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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Battista v. Jedson Ltd & Anor [2002] UKEAT 1182_01_1803 (18 March 2002) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2002/1182_01_1803.html Cite as: [2002] UKEAT 1182_01_1803, [2002] UKEAT 1182_1_1803 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
MS J DRAKE
MR B V FITZGERALD MBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
PRELIMINARY HEARING
For the Appellant | Mr Perera (Representative) 25 Astley House Row Cross Street London SE1 5HU |
MR JUSTICE LINDSAY (PRESIDENT)
The IT3 said:
"The company [Jedson Ltd] agreed to sell the restaurant to the Applicant for £15,000. The Applicant insisted that the restaurant remained open whilst the transaction went through even though this would mean that further losses were incurred. It was therefore agreed that completion should take place within one month failing which the purchase price would be increased by £1,000 for each month that completion was delayed. The Applicant agreed to these terms."
"The Applicant was not employed by either or both of the Respondents and his claim fails. The Originating Application is accordingly dismissed."
" Once it was accepted by the Second Respondent that the Appellant was previously in paid employment, (the fact that he was self-employed is immaterial) as a gardener, the burden was on the Respondents to show that the nature of the relationship ceased and a new relationship was created."
But there is no such principle in law. One cannot infer that because Mr Nazif had previously used Mr Battista as a self-employed gardener that in the restaurant business there was some onus on the Respondents, or either of them, to show that he was not an employee. There is no such principle of law. Mr Battista criticised the Employment Tribunal's reception of the well known case, Ready Mix Concrete Ltd [1968] 1 All ER 433. We would readily accept that that case is usually used to distinguish between an employee with a contract of service on the one hand and a self-employed person and a contract for services on the other. But it cannot be said to be wholly inappropriate in testing for employment as against partnership. Thus, as to the question of whether the worker has undertaken to provide his own work in return for remuneration, well, here there were no wages paid to Mr Battista for over one hundred and five weeks. There were no wages, it would seem, even claimed by Mr Battista over one hundred and five weeks. Mr Battista and the company and Mr Nazif were held to have understood that the Applicant would run the restaurant and be the chef, and that the two Respondents would provide the finance. That could well lead to an implied promise that profits, if any, were to be shared equally and there is no finding as to any promise of remuneration of any other type. That type of promise of remuneration would, of course, be consistent with partnership.
"Mr Ersin Nazif gave oral evidence to the Tribunal on behalf of himself and the First Respondent. Oral evidence was given by the Applicant, mainly through his son who was his interpreter. The Tribunal also received evidence, bundles of documents from both the Applicant and the Respondents."
A little later in their paragraph 7, the Tribunal says:
"(1) For some years the Applicant had worked as the Second Respondent's gardener but he had been undergoing training as a chef and in the summer of 1998 the Applicant and the Second Respondent agreed to open a restaurant together. Unfortunately, the basis of their business relationship was never formally addressed or reduced to writing but it was clearly understood between them that the Second Respondent would provide the finance and the Applicant would run the restaurant and be the chef.
(2) On 18 June 1999, the First Respondent was incorporated as a trading vehicle for the restaurant and to hold the lease. The Second Respondent was the sole director and shareholder.
(3) The Applicant found suitable premises for the restaurant and in due course the First Respondent took a lease of restaurant premises with effect from 24 June 1999 at 257, London Road, Mitcham. The Second Respondent stood as surety and he obtained a loan of £20,000, secured on his own home, to meet the expenses of starting the restaurant. The Applicant refurbished the premises largely, if not entirely, on his own and it opened on 14 February 2000. It was called "Antonio Di Calabria" which was a name chosen by the Applicant.
(4) Sadly, the restaurant was a financial failure and it incurred substantial losses which were met by the Second Respondent. "
A little later they say:
"(5) The Applicant worked in the business for 105 weeks, which included the business of refurbishment and he received no wages. He purchased with his own funds various items of equipment at a cost of well over £2,000, which were used in the restaurant."
And a little later, they said:
"(6) ……….On the other hand, the Applicant had exclusive control over all aspects of the running of the restaurant, including the hiring of staff, the purchase of food and the hours of opening, within the limitations of the Restaurant Licence.
(7) The Applicant's name was not shown by him on the payroll and he never made any claim for the payment of wages. Nor did he ever threaten to cease running the restaurant if wages were not paid to him."
"a) On behalf of the Respondents, Mr Herbert submitted that the Applicant could not at any time have been an employee of either or both of the Respondents. Whilst the names of those employed at the restaurant were shown on the payroll, the Applicant's name did not appear. If the Applicant had been an employee, it would have been in his own interest to have put his name on the payroll but he did not do so and he never claimed wages. Instead, the Applicant relied on a loan to enable him to survive financially for the 105 weeks that he was working in the business.
b) Mr Herbert submitted that the reality was that the parties were effectively in an equal partnership, the Respondents contributing the finance and the Applicant contributing his work and expertise in running the restaurant. The Applicant was in sole charge and control of the business and there was no element of supervision by either of the Respondents.
c) Mr Herbert submitted that it is beyond belief that the Applicant would have been prepared to work in the restaurant for 105 weeks without wages if he had been an employee and entitled to be paid wages."
"The Tribunal agrees with Mr Herbert's submissions on behalf of the Respondents and the Applicant was not an employee of either or both of the Respondents. The relationship between the Applicant and the Respondents was much more in tune with a partnership than that of an employer and an employee."
We do not see that the Employment Tribunal misdirected itself in law and, of course, we must emphasise that it is only errors of law with which we can deal.