Articles 2019

Today
Today
If You Shouldn’t be Saying it, Don't: Sharing Confidential Information Can be Cause for Dismissal

If You Shouldn’t be Saying it, Don't: Sharing Confidential Information Can be Cause for Dismissal

  • May 10, 2018
  • Nadia Zaman and Stuart Rudner

In Manak v Workers' Compensation Board of British Columbia, 2018 BCSC 182, the British Columbia Supreme Court held that where a managerial employee breaches his or her confidentiality obligations, the employer may have just cause for dismissal. This decision not only shows that breach of confidentiality obligations can constitute just cause for dismissal, but also emphasizes the importance of a properly executed release.

Labour and Employment Law, Student Forum

Hospital Protected by Public Hospitals Act in Physicians’ Wrongful Dismissal Claim

  • April 12, 2018
  • Kate Deakon, lawyer, Borden Ladner Gervais LLP and Anne Corbett, partner, Borden Ladner Gervais LLP

This article decision summarizes a recent decision, where the Court concluded that subsection 44(5) of the Public Hospitals Act will provide a hospital protection where the board of the hospital determines that the hospital will cease to provide a service.

Health Law, Labour and Employment Law
Severing a Single Sentence: The Interplay of the Employment Standards Act and Severability Clauses

Severing a Single Sentence: The Interplay of the Employment Standards Act and Severability Clauses

  • February 13, 2018
  • Dena Varah

Employers sometimes rely on severability clauses to hedge against the risk that clauses in employment contracts could be found to run afoul of the Employment Standards Act and be unenforceable as a whole. However, in a recent decision, the Ontario Court of Appeal signalled that these clauses have limited effect when parties include terms in agreements that contract out of minimum employment standards.

Labour and Employment Law
Bill 148 and Construction Employers

Bill 148 and Construction Employers

  • February 13, 2018
  • Sydney Kruth

The most significant changes to the ESA in more than fifteen years were recently implemented pursuant to Bill 148. This article has provided an overview of the construction-specific standards and exemptions introduced by Bill 148 and the newly amended Regulations to the ESA.

Labour and Employment Law
Classification of Workplace Relationship – Treading on Thin Ice?

Classification of Workplace Relationship – Treading on Thin Ice?

  • February 12, 2018
  • Shefali Rajaputra

This article discusses the decision of the Ontario Superior Court of Justice in Fisher v. Hirtz, which ruled on the issue of ‘employee versus independent contractors’ and highlighted the common law principles for differentiating employees from independent contractors and dependent contractors.

Labour and Employment Law
WSIB Issues Final Chronic Mental Stress Policy – Change is Coming

WSIB Issues Final Chronic Mental Stress Policy – Change is Coming

  • November 17, 2017
  • Jodi Gallagher Healy

Recent amendments to the Workplace Safety and Insurance Act, 1997 will expand the scope of benefit entitlement for mental stress to include chronic mental stress. The Workplace Safety and Insurance Board has just issued the final version of its operational policy in support of this new entitlement. This expanded entitlement will have significant consequences for employers.

Labour and Employment Law
Mitigation of Damages Following Dismissal: New Instructions from the Court of Appeal

Mitigation of Damages Following Dismissal: New Instructions from the Court of Appeal

  • November 17, 2017
  • Andrew Reynolds

Employees who have been terminated without reasonable notice have a duty to mitigate their damages by searching for and, where possible, accepting alternate employment during the notice period. However, in a recent decision the Ontario Court of Appeal indicated that not all income earned during the notice period will be deducted from a damages award.

Labour and Employment Law
After-Acquired Cause for Dismissal: What Employers Don't Know Might Help Them

After-Acquired Cause for Dismissal: What Employers Don't Know Might Help Them

  • November 17, 2017
  • Nadia Zaman and Stuart Rudner

If an employer dismisses an employee without cause, and then later discovers that they had been stealing from the company for years, can they now allege just cause for dismissal? What if the employee was initially dismissed for just cause; can the employer rely upon after-acquired cause to bolster the grounds relied upon by them to support summary dismissal? This article articulates the principles that allow employers to rely on after-acquired cause as a justification for dismissal.

Labour and Employment Law
A Lesson in Mass Termination – New Decision Affirms Importance of Notifying the Ministry of Labour and Securing Adjustment Services

A Lesson in Mass Termination – New Decision Affirms Importance of Notifying the Ministry of Labour and Securing Adjustment Services

  • November 17, 2017
  • Genevieve Cantin

In the recent decision Wood v. CTS of Canada Co., the Ontario Superior Court provided useful guidance to employers, unions and employees caught up in a mass termination. The Court emphasized the importance of providing proper early notice to the Ministry of Labour and securing adjustment services for affected employees.

Labour and Employment Law