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United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Wilson (t/a Reds) v. Lamb [2007] UKEAT 0106_07_1206 (12 June 2007) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2007/0106_07_1206.html Cite as: [2007] UKEAT 106_7_1206, [2007] UKEAT 0106_07_1206 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
MS V BRANNEY
MR T MOTTURE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Transcript of Proceedings
For the Appellant | Mr Rixon (Representative) |
For the Respondent | Neither present nor represented |
SUMMARY
Contract of employment – Incorporation into contract / Apprenticeship
Modern apprenticeship agreement. Incorporation of term as to minimum pay rate. Breach. Affirmation of contract – waiver. Novation.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE PETER CLARK
The facts
"Dear Salon Manager
Changes to Learner wages
The Learning Skills Council (LSC) have informed all training providers in a letter dated 27th June 2005, that from the 1st August 2005 all employed learners wages must be at least £80 per week (this wage includes travel payments).
We apologise for the very short notice, but having received the instruction we wanted to seek clarification about the full implications before sending out this letter. The minimum wage is £3 per hour for 16 to 17 year olds not in training.
This is the first rise in Learner wages for a number of years, and we hope the result will be continued growing professionalism with the industry, making it more attractive to the new generation of hairdressers entering this age.
Trainees with your salon, which this applies to, are:
Should you require any further information, please do not hesitate to contact me at the address below."
"This confirms that the above named parties have entered into a training contract. Whereby ……………………………………………. will pay a minimum wage of £80 per week. (All apprentices above the age of 19 are entitled to the National Minimum Wage after their first year of apprenticeship).
If either partners of the contract is unhappy with the terms or placement, a week's notice should be provided for termination."
"Dear Mrs Wilson
I was in your employment during my modern apprenticeship doing ladies hairstyling from July 2004 until 19 August 2006. During this time I received £45 per week for the first year and then £65 in my second year, as you were fully aware as from the 1st August 2005 you had to pay me no less than £80 per week as you were notified in writing from Saks Training of Excellence College, which you have certainly ignored as I was still only receiving £65 per week.
This is the reason I am drafting this letter to give you the opportunity to repay £795 back monies and £160 two weeks wages owed to me which I have not yet received. Let me state you only have 28 days to make this payment or a matter will certainly proceed onto the tribunal courts."
The claim
The Tribunal decision.
(1) By regulation 12(3)(b) of the National Minimum Wage Regulations 1999, the requirement on employers to pay the MMW did not apply to this MAA,
(2) However, the direction from the LSC that from 1 August 2005 the minimum weekly wage should be £80 had, if not statutory authority for such increase, contractual force in that the MAA was subject to the rates set by the LSC,
(3) By refusing to sign the new form of contract provided by SACS, the Respondent was unilaterally imposing new terms and conditions outside the MAA. That the Claimant continued to work at the pre-1st August 2005 rate of £65 per week did not amount to "her acquiescence to a variation in the contract" but rather her acceptance that the old contract had come to an end and a new one was entered in to. That was supported by the fact that the training contract was a tripartite agreement and SACS did not agree to a rate less than £80 per week. In these circumstances the MAA came to an end of 1 August 2005 and the Claimant and the Respondent, but not the inferred SACS, entered into a new separate contract, which was not an MAA, but was a contract of employment to which the NMW applied.
(4) Consequently the Claimant was entitled to claim unauthorised deductions from wages, not in the amount claimed, £15 per week from 1 August 2005, but at the NMW rate, namely £3 per hour from 1 August to 25 November 2005 and thereafter at the rate of £4.25 per hour.
(5) Not only was the Claimant entitled to succeed as to those higher rates of pay in her wages act claim, but further, she had raised a grievance with which the Respondent had failed to deal with, and thus the wages act award was uplifted by 25% under section 31 of the 2002 Act.
The appeal
Analysis
"The fact that the Claimant continued for a further 11 months after this [the imposition of new terms and conditions by the Respondent] was not in my view her acquiescence to a variation in the contract but rather her acceptance that the old contract had come to an end and a new one was entered into."
We shall come to the new contract shortly, but first the question of acquiescence by the Claimant.
Conclusion