ABSTRACT
The laws which govern employment
occupy a position of considerable importance in any modern society. This is so
because of the tremendous contributions which workers can make to national growth
and development, as well as the general well-being of the nation’s citizenry.
Labour law has a vital role to play in the mobilization of the work force for
national growth. The major players in employment are essentially-the employer
and the employee and whenever there is a contractual relationship between these
two parties, the binding contract naturally brings about rights and duties
which must be complied with. Their respective rights and duties have to be
analyzed wholly in contractual terms. In many civilize countries, a case study
of Nigerian, it has been observed from historical antecedents, a structured
favour to employers over and above the employees liability arose. As much as it
is an undisputed fact that employers reserve the right to dismiss alongside
other rights, employees also have rights which they can also exercise. But in
most circumstances, due to ignorance of many employees, the opportunity to
challenge such unlawful acts of the employerselude them. Efforts has been made
in this research projects to identify these problems, their causes and also
solutions have been suggested in the concluding chapter for a need to reform
the whole set up as it affects labor law and practice in Nigeria.
CHAPTER ONE
INTRODUCTION-MEANING AND SCOPE, FORMATION,
HISTORICAL BACKGROUND AND BASIS OF LIABILITY.
1.1 Meaning
and Scope of Contract of Employment
The contract of employment is a specie of contract, and is Therefore governed
by general principles of the law of contract, consensusad item, Being a kind of
simple contract, contract of employment must also satisfy the elements of a
valid contract. The vitiating factors are also applicable to it. What
distinguishes a contract of employment from a simple contract, which chitty
defines as a promise or a set of promises which the law will enforce1, is the
degree of control that one party has over the other party2. Also, a contract of
employment relates to a relationship that exists between two or more persons
for the performance of services, while one person is employed by the other.
Where as, a contract relates to a relationship that exist between two or more
persons in any transaction, generally.
Traditional statements of what constitute a contract of employment, place most
emphasis on the power of the employer to control the work of the employee in
contrast to a contract with an independent contractor.In Chadwick v.
pioneer private telephone Ltd, contract of employment was defined
thus: contract of services implies an obligation to serve and it comprises some
degree of control by the master”3. It must howeverbe noted that there is no
comprehensive definition, only conflicting criteria’s. A contract of employment
can be defined as a contract entered in to by two parties whereby one party
submits himself to the service of the other for some considerations in most
casess salary and wages. An attempt has, however been made in the sphere of
labour Legislations in Nigeria4 at defining a contract of employment as;
’’Any agreement whether oral or
written, express or implied, whereby one person agrees to employ another as a
worker and that other person agrees to serve the employer as a worker.”
It is a contract of service and not
for service, what differentiates them is the fact that in a contract of
service, a man (employee), places his labor at the disposal of another,
resulting in a relationship between the to parties. Where as, a contract for
services involve a situation where a man who operates an independent business
agrees to do labor or carry out a task or tasks for the person of another. In
past times, the contract of employment was known as and called a relationship
of ‘’ master and servant”.
Since employment relationship strictly
represents subordination of an individual as a worker to an employer, which
relationship could be described as a dependent labor relationship, Mr. Y’s
house keeper, gate keeper, driver or chauffeur is his employee, that a laundry
man or a t-axi driver is an independent contractor5.
Thus, for a contract of employment to
be distinguished from a contract for service, the parties involved must avail
themselves of the statutory rights under it. That is, it must be shown that a
relationship of employer and employee or master and servant exists between
them. Thus, there must be terms agreed by both parties for this will be the
sole principle which will guide their acts and conducts during the subsistence
of the employment. As held by the court in SMITH V. GENERAL MOTOR CAB. CO6,
where the claim for the existence of such relationship between the parties
fails.
