1 Introduction and
Characteristics of Labour Disputes
- This chapter provides a comparative study of the
labour dispute resolution process in the judicial system,[3] taking into account the following characteristics
of labour disputes:
- Inequality between the parties: often in a labour dispute, one of
the parties involved is an employee, while the other party is the employer, resulting in the situation
where the former is often economically disadvantaged. Especially when wage payments are involved, such
disputes are closely related to the right to property, the right to work, and the right of individual
employees to minimum livelihood. Individual employees are usually at a disadvantage with their
insufficient ability to confront and negotiate with their employer.
- Difficulty in finding facts: labour disputes often occur in the
workplace, and the evidence is usually under the control of the employer. Claims related to occupational
injuries or harassment in the workplace often rely on backtracking the sequence of the incident. It is
often not easy to recall causal interactions.
- Maintenance of harmonious labour relations and compatibility:
labour relations are successive relationships that work best when both parties are in harmony. To
prevent the parties from further opposition, thorough considerations of the parties' interests and a
consensus to resolving disputes are indispensable.
- Complexity and legal uncertainty: labour disputes have a level of
complexity that requires experience or expertise in understanding labour relations. The rights and
obligations arising from labour relations, in terms of their constitutive elements, often depend on the
interpretation of uncertain legal concepts, such as ‘reasonable range’,[4] ‘reasonably
compensate’,[5] ‘based on business needs’,[6] ‘serious violation’, [7] and ‘without good cause’.[8]
- Based on the above-mentioned characteristics of
labour disputes, procedures for labour dispute resolution are usually designed, to appropriately handle
the disputes and achieve procedural justice, as follows:[9]
- Guaranteed access to the courts: reasonable or mitigated costs
should be ensured to safeguard employees' rights to access the courts. In addition, facts and
evidence should be collected in such a way that employees have access to the evidence held by the
employer in order to ensure substantive equality in the process. The allocation of the burden of proof
may be adjusted under certain conditions.
- Efficiency and promptness: prolonged delays in the procedures are
usually unacceptable to workers for reasons of livelihood maintenance. Furthermore, in incidents
involving a large number of people, to prevent more considerable economic loss and social chaos, an
effective, efficient, and expeditious procedure is essential and a simplified procedure is therefore
needed.
- Consensual resolution: to maintain harmonious labour relations,
there is a greater need to adopt non-litigious or non-adversarial procedures in the handling of labour
disputes. Consensual settlement is a possible solution to help minimize conflicts between the parties,
avoid confrontation in labour relations, and reduce the impact on social stability. Also, linking
mediation and litigation, or combining the negotiated adjustment between the parties with summary
judgment procedures, may enhance the efficiency of dispute resolution.
- Discretionary and specialized composition of judges:
the labour courts have greater discretion to facilitate proceedings and to investigate facts and
evidence to make appropriate decisions. Therefore, the labour courts are composed of professional judges
and lay judges to facilitate convincing resolutions. Judges must have extensive expertise in labour
relations so that they can quickly grasp and focus on the core issues of the disputes and render
appropriate decisions while balancing the interests of all parties.[10]
- Although the out-of-court dispute resolution system also plays an
important role in avoiding labour disputes from occurring or expanding, this chapter mainly focuses on
labour proceedings in the judicial system and analyses how individual labour disputes can be resolved
timely, effectively, and efficiently in different jurisdictions.
2 Overview of Labour Proceedings in the Judicial System
- Labour proceedings in courts in different jurisdictions can be
broadly classified into the following three categories:
- Specialized labour courts, such as those in many European countries
(Germany, France, Belgium, the UK);
- Specialized labour divisions or tribunals in ordinary courts, such
as those in some East Asian countries (Taiwan, Japan);
- Neither specialized labour courts nor labour tribunals, but rather
ordinary civil courts as in other civil cases, such as those in North America and China.
2.1 Specialized Labour Courts or Tribunals
- Many countries in Europe have established specialized courts or
tribunals and special procedural regulations, such as Germany, the United Kingdom, Belgium, and France.
The common feature is that the labour courts are composed of professional and lay judges.[11] The primary duties of
a lay judge in the labour court are to provide direct observations of labour domains, have professional
knowledge in labour relations, and have their own professional experience in trials. Allowing
representatives from both parties to join the panel reflects the statutes of inverse interest in the
labour world and can potentially increase parties' acceptance of the verdict, ultimately leading to
the harmony in the Rule of Law.[12]
- Germany legislated Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (a specialized Labour Court Act (ArbGG))
in 1926, which continued throughout the wars.[13] After World War II, the specialized labour
court jurisdiction system was maintained. The labour court is isolated from the civil court[14] and has a separate
system with three tiers: Arbeitsgericht (the
district labour court), Landesarbeitsgericht (the
state labour court), and Bundesarbeitsgericht (the
federal labour court).[15] Its jurisdiction vastly included labour incidents related to both individual and group
agreements. From the very beginning, Germany's labour court has required lay judges to participate
in trials throughout all instances. The district and state labour courts require one professional judge
and two lay judges in the form of a collegiate panel to trial. In the Federal Supreme Labour Court, the
collegiate panel comprises three professional judges and two lay judges, totalling five judges.
Individual labour disputes are conducted, as a rule, like civil proceedings in the district courts (Art
46 of ArbGG), but there are many special provisions that honour the special characteristics of labour
disputes. For example, the defendant is not requested to respond to the complaint in writing.[16] At the
beginning of the procedure, the presiding judge conducts an oral hearing for the purpose of reaching an
amicable agreement between the parties (Güteverhandlung, conciliation hearing). The presiding judge may also refer the parties to a judge designated
for this purpose but unauthorized to make decisions for the conciliation hearing. The judge for
conciliation may use all methods of dispute resolution, including mediation (Art 54 (6) of ArbGG).
Especially in the case of dismissals, the conciliation hearing should take place within two weeks of the
suit being filed,[17] in order to settle the dispute as quickly as possible.
- In the United Kingdom, the Employment Tribunal (ET) was initially
called the Industrial Tribunal (IT) and was founded based on the Industrial Training Act
1964.[18] The
ET is an individualized judiciary specializing in resolving disputes in labour relations between
employer and employee. Until 2007, through the legislation of the Tribunal, Courts and Enforcement Act,
it had established its status as a judiciary and as a subordinate of Her Majesty's Court &
Tribunal Service (HMCTS). Managed by the HMCTS along with other tribunals,[19] its procedures are based on the
Employment Tribunal Procedure Rules (ETPR) and other applicable rules, such as the Employment Rights Act
1996, the Equality Act 2010, and the Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992. Its most
common disputes are related to unfair dismissal, redundancy payments and employment discrimination. As
the jurisdiction of the IT expanded through the years, it grew to include most statutory individual
labour relations proceedings; hence, the IT system has evolved and now comprises complex, official
procedures. According to the Employment Rights (Dispute Resolution) Act 1998, it changed its name to the
ET. The ET panel consists of a chair with expert legal qualifications (so-called Employment Judges) and two non-legal experts in labour relations
cases. The Lord Chancellor appoints one after consultation with organizations or associations
representing employees, and the other represents employers.[20] However, when the case is unambiguous, a trial
can also be conducted solely by a legally qualified employment judge—a member of the
tribunal.[21] In contrast to Germany, the UK has a mixed court system. Appeals go from employment
tribunals to the Employment Appeal Tribunal. It is equivalent in status and as a court of record to the
High Court. Appeals from the Employment Appeal Tribunal are heard by the 'ordinary' courts,
Court of Appeal, Civil Division, in England and Wales. Final appeals are heard in the UK Supreme
Court.
- Belgium has specialized jurisdiction over labour
disputes. Tribunal de travail – arbeidsrechtbank (the Labour Tribunal) has specific jurisdiction concerning matters of individual labour
law and social security law— not for matters of collective labour law (such as strike or lockout),
which are resolved by means of negotiations and are kept from the judiciary as a whole.[22] As part of the 2014
reform, the Labour Tribunals are organized at the level of the Court of Appeal and are located in 5
different cities: Antwerp, Brussels, Ghent, Liège, and Mons.[23] However, to ensure access to
justice, all 27 judicial districts are maintained as local divisions of the scaled-up centralized courts
where hearings are held. The composition of Labour Tribunal is similar to that of Germany, consisting of
one professional judge and two lay judges—one of them is an employer representative and the others
are a union representative or a representative of the employee (or the self-employed).[24] A party who disagrees
with the judgment of the Labour Tribunal can appeal to a Labour Court of Appeal. As with the Labour Tribunal, the sections of
the Labour Court consist of a professional judge and two or four lay judges. Belgium’s
Supreme Court, the Court of Cassation, has three divisions: one for labour and social security cases,
one for civil (including business) cases, and one for criminal cases. All members of Cassation are
professional judges, but five of them must have practiced for at least five years in a Labour Tribunal
or Labour Court of Appeal. A comparative feature is that there is a labour prosecutor in each Labour
Court, who represents the public interest and intervenes specifically in social security matters or in
cases involving discrimination, harassment, or violence.[25]
- France has a unique labour justice system different from Germany and
the UK.[26] The first instance of the labour court (the Labour Council, Conseils de prud'hommes) is composed of only lay judges (labour
councillors, conseillers prud’hommes)—one
from the employers' side and the other from the employees' side (Art L1421-1 of the Labour Code)
that are elected and not nominated by social partners. The labour court is exclusively competent for
cases concerning individual labour disputes, such as employment contracts, disputes involving public
sector employment under private-law conditions, and disputes between employees during work (Arts
L1411-1-L1411-4 of the Labour Code). A mandatory conciliation is held by the labour court before two jay
judges. However, only fewer than 10% of disputes are resolved at the conciliation stage.[27] The labour court
judges disputes when conciliation has not been successful (Art L1411-1 of the Labour Code) and plays the
role of civil courts of first instance. The labour court applies several specialized procedures for
labour matters and is independent from other civil courts of first instance. Each labour court consists
of at least four lay judges to conduct a full hearing (bureau de
jugement). If the lay judges cannot reach a majority decision, the case proceeds
to another hearing to break the tie: a settlement hearing (audience de
départage) held with the same lay judges and an additional professional
judge who acts as 'the fifth member'. The referral rate to a 'tie-break' hearing appears
to have increased in recent years.[28] Appeals go from the first instance of a labour
court to special sections of appellate civil courts, which only consist of professional
judges.[29] In
cases concerning collective labour relations (conflits collectifs), the Labour Code provides three dispute resolution mechanisms, which are conciliation
(conciliation), mediation (médiation) and arbitration (arbitrage). Apart from these mechanisms, in cases concerning
collective labour relations, the conventional method of dispute resolution is to file a suit in ordinary
civil courts of first instance (tribunal judiciaire).
2.2 Specialized Tribunals in Civil Court
- In some jurisdictions, although there are no special labour courts,
special divisions or special tribunals in ordinary civil courts are established in consideration of the
characteristics of labour disputes. There are two subtypes of courts within this category: those that
have some special rules that differ from the Code of Civil Procedure, such as in Taiwan and Japan, and
those that have no special procedural rules and still apply the Code of Civil Procedure, such as those
in South Korea and China.
