desprateseagull
New member
After such a long time, I think there would be a general expectation that the firm was paying staff the right amount. I don't think they could claim back that far, anyway- Has the pay rate been the same? No raises?
Employment law is my specialism. I don't know whether Binney on acid's partner has a contractual term covering overpayment, so I'll assume for the moment that she doesn't. This means the position is covered by longstanding common law principles. These dictate that an overpayment of wages or salary can be recovered by the employer if:
- the employer has led the employee to believe that he or she is entitled to treat the money as his or her own
- the employee has in good faith changed his or her position - i.e. spent the money believing it to be his or her own; and
- the overpayment was not caused primarily by the fault of the employee.
Given the above, Binney on acid's partner is in quite a strong position with regards to the overpayment, and I would suggest an opening position of telling the Practice "it's your mistake, you deal with the financial consequences".
I'm not a specialist but have been involved in two cases at previous workplaces where this happened. One was very significant and was recovered quickly (although the employee 'tried it on'), the second was similar to this case - outcome was as [MENTION=21166]Frampler[/MENTION] has suggested - it was a small amount over a long period of time and the three bullet points noted applied (although I think [MENTION=21166]Frampler[/MENTION] meant to say 'can't be recovered' rather than 'can' )