Re: Made redundant and boss's wife doing my job: What to do?
I agree..... If this is the case then I could understand why his wife is now working in your old role.
How was the business doing ? is this the reason you were left go?
Really it is not OP's problem/business whether the wife is working for little or no pay. I'm not sure whether replacing an employee with a "volunteer" will invalidate a redundancy or not but we shouldn't speculate about any of that. If it turns out to be the case that the wife is merely volunteering, then that may paint things in a different light from an employment law perspective.
We have no evidence to suggest that someone is working for nothing. What we do have evidence of is that OP was made redundant and the position is clearly not redundant because the position is now filled by someone else. That's the starting point for any discussion.
Let's ignore the fact that OP has been replaced by the boss's wife. One cannot simply make an employee redundant and replace them with someone else for lower pay. Well, you can do whatever you want in practice, but that leaves the employer open to a UDA claim.
We're all aware of the difficulties facing private enterprise at the moment, but that cannot be an excuse to flout employment law. The company has some explaining to do; it should not be up to OP to come up with excuses as to why the company has acted in this manner.
Bear in mind that, if business is bad, it is always open to a company to make a position redundant - employment law doesn't argue with that. What is a problem is if they then turn around and hire someone for the same role.
OP, you should probably consult with an employment solicitor but if you don't want/can't afford to, I'd write to your employer asking for more background on your redundancy and questioning why someone has been hired in that same role. I'd give them a reasonable time limit to reply and work from there.