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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 >> Colen & Anor v Cebrian (UK) Ltd. [2003] EWCA Civ 1676 (20 November 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2003/1676.html Cite as: [2003] EWCA Civ 1676, [2004] ICR 568, [2004] IRLR 210 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
HIS HONOUR J. ALTMAN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WALLER
and
LORD JUSTICE CARNWATH
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COLEN & ANOR |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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CEBRIAN (UK) LIMITED |
Appellant |
____________________
James Laddie (instructed by Hacking Ashton solicitors) for the Appellant
Hearing dates : Tuesday 28th October 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Waller:
Introduction
Background facts
"In 1988 the commission system was changed again with Mr Colen and Mr Percival each taking 10% on their own sales. The purpose was to increase their own motivation"
"There has been very little evidence about the terms on which commission was chargeable by the Colens and the Percivals. The best evidence I have been shown is a letter in Spanish dated 25 February 1982 which appears to set out Mr Percival's terms in connection with Tellime. It speaks of Commission on sales.
In my judgment, all of these elements of the Counterclaim fail. I have heard evidence that post and packing did indeed include a profit element. The medal cases were indeed sold to Cebrian SL which company made a good profit on them. I accept Mr Craig's submission that the commission was on sales not profit. So far as I can tell, there was no provision for the commission to be payable only once the customer had paid for the goods. It is true that Manolo and Paco Cebrian complained that the Percivals and the Colens were making too much money out of the company, but never was any complaint made about the way in which commission was calculated until long after both the Percivals and the Colens had left. If the complaint were legitimate it would have been raised much earlier. This part of the Counterclaim fails."
"The Cebrians had very little involvement in the business in the UK, despite being majority shareholders and left Ann and myself, together with Peter and Lynne, to run the business. Our basic salaries increased, but we always retained a low basic salary, with commission of 10% being paid on all sales. For a short while, between 1984 and 1988, we changed the system of commission so that each family earned 5% of commission throughout the country. Prior to that, and again after October 1988, we each had 10% commission on the sales in our particular areas. Sales in the southern area were usually about 60-65% of the total sales. As always, our commission was paid to the family, i.e. Percivals and Colens.
"At the time of my dismissal I was earning a basic salary of £12,600 per annum and Ann was earning a basic salary of £4,680. As already explained we shared the commission in the most tax efficient way as advised to us and some parts of the commission were used to pay for private health insurance. We also participated in a fine wine scheme whereby wine was purchased by the company on our behalf, and later sold. I understand this avoided the payment of national insurance contributions. I do not know all the details, but my understanding is that this was a perfectly legitimate scheme recommended by SDB Group and implemented by Dean Statham."
"Throughout the whole of my employment with Cebrian (UK) Limited, Manolo and I always shared income. We both had low salaries from the start and at the very beginning we took a joint salary of about £5,000.00 together with commission. We always arranged it so that commission was paid to both of us with it being divided in a tax efficient way. We were both working, and we both had low salaries and it was reasonable for each of us to receive some commission. My brother Peter Percival and his wife Lynne similarly shared commission in a way appropriate to them and this was the way payments were always made. The Cebrians had no involvement in the way payments were made and, at least initially, were just happy that the company grew in its turnover and profitability."
"For the sake of completeness, those seven points which we had to decide were as follows:
(1) the length of Mrs Colen's service;
(2) the method of calculating the commission;
(3) what has been colloquially referred to as the "split" in respect of the commission, i.e. whether the commission was due to Mr Colen or Mrs Colen or both;
(4) the length of notice to which each of the applicants were entitled;
(5) one of illegality, and whether this contract was tainted with illegality as being a fraud on the Revenue;
(6) holiday pay;
(7) the compensatory award in the unfair dismissal case.
The parties agreed that we should initially decide items (3) and (5) which are inextricably intertwined; the decision on (5) depended on our factual findings in respect of (3). We have to make findings of fact as to who was entitled to the commission before we can decide whether there is an illegality such as to deprive Mr and Mrs Colen of their rights."
"Our findings of fact are substantially based upon the applicant's own evidence and their own pleaded cases. It is all very well parties expressing views in 2001, looking back to 1995, for example, but it is very easy for any party to forget or to put a gloss on matters later. Accordingly, it is helpful for a Tribunal to look at some of the original documents to assist us.
If one looks at page 3 of the bundle of documents, this is part of Mrs Colen's originating application, drawn up on her behalf by solicitors. That states, in paragraph 2:-
"The following were express terms of the contract of employment relating to remuneration and benefits:-
(b) ad hoc share in the commission of 10% of total sales of the Respondent which was payable to the applicant's husband.
