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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Davies v Neath Port Talbot County Borough Council [1999] UKEAT 449_97_1509 (15 September 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/1999/449_97_1509.html Cite as: [1999] ICR 1132, [1999] UKEAT 449_97_1509, [1999] IRLR 769 |
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At the Tribunal | |
On 15 July 1998 | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE MORISON (P)
MR J R CROSBY
MR E HAMMOND OBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised
For the Appellant | MR A FREER Legal Department GMB 22-24 Worple Road London SW19 4DD |
For the Respondents | MR J MIDDLEBURGH (of Counsel) The Solicitor Neath Port Talbot County Borough Council Port Talbot Civic Centre Port Talbot SA13 1PJ MR D ANDERSON AMICUS CURIAE |
MR JUSTICE MORISON: The Appellant, Mrs Davies, appeals against the decision of an Industrial Tribunal sitting at Cardiff, that she had received her proper entitlement to compensation pay by virtue of section 168 of the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 ["the Act"], and that Article 119 of the EEC Treaty did not entitle her to be paid as if she were a full-time worker.
"The training which she received was not work for her employers; nor even preparation for work for her employers. It was training for her to be a trade union representative. It seems to us that the question whether it was work has to be decided in the light of the facts of a particular case."
"We doubt that this Council or any employer will be providing courses for shop stewards. At the hearing the question was confined to Health & Safety training which may, of course, be the subject of in-house training. We think there is an essential difference between an employee, during working hours, doing her employer's bidding and attending for training. Under her contract of employment she would be entitled to be paid the proper rate for all hours worked. Work in this context would mean doing the bidding of her employer during her employed hours. Mrs Davies was not doing the bidding of her employer. She attended the GMB course of her own volition. Her employers did not send her. Indeed, they had to be persuaded to give her permission at all. The indications are that permission was only granted because of the statutory provision. In our view she would be entitled to be paid if she was called to a meeting or conference in working hours to discuss any matter at the instance of her employer. It does not follow that she is entitled to be paid merely because her Union chooses to call a conference or run a course to discuss a similar matter."
1. Whether the decision in Nazir, that attendance at union conference was not 'work' under Article 119, was correctly decided in the light of Botel and Kuratorium Fur Dialyse Und Nierentransplantation v Lewark [1996] IRLR 637, (though only Botel was cited to the Employment Appeal Tribunal in that case).
2. Whether the tribunal failed to apply correctly the decision in Botel as applied in Lewark, in particular in failing to consider whether or not time spent on Union courses by the Appellant was by reason of the existence of an employment relationship.
"168
(1) An employer shall permit an employee of his who is an official of an independent trade union recognised by the employer to take time off during his working hours for the purpose of carrying out any duties of his, as such an official, concerned with –
…
(b) the performance on behalf of employees of the employer of functions related to or connected with matters falling within that provision which the employer has agreed may be so performed by the trade union.
(2) He shall also permit such an employee to take time off during his working hours for the purpose of undergoing training in aspects of industrial relations –
(a) relevant to the carrying out of such duties as are mentioned in subsection (1), and(b) approved by the Trades Union Congress or by the independent trade union of which he is an official.
…
169
(1) An employer who permits an employee to take time off under section 168 shall pay him for the time taken off pursuant to permission.
(2) Where the employee's remuneration for the work he would ordinarily have been doing during that time does not vary with the amount of work done, he shall be paid as if he had worked at that work for the whole of that time.
(3) Where the employee's remuneration for the work he would ordinarily have been doing during that time varies with the amount of work done, he shall be paid an amount calculated by reference to the average hourly earnings for that work.
…
170
(1) An employer shall permit an employee of his who is a member of an independent trade union recognised by the employer in respect of that description of employee to take time off during his working hours for the purpose of taking part in –
(a) any activities of the union, and(b) any activities in relation to which the employee is acting as a representative of the union.
…"
"Each Member State shall during the first stage ensure and subsequently maintain the application of the principle that men and women should receive equal pay for equal work.
For the purpose of this Article, "pay" means the ordinary basic or minimum wage or salary and any other consideration, whether in cash or in kind, which the worker receives, directly or indirectly, in respect of his employment from his employer.
Equal pay without discrimination based on sex means:
(a) that pay for the same work at piece rates shall be calculated on the basis of the same unit of measurement;(b) that pay for work at time rates shall be the same for the same job."
"It is therefore obvious that unless there is work, and pay for that work, Article 119 has no operation…the word 'pay' has been given a very wide meaning indeed, because employers frequently consider it in their interests to promote goodwill, enthusiasm and so on by giving bonuses, benefits in kind and indeed promises of benefits in the future. Nonetheless, it seems to us that in the present case we are obliged to enquire what the appellants were paying for, and in particular whether what Ms Nazir was engaged in can conceivably be described as 'work' while she was attending the union annual conference…
…on the basis of the plain wording of Article 119, we should have been disposed to say that it was perfectly plain that the pay which Ms Nazir received in respect of her attendance at the Union's annual conference was not payment for her labours at the conference at all; the pay was in respect of her past, probably also her future work for the appellants."
"Although compensation such as that at issue in the main proceedings does not, as such, arise from the contract of employment, it is nevertheless paid by the employer by virtue of legislative provisions and by reason of the existence of an employment relationship with an employee. In fact, the members of Staff Committees must of necessity enjoy the status of employees of the undertaking and they are obliged to look after the interests of the workforce, thus encouraging the existence of a harmonious working relationship within and in the general interests of the undertaking."