
The Employers Update - March 2010
Welcome to the March edition of
Employ with ongoing updates on
developments in HR and Employment
Law. If you wish to discuss any of
the matters raised within this
Employ! please do not hesitate to
contact a member of the Employment
Team.
For further information on the
extensive services Taylors
Employment team can offer you please
feel free to contact us:
Oliver McCann - Partner and
Head of Employment
James Bellamy
- Employment Solicitor
Tel: 0844 8000 263
Email:
oliver.mccann@taylors.co.uk |
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Constructive unfair dismissal is where
an employee resigns from his employment in
response to a fundamental breach of the
contract of employment by the employer. The
usual fundamental breach alleged is a breach
of implied terms of mutual trust and
confidence, although others may include
unilateral variations to the contract such
as pay, working hours, place of work, the
support offered to employees or a failure to
safeguard an employee's health etc.
A recent case has confirmed that the
test for constructive dismissal is not a
range of reasonable responses test but a
unitary one. More importantly the case
confirmed that once there is a breach it
cannot be cured.
In this case a Professor at a university
resigned after exam papers he had marked
were remarked by the chairman of the board
of examiners. An inquiry from the University
was subsequently set up which vindicated the
Claimant and criticised the marking
procedures in place. A tribunal held that
the remarking of papers was a fundamental
breach of contract and although the
subsequent inquiry cleared the Professor of
any wrongdoing it was not sufficient to cure
the breach.
As such care now needs to be taken when
investigating grievances and in particular
what admissions, if any, are made as such
admissions and steps put in place to rectify
any breaches may not be enough to avoid a
claim.
Draft regulations pertaining to the
new right to paternity leave have now been
approved.
The most important is the Additional
Paternity Leave Regulations 2010, which
provide that additional paternity leave will
be for a minimum of 2 weeks and maximum of
26 weeks. Such leave must not start until at
least 20 weeks after the birth and must end
no later than 12 months after the birth.
Leave may only be taken in multiples of
complete weeks. Similar provisions apply for
adoption placements.
The regulations come into force on 6th April
2010 but will only apply to children whose
expected week of birth (or adoption) begins
on or after 3rd April 2011.
Fathers may take to up to six months
additional paternity leave as long as the
mother has returned to work. This gives the
parents the choice of dividing the period of
“paid leave” entitlement between them. For
the Additional Paternity Leave to be paid it
must fall within the 39 weeks period for
which SMP would be payable. As such, fathers
could receive Paternity Pay at the statutory
rates for weeks 21- 39 assuming the mother
utilised no more than 1 week of her
Maternity Leave before the child was born.
Parents will need to 'self certify' by
providing details of their eligibility to
their employer. Employers and HMRC will both
be able to carry out further checks of
entitlement if necessary.
A recent case acts as a timely
reminder about the importance of engaging in
some form of collective consultation, even
where it is not possible to meet the minimum
period of consultation (30 day = 20-99
employees, 90 days 100+).
An engineering company received notice
from its customer to amend its working
practices within 24 hours resulting in an
immediate need to reduce the workforce by 50
employees. The need to make 20 or more
redundant immediately triggered obligations
to inform and consult under S.188 Trade
Union & Labour Relations (consolidation) Act
1992. 50 staff were made redundant the day
after the working practices were
implemented.
Complaints were submitted by Unite, the
recognized trade union that the Company had
failed to comply with its S.188 obligations.
The Employer argued that there were special
circumstances rendering it not reasonably
practicable to comply with s.188.
An Employment Tribunal found that there were
special circumstances rendering it not
practicable to consult for a 30 day period
but that there were no special circumstances
preventing the Employer from engaging S.188
(2) and (4) – information in writing about
the collective redundancy circumstances and
the need to consult on ways to avoid
dismissals, reducing the number of
dismissals and mitigating consequences of
those dismissals. The tribunal felt the
Employer could have engaged in some
consultation over 2-3 days and awarded 90
days protective award.
The employers appeal failed except on the
point that the award should reflect the
mitigating circumstances that existed.
One has to have sympathy with the Employer
who, without proper notice, ended in a
collective consultation obligation. However
the reasoning of the Tribunals emphasizes
that obligations under s.188 are not to be
taken as one complete obligation, but
instead viewed independent of each other
with the over riding theme that an Employer
must do all that is reasonable practicable
to comply with individual sub sections of
s.188.
A recent case upheld a decision that it
was fair to terminate an employee’s
employment summarily where the employee had
undermined the trust and confidence at the
heart of the employment contract. Once
established the employer was entitled to
accept such a repudiatory breach and was
released from the need to continue to employ
the employee.
In this particular case a very senior
employee had failed to report to Group
Headquarters on fundamental issues
pertaining to risk to the operating company
thereby denying them the opportunity to
assess the risk themselves. This was in
specific breach of an express instruction
which the employee had been issued with. The
failure to comply with this instruction
undermined the trust and confidence placed
in the employee and entitled the Employer to
dismiss for gross misconduct.
This is a common issue faced by employers
relating to last minute requests by
employees to take a day or two holiday
leave, or worse still, a week or more.
Usually, employers set out the holiday
procedure for booking annual leave within a
handbook stating the amount of notice that
needs to be given and other factors which
will be considered when deciding whether to
agree to the holiday leave request.
However what is the position where an
employee is approaching the end of holiday
year and submits a request which gives
insufficient notice to take holidays but
refusal of which would deny the employee the
right to use his accrued holidays? A recent
case confirmed that an employee is bound by
notice provisions set out in the employment
contract or under the Working Time
Regulations 1998 and as long as the Employer
does not use the notice provisions in a way
that is unreasonable, inconsistent, or
prejudicial manner then a refusal with the
employee’s loss of his right to take
holidays (without a payment in lieu) is
lawful and not a fundamental breach of
contract.
As long as there are justified reasons for
refusal the loss of holiday leave is
irrelevant. Such requests cannot be
dismissed out of hand though and
consideration should be given to each on a
case by case basis.
1. Can you clarify what an
individual’s entitlement is to annual leave
whilst off sick?
The position can be summarized as follows:
- Annual leave continues to accrue
whilst an individual is on sick leave
- You must allow workers to take
annual leave during a period of sick
leave if they wish to do so
- If no requests are made then you
must allow the worker to take their
annual leave upon return to work
providing they can take their full
entitlement within that holiday year
- Where a worker returns to work but
cannot take their full entitlement in
the holiday year then they are not
allowed to carry over holiday leave,
unless the worker works in the public
sector and can enforce European
Directives directly in which case they
can enforce the Pareda decision which
says a worker must be allowed to take
accrued holidays upon return to work
even if that means holiday leave needs
to be carried over on to another holiday
year
- Where employment terminates then a
worker is entitled to be paid in lieu
for accrued holidays not taken as at the
date of termination including leave
accrued and untaken in previous years
where the failure to pay constitutes a
series of deductions.
2. I have heard that the new Equality
Act, due in October this year, will force
employers to disclose details about their
pay gaps. Is this correct?
The Equality Bill is still making its way
through the system for final approval but is
expected to be implemented in October 2010.
Assuming no further changes to the current
drafts then employers of more than 250
employees will be required to disclose to
the government details of their pay gap
within the organization. A failure to do so
will result in civil enforcement and
penalties. The good news is that it is
voluntary until 2013.
Note that it will be prohibited to enforce
pay secrecy clauses against employees. They
will be free to discuss pay with one another
– the only caveat being that such
discussions are with a view to establishing
a connection between pay and discrimination
– but how easy will it be to prove
otherwise?
Copyright 2006 - 2010 Taylors Solicitors
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