BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> The Independent Workers' Union of Great Britain, R (on the application of) v The Secretary of State for Work and Pensions & Ors [2020] EWHC 3050 (Admin) (13 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2020/3050.html Cite as: [2020] WLR(D) 613, [2021] IRLR 102, [2020] EWHC 3050 (Admin), [2021] ACD 13, [2021] ICR 372 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [View ICLR summary: [2020] WLR(D) 613] [Buy ICLR report: [2021] ICR 372] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN on the application of THE INDEPENDENT WORKERS' UNION OF GREAT BRITAIN versus |
Claimant |
|
(1) THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR WORK AND PENSIONS (2) THE SECRETARY OF STATE FOR BUSINESS, ENERGY AND INDUSTRIAL STRATEGY - and - THE HEALTH AND SAFETY EXECUTIVE |
Defendants Interested Party |
____________________
(instructed by Harrison Grant Solicitors) for the Claimant
Caspar Glyn QC and Tom Brown
(instructed by Government Legal Department) for the Defendants and Interested Party
Hearing dates: 21 and 22 October 2020
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Chamberlain:
Introduction
The background to this claim
EU law
The applicability of EU law in the implementation period
Treaty provisions
"The conference notes that in the discussions on article 118a(2) of the EEC Treaty it was agreed that the community does not intend, in laying down minimum requirements for the protection of the health and safety of employees, to discriminate in a manner unjustified by the circumstances against employees in small and medium-sized undertakings."
"The Union and the Member States, having in mind fundamental social rights such as those set out in the European Social Charter signed at Turin on 18 October 1961 and in the 1989 Community Charter of the Fundamental Social Rights of Workers, shall have as their objectives the promotion of employment, improved living and working conditions, so as to make possible their harmonisation while the improvement is being maintained, proper social protection, dialogue between management and labour, the development of human resources with a view to lasting high employment and the combating of exclusion.
To this end the Union and the Member States shall implement measures which take account of the diverse forms of national practices, in particular in the field of contractual relations, and the need to maintain the competitiveness of the Union economy.
They believe that such a development will ensue not only from the functioning of the internal market, which will favour the harmonisation of social systems, but also from the procedures provided for in the Treaties and from the approximation of provisions laid down by law, regulation or administrative action."
"1. With a view to achieving the objectives of Article 151, the Union shall support and complement the activities of the Member States in the following fields:
(a) improvement in particular of the working environment to protect workers' health and safety;
(b) working conditions;
…
2. To this end, the European Parliament and the Council:
(a) may adopt measures designed to encourage cooperation between Member States through initiatives aimed at improving knowledge, developing exchanges of information and best practices, promoting innovative approaches and evaluating experiences, excluding any harmonisation of the laws and regulations of the Member States;
(b) may adopt, in the fields referred to in paragraph 1(a) to (i), by means of directives, minimum requirements for gradual implementation, having regard to the conditions and technical rules obtaining in each of the Member States. Such directives shall avoid imposing administrative, financial and legal constraints in a way which would hold back the creation and development of small and medium-sized undertakings."
"Fair and just working conditions
1. Every worker has the right to working conditions which respect his or her health, safety and dignity.
2. Every worker has the right to limitation of maximum working hours, to daily and weekly rest periods and to an annual period of paid leave."
The Directives
"[6] Whereas this Directive does not justify any reduction in levels of protection already achieved an individual Member States, the Member State being committed, under the Treaty, to encouraging improvements in conditions in this area and to harmonising conditions while maintaining the improvements made;
…
[8] Whereas, pursuant to article 118a of the treaty, such directives must avoid imposing administrative, financial and legal constraints which would hold back the creation and development of small and medium-sized undertakings;
…
[12] Whereas Member States had a responsibility to encourage improvements in the health and safety of workers on their territory; whereas taking measures to protect the health and safety of workers at work also helps, in certain cases, to preserve the health and possibly the safety of persons residing with them;
[13] Whereas Member States' legislative systems covering safety and health at the work place differ widely and need to be improved; whereas national provisions on the subject, which often include technical specifications and/or self-regulatory standards, may result in different levels of safety and health protection and allow competition at the expense of safety and health."
