Alongside the constant stream of election related news, there were two EAT decisions in June, dealing with “pool of one” redundancies and ill-health dismissals, which will be of interest. In future, there will be further...more
April was a smorgasbord of developments, with a UK Supreme Court case on detriments and industrial action and two EAT decisions on international jurisdiction. In Parliament, another family-friendly bill is proceeding with...more
In March the government confirmed that changes to paternity leave, additional redundancy protection for pregnant employees and new parents and the right to carer’s leave will come into force in April as planned. We’re...more
In the run-up to Christmas, the government confirmed how carer’s leave and new protection against redundancy for pregnant employees and new parents will work. It announced changes to paternity leave in January and said that...more
The UK’s Supreme Court has confirmed that “part year” workers are entitled to 5.6 weeks’ holiday. Their holiday entitlement should not be pro-rated to reflect their actual hours of work, even though this means that they get...more
Managing an employee who has persistent short or medium term ill-health absence is difficult for an employer. Dismissing an employee whose attendance is unlikely to improve may be fair, but this will often depend on medical...more
An employee will succeed with an indirect sex discrimination claim if she can show that her employer applied a provision, criterion or practice (PCP) that put women (including the employee) at a disadvantage when compared...more
In this weeks issue: Who knew? Women less likely to be able to accommodate certain working patterns Spring in the step - Deliveroo riders not workers for trade union recognition Going, going, gone - final edition of the...more
If not now then when? Tribunal should have identified when jurisdiction established -
An employment tribunal only has jurisdiction to hear claims under the Employment Rights Act 1996 and Equality Act 2010 if the claimant...more
Narrow escape - limited waiver of privilege decision upheld In Watson v Hilary Meredith Solicitors Ltd the EAT reaffirmed the correct approach to waiver of privilege. A tribunal was entitled to find that a respondent had...more
Cashiered – supermarket staff succeed in Supreme Court -
To bring an equal pay claim, an employee has to point to a comparator of the opposite sex doing like work, work rated as equivalent or work of equal value. If the...more
4/12/2021
/ Adoption ,
Employee Benefits ,
Employee Rights ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Equal Pay ,
Holiday Pay ,
International Labor Laws ,
Parental Leave ,
Sex Discrimination ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Wage and Hour
Split the difference - CJEU decision on fragmentation applies to service provision changes -
When a contract is retendered, services that were originally provided by a single contractor may be divided between two or more...more
Employment newsletter In this weeks issue: Beating around the bush – disclosure did not have to identify legal obligation Gone fishing – disclosure in equal pay claims All change – tribunal limits and pay gap reporting ...more
Timed out – reasonable steps defence fails because training stable -
An employer can defend a discrimination claim under the Equality Act if it has taken all reasonable steps to prevent employees from committing acts of...more
2/22/2021
/ Coronavirus/COVID-19 ,
Economic Impact Analysis ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Litigation ,
Equality Act ,
Harassment ,
Infectious Diseases ,
International Labor Laws ,
Pay Gap ,
Race Discrimination ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Wage and Hour
Only joking – employer not vicariously liable for practical joke -
In Chell v Tarmac Cement and Lime Ltd employees of Roltech Engineering were contracted to work alongside Tarmac employees at a site, resulting in some...more
Way ahead – Roadmap for employment tribunals published:
The Presidents of the Employment Tribunals have published a roadmap outlining a plan for increasing the number of employment tribunal hearings that can take place...more
What's in a name? Return to work was a return to employee's old role -
In ICTS (UK) Ltd v Visram the Court of Appeal confirmed that an employee was entitled to receive long term disability benefit until he was able to...more
3/10/2020
/ Age Discrimination ,
Breach of Contract ,
Disability Discrimination ,
Disability Leave ,
