TamberLawPC

Being let go from a job is never easy, but when the termination feels unjustified or wrongful, it can be emotionally challenging and legally complicated. An unjust dismissal not only disrupts your career path but can also leave you feeling betrayed, disrespected, and uncertain about your rights and options moving forward. 

This blog discusses unjust dismissals, providing insights into what constitutes unfair termination, your potential legal recourses, and strategies for protecting your interests during this difficult period.

What is a Wrongful Termination?

Wrongful termination in Ontario occurs when an employer dismisses an employee in a manner that violates the Employment Standards Act (“ESA”), breaches the terms of their employment contract, or contravenes the Ontario Human Rights Code.

Examples of Wrongful Termination

Several circumstances can be considered wrongful termination in Ontario, including:

  • Lack of Reasonable Notice: Employers must provide employees with reasonable notice of termination or pay in lieu of notice, as determined by the ESA and common law. Failure to provide sufficient notice or compensation may amount to wrongful termination.
  • Violation of the Employment Standards Act: Dismissing an employee for taking a legally entitled leave, such as maternity leave or sick leave, is a violation of the ESA and is considered wrongful termination.
  • Breach of Contract: If an employer dismisses an employee in a manner that breaches the terms of the employment contract (e.g., terminating without following the agreed-upon process), it can be grounds for wrongful termination.
  • Constructive Dismissal: This occurs when an employer makes significant changes to the terms of employment without the employee’s consent, effectively forcing the employee to resign. This can be treated as a wrongful termination.
  • Discrimination or Retaliation: Terminating an employee on protected grounds such as race, gender, age, disability, or any other characteristic protected by the Ontario Human Rights Code is wrongful. It is also wrongful to terminate an employee in retaliation for exercising their legal rights, such as filing a complaint about workplace harassment.
  • Bad Faith or Malicious Intent: Termination carried out in bad faith or with malicious intent, such as fabricating reasons for dismissal to harm the employee’s reputation, can also be considered wrongful.

After you are fired or let go, there are some key things you should do in order to protect your employment rights:

  • Don’t sign off on any severance offers or termination papers. If you do, you could give up your right to file a claim for wrongful dismissal and compensation
  • Immediately write down what happened, from the point of termination through the termination meeting itself, and include as much detailed information as possible.
  • Put together all documents related to your employment with the company. This can include your employment contract, any performance reviews (positive or otherwise), pay statements, emails, or other correspondence about your workplace or connected to your firing, and those termination papers you may have been given.

Wrongful Dismissal Damages

If an employer fails to provide reasonable notice of termination as required by the employment contract, common law, or employment standards legislation, an employee can sue for wrongful dismissal damages. This includes:

  • Pay in lieu of reasonable notice (severance)
  • Lost benefits during the notice period
  • Lost pension contributions/equity compensation 

Human Rights Damages

If the termination was based on discriminatory grounds like race, gender, disability etc., in violation of the Ontario Human Rights Code, an employee can file a human rights complaint. Potential remedies include:

  • Compensation for lost income
  • Damages for injury to dignity, feelings, and self-respect
  • Reinstatement (in rare cases) 

Extraordinary Damages

In egregious cases where the employer’s conduct during termination was particularly reprehensible or in bad faith, courts can award extraordinary damages for:

  • Mental distress/emotional pain and suffering
  • Loss of reputation/career opportunities
  • Punitive damages 

Complaints can fall into different categories, each handled by a specific agency:

  • Employment standards violations (e.g., unpaid wages, denial of breaks): Ministry of Labour
  • Human rights violations (e.g., discrimination, harassment): Human Rights Tribunal of Ontario
  • Workplace safety issues: Ministry of Labour’s Health and Safety Contact Centre
  • Unjust dismissal (for federally regulated employees): Canada Industrial Relations Board

If you have been let go or fired and need legal advice, contact our office today!

What are your options if Employer is not paying you wages?

