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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Nambalat v Taher & Ors [2012] EWCA Civ 1249 (05 October 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/1249.html Cite as: [2013] ICR 1024, [2012] IRLR 1004, [2012] EWCA Civ 1249 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE BLACK
and
MR JUSTICE BEAN
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Ms T Nambalat |
First Appellant |
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- and - |
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Mr Taher and Mrs S Tayeb |
First Respondents |
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Ms Y Binti Salim Udin |
Second Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) Mr F Chamsi-Pasha (2) Mrs L Chamsi-Pasha (3) Mr Y Kaylani |
Second Respondents |
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Ms Rehana Azib (instructed by Evans Dodds Solicitors) for the First Respondents
Mr Jonathan Goldberg QC and Ms Bushra Ahmed (instructed by Goldkorn Mathias Gentle Solicitors) for the Second Respondents
Hearing date : 5 July 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill :
The Statutory Framework
"(1) A person who qualifies for the national minimum wage shall be remunerated by his employer in respect of his work in any pay reference period at a rate which is not less than the national minimum wage.
(2) A person qualifies for the national minimum wage if he is an individual who—
(a) is a worker;
(b) is working, or ordinarily works, in the United Kingdom under his contract; and
(c) has ceased to be of compulsory school age.
(3) The national minimum wage shall be such single hourly rate as the Secretary of State may from time to time prescribe."
"(2) In these Regulations 'work' does not include work (of whatever description) relating to the employer's family household done by a worker where the conditions in sub-paragraphs (a) or (b) are satisfied.
(a) The conditions to be satisfied under this sub-paragraph are–
(i) that the worker resides in the family home of the employer for whom he works,
(ii) that the worker is not a member of that family, but is treated as such, in particular as regards to the provision of accommodation and meals and the sharing of tasks and leisure activities;
(iii) that the worker is neither liable to any deduction, nor to make any payment to the employer, or any other person, in respect of the provision of the living accommodation or meals; and
(iv) that, had the work been done by a member of the employer's family, it would not be treated as being performed under a worker's contract or as being work because the conditions in sub-paragraph (b) would be satisfied.
(b) The conditions to be satisfied under this sub-paragraph are–
(i) that the worker is a member of the employer's family,
(ii) that the worker resides in the family home of the employer,
(iii) that the worker shares in the tasks and activities of the family,
and that the work is done in that context."
"Particular attention should be paid to ensure that the au pair relationship is not a simple shield for exploitation and that the relevant individual is genuinely being treated as a member of the family unit."
"In our view the tasks that are for consideration are the tasks performed by the family as a family unit. Reg.2(2)(a)(ii) requires the worker to be treated as a family member. The issue is whether the worker is integrated into the family. What work the worker does under his or her contract of employment is not relevant for the purposes of considering whether this condition is satisfied."
"In our view there is no justification for importing the concept of equivalence into the clear words 'the sharing of tasks'. Regulation 2(2)(a)(ii) does not require the worker to share all meals, tasks and leisure activities with the family but rather that the worker is treated as a member of the family in those particular respects. Each family is different. When considering whether the condition is satisfied the habits of the individual family in relation to the taking of meals, the sharing of tasks and leisure activities have to be examined."
Ms T Nambalat (first appellant)
"21. As regards the conditions in Regulation 2(2) National Minimum Wage Act Regulations 1999, it is not in dispute that the claimant resided in the family home. It is also not in dispute that there were no deductions from her pay in respect of her accommodation. The questions we have to decide are whether the claimant was treated as a member of the family and whether her work consisted of sharing in the tasks and activities of the family.
22. Dealing with the first of those matters, we noted that the claimant's room was a room that the family did use, albeit to a limited extent. The doors were generally left open. Some meals were taken together with the claimant and members of the family but the claimant was free to take all meals with the family, although it was her decision not to, most of the time. There was sharing of tasks, in particular cooking and clearing up after meals. Otherwise, the claimant did the bulk of the work. As regards leisure activities the claimant shared these with the children to some extent. She was invited to the cinema and to family occasions although she declined. She watched television with some members of the family.
23. As regards the sharing of task and activities of the family, she was involved in cooking and preparation of the meals. Time was spent with the children, especially Husain, which went beyond the scope of her duties, or watching television or clearing up after meals.
24. In our judgment, for those reasons, all of the conditions are satisfied. That has the consequence that her work is not defined as work for the purposes of the National Minimum Wage Act."