Employment Litigation ,
Former Employee ,
International Labor Laws ,
Leave of Absence ,
Legal Advice ,
PHI ,
Restrictive Covenants ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Wage and Hour
Gathering clouds – flawed investigation made dismissal unfair -
In Sunshine Hotel Ltd t/a Palm Court Hotel v Goddard the EAT agreed that failing to hold an investigatory meeting does not necessarily make a dismissal...more
1/13/2020
/ Employee Misconduct ,
Employee Rights ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Litigation ,
Equal Pay ,
Hiring & Firing ,
International Labor Laws ,
Job Promotions ,
Labor Regulations ,
Legislative Agendas ,
Regulatory Agenda ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Unfair Dismissal ,
Workplace Investigations
Red faces – no gross misconduct when employee revealed executive's pay -
The EAT had to consider whether an employee had acted in breach of contract or committed gross misconduct when he revealed details of an executive's...more
12/16/2019
/ Couriers ,
Defense Strategies ,
Employee Definition ,
Employee Misconduct ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Litigation ,
Equal Pay ,
Hiring & Firing ,
International Labor Laws ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Wage and Hour ,
Wrongful Termination
It's not what you know – dismissal for whistleblowing despite dismissing manager's belief -
In Royal Mail Group Ltd v Jhuti the Supreme Court has reinstated a decision that an employee was dismissed because she had blown...more
12/3/2019
/ Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) ,
Disciplinary Proceedings ,
Employee Rights ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Litigation ,
Entitlements ,
Hiring & Firing ,
Holidays ,
International Labor Laws ,
Labor Regulations ,
Retaliation ,
Senior Managers ,
Sick Leave ,
Trade Unions ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Whistleblower Protection Policies ,
Whistleblowers
If it ain't broke – removing extended absence trigger a failure to make a reasonable adjustment -
Removing an extended sickness absence trigger point from an employee with ME/ chronic fatigue syndrome was a failure to make...more
11/18/2019
/ Breach of Duty ,
Constructive Discharge ,
Disability Discrimination ,
Diversity ,
FTSE ,
Hiring & Firing ,
Internal Investigations ,
International Labor Laws ,
Leave of Absence ,
Reasonable Accommodation ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Woman Board Members
Noteworthy – no holiday pro-rating for "part year" music teacher -
In The Harpur Trust v Brazel the Court of Appeal confirmed that a music teacher was entitled to be paid for 5.6 weeks' annual holiday, even though she only...more
9/9/2019
/ Constructive Discharge ,
Diversity ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Litigation ,
Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) ,
Foreign Workers ,
Holiday Pay ,
Immigrants ,
International Labor Laws ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Wage and Hour
Perception is king – rejection for hearing impairment perceived disability discrimination -
In The Chief Constable of Norfolk v Coffey the Court of Appeal confirmed that rejecting a transfer request from someone with a...more
7/1/2019
/ Age Discrimination ,
Appeals ,
Disability Discrimination ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Litigation ,
International Labor Laws ,
Labor Regulations ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Wage and Hour ,
Whistleblowers
No handbrake turns – holiday pay included voluntary overtime pay -
The Court of Appeal confirmed the EAT decision in East of England Ambulance Service NHS Trust v Flowers that holiday pay has to include voluntary overtime...more
6/17/2019
/ Collective Bargaining ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Contract ,
Employment Litigation ,
Employment Tribunals ,
Holiday Pay ,
International Labor Laws ,
Non-Disclosure Agreement ,
Over-Time ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Unions ,
Wage and Hour
Space invaders – parking policy relevant to reasonable adjustments claim -
In Linsley v Commissioners for Her Majesty's Revenue and Customs the EAT confirmed that the employer's parking policy should not have been...more
4/15/2019
/ Appeals ,
Collective Bargaining ,
Disability Discrimination ,
Disciplinary Proceedings ,
Employer Liability Issues ,
Employment Policies ,
International Labor Laws ,
Parking Lots ,
Reasonable Accommodation ,
Trade Unions ,
UK ,
UK Employment Appeal Tribunal ,
Unfair Dismissal