Law Office of Arkady Itkin 

  • Home
  • Contact
  • About
  • Areas of Practice
  • Employment Law Blog
  • Injury Law Blog
  • Results
  • Links
  • Deposition Tips in Injury and Employment Cases
  • Filing Wrongful Termination Personal Injury Lawsuit
  • Mediation Tips and Advice
  • Sample Letter Request for Reasonable Accommodation to Disability at Work
  • Sample Letter Complaint about Discrimination / Harassment at Workplace
What is constructive discharge/termination at workplace? 06/22/2008
0 Comments
 

Constructive discharge occurs when an employer engages in conduct that effectively forces the employee to resign or retire. Although the employee may say “I quit,” the employer relationship is actually terminated by the employer’s acts against the employee’s will. As a result, a constructive discharge is legally considered as a firing by the employer rather than a voluntary resignation or retirement by the employee.

To establish a constructive discharge claim, an employee must prove that the employer either intentionally created or knowingly permitted working conditions that were so intolerable or aggravated that a reasonable employer would realize that a reasonable person in the employee’s position would be compelled to resign. In determining whether a reasonable employee would feel compelled to resign, courts consider such factors as demotion, reduction in salary, reduction in job responsibilities, reassignment to degrading work, badgering, harassment or humiliation by the employer intended to encourage the employee to resign, offers of early retirement or continued employment on terms less favorable than the employee’s former status.  The employee must further notify someone in a position of authority of intolerable conditions before he may prevail on a constructive discharge claim. Such notice prevents employers from closing their eyes to wrongdoing and permits employers who are unaware of any wrongdoing to correct a potentially destructive situation.

It is important to remember that this standard is objective, and employee’s subjective feeling of disappointment is not enough to claim constructive discharge. An employee is not permitted to quit and sue simply because he doesn’t like something at his workplace.

So, which working conditions are considered “intolerable” and thus grounds to claim constructive discharge? Intolerable working conditions are those which either are unusually aggravated or amount to a continuous pattern of objectionable conduct. For instance, continuous course of harassment, uncorrected by management, can constitute objectively intolerable working conditions.

Normally, a single or isolated acts are generally insufficient to support a constructive discharge claim. But in some cases, even a single incident may be held to be “aggravated” misconduct by the employer; e.g., a crime of violence against the employee, or an ultimatum that the employee commit a crime.

The following conditions have been found to be “intolerable:”

continued harassment of an employee due to his sexual orientation (repeated gay jokes and other remarks);
a supervisor’s continuous “yelling and screaming,” unfair and harsh criticism and threats to fire an employee, uncorrected by management, may constitute objectively intolerable working conditions;
a supervisor’s extended campaign to get an employee fired, including repeated efforts to invent documentation for her termination, frequent reorganization of her duties and demands that she process unlawful orders, may constitute “intolerable” working conditions when the employee’s medical condition is exacerbated by stress.
The following conditions have been found to NOT be “intolerable:”

severe verbal abuse of employee (harsh, unfair criticism) in front of other employees and threats to terminate or demote are not intolerable working conditions unless a continuous course of such conduct is involved;
a poor performance rating or demotion, even when accompanied by a pay cut does not constitute an intolerable working condition necessary to support a claim for constructive discharge;
failure to promote over a long period of time is normally not enough to show “intolerable” working conditions.
The claim of constructive discharge is not applicable to at-will employment. There is no constructive discharge where there is no contractual right to continued employment. In other words, if you are an at-will employee (and you are presumed to be in the absence of a contract between you and your employer or any other evidence of your employer’s promise to continuously employ you for a certain period of time), you cannot have a claim of constructive discharge.

Add Comment
 

    RSS Feed

    San Francisco Wrongful Termination Lawyer

    Categories

    All
    Ada
    Administrative Exemption
    Age Discrimination
    At Will Employment
    Attorney Client Relationship
    Cfra
    Class Actions
    Constructive Discharge
    Defamation
    Defamation By Employer
    Depositions And Trial Testimony
    Disability Discrimination
    Disability Rights At Workplace
    Discrimination
    Discrimination Complaint
    Employee Employer Relationship
    Employment Contracts
    Extended Leave
    Facebook
    Feha
    Fmla
    Fraud
    Good Cause Termination
    Harassment
    Harassment At Workplace
    Harassment Complaint
    Hiring Job Interviews
    Hostile Work Environment
    Independent Contractors
    Interactive Process
    Investigation At Workplace
    Involuntary Illness Leave
    Jury Trial
    Legal Representation Of Employers
    Meal And Rest Breaks
    Mediation
    Medical Leave
    Negative Performance Reviews
    Non Compete Agreements
    Obesity
    Offduty Conduct
    Overtime Compensation
    Pregnancy Leave
    Racial Harassment
    Reasonable Accommodations
    Retaliation
    Sexual Harassment
    Time Cards
    Tips And Tip Sharing
    Unemployment Benefits
    Unemployment Benefits Appeals
    Union Grievances
    Vacation Time
    Violence Accusations
    Whistleblower Retaliation
    Whistleblowing
    Work Injury
    Work Related Injuries
    Working With Attorney
    Workplace Disability Laws
    Wrongful Termination

    Archives

    January 2012
    December 2011
    November 2011
    February 2011
    January 2011
    December 2010
    November 2010
    October 2010
    September 2010
    August 2010
    July 2010
    June 2010
    May 2010
    April 2010
    March 2010
    January 2010
    December 2009
    November 2009
    October 2009
    September 2009
    July 2009
    June 2009
    May 2009
    April 2009
    February 2009
    January 2009
    November 2008
    October 2008
    August 2008
    July 2008
    June 2008
    May 2008
    April 2008
    March 2008

    View my profile on LinkedIn

Law Office of Arkady Itkin - San Francisco & Sacramento Injury and Employment Lawyer