Categories: Insights, Case Law

Tag: Corte di Cassazione, Licenziamento per giustificato motivo oggettivo, Obbligo di repêchage


27 Feb 2019

Refusal to transform the employment relationship from full time to part time is evidence of a “repêchage” attempt

The Court of Cassation, with judgement No. 1499 dated 21 January 2019, confirmed the principle of law according to which, concerning dismissal due to justified objective grounds, it must be deemed proven that an attempt has been made to repêchage by the employer who, as an alternative to dismissal, offered to the redundant employees the chance to change their work hours.

The facts

A female worker, employed by a company operating in the insurance and tourism services sector and employed at the reception counter and ticketing area, was dismissed on justified objective grounds because of the closing of the area where she was employed. As an alternative to the dismissal, the Company had proposed transforming the employment relationship from full time to part time, which, however, the employee refused.

The worker then filed a lawsuit to the competent local Employment Court to claim that her dismissal had been unlawful with all the legal consequences that would result from it. As a basis for her claim, the worker stated that the offer to change work hours could not constitute a valid attempt at repêchage, since the company hired a new full-time employee one year after her dismissal, and had also entrusted said new hire with tasks that she had previously carried out.

The Court accepted the worker’s application but its ruling was overturned by the Court of Appeal of Ancona selected by the company.

The Court of Appeal, in particular, declared lawful the dismissal on the grounds that:

  • the company had fully proved the effective divestment of the ticketing and reception counter area to which the employee was assigned;
  • the proposal to transform the employment relationship presented to the worker shortly before the notice of dismissal and refused by her was proof of the attempt of “repêchage”;
  • No recruitment had taken place to replace the worker, but the newly hired employee in question had replaced another employee.

 

The employee thus appealed to the Court of Cassation against the judgment issued by the Court of Appeal.

 

The ruling of the Court

The Court of Cassation upheld the decision of the Appeal Court by considering that the proposal to convert the employment relationship from full-time to part-time was sufficient to prove that the employer had attempted the repêchage.

The Court of Cassation also pointed out that it was not possible to consider the recruitment of a new resource valid either, since that recruitment had taken place as a result of the termination of another employment relationship, which was ended after the termination of the appellant’s employment relationship.

Conclusions

From the judgment in question, it follows that an attempt to repêchage by the employer must be regarded as proven when as an alternative to dismissal the employer offers to the redundant employee the chance to change work hours.

 

 

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 Jul 2026

Pay transparency: one month after its entry into force, two approaches are emerging in the market (The Platform, 8 July 2026 – Vittorio De Luca, Claudia Cerbone e Martina De Angeli)

Since 7 June, EU rules aimed at strengthening the principle of equal pay between men and women for the same work or for work of equal value have…

2 Jul 2026

Did you know…? As of 7 June 2026, Legislative Decree No. 96/2026 is fully in force

As of 7 June 2026, Legislative Decree No. 96/2026 is fully in force. It also introduces into the Italian legal system a structured framework on pay transparency, with…

2 Jul 2026

Failure to serve disciplinary charges does not render the dismissal null and void: italian supreme court confirms no reinstatement remedy for employers below the statutory workforce threshold

Principle of Law In its recent judgment No. 17283 of 1 June 2026, the Italian Supreme Court (Corte di Cassazione) examined the legal consequences arising from the employer's…

2 Jul 2026

AI and the employment relationship: initial guidance from the implementing decrees and data protection implications

Following the preliminary approval by the Council of Ministers, on 10 June 2026, of the first draft legislative decrees implementing the enabling law on artificial intelligence (Law No.…

1 Jul 2026

Sustainability, Responsibility, and the Future: A Commitment That Grows with Time

As we celebrate our 50th anniversary, we have chosen to look to the future with the same care and dedication with which we preserve our roots. Those roots…

25 Jun 2026

Pay Equity and Pay Transparency: What Will Change in Italy (People are People, 25 June 2026 – Claudia Cerbone e Martina De Angeli)

With Legislative Decree No. 96 of 7 May 2026, which entered into force on 7 June 2026, Italy transposed Directive (EU) 2023/970 on pay transparency, becoming one of…