2.2.1 Specialized Tribunal with Special Procedural Rules
- Taiwan legislated the new Labour Incident Act (LIA) at the end of
2018 and implemented it on January 1, 2020. The LIA was enacted for the purposes of ensuring
expeditious, proper, professional, effective, and equal treatment of labour cases, the protection of the
rights and interests of employers and workers, and the promotion of harmonious labour relations to
pursue the healthy development of everyday life in society.[30] Taiwan does not have a specialized labour
court, such as in Germany, but it has a specialized labour tribunal within the civil court. Civil courts
of all instances (except for specialized courts) shall establish a specialized labour tribunal focusing
on labour matters to ensure professionalism.[31] Concerning the serving of labour tribunals,
judges with proficient knowledge and experience in labour law are preferred. Labour tribunals in
Taiwan's courts, however, are composed of professional judges, not lay judges. To make up for the
lack of lay judges in labour litigation procedure, before litigation, there is a mandatory mediation
procedure in court. The Labour Mediation Committee is composed of one labour tribunal judge and two
experts in labour relations.[32] If mediation fails, the same labour judge will
continue the specialized labour litigation procedure. This pre-trial mediation in Taiwan functions
similarly to the settlement proceedings that are part of the oral argument session of the adjudicative
process in Germany.
- Labour mediation is distinguished from labour litigation by
emphasizing reaching a mutual agreement among opposing parties. The mediation committee is authorized to
resolve the dispute at its discretion and does not necessarily have to conform to the law. The mediation
committee may devise and determine the terms of mediation to resolve the dispute with the consent of all
parties. Should the parties not reach an agreement, the committee shall consider all things and present
ex officio a suitable proposal based on the
balanced interests of both parties, without violating the parties' primary intention.[33] This kind of proposal is not binding. If the parties involved and other interested parties
participating in the mediation raise objections to the proposal within 10 days, the mediation is deemed
unresolved.
- In Japan, there is no specialized labour court. The
labour disputes concerning either individual or group agreements are under the jurisdiction of the Civil
Court, where the Code of Civil Procedure is applied. However, before the civil litigation procedures,
individual labour disputes may try to settle through the so-called labour tribunal proceedings. Japan
legislated the Labour Tribunal Act in 2004 and implemented it on April 1, 2006.[34] The labour tribunal
proceeding is a conciliation proceeding at the district court, [35] which is an informal
non-contentious procedure to achieve prompt, proper, and effective dispute resolution depending on the
circumstances of the dispute. [36]
- The labour tribunal is composed of one labour
tribunal judge and two labour tribunal members with knowledge and experience in labour
relations,[37] depending on the circumstances of the case.[38] The labour tribunal judge is designated by the
district court from among its judges[39] and is responsible for conducting labour
tribunal proceedings.[40] The labour tribunal member, appointed by the supreme court and assigned to the
designated district court, has a term of two years.[41] The task of the labour tribunal is to conduct
conciliation. Should the case fail to be settled by the parties, the labour tribunal renders a decision
by the majority opinion of the labour tribunal judges and members,[42] taking into account the rights
and interests of the parties. If the parties refuse to comply with that decision, any one of them may
propose their opposition within two weeks. Such opposition is regarded as a lawsuit and the case then
proceeds to ordinary civil litigation. Since labour tribunal proceedings are not considered a
‘trial’ under Art 23(1)(vi) of the Japanese Code of Civil Procedure, the labour tribunal
judge can continue to conduct the civil proceedings.[43]
2.2.2 Specialized Tribunal without Special Procedural Rules
- South Korea has not established specialized labour
courts. Labour disputes related to labour contracts, wage payments, dismissal payment, and occupational
injury damages fall under the jurisdiction of the District Court, Appeal Tribunal of the District Court,
High Court, and Supreme Court. For efficiency, it has founded special labour divisions in district
courts and high courts,[44] but judges designated therein face staffing or work changes every two years. Such
changes therefore may limit expertise in dealing with labour disputes. Some suggest that labour
proceedings should be treated in a more systematic manner, for example, by hiring legal experts
experienced in labour relations as labour judges or judges appointed to conduct labour proceedings
longer term.[45] Recently, there were discussions about reforming procedures to establish labour
courts.[46] In
practice, labour disputes are rarely brought to the courts without going through the Labour Relations
Commission (LRC), which is an administrative organization, as procedures in courts can be costly and
time-consuming.[47] Civil litigation requires attorney's fees (except if it is a small claims trial,
which can be conducted without an attorney), and it can take up to two years for the Supreme Court to
render the final verdict.
- In China, there is no specialized labour court. Labour disputes are
handled by People’s Court of first instance and second instance civil court. The fundamental
procedures in dealing with labour disputes are three stages of
‘mediation-arbitration-litigation’, which means the case must go through mandatory mediation
and arbitration outside of court before bringing a lawsuit.[48] Labour arbitration in China is actually not the
same as the internationally accepted arbitration based on the arbitration agreement and shows the
feature of administrative arbitration. It has been
criticized for its lengthy procedures and prescriptions, where labour dispute arbitration only has 60
days in the statute of limitations, starting from the time the labour dispute occurred. If arbitration
is not filed within the statute of limitations, then the court will not hear the case if it is filed,
which causes labourers' rights to be infringed without remedy.[49]
- In 2007, the Labour Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Law
(thereafter the New Law as the framework for
China’s labour dispute system was enacted). There are many changes in favour of employees.
Firstly, there is no prerequisite to arbitration and the parties may choose to seek arbitration directly
by bypassing the mediation stage entirely (Art 5 of the New Law). Secondly, the New Law extended the
statute of limitations period to one year and the period does not start until the party knows or should
have known that his or her labour rights were infringed upon (Art 27 of the New Law). Thirdly, to
promote the efficiency of arbitration, the New Law stipulates that an arbitration proceeding must
generally be completed within 45 days after the date the Arbitration Commission accepts the arbitration
application. In complicated cases this limitation can be prolonged, but for no more than 15 days (Art 43
of the New Law). If the Arbitration Commission exceeds this limitation, the party may file the suit in
People's Court directly. Fourthly, if the employer is in possession or control of the evidence in
connection with the labour dispute, the employer has the obligation to provide such evidence (Article 39
of the New Law). Any party who disagrees with an arbitration result has 15 days to file an action at the
People’s Court. There are two instances. The losing party at the first instance of court can
appeal to the court at higher levels.
- The China’s Court has also been criticized for overly
expensive litigation costs, unreasonable allocation of the burden of proof and the tribunal's
formation is unable to adapt to the nature of the labour dispute. To resolve practical issues, the
Supreme People's Court concluded their case practices and implemented the Supreme People's Court
‘Explanations of Applicable Laws for Labour Dispute Cases’[50] on January 1, 2021. China's
first court specializing in labour disputes was then established on July 16, 2021, in Suzhou City,
Jiangsu Province, as a division of the Intermediate People's Court.[51] However, not all courts have
labour tribunals and there are no special
rules for litigation procedure.
2.3 No
Specialized Labour Courts or Tribunals
- Some countries have not established specialized courts or tribunals.
If parties did not reach a consensus during mediation proceedings out of court, the case would proceed
to civil procedure in ordinary courts. Such countries where this applies include the US,[52] Canada,[53] and most provinces of
China.[54]
- In the US and Canada, there are no specialized labour
courts or rules for labour litigation proceedings. Under the federal system in the US,[55] the courts apply the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the Federal Rules of Evidence for labour proceedings. In the US
courts, compared to other countries that have established specialized labour courts (or labour
tribunals), professionalism and efficiency in resolving labour proceedings are insufficient;[56] this is because the
US does not have specialized labour courts or labour tribunals, and a federal court judge has to conduct
both civil and criminal cases, while the state court judge has no specialization and needs to run
through the entire civil case. Most disputes rely on administrative mechanisms for
resolution.[57] Before filing a suit in the courts, it is mandatory to file a complaint with the Equal
Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which is an administrative agency.[58] Many statutes require the
complaining party to exhaust administrative procedures before seeking redress from the court system.
This requirement induces the government agency charged with enforcing the particular regulation to
investigate the charges and seek conciliation before bringing a lawsuit.[59] Considering the expense in time
and finance of litigation, the US's solution to disputes leans heavily on mediation or arbitration
out of court.[60]
- Similar to the US, Canada has not established a specialized labour
dispute procedure in court. However, the use of private arbitration in individual labour disputes in
Canada is much less prevalent than in the US.[61] The provinces of Ontario and Quebec have
specialized labour tribunals. In 2016, the Commission des relations du
travail (CRT) was merged into a new Administrative Law
Tribunal, called the Commission des normes, de l’équité, de la santé ET de la
sécurité du travail (CNESST).[62] It is not a court or a tribunal in court, but an administrative law tribunal. Seventy
per cent of complaints are settled and do not go to court.[63] Although labour claims can be brought to civil
courts, civil court procedures are expensive and lengthy due to lawyers' fees and fee-charging
mediation in Canada.[64] Since most administrative tribunals in Canada do not require employees to pay a fee for
filing a complaint, whereas employees must pay the applicable court filing fee when litigating in a
civil court, very few cases are filed directly to court. The court’s function is limited to
reviewing the correctness of mediation or arbitration by the administrative law tribunal. In general,
the court tends to respect the decisions made by the administrative law tribunal. The scope of judicial
review is limited: only in cases where the tribunal violates procedural requirements, lacks
jurisdiction, or issues an award that is ‘patently unreasonable’.[65]
- In China, most courts have not established specialized labour
tribunals. Labour relations disputes are still under the jurisdiction of the civil court, which aligns
with the tradition of ‘not distinguishing between labour disputes and civil disputes’.
Although some courts have started to establish labour dispute divisions to handle labour disputes, in
reality, judges are appointed to conduct labour dispute proceedings on a regular basis, so this does not
make a significant difference. Such procedures are also seemingly unable to adjust to the particulars of
the labour dispute at hand. Some criticize that the current conditions are harming the quality and
effectiveness of labour proceedings. Since China is currently undergoing a period of social
transformation and contradiction, and labour relations are undergoing profound adjustment, labour
disputes are rapidly increasing. Recently, it has been suggested that a specialized labour court should
be established. Treating labour disputes as ordinary civil cases, however, will negate the social and
affiliated nature of labour disputes, the efficiency, and the social and professional characteristics of
labour dispute handling—which is not conducive to the speedy and fair resolution of labour
disputes.[66]
3 Basic
Principles for Labour Proceedings
- The following analyses the important basic principles of labour
proceeding in courts, including: 1) Facilitation of Consensual Resolution; 2) Expedited Proceedings; 3)
Legal Aid and Minimization of Court Costs; and 4) Ex Officio Powers of the Court and Gathering of Fact
and Evidence.
3.1 Facilitation of Consensual Resolution
- To maintain harmonious labour relations, even in court proceedings,
the importance of consensual dispute resolution is emphasized, but in slightly different ways in
different jurisdictions.
3.1.1 Conciliation as a Part of the Oral Argument Session of Adjudicative Procedure
- In Germany, as soon as an action is filed, the Labour Court should
schedule the oral arguments and begin the conciliation procedure (Art 54 (1) of the German Labour Court
Act). Conciliation procedures are obligatory and are a specialized procedure in the first instance of
labour proceedings that forms part of the oral argument session. Moreover, the parties cannot abandon
the conciliation procedure, and the court should not proceed with the conciliation procedure even if the
parties are unlikely to reach a consensus.[67] The conciliation procedure is conducted by the
presiding judge alone, without any lay judge (ehrenamtlicher Richter). The presiding judge should liberally discuss with the parties all the circumstances of the
case, elucidate the conditions of legality and the facts where the parties are unfamiliar with the
procedures, and indicate legal opinions. The presiding judge may also indicate the possible result of
the litigation and means of attack or defence, the time spent and cost of the litigation, and the risk
of taking evidence to the parties. Where the case is obscure, and although there is no evidence-taking
at the conciliation procedure, the presiding judge can still evaluate the documentation provided by the
parties, such as receipts, payroll documents, certificates of diagnosis, etc, to judge the causal
process of the facts and propose suggestions on reconciliation. To allow the parties to discuss the case
freely, the conciliation procedures comprise the following: 1) limitations of an open court: to achieve
reconciliation, the presiding judge may limit the publicity of the court (Art 52 of the German Labour
Court Act); 2) limitations on the effects of admission: admission in the negotiation procedure should
only be bound if the admission is specifically stated by the party on the record (Art 54(2) of the
German Labour Court Act); and 3) consultation of the present witness: generally, the presiding judge,
not a panel, would conduct the negotiation procedure, so evidence-taking should not be allowed in the
negotiation procedures. However, if the witness is present, the presiding judge may seek information
from or question the witness.
