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Anna Denton-Jones Articles Disciplinary Employment Law Investigations

The Tolley KC investigation into Dominic Raab

Anyone who takes on the role of investigating officer, whether it’s into grievances raised by employees or disciplinary matters, should read Adam Tolley KC’s investigation report produced for the Prime Minister, because it is a master class in how the findings of an investigation ought to be presented.

Firstly, he sets out what his terms of reference were, which is particularly important for those who are appointed externally by an organisation – often when I am acting for the employee, I ask about terms of reference and am shocked by how often organisations have not set out the scope of an investigation. Also, if data is being shared with a third party as part of the investigation, then the Data Protection implications of this needs to be addressed somewhere?

The Report commences by setting out the relevant policies and what they say. Obviously as a bullying investigation, the definition of bullying is set out. In this particular example, he has referred to case law reports within the civil service, but an employer is likely to have a policy setting out what they regard as bullying or if they don’t then there is always the ACAS definition to be referred to.

The Report describes the methodology followed. Tolley goes to lengths to explain the submissions made by Dominic Raab, both verbally and in writing and addresses his representations and how he has factored in those things to his decision-making process. For example, representations about complaints not having been made contemporaneously with events some years down the line or the availability of direct documentary evidence. When you read the explanation as to his thought process, you are able to understand that he has weighed up considerations and to understand decisions he has made along the way.  This has the benefit of being transparent, reassuring the employee, in our case, who is at the centre of the investigation, that things have been dealt with fairly. Reports that lack this level of detail are often criticised by the subject, as it will appear that certain things have not been taken into account when actually they might have been.

Adam Tolley also goes into the background first with a detailed description of the Deputy Prime Minister’s working style. The advantage of setting out this background is that not only does it give another opportunity to show fairness and balance, it is useful for anyone reading the report outside of an organisation to understand the context. This will be potentially important if there is an appeal to be dealt with or, in our case, an Employment Tribunal.

The Report is forensic in that it breaks down complaints or allegations into constituent parts and addresses each element in turn. In taking that approach, he is able to sift through those items for which there is evidence and items where there is not, and that gives you a feeling of balance in that he has acted fairly, only finding fault where there is evidence to suggest there was, for example, when it comes to physical gestures like table slamming and shouting and swearing, Dominic Raab was not found to have acted inappropriately. It also enables us to see that each aspect has been covered.

The Report looks at the history – in a disciplinary context, this might be previous disciplinary warnings or whether any informal meetings have ever been held about conduct previously. Here there were certain communications which sought to alert the Deputy Prime Minister to the existence of an issue with his behaviour but those communications did not use the word ‘bullying’.

Where he talks about witnesses, Tolley shows his thinking in terms of the reliability of those witnesses and whether or not they may have had any motive to complain – this is often useful in a Report to articulate why, for example, a particular witness should be believed or not. In this particular case, there is a discussion around so called “snowflake” reactions and the resilience levels that can be expected from civil servants. You would expect any investigating officer to be able to talk about the extent to which they felt witnesses were acting in good faith and in bullying cases in particular, perhaps commentary on the impact the experience had on their health. Adam Tolley recognised the impacts communicated to him were genuinely experienced and this will be the case where we are not focused on the intention of a protagonist but rather the impact that behaviour has had (harassment cases for example).

The Report discusses confidentiality and how that has been addressed and its relevance to the findings in the Report. This is particularly important if the identity of individuals is going to be protected, for example, in harassment cases. In the Tolley Report, because he knew it was going to be published to the public, he has had to work hard to protect the confidentiality of individuals (only two people are named, with their consent) and that has resulted in some detail being omitted and kept between him and the Prime Minister. That would obviously differ in an employment context where the detail and the information would be included in the Report and it’s appendices, although occasionally a decision may be taken to anonymise witness statements and to omit details which would betray the identity of the witnesses.

We can all learn from this example, quite apart from the debate around what is or isn’t bullying. A link to the actual report can be found in the following link:

https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2023/apr/21/dominic-raab-investigation-raises-questions-about-rishi-sunaks-judgment?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Anna Denton-Jones Duty of Care Employment Law Employment Rights Act 1996 HR Mental Health Pay Sick Pay Stress

Are you entitled to withhold SSP?

You’ve probably noticed wording in your sickness policy that makes it clear if employees don’t comply with your procedure, they risk the payment of Statutory Sick Pay (SSP).

It is not open to an employer to withhold SSP where the employee provides medical evidence from their GP late. For example, you may require the certificate to be given to you on day 8 of absence, and the employee might not get around to giving you a certificate until day 10.

