A friend of mine works as a delivery driver. During his employment, the employer paid for driver training to enable him to drive larger vehicles. He signed a contract enabling them to recover costs on a sliding scale over two years following completion of that training. He has now chosen to leave the company six months into that period so accepts he will need to repay 75% of the costs.
On the signed document, and below the signatures, is the phrase "training costs £2000". He's almost certain that was not there when he signed the document but has been added since (but not 100% certain). He understands they intend to recover 75% of that sum.
The contract shows the relevant cost categories to be:
a) the course fees for the full course of study/training
b) any relevant examination fee paid on [his] behalf
c) any grant towards the cost of equipment/books paid to [him] by the employer
d) any allowance or other expenses paid to [him] to enable [him] to attend the course
There have been no costs in categories c or d. The total costs involved in the training and examination amount to £950. They used a driver training company which has detailed all the relevant costs amounting to £950 which was billed to the employer, though obviously will not supply a copy of the actual invoice.
My questions are:
1 Are they legally entitled to recover a sum in excess of the actual costs incurred?
2 If not, how can he challenge that? Can he demand to be shown the supporting invoice?
3 I imagine the issue of whether the "£2000" phrase was added subsequent to signing will be difficult to prove. Is the fact that the phrase is beneath the signatures relevant?
On the signed document, and below the signatures, is the phrase "training costs £2000". He's almost certain that was not there when he signed the document but has been added since (but not 100% certain). He understands they intend to recover 75% of that sum.
The contract shows the relevant cost categories to be:
a) the course fees for the full course of study/training
b) any relevant examination fee paid on [his] behalf
c) any grant towards the cost of equipment/books paid to [him] by the employer
d) any allowance or other expenses paid to [him] to enable [him] to attend the course
There have been no costs in categories c or d. The total costs involved in the training and examination amount to £950. They used a driver training company which has detailed all the relevant costs amounting to £950 which was billed to the employer, though obviously will not supply a copy of the actual invoice.
My questions are:
1 Are they legally entitled to recover a sum in excess of the actual costs incurred?
2 If not, how can he challenge that? Can he demand to be shown the supporting invoice?
3 I imagine the issue of whether the "£2000" phrase was added subsequent to signing will be difficult to prove. Is the fact that the phrase is beneath the signatures relevant?
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