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Losing
a job under any circumstances can be a traumatic experience
-- especially if you have devoted a number of years to a particular
employer. When the reason for losing a job is a legitimate one,
the blow is softened. But when an employer terminates an employee
unjustly, the adverse impact can be far-reaching. Anger, humiliation,
and worry predictably follow -- together with many sleepless nights.
What next? Can you fight back? Should you?
The first question is: do you have a potential
legal claim? Whether to act on it or to let go of it is a
different question.
It surprises many working people in California to learn that there
is not always a remedy even when a wrong has occurred -- in other
words, not every injustice is a violation of law.
And a legal remedy is available only for
violations of law. Management decisions may be bad or
unfair -- and ultimately limit a company’s success -- but
may not be unlawful.
“At-will” employment is still the
law in California. An employee hired for an indefinite term
can be discharged at the will of the employer -- with or without
notice, and for good or bad reasons or for no reason
at all. Employees with written contracts of employment for
a specified term, or requiring that termination be for “good
cause,” are not “at-will.” And employees who are
covered by a Union contract are also not “at-will.”
See Labor Law/Unions.
Over the years, the California legislature and the courts have created
exceptions to the harsh results of the at-will rule, making certain
terminations wrongful.
Here are the most common examples of wrongful terminations:
• The employer is motivated by discrimination
or retaliates against an employee for opposing discrimination. See
Age/Race/Sex Discrimination, Sex Harassment
and Disability/Pregnancy Discrimination.
• The employer is motivated by a
desire to retaliate against an employee:
---- who complained in good faith about
---- unsafe
working conditions
---- who refused to perform an illegal
act,
---- like price fixing or giving false
testimony
---- who was a whistleblower
by disclosing
---- information to a government or
law
---- enforcement agency
---- who was an internal
whistleblower by
---- making his/her employer aware
of
---- illegal activity on a matter affecting
---- the public interest
---- who was injured on the job.
---- See Workers’
Compensation.
•The employer’s real reason for the
termination violates a public policy which
is
---- fundamental,
---- beneficial for the public, and
---- embodied in a statute or
---- constitutional provision.
• The employer’s conduct in terminating an employee
results from a serious invasion of a legally protected privacy
interest when the employee had a reasonable expectation of privacy.
• The employer terminates an employee without
good cause when the employer had promised, by words or conduct,
to discharge the employee only for good cause.
• The employer terminates an employee who is absent from work
on a protected leave or because he/she
requested or took such leave -- for example, under the California
Family Rights Act or under the
Pregnancy Disability Leave Act. There are exceptions and defenses.
See Disability/Pregnancy Discrimination.
Employers may also be held accountable for the harm they cause when
they violate employees’ rights protected by other laws:
---- Discharging an employee who refuses
to
--- -take a polygraph
examination or other lie
---- detector test.
---- Discharging an employee for engaging
in
---- political activities.
---- Blacklisting
former employees, whether
---- they quit or were discharged,
by using
---- misrepresentations to prevent
or attempt
---- to prevent them from obtaining
employment.
---- Making misrepresentations
-- statements of
---- fact known to be false at the
time made --
---- about a job or the compensation
to be
---- paid in order to induce a person
to
---- relocate to accept it.
What If Your Employer’s
Conduct Forces You To Quit?
Under certain circumstances, an employee who is “forced to
quit” has a legal claim for constructive discharge. In general,
for a seemingly voluntary resignation to be treated as a “discharge,”
the employee must have been required to endure intolerable working
conditions associated with the employer’s violation of a statute
or a public policy. But when an employer demands a resignation in
lieu of being fired, this will be treated as a discharge not a constructive
discharge.
You Have A Duty To “Mitigate” Your
Damages
Even when you are the victim of a wrongful termination, you have
a duty to mitigate the damages caused -- meaning to minimize the
resulting damages by making reasonable efforts to get and keep comparable
replacement employment.
Case Evaluation
If you believe that you have been wrongfully terminated, you need
the advice of a competent, qualified attorney who specializes in
Employment Law who can:
• Review the details of what happened.
• Identify whether a violation of law has occurred.
• Determine if there are credible witnesses and evidence to
prove it.
• Consider the effect of any internal grievance procedure
or agreement to arbitrate.
• Evaluate the provable damages.
