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29 May 2014 / Ian Smith
Issue: 7608 / Categories: Features , Property
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Employment law brief: 29 May 2014

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Ian Smith considers the latest employment law developments

Three cases in the last month concern widely different aspects of employment law, but each arose in an area that has been of some controversy and/or difficulty recently: (i) can an employer defend a claim for victimisation/detriment on the basis that it took the action against the employee not because of what he did (which was protected by the law) but because of the unacceptable way that he did it?; (ii) where there has been a failure to consult on an impending TUPE transfer due to the transferee’s fault, can there be a direct action against that transferee?; and (iii) where the Employment Appeal Tribunal (EAT) discerns an error of law in a tribunal’s judgment, when can it decide the result of the case itself, without the extra delay and expense of a remission to the tribunal?

 

It’s not what you say, it’s the way you say it

The claimant in Panayiotou v Kernaghan UKEAT/0436/13 claimed to have suffered a detriment

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MOVERS & SHAKERS

Clarke Willmott—Matthew Roach

Clarke Willmott—Matthew Roach

Partner joins commercial property team in Taunton office

Farrer & Co—Richard Lane

Farrer & Co—Richard Lane

Londstanding London firm appoints new senior partner

Bird & Bird—Sue McLean

Bird & Bird—Sue McLean

Commercial team in London welcomes technology specialist as partner

NEWS
The legal profession’s claim to be a ‘guardian of fairness’ is under scrutiny after stark findings on gender imbalance and opaque progression. Writing in NLJ this week, Joshua Purser of No5 Barristers’ Chambers and Govindi Deerasinghe of Global 50/50 warn that leadership remains dominated by a narrow elite, with men holding 71% of top court roles
A legal challenge to police disclosure rules has failed, reinforcing a push for transparency in policing. In NLJ this week, Neil Parpworth examines a case where the Metropolitan Police required officers to declare membership of groups like the Freemasons
Bereavement leave is undergoing a quiet but profound transformation. Writing in NLJ this week, Robert Hargreaves of York St John University explains how the Employment Rights Act 2025 introduces a day-one right to leave for a wider range of losses, alongside new provisions for pregnancy loss and bereaved partners
Courts are beginning to grapple with whether AI-generated material is legally privileged—and the answers are mixed. In this week's issue of NLJ, Stacie Bourton, Tom Whittaker & Beata Kolodziej of Burges Salmon examine US rulings showing how easily privilege can be lost
New guidance seeks to bring order to the growing use of artificial intelligence (AI) in expert evidence. Writing in NLJ this week, Minesh Tanna and David Bridge of Simmons & Simmons set out a framework stressing ‘transparency’, ‘explainability’ and ‘reliability’
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