The information contained in this Newsletter is of a general nature and does not constitute legal advice


February 2008

LABOUR LAW

1. Social Security. Special agreement. Increase of the annual maximum contribution base

Order of the Labour Ministry 482/2008 of 22 February 2008 modifies article 6.2.1 of the Order of the Labour Ministry 2865/2003 of 13 October on the special agreement with the Social Security. This modification allows the request for the increase of the annual maximum contribution base to employees that, having subscribed to a special agreement with the Social Security, had chosen a contribution base resulting from the average contribution for general contingencies in the 12 months prior to the termination of the special agreement or the expiration of the contribution obligation. (More Information)

2. Dismissal. Unlawful dismissal of an employee undergoing in vitro fertilization

On 26 February 2008, the European Court of Justice heard a case on the dismissal of an employee at an advanced stage of an in vitro fertilization process and held that she could not be dismissed if it is proven that her dismissal is due to the fact that she was undergoing the same. (More information)

3. Promotion of employees. Temporary contracts and the calculation of workers’ length of service in a company

The judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Spanish Supreme Court dated 19 December 2007, recognizes employees’ right to promotion, regardless of whether they are permanent or temporary workers, provided that they have worked in a company for the appropriate period(s) as set out in the applicable collective bargaining agreement. (More Information)

4. Canteens in companies. Absence of an obligation for the company

The interpretation of Decree of 8 June 1938 and the developing regulation, which established the compulsory obligation for the company to fit out a canteen for employees, must be made in relation to what is established in article 3 of the Civil Code. Therefore, the Labour Chamber of the High Court of Justice of Cataluña of 21 December 2007 held that the rules cannot presently be applied because they were approved during the Spanish Civil War according to the spirit and circumstances of that time. (More Information)

5. Breach of the right to privacy. Evidence provided by detectives. Nullity. Unfair dismissal

The judgment of the Labour Chamber of the High Court of Justice of Madrid dated 27 June 2007, held that a company’s hiring of a detective for the purposes of monitoring an employee must be proportional if it is not to breach the employee’s fundamental right to privacy. The dismissal of the employee was considered unfair as a result of the evidence gathered by the detectives being deemed null and void. (More Information)


1. Social Security. Special agreement. Increase of the annual maximum contribution base

Order of the Labour Ministry 482/2008 of 22 February modifying Order of the Labour Ministry 2865/2003 of 13 October on special agreements with the Social Security

Article 6.2.1. a) of the Order of Labour Ministry 2865/2003 of 13 October regulating the special agreement in the Social Security (the “Order”) sets out the possible contribution bases that may be chosen by the employee through a special agreement with the Social Security. The modification introduced by Order of Labour Ministry 819/2004 permitted employees who had chosen this contribution base to request an increase of the annual maximum contribution base.

The most recent modification extends the right of asking for an increase in the annual maximum contribution base to employees that had chosen the other contribution base according to article 6.2.1. of the Order. The other contribution base is the average contribution base for general contingencies in the 12 months immediately preceding the termination or expiration of the contributing obligation.

2. Dismissal. Unlawful dismissal of an employee undergoing in vitro fertilization

Judgment of European Court of Justice of 26 February 2008

On 26 February 2008, the European Court of Justice (the “ECJ”) issued its decision on a query from an Austrian Court regarding whether the prohibition on dismissing pregnant employees established in article 10.1 of Directive 92/85/EEC can be applied to an employee undergoing in vitro fertilization who is notified of her dismissal once her ovules have been fertilized but before they have been returned to her uterus.

The ECJ held that the aim of the Directive and in particular the EU regulations governing equality between men and women within the ambit of the rights of pregnant women or those who have recently given birth, is to protect female employees before and after childbirth. Therefore, in article 10 of the Directive, the EU legislator has provided special protection for women by prohibiting their dismissal during the period between the start of pregnancy and the end of maternity leave. The Directive makes no exception to the prohibition on dismissing pregnant employees.

From the foregoing, the ECJ infers that article 10 of the Directive must be interpreted as meaning that to be protected against dismissal, the woman must be pregnant. In such circumstances, to ensure the safety and protection of pregnant employees the date that must be taken into account is the earliest date possible.

However, whilst Directive 92/85/EEC cannot be applied to this particular case, according to ECJ case law, EU regulations, that the national court has not made reference to in the preliminary question raised, can be taken into account. In this regard, Directive 76/207/EEC would be applicable, which regulates the principle of equality between men and women with regard to access to employment, training, career development, and working conditions.

