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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Redrow Homes (Yorkshire) Ltd v Wright [2004] EWCA Civ 469 (23 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/469.html Cite as: [2004] IRLR 720, [2004] EWCA Civ 469, [2004] ICR 1126, [2004] 3 All ER 98 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL
TRIBUNAL (HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE LATHAM
and
MR JUSTICE HOLMAN
____________________
REDROW HOMES (YORKSHIRE) LTD |
Appellants |
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- and - |
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MR B WRIGHT |
Respondent |
____________________
Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
MS JILL BROWN (instructed by Rowley Ashworth Solicitors, London SW19 1SE) for the Respondent Mr B Wright
And
MR ANDREW STAFFORD QC & MR SAM NEAMAN (instructed by Redrow Group Services Ltd, Flintshire CH5 3RX)
For the Appellants Redrow Homes (North West) Ltd
MR ANDREW HOGARTH QC (instructed by O H Parsons Solicitors London WC2H 8PR) for the Respondent Mr K Roberts
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AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
CROWN COPYRIGHT ©
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
" "Worker" means an individual who has entered into or works under (or, where the employment has ceased, worked under) –
(a) a contract of employment; or
(b) 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."
"Please undertake, execute, carry out and complete the undermentioned works subject to:
a) the undermentioned conditions and
b) the terms and conditions of business of Redrow Group plc.
Acceptance of this order will be deemed to be acceptance to all the said conditions."
"The contractor is to ensure that a copy of their current Health & Safety Policy together with a Method Statement for the work is forwarded to our offices prior to commencement on site"
(1) that the Contractor having had an opportunity of inspecting our Conditions of Contract shall be deemed to have noted its provisions, and hereby agrees to be bound by them insofar as they are applicable to his subcontract.
(6) LABOUR
In respect of all operatives employed by the Contractor, the Contractor is responsible for and shall keep the Company indemnified against any claim or liability for National Insurance, Graduated Pension Contributions, Pay-As-You-Earn, Holiday Pay, Construction Industry Training Board levy. Travelling Expenses and other emoluments payable, all other payments required by Law or otherwise which may be necessary for the proper execution of the contract work whether current or introduced during the period of the contract.
The Contractor must at all times provide sufficient labour to maintain the rate of progress laid down from time to time by the Company, and shall supply such labour with all necessary tools and equipment.
On each site where the work is in progress the Contractor must maintain a competent foreman or chargehand who has complete control of all labour engaged on the work. Any instructions given to such foreman or chargehand shall be deemed to have been given to the Contractor.
Condition 20, which Redrow submit is readily reconcilable with Condition 6, provides:
(20) SUBLETTING
No order, nor any part order issued by the Company shall be assigned, sublet or transferred without the prior consent in writing of the Company. In the event of any such assignment, subletting or transfer, the Contractor shall be responsible for securing compliance with these conditions in every respect.
(16) PROGRAMME OF WORK
Programmes of work issued by the Company from time to time must be adhered to rigidly, in regard to both rate of progress and the sequence in which work is to be completed.
(17) HOURS OF WORK
No Contractor or employee of the Contractor shall be permitted to work on site outside normal working hours of 8.00am to 5.30pm Monday to Friday, Saturday 8.00am to 12.00 noon inclusive, unless prior to consent has been given by the Company in writing and only then when the Company's appointed supervisor is on site.
Condition 18, having dealt with payment, states that the company "requires Contractors to provide their VAT registration number or statement that they are not VAT registered".
"Furthermore, in construing the contract, we are entitled to have regard to all the circumstances. They include the fact that the contract was performed personally throughout the period of engagement. We find that that reflected the parties' expectation that it would be so performed."…..
"Looking at the above factors, we are left with the clearest impression that the applicant was in a subordinate and dependent position vis-a- vis the respondent, similar to that of an employee. We find accordingly that the respondent's status was not by virtue of the contract with the applicant that of a customer of a business undertaking carried on by the applicant. The applicant and Mr Milner were not a firm. They were two individual workers who worked together and personally provided their service as bricklayers to the respondent."