An employer is allowed to not pay SSP if the employee has failed to notify them of the absence, and there is no good reason to cause the delay in notification. For example, the employee is supposed to notify you of their absence on the first day of incapacity – if they didn’t notify you and essentially were absent without leave for the first few days and told you on day 8, then potentially Section 156(2)(a) Social Security Contributions and Benefits Act 1992 applies. So, for example, if the employee had gone AWOL effectively for the first week and then telephoned in, the employer is entitled to withhold for the duration of the delay.

Employers may introduce something more onerous as a matter of contract. For example, that the employee has to report in sick by a particular time on the first day of their absence and thereafter at regular intervals. That cannot override the statutory scheme when it comes to SSP but if more generous contractual sick pay is available, such as payment for the waiting days when SSP doesn’t apply or payment of full pay or something more than SSP, then the employer will be able to follow what they have said in their contract and withhold the extra payment if the employee has not complied with the rules.

Under SSP rules, HMRC in its www.gov.uk page ‘Statutory Sick Pay: employee fitness to work’, states that “if an employer decides to stop payment of SSP, they should explain their decision to the employee”. The employee will be entitled to a written statement from the employer and can seek a formal decision on their entitlement from HMRC Statutory Disputes Payment team. You might like to refer to the ‘Stop Payment of SSP Section’ of that Guidance. There is an example letter to notify the employee that you will not be paying them.

There will be occasions where the employer has real reasons to believe that the person may not have been unfit for work. For example, they may have requested annual leave and that request has been rejected, so the individual then phones in sick. Clearly the employer would have to do as much investigation as they possibly could around the circumstances. For example, if the individual provides a doctors fit note, HMRC advises that that should be accepted as conclusive proof of incapacity for SSP purposes, even if there is very strong evidence to the contrary. The employer might need to get their own medical advice or to ask HMRC to arrange for the employee to be examined by the medical services team. Clearly that only works in the case of a health condition that is likely to be ongoing.

It might be possible to ask, for example, a GP who has provided a backdated sick note when their consultation with the individual was and providing evidence timing that the employee has been covering up them being perfectly well on the days in question. Evidence as to their activity from social media may also be relevant, eg. photographs of the employee swanning around Spain when the employee told the employer they were in bed and that they were so unwell that they couldn’t get up.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

 

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Anna Denton-Jones Communication Confidentiality Disclosure Employment Law Procedural Fairness Without Prejudice

Changing what you say in protected conversations

From time to time you may send out a letter offering an employee, via a protected conversation, a settlement package. In a case called Meaker v Cyxtera Technology UK Ltd, the employee, in receipt of such a letter marked “without prejudice” believed that that letter constituted an effective dismissal. This is because the letter set out the particular date the employer was proposing that he would leave, the different payments he would get and when. He argued that this was a sufficiently clear letter to be a dismissal when it came to bringing an unfair dismissal claim under the Employment Rights Act 1996.

The relevance of this in the Employment Tribunal was whether he had brought his claim in time. If the “without prejudice” letter did, as he said, constitute a dismissal then his claim was going to be out of time. Alternatively, if the date of dismissal was the date on which he received payment in lieu of notice and holiday payment, then his claim was going to be in time.

The Tribunal agreed that the “without prejudice” letter was an effective letter of dismissal but the employee appealed. The Employment Appeal Tribunal agreed that that letter created a clear decision to dismiss, even though it was marked “without prejudice” and enclosed a draft Settlement Agreement, without terms providing for a mutual termination not having, in fact, been agreed. In effect, both the Tribunals viewed the letter as terminating the employee’s contract unilaterally.

As always the background facts were case specific – the employee had hurt his back and couldn’t do his job but wasn’t so severely affected that he met the test for income protection to kick in. There had been numerous discussions about what to do next. The employer sent the offer letter and draft settlement following a discussion with HR and actually processed the payment in lieu of notice even though agreement had not been reached.

The first moral of the story is never ever make payments in connection with a settlement agreement until it is all sorted!

This case has, however, given me reason to go back and review the standard kind of offer letter that I see on a regular basis: where the employers will state a termination date for example, the payment in lieu of notice that might be made, payment in lieu of holiday that might be made and an ex gratia payment that might be given in addition to things like reference and other benefits like outplacement counselling.

Employers run the risk that these letters can be seen as dismissal letters (any employee who has ever been on the receiving end of such an offer letter will tell you that they feel that it’s such a strong signal from the employer that the relationship is over and that they could not in fact continue). Is it worth drafting them in a different way to account for this risk? For example, instead of setting out a termination date, you may suggest to the employee that a leaving date would be agreed when the terms of a settlement agreement are agreed – this leaves it uncertain.

Secondly, the employer may wish to clarify that in no way should the employee take receipt of the letter as indicating any intention to bring their employment to an end.

You might also decide to say that holiday pay is something that would have to be agreed once the parties have discussed what the accrued holiday actually is.

