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11 July 2024 / Ian Smith
Issue: 8079 / Categories: Features , Employment , Tribunals
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Employment law brief: 12 July 2024

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With pre-election purdah offering a (brief) cessation of legislation, Ian Smith focuses on the work of the EAT and some fairly fundamental points of interpretation. Simples!
  • Fixed-term employment: when are successive contracts justified?
  • National minimum wage—when does time travelling count?
  • Redundancy—what are the requirements in a ‘pool of one’ case?
  • TUPE—when does commissioning count as an economic activity?

As employment lawyers enjoyed their one saving grace of the purdah period leading up to an election (ie, a cessation of legislation), the EAT has made up for it by producing useful judgments on some fairly fundamental points of interpretation. The cases selected for consideration this month can be summed up in four apparently simple questions: (i) when are successive fixed-term contracts exceeding in aggregate four years justifiable? (ii) when does time travelling count in applying the National Minimum Wage? (iii) what are the requirements for a fair redundancy dismissal in a ‘pool of one’ case? and (iv) in the TUPE context, when does commissioning qualify as an ‘economic activity’?

Successive

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NEWS
The High Court’s refusal to recognise a prolific sperm donor as a child’s legal parent has highlighted the risks of informal conception arrangements, according to Liam Hurren, associate at Kingsley Napley, in NLJ this week
The Court of Appeal’s decision in Mazur may have settled questions around litigation supervision, but the profession should not simply ‘move on’, argues Jennifer Coupland, CEO of CILEX, in this week's NLJ
A simple phrase like ‘subject to references’ may not protect employers as much as they think. Writing in NLJ this week, Ian Smith, barrister and emeritus professor of employment law at UEA, analyses recent employment cases showing how conditional job offers can still create binding contracts

An engagement ring may symbolise romance, but the courts remain decidedly practical about who keeps it after a split, writes Mark Pawlowski, barrister and professor emeritus of property law at the University of Greenwich, in this week's NLJ

Medical reporting organisation fees have become ‘the final battleground’ in modern costs litigation, says Kris Kilsby, costs lawyer at Peak Costs and council member of the Association of Costs Lawyers, in this week's NLJ
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