Business Law Consultants Bristol

Local resource for business law consultants in Bristol. Includes detailed information on local businesses that provide access to business organizational plans, contract drafting tips, tax counseling services, investment solutions, and law educational programs, as well as advice and content on legal aspects of business.

Devereux and Co.
0117 959 3344
52a High Street
Bristol
LHP Law
01225 315055
37 Gay Street
Bath
John Hodge & Co.
01934 410910
Unit 10/11 Morston Court
Weston-Super-Mare
Chawner Grey
01934 417768
Grove Chambers
Weston-Super-Mare
Harding Evans Solicitors
01633 244233
Queens Chambers
Newport
Foster and Partners
0117 961 5300
International House
Bristol
Stone King Sewell
01225 571795
13 Queen Square
Bath
Wards Solicitors
01934 413535
37 Boulevard
Weston-Super-Mare
Fryer, Collett & Co.
01934 626681
5 Beaconsfield Road
Weston-Super-Mare
Everett Tomlin Lloyd & Pratt
01633 251801
28-30 Stow Hill
Newport
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Legal Pitfalls

Although it is natural to want to find out as much as possible during the interview, you don’t have a completely free rein. Legally, there are some questions that you can’t ask.

“The thing that you have to be careful about is that you don’t discriminate,” explains Alexandra Davidson, a partner with the employment team at law firm Berwin Leighton Paisner.

There are three ways in which your questions could be discriminatory:

Sex

Obviously you should avoid sexist comments but you should also avoid questions such as “Are you planning to start a family?” If you refuse to employ someone because they say that they are, you are being discriminatory and are liable for a claim against you.

Disability

If the candidate discloses a disability, you can’t use it as a reason not to employ them unless it is justified. “Somebody who’s blind obviously can’t be a bus driver but there’s no reason why they can’t be a receptionist. If it will only take small adjustments to enable them to do the job, then you will have to make them,” explains Davidson.

Making the decision

Any questions relating to disability have to be carefully worded. They need to centre on how you can enable them to do the job with the disability rather than why it would exclude them.

Race

You can’t discriminate on grounds of race. This covers both ethnic background and country of origin. “The chief pitfall is in stereotyping people,” explains Davidson.

Overall the rule is “Only ask questions which help you make a decision about whether you are going to appoint them for the job or not.” If you are asking a discriminatory question to help you decide whether to employ the person or not, then it is unlawful. If you are not asking the question for that reason, they why are you asking it at all?

Contractual agreements

On a more general note, you should also be careful that you don’t make any promises in the interview that you can’t keep. If you offer someone a job along with all sorts of benefits, and they accept – you can’t then change the offer because you realise that you can’t afford it.

“Be cautious with your wording and don’t promise the earth unless you’re going to give it. If you offer them the job and they say, “great, I’ll start on Monday”, that’s a contractual agreement. Just because it’s verbal, it doesn’t mean it’s not binding,” cautions Davidson.

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