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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> McCarthy & Ors v. Blue Sword Construction Ltd [2003] UKEAT 0223_03_1407 (14 July 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/0223_03_1407.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 223_3_1407, [2003] UKEAT 0223_03_1407 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 10 June 2003 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE REID QC
MR B V FITZGERALD MBE
MRS M T PROSSER
2) MR P JACKSON 3) MR M B SMITH |
APPELLANT |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellants | MR BRIAN GALLAGHER (of Counsel) Instructed by: O H Parsons and Partners Sovereign House 212-224 Shaftesbury Avenue London WC2H 8PR |
For the Respondent | MR DAVID CAMP (Representative) Alliance HR Solutions c/o Blue Sword Construction Ltd 41 Station Road Frimley Surrey GU16 7HE |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE REID QC
3.1 The Appellants, who are shuttering carpenters, were each engaged individually by the Respondent, a small company which undertakes concrete frame and groundworks contracting to work, at a site in Trafalgar Street Brighton. When they reported for work on the first occasion after they had been engaged each Appellant was presented by the Respondent's foreman with a form headed "Registration & Safety Induction Card" which he was required to sign before commencing work. These forms were retained by the Respondent and no copy was provided to any of the Appellants. The form was designed for use by both subcontractors and worker/employees. In the case of employees it states
'It is understood that I am employed on a temporary short term bases (sic) and that the agreed rates of pay have been enhanced to fully include any non-productive overtime, holiday pay, sickness benefit or any other statutory requirement, unless otherwise agreed in writing"
For subcontractors it says:
"Under the CIS scheme a schedule of rates will prevale (sic) with a monthly measured account. Any faulty workmanship to be the responsibility of the subcontractor."
These were the only documents ever produced to the Appellants and were not produced until after their engagement when they arrived on site.
3.2 The Respondent had agreed to pay the Appellants a daily rate of £135 for a working day from 7.30am to 5.30 pm Monday to Friday. Provided a full week was worked the Appellants also received a day's pay of £135 for working 7.30am to 1.00pm. on Saturdays. This in effect was a loyalty bonus paid to ensure attendance throughout the week. The Appellants therefore were paid 6 days pay if they worked a full 5½ day working week. The payslips showed that this inducement was not entirely successful: the Appellants did not necessarily work the full week and so did not necessarily qualify for the extra payment.
3.4 The Appellants were always under the management control of the Respondent's foreman who directed what work was to be done. Apart from hand tools the Respondent provided all other tools and equipment.
3.5 It was an implied term of their contracts that they would perform the work personally. Further, the Appellants were not free to leave the job in order to go elsewhere to complete other work, it being expected by all parties that they would work the hours contracted.
3.6 Each Appellant worked under CIS terms. This meant that the Respondent deducted income tax at 18% from their wages and thereafter each Appellant was responsible to the Inland Revenue for any balance of income tax due. They were not engaged on PAYE terms and although they could have asked for this none of them did.
3.7 The only financial risk to the Appellants was whether the Respondent would honour its agreement to pay their wages.
3.8 The Appellants were always paid on the basis of a daily rate and payment for their work was never made on a measurement basis. The weekly payments were not payments on account, subject to measuring the work and making any adjustments later.
3.9. On Friday 6 September 2002, after concrete had been poured, the foreman told Smith that he (the foreman) had to 'get rid' of 2 carpenters and summarily dismissed Smith. On Monday 9 September two new carpenters appeared on site. McCarthy and Jackson were told that the contract was losing money and unless production was increased money would be withheld from their wages. The Appellants worked a week in-hand and therefore, at that stage, had not been paid for the previous week's work. Mr McHale of the Respondent refused to confirm whether McCarthy and Jackson would be paid their wages for the previous week and also for the work done that Monday morning. Both McCarthy and Jackson regarded this as an anticipatory breach of contract by the Respondent, and, treated themselves as constructively dismissed, leaving the site at about 11am
3.10 The Appellants were not subjected to any formal written grievance or disciplinary procedure.
3.11 By letter dated 17 October 2002 the Respondent wrote to the Appellants alleging their work required making good and requesting them to attend site "within the next seven days" and stating that if they "fail to do this then we shall no alternative than to complete these works on your behalf."
3.12 The Respondent admitted withholding wages from McCarthy and Jackson amounting to £163.42 each, being payment of £135 for work on the Saturday morning 7 September and not paying £28.42 for the work undertaken on the Monday morning.
"13. The present circumstances are, however, different. Workers such as the applicants move from job to job as and when it suits them. They do not expect to remain with the same 'employer' on a long-term basis and move with him from site to site The relationship has a transient element to it and in this respect is akin to that of a self-employed sub-contractor. This position was considered in Byrne Brothers where different types of workers were identified being 'on the one hand workers whose degree of dependence is essentially the same as that of employees and on the other, contractors who have a sufficiently arm's-length and independent position to be treated as being able to look after themselves in the relevant respects' The EAT referred to such a worker as creating an "intermediate category" being between the position of employee and self-employed contractor.
14. I conclude that these applicants fall within the definition of "worker" as they provided personal services and predominantly were under the control of the Respondent who supplied all tools and equipment apart from basic hand tools. Their method of payment was by reference to time worked and included an element of overtime. I reach this conclusion despite the fact that they were paid under the CIS scheme As stated in Byrne "the fact that such a worker may be regarded by the Inland Revenue as self -employed and hold certificates to prove it, is relevant but not decisive to determining their status. I find they fall into the "intermediate category" referred to in Byrne and therefore are not employees.
15 As the Applicants are "workers" but not "employees" they are not entitled to statutory notice on termination of their employment but they are entitled to holiday pay. I conclude that as these applicants were in the intermediate category referred to in Byrne Brothers they should be treated as being able to look after their own interests when it comes to holiday pay. As participants in the CIS scheme they have to keep accounts sufficient to be able to satisfy the Inland Revenue as to their individual tax liability which marks them out as different from PAYE employees. With the transient nature of their employment it would, in my opinion, place an unwarranted accounting duty on the Respondent to keep precise records of the time they worked and to calculate holiday pay as and when each such worker left the Respondent's employment. In the circumstances of these Applicants. I therefore prefer the reasoning in Gridquest and find the Respondent was entitled to 'rolled-up' holiday pay which I find as a fact it did. No further entitlement is therefore due."
"an individual who has entered into or works under ( or, where the employment has ceased, worked under) (i) a contract of employment or (ii) 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. "
It is concerned not with a distinction between non-employee and employee but between those who genuinely have their own business and those who simply work for another .