TRANSFER
OF UNDERTAKINGS REGULATIONS (T.U.P.E)
This is a highly complex area of the law which has
been the subject of a great deal of debate and case
law in the U.K. and throughout Europe. The Regulations
are due to be revised and you should seek our our
specialists' advice so that we may advise you clearly
in your particular situation.
OUTLINE
OF REGULATIONS
The Regulations preserve employees' terms and conditions
when a business or undertaking, or part of one,
is transferred to a new employer. Any provision
of any agreement (whether a contract of employment
or not) is void so far as it would exclude or limit
the rights granted under the Regulations.
The Regulations have the effect that: Employees
employed by the previous employer when the undertaking
changes hands automatically become employees of
the new employer on the same terms and conditions.
It is as if their contracts of employment had
originally been made with the new employer. Thus
employees' continuity of employment is preserved,
as are their terms and conditions of employment
under their contracts of employment (except for
certain occupational pension rights).
· Representatives of employees affected
have a right to be informed about the transfer.
They must also be consulted about any measures
which the old or new employer envisages taking
concerning affected employees.
TRANSFERS
COVERED BY THE REGULATIONS
The Regulations apply when an undertaking or part
of an undertaking is transferred from one employer
to another.
Some examples of transfers are:
where all or part of a sole trader's business
or partnership is sold or otherwise transferred;
where a company, or part of it, is bought or acquired
by another, provided this is done by the second
company buying or acquiring the assets and then
running the business and not acquiring the shares
only;
where two companies cease to exist and combine
to form a third;
where a contract to provide goods or services
is transferred in circumstances which amount to
the transfer of a business or undertaking to a
new employer.
The Regulations can apply regardless of the size
of the transferred undertaking. Thus the Regulations
equally apply to the transfer of a large business
with many thousand employees or of a very small
one (such as a shop, pub or garage).
The Regulations apply equally to public or private
sector undertakings.
TRANSFERS
NOT COVERED BY THE REGULATIONS
The Regulations do not apply to the following:
transfers by share take-over because, when a
company's shares are sold to new shareholders,
there is no transfer of the business - the same
company continues to be the employer;
transfers of assets only (for example, the sale
of equipment alone would not be covered, but the
sale of a going concern including equipment would
be covered);
transfers of a contract to provide goods or services
where this does not involve the transfer of a
business or part of a business;
transfers of undertakings situated outside the
United Kingdom.
Those provisions of the Regulations which relate
to dismissal of employees because of the transfer,
the duty to inform and consult representatives
and the failure to inform and consult them as
required, do not apply to employees who, under
their contracts of employment, normally work outside
the United Kingdom.
EMPLOYER'S
POSITION IN A TRANSFER EMPLOYEE'S POSITION IN
A TRANSFER
Under the Regulations, when an undertaking is
transferred the position of the previous employer
and the new employer is as follows:
The new employer takes over the contracts of
employment of all employees who were employed
in the undertaking immediately before the transfer,
or who would have been so employed if they had
not been unfairly dismissed for a reason connected
with the transfeR - An employer cannot just pick
and choose which employees to take on;
The new employer takes over all rights and obligations
arising from those contracts of employment, except
criminal liabilities and rights and obligations
relating to provisions about benefits for old
age, invalidity or survivors in employees' occupational
pension schemes;
The new employer takes over any collective agreements
made on behalf of the employees and in force immediately
before the transfer;
Neither the new employer nor the previous one
may fairly dismiss an employee because of the
transfer or a reason connected with it, unless
the reason for the dismissal is an economic, technical
or organisational reason entailing changes in
the workforce. If there is no such reason, the
dismissal will be unfair. If there is such a reason,
and it is the cause or main cause of the dismissal,
the dismissal will be fair provided an employment
tribunal decides that the employer acted reasonably
in the circumstances in treating that reason as
sufficient to justify dismissal. If, in this case,
there is a redundancy situation, the usual redundancy
procedures will apply;
The new employer may not unless the contract of
employment so provides unilaterally worsen the
terms and conditions of employment of any transferred
employee;
The previous and new employers must inform and
consult representatives of the employees
When an undertaking is transferred the position
of the employees of the previous or new employers
is as follows:
An employee claiming to have been unfairly dismissed
because of a transfer has the right to complain
to an employment tribunal;
Transferred employees who find that there has
been a fundamental change for the worse in their
terms and conditions of employment as a result
of the transfer generally have the right to terminate
their contract and claim unfair dismissal before
an employment tribunal, on the grounds that actions
of the employer have forced them to resign. Employees
may not make this type of claim solely on the
grounds that the identity of their employer has
changed unless the circumstances of an individual
case change and that change is significant and
to the employee's detriment.
In both the above cases dismissal because of a
relevant transfer will be unfair unless an employment
tribunal decides that an economic, technical or
organisational reason entailing changes in the
workforce was the main cause of the dismissal
and that the employer acted reasonably in the
circumstances in treating that reason as sufficient
to justify dismissal. Even if the dismissal is
considered fair, employees may still be entitled
to a redundancy payment
Employees employed in the undertaking immediately
before the transfer (or who would have been so
employed had they not been unfairly dismissed)
for a reason connected with the transfer 1 automatically
become employees of the new employer, unless they
inform either the new or the previous employer
that they object to being transferred. In this
case the contract of employment with the previous
employer is terminated by the transfer of undertaking
but the employee is not dismissed. The previous
employer may re-engage the employee.
An employee's period of continuous employment
is not broken by a transfer, and, for the purposes
of calculating entitlement to statutory employment
rights, the date on which the period of continuous
employment started is the date on which the employee
started work with the old employer. This should
be stated in the employee's written statement
of terms and conditions; if it is not, or if there
is a dispute over the date on which the period
of continuous employment started, the matter can
be referred to an employment tribunal. (For further
details.
Transferred employees retain all the rights and
obligations existing under their contracts of
employment with the previous employer and these
are transferred to the new employer, with the
exception that the previous employer's rights
and obligations relating to benefits for old age,
invalidity or survivors under any employees' occupational
pension schemes are not transferred. If the new
employer does not provide comparable overall terms
and conditions, including pension arrangements,
an employee may have a claim for unfair dismissal.
Occupational pension rights earned up to the
time of the transfer are protected by social security
legislation and pension trust arrangements.
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