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Bujon - Employment Tribunal Help Please

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  • #76
    Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

    My employer refused straight away the early conciliation. I cant see him entertaining the thought of making an offer because as far as he is concerned he is in the right and wont be dictated to by anyone. He would see the making or accepting of an offer as an admission he was wrong.

    Comment


    • #77
      Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

      Originally posted by ritemaster View Post
      My employer refused straight away the early conciliation. I cant see him entertaining the thought of making an offer because as far as he is concerned he is in the right and wont be dictated to by anyone. He would see the making or accepting of an offer as an admission he was wrong.
      Same situation as myself. Even though my employer knows full well the perpetrator is a bully, they feel that having simply followed an in house protocol for grievance and found no evidence in their investigations equates to being in the right! A simple pat on the back and a small redundancy offer at that time and I'd have simply walked. It's the blatant denial that is under my skin now.

      Comment


      • #78
        Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

        Originally posted by Bujon View Post
        A simple pat on the back and a small redundancy offer at that time and I'd have simply walked.
        I have said that so many times. It would have been easier for everyone had my employer done that. His stubbornness to open his eyes and see the world doesn't revolve around him is the reason we are heading for a tribunal.

        Comment


        • #79
          Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

          Originally posted by Bujon View Post
          I think it's one of those things, see if a settlement offer is even on the table before deciding the benefits of accepting it. I think that is why I was wondering if there were any tactic you could adopt at the early conciliation stages to prompt an early offer and therefore make a judgement call on the most reasonable outcome.
          In my experience (including those of others I know and know of), they won't even contemplate a settlement before a claim has been issued. Threats of legal action are very common in all areas of life and the vast majority never come to fruition, so employers usually assume you are just bluffing until you issue a claim. I'd like to know how many cases have been settled by early conciliation, surely ACAS will have stats to show whether the system is working. If no settlements are made at this stage it's hardly worth keeping the additional step in the process. :mmph:

          Originally posted by ritemaster View Post
          My employer refused straight away the early conciliation. I cant see him entertaining the thought of making an offer because as far as he is concerned he is in the right and wont be dictated to by anyone. He would see the making or accepting of an offer as an admission he was wrong.
          Same here and I can see that applying to... 99% of cases? :ohwell:

          Early conciliation is compulsory so it's hardly worth discussing its merits. The way I see it you get an extra month to prepare your claim so there's some good in it.

          Although there is no requirement to send a letter before action before issuing a claim, I still think it's worth doing and quoting settlement figure on it. In fact the ACAS guy asked whether there had been any attempt at settlement and the answer was "yes, a letter was sent..." The respondent would not doubt see it as yet another threat-o-gram, however, when things move forward, you can always argue that you did your best to sort out the situation from the start and that they could have saved a lot of money and hassle by negotiating with you at that point. :thumb:
          Last edited by FlamingParrot; 30th August 2015, 10:59:AM. Reason: typo :(

          Comment


          • #80
            Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

            Originally posted by Bujon View Post
            Same situation as myself. Even though my employer knows full well the perpetrator is a bully, they feel that having simply followed an in house protocol for grievance and found no evidence in their investigations equates to being in the right! A simple pat on the back and a small redundancy offer at that time and I'd have simply walked. It's the blatant denial that is under my skin now.
            Originally posted by ritemaster View Post
            I have said that so many times. It would have been easier for everyone had my employer done that. His stubbornness to open his eyes and see the world doesn't revolve around him is the reason we are heading for a tribunal.
            That's almost always the case but they all seem to think they've got a good case, especially when they've been plotting your dismissal for at least a year (twice lucky! :lol. They think they've got you over a barrel and everything tightly sewn up and they are on top of things and have barricaded themselves against anything you may throw at them. Yet they can get it soooooo wrong! :grin: :grin: :grin:

            Arrogance makes them think they know everything when in fact they don't know how much they don't know! msl:

            Comment


            • #81
              Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

              Sad to hear the flaws in the whole process really. Because of the relatively small awards, paying for legal representation makes self representation the only real option in my case. The stress and effort of having to 'play the game' off the back of a very stressful constructive dismissal situation makes the whole process seem disproportionate. I firmly think there should be some penalty that means if a defendant at a late stage makes an offer of settlement it should carry with it an additional cost for wasting everyone's time.

              Comment


              • #82
                Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

                What actually is sickening, is that my position has been filled by a new staff member and the role was advertised at less salary than I was on, a difference of more than what I offered them in the early conciliation phase....so far they are quids in...Or so they think!!!

                Comment


                • #83
                  Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

                  Originally posted by Bujon View Post
                  Sad to hear the flaws in the whole process really. Because of the relatively small awards, paying for legal representation makes self representation the only real option in my case.
                  It is possible to get pro-bono legal representation (once more, twice lucky here :grin.
                  Originally posted by Bujon View Post
                  The stress and effort of having to 'play the game' off the back of a very stressful constructive dismissal situation makes the whole process seem disproportionate.
                  Sadly constructive dismissal cases have a very low success rate, perhaps because the whole concept is widely misunderstood; many people seem to think they can just resign and then claim constructive dismissal. :mmph:

                  Having said that, employers may still consider a 'commercial settlement', I know someone who submitted a claim on those basis after resignation and, IMHO he didn't have a strong case, yet he did get a settlement in 2008, however, the settlement was rather small and a good reference was an incentive for acceptance.
                  Originally posted by Bujon View Post
                  I firmly think there should be some penalty that means if a defendant at a late stage makes an offer of settlement it should carry with it an additional cost for wasting everyone's time.
                  I would second that! :clap2: :clap2: :clap2: Where do I sign the petition?