Equally, on page 7 of the documents, Mr Colen says, in his originating application:-
"The following were express terms of the contract of employment relating to remuneration and benefits:-
(b) commission of 10% of total sales of the Respondents (to be shared on an ad hoc basis with the applicant's wife.
In paragraph 19 of Mr Colen's written witness statement he says:-
"As already explained, we shared the commission in the most tax efficient way as advised to us."
In paragraph 4 of Mrs Colen's written witness statement she states:-
"We always arranged it so that commission was paid to both of us with it being divided in a tax efficient way.
The position was confirmed by Mr Colen in his verbal testimony to the Tribunal. He stated that his duties were principally sales and buying. He confirmed that initially in the first two years his wife came round with him on his sales calls because his English language abilities were not very good. However, thereafter her main duties were administrative and clerical. She did, in fact, deal with mail order and telephone sales arising therefrom. For a period of approximately four years, after the birth of her daughter in 1984, Mrs Colen worked mainly at home and went into the office from time to time. Mr Colen further gave evidence that the split of commission would be different from time to time dependent upon the advice that he was receiving. He gave examples of perhaps a 7 to 3 split or a 6 to 4 split dependent upon how favourable it was at the particular time.
Neither of the applicants could give any evidence whatsoever as to the exact amount to which Mrs Colen would be entitled. Whereas, it was very clear indeed, that Mr Colen was entitled to 10% commission on his sales.
Of considerable importance also was the judgment of the High Court, at page 47 in the bundle of documents, where the judge stated:-
"In 1988 the commission system was changed again with Mr Colen and Mr Percival each taking 10% on their own sales.
Further, Mr Richard Bladen, chartered accountant, gave evidence and referred to contemporaneous documents, which referred to the commission due to Mr Colen, and made no mention of Mrs Colen.
The Tribunal accepts that factually the company did actually pay commission to Mrs Colen over many years."
"The burden of proof is upon the applicants to satisfy this Tribunal on the balance of probabilities that it is more likely than not that the applicant, Mrs Colen, was legally and contractually entitled to commission. They have singularly failed to do that. Indeed, we are satisfied, on the balance of probabilities, that it was more likely than not, that Mrs Colen was not legally or contractually entitled to commission as claimed.
The contemporaneous documents indicate to us the commission was due to Mr Colen. The High Court judge so found in his decision.
We appreciate that citizens have the right to organise their tax affairs in the most tax efficient way possible. However, we cannot envisage that a wage earner has the right to say to employers: "Please pay a proportion of my salary to someone else, who does not pay tax or who pays tax at a lower rate than I, in order that I should pay less tax to the Inland Revenue". That seems to us a classic case of tax evasion. The Revenue would no doubt lose billions of pounds a year from such a device. Where does such matters end? Would it be right for a wage earner to direct the top slice of his income to his wife, his daughter, his cousin, his friends? Clearly, not."
"The unanimous decision of this Tribunal is that these contracts of employment between the parties are tainted with illegality, as being a fraud on the Revenue, and accordingly, we must dismiss both cases."
"On any proper reading of the High Court judgment it is clear that the Appellants were jointly entitled to receive 10% commission, payable on all sales, until mid 1984. From mid-1984 to 1988 the Colens and the Percivals were each entitled to receive 5% commission, payable on all sales. However, post-1988 it was agreed that the Second Appellant (or for that matter Mrs Percival) would no longer be entitled to any form of commission; commission was payable solely to the First Respondent (and Mr Percival) on all sales made by him, the purpose of which arrangement was to increase his motivation."
"In those circumstances it seems to us that an examination of those facts would inevitably have driven a reasonable Tribunal to exactly the opposite conclusion to which this Tribunal was driven; which was that there was a clear contractual term for the entitlement that was argued for by the parties. A distinction is to be drawn, it seems to us, between the method of calculating commission which was to be 10% on Mr Colen's sales and the ultimate destination of such commission.
There is no difficulty, it seems to us, in an employee A being entitled to gross commission subject to a deduction in favour of employee B so as to leave him with only a net figure of commission. That seems to us to be the only interpretation there can be placed upon the evidence that was before the Employment Tribunal."
