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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Khan v. Premier Private Hire Taxi [2006] UKEAT 0322_06_0610 (6 October 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2006/0322_06_0610.html Cite as: [2006] UKEAT 322_6_610, [2006] UKEAT 0322_06_0610 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MS A ROBINSON (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Stachiw Bashir Green Solicitors 1a Oastler Road Saltaire West Yorkshire BD18 4SE |
For the Respondent | MR M SHERIDAN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Levi & Co Solicitors 33 St Paul's Street Leeds West Yorkshire LS1 2JJ |
SUMMARY
Practice and Procedure – Application/Claim
Religion or Belief
The Chairman refused to accept the claim form on the ground that it appeared that the Claimant was a private hire taxi driver in the same position as the Claimant in Mingeley v Amber Cars. This was an error as the application of Mingeley could have only been properly carried out once the facts of the relationship had been found or had been made clear in the claim form. The admission in the form (completed by the Claimant in person) that he was like an agent was not sufficient. There should have been a hearing in order to find the facts.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
"It seemed to me that the Claimant came within the type of worker (in the very loosest sense of that word) who was the subject of a prior decision of the EAT in Mingeley v Mr A Pennock & Mr F Ivory t/a/ Amber Cars EAT/1170/02, which, by pure chance, was an appeal against a decision made by a Tribunal which I chaired, in September 2002. My recollection, although I have not had a chance to check the position, is that the unsuccessful Appellant, Mr Mingeley, sought to challenge the EAT decision in the Court of Appeal and that he was unsuccessful in so doing. I attach a copy of the decision in Mingeley for ease of reference by the learned Judge.
It seems to me that the position of the present Claimant, Mr Khan, is identical to that of Mr Mingeley. Since Mr Mingeley was not able to claim the protection of the Race Relations Act 1976, and since the relevant provisions in the 1976 Act and the Employment Equality (Religion or Belief) Regulations 2003 are identical, then equally Mr Kahn would not enjoy the protection of the 2003 Regulations.
When I made the decision to reject the claim, I did not have the judgment of the EAT in Mingeley in front of me. I have re-read that. I note that His Honour Judge Peter Clark referred to the possibility that that Appellant might be able to rely upon Section 14 of the Race Relations Act, which is, or course, equivalent to Regulation 18 of the 2003 Regulations. That in turn requires consideration of the definition of an employment agency. There is no definition in the 2003 Regulations, but for present purposes I take the equivalent definition from Section 78(1) of the Race Relations Act 1976. An "employment agency" means:
"A person who, for profit or not, provides services for the purpose of finding employment for workers or supplying employers with workers".
If that definition is to be applied to the present circumstances, the proposed Respondent would have to be a person who provides services for the purpose of providing employment for workers. The relevant employment would have to be between the taxi driver and the taxi customer. I do not consider that is an employment relationship. Apart from any other factor, there is no mutuality of obligation as between those parties. Alternatively, the definition encompasses a body which supplies employers with workers. Clearly, that is not relevant to the present situation.
In any event, and doing the best I can for the Claimant, none of this appears from the Claim Form. In my view, therefore, the claim was properly rejected."
"It seems to me arguable that this appeal should not have been excluded without at least hearing evidence about the precise nature of the relationship between the taxi driver and the taxi firm."
"13. I find this to be an unsustainable argument. That which a Directive has recently imposed on Member States as a legislative requirement cannot provide a useful aid to construction of a provision of domestic legislation which has been in existence for more than a quarter of a century and which has received authoritative interpretation in the Court of Appeal and the House of Lords. Moreover, Parliament must be assumed to be aware of that authoritative interpretation but it has chosen not to amend s.78.
14. I return to the central issues which Mr Thacker correctly identified in his Skeleton argument. In my judgment, on the plain words of s.78 and the authorities to which I have referred, the employment tribunal was correct to conclude that, in order to bring himself within s.78, Mr Mingeley had to establish that his contract with Amber Cars placed him under an obligation "personally to execute any work or labour". As the tribunal found, there was no evidence that he was ever under such an obligation. He was free to work or not to work at his own whim or fancy. His obligation was to pay Amber Cars £75 per week and if he chose to work then to do so within the requirements of the arrangement. However, the absence from the contract of an obligation to work places him beyond reach of s.78.
In addition Buxton LJ said this:
21. It was agreed in argument, and indeed found by the tribunal, that Mr Mingeley's only contractual obligation to Amber Cars was to pay the £75 weekly fee for access to Amber Cars' computer system. He does nothing else contractually for Amber Cars: and therefore, on the plain meaning of the words, his contract with them cannot be a contract personally to execute any work or labour. For that reason, I think that in this case the facts never approached the issue of dominant purpose which, I would agree with my Lord, poses difficulties of its own."
"Answer to question no.4.4:- the company was not paying me, I was taking fare from customer and paying commission to the company. Like an agent transacting business for another."