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LPC Law Notes Employment Law Notes

Recruitment Issues And Employment Contracts Notes

Updated Recruitment Issues And Employment Contracts Notes

Employment Law Notes

Employment Law

Approximately 388 pages

A collection of the best LPC Employment notes the director of Oxbridge Notes (a former Oxford law graduate) could find in 2014 after combing through seventeen LPC samples from outstanding students with the highest results in England and carefully evaluating each on accuracy, formatting, logical structure, spelling/grammar, conciseness and "wow-factor". In short these are what we believe to be the strongest set of Employment Law notes available in the UK this year. This collection of notes is full...

The following is a more accessible plain text extract of the PDF sample above, taken from our Employment Law Notes. Due to the challenges of extracting text from PDFs, it will have odd formatting:

Recruitment issues and employment relations

‘Worker’ or ‘Employee’ Definition

Worker is employed under a ‘contract for services’

Worker may be regarded as ‘carrying on a business’ (Byrne Brothers (Formwork) Ltd 2002)

Employees entitled to:

  • Redundancy payments

  • Present claim for unfair dismissal

(see eg Hall v Lorimer [1994] IRLR 171).

Matters that may be relevant to consider as to whether the person is an employee are:

(a) How is the individual paid?

(b) Who pays tax and National Insurance?

(c) Who provides the tools and equipment?

(d) How integral to the business is the individual’s role?

(e) Is the individual paid for sickness and holiday?

(f ) Is the individual subject to the disciplinary and grievance policy?

(g) Is the individual a member of a company pension scheme?

(h) Where does the economic risk lie?

(i) How did the parties view the relationship at the outset

( j) How was the arrangement terminable?

A worker is defined under s 230(3) of the ERA 1996 to mean an individual who has entered into or works under (or where employment has ceased worked under)

(a) a contract of employment; or

(b) any other contract, whether express or implied and (if it is express) whether oral or in writing, whereby the individual undertakes to do or perform personally any work or services for another party to the contract whose status is not by virtue of the contract that of a client or customer of any profession or business undertaking carried on by the individual.

The reference to a contract of employment in para (a) above means that an employee is also a worker. The same definition appears in the National Minimum Wage Regulations 1999 and the Working Time Regulations 1998.

There are thus four requirements that need to be satisfied in limb (b):

(a) the worker has to be an individual who has entered into or works under a contract;

(b) with another party for work or services;

(c) the individual undertakes to do or perform personally the work or services for the other party;

(d) that other party must not, by virtue of the contract, have the status of a client or customer of any profession or business undertaking carried on by the individual who is to perform the work or services.

Worker has benefit of:

  • Working Time Regs 1988; and

  • Discrimination legislation

Information needed to draft anemploymentcontract

Practical LawEmployment

General

The points follow the order of the clauses in theStandard document,Section 1 statement of termsand theStandard document,Employmentcontractforajunioremployee.

Parties

  • Names and addresses of the employer and theemployee.

Commencement ofemployment

  • Date when theemploymentbegan, or is to begin.

  • Date on which theemployee's period of continuousemploymentbegan or will begin (if different from above). Does anyemploymentwith a previous employer (or the same employer after a break) count towards theemployee's continuous serviceforstatutory purposes?

  • If theemploymentisfora fixed term or is temporary, when does the fixed term or the temporary period expire? Is there any procedurefora renewal of theemployment?

  • Should theemployeebe subject to a probationary period and, if so,forhow long? Does the employer wish to have the right to extend the probationary period?

Job title

  • Theemployee's job title and a brief job description (if appropriateforthe particular case).

  • Who should theemployeereport to?

  • Can the job be performed jointly with other individuals?

Place of work

  • Where is theemployeeto be employed? Will theemployeespend any time working from home? SeePractice note, Homeworkingformore information.

  • Will theemployeebe required to work at different locations?

  • Will theemployeebe required to live at a particular place in order to carry out the job?

  • Will the employer need to be able to change the location of theemployee's workplace and, if so, what is the relevant geographical areaforsuch relocation?

  • Is theemployeerequired to work abroadfora period of more than one month? If so, in which currency will theemployee be paid? Will theemployeereceive additional pay (forexample, a living allowance or bonus)? What terms and conditions apply to theemployee's return to the UK?

Salary

  • How much is theemployeepaid? Is this payable weekly, monthly or over some other period? Is it payable in advance or arrears? At what point in each period will it be paid?

  • Will the salary be reviewable and, if so, how often and by whom? Does the employer want to identify any factors which might be taken into account in deciding whether to award a pay rise (forexample, based on individual performance)?

  • Does the employer operate a grade system which will entitle theemployeeto an automatic salary increase on attaining a higher grade?

  • What deductions, if any, might the employer wish to be able to make from the salary (forexample, overpayments, loan repayments)?

Hours of work and office rules

  • What are theemployee's normal hours of work (if any)?

  • Will theemployeehave to work any overtime? What rates of pay, if any, are paidforovertime? Or will theemployeebe entitled to take time off in lieu of any overtime worked?

  • Will theemployeebe working full-time or part-time?

  • Does the employer operate a shift system and will theemployeebe required to work shifts?

  • Is theemployeelikely to work more than an average of 48 hours each week over a 17 week reference period? If so, consider a separate opt-out agreement.

  • Is there an office manual or staff handbook or other rules and procedures?

Holidays

  • What is the employer's holiday year?

  • Willemployees be allowed to carry non-statutory holiday into the next holiday year or will holiday which has not been taken in a particular holiday year beforfeited?

  • What rules apply with regard to taking holiday (forexample, notice requirements and number of days that can be taken at one time)?

  • Will holiday entitlement increase with years of service?

  • Will theemployeebe entitled to take holiday during a probationary period? (Holiday will continue to accrue in any event).

  • Does the...

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