Dismissals – the key developments
• A ‘disclosure of information’ attracting whistleblowing protection means giving facts, not simply stating a position or making a bare allegation (case 1).
• An employee may have a right to legal representation under Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights where internal disciplinary proceedings would have a substantial influence on his/her right to practice his/her profession (case 2).
• To be gross misconduct, the employee’s behaviour must be a deliberate and wilful contradiction of the contractual terms or amount to very considerable negligence (case 3).
• In the well known three-fold test for conduct dismissals set out in British Home Stores v Burchell, the burden of proof is on the employer only in respect of the first stage, but is neutral for the second and third stages (case 4).
• When finding constructive dismissal, a tribunal must identify the relevant contract term which the employer has breached, decide whether it was a fundamental breach and decide whether it was the effective cause of the employee’s resignation (case 5).
Case details are available at www.employmentappeals.gov.uk (EAT) and www.bailii.org (Court of Appeal).
Call 020 8686 9141 for details of the journal Industrial Relations Law Reports (IRLR).