                  ....and there should be an additional uplift when they still refuse to make an offer even after their case has been declared as dead as a dodo so to speak" :grin:

                  - - - Updated - - -

                  Originally posted by Bujon View Post
                  What actually is sickening, is that my position has been filled by a new staff member and the role was advertised at less salary than I was on, a difference of more than what I offered them in the early conciliation phase....so far they are quids in...Or so they think!!!
                  Or SO THEY THINK... but are they really? Uhmmmm... we shall see.... :wof:

                  Comment


                  • #84
                    Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

                    What catches out claimants in constructive dismissal cases is that the employer doesn't have to prove a thing.
                    The burden of proof is wholly on the claimant.
                    Unlike 'ordinary' unfair dismissal cases the claimant often presents their evidence first.
                    At many of the failed constructive dismissal hearings; the case will have ended after the claimant presented his/her case as the Tribunal decided at that point that the burden of proof had not been met.

                    Comment


                    • #85
                      Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

                      Originally posted by mariefab View Post
                      At many of the failed constructive dismissal hearings; the case will have ended after the claimant presented his/her case as the Tribunal decided at that point that the burden of proof had not been met.
                      If only a similar thing happened in unfair dismissal cases where the respondent goes first!!!

                      One thing I will never understand is why the employers representative carries on with a case even when it becomes clear the employer has messed up big time and the dismissal was not fair.

                      Comment


                      • #86
                        Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

                        It does happen occasionally.

                        The representative is paid to follow instructions even in an obviously losing case.

                        Comment


                        • #87
                          Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

                          Originally posted by mariefab View Post
                          What catches out claimants in constructive dismissal cases is that the employer doesn't have to prove a thing.
                          The burden of proof is wholly on the claimant.
                          Unlike 'ordinary' unfair dismissal cases the claimant often presents their evidence first.
                          At many of the failed constructive dismissal hearings; the case will have ended after the claimant presented his/her case as the Tribunal decided at that point that the burden of proof had not been met.
                          Even though the burden of proof falls on the claimant, surely you only have to prove on balance of probabilities and not beyond reasonable doubt...two children in a shed together and the smaller one comes out crying, balance of probabilities would suggest that they were a victim of bullying, no? Particularly if they said so once questioned about it?
                          Last edited by Bujon; 30th August 2015, 21:56:PM.

                          Comment


                          • #88
                            Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

                            Originally posted by ritemaster View Post
                            If only a similar thing happened in unfair dismissal cases where the respondent goes first!!!

                            One thing I will never understand is why the employers representative carries on with a case even when it becomes clear the employer has messed up big time and the dismissal was not fair.
                            I also wonder the exact same thing, especially when it's glaringly obvious that the respondent has not followed the process because they didn't think they had to.

                            If by representative you mean the respondent's solicitor, then it could be because they charge by the hour!

                            - - - Updated - - -

                            Originally posted by Bujon View Post
                            Even though the burden of proof falls on the claimant, surely you only have to prove on balance of probabilities and not beyond reasonable doubt...two children in a shed together and the smaller one comes out crying, balance of probabilities would suggest that they were a victim of bullying, no? Particularly if they said so once questioned about it?
                            Yes, in employment matters the standard of proof is on the balance of probabilities, not beyond a reasonable doubt.

                            Comment


                            • #89
                              Re: 28 day time limit for ET3 form

                              So if a junior member of staff hands in their notice after a one on one with his/her superior due to over bearing and demeaning remarks, and then after some negotiations with HR that resignation is retracted, only for the exact same thing to happen 6 months later, but this time the junior raises an official grievance about the superior and resigns only after the company finds no evidence, surely that chain of events is pretty much game set and match on a balance of probabilities? You'd only have to prove that over bearing behaviour can be accepted as 'bullying'......given this simplistic model, why is the success rate so low? Are judges somewhat allergic to the word and thought of 'bullying' as a real concept, pretty reflective of society?.......My aim is going to be centred on three points 1) A definition of bullying, 2) My personal acceptance of being a victim of said bullying and 3) on a balance of probabilities the bullying events were more likely than likely not to have occurred given the chain of events described in both the grievance and my claim to the tribunal. The additional factor and further breach is against the company for a lack of duty of care and trust in the manner in which those investigations were given no serious gravity.
                              Last edited by Bujon; 30th August 2015, 22:43:PM.

                              Comment


                              • #90
                                Incorrect date on signed ET3 form

                                This is linked to my previous post on the 28 day time limit of the ET3 form, but having now received a copy of the respondents form, I have noticed they have dated it 3 months previous....clearly a type error (May instead of Aug), but the form can't be allowed to stand with such an obvious error surely? the date actually precedes the constructive dismissal date to which my claim relates!!DO I simply point this out to the ET? http://www.legalbeagles.info/forums/...ies/beagle.gif

                                Comment

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