LRD guides and handbook May 2019

Law at Work 2019 - the trade union guide to employment law

Chapter 10

Dismissal due to return of original post-holder





[ch 10: page 356]

The return of a post-holder who was temporarily absent from work due, for example, to secondment, maternity or long-term illness or injury is likely to be a fair reason for dismissal. As usual, it depends on all the circumstances. In particular, the employee should have been told at the outset that the arrangement was temporary and would end on the return of the post-holder. This kind of dismissal is not a redundancy, because the reason for dismissal is not a reduced need for employees. Instead it is a dismissal for “some other substantial reason” (Greater Glasgow Health Board v Lamont [2012] UKEATS/0019/12/B1) — see also page 387.