Close

Insights

Updated:

Employers Face Significant Difficulty Obtaining Injunctive Relief for Alleged Breach of Non-competition and Confidentiality Provisions

By: Eric Levine, Esq. In , the Superior Court denied Mega Brand’s application for injunctive relief against two former employees who purportedly violated the non-competition and confidentiality provisions of their employment agreements.  The decision illustrates the burden faced by employers seeking to enforce post-employment restrictions against former employees, as well…

Updated:

New Jersey Supreme Court Adopts Narrow Test for Determining Independent Contractor Status Under NJ Wage and Hour Laws

To avoid the costs inherent in the employer-employee relationship, including employee benefits, workers compensation insurance, employment taxes and other liabilities, many employers secure the services of an independent contractor to avoid these liabilities.   There are significant risks with this approach, however.  An employer who misclassifies a worker as an “independent…

Updated:

Perceived Ostracism By Co-workers Does Not Create Employer Liability For Hostile Work Environment

Under the New Jersey Law Against Discrimination (the “LAD”), an employer who acts negligently in eradicating discriminatory conduct from the workplace may be held vicariously liable for the discriminatory actions of its employees. In a victory for employers statewide, the Appellate Division refused to find an oil delivery company liable for one…

Updated:

Retroactive FMLA: For Employers It’s All About The Timing

By: Kathleen Connelly, Esq. A recent holding by a New Jersey federal court in serves to remind employers that when employees fail to give timely notice of the need for medical leave they may be forfeiting the protections of the Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA). The Facts: On May…

Updated:

THE SUPREME COURT SPEAKS: Time Spent by Workers at Employer Security Checkpoints is Not Compensable Under the FMLA

By: Kathleen Connelly, Esq. In its rare unanimous, pro-employer ruling in  the United States Supreme Court held that under the Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA), employers are not obligated to compensate employees for time spent undergoing employer-mandated security checkpoints after normal working hours.   The ruling resolved a split between rulings…

Updated:

SUBCONTRACTOR’S RIGHTS PROTECTED AND LARGE CONSTRUCTION PROJECT RESUMES

Two years into a large federal design-build project through the Army Corps of Engineers here in New Jersey, the owner shut down the project and terminated the general contractor for cause, citing its failure to keep to the schedule among other issues. Our client, a mechanical subcontractor with an almost…

Updated:

Ignorance of Employee Rights Proves Costly – Jury Awards Hundreds of Millions in Pregnancy Discrimination Suit

By: Kathleen Connelly, Esq. The Los Angeles Times and other news outlets have reported that following eight years of protracted litigation, a San Diego jury awarded nearly $186 million dollars to a former AutoZone manager who claimed she was demoted by AutoZone after she announced her pregnancy and was terminated…

Updated:

BIG MAC ATTACK: The NLRB’s General Counsel Uproots McDonald’s Franchisor-Franchisee Relationship

By: Sergio Simoes, Esq. In July 2014, the General Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board (“NLRB”) shook the foundations of the franchisor-franchisee relationship when he determined that McDonald’s Corporation could be prosecuted as a “joint employer” with its franchisees in forty-three cases, charging unfair labor practices at its franchised…

Updated:

Appellate Division Extends New Jersey Law Against Discrimination to Divorcing Employees

The New Jersey Law Against Discrimination (“LAD”) has long prohibited discrimination against individuals on the basis of their “marital status,” barring employers from considering an individual’s status as married or unmarried in making any employment decisions.   In the recent case of a New Jersey appeals court recently examined the scope…