whether or not tangible assets were transferred, whether intangible assets were transferred, the nature of the activities engaged in and whether or not they ceased at the time of transfer, whether it transferred as a going concern and whether the operation was continued or resumed by the transferee business carrying out the same or similar activities.
  1. As to the effect of a relevant transfer on contracts of employment, regulation 4 of which, insofar as relevant to the present case, provides:

"(1) ……a relevant transfer shall not operate so as to terminate the contract of employment of any person employed by the transferor and assigned to the organised grouping of resources or employees that is subject to the relevant transfer, which would otherwise be terminated by the transfer, but any such contract shall have effect after the transfer as if originally made between the person so employed and the transferee.

(2) Without prejudice to paragraph (1), but subject to regulations 8 and….on the completion of a relevant transfer –

(a) all the transferor's rights, powers, duties and liabilities under or in connection with any such contract shall be transferred by virtue of this regulation to the transferee; and

(b) any act or omission before the transfer is completed, …….in respect of that contract ……shall be deemed to have been an act or omission of or in relation to the transferee.

(3) Any reference in paragraph (1) to a person employed by the transferor and assigned to the organised grouping of resources or employees that is subject to a relevant transfer, is a reference to a person so employed immediately before the transfer, or who would have been so employed if he had not been dismissed in the circumstances described in regulation 7(1), including, where the transfer is effected by a series of two or more transactions, a person so employed and assigned or who would have been so employed and assigned immediately before any of those transactions."

  1. Regulation 7(1) provides that a dismissal is unfair if the reason for it is the relevant transfer or is a reason connected with that transfer which is not an economic, technical or organisational reason entailing changes in the workforce.
  1. Thus, an employee who is dismissed by reason of a relevant transfer or for a reason connected with it which is not within one of the regulation 7(1) exceptions, is deemed to have been employed 'immediately before the transfer' and is subject to the protection of regulation 4, with any liability arising from the dismissal passing to the transferee. In such a case, the act of dismissal, even if carried out by the transferor, is deemed to have been the act of the transferee.
  1. Regulation 4 achieved statutory articulation of the principle determined upon by the House of Lords in Litster, namely that if an employee was dismissed in advance of a relevant transfer by reason of that transfer, he nonetheless had TUPE protection as against the transferee business; the employment would be deemed to have continued. In Litster, the employees had claimed against the transferor – that was the wrong respondent. They should have claimed against the transferee company. Similarly, in the case of Stirling District Council v Allen, the Inner House held that the transferring entity was the wrong respondent; liability had passed from the respondent council to the company to whom they had transferred certain service provision previously carried out by their direct labour organisation.
  1. I would also refer to regulation 8 but only because the Respondent's esto case appears to proceed on the basis that the protection of regulations 4 and 7 of TUPE was not available to the Claimants because Clydeview were in administration. Regulation 8(7) provides:

"Regulations 4 and 7 do not apply to any relevant transfer where the transferor is the subject of bankruptcy proceedings or any analogous insolvency proceedings which have been instituted with a view to the liquidation of the assets of the transferor and are under the supervision of an insolvency practitioner."

