A Blog by Jonathan Low

 

Dec 20, 2018

The Implication of Uber Losing Its Appeal Over Driver Employment Rights

Though this ruling will be appealed, Uber has now lost twice with the same argument.

The latest finding cuts to the question at the heart of Uber's (and Lyft's) future: is their business model so contrived and so dependent, not on technology, but on underpaying their workforce, that their legitimacy and long term sustainability is at stake once that shaky economic foundation is rendered illegal? JL


Sarah Butler reports in The Guardian:

Judges have dismissed Uber’s appeal against a landmark employment tribunal ruling that its drivers should be classed as workers with access to the minimum wage and paid holidays. “For [Uber] to be stating to its regulator that it is operating a private hire vehicle service and is a fit and proper person to do so, while at the same time arguing in this litigation that it is merely an affiliate of a company which licenses tens of thousands of proprietors of small businesses to use its software, contributes to the air of contrivance and artificiality which pervade’s Uber’s case.”
Judges have dismissed Uber’s appeal against a landmark employment tribunal ruling that its drivers should be classed as workers with access to the minimum wage and paid holidays.
Master of the rolls, Sir Terence Etherton, along with Lord Justice Bean, backed an October 2016 employment tribunal ruling that could affect tens of thousands of workers in the gig economy. A third judge, Lord Justice Underhill, dissented, leading to a 2-1 majority decision.
The judges found there was a “high degree of fiction” in the wording of the standard agreement between Uber and its drivers, which it argues are self-employed independent contractors with few employment rights.
The judgment handed down on Wednesday said: “For [Uber] to be stating to its statutory regulator that it is operating a private hire vehicle service in London and is a fit and proper person to do so, while at the same time arguing in this litigation that it is merely an affiliate of a Dutch-registered company which licenses tens of thousands of proprietors of small businesses to use its software, contributes to the air of contrivance and artificiality which pervade’s Uber’s case.”
Uber said it would challenge the latest ruling at the supreme court after being given leave to do so. The company previously appealed to the employment appeal tribunal before heading to the court of appeal.
An Uber spokesperson said: “This decision was not unanimous and does not reflect the reasons why the vast majority of drivers choose to use the Uber app. We have been granted permission to appeal to the supreme court and will do so.
“Almost all taxi and private hire drivers have been self-employed for decades, long before our app existed … If drivers were classified as workers they would inevitably lose some of the freedom and flexibility that comes with being their own boss.”
The case began when two Uber drivers, James Farrar and Yaseen Aslam, took Uber to court on behalf of a group 19 others who argued that they were employed by the San Francisco-based company, rather than working for themselves.
It is one of a string of cases that have challenged the self-employed status of gig-economy workers, including action against the minicab firm Addison Lee and the delivery groups CitySprint, Excel and eCourier.
Farrar said: “We’re really delighted and relieved but also dismayed that drivers have no remedy while Uber exhausts another appeal. It is just a cynical ploy to delay the inevitable while they pursue a [stock market flotation] next year.
“It shouldn’t be us doing this. It is the government’s job to enforce the law and the mayor of London should and could do more to protect drivers.”
Aslam said: “We have got a union backing us and the ability to bring this case but this is not an ideal scenario for a precarious worker.”
Although the ruling will not apply to employees outside the UK, the case will be closely watched by lawyers in in the many jurisdictions across the world where Uber has succeeded in disrupting licensed taxi operations.
The San Francisco-based company’s business model has been built on treating drivers who log on to its app as self-employed contractors and taking a cut of their fares, the level of which the company dictates. Uber claims to have two million drivers worldwide.
The case, led by the law firms Bates Wells Braithwaite and Leigh Day, was initially backed by the GMB union and the two lead claimants are also supported by the gig-economy union the Independent Workers Union of Great Britain (IWGB).
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Tim Roache, the GMB general secretary, said: “We’re now at a hat-trick of judgments against Uber; they keep appealing and keep losing. Uber should just accept the verdict and stop trying to find loopholes that deprive people of their hard-won rights and hard-earned pay.”
In June, a court decided Uber should be awarded a 15-month probationary licence to operate in London after the ride-hailing service promised improvements including proactive reporting of serious incidents involving drivers. Transport for London declined to renew Uber’s private hire vehicles operator licence in September 2017 after ruling that it was not a “fit and proper” licensee.
Since then, Uber has improved some terms for UK drivers, including providing limited insurance and limits on working hours.

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