Employee Liability Information & TUPE

employee liability information tupe

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Employee liability information is a fundamental part of the Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations, known as TUPE. It requires the outgoing employer to provide the incoming employer with key details about the employees who are transferring as part of a business or service transfer. The information must include names, ages, employment terms, pay details and records of grievances or disciplinary actions in the past two years. It also covers any ongoing or potential legal claims involving the transferring employees.

The outgoing employer must deliver this information no later than 28 days before the transfer. Failing to do so can result in a financial penalty of up to £500 per employee.

For UK employers, managing employee liability information presents significant risks if not handled properly. Sharing incomplete or incorrect data can lead to legal disputes and financial liabilities. Employers must also ensure compliance with data protection laws when transferring sensitive information. The incoming employer relies on the accuracy of this information to assess potential liabilities and plan effectively for the integration of transferring employees.

In this guide, we explain what ELI is and its role in the TUPE transfer process.

 

What is TUPE?

 

The Transfer of Undertakings (Protection of Employment) Regulations (TUPE), are designed to protect employees if they are being transferred to a new employer. First passed in 1981, the regulations were updated in 2006, with further amendments in 2014.

Its purpose is to seamlessly transfer employees, and any liabilities associated with them and their terms and conditions of employment, from the previous employer owner to the new employer.

To protect a business from claims, an employer needs to understand:

 

  • The circumstances when TUPE is likely to apply
  • What TUPE means legally
  • What an employer is obligated to do to comply with TUPE and the penalties for failing to do so
  • What the implications are if TUPE does not apply
  • Any other steps that can be taken to protect a business from the effects of TUPE

 

 

When does TUPE apply?

 

There are a vast number of business transactions where TUPE will apply, and it is therefore essential employers, whether small, medium, or large, understand what employment liabilities can arise. TUPE can apply when:

 

  • Any part of a business is bought or sold as a “going concern”
  • Outsourcing or a “service provision charge”, concerning either (a) an initial outsourcing of a service such as where services are transferred from a customer to an external contractor; (b) a subsequent transfer, such as where services are transferred from the initial external contractor to another external contractor; and (c) bringing the service back “in-house”, such as where services that were previously transferred to an external contractor are returned to the customer.
  • A lease has been granted or taken over, or licence of premises, and the same business is operated from those premises.

 

In its simplest form, TUPE applies when there has been a “relevant transfer”. This complicated area of law was clarified in 2006 and describes a relevant transfer as: “the transfer of an economic entity which retains its identity”. In deciding whether this has happened, the court considers the following factors:

 

  • The sort of undertaking being transferred
  • Whether any tangible assets such as buildings, or moveable property for example, are being transferred
  • Whether any intangible assets are being transferred and an estimate of their value
  • Whether the majority of the employees are transferred over by the new employer
  • Whether any customers will be transferred
  • The degree of similarity between the business activities undertaken prior to and after the takeover
  • The period for which those business activities were suspended

 

TUPE will be a consideration in most service provision changes such as outsourcing and insourcing. Due to the uncertainty surrounding when TUPE does and does not apply, it is common for these issues to be regulated by a contract.

 

What is Employee Liability Information (ELI)?

 

Regulation 11 of the TUPE Regulations imposes an obligation on the outgoing employer to provide employee liability information (ELI) to the new employer within a certain time frame. In the changes made in 2014, the limit for providing the information was increased to 28 days before the transfer of the business.

ELI is useful for the new employer, commonly referred to as the “transferee”, to establish what obligations they are inheriting.

TUPE regulations require that the following employer liability information must be given before the transfer takes place:

 

  • The name or identity and age of all employees who will be transferred
  • Any information contained within the employees “statements of employment particulars”, this includes things such as, hours of work, pay, holiday entitlement, etc. Generally, this information can be found in the employee’s contract of employment or offer letter.
  • Details of any relevant collective agreements in place that will affect the transfer in relation to the employee
  • Information about any disciplinary action taken within the last two years against any employee
  • Information about any grievance processes raised by an employee within the last two years.
  • Any legal action, either before a court or employment tribunal, against the employer by an employee within the last two years, including any details regarding potential legal action where the former employer has reasonable grounds to believe an employee may bring a case against the new employer.

