AVOIDING LAWSUITS
HOW BUSINESSES CAN PREVENT
EMPLOYMENT CLAIMS AND LIABILITIES
April 1, 2002
Avoiding
Lawsuits is
a service of the employment law training and consulting firm
of Counsel Consulting Group LLC and the law
firm of Powell,
Trachtman, Logan, Carrle & Lombardo, P.C.
THE "REVENGE LAWSUIT" -
FIVE TIPS FOR MINIMIZING THE RISK OF
LAWSUITS FROM TERMINATED EMPLOYEES
Human nature being what it is, terminated
employees frequently lash back at their employers in any way
they can, often by filing lawsuits. You may not be able to
avoid these lawsuits, but you can increase the likelihood that
you'll win them. Primarily, it takes some advance planning,
coupled with management training.
Here are five things you can do to
make it less attractive for terminated employees to file lawsuits,
and to up the odds for a quick victory.
1. Develop A Meaningful Written Employee Evaluation
Procedure,
And Train Your Managers To Use It
Joe and Mary hold identical positions
as accounting clerks. Joe is much more productive than Mary,
and Mary makes numerous mistakes in her work. Joe and Mary
each report to Bob.
Bob has told Mary on numerous occasions
that she needs to improve her work performance. However, Bob
abhors confrontation, and he believes that reporting Mary's
failures will reflect poorly on his own performance. Consequently,
Bob never sends Mary a warning memo, he makes no written record
of her poor performance, and he fills out his semi-annual evaluation
forms for Joe and Mary by checking the "meeting expectations" blocks
next to each evaluation category. Eventually, Mary's mistakes
come to the attention of Bob's superiors, and Bob musters up
the courage to fire her. Mary immediately files a claim with
the EEOC, claiming that Bob discriminated against her, based
on her gender.
Mary's lawyer subpoenas Mary's and
Joe's personnel records, and schedules Bob's deposition. When
asked why he fired Mary, Bob testifies that he terminated Mary
not because she was a woman, but because of her poor work performance.
Mary's lawyer then asks Bob if he
ever lied to his employer. Bob answered that, of course, he
did not. Mary's lawyer then pulls out the job evaluation forms
that Bob prepared for Mary and Joe - he's blown them up and
mounted them on poster boards. Mary's lawyer gets Bob to admit
that Bob submitted these evaluation forms to his employer,
and because Bob never lied to his employer, the evaluation
forms must be correct. "You wouldn't submit phony evaluation
forms, would you Bob?" he asks. He then asks Bob to point
out where on the evaluation forms there exists any indication
that Mary was a less competent employee than Joe, her male
counterpart. Bob begins to sweat. Mary's lawyer then asks Bob
to extract from Mary's personnel file any memo, note or other
evidence of any kind that Mary had ever been warned, disciplined
or negatively evaluated at any time. Bob struggles for an explanation.
He then asks Bob whether he has any documentary evidence
showing that there was any reason aside from her gender
which could explain Mary's termination.
All the while, Mary's lawyer contemplates
how much fun it can be to shoot fish in a barrel.
Avoiding Lawsuits has, on many occasions, repeated
the mantra that proof, not allegations, is what matters in
a lawsuit - in the world of litigation, if you cannot prove
it, it doesn't exist. (See, for example, the August 1, 2000, the October
15, 2000 and
the September 1, 2001 issues.) This is no more true than
in the arena of employee terminations. All too often, terminated
employees will take an oath and testify that they were model
performers who were never disciplined, warned or negatively
evaluated. Their managers will know that the employee is lying,
but if the manager cannot prove it, the case will become, at
best, a "my word against your word" coin flip.
Worse, knowing that companies routinely
keep personnel files, judges and juries will often presume
that if, in fact, there had been problems with an employee,
the employer would have had documents to prove it. The lack
of documents will be used as evidence that such problems really
did not exist, and that the employer is simply trying to smear
the employee after the fact, to hide unlawful, discriminatory
conduct.
The solution is a real employee
evaluation procedure, and a management team that is trained
on the importance of using it in the right way.
2. Check The File Before Terminating
A Member Of A Protected Class
You need to be on guard before terminating
a person who is member of a class to which the law applies
certain protections, such as, for example, a racial minority,
a disabled person, a pregnant woman, and an individual over
40. Those who are responsible for termination decisions must
be schooled to anticipate the fact of life that, sometimes,
a terminated employee in a protected class will contend that
he or she was fired because of race, national origin, gender,
disability, age... anything but the employee's own fault.
Before terminating an employee for
poor performance or misconduct, therefore, a prudent manager
will first ask whether the employer will be able to prove the real reason
for the termination. Does the file reflect poor job evaluations?
Does the file reflect any disciplinary warnings or notices?
Does the file reflect that the employee was told that he or
she needed to improve performance, and failed to do so? Ultimately,
the answer to these questions will, again, depend on how well
the employer documented employee evaluations, warnings and
other issues. If the employee is a member of a protected class
and the proof is not there, it is sometimes better to back
off until the appropriate documentation can be put into place
- for instance, issue the employee a formal warning which details
prior problems and requires substantial improvement. If the
employee improves, great; if not, document it, and then act
accordingly.
