Re: Resigned or gave notice? Employment terminated?
The email header contains the original wording along with the dates, timestamps and addresses of who and where it was sent to.
You will have a hard struggle proving what you are trying to say by relying on the word 'notice' that email also states effective immediately so used in conjunction the email apparently states your girlfriend is resigning immediately. The ordinary meaning of resignation is to give up the position or role.
If the email said 'I give notice to resign', that is a whole lot different to giving notice to 'resign immediately' and in my eyes you will be clutching at straws on that argument as the tribunal will simply look at the email as a whole not just the word 'notice'.
If you or your gf does not want to ask for the email to be forwarded then you are effectively relying on a printout of the document as being truthful and accurate. I think the claim will fall at the first hurdle, the words on that email are clear and not ambiguous in any way, your girlfriend says she gives notice to resign immediately i.e. from the moment the email is sent to the employer.
If you want to go other routes i.e. ISP (although I am certain they don't retain contents of the email but only the meta data which is the dates, times, recipients but that's all void anyway at the moment since the European Court Justice invalidated the EU legislation relating to it and DRIPA I believe has be struck down as ineffective by the High Court and is pending appeal?) you are going to have to get an order from the court doing so and thats money in itself.
The email header contains the original wording along with the dates, timestamps and addresses of who and where it was sent to.
You will have a hard struggle proving what you are trying to say by relying on the word 'notice' that email also states effective immediately so used in conjunction the email apparently states your girlfriend is resigning immediately. The ordinary meaning of resignation is to give up the position or role.
If the email said 'I give notice to resign', that is a whole lot different to giving notice to 'resign immediately' and in my eyes you will be clutching at straws on that argument as the tribunal will simply look at the email as a whole not just the word 'notice'.
If you or your gf does not want to ask for the email to be forwarded then you are effectively relying on a printout of the document as being truthful and accurate. I think the claim will fall at the first hurdle, the words on that email are clear and not ambiguous in any way, your girlfriend says she gives notice to resign immediately i.e. from the moment the email is sent to the employer.
If you want to go other routes i.e. ISP (although I am certain they don't retain contents of the email but only the meta data which is the dates, times, recipients but that's all void anyway at the moment since the European Court Justice invalidated the EU legislation relating to it and DRIPA I believe has be struck down as ineffective by the High Court and is pending appeal?) you are going to have to get an order from the court doing so and thats money in itself.
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