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Laws Affecting Employment Agency Law Employment Law Class 9
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Agency Law A business can be responsible for the debts incurred, decisions made, and negligent acts of its agents.
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Agency Relationship There must be – A principal – An agent – Consent of the principal to have the agent act on its behalf – Control by the principal of agent’s actions – Fiduciary relationship
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Principal A principal is a person or entity who permits or directs another person (the agent) to act on his or her behalf, subject to the principal’s direction and control. – Principal must consent to the relationship – Principal has the right to control the acts of the agent
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Agent An agent is a person who has the power to act in the place of or on behalf of another.
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Fiduciary Duty Agent owes a fiduciary duty to the principal – to act in the best interest of the principal. – Competent performance – Notice of important information – Loyalty and accountability Agent who fails to act in the principal’s interests is liable for resulting damages.
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Additional Duties The agent has a duty – To obey instructions of the principal – To act with reasonable care – To provide information that the principal should or would want to know
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Agent’s Power The agent has the power to bind the principal – so long as the agent is authorized to act on the principal’s behalf.
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Principal’s Duties The principal must – Cooperate with the agent and – Compensate the agent for services rendered – Indemnify agent for expenses, liability
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Liability for Contracts A principal is bound by the contracts of the agent, if – The agent has authority (express, implied, apparent) to act on the principal’s behalf – The principal ratifies or accepts the benefit of the transaction – A court finds the principal should be estopped from denying the agent’s authority
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Liability for Contracts An agent is liable on a contract only if – The principal’s existence is disclosed, but his identity is not or – Neither the existence nor identity of the principal is disclosed The principal is always liable on the contract, if the agent has authority to make it.
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Principal’s Remedies If an agent breaches his duties, the principal can recover damages caused by the breach. – Also can recover unlawfully gained profits – Can rescind transaction or contact made by the agent
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Employment Setting An employer, as a principal, is responsible for – and liable for – the acts and omissions (negligence) of an employee. This is based on the concept that the employee is acting on the employer’s behalf. The employee is acting as the employer’s agent.
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Who is an Employee? Individuals who work for businesses may be – Employees or – Independent contractors
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Independent Contractor The independent contractor contracts to perform a specific service for a set fee. The independent contractor is hired to do a job – but the contractor determines how to get the job done.
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Employee An employee is usually hired for a specific wage or salary that is paid periodically – rather than when a job is done. – Employer pays social security, benefits, income tax, unemployment compensation and workers compensation contributions. Employer maintains control over the task and how it will be accomplished.
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Agency Relationship Either an employee or an independent contractor can act as an agent. Either can bind the principal – the employer – so long as the agent has authority to act. The agent must be authorized to act on behalf of the principal.
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Respondeat Superior The doctrine of respondeat superior holds a business liable for the tortious acts of a worker if: – The worker was an employee – The worker’s tortious act caused injury – The worker was acting within the scope of employment at the time of the injury
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Employment Law Employee rights Employee actions for: Compensatory damages Injunctive relief
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Employee Rights And Protections
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Employment at Will Generally either an employee or an employer can terminate the employment – without any reason. An exception is that an employer may not terminate employment if it would violate a contractual right, a statutory right, or public policy.
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Basic Employee Rights Minimum wage Safety protections Special protections for minors Right to organize and collectively bargain
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Fair Labor Standards Act Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) establishes certain minimum requirements for wages, hours of work, premium overtime, and payroll records. FLSA identifies two types of employees: non- exempt employees and exempt employees. Washington’s counterpart is the state Minimum Wage Act.
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Equal Pay Act The federal Equal Pay Act protects men and women who perform substantially equal work in the same establishment from sex-based wage discrimination
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Workers Compensation Washington law provides a statutory (rather than a common law) remedy for workers who are injured on the job. RCW title 51.
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Family Leave Acts Both federal and state laws provide employees the right to time off to care for newborn or sick children or sick family members.
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Discrimination Federal law, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, prohibits discrimination based on Race, color, national origin Sex Religion
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The EEOC figures for 2006 show a total of 75,768 discrimination charges against private sector employers, the first increase in charge filings since 2002. There were 27,238 charges based on race 23,247 on sex 22,555 on retaliation 15,625 on disability 13,569 on age 8,327 on national origin 2,541 on religion 4,901 on pregnancy 12,025 alleged sexual harassment (15 % by men)
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This is a poster from England to emphasize that women graduating from college this year will start at an average of 15 percent less than men.
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Discrimination Washington law prohibits discrimination based on Age Religion Sex, sexual orientation, marital status Race, color, national origin Presence of any sensory, mental or physical disability or the use of a trained dog guide or service animal by a disabled person.