"(a) worker: any person employed by an employer, including trainees and apprentices but excluding domestic servants;
(b) employer: any natural or legal person who has an employment relationship with the worker and has responsibility for the undertaking and/or establishment"
"travailleur, toute personne employée par un employeur ainsi que les stagiaires et apprentis, à l'exclusion des domestiques;
employeur, toute personne physique ou morale qui est titulaire de la relation de travail avec le travailleur et qui a la responsabilité de l'entreprise et/ou de l'établissement"
"1. Within the context of his responsibilities, the employer shall take the measures necessary for the safety and health protection of workers, including prevention of occupational risks and provision of information and training, as well as provision of the necessary organisation and means.
The employer shall be alert to the need to adjust these measures to take account to changing circumstances and aim to improve existing situations.
…
4. Without prejudice to the other provisions of this directive, where several undertakings share a workplace, the employers shall cooperate in implementing the safety, health and occupational hygiene provisions and, taking into account the nature of the activities, shall coordinate directions in matters of the protection and prevention of occupational risks, and shall inform one another and their respective workers and/or workers' representatives of these risks.
5. Measures related to safety, hygiene and health at work may in no circumstances involve the workers in financial cost."
"4. Workers who, in the event of serious, imminent and unavoidable danger, leave their workstation and/or a dangerous area may not be placed at any disadvantage because of their action and must be protected against any harmful and unjustified consequences, in accordance with national rules and/or practices.
5. The employer shall ensure that all workers are able, in the event of serious and imminent danger to their own safety and/or that of other persons, and where the immediate superior responsible cannot be contacted, to take the appropriate steps in the light of their knowledge and the technical means at their disposal to avoid the consequences of such danger.
Their actions shall not place them at any disadvantage, unless they acted carelessly or there was negligence on their part."
"Personal protective equipment shall be used when the risks cannot be avoided or sufficiently limited by technical means of collective protection or by measures, methods or procedures of work organization."
"3. The conditions of use of personal protective equipment, in particular the period for which it is worn, shall be determined on the basis of the seriousness of the risk, the frequency of exposure to the risk, the characteristics of the workstation of each worker and the performance of the personal protective equipment.
…
6. Personal protective equipment shall be provided free of charge by the employer, who shall ensure its good working order and satisfactory hygienic condition by means of the necessary maintenance, repairs and replacements.
However, Member States may provide, in accordance with their national practice, that the worker could be asked to contribute towards the cost of certain personal protective equipment in circumstances where use of the equipment is not exclusive to the workplace."
The key case law
"The concept must be defined in accordance with objective criteria which distinguish the employment relationship by reference to the rights and duties of the person is concerned. The essential feature of an employment relationship, however, is that for a certain period of time a person performs services for and under the direction of another person in return for which he receives remuneration."
"The consequence of that fact is that, for the purposes of applying Directive 2003/88, that concept may not be interpreted differently according to the law of member states but has an autonomous meaning specific to European Union law. The concept must be defined in accordance with objective criteria which distinguish the employment relationship by reference to the rights and duties of the persons concerned. The essential feature of an employment relationship, however, is that for a certain period of time a person performs services for and under the direction of another person in return for which he receives remuneration (see, by analogy, for the purposes of Article 39 EC, case 66/85 Lawrie-Blum [1986] ECR 2121, paragraphs 16 and 17, and also case C-138/02 Collins [2004] ECR I-2703, paragraph 26)."
