Without written notice he hasn't breached his contract and is still legally an employee of your company.
Really? Well as its apparently on the Direct.gov website, can you offer a link to where
UK employment law means you require a resignation in writing
?
and you can reclaim any reasonable costs such as over payments from his final wage
What dangerous advice! You cannot do this without a clause in the contract, which many employment contracts (including the template contracts from Business Link) dont have.
If you assume he has left without a resignation in writing and don't pay him his full wage because you've made deductions he will win if he takes you to a tribuneral. The tribuneral would also fine you for not following correct legal procedures.
I
A fine? Since when have they started issuing fines?
Oh, and your spelling
appears to be upsetting some people.
If he was contractually bound to give a week's notice then I'm sure he is in breach of contract.
If the employment contract is well written then you are actually entitled to deduct the reasonable costs of replacing his work due to that breach of contract.
That may or may not be deductable from his holiday entitlement however I am an employer not not an HR expert so I cannot give a definitive answer.
Not wrong on any count Jon.
You're wrong on this one. UK employment law is what counts and a tribuneral is bound by the law.
He is not in breach of contract it is unauthorised absence. To hold him in breach you need to go through disciplinary procedures for unauthorised absence or get a resignation in writing. If you dont and it goes to tribuneral then you lose..
What complete tosh are you talking about Blood Lust? If hes breached the contract as here, resigning without the necessary notice how can you hold a disciplinary? There is no-one to discipline!
The terms you can insert in a UK employees contract are also determined by UK law. You cant make up your own rules as UK businesses are bound by the law. Its also illegal to deduct costs of finding a replacement from his salary.
If you tried any of this and it was revealed at a tribuneral the fines you would encure would put you out of business.
Again, what are you on about? What terms are determined by UK law? The employer & employee can agree to are for them to decide; some might not be valid if they dont comply with the law such as paying less than the minimum wage but UK law doesnt stipulate what terms you can agree.
And what is this about fines? Is the consultation over already?
Without a letter you have nothing to show as evidence at a tribuneral that he quit. They wont take your word on it they require evidence because the law only works off evidence.
Ive got two sex discrimination hearings coming up in the next couple of months. As we have about 15 witnesses between the two cases, do you think I can free up about a week? Obviously these witnesses will serve no useful purpose, as the tribunal wont take the word of any of them, so really seems no point having them there at all! :|
When an employee walks off site without resigning in writing Human Resources sends them a letter inviting them to a meeting. This is to find out if any of the above problems exist or if the cause of your unauthorised absence is that you really have quit.
This procedure is required by law if they didnt resign in writing. It also enables you to sack them if they dont have reasonable grounds for being absent. If you miss this procedure out the tribuneral will impose heavy fines on your business regardless of the outcome.
As I said UK employment law is laid out for all to see on the directgov website. It tells you all the procedures you must follow and you must as an employer otherwise sooner or later you've got a shock coming once you encounter a member of staff that knows what they're doing.
And what about the many small companies that dont have a Human Resources department? Who sends a letter then?
Ive never seen
any UK employment law on Direct.gov. Can you post a link to any of it BS?
For the record, the employee resigned. The employer can't force him to confirm that in writing, but he certainly does not have to hold a disciplinary for an employee that has resigned.
It is sensible to write, acknowledging & accepting the verbal resignation, but nothing more than that is required by UK law, and BL is simply talking BS above!
Karl Limpert