"(4) It seems to us that the best guidance is to be found by considering the policy behind the inclusion of limb (b). That can only have been to extend the benefits of protection to workers who are in the same need of that type of protection as employees stricto sensu – workers, that is, who are viewed as liable, whatever their formal employment status, to be required to work excessive hours (or, in the cases of Part II of the Employment Rights Act 1996 or the National Minimum Wage Act 1998, to suffer unlawful deductions from their earnings or to be paid too little). The reason why employees are thought to need such protection is that they are in a subordinate and dependent position vis-à-vis their employers: the purpose of the Regulations is to extend protection to workers who are, substantively and economically, in the same position. Thus the essence of the intended distinction must be between, 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.
(5) Drawing that distinction in any particular case will involve all or most of the same considerations as arise in drawing the distinction between a contract of service and a contract for services – but with the boundary pushed further in the putative worker's favour. It may, for example, be relevant to assess the degree of control exercised by the putative employer, the exclusivity of the engagement and its typical duration, the method of payment, what equipment the putative worker supplies, the level of risk undertaken etc. The basic effect of limb (b) is, so to speak, to lower the pass-mark, so that cases which failed to reach the mark necessary to qualify for protection as employees might nevertheless do so as workers.
(6) what we are concerned with is the rights and obligations of the parties under the contract – not, as such, with what happened in practice. But what happened in practice may shed light on the contractual position: see Carmichael [2000] IRLR 43, esp. per Lord Hoffmann at pp.[46-47]."
"Self-employed labour-only subcontractors in the construction industry are, it seems to us, a good example of the kind of worker who may well not be carrying on a business undertaking in the sense of the definition; and for whom the 'intermediate category' created by limb (b) was designed. There can be no general rule, and we should not be understood as propounding one: cases cannot decided by applying labels. But typically labour-only sub-contractors will, though nominally free to move from contractor to contractor, in practice work for long periods for a single employer as an integrated part of his workforce: their specialist skills may be limited, they may supply little or nothing by way of equipment and undertake little or no economic risk. They have long been regarded as being near the border between employment and self-employment:………. Cases which 'could have gone either way' under the old test ought now generally to be caught under the new test in 'limb (b)'. The fact that such a subcontractor may be regarded by the Inland Revenue as self-employed, and hold certificates to prove it, is relevant but not decisive."
"It is plain that the conditions are drafted on the basis that "one size fits all". It is specifically envisaged that not all the terms will be appropriate to all contracts entered into by Redrow…..
Looking at the factual background it is clear to us, as it was to the tribunals below, that it was the common intention of the parties that under the contract the applicants would provide their personal services……. The personal service requirement was made out".
a) Redrow's printed form of contract was plainly intended to cover a wide range of situations, from contracts with substantial contractors to contracts with applicants such as the present applicants.
b) Arrangements between housebuilders such as Redrow and small gangs of workers, such as the bricklayers in these cases, are common in the housebuilding industry. Both Redrow and the present applicants were accustomed to them.
c) Condition 1 binds the applicants to the conditions "insofar as they are applicable to [his] subcontract." Having regard to the wide range of contracting parties by whom the conditions were intended to be used, that provision is totally unsurprising.
d) There is no evidence that Redrow sought to enforce, or intended to enforce against these parties the conditions relating to depositing a current Health & Safety Policy and relevant VAT registration. It can be inferred, as an illustration of the flexibility permitted by Condition 1, that these provisions were not considered appropriate to the contracts with these applicants, as distinct from bigger contractors.
e) The items of work specified were not beyond the capacity of the men to do it themselves.
f) The agreed method of payment was not payment to the named contractor, Mr Wright, but to each individual doing the work. The suggestion that, by agreeing to pay Milner, Redrow was acting as agent for Wright, produces an unnecessary and unlikely complexity. While Milner is not an applicant, it is difficult to discern an intention that his position be different from that of Mr Wright.
g) In Roberts, it was not suggested by Redrow that the other members of the gang were in a position different from that of Mr Roberts.
h) The requirement in Condition 6 for a "competent foreman or chargehand" is foreign to arrangements made, and customarily made, with members of a small gang of bricklayers and it is difficult to conclude that the parties intended it to be included in these contracts..
Lord Justice Latham:
Mr Justice Holman:
""worker" means an individual who….worked under …. a …. contract….whereby the individual undertakes to do …. personally any work….for another party to the contract…."
The applicants are individuals. There were contracts between them and Redrow to do work. The only question is whether by the contracts ("whereby") the applicants undertook to do the work "personally". I agree with Mr Stafford that it is irrelevant that later the applicants did in fact do the work personally. The question is whether the contracts themselves bound or required the applicants to do the work personally.
Clause 6
Undertaking to do the work personally