$50K fine for IKEA’s shaky firing

The furniture giant has been rebuked after dismissing a worker over milkshake-related misconduct.

It’s no use crying over spilled milk or, in this case, stolen milkshake – that’s the advice employers at IKEA Ireland should have taken before firing one experienced employee.

The retail giant has been hit with a €30,000 fine – equivalent to NZ$50,000 – after it sacked bistro worker Ian Fortune for drinking a milkshake without paying for it.

Fortune, who had worked at IKEA since 2009, did not dispute taking the milkshake but insisted it was an honest mistake. Bosses disagreed and viewed the incident as gross misconduct.

A subsequent investigation and disciplinary meetings were held but Dublin-based Fortune failed to turn up – he told an employment tribunal that they were held while he was on a pre-booked family holiday to France and he had never been informed of them.

The employment tribunal eventually ordered IKEA to pay significant compensation to Fortune after a judge ruled the organisation has falsely categorized the slip-up as serious misconduct and therefore had unfairly dismissed him.

It concluded that; “taken all in all and given the circumstances of the milkshakes and the conversation at the time the Tribunal is not satisfied that the matter amounts to a ‘substantial ground justifying the dismissal.”

Auckland-based employment lawyer Carl Blake told HRM that the most common firing mistake among New Zealand employers was “a lack of following a fair process.”

“Regardless of how absolutely clear an employee’s misconduct may be in the sense of even being videoed stealing money or engaging in absolutely serious misconduct, a process still needs to be followed allowing the employee an opportunity to respond to the allegations and the proposal to dismiss them before any decisions are made,” he stressed.

More like this:

When can HR legally ask for a sick note?

Transgender worker claims constructive dismissal

Three must-have skills HR should borrow from marketing
 

Recent articles & video

First-ever trial begins against New Zealand executive for WHS charges

Migrant workers warned of deportation amid growing offences

Supporting neurodiverse employees in the workplace

Google fires employees involved in April 16 protest: reports

Most Read Articles

Kiwi firms still looking to hire despite challenging economy

'We need to be constantly pulse-checking with employees'

Woolworths pleads guilty in $1.1-million wage underpayment case