Ian Smith tackles ‘no oral variations’ clauses, zero-hour contracts & who qualifies as a ‘worker’
- Cycle courier qualifies as a ‘worker’.
- Zero-hours part-timer can claim a valid comparison.
- ‘No oral variation’ clauses effective; effect on ‘entire agreement’ clauses.
In a month when we have all been assailed by frantic emails from all sorts of weird and wonderful organisations wanting to stay our best friends after the GDPR came into force (the usual response of most of us being a maniacal laugh and an audible ‘you must be joking’), the one point of primary importance for employment lawyers about the new Regulation is that the view of the Information Commissioner’s Office is that it does not affect its long-standing Employment Practices Data Protection Code (see Harvey at s [1801]), which continues to apply and for which there are no current plans for replacement.
Turning to the case law this month, the three cases below all concern issues relating to contracts of employment – (1) the basic definition of a ‘worker’ and its application to the ‘gig economy’, (2) the application