The
clause was correctly worded, the employee was given a copy of the contract and
signed it before he started work. So what went wrong for the employer?
The ERA
held that the clause failed to be effective for two reasons (either would have
been sufficient to set aside the clause).
1.
The
employer did not sign the agreement
until 20 minutes after the employee commenced work so the employee was already
employed when the contract was signed.
2.
The
employee was only given the contract the evening before commencing work and
therefore had no reasonable opportunity to take independent advice on the
agreement before signing it the next morning.
As a
result, the 90-day trial clause was out and so the employee’s dismissal failed
to follow any proper procedures and was unjustified.
The
employer was ordered to pay three months lost wages and $6,000 compensation.
An
expensive outcome for the failure to give the employee the contract in enough
time for him to get advice on it, and for not ensuring both the employee and
employer signed before he commenced work. How much time is needed for getting
advice can depend on the circumstances but at least a couple of work days would
be the minimum. Allow more if the employee asks for further time. Their start
date must be delayed if they have not yet signed.
Alan
Knowsley
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