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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 >> Bamsey & Ors v Albon Engineering & Manufacturing Plc [2004] EWCA Civ 359 (25 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/359.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 359, [2004] 2 CMLR 59, [2004] ICR 1083, [2004] IRLR 457 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
LORD JUSTICE JACOB
____________________
D. BAMSEY & ORS |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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ALBON ENGINEERING & MANUFACTURING PLC |
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)
Mr. Thomas Linden (instructed by The Treasury solicitor) as Advocate to the Court
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Auld :
1) the meaning of the term "normal working hours" in sections 221-224 of the Employment Rights Act 1996 ("the Act") as used for the calculation of "a week's pay" of an employee for the purposes of the Act;
2) the meaning of "normal working hours" for the purpose of calculating an employee's entitlement to payment under regulation 16 of the Working Time Regulations 1998 ("the Regulations") for the four weeks annual leave to which he is entitled under regulation 13 of the Regulations;
3) the effect of that meaning on "a week's pay" of an employee whose contract of employment requires, but does not entitle him, to work overtime in addition to his basic contractual hours, more particularly whether it is capable of resulting in him receiving significantly less by way of pay for annual leave than when he was working; and
4) the extent to which, if at all, the meaning of the term "normal working hours" insofar as it bears on the calculation of "a week's pay" for the purpose of determining his annual leave pay under regulation 16, should be purposively construed to give it a meaning that it might not otherwise have so as to conform to the main purpose of Article 7 of Council Directive 92/104, the Working Time Directive ("the Directive"), which the Regulations implement.
The facts
The law
The 1996 Act
"220 Introductory
"The amount of a week's pay of an employee shall be calculated for the purposes of this Act in accordance with this Chapter." [my emphasis]
221 General
(1) This section and sections 222 and 223 apply where there are normal working hours for the employee when employed under the contract of employment in force on the calculation date.
(2) Subject to section 222, if the employee's remuneration for employment in normal working hours (whether by the hour or week or other period) does not vary with the amount of work done in the period, the amount of a week's pay is the amount which is payable by the employer under the contract of employment in force on the calculation date if the employee works throughout his normal working hours in a week.
(3) Subject to section 222, if the employee's remuneration for employment in normal working hours (whether by the hour or week or other period) does vary with the amount of work done in the period, the amount of a week's pay is the amount of remuneration for the number of normal working hours in a week calculated at the average hourly rate of remuneration payable by the employer to the employee in respect of the period of twelve weeks ending –
(a) where the calculation date is the last day of a week, with that week; and
b) otherwise with the last complete week before the calculation date.
…."
"222 Remuneration varying according to time of work
(1) This section applies if the employee is required under the contract of employment in force on the calculation date to work during normal working hours on days of the week, or at times of the day, which differ from week to week or over a longer period so that the remuneration payable for, or apportionable to, any week varies according to the incidence of those days or times.
(2) The amount of a week's pay is the amount of remuneration for the average number of weekly normal working hours at the average rate of remuneration.
(3) For the purposes of subsection (2) –
(a) the average number of weekly hours is calculated by dividing by twelve the total number of the employee's normal working hours during the relevant period of twelve weeks; and
(b) the average hourly rate of remuneration is the average hourly rate of remuneration payable by the employer to the employee in respect of the relevant period of twelve weeks.
…
223 Supplementary
"For the purposes of sections 221 and 222, in arriving at the average hourly rate of remuneration, only –
(a) the hours when the employee was working, and
(b) the remuneration payable for, or apportionable to, those shall be brought in.
(2) If for any of the twelve weeks mentioned in sections 221 and 222 no remuneration within subsection (1)(b) was payable by the employer to the employee, account shall be taken of remuneration in earlier weeks so as to bring up to twelve the number of weeks of which account is taken.
(3) Where
(a) in arriving at the average hourly rate of remuneration, account has to be taken of remuneration payable for, or apportionable to, work done in hours other than normal working hours, and
(b) the amount of that remuneration was greater than it would have been if the work had been done in normal working hours (or, in a case within section 234(3), in normal working falling within the number if hours without overtime), account shall be taken of that remuneration as if the work had been done in such hours and the amount of that remuneration had been reduced accordingly.
224 Employments with no normal working hours
(1) This section applies where there are no normal working hours for the employee when employed under the contract of employment in force on the calculation date
(2) The amount of a week's pay is the amount of the employee's average weekly remuneration in the period of twelve weeks ending –
(a) where the calculation date is the last day of a week, with that week, and
(b) otherwise, with the last complete week before the calculation date.
(3) In arriving at the average weekly remuneration no account shall be taken of a week in which no remuneration was payable by the employer to the employee and remuneration in earlier weeks shall be brought in so as to bring up to twelve the number of weeks of which account is taken. …"
"(1) Where an employee is entitled to overtime pay when employed for more than a fixed number of hours in a week or other period, there are for the purposes of this Act normal working hours in his case.
(2) Subject to subsection (3), the normal working hours in such a case are the fixed number of hours.
(3) Where in such a case –
(a) the contract of employment fixes the number, or minimum number of hours of employment in a week or other period …, and
(b) that number or minimum number of hours exceeds the number of hours without overtime,
the normal working hours are that number or minimum number of hours (and not the number of hours without overtime)."