3.1.2 Non-Compulsory Mediation Proceeding
- Since 2012 in Germany, in addition to the conciliation procedures
described above, the labour court may propose mediation or other out-of-court dispute resolution
procedures to the parties.[68] If the parties decide to conduct mediation or another out-of-court dispute resolution
procedure, the court shall order the litigation proceedings to be suspended. At the request of one of
the parties, a date for an oral hearing shall be set. Otherwise, the court shall resume the proceedings
after three months, unless the parties agree that mediation or out-of-court dispute resolution is still
being pursued (Art 54(a) of the German Labour Court Act).
- In the United Kingdom, reform of the employment tribunal has been
focusing on the essential facilities of conciliation and mediation in collective and individual labour
disputes.[69] Judicial mediation by the employment tribunal was introduced as a pilot scheme in
2006[70] and
is now available in all tribunals in England and Wales for any claim that is otherwise referable to an
ET. Mediations are conducted by trained employment judges. When the claimant files the form with the
court, the employment judge will consider if the case is suitable for mediation and provide mediation
services to the parties at a non-public preliminary hearing. The actual mediation follows a typical
four-stage format including: identification of the issues, generating and evaluating opinions, deciding
on alternatives, and developing the plan for implementation.[71] If the mediation fails, the parties may not
mention anything from the mediation in the court hearing. Anything communicated to a conciliation
officer in connection with the performance of their functions shall not be admissible in evidence in any
proceedings before an ET, except with the consent of the person who communicated it to that
officer.[72] Additionally, the ET judge presiding over the mediation shall not appear as a trial
judge without the consent of the parties.[73]
3.1.3 Compulsory Court-Annexed Mediation or Conciliation and Multi-Tier Proceedings
- Taiwan instituted a special judicial mediation, stipulating
mediation as the precondition for litigation. The judicial mediation mechanism is conducted by the
Labour Mediation Committee in the district court, in consideration of the characteristics of labour
incidents (wide variety, complexity, and difficulty in fact-finding), as well as the demand for a
harmonious and expeditious settlement different from traditional administrative mediation which is
directed by the municipal or county (city) competent authority. Mediation before litigation is
mandatory. Unless there is a reason specified by law,[74] such as unsuccessful mediation by another
legally authorized mediatory agency, or the notification to be served upon the opposing party should be
effectuated either by constructive notice or in a foreign country, all labour cases shall be subject to
labour mediation by the court before an action is initiated. For cases that do not mandate pre-trial
mediation, a party may also apply for mediation before initiating an action. The labour mediation shall
be completed within three months with a maximum of three mediation sessions.
- Unlike German law, which provides for judge-conducted conciliation,
Taiwan's labour mediation is conducted by a Labour Mediation Committee consisting of one judge and
two mediators who are equipped with expertise or experience in labour relations or employment
affairs.[75] They contribute to the proceedings by providing observations, experience, and knowledge
of the practical issues in the relevant field. This formation is designed to include both the legal
perspective and specialized knowledge in relevant fields with the aim of paving the way for the
autonomous consensual resolution of disputes between employers and employees. Parties' opinions
regarding whom to select shall also be respected. In cases where a party has objected to any of the
appointed mediators, or where parties have agreed to appoint other appropriate persons, the judge may
re-appoint such agreed-upon persons. This allows parties to place more faith in mediation proceedings,
thereby increasing the likelihood of reaching an agreement. In terms of deliberating mediation terms or
proposing resolutions, the mediators and the judge are on an equal footing, as the final outcome is
decided by a majority vote.[76] Nevertheless, the judge shall have exclusive authority over matters involving
admissibility of the process and jurisdictions for the purpose of ensuring procedural efficiency (Art 22
(1)(2) of Labour Incident Act).
- The labour mediation shall be completed within three months with a
maximum of three mediation sessions.[77] The parties shall promptly present the facts
and evidence before the end of the second session unless there are reasons not imputable to the parties.
The Labour Mediation Committee shall hear the parties' arguments, coordinate pertinent issues and
evidence, elucidate potential outcomes at appropriate times, and facilitate settlement. The committee
may also, upon motion or on its own initiative, investigate facts and necessary evidence. The parties
and known interested parties shall have the opportunity to speak about the results of the
investigation.
- This form of labour proceeding in court is multi-tiered and consists
of four tiers:
- the settlement agreement reached by the parties’
consensus;
- the committee’s proposal of mediation terms with the
agreement of the parties;
- the appropriate resolution proposed at the committee’s own
initiative and to which the parties do not object; and
- the judgment made by the labour court.
- These four tiers occur in different phases of dispute resolution. To
put these four tiers on a spectrum, the parties have the most autonomy in tier (a), and the least in
tier (d); a third-party, independent body intervenes the most in tier (d), and the least in tier (a). It
is noteworthy that the four tiers are not dissociated. Instead, they are interconnected and reflect the
'multi-tiered' concept.[78] On the one hand, the mediation committee's
discretion is strengthened. In cases where parties cannot reach an agreement, the committee shall
propose appropriate resolutions on its own initiative. However, such resolutions only take effect when
no objection is raised. Therefore, as consent is one of its significant features, this mechanism also
falls under ADR. On the other hand, in light of the fact that this is still an in-court procedure,
transition to subsequent litigation is facilitated.
- The labour judge who conducted the mediation will also be the
litigation judge.[79] Therefore, mediation also operates as a process where the issues under dispute are
formulated and outlined. Since the judge is a member of the mediation committee, by the time the
litigation is resumed, relevant issues and evidence would have already been outlined during the
mediation sessions. Therefore, the judge, with a fully developed sense of the case, can resolve the
conflict promptly and sufficiently. However, to obviate prejudiced prejudgment during the mediation
sessions and to ensure the parties can communicate in good faith, the advice given by the labour
mediation committee members or the judge in the mediation proceedings, and the statements or concessions
made by the parties that are unfavourable to themselves, shall not be adopted as grounds for judgment
when said case moves to litigation.[80] This method has proven to be effective. Since
its implementation in 2020, the success rate of mediation has significantly increased from 20% to more
than 60%.[81] In short, compared to ordinary civil mediation and litigation, Taiwan’s labour
dispute mediation has stronger cohesion and can smoothly converge with litigation procedures.
- In Belgium, each dispute claim may be conciliated on
the request of one party or both parties by a judge competent at the first instance before the hearing
(Art 731 of the Judicial Code). However, conciliation is compulsory before litigation, insofar as the
litigation concerns work contracts (Art 734 (1) of the Judicial Code).[82] This is largely a formality
which does not help to bring the parties to an agreement,[83] and is therefore criticized as
‘unproductive’ and ‘an expensive nuisance’.[84]
3.1.4 Combination of Labour Conciliation Proceedings and Labour Tribunal Proceedings
- In the case of Japan, labour tribunal proceedings are a combination
of two types of judicial ADR procedures: ‘labour conciliation proceedings’ and ‘labour
tribunal proceedings’. Labour tribunal proceedings function based on ‘being able to
conciliate during labour tribunal proceedings’. Even if consent cannot be reached in conciliation
during the proceedings, the labour tribunal should still make a written labour tribunal decision in
which the main text of the decision and a summary of the reasons therefore are noted.[85] If no lawful
challenge is filed or the challenge is illegal, the labour tribunal decision has the same effect as a
judicial settlement and as a final and binding judgment.[86]
- Labour tribunal proceedings at the district court level have the
characteristics of non-contentious proceedings. The labour tribunal is composed of one labour tribunal
judge and two labour tribunal members.[87] The former is designated by the district court
from among its judges;[88] the latter is designated in every single labour tribunal case by the court after taking
into account the knowledge and experience of the labour tribunal members and any other relevant
circumstances, and with due consideration to ensure the appropriate composition of labour tribunal
members in the labour tribunal.[89] The labour tribunal member must have expertise
in labour relations and perform their duties from a neutral and fair standpoint.[90] Labour tribunal
proceedings are led by the labour tribunal judge.[91] Other than the power to instruct the
proceedings, schedule a specific date for labour tribunal proceedings, and summon the persons concerned
with the case to appear, the duties of the labour tribunal judge and labour tribunal members do not
differ.[92]
- Unlike Taiwan, labour tribunal proceedings in Japan are not a
mandatory pretrial procedure. The same civil labour dispute pending in labour tribunal proceedings would
not hinder actions being filed for ordinary litigation. However, an ordinary civil court in charge of
the case may suspend court proceedings in the action until the labour tribunal case has been
closed.[93] If
the parties reach agreement and the labour tribunal proceedings should close, such has the same effect
as a judicial settlement. On the other hand, if agreement between the parties cannot be reached within
the third session of the labour tribunal proceedings, the labour tribunal should declare the proceedings
terminated and render a labour tribunal decision based on the development of the proceedings and the
interest of the parties in written form.[94] The parties may file a challenge with a court
against the labour tribunal decision within an unextendible period of two weeks.[95] If no lawful
challenge is filed, the labour tribunal decision has the same effect as judicial settlement.[96] Oppositely, if a
lawful challenge is filed, the labour tribunal decision ceases to be valid and the petition to labour
tribunal proceedings is treated as an action to the district civil court.[97] The case would automatically
transfer to the ordinary civil court. Since the implementation of the labour tribunal system, cases
related to provisional injunction have been significantly fewer in quantity, and cases related to
motions for provisional injunction have decreased by at least 50%. Furthermore, cases in ordinary
litigations have become fewer,[98] demonstrating the efficiency of this
mechanism.
3.2 Expedited Proceedings
- Expeditious resolution is crucial for labour matters, as they not
only affect the worker's individual right of personality, property, work, and minimum livelihood,
but also the livelihood of the worker's family. To resolve labour matters swiftly and efficiently as
to make immediate judicial remedy readily available for workers, courts of all levels are expected to
enhance their efficiency and litigants should also cooperate in good faith with court proceedings.
Different approaches have been adopted in different countries to realize this common idea as
follows.
- The German Labour Court Act stipulates that the labour procedures in
all instances of the court shall be handled in an expeditious manner (Art 9(1) of German Labour Court
Act). The oral argument session should end after one session where possible (Art 57 (1) of German Labour
Court Act). The court is required to take measures to speed up the dismissal procedures (Art 61a of
German Labour Court Act). The conciliation procedures should be conducted within two weeks after the
action is filed. If the conciliation hearing is unsuccessful, or the procedures cannot be concluded in
an oral hearing immediately following, and the defendant has not yet responded or has not responded
sufficiently to the claim, the presiding judge shall order the defendant to respond to the claim in
detail in writing within a reasonable period of time (which must be at least two weeks) and to provide
evidence. The presiding judge may also set a reasonable time limit for the plaintiff, which must be at
least two weeks, to respond in writing to the statement of defence. Parties who fail to present their
means of attack or defence within the appropriate time as set by the court may only present it when the
court determines that the presentation would not prolong the proceedings, or if the party sufficiently
excuses the delay.
