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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> O2 (UK) Limited v. Wallace [2008] UKEAT 0050_07_1706 (17 June 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2008/0050_07_1706.html Cite as: [2008] UKEAT 0050_07_1706, [2008] UKEAT 50_7_1706 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH
(SITTING ALONE)
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellants (Respondents) | MS R WEDDERSPOON (of Counsel) Instructed by: 02 ( UK ) Ltd Legal Services Arlington Business Centre Millshaw Park Lane Leeds LS11 0NE |
For the Respondent (Claimant) | No appearance or representation by or on behalf of the Respondent |
SUMMARY
CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT: Implied term/variation/construction of term
Particular of Employment Holidays; inclusion of provision whereby shift worker's holiday allowance of 23 days to be calculated on an hourly basis.
THE HONOURABLE LADY SMITH
Introduction
"The claimant is entitled to 23 days holiday, such holiday allowance to be calculated on an hourly basis, with a "day" equating to 9 or 9.5 hours as worked by the claimant."
Background
"Your usual hours of work are 37.5 hours per week."
and as regards holidays:
"You are entitled to 23 days holidays per holiday year. O2's holiday year runs from 1 April to 31 March. These holidays are in addition to normal bank and public holidays. You will accrue additional holidays with length of service. Details of this can be found on the vitalO2 intranet…"
"People who work part-time, or don't work a standard 5 – day week, (full time staff on a shift pattern, for example) will have their holiday allowance calculated in hours."
The Tribunal's judgment
"28. I noted the example provided by the respondent , comparing the number of hours off for the claimant and a person working a standard 37.5 hour week over five days but I was not convinced the comparison was correct: obviously the person working 37.5 hours a week over five days will work less hours per day. I understood the person working a standard five day week would have their holiday entitlement expressed in days and /or weeks, so that a week off would equate to five days of their entitlement . Further, a day off would reduce holiday entitlement by one day – not by a number of hours. The same must be true for the claimant – a week off would mean four days off, and a day off must reduce holiday entitlement by one day.
29. The claimant worked 37.5 hours per week over four days and there was no dispute regarding the fact that the document on the intranet provided for his holiday allowance to be calculated in hours. The respondents' position was that they used 7.5 hours as a day, but I heard no evidence regarding this matter and could gain no understanding of the respondent's position. I could not reconcile the fact that the claimant, having been given 23 days annual leave, in fact was permitted less days holiday because of 7.5 hours being used in the calculation."
and it was on that basis that the Tribunal issued judgment in the above terms.
The Appeal
Discussion and Decision
"(4)…………
(c) any terms and conditions relating to……………..
(i) entitlement to holidays….."
" …to determine what particulars ought to have been included or referred to in a statement so as to comply with the requirements of the section concerned."
"8. The more important and preliminary question is whether or not this application could be heard at all. From the recital and analysis of the facts so far adumbrated it is clear that every particular required by the statutory provisions was included in the contract of employment. The only area of dispute was whether or not the agreed salary scale in effect antedated the threshold payment. If the entry occurred, as it did, half way through the year at an expressed grade for salary scale, was the threshold payment to refer back or be delayed? Was the figure of £3150 inclusive or exclusive of a threshold payment of £104? In one sense this was an entirely peripheral matter which did not affect the contract as a whole. It certainly was not fundamental ………….
10. This application was misconceived and should not have been entertained."
"…there is nothing in any section of the Act which empowers or requires the tribunal to impose upon the parties terms which had not been agreed ….".
"People who work part-time , or don't work a standard 5 day week , ( full – time staff on a shift pattern, for example) will have their holiday entitlement calculated in hours."
"The claimant acknowledged the respondent's example (the claimant worked 37.5 hours per week made up of 4 days x 9.5 hours per day. If he was given 23 days annual leave @ 9.5 hours per day, it would equate to 218.5 hours. In comparison, if someone worked a standard 37.5 hours per week over 5 days and was given 23 days holiday, that person would get 23 days @ 7.5 hours per day, equating to 172.5 hours) would mean that he received more holidays than the other person."
"The claimant is entitled to 23 days holiday, such holiday allowance to be calculated in hours, on the basis that a 'day' equates to 7.5 hours."