Handling Employee Termination and Subsequent Harassment

We had a female laborer who underwent an operation three years ago and was advised to take on light duty. She has been working in our factory for the past 15 years. Following the advice, we assigned her light duty in the pantry. However, she initiated inappropriate relationships with a couple of our employees. Consequently, I had to terminate her employment.

Now, she is harassing me by frequently visiting the factory with some local politicians, CPI union leaders, and the general secretary of our industrial area. They are even planning a protest. Please advise on how to handle this situation.

Regards,
[Username]

From India, Bangalore
Acknowledge(0)
Amend(0)

Addressing Termination Due to Inappropriate Relationships

You showed her the door as she maintained a sexual relationship with a couple of your employees.

1. Does her involvement in a sexual relationship violate the standing order?
2. Does such an act fall under professional misconduct?
3. Did you also remove those other employees with whom she had a sexual relationship?
4. Did you conduct any domestic inquiry before terminating her service? If not, then such termination is unlawful and illegal. She can easily challenge such termination, win the case, and you will be liable to reinstate her and pay all back wages. Judging from her attitude as narrated by you, I am very sure that with the help of the union, she will raise an industrial dispute soon.

Check my blog at www.labourlawhub.com

From India, Kolkata
Acknowledge(5)
NA
SH
CC
Amend(0)

nathrao
3180

Management's Awareness and Termination Procedures

Was the higher management fully informed before the termination? Discuss the course of action with them. What the knowledgeable member mentioned is valid. If the termination procedures were not followed correctly, issues could arise, potentially leading to the reinstatement of the concerned individual.

Evidence and Context of Alleged Misconduct

What evidence was documented regarding the alleged sexual misconduct? Did it occur in the workplace, during working hours, or off-site? If the actions took place outside working hours and premises, her behavior might not be considered misconduct in legal terms.

Comprehensive Evaluation and Dialogue

Examine the situation from all perspectives, engage in dialogue with senior management, and determine the appropriate course of action.

From India, Pune
Acknowledge(1)
Amend(0)

Handling Termination and Employee Relations

Termination without a domestic inquiry is illegal. It is her choice with whom she can have relationships. Did her relationship cause any harm to the company? If yes, can it be labeled as misconduct? If yes, was any inquiry conducted?

Before you encounter further complications, please settle the matter and try to seek her resignation if you do not want her to work for your organization, or take her back on the job. If the matter is escalated to authorities, your company will be in serious trouble. She may lodge a complaint of sexual harassment, though it may be false. What will you do then? Be careful while dealing with female employees.

From India, Mumbai
Acknowledge(3)
Amend(0)

The information made available is incomplete. What do you mean by a sexual relationship? Did this alleged sexual relationship involve sexual contacts within the workplace? If so, what is the backdoor process adopted to remove her? What action have you taken against other person(s) involved?
From India, Kochi
Acknowledge(0)
Amend(0)

Now, I suppose you have already terminated her without conducting any domestic inquiry. Have you issued any written termination letter? This has to be examined to see the reasons cited by you for her termination. You can seek an injunction from the labor court to restrain the dharna from becoming violent and for the protection of personnel and property. You can give a letter to the police asking for protection. If she approaches the labor court, you can take the plea that you will justify the action by presenting evidence before the court.

Regards

From India, Pune
Acknowledge(0)
Amend(0)

nathrao
3180

Legal Considerations in Termination Cases

These actions are only to protect ourselves from legal action. The primary point here is: did the company follow the proper procedure for termination? Was the sexual misconduct in the office or outside the office during working hours? In my opinion, the company is not a judge of someone's personal morality. Her actions that led to problems in the office are the ones that matter.

Besides, in this query, the original poster is silent, and we are discussing the matter without full inputs. If the original poster does not contribute further, I think the thread should be closed.

Regards

From India, Pune
Acknowledge(0)
Amend(0)

Since your post leaves everything else that happened between the alleged misconduct and the punitive termination in very vague terms, one can only presume that the political and trade union support given to the issue is because of your hasty decision without following the legal formalities. If the alleged amorous affairs within the workplace and course of employment are true, it would certainly be misconduct, whether mentioned in the Standing Orders or not. However, you ought to have proceeded against all involved in it and not the woman employee alone. Whatever the reasons for the procedural lapses are, it is better to settle the issue amicably by negotiating for a monetary settlement.

Regards

From India, Salem
Acknowledge(3)
CC
Amend(0)

Dear Mr. Venkybalaji03,

Though you haven't mentioned clearly how you came to know about this misconduct, inquiries should be made to establish the facts, findings, and recommend appropriate actions for punishment. One can infer this information through personal exposure to the industry and human resource practices. It appears that there are deviations from the natural justice process, and decisions seem to be rushed, leading to the complexities you have highlighted in your post.

From India, Gurgaon
Acknowledge(0)
Amend(0)

CiteHR is an AI-augmented HR knowledge and collaboration platform, enabling HR professionals to solve real-world challenges, validate decisions, and stay ahead through collective intelligence and machine-enhanced guidance. Join Our Platform.







Contact Us Privacy Policy Disclaimer Terms Of Service

All rights reserved @ 2025 CiteHR ®

All Copyright And Trademarks in Posts Held By Respective Owners.