You’ve made an offer and the applicant accepted – but something’s changed. Here, HRM looks at the legal implications of withdrawing.
Sometimes, for whatever reason, HR managers will be compelled to withdraw a job offer but be careful – one employment lawyer says rescinding is only legal under certain circumstances.
Here, Filion Wakely Thorup Angeletti associate Roslyn McGilvery explains the acceptable situations:
If you’ve made a conditional offer subject to reference checks
An offer can be withdrawn if it was made conditional on positive results from reference and background checks. With this kind of offer the employer can withdraw it if they find out any relevant information that shows the person is unsuitable for the job. Note that the background information should not involve a discovery about protected classes, such as religion, pregnancy or disability.
“In this case the employer would likely be within its rights to withdraw the offer if the employee’s references aren’t consistent with what the employer was able to learn from the resume and interview process,” McGilvery said.
If the employee has lied during the recruitment process
Another scenario that would justify the withdrawal of the offer would be if it was discovered that the applicant had misrepresented themselves on their resume. Even Yahoo’s CEO made fraudulent educational claims his resume, so don’t think it’s not worth checking.
“The classic case would be if the employee lists academic credentials on their resume, which they never earned,” McGilvery said. “If the employer can say it was induced to hire the employee based on these fraudulent credentials and it would not otherwise have hired them, the employer would have a good case for putting an end to the employment relationship.”
Outside of these specific situations, employers could be putting themselves at risk for a wrongful dismissal case. According to McGilvery, cases decided against the employer usually have damages at the lower end of the scale, however, in 2011 the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal found a withdrawn conditional offer of employment was discriminatory because the decision was made based on a disability. They awarded the rejected candidate $10,000.
It's another reminder to HR that protected traits apply at every stage of the hiring process.
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Here, Filion Wakely Thorup Angeletti associate Roslyn McGilvery explains the acceptable situations:
If you’ve made a conditional offer subject to reference checks
An offer can be withdrawn if it was made conditional on positive results from reference and background checks. With this kind of offer the employer can withdraw it if they find out any relevant information that shows the person is unsuitable for the job. Note that the background information should not involve a discovery about protected classes, such as religion, pregnancy or disability.
“In this case the employer would likely be within its rights to withdraw the offer if the employee’s references aren’t consistent with what the employer was able to learn from the resume and interview process,” McGilvery said.
If the employee has lied during the recruitment process
Another scenario that would justify the withdrawal of the offer would be if it was discovered that the applicant had misrepresented themselves on their resume. Even Yahoo’s CEO made fraudulent educational claims his resume, so don’t think it’s not worth checking.
“The classic case would be if the employee lists academic credentials on their resume, which they never earned,” McGilvery said. “If the employer can say it was induced to hire the employee based on these fraudulent credentials and it would not otherwise have hired them, the employer would have a good case for putting an end to the employment relationship.”
Outside of these specific situations, employers could be putting themselves at risk for a wrongful dismissal case. According to McGilvery, cases decided against the employer usually have damages at the lower end of the scale, however, in 2011 the Ontario Human Rights Tribunal found a withdrawn conditional offer of employment was discriminatory because the decision was made based on a disability. They awarded the rejected candidate $10,000.
It's another reminder to HR that protected traits apply at every stage of the hiring process.
More like this:
Outside-of-the box ways to recognize your workers
Designing an HRIS to support globalization
HR among most amorous at Christmas parties