As must have been noted, a
contract of service involves two separate legal categories of persons namely –
an Employer, master, hirer, or recruiter, and an Employee. WHO IS AN
EMPLOYER ?: Although this has no précise meaning in law;
’’An employer is any person who has entered in to contract of employment to
employ any other person as a worker her for himself or for the services of any
other person and includes the agents, manager, or factor of that first
mentioned person and the personal representatives of a deceased employer.”7
An employer can also be defined as;
’’The entrepreneur who engages a worker under a dependent labor relationship
and has control over that worker to the extent that such worker could be
referred to as an employee’’. Also, an employer is ’’Any person who employs or
engages labour or the service of another person under contract of
service’’.Theemployer could be an individual, a partner, a corporate body or
even a state (the Government).8
WHO IS AN EMPLOYEE?
Any person who has entered in to or works under a contract with an employer
whether the contract is for manual labor or clerical work or express or implied
or oral or written, and whether it is a contract of service or a contract
personally to execute any work or labor but does not include…………… persons
exercising administrative, executive, technical or professional functions as
public officer or otherwise.”9
To identify an employer or servant
then, the essential question is ’’ was his contract a contract of service
within the meaning which an ordinary person would give to the word?”. In CASSIDY
v. MINISTER OF HEALTH10Bomerell,l.jgave the view that, if the answer is YES,
then such a person will be regarded as an employee. In ADEYEMO v. OYO STATE
PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISION,11 the plaintiff who was a deputy accountant
Generalloyo state public service was held to be a servant or employee. Employee
and servant have been used interchangeably by authors also, various Nigerian
statutes have defined who a servant is by using words like workers, employee or
workman.
1.2 Formation of Contract of Employment
The existence of binding relationship
between the employer and the employee arises out of contract, as essential
elements for the formation of a contract of employment or service between
an employer and employee upon which their rights and obligations depends are
generally same as conditions in ordinary or simple contact. This legal
relationship therefore presupposes the voluntary consent of the parties to its
creation expressed through the process of hiring within limitation imposed only
by the general law of contract or statutory regulation. The terms are often not
negotiable by the individual employee except in some cases where remuneration
is negotiable, depending on the professional skills required by the employer.
As such, the rights and dutiesof the master and servant are essentially
the products of free bargaining between the parties, as they have
liberty to decide the terms and conditions of service.
Beside the element of voluntariness,
there is also the presumption of equality between the parties but professor
Odumosu has described this presumption of equality between the parties as a
’’Fiction’’.12 Also, AdeogunA.A commented on the presumption of equality
and voluntariness of bargaining power between the master and the servant, as he
noted that, ’’… the so-called bargaining power of the individual worker is of
little importance in practice……”13
The basic conceptual frame work for
the individual employment relationship is provided by contract, and as such,
the employment relationship created must of necessity satisfy all the essential
features of a valid contract. There must be offer, acceptance, requisite
capacity of parties, consideration, intention to give the agreement legal
efficacy and no element vitiate the contract. With regard to capacity, the
parties must have requisite legal capacity to enter the employment
relationship, Generally, the capacity of infants, women, and persons of
unsound mind are limited in some ways.
TERMS OF A CONTRACT OF
EMPLOYMENT
The terms of the contract of employment can be derived from the individual
contract itself, collective agreement and legislations.Besides this, the terms
of a contract also depends largely on the intention of the parties, as they are
free to agree upon the contents or terms of their employment relationship. The
terms of contract relates to those statements, express or implied, by which the
employer and the employee intend to guide their employment relationship. The
term defines the rights and duties of obligations and liabilities arising from
the relationship. As stated above, there are express or implied terms . The
express terms include: Hours of work14 travel to work,15wages and control
of wages. The Implied obligation of employer include: To pay wages,16To treat
employee with due respect; provision of work for the employee; Safety of the
employee at work; Provision of references; To indenify the employee.17.
Some implied duties of the employee
include: The duty of obedience; 18 Dutyto exercise skills and
reasonable care;19 duty to render honest and faithful service; Avoid
secret profit and personal gain; competition.Avoid misuse of confidential
information.20
The contractual terms may be oral or written, but important contents of a
contract ofemployment are as a matter of practice and prudence, made in writing
and the terms documented properly.