Ms Y Binti Salim Udin (second appellant)
"[The second respondents] gave unchallenged evidence that the house was cleaned regularly by an employee of Mr Chamsi-Pashas' company and that no such duties fell to Ms Salim Udin. Cooking, washing up, clothes washing and other sundry tasks were shared between the adults in the household, including Ms Salim Udin." (paragraph 124)
"As for trips to Huddersfield, the respondent's evidence was that these were holidays; Ms Salim Udin travelled there as a member of the family, helping out by looking after the smaller children and contributing to other household tasks." (paragraph 145)
"We find that the Chamsi-Pashas' descriptions of the sleeping accommodation and bathroom and toilet facilities at the various residences was true and accurate, as was their outline of the pattern of daily life and Ms Salim Udin's working routines." (paragraph 165)
"So far from members of the family being hostile towards her, we find that she was treated kindly, affectionately and with respect." (paragraph 166)
"We accept the evidence of Mrs Chamsi-Pasha that routine household tasks were shared. If she brought shopping home, she and Ms Salim Udin would put things away together. If Ms Salim Udin was cooking the evening meal, she might help with food preparation or tidying away." (paragraph 168)
"Mr and Mrs Chamsi-Pasha included her without differentiation from the members of the family in planned outings and holidays and on ad-hoc visits to the park or to cafes or restaurants." (paragraph 170)
Reference was made to the shared Muslim religion which, in the Tribunal's view, "served to some extent as a levelling force". (paragraph 4)
"We tentatively volunteer a few additional observations of our own. In the first place, it seems to us that the concept of being treated as a member of the family must entail a degree of involvement. The individual must be more than a guest. She (or he, but for brevity we will use the feminine only) must be a member of the household. She must be included to some degree in family life. This involvement must entail taking part, or at least being expected or invited to take part, in tasks and activities which fall outside the scope of the work for which she is employed. It also involves her sharing the family's food and accommodation, which must extend to sleeping accommodation, bathing and washing facilities, kitchen and living space. In our view the notion of being included as a member of a family does not require parity of treatment with family members, but a significant difference in the standard of facilities or services made available to the domestic worker on the one hand and the rest of the household on the other may argue against the conclusion that she is being treated as a family member. On the other hand, we note that the Regulations refer to the provision, not sharing, of meals and we do not read them as requiring that meals be eaten together, or even that the same meals be taken. (But clearly a worker who ate different meals from the family would be less likely to be seen as being treated as part of the family.) The concept of sharing tasks, must, it seems to us, be interpreted in the context of what it is that the worker is employed to do. If a primary employment duty of the worker is to get children ready for school in the morning, the exemption clearly does not depend on that task being shared with other members of the family. To put it another way, the domestic worker does not need to share her role with other members of the family in order to fall within the exemption. It seems to us that the reference to 'tasks' is aimed at routine household jobs and chores outside the scope of the worker's employment which one would expect members of a family to share as a matter of course."
"While we differ on the question of accommodation, we are united in regarding the language of the exemption as being otherwise satisfied. We have found that meals were shared, even though they were rarely taken together. We have accepted the evidence of Mrs Chamsi-Pasha that there was a sharing of routine household tasks. And Ms Salim Udin was involved in leisure activities. These took place at weekends: visits to the park and further afield, outings to places of interest, visits to friends and family, trips to the cinema and to local restaurants and local cafes. She was not taken, as she suggested, so that use could be made of her services in looking after the children, but because she was seen as part of the family and it was natural that she should be asked. The fact that she could, and sometimes did, decline invitations to go out with the family, reinforces the Respondents' case that she was treated as a member of the family."
The Tribunal had found that, on occasions, the appellant elected to stay at home with one of the children.
