Employment contract - can it be overridden?
Employment contract - can it be overridden?
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Discussion

JacksHereR

Original Poster:

879 posts

197 months

Friday 15th January 2010
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The initial message was deleted from this topic on 11 February 2010 at 10:05

JacksHereR

Original Poster:

879 posts

197 months

Friday 15th January 2010
quotequote all
nah he suggested it when he told me about the planned harmonization. Ive a few weeks to think about it. He said he would right me an email. Ive seen neither the contract nor email yet.


just had a horrid thought, if director leaves or company gets bought out - his letter to me wont mean anything to the people who hold my employment contract? if at all to a court?



Edited by JacksHereR on Friday 15th January 11:16

johnfm

13,712 posts

267 months

Monday 18th January 2010
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If there is an entire agreement clause in the employment contract, I assume his 'letter' will need to be a deed of variation.

johnfm

13,712 posts

267 months

Wednesday 20th January 2010
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anonymous said:
[redacted]
How else would you deal with a contract with an entire agreement clause?

johnfm

13,712 posts

267 months

Wednesday 20th January 2010
quotequote all
anonymous said:
[redacted]
Fair enough.. i just assumed a DoV was the standard route for varying terms...


..still haven't started my TC yet - which is why I ask the questions!!

Doofus

31,432 posts

190 months

Wednesday 20th January 2010
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My first reaction on reading this is that regardless of your original question, and once that's sorted out; if they want you to complete a 37.5 hour timeseet whilst only working 35, GET THAT IN WRITING.

Otherwise there's a chace that some time down the road, they'll accuse you of falsifying your timesheets and you'll get summarily dismissed.