Re: tupe transfer
Hang-on a minute, just thought a bit more about what he said - Why was the brewery trying to give him a contract, as surely the contract would not be with the brewery but with the landlord of the pub, at the time the contract was offered? So what hes saying doesn't make sense, unless of course the brewery was at the time acting as the landlord? As what hes saying is that the Brewery was his employer at the time the contract was offered.
Also if he never signed a contract, then his hours are not contracted hours either and can be changed to suite business needs, just like workers can be asked to work extra hours when needed they can be asked to work less too if no fixed contracted hours are in the contract. He can argue custom and practice all he likes, but as he never had any contracted hours he would have to prove it was implied he would be granted x amount of hours per week and prove he was an employee and not a worker. In regards to what he said about the contract, he would have to prove that he sent said contract back asking for the clause to be removed (Recorded delivery) without that then it will likely been deemed that he had not sent it back and simply didn't return a signed copy and therefore silence is deemed acceptance of the terms of that contract and hes only now saying this about his contract in an attempt to avoid his hours being reduced. Which is foolish of him, as it leaves you no choice but to make his position redundant - So you need to find out why he sent it to the brewery and not his employer (The Landlord at the time) and whether the brewery received the contract with the letter asking for the clause to be removed.
If it turns out he was an employee of the brewery at the time, and not an employee of the landlord whom you took the business over from, then TUPE is not a question here as he will still be an employee of the brewery, which if that is the case, then the brewery should be paying his wages. Off course i doubt he was an employee of the brewery anyway, and i think hes trying to cloud the water by saying he sent the contract back to brewery and that they were trying to get everyone on contracts, which doesn't make sense as the Landlord is the employer not the brewery, unless off course the Landlord was merely a manager working for the brewery too. So who did you take the pub business over from, the previous landlord or the brewery?
Hang-on a minute, just thought a bit more about what he said - Why was the brewery trying to give him a contract, as surely the contract would not be with the brewery but with the landlord of the pub, at the time the contract was offered? So what hes saying doesn't make sense, unless of course the brewery was at the time acting as the landlord? As what hes saying is that the Brewery was his employer at the time the contract was offered.
Also if he never signed a contract, then his hours are not contracted hours either and can be changed to suite business needs, just like workers can be asked to work extra hours when needed they can be asked to work less too if no fixed contracted hours are in the contract. He can argue custom and practice all he likes, but as he never had any contracted hours he would have to prove it was implied he would be granted x amount of hours per week and prove he was an employee and not a worker. In regards to what he said about the contract, he would have to prove that he sent said contract back asking for the clause to be removed (Recorded delivery) without that then it will likely been deemed that he had not sent it back and simply didn't return a signed copy and therefore silence is deemed acceptance of the terms of that contract and hes only now saying this about his contract in an attempt to avoid his hours being reduced. Which is foolish of him, as it leaves you no choice but to make his position redundant - So you need to find out why he sent it to the brewery and not his employer (The Landlord at the time) and whether the brewery received the contract with the letter asking for the clause to be removed.
If it turns out he was an employee of the brewery at the time, and not an employee of the landlord whom you took the business over from, then TUPE is not a question here as he will still be an employee of the brewery, which if that is the case, then the brewery should be paying his wages. Off course i doubt he was an employee of the brewery anyway, and i think hes trying to cloud the water by saying he sent the contract back to brewery and that they were trying to get everyone on contracts, which doesn't make sense as the Landlord is the employer not the brewery, unless off course the Landlord was merely a manager working for the brewery too. So who did you take the pub business over from, the previous landlord or the brewery?
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