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Swearing Did Not Warrant Summary Dismissal

The Fair Work Commission has awarded an Operations Manager $27,787 in compensation following a finding that swearing at another manager was not sufficient to justify his summary dismissal.

Facts

In essence:

  • On or around July 2016, the Operations Manager had a heated argument with the national WHS Manager of Precepts Services Pty Limited (‘the employer’). The WHS Manager happened to be the wife of the employer’s Managing Director.
  • Prior to the argument, the WHS Manager had a meeting with the Operations Manager’s son – who was employed by the employer as an apprentice electrician – in relation to concerns about his performance.
  • The Operations Manager questioned why he was not invited to attend his son’s performance review meeting, and allegedly said to the WHS manager: “Your sneaky husband made that decision, did he?
  • The WHS manager asked what he had meant by “sneaky”. In response, the Operations Manager referred to a previous phone conversation between his (i.e. the Operations Manager’s) wife and the Managing Director in relation to a dispute over their son’s wages. The Operations Manager relayed that during the phone conversation, the managing director allegedly swore at the Operations Manager’s wife, saying to her “f-ck off, you do not have your facts right”, and then hung up on her.
  • The Operations Manager then allegedly leant over the table of the WHS manager and asked her twice: “How would you f-cking feel if I said get f-cked to you?”
  • In September 2016, the Managing Director directed the Operations Manager to attend a meeting to discuss allegations of misconduct made against him. The Operations Manager attended the meeting, during which he was summarily dismissed.
  • According to the Operations Manager, the Managing Director had a habit of swearing at employees including his own wife (the WHS manager), and regularly punched and kicked walls in the office.

Swearing not sufficient to justify summary dismissal [...]  READ MORE →

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Adverse Action Claim Dismissed

The Federal Circuit Court recently dismissed an employment law adverse action claim, in which an employee alleged her dismissal was related to her workplace injuries and a bullying complaint.

Background

  • The employee was working as a microbiologist in a medical laboratory. She sustained injury to her neck, due to the posture in which it was necessary for her to carry out her duties. She went on sick leave from September 2013 – February 2014, returning on light duties. Her workers compensation claim was accepted.
  •  [...]  READ MORE →

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    FWO flags review of abandonment clauses in Awards

    The Fair Work Commission has indicated that it will conduct a review of abandonment clauses contained in six modern awards, following the decision of the Full Bench of the Fair Work Commission in Benias v Iplex Pipelines Australia Pty Ltd [2017] FWCFB 38.

    In the decision, the Full Bench overturned the decision of Senior Deputy President O’Callaghan ([2016] FWC 6624), who dismissed an employee’s unfair dismissal claim on the basis that the termination was not at the initiative of the employer.

    The facts

    Section 386 of the Fair Work Act 2009 defines a dismissal as a termination of employment ‘on the employer’s initiative’. The Act provides that where an employee’s employment is not terminated on the employer’s initiative (i.e. a voluntary resignation), that employee is unable to pursue a remedy for Unfair Dismissal. [...]  READ MORE →