"All the parties have pointed out that there is no single definition of worker in European Union law… For example, in the field of equal treatment for male and female workers, the term 'worker' is an autonomous European Union law notion, which must be given a broad interpretation. In this connection civil servants may also be regarded as workers… In the field of the safeguarding of employees' rights, the court has stressed, in connection with the Working Time Directive…, the need for an autonomous, uniform definition of working time in the European Union, even though here too the wording of the Directive referred to national law… With regard to the Directive on transfers of undertakings, however, it has ruled that in determining the scope regard must be had solely to the definition of worker laid down in national legislation…"
"There is no single definition of worker in Community law: it varies according to the area in which the definition is to be applied."
He then cited [28] of Union Syndicale, before concluding as follows:
"The court therefore considers that the worker to whom [the Working Time Directive] is addressed is defined in the same way – save for one reservation which I shall set out below – as the worker to whom article 45 TFEU is addressed. Reference may therefore usefully be made in this opinion to the classic case law of the court in the field of freedom of movement for workers."
"24. In that connection, as regards [the Working Time Directive], it should be noted that, as the Advocate General maintains in point 29 of his opinion, that Directive makes no reference to the term "worker" as appearing in [the Framework Directive], or to the definition of that term in national legislation…
25. It follows that, as regards the application of [the Working Time Directive], the concept of a "worker" may not be interpreted differently according to the law of the member states but has an autonomous meaning specific to EU law…
26. As the Advocate General pointed out at point 26 of his opinion, that finding applies also with regard to the interpretation of the term "work" within the meaning of article 7 of [the Working Time Directive] and of Article 31(2) of the Charter, in order that the uniform scope of the rights of workers to paid leave ratione personae may be ensured.
27. In that context, it should be recalled that, according to the settled case law of the court, the term "worker" within the meaning of [the Working Time Directive] must be defined in accordance with objective criteria that distinguish the employment relationship by reference to the rights and duties of the person is concerned. So, any person who pursues real, genuine activities, to the exclusion of activities on such a small scale as to be regarded as purely marginal and ancillary, must be regarded as a 'worker'. The essential feature of an employment relationship is that for a certain period of time a person performs services for and under the direction of another person in return for which he receives remuneration…"
27. In accordance with the settled case law of the Court, the essential feature of an employment relationship is that, for a certain period of time, a person performs services for and under the direction of another person, in return for which he receives remuneration, the legal characterisation under national law and the form of that relationship, as well as the nature of the legal relationship between those two persons, not being decisive in that regard…
…
32. On the other hand, that provision cannot be interpreted as a waiver on the part of the EU legislature of its power itself to determine the scope of that concept for the purposes of Directive 2008/104, and accordingly the scope rationae personae of that Directive. As follows from paragraphs 25 and 26 of this judgment, the EU legislature did not leave it to the Member States to define that concept unilaterally, but specified itself the contours thereof in Article 3(1)(a) of that Directive, as, moreover, it also specified the contours of the definition of 'temporary agency worker' in Article 3(1)(c) of that Directive.
33. Accordingly, for the purposes of interpreting that Directive, that concept covers any person who has an employment relationship in the sense set out in paragraph 27 of this judgment and who is protected, in the Member State concerned, by virtue of the work that person carries out.
…
36. To restrict the concept of 'worker' as referred to in Directive 2008/104 to persons falling within the scope of that concept under national law, in particular, to those who have a contract of employment with the temporary-work agency, is liable to jeopardise the attainment of those objectives and, therefore, to undermine the effectiveness of that Directive by inordinately and unjustifiably restricting the scope of that Directive.
37. Indeed, such a restriction would permit the Member States or temporary-work agencies to exclude at their discretion certain categories of persons from the benefit of the protection intended by that Directive, in particular, from the application of the principle of equal treatment of temporary agency workers and staff employed directly by the user undertaking laid down in Article 5 of that Directive, even though the employment relationship between those persons and the temporary-work agency is not substantially different to the employment relationship between employees having the status of workers under national law and their employer."
Domestic legislation relied upon as implementing the Directives
"It shall be the duty of every employer to ensure, in so far as is reasonably practicable, the health, safety and welfare at work of all his employees."
