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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Balfour Beatty Power Networks Ltd v. Tucker & Ors [2002] UKEAT 182_01_1004 (10 April 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/182_01_1004.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 182_01_1004, [2002] UKEAT 182_1_1004 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 7 March 2002 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE HOLLAND
MRS A GALLICO
MR D NORMAN
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellants | MISS MELANIE TETHER (of Counsel) Instructed By: Mr R L Dobie Tods Murray WS 66 Queen Street Edinburgh EN2 4NE |
For the Respondents | MR ANDREW HOGARTH (of Counsel) Instructed By: Mr B A Smith Messrs O H Parsons & Partners Solicitors 3rd Floor Sovereign House 212-224 Shaftesbury Avenue London WC2H 8PR |
MR JUSTICE HOLLAND:
Introduction
The Law
Section 13(1). An employer shall not make a deduction from wages of a worker employed by him …
(3). Where the total amount of wages paid on any occasion by an employer to a worker employed by him is less than the total amount of the wages properly payable by him to the worker on that occasion (after deductions), the amount of the deficiency shall be treated for the purposes of this Part as a deduction made by the employer from the worker's wages on that occasion.
27(1). In this Part 'wages' in relation to a worker means any sums payable to the worker in connection with his employment including
(a) any … bonus …
The Facts
"You may be aware that new rates of pay, classification of skills and changes to the old Working Rule Agreement came into force on 29 June 1998.
The changes are such that new Contracts of Employment will be issued to each employee. These will be produced within four weeks.
The previous rates of pay in Balfour Kilpatrick were enhanced by an additional payment or bonus.
The 1998 pay agreement significantly increases the hourly rate of pay for everyone. In order to remain competitive in what is becoming an increasingly difficult market, these increases in the hourly rates have required a reduction to the discretionary enhancement after allowing for the changes in the new agreement relating to overtime and travel pay. The rest of the civil contracting industry is having to do the same.
The overall effect of these changes is that nobody will be worse off. It should also be noted that there is the possibility of improvement with the higher hourly rate being used in overtime working.
Each employee has been allocated a classification of skill level based on his training record. Your Engineer has a list of all employees, their skill level and new hourly rate. If you disagree with our assessment of your skill level please inform your Engineer."
By 10th August 1998 a minute of an internal meeting served to set out the Respondents approach to implementation of the Agreement:
"P. Elliott advised the changes on the Working Rule Agreement (Construction Industry Joint Council) new rates of pay and the method for implementation within BK Cardiff. The main principles of which are: -
1.1. No employee would be any worse off under the new rule.
1.2. Based on 39 hours week.
1.3. Only hours worked to be booked.
1.4. Operatives required to work at a higher skill level for a short period of time are to
be paid for the rate appropriate to that skill factor for the period of time that they
work at the higher level ONLY – and they then return to their designated rate.
1.5. Where operatives would be worse off under the new scheme they will be paid a
daily bonus equal to the difference in remuneration between new and old scheme.
1.6. Any bonus paid as item 5 would only be paid for attendance Monday to Friday
inclusive – it "will not" apply to Saturday and Sunday working."
"Remuneration
4 (a) (i) Your rate of remuneration will be that applicable to the job you are required to undertake at any time in accordance with the CIJC Working Rules Agreement. Your basic/ordinary hourly rate of pay (which is used for the purposes of overtime, night work or shift work calculations) at the date of this statement is £5.50p per hour. Your rate of pay can vary depending on the job you are engaged on at any time, and will be shown on your pay slip which will constitute an amendment to this statement. In certain circumstances you may be entitled to other payments the method of calculation of which will be in accordance with the CIJC Working Rule Agreement.
(ii) It shall be open to employers and employees on any job to agree a bonus scheme based on measured output and productivity for any operation or operations on that particular job.
(b) Your remuneration is paid weekly in arrears by credit transfer to your nominated bank or building society account."
Additionally this statement provides: "The collective agreement which applies to you at the date of this statement is the Working Rule Agreement of the Construction Industry Joint Council (CIJC)."