 

As stated above, this information must be provided to the new employer 28 days before the date of the transfer of the business. If there is an exceptional situation and the deadline cannot be met, the information should be supplied as soon as possible.

If there is an abject failure by the former employer to comply with their duty to supply employee liability information, the incoming employer can apply to the Tribunal for compensation which is assessed regarding the losses suffered by the incoming employer, with a minimum award of £550 per employee.

 

Data protection

 

Because employers are legally bound to provide employee liability information under TUPE and face penalties if they fail to do so, the Data Protection Act (DPA) allows this disclosure. That said, all parties must ensure they comply with DPA principles for handling and sharing such personal information.

Care must be taken in the following circumstances:

 

  • Transfers outside the scope of TUPE, such as share takeovers
  • Where there are several bidders for the business, only one of whom will be successful and take over the business, but every interested party needs the information to assess whether to pursue a purchase.
  • The potential new employer may ask for more information than is required under the TUPE regulations.

 

In the above situations, the employer should only release anonymised information, or if that cannot be achieved, remove obvious identifiers such as names. Employers must only disclose extra information with the consent of the individuals concerned, or failing that, put appropriate safeguards in place to ensure information will only be used in connection with the proposed business purchase and will be destroyed once it has been used.

Once the transfer of staff has taken place, the new employer will require each employee’s record of employment in order that they can manage their newly acquired workforce. However, the new employer should consider whether they really need every piece of information within the employee’s personnel file and delete or destroy it if not.

The former employer is likely to need to hold on to some personal information about their former employees, this is to enable them to deal with any liabilities, such as tax or National Insurance Contributions, for example. The DPA permits such retention, providing the old employer has a “justifiable need” to keep the information, and they only keep it for as long as necessary. As soon as it is no longer needed, the former employer should securely destroy or delete any information they do not need to retain.

 

 

Duty to inform and consult

 

The new employer is required to give the former employer information on proposed measures that allow them to comply with its duty to inform and consult with their employees. There is not any set timetable for such consultation to take place, but it must be in “good time” before the business is transferred to the new employer. Generally speaking, the larger the business and more employees affected, the longer the timetable will need to be.

Failure to inform and consult can result is a complaint being made to an employment tribunal and if successful, the tribunal can award as much compensation as it sees fit up to 13 weeks’ pay per affected employee. The tribunal takes into consideration what is just and equitable and having regard to the seriousness of the employer’s failure.

Information and consultation failures can mean joint and several liability between the outgoing and incoming employers, although as stated above, the contract governing the transfer can set out terms that cater for apportionment of liability.

A failure to comply with TUPE could expose employers to large claims which have the real possibility of undermining the entire transfer. Since 2014, potential exemptions apply from consultation provisions for businesses employing fewer than ten employees.

 

TUPE in insolvency

 

TUPE Regulations are relaxed in order to protect new employers where the former employer is insolvent. Liabilities for redundancy, notice, and other payments to employees do not transfer to the new employer. Additionally, providing it is agreed with employee representatives or the trade union, terms and conditions of employment can be changed without an economic, technical, or organisational (ETO) reason if the change is necessary to save a failing business. The idea behind this is that it will encourage more businesses to “rescue” insolvent companies, which will have the knock-on effect of safeguarding employees’ jobs, because inherited liabilities are not as onerous.

 

Practical steps to protect a business

 

It is not possible to contract out of TUPE and its regulations affect both the former and new employer. However, there are steps that can be taken to divide TUPE liabilities contractually between them.

Under TUPE, employment liabilities attached to the transferring employees lay a new employer open to employee claims, even if their grievance arose with their former employer. The parties can decide to contractually divide any potential liabilities between them by way of contractual indemnities. This can be a particularly complex area of law to get right and done incorrectly can be worse than having no contract at all. The best course of action is to obtain specialist legal advice.

