0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views30 pages

Units 7 - Legal Environment

The document discusses how the legal environment affects businesses in many ways, including through contractual relationships, duty of care, employment legislation, and intellectual property laws. It covers various aspects of contract law, negligence law, the court system, consumer protection legislation, employment law, discrimination law, and protection of intellectual property. The document aims to help readers understand the principal sources of law and how law impacts business activities.

Uploaded by

Innocent Mpande
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
36 views30 pages

Units 7 - Legal Environment

The document discusses how the legal environment affects businesses in many ways, including through contractual relationships, duty of care, employment legislation, and intellectual property laws. It covers various aspects of contract law, negligence law, the court system, consumer protection legislation, employment law, discrimination law, and protection of intellectual property. The document aims to help readers understand the principal sources of law and how law impacts business activities.

Uploaded by

Innocent Mpande
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 30

Unit 7

THE LEGAL
ENVIRONMENT

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 2012 1


OPENING
QUESTION WHO NEEDS A LAWYER?

Just 40 years ago, a UK shopkeeper could:


• Find it relatively easy to discriminate on grounds of
gender and race when recruiting staff
• Pay only cursory regard to “Health and Safety”
• Refuse to serve disabled customers
• Happily allow smoking by customers and employees
• So much has changed!
Is change in the law a good or bad thing?
Who benefits and who bares the costs?
© The McGraw-Hill Companies 2
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
To understand
1. The principal sources of law
2. The impacts of law on business activities
3. legal remedies and processes available to a
firm's customers
4. Voluntary codes of conduct as an alternative to
law

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 3


THE LEGAL ENVIRONMENT AFFECTS
BUSINESSES IN MANY WAYS
 Contractual relationships with customers / suppliers
 Owes duty of care to members of the public
 Increasingly complex employment legislation
 The legal environment influences the relationship between
business enterprises themselves
 The laws of copyright and patent protect a firm's investment in
research
 The legal environment influences the production possibilities of
an enterprise and hence the products that can be offered to
consumers

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 4


TWO SOURCES OF LAW
In UK:
 Common law
- develops on the basis of judgements in the courts.
Previous cases set precedent
 Statute law
- passed by Parliament

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 5


THE LAW OF CONTRACT
• Vital elements for a contract to exist:
– offer
– acceptance
– intention to create legal relations
– consideration
– capacity
• Must not be Misrepresentation
• Damages for breach of contract

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 6


THINKING
AROUND IS A BUSINESS
THE RELATIONSHIP A
SUBJECT CONTRACT?

• Many long term relationships between businesses may


be based on vague understandings between the party
• EG Marks and Spencer's has had close business
relationships with many suppliers
• But can M&S be in breach of contract if it suddenly
stops giving orders to its suppliers?
• Wren does a general understanding become a
contractual obligation to place orders?
SEE MINI CASE
PAGE 204
© The McGraw-Hill Companies 7
LAW OF NEGLIGENCE
• A civil remedy based mainly on decided
cases
– Does the company owe a ‘duty of care’ to an
individual?
– Were they in breach of that duty?
– Is damage of a type that ought reasonably to
have been foreseen?
• Definition of “reasonable” changes over
time
© The McGraw-Hill Companies 8
THE LEGAL SYSTEM (In England)
• The Magistrates Court - mainly criminal matters
• Crown Court - more serious cases committed to
it for trial on ‘indictment’
• High Court - hears appeals from the Magistrates
Court
• Court of Appeal - deals with appeals from Crown
Court.
• County Courts - the courts of first instance in
most civil matters
• Supreme Court - ultimate appeal court

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 9


ENFORCEMENT OF CONSUMER
LEGISLATION

 Trading Standards Departments


 Environmental Health Departments
 Utility regulators

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 10


STATUTORY INTERVENTION IN
CONSUMER LAW
Main Legislation:
– Trade Descriptions Act 1968
– Sale of Goods Act 1979
– Misrepresentation Act 1967
– The Consumer Protection Act 1987
– Consumer Credit Act 1974

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 11


CODES OF CONDUCT
• A voluntary agreement (e.g. ASA Code)
• Can help raise standards in an industry
sector
• More flexible than legislation
• Can be quicker and cheaper than recourse
to the law
• Threat of new law if code breaks down

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 12


THINKING
AROUND
WHO BENEFITS FROM A
THE “COMPENSATION
SUBJECT CULTURE”?
• Many stories about apparently “trivial” claims by customers for
compensation:
– Customer burned by coffee “too hot”
– Girl guide awarded compensation for being struck by fat from a cooking
sausage
– Teacher sued after slipping on a chip
• Greedy opportunistic behaviour?
• Or an essential part of the process of making businesses act
responsibly to customers and to others?

