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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Wheeler v Qualitydeep Ltd. (t/a Thai Royale Restaurant) [2004] EWCA Civ 1085 (30 July 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1085.html Cite as: [2005] ICR 265, [2004] EWCA Civ 1085 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM the Employment Appeal Tribunal
His Honour Judge J McMullen QC
Mr P M Smith
Mrs R A Vickers
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE WALL
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE HOOPER
____________________
Mrs Laong Wheeler |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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QualityDeep Ltd T/A Thai Royale Restaurant |
Respondent |
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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)
Ms Dinah Rose instructed by the Treasury Solicitor as Advocate to the Court
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Hooper :
LORD JUSTICE HOOPER:
"Part of Mrs Wheeler's application was made on the basis that only one payslip had been issued to her. In fact during the course of the hearing Mrs Wheeler produced 2 payslips which were issued to her. These wrongly show the gross wages of £72 per week which is also the net wage on those payslips. The slips are dated 30 March 2001 and 14 September 2001. The annual figures for earnings on both of those payslips total what is the equivalent of £72 per week. One of the payslips is a complete tax year and the other for the part of a tax year from April to September."
"She received nothing in writing from the employer, such as P45/P60 tax forms and more pointedly as well she received nothing from the Inland Revenue in terms of tax codes and other correspondence during the course of her employment".
"Had Mrs Wheeler not had the assistance of her husband we may have taken a different view of her situation in view of her limited knowledge of tax and National Insurance in the United Kingdom and her limited knowledge of the English language".
"As a result over a course of three years Mrs Wheeler received her payment of wages without any deductions for tax and National Insurance. Mrs Wheeler clearly relied upon her husband for advice on reading documents and letters and so forth. We believe it having been flagged up by the payslips showing a net and gross pay of £72 per week that there was an awareness within the family that there was something awry."
"but all in all it seems that Mr Wheeler at least was quite willing to acquiesce in the situation and for the arrangement to continue. No referral was made to the tax office to see whether there had been any accounting for tax by Mr or Mrs Wheeler."
"We believe that Mrs Wheeler may have initially have followed this in all probability innocently but we do not believe that Mr Wheeler misunderstood and we believe, in all probability, that he chose to ignore the situation. No course of action was taken with the authorities. "
"Therefore over the course of this more than three years both the respondent and the applicant had benefited from this arrangement".
"an awareness within the family that there was something awry"
"Mr Wheeler was at least quite willing to acquiesce in the situation and for the arrangement to continue."
"Mrs Wheeler may well have initially followed this in all probability innocently."
"Mr Wheeler did not misunderstand the situation and he chose to ignore it."
"Both the respondent and the applicant had benefited from this arrangement".
"Between them Mr and Mrs Wheeler must have known something was wrong. They would have made a choice to acquiesce."
"The ET unfortunately has not made clear findings as to what were the terms of the contract of employment."
"... In cases where the contract of employment is neither entered into for an illegal purpose nor prohibited by statute, the illegal performance of the contract will not render the contract unenforceable unless in addition to knowledge of the facts which make the performance illegal the employee actively participates in the illegal performance. It is a question of fact in each case whether there has been a sufficient degree of participation by the employee. ..."
"The starting point must be the unchallenged finding that the performance of the contract was illegal. No payments were made for tax or National Insurance. The consequence was that both the applicant and the respondent benefited. Both these propositions appear to have been accepted in ground 3 of the Notice of Appeal."
"No reasonable tribunal could have reached the decision they did on the facts before it. On the facts although the contract may have been performed illegally in that the employer did not make the correct deductions of tax or National Insurance, the appellant did not know that there had been illegal performance and although she may have benefited as a result of the employer's illegal actions, she did not actively participate in that illegal performance, and as such the contract was not illegal in law.
"... the tribunal made the free-standing finding that 'between them', by which we understand the Tribunal to mean both of them, they "must have known something was wrong They acquiesced in the illegal agreement".
"Evidence of the illegal agreement was plain to anyone receiving a pay slip for £72 said to constitute both gross and net pay, and receiving in cash £260 (using the latest wage rate for convenience) on at least two occasions when pay slips were given. Further, since those payslips apparently recorded a cumulative figure of respectively one year's and six months' gross pay at £72 per week, it would be instantly visible to the applicant that she was receiving in her hand each week £190 more than the printed record showed."
"Naturally she asked her husband who was well acquainted with employment matters and relied upon him but also herself made requests relating to pay slips. It was of course open to the tribunal to decide that the applicant, by reason of her status or language, may not have had any proper involvement. But it did not. The tribunal found that both she and her husband acquiesced."
"Is acquiescence enough to make the contract illegal in its performance?"
"It seems from those statements that knowledge and participation of the illegality are essential. Those are issues of fact. Whether the employee benefits is obviously a very significant factor …"
"It must be borne in mind that every week the applicant received payment in cash and twice received pay slips which were plainly wrong for each of the relevant weeks and by analysis reflected such incorrect figures throughout, respectively, the previous year and six months."
"The applicant benefited from this arrangement. That was a factor to which the tribunal gave weight. She was paid well above the National Minimum Wage. The tribunal found that she knew something was wrong. That is a finding of fact in a highly fact-sensitive domain. Quite properly, the applicant herself raised questions about this arrangement but was content to acquiesce in the continuation of it even after she had been assured that the problem had been 'straightened out' for at least a year. Although the applicant was under no duty herself to account to the Revenue, an assurance that the matter would be straightened out was not followed by any communication from the Revenue relating to pay codings nor did she receive a P60 at the end of the three tax years which ended during her career. The tribunal regarded this too as 'pointed'."
"It obviously equated knowingly being a party to acquiescence in the form in which it was used in its reasons. The applicant knew there was something wrong since nothing changed and she received no communications from the Revenue or her employer."
"The Tribunal was entitled to find that these facts demonstrated knowing acquiescence in the continuation of wrongdoing and that the contract was illegal in its performance. Although expressed as acquiescence, the reality of the Employment Tribunal expression is that the applicant participated."
"The evidence given by the appellant's husband was limited to the period following her dismissal and the only evidence given was to the effect that he had assisted the appellant in discussions with her employer which took place immediately after the dismissal."
"The applicant was seeking an expedited hearing, directions were given in chambers by HHJ Prophet. Because the case was expedited, no specific directions were given about evidence or fresh evidence, but paragraph 7 and 8 of the Practice Direction applied. These set out the procedure which must be followed if there is to be an assertion on appeal about the nature of the evidence below."
"The applicant's second ground of appeal is based upon a contention as to the material put before the Employment Tribunal. Six separate assertions are made. In the absence of compliance with the procedures set out in practice direction paragraphs 8 and 9, these contentions cannot be accepted."
"An appellant who considers the point of law raised in the Notice of Appeal cannot be argued without any reference to any matter of, or relating to, evidence adduced at the Employment Tribunal, which does not sufficiently appear from the Decision and Reasons, must ordinarily submit an application with the Notice of Appeal. If (exceptionally) such application is not so made, then it should be made –
a….
b if the case is listed for FH [Full Hearing] without a PH [Preliminary Hearing] then within 14 days after service of the order so providing."
LORD JUSTICE WALL
LORD JUSTICE WARD
ORDER: Appeal allowed; decision of the Employment Appeal Tribunal sitting at Sheffield quashed; matter remitted to Employment Appeal Tribunal for a hearing on the merits. Draft order approved.