Submissions on the meaning of "worker" in the Directives
The Claimant
The Defendants and Interested Party
"(i) The servant agrees that, in consideration of a wage or other remuneration, he will provide his own work and skill in the performance of some service for his master. (ii) He agrees, expressly or impliedly, that in the performance of that service he will be subject to the other's control in a sufficient degree to make that other master. (iii) The other provisions of the contract are consistent with its being a contract of service."
"In the changing labour market with the emergence of new forms of work and increasing uncertainty of the status of workers and self-employed, the question of application of health and safety rules to all becomes even more important to prevent accidents and occupational diseases. Considering the recommendations from the NIRs [sc. national reports on the practical implementation of the Directives], the conclusions of the external evaluation study, the development of the caselaw of the ECJ on the definition of work are in EU law and the treatment of self-employed under construction site and fishing vessel directives, promoting inclusion of self-employed and in particular those self-employed working alongside workers might be considered as a possible action in the context of future proofing the [occupational safety and health] framework." (Emphasis in original.)
Discussion on the meaning of "worker" in the Directives
(a) There is no single definition of worker in EU law: it varies according to the area in which the definition is to be applied: see Allonby, [63], O'Brien (Opinion of AG Kokott at [25]) and Fenoll (Opinion of AG Mengozzi at [24]).(b) It follows that the use of the term "worker" in Article 3 of the Framework Directive does not, in and of itself, indicate an intention that the scope of application of the Directives should be identical to that of the treaty provisions on free movement (as explained in Lawrie-Blum) or equal pay (as explained in Allonby).
(c) Indeed, the fact that it contains bespoke definitions of "worker" and "employer" is a powerful indicator that a different meaning was intended.
(d) But that tells us very little about the extent of the intended differences. There are at least two that are obvious from the text of the definitions: domestic servants are excluded; and the "employer" must have responsibility for the undertaking and/or establishment. The real question in this case is whether any other differences in meaning were intended.
(e) There is no magic, one way or the other, in the use of the words "employed", "employer" and "employment relationship" in Article 3 of the Framework Directive. The French text speaks of a "relation de travail", exactly the same term used in the French version of the judgments in Lawrie-Blum and Allonby to describe the relationship between a worker and the person for whom and under whose direction he or she performs services. This shows that the term "employment relationship" can be used in contexts where the autonomous EU law meaning of "worker" is intended.
(f) For the same reason, the use of the word "employees" in the declaration in relation to Article 118a(2) EEC is not an indicator that the latter covers only those whom UK law would regard as employees. The equivalent French term is "travailleurs". More importantly, it is now well established that some of the Directives adopted under Article 118a EEC protect all workers who fall within the autonomous EU law definition: see, in relation to the Working Time Directive, Union Syndicale and Fenoll. That would not be possible if "worker" in Article 118a (interpreted in accordance with the declaration) had a narrower meaning.
(g) The reason why, in Union Syndicale and Fenoll, "worker" in the Working Time Directive was held to have the autonomous EU law meaning was that that Directive referred neither to the definition in Article 3 of the Framework Directive nor to the definition in national law. This shows that the definition of "worker" in Article 3 of the Framework Directive differs from the autonomous EU law meaning. It does not, however, show that it differs in the way Mr Glyn submits.
(h) It is significant that Article 3 of the Framework Directive lacks any reference to definitions deriving from national law and practice. This is so not only because of the contrast with the other instruments referred to in [57] above but also because of the contrast with other provisions in the Framework Directive itself – e.g. Articles 8(4), 10(1), (2) and (3), 11(2) and 12 in fine – all of which refer expressly to national law and practice. This suggests that "worker" in Article 3 of the Framework Directive was intended to have a single meaning applicable in all Member States.