• Help you decide whether to sue, improve on a severance offer
being made, or simply close this
unhappy chapter in your life and move on.
All litigation costs money and causes stress to the parties involved.
Not every wrongful termination can be effectively remedied in a
court of law. And not every wrongful termination causes enough damage
(even if the harm feels immense at first) to justify the high costs
associated with litigation.
You are not alone. See how we will help.
Caution: What appears on
this page is not an exhaustive list of all the ways in which employers
may violate the law. What is offered here is intended to illustrate
some of the wrongs that can and do happen in the workplace. If your
employment is terminated or you are demoted or discriminated against
under circumstances which cause you concern, you should get legal
advice about your rights and what options are available to you to
challenge your employer’s conduct.
Legal Team
Thomas
L. Tosdal
Position: Partner
Admitted to Bar: 1975, California; U.S. District
Court, Southern and Central Districts of California; U.S. Court of
Appeals, Ninth Circuit and U.S. Supreme Court.
Education: University of California at Santa Barbara
(B.A., high honors, 1971); Harvard University (J.D., cum laude, 1975).
Of Note: Listed in The Best Lawyers in America (Labor
Specialty). Law Clerk, Honorable Edward J. Schwartz, Chief Judge,
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California, 1975-1976.
Staff Counsel, Agricultural Labor Relations Board, State of California,
1976-1978. Private Practice, 1978 --.
Member: Association of Trial Lawyers, Consumer Attorneys
of California, Consumer Attorneys of San Diego, American Inns of Court,
San Diego County Bar Association, and State Bar of California.
Ann
M. Smith
Position: Partner
Admitted to Bar: 1985, California and U.S. District
Court, Southern District of California; U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth
Circuit.
Education: Simmons College; Monterey College of
Law (J.D., cum laude, 1985).
Of Note: 1993 Recipient, Outstanding Trial Lawyer
Award, San Diego Trial Lawyers Association. Labor Negotiator for
United Farm Workers of America 1976-1981 and for San Diego Municipal
Employees Association 1986--.
Member: Consumer Attorneys of California, Consumer Attorneys of
San Diego, San Diego County Bar Association, and State Bar of California.
Languages: Spanish.
Reported Cases: Salgado v. Atlantic Richfield Co.
(9th Cir. 1987) 823F 2nd 1322. Branch v. Homefed Bank (1992) 6 CA.
4th 793.
Fern
M. Steiner
Position: Partner
Admitted to Bar: 1977, Illinois; 1978, U.S. District
Court, Northern District of Illinois and U.S. Court of Appeals, Seventh
Circuit; 1985, California, U.S. District Court, Southern District
of California and U.S. Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit; 1987, U.S.
District Court, Northern and Central Districts of California.
Education: Northwestern University (B.A., 1971);
John Marshall Law School (J.D., cum laude, 1977).
Of Note: Listed in The Best Lawyers in America (Labor
Specialty).
Author: "Interference with Rights of Employees,"
Labor Law for the General Practitioner, Chapter 4, 1984.
Member: American Bar Association, Industrial Relations
Research Association, AFL-CIO Lawyers Coordinating Committee, National
Lawyers Guild and its Labor & Employment Committee, San Diego
Bar Association, and State Bar of California.
Jon
Y. Vanderpool
Position: Partner
Admitted to Bar: 1992, California; 1995, Massachusetts;
and U.S. District Court, Southern, Central, and Northern Districts
of California.
Education: Rice University (B.A., 1986); Pepperdine
University (J.D., 1992).
Member: American Inns of Court, San Diego County
Bar Association, and State Bar of California.
Angela M. Jae
Position: Associate
Admitted to Bar: 2007, California and U.S. District Court, Southern and Central
Education: University of California, San Diego (B.A. 2003); California School of Law (J.D., 2006)
Member: San Diego County Bar Association, Pan-Asian Lawyers of San Diego, and State Bar of California
Caution: What appears
on this page is not an exhaustive list of all the ways in
which employers may violate the law. What is offered here is intended
to illustrate some of the wrongs that can and do happen in
the workplace. If your employment is terminated or you are demoted
or discriminated against under circumstances which cause you concern,
you should get legal advice about your rights and what options are
available to you to challenge your employer’s conduct, whether
in a court of law, before the Labor Commissioner or before some other
administrative agency. Just because you do not see the issue itemized
on this page, does not mean you have no claim.
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