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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Anderson v. ASC Staffing Ltd [2000] UKEAT 181_00_1606 (16 June 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2000/181_00_1606.html Cite as: [2000] UKEAT 181__1606, [2000] UKEAT 181_00_1606 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE MAURICE KAY
MR B R GIBBS
MRS D M PALMER
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING – EX PARTE
For the Appellant | THE APPELLANT NEITHER PRESENT NOR REPRESENTED |
MR JUSTICE MAURICE KAY: We are invited to deal with this preliminary hearing on the papers because the appellant's wife has serious health problems and they are both prevented from being here today. They have, however, indicated their readiness for the matter to proceed in their absence and upon paper.
"4. … We are satisfied that at that time the Applicant had a discussion with a Miss Robinson, who was the On-site Co-ordinator and for the following three weeks the Applicant was not offered, nor did he accept, work from the Respondents. It was, however, understood that once his wife's illness had been dealt with, the Applicant would wish to return and be re-assigned to Speedibake and that happened on 4 January 1999."
"6. The question which we as a Tribunal have to determine is the nature of the relationship between the Applicant from the early part of July 1998 until April 1999. …"
They declared themselves to be greatly assisted by the recent decision of the House of Lords in Carmichael & Another v National Power Limited. The tribunal noted the different facts in that case, but emphasised in the National Power case, there was a document which:
"did no more than provide a framework for a series of successive ad-hoc contracts of service or for services which the parties might subsequently make and that when the applicants were not working under the arrangements anticipated by the agreement, they were not in any employment relationship with the company, National Power."
That essentially, was what the Employment Tribunal found to be the correct analysis in the present case.
"8. … There was no mutuality of obligation. There was no obligation upon ASC to find work for the Applicant and there was no obligation on the Applicant to take work if it were found. …"
They observed as a fact that each and every week between July and December 1998 and each and every week from January and April 1999, were weeks in which ASC did find work and the appellant proceeded to carry out that work.
"11. Taking the totality of the relationship, the Applicant had either to be working under a contract of employment or he had to be working under some other kind of contract. The reality of the situation is that the Applicant cannot be regarded as an independent contractor. He was engaged to do the bidding of another party and to follow the instructions of that other party. We are satisfied that the reality of the relationship between the Applicant and the Respondents, each and every week was that of employee and employer but that was not a relationship under the umbrella agreement of 3 June or 30 September 1999. It was a relationship that was created on an ad-hoc basis each and every week. Each week that the Applicant was offered work and took it, that created a separate contract of employment."
There then followed a careful analysis explaining why, in those circumstances, the appellant was unable to point to the necessary 52 weeks continuity of employment, there being a break between 11th December 1998 and 4th January 1999. The tribunal said:
"13. … Those are weeks which we are satisfied were not governed by any of the ad-hoc contracts of employment that the Applicant entered into on a week by week basis."
"14. … On the evidence we are satisfied that for those three weeks it was agreed that the Applicant would not be offered a contract and the Applicant would not accept a contract. It was not an arrangement whereby the Applicant would be regarded as continuing in employment."
Putting all that together, the appellant therefore failed to establish the 52 weeks of continuity.