Just on a procedural point, the hearing process, which you do need to familiarise yourself with, is that you will be allowed what is called "examination in chief" prior to your witness being cross-examined by the respondent. This allows you to ask questions of your witness that may be needed to respond to points made for the first time in the other side's witness statements.
Currently all you have is the ET3 and any Grounds of Resistance from the respondent. I presume you do not know, at this moment, what from their side they are proposing to include in the bundle. You also have input to the content of the bundle (albeit the respondent, as previously stated, will be responsible for paginating and collating it). As part of your input to the documents for the bundle, you can request to have included the detail of all the evidence they have of the allegations of which you were accused. This should include the examples of where you did not follow procedure, if that was what they based their decision to dismiss you on. They need to evidence that in the bundle to be able to defend your claim. If they do not provide that evidence then you can request it from them and in the event it is not provided and you can demonstrate it is material to the claim, then you can make an application to the Tribunal.
I hope you have considered what I have said about the number of witnesses and that an unnecessary number of witnesses will antagonise the tribunal. If a witness can only verify the evidence given by another witness, then seriously consider whether they are needed. If the witness can give a first-hand account of an allegation made by the respondent that is denied by you, then their evidence may assist the tribunal. Taking this into account you then need to find out if these individuals are willing to be witnesses for you. If they are still employed by your ex-employer there may be some reluctance to be your witness, in which case again you need to consider what lengths you will go to force them to do so.
Once you have an agreed set of witnesses, then you can ask them at this early stage in the process, whilst events etc are still easier to recall, to start preparing their statement. What you may want to do is think about and set out any particular events, areas of dispute, missing information, and / or conflicting evidence would it be helpful for the witness's statement to cover? Also consider points that the respondent's potential witnesses are likely to cover in their statements? Ensure the statements from you witnesses cover those areas as far as possible. What you cannot do is "put words in the mouths" of your witnesses, or have a serious of statements that all appear to be answering a pre-determined set of questions. It is their statement of the events they witnessed and they have to not only declare a statement of truth when they sign it, when they are called to give evidence they have to swear that they are telling the truth in respect of what they witnessed.
At this stage, without the content of the bundle being known, it will be difficult to direct them to any documents or other evidence it would be useful for the witness to comment on. This means that you may need to ask them to revisit their statement once you have details of the bundle content. Any reference to documents in the bundle contained in the witness statement will need to be referenced by page number.
Currently all you have is the ET3 and any Grounds of Resistance from the respondent. I presume you do not know, at this moment, what from their side they are proposing to include in the bundle. You also have input to the content of the bundle (albeit the respondent, as previously stated, will be responsible for paginating and collating it). As part of your input to the documents for the bundle, you can request to have included the detail of all the evidence they have of the allegations of which you were accused. This should include the examples of where you did not follow procedure, if that was what they based their decision to dismiss you on. They need to evidence that in the bundle to be able to defend your claim. If they do not provide that evidence then you can request it from them and in the event it is not provided and you can demonstrate it is material to the claim, then you can make an application to the Tribunal.
I hope you have considered what I have said about the number of witnesses and that an unnecessary number of witnesses will antagonise the tribunal. If a witness can only verify the evidence given by another witness, then seriously consider whether they are needed. If the witness can give a first-hand account of an allegation made by the respondent that is denied by you, then their evidence may assist the tribunal. Taking this into account you then need to find out if these individuals are willing to be witnesses for you. If they are still employed by your ex-employer there may be some reluctance to be your witness, in which case again you need to consider what lengths you will go to force them to do so.
Once you have an agreed set of witnesses, then you can ask them at this early stage in the process, whilst events etc are still easier to recall, to start preparing their statement. What you may want to do is think about and set out any particular events, areas of dispute, missing information, and / or conflicting evidence would it be helpful for the witness's statement to cover? Also consider points that the respondent's potential witnesses are likely to cover in their statements? Ensure the statements from you witnesses cover those areas as far as possible. What you cannot do is "put words in the mouths" of your witnesses, or have a serious of statements that all appear to be answering a pre-determined set of questions. It is their statement of the events they witnessed and they have to not only declare a statement of truth when they sign it, when they are called to give evidence they have to swear that they are telling the truth in respect of what they witnessed.
At this stage, without the content of the bundle being known, it will be difficult to direct them to any documents or other evidence it would be useful for the witness to comment on. This means that you may need to ask them to revisit their statement once you have details of the bundle content. Any reference to documents in the bundle contained in the witness statement will need to be referenced by page number.
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