Relation to Coursework
Judgement
Case Facts
Legal Issue
General Knowledge
100

Uber drivers had to prove “worker” status.
On the contrary, Bella must prove this to succeed in defamation.

defamation

100
The Supreme Court unanimously dismissed this party's appeal

Uber


100

These 3 companies were the appellants:

Uber BV (Netherlands), Uber London Ltd, and Uber Britannia Ltd

100

The central legal question was whether drivers fit this category under UK law

'Worker' status under the Employment Rights Act 1996

100

What is a person who commits a tort called

the tortfeasor

200

Just as Uber exercised control over drivers, a newspaper may be liable if it does this to freelancers

directing, editing, and profiting from their work

200

The Court confirmed that Uber drivers were classified as this under s.230(3)(b) ERA 1996

Worker status


200

These individuals, along with other Uber drivers, were the respondents


Yaseen Aslam, James Farrar, and Robert Dawson

200

The Court emphasised examining this, rather than relying solely on Uber's written contracts.

The reality of the working arrangement


200

This tort occurs when someone intentionally causes another to fear immediate unlawful force 

Assault


300

Uber couldn’t avoid responsibility by relying on this, and The Telegram may face the same limitation

Contractual wording

300

Uber exercised significant control over drivers in these four areas

Fares, contractual terms, performance monitoring, and access to the app

300

Unlike Deliveroo drivers, Uber drivers could not do this, showing their personal obligation to perform the work

delegate or substitute another driver

300

One contested issue was whether drivers were only working during trips, or also during this period

while logged into the app and available for work

300

What was the 2 stage test established in Campbell v MGN

1. Reasonable expectation of privacy

2. Balancing test (Art 8 v Art 10 ECHR)

400

If a journalist or photographer is effectively integrated into the newspaper’s operations, this doctrine may apply

Vicarious Liability
400

the Court hekd that these documents did not reflect the reality of the working relationship

Written contracts

400

Passengers booking an Uber are given this information, which ties the service to a specific driver under minicab regulations

the driver’s name and vehicle registration

400

Uber’s ability to set fares, control customer access, and monitor performance was central to assessing this factor

the level of control Uber exercised over drivers

400

This doctrine allows liability even without fault

Strict Liability

500

The coursework scenario parallels Uber because The Telegram may not escape liability for Snoop Canid’s article if it does this

exercising control and integrating his work into the paper’s business

500

Key takeaway of the judgement was that Uber Drivers are workers, marking this broader impact

A major step in strengthening rights across the gig economy 

500

Because of Uber’s control and drivers’ dependency, the Court classified them not as contractors but as this

“workers” entitled to statutory protections

500

The overall legal question was whether Uber’s control and drivers’ dependency meant they qualified for these statutory protections

worker rights and protections (minimum wage, paid holiday, etc.)

500

The principle where the facts themselves imply negligence, even without direct evidence of the defendant's conduct

Res Ipsa Loquitur