JumbleDuck
Well-Known Member
Well I read that as the owner can pay who he likes (a delivery skipper) provided the owner is not receiving payment other than a contribution towards the cost of say food and provisions.
No contribution of goods or services either. Like crewing services?
If you borrow a boat you have an obligation to at least try to give it back at an agreed place and time. Now I believe this was a delivery in this case, but your argument that agreeing to hand it over at a certain place proves on its own that it is a commercial voyage has holes.
That's not my argument. My argument is that if two employees of a company perform what would normally be part of their duties for their employer to do something of direct benefit to their employer, it's difficult to claim that they weren't it as part of their employment. Employers regularly try the "s/he wasn't actually working for us at that instant" claim to wriggle out of problems, and it rarely works.