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In order to avoid unfairly dismissing an employee or employees, the employers reason(s) for the dismissal must be fair, for instance:
a. a reason relating to the employee’s capability or qualification for performing work of the kind s/he was employed to do
b. a reason relating to the conduct of the employee
c. the employee is made redundant or
d. for some other substantial reason of a kind that would justify dismissal.
This would vary as it would depend on the reason for dismissal. If an employee is dismissed for gross misconduct for instance, the procedure would be different to say someone dismissed due to a redundancy situation.
Individually consultation is necessary even in collective redundancy.
a. Adultery
b. Unreasonable behaviour
c. Two years’ separation
d. Five years’ separation
e. Desertion
Aggressive and violent behaviour from your spouse/partner would come under ‘Unreasonable behaviour’.
following:
a. disparage a claimant in their business, trade, profession or office; b. lower the claimant in the estimation of right-thinking members of the society; c. causes the claimant to be avoided or shunned; d. expose the claimant to hatred, ridicule and contempt.
Any allegation that suggest a person is corrupt, immoral, incompetent, producer of shoddy goods, dishonest, guilty of a criminal act or insolvent may be considered to be defamatory.
a. that the words are defamatory of them b. that the words would be deemed to refer to them by one other person; c. that the words have been published to a third party.
In bringing a libel case, you don’t have to prove that the words are false or prove that he has in fact suffered a loss. Damages is automatically assumed. Whereas, in a slander case, the claimant will need to prove that the defamatory allegations caused actual financial damage, unless this is within certain categories.
Justification: This is also referred to as true statement or truth, it is a complete defence to a libel action. The onus is on the defendant to prove that the allegations are indeed true.
Fair comment: Fair or honest comment defence applies only to expressions of opinion, rather than to statements of fact.
Privilege: The UK law recognises that there are circumstances in which it is in the public interest to permit greater freedom of speech. There are qualified and absolute privileges.
a. False
b. the publication was malicious
c. special damage flowed from the publication.
The words do not have to be defamatory unlike in libel and slander claims.