By judgment No 12132 of 8 May 2023, the Italian Court of Cassation ruled on the subject of dismissal for justified objective reason. The Court specified that in the assessments of the possibility of relocating the employee before proceeding with the dismissal (so-called repêchage obligation), the employer is required to take into consideration not only the positions already vacant at the date of dismissal, but also those that will be ‘available in a period of time very close to the date of the announcement of the dismissal’.

The facts and the judgment on the merits

On 3 May 2011, an employee with the duties of Sales Manager, was dismissed because his position was redundant. The employee brought an application challenging the dismissal before the Court of Busto Arsizio.  The employee sought reinstatement and compensation and also requested a determination that his employment relationship was also attributable to another group company.

The application was dismissed at first instance and on appeal.

A first appeal was therefore brought before the Italian Court of Cassation against the judgment of the Court of Appeal of Milan. This appeal concluded with the acceptance of this further appeal and a referral to the same Court of Second Instance, sitting with different judges, to rule on the objections raised on the subject of the repêchage obligation.

In particular, according to the Italian Supreme Court of Cassation, the Court of Appeal had not conducted the necessary investigations regarding the employer’s compliance with its repêchage obligation. The Court of Cassation recalled that the employer, in this regard, had the burden of proving: (i) the lack of available positions where it could feasibly relocate the employee and (ii) the absence of subsequent recruitment. The Italian Court of Cassation also pointed out that the finding of co-employment could be relevant in the context of an overall assessment of compliance with the repêchage obligation.

The proceedings were therefore reinstated before the Court of Appeal of Milan, which established the actual breach of the repêchage obligation and therefore the unlawfulness of the challenged dismissal.

Specifically, according to the Court of Appeal, at the time of dismissal, two employees with Area Manager duties had resigned with notice expiring on 31 May 2011, a period of time shortly after the date of dismissal. Consequently, the employer should have taken that fact into account in its assessments of the employee’s relocation.

According to the Court of Appeal the following points were irrelevant: (i) the two resigning employees were hired a month later by another Group company that previously obtained their services through a service contract and then decided, in June 2011, to internalise the sales activity, no longer using the services provided by the employer company; and that, consequently, (ii) the dismissal was due to a complex company reorganisation to reduce staff numbers, including the two who had resigned who, in fact had never been replaced, to cope with loss of turnover.

The judgment of the Italian Supreme Court

The employee appealed to the Italian Court of Cassation against the decision taken by the Court of Appeal of Venice. The employer company appealed to the Italian Court of Cassation against the decision taken by the Court of Appeal of Milan.

The Italian Court of Cassation declared the appeal inadmissible and upheld in full the judgment issued by the Court of Appeal of Milan when the case was referred to it.

Specifically, with particular reference to the repêchage obligation, the Italian Court of Cassation highlighted how the Court of Appeal of Milan had followed the indications provided at the time of referral and had ascertained that on the date of the employee’s dismissal, 3 May 2011, two employees of the employer company were completing the dismissal notice period that was to end on 31 May 2011. This proved that at the time of dismissal, the employer was aware that two positions that could be filled by the employee would soon become available in the company.

The Court of Appeal then found that the employer company had not yet been informed at the time of the dismissal of the related company’s decision not to continue to use the service contract and to internalise sales, as this information was not provided until 20 June 2011.

The loss of the service contract could therefore in no way be linked to the dismissal.

The Italian Court of Cassation therefore agreed with the finding made by the Court of Appeal of Milan and underlined that ‘the employer, in assessing the possibility of relocating the employee before proceeding with his/her dismissal, must also take into consideration those employee positions that, although still filled, will become available in a period of time very close to the date when notice of the dismissal is given’.

Since the appeal to the Italian Court of Cassation was ultimately seeking only a different interpretation of the facts from that provided by the Court of Appeal, the Court of Cassation therefore concluded that the appeal was inadmissible, and that the applicant should be ordered to pay the costs.

Other related insights:

There is no violation of the repechage obligation if the employee does not want to transfer to another office