The Employment Standards Act (ESA) requires that employees be paid wages for all work performed. Employers are to pay wages on time, on a set pay period (be it weekly, monthly, biweekly, etc.) and that pay must be at least minimum wage. Similar requirements for wages are found in the Canada Labour Code for federally regulated employees (such truckers, post office workers, telecommunications employees).

It is therefore absolutely illegal for an employer to withhold or fail to pay you wages. There are several steps an employee should take if they find themselves not being paid properly despite performing work for their employer.

1. Make Demands for Wages in Writing

Any lawyer’s first piece of advice for situations like these will be to start building evidence in the event that things need to move forward. Ensure that you start putting your requests for your employer to pay you into writing. Outline the amount and number of hours that you are missing pay for. Ask them when they intend to pay the amount. Whether this is in an email, a text message, or other written form of communication, make sure you start creating a paper trail of some kind in case things need to move forward.

2. Gather Records

Along with suggestion number 1, ensure that you have accurate records of the hours/dates for which wages are owed. This could be in the form of paystubs, punch cards, schedules, timesheets, Google location tracking showing routes you drove/proving you attended an office or a client location, or even a handwritten journal of the hours you have worked. The best records are contemporaneous, meaning they are made at the time that the unpaid wages are accrued. If the matter goes to the Ministry of Labour, you will be asked for proof of the hours you are saying are unpaid, so the sooner you start building this record, the better.

3. Seeking Legal Advice

If despite talking to your employer you don’t receive the wages you believe you are owed, it is worth speaking to your local legal clinic or an employment lawyer for advice about your options. Depending on if unpaid wages are your only issue, or if there are other employment law issues at play with the unpaid wages, a lawyer may recommend a few different options: (1) a Ministry of Labour claim or (2) a Small Claims Court/Superior Court claim.

Ministry of Labour Claim

In many cases, a lawyer may recommend obtaining unpaid wages through a Ministry of Labour claim. The Ministry of Labour enforces the ESA. It is a very straightforward process for the most part and while you can hire a lawyer to help you, you don’t need one. You have two (2) years from the date of an unpaid wage to file a claim at the Ministry of Labour.

The Ministry of Labour will review your claim and investigate by speaking to both you and your employer. It will gather evidence from both sides, and make decisions based on both the evidence and credibility of each party.

The Ministry can choose to either issue an order if it thinks the employer has contravened the ESA, or choose to issue no order if it thinks the employer hasn’t done anything wrong. If the Ministry thinks the employer has done something in violation of the ESA, it will also often order the employer to pay administrative fees or penalties.

If your only issue is unpaid wages, and/or there are other ESA issues at hand such as overtime pay or public holiday pay, then the Ministry of Labour is often the better route. More complex cases may need to go through civil courts as explained below.

Small Claims Court/Superior Court

Sometimes unpaid wages are not the only issue an employee is facing with their employer. We see many cases for example where on top of having unpaid wages, long service employees are terminated from their employers and not given proper “severance”. They may have also faced discrimination or harassment in the workplace. The Ministry of Labour unfortunately does not have the power to award remedies for discrimination or award “common law” severance. In those scenarios, a lawyer may advise you that the better route is to file a Small Claims Court claim or, if your claim is worth more than $35,000.00 in total, a Superior Court claim for civil damages.

The Ministry of the Attorney General has excellent guides on both of these processes available here and here.

The main difference is that Superior Court processes are a lot more “self-guided” in terms of parties needing to schedule a lot of steps between themselves, and in accordance with the Rules of Procedure, to move a matter along. In contrast, Small Claims Court matters are very dependent on the individual Court scheduling key steps like a settlement conference or a trial for the parties.

There are also much higher costs to move a Superior Court matter forward, given that parties will have to hire private services for key steps like examination for discovery and mediation. In contrast, Small Claims Court does not have costs for the most part associated with it apart from filing fees and/or process server fees if you choose to use one to serve or file your documents.

The bottom line is that your employer can face several different consequences for failing to pay you. Take steps to protect yourself and ensure that your rights are not violated.

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