Re: Verbal agreements - enforceable?
Amateur hour - Really! Coming from the lady that failed to spot that they stated there was a verbal agreement that the OP worked for the employer for 18 months, which is not permitted under the employment rights act as such duration of contract must be in the written contract.
Also, I did not say you did not know what an employment contract was, only that you were confused between what terms regarding training courses can be put in the employment contract, and where course specifics are included in the course agreement. This is standard practice for many employers to include terms as to who pays for training courses in employment contracts.
You say am the amateur, i have successfully advised many on employment issues. Yet you failed to spot the error in the employers argument, you failed to note whether the op was between 16-18 and therefore maybe protected under section 63A employment rights act. You Lady, jumped to conclusions based solely on what the op said, without considering the potentially fuller picture.
As for pretending to be a lawyer, well take note of my signature, i make it clear i am not a lawyer, nor do i pretend to be, DO YOU?
Now why such hostility towards me, i do not have to explain myself or reasons for not reading to full thread originally to you or anyone else. Are you hostile because i disagree, because you can handle healthy debate, or is it because i may be right and you just don't like to admit it! As i can tell you now this is not the simple Employers word against Employees as there state about verbal agreement to work for them for 18 months loses them all their creditability
@EXC - That's your opinion, but if i do not have the time to read every post then i simply do not have the time to do so - I am not the only one! If people do not like that then tough ****, they can go cry to mummy for all i care, instead of starting childish immature arguments or making comments of a similar nature.
I am here to help the OP, i am not here to help or please the rest of you that are not in need of help!
If OP follows Eloise advice then the OP will be out of pocket, if OP accepts my help then OP will not be out of pocket, its that simple.
Also Eloise i was on CAG advising on employment matters prior to coming to LB 2 years ago (don't recall seeing you on CAG), so don't act as if your gods gift to employment matters, as no one is, or that you can rule the nest here!
The reason i have not lost 1 employment matter where the person in need stayed the course is simply because i look at all angles, all probabilities and all possible interpretations, grounds of reasonableness, likeliness, fairness which is what a tribunal or court would consider too, as well as looking at all laws.
Hell no one here spotted that they may have been in breach of working time regulation by having the OP have less than 11 hours break between anyone shift. Its all too easy to jump to assumptions and say its there word against the OP's - Sorry but in my book that's no helping, that's i can't be bothered!! I may not have read the whole thread originally when i first posted, but at least i tried to help and have showed willingness by putting out a few things were the employer may be in the wrong.
Its also pretty oblivious why the employer didn't say anything about over-payments for 6-7 months prior to the op leaving, and it would be difficult for them to explain why, if they were over-payments, that they were not noticed for so long especially as accounts are done weekly/monthly. Am an employer myself, its not difficult to tell when someone was not in work one day off the week or when someone has been overpaid that week or month. But as i said, the fact they are saying there was a verbal agreement that the OP serve them for 18 months means any of there arguments and their claim would lose all creditability considering the OP written contract makes no mention of that, from what the OP has stated - In fact am shocked you all missed that very obvious flaw in the employers arguments that the OP stated in her first post.
Also just because an OP seeking help hasn't mentioned something, it doesn't mean it has not happened, hence why its important to get the full story and full facts before giving a definitive answer such as there word against yours!
@Loxxie - If you would like more advice from myself then feel free to PM me, i shall not post on this thread again to avoid escalation of arguments with Eloise. But if you want me help am more than willing to help you.
Originally posted by Eloise01
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Amateur hour - Really! Coming from the lady that failed to spot that they stated there was a verbal agreement that the OP worked for the employer for 18 months, which is not permitted under the employment rights act as such duration of contract must be in the written contract.
Also, I did not say you did not know what an employment contract was, only that you were confused between what terms regarding training courses can be put in the employment contract, and where course specifics are included in the course agreement. This is standard practice for many employers to include terms as to who pays for training courses in employment contracts.
You say am the amateur, i have successfully advised many on employment issues. Yet you failed to spot the error in the employers argument, you failed to note whether the op was between 16-18 and therefore maybe protected under section 63A employment rights act. You Lady, jumped to conclusions based solely on what the op said, without considering the potentially fuller picture.
As for pretending to be a lawyer, well take note of my signature, i make it clear i am not a lawyer, nor do i pretend to be, DO YOU?
Now why such hostility towards me, i do not have to explain myself or reasons for not reading to full thread originally to you or anyone else. Are you hostile because i disagree, because you can handle healthy debate, or is it because i may be right and you just don't like to admit it! As i can tell you now this is not the simple Employers word against Employees as there state about verbal agreement to work for them for 18 months loses them all their creditability
@EXC - That's your opinion, but if i do not have the time to read every post then i simply do not have the time to do so - I am not the only one! If people do not like that then tough ****, they can go cry to mummy for all i care, instead of starting childish immature arguments or making comments of a similar nature.
I am here to help the OP, i am not here to help or please the rest of you that are not in need of help!
If OP follows Eloise advice then the OP will be out of pocket, if OP accepts my help then OP will not be out of pocket, its that simple.
Also Eloise i was on CAG advising on employment matters prior to coming to LB 2 years ago (don't recall seeing you on CAG), so don't act as if your gods gift to employment matters, as no one is, or that you can rule the nest here!
The reason i have not lost 1 employment matter where the person in need stayed the course is simply because i look at all angles, all probabilities and all possible interpretations, grounds of reasonableness, likeliness, fairness which is what a tribunal or court would consider too, as well as looking at all laws.
Hell no one here spotted that they may have been in breach of working time regulation by having the OP have less than 11 hours break between anyone shift. Its all too easy to jump to assumptions and say its there word against the OP's - Sorry but in my book that's no helping, that's i can't be bothered!! I may not have read the whole thread originally when i first posted, but at least i tried to help and have showed willingness by putting out a few things were the employer may be in the wrong.
Its also pretty oblivious why the employer didn't say anything about over-payments for 6-7 months prior to the op leaving, and it would be difficult for them to explain why, if they were over-payments, that they were not noticed for so long especially as accounts are done weekly/monthly. Am an employer myself, its not difficult to tell when someone was not in work one day off the week or when someone has been overpaid that week or month. But as i said, the fact they are saying there was a verbal agreement that the OP serve them for 18 months means any of there arguments and their claim would lose all creditability considering the OP written contract makes no mention of that, from what the OP has stated - In fact am shocked you all missed that very obvious flaw in the employers arguments that the OP stated in her first post.
Also just because an OP seeking help hasn't mentioned something, it doesn't mean it has not happened, hence why its important to get the full story and full facts before giving a definitive answer such as there word against yours!
@Loxxie - If you would like more advice from myself then feel free to PM me, i shall not post on this thread again to avoid escalation of arguments with Eloise. But if you want me help am more than willing to help you.
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