Employment law cases

All items: Working hours

  • R v Attorney General for Northern Ireland ex parte Burns

    Date:
    1 May 1999

    In R v Attorney General for Northern Ireland ex parte Burns [1999] IRLR 315 NIHCQB, Northern Ireland High Court, Queen's Bench Division held that that the failure of the Government to transpose the Working Time Directive in time was an actionable breach of Community law.

  • Contracts of employment: Maximum 48-hour week is a statutorily implied term in all employment contracts

    Date:
    1 April 1999

    In making the Working Time Regulations, Parliament intended that all contracts of employment must be read so as to provide that an employee should work no more than an average of 48 hours per week during any 17-week reference period, holds the High Court in Barber and others v RJB Mining (UK) Ltd.

  • Contracts of employment: Doctors' hours under attack

    Date:
    8 March 1991

    An employer's right to require overtime from an employee who is under a contractual obligation to be "on call" for a specified number of hours in excess of his basic working week, is subject to the employer's implied duty to take reasonable care not to injure its employee's health, holds the Court of Appeal in Johnstone v Bloomsbury Health Authority.

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Employment law cases: HR and legal information and guidance relating to working hours.