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


March 2010

LABOUR LAW

 

1. Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union

The Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union has been approved and will replace the Charter signed on 7 December 2000 when the Lisbon Treaty enters into force. (More information)

2. Transfer of functions and services to the goverment of Catalonia on Inspector’s Public Function of the Labour and Social Security Inspection

Royal Decree 206/2010 of 26 February transfers the duties and services of the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate to the regional government of Catalonia (Spanish Official Gazette of 1 March 2010). (More information)

3. Collaboration between the Ministry of Labour and Immigration and the Labour Department of the regional government of Catalonia

By means of a resolution dated 5 March 2010, the Technical Secretariat published the collaboration agreement between the Ministry of Labour and Immigration and the Labour Department of the regional government of Catalonia on the organisation and operation of the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate in Catalonia. (More information)

4. Electronic transfer to the Public Employment Service of official earnings records

Order TIN/790/2010 of 24 March on the electronic transfer to the Public Employment Service of official earnings records. (More information)

5. Tax, labour and social security fraud prevention plan

This plan, approved by the Council of Ministers, has been prepared by the Tax Authority, the Social Security General Treasury and the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate in response to changes in the types of fraud committed as a result of the current economic situation. (More information)

6. Labour courts jurisdiction. Deductions from back pay

The judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court dated 24 November 2009 upheld an appeal for the unification of doctrine, and reversed the judgment of the Labour Chamber of the High Court of Justice of Catalonia dated 6 May 2008. The Supreme Court held that, in those cases in which the withholding of tax and social security amounts is an ancillary procedural issue, the labour courts are competent to decide whether or not tax withholdings are applicable. (More information)

7. Saturdays falling between the submission of a conciliation request and the conciliation hearing are not taken into consideration for the calculation of a dismissal action statute of limitations period

The judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court dated 21 December 2009 unified doctrine by overturning the decision of a lower court that had held that Saturdays should be included in calculating the 15-day period for which the statute of limitations period of a dismissal action is tolled after a conciliation request is made. (More information)

8. Termination of an employment contract after a request to have employment status changed to permanent or indefinite is not a breach of the guarantee of indemnity

In its judgment dated 22 December 2009, the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court declared that the filing of a request by employees of a public authority seeking that they be granted permanent status three weeks before the expiry of their employment contracts is not sufficient evidence to find that the fundamental rights of the employees have been violated. (More information)

9. In the absence of an express CPI forecast in the State Budget Law, the forecast for public pensions contained in the State Budget Law applies for the salaries review provided in a collective bargaining agreement that referred to the CPI forecast

This decision of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court, dated 18 February 2010, confirmed the National Court’s ruling. The Supreme Court held that, since the State Budget Law does not contain an official RPI forecast, the forecast provided for public pensions can be applied to salary reviews. (More information)

10. If the CPI forecast exceeds the official CPI, a company can deduct the difference in salary in subsequent payslips

In its ruling of 26 January 2010, the Labour Chamber of the National Court held that a company was entitled to deduct from future payslips the difference between a salary increase calculated on the basis of the CPI forecast and the amount employees were actually entitled to according to the official CPI. (More information)

11. Individual and collective dismissals. Insolvency

The ruling of the High Court of Justice of Castille and León, dated 17 December 2009, upheld a first instance decision that considered that the judge in charge of insolvency proceedings was competent to hear the dismissal claims that were brought by eight workers subsequent to the employer’s insolvency declaration. (More information)

12. Non-professional use of the Internet during working hours. Lack of adequate technical and security measures

By means of notary’s reports, it was proven that a work computer lacked the adequate levels of security to establish that the prohibition to use the Internet for personal use during working hours had been breached. The dismissal was therefore declared to be unfair. (More information)

 


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1. Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union

Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (2010/C 83/02) of the European Parliament, the Council and the Commission (Official Journal of the European Communities of 30 March 2010)

The Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union recognises a number of rights, freedoms and principles deriving from the constitutional traditions of the Member States, European traditions and case law. The Charter contains several provisions that have a direct impact on labour and social security matters, such as the prohibition of slavery and forced labour, the freedom to choose an occupation, the right to work and the freedom to conduct a business. Indirectly, employment is affected by the provisions on the protection of personal data, equality, the prohibition of discrimination and the integration of disabled people. Workers’ rights to be informed and consulted by employers and to participate in collective bargaining and collective action is also acknowledged. In relation to social security matters, the Charter recognises the right of access to social security benefits, social services and placement services. Other provisions are strictly work-related, such as the right to protection against unjustified dismissal, to fair and just working conditions, the prohibition of child labour, the protection of young people at work and the right to reconcile work and family life.

2. Transfer of functions and services to the Generalitat of Cataluña on Inspector’s Public Function of the Labour and Social Security Inspection

Royal Decree 206/2010 of 26 February transfers the duties and services of the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate to the regional government of Catalonia (Spanish Official Gazette of 1 March 2010).