(i) To the extent that Prof. Countouris suggests the contrary, I do not agree. If there were no single meaning of "worker", individual Member States would be free to cut down the category of persons benefitting from the Directive's protections, thereby resulting in "different levels of safety and health protection" as between Member States and "competition at the expense of safety and health" – precisely the unsatisfactory situation which, according to the 13th recital, the Directive was intended to address. The objectives of the Framework Directive suggest a scope fixed by reference to a single EU-wide meaning.
(j) United Kingdom v Council and Pfeiffer establish that it is necessary to apply a broad interpretation of Article 2 of the Directive. That does not necessarily mean the same is true of Article 3. However, one of the reasons given in [52] of Pfeiffer for the breadth of the Directive's scope was its purpose, as evident from Article 1 – encouraging the improvement of the health and safety of workers at work. That purpose would be as likely to be undermined by a narrow interpretation of the term "worker" as by a narrow interpretation of the sectors of economic activity to which the Directive applies, or too expansive an interpretation of the exceptions in Article 2(2).
(k) Contrary to Mr Glyn's submission, the requirement that the "employer" must have "responsibility for the undertaking and/or establishment" does not point in the direction of a narrow interpretation of the term "worker" as something akin to "employee" in UK law. The "responsibility" which the employer must have is responsibility for the undertaking or establishment. Once that responsibility is established, the "employer" then owes duties to everyone in that undertaking or establishment with whom he/she/it has an employment relationship (relation de travail).
(l) Once it is understood that the terms "employed", "employer" and "employment relationship" are neutral (see sub-para. (e) above), the natural reading of Article 3 is that limb (a) excludes domestic servants and limb (b) provides that the person with whom the worker has an employment relationship must have "responsibility for the undertaking and/or establishment". But subject to these points, in the absence of any reference to national law and/or practice, "worker" includes anyone who would fall within the autonomous EU law definition.
(m) This broad reading is more consistent than Mr Glyn's alternative with what Ms Omambala aptly described as the "progressive convergence of approach" seen in the jurisprudence of the ECJ to the term "worker" in various different contexts. It is noteworthy that the ECJ has settled on the same autonomous definition in a variety of different contexts: the treaty provisions on free movement (Lawrie-Blum) and equal pay (Allonby), the Working Time Directive (Union Syndicale, Fenoll, Syndicatul Familia Constanta) and the Temporary Agency Directive (Ruhrlandklinik). The latter case is a particularly striking example of the use of purposive interpretation to apply the autonomous definition in circumstances where the plain language of the Directive being construed might have suggested something else.
(n) The broad reading is also supported by Article 31 of the Charter. I accept that the Charter is no more than an interpretive aid. It could not, for example, be used to override the express exclusion of domestic servants. But the fact that the drafters, drawing on the Framework Directive, chose to confer the right to "working conditions which respect his or her health, safety and dignity" on "every worker", without seeking to confine the application of that term, seems to me to support as broad an interpretation as possible of the term when used in the Framework Directive.
Are there sufficient equivalent protections in domestic law?
The proper approach to the parties' written submissions
(a) the general obligations in Articles 5(1) and 6(1) of the Framework Directive;(b) Article 8(4) and (5) of the Framework Directive; and
(c) Article 3 of the PPE Directive.
(a) The general obligations in Article 5(1) and 6(1) of the Framework Directive
Submissions for the Defendants and Interested Party
"(1) It shall be the duty of every employer to conduct his undertaking in such a way as to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, that persons not in his employment who may be affected thereby are not thereby exposed to risks to their health or safety.
(2) It shall be the duty of every self-employed person who conducts an undertaking of a prescribed description to conduct the undertaking in such a way as to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, that he and other persons (not being his employees) who may be affected thereby are not thereby exposed to risks to their health or safety."
"(1) This section has effect for imposing on persons duties in relation to those who—
(a) are not their employees; but
(b) use non-domestic premises made available to them as a place of work or as a place where they may use plant or substances provided for their use there, and applies to premises so made available and other non-domestic premises used in connection with them.
