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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Harlow District Council v O’Mahony & Anor [2007] UKEAT 0144_07_2106 (21 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2007/0144_07_2106.html Cite as: [2007] UKEAT 144_7_2106, [2007] UKEAT 0144_07_2106 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MR K EDMONDSON JP
MR P GAMMON MBE
APPELLANT | |
2) APS RECRUITMENT LIMITED |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
APPEARANCES
For the Appellant | MR M LANE (of Counsel) Instructed by: Harlow District Council Legal Services Civic Centre The Water Gardens Harlow Essex CM20 1WG |
For the 1st Respondent For the 2nd Respondent |
MS B AHMED (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs O H Parsons & Partners 3rd Floor Sovereign House 212-214 Shaftesbury Avenue London WC2H 8PR MS T WALKES-BROWN (Representative) |
SUMMARY
Contract of Employment – Definition of employee
Triangular relationship – whether ET entitled to conclude that there was to be implied a contract of employment between worker and end-user. See Dacas. Muscat. James v Greewich BC. They were. Adequacy of reasons. Conclusion by ET plainly right.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
Overview
The facts
"HDC had an agreement with a recruitment agency … (APS) to supply a variety of people to carry out and fulfil roles within Operational Services of HDC. In approximately December 2004/January 2005 HDC asked APS to supply a competent plasterer. APS then contacted us with details of persons they thought to be suitable and one of the persons referred was the Claimant."
"The client (HDC) agrees to pay the hourly charge plus VAT advised by the employment business (APS) at the time of the assignment. Verification and signature of the employment business' timesheet each week constitutes acceptance that a temporary worker has worked satisfactorily for the hours stated."
"Acceptance. These terms and conditions are accepted by the client in respect of the provision of personnel services on the interview of or the engagement under a contract or services of a temporary worker assigned by the employment business (temporary worker)."
And clause 10 begins:
"Temporary workers are engaged by the employment business under contracts for services. They are deemed to be under the supervision direction and control of the client from the time they report to take up duties and for the duration of the assignment."
The Claimant ceased working for HDC on 5 May 2006.
The Tribunal decision
The appeal
Conclusion
"There were shortcomings in the judgment in this case. On a number of occasions we have had to consider the underlying material to which the judge referred in order to understand his reasoning. On one occasion, the significance of the fact that the milking cups were perpetually full of milk, we failed to follow his reasoning even with the benefit of the underlying material. At the end of the exercise, however, we have been able to identify reasons for the judge's conclusions, which cogently justify his decision. While he did not express all of these with clarity in his judgment he made sufficient reference to the evidence that had weighed with him to enable us, after considering that evidence, to follow that reasoning with confidence."
"When the arrangements are genuine and when implemented accurately, represented the actual relationship between the parties, as is largely to be the case where there was no pre-existing contract between worker and end user. Then we suspect that it will be a rare case where there will be evidence entitling the Tribunal to imply a contract between the worker and the end user. If any such a contract is to be inferred, there must, subsequent to a relationship commencing, be some words or conduct which entitle the Tribunal to conclude that the agency arrangements no longer dictate or adequately reflect how the work is actually being performed, and that the reality of the relationship is only consistent with the implication of the contract. It will be necessary to show that the worker is working not pursuant to the agency arrangements, but because of mutual obligations binding worker and end user which are incompatible with those arrangements."
We respectfully adopt that analysis.
(a) HDC asked APS to find them a plasterer. That is entirely consistent with APS acting as agent for HDC in obtaining personnel;
(b) HDC interviewed the Claimant before taking him on. He was then subject to the control of his supervisor, Mr Mckenzie;
(c) The Claimant had no further contact with APS or its representatives, save that he submitted timesheets countersigned by Mr Mckenzie and APS paid his wages, we are satisfied, as agent for HDC, see Muscat;
(e) The Claimant negotiated a pay increase directly with Mr Mckenzie on behalf of HDC, not with APS;
(e) He was provided with HDC clothing, protective equipment and a vehicle to carry out his work;
(f) He was subject to discipline by HDC and raised a grievance with HDC about his working conditions;
(g) He was asked directly by Mr Mckenzie to work overtime when required;
(h) He needed HDC permission to take holidays and notified them when he was absent through sickness.