Toronto Employment Lawyer | Bune Law

Practical legal advice and representation for terminations, wrongful dismissal, severance packages, employment contracts, and workplace disputes in Toronto and across Ontario.

12+

Years Experience

Employment Law

1,500+

Clients Served

Across Ontario

4.9★

165+ Reviews

Google Rating

Millions

in Severance

Recovered

Trusted

& Recommended

By Ontario Employees

Sezar Bune — Toronto Employment Lawyer, Bune Law

Toronto Employment Lawyer | Bune Law

Practical legal advice and representation for terminations, wrongful dismissal, severance packages, employment contracts, and workplace disputes in Toronto and across Ontario.

12+ Years Experience Employment Law
1,500+ Clients Served Across Ontario
4.9★ 165+ Reviews Google Rating

Why Clients Trust Bune Law — Toronto Employment Lawyer

Understand Your Rights. Clarify Your Next Steps

Whether you're facing a recent termination, reviewing a severance package, or navigating a workplace dispute, getting clear legal advice early can make a significant difference in your outcome.

Speaking with Ontario employment lawyer Sezar Bune can help you fully understand your rights, obligations, and options — so you can move forward with clarity and confidence, on your own terms.

They Have a Lawyer. Now You Do Too.

Facing a Termination or Workplace Dispute? Find Out Where You Stand.Supporting Employees with:

Losing your job or facing unfair treatment at work affects more than your career. It can affect your life beyond work. Bune Law helps you understand your rights and take action to protect your future.

Proactive Legal Advice and Representation for Workplace Disputes.Supporting Employers with:

Ontario employers face real legal obligations in how they hire, manage, and let people go. Bune Law provides clear, practical advice to help businesses stay on the right side of employment law.

Experience and Results Matter.

What matters most in an employment lawyer is the difference they make. Every client below turned to Bune Law after a termination left them with an unfair severance package, and each walked away with the outcome they deserved.

Prior results do not guarantee similar outcomes. Each case is unique and depends on its own specific facts. These summaries are provided for informational purposes only. Identities have been withheld for confidentiality.

Sezar Bune, Toronto Employment Lawyer, Bune Law
Sezar Bune Employment Lawyer — Ontario
Law School University of Ottawa
Called to the Bar 2014
Years of Experience 12+
Practice Area Employment Law
Experience Wrongful Dismissal, Constructive Dismissal, Severance Packages

12 Years. One Lawyer. One Focus: Ontario Employment Law.

Sezar Bune has practiced employment law in Ontario for more than 12 years, representing both employees and employers across a wide range of workplace disputes. Over that time, he has built a practice rooted in one area of law, developing the kind of depth that only comes from years of handling the same issues, at every level of complexity, across hundreds of real cases.

That depth has a direct effect on your matter. Every development in Ontario employment law, every lesson from over a decade of files, goes into how Sezar approaches your situation.

When you contact Bune Law, you speak directly with Sezar. From the first call to the last. No junior associates. No handoffs. No file passed down the line.

Member: Law Society of Ontario
Called to the Bar: 2014 — University of Ottawa, Faculty of Law (Magna Cum Laude)
Ontario Bar Association | Toronto Lawyers' Association
12+ Years | 400+ Published Articles | Exclusively Employment Law
Learn More About Sezar Bune →

Client Reviews & Testimonials

What Sets Bune Law Apart

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Frequently Asked Questions: Ontario Employment Law.

Straightforward answers on wrongful dismissal, severance packages, constructive dismissal, and workplace rights.

Was I wrongfully dismissed and do I have a case?

Wrongful dismissal in Ontario does not require your employer to have acted maliciously. If you were terminated without cause and did not receive reasonable notice or pay in lieu of notice, you likely have a claim regardless of whether your employer called it a layoff, restructuring, or elimination of your role. Constructive dismissal — where an employer makes your working conditions intolerable enough to force a resignation — is also recognized under Ontario law. The sooner you get clarity on where you stand, the more options you have.

How much severance am I entitled to in Ontario if I'm terminated without cause?

If your situation is like many of the employees we help, your employer's initial offer likely reflects the minimums under the Employment Standards Act, not your full entitlement under common law. Depending on your specific situation — including whether you have signed an employment contract with a valid termination clause, as well as your age, length of service, seniority, and how long it will realistically take you to find comparable work — your true entitlement to severance pay is often much higher, sometimes as much as 24 months. Many of the employees we help recover substantially more than the original offer, but only when they seek a review before signing.

Should I sign my severance package right away or can I negotiate more?

Most employees we speak with are surprised to learn they generally have time to respond. A severance package is an employer's offer to walk away without negotiating your rights, and in most situations there is room to negotiate. An employment lawyer can review your package quickly, assess whether the offer reflects your full entitlement, and help you understand your options before you make any commitments.

What are my rights as an employee in Ontario?

Ontario employees have significantly more legal protection than most people realize. Under the Employment Standards Act and common law, you have the right to reasonable notice or pay in lieu of notice if your employment is terminated without cause, the right to a workplace free from harassment and discrimination, and the right to have your employment contract enforced fairly. If your employer changes your job, compensation, or working conditions in a significant way without your consent, that may amount to constructive dismissal — which carries the same legal remedies as a termination. The law also protects you from being fired or penalized for asserting your rights. Understanding what you are entitled to before you respond to anything your employer puts in front of you is almost always the most important step you can take.

Can my employer fire me for making a complaint about harassment or discrimination?

No. Firing or penalising an employee for reporting harassment, discrimination, or a workplace rights violation is illegal in Ontario and is known as reprisal. It is more common than most employees realise, and it often happens in ways that are not immediately obvious — such as a sudden negative performance review, a drastic shift in responsibilities, or a hostile work environment that follows a complaint. If any of this sounds familiar, the circumstances are worth discussing with an employment lawyer.

Ontario Employment Law Insights

Our employment lawyer has published over 400 articles to serve as an educational resource covering termination, severance pay, constructive dismissal, employment contracts, human rights and workplace harassment. This library is designed to help workers and businesses understand the legal landscape and the general principles of employment law.

Areas We Serve

Serving Clients in the Greater Toronto Area and Ontario from our law offices in Toronto

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