- Similar legislative purposes can also be found in Taiwan law. In
labour cases, the court shall generally conclude the oral argument within one session and the first
instance trial should be concluded within six months unless the case is complex or more time is needed
for trial.[99] When preparing the oral argument session, the court should clarify relevant issues as
soon as possible, and may take the following measures: 1) order the parties to give supplementary
statements on the contents of preparatory pleadings to submit documentary evidence and relevant physical
evidence, and, if necessary, inform the parties of deadlines and the effects of an abridgment of rights;
2) request that organizations or public legal persons to provide relevant documents or other official
information; 3) order the parties to appear in person; 4) notify either of the parties’ witnesses,
including experts, to be present on the date of the oral argument session; and 5) invite labour
mediation committee members to participate in the consultation.
- In Japan, there are no special rules for labour
litigation. However, in Japan's labour tribunal proceedings, to avoid the precarious status of the
worker, and further impact on the worker's income and family life,[100] the labour tribunal must hear
the statements of the parties and arrange issues and evidence promptly (Art 15 of the Japanese Labour
Tribunal Act).[101] Unless other rules apply, the labour tribunal proceedings should conclude within three
sessions. Over 70% of the cases could be closed within three months. This is obviously faster than the
time taken in civil litigation for labour cases, which was around 15 months.[102]
- In the UK, the Tribunal may at any stage of the proceedings make a
case management order on its own initiative or upon application.[103] To facilitate the
proceedings, it may also impose limits on the time that a party may take to present evidence, question
witnesses, or make submissions; it may also prevent the party from proceeding beyond any time so
allotted.[104]
- In France, some provisions in the Labour
Code stipulate a maximum limit on the duration of a procedure. For instance, if an application for
qualification of termination of the employment contract is filed with the Labour Court by the employee
based on the facts he alleges against his employer, the case shall be decided on the merits within one
month from the date of its referral (Art L1451-1 of the Labour Code). In addition, it is provided that,
in a number of situations, la procédure
accélérée au fond (‘the accelerated
procedure on the merits’) shall apply (Art R1455-12 of the Labour Code).
3.3 Minimization of Court Costs
- As the financial disadvantages of the worker often result in an
inability to afford court costs, it is necessary to reduce the costs of litigation and provide workers
with legal assistance for their accessibility to courts so they may defend their rights. Although the
rules on labour litigation costs vary significantly by country due to different underlying principles of
litigation costs, the common philosophy is to reduce the burden on employees. The first way is that the
plaintiff or claimant does not have to prepay court fees, such as in Germany, the UK, and France; the
second way is to reduce the amount of court fees, such as in Taiwan.
3.3.1 No
Prepayment of Court Fees
- In Germany, costs of civil procedure are based on the principle that
the loser pays.[105] There are two types of costs: court fees and out-of-court expenses, including attorney
fees, travel, fees for court-appointed expert witness, and all other costs. The amount of the court fees
to be paid is provided in Gerichtskostengesetz (the
German Court Fees Act) and the amount of attorney fees is stipulated in Rechtsanwaltsvergütungsgesetz (the Remuneration of
Attorneys Act). In civil courts, the court fees are due when the statement of claim, application,
objection or appeal is filed or when the corresponding declaration is made on the record (Art 6(1) of
the German Court Fees Act). [106] However, this rule is not applied in a labour
proceeding—that is, the plaintiff does not have to prepay for the cost of labour proceedings (Art
11 of the German Court Fees Act). Moreover, there is no cost to be paid in a ruling proceeding.
- In the UK, the Employment Tribunals and the
Employment Appeal Tribunal Fees Order (the Fees Order) had been in force since 2013. Prior to the Fees
Order, claimants were not required to pay fees to bring tribunal claims or appeals. However, under the
Fees Order, the claimant had to pay the issue fee for filing the claim and the hearing fee for the first
substantive hearing, unless there were circumstances where the cost could be mitigated. If the claim was
successful, the court could issue an order for the employer to bear the cost of the proceedings.
Nevertheless, this Fees Order was declared unlawful by the Supreme Court in 2017, R (Unison) v Lord Chancellor,[107] as it prevented access to justice and was indirectly discriminatory. Those who paid the cost of the proceedings in the past can file an application for a refund.
As a result, since 2017, individuals have not been subject to pay for employment tribunal
claims[108].
Therefore, the number of claims has risen significantly.[109]
- In general, claimants are responsible for their own costs in
Employment Tribunal claims. However, if the court finds that one party has acted unreasonably, it may
make a ‘costs order’ to require that party to bear the other party's costs. In country
courts, there is an even higher likelihood of obtaining ‘cost orders’, so claimants there
are more prone to settle their claims as a means of avoiding unexpected loss in advance. Claimants might
even accept unfavoured settlement or confidentiality clauses in the face of a big opponent—the
government or a large company. This further shows the cruel fact: ‘without legal aid, there is no
protection’.[110] The Equality Act 2010 attempts to help individual claimants by offering legal opinions
(such as in the negotiation with the other party) and providing assistance from legal representatives.
However, the Employment Tribunal allows the application of legal representation only after the entry of
an appeal, leaving claimants to look for an attorney at their own expense or to represent themselves in
the first instance. The accompanying result is that only few claimants can access face-to-face advice,
let alone the 0.5% access rate of the legal representation aid.[111] Despite the existence of the
Exceptional Case Funding, none of the ten legal representation aid applications in the past five years
got reciprocal responses. The House of Commons Women and Equalities Committee pinpoints that the core
problem lies in the ‘merit test’ before the approval of legal aid. The ‘merit
test’ evaluates the cost and benefit of a legal aid application. Only when the expected benefit
exceeds the expected expense can the claimants access legal aid.[112] Most applications fail to
pass ‘merit test’,[113] because in most discrimination cases, the
court only grants a small number of damages to the claimant. Even in cases with nearly every prospect of
success, the ceiling of injury to feelings (GBP 44,000) tightens up the court’s hands to award
satisfying compensation to the claimant, not to mention the doomed result in a damages-based cost and
benefit evaluation.
- In France, the personnel and operating expenses of the Labour
Council are borne by the State (Art L1423-15 of the Labour Code). Parties are therefore free to resort
to the Labour Council to resolve labour disputes.
3.3.2 Mitigated Court Fees
- In Taiwan, the plaintiff has to prepay court fees, but court fees
can be mitigated in some situations. Taiwan's Labour Incident Act (LIA) stipulates provisions that
adjust court fees in certain situations. The cost of litigation is related to the value of the subject
matter of the lawsuit. While cases regarding the confirmation of the existence of employment are related
to claims for regular payment, according to Art 77-10 of the Taiwan Code of Civil Procedure, the value
of subject matter shall be the total amount of income for the entire duration of the right to such
payment. In labour disputes, as the worker's livelihood usually relies on such a claim for regular
payment, Art 11 of Taiwan's LIA therefore provides that if such duration is more than five years,
only income for the duration of five years shall be calculated to reduce court fees. In addition, if a
worker or a labour union initiates an action for the confirmation of the existence of employment, wage
payments, pensions or severance payment, two-thirds of the court cost may be temporarily waived.
Moreover, court costs are waived for cases of collective action for injunctive relief initiated by a
union that comply with Art 40 of Taiwan's LIA (Art 13 (2) of LIA). If the value of the claim exceeds
NTD 1 million, the court fees of the excess portion shall temporarily be waived (Art 13 (1) of
LIA).
- When workers meet the criteria of a low-income family and
middle-low-income family as stipulated in the Social Relief Act, they may petition for legal aid (Art 14
(1) of LIA). When workers or their surviving dependents initiate a suit over an occupational accident,
the court shall grant legal aid by the plaintiff's motion to protect the litigation rights of the
workers and their surviving dependents. While the LIA provides no explicit conditions regarding legal
aid, the Act for the Settlement of Labour-Management Disputes and the corresponding regulations, the
Regulations on Aid for Legal Services and Living Expenses of Labour-Management Disputes stipulate the
requirements and procedures for the application for motion fees, litigation fees, representation fees
for attorneys, and necessary living expenses during mediation and litigation.
3.3.3 No
Special Regulations
- In the US, unlike the way to resolve labour disputes through
administrative agencies, the court entails legal expenses (federal courts cost around USD 350), which
may not be affordable to some workers. The procedures in federal court and higher instances of state
courts are commonly more complicated and time-consuming.[114] In most cases in the United States, the party
has to bear the cost of litigation and other costs, which results in workers being unwilling to sue
their employer due to the burden of litigation. Moreover, workers in the US have difficulties accessing
legal services. To most workers, proceedings are very hard to manage without lawyers. It is very
difficult for workers in the US to find attorneys for two main reasons: a) handling disadvantaged labour
cases does not make economic sense to lawyers—statistics show that only 5% of labour
discrimination cases obtain private legal services, and most parties to litigation are managers or
professionals (white-collar workers); and b) the employer of the disadvantaged workers are generally
non-official companies or smaller companies, which prompts lawyers to consider that enforcement would be
more challenging.[115]
- However, cases related to employment discrimination, salary, and
working hours have a ‘fee-shifting’ mechanism to compensate workers; if the worker wins the
lawsuit, there may be reasonable compensation to cover the cost of litigation. Furthermore, the attorney
can also guarantee their remuneration. However, there have been cases where the cost of the attorney has
exceeded the subject of the claim; nevertheless, this mechanism has the potential to increase the
willingness of the worker to file an action.[116] The National Labour Relation Board (NLRB) in
the United States, which is an independent federal agency, is a more financially accessible forum for
labour disputes resolution than ordinary courts. Filing fees are not required and translation services
are offered.
- In Canada, civil suits are also expensive and lengthy due to
lawyers' fees and fee-charging mediation, which is borne by the parties. However, the employee is
represented by the union and does not have to incur costs for legal representation. The union and the
employer pay the arbitrator's fees and disbursements as determined by the collective bargaining
agreement.[117]
3.4 Ex
Officio Powers of the Court and the Burden of Proof
- As labour matters fall under the category of civil disputes,
procedural guarantees provided by the Code of Civil Procedure should be applied to labour cases. While
some jurisdictions still adopt an adversary system and do not have special rules regarding court
procedures in labour matters (such as Germany, the US, and Canada), there are some jurisdictions that
have expanded the court's authorities to investigate facts and evidence, taking into account the
weakness of employees (such as the UK and Taiwan). However, the scope of authorities differs. The
following describes cases where special laws are in place.
3.4.1 Adopting the Doctrine of Facts and Evidence Provided by the Parties
- Labour court proceedings in Germany are mostly the same as civil
proceedings where the principle of adversary applies. In accordance with Art 46(2) of the German Labour
Court Act, unless otherwise provided for in this Act, the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure
regarding district court proceedings shall apply to labour proceedings. Therefore, the doctrine of
parties’ disposition and the doctrine of facts and evidence provided by the parties are also
applicable to labour court proceedings. That is, the court would judge based on the facts that the
parties have presented. If there are issues in determining the facts, the court cannot clarify them on
its own, so the party who has the burden of proof under substantive law must bring the evidence. In
principle, a party must assert the facts and bring forward the evidence, that, under substantive law,
constitutes the party’s claim.[118] If no evidence is presented, or if the
evidence presented is insufficient for the judge to establish the facts, the party with the burden of
proof will lose the case. For example, in the case of dismissal on the grounds of illness, the employer
must assert and prove that the employee's health condition is not expected to be conducive to work,
or the employer must demonstrate that the dismissal is for good cause and state that the employment is
no longer needed due to an urgent business need.
