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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Royal Mail Group Plc v. Shotton [2004] UKEAT 0345_04_0312 (3 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2004/0345_04_0312.html Cite as: [2004] UKEAT 345_4_312, [2004] UKEAT 0345_04_0312 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE MCMULLEN QC
MR P R A JACQUES CBE
MRS M V McARTHUR
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR PETER EDWARDS (Of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Hammonds Solicitors 2 Park Lane Leeds LS3 1ES |
For the Respondent | MS SOPHIE BUCKLEY (Of Counsel) Instructed by: The University of Northumbria Student Law Office Northumberland Road Newcastle upon Tyne NE1 8ST |
(1) ET's decision that it was reasonable for the Claimant to present a claim 5 months after date of knowledge was not perverse. Marley UK Ltd v Anderson [1994] ICR 295 and London Underground Limited v Noel [1999] IRLR 622 (CA) applied.
(2) A failure to pay the Claimant at premium time rate for working during rest breaks constituted an unlawful deduction from what is properly payable as wages under the Claimant's contract, contrary to ERA 1996 Part II.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
Introduction
The issues
The legislation
13 Right not to suffer unauthorised deductions
(1) An employer shall not make a deduction from wages of a worker employed by him unless –
(a) the deduction is required or authorised to be made by virtue of a statutory provision or a relevant provision of the worker's contract,
(3) Where the total amount of wages paid on any occasion by an employer to a worker employed by him is less than the total amount of the wages properly payable by him to the worker on that occasion (after deductions), the amount of the deficiency shall be treated for the purposes of this Part as a deduction made by the employer from the worker's wages on that occasion."
27 Meaning of "wages" etc
(1) In this Part "wages", in relation to a worker, means any sums payable to the worker in connection with his employment, including –
(a) any fee, bonus, commission, holiday under his contract or otherwise,"
"23 Complaints to [employment tribunals]
(4) Where the [employment tribunal] is satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable for a complaint under this section to be presented before the end of the relevant period of three months, the tribunal may consider the complaint if it is presented within such further period as the tribunal considers reasonable."
The facts
"(b) Throughout his employment, the applicant has been contractually entitled to a fixed basic hourly rate of pay which has increased on an annual basis. Overtime may be available and at all relevant times that has been payable at the rate of time and a half irrespective of the day of the week and the length of the overtime: it was common ground between us that there has never been a minimum period of time before which there would arise the entitlement either to any payment at all or to a premium rate. Included in the applicant's hours of work has always been a paid meal break of certain duration and indeed times. However, as a result of the volume of work and on occasions the need to cover an absent colleague, it was common practice within the delivery office for the applicant (and many of his colleagues) to be asked and to agree to work part of if not through the meal break. On such frequent occasions, the applicant (and others) did. not take their breaks at some later time but were offered the choice of either leaving work at the normal time with payments for overtime (at time and a half). for the relevant part of the meal break or time off in lieu which would usually mean leaving work early to the same extent as the time given up but at particularly busy times might mean arriving late or leaving early on the following day. Occasionally, again because of the demands upon services, a choice might not be offered: on those occasions, overtime payment had to be taken. It may very well be that the applicant usually, perhaps even invariably, chose and was allowed to take time off work on the same or the following day but that was his preference.
(c) On 15 May 2000, as a result of extensive negotiations between the respondent and the Communication Workers' Union, there came into effect in relation to all employees including the applicant revised terms and conditions contained in a national agreement called the Way Forward Agreement together with a local agreement known as Fit to Deliver. These terms an conditions were placed before us at A8-70 but it was common ground that the only provision of importance in this case was at A32. It related to the duration of paid meal breaks. It sought to harmonise that on a national basis and it is likely that, so far as the applicant was concerned, it resulted in an increase in time off. It was common ground before us that as from 15 May 2000 all relevant employees (including the applicant) who worked either a six-day or a five-day week were entitled to a paid meal break of 40 minutes Monday to Friday and 30 minutes on Saturdays. The revision had no bearing or effect upon the practice whereby the applicant and others agreed to work at least part of their meal breaks in return for an early finish or overtime payments at premium rate.
"….On the evidence placed before us, we were unable to accept this argument. If the applicant had known that he was being required each day to work 10 minutes of his meal break, he would have had a choice (in addition to the option of refusal) to leave work 10 minutes early or to be paid overtime. Even if he would have chosen the former, as Mr Springer contended, on every occasion on which he left work at 12.15 pm his working day should in fact have finished at 12.05 pm. Accordingly, he did not simply lose 10 minutes relaxation time: he worked 10 minutes longer than ought to have been the case and further than the period in respect of which he was paid. In effect, during every week in which he attended work in that period of about 2.5 years, he worked 41 hours when he was paid for 40 hours."
The Respondent's case
The Applicant's case
The legal principles
"As for the tribunal's invocation in paragraph 12 of its decision of good industrial relations practice, the like considerations if valid would have led to the conclusion that so long as an employer's internal appeals procedure has not been exhausted, it is reasonably impracticable for an employee to present a complaint. But that is not the law, this notwithstanding that there have been powerful calls over the years for a reconsideration of the legislative provisions (see MacDonald v South Cambridgeshire RDC [1973] IRLR 308 at 309, 19, and Bodha [1982] ICR at p.205). The fact remains that the statutory test continues to be that of reasonable practicability, in contrast to the wider test of whether it is just and equitable to extend time to be found in the discrimination legislation (s.76(6) Sex Discrimination Act 1975, s.68(c) Race Relations Act 1976 and para.3(2) Sch. 3 Disability Discrimination Act 1995).
I would accept that if the test had been one of reasonableness, as distinct from reasonable practicability, the employee would be entitled to succeed. The present case seems to be to be a very hard one and I have sympathy for the employee. But time limits in employment cases are, in general, strictly enforced, and in reality the tribunal had not found a single fact which showed that it was not feasible for the employee to complain to the tribunal before 9 July 1997."
"In our judgment, the reasons given by the industrial tribunal for its decision on this point disclose an error o law which led the tribunal to concentrate on the length of the delay to the exclusion f a proper consideration of all the relevant circumstances in which that delay occurred. We accept the submission made on behalf of the employee that the error of law took the form of a misdirection in accepting the employers' submission that the decision in James W Cook & Co (Wivenhoe) Ltd v Tipper [1990] ICR 716 laid down any time limits as to what should and should not be regarded as a reasonable period. That decision of the Court of Appeal did not lay down any time limits. The correct position is that if the tribunal is satisfied, as it was here, that it was not reasonably practicable for the complaint to be presented before the end of the three months, the tribunal was then free to consider, having regard to all the relevant facts of the particular case whether the complaint was presented "within such further period as the tribunal considers reasonable""
Conclusions
Time limits
Deduction from wages
Quantification