By virtue of the Royal Decree, the duties and services of the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate are transferred to the regional government of Catalonia, which will coordinate and collaborate these activities when necessary with the Central State Administration.

Those duties and services performed by the Central State Administration that have been transferred to the government of Catalonia concern labour and social security inspectors and employment and social security sub-inspectors in Catalonia. In terms of structure and duties, these inspectors will now come under the authority of the government of Catalonia of Catalonia, although it must coordinate the recruitment of new inspectors with the Central State Administration.

The transfer aims to achieve a more effective inspection service, carried out through a single, comprehensive inspection system that unites the activities of the various different bodies of inspectors. The labour and social security inspectors and the employment and social security sub-inspectors are entitled to carry out investigations and inspections into all types of employment matters within the scope of their respective powers and competences, even if these are the responsibility of an authority other than their own.

The hearing and resolution of disciplinary proceedings for the breach of employment regulations or the settlement of amounts owed to the Social Security are the responsibility of the competent authorities in those areas.

Despite the transfer, a number of powers are reserved to the Central State Administration.

3. Collaboration between the Ministry of Labour and Immigration and the Labour Department of the regional government of Catalonia

Resolution dated 5 March 2010, by means of which the Technical Secretariat published the collaboration agreement between the Ministry of Labour and Immigration and the Labour Department of the regional government of Catalonia on the organisation and operation of the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate in Catalonia (Spanish Official Gazette of 9 March 2010).

An association of the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate is to be set up before 1 May 2010 as a bilateral mechanism to facilitate cooperation between the Central State Administration and the regional government of Catalonia in relation to the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate in the region of Catalonia.

The transfer of the Labour Inspectorate to the regional government of Catalonia is based on the principle that the inspection service should act as one and with a single purpose on all matters regarding work and employment. To safeguard this principle, labour and social security inspectors and work and social security sub-inspectors should enjoy the same working conditions, including remuneration.

The Central State Administration and the regional government of Catalonia believe that the existing regulations on the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate need to be amended in accordance with new developments, while maintaining a consistent and consolidated system.

The agreement refers to the principle that access to, mobility within and collaboration between the authorities should be equal as the basis for the assignment of the functions of the inspectorate to the regional government of Catalonia, and sets out general provisions to safeguard these principles as regards selection processes and the provision of jobs and training, discipline and conditions of re-entry for civil servants of both the Central State Administration and the regional government of Catalonia.

4. Electronic transfer to the Public Employment Service of official earnings records

Order TIN/790/2010 of 24 March on the electronic transfer to the Public Employment Service of contribution records (Spanish Official Gazette of 30 March 2010).

According to the Order, all employers must send the contribution record to the Public Employment Service through the Internet if they have employees, operate in Spain and contribute to the Social Security. The record must be sent when employees terminate, suspend or reduce their employment relationship and notify the company of their intention to apply for unemployment benefits. The submission of this record through the Internet exempts workers from their obligation to enclose this document when applying for unemployment benefits.

However, the official earnings record may only be sent to the Public Employment Service using the certific@2 application.

5. Tax, labour and social security fraud prevention plan

On 5 March the Council of Ministers approved a comprehensive plan towards preventing tax, labour and social security fraud. The plan sets out sixty measures based around four core areas: prevention and promotion of voluntary compliance, improvement of data collection systems by means of the Tax Authority, Social Security General Treasury and the Labour and Social Security Inspectorate sharing their databases, the implementation of joint control measures to complement those already carried out separately by each body, and the design of coordinated payment collection methods to increase their efficiency.

With regard to the prevention of labour-related fraud, the general objective of promoting voluntary compliance is to be achieved through two specific measures: the collaboration of social partners in the detection of occasional goods transportation activities and the monitoring of transnational services. Particular emphasis is also to be placed on monitoring the following risk areas: sweatshops, seasonal agricultural work, retail establishments with notoriously low prices, the misuse of work experience/scholarship contracts, contracts subsidised by autonomous communities, and companies compliance with occupational advert prevention measures in order to reduce the costs they represent for the social security system.

With regard to social security fraud, voluntary compliance is to be encouraged by publicising the measures taken by the Social Security General Treasury among businesses, workers and people on benefits. Risk areas that must be carefully monitored include: wrongful cancellation of consolidated registrations through the network system and related to short periods of time, social security registration of partial retirement cover workers; unlawful registration of workers, multiple jobholders and impersonation of illegal foreign workers; management of medium-sized and large-sized companies’ social security debts; investigation of alleged criminal offences related to social security infringements or derived therefrom, and joint monitoring of unemployment and social security benefit fraud.

6. Labour courts jurisdiction. Deductions from back pay

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court dated 24 November 2009

In a change to its case law, the Supreme Court held in this judgment that the labour courts are competent to rule on the deduction of income tax and employee social security contributions from back pay awards. The Labour Chamber held that, in those cases where the determination of whether or not tax withholdings must be made is merely incidental to the main proceedings, it is the labour courts that should interpret and apply the law.

