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Case lawEmployment tribunals

Employment tribunal decisions now online

by Personnel Today 9 Feb 2017
by Personnel Today 9 Feb 2017

A new webpage listing employment tribunal decisions has been launched on the gov.uk website.

The webpage allows the public to search for first-instance judgments from England, Wales and Scotland using drop-down menus and a free-text search.

Podcast: Employment tribunals –
the state of play

XpertHR editors Ellie Gelder and Stephen Simpson discuss the implications of employment tribunal decisions being available online.

Previously, anyone wanting to search or browse employment tribunal decisions had to attend in person at offices in Bury St Edmunds for English and Welsh decisions, and in Glasgow for Scottish decisions.

Currently, a selection of decisions from 2015, 2016 and 2017 are listed on the page.

HM Courts and Tribunals Service previously stated that earlier employment tribunal decisions will not be available through the online database but will continue to be available in Bury St Edmunds and Glasgow.

“Employment tribunal judgments are first-instance decisions and are not binding on subsequent cases,” said Qian Mou, employment law editor at XpertHR.

“However, decisions often provide a detailed account of the facts in a case, which can incentivise parties to settle rather than risk bad publicity. Judgments can also provide helpful examples of how tribunals deal with legal issues and fact situations.”

Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) decisions and Court of Appeal decisions on employment law are currently available via the EAT online service, the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary’s online service and the British and Irish Legal Information Institute (BAILII).

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Decisions of the Northern Ireland industrial tribunals and the Fair Employment Tribunal are already available online.

Tribunal decisions on XpertHR

Over the years, XpertHR has regularly reported first-instance decisions of practical interest to HR professionals. We have over 1,000 reports on employment tribunal decisions. Recent case reports on employment tribunal decisions have covered:

  • the employment status of a CitySprint courier;
  • easyJet’s refusal to limit the shift lengths of two cabin crew who were breastfeeding;
  • the fair dismissal of an employee with no evidence of right to work in UK; and
  • the fair dismissal of an employee for historic tweets.
Personnel Today

Personnel Today articles are written by an expert team of award-winning journalists who have been covering HR and L&D for many years. Some of our content is attributed to "Personnel Today" for a number of reasons, including: when numerous authors are associated with writing or editing a piece; or when the author is unknown (particularly for older articles).

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1 comment

Philip Shaw 20 Apr 2018 - 9:14 am

A significant step forward as regards protecting employees, with a little extra work from the tribunal.

Comments are closed.

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