1. Social 
        security. Temporary disability benefits
        Royal Decree 1430/2009 of 11 September 
        develops Law 40/2007 on social security measures in connection with 
        temporary disability benefits (Spain’s Official Gazette of 29 September 
        2009)
        This Royal Decree (“RD”) develops the 
        procedures to reduce companies’ social security contributions resulting 
        from employees suffering from a level of professional illness for which 
        no economic social security benefit is foreseen (unpaid sick leave).
        Companies will be able to reduce their social 
        security contributions if the employees are assigned to another 
        compatible job within the company. The purpose of the measure is to 
        avoid the exclusion of these workers from the market.
        The RD also governs electronic communications by 
        the public authorities of the autonomous regions when an employee has 
        been in a situation of temporary disability for twelve months, avoiding 
        any lack of coordination in the payment of the benefit. In this respect, 
        once the temporary disability period of twelve months lapses, the Social 
        Security will pay the benefits that the company was paying until that 
        moment.
        Finally, the RD establishes a review procedure 
        for temporary disability processes at the request of the interested 
        party and collaborating entities.
        
        2. Social 
        security. Agreement between Spain and Japan
        Spain and Japan signed a social security 
        agreement in Tokyo on 12 September 2008 (Spain’s Official Gazette of 30 
        September 2009)
        This agreement governs international relations 
        between Spain and Japan in the area of social security.
        Previously, seconded workers were under the 
        obligation to pay social security contributions in both countries and 
        the agreement aimed to resolve this issue. In this regard, employees who 
        are seconded for a period of less than five years will pay contributions 
        to the Social Security in their country of origin. If employees stay 
        longer, the competent Spanish and Japanese authorities may agree to 
        allow the employee to continue being subject to the regulations of the 
        country of origin. Moreover, the years of contribution in both countries 
        will accrue for the purpose of a right to a pension.
        
        3. Personal 
        data protection. Subcontracting. Transfer of TC2 forms and payslips
        Report 0412/2009 of the Data Protection 
        Agency
        The Data Protection Agency (“DPA”) 
        published a report (0412/2009) in which it rectified its opinion that 
        the delivery of TC2 forms and payslips by a subcontractor company to the 
        principal company was unlawful on the basis that this transfer did not 
        fall within the scope of article 42.1 of the Statue of Workers (“SW”) 
        or article 24 of Law 31/1995 on health and safety at work.
        The DPA’s analysis of the legitimacy of this 
        transfer of data was based on article 7.3 of Law 15/1999 of 13 December 
        on Data Protection (“DP”), which establishes that transfers of 
        sensitive data must be governed by a legally binding rule or have been 
        consented by the data subject (TC2 forms and payslips may contain health 
        data and union membership data).
        In previous reports, the DPA stated:
        “(...)in no event can TC2 forms, payslips and 
        medical reports be communicated, since the information contained in 
        these documents is specially protected data and article 7.3 of DP 
        establishes that the transfer of this type of data is subject to the 
        consent of the affected person or to a specific law permitting such 
        transfer. Neither the SW nor the Health and Safety Law in force requires 
        the communication of these data to the contracting party, the indemnity 
        of the contractor being certain if the certification mentioned in 
        article 42.1 of the SW is provided, without further information about 
        the employees working in the subcontractor company being necessary.”
        However, the DPA amends its last opinion 
        establishing that:
        (i) The communication of the TC2 forms of the 
        employees of the subcontracted company to the main company is permitted 
        under article 42.2 of the SW (“the transfer of TC2 forms will fall 
        within the scope of article 7.3 of the DP related to article 42.2 of the 
        SW and of the joint and several liability governed by the Civil Code”), 
        and
        (ii) the treatment of union membership data 
        contained in certain payslips is not an impediment for their provision 
        to the principal company (provided that it refers to subcontracted 
        employees), since the main purpose of the inclusion of this type of data 
        in the payslip is not altered (i.e., to deduct the relevant union fees) 
        and, “since the purpose is the same,(...) the transfer of data is in 
        accordance with article 7.2 related to article 4.2 of the DP and the 
        obligation set out in article 42.2 of the SW.”
        
