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misrepresenting the reason for the termination

By Alison J. Bird | 3 Minutes Read January 14, 2013

When will an employer be liable for bad faith damages?

Since the Supreme Court of Canada’s decision in Honda v. Keays, dismissed employees have increasingly sought bad faith damages in severance negotiations and wrongful dismissal actions. A key issue in these claims is whether the employer’s conduct was sufficiently egregious to justify these damages. The courts are clear that not every perceived offence or instance of misconduct will give rise to a finding of bad faith.

Article by Alison J. Bird / Employee Relations, Employment Standards, Payroll / bad faith damages, damages, deprive the employee of a benefit, dismissed employees, employer’s conduct was sufficiently egregious, employment law, employment relationship, Evans v. Complex Services Inc, evidence of mental distress, Honda Canada Inc. v Keays, liable for bad faith damages, malice or blatant disregard for the employee, management and the employee, misrepresenting the reason for the termination, must still establish actual loss caused by the misconduct, perceived offence or instance of misconduct, severance negotiations, Supreme Court of Canada, termination, termination notice, terminations, time of dismissal, wrongful dismissal actions

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