3. Watch Out For Potential
Retaliation Claims
A common scenario involves an employee
who is repeatedly absent, and is warned that he needs to improve
his attendance. The problem persists, but no disciplinary action
is taken and no file documents are created. The employee misses
a Monday and a Tuesday without notice. The employee's manager
has had it, and prepares a termination notice. Before the notice
is sent, however, the employee calls and says he needs a one
month leave of absence to attend to an ailing spouse. Assuming
that the FLMA applies (for instance, the employee has the requisite
50 or more employees and the employer has worked the requisite
number of hours), the employee's request constitutes an exercise
of the employee's federal right to FLMA leave. The manager
sends the termination notice.
The employee then sues, bringing what
the courts call a "retaliation claim" - he says he
was fired in retaliation for exercising his federally-protected
right to FMLA leave, which is unlawful. The employee can often
offer enough proof to shift the burden to the employer by showing
little more than the undisputed chronology of events - there
are no documents showing I was a bad employee, I exercised
my rights, then I was fired. Without the requisite documents,
how will the employer prove that the employee was fired for
lawful reasons?
Retaliation claims come in lots of
flavors - an employer is not allowed to terminate or otherwise
prejudice an employee's rights in retaliation for filing a
sexual harassment claim, a discrimination claim, an ADA claim,
and so on. The issue in such cases is almost always one of
proof: how can the employer prove why the action was
taken? At the risk of repetition, your procedures, and the
training you have given your managers respecting the creation
and maintenance of employee records, will rule the day.
4. Be Careful Not To Turn
A Termination Case Into A Defamation Case
It is of paramount importance that
an employer publicize the reasons for terminating an employee
on a need to know basis, only. If, for example, you
feel that an employee is incompetent or dishonest and you terminate
the employee for that reason, and if you publicize your assessment
of that employee beyond the circle of those who really have
a reason to know about it, you run the risk of the employee
suing you for defamation. The law of defamation provides that
an employee whose reputation is damaged can sue an employer
for both compensatory and punitive damages. The employer is
then left with the burden of proving that what the employer
said was true, and because so many termination decisions are
made on a subjective basis, without hard evidence, this can
often be an insurmountable task.
As an adjunct to this, be extremely
careful about how you respond to requests for references from
a terminated employee's prospective employers. If you provide
a negative reference, you again run the risk of the employee
suing you for defamation. We routinely advise our clients to
respond to requests for employee references by doing nothing
other than stating the dates of employment and the positions
held. There is no upside to your providing a prospective employer
with your view of your former employee's negative traits.
5. Be Careful Of Potentially
Violent Or Unstable Employee
Suppose you have an employee who has
manifested potentially violent tendencies, and you think it
best to terminate that employee for the safety of all concerned.
These situations hold all kinds of "damned if you do and
damned if you don't" possibilities. On the one hand, the ADA may require you to accommodate such an employee. On
the other hand, employers frequently face liability for workplace
violence if they do not take prudent steps to remove potentially-dangerous
employees from the workforce.
You (and your managers) need to recognize
the risks; often, the inescapable conclusion is that these
situations have to be confronted on a case-by-case basis, with
the assistance of competent counsel.
Those responsible for implementing
termination decisions must know how to assess the risks of
their decisions. There are many issues aside from those referenced
above that may need to be confronted. Did the employee have
an employment contract that precludes termination except upon
proof of "cause" for termination? Is the termination
part of a large scale layoff that might come within the parameters
of the WARN Act? Is the terminated employee close to vesting
in a pension plan and, therefore, protected by ERISA? A consult
with counsel is always a good idea in all except the most routine
termination decisions.
Like it or not, in many cases, termination
decisions cannot be made strictly on the merits. Lawyers who
practice in this field all have horror stories of employers
who were absolutely "right," and who paid hundreds
of thousands of dollars in legal costs for that privilege.
___________________________________________________________________________________
Counsel Consulting Group LLC helps companies throughout the United States avoid employment and HR-related claims
and liabilities. CCG assesses existing policies, procedures
and problem areas; it provides customized liability-avoidance
training to managers and executives; and it designs and implements
business techniques that reduce employment liability risks
on a long term basis. CCG also offers specialized workshops
for managers and HR executives, customized consulting in focused
employment-related areas, and CD-ROM and web-based training
alternatives. For more information, contact us at info@counselconsulting.com and
visit our website at www.counselconsulting.com.
Powell, Trachtman, Logan, Carrle & Lombardo, P.C. is
a full service law firm with offices in suburban Philadelphia, PA, Harrisburg, PA and Cherry Hill, NJ. Powell Trachtman represents a variety
of commercial enterprises, entrepreneurs and business executives
in respect to their litigation, litigation avoidance planning,
business formation, business transactions, estate and tax planning,
and other needs. We are also approved defense counsel for
numerous insurance carriers in matters pertaining to professional
malpractice, products liability, employment practices, directors
and officers liability, and many other fields. For more information,
contact us at info@powelltrachtman.com and
visit our website at www.powelltrachtman.com.
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2003-2005 CCG Properties LLC. All rights reserved, except that recipients
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attorney.