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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 >> Deakin & Ors v Kuehne & Anor [2012] EWCA Civ 22 (27 January 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2012/22.html Cite as: [2012] EWCA Civ 22 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE EMPLOYMENT APPEAL TRIBUNAL
His Honour Judge Serota Q C
(UKEAT/0030/11/RN, BAILII: 2011] UKEAT 0030_11_1705)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
and
LORD JUSTICE McFARLANE
____________________
COLIN DEAKIN and Others |
Appellants |
|
- and - |
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KUEHNE & NAGEL DRINKS LOGISTICS LIMITED |
Respondent |
____________________
Mr Keith Bryant (instructed by Thomas Eggar LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 25 November 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Elias :
"c) Breaks From Work
Drivers will at all times comply with all legal requirements contained in the Drivers' Hours Regulations with particular reference to breaks and maximum driving hours.
Where an operator's day/shift is planned to be up to six hours there will be no compulsory break planned into the shift.
Where an operator's day/shift is planned to be between 6 and 9 hours an unpaid break of thirty minutes will be planned into the day/shift.
Where the day/shift is planned to be in excess of 9 hours the unpaid break time will be 45 minutes.
Where the day/shift consists of two or more trips the break will, where possible and practicable, be planned between trips at the distribution centre.
Where an operator's day/shift is planned to consist of one trip only it is deemed the responsibility of that individual operator to ensure that break time of 30 or 45 minutes as appropriate is taken within the working day.
All break time will be taken account of and deducted when calculating actual hours worked."
"The claimants' daily routine is that on arrival at work they receive a manifest that includes the planned duration of the working schedule and specifies the planned breaks. The Company's system automatically allocates set times for the journeys and for the various stops at customer outlets or storage facilities …The system allows either for there to be no break (shifts of under 6 hours) or for timed breaks (for shifts that exceed 6 hours). The system automatically provides a print out showing specific times for each activity; it does not split up the breaks or apportion them …
Having completed one's work a driver would take his record to a de-briefing clerk where a record is be made of the actual time spent working. It was accepted by all concerned that the plan was only a guide and the timed journeys, calls and break at the end of 6 hours is not a hard and fast stipulation. It would not be possible to so provide as the drivers are to an extent subject to the whims of traffic, customers and any number of delays whereas the manifest would appear on the face of it to be proscriptive….
The respondent has adopted a practice of calculating the duration of a shift, time spent working and therefore payment not on the planned hours under the manifest or the actual worked hours but on what it calls "attended hours". This is not defined in N2. By "Attended hours" the respondent refers to the time that is spent working plus time spent on break periods. It follows from this practice that the attended hours on which payment is calculated includes non-working time for which no payment is due. The respondent calculates the working day by reference to the attended hours; in establishing whether or not a shift is of 6 hours, 9 hours or some other duration it will include the unpaid break periods in calculating the length of day "attended"."
The judgments below.
"Drivers are not paid for adhering to a plan or guide which in practice can rarely be delivered as all parties conceded."
"[The agreement] was the only written documentation concerning these provisions relating to break periods and payment. That agreement provided that unworked hours, the rest break periods, should not be taken into account when calculating pay. Clearly the 30 minutes break taken during the 9 hours "attended" was being taken into account by the respondent and served to reduce the claimant's pay on the assumption that after 9 hours attended work the claimant had an additional 15 minute unpaid break. The respondent should have measured the actual time worked and only required 45 minutes total break when the total number of worked hours, excluding break periods, exceeded to 9 hours. That would be in accordance with the strict application of [the agreement] and makes more sense in the context of the working time directive, drivers' hour's regulations and health and safety requirements. It does not make sense to impose an additional break for rest purposes on the basis in part of time already spent not working but resting."
Discussion.
Issue 1: Can the employer deduct planned breaks even if not actually taken?
Issue 2: When is the 45 minute break triggered?
Lord Justice McFarlane:
Lord Justice Ward: