[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Newham Farms Ltd v. Powell [2001] UKEAT 0711_01_2310 (23 October 2001) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2001/0711_01_2310.html Cite as: [2001] UKEAT 711_1_2310, [2001] UKEAT 0711_01_2310 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HER HONOUR JUDGE A WAKEFIELD
MS N AMIN
MRS D M PALMER
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING - EX PARTE
For the Appellant | MR S DEVONSHIRE (Of Counsel) Instructed by Roythorne & Co 10 Pinchbeck Road Spalding Lincolnshire PE11 1PZ |
JUDGE A WAKEFIELD
"This has been an unusual, difficult and we venture to say important case on the position of a farmer's wife. Does she have employee status? Is she "employed in agriculture"?"
"We considered that the Applicant was a worker "employed in agriculture" for the purposes of the 1948 Act. The Respondent's argument was that the nature of her work was administrative and not direct agricultural work. The Order provides that it applies to "any worker employed to undertake agricultural work". Clearly the business of the farm was agricultural as defined in Section 17(1) of the 1948 Act. We consider that the Applicant's tasks being ancillary to a wholly agricultural business is agricultural work. On a farm many workers' tasks will in practice involve a mixture of administration and direct productive agricultural work. We cannot think the legislation intended their duties to have to be split, for minimum wage purposes, between the two types of work. The Applicant herself would occasionally undertake relief work of a direct agricultural nature. If it was intended that pure management or administration was to be excluded from the definition of agricultural work, we would have expected that to be spelt out in the legislation. It is not. We are left to decide this point with no statutory guidance or precedent case law, but decide it with confidence nonetheless, on the facts of the case. We can see that where there are non-agricultural enterprises run from a farm, it might be more complicated. The fishing club, for instance, is a moot point in this case."
"The Tribunal concluded that Mrs Powell was a worker "employed in agriculture" on the basis that her "tasks" were ancillary to a wholly agricultural business, and as such were agricultural work.
There is, so far as the Appellant been able to ascertain, no authority directly in point on the meaning of "worker employed in agriculture" for the purposes of the 1948 Act. No clear lead emerges from the decided cases which have construed similar words under other pieces of legislation.
There is then a reference to allegedly analogous situations. In 4.3 the argument continues:
"In the context of the 1948 Act, the proper focus should be on the nature of the work undertaken by the worker/employee, not on the nature of the work or business of the employer."
"The Tribunal considered the dismissal had to be unfair because of the admitted lack of consultation. Consultation would not, prospectively, have been futile. We considered that one month would have been appropriate to allow for a reasonable and suitably sensitive consultation on the available options and would limit any compensatory award accordingly."
This is said in the grounds of appeal, and further argued in the skeleton and in oral argument, to be a flawed analysis. In particular it is criticised because the notice to the Respondent was given in January. The notice was to expire in June. Therefore it is argued, any one month's consultation would have been encompassed by that period.