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Constructive Dismissal and Cause: 2 Ways Your Employer Can End Your Employment and Claim You are Owed Nothing

Learn about constructive dismissal and cause in employment law, including fundamental changes, toxic environments, and investigations. Understand your rights and obligations in these situations.

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Constructive Dismissal and Cause: 2 Ways Your Employer Can End Your Employment and Claim You are Owed Nothing

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  1. Constructive Dismissal and Cause: 2 Ways Your Employer Can End Your Employment and Claim You are Owed Nothing

  2. Nicole Howell nhowell@hhbg.ca 604.696.5116

  3. What we’ll cover today: • Employment Law 101: The Employment Contract • Constructive Dismissal • Fundamental Change • Toxic Environment • Cause • The Smoking Gun • Cumulative Misconduct • Investigation: Your Rights and Obligations • Performance Improvement plans (PIP) and Final Warning

  4. Part One: The Employment Contract

  5. Part One: The Employment Contract • What makes a contract? 1. Offer 2. Acceptance 3. Consideration Employer: Wages/$$$$ Employee: Services

  6. Part One: The Employment Contract • Termination clause? • contemplating the end of the relationship at the beginning • may or may not be enforceable • No Termination clause? • BC Employment Standards Act - 8 weeks’ max • Reasonable notice under the common law – 2 years max: • Age • Postion • Length of service • Availability of other jobs

  7. Part One: The Employment Contract • What ends an employment contract? The EMPLOYEE may resign to move on to another opportunity; • The EMPLOYER may trigger separation per contract terms or per common law; • OR The EMPLOYER may breach the contract

  8. Part Two: Constructive Dismissal

  9. Part Two: Constructive Dismissal What is Constructive Dismissal? Employer alters an “essential term” or makes a “fundamental change”: • Compensation • Location • Hours of work • Significant change of duties • Or change of responsibilities • A combination of the above • Safe workplace (i.e. creates/permits toxic work environment)

  10. Part Two: Constructive Dismissal Constructive Dismissal: Fundamental Change Change must be: • Unilateral (i.e. you don’t agree with it) • To your (the employee’s) detriment • Permanent or indefinite

  11. Part Two: Constructive Dismissal Constructive Dismissal: Toxic Environment • If your boss or co-workers are exhibiting toxic behavior • Yelling, swearing, inappropriate comments etc. • You must report the behavior. It is the employer’s failure to fix it that amounts to the potential breach

  12. Part Two: Constructive Dismissal Duty to Mitigate • One complicating factor is that you may have a duty to mitigate even if your employer has fundamentally breached your contract • And that duty to mitigate may require you to remain in the new role (despite the significant change) UNLESS: • There is a significant cut (30% or more) to your pay OR • It would be humiliating and/or embarrassing to remain in the new role

  13. Part Two: Constructive Dismissal • Takeaways: • Protest. Tell the employer (preferably in an email so that it is documented) that you are not happy with the change and why – hopefully you can resolve the issue right then and there. • Trial period. Consider whether you are prepared to try the new role / situation for period of time before you make your decision • Talk to an employment lawyer. This doesn’t mean you are ‘lawyering up’. It means you are finding out your rights so that you know your options. Knowledge is power • New job. Start looking at other employment options. • Quit. Walk out and take the position you have been constructively dismissed. Don’t do this without talking to a lawyer!

  14. Part Three: CAUSE

  15. Part Two: Cause • 2 categories of cause: • The egregious category: the smoking gun • E.g: • Stealing, misappropriating funds • Fraud • Gross Insubordination • Gross breach of company policy • Employer’s Duty To Pay Severance:

  16. Part Three: Cause • 2 categories of cause: • The less egregious category: • For example: • Substandard performance • Minor insubordination • Minor breach of company policy • Bad attitude

  17. Part Three: Cause • Employer Duties BEFORE Firing For Cause • If the Employer has no smoking gun: • Provide a warning • Explain the expected standard and how you are falling short • Explain what you need to do to • Provide a reasonable period of time for you to improve • Provide additional warnings and additional time to improve, including a clear warning that if you continue to fail to improve you will be terminated with cause

  18. Part Three: Cause • No one’s perfect – was it cause despite the misconduct? 3-Factor Test Judges Use: a contextual analysis • What was the nature and extent of the misconduct? • What were the surrounding circumstances? • Is dismissal a proportionate response?

  19. Part Four: Investigation

  20. Part Four: Reacting to Investigation Employee Rights During Investigation If you are being investigated: • Don’t panic! • Gather information. You should be told the complaint against you • Cooperate. It is important – and in your interest - to tell your side of the story. Unlike like a criminal investigation, there is no right to silence • You may want to talk to an employment lawyer

  21. Part Four: Reacting to Investigation Employer Obligations During Investigation • Employers are required to take complaints seriously • Employers should: • gather information from all relevant witnesses; • allow the employee to hear the complaint against them and provide a response; • investigation should be confidential and should minimally disrupt all parties involved.

  22. Part Five: Passing the PIP

  23. Part Five: Passing the PIP What is a PIP? Performance Improvement Plan • Written set of short-term expectations • Not always possible to achieve as drafted • May contain warning statement: “Failure to achieve/modify conduct will result in discipline up to and including termination”

  24. Part Five: Passing the PIP How to handle a PIP Remember employer’s obligation: • Required improvements are reasonable • Clear guidance on required improvements • Reasonable opportunity to improve Your move: • Work with manager to redraft with realistic goals • Ensure resources or training in place if needed • If you don’t agree with the PIP, document your position • Plan B

  25. Nicole Howell nhowell@hhbg.ca 604.696.5116

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