BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> P Miles v. Linkage Community Trust Limited [2008] UKEAT 0618_07_1003 (10 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2008/0618_07_1003.html Cite as: [2008] UKEAT 618_7_1003, [2008] IRLR 602, [2008] UKEAT 0618_07_1003 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
MR D NORMAN
MISS S M WILSON CBE
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
For the Appellant | MR O SEGAL (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Thompsons Solicitors City Gates East Toll House Hill Nottingham NG1 5FS |
For the Respondent | Mr C BOURNE (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Bridge McFarland Solicitors 3-9 Tentercroft Street Lincoln LN5 7DB |
SUMMARY
Working Time Regulations
Under WTR Reg 30(4), an Employment Tribunal did not err when it upheld the Claimant's case for breach of Reg 24 on loss of compensatory time yet awarded no compensation. It considered relevant factors and the employer's default. The period of time of the default runs from the date of the actual refusal of the employer to permit the exercise of the right, and does not begin on the day the employee takes up employment on that working pattern.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE McMULLEN QC
Introduction
The legislation
"Daily rest
10. (1) An adult worker is entitled to a rest period of not less than eleven consecutive hours in each 24-hour period during which he works for his employer.
21. Subject to regulation 24, regulations 6(1), (2) and (7), 10(1), 11(1) and (2) and 12(1) do not apply in relation to a worker -
(c) where the worker's activities involve the need for continuity of service or production, as may be the case in relation to -
(i) services relating to the reception, treatment or care provided by hospitals or similar establishments, residential institutions and prisons;
Compensatory rest
24. Where the application of any provision of these Regulations is excluded by regulation 21 … and a worker is accordingly required by his employer to work during a period which would otherwise be a rest period or rest break -
(a) his employer shall wherever possible allow him to take an equivalent period of compensatory rest, and
(b) in exceptional cases in which it is not possible, for objective reasons, to grant such a period of rest, his employer shall afford him such protection as may be appropriate in order to safeguard the worker's health and safety.
Remedies
30. - (1) A worker may present a complaint to an employment tribunal that his employer -
(a) has refused to permit him to exercise any right he has under -
(i) regulation 10(1) …; or
(ii) regulation 24, in so far as it applies where regulation 10(1) … is modified or excluded…
(2) An employment tribunal shall not consider a complaint under this regulation unless it is presented -
(a) before the end of the period of three months …beginning with the date on which it is alleged that the exercise of the right should have been permitted (or in the case of a rest period or leave extending over more than one day, the date on which it should have been permitted to begin) or, as the case may be, the payment should have been made;
(b) within such further period as the tribunal considers reasonable in a case where it is satisfied that it was not reasonably practicable for the complaint to be presented before the end of that period of three or, as the case may be, six months.
(3) Where an employment tribunal finds a complaint under paragraph (1)(a) well-founded, the tribunal -
(a) shall make a declaration to that effect, and
(b) may make an award of compensation to be paid by the employer to the worker.
(4) The amount of the compensation shall be such as the tribunal considers just and equitable in all the circumstances having regard to -
(a) the employer's default in refusing to permit the worker to exercise his right, and
(b) any loss sustained by the worker which is attributable to the matters complained of.
"Article 3, Daily Rest: Member states should take the measures necessary to ensure that every worker is entitled to a minimum daily rest period of 11 consecutive hours per 24 hour period."
The facts
"3.3 The Claimant was employed as a Houseparent and therefore worked in accordance with the Respondent's residential shift pattern which is calculated by reference to a 12 month cycle. The Claimant's contract of employment refers to the following shift pattern:
Week 1
Monday: 9:00am to 11:00pm with break of 2 hours (plus sleep-in)
Tuesday: 7.30am to 11:00pm with break of 2 hours (plus sleep-in)
Wednesday: 7.30 am to 9.30am
Thursday: Off
Friday: 9.00am to 11:00pm with break of 2 hours (plus sleep-in)
Saturday: 8.00am to 11.00pm with break of 2 hours (plus sleep-in)
Sunday: 8.00am to 11.00pm with break of 2 hours (plus sleep-in)
Week 2
Monday: 7.30am to 9.30am
Tuesday: Off
Wednesday: 7.30am to 11.00pm with break of 2 hours (plus sleep-in)
Thursday: 7.30am to 11.00pm with break of 2 hours (plus sleep-in)
Friday: 7.30am to 9.30am
Saturday: Off
Sunday: Off"
"5.1 Mr Midgley asked us to take account of the fact that the employer's default certainly, he says, began from 31 May 2006. We are of the view that we have to find a different date for when the default began. By reference to paragraph 5.3 of our previous judgment where we found that a letter dated 7 April 2006 was in fact what we might call "the initiatory grievance" which brought into play his right to complain in relation to the Working Time Regulations. That default, therefore, continued until he left the Respondent's employment on 1 January 2007, a period of some 8 months.
