Time limits
[ch 13: pages 497-498]The application must be submitted within the time limits laid down by the law for each type of claim. Time generally runs from the date of the act complained of (for example, the date of dismissal in an unfair dismissal claim). Although there are a few exceptions, the time limit for most employment claims is three months. The tribunal’s approach to time limits is extremely strict and time limits must be approached as if set in stone.
The correct way to calculate the three-month period is to take the day of the month immediately before the date of the incident that triggered the claim, for example, the dismissal, and then go forward three months. For example, if an employee is dismissed with immediate effect on 10 January, the last date for launching the claim (by submitting the Acas EC Notification Form) is 9 April, not 10 April.
Tribunal time limits are affected by Acas EC. This is explained on page 491.
The time limit for a request for interim relief is only seven days (see Chapter 5: Interim relief).
If a claim is issued out of time, the tribunal has no power to hear it and it will almost certainly be dismissed. The tribunal has discretion to extend the time limit in most claims, but extensions of time are rare (see Chapter 10: Dismissal — Extending time to bring an unfair dismissal claim, page 378) and Chapter 6: Discrimination, page 285).
No extension of time is possible in a claim for equal pay (see Chapter 7).
The failure of electronic equipment will never justify missing the deadline.