Respondents' submissions
Treatment as family member
a) Accommodation
"214. Unfortunately, we are unable to agree on the question whether the exemption applies here. The majority, consisting of Mr Javed and Mrs Bond, takes the view that the wording of the exemption is not satisfied. They point to the fact that Ms Salim Udin was at all relevant times a woman in her thirties. After leaving Portland Place, she was accommodated in a small bedroom in Hallam Street and likewise in Thurloe Street, sharing with the two smaller boys. And in Thurloe Street that arrangement gave way to a mattress on the dining room floor. They also point to the limited and rudimentary storage space made available for her toiletries and other possessions at Thurloe Street (photo p.160). The majority reasons that a member of the Chamsi-Pasha family in her late thirties living within their household would not have been treated as Ms Salim Udin was in terms of the standard of accommodation provided to her at Hallam Street and Thurloe Street. And if the comparison with the imaginary Chamsi-Pasha family members is invalid, the majority rests its view in the alternative on the broad proposition that the standard of accommodation afforded to Ms Salim Udin at Hallam Street and Thurloe Street was such that she cannot be regarded as having been treated as a member of the family when living at those addresses. The majority opinion is based solely on the accommodation at Hallam Street and Thurloe Street. But for this aspect, the majority conclusion would have been that the exemption was made out. Accordingly, Mr Javed and Mrs Bond consider that Ms Salim Udin is entitled to a remedy based on the national minimum wage provisions for unauthorised deductions from wages during her time at Hallam Street and Thurloe Street only.
215. The Employment Judge sees the matter differently. In his view the Tribunal is not required, or indeed permitted, to reason that, since a mature female member of the family might have been better accommodated than the Claimant, the exemption fails on the accommodation ground. The question is whether Ms Salim Udin was treated as a member of the family. It seems to the Employment Judge that in the context of the relatively straitened circumstances of the family following the move from Portland Place, it cannot be said that in terms of the accommodation provided to her, Ms Salim Udin was treated otherwise than as a member of the family. At Hallam Street she (unlike Yasmine) had a bedroom. And at Thurloe Street she was provided with a bedroom too, although out of choice and with the agreement of Mrs Chamsi-Pasha, she eventually moved to the dining room. The simple fact is that there was no bedroom which Ms Salim Udin could occupy alone. The sleeping arrangements were not by any means ideal, but the entire family had to tolerate cramped conditions. As the Tribunal has found the two elder boys had to share a small bedroom in circumstances where only one could sleep in a bed if both were at home at the same time. In the Employment Judge's view, it is impossible to say that there was a qualitative difference between the standard of accommodation enjoyed by Ms Salim Udin on the one hand and the family on the other, either at Hallam Street or at Thurloe Street. The Tribunal is unanimous in its view that the provision of accommodation at Portland Place was compatible with the exemption. It seems to the Employment Judge to be erroneous to say that the consequence of Mr Chamsi-Pasha's decision to sacrifice space for location and remain in central London was that Ms Salim Udin ceased to be treated as a member of the family"
"56. . . . In our view the majority erred in considering the issue of accommodation in isolation, as if there is a separate accommodation test, which there is not. When all the material evidence in relation to the issue as to whether the Claimant was treated as a member of the Respondents' family is considered holistically it is clear, in our view that she was so treated and a decision to the contrary would be perverse. We agree with the observation of the Employment Judge to whom it seemed to be erroneous to say that 'the consequence of Mr Chamsi-Pasha's decision to sacrifice space for location and remain in central London was that Ms Salim Udin ceased to be treated as a member of the family' (para 215).
57. Even focussing on accommodation alone (which, as we have said, is not the correct approach), it is significant that at Hallam Street the Claimant, unlike Yasmine, the Respondent's teenage daughter, had her own bedroom. Yasmine, then aged 13, slept on a mattress in the hallway for about the first six months at Hallam Street. When her grandmother visited she put a stop to this practice, insisting that she should sleep in her uncle Talal's bedroom (para 116). As for the sleeping arrangements at Thurloe Street, these were not by any means ideal, but the entire family had to tolerate cramped conditions. The two elder brothers had to share a small bedroom in circumstances where only one could sleep in a bed if both were at home at the same time. There was no bedroom which the Claimant could occupy alone. She was provided with a bedroom which she shared with the two boys, Faysal and Zeyd, in which she had a bunk bed with a mattress. Out of choice and with the agreement of Mrs Chamsi-Pasha the Claimant moved into the dining room and slept on a roll-up mattress which was purchased for her, together with new bedding. The Respondents' evidence, which was accepted, was that the change in sleeping arrangements was made at the behest of the Claimant, who preferred to be flexible as to when she went to bed because she enjoyed watching "soaps" on television, sometimes until quite late at night (para 117). We conclude that the sleeping arrangements at Hallam Street and/or Thurloe Street could not have had the effect of the Claimant ceasing to be treated as a member of the family."
b) General considerations
Lady Justice Black :
Mr Justice Bean :