The “Burchell test” asks 3 questions:
The employer regularly doesn’t put warning signs up when floor cleaning is in progress.
The employee cleaned the same floors once at the same time of day under the same conditions and didn’t put warning signs up. This was seen as a breach of health and safety by the employer. The employee was disciplined and dismissed.
Under the 'Burchell test', could the employer have believed the employee was guilty of misconduct and, did the employer have reasonable grounds to base that belief?
As far as I can see, the employer set the standard and the employee worked to that same standard.
- Whether the employer actually believed that the employee was guilty of misconduct,
- Whether it had reasonable grounds on which to base that belief, and
- Whether it had carried out as much investigation as was reasonable in the circumstances of the particular case.
The employer regularly doesn’t put warning signs up when floor cleaning is in progress.
The employee cleaned the same floors once at the same time of day under the same conditions and didn’t put warning signs up. This was seen as a breach of health and safety by the employer. The employee was disciplined and dismissed.
Under the 'Burchell test', could the employer have believed the employee was guilty of misconduct and, did the employer have reasonable grounds to base that belief?
As far as I can see, the employer set the standard and the employee worked to that same standard.
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