The Court of Appeal, Penal Section, with sentence
50919 of 17 December 2019, confirmed that the installation of
video-surveillance systems, resulting in the remote control of workers’
activities, must be preceded by reaching a trade union agreement or, failing
that, by obtaining administrative authorisation. The consent of the workers
concerned is not sufficient.
Facts of the case
The Court of Milan had ordered a contractor to pay a
fine for breaching Articles 114 and 171 of Legislative Decree 196/2003 and
Articles 4, paragraph 1 and 38 of the Workers’ Statute. This was because the
entrepreneur had installed 16 video surveillance systems within his company,
with the declared aim of controlling access to them and acting as a deterrent
to criminal events, which, however, allowed for the remote control of
employees’ activities. The installation had taken place without prior union
agreement or administrative authorisation.
On that matter, in fact, the Court had pointed out
that the entrepreneur had indeed asked the peripheral bodies of the Labour
Inspectorate territorially competent to issue the authorisation but, before
obtaining it, the entrepreneur had installed the aforementioned systems.
Furthermore, according to the Court, the disclaimer
issued in court, signed by all the employees and sent in advance by the
entrepreneur to the Inspectorate, could not be applied, given that it:
- was
formed after the actual occurrence of the conduct imputed to the entrepreneur
himself and the challenge of its existence and,
- in
any event, in the light of the most recent guidelines in the case-law on
legality, it could not act as a ‘substitute
either for the existence of a trade union agreement or the authorisation issued
by the public body‘.
The entrepreneur appealed against the judgement at
first instance, arguing, inter alia, that the consent given by the
employees should be understood as an element that would exclude the criminal
relevance of the disputed conduct.
The appeal in question was converted, in accordance with
the principle of favor impugnationis,
into an appeal by cassation, given that it could not be appealed as only the
fine had been imposed.
The
decision of the Court of Appeal
The Court of Appeal, in declaring the appeal filed by
the entrepreneur as inadmissible, firstly noted that the case in question is
governed by Article 114 of Legislative Decree 196/2003, which also followed the
entry into force of Article 15 of Legislative Decree 101/2018 (Decree adapting
national legislation to EU Regulation 2016/679 on the protection of personal
data), provides for the following: “the
breach of the provisions set out in Article 4, paragraph 1, (…) of Law no.
300 dated 20 May 1970 shall be punished with the sanctions set out in Article
38 of the same law“.
In the opinion of the Court of Appeal, “the circumstance (…) according to which
the visual recording system was installed in order to guarantee the safety of
the employees themselves, given that the purpose of guaranteeing occupational
safety is one of the factors which, in abstract terms, make it possible to
activate this type of system, notwithstanding, however, the implementation of
the subsequent forms of guarantee for the protection of workers provided for by
the aforementioned preceptive regulations“.
Equally irrelevant, according to the Court of Appeal,
is the circumstance that the entrepreneur had not personally had access to the
content of the video recordings, given that the relevant system was managed by
a third party. This is because Article 4, paragraph 1, of the Workers’ Statute
prohibits, in the absence of a prior trade union agreement or, in the absence
of prior authorisation issued by the Labour Inspectorate, the installation of
remote video surveillance equipment.
The Court of Appeal also underlined that Article 38 of the Workers’ Statute does
not protect “the personal
interest of the individual worker nor the arithmetical sum of each of them, but
it does safeguard the collective and super-individual
interests, although a possible interference between the injury of the legal
positions of the trade union representatives and those of the individual
workers from time to time cannot be excluded”. And the
employer’s conduct, which does not allow for discussion with trade union
representatives, causes objective damage to the collective interests of the
trade union representatives. The trade union representatives are, in fact,
“responsible for ascertaining, given that they are
holders ex lege of the relevant right, whether or not the audio-visual equipment , from which the employer intends to make
use, has, on the one hand, the ability
to infringe the dignity of workers for their potential finalisation to the
remote control of the performance of the work activity and to verify, on the
other hand, the effective compliance of said systems with the
technical-productive or safety requirements so as to regulate, through
collective agreement, the terms and conditions of use and thus free the
entrepreneur from the impediment to their installation“.
In this context, the Court of Appeal, citing a
precedent of its own, pointed out that the employer, if it installs
installations without complying with the procedural guarantees provided for in
Article 4 of the Workers’ Statute, behaves in an anti-union manner, which can
be repressed with the special protection provided for by Article 28 of the
Workers’ Statute (see Court of Appeal, Labour Section, 16 September 1997, no.
9211).
Furthermore, according to the Court of Appeal, the
procedural guarantees dictated by Article 4 of the Workers’ Statute are based
on the fact that workers can be configured as weak subjects of the employment
relationship. Otherwise, continued the Court of Appeal, “it would suffice for the employer, in order to
circumvent the procedure imposed by law, to make each employee, at the time of
hiring, sign a declaration by which he accepts the introduction of any control
technology to obtain consent, whose free determination appears vitiated by the
fear, in case of refusal to sign the declaration in question, that he will not
be hired”.
In conclusion, in the opinion of the Court of Appeal,
the consent or acquiescence that the worker may have given or has given does
not perform any exempting function, given that the protected collective
interest remains outside the theory of the consent of the person entitled.