The Court of Cassation, with order no. 118 of 7 January 2020, on the subject of collective redundancy, stated, recalling its own consolidated case law, that the choice of workers to be dismissed cannot fall exclusively on the personnel assigned to the department or sector eliminated or reduced. There must, in fact, be objective business needs underlying the choice of those subjected to the restructuring project. And the burden of proof of the existence of such reasons lies with the employer.
Facts of the case
Both
the Judge at first instance and the Court of Appeal had declared unlawful the
dismissal of a worker in the context of a collective redundancy procedure,
declaring the employment relationship terminated and ordering his former
employer to pay twenty months’ salary as compensation, in addition to the
reimbursement of legal costs.
As
the basis of the decision, the Court of Appeal found that the trade union
agreement signed made it possible to consider that the reasons put forward by
the company to demonstrate the abolition of the department to which the worker
was exclusively assigned existed. However, this agreement could not be regarded
as sufficient to remedy the obligation not to limit the scope of choice to the
department abolished. According to the District Court, the company should have
compared the worker with the workers employed in the other departments. This
was because he had shown that he had a number of skills similar to the workers
in question (repêchage rule) and he was physically fit to be compared
with them. Finally, in the Court’s view, the compensation under Article 18 of
Law 300/1970 provided for following the termination of the relationship did not
require the deduction of either the aliunde
perceptum [refers to the event in which the employee has earnings from
other employment undertaken in the meantime] or the aliunde percipiendum [refers to the event in which the employee has
not sought other employment in the meantime].
The
unsuccessful company appealed to the Court of Cassation against the decision of
the Court of Appeal with only one ground of appeal. The applicant resisted with
a counter-appeal.
The decision of the Court of Cassation
By
its ground for appeal, the company argued that (i) in a collective redundancy
procedure the repêchage obligation does not apply and (ii) in the
presence of a trade union agreement, there is no need for comparison with
departments other than the one to be abolished.
The
Court of Cassation, citing its own precedent, first of all stated that “in
the matter of collective redundancy for reduction of staff, where the
company restructuring project relates exclusively to a production unit or a
specific sector of the company, the pool of workers concerned may be limited to
those employed in a given department or sector only on the basis of objective
company requirements, in relation to the company restructuring project, and
it is the burden of the employer to prove the fact that it determines the
objective limitation of those requirements and to justify the narrowest
possible space in which the choice was made; with the consequence that the
choice of workers cannot be considered lawful only because they are employed in
the operational department abolished or reduced, neglecting the possession of
professionalism equivalent to that of employees in other organizational units“.
In
the present case, in the Court’s view, it was the company’s obligation – since
the employee had demonstrated that he possessed many professional skills
acquired during the course of the employment relationship – to compare him with
the employees of the other departments remaining in operation.
That
said, the Court of Cassation, again recalling its own precedent, has observed
that in the matter of collective redundancies, the employer and trade unions
can sign an agreement to regulate the placement of redundant workers in
mobility also by establishing conditions different from the statutory ones,
provided that the requirements of objectivity and rationality are respected.
This is because the agreement fulfils a function duly delegated by law.
However,
in the present case, according to the Court of Cassation, the agreement reached
between the parties did not comply with those requirements, because in
providing for the redundancy of the worker it did not take into account his
documented professionalism and the positions he could have occupied.
In
view of all the above, the Court of Cassation rejected the appeal and ordered
the Company to pay the costs of the proceedings.