In relation to the ELI requirements, the following are best practices for employers:

 

  • Always keep data protection at the forefront during the TUPE process
  • Agree with the new employer what information will be transferred, and how it will be transferred (e.g. hard copies or sent electronically) plenty of time before the transfer takes place
  • Ensure those staff members responsible for negotiating the transfer are aware of their data protection responsibilities, such as keeping personal data current and secure
  • Ensure sufficient information is transferred to meet the TUPE obligations to allow the new employer to manage the staff and run the business. Although both parties should ensure excessive and irrelevant information is not transferred
  • Ensure information that is handed over is only used for the purposes of TUPE until the transfer is completed
  • Inform employees their information will be passed on to their new employer. Although it is accepted this may not always be possible
  • Consider anonymising personal information before providing any information not required by TUPE
  • Ensure, once the transfer of staff has completed, that employment records are up to date, and securely destroy any unnecessary information.

 

Need assistance?

 

DavidsonMorris’ employment lawyers can help with all legal aspects of company reorganisations, including meeting relevant duties under the TUPE provisions  in areas such as ELI. Working closely with our specialists in HR, we provide comprehensive guidance on how to approach and implement organisational change projects to minimise legal risk while ensuring commercial goals are achieved and employee engagement is optimised. For help and advice, speak to our experts.

 

TUPE & ELI FAQs

 

What is ELI in TUPE?

Employee liability information is a set of key details about employees who are transferring to a new employer under TUPE regulations. It includes information such as employee identities, employment terms, and details of any disciplinary actions or grievances.

 

What details must be provided as part of employee liability information?

The information must include the names, ages, and roles of transferring employees, along with their employment contracts, pay details, and any collective agreements. It also includes records of disciplinary actions or grievances in the past two years, as well as any outstanding legal claims.

 

When must employee liability information be provided?

The outgoing employer must provide this information to the new employer no later than 28 days before the transfer takes place, as required by TUPE regulations.

 

What happens if the outgoing employer fails to provide the information?

Failure to provide accurate or timely employee liability information can result in financial penalties. The new employer may claim up to £500 per employee as compensation.

 

Can employees request access to their own liability information?

Employees have the right to access their personal data under data protection laws, but the TUPE process itself does not grant employees direct access to the liability information shared between employers.

 

How should employee liability information be shared?

The information should be shared securely and confidentially, ensuring compliance with data protection laws, including the UK GDPR. Employers must take steps to protect the privacy of employees during the transfer.

 

Author

Founder and Managing Director Anne Morris is a fully qualified solicitor and trusted adviser to large corporates through to SMEs, providing strategic immigration and global mobility advice to support employers with UK operations to meet their workforce needs through corporate immigration.

She is a recognised by Legal 500 and Chambers as a legal expert and delivers Board-level advice on business migration and compliance risk management as well as overseeing the firm’s development of new client propositions and delivery of cost and time efficient processing of applications.

Anne is an active public speaker, immigration commentator, and immigration policy contributor and regularly hosts training sessions for employers and HR professionals

About DavidsonMorris

As employer solutions lawyers, DavidsonMorris offers a complete and cost-effective capability to meet employers’ needs across UK immigration and employment law, HR and global mobility.

Led by Anne Morris, one of the UK’s preeminent immigration lawyers, and with rankings in The Legal 500 and Chambers & Partners, we’re a multi-disciplinary team helping organisations to meet their people objectives, while reducing legal risk and nurturing workforce relations.

Read more about DavidsonMorris here

 

Legal Disclaimer

The matters contained in this article are intended to be for general information purposes only. This article does not constitute legal advice, nor is it a complete or authoritative statement of the law, and should not be treated as such. Whilst every effort is made to ensure that the information is correct at the time of writing, no warranty, express or implied, is given as to its accuracy and no liability is accepted for any error or omission. Before acting on any of the information contained herein, expert legal advice should be sought.

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