Workplace Investigations
Contributing Editors
Workplace investigations are growing in number, size and complexity. Employers are under greater scrutiny as of the importance of ESG rises. Regulated industries such as finance, healthcare and legal face additional hurdles, but public scrutiny of businesses and how they treat their people across the board has never been higher. Conducting a fair and thorough workplace investigation is therefore critical to the optimal operation, governance and legal exposure of every business.
IEL’s Guide to Workplace Investigations examines key issues that organisations need to consider as they initiate, conduct and conclude investigations in 29 major jurisdictions around the world.
Learn more about the response taken in specific countries or build your own report to compare approaches taken around the world.
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27. What legal exposure could the employer face for errors during the investigation?
27. What legal exposure could the employer face for errors during the investigation?
Finland
Finland
- at Roschier
- at Roschier
There are no regulations regarding the actual investigation process. Therefore, the employer cannot be accused of procedural errors as such. However, once the matter has been adequately investigated, the employer must decide whether or not misconduct has taken place. If the employer considers that misconduct has taken place, the employer must take adequate measures for remedying the situation. Failure to adequately conduct the investigation could result in criminal sanctions being imposed on the employer as an organisation or the employer’s representative, or damages.
Ireland
Ireland
- at Ogier
- at Ogier
A failure to follow fair procedures in the investigation can have significant consequences.
Although the exception rather than the rule, an employee could challenge the investigation through injunctive proceedings if there is a breach of fair procedures. Such action would be taken before the High Court. Injunction proceedings may be brought while the investigation is ongoing, or just before its conclusion to prevent publication of a report making specific findings against an employee. A successful injunction may curtail any subsequent attempt to investigate the matter as allegations of penalisation, prejudice and delay may arise.
Errors during the investigation can also give rise to a complaint of constructive dismissal, with allegations that flaws in the procedure have fundamentally breached the implied term of mutual trust and confidence.
A flawed investigation can also undermine any disciplinary process and sanction that is imposed as a result. This commonly occurs when an employee has been dismissed following a disciplinary process launched on foot of the investigation. While dismissal may be an appropriate sanction, the dismissal can still be found to be unfair if there is a failure to follow fair procedures. An employee may challenge their dismissal before the WRC and the employer should be alive to not only an unfair dismissal complaint, but allegations of discrimination and penalisation.
Overall, to carry out a successful workplace investigation, an employer should consider taking advice at the earliest opportunity to ensure that the investigation can withstand challenges.
Portugal
Portugal
- at Uría Menéndez - Proença de Carvalho
If the disciplinary procedure recommends an employee's dismissal
Should a company dismiss an employee that has breached legal requirements, the latter may take action against the company within 60 days of the date of termination of their employment agreement.
If this action results in a ruling of unfair dismissal, the employee will be entitled:
- to receive all the payments they should normally have earned (back pay, including salary, holidays, legal subsidies, etc), from the month preceding the commencement of the lawsuit and until the final ruling of the court, minus any amounts they may have received during the same period and they would otherwise not have received; and
- to be reinstated in their former position or at the employee’s choice, to receive an indemnity that the court will calculate as between 15 and 45 days of base salary (and service bonuses) for each full year of service or fraction thereof, with a minimum limit of three months’ compensation.
This graduation will depend on the amount of the base salary (the lower the base salary, the higher the indemnity) and the severity of the company’s conduct. Additionally, the employee is entitled to claim an indemnity for further damages.
There are, however, two exceptions to the above: the first relates to high-ranking employees (ie employees carrying out management duties); the second refers to micro-companies (ie, a company that registered an average number of employees in the preceding calendar year below 10). In these two cases, the employer may oppose the employee’s option for reinstatement, arguing that it would be gravely harmful to the company's activity. From a practical perspective, opposition to reinstatement is not commonly decided by the courts.
Finally, should the court rule that the grounds for dismissal were valid, but the investigation was found to have been irregular, the dismissal will be deemed valid, but the employee will still be entitled to an indemnity of 7.5 to 22.5 days of base salary (plus service bonuses, if any) per year of service.
If the disciplinary procedure does not recommend dismissal, but the application of a conservatory sanction
In this event, the employee can challenge the application of the sanction through the filing of a lawsuit against the company. Although the law is not entirely clear, there are court rulings stating that the employee has one year to bring a lawsuit, but others consider that the statute of limitation to challenge a conservatory disciplinary sanction is also one year from the termination of the employment agreement when a pecuniary penalty or suspension was applied to the employee.
Moreover, according to article 331(3) of the Portuguese Labour Code, the employer who applies an unjustified conservatory penalty should compensate the worker under the terms set out in paragraphs 5 and 6 of said article. The imposition of an abusive penalty is also considered a very serious administrative offence as per article 331(7). Please note that the Portuguese Labour Code considers a penalty to be unjustified if its imposition is motivated by the following:
- the employee lawfully complaining about their labour conditions;
- the employee lawfully disobeying unlawful orders from a superior;
- the employee being a member of any employee representative structure or having been a candidate for such a position; and
- the employee exercising or invoking their rights and guarantees.
Furthermore, any penalty imposed within six months of any instance listed above (or within one year if the invoked rights are related to equality and non-discrimination) is presumed to be abusive.