- In overtime litigation, the Federal Labour Court ruled that
the employee must still show and demonstrate that the employer has
ordered or approved the overtime worked. Where a delivery driver did not demonstrate that the hours
worked were required considering his workload and to what extent the employer was aware of these
circumstances, he therefore failed to fulfil
this burden of proof. [119]
- In discrimination cases, Art 22 of Allgemeines Gleichbehandlungsgesetz (the General Equal Treatment
Act) provides that
[w]here, in case of conflict, one of the parties is able to establish facts from
which it may be presumed that there has been discrimination on one of the grounds referred to in Section 1,
it shall be for the other party to prove that there has been no breach of the provisions prohibiting
discrimination.
- This Article transposes the requirements of EU Directive
2000/43/EC[120] so that the burden of proof in the proceedings before the relevant litigation or
authority will be divided into two stages. First, under the general principle of burden of proof, the
claimant will prove the existence of unlawful adverse treatment by the other party. At this stage, the
burden of proof is relieved, and the claimant is only required to convince the court that there is a
higher probability of a fact of unlawful discrimination (specifically, a causal link between the adverse
treatment and the manifestation of discrimination) than there is of no discrimination. After the
claimant has met this lower burden of proof, the other party must prove that there was no unlawful
discrimination or that a deterrent to unlawful conduct existed.[121]
- However, unlike courts in the US, German courts still have the
obligation to clarify to the parties important but insufficient statements of fact for adjudication, and
to do so in a clear manner, is not misleading, and gives the parties an opportunity to supplement the
statements as appropriate. If it becomes apparent that the parties have misunderstood the court's
clarification, the court should clarify further and allow the parties to express their views.
- In addition, the court has the authority to maintain the promptness
and fairness of proceedings to a certain extent. The presiding judge shall prepare the hearing in such a
way that it can be completed in one sitting, if possible. For this purpose, the presiding judge may take
the following measures, if necessary: 1) order the parties to supplement or explain their preparatory
pleadings and to submit documents and other items suitable for filing with the court; 2) set a deadline
for clarification of certain issues; 3) request relevant documents or official information from
authorities or public officials; 4) order the parties to appear in person at court; and 5) summon a
party’s witnesses and experts to the oral hearing.[122] If the parties' methods of attack and
defence are not presented within the time limit set by the judge, they may be presented only when the
judge deems that it will not cause delay to the proceedings or if the party has justifiable reasons for
the delay.[123] The judge shall instruct the parties as to the legal effect of the late filing.
3.4.2 More Flexibility of Procedures and Broader Authorities of Courts
- In the United Kingdom, the proceedings of the ET are more flexible
according to the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013 (referred
to as the ‘Rules’). The Tribunal has broad powers to regulate procedures and has adopted an
increasingly active role in the management of cases.[124] Tribunals may conduct hearings based on the
case in pursuing justifications. They may inquire of parties or witnesses to collect evidence on their
own authority, insofar as it is appropriate in order to clarify the issues or elicit evidence. The ET is
also not restricted by any rules related to the admissibility of evidence in court. The ET shall conduct
the hearing in the manner it considers fair, having regard to the principles contained in the overriding
objective to avoid undue formality. Since it must still comply with the fundamental principles of
procedural safeguard, the ET generally should consider any written statements of the party and any
witness statement as the primary evidence should be able to be examined by the public who attended
hearings (Rule 44).
- However, the ET may conduct a non-public hearing regarding evidence
if the evidence presented may violate the law or confidentiality, or would cause great damage to the
company.[125] The ET may sit in private for the purpose of hearing evidence from any person which, in
the opinion of the tribunal, is likely to consist of a) information which they could not disclose
without contravening a prohibition imposed by or by virtue of any enactment; b) information which has
been communicated to them in confidence or which they have otherwise obtained in consequence of the
confidence reposed in them by another person; or c) information, the disclosure of which would, for
reasons other than its effect on negotiations, cause substantial injury to any undertaking of theirs or
in which they work. Moreover, any hearing may be conducted by use of electronic communications if the
employment judge or tribunal considers it just and equitable to do so. It must be guaranteed that the
attendants and the public can hear what the court can hear and are able to see any witnesses (Rule
46).
- The ET may investigate evidence on its own authority to avoid
unnecessary procedure. It can interrogate parties or witnesses on its own to clarify issues or collect
evidence.[126] The ET may also issue a case management order by petition or on its own authority at
any stage of the proceedings, including disclosure of the relevant documentation, request for specific
witnesses to attend the hearings, issue deposit orders, etc. At the preliminary hearings, if the
tribunal considers that the plaintiff has a limited reasonable possibility for the claim to be
successful, the ET may on its own authority decide to issue a deposit order requiring the plaintiff to
pay the cost of the proceedings within a specific period of time (usually within 28 days) as a condition
to continue the proceedings. If the plaintiff does not pay the cost of the proceedings within the
specific period, the claim will be dismissed.[127]
- There is a specific rule of burden of proof regarding
anti-discrimination cases:
The burden is on [c]laimant to establish facts from which it might be presumed there
has been discrimination but once that is done, the burden shifts to the [d]efendant to show, on the balance
of probabilities, that there was no discrimination.[128]
The burden of proof is in this sense on the defendant: if the defendant fails to
prove the absence of unlawful discrimination, the court must allow the claim.
- In Japan, labour tribunal proceedings are pre-litigation procedures
in court and are considered non-contentious procedures. They apply the principles of ex officio into
evidence instead of adversary.[129] The labour tribunal may investigate facts
and evidence on its own authority, but not by petition only.[130] It should hear the statements of the parties
and a third person, examine witnesses, investigate documentary evidence, and close the proceedings by
the ruling.[131] As the labour tribunal proceedings involve individual labour relations, which are civil
disputes, the parties still have the right to request the court to investigate evidence.[132] The investigation
of evidence should fall under the Code of Civil Procedure.[133] The Japanese Labour Tribunal Act does not
have any special provisions on the allocation of the burden of proof. As previously mentioned, labour
tribunal proceedings take the ex officio route, and
the Labour Tribunal seeks to find a flexible and suitable resolution to disputes within three sessions.
Therefore, when providing evidence of the circumstances of a de facto relationship of subordination with
an employer that suggests it appropriate for such proceedings to be applied to reach a conclusion, the
requirement should be to provide prima facie evidence, and that is sufficient.[134]
3.4.3 Strengthening the Authority of the Labour Court
- In Taiwan, labour courts do not have the same broad authority as
English employment tribunals, and the Code of Civil Procedure is still applicable in principle. However,
compared to German law, special provisions have been added to protect workers. Labour judges (or labour
courts) have to take more initiative than their colleagues in ordinary civil procedure. For
instance:
- As a modification of the adversarial system, to uphold substantive
fairness, the court shall elucidate necessary facts to enable the parties to supplement unclear
statements of facts.[135] The court may, if necessary, initiate an investigation of evidence while safeguarding
the parties' right to be heard. If the worker and the employer adopt standard contract terms as the
contract of evidence and said contract is obviously unfair, the worker is not bound by such
contract.[136]
- For the purpose of effective and integrative treatment for multiple
related labour cases, the labour judge may conduct a joint mediation either by motion or on their own
initiative.[137] If the parties are unable to reach an agreement in the mediation, the labour mediation
committee shall present an appropriate proposal on its own initiative.[138]
- When an action for payment filed by the worker is ruled in favour
of the worker, the labour judge shall declare a provisional execution on its own initiative to implement
the right of the worker effectively. The labour judge shall declare that the employer may provide
security or lodge the subject of the claim to avoid provisional execution. This is to prevent the
employer's risk of undue damages if the case turns in favour of the employer in the appellate court,
therefore balancing the interests of both parties.[139]
- Concerning the burden of proof, in principle, a party shall bear the
burden of proof for the fact which is of their benefit (Art 277 of Taiwan's Code of Civil
Procedure). In labour cases, however, it is difficult for the employee to prove or assert their rights,
as key documents in the litigation usually lie in the hands of the employer. Therefore, in cases filed
by the worker, the employer is obligated to provide relevant documents[140] (for example, attendance
records and payroll roster, etc[141]). If the holder of the documents demanded, the
objects to be inspected, or the information required for examination defies the court's order to
present such evidence without justifiable reason, the court may impose a fine and may rule compulsory
measures in necessary situations (Art 36 of LIA). As the employer is obligated under the Labour
Standards Act to preserve records of attendance and payment and is in a presiding position to rectify
such documents, the employer is usually more capable of proving the remunerative and regularity of the
payment, as well as the working hours of the worker. In wage disputes between workers and employers,
particularly on the pension calculation, if it
can be proven that the worker received payments from the employer based on a working relationship, the
remuneration is presumed to have been paid for the work performed and not a bonus.[142] In disputes concerning overtime pay, there is
also a presumption that the work hours
recorded on the worker's timesheet indicate that the worker performed their duties with the
employer's permission during the recorded hours.[143]
- In anti-discrimination cases, Art 31 of the Act of Gender Equality
in Employment (hereinafter the AGEE) states:
After employees or applicants make prima facie statements of the discriminatory
treatment, the employers shall shoulder the burden to prove the non-sexual or non-sexual-orientation factor
of the discriminatory treatment, or the specific sexual factor necessary for the employees or the applicants
to perform the job.
- This provision is established in consideration of the
disadvantageous position of workers in the traditional allocation of burdens of proof and specifies the
evidentiary responsibility of employers with regard to differential treatment.[144] In practice, the court
recognizes that the advantageous position of employers in relation to workers often makes it difficult
for employees to provide evidence when determining whether an employer has directly or indirectly
treated them unfavourably in matters such as retirement, layoff, resignation, and dismissal based on
gender factors. Therefore, the law stipulates that employees only need to fulfil the duty of prima facie
demonstration, and the burden of proof is shifted to the employer.[145] Therefore, in the
investigation and determination initiated by the Gender Equality Committee (under Executive Yuan) on
whether an employer has subjected job seekers or employees to differential treatment based on their
gender or sexual orientation, employees are only required to explain the facts of such differential
treatment and the burden of proof lies with the employer to demonstrate that the differential treatment
is ‘not based on gender or sexual orientation factors’.[146]
- In civil torts cases, the AGEE also includes provisions on the
reverse burden of proof compared to the traditional allocation of evidentiary responsibility in civil
tort liability. Art 26 of the AGEE states: ‘When employees or applicants are damaged by the
employment practices referred to in Articles 7 to 11 or Art 21 of the Act, the employers shall be liable
for any [damages] arising therefrom.’ In other words, in civil torts cases involving gender
discrimination, if the employer's treatment has been determined to involve gender discrimination,
the employer's negligence is presumed. Case 2019 (Tai Shang) 1062 (Supreme Court, Taiwan) holds as
follows:
Art 26 of the AGEE states the employer shall be liable for any damages arising from
situations in Art 7 without specifying a transfer of burden of proof as in Art 184 Sec 2 of the [Taiwan]
Civil Code. However, seeing that the main purpose of AGEE is to ‘protect gender equality in the
workplace, [to] implement thoroughly the constitutional mandate of eliminating gender discrimination, and
[to] promote the spirit of substantial gender equality’ (see Art 1 AGEE), Art 26 can be understood as
in nature a statutory protection enacted for the protection of others. During its legislation process, the
legislators deleted ‘intentional or negligence’ from the preliminary draft of Art 26 and
referred to German Civil Code Sec 661a, where the general allocation of burden of proof is transferred to
the employers when they violate the principle of gender equality and causes damage to the labourers.
Also, in Art 31 AGEE, the transferral of burden of proof to the employer is conspicuously seen. It
shall in this sense be concluded that employers should suffer from a presumption of negligence: the burden
of proof is transferred to the employers, and they can only be exonerated from such liability when they
prove themselves without fault.
