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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Bacica v. Muir [2005] UKEAT 0004_05_2009 (20 September 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2005/0004_05_2009.html Cite as: [2005] UKEAT 4_5_2009, [2005] UKEAT 0004_05_2009 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH
MR J M KEENAN
MISS A MARTIN
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | Mr S Bacica, In Person 43 Bath Street EDINBURGH EH15 1HB |
For the Respondent |
Mr K M Muir, In Person 6 Broomhall Avenue EDINBURGH EH12 7NB |
Holiday pay
Working Time Regulations; holiday pay. Claimant sought holiday pay after working for respondent on a self employed basis. The tribunal held that he was a worker and entitled to receive holiday pay. The Employment Appeal Tribunal found that the tribunal had erred in their assessment of the evidence as to the circumstances of his employment which included that he worked under the CIS scheme, that he had and was free to work for other customers and had self employed accounts made up by an accountant. He did not qualify as a worker within the meaning of the regulations.
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH:
Preliminaries
Introduction
The issues
The Judgment
The appeal
EAT Directions
The legislation
"(1) Subject to paragraph (5), a worker is entitled to four weeks' annual leave in each leave year."
secondly, section 230 (3) of the Employment Rights Act 1996:-
"In this Act "worker"….means an individual who has entered into or works under …..
(a) (a) a contract of employment, or
(b) (b) any other contract, whether express or implied and (if it is express) whether oral or in writing, whereby the individual undertakes to do or perform personally any work or services for another party to the contract whose status is not by virtue of the contract that of a client or customer of any profession or business undertaking carried on by the individual."
and thirdly, Regulation 2 of the Working Time Regulations which contains the same definition of 'worker' as that which appears in s.230 of the Employment Rights Act.
Employment Tribunal directions
The facts
The Respondent was evidently clear in his own mind that he had had no intention of creating an employer/employee relationship. He paid the Claimant £10 per hour on the basis that that was intended to provide cover for overheads and that he could not prevent the Claimant also working for others.
The Employment Tribunal found that the Claimant was a worker. They appear to have placed weight on the fact that the work required to be carried out personally by the Claimant.
Respondent's case
"If you are self-employed, running your own business and are free to work for different clients and customers, the Working Time Regulations do not apply to you."
Thirdly, he submitted that a proper analysis was that there was a contract for services provided by the Claimant's business. Fourthly, he said that the Claimant had come to him as a self-employed painter and decorator, with a CIS card and with other clients that he needed to be free to work for, in circumstances where there was no mutual intention to create an employment relationship, all of which supported the view that he was self-employed and not a worker. In support of that submission, he relied on the case of Apex Masonry v DS Everitt UKEAT 0482112004 at paragraph 11 of the judgment:
"We begin with the Tribunal's finding that Mr Everitt was paid or operated on a "CIS basis". It seems to us, interpreting the succinct terms of paragraph 4 (v) of the Decision as best we can, that the Tribunal regarded this factor as supportive of the conclusions that Mr Everitt was an employee, or at best neutral. However, it is neither of these things. Reference to payment on "CIS basis" is a reference to the Construction Industry Scheme operated by the Inland Revenue. This Scheme applies only where the payer considers the payee to be self-employed. Moreover, the payee will have obtained a registration card and presented it to the payer, so the payee too is likely to be claiming the status of someone who is self-employed."
He referred also to the case of Secretary of State for Employment v McMeechan [1997] IRLR 353 a case in which there was an issue as to whether or not a Claimant was an employee and the Court of Appeal said:-
"The principle which it enshrines is that if there be an absence on the one side of any obligation to provide work and an absence on the other side of any obligation to do such work ….., then that provides a powerful pointer against the contract …being one of service."
and said that in the present case, no such obligation existed.
Fifthly, the Respondent submitted that it was clear that the Claimant considered himself to have been self-employed and referred not only to his having a CIS card but also to his accounts and to the CIS certificates in respect of his having performed work for Alder Joinery Ltd. Under reference to his accounts, the Respondent submitted that it seemed that the Inland Revenue would require to revisit his tax and national insurance liabilities if he was in fact found to have the status of worker.
Regarding the Employment Tribunal's decision, the Respondent commented that it seemed wrong to determine that a person was a worker on the basis that they personally performed whatever work was required under a contract. That, he said, was quite normal in the case of self-employed persons and it could not, surely, mean that they fell to be classed as workers entitled to holiday pay? Further, if the Claimant was, in truth, saying that he could be both self-employed and a worker, then why was he not claiming a proportionate part of holiday pay from his other customers such as Alder Joinery Ltd?
Finally, it was clear from the Respondent's approach that he had carefully considered the question of the Claimant's status at the outset and satisfied himself that he was self-employed, entitled to the benefit of the CIS scheme, not liable to be treated as an employee but entitled to the higher hourly rate paid, so as to cover his overheads, in recognition of the fact that he was working on a self-employed basis. We were impressed at the responsible attitude of the Respondent regarding this matter and it was plain that he found it very puzzling that he should now be facing a claim for holiday pay which, to his mind, was something only payable to his employees.
Claimant's case
The legal principles
Firstly, if a person is a 'worker' within the meaning of regulation 13 of the Working Time Regulations, then he is entitled to holiday pay. Secondly, for a person to be categorised as a worker for the purposes of the Regulation, he must work under a contract, he must perform that work personally and it must not be the case that the work is carried out in circumstances where the person for whom it is provided is a client or customer of a business carried on by that person. Broadly speaking, it is evident that the statutory definition of 'worker' will normally exclude those who are self-employed. The last part of the definition is a clear attempt to see that that result is achieved and it is, accordingly, not surprising that the DTI have felt able to state, on their website, that the Working Time Regulations do not apply to those who are self-employed. Thirdly, the determination of the question of whether or not a person works on a basis that fits the definition of worker is essentially a matter of fact.
The Employment Tribunal make specific reference to the case of Redrow Homes (Yorkshire) Ltd v Wright stating that the Court of Appeal held that it was correct to conclude that the Claimant contract bricklayers were employed under contracts where they undertook personally to perform work or services for the company "and were therefore "workers" within the meaning of …..the Working Time Regulations." It cannot, however, be correct to suggest that the mere rendering of a service personally makes a person a "worker". To do so is to ignore the last clause in the definition which makes it clear that if a person renders services or performs work on the basis that the person to or for whom he does so is a customer of his business, he is not then to be regarded as a worker. Such work or service may well be rendered on a personal basis. It is, for instance, well within the competence of many self-employed sole traders to do so and many secure business on the basis of selling their personal skills.
In carrying out an assessment of the basis on which a person works, factors such as his working on the basis of a CIS certificate, having business accounts prepared and submitted to the Inland Revenue, his being free to work for others, his in fact working for others, his being paid at a rate which includes an overheads allowance and his not being paid if not working, can all be relied on as supporting the view that he is running a business and work performed by him in the course of doing so is on the basis that the person for whom he performs it is a customer of that business.
Conclusions