“Just cause” is a legal term that means a
non-union employer is justified in terminating an employee without ANY notice
of termination at common law.
The courts decide whether or not just cause
exists unless the employee has agreed that certain misconduct constitutes just
cause in an employment contract.
The onus is on an employer to prove it had
just cause in terminating the employee.
What must an employer prove?
When deciding whether “just cause” exists, the
Ontario Court of Appeal has stated:
" …the core question for determination is
whether an employee has engaged in misconduct that is incompatible with the
fundamental terms of the employment relationship. The rationale for the
standard is that the sanction imposed for misconduct is to be proportional – dismissal
is warranted when the misconduct is sufficiently serious that it strikes at the
heart of the
employment relationship."
Three examples where an Employer has proven
Just Cause
1. Driving an employer’s vehicle while drunk. After 32 years of service, an employee was
returning to the workplace from a customer visit. While driving, the employee
was responsible for a serious accident which destroyed the vehicle and left him
with life threatening injuries. Although finding just cause, the court stated:
“Normally, a single and isolated incident will not be sufficient cause to
dismiss a long service employee, particularly one with a clean disciplinary and
performance record.” And, “Intoxication at work does not automatically justify
termination.”
2. Falsifying and submitting medical benefits
claims forms, lying to the employer’s group insurer, and failing to
forthrightly admit this misconduct when asked during an employer investigation.
At the time of her
termination, this first level manager had been employed with the employer for
19 years.
3. Engaging in personal and sexual
harassment of a co-worker. The employee, a lawyer with 13 years of service
and no prior discipline, persisted in pushing a romantic relationship with a
female co-worker after she repeatedly told him that she was not interested.
Harassment included the employee communicating with the co-worker’s colleagues
and superiors and his attempt to have her employment terminated.
MacLeod Law Firm has been practicing
employment law exclusively for over 20 years. This makes us efficient with our
time and experts in our field. Visit our website www.macleodlawfirm.ca/employers/ to learn more about your rights and obligations under
Ontario’s employment laws. To discuss what kind of evidence is needed to prove
just cause in a particular case, please email us at inquiry@dougmacleod.com or call us at 1-888-640-1728.
1 comment:
This blog provides a general overview of wrongful dismissal Toronto. The best way to protect your rights is to seek the advice of a lawyer before matters escalate.
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