The Employment Tribunal
"With effect on and from Monday 28 June 1999, new and increased basic rates of pay, allowances and additional payments were applicable as permitted by the terms of that Agreement.
The Respondent sought to offset the cost of the basic pay increase by reducing the level at which bonus payments were made to myself and other operatives. This action was explained by reference to the need to ensure that the Company would remain able to tender competitively for contracts that may be let in the future.
I would confirm that, at no time, did the Company seek to achieve, or achieve, my consent to any reduction in bonus payment entitlement and that a continuing series of deductions have occurred since 9 July 1999.
I consider these deductions to be unlawful and seek recovery of the sums deducted."
The Submissions
a. Payment for Ghost hours was not the subject of legal entitlement but was discretionary – as was common ground before the Tribunal.
b. What is at stake is what is being paid to compensate for the termination of that which was discretionary: it would be remarkable, and wholly dependent on express terms if there came into being a legal entitlement to that which is paid to replace that which was discretionary.
c. The fundamental flaw in the reasoning of the Tribunal is to be found in paragraph 25 of the Extended Reasons: "Our view is that it cannot be inferred or implied that the compensatory bonus was to be discretionary or annually reviewable in the absence of any express term to that effect." This, she submits, reverses the burden of proof and amounts to a serious misdirection. It is not for the employers expressly to disavow legal entitlement; it is for the employees to prove such.
d. Having found in paragraph 15, "the purpose of the site allowance or daily bonus is purely to bring the basic week's pay into line with what it had been in the previous year under the Ghost Hours Scheme," there were arguably contradictory findings in paragraph 25 of the Extended Reasons, viz., "there is no doubt that when the Respondent introduced the compensatory bonus it intended to draw a line under past practices. For that reason we have not been persuaded by arguments that the compensatory bonus should have the same characteristics as the Ghost Hours system which it replaced …"
c. Finally, Miss Tether queries why any legal entitlement (none being admitted) should be in perpetuity to the sum that was appropriate in 1998 to ensure no overall income loss; why not to the sum as computed for ensuing years as being necessary to achieve the same object.
"In a case such as the present, the factors to which Browne-Wilkson J. referred are likely to be among the most important circumstances to be taken into account, but they have to be taken into account along with all the other circumstances of the case. Thus, for example, in our view, the question is not whether the period for which policy has been followed is 'substantial' in some abstract sense, but whether, in relation to the other circumstances, it is sufficient to support the inference that that policy has achieved the status of a contractual term. Again, with regard to communication, the question seems to us to be not so much whether the policy has been made or become known directly to the employees or through intermediaries, but whether the circumstances in which it was made or has become known support the inference that the employers intend to become contractually bound by it."
Judgment
a. For the Tribunal the factual matrix included the proposition that Mr. Tucker received £72.80 per week for one year as 'bonus' or ' site allowance' without any other explanation as to its genesis. On that footing there can be no basis whatever for the implied development of a legal entitlement to the sum: what else is it in such circumstances but an uncovenanted gratuity? Contrast that which Mr. Hogarth postulated: an uncovenanted rise in basic rate of pay. Once described as such, there is no scope for regarding it as a weekly gratuity: its very description and nature postulates a contractual obligation on the part of the employers to maintain payment of this enhanced pay rate as a contractual entitlement.
b. Let it be supposed that Mr. Tucker did have knowledge as to how and why the £72.80p. had been calculated and paid: the notion of a continuing legal entitlement to such sum or any other sum subsequently to be calculated for a like purpose is plainly untenable. The explanation has to be grounded on the premise that this is a discretionary payment temporarily to compensate for that which has hitherto been enjoyed, again on a discretionary basis.
c. Finally let it be supposed that there came to be legal entitlement: how can it possibly be to £72.80p. in perpetuity as distinct from the product from time to time of the machinery that served to produce £72.80p. as at 1998? The proposition to be found in paragraph 31 of the Extended Reasons, "they were entitled to presume that it was a contractual bonus payable in perpetuity" is, we have to say, obviously untenable – indeed so untenable that it serves to categorise the reasoning which led to it as wholly unsustainable.
Conclusion