Re: Disciplinary for unauthorised absence
You are backwards engineering your argument to prove a point that was wrong in the first place. You did not specify a probationary period of less than a month - you said that a contract can be terminated without notice during the probationary period, which is not true. It may have escaped your attention, but not everyone works for McDonalds. Probationary periods, which, as I have explained at great length, do not exist in law, can be several months long. The length of them is determined by the employer, and solely by the employer.
Best practice is not law. Tribunals do not rule on best practice, they rule on points of law. And the ACAS code of practice does not say that an employer must hold an investigation. So whether an investigation is held is not relevant to an argument about failure to follow it because an investigation is not part of it! It is up to the employer to determine whether an investigation is necessary, but no tribunal in the land will uphold an unfair dismissal claim on the basis that no investigation was carried out. They determine the fairness in law of a dismissal based on due process (which does not include a requirement for an investigation), whether reasonable belief is estabished, and whether the outcome of dismissal is within the bounds of an outcome that a reasonable employer would consider in relation to the misconduct.
Originally posted by jon1965
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Best practice is not law. Tribunals do not rule on best practice, they rule on points of law. And the ACAS code of practice does not say that an employer must hold an investigation. So whether an investigation is held is not relevant to an argument about failure to follow it because an investigation is not part of it! It is up to the employer to determine whether an investigation is necessary, but no tribunal in the land will uphold an unfair dismissal claim on the basis that no investigation was carried out. They determine the fairness in law of a dismissal based on due process (which does not include a requirement for an investigation), whether reasonable belief is estabished, and whether the outcome of dismissal is within the bounds of an outcome that a reasonable employer would consider in relation to the misconduct.
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