Alternatively, you need to be aware that every time you do provide such an offer letter that it is open to the employee to argue that it brings an end to their employment, despite the fact that it is marked “without prejudice” and probably subject to a protected conversation.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

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Anna Denton-Jones Disability Employment Law Employment Rights Act 1996 Equality Act 2010

Disability cases — Being able to defend them

A recent case involving HMRC illustrated some key messages for me about defending a disability case.

In McAllister v Revenue and Customs Commissioners, the employee worked for HMRC for 7 years. He suffered from anxiety and depression and was off work for long periods of time, although some of these absences were not related to his mental health issues. In the last 24 months of employment he had been off for 245 days over 23 different occasions. At the time of dismissal, he had been off for 7 months straight. Often employers want to know “are we in safe territory to dismiss?”. With numbers like that, I’d be saying “why are you still employing?”.

The employer concluded that that level and regularity of absence impacted on productivity and staff morale (all reasonable adjustments had been exhausted). It therefore decided to dismiss. The employee would ordinarily have been entitled to a payment under the Civil Service Compensation Scheme, but the amount paid to him was reduced by 50% because they were penalising certain behaviour. That behaviour included failure to answer calls, delaying returning relevant forms, displaying disruptive behaviour and turning up late during a phased return to work.

Unsurprisingly, the employee appealed the penalty and his award was increased to 80%. He also claimed discrimination arising from disability under S.15 of the Equality Act 2010 in relation to his dismissal and the reduction of the payment.

The employer agreed the employee was disabled – this is not worth challenging unless there is real doubt over the employee qualifying as disabled. The employer is better off focussing on the lack of discrimination.

In such a case the narrative the employer is looking to tell the Tribunal is basically that “yes the person is disabled, look at all the things we did to look after him and level the playing field (reasonable adjustments). Unfortunately, the level of absence got so bad it followed this pattern – look how much time the employee was taking off and how frequently (see the figures above). We tried to manage it, and this is the advice we got from occupational health and this is what we did but it made no difference”.

Where you can evidence that for the Tribunal, it is then likely to find, as here, that the dismissal was a proportionate means of achieving the employer’s aim of ensuring that staff were capable of demonstrating satisfactory attendance and a good standard of attendance, which also comprised the aims of the maintenance of a fair, effective and transparent sickness management regime, and the efficient use of resources. The Tribunal had found that M’s absence had a very real impact on HMRC’s use of resources, in particular, on time management and staff morale.

If you think about the compensation scheme, it is a benefit – to get a disability claim off the ground you have to be able to show an act of unfavourable treatment – here the employee failed to do so as follows: the relevant treatment was the payment to the employee, the object of which was to compensate the jobholder for loss of employment that is beyond his or her control. That was made because of dismissal due to disability-related absence and disability was behind that. However, being treated as entitled to a payment– was not unfavourable treatment; if anything, it was more favourable than it would have been if the employee had been dismissed for a reason other than his disability. This shows it is key to fighting cases to really drill down into the specific wording of the law – just because someone feels aggrieved about something doesn’t mean they will get themselves through that successfully.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

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Anna Denton-Jones Constructive Dismissal Employment Contract Employment Law Employment Rights Act 1996 Video

Video | Constructive dismissal and side hustles

Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel — please click here to watch Anna discussing the issues raised by a recent case involving somebody with anxiety that was triggered by outside of work things but was impacting upon their employer.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

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Anna Denton-Jones Conflict Employment Contract Employment Law Employment Rights Act 1996 Part-Time Working

Video | Employees with second jobs, part 2

Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel — please click here to watch Anna discussing employees with second jobs. This is our second video on this topic this year – the first video led to some healthy debates on the subject and we felt there was a need for a second video with the aim of clarifying the position on why employers might want to restrict somebody from having a second job for the benefit of employers and employees. We hope that you find it useful.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

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Anna Denton-Jones Employment Law Performance Management

Knowledge November 2022

Covering the topic of ‘performance management’, Week 1 of Knowledge November 2022 is now available to view:

https://mailchi.mp/075e6d5dbb56/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-14406919

Week 2 of Knowledge November 2022 is now available to view. This week the focus is on what tools we have in our kit bags to manage performance and the performance management cycle:

https://mailchi.mp/2c89212ce29a/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-14406951

Week 3 of Knowledge November 2022 is now available to view. This week we pick up on where to start if we recognise that performance is below par:

https://mailchi.mp/75be8522e9e7/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-14407003

Week 4 of Knowledge November 2022 is now available to view. This week we consider some bumps that may appear in the road when performance managing and what a fair process looks like to the Tribunal:

https://mailchi.mp/a20d8dbb8a2d/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-14407087

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

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Anna Denton-Jones Articles Employment Law

Knowledge November — Past editions

For those who are new to our newsletter, each November we focus in-depth on a subject with weekly videos and content on a specific topic. In previous years we have looked at the following in focus:

