Adminstraion of justice update

Administration of justice update:
ET fees block access to justice

R (UNISON) v Lord Chancellor [2017] UKSC 51 considered whether employment tribunal (ET) fees were unlawful because of their effect on access to justice.

Background to the appeal

Parliament has conferred statutory rights on employees, including through legislation giving effect to EU law. Most employment rights can only be enforced in ETs and the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT). Until the coming into force of the Employment Tribunals and the Employment Appeal Tribunal Fees Order 2013 SI No 1893 (‘ the Fees Order’), on 29 July 2013, a claimant could bring and pursue proceedings in an ET and appeal to the EAT without paying any fees. The stated aims of the Fees Order were to transfer part of the cost burden of the tribunals from taxpayers to users of their services, to deter unmeritorious claims, and to encourage earlier settlement.

The Fees Order requires an issue fee to be paid when a claim form is presented to an ET, and a hearing fee before the hearing of the claim. The amounts depend on whether the claim is brought by a single claimant or a group, and whether the claim is classified as ‘type A’ or ‘type B’. Type A claims are specified, and in general require little or no pre-hearing work and very short hearings. All other claims are type B, including unfair dismissal, equal pay and discrimination claims. For a single claimant, the fees total £390 for a type A claim and £1, 200 for a type B claim. In the EAT, fees are also payable in two stages, but without distinction between different types of appeal, or between single and group appellants. The Fees Order also makes provision for the full or partial remission of fees if a claimant’s disposable capital, together with their partner’s, is below a specified amount (in most cases, £3,000). The amount of remission depends on the claimant’s gross monthly income, together with their partner’s, and the number of children they have. A fee may also be remitted if the Lord Chancellor is satisfied that there are exceptional circumstances. A claim or appeal must be rejected unless it is accompanied by a fee or a remission application.

This appeal arose out of proceedings for judicial review in which the trade union Unison (the appellant) argued that the making of the Fees Order was not a lawful exercise of the Lord Chancellor’s statutory powers because the prescribed fees interfere unjustifiably with the right of access to justice under both the common law and EU law, frustrate the operation of parliamentary legislation granting employment rights, and discriminate unlawfully against women and other protected groups.

Judgment

The Supreme Court unanimously allowed the appeal. Lord Reed gave the lead judgment, with which the rest of the court agreed, dealing with all issues except for discrimination. Lady Hale gave judgment on the discrimination issue, with which the rest of the court agreed.

Reasons for the judgment

The Fees Order is unlawful under both domestic and EU law because it has the effect of preventing access to justice. Since it had that effect as soon as it was made, it was therefore unlawful and must be quashed.

The Fees Order is unlawful... because it has the effect of preventing access to justice. Since it had that effect as soon as it was made, it was therefore unlawful and must be quashed

The constitutional right of access to the courts is inherent in the rule of law: it is needed to ensure that the laws created by parliament and the courts are applied and enforced. Tribunals are more than merely the providers of a service which is only of value to those who bring claims before them (paras 65–85). As a matter of domestic law, the Fees Order is unlawful if there is a real risk that persons will effectively be prevented from having access to justice, or if the degree of intrusion into access to justice is greater than is justified by the purposes of the Fees Order (paras 86–89).

While court fees for small claims are related to the value of the claim, the ET and EAT fees bear no direct relation to the amount sought and can, therefore, be expected to act as a deterrent to claims for modest amounts or non-monetary remedies (which together form the majority of ET claims). The recoverability of costs on success cannot be decisive of the question of access to justice as that right is not restricted to the ability to bring successful claims (paras 20–37). Indeed, the evidence before the court shows that the effect of the Fees Order was a dramatic and persistent fall in the number of claims brought in ETs, with a greater fall in the number of lower value claims and claims in which a financial remedy was not sought. Fees were the most frequently cited reason for not submitting a claim. Worked examples of the impact of fees on hypothetical claimants indicated that in order to meet the fees, they would have to restrict expenditure that was ordinary and reasonable for maintaining living standards (paras 38–55).

The question of whether fees effectively prevent access to justice must be decided according to the likely impact of the fees on behaviour in the real world. Fees must be affordable not in a theoretical sense, but in the sense that they can reasonably be afforded. Where households on low to middle incomes can only afford fees by forgoing an acceptable standard of living, the fees cannot be regarded as affordable. Even where fees are affordable, they prevent access to justice where they render it futile or irrational to bring a claim, for example, where in claims for modest or no financial awards no sensible claimant will bring a claim unless they can be virtually certain they will succeed, that the award will include recovery of fees, and that the award will be satisfied in full (paras 90–98). Furthermore, although the stated purposes of the Fees Order are legitimate aims, it has not been shown that the Fees Order was the least intrusive means of achieving those aims (paras 99–103). The Fees Order is also unlawful because it contravenes the EU law guarantee of an effective remedy before a tribunal: it imposes disproportionate limitations on the enforcement of EU employment rights (paras 105–117).

The Fees Order is indirectly discriminatory under the Equality Act 2010 because the higher fees for type B claims put women at a particular disadvantage since a higher proportion of women bring type B than bring type A claims. The charging of higher fees was not a proportionate means of achieving the stated aims of the Fees Order. It had not been shown to be more effective at transferring the cost of the service from taxpayers to users, and in some type B cases (such as pregnancy dismissal) the higher fee did not correspond to a greater workload placed on the tribunal. Furthermore, meritorious as well as unmeritorious claims might be deterred by the higher price, and there was no correlation between the higher fee and the merits of the case or incentives to settle (paras121–134).

It has been reported that employment tribunal fees will be scrapped after the UKSC's ruling and that, in addition, the government will also have to refund more than £27m to everyone charged for taking claims to tribunals since July 2013, when fees were introduced by the then Lord Chancellor Chris Grayling.

The Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling that the government was acting unlawfully and unconstitutionally when it introduced the fees, means that anyone who has been treated illegally or unfairly at work will no longer have to pay to take their employers to court.

Case Management Order on ET claims and applications

On 9 August 2017, Judge Brian Doyle, president of the Employment Tribunals, issued the following case management order in the matter of claims and applications brought to the employment tribunal in England and Wales in reliance on the decision of the Supreme Court in R (Unison) v Lord Chancellor):

Having regard to the decision of the Supreme Court in R (on the application of Unison) v Lord Chancellor [2017] UKSC 51 (26 July 2017);

And having regard to the Employment Tribunals and the Employment Appeal Tribunal Fees Order 2013 SI 2013/1893;

And having regard to rules 11 and 40 of the First Schedule to the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013 SI 2013/137 as amended;

And having regard to the overriding objective under rule 2 of the First Schedule to the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013, SI 2013/137 as amended;

And having regard to the general power to make case management orders under rule 29 of the First Schedule to the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013, SI 2013/137 as amended It is ordered that:

1. All claims or applications brought to the Employment Tribunal in England and Wales in reliance upon the decision of the Supreme Court in R (on the application of Unison) v Lord Chancellor [2017] UKSC 51 (26 July 2017) shall be stayed to await decisions of the Ministry of Justice and Her Majesty’s Courts and Tribunals Service in relation to the implications of that decision.

2. Any party or representative wishing to make representations for the further conduct of such claims or applications should do so upon application to the Regional Employment Judge for the relevant Employment Tribunal region.

3. A copy of this Case Management Order shall be sent to Acas and to all known interested parties or persons and shall be published on the Judiciary website at: www.judiciary.gov.uk/publications/directions-employment-tribunals-england-wales.