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Unfair dismissal
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Hi - I have been dismissed by a company for something I didnt do - the dismissal date was 26th september. The company dragged out the internal appeal, and finally made a decision on the 24th december - 1 day before the deadline for appealing via tribunal. They did not follow procedures correctly throughout the whole investigation, and did not investigate the points raised at the appeal meeting sufficiently.
Is there anything I can do now as the 3 months deadline has past?
Cheers
J
Is there anything I can do now as the 3 months deadline has past?
Cheers
J
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by leejamie82. 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.Hang on, this is all wrong and you were conned.
If the company has an internal appeals procedure, this should have been followed BEFORE the final decision to dismiss you. In other words, you should have been suspended and be paid whilst the appeals procedure went on. And another thing, it shouldn't take anything like 3 months to organise.
Sounds like this was stretched out deliberately to give you hope that you might get the job back to stop you thinking about taking the case to Employment Tribunal.
And yet another 5 weeks has past before you posted on AB. How come?
I fear you are out of time now.
If the company has an internal appeals procedure, this should have been followed BEFORE the final decision to dismiss you. In other words, you should have been suspended and be paid whilst the appeals procedure went on. And another thing, it shouldn't take anything like 3 months to organise.
Sounds like this was stretched out deliberately to give you hope that you might get the job back to stop you thinking about taking the case to Employment Tribunal.
And yet another 5 weeks has past before you posted on AB. How come?
I fear you are out of time now.
-- answer removed --
-- answer removed --
From the employment tribunal website: In certain circumstances, for example, when you write to your employer within the original time limit raising a grievance, these limits will be extended by three months - in other words, in most cases to six months. The circumstances in which time limits will be extended are set out in the DTI booklet, 'Resolving disputes: a guide for employees' (PDF 46KB).
http://www.employmenttribunals.gov.uk/claim/ma king_a_claim.htm
I therefore believe you still have a case
http://www.employmenttribunals.gov.uk/claim/ma king_a_claim.htm
I therefore believe you still have a case
Leejamie - I have been in exactly the same situation as you! I did take it to tribunal (as you still can - you're not out of time) but if my experience was anything to go by, just forget it and move on.
I had complete faith in the system, but was wholly let down by the final decision.
I was sacked for something that I didn't do, the tribunal agreed that I didn't do it, but ruled that on the information that the company had at the time, they had made a reasonable decision to sack me. The fact that the company would have come to a different conclusion had they have carried out a full and proper investigation seemed to pass them by.
On the upside, the tribunal did see through the lies that my ex-employers were telling, so it was quite satisfying seeing them unravel under cross examination.
On the whole though, it was a thoroughly unpleasant experience that dragged on for over a year, and I truly wouldn't recommend anyone to go through it. You've already got a new job (let me know how you managed that - I've found it so hard!) so just draw a line under it, get on with your life and keep in the forefront of your mind that whilst you are working for someone else you are merely a statistic who will never be fully appreciated!
I had complete faith in the system, but was wholly let down by the final decision.
I was sacked for something that I didn't do, the tribunal agreed that I didn't do it, but ruled that on the information that the company had at the time, they had made a reasonable decision to sack me. The fact that the company would have come to a different conclusion had they have carried out a full and proper investigation seemed to pass them by.
On the upside, the tribunal did see through the lies that my ex-employers were telling, so it was quite satisfying seeing them unravel under cross examination.
On the whole though, it was a thoroughly unpleasant experience that dragged on for over a year, and I truly wouldn't recommend anyone to go through it. You've already got a new job (let me know how you managed that - I've found it so hard!) so just draw a line under it, get on with your life and keep in the forefront of your mind that whilst you are working for someone else you are merely a statistic who will never be fully appreciated!