The
Court of Appeal, by ruling no. 25355 dated 9 October 2019, stated that
employers that claim earnings from other work or sources to be deducted from
the compensation due to employees are required to enclose specific factual
circumstances and to provide timely specifications, proving general requests
for evidence or requests for evidence for purely investigative purposes to be
inadmissible. The background that the Supreme Court examined was, essentially,
as follows. A claims adjuster was dismissed by the insurance company he worked
at as a result of disciplinary proceedings against him for having committed
grossly negligent conduct. The employee had specifically been challenged for
not having carried out, in 18 instances, all the preparatory and preliminary
activities necessary to ascertain the actual occurrence, as well the dynamics
of the events relating to claims and the consequent reported injuries. The
Court of Cosenza had rejected the opposition pursuant to Article 1, paragraph
51, of Law 92/2012, proposed by the employee and by the insurance company
against the order issued in the summary phase. In partial acceptance of the
appeal against the dismissal, the employment contract was thereby declared
terminated and the insurance company was ordered to pay compensation equal to
20 monthly salaries of the final overall de facto remuneration. The insurance
company filed a complaint on appeal and the employee entered an appearance by
proposing a cross-appeal. The District Court considered the 18 disputed incidences,
noting, however, that “the considerable workload allocated to the employee
led (in any case) to the irrecoverability (editor’s note: had in any case led
to the irrecoverability) of the knowledge of the anomalies which, indeed, had
been (allegedly) identified, by the employer, only following a costly and
worthwhile investigation”. The jurisdiction of the local Court of Appeal
accepted the employee’s cross-appeal and nullified the imposed dismissal,
ordering: – on the one hand, the insurance company to reinstate the employee,
sentencing it to pay, from the date of dismissal to the date of reinstatement,
the social security and welfare contributions, plus interest – and, on the
other hand, the employee to return the sum equal to 8 monthly salaries of the
overall de facto remuneration, plus ancillary costs, fully paid up.
Furthermore, the Court of Appeal rejected the objection to payment of earnings
from other work or sources raised by the employer, claiming that “specific
elements, capable of accounting for less damage to be compensated” were not
offered. The insurance company filed an appeal against this ruling on four
grounds and the employee challenged it with a counter-appeal. As far as we are
concerned we only report the fourth ground of appeal with which the insurance
company claimed the “omitted and/or insufficient grounds regarding a
controversial fact is decisive for the judgement; the criticism refers to the
rejection of the exception of earnings from other work and sources; the
appellant party accuses the Court of Appeal of not having carried out the
necessary investigations in this regard, as, however, it was obliged to do”.
The Supreme Court, upon rejecting the aforementioned ground of appeal,
stressed, inter alia, that the Court of Appeal had correctly applied the
principle of law, according to which “employers that claim earnings from
other work or sources to be deducted from the compensation due to employees are
required to enclose specific factual circumstances and, in order to fulfil
their related burden of proof obligation, they are also required to provide
timely specifications, proving general requests for evidence or requests for
evidence for purely investigative purposes to be inadmissible (ex plurimis,
Court of Appeal No. 4999 of 2017)”.
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