Uk government employment contract

Employers and employees have certain duties that are central to any employment contract. These are sometimes called 'imposed duties'.

The main duties are:

If either the employer or employee breaches one of these duties, it can damage or even end the working relationship.

Duty of care

This means employers must do all they reasonably can to protect their employees' health, safety and wellbeing at work.

This could include:

Examples of how an employer might breach their duty of care include:

If an employer breaches their duty of care

There is no standalone legal claim called 'breach of duty of care'.

However, there are likely to be other legal claims for situations where the employer breaches this duty. For example:

If an employee notices a health and safety risk

If an employee identifies a health and safety risk at work, they should:

Employees can also report health and safety issues to the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) or their local authority if:

Detriment relating to health and safety

An employer must not cause an employee or worker 'detriment' because they:

Detriment means someone experiences one or both of the following:

Examples of detriment could be:

Employees and workers are also protected if they whistleblow about health and safety. Find out more about whistleblowing at work.

Duty of trust and confidence

Employers and employees have a 'duty of trust and confidence' towards each other.

If an employer breaches the duty of trust and confidence

If an employer breaches the duty of trust and confidence, their employee might be able to claim:

Examples of how an employer might breach this duty include:

If an employee breaches the duty of trust and confidence

If an employee breaches this duty, their employer might take disciplinary action, which could lead to dismissal.

Examples of how an employee might breach this duty include:

Duty of fidelity

Employees have a 'duty of fidelity' towards their employer. It is sometimes called the duty of good faith.

This duty means employees must behave honestly and faithfully towards their employer.

Under the duty of fidelity, employees must not:

This duty is especially relevant when an employer includes a 'restrictive covenant' in their employee's contract. This is a term stating that an employee cannot take certain actions that are in competition with the employer's business.

'Non-compete clauses' are a type of restrictive covenant.

Doing work for another employer

The duty of fidelity would not stop employees taking on extra work for a different employer.

However, they should consider whether:

In both these circumstances, the employee might be breaching the duty of fidelity.

Contact the Acas helpline

Contact the Acas helpline for any questions about employer and employee duties or circumstances that relate to them.