2021 – Constructive Dismissal

Week 1 – https://mailchi.mp/ff1178f15115/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-5374561

Week 2 – https://mailchi.mp/5b70ce97b43e/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-5577949

Week 3 – https://mailchi.mp/9b38225cac66/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-5577953

Week 4 – https://mailchi.mp/2d4f922538b3/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-5577957

2019 – Stress

Week 1 – https://mailchi.mp/011042aa9b47/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-2473633

Week 2 – https://mailchi.mp/82af2e655cc1/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-2473741

Week 3 – https://mailchi.mp/8538aa73c213/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-2477357

Week 4 – https://mailchi.mp/99acef56fca1/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-2477369

2018 – Disciplinary

Week 1 – https://mailchi.mp/269a19ef5212/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-2218317

Week 2 – https://mailchi.mp/ffc8e8625d00/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-2218377

Week 3 – https://mailchi.mp/9ce35a5e1db9/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-2226901

Week 4 – https://mailchi.mp/7c113f7a033a/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-2228333

Week 5 – https://mailchi.mp/7c29235f5667/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law-2232529

2017 – Social Media

Week 1 – https://mailchi.mp/b50657f8f52a/welcome-to-knowledge-november-refreshing-law

Week 2 – https://mailchi.mp/5cd3b5df34a2/newsletter-from-refreshing-law-1822157

Week 3 – https://mailchi.mp/707d5482b9a6/newsletter-from-refreshing-law-1822325

Week 4 – https://mailchi.mp/48961da7e83a/newsletter-from-refreshing-law-1824365

Week 5 – https://mailchi.mp/3e2daab8065c/newsletter-from-refreshing-law-1824405

2016 – Directors

Week 1 – https://us7.campaign-archive.com/?u=e76d904607d00f77f84faad50&id=55749d02be

Week 2 – https://us7.campaign-archive.com/?u=e76d904607d00f77f84faad50&id=7066d77184

Week 3 – https://us7.campaign-archive.com/?u=e76d904607d00f77f84faad50&id=09fa4fcc68

Week 4 – https://us7.campaign-archive.com/?u=e76d904607d00f77f84faad50&id=1cf5deda06

Week 5 – https://us7.campaign-archive.com/?u=e76d904607d00f77f84faad50&id=73a8292124

2015 – Subject Access Requests

Week 1 – https://us7.campaign-archive.com/?u=e76d904607d00f77f84faad50&id=40189790f4

Week 2 – https://us7.campaign-archive.com/?u=e76d904607d00f77f84faad50&id=f95898dfd9

Week 3 – https://us7.campaign-archive.com/?u=e76d904607d00f77f84faad50&id=23907acbd3

Week 4 – https://us7.campaign-archive.com/?u=e76d904607d00f77f84faad50&id=a3a21935ae

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

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Anna Denton-Jones Employment Law Employment Rights Act 1996 Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Act 2023 Video

Video | Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill

Our latest video is available to view on the Refreshing Law YouTube channel — please click here to watch Anna discussing the Retained EU Law (Revocation and Reform) Bill which the Government has recently published in the House of Commons. We have prepared this video to update you on the potential changes that could occur around Employment Law.

There are also two articles which are mentioned in the video which can be found here: Law Society Gazette and here Employment Lawyers Association.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law

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Anna Denton-Jones Employment Law Immigration Right to Work

Updating practices around right to work checks

From 1 October 2022, there will only be three main methods of checking an individual’s right to work in the UK – online, manual and using an Identity Service Provider (IDSP). The method an employer uses will depend on the immigration status of the individual and the documents they hold.

IDSPs
A list of those who are recognised IDSP is found at:

https://www.ukas.com/resources/latest-news/uk-digital-identity-and-attributes-trust-framework-pilot/

The fees for each can differ and they may offer different service packages.

An IDSP is intended to be used for holders of valid British and Irish passports only. Individuals with other immigration statuses or who do not hold a valid British or Irish passport will not be able to be checked using IDSP.

It is not mandatory to use one of these services – you can still check British and Irish nationals documents manually.

Temporary COVID changes ending

Temporary changes to right work check requirements introduced on 30 March 2022 due to the COVID-19 pandemic which allow checks to be carried out over video call and for scans or photographs of documents to be checked rather than original documents will also end on 30 September 2022.

To prepare for the changes, employers should:

• Consider the percentage of employees who hold various immigration documents and the rate of staff turnover. This will help to decide whether it is worth the employer using an IDSP.
• Determine how it will conduct manual checks on relevant employees following the end of the temporary COVID-19 related concessions.
• Create step-by-step guides for those conducting right to work checks and ensure whoever is conducting the checks understands when to use each method and what that involves.

Anna Denton-Jones
Refreshing Law