1) Where pay for normal working hours does not vary according to the amount of work done in any period or as to when the normal working hours are worked (sections 221(2) and 222), the determination of "a week's pay" does not depend on an employee's "normal working hours"; it is the weekly amount payable under the contract at the relevant calculation date.
2) Where there are no "normal working hours" (section 224), "a week's pay" is the amount of an employee's average weekly pay in the applicable 12 weeks preceding the calculation date.
3) Where pay varies according to the amount of work done during "normal working hours" in any period (section 221(3)), "a week's pay" is calculated at an average hourly rate of pay in the applicable 12 weeks before the calculation date.
4) Where, in category 3), the contract does not provide for overtime, but an employee undertakes it voluntarily at his employer's request – which is not this case – if section 234 applies to regulation 16, the overtime hours are not part of the "normal working hours".
5) Where, in category 3), an employee is under a contractual duty to do overtime but is not entitled to it - which is this case - if section 234 applies to regulation 16, the overtime hours are not part of the "the normal working hours".
6) Where, in category 3) an employer has a contractual duty to provide overtime and an employee has a matching contractual duty to do it – which is not this case - if section 234 applies to regulation 16, the "normal working hours" would include the overtime worked.
The Regulations
"(1) A worker is entitled to be paid in respect of any period of annual leave to which he is entitled under regulation 13, at the rate of a week's pay in respect of each week of leave.
(2) Sections 221 to 224 of the 1996 Act shall apply for the purpose of determining the amount of a week's pay for the purposes of this regulation, subject to the modifications set out in paragraph (3).
(3) The provisions referred to in paragraph (2) shall apply – (a) as if references to the employee were references to the worker; (b) as if references to the employee's contract of employment were references to the worker's contract; (c) as if the calculation date were the first day of the period of leave and question; and (d) as if the references to sections 227 and 228 did not apply."
The Directive
"any period during which the worker is working at the employer's disposal and carrying out his activity or duties in accordance with national laws and/or practice."
Article 7 of the Directive, in respect of which Article 17 does not permit derogation, provides:
"Member States shall take the measures necessary to ensure that every worker is entitled to paid annual leave of at least four weeks in accordance with the conditions for entitlement to, and granting of, such leave laid down by national legislation and/or practice."
"Whereas Article 118a of the Treaty provides that the Council shall adopt, by means of Directives, minimum requirements for encouraging improvement, especially in the working environment to ensure a better level of protection of the safety and health of workers … whereas the Community Charter of the Fundamental Social Rights Of Workers … declared that … every worker in the European Community shall have a right to a weekly rest period and to annual paid leave … every worker must enjoy satisfactory health and safety conditions in his working environment …. Whereas the improvement of workers' safety hygiene and health at work is an objective which should not be subordinated to purely economic considerations … whereas in order to ensure the safety and health of Community workers, the latter must be granted minimum daily, weekly and annual periods of rest and adequate breaks." [my emphasis]
The EAT's decision
1) the main purpose of the Directive as a whole was to improve the safety and health of workers, and of Article 7 to that end, to encourage them to take their full holiday entitlement by paying them when on leave at a rate comparable to that which they normally received when at work;
2) regulation 16, as a provision implementing a Directive without direct effect, should be construed, so far as possible, consistently with the Directive, in accordance with Marleasing SA v. La Comercial Internacional de Alimentatacion [1990] ECR 1-4135 ECJ and Webb v. EMO Air Cargo [1993] ICR 175;
3) regulation 16, in expressly incorporating sections 221-224 of the 1996 Act, automatically incorporated the interpretative provisions of section 234, relying on a dictum of Lord Lowry in Wyre Forest DC v. Secretary of State for the Environment [1990] 2 AC 357, at 365D; and
4) despite the purpose of the Directive, if regulation 16 did not incorporate section 234, its reference to "normal working hours" could not mean just hours normally worked as distinct from those worked and contractually fixed so as to require averaging under section 224, since that would be so uncertain in effect as to be unworkable.
The submissions
1) Articles 2 and 7 of the Directive require member states to ensure that workers are paid, when on annual leave, by reference to what they are normally paid for working time, that is the actual time for which they work, so as to ensure a broad equivalence between their working time pay and their holiday pay;
2) Regulation 16 should be purposively construed to achieve that result, namely where the contract of employment is silent or unclear as to whether there are "normal working hours" or as to what they are, the courts should not approach the matter by way of a rigidly contractual analysis, but should have regard to what, on the facts, the employee regularly does when at work. Article 2 of the Directive defines "working time", as "any period during which the worker is working, at the employer's disposal and carrying out his activity or duties", and a similarly pragmatic approach should be adopted to payments for periods of annual leave.
3) There is nothing in sections 221 to 224 of the Act, read without section 234, to preclude that construction. In developing that argument, Mr Hendy submitted that, outside section 234, regulation 16 could, consistently with the purpose of Article 7 and without distorting our domestic legislation, be construed as to apply to normal actual working hours, relying by way of example on Litster v. Forth Dry Dock [1989] ICR 341, HL, per Lord Oliver at 354D; Garland v. British Rail Engineering Ltd. [1983] 2 AC 751, per Lord Diplock at 771A; and Webb v. EMO Air Cargo, per Lord Keith at 186D.
