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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Conway v. Comms People Ltd [2003] UKEAT 388_01_2901 (29 January 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/388_01_2901.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 388_01_2901, [2003] UKEAT 388_1_2901 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J McMULLEN QC
MS S R CORBY
MR I EZEKIEL
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MS S COWEN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Browne Jacobson Aldwych House 81 Aldwych London WC2B 4HN |
For the Respondent | MS N ELLENBOGEN (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Pritchard Englefield Solicitors 14 New Street London EC2M 4TR |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J McMULLEN QC
" the issues …..hardly leap from the page"
The facts
"3.1 The Employee shall be employed as a consultant of the Company to provide the Services to the Client as described in the Employee Schedule…
….
6.1. The Employee warrants that he:
6.1.1 has read and understood the Employee Schedule
….
8 Remuneration
8.1 The Employee shall keep a time sheet record of the hours spent performing the Services. The time sheet must show the number of hours the Employee has worked each day and be signed by each of the Employee and the Client. A copy of each time sheet must be submitted by the Employee to the Company by the 5th of the month.
….
8.3 The Company will pay the Employee Basic Pay as specified in the Employee Schedule….The standard working week is 5 working days, comprising a minimum of 40 hours and a maximum of 50. ….
8.4 The Employee shall share in the profits generated from the supply of the Employee's services by way of a Profit Bonus. The profit, for the purpose of calculating the Employee's Profit Bonus, is calculated for each month as follows:
Money received by the Company net of VAT for the services of the Employee;
Less Expenses of the Employee for the assignment;
less The Basic Pay of the Employee;
less the aggregate of the Holiday Pay and Illness Accrual of the Employee;
less any taxes or costs borne by the Company relating to the Employment of the Employee;
less the Company's administration costs and profit.
8.5 The Profit Bonus shall comprise 100% of the profit calculated above. The Profit Bonus shall be paid out monthly in arrears, subject to the submission of time sheets and payment therefor.
8.6 Expenses will be reimbursed to the Employee subject to expense claims being submitted correctly and the Company, at their sole discretion, accepting their validity…….
8.8 The Company shall be entitled to make the necessary legal deductions required by the UK tax and social security authorities and by any foreign tax and social security authorities from the Remuneration.
8.9 The Company will be entitled at any time during the Employment and at its termination to deduct from any payment to the Employee any monies owed to the Company by the Employee. Failure by the Employee to fulfil the terms of the Agreement will entitle the Company to withhold any payments due to the Employee without prejudice to any other rights in law, which the Company may have against the Employee arising out of the breach of this agreement."
By the Employee Schedule, in Appendix B, a notice period, on either side, is provided of four weeks, and then there follows a list.
"Basic Pay: NLG 143.18 per day
Holiday Pay: NLG 13.22 per day
Profit Bonus: NLG 1130.39 per day
Illness Accrual NLG 13.22 per day
Total Contract Rate NLG 1,300.00 per day"
"1. This is what is being deducted from your Payment:
Paye Tax - This is your full UK tax liability and is calculated under standard UK tax legislation
National Insurance - Your employee UK National Insurance contributions
Employers Costs - Employer's National Insurance contributions…..
Deductible Expenses - …..
J. Your net pay figure in guilders is the total payments ……minus all deductions …..
….
Under your contract of employment ……you will have UK national insurance (both Employee's and Employer's) deducted from your gross pay, just as if you were running a UK limited company of your own or working through any other Management company. Remember you are only liable for national insurance (Employee's and Employer's) and income tax on the taxable element of your gross pay not on all of your gross pay."
There then follows an algorithm indicating "how your pay is calculated". From the Gross Target Rate Value, which is the Applicant's agreed contract rate multiplied by the number of hours he worked, are deducted expenses and employer's costs. That results in a figure for taxable income, from which are then deducted National Insurance and tax, to provide the Applicant's net pay. The Tribunal described this method as being set out in easy stages.
"The NI rate for employee contributions is basically 10% of your earnings with a maximum amount payable in a month of £188.10. There is also a 12.2% employers costs which is also deducted from your wages."
"have endeavoured to assist and appease your numerous demands and arrange for personal tax/legal advice"
She pointed out that she was awaiting feedback from her lawyers, and criticised the Applicant for holding the Respondent and Lucent to ransom by leaving the site mid-project, without notice. She was anxious to resolve the problem, and establish a damage-limitation course of action by ensuring an effective handover of project knowledge. The next day, she urged him to return to site. He did not. It is clear from the exchange of e-mail that Ms Pilson was seeking further advice from her lawyers, and urging the Applicant not to precipitate action in the meantime.
