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Posted: 21/11/2023
The Supreme Court has ruled today on the status of Deliveroo food delivery riders for the purposes of collective bargaining in the case of Independent Workers Union of Great Britain v Central Arbitration Committee (CAC) [2023] UKSC 43. The court considered the factual matrix, which showed that:
The Supreme Court examined Article 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights, which protects the general rights of freedom of peaceful assembly and freedom of association with others, and a specific right to form and join trade unions, together with the case law of the European Court of Human Rights, from which it is clear that:
The Supreme Court held that the CAC had rigorously scrutinised the substance of the relationship between Deliveroo and the riders. It examined in detail how the contract between Deliveroo and the riders operated in practice, and gave close scrutiny as to whether the provisions in that contract genuinely reflected the true relationship between the parties. Accordingly, in all the circumstances, the CAC was entitled to conclude that the provisions in the contract genuinely reflected the reality of the relationship, and that it was not an employment relationship.
Whilst this is the end of the road for the claim in this gig economy business, the case is fact specific. The Supreme Court’s ruling does not mean that other gig economy businesses may not be subjected to collective bargaining being imposed by the CAC.