Pimlico Plumbers: Supreme Court confirms plumber’s self-employment status was a sham

June 13, 2018

 

In a long-awaited judgment relating to the “gig economy”, the Supreme Court has confirmed that a heating engineer who was engaged by Pimlico Plumbers allegedly on a self-employed basis was in fact a worker and was therefore entitled to basic employment rights.

The Claimant, Gary Smith, in the widely-reported case of Pimlico Plumbers v Smith ([2018] UKSC 29)was engaged by Pimlico as a heating engineer for six years between 2005 and 2011. During this period he worked a 40-hour week, wore Pimlico’s branded uniform and drove its vans, was subject to the company’s rules and policies, and had all of his work booked in by the company. However, the contract under which he was working classed him as an independent contractor, with the company described as his client rather than his employer. He was therefore not paid holiday pay or statutory sick pay.

In 2011, after suffering a heart attack and asking to be moved down to a 3-day week, Mr Smith was told that his contract was to be terminated. He subsequently brought a number of claims in the Employment Tribunal. The bitterly-fought case has subsequently made its way through the Tribunals and appeals courts over the last seven years, and was finally heard in the Supreme Court in February this year.

The Supreme Court has now released a judgment which found that Mr Smith was personally obliged to turn up to work for Pimlico for up to 40 hours per week. He did not have the right to send a substitute in his place (other than occasionally being allowed to swap shifts with other Pimlico engineers). It was therefore not correct to class him as self-employed. In addition, the Court confirmed that it was also not appropriate to describe Pimlico as Mr Smith’s client – it was his employer, and he was therefore entitled to a number of important employment rights.

Although it does not set down any new legal test, the case is important for employers who operate in the gig economy because it confirms the courts’ recent willingness to closely scrutinise businesses’ agreements with self-employed contractors or consultants. The Tribunals are now much more likely to look past written contracts and look at the day-to-day reality of individuals’ working conditions. We have recently seen the same happen in cases against Uber, and similar claims have been lodged against Amazon and CitySprint, which is facing a group claim for £200,000 worth of holiday pay.

The Government is also currently running a number of consultations in relation to the gig economy under the Taylor Review – a 2017 report which found that workers’ rights were not adequate in this area, and that employers and workers both need more certainty on the definitions of self-employment and worker status. We are therefore likely to see further developments in the next few months.

 

Read more

Contact Our Team

To speak to one of our experts today, please contact us on 02920 829 100 or by using our Contact Us form for a free initial chat to see how we can help.

Catherine Burke
Partner
View Profile
Damian Phillips
Partner
View Profile
Fflur Jones
Managing Partner
View Profile
Gareth Wedge
Partner
View Profile
Mark Rostron
Partner
View Profile
Nick O’Sullivan
Partner
View Profile
Owen John
Partner
View Profile
Rhodri Lewis
Partner
View Profile
Stephen Thompson
Partner
View Profile

What our clients have said...