4) Section 234 has nothing to do with sections 221 and 222, which are in a different Chapter of Part XIV of the Act, and, therefore, in its definition of "normal working hours", does not govern that term in sections 221 and 222.
5) Even if section 234 does govern sections 221 to 224 for the purposes of the Act, it should be ignored when construing regulation 16 because: (a) it is a deeming provision, as expressly provided in section 234(1) "for the purposes of" the Act, which do not include the purposes of the Regulations. The statutory predecessors of sections 221-224 of the 1996 Act were enacted long before the making of the Directive and in the wholly different context of entitlement to notice periods, redundancy payments etc. so the ruling of the House of Lords in Wyre Forest District Council case, that words used and defined in a statutory enactment, in the absence of any indication to the contrary, should bear the same meaning throughout the same statute and any related subsidiary legislation, does not apply. (b) Regulation 16 does not expressly incorporate it; and (c) to imply it would be contrary to the purposes of the Directive because: it would artificially restrict the meaning of "normal working hours", which, under sections 221-224, when read without section 234, are not tied to the terms of the contract of employment; it could result, as here, in a substantial diminution in an employee's holiday pay from that which he normally earned when working; and would thus deter employees from taking their annual leave.
6) Regulation 16 is, in any event, workable without section 234 of the 1996 Act since tribunals frequently have to apply sections 221 or 224 to cases where there are no express contractual terms specifying minimum working hours.
7) If overtime done, but not qualifying as contractually "fixed" hours within section 234, does not amount to "normal working hours" for the purpose of calculating "a week's [holiday] pay" under regulation 16, there would be scope for employers to defeat the purpose of the Directive by reducing the contractual basic working hours to a minimum, so as to peg paid annual leave to that low level.
8) Accordingly, for the purpose of regulation 16, Mr. Sturge's normal working hours at the material time included his overtime, namely an average of 58 or 60 hours a week, not his contractual basic weekly hours, namely 39.
9) Alternatively, he had no normal working hours, so that the averaging formula of section 224 applies, producing an average of sixty hours.
1) The meaning of the term "normal working hours" for the purpose of calculating "a week's pay" for the purpose of regulation 16 is the same as that for the purposes of the Act in sections 220 to 224, when read with section 234.
2) Such meaning is not contrary to the main purpose of the Directive, since Article 7 expressly leaves the "conditions for entitlement to, and granting of," paid annual leave to "national legislation and/or practice". Although the Directive specified a minimum period of annual leave and required payment during such leave, it left what was to be paid to each Member State. It is silent on such concepts as "a week's pay" or "normal working hours". It does not specify any minimum pay requirement or prevent Member States from providing that an agreed basic salary should be "a week's pay" for this purpose. He relied on this Court's ruling in Gibson v. East Riding of Yorkshire Council [2000] ICR 890, as an indicator that the Article was insufficiently precise to satisfy the Becker condition of sufficient precision to be directly enforceable without domestic implementing legislation. In short, he submitted that there is no inconsistency between the main objective of Article 7 and the terms of section 234 so as to require the courts to construe the 1998 Act as if section 234 does not apply to sections 220 to 224.
3) If it were contrary to the Directive, it could not be construed so as to conform with the appellants' construction of it, which is in any event unclear and would produce great uncertainty in its application.
Conclusions
The meaning of "normal working hours" for the purposes of the Act
Whether regulation 16 incorporates section 234.
Construction of regulation 16 in the light of the Directive
"… [It] contains the following definition of 'working time': 'any period during which the worker is working, at the employer's disposal and carrying out his activity or duties, in accordance with national laws and/or practice.' I regard that definition, imprecisely framed and coupled with an express reference to 'working … in accordance with national laws and/or practice,' as specially important in the context of Section II of the Directive which contains article 7 'Annual Leave'. Section II deals with 'Minimum Rest Periods-Other aspects of the Organisation of Working Time'.
….
I agree … that article 7 does not have direct effect so as to be enforceable by individual workers in national courts against state employers because it leaves unanswered key questions affecting individual entitlement to annual leave. In a sense article 7 is precise: the length of the minimum period of paid annual leave is a precise period of four weeks. But it does not follow from the precision of the length of the period of leave that the obligation in the article is sufficiently precise for a national court to enforce it at the instance of an individual without more.
The first basic question for the national court is: what is the period of 'working time' for which the worker must have worked before he becomes entitled to annual leave under article 7? Annual leave is leave from 'working time'. The concept of 'working time' is not precisely defined. To what period of 'working time' does the specified period of annual leave relate? This question is not answered by article 7 itself or by any other provisions in Directive 92/104. How then is it possible for a national court to decide which workers are entitled to annual leave? "
Whether sections 220 to 224 are workable without section 234
Scope for abuse if section 234 is applicable to sections 220-223
Reference to the European Court of Justice?
Lord Justice May:
Lord Justice Jacob: