COVID-19: what next for UK employers, Part 3


We made an employee redundant before the furlough scheme ended – will his unfair dismissal claim succeed?

The basic argument here is an easy one to understand – you made me redundant when you did not have to because my salary was being borne by the CJRS.  In circumstances where employers are duty-bound to consider alternatives to redundancy, leaving me on furlough at someone else’s expense must surely be such an alternative.

After that, it gets a little more complicated.  The employer has no active duty to take any alternative to redundancy, only to consider it and have a not untenable reason for not going down that path.  We previously noted a case where the employer came unstuck because it had not done that.  It was not altogether clear from the judgment there whether the ET found that the employer’s reasons for not putting (or leaving, the point is the same) the employee on furlough were too incoherent to be the product of reasonable thought or that it had not looked at the question at all.  Either way, it lost.  By contrast, have a look at Handley in the same post, where the employer expressly considered whether the at-risk employee could be left on furlough and had viable reasons for deciding not. In fairness, it also lost, but for different reasons.

Potentially relevant factors for an employer to consider at the time of the dismissal could include:

The ET will readily accept that it was only very early in the pandemic that anyone in authority was foolish enough to claim clear views of how long or serious its impact would be, and that in the event, almost all of them were wrong anyway.  Therefore the burden on the employer in these cases to be right about any of its conclusions above is not at all a heavy one.  The key is merely to have thought about them with an open mind and a degree of good faith at the time.

If you didn’t think about them (or can’t prove that you did), that might mean that you lose the unfair dismissal claim as a question of liability.  However, this judicial poke in the eye can be significantly mitigated by arguments on quantum.  If the Employment Tribunal accepts that suitable consideration of those points at the time would not have altered the outcome, as in Handley above, it will award the employee little or no compensation.


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National Law Review, Volume XI, Number 264