5.2 However, we believe we should also take in account the degree of default. We have the situation here where this shift pattern was in place for perhaps some years prior to it becoming an issue in these proceedings. As we have set out in our previous judgment our findings in relation to the shift system, we do not repeat them here. However, we do conclude from those findings that there was no culpable default on the part of the employer. It is apparent that from the point of Mr Miles' grievance throughout that his main thrust was, in fact, not being paid for those hours in which his claim has been unsuccessful. However, from an early time he did have the assistance of an experienced trade union representative. The employers themselves took legal advice. None of them appeared to have raised this issue of the failure to give compensatory rest and it really only emerged when this case came to this Tribunal. Our previous judgment will demonstrate, we hope, the complexity of these Regulations and frankly we do not criticise any employer who was not able to interpret them and apply them accurately. There is no doubt from our previous findings that there was no lack of faith or goodwill on the part of the employer here. We, therefore, are of the view that there was not a culpable employer, as it were, seeking to do down or undermine Mr Miles, or indeed his colleagues in this respect."
On that basis no money was forthcoming at the end of this long endeavour of the Claimant and his trade union.
The Claimant's case
The Respondent's case
The legal principles
"34. As we have said, there are within Part III of WTR various exemptions, qualified and unqualified, which modify the obligation under Reg 12(1); but no such provision was relied on before the Tribunal. Since it is plain that by the very method of work imposed on her, OHM refused to allow her to exercise her right to rest breaks, the appeal on this ground must be allowed, and a declaration made that Mrs MacCartney in relation to rest breaks is well founded.
61. Again we record that it was not argued below that OHM's obligation under reg 10 was excluded or modified by any provision of Part III of the WTR. Accordingly, the Tribunal's decision as to rest periods cannot stand, and there will be substituted a decision that Mrs MacCartney's claim under Regulation 10(1) of the WTR is well founded. The question of remedy will be remitted to the Tribunal."
"15.
On this part of the case we have been persuaded that the Tribunal misdirected itself and took too narrow a view of the scope of its power to award compensation for what it found to be an unreasonable infringement by the employer of the Applicant's rights under section 168. Section 172, the material parts of which were accurately set out by the tribunal at the beginning of the passage just quoted, empowers the tribunal to make an award of compensation in such a case and requires it to have regard not only to 'any loss sustained by the employee' but also to the employer's default in failing to permit him to take time off. This formulation also appears elsewhere in the employment legislation in the same or closely similar terms, in provisions for compensation for such matters as refusal to permit time off for public duties, to care for dependants, to carry out duties as an occupational pension scheme trustee, and so forth (cf ss. 51, 57B, 60 Employment Rights Act 1996); and is materially different from that of a provision such as s.123 of the Employment Rights Act 1996, where the 'compensatory award' is directed to be such amount as the tribunal considers just and equitable having regard simply to the loss sustained. The difference was accurately pointed up in the recent decision of the EAT in Hardy v Polk (Leeds) Ltd [2004] IRLR 420 where at paragraph 34.3 of the judgment Burton P said, in relation to section 123:
'The statute does not say that the award will be such an amount as the tribunal considers just and equitable by reference to the conduct of the employer.'
The statute before us of course does just that.
16.
That s. 172 also requires the tribunal to have regard to any loss the employee can show he has suffered also differentiates it from the provisions for group protective awards under s.189 of the 1992 Act on failure to consult about collective redundancies, where there is no mention of compensation for loss at all (cf Susie Radin Ltd v GMB and others [2004] IRLR 400, per Peter Gibson LJ at paragraphs 34, 45), but does not mean that under s.172 some financial loss or other special injury is the only thing to which regard is to be had in assessing compensation as the tribunal in the present case appear to have assumed."
Discussion and conclusions
Result