ESM0517 - Guide to determining status: relative importance of control
Until the 1960s the courts had taken the view that the ability
of an engager to control a worker was fundamental to determining
status. If the engager had the right to exert control over the
worker then there was likely to be employment. However, changes in
employment conditions meant that this rigid approach was no longer
appropriate. The idea that the control test was conclusive dated
back to the days of highly structured working environments and
traditional master/servant relationships. A more flexible approach
to employment and a work force with much greater skills and
autonomy meant that the control test, although important, could no
longer be relied upon to determine status on its own.
One of the leading cases on the subject is that of Market
Investigations Ltd v The Minister of Social Security (see
ESM7040). This case concerned the status
of a market researcher and in his judgement Cooke J said
’…. nor can strict rules be laid down as to the
relative weight which the various considerations should carry in
particular cases. The most that can be said is that control will no
doubt always have to be considered, although it can no longer be
regarded as the sole determining factor.’
Further judicial comment on the relative importance of
control can be found in the case of Ready Mixed Concrete (South
East) Ltd v Minister of Pensions and National Insurance (see
ESM7030). The case concerned the status
of the owner-driver of a concrete mixing lorry who wore the company
uniform and had to comply with company rules. Despite the extensive
control that the company had over the worker, he was held to be
self-employed. In his judgement MacKenna J said
’An obligation to do work subject to the other
party’s control is a necessary though not always a
sufficient, condition of a contract of service. If the provisions
of the contract as a whole are inconsistent with its being a
contract of service, it will be some other kind of contract, and
the person doing the work will not be a servant. The judge’s
task is to classify the contract ……. He may, in
performing it, take into account other matters besides
control.’