        4. Temporary 
        disability and holidays
        Judgment of the Court of Justice of the 
        European Communities dated 10 September 2009
        This judgment of the Court of Justice of the 
        European Communities (“ECJ”) resolves a preliminary issue 
        proposed by Labour Court number 23 of Madrid.
        On the basis of protecting the health and safety 
        of employees, the ECJ reaffirmed (see its previous judgment of 20 
        January 2009) its interpretation of Article 7 Section 1 of Directive 
        2003/88 and recognised the right of an employee to enjoy holidays in a 
        period other than that established by the company, even when this occurs 
        outside the established reference period.
        The ECJ stated that the purpose of the right to 
        annual paid holidays is to allow employees to rest and have time for 
        leisure and recreation. This purpose is different than that 
        corresponding to temporary disability leave, which purpose is to allow 
        the employee time to recover.
        
        5. Work 
        related accident. Civil jurisdiction
        Judgment of the Civil Chamber of the Supreme 
        Court dated 23 April 2009
        The Supreme Court (“SC”) stated that 
        liability claims against an employer arising out of a breach of an 
        employment contract fall under the jurisdiction of the labour courts. 
        Nevertheless, the SC stated that, if the event involving the employee 
        giving rise to the claim occurs while the employee is working in a 
        building of a company that has no labour relationship with the employer, 
        the civil courts will be competent to hear the action involving 
        liability.
        In the case analysed by the SC, both the 
        employing company and that corresponding to the building in which the 
        accident occurred were sued. In the opinion of the SC, the case should 
        have been heard by the civil courts, given that the defendants were 
        legal persons between which there was no labour link. It was therefore 
        possible to deduce that the civil courts have jurisdiction to hear the 
        action for liability given that, when the cause cannot be separated, 
        “vis atractiva” of civil jurisdiction should apply if the employee has 
        not entered into an employment contract with the defendant company.
        
        6. Paid leave 
        of absence. Maternity hospital stay
        Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme 
        Court dated 5 May 2009
        In this judgment, the SC established an employee’s 
        right to paid leave under article 37.3b) of the SW when patients with a 
        second degree of consanguinity or affinity are in hospital and that, 
        furthermore, only proof of hospital admission is necessary, not the 
        reasons for the same.
        In the case analysed, the hospital admission 
        involved a birth without complications and while childbirth is not 
        considered an illness, the SC stated that the woman’s hospital admission 
        should be treated the same as that of an ill person. As such, the SC 
        interpreted article 37.3 b) of the SW literally and declared the right 
        to paid leave even when childbirth occurs without complications.
        
        7. Transfer 
        of undertaking. Subrogation of business
        Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme 
        Court dated 28 April 2009
        Referring to EU law, the judgment of the SC 
        dated 28 April 2009 established that the continuance of the activity and 
        the transfer of the workforce is not sufficient for the purposes of 
        determining if a transfer of companies has occurred despite the 
        importance of such circumstances for the development of the business. 
        The transfer of the company’s assets was the determining factor. 
        
        The judgment analysed a public tender to supply 
        radiopharmaceuticals and the management of toxic waste from specific 
        public hospitals. The award was given to a specific company and the 
        hospitals proceeded to provide the company with radiopharmaceutical 
        materials in order that the former carry out the necessary tasks. The 
        public tender was subsequently awarded to a new entity established 
        within the hospitals. The new company paid the previous company for the 
        pharmaceutical stock and received from the hospital the building and the 
        work instruments for the rendering of services.
        Thus, the SC concludes that a transfer of 
        undertaking occurred given that there was a transfer of assets -units 
        and instruments of the public health service and pharmaceutical stock 
        acquired by the second successful bidder- and not because there was a 
        transfer of a significant number of employees and the business activity 
        continued.
        
        8. Bonus. 
        Proportional payment
        Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme 
        Court dated 5 May 2009
        In this case an employee had voluntarily 
        resigned from her post and sought payment of the variable remuneration 
        corresponding to the first eight months of the year.
        In the employment contract the parties had 
        agreed that the employee would be paid twelve thousand euros per year in 
        variable remuneration if she met the targets set by the company. The 
        company had to establish the targets and how much of the variable would 
        be paid for their fulfilment. In addition, the parties agreed that 
        during the first year of the contract, the remuneration would be paid in 
        proportion to the time worked.
        The claimant only achieved 90.54% of her targets 
        in the period for which the variable compensation was claimed, but she 
        nonetheless sought payment of the variable remuneration corresponding to 
        the length of time worked and the targets achieved.
        The judgment of the Labour Court dismissed the 
        claim at first instance, but at appeal the claim was upheld on the 
        grounds that there is a right to receive the variable remuneration 
        corresponding to the targets achieved.
        The company appealed to the SC to set aside the 
        judgment. The SC dismissed the appeal and upheld the Appeal Court 
        judgment, declaring that the payment must be proportional to the 
        variable targets achieved each year. The SC stated that:
        “(...) the term variable salary, indicates 
        that the amount of money is variable and it is not necessary that all 
        the targets are met because it can be paid in proportion (variable) to 
        the targets achieved, because otherwise, the bonus would be fixed as 
        opposed to variable, for the achievement of targets (...) When it is 
        said that the variable salary «will be paid in accordance with 
        the fulfilment of the targets set», the intention of the parties 
        is that the achievement of all or part of the targets or aims determines 
        the amount of the variable remuneration paid that is established in 
        accordance with the achievement of the target because, if this were not 
        the case, the remuneration would not be variable and it would not be 
        paid in accordance with the targets achieved (...) By providing that 
        during the first year the amount of variable remuneration would be fixed 
        in accordance with the length of time worked, the intention of the 
        parties was to pay the bonus in proportion to the targets achieved each 
        year.”
        
        9. Validity 
        of a non-statutory collective agreement. Professional category
        Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme 
        Court dated 11 May 2009
        In this case the SC had to determine if the 
        professional category recognised by a non-statutory collective agreement 
        should be maintained (i) when such agreement expires, and (ii) after a 
        statutory agreement has entered into force.
        The SC established that non-statutory collective 
        agreements have contractual force, are of limited scope and temporary. 
        Therefore, a non-statutory collective agreement cannot create more 
        beneficial conditions for employees that must be maintained after it 
        expires or a new statutory collective agreement enters into force.
        The SC held that if the rights established in a 
        non-statutory collective agreement remain in force after the agreement 
        expires, it would be contrary to the rules on promotion established in a 
        statutory collective agreement, and would place the employees to whom a 
        non-statutory agreement applies in a more advantageous position.
        
        10. 
        Termination of employment contract. Constructive dismissal. Failure to 
        pay salary or continuous delay in payment of the same
        Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme 
        Court dated 10 June 2009
        In this case, an employee sought to terminate 
        her employment contract owing to the employer continuously making late 
        salary payments.
        The claim was rejected by the Labour Court but 
        the Appeal Court declared the termination of the contract and ordered 
        the company to pay the employee compensation, due to constructive 
        dismissal.
        The company appealed to the SC on the ground 
        that the action was inadmissible and that prior notice should have been 
        given pursuant to the requirements of good faith.
        The SC held that article 50 of the SW is the 
        application in an employment context of article 1124 of the Civil Code, 
        which allows the injured party to choose between the performance of the 
        obligation or the recovery of damages and interest. The SC held that the 
        exercise of rights is conditioned by the inactivity of their holder when 
        the legislator considers it appropriate to establish an expiry or 
        prescription period. However, in this case the legislator had not 
        established a period of time within which the request to terminate the 
        employment contract based on constructive dismissal must be made. 
        Therefore, it is possible for an employee to claim for constructive 
        dismissal (without having to notify the employer) when there is a repeat 
        delay in the payment of salaries.
        
        11. Legal 
        transfer of workers within a group of companies
        Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme 
        Court dated 25 June 2009
        The SC upheld the appeal against a judgment of 
        the National Court (“NC”) which rejected a labour claim.
        The claim affected around forty workers who were 
        initially hired by companies in which one main company had the majority 
        shareholding. The workers provided services based on the commercial 
        contracts agreed between the main company and the direct employers. 
        Subsequently, the workers signed employment contracts with the main 
        company, which did not acknowledge their previous length of service.
        The labour claim was filed to determine whether 
        the contracting period with the subsidiaries should be borne in mind 
        when calculating certain pay supplements and the length of service bonus 
        to be paid by the main company.
        The NC rejected the claim, which was appealed on 
        the grounds of the breach of articles 42 and 43 of the SW, and therefore 
        that there had been an illegal transfer of workers.
        The SC held that there is no illegal transfer of 
        workers when a “group of companies” exists and group is understood in 
        its widest sense, i.e., when the companies actually form part of a group 
        even though not formally.
        The SC also held that this situation was a legal 
        transfer of workers as it was possible to establish direct contracting 
        mechanisms between a real group of companies. This practice should be 
        considered lawful when the workers’ rights are not limited. The workers’ 
        rights were guaranteed in this case and therefore the SC upheld the 
        appeal as it held that the length of service of the affected workers 
        must be calculated from the start of the transfer.
        
        12. Danger 
        money. Only payable for the number of days worked
        Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme 
        Court dated 29 June 2009
        The SC held that danger money must be paid only 
        for the number of days worked under these circumstances as opposed to on 
        a calendar days basis.
        The employee worked for a cleaning company and 
        had been receiving an additional payment for working under dangerous 
        conditions on a calendar day basis until a particular date on which she 
        began receiving the payment per number of days worked. In response to 
        this change, the employee claimed the additional payment, which was 
        upheld at first instance and at appeal.
        However, the SC held that as the additional 
        payment was not regulated in the collective bargaining agreement, it 
        should be treated as a pay supplement. Therefore, unless the employee’s 
        contract stated otherwise, the additional payment for dangerous working 
        conditions could only be made for the days on which the activity was 
        carried out under these circumstances, as opposed to on a calendar days 
        basis.
        
        13. Unfair 
        dismissal. Outsourcing termination
        Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme 
        Court dated 2 July 2009
        The SC held as an unfair dismissal, the 
        termination of a temporary employment contract that was linked to the 
        duration of an outsourcing.
        The case related to a non-governmental 
        organization which had implemented a project in an autonomous region. 
        The non-governmental organization decided to end the project early and 
        as a result informed one of its employees that his contract would be 
        terminated.
        The SC held that “as the contract was 
        terminated early due to the will of the contractor, the cause of 
        termination was not the termination of the works or service forming the 
        purpose of the contract but rather the early termination by the 
        contractor.”
        The SC therefore concluded that the 
        contractor was liable for the termination without cause of the 
        employment contract.
        
        14. 
        Collective dismissal. Priority of employee representatives to retain 
        their posts
        Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the High 
        Court of Justice of Aragon, dated 9 June 2009
        This judgment held that the priority that the 
        employee representatives have to remain in a company or workplace is 
        limited by the redundancy procedure. If a redundancy procedure which 
        suspends or terminates employment contracts affects practically all 
        staff or a majority of employees who perform the same or similar 
        activities, members of the employee representatives no longer have 
        priority to retain their posts.
        This judgment made reference to the case law of 
        the SC of the early 90s, which stated that the priority of employee 
        representatives to retain their posts is not unconditional or absolute, 
        and that the mere suspension of their employment relationships does not 
        give rise to the suspension of their representative activities. The SC 
        held that such priority right cannot be enforced against other employees 
        who have different qualifications and whose activity in the company is 
        necessary for the company’s survival, as this would diminish or 
        eliminate the effectiveness of the technological, economic and 
        organisational measures. Therefore it is necessary to continue the 
        employment contracts of employees who are qualified for such posts.
        
        