(2) It shall be the duty of each person who has, to any extent, control of premises to which this section applies or of the means of access thereto or egress therefrom or of any plant or substance in such premises to take such measures as it is reasonable for a person in his position to take to ensure, so far as is reasonably practicable, that the premises, all means of access thereto or egress therefrom available for use by persons using the premises, and any plant or substance in the premises or, as the case may be, provided for use there, is or are safe and without risks to health."
"(1) Every employer shall make a suitable and sufficient assessment of—
(a) the risks to the health and safety of his employees to which they are exposed whilst they are at work; and
(b) the risks to the health and safety of persons not in his employment arising out of or in connection with the conduct by him of his undertaking, for the purpose of identifying the measures he needs to take to comply with the requirements and prohibitions imposed upon him by or under the relevant statutory provisions.
(2) Every relevant self-employed person shall make a suitable and sufficient assessment of—
(a) the risks to his own health and safety to which he is exposed whilst he is at work; and
(b) the risks to the health and safety of persons not in his employment arising out of or in connection with the conduct by him of his undertaking, for the purpose of identifying the measures he needs to take to comply with the requirements and prohibitions imposed upon him by or under the relevant statutory provisions.
…
(3A) in this regulation 'relevant self-employed person' means a self-employed person who conducts an undertaking of a prescribed description for the purposes of section 3(2) of the Health and Safety at Work etc. Act 1974."
Submissions for the Claimant
Discussion
"7. The difference between the two sections lies in the persons to whom the obligation is owed. As is apparent, section 2 creates an obligation towards employees and section 3 creates an obligation towards non-employees. To the question 'which non-employees?', section 3 returns the answer: 'those who may be affected thereby'. The section makes it clear that the word 'thereby', which appears twice, relates back the defendant's undertaking. Thus the test is whether there is a non-employee who may be affected by the undertaking being carried on (or 'conducted'). If there is, then the employer commits an offence if he does not ensure, so far as reasonably practicable, that such a person is not exposed to a risk 'thereby' – i.e. that the conduct of his undertaking does not expose the non-employee to risk. The non-employees who are relevant under section 3 to the obligation, and to the offence of non-compliance with it, may be in a wide variety of positions. Some may be other people working alongside the employees of the defendant (such as agency workers, or the employees of independent contractors or of collaborators in the operation). Some may be visitors to the premises operated by the defendant (such as, for example, the child visitor to the defendants' swimming pool in R v Upper Bay Ltd [2010] EWCA Crim 495). Sometimes they may simply be members of the public generally (such as, for example, those who might breathe in the legionnaires' disease bacteria in R v Board of Trustees of the Science Museum [1993] 1 WLR 1171).
8. The obligation in respect of employees under section 2(1) is somewhat wider than that towards non-employees under section 3(1) because the former extends to ensuring the welfare of the employee at work. But so far as safety and health are concerned the sections create similar obligations and similar offences. For the purpose of what follows we refer for convenience to 'safety', but the same applies, mutatis mutandis to 'health' and, in relation to section 2 and employees only, to 'welfare'."
Article 8(4) and (5) of the Framework Directive
Submissions for the Defendants and Interested Party
"(d) in circumstances of danger which the employee reasonably believed to be serious and imminent and which he could not reasonably have been expected to avert, he left (or proposed to leave) or (while the danger persisted) refused to return to his place of work or any dangerous part of his place of work, or
(e) in circumstances of danger which the employee reasonably believed to be serious and imminent, he took (or proposed to take) appropriate steps to protect himself or other persons from the danger."
"(a) that a criminal offence has been committed, is being committed or is likely to be committed,
(b) that a person has failed, is failing or is likely to fail to comply with any legal obligation to which he is subject,
…
(d) that the health or safety of any individual has been, is being or is likely to be endangered".
