The tribunal will hold the dismissal of an employee to be unfair if they are dismissed or selected for redundancy:
- because of their trade union membership, trade union non-membership, trade union activities or proposed activities, or use or proposed use of trade union services
- because they failed to accept an unlawful inducement from an employer to give up their trade union rights or to disapply a collective agreement
- because they failed to accept an offer made by an employer to induce them to become a trade union member
- because they refused to make a payment in lieu of union membership, or objected to their employer deducting a sum from their wages or salary to make such a payment
- for exercising or seeking to exercise rights relating to trade union recognition procedures
- for exercising or seeking to exercise their right to be accompanied at a disciplinary or grievance hearing, or to accompany a fellow worker at such a meeting
- for reasons relating to jury service
- on grounds relating to pregnancy, childbirth or maternity
- for taking, or seeking to take, ordinary, compulsory or additional maternity leave
- for taking, or seeking to take, ordinary or additional paternity leave
- for taking, or seeking to take, ordinary or additional adoption leave
- for taking, or seeking to take, parental leave
- for taking, or seeking to take, time off for dependants
- for taking, or proposing to take, certain specified types of action on health and safety grounds
- because, subject to certain conditions, the employee was a shop worker or a betting worker and refused to work on Sundays or gave, or proposed to give, an ‘opting-out’ notice to their employer
- for reasons relating to the Working Time Regulations 1998
- for performing, or proposing to perform, any duties relevant to their role as an occupational pension scheme trustee
- for performing, or proposing to perform, any duties relevant to their role as an employee representative or as a candidate to be such representative or as a participant in the election of such a representative
- for making a protected disclosure
- for having sought, in good faith, to assert a statutory employment protection right
- for reasons relating to the national minimum wage
- for requesting flexible working arrangements
- for taking lawfully organised official industrial action lasting 12 weeks or less (or more than 12 weeks in certain circumstances)
- for reasons relating to the Transnational Information and Consultation of Employees Regulations 1999
- on grounds related to the Part-time Workers (Prevention of Less Favourable Treatment) Regulations 2000
- on grounds relating to the Fixed-term Employees (Prevention of Less Favourable Treatment) Regulations 2002
- for reasons relating to the European Public Limited-Liability Company Regulations 2004
- for reasons relating to the Information and Consultation of Employees Regulations 2004
- for reasons relating to the Occupational and Personal Pension Schemes (Consultation by Employers and Miscellaneous Amendment) Regulations 2006
- for exercising or seeking to exercise the right to be accompanied at a meeting to consider a request not to retire, or for exercising or seeking to exercise the right to accompany a fellow employee at such a meeting*
- for reasons relating to the European Cooperative Society (Involvement of Employees) Regulations 2006
- for reasons relating to the Companies (Cross-Border Mergers) Regulations 2007
- for reasons relating to them making a request for time to study or train
- for reasons relating to the European Public Limited-Liability Company (Employee Involvement) (Great Britain) Regulations 2009
- in relation to them being on a ‘prohibited list’, ie a blacklist of individuals who are currently or used to be trade union members or who currently or used to take part in trade union activities
A dismissal will also be unfair where the employee was dismissed:
- On grounds of retirement without the employer having first complied with their duty to consider a request by the employee not to retire*.
- On the transfer of an undertaking or part of an undertaking, and the transfer itself, or a reason connected with it, is the main reason for the dismissal. This is unless it can be established that the dismissal was for an economic, technical or organisational reason entailing changes in the workforce.
For all these dismissals, the employee can bring an unfair dismissal claim to a tribunal from the start of their employment, ie they do not need at least one year’s continuous employment.
*The default retirement age is being abolished. If an employee was not notified of his or her retirement before 6 April 2011 and was 65 or over before 1 October 2011, the employee can’t be made to retire using the default retirement age. Employers can only continue to operate their own compulsory retirement age if this can be objectively justified. Such cases of compulsory retirement are likely to be considered by employment tribunals under the ‘some other substantial reason’ heading.