GMB Branch secretary wrote:
JD wrong im afraid the driver could be deemed a worker under the direction of the company, currently winning these in London.So he CANT be dispensed with at the Prop whim.
DECISIONS ARE TAKEN BY THOSE THAT TURN UP!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
The post I made was about contract law and not whether a person given a job by a radio dispatcher was deemed a worker? I advised Geoff that he is under no obligation to take a radio job but the operator is also under no obligation to have him on the radio system?
I haven't read any of the decisions you mention Terry or what court they eminate from. I can only go on what I believe has already been established in law. If a new precedent has been set then I think we would all like to read it. I have posted a previous post of mine outlining past case law on the definition of employment in the Taxi trade in relation to a contract to supply work by an operator.
It is my understanding that anyone directly employed by an operator, in respect that the operator pays a wage to the employee, is a different proposition to someone who is self-employed and who enters into a contract for the supply of a service.
Regards
JD
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Martin Edwards of Mace & Jones solicitors offered this legal update in respect of Employment law through the Law Society Gazzette in June 2004. Events since 2004 may of course disable some of the findings presented here but as yet I have seen nothing significant which has not already been said to depart from these comments.
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LAW SOCIETY GAZETTE
10 June 2004
LSG 101.23(31)
TOPIC:
TITLE: Legal Update: Employment Law
AUTHOR: Martin Edwards; Mace & Jones, Liverpool
CASES REFERRED TO:
Dacas v Brook Street Bureau (UK) Ltd; (2004) IRLR 358; Mingeley v Pennock & Ivory t/a Amber Cars; (2004) IRLR 373; South East Sheffield Citizens Advice Bureau v Grayson; (2004) IRLR 353; Crossley v Faithful & Gould Holdings Ltd; (2004) IRLR 377; Scally v Southern Health & Social Services Board; (1991) IRLR 522; Lennon v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis; (2004) IRLR 385; Susie Radin Ltd v GMB & others; (2004) IRLR 400
LEGISLATION REFERRED TO:
Race Relations Act 1976
TEXT:
Who is an employee?
Dacas v Brook Street Bureau (UK) Ltd (2004) IRLR 358
The Court of Appeal ruled that a cleaner at a council hostel was not an 'employee' of the employment agency that had assigned her to that work.
Accordingly, she did not have the right to claim unfair dismissal when, at the instigation of the council, the agency terminated her contract.
The basis for the decision was that, on the facts, the contract between the cleaner and the agency was not a contract of service. It lacked the 'irreducible minimum of mutual obligation' that was necessary. The agency was under no duty to provide her with work and she was under no duty to accept any work it offered to her.
The fact that the agency agreed to do some things that an employer would normally do, including paying her, did not make it the employer. However, the tribunal was wrong to hold that the cleaner was not employed by the council. It had failed to address the possibility that there was an implied contract of service between the cleaner and the council. Such a contract may be deduced as a necessary inference from the conduct of the parties and the work done. Lord Justice Mummery said that in cases involving 'triangular arrangements' of this kind, the outcome which would accord with practical reality and common sense is that the individual has a contract (not a contract of service) with the agency and works under an implied contract of service with the end-user. The objective facts and degree of control over the work done for the end-user is crucial.
Lord Justice Sedley said the tribunal's conclusion that the cleaner 'was employed by nobody is simply not credible.' But Mr Justice Munby gave a cogently reasoned dissenting judgment. The majority decision has rung alarm bells with many employers who use agency workers on a long-term basis and, since the Court of Appeal was not unanimous, definitive guidance from the House of Lords on this important issue would be welcome.
Mingeley v Pennock & Ivory t/a Amber Cars (2004) IRLR 373
A differently constituted Court of Appeal upheld a decision that a taxi driver was not employed under 'a contract personally to execute any work or labour' within the meaning of the definition of 'employee' in section 78 of the Race Relations Act 1976 because under his contractual arrangements, there was no mutual obligation to offer or accept work. While it was questionable whether Parliament intended to exclude such arrangements from the scope of the Act, their inclusion could only be achieved by fresh legislation.
South East Sheffield Citizens Advice Bureau v Grayson (2004) IRLR 353
The question for the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) in this case was whether volunteer advisers working for a Citizens Advice Bureaux (CAB) were 'employees'. The EAT said they were not. For a volunteer to be an 'employee', there must be an arrangement under which, in exchange for valuable consideration, the volunteer is contractually obliged to render services to or work personally for the employer. Whether any benefit flowed from the CAB to the volunteer in consideration of any work actually done by the volunteer was not the key issue.
Like similar charities, the CAB provides training for its volunteers and expects of them a commitment to work for it, but the work expected is expressed to be voluntary and is unpaid. Volunteers may at any point, with or without notice, withdraw their services.
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In order to be classed as employed
"there must be a wage or other remuneration. Otherwise there will be no consideration, and without consideration, no contract of any kind.
See these three cases for assistance on employed status. Carmichael v National Power is the precedent in most employment status cases. Third one down.
http://www.taxi-driver.co.uk/phpBB2/vie ... php?t=2357
http://www.bailii.org/cgi-bin/markup.cg ... _1612.html
http://www.bailii.org/cgi-bin/markup.cg ... 99/47.html
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