If severance terms are included in the letter of offer, is it possible or worth contesting them? Do courts ALWAYS or almost always enforce these? TIA for opinions/advice.
The company's policy on severance was on the letter of offer I signed. After the fact, (upon termination) can these clauses be successfully challenged in court or or is it a waste of time/money?I don't quite follow. You mean, terms in case of future severance are spelled out in an offer of employment?
In any offer, you can counter-offer. If you don't like those terms, strike or change them or speak to your lawyer for advice.
On the face of it, if you signed the offer with those terms therein, you agreed to them as a condition of your employment but speak to an employment lawyer.The company's policy on severance was on the letter of offer I signed. After the fact, (upon termination) can these clauses be successfully challenged in court or or is it a waste of time/money?
Yes, but it will depend on the exact circumstances of your dismissal and the exact wording of your employment contract. You would have to review these details with a lawyer who regularly deals with employment matters.
The dismissal was a restructuring, they are not claiming any misbehavior or preformance related issue. I did not work there long, the delta between what they are offering me and what I think is fair is at most about 21K take 50% off for tax.. we are down to 11.5 in pocket.. maybe I will just ask them to give me another month and call it..
After some research you need to do some maths. Even if you win you will still be out of pocket at least 50% of your legal fees. Again speak to a lawyer who would need to know your salary, length of service, employment history and is willing to give you an HONEST estimate of the legal fees, as opposed to an estimate designed to get you to sign his retainer.
The overwhelming majority of these cases settle. The wording of the contract is but one factor. The company still has limits on their conduct that could create constructive dismissal. They cannot contract out of tort liability for slander, which is fact specific depending upon how you were dismissed. Courts look at all of the factors and consider all sides. The cases that do go to trial often have one side that is unreasonable in their belief of entitlements.
Usually the company looks at it as an economic decision. The employee may have an emotional component of insult and outrage that clouds their thinking.
Bottom line, it is a very fact specific question and you need a good professional opinion from a lawyer with employment experience in your jurisdiction.
Some issues to consider, but certainly not exclusive are:The dismissal was a restructuring, they are not claiming any misbehavior or preformance related issue. I did not work there long, the delta between what they are offering me and what I think is fair is at most about 21K take 50% off for tax.. we are down to 11.5 in pocket.. maybe I will just ask them to give me another month and call it..
The dismissal was a restructuring,...
My question too ...How do you get severance anywhere near $21K, or even a difference of opinion that high, for what you call "short-term employment", and still have to come to TERB for legal advice?
How do you get severance anywhere near $21K, or even a difference of opinion that high, for what you call "short-term employment", and still have to come to TERB for legal advice?
My question too ...
Do you really think 21K is that much money? How do you afford SPs? 30K is based on 3 months income. Last place I worked I got over 40K in severance after 2 years. Anyhoo, when I run it though the tax calculator.. since I only get to keep half-minus legals and hassle, plus the fact that I DID sign. I am just gonna ask for a bit more and leave it at that.. not really worth expending my energy so the Feds can make 12K over what will be a 12-18 month battle.How do you get severance anywhere near $21K, or even a difference of opinion that high, for what you call "short-term employment", and still have to come to TERB for legal advice?
Good thinking.Do you really think 21K is that much money? How do you afford SPs? 30K is based on 3 months income. Last place I worked I got over 40K in severance after 2 years. Anyhoo, when I run it though the tax calculator.. since I only get to keep half-minus legals and hassle, plus the fact that I DID sign. I am just gonna ask for a bit more and leave it at that.. not really worth expending my energy so the Feds can make 12K over what will be a 12-18 month battle.
For severance, 21K is HUGE.Do you really think 21K is that much money? How do you afford SPs? 30K is based on 3 months income. Last place I worked I got over 40K in severance after 2 years. Anyhoo, when I run it though the tax calculator.. since I only get to keep half-minus legals and hassle, plus the fact that I DID sign. I am just gonna ask for a bit more and leave it at that.. not really worth expending my energy so the Feds can make 12K over what will be a 12-18 month battle.
For severance, 21K is HUGE.
Most professionals can expect about 1 week severance per year of service. I know plenty of folks who barely got 20-30K severance after 10 years employment (at a rate of about $100k/year).
But if you're getting paid $120/year, you can easily afford legal advice and don't need to come to TERB for "free" advice.
Yes they lose big when they go to court, you can also go to small claims court for up to 25K. I am going to do a "nice ask" for one month more. Having spoken to a few people, the courts to tend to uphold these conditions. Chances are since they are a well funded company teeming with lawyers they will know this. Best to try and appeal to their sense of sympathy and fair play before going to war.If you are expecting only one week per year of service you are not a professional. One month is fair. Stingy places may try to cut it to two weeks per year.
Severance fights are trench warfare, everybody loses but the winner loses less. Your goal is to start a legal battle that is inexpensive for you but costly for them so that they make an economic decision to pay out even if they think they could win.
Almost certainly it is worth having a lawyer crafting a nasty letter then suggesting negotiations and trying to bargain for a better deal.
They won't want to go to court either.
Their sense of fair play? When you have demonstrated that you have none? Wow.Yes they lose big when they go to court, you can also go to small claims court for up to 25K. I am going to do a "nice ask" for one month more. Having spoken to a few people, the courts to tend to uphold these conditions. Chances are since they are a well funded company teeming with lawyers they will know this. Best to try and appeal to their sense of sympathy and fair play before going to war.
I thought the ROT was one month per year for long tenures and professionals/key employees, while one week per year was for the opposite situations?For severance, 21K is HUGE.
Most professionals can expect about 1 week severance per year of service. I know plenty of folks who barely got 20-30K severance after 10 years employment (at a rate of about $100k/year).
But if you're getting paid $120/year, you can easily afford legal advice and don't need to come to TERB for "free" advice.