A similar holding also appears in Case 2021 (Tai Shang) 576 (Supreme Court,
Taiwan):
Determinations regarding retirements, layoffs and dismissals shall not be based on gender or
sexual orientation discrimination. Once the labourer preliminarily alleges discrimination, the employer has
to prove that such discrimination is based on non-gender, non-sexual orientation factors, or specific gender
factors relevant to the occupation (see Art 11 Sec 1, Art 31 AGEE). Discrimination based on pregnancy
constitutes ‘gender discrimination’ under Art 11 Sec 1 AGEE, and in this regard, retirements,
layoffs and dismissals based on pregnancy signify the violation of the said article. The employers would
therefore have to prove that their determinations are non-discriminatory, irrelevant to the pregnancy of the
labourer, after the labourer has preliminarily alleged a discrimination. ‘Preliminary
allegation’ in this context only requires the factual allegation to be ‘generally and
legally’ convincing to the court, which is different from ‘proof’, where litigants have to
provide enough factual evidence for the court to affirm the truthfulness of their allegations. Art 31 AGEE
only requires the pregnant labourer to make preliminary factual allegations of discrimination; the burden of
proof instead goes to the employer.
- There is disagreement regarding the applicability of the reverse
burden of proof in cases of employment discrimination that are not covered by the AGEE, as there are no
similar provisions in other applicable laws. Some argue that the AGEE, as part of the legal framework
for addressing employment discrimination, conflicts with the principle of equal protection under the law
and equal opportunities for all citizens in obtaining employment if the benefits of reverse burden of
proof are limited to cases of gender discrimination only. Therefore, in other employment discrimination
cases where there is unequal evidentiary capacity between employers and employees, it is suggested to
analogously apply the reverse burden of proof provisions of the AGEE or apply the provision in Para 2,
Art 277, of the CCP, which allows for the reverse burden of proof.[147] With the enacted Labour
Incident Act, it is also possible for the court to order the opposing party to present necessary
evidence under Art 33 of the Labour Incident Act or request the court to conduct an investigative duty,
to balance the burden of proof between employers and employees.
4 Jurisdiction
- Throughout the world, actor sequitur forum
rei serves as a general legislative guideline for the jurisdiction of civil
cases. However, in cases of labour matters, it is common that the worker is financially disadvantaged,
and the dispute often takes place where labour services are provided. To protect the right of workers to
litigation and to have access to the courts, there are special provisions regarding international
jurisdiction and venue (territorial jurisdiction) in labour dispute matters.
4.1 International Jurisdiction
- In the EU, according to Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 (the Brussels
Ibis Regulation), the employer can sue the employee
only in the Member State where the employee is domiciled (Art 22). But if the employee files a suit
against the employer, the employee has the choice to sue the employer (Art 21): at the place of domicile
of the employer; at the place where or from where the employee habitually carries out their work; or
where the place of habitual work is not situated in any one country, the place where the business which
engaged the employee is or was situated. An international jurisdiction agreement may be only valid if
when the agreement is entered into after a dispute arises, or if it allows the employee to bring
proceedings in courts other than those statutory jurisdictions (Art 23).
- Similar provisions can be found in Japanese and Taiwanese law. In
cases where the plaintiff is the employee, Taiwan has international jurisdiction if the location where
the plaintiff provides their service, or the domicile, residence, main business, or main office of the
defendant is located within the territory of Taiwan (Art 5 (1) of Taiwan's LIA). In addition, the
employee would not be bound by any jurisdictional agreement that violates the preceding provision (Art 5
(2) of Taiwan's LIA).
- In Japan, the international jurisdiction of individual labour
relations disputes is stipulated in Japan's Code of Civil Procedure Art 3-4(2). If the plaintiff is
an individual worker where the labour contract states the location to provide labour is within the
territory of Japan, the plaintiff may file an action with a Japanese court; if the labour contract did
not establish the location, jurisdiction is subject to the court in the location where the worker was
hired.[148] If the plaintiff is the employer, according to Art 3-4 (3) of the Code of Civil
Procedure, the employer should comply with actor sequitur forum rei unless parties agree to an international jurisdiction[149] or accept the
jurisdiction.[150] Moreover, international jurisdiction would be subject to a Japanese court if the
location of the worker's domicile is in Japan.[151] The international jurisdiction agreement of
individual labour relations disputes is stipulated in Art 3-7(6) of Japan's Code of Civil Procedure;
regarding an individual labour relations case arising in the future, the international jurisdiction
agreement is only valid under the following circumstances: 1) when the agreement is made and established
at the time that the labour contract ends, an action may be filed to the court of the country in which
labour was provided; and 2) the worker, based on the international jurisdiction agreement, filed an
action to the court of the agreed-upon country, or the employer filed an action at a court in Japan or
in a foreign country and the worker invoked said agreement. Moreover, in accordance with the Code of
Civil Procedure Art 3-7(6)(i) proviso, the international jurisdiction agreement in a labour tribunal
case should be considered a ‘coexist jurisdiction agreement’ if the parties agreed upon
exclusive jurisdiction; unless the worker agreed that an action be filed or the invocation is solely for
defence,[152] it should hinder the worker's right to file actions at courts other than in an
agreed-upon country.
- In the UK, pursuant to the Employment Tribunals (Constitution and
Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013 S.8(2) and (3), a claim can be presented in the Employment Tribunal
where: a) a respondent or one of the respondents resides or carries out business in England, Wales, or
Scotland; b) one or more of the acts or omissions complained of took place in England, Wales, or
Scotland; c) the claims related to a contract under which the work is or has been performed partly in
England, Wales, or Scotland; or d) the Tribunal has the jurisdiction to determine the claim by virtue of
a connection with Great Britain and the connection in question is at
least partly a connection with England, Wales, or Scotland. This Rule reflects leading cases.[153]
4.2 Venue (Territorial Jurisdiction)
- In Germany, territorial jurisdiction at the first instance labour
court is determined by the same rules as in regular civil proceedings and normally subjected to the
court of the defendant's domicile.[154] For disputes arising from and disputing the
existence of a contractual relationship, the court of the location where the obligation is to be
performed also has jurisdiction. However, in the practice of labour litigation, it is more common that
the jurisdiction is subject to the court of the location where the worker provides services.[155] In 2008, Art 48
(1a) of the Labour Court Act was added to Art 2 of the Labour Court Act to provide that the jurisdiction
of individual labour relations disputes may be subject to the court of the location where the employee
regularly provides services or most recently provided services regularly. This stipulation can be
beneficial to those who had been assigned to work at a location other than the location of the business
office. In addition, parties in a labour agreement may agree on territorial jurisdiction following
incidents.[156]
- For labour cases with plaintiff workers in Taiwan, the court where
the defendant's domicile, residence, main business, or main office is located, or where the
plaintiff provides labour services, shall have jurisdiction over the case. For labour cases with
plaintiff employers, the court where the defendant's domicile or residence is located, or where the
current/last labour service is/was provided, shall have jurisdiction over the case. As a general rule
for cases of concurrent jurisdiction, the plaintiff shall have the option to file suit in any
jurisdictional court (Art 22 of Taiwan's Code of Civil Procedure). Nevertheless, in cases filed by
the employer, the employee may petition to transfer the case to the jurisdictional court of their choice
before the beginning of oral arguments. This is to ensure the protection of the rights and interests of
the disadvantaged litigant and for the convenience of the worker responding to the suit (Art 6 (2) of
Taiwan's LIA). If a court choice agreement exists between the employer and the employee but the
agreement is clearly unfair, the employee-defendant may petition to transfer the case to the
jurisdictional court of their choice before the beginning of oral arguments (Art 7 (1) of Taiwan's
LIA). This provision may prevent abuses of agreement from employers; it safeguards the rights and
interests of financially disadvantaged litigants.
- In Japan, the district court has jurisdiction over labour disputes
of the first instance.[157] Regarding territorial jurisdiction, there are four possibilities:[158]
a) The district court has jurisdiction where the defendant is
domiciled or has a residence, business office, or any other office. Offices purely under the command and
supervision to carry out business should be excluded.[159]
b) The district court has jurisdiction where the employee currently provides
services (the current employer's business office) has jurisdiction. This jurisdiction is stipulated for
the purpose of easing the burden of travel for parties (especially for the worker) to respond to the
lawsuit. Since the employer is generally in control of where to locate its business office and provide the
work environment, it seems fair (or at least does not cause legal detriment) for the employer to respond to
the lawsuit at the district court in the location where the worker is currently providing services.
Moreover, it is highly likely that the business office possesses a considerable amount of information
related to labour relations, which could be beneficial for the court's accessibility to evidence. In
addition, ‘business office’, as explained, is not required to be independent as previously
defined, as long as it is the location where business is conducted.[160]
c) The district court has jurisdiction where the worker last provided services at
the employer's business office. If the labour relations between both parties ended before a party
instituted the labour tribunal case, jurisdiction under this section shall not apply. However, it may be
necessary to authorize jurisdiction where the worker ‘last’ provided services when considering
the parties' access to court, the relevancy in the dispute, and the probability of locating existing
evidence. However, if the business office has closed permanently, the district court where the office is
located may cause unfairness to the employer. Additionally, the jurisdiction of that particular court may
seem unlikely to be beneficial to the supplementary interest of elucidation in labour tribunal cases. As a
result, in these circumstances, that particular court should not have jurisdiction.[161]
d) Based on the principle of autonomy of the parties, parties may choose a desirable
court by agreement. In principle, jurisdiction clauses are valid and binding.
- According to Japan's Labour Tribunal Act Art 2(2), where the
respondent is not a juridical person, association, or foundation, and has no known domicile or residence
in Japan, the district court has jurisdiction in the respondent’s last place of domicile.
Moreover, Japan's Labour Tribunal Act Art 2(3) stipulates that, where the respondent is a juridical
person or nonforeign association or foundation and has no office in Japan, the labour tribunal case is
subject to the jurisdiction of the district court in the domicile of the respondent’s
representative or other principal person in charge of its business in Japan. According to Labour
Tribunal Act Art 2(4), where the respondent is a foreign association or foundation and has no business
office or other office in Japan, the labour tribunal case is subject to the jurisdiction of the district
court in the domicile of its representative in Japan or another principal person in charge of its
business.
- In countries that do not have special procedural rules for labour
disputes, there are also no special rules for jurisdiction. For example, in the United States, federal
courts only accept two types of litigation: action brought according to federal law or action in which
the parties come from different states (which is very uncommon in labour cases). If the federal court
accepts the case, all other concomitant ‘non-federal rule claims’ may also be tried. In
comparison, the state court have broad jurisdiction to take actions according to local, state, and
federal rules. For example, New York State distributes its cases to different state courts by
subject-matter and value. The Small Claims Court is in charge of claims of and under USD 5,000; the
Civil Court is in charge of claims of and under USD 25,000; and the Supreme Court is in charge of claims
over USD 25,000. Generally speaking, cases with higher values have more sophisticated and extended
procedures, and the complexity of the procedure and the time required to resolve the case
intensifies.[162]
- In China, there are no specialized rules for international
jurisdiction or venue of the labour disputes in the Code of Civil Procedure. However, the Supreme
People’s Court of the People’s Republic of China explained in 2021 that labour dispute cases
shall be under the jurisdiction of the primary people's court in the place where the employer is
located or the place where the labour contract is performed. If the place of performance of the labour
contract is not clear, the primary people's court at the location of the employer shall have
jurisdiction.[163]
5 Representation
- Most countries do not require attorney representation in the first
instance of litigation. This helps to minimize the cost and burden of the process on the parties. Such
is the case in Taiwan, Germany, and the United Kingdom. In contrast, Japan requires legal representation
but provides legal aid for labour tribunal proceedings.