  1. Clydeview was in administration when the Claimants were dismissed. Does that mean that regulations 4 and 7 cannot apply to the Claimants? It does not; I agree with Underhill P that, at the point of their institution – which, in terms of regulation 8(7) is the relevant tempus inspiciendum – administration proceedings are not "bankruptcy or analogous insolvency proceedings" for the reasons so clearly explained in the case of [OTG Ltd v Barke and Ors]() UKEAT/0320/09/1602.
**The appeal**
  1. Mr Cunningham submitted that the Employment Judge's fundamental error was that he failed to consider whether or not TUPE applied and to appreciate that, to determine that issue, it was necessary to hear evidence. He ought to have fixed a further PHR at which evidence could be led. The test for strike out was not met: Ezsias; [Reilly v Tayside Public Transport Company Ltd]() UKEATS/0065/BI. Further, he had failed to recognise that the Respondent's position, which was that they were not the right respondent, was wrong in law.
  1. He explained that he had, at the PHR asked that the Employment Judge fix a CMD, albeit that advance notice of that motion had not been given. The PHR could have been converted into a CMD to consider further procedure. It should have been clear to the Employment Judge, from the previous documentation (Employment Judge McLean's order of 30 July 2009, the Claimant's note of proposals for further procedure and the Respondent's note of proposals for further procedure), that there was an outstanding issue as to whether or not evidence was to be led at the PHR. Further, it was plain that evidence was required given the issue that clearly arose between parties as to whether or not TUPE applied; if it did, as a matter of law, any liabilities arising from the Claimants' dismissals had passed to the Respondent: TUPE, Regulation 4 and 7; Litster v Forth Dry Dock and Engineering Co Ltd; Stirling District Council v Allen & Ors. The Claimants had advanced a case that there had been a relevant transfer which, prima facie, satisfied the requirements of regulation 3: Spijkers v Gebroeders Benedik Abbattoir.
  1. He moved that the appeal be allowed and there be a remit to a fresh employment tribunal with a direction that the issue of whether or not a TUPE transfer took place be determined after evidence having been heard.
  1. For the Respondent, Mr Caldow submitted that the Employment Judge had covered, as one of the issues before him, that of whether or not there was a relevant transfer but that was not the fundamental point. What mattered was that the Claimants had been dismissed by Clydeview, the company which was their employer under s.230 of the 1996 Act and that claims for unfair dismissal could only, under s.94, be brought against a person's employer. That meant that the Claimants had to name Clydeview, the alleged transferor as the respondent. They had not done so. Even if TUPE applied, it was for the transferor to answer the claim. Mr Caldow did not appear to understand or appreciate the import of the decision in Litster **and the terms of regulations 4 and 7.
  1. Subsequently, Mr Caldow accepted that it could be appropriate for the transferee to be named as a respondent but in that case the claimant required, he submitted, also to name the transferor. He was unable to refer to any authority for that proposition which is not surprising as it is not correct in law.
**Discussion and Decision**
  1. I have no hesitation in upholding this appeal.
  1. First, the Employment Judge proceeded on the basis of a fundamental error of law; it is not correct to say as, in his review decision he did, that no claim for unfair dismissal can pass to the transferee in a transfer that is relevant for TUPE purposes. I would refer to the "Relevant Law" section above. If he had properly considered the relevant statutory and case authorities – which were referred to in the well argued application for review - he could only have realised that he had been wrong to conclude that where employees are dismissed by the transferor any claim in respect of unfair dismissal against the transferee is bound to fail.
  1. Secondly, at the PHR the Employment Judge failed to notice that there had not been any prior determination of the issue of whether or not evidence should be led. I would refer to my earlier observations regarding the procedural history, particularly at paragraph 20. Parties had plainly been at odds as to whether or not the PHR should be an evidential hearing. That was clear from the terms of their written submissions following the PHR on 29 April 2010. Employment Judge McLean required to provide a reasoned determination of that issue and state expressly in her order whether or not evidence was to be allowed. Employment Judge MacKenzie's failure may of course, have occurred because he did not appreciate the significance of the Claimants' case that there had been a relevant transfer. Had he done so, he would, perhaps, have given closer consideration to the Respondent's questions A1 - 4 and realised that there needed to be an enquiry into the facts surrounding the dismissals and business changes involving Clydeview and the Respondent. He needed to do so. He would also, perhaps, have appreciated that contrary to what he found as fact (without hearing evidence), the Claimant's case was not that they were dismissed by Clydeview but by the administrators, leaving open the question of which company dismissed them; if the transfer which they say occurred was, for instance, found to have taken place prior to 20 November then their contracts of employment would have transferred to the Respondent before the letters of dismissal were issued and it could not have been Clydeview who dismissed them. In all the circumstances, the only conclusion open to the Employment Judge was that he could not determine the TUPE issue without first hearing evidence.
  1. Thirdly, the Employment Judge appears to have failed to consider and have regard to the care that required to be taken before striking out a claim as having no reasonable prospects of success. Nothing stated in Ezsias suggests that it is a step which should be taken lightly. Whilst it may well be clear, in an individual case, that testing a claimant's case by taking his averments at their highest, he could still not, as a matter of law, succeed, the tribunal has to be satisfied that there are no reasonable prospects of success and that it is not only a high test but one in respect of which the onus lies on the party seeking strike out. I would refer to some of the comments I made in the case of Reilly v Tayside Public Transport Company, at paragraph 10:

"The Employment Judge required to have regard to the draconian impact of an order for strike out. Such an order is, put shortly, the end of matters; the Claimant is denied access to the Tribunal where his case can be considered on the basis of evidence given on oath and, if so advised, tested by parties or their representatives."

**Disposal**
  1. In these circumstances, I will pronounce an order:

(a) upholding the appeal;

(b) remitting the Claimants' claims to a freshly constituted Tribunal;

(c) directing that there be a Pre-Hearing Review at which evidence may be led by parties to determine the issue of whether or not there was a relevant transfer in terms of regulation 3 of TUPE 2006; and

(d) holding a case management discussion prior to the Pre-Hearing Review referred to in paragraph (c) either on the application of one of the parties or if it considers it would be appropriate to do so.

  1. If the Employment Tribunal find that there was a relevant transfer, it will, thereafter, require to fix further procedure in accordance with whatever, at that stage, are the outstanding issues between parties.
  1. I should add that I am directing that the remit be to a fresh Tribunal on account of the fundamental nature of the error in law that occurred here. It is, I consider, better that a fresh pair of eyes be applied to these claims.

Published: 09/12/2011 11:20

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