When a back pay judgment becomes final, the court replaces the debtor (employer) by paying the creditor (employee), and therefore it must make the payment in the same terms as the employer would have done. Consequently, the deductions imposed by laws and regulations must be made by the court enforcing the award. Otherwise, the creditor would benefit unfairly at the expense of the debtor.

7. Saturdays falling between the submission of a conciliation request and the conciliation hearing are not taken into consideration for the calculation of a dismissal action statute of limitations period

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

The judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court (“SC”) overturned a judgment of the High Court of Justice of Castille-La Mancha (“HCJ”) which had held that the statute of limitations period for a dismissal action had expired. Under Spanish law, if the period between the submission of a conciliation request and the conciliation hearing is less than 15 days, the prescription period is tolled until after the hearing. In calculating that 15-day period, the HCJ had included Saturdays falling between the request and the hearing on the basis that the term was administrative. The SC heard the case based on an appeal seeking the unification of doctrine and held that as Saturdays are not business days, they should not be used in calculating the 15-day period.

8. Termination of an employment contract after a request to have employment status changed to permanent or indefinite is not a breach of the guarantee of indemnity

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

The judgment of the Supreme Court (“SC”) unifies doctrine and upholds the judgment issued by the High Court of Justice of the Canary Islands (“HCJ”) that had held a public authority’s decision to dismiss two employees rendering services by virtue of fixed-term contracts as unfair, as opposed to null. When the employment contracts were set to expire in three weeks, the employees filed a request to have their employment status changed to either permanent or indefinite. The SC upheld the HCJ’s judgment that had rejected the petition for the annulment of the dismissal basing its decision on insufficient evidence supporting a violation of the guarantee of indemnity. The SC held that the authority’s decision was not based on discriminatory grounds or taken in retaliation for the employees exercising a right.

9. In the absence of an express CPI forecast in the State Budget Law, the forecast for public pensions contained in the State Budget Law applies for the salaries review provided in a collective bargaining agreement that referred to the CPI forecast

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the Supreme Court dated 18 February 2010

The Supreme Court confirmed the decision of the Labour Chamber of the National Court stating that, although not expressly, the State Budget Law does in fact contain a consumer price index forecast for the year in question, because it provides for a 2% increase in civil servant pensions and the state pension. This increase in pensions is in line with articles 27 of the revised text of the Civil Service Pensions Law and 48 of the revised text of the Social Security Law, both of which stipulate that pensions must be reviewed “based on the consumer price index for the relevant year.” Consequently, according to the National Court’s ruling, which was confirmed by the Supreme Court, the pension increase constitutes an implied acknowledgment of the government’s CPI forecast.

10. If the CPI forecast exceeds the official CPI, a company can deduct the difference in salary in subsequent payslips

Judgment of the Labour Chamber of the National Court dated 26 January 2010

The purpose of this ruling was to determine whether a provision of a collective agreement that provides for salary increases in accordance with the CPI forecast in the State Budget Law that are subsequently adjusted in line with the official CPI, is applicable only when the CPI is higher than forecasted, as the claimants contended. The Labour Chamber rejected the claim on the grounds that salary payments made before the official CPI is published must be adjusted, regardless of whether this is favourable to the company or the employee. Therefore, the reduction in salary applied by the company in this case as a result of the official CPI being lower than that forecasted in the State Budget Law was lawful because it was consistent with the terms of the collective bargaining agreement.

11. Individual and collective dismissals. Insolvency

Judgment of the High Court of Justice of Castille and León dated 17 December 2009

The High Court upheld a first instance judgment which declared that the judge in charge of a company’s insolvency proceedings was competent to hear the dismissal claims of its employees. The court clarified that individual dismissal claims that are considered collective claims pursuant to article 64.10 of the Insolvency Law are only collective for the purposes of that article.

The court jointly interpreted articles 8 and 64 of the Insolvency Law, and among others, concluded that despite the fact that the commercial courts have jurisdiction over collective dismissals in the event of companies’ insolvency, the labour courts continue to have jurisdiction over individual dismissals, and that if a collective dismissal takes place due to a company breach of article 50.1.b) of the Statute of Workers, the employee claims must be processed by means of a collective dismissal procedure.

12. Non-professional use of the Internet during working hours. Lack of adequate technical and security measures

Judgment of Labour Court number 2 of Badajoz dated 17 September 2009

A worker filed a claim in response to his dismissal, which his employer had based on the grounds that he had used the Internet for personal purposes during working hours and that he had been informed that this was prohibited. A notary’s report was submitted to show that the worker had used his work computer to access a number of websites during working hours which bore no relation to his profession. However, it was also proven in the trial that the computer lacked a “proxy” or “firewall” system, without which data concerning the identity of the user could be changed. In addition, it was proven that the computer lacked a security system to prevent external access, and that the Internet navigation program could not keep track of the time. Therefore, as the report did not prove that the visits to non-work related websites were carried out by the claimant during working hours, the Labour Court fully upheld the worker’s claim by declaring his dismissal to be unfair.

 

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