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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Armstrong & Sons Ltd v Borrill [1999] UKEAT 1124_98_2107 (21 July 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/1124_98_2107.html Cite as: [1999] UKEAT 1124_98_2107, [2000] ICR 367 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE CHARLES
MR S M SPRINGER MBE
MRS R A VICKERS
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellants | MR C LEWIS (of Counsel) Instructed By: Mrs J O'Hanlon The Legal Dept National Farmers Union 164 Shaftesbury Avenue London WC2H 8HL |
For the Respondent | MR H FORREST (Solicitor) Humberside Law Centre 95 Alfred Gelder Street Hull HU1 1EP |
MR JUSTICE CHARLES:
(a) sections 162 and 221 of the Employment Rights Act 1996 (the ERA),
(b) provisions of the Agricultural Wages Act 1948 (the 1948 Act) and the Agricultural Wages Order 1997 (the Order), and
(c) the contract of employment.
"3. The dispute between the parties was this. The Applicant said that his gross basic wage was the total amount set out in the Agricultural Wages Board Order 1997 (Number 1) dated 1 June 1997 namely £160.85. The Respondent said that the gross basic wage was £100.53, being £160.85 less the amount of £60.32 paid by the Respondent directly to the Applicant's Mother in respect of the Applicant's Board and Lodgings as provided for under the provisions of the same Order."
"5. FACTS
a) The Applicant had worked for the Respondent from June 1977 until his dismissal for redundancy with pay in lieu of notice on 16 January 1998.
b) On the occasion of the Applicant's dismissal it was acknowledged by the Respondent that he was entitled to 12 weeks' pay in lieu of notice and 17 weeks' pay in respect of a redundancy payment.
c) Each of these payments was made at the rate of £100.53 making pay in lieu of notice in the amount of £1,206.36 and a redundancy payment in the amount of £1,709.01, being a total payment of £2,915.37.
d) In accordance with the Contract of Employment between the Applicant and Respondent, the particulars of which required to be set out by statute were contained in a document signed by the Applicant and dated 2 December 1997, the Applicant was:-
i) a designated 'Agricultural Worker'.
ii) his rate of pay was 'in accordance with the Agricultural Wages Order less board and lodging paid to your mother'.
e) At the time of dismissal the Agricultural Wages Order payment was as referred to above that at 5.1 for a worker 19 years and over, namely £160.85.
f) By the same Order Table 13.1 relating to payments in kind and their values the amount for Board and Lodgings was £60.32.
g) In this employment there were normal working hours set out in the Wages Register and referred to in the written particulars of the terms and conditions of employment.
THE LAW
A) REDUNDANCY PAY
1. The Employment Rights Act 1996, Section 162 sets out how to calculate a redundancy payment. For that purpose it is necessary to calculate a week's pay.
2. A Week's Pay is defined in Section 221(2) of the Act where there are normal working hours as:-
'... the amount of a weeks 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. The Agricultural Wages Act 1948 gives power to Agricultural Wages Boards to fix (inter alia) minimum rates of payment to agricultural workers and it provides criminal sanctions but expressly in Section 4(4) does not derogate from 'any right of a worker to recover such sums in civil proceedings'.
4. Section 7 gives the Board powers:-
'(a) to define the benefits or advantages (not being benefits or advantages prohibited by the law) which for the purpose of a minimum rate of wages fixed under this Act may be reckoned as payment of wages in lieu of payment in cash'.
(b) to determine value
(c) to limit or prohibit the reckoning
5. Section 11 of the same Act makes certain agreements void, eg:-
'(a) an agreement for the payment of wages in contravention of this Act, or for abstaining from exercising a right of enforcing the payment of wages in accordance with this Act'.
6. The Agricultural Wages Order 1997 (Number 1) is made in exercise of these powers and having set the minimum wage rate applicable in the current case at £160.85 a week at Section 13, 'Payments in Kind', sets out at Table 13.1 the general provisions stating that employers can treat certain benefits in kind as stipulated in the table below as payments of part of the worker's minimum wage, provided they are provided 'in accordance with the worker's contract of employment', 'up to the maximum value of a benefit shown in table 13.1 ....'
"What is the amount payable by the employer under the contract of employment?"
That question raises a point of construction and application of the contract of employment.
REASONS
"REMUNERATION. Under the terms of the Agricultural Wages Structure you are employed as Agricultural Worker
Your rate of pay is in accordance with that set out in the Agricultural Wages Order less Board and Lodging Paid to your Mother."
------- your rate of pay is £160.85 less £60.32 (i.e. £100.53).
The Employer's argument continues that therefore £100.53 is the amount of a week's pay as defined by s 221(2) ERA.
(a) such an agreement as to pay accords with the 1948 Act and the Order and is therefore not rendered unlawful or void thereby,
(b) in any event £60.32 (the amount paid for board and lodging) is a sum paid to a third party and not to the employee so it is not part of Mr Borrill's pay, it being implicit in s 221(2) that the week's pay is paid, or is to be paid, to the employee, and
(c) this result accords with existing authority that payments for board and lodging do not form part of a week's pay for the purposes of calculating a redundancy payment.
"define the benefits and advantages ..... which for the purposes of a minimum rate of wages fixed under this Act may be reckoned as payment of wages in lieu of payment of cash",
and to
"determine the value at which, for the purposes aforesaid, such payments or benefits may be reckoned" (our emphasis).
"They (the benefits) must be provided in accordance with the worker's contract of employment."
The Order also makes it clear that the values specified in the table are maximum values.
(1) the Employer is to pay Mr Borrill a minimum rate of wages or pay but can, in part, satisfy that statutory obligation by providing defined benefits, and
(2) pursuant to powers under the 1948 Act the Board determines:
(a) the minimum rate of wages or pay that the employer must pay if it is to avoid committing an offence under s 4,
(b) what benefits the employer can treat as payment of the minimum rate of wages or pay, and
(c) the value of those benefits for reckoning what can be treated as payment of wages or pay in lieu of payment in cash.
(a) lead to a result where less than £100.53 cash was paid which would be contrary to the provisions of the 1948 Act and the Order, or
(b) lead to a result where the approach based on the introduction of figures, or the wording introduced in manuscript, was qualified by adding that the amount paid for board and lodging that could be deducted could not exceed the maximum value placed on it by the Order.
(a) in our judgment the approach of the Inland Revenue to the provision of board and lodging to Mr Borrill and other agricultural workers does not provide any real assistance to either side because it is concerned with different statutory provisions relating to the payment of tax, and
(b) in our judgment having regard to the purpose of redundancy payments (as was done in the Wilkes case at 649E) the conclusion we have reached accords with that purpose and the purpose underlying the provisions of the 1948 Act and the Order that provide a minimum rate of wages for agricultural workers such as Mr Borrill.