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 13


EMPLOYMENT LAW
• Based on principles of contract law and
negligence
• Employer vicariously liable for actions of
employees
• Increasing amount of statutory legislation
• Need to distinguish between an employee
and a self-employed contractor

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 14


THINKING
AROUND SHOULD COMPANY
THE DIRECTORS BE LIABLE?
SUBJECT

Consider fatal accidents,


e.g. Paddington train
crash
• Junior employees
blamed for error
• But should directors be
prosecuted for having
unsafe procedures?

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 15


CONTRACT OF EMPLOYMENT
An employer must issue its employees with a
written contract of employment within 13
weeks of starting their employment
(Employment Rights Act 1996)
– Contains details of hours of work, pay,
conditions etc
– Terms cannot be altered without agreement
– Contract may refer to a collective agreement

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 16


INCREASING LEVELS OF LEGAL
PROTECTION FOR EMPLOYEES
• To redress imbalance of power between
employer and employee
• Examples:
 Health and Safety legislation
 Minimum wage legislation
– Working Hours directive
• Statutory redress for unfair dismissal/
redundancy
© The McGraw-Hill Companies 17
THINKING
AROUND TOO MUCH ‘ELF AND
THE SAFETY?
SUBJECT

• Is the customer always right?


• Regulations often seek to
protect ‘vulnerable’
customers/employees
• Many examples:
– Smoking in pubs
– 2006 EU Optical Radiation
Directive – should she be
covered up and protected from
sunshine??

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 18


DISCRIMINATION AT WORK
• Legislation seeks to protect disadvantaged
groups
– The Sex Discrimination Act 1975 (SDA)
– The Equal Pay Act 1970
– Race Relations Act 1976

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 19


RIGHTS TO WORKERS’
REPRESENTATION
• Traditionally, Labour governments have
advanced the cause of organised labour;
Conservative governments have taken a
more individualist approach
• The Employment Relations Act 1999
established a statutory procedure through
which trades unions can seek recognition
for collective bargaining

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 20


HUMAN RIGHTS ACTS
• The Human Rights Act came into force in the UK
in 2000
• Has presented a number of new legal challenges
for business organisations.
• Many of the rights specified in the Act are already
protected e.g. Sex Discrimination Act 1975
• Courts in the UK can now issue injunctions to
prevent violations of rights

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 21


PROTECTION OF COMPANY’S
INTANGIBLE ASSETS
• PATENTS
– Patents Act 1977 gives right to an inventor to reap
the benefits from their invention
• TRADE MARKS
– The Trade Marks Act 1994 provides protection for
trade marks (defined as any sign capable of being
represented graphically to distinguish goods or
services from those of competitors)

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 22


WHAT CAN A TRADE MARK OWNER
DO TO PREVENT THIS ?
• Patents and trade marks
are often a company’s
most valuable assets

• The law helps prevent


‘passing off’

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 23


LAW AND THE INTERNET
• Same basic principles of law apply online
• But can be difficult to determine the legal
jurisdiction that governs a contract
• Can be difficult to track down the other party
in cyberspace in order to enforce legal
requirements

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 24


THINKING
AROUND WHERE DO YOU GAMBLE
THE ONLINE
SUBJECT

• Online gambling has become big


business
• Can cross national boundaries and
avoid national laws to prevent
gambling
• How can countries ban shop
based gambling but be apparently
powerless to stop online gambling
in their countries
• What legal remedies – direct and
indirect – are practical?
© The McGraw-Hill Companies 25
LAW AND PRODUCTION
PROCESSES

Increasing level of legislation to reduce


external costs of production, e.g.:

– Environmental Protection Act 1995


– Environment Act 1990
– Water Resources Act 1991

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 26


LEGISLATION TO PROTECT THE
COMPETITIVENESS OF MARKETS

• Presumption that competitive markets are


more efficient
• Common law acts against restraint of trade
• Statutory regulatory framework (e.g.
Competition Act; Articles 85 and 86 of Treaty
of Rome)

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 27


CASE LEGISLATION
STUDY STRENGTHENED IN A BID
TO END “NIGHTMARE”
HOLIDAYS
• Holidays are bought on trust – you cannot
evaluate the holiday until after purchase
• Many codes of conduct have had mixed success
• Now much more legislation to protect
consumers
• But is there now too much protection?

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 28


SUMMARY
You should now understand
 The basic principles of law as they affect
business organisations
 Legal remedies and processes available to a
firm's customers
 Voluntary codes of conduct as an alternative to
law
Remember, the law can be very complex.
This session has only covered basic principles!

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 29


END

© The McGraw-Hill Companies 30

You might also like