In the case referred to above, the ECJ concluded that an employee who is at an advanced stage of in vitro fertilization cannot be dismissed, provided that it can be proved that the dismissal is essentially based on the fact that the employee has been undergoing such treatment.

3. Promotion of employees. Temporary contracts and the calculation of workers’ length of service in a company

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Spanish Supreme Court dated 19 December 2007

A company lodged an appeal against a judgment upholding a collective dispute claim which declared that employees whose salary levels meant that they were due to be promoted on the basis of their experience (according to the saving banks collective bargaining agreement), were entitled to have periods in which they worked for the defendant company under temporary employment contracts to be included in the calculation of the length of time they had worked for the company, irrespective of the duration of the breaks between each contract.

The appellant company contended that, as promotion in this case is awarded on the basis of the employee having worked continuously for the company, an employee should only be promoted when there has been an uninterrupted provision of services, less than twenty days of interruption, or longer interruptions that were due to fraudulent acts. Therefore, the sum of separate periods during which services have been provided pursuant to various contracts over a period of time cannot be considered for promotional purposes.

The Supreme Court analyzed the facts and dismissed the appeal lodged by the company arguing that it is the applicable collective bargaining agreement itself that recognizes the right to promote all employees who have been at the company for a certain period of time, without making any distinction between permanent and temporary workers. According to the applicable bargaining agreement, workers can be promoted due to their experience for simply having provided services for a certain amount of time, even though interruptions may exist as “a forced leave of absence and suspension of the employment contract with a reservation of the post are included within the concept of permanent provision of services”.

4. Canteens in companies. Absence of an obligation for the company

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the High Court of Justice of Cataluña of 21 December 2007

This judgment declared that this issue depends on the interpretation of Decree of 8 June of 1938 on the establishment of canteens in companies (the “Decree”) and the developing regulation (the “Order”). The Decree regulates the compulsory establishment of a canteen by companies. The Order, in turn, establishes that a company must contract a cook, supply the cooking fuel, the kitchenware and advance the amounts necessary to enable the employees to acquire products at a lower wholesale price.  

In this case, a company of 170 employees had fit out an old training room for use as a canteen with a 30 person capacity. However, the room did not provide a supply of drinking water or a location in which  clean kitchenware.

The company and employee representatives disagreed on the interpretation of the Decree and the Order regarding whether the company was obligated to fit out a canteen room or instead, a canteen service.

The Labour Chamber of Superior Court held that according to article 3 of the Civil Code “rules must be interpreted strictly in relation to the context, historic and legislative background and the social circumstances of the time when they were originally implemented, with particular attention to their spirit and purpose”. The court held that the Decree and the Order are contrary to principles of the Spanish Constitution, thus a company cannot be obligated to establish a canteen.

5. Breach of the right to privacy. Evidence provided by detectives. Nullity. Unfair dismissal

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the High Court of Justice of Madrid, dated 27 June 2007

The judgment of the Labour Chamber of the High Court of Justice of Madrid, (the “HCJM”) of 27 June 2007 declared the evidence obtained for dismissal proceedings by detectives contracted by the employer to be null and void. As a result, the company was unable to prove the allegation of the breach of good faith it asserted in the employee’s dismissal letter.

In this case, the company’s commercial representative, who worked from home and made commercial visits, incorporated a company that competed directly with its employer’s customers. The report issued by the detectives, who followed the employee for six months, revealed that the employee would visit the offices of a company of which he was joint and several director, used the employer’s company car for his own business, and also charged any expenses incurred in his own business to his employer.

The HCJM held that the activity carried out outside of a person’s workplace is private, even if conducted in public spaces, and cannot be monitored by the company because it is private and falls under his/her right to privacy. Thus employers do not have the right to know what employees do in their spare/private time. The judgment added that the occupations or activities of people conducted in public spaces are still private, and can be shared with whomever they wish or be protected by anonymity if they so wish.

The court compared this case to those in which the Constitutional Court issued a judgment regarding recreation and relaxation areas within the workplace.

The prevalence of the appellant’s right to privacy can only be limited by the employer’s powers of control or by a justified business need or interest, it not being sufficient to simply invoke the right to limit the employee’s rights. In the case heard by the HCJM, the company did not include any facts, details or conduct in the dismissal letter that justified the need to monitor the employee. In fact, it was only after contracting the detectives’ services, that the company found out about the employee’s breach.

The information contained in this Newsletter is of a general nature and does not constitute legal advice