"That is the formula that your former employer used to calculate the Profit Bonus that you were entitled to receive. It was clearly intended that you should have a share of the profit after the deduction of all employment expenses and costs, including tax and national insurance contributions (NICs)…..
As you may know, all employed earners are liable to pay primary Class 1 NICs with their employers liable to pay secondary Class 1 NICs. Whilst your former employer had an obligation to deduct the Class 1 NICs from your earnings the secondary Class 1 NICs are payable in addition to your earnings. Your former employer is not, normally, able to deduct the contribution that it is liable to make from your "earnings".
For the purposes of the National Insurance legislation "earnings" is the amount of your gross pay for PAYE purposes before any deduction of pension contributions. It would include any profit or remuneration payable to you from your employment.
Comms People Ltd would not, therefore, be entitled to deduct any employer's NICs from your contractual arrangement to pay (i.e. basic salary and profit bonus entitlement).
This does not, however, prevent your former employer calculating your profit bonus after the deduction of all employment expenses including any employer's national insurance contributions that it was obliged to make.
It is clear that the intention behind the Profit Bonus was that you should receive a share of the employer's profits after the deduction of all expenses including tax and national insurance contributions on your remuneration. Your entitlement to the profit bonus was therefore to a sum calculated after NICs had been taken into account.
Comms People Ltd were therefore not deducting employers national insurance contributions from your earnings which would not be permissible. Instead they had calculated your Profit Bonus by reference to the available profit, which is permissible.
From a personal point of view I feel that had you been given this information prior to you signing your contract then this may well have alleviated the problems that you had encountered."
The legislation
"(1) An employer shall not make a deduction from wages of a worker employed by him unless -
(a) the deduction is required or authorised to be made by virtue of a statutory provision or a relevant provision of the worker's contract, or
(b) the worker has previously signified in writing his agreement or consent to the making of the deduction.
…
(3) Where the total amount of wages paid on any occasion by an employer to a worker employed by him is less than the total amount of the wages properly payable by him to the worker on that occasion (after deductions), the amount of the deficiency shall be treated for the purposes of this Part as a deduction made by the employer from the worker's wages on that occasion."
There are a number of excepted deductions under section 14 which do not apply here.
"3A (1) …..a person who is or has been liable to pay any secondary Class 1A or Class 1B contributions shall not -
(a) make, from earnings paid by him, any deduction in respect of any such contributions from which he or any other person is or has been liable;
(b) otherwise recover any such contributions (directly or indirectly) from any person who is or has been a relevant earner; or
(c) enter into any agreement with any person for the making of any such deduction or otherwise for the purpose of so recovering any such contributions."
The effect of that is to debar an employer from deducting from an employee's wages, directly or indirectly, any sum which is attributable to the employer's obligation to make primary Class 1 contributions. The only deduction therefor is in respect of the employee's contribution, i.e. the secondary contribution.
The counterclaim
"will fully and effectively indemnify the Company against any and all losses arising out of the action or inaction of the Employee"
We are satisfied there was ample evidence before the Employment Tribunal to reach its conclusion.
Costs
HUGH CONWAY-V- COMMS PEOPLE LIMITED METHOD OF CALCULATION OF NET PAY OF HUGH CONW AY FOR MARCH 20
NLG | |
Money received from Client | |
1,800 x 25 days worked | 45,000.00 |
Less Company's Admin and costs & Profit- 500 x 25 days | (12.500.00) |
Equals total Contract Rate due 1,300 x 25 days worked | 32,500.00 |
Less Basic Pay of Employee -143.18 x 25 days | ( 3,579.50) |
Less aggregate of Holiday Pay and Illness Accrual 13.22 + 13.22 = 26.44 x 25 days | ( 661.00) |
Equals gross Profit Bonus | 28,259.50 |
Less any costs and taxes borne by the Company (Employers costs) | ( 4,262.18) |
Less Expenses of Employee for Assignment | (14,648.43) |
Net Profit Bonus | 9,348.89 |
Add Basic Pay | 3,579.50 |
Add Holiday Pay and Illness Accrual | 661.00 |
Add relocation expenses of which are taxable | 8.000.00 |
TAXABLE PAY | 21,589.39 |
Less UK Income Tax | ( 4,965.23) |
Less Employees National Insurance Contributions | ( 675.88) |
PAY AFTER TAX | 15,948.28 |
Add balance of Expenses (relocation already added back) | 6.648.43 |
22,596.71 | |
Add other Expenses ( Billable to Client) | 5,529.65 |
28,126.36 | |
Currency Conversion Rounding | ( 0.01) |
NET PAY | 28,126.35 |