"(1) Every employer shall—
(a) establish and where necessary give effect to appropriate procedures to be followed in the event of serious and imminent danger to persons at work in his undertaking;
(b) nominate a sufficient number of competent persons to implement those procedures in so far as they relate to the evacuation from premises of persons at work in his undertaking; and
(c) ensure that none of his employees has access to any area occupied by him to which it is necessary to restrict access on grounds of health and safety unless the employee concerned has received adequate health and safety instruction.
(2) Without prejudice to the generality of paragraph (1)(a), the procedures referred to in that sub-paragraph shall—
(a) so far as is practicable, require any persons at work who are exposed to serious and imminent danger to be informed of the nature of the hazard and of the steps taken or to be taken to protect them from it;
(b) enable the persons concerned (if necessary by taking appropriate steps in the absence of guidance or instruction and in the light of their knowledge and the technical means at their disposal) to stop work and immediately proceed to a place of safety in the event of their being exposed to serious, imminent and unavoidable danger; and
(c) save in exceptional cases for reasons duly substantiated (which cases and reasons shall be specified in those procedures), require the persons concerned to be prevented from resuming work in any situation where there is still a serious and imminent danger."
Submissions for the Claimant
Discussion
Article 3 of the PPE Directive
Submissions for the Defendants and Interested Party
Submissions for the Claimant
Discussion
Conclusion
Relief and ancillary matters
"The UK Government has failed properly to implement in UK law:
(a) Article 8(4) and the second paragraph of Article 8(5) of Council Directive 89/391/EC on the introduction of measures to encourage improvements in the health and safety of workers at work ("the Framework Directive"); and
(b) Article 3 of Council Directive 89/656/EC on the introduction of minimum health and safety requirements for use by workers of personal protective equipment at the workplace ("the PPE Directive")
by reason that in UK law those obligations have not been extended to workers as defined in section 230(3)(b) of the Employment Rights Act 1996, whereas the definition of "worker" in Article 3 of the Framework Directive (which also applies to the PPE Directive) includes such workers."
(a) There is no doubt, and indeed no dispute, that the Claimant is the "successful party". In those circumstances, the general rule is that the Claimant should have its costs: CPR r. 44.2(2)(a).(b) This is not a case in which it is appropriate to make an issue-based costs order. The bulk of the argument was concerned with the meaning of "worker" as that term is used in the Directives. The Claimant succeeded on that argument. It also succeeded in showing that there was a failure to implement the Directives in two of the three respects alleged. The argument on the one point on which it lost occupied a small proportion of the time taken to argue this case. In any event, even if that argument had not been advanced, it would have been necessary to consider most or many of the materials relevant to it to understand the structure of the UK legislation by which it was said the UK had implemented the Directives. This is not, therefore, a case in which the issues can be neatly separated in such a way as to make an issue-based costs order appropriate.
(c) The question whether the costs cap includes VAT turns on the proper interpretation of Choudhury J's order. That does not specify one way or the other whether the cap includes VAT. However, the purpose of a cost-capping order is to provide certainty to a claimant which would otherwise be exposed to open-ended liability. In most cases, including this one, a reciprocal cap is imposed on the costs which the party making the application can recover if it wins. When making the application for the order in this case, the Claimant filed evidence in support of its application for a cap of £4,500 on the costs which it might be ordered to pay. Choudhury J understood this to be "all the Claimant says it can afford". If it had lost, the Defendants would not have been able to claim for VAT on services rendered by their own staff (see CPR 44PD, para. 2.13), but they could have claimed VAT on other aspects of costs, such as counsel's fees. I read Choudhury J's order as setting a cap on the total liability of the Claimant – i.e. as limiting the total costs the Claimant could be ordered to pay to £4,500 including VAT. The reciprocal cap should be read in the same way. It follows that the Claimant's recoverable costs are capped at £30,000 including VAT.
(d) I have not seen any bill or schedule of costs, but it seems very likely that the Claimant's costs (inclusive of VAT) will substantially exceed the cap imposed by Choudhury J. That makes the interim payment sought by the Claimant appropriate.