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is my warning legal?
Hi.
I received a final written warning in January for gross misconduct.
However, although i was informed of the details of the warning at the hearing i was not sent any letter to confirm i recieved the warning or offer the opportunity of appeal.
I have not signed any documents in relation to the warning.
My question is simple: is this warning legal and is it still viable?
Regards and thanks...
I received a final written warning in January for gross misconduct.
However, although i was informed of the details of the warning at the hearing i was not sent any letter to confirm i recieved the warning or offer the opportunity of appeal.
I have not signed any documents in relation to the warning.
My question is simple: is this warning legal and is it still viable?
Regards and thanks...
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by scots. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Depends what you mean by 'legal and still viable'.
The way these things get tested is through an Employment Tribunal. The only way it is going to get tested is if you are dismissed as the result of a situation that uses this FWW (say if you commit another breach of conduct within the period of time the original is in force - typically 12 months) or if you are disadvantaged in some other way - say you got no salary increase this year when others did and the stated reason was that you are subject to a FWW.
In either situation, you would have to take the employer to ET and claim the FWW was flawed.
From what you say (no written confirmation and no given opportunity to appeal) I agree with you that the process is liable to be adjudged flawed. But you are probably best just keeping your head down and working through it until 12 months have past, then trying to antagonise the employer.
The way these things get tested is through an Employment Tribunal. The only way it is going to get tested is if you are dismissed as the result of a situation that uses this FWW (say if you commit another breach of conduct within the period of time the original is in force - typically 12 months) or if you are disadvantaged in some other way - say you got no salary increase this year when others did and the stated reason was that you are subject to a FWW.
In either situation, you would have to take the employer to ET and claim the FWW was flawed.
From what you say (no written confirmation and no given opportunity to appeal) I agree with you that the process is liable to be adjudged flawed. But you are probably best just keeping your head down and working through it until 12 months have past, then trying to antagonise the employer.