Customs Today
  • Home
  • Islamabad
  • Karachi
  • Lahore
  • National
  • Transfers and Postings
  • Chambers & Associations
  • Business
No Result
View All Result
Customs Today
  • Home
  • Islamabad
  • Karachi
  • Lahore
  • National
  • Transfers and Postings
  • Chambers & Associations
  • Business
No Result
View All Result
Customs Today
No Result
View All Result
Home International Customs New Zealand

Sacked JB Hi-Fi sales star wants more than his $66K compo

byadmin
13/06/2019
in New Zealand
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Sacked JB Hi-Fi sales star Shailen Kumar says the $66,300 he has been awarded for unjustifiable dismissal is not enough.

He also wants his job back.

You might also like

New Zealand shares fall as mainland Chinese markets reopen

03/02/2020

NZ stock market’s prospects lift

30/01/2020

“The money is not the reason I fought this case,” Kumar told the Herald.

“The money means nothing to me. I fought the case for my pride.

“To get my job back, would be to get my pride back.”

Kumar said he had suffered depression and sleeplessness and that it had affected his family life.

A long-planned trip to Fiji for a cultural event, which he departed for soon after being frog-marched from JB Hi-Fi, turned into a joyless wreck as he fretted about events, and his future.

It had also affected his job hunting. “No one wants to hire someone who’s been terminated,” he said. He said it took him months to find a new role. He is now working at a New Lynn car yard.

In June last year, Kumar – who had worked for JB Hi-Fi for eight years – was summarily dismissed from his sales job at the chain’s Albany, Auckland store.

After an investigation, JB Hi-Fi alleged Kumar had sold dozens of iPads and iPhones to a reseller at below cost, and received an under-the-table commission from the reseller for his trouble.

However, the company made paperwork blunders with Kumar’s dismissal, and – bar the case of a single iPad – was unable to refute the salesman’s claim that he had received the required permission from a manager at the Albany store for each sale.

JB Hi-Fi was also unable to prove its claim that the reseller and Kumar new each other.

The chain claimed that, during a coffee shop meeting with two JB Hi-Fi managers, the owner of the reseller had admitted to a knowing Kumar, and that the salesman had tipped them him off about good deals. However, no notes were taken during the meeting. And ERA member Nicola Craig expressed dubiousness about the reseller’s apparent confession.

JB Hi-Fi also operates a commercial division, which sells to resellers – and it was in partly in that context that the meeting was setup. Craig raised the prospect that there was the lure of an official relationship.

She noted in her determination that “I found it surprising that the reseller’s owner was this co-operative with [JB Hi-Fi managers] Mr Murray and Mr Korff … My impression is that the possibility of a formal relationship was introduced as a means of extracting information from the Reseller which might not otherwise have been forthcoming.”

Craig also said while there was a policy of only selling one iPhone or iPad to a customer – to thwart resellers who had at times entered JB Hi-Fi to buy in bulk – sales people had only been updated by email. It had not been presented as a policy. There had also been an element of confusion about whether the policy had applied to clearance stock (or “quick stock” or “q-stock” in JB Hi-Fi parlance).

However, she also noted that Kumar had not relied on either argument, instead centering his defence on the fact all of the sales in question, bar one, had received the required approval by a manager.

JB Hi-Fi did not immediately respond to a request for comment But at a December hearing, the chain argued Kumar should not get his floor sales role back.

Related Stories

New Zealand shares fall as mainland Chinese markets reopen

byadmin
03/02/2020

New Zealand shares fell as the coronavirus outbreak continued to weigh on investor confidence, however, it weathered a savage reopening...

NZ stock market’s prospects lift

byadmin
30/01/2020

Law firm Chapman Tripp's annual review has found a revamp of the the NZX's rules, fees, and the move to...

Trivago hit with 18 Commerce Commission complaints

byadmin
21/01/2020

The Commerce Commission says it has received 18 complaints about hotel comparison website Trivago. Trivago, part-owned by US-based Expedia, has...

Grant Biggar
Fin-Tech & Fin-Services Investing and Advising US, UK, NZ & Aus
Greater New York City Area 
Picture supplied via LinkedIn
https://www.linkedin.com/in/grant-biggar-8434201/

New Zealand businessman Grant Biggar owes $3m in New York taxes

byadmin
13/01/2020

A New Zealand man owes US$2 million (NZ$3m) in New York income taxes according to a decision by the New...

Next Post

Banking secrets: 3,600 accounts examined by tax department since 2001

  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

© 2011 Customs Today -World's first newspaper on customs. Customs Today.

No Result
View All Result
  • Transfers and Postings
  • Latest News
  • Karachi
  • Islamabad
  • Lahore
  • National
  • Chambers & Associations
  • Business
  • About Us

© 2011 Customs Today -World's first newspaper on customs. Customs Today.