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Employment Law

Endeavour hosts recent CIPD meeting

Endeavour hosted the most recent Chartered Institute of Personnel & Development Teesside branch meeting to a room full of members on the subject of Recruitment – Key Legal Issues. This is the second CIPD event that Endeavour has hosted and we received some excellent feedback. Email Joanna Gibson at j.gibson@endeavour.law for further information.

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Posted in:Employment Law News & PR

Employers warned over holiday pay

Endeavour Partnership warns employers to ensure they are calculating holiday pay correctly after a number of recent legal challenges.

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Posted in:Employment Law

New flexible working scheme to come into force

Employers are reminded that from 30 June 2014, all employees will have the right to request flexible working.

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Posted in:Employment Law

Pensions auto-enrolment guidance

Although small businesses will not be subject to the pensions auto-enrolment requirements until June 2015 at the earliest, they should nevertheless take note of a recently published Pensions Regulator report.

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Posted in:Employment Law

Endeavour hosts CIPD briefing

Endeavour’s employment team is hosting the Chartered Institute of Personnel Development’s June briefing on the subject of re-structuring a business.

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Posted in:Employment Law News & PR

Restrictive covenants and goodwill agreements

A High Court case illustrates that it is not always in an employer’s best interests to immediately place an employee on garden leave, or seek injunctive relief against a departing employee when they leave to set up in competition.

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Posted in:Employment Law

Confidentiality during employment and after termination

In what appears to be one of the few times that a judge has felt justified in allowing the inspection and imaging of employees’ computers, the High Court has recently ordered that an employer may instruct an independent computer expert to inspect and take images from the personal computers of two former employees.

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Posted in:Employment Law

Dismissing an employee: taking the right steps

Two recent Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) cases highlight some of the issues a business needs to consider when contemplating dismissing an employee.

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Posted in:Employment Law

Covert recordings of meetings admissible in evidence

In Punjab National Bank (International) Limited and others v Gosain UKEAT/0003/14, the EAT held that covert recordings of public and private conversations by an employee at disciplinary and grievance meetings were admissible in evidence and could be considered by the Tribunal when it came to determining the case at full hearing.

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Posted in:Employment Law

Wages were not a pre requisite for employment status

In the recent case of Secretary of State for Business, Innovation and Skills v Knight UKEAT/0073/13, the EAT considered whether a managing director and sole shareholder who had not received salary for two years could be an employee and therefore entitled to a redundancy payment from the Insolvency Service under section 166 of ERA 1996.

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Posted in:Employment Law