Categories: Insights, Case Law


1 May 2018

Incompleteness of the notice of commencement of the collective dismissal procedure: unlawful dismissal

With its judgement No. 6792 of 21 March 2018, the Court of Cassation dealt with the completeness of the notice of commencement of the collective dismissal procedure under article 4 of Law No. 223/1991.  In particular the Court, in compliance with the stance of the judges ruling on the merits of the case, stressed that said notice amounts to fundamental compliance for the profitable participation of the trade unions in the co-management of the crisis and for the transparency of the employer’s decision-making process.  The foregoing entails that the employee may lawfully assert the incompleteness of the notice as a flaw of the dismissal notified thereto and that the subsequent reaching of a trade union agreement will not cure in itself the lack of information. In the Court’s opinion, the duties of information must accompany the beginning of the procedure by communicating the entire reasons leading to the surplus situation, as well as the number, the position within the company and the professional profiles of the staff deemed to be in excess. It will only be like this, according to the Court, that it may be possible to check the connection between the company’s needs and the identification of the staff to be dismissed. And, in the case at issue, the real reasons for the reorganisation were to be found not only in the vague drop in turnover, as shown in the notice, but also in the merger project resolved upon. In this respect, even if it is true that, pursuant to section 2112 of the Civil Code, the employer transferor is however entitled to notify the dismissals deemed necessary, this does not exclude the obligation, after having taken the decision to reduce the staff, to fulfil the communication obligations by acting in a transparent way, such as to allow the trade unions to fulfil a guarantee purpose as requested by law.

Subscribe to our newsletter

Contact

Need information? Write to us and our team of experts will respond as soon as possible.

Fill in the form

More news and insights

8 Apr 2026

Management of corporate email after termination of employment: the limits according to the Italian Data Protection Authority

The Italian Data Protection Authority (i.e. “Garante per la protezione dei dati personali”) has once again provided guidance on how employers should manage corporate email accounts after the…

8 Apr 2026

Oral dismissal: the burden of proof on the employee

With order no. 4077 of 23 February 2026, the Italian Supreme Court addressed the issue of oral dismissal, holding that an employee challenging the termination of the employment…

8 Apr 2026

DID YOU KNOW THAT… incompatibility between colleagues may justify the transfer of an employee? 

The Italian Supreme Court, with order no. 4198 of 25 February 2026, held that an employee’s transfer may be lawfully implemented also in the presence of a situation…

7 Apr 2026

The boundary between rest and inactivity in the management of working hours (AIDP – HR Online, 7 aprile 2026 – Vittorio De Luca, Alesia Hima)

In the organizational language of companies, terms such as “breaks,” “waiting times,” or “downtime” are often used. In operational practice, these expressions tend to be treated almost as…

17 Mar 2026

Equal pay: green light for the decree on pay equality and wage transparency (People are People, 16 marzo 2026 – Claudia Cerbone, Martina De Angeli)

Claudia Cerbone and Martina De Angeli, professionals at the De Luca & Partners firm, author this article dedicated to the draft legislative decree approved last February 5 by…

16 Mar 2026

Illegitimacy of staff leasing due to violation of the principle of temporariness (Top 24 Lavoro, 27 febbraio 2026 – Vittorio De Luca, Alessandra Zilla)

With judgment no. 4493 of December 19, 2025, the Court of Milan addressed the issue of indefinite-term labor supply (so-called staff leasing). In particular, the Court clarified that,…