LRD guides and handbook May 2019

Law at Work 2019 - the trade union guide to employment law

Chapter 14

Deposit order




[ch 14: page 479]

In a weak case, a judge can order a party to pay a deposit, not exceeding £1,000, within 21 days or else the claim will be struck out (dismissed). A tribunal considering a deposit order must consider a claimant’s ability to pay and deposit orders must not be used to inhibit access to the tribunal. Only a nominal amount, say £1, should be ordered if the evidence shows that a claimant cannot pay (Hemdan v Ismail [2016] UKEAT 0021/16/1011).




A tribunal must not make a deposit order just because a claimant’s case is unclear (Tree v South East Coastal Services Ambulance NHS Trust [2017] UKEAT/0043/17/LA).



A deposit order is a strong indicator that a claim is likely to fail so urgent legal advice should be taken before carrying on. Even if the sum ordered is nominal, its purpose is the same, namely to signal to a litigant that their case is weak and that they are at risk of being ordered to pay the other side’s legal costs if they continue. A claimant who pursues a claim unreasonably after being warned by the tribunal that their case will probably fail is at a high risk of a costs order (see page 484).