5.1 No
Compulsory Attorney Representation
- In Germany, a party may proceed in labour litigations by itself
without representation by an attorney at the first instance labour court. This is quite different from
other civil litigation under the Code of Civil Procedure, which generally requires attorney
representation before Landesgericht (the
regional court) and Oberlandesgericht (higher
regional court).[164] In labour court, a party may appoint an attorney. Members of a union may appoint the
union or juridical person whose responsibility law is to provide the union and its members with legal
advice or act as its agent in litigation. If the party cannot afford the cost of the litigation without
damaging the necessary living cost of the party and their family and cannot be represented by the union
or a member of the employer or employee and the other party has appointed an attorney, the presiding
judge of the labour court should appoint an attorney for the party by petition (Art 11-1(1) of the
Labour Court Act). However, if the court has a justifiable reason to consider this unnecessary or if
performance in the litigation is demonstrated as wilful, it may not appoint an attorney. Unlike in civil
procedure in Germany, lawyer’s fees shall be borne by the client in the first instance of the
labour proceeding, since mandatory legal representation is not adopted. By contrast, in civil
proceedings, the cost can be borne by the defeated party, or the burden of cost can be agreed upon by
the parties. That is, the prevailing party shall not be entitled to compensation for loss of time or to
reimbursement of the costs incurred in obtaining the services of an attorney or counsel. On the other
hand, a losing client does not have to worry about incurring additional attorney's fees. When the
attorney accepts an appointment from the party, they should explain the burden of cost in labour
proceedings.[165] At the second instance of labour proceedings, if the cost of the proceeding has been
shared proportionally according to Art 92 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and one of the parties is
represented by an attorney and the other is represented by a group representative, the cost of the other
party is considered as the cost of the attorney. However, this is limited to the actual cost that has
been spent which may be claimed.[166]
- In Taiwan, legal representation is not required for civil litigation
proceedings in the first and second instance. According to Art 15 of the Taiwan Labour Incident
Act, labour cases shall apply to Art 68 of the Code of Civil Procedure regarding litigation
representation. Therefore, although labour cases can be litigated by the parties themselves, if they
want to be represented in the litigation, in principle, they must still be represented by lawyers. Only
with the permission of the presiding judge, non-attorneys may act as an advocate as well. However, in
respect of injunctive actions filed by the labour union pursuant to Art 40 of Taiwan Labour Incident
Act, mandatory legal representation applies, which means lawyers should be retained for advocacy for
such actions (Art 40 (2)), as such actions require a high level of expertise, not only in the assembling
of litigative documentation but also the assertion of legal relations and the presentation of evidence
to prove facts.
- In the ET of the UK, a party may appear in person or be represented
by counsel or a solicitor, a representative of a union or an employer’s association or any other
person whom they desire to represent them.[167] In Belgium’s labour courts, parties may
also be assisted or represented by a representative of a trade union.[168]
5.2 Compulsory Legal Representation
- In Japan’s labour tribunal proceedings, parties must be
represented by attorneys, or another person allowed by relevant rules to act in civil litigation (except
for agents who can perform judicial acts under laws and regulations). However, when the court finds it necessary and appropriate to protect the rights and
interests of the parties and to ensure smooth progress in labour tribunal proceedings, it may permit a
person who is not an attorney to serve as an agent (Art 4 (1) of Japan Labour Tribunal Act). This is because, on
the one hand, labour tribunal proceedings are to be concluded within three sessions expeditiously and
require the representative to carry both knowledge and experience in substantive law and procedural
law;[169] on
the other hand, labour tribunal proceedings need to meet their function as the pre-phase of civil
litigation characterized by an expeditious and convenient non-contentious proceeding. Non-lawyers are
therefore needed when the court deems it necessary—often under the consideration of both
parties’ interests and the progress of the labour tribunal proceeding. If the approved
representative is found to be unqualified after appointment or they are no longer qualified, the court
may revoke the approval (Art 4 (2) of Japan Labour Tribunal Act).[170]
6 Collective Redress Procedures
- Collective redress comprises two forms: one is representative action
for regulatory relief, and the other is class action for multi-party monetary relief.[171] In many
jurisdictions, labour unions have the right to sue on behalf of workers. However, unlike consumer
protection matters, collective redress for individual labour protection is not facilitated
much;[172] fewer jurisdictions have special provisions for collective actions, and Taiwan is one
example.
6.1 Permanent Injunctive Relief
- Actions in Taiwan for injunctive relief, as provided by Art 40 of
the LIA, shall be filed in the form of collective action through a labour union. As such actions are
based on the collective rights of the workers rather than the rights of the individual worker, the
undertaking of the action does not require authorization from individual workers. Mandatory
representation is stipulated for the purpose of the proper progression of the litigation (Art 40 (2) of
the LIA). To effectively protect workers’ rights and to prevent vexatious litigation, the
union’s right for litigation is delimited by the interests of its members; thus, if the suit
violates the interests of the members of the union, the case shall be dismissed (Art 40 (3) of the LIA).
Moreover, as such actions are mainly concerned with the common interests of the individual and of the
workers as a collective, there are limitations on the principle of party disposition; hence, the
withdrawal, abandonment, or settlement of such a lawsuit shall be subject to the approval of the court
(Art 40 (4) of the LIA).
6.2 Monetary Relief
6.2.1 Joinder of
Actions
- If there are multiple workers who want to assert their rights
together, a simple and fundamental approach is the joinder of actions or to consolidate the lawsuits.
Although parties based on similar factual and legal issues may sue jointly, each claim remains
individual and therefore each party must present their own evidence and facts.[173] In disputes involving a large
number of claimants, the joinder approach may not be efficient enough. Some jurisdictions have added the
following collective dispute resolution.
6.2.2 The Opt-In Model
- In addition to the joinder of actions system, the opt-in model has
been adopted in some jurisdictions, such as Taiwan. The labour union may file a collective action by the
appointment of individual workers.[174] To resolve common issues through a single proceeding, the appointed labour union may
file additional claims to request a declaratory
judgment confirming the existence of the common basis perquisites concerning the claim and legal
relationship between the appointing persons and the defendant before the end of oral arguments in the
first instance trial. When the appointed labour union files the additional declaratory claim, the court
may seek the consent of the appointed labour union, or the appointed labour union may file a motion to
which the court deems appropriate, and then make public announcements to notify other workers with
common interests that they may submit a pleading to join the case within a certain period of time. The
person petitioning to join the case shall be deemed to have appointed the labour union.[175] This opt-in model
is devised to maximize the effectiveness of such actions.[176] Accordingly, workers who share common
interests based on the same cause may request joint litigation or a joint trial. Such workers are not
limited to members of the suing union. Concerning the additional claim, the court should give priority
to conducting argument and adjudication; before the adjudication concerning the additional claim is
finalized, the original litigation proceedings may be stayed by the court.[177]
- In the US, the Fair Labour Standards Act (FLSA) is a remedial
statute specifically created to protect employees’ federal wage and hour rights. It adopts an
opt-in model for wage and hour collective actions (Section 216(b) of the Fair Labour Standards Act,
thereafter (FLSA)). In contrast to the opt-out model (class action) under Rule 23 of the USFRCP, an
individual who wants to participate in a collective action of FLSA must clearly state the willingness to
join the action and the circumstances between each individual must be similar. If the individuals do not
file a written consent to participate in the collective action, they will not be part of the action and
will not be bound by the judgment of the court (Section 216(b) of the FLSA).[178] However, the employer may
seek to transfer all related actions to a single judge and ask that those actions be consolidated into
one case for trial (Rule 42(a) of USFRCP, 28 USC § 1407). As a benefit, this mechanism allows
cases that have no (or little) litigation interest (such as claims of low overtime payment), through the
collective of many workers to balance the cost of litigation, appointing an attorney, and hiring expert
witnesses. This is more beneficial to disadvantaged workers.[179]
6.2.3 The Opt-Out Model
- In the US, in addition to the above-mentioned collective actions
under Section 216(b) of FLSA, large-scale cases of FLSA violations are often brought as class action
under Rule 23 of the USFRCP. These are referred to as ‘hybrid’ actions.[180] If the case of the
party complies with the class criteria of class actions, individuals would automatically be included as
the parties in the class action, unless they have clearly stated to opt-out. In this case, the plaintiff
may be the class representative for all individuals and they may appoint an attorney collaboratively.
This mechanism is applicable in the New York Labour Law (NYLL) and federal and state court cases or
local discrimination cases. The benefit of class actions is that the employees are not required to
participate actively in the case and do not have to incur enormous costs during litigation. The employer
would be less likely to seek ‘revenge’ on a particular employee.[181]
7 Interim relief
- If a party (usually the employee in a labour dispute) is in dire
need of legal protection, they need interim relief because the litigation process takes too long. In
dismissal disputes, the employee usually wishes to continue working in order to get paid. This is where
an interim injunction is needed, ordering the employer to tolerate the employee's continued
employment. While some jurisdictions do not have specific provisions on temporary injunction or interim
relief in labour proceedings, and apply the rules of civil procedure to deal with such situations, such
as Taiwan prior to 2020, the possibility of interim award still is recognized, albeit infrequently and
with differing opinions. In order to resolve the controversial issues and divergent decisions in
practice, Taiwan's legislators referred to German law (Art 102 of Work Constitution Act)[182] as well as the
Judgment of the German Federal Labour Court,[183] and passed the new legislation in 2020 with
special rules for interim relief, particularly regarding temporary status for continued
employment.[184] There are two types of temporary status quo injunctions for labour cases: monetary
payment and maintenance of status. While the former guarantees the worker's right to existence by
sustaining the livelihood of the worker, the latter is related to the personality rights of the
worker.
7.1 Temporary Status Quo Injunction for Continuous Employment
- The purpose of taking a request for continuous employment is to
preserve the occupational skills and competitiveness of the worker, whereas the payment of wages is
merely a consequence of the status of employment. However, requiring the employer to continue employment
would have a significant impact on the employer's business operations. Therefore, the labour courts
must weigh the interests of the employee against those of the employer.
- In Germany, in dismissal protection proceedings, according to Art
102(1) of Betriebsverfassungsgesetz (the Works
Constitution Act, BetrVG), the works council must be
heard before each dismissal. In case of an ordinary dismissal, the works council can expressly oppose
the dismissal if reasons to object exist in accordance with Art 102(3) of the BetrVG. Then the employee
may make a claim for continued employment. If the works council has objected to a dismissal and if the
employee has filed an action under the Dismissal Protection Act claiming that the employment
relationship has not been terminated by the dismissal, the employer must, at the request of the
employee, continue to employ him/her under the same working conditions until the conclusion of the
dispute by a court decision that cannot be contested anymore. On application by the employer the court
may issue an interim order releasing him from his obligation under sentence 1 to maintain the employment
relationship in the following cases: 1. if the action brought by the employee is not
reasonably likely to succeed or appears abusive; or 2. the continuation of the employment
relationship imposes an unreasonable financial burden on the employer; or 3. the objection
raised by the works council is manifestly unfounded.
- In addition, to the above-mentioned cases under Art 102 of BetrVG,
the German Federal Labour Court extended this right of the dismissed employee to request reinstatement
during the litigation procedure to other cases in an important decision of 1985. The dismissed employee
can demand temporary reinstatement if the dismissal is evidently unlawful or if the labour court of
first instance declares the dismissal to be unlawful. In these cases, the employee's interest in
continuing to work, a constitutionally protected individual right, would outweigh the employer's
interest in terminating the employment relationship.[185]
- According to the Taiwan Labour Incident Act, if the court recognizes
that the case for confirming the existence of an employment relationship (as initiated by the employee)
has a chance of prevailing and that the employer has no major difficulties in continuously employing the
worker, the court may order a temporary status quo injunction by motion for continuous employment and
payment of wages (Art 49 of the LIA). In order to properly weigh the
interests of both parties and the requirements of injunction, the court shall
allow the parties to be heard before ruling.[186] These rulings of temporary injunction are
enforceable.
