Tubby-McFat-Fuc
Well-known member
Why is very one talking about court? Charlie has mutally agreed to leave the club. It's over. Draw a line under it and move on!
We're not. The discussion about court proceedings is about Gus.Why is very one talking about court? Charlie has mutally agreed to leave the club. It's over. Draw a line under it and move on!
Am I right in thinking that there's nothing to stop a case going to both the Employment Tribunal and the County Court? In a complex case like this one, each court would have a different issue to rule on.
I am struggling to see the benefits of going to a tribunal what with the County Court having no limits placed upon them for potential awards.
However, a County Court can't force his reinstatement, can they?
Apparently it could.
A tribunal appearance might be abandoned as a waste of time, if the settlement is ample enough from the County Court. Assuming the County deals with the case first.
County Court is a higher authority than Tribunal so it can't go backwards on appeal.
Not 100% certain on Employment Tribunals but based on how the system works in other areas, a Tribunal may be used to "discover" the facts of the case and will then make a judgement on them. It is then open to either party to appeal that to Crown Court on a point of law only as its not then possible to contest the facts as set out in the ruling. If it starts in County Court it can be appealed to High Court in the same way. It can jump from Tribunal to High Court if the point of law is particularly complex etc but its unusual - if its that complex the Tribunals usually don't hear it to begin with & it starts higher up.
Employment Tribunal hearings are presided over by a Judge. Appeals against Employment Tribunal decisions are submitted to the Employment Appeals Tribunal, not to the High Court.County Court is a higher authority than Tribunal so it can't go backwards on appeal.
Not 100% certain on Employment Tribunals but based on how the system works in other areas, a Tribunal may be used to "discover" the facts of the case and will then make a judgement on them. It is then open to either party to appeal that to Crown Court on a point of law only as its not then possible to contest the facts as set out in the ruling. If it starts in County Court it can be appealed to High Court in the same way. It can jump from Tribunal to High Court if the point of law is particularly complex etc but its unusual - if its that complex the Tribunals usually don't hear it to begin with & it starts higher up.
I think when Poyet finally goes, his goodbye, if any, will be one of the briefest to the point statements the club has ever made.
Employment Tribunal hearings are presided over by a Judge. Appeals against Employment Tribunal decisions are submitted to the Employment Appeals Tribunal, not to the High Court.
I wonder if he was suspended because he was a key witness in the Gus situation.
Well if he was, the club would have to suspend all its fans as wellI wonder if he was suspended because he was a key witness in the Gus situation.
But the Club said that they would follow UK employment law. The fact that they have pulled out of the process before it reached the conclusion they were working towards suggests that a realisation has kicked in that the process wasn't working for them.
As long as any suggestion remains that Charlie might have been "guilty" of something (and a number of posters in this thread seem to be prepared to believe this), then Charlie is being maligned. This is no way to treat him.