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Interpretation of the Law Even though Washington’s law against discrimination pre-dates the federal law, Washington has relied on federal case law in interpreting its own law against discrimination. Washington has also relied heavily on the interpretation given its law by the State Human Rights Commission.
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What Law Applies? Considerations in using state law or federal law What remedies are available? Is administrative action a prerequisite to suit? Defenses?
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Who is an “Employer”? Under Washington law “employer” is any person who employs 8 or more employees (with some exceptions). Under federal law an employer must have 15 employees to be subject to the law. The limitation on protection (based on number of employees) is not a violation of equal protection. Griffin v. Eller, 130 Wn.2d 58 (1996)
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Prima Facie Case Employee must show by a preponderance of evidence 1. The employee is a member of a protected class 2. The employee is qualified for the job 3. Adverse action by employer (denied employment, promotion; fired, demoted) 4. Someone who is not in the class was hired to fill Plaintiff-employee’s spot
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Employer’s Burden The employer then has the right to present evidence showing that the reason for the adverse action was a legitimate non- discriminatory reason
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Ultimate Burden The burden then shifts back to the employee to prove that the reason advanced by the employer is a pretext for discriminating against the employee. Employee has the ultimate burden of proof for showing discrimination has occurred.
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Age Discrimination “In the face of rising productivity and affluence, older workers find themselves disadvantaged in their efforts to retain employment, and especially to regain employment when displaced from jobs” US Congress 1967 40+
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Washington Law RCW 49.44.090 makes it unlawful for an employer to discriminate in the terms and conditions of employment against an employee or applicant for employment because the employee is 40 years old or older.
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Discrimination Bona fide occupational qualification (BFOQ) Direct (disparate treatment) Indirect (disparate impact) Sexual harassment
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BFOQ A defense to an employee’s claim of overt discrimination is that the presence or absence of a particular characteristic is a necessary qualification for the job. The qualification must be reasonably necessary to the business operation
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Disparate Treatment Occurs when an individual believes he or she is being directly and intentionally discriminated against on the basis of race, sex, national origin, disability, age, or marital status.
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Disparate Impact Occurs when a facially neutral employment practice or policy deprives an employee of employment opportunities because the practice or policy has a disproportionate impact on a protected class of individuals to which the plaintiff belongs.
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Sexual Harassment Quid pro quo Hostile work environment
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Quid Pro Quo Harassment Any unwelcome sexual advance, request for sexual favors, or other verbal or physical conduct of a sexual nature when any one of three criteria is met: Submission to sexual conduct is made (explicitly or implicitly) a term or condition of employment. Submission to or rejection of the sexual conduct is the basis for employment decisions.
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Hostile Work Environment Employee must establish Offensive, unwelcome contact that Occurred because of sex or gender Affected the terms or conditions of employment Can be imputed to employer Casual, isolated, trivial manifestations of a discriminatory environment do not affect the employment sufficiently to violate the law.
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Hostile Workplace Sexual harassment can be in the form of Verbal behavior (unwanted sexual comments, suggestions, jokes, requests for sexual favors) Non-verbal behavior (gestures, leering, pictures, cartoons) Physical behavior (assault, molestation, touching, repeated brushing against a person's body)
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Disability Discrimination RCW 49.60, prohibits discrimination on the basis of a disability, or perceived disability. The federal Rehabilitation Act prohibits discrimination based on disability by federal agencies and agencies receiving federal funds. The federal Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) prohibits discrimination in employment and in the delivery of public services.
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American Disabilities Act Federal counterpart to RCW 49.60. Enacted July 26, 1990 The ADA prohibits discrimination and ensures equal opportunity for persons with disabilities in employment state and local government services public accommodations commercial facilities transportation.
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Washington Law RCW 49.60.180 – It is an unfair practice for any employer to discriminate in the terms and conditions of employment because a person has a sensory, mental or physical disability or uses a service animal unless based on a bona fide occupational qualification.
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Reasonable Accommodation Employers have a duty to reasonably accommodate the disabilities of applicants and employees. When does the duty arise? What is reasonable? What isn’t? What is a bona fide occupational qualification for purposes of disability discrimination?
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What is a disability? To provide a single definition of "disability" that can be applied consistently throughout the Washington Discrimination Law, the state supreme adopted the federal definition in the ADA. A plaintiff bringing suit under Washington law establishes that he has a disability if he has (1) a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of his major life activities, (2) a record of such an impairment, or (3) is regarded as having such an impairment. McClarty v. Totem Electric, 157 Wn.2d 214 (2006)
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Rehabilitation Act The federal Rehabilitation Act of 1973 prohibits discrimination against qualified individuals with disabilities who work in the federal government, or for agencies receiving federal funds, and provides monetary damages in cases of intentional employment discrimination.
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