![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Walton v The Independent Living Organisation [2003] EWCA Civ 199 (26 February 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/199.html Cite as: [2003] ICR 688, [2003] EWCA Civ 199, [2003] IRLR 469 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL | ||
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE ARDEN
and
MR JUSTICE JACOB
____________________
JULIE MEGAN WALTON | Appellant | |
- and - | ||
THE INDEPENDENT LIVING ORGANISATION | 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)
Andrew Hillier QC and Andrew Blake (instructed by Eversheds) for the Respondent
____________________
AS APPROVED BY THE COURT
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Aldous:
"4. Wages
Your rate of pay will vary according to the assignment you are undertaking. This may be at an hourly, daily or weekly rate. Your manager will advise you of your rate of pay prior to each assignment. Wages are payable by direct credit transfer to your bank account each Tuesday for the week ending the previous Friday before last.
5. Hours of Work
Your hours of work will vary according to the assignment you are allocated. Because of the nature of the services offered by the company, there is no guarantee of continued work each week. You will only be offered work when in the opinion of the company there is a suitable assignment available for you. Likewise, there is no obligation for you to provide a minimum number of hours in any day or week. However once engaged on an assignment you are required to complete it and devote your full attention and abilities to the needs of the client to ensure the satisfactory provision of such services.
Because of the nature of assignments, you will normally only be offered an assignment on an alternate week basis. It should also be understood that if a client requests that you cease servicing them or in the opinion of the company you are no longer suitable for a particular assignment, the company reserves the right to remove you from that assignment without any liability to you."
"11. The actual working time definition should define what constitutes working time for the purposes of the National Minimum Wage. The National Minimum Wage should also apply to all working time when a worker is required by the employer to be at the place of work and available for work, even if no work is available for certain periods. (para. 4.33)
12. For hours when workers are paid to sleep on the work premises, workers and employers should agree their allowance, as they do now. But workers should be entitled to the National Minimum Wage for all times when they are awake and required to be available for work. (para. 4.34)
…
4.33 We recommend that the actual working time definition should define what constitutes working time for the purposes of the National Minimum Wage. The National Minimum Wage should also apply to all working time when a worker is required by the employer to be at the place of work and available for work, even if no work is available for certain periods. This definition has the advantage of covering agreed 'downtime' hours when workers are on-site but unable to work (e.g. because of machine breakdowns or lack of materials). It includes all agreed overtime hours, including call-out hours for emergencies, but it does not include standby or on-call periods away from the employer's workplace or agreed rest periods.
4.34 Certain workers, such as those who are required to be on-call and sleep on their employer's premises (e.g. in residential homes or youth hostels), need special treatment. For hours when workers are paid to sleep on the premises, we recommend that workers and employers should agree their allowance, as they do now. But workers should be entitled to the National Minimum Wage for all times when they are awake and required to be available for work."
"3. In these Regulations "time work" means -(a) work that is paid for under a worker's contract by reference to the time for which a worker works and is not salaried hours work;(b) work that is paid for under a worker's contract by reference to a measure of the output of the worker per hour or other period of time during the whole of which the worker is required to work, and is not salaried hours work; and(c) work that would fall within paragraph (b) but for the fact that the worker is paid by reference to the length of the period of time alone when his output does not exceed a particular level.
Reg 4 The meaning of salaried hours work(1) In these Regulations "salaried hours work" means work-(a) that is done under a contract to do salaried hours work; and(b) that falls within paragraph (6) below.
…
Reg 5 The meaning of output workIn these Regulations "output work" means work that is paid for under a worker's contract that is not time work and, but for the effect of the Act and these Regulations or anything done pursuant to these Regulations, would be paid for under that contract wholly by reference to the number of pieces made or processed by the worker, or wholly by reference to some other measure of output such as the number or value of sales made or transactions completed by the worker or as a result of his work.
Reg 6 The meaning of unmeasured work
In these Regulations "unmeasured work" means any other work that is not time work, salaried hours work or output work including, in particular, work in respect of which there are no specified hours and the worker is required to work when needed or when work is available."
"Provisions in relation to time work15. - (1) In addition to time when a worker is working, time work includes time when a worker is available at or near a place of work, other than his home, for the purpose of doing time work and is required to be available for such work except that, in relation to a worker who by arrangement sleeps at or near a place of work, time during the hours he is permitted to sleep shall only be treated as being time work when the worker is awake for the purpose of working.(2) Time when a worker is travelling for the purpose of duties carried out by him in the course of time work shall be treated as being time work except where-
(a) the travelling is incidental to the duties, to the extent that the time is time when the worker would not otherwise be working; or(b) the travel is between the worker's home and his place of work or between an address where he is temporarily residing, other than for the purposes of performing work, and his place of work.
…
(7) Where a worker is entitled to a rest break in the course of time work, the period of the break shall be treated as time when the worker is absent from work; but a worker shall not be treated as being entitled to any rest breaks during time which is required to be treated as time work by paragraph (2)."
"Reg 27 Unmeasured workUnless the condition in regulation 28(1) is satisfied, the unmeasured work worked by a worker in a pay reference period shall be the total of the number of hours spent by him during the pay reference period in carrying out the contractual duties required of him under his contract to do such work.
Reg 28 "Daily average" agreements for unmeasured work(1) The condition referred to in regulation 27 is that there is an agreement in writing between the worker and his employer, made at any time before the beginning of the pay reference period, determining the average daily number of hours the worker is likely to spend in carrying out the duties required of him under his contract to do unmeasured work on days when he is available to carry out those duties for the full amount of time contemplated by the contract.(2) The condition in paragraph (1) is not satisfied if the employer cannot show that the average daily number of hours determined is a realistic average.(3) Unless otherwise agreed the agreement referred to in paragraph (1) has effect solely for the purpose of determining the amount of unmeasured work the worker is to be treated as having worked for the purpose of these Regulations and does not vary the worker's contract."
"12. …. No one would say that an employee sitting at the employer's premises during the day waiting for phone calls was only working, in the sense of only being entitled to be remunerated, during the periods when he or she was actually on the phone. Exactly the same consideration seems to me to apply if the employer chooses to operate the very same service during the night-time, not by bringing the employees into his office (which would no doubt impose substantial overhead costs on the employer and lead to significant difficulties of recruitment), but by diverting calls from the central switchboard to employees sitting waiting at home. It was indeed as a continuation of the day-time service that the employer presented the night-time service to his employees and recruited them for that purpose. That is illustrated by the job description document that was shown to us …"
"We know that her pay was assessed according to the difficulty and duration of the specific tasks which she had to perform at times which could not be exactly stipulated. Meal times would follow a pattern, but other matters would depend on personal choice. She was not paid an hourly rate or anything of that sort. It was a broad assessment based on difficulty and duration. No question arose of measuring output."
Lady Justice Arden :
Mr Justice Jacob: