
Tribunal Reform
The Lord Chancellor has announced the way forward on tribunal
reform. Informed by Sir Andrew Leggatt's 2001 report
"Tribunals for Users - One System, One Service" and the
Lord Chancellor's subsequent consultation on that report, the
Government has decided to establish a unified Tribunals Service
within the Lord Chancellor's Department. More details of the new
service will follow in a White Paper later in the year.
Q. Which DTI tribunals will form part of
a unified service?
A. The LCD announcement states that initially the new
service will be based on the ten largest tribunals and will
include the Employment Tribunals Service. Briefing on the new
service and changes to tribunals in the employment field can be
found on [link to ER website announcement on Tribunals for Users].
Where appropriate, other smaller DTI tribunals will join the new
service at a later date.
Q. Will any DTI tribunals be excluded
from the new unified service?
A. Yes. The Central Arbitration Committee, the
Competition Commission Appeals Tribunal, the Copyright Tribunal
and the tribunal functions of the Patent Office will remain with
DTI.
Q. Why is a special case being made for
these tribunals?
A. The tribunal functions of the Patent Office have
never been within the scope of a unified service.
It was not thought appropriate to include these tribunals
within a unified service because of the specialist nature of the
work and the type of
parties appearing before them as well as their dependence on the
resources of host organisations (Patent Office, ACAS and the
Competition Commission). In particular:
The Copyright Tribunal
The Copyright Tribunal has stayed with DTI because:
- It is a small party v party tribunal which hears only one or
two cases a year. These are of a specialist nature where the
parties are invariably representative bodies that have UK-wide
coverage and that use senior barrister to argue their cases.
- Resources (e.g. accommodation, administration and IT) are
provided by and shared with Copyright Directorate in
PATS. Except when hearing are taking place, this
involves a part-time secretary who, because of her
contribution for the rest of the time
to the other work of Copyright Directorate, has considerable
knowledge that can be used to great effect in administration
of the Tribunal. For example she has the knowledge to give
appropriate advice when people often mistakenly approach the
Tribunal in the belief that it can have a role.
- The efficient and effective support for the Copyright
Tribunal was recognised in responses to the LCD consultation
from the senior members of the Tribunal and some important
users. It was questioned whether an equivalent holistic
approach could be
provided within a unified tribunal service. None of these
responses we have seen identified any lack of independence for
the Copyright Tribunal with the current arrangements.
The Central Arbitration Committee (CAC)
The CAC has stayed within DTI responsibility because:
- (as the Certification Office) it is resourced and organised
through Acas, with which it works closely. For organisational
and other reasons it is sensible not to change its status.
The Competition Commission Appeals Tribunal (CCAT)
The CCAT has stayed with DTI because:
- The CCAT hear appeals against decisions of the DGFT and the
utility regulators NOT against the decisions of Ministers or
government departments.
- The CCAT deals with complex legal, economic and financial
issues. Members include specialists in law, accountancy
and economics. Those appearing before the CCAT will
almost always be large
companies represented by high-powered lawyers.
- The CCAT are already strongly independent of both the
government and the reporting side of the Commission.
- At the same time, the CCAT already share resources with
other parts of the Commission, and form part of a focus for
competition expertise.
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