Issue for the Court of Appeal
ET's Decision
"There can be no doubt but that under English law a claim, whether in contract or in tort, may be defeated on the ground of illegality or, in the Latin phrase, ex turpi causa non oritur actio. The classic statement of the principle was by Lord Mansfield CJ in Holman v Johnson (1775) 1 Cowp 341, 343:"No court will lend its aid to a man who founds his cause of action upon an immoral or an illegal act. If, from the plaintiff's own stating or otherwise, the cause of action appears to arise ex turpi causa, or the transgression of a positive law of this country, there the court says he has no right to be assisted."Although we are not directly concerned with a claim in contract, it is helpful to consider the applicability of the defence of illegality to a contractual claim before considering the more directly relevant position of a claim in tort. In contract the decision of the House of Lords in Tinsley v Milligan [1994] 1 AC 340 has reaffirmed that the claimant cannot found his claim on an unlawful act. But when the claimant is not seeking to enforce an unlawful contract but founds his case on collateral rights acquired under the contract the court is neither bound nor entitled to reject the claim unless the illegality of necessity forms part of the claimant's case: p 377 per Lord Browne-Wilkinson.
In two types of case it is well established that illegality renders a contract unenforceable from the outset. One is where the contract is entered into with the intention of committing an illegal act; the other is where the contract is expressly or implicitly prohibited by statute: St John Shipping Corporation v Joseph Rank Limited [1957] 1 QB 267, 283 per Devlin J.
In a third category of cases a party may be prevented from enforcing it. That is where a contract, lawful when made, is illegally performed and the party knowingly participated in that illegal performance. In Ashmore, Benson, Pease & Co v A V Dawson Ltd [1973] 1 WLR 828, 833 Lord Denning MR said:
"Not only did [the plaintiff's transport manager] know of the illegality. He participated in it by sanctioning the loading of the vehicle with a load in excess of the regulations. That participation in the illegal performance of the contract debars [the plaintiff] from suing [the defendant] on it or suing [the defendant] for negligence."So too Scarman LJ, at p 836:
"But knowledge by itself is not ... enough. There must be knowledge plus participation ... For these reasons I think the performance was illegal ..."."
"In Coral Leisure Group Ltd v Barnet [1981] ICR 503, 508 the Employment Appeal Tribunal asked itself the question whether any taint of illegality affecting part of a contract necessarily rendered the whole contract unenforceable by a party who knew of the illegality. In the case of a contract not for an illegal purpose or prohibited by statute the appeal tribunal answered that question in the negative, holding that the fact that the employee in the course of his employment committed an unlawful act did not prevent him from asserting thereafter his contract of employment against his employer.
In Newland v Simons & Willer (Hairdressers) Ltd [1981] ICR 521 the question was whether an employee could complain of unfair dismissal in circumstances where the tribunal had held that the employee knew or ought to have known that her employer had failed to pay tax and national insurance contributions in respect of her wages. The majority of the Employment Appeal Tribunal were of the view that, where both employer and employee knowingly commit an illegality by way of a fraud on the revenue in the payment and receipt of the employee's remuneration under a contract of employment, the contract was turned into one prohibited by statute or common law and the employee was precluded from enforcing any employment rights which she might otherwise have against the employer. The majority thought the essential question to be: "Has the employee knowingly been a party to a deception on the revenue?": see p 531. Further, May J said, at p 533:
"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.""
Lord Justice Carnwath:
a) What was the contract?
b) Did it involve illegality?
c) If so, how does this affect the jurisdiction of the Employment Tribunal?
"it was agreed that (Mrs Colen)… would no longer be entitled to any form of commission. Commission was payable solely to (Mr Colen)… and all sales made by him, the purpose of which arrangement was to increase his motivation".
"it was all four of us worked in the business, and it was never the case that it was my commission and Peter's commission, although that was the way it was often referred to, but rather was just the basis on which we were all paid."
"perhaps a 7 to 3 split or a 6 to 4 split dependent upon how favourable it was at a particular time". (para 11).
"Generally it seems that the commission of a legal wrong or acting otherwise contrary to public policy in the course of performing a contract does not at common law affect enforcement."
"The fact that a party has in the course of performing a contract committed an unlawful or immoral act will not by itself prevent him from further enforcing that contract unless the contract as entered into with the purpose of doing that unlawful or immoral act or the contract itself (as opposed to the mode of his performance) is prohibited by law."
"It cannot be right that the Tribunal should have a stab at it on the basis of what the applicant earned over the last 12 weeks of her employment."
"provided for a share of the commission in accordance with the terms of the contracts as set out in the originating applications."
"That the contracts of employment were not tainted by illegality and provided for commission of 10% to be paid to Mr and Mrs Colen jointly."
Peter Gibson L.J.: