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


January 20
10

LABOUR LAW

 

1. Social Security. Payment rules for 2010

Order TIN/25/2010 of 12 January establishes the 2010 contribution bases and rates for social security payments, unemployment benefits, the Salary Guarantee Fund and professional training. (More information)

2. Collusive agreement.  Sanction

In its resolution dated 24 September 2009, the National Competition Commission declared the existence of collusive conduct between the National Association of Stevedoring Companies and Ship Consignees and various trade unions. The collusive conduct involved an agreement that included provisions regulating labour relationships in the sector that extended its scope of application to third-party companies, thereby excluding or frustrating the entry of those companies to the complementary dock services market. (More information)

3. Back-pay and severance payment for unemployment. Incompatibility

On 20 October 2009, the Supreme Court held that when a severance payment for unfair dismissal has been deemed to have been correctly calculated initially but subsequently rejected on appeal, the accrual of back-pay is limited to the period from the date of the dismissal until the date on which the company chooses to pay the severance payment. (More information)

4. Dismissal withdrawal. Ineffective if prior to the settlement package

On 7 October 2009, the Supreme Court held that the withdrawal of a dismissal with a readmission offer was not effective given that the unilateral decision of the employer could not restore the contractual link between the parties. It also held that the employee’s refusal to accept the reincorporation offer could not be considered a resignation. (More information)

5. Working time. Paid leave

In its decision of 22 September 2009, the Supreme Court held that a company cannot request proof of absence for medical reasons if the required proof exceeds that established in the applicable collective bargaining agreement. (More information)

6. Rejection of voluntary additional compensation for an employee’s decease

In its decision of 21 September 2009, the Supreme Court rejected the right of a worker’s daughter to receive the additional compensation provided in the applicable collective bargaining agreement as a result of an employee’s decease from her mother’s former employer. The employee left the company and later passed away due to a long illness, of which the company was aware while she was an employee. (More information)

7. Temporary disability and part-time work. Bonuses and variable remuneration

In its judgment of 10 November 2009, the National Court held that part-time workers and employees on temporary disability leave have the right to receive the full bonus paid for the achievement of joint targets. (More information)

8. Income tax. Compensation for arranged dismissal

In its judgment dated 30 September 2009, the National Court held that the income tax exemption for severance payments is not applicable if the dismissal is arranged and the payment is made to encourage the employee to voluntarily leave his/her post. (More information)

9. Fair dismissal based on presumptions

In its judgment dated 16 September 2009, the High Court of Justice of Castilla y León (Valladolid) confirmed that a company can justify a disciplinary dismissal based on presumptions and circumstantial evidence as opposed to direct evidence. (More information)

10. Void dismissal for lack of justification

In its judgment dated 10 July 2009, the High Court of Justice of Aragón upheld the decision of the lower court which declared a dismissal void because the company had not justified the dismissal sufficiently. (More information)


1. Social Security. Payment rules for 2010

Order TIN/25/2010 of 12 January 2009 develops the regulations on social security payments, unemployment benefits, the Salary Guarantee Fund and professional training established in Law 26/2009 of 23 December on the National Budget for 2010

Order TIN/25/2010 establishes that the maximum contribution base to the General Social Security Regime will be EUR 3,198.00 per month as of 1 January 2010. The minimum contribution base for industrial accidents and professional diseases will be EUR 738.90 per month.

The payment rates will remain the same as those applied in 2009.

The maximum contribution base for self-employed workers will be EUR 3,198 per month and the minimum will be EUR 841.80 per month. The contribution base for those age 50 or over as of 1 January 2010 will range between EUR 907.50 and EUR 1,665.90 per month. Nevertheless, the contribution base will range between EUR 841.80 and EUR 1,665.90 per month if the self-employed worker is age 45 or older and was obligated to register with the regime as a result of taking over the business of his/her deceased spouse.

2. Collusive agreement.  Sanction

Decision of the National Competition Commission dated 24 September 2010

The National Competition Commission (“NCC”) declared that the Agreement IV executed between the National Association of Stevedoring Companies and Ship Consignees (“ANESCO”) and various trade syndicates violated article 1 of the Competition Law and Article 81 of the Treaty Establishing the European Union.

Agreement IV extends the scope of the provisions established in Agreement III under which stevedoring companies undertook to only carry out complementary dock services with longshoremen. Nevertheless, the performance of such services was not regulated by Agreement III, but rather by the rules established the collective bargaining agreements that regulated the labour conditions of such employees, which afforded universal competition in the sector.

The execution of Agreement IV affected non-stevedoring companies which principal activity was rendering complementary dock services. Under the Agreement IV, ANESCO reserved all complementary dock services for stevedoring companies, thereby extending their area of activity and ensuring their protection from competition or new entries to the market. As a result, non-stevedoring companies were subject to their conditions, including the hiring of staff without any involvement in the negotiations.

Similarly, the NCC stated that Agreement IV could be protected under the scope of the Competition Law given that it directly affected third parties. It also could not be protected by the collective bargaining agreement given that it had not been published or recognised by the labour authorities.

The NCC declared the agreement to be collusive, qualified the conduct as a serious infraction and imposed a EUR 901,518.16 sanction on ANESCO and sanctions ranging between EUR 3,000 to EUR 168,000 (depending on their contribution) on the trade unions.

3. Back-pay and severance payment for unemployment. Incompatibility

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court dated 20 October 2009

In this case, an employee was dismissed by the company for disciplinary reasons. The company acknowledged the unfairness of the dismissal and offered the corresponding severance payment.

The first instance court upheld the unfair dismissal and declared the corresponding severance payment to be correct. The employee appealed the decision to the High Court of Justice of the Canary Islands (“HCJ”), which held the severance payment to be incorrect. The HCJ ordered the company to pay the back-pay from the date of the dismissal until the date of the notification of the judgment in the appeal.

The main issue on appeal was whether the back-pay must be paid until the date of the notification of the first instance judgment or until the date of the notification of the judgment in the appeal even though the severance payment was approved initially and subsequently overturned by a higher court.

The Supreme Court (“SC”) stated that the intention of the law to exclude the accrual of back-pay during appellate proceedings if the employer paid the severance payment is clear given that article 111 of the Labour Procedure Law characterises such individuals as “unemployed” during appellate proceedings.

Therefore, the SC partially upheld the company’s appeal and limited the severance amount to that stated in the judgment of the HCJ along with the back-pay accrued from the date of the dismissal to the date on which the employer chose to pay the severance payment. The SC also held that the employee had the right to be declared unemployed from the moment she began the appeal proceedings.

4. Dismissal withdrawal. Ineffective if prior to the settlement package

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court dated 7 October 2010

In this case, the employee had been dismissed due to multiple unjustified absences. The company withdrew its decision a few days later but before offering her the settlement package. The company notified the employee that the dismissal would no longer be valid given that she had justified her absences by informing the company that she had been temporarily incapacitated. The company indicated that if the employee reassumed her post immediately she would only receive a disciplinary sanction for not having made her temporary absence known on time and by the correct means.

Following its own case law, the Supreme Court (“SC”) held that the offer made to the employee to reassume her post did not imply the restoration of the broken relationship and that the employee’s refusal to reassume her post could not be considered a resignation regardless of whether or not the offer had been made during or after the pre-judicial settlement proceedings or even after the filing of the claim. The SC reasoned that a decision to the contrary would distort the dismissal process and compromise the right to effective judicial protection.

5. Working time. Paid leave

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court dated 22 September 2009

The Supreme Court (“SC”) rejected the appeal against the decision of the Labour Chamber of the National Court that established the employees’ right to enjoy the leave established in the National Telemarketing Collective Bargaining Agreement by only satisfying the requirements it contained.

In exercising one of the faculties afforded to it under article 20 of the Statute of Workers, the company demanded that its employees exhaustively prove their leave on the basis of an abusive application of the rule established in the collective bargaining agreement. The SC rejected the appeal and held that the requirement to prove leave established in the collective bargaining agreement must be interpreted in view of the circumstances of the specific case and that a company cannot demand exhaustive proof as this restricts the employees’ right to attend medical appointments.

6. Rejection of voluntary additional compensation for an employee’s decease

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court dated 21 September 2009

In this case, a worker’s daughter claimed her right to receive compensation deriving from the life insurance taken out by the company covering its employees’ decease as a consequence of ordinary illness. She argued that although her mother no longer worked for the company at the time of her passing, her death was the result of complications from the ordinary illness from which she suffered while working in the company, an illness of which the company was aware.

The Supreme Court (“SC”) stated that the matter involved a general situation in which voluntary compensation that is more favourable than that granted by the Social Security is established in the applicable collective bargaining agreement by obligating companies to take out a life insurance policy covering the decease of their current employees.

The SC emphasised the difference between additional compensation for death and for permanent disability, both as a result of an ordinary illness. As regards the latter, the insured event is the moment the injury renders the employee unfit for work and it is therefore from this moment that compensation is due. However, if the insured event is the decease of an employee, the event cannot be anticipated or separated from the act itself, regardless of whether or not the decease is caused by an illness that was known previously.

7. Temporary disability and part-time work. Bonuses and variable remuneration

Judgments of the Labour Chamber of the National Court dated 6 and 10 November 2009

In its judgment of 10 November 2009, the National Court (“NC”) held that part-time workers and those who were on temporary disability leave had the right to receive exactly the same bonuses as full-time workers for meeting joint targets, and that no distinction may be made on the basis of the actual length of time worked by each employee.

In this case, the NC found that a bonus was paid on the basis of the results obtained by all the staff. The accrual of the bonus was collective as no requirements were established in the applicable collective bargaining agreement other than the joint achievement of the established targets. As such, the NC held that the bonus must be shared equally among all the employees and that the company could not set the amount allocated to each employee based on his/her individual contribution to the achievement of the target.

The NC reaffirmed its approach in its judgment dated 6 November 2009 in which it held that employees with part-time contracts and those on temporary disability leave have the right to receive the same variable remuneration if a joint target is achieved.

8. Income tax. Compensation for arranged dismissal

Judgment of the Administrative Chamber of the National Court dated 30 September 2009

In this case, the National Court (“NC”) analysed the tax exemption for severance payments established in article 7.e) of Law 40/98.

The claim involved an appeal against a decision of the Central Economic and Administrative Tribunal that had held that the income tax exemption was not applicable to the severance payments paid to a group of employees given that they were made according to a mutual agreement between the employer and employees to terminate employment.

The NC found that the compensation and the surrounding circumstances did not serve to compensate the forced loss of jobs, but rather to encourage employees over the age of 50 to take early retirement. Given the true purpose of the compensation, the NC held that the income tax exemption was not applicable.

The NC emphasised that the compensation bore no relation to that established in the Statute of Workers for dismissals or the employees’ lengths of service. The NC also considered it highly unlikely that every employee had committed a breach justifying disciplinary dismissal. The company also continued to pay the dismissed employees financial assistance for retirement.

9. Fair dismissal based on presumptions

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the High Court of Justice of Castilla y León (Valladolid) dated 16 September 2009

The case involved security guard that worked night shifts in a slaughterhouse. The individual worked in a hut to which no one else had access during the night. The employee was dismissed for disciplinary reasons after an antivirus programme detected a virus on the computer in the hut.

After a detailed investigation, it was evidenced that the antivirus programme detected the infection at 3 a.m. At this time, the security guard would be the only person in the hut.

The company justified the dismissal based on the presumption that the employee was the only person who misused the computer given that  nobody else could have been in the hut at 3 a.m. Moreover, the arrival of a truck was registered seven minutes after the virus was detected and the security guard therefore had to be in the hut at that time in order to let the truck enter the premises.

The High Court of Justice accepted the presumptions stating that the reasons for a dismissal do not necessarily need to be evidenced with direct evidence. However, the High Court of Justice did state that, when a dismissal is based on presumptions, the requirements established in the Supreme Court’s judgment of 16 April 2004 must be complied with.

10. Void dismissal for lack of justification

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the High Court of Justice of Aragón dated 10 July 2009

The High Court of Justice of Aragón (“HCJ”) rejected the appeal and upheld the judgment of the lower court declaring the dismissal void.

Following a corporate restructuring, an employee was dismissed for economic and productive reasons based on article 52.c of the Statute of Workers (“SW”). Immediately after his dismissal, his former duties were assumed by an employee who had been working in another department. Shortly afterwards, the company hired another person to carry out the same duties.

The company based the dismissal on the evolution of the market and the negative trend in production levels in recent years. The HCJ followed the Supreme Court’s (“SC”) case law, and stated that although the SW establishes that the dismissal must be previously communicated to the employee “explaining the cause”, it must be similar to the “facts” referred to in article 55 of the SW for disciplinary dismissals.

The SC’s case law has established that dismissal letters must take into account a variety of circumstances. In addition, the case law of the HCJ states that these letters must be specific about the facts justifying the dismissal, in order to allow employees to exercise their right to self-defence.

The HCJ stated that the dismissal letter had not fulfilled these requirements as it only referred to the negative evolution of the market and did not mention if the company was affected. Furthermore, the company that dismissed the employee had not suffered losses as the rest of the group’s companies.

Following the SC’s case law, the HCJ held if an employee is made redundant and the company is not closing down, the dismissal must be based on measures designed to achieve a certain balance in the company.

The HCJ upheld the judgment of the lower court and declared the dismissal void.

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