1.4 Historical Background of
Employer’s Liability
Munkman21asserts that a recorded
history of an employer’s liability started in 1837, when it started by
effecting a denial of the workman a remedy for his damage through the
application of the Doctrine of Common Employment. This doctrine operated as a
defence under Common Law. It depends on the theory that the contract of
employment between an employer and an employee contains an implied term that
the employee will not hold his employer liable for an injury due to negligence
of a fellow employeeengaged in Common employment with him. Thus, a master was
only liable to his servant when there was a want of care in selecting his
servant or personal negligence or omission to take reasonable precautions to
ensure his worker’ safety. The employer was therefore absolved of any vicarious
liability for any tort committed by one fellow employee against
another.22 This was the principle introduced into the common law by Lord
Abinger CB in PRIESTLEY v. FOWLER,23 where he held that:“the mere relation
of the master and the servant can never imply an obligation on the part of the
master to take more care of the servant than he may reasonably be expected to do
of himself”. By this, Lord Abinger almost excluded the employer totally
from any liability to his employee.
This remained the common law position until the English House of Lords WILSON
and CLYDE COAL Co Ltd. V. ENGLISH,24 Maintained that the employer is under
the duty to take reasonable care for the safety of his employee in the course
of his employment. This doctrine of common employment continued to limit the
remedy available to employees until the Wilson’s case: In the case, an employee
was killed due to an accident caused by co-workers. The employee argued that
the company was not liable on the grounds that the decreased employee
contributed to his own death by not taking an alternativeroute on thegrounds
that the decreased employee contributed to his colleagues aware of his
location. The court held that the employer-company is liable for negligence in
the performance of the duty to exercise reasonable care and to ]provide a
reasonably safe system of work. That the implied duty of care was personal to
the employer –company and it could not be devolved upon one of its employees,
as the employer had argued that the duty of provide a safe system of work had
been delegated to the colleagues of the deceased who caused the accident, that
the employer has a delegable duty to create a safe system of work. The defence
of common employment has also been statutorily abolished in Nigeria, in the
then Federal territory of Lagos, in 1961. Eastern Region, 1962, Western Region,
1963, and for the whole country in 1988.25
The Labour Act provides;
(1) It shall not be a
defence to an employee who is used in respect of personal injuries caused by
the negligence of a person employed by him, that, that person was, at the time
the injuries were caused, in common employment with the person injured.
2) Any provisions
contained in a contract of service or apprenticeship or in an agreement
collateral thereto (including a contract or agreement entered into before the
commencement of this section) shall be void in so far as it would have the
effect of excluding or limiting any liability of the employee in respect of
personal injuries caused to the person employed or apprenticed by the
negligence of persons in common employment with him.
In NIGERIAN TOBACCO CO. LTD. V. ALLOYSIUS OLUMBA AGUNANNE,27 the Supreme
Court opined that the doctrine does not exist to all.
1.5 BASIS OF THE EMPLOYER’S
LIABILITY
The employee’s safety at work is
generally guaranteed by the imposition of certain duties on the employer,
duties either fixed by the contract itself expressly, or implied by and or
imposed by statutes as the case may be. The breach of these duties may involve
the employer in one form of liability of another.28 But one is baffled at the reason
why the employer should be liable to the employee he has employed, as it is the
employer who makes an offer of the existence of such employment to the employee
and to pay him wages.
As stated above, certain duties are imposed on the employer, as fixed by the
contract itself. That is, certain termsexpressly agreed on and fixed by both
the employer and the employee as the sole principle which will guide their acts
and conducts during the substance of the employment. In a situation where
parties were free to go back on their promises without incurring any liability,
employment relations would be unbearable and it would be impossible to carry on
trade and commerce. In the case of a contract of employment, the employer’s
liability to his employee should be breach any term of the contract arises
because both –parties genuinely intended and consented their legal relations,
to be bound by it.
The general rule is that the employer
at common law has the implied duty to take reasonable care of his employee.
This duty is concerned with those protection given by the common law, to
guarantee the safety of the employee at work or save the employer from damages
in case of any injury to the employee in the course of the employment.29
The legal duties and responsibilities of the employer in course of his
relationships with the employee can arise in two ways namely; personal or
vicarious (Liability).
Chapters: 1 - 5
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Delivery: Email
Number of Pages: 75
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