An employer can monitor an employee’s emails provided it has made it clear beforehand that it might do so. It is permissible for the employer to prohibit employees from using its electronical equipment for private use, but if the employer is going to check whether this rule was being complied with, it needs to have a significant reason to do so and must respect the principles of legality legitimacy and proportionality. |
Case Reports |
2017/21 Legal rules for employers for monitoring employees in Slovakia (SK) |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 2 2017 |
Trefwoorden | Privacy, Unfair dismissal |
Auteurs | Gabriel Havrilla en Richard Sanák |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Case Reports |
2017/20 Data gathered by GPS as a basis for disciplinary dismissal (PT) |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 2 2017 |
Trefwoorden | Privacy |
Auteurs | Maria de Lancastre Valente en Mariana Azevedo Mendes |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
Distance-related data gathered by GPS and data reported manually by the employee (a sales representative at a pharmaceutical company) are valid and admissible sources of evidence in the context of a disciplinary dismissal procedure. This decision is innovative in that it contradicts the usual view of the Supreme Court of Justice on the scope of ‘distance-controlled supervision’ for the purposes of assessment of employee conduct. |
Case Reports |
2017/22 Use of ex-employee’s emails and files found on company PC admissible (GR) |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 2 2017 |
Trefwoorden | Privacy |
Auteurs | Effie Mitsopoulou |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The Supreme Court ruled that evidence of wrongdoing obtained by a company against two former executives was admissible in court, as it was legitimate that the company should have the opportunity to defend its right to free competition. In such cases, the executives’ right to privacy of communication should be balanced against the company’s freedom of competition. |
Case Reports |
2017/2 Length of service is not a protected characteristic for discrimination and roles with different educational requirements are not comparable (HU) |
Tijdschrift | European Employment Law Cases, Aflevering 1 2017 |
Trefwoorden | Age discrimination |
Auteurs | Gabriella Ormai |
SamenvattingAuteursinformatie |
The Curia (Hungarian Supreme Court) stated in its ruling that length of service is not a protected characteristic under discrimination law. Length of employment cannot be considered as a core feature of the individual based on which he or she would belong to a specific group, as it is a result of his or her own actions. It therefore cannot be treated as a ‘miscellaneous’ ground for the purposes of the Hungarian Equal Treatment Act. Further, length of service cannot be linked to age discrimination. The length of service of an employee is not directly connected to age, therefore treatment of an employee based on length of service with a specific organisation cannot be considered age discriminatory. |