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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Wheeler v Qualitydeep Ltd (t/a Thai Royale Restaurant)[2004] UKEAT 0998_03_1604 (16 April 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2004/0998_03_1604.html Cite as: [2004] UKEAT 998_3_1604, [2004] UKEAT 0998_03_1604 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 2 March 2003 | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J MCMULLEN QC
MR P M SMITH
MRS R A VICKERS
APPELLANT | |
t/a THAI ROYALE RESTAURANT (IN LIQUIDATION) |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | Representations in writing |
For the Respondent | No Appearance or Representation By or on Behalf of the Respondent |
SUMMARY
Unfair Dismissal
Acquiescence / knowledge of illegality of contract prevented a claim for unfair dismissal.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE J McMULLEN QC
Introduction
The Issues
"1. The applicant confirmed that she complains of unfair dismissal, the failure of the respondent to provide payslips, failure to make a redundancy payment, breach of contract and failure to pay holiday pay. The respondent failed to attend. The applicant understood that the respondent company had ceased trading although it was not clear that it had become insolvent in any way which prevented the tribunal hearing complaints.
2. It appeared that the applicant received untaxed income and the legality of the employment contract, and its effect on the application in this case were considered by the tribunal."
The Appeal
EAT Directions
The Legislation
8 "Itemised pay statement
(1) An employee has the right to be given by his employer, at or before the time at which any payment of wages or salary is made to him, a written itemised pay statement.
(2) The statement shall contain particulars of -
(a) the gross amount of wages or salary,
(b) the amounts of any variable, and (subject to section 9) any fixed deductions from that gross amount and the purposes for which they are made,
(c) the net amount of wages or salary payable, and
(d) where different parts of the net amount are paid in different ways, the amount and method of payment of each part-payment."
3. "In a case where the contract of employment is tainted with illegality a tribunal should consider whether it accords with public policy to hear any complaints based upon that contract. Although the position should be considered flexibly (Salveson v Simons [1994] IRLR 52) it will normally be the case that a party will not be able to enforce a contact [sic] which is illegal if that party was knowingly a party to the illegality, (Wilkinson v Lugg [1990] ICR 500)."
The Facts
9 "…a knowledge of the world and its affairs in the UK. 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 UK and her limited knowledge of the English language."
The Applicant's Case
(i) the Tribunal was wrong to attribute wrongdoing to the Applicant through the knowledge or acquiescence of her husband;
(ii) the decision was inconsistent with the evidence;
(iii) although the contract may have been performed illegally, and the Applicant benefited therefrom, the absence of active participation by the Applicant rendered the decision one which no reasonable Employment Tribunal could reach.
Conclusion
38 "… 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. And as Coral Leisure Group shows, even if the employee has in the course of his employment done illegal acts he may nevertheless be able subsequently to rely on his contract of employment to enforce his statutory rights. The Salvesen case on its facts was not a case of mere knowledge of the facts constituting illegality: the employee's involvement was much greater. The Hewcastle case shows some of the factors which may be relevant to determining whether the statutory employment rights conferred on an employee are not to be defeated by illegality in the performance of the contract of employment."
47 "…she was not herself guilty of any unlawful conduct. No benefit is shown to have been received by her from the employer's failure to deduct tax and national insurance contributions and to account for the same to the Revenue."
80 "In the present case, the position is in my view as follows:
(A) At the root of the industrial tribunal's and Employment Appeal Tribunal's decisions lies the proposition that Mrs Hall was involved in the illegality in a manner which would have prevented her from enforcing her contract of employment by any contractual claim. I agree with Peter Gibson LJ's conclusion that on the facts of this case this conclusion was itself in error. The contract as made and as varied was legal. It was at no stage expressly prohibited by any statute. The suggested illegality arose simply from the method of its performance, involving the employers' failure to make or account for deductions to the Revenue and DHSS, and issue of false PAYE slips. Before this could disable the appellant from enforcing her contract of employment, there would - applying the statements of Lord Denning MR at p.833 and Scarman LJ at p.836 in Ashmore, Benson Ltd v Dawson Ltd - have to be shown both knowledge and participation on her part in the illegal method of performance.
Thus, in Coral Leisure Group Ltd v Barnett the Employment Appeal Tribunal held that the industrial tribunal had jurisdiction in a claim for unfair dismissal under the Employment Protection (Consolidation) Act 1978, although after making an initially lawful contract, the relevant employee had knowingly participated in the finding of prostitutes for punters and in paying for them out of funds provided by his employers. The contract of employment itself, as distinct from the mode of its performance, was not prohibited by law: see per Browne-Wilkinson J at p.207. Even minor though inessential participation by an employee in a scheme for the fraudulent evasion of VAT by and for the benefit of his employers was held not to preclude a claim for unfair dismissal under the 1978 Act in Hewcastle Catering Ltd v Ahmed [1991] IRLR 473. The reasoning in that case was influenced by the 'public conscience' test, since rejected in Tinsley v Milligan. But the first five factors mentioned by Beldam LJ at p.477 would still point to the same conclusion, although it is unnecessary to form any decided view on that in this case.
Newland v Simons & Willer (Hairdressers) Ltd was concerned with a similar subject-matter to the present. But the employee had been employed over the end of a tax year, and any awareness on her part that proper deductions were not being made was said to have derived from her receipt of her P60 at the end of that tax year. In the view of the majority in the Employment Appeal Tribunal the essential question was 'Has the employee knowingly been party to a deception on the revenue?' However, I have to say, reading the judgment, that the majority appears also to have considered that it would be sufficient to make her 'party to the deception' if she either took part in 'or continued working knowing of the illegal mode of performance by her employers of her contract of employment': see p.363. Further, the majority took a stern view towards the argument that, even if the contract 'on its face or in its performance to his knowledge involves a fraud on the revenue", the employee should not be deprived of his rights under the employment protection legislation: see p.365. May J said:
'We have no doubt that Parliament never intended to give the statutory rights provided for by the relevant employment legislation to those who were knowingly breaking the law by committing or participating in a fraud on the revenue.'
We are not directly concerned with the employment protection legislation, and the facts are not identical with those in issue in Newland v Simons & Willer (Hairdressers) Ltd. But I confess to doubt about both the reasoning and the outcome in it.
In the present case also, the industrial tribunal evidently considered that knowledge alone would suffice. After contracting lawfully, Mrs Hall was given payslips which she queried. She was dismissed before the end of any tax year. The tribunal reasoned that she 'was turning a blind eye to the fact that the respondents were not paying tax on part of her income'. It is a fact that Mrs Hall continued to receive payslips and did not report her employers to any authorities. But, as Peter Gibson LJ has said, there was no positive duty on Mrs Hall to payor do anything (cf. IRC v Herd [1993] 1 WLR 1090), nor was she herself guilty of any unlawful conduct. Her continuing passive receipt of payslips, after her initial query, cannot in my view be regarded as making her a party to her employers' plan to deceive, or as amounting to participation in it such as to preclude her from enforcing her contract of employment. We need not consider what might have been the position after the end of a tax year, when it might have become her duty to make a tax declaration in respect of income which was to her knowledge untaxed. She was dismissed before any tax year had ever expired. I say only that I should require persuasion that non-compliance with a duty under the taxes legislation to make her own tax return then should be viewed as impliedly prohibiting or affecting the enforceability of her contract of employment. In these circumstances, I consider that the industrial tribunal and Employment Appeal Tribunal were wrong to regard Mrs Hall as involved in her employer's unlawful scheme in any way that disabled her under English law from enforcing her contract of employment, even if she had, by her present claim, been seeking to enforce it."