- Where the worker initiates an action to confirm the ineffectiveness
of a job transfer or for re-employment, if the court recognizes a high possibility for the transfer to
violate labour laws, group agreements, work rules, labour-management conference resolutions, labour
contracts or labour norms, and that the employer has no significant difficulties in continuously
employing the worker in their original position, the court may grant a temporary status quo injunction,
based on the worker's motion, for continuing employment in the original position or a new position
to which both parties agree.[187] Regarding the necessity of temporary status
quo injunctions in disputes over job transfers, the court shall consider not only the worker's
disadvantages caused by the transfer and the subject matter of the imminent danger of which the
injunction is to prevent, but also whether the transfer violates law or contract, or whether the
employer will encounter significant difficulty in re-employing the worker. This way, the interests of
both parties may be equally attended to.
- In the United Kingdom, an employee who presents a complaint to an ET
that they have been unfairly dismissed may file a pre-verdict request to the tribunal for interim relief
to maintain their current status, such as reinstatement, re-employment, or salary payments and other
benefits according to the contract until the claim is concluded. The applicant must show they have a
'pretty good chance' of succeeding at the final hearing (Taplin v C
Shippam Ltd [1978] ICR 1068, EAT). The test is set 'comparatively
high' due to the potential prejudice to the employer (Dandpat v University
of Bath UKEAT/0408/09/LA). The tribunal shall not entertain an application
for interim relief unless it is presented to the tribunal before the end of the period of seven days
immediately following the effective date of termination. The tribunal shall resolve the application for
interim relief as soon as practicable after receiving it and give the employer no later than seven days
before the date of the hearing a copy of the application and the notice of the date, time, and place of
the hearing. The tribunal shall not exercise any power to postpone the hearing of an application for
interim relief except where it is satisfied that special circumstances exist that justify it doing
so.[188]
7.2 Temporary Status Quo Injunction for Payment of Wages
- In Taiwan, the court should inform the worker that they may motion
for a temporary status quo injunction to receive a certain payment ex
ante when the court discovers that a litigation case in which the worker
motions for payment of wages, workers' compensation, pension or severance pay, will cause great
hardship to their livelihood.[189] This Article of the LIA is provided for the
maintenance of the worker's right of existence and human dignity. The object of the temporary status
quo injunction may either be a singular payment or a continuous payment, while the necessity of interim
relief should be evaluated by the financial survivability of the worker.
7.3 Unenforceable Interim Measures in Conciliation Proceedings
- In Japan, the Labour Tribunal Act did not stipulate
any rules on temporary remedy,[190] but the Civil Conciliation Act may be
mutatis mutandis applied in labour tribunal
cases.[191] Since the labour tribunal may try to conciliate during labour tribunal proceedings, the
labour tribunal may, upon petition of a party, order to prohibit the respondent or any other person
concerned with the case from changing the existing state of or disposing of any property or order them
to cease and desist from any act that would make it impossible or extremely difficult to achieve the
subject matter of the conciliation when it finds it particularly necessary for conciliation.
‘Particularly necessary’ normally means in consideration of the purpose of the rules, the
possibility for successful conciliation, the party's interests, damage due to the measure, and the
urgency with which the applicant's interest should be protected.
- However, such measures are not enforceable.[192] If the respondent
fails to comply with the obligation of pre-conciliation measures, the effect of the sanction would only
be a fine under JPY 100,000.[193] Since pre-conciliation measures are not
enforceable, some suggest that the applicant needs to provide a security deposit.[194]
8 ADR
out of Court
- ADR out of court is an important mechanism for labour dispute
resolution. In some countries, it plays an even more meaningful role than court proceedings. The
following discussion focuses on mediation, conciliation, and arbitration.
8.1 Administrative Mediation and Conciliation
- In Taiwan, mediation or conciliation is the most important way to
resolve an individual labour dispute—not only in the court procedure described in section 3.1.,
but also in proceedings out of court.[195] As the administrative mediation mechanism,
the competent authority may designate a sole mediator or notify the disputants to appoint 3–5
persons as members of the Labour Mediation Committee. Either the mediator or the Labour Mediation
Committee will then engage in the mediation and investigation and shall complete the mediation in 20 and
49 days, respectively. The resolution proposed by the mediator, or the Labour Mediation Committee shall
be agreed upon by both parties and will become a contract between the two parties. The mediation is
deemed unsuccessful where the disputants could not agree on the proposed resolution, a quorum of the
committee is not met in two consecutive meetings, or the committee could not decide on a
proposal.[196] In those scenarios, the parties can continue to settle their dispute via the mechanisms
of litigation, labour dispute arbitration or arbitration pursuant to the Arbitration Law.
- Regarding individual labour relations disputes in Japan, the
director of the Prefectural Labour Bureau should provide the worker and employer with relevant
information, consultations, and other assistance to prevent individual labour relations disputes and
promote voluntary resolution.[197] When a party files an application for
mediation of an individual labour relations dispute to the Prefectural Labour Bureau, the Dispute
Coordinating Committee may conduct mediation if the director finds it necessary for
resolution.[198] Mediation by Committee is to be conducted by three members whom the chairman designates
to each case from among committee members.[199] Mediation members may hear the opinions of
the parties or request that these parties and any witnesses submit written opinions. Members may also
prepare a mediation plan as necessary to resolve the dispute by unanimous decision of all members and
present it to the disputing parties.[200] However, the mediation plan is unenforceable
(or has no coercive power) whether or not the parties agree to it. The Act on Securing, Etc. of Equal
Opportunity and Treatment between Men and Women in Employment stipulates that the Director of the
Prefectural Labour Bureau may provide opinions, guidance, or any recommendations on disputes related to
equal opportunities and treatment.[201] If the Director finds it necessary for the
resolution of the dispute, they may have the Dispute Adjustment Commission conduct the
conciliation.[202] The difference between conciliation and mediation is that the commission may recommend
the parties to agree to the conciliation proposal,[203] whereas the mediation plan can only be
proposed.
- The principal characteristics of mediation are that it places great
emphasis on the autonomy of labour relations and that, in the absence of strict statutory methods, the
methods of mediation can be varied. In practice, when one of the parties refuses a group negotiation,
the other party may apply for mediation to resolve disputes.[204] The chairman of the Labour Relations
Commission may, by petition or on their own authority, appoint a mediator with relevant expertise to
assist in the settlement of the labour dispute.[205] The mediator must act as an intermediary
between the parties concerned, ascertain their respective point of view, and assist them in resolving
the dispute.[206] When the dispute cannot be settled, they must report the key points of the dispute to
the Labour Relations Commission.[207]
- In Japan, conciliation[208] must be applied to both parties based on the
provisions of a labour agreement. But, in cases concerning public welfare businesses, the conciliation
may also be brought by the Labour Relation Committee on its own authority if it deems it
necessary.[209] The conciliation committee consists of representatives of the employer, the worker, and
the public interest. The number of representatives of the employer and the worker must be
equal.[210] The conciliation committee may draft a conciliation proposal, present it to the
parties, and recommend that it be accepted. The committee may publish the conciliation proposal along
with its reasoning, and it may request the media (such as a newspaper or radio program) to make the
matter public (Labour Relations Adjustment Act Art 26).[211]
- In the United Kingdom, The Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration
Service (ACAS) is an independent and unprejudiced facility that is assigned to prompt and conduct
conciliation of individual labour relations disputes.[212] Since 2014, the implemented ‘early
conciliation’ service must provide information of the case in advance to the ACAS (except in
exclusive circumstances and before the ET accepts the claim). Within the specified time period, the
conciliation officer shall endeavour to promote a settlement between the persons who would be parties to
the proceedings.[213] The burden on the ET is reduced by allowing the ACAS to conduct conciliation. Only 9%
of early conciliation cases progressed to an ET process in 2022–2023.[214]
- As discrimination cases follow the same procedure as a typical
labour case, the litigants have to notify ACAS in advance and exhaust their attempts of settlement
(early conciliation service). When a pre-litigation settlement fails, the awarded ‘early
conciliation certificate’ serves as a ‘ticket’ to the ensuing litigations, but
litigants can still decide whether to bring the conflict to the court within one month.[215]
- In Canada (Quebec), as of January 1, 2016, the Administrative Labour
Tribunal (ALT) replaced the Commission des
relations du travail (CRT) and the Commission des lésions
professionnelles (CLP) to deal with labour relation disputes to ensure compliance with
the Act Respecting Labour Standards and to manage the compensation scheme for workers who have suffered workplace injury.[216] With the
consent of the parties in a matter, the president of the ALT, or an ALT member or personnel member
designated by the president, may conduct a pre-decision conciliation process and ask a conciliator to
attempt to bring the parties to an agreement.[217] If an agreement is reached, it may be
submitted to the ALT for approval at either party's request. If no request for approval is submitted
to the ALT within 12 months after the date of the agreement, the matter is terminated.[218] If no agreement
is reached or if the ALT refuses to ratify the agreement, the ALT must hold a hearing as soon as
possible to make a decision.[219]
- The ALT may call the parties to a pre-hearing conference to
define the issues to be argued at the hearing, assess the advisability of clarifying and specifying the parties' contentions and the
conclusions sought, ensure that all documentary evidence is exchanged by the
parties, plan the conduct of the proceeding and the order of presentation of
evidence at the hearing, examine the possibility of the parties admitting
certain facts or proving them by means of sworn statements, and examine any other matter likely to
simplify or accelerate the conduct of the hearing. The pre-hearing
conference may also allow the parties to come to an agreement and thus terminate the matter.[220] Before
rendering its decision, the tribunal must allow the parties to be heard by any means provided for in its
rules of evidence and procedure. However, with the parties' consent, the tribunal may proceed on the
record if it considers it appropriate.[221] The matter is decided by the member who
heard it. Subject to a special rule provided by law, the tribunal must render its decision in principle
within three months after the matter is taken under advisement and, in the case of the occupational
health and safety division, within nine months after the originating pleading is filed.[222] The
tribunal's decision is final, enforceable, and may not be appealed. The persons concerned must
immediately comply with the decision.[223] However,
decisions of this tribunal are subject to internal review or revocation in cases
where a new fact is discovered, a substantive or procedural defect likely to invalidate the decision, or
where a party did not have sufficient opportunity to make representations or to be heard. A review
proceeding must be brought by way of a motion filed with the tribunal within a reasonable amount of time
after the discovery of the new fact or defect that could invalidate the decision.[224] Only in certain
exceptional cases can an application for ‘judicial review’ be made before courts.[225] This kind of administrative tribunal is less formal than
courts and is not part of the court system, but plays an essential role in resolving disputes in
Canadian society.
- In the US, while there are no special rules on labour
dispute mediation specifically, mediation is very common as a method to relieve grievances and
dissatisfaction,[226] mainly because mediation is not restricted by any procedural rules, substantive rules
or precedent. The outcome of mediation can be decided by the parties, and it emphasizes whether the
outcome can satisfy the interests and needs of the parties and create win-win situations.[227] Therefore,
mediation suffices to process where the parties have complicated jural relations and affinity, or for
disputes between parties that are in dependencies. The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) is
an administrative agency that provides pre-court mediation and conciliation for discrimination claims
under federal statute. Before going to court, a complaint must be filed with the EEOC.[228] Mediation can also
be conducted by the Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service (FMCS) and similar facilities in other
states, and most first and second instance federal and district courts have established a mediation
system conducted by a judge or mediator appointed by the court. The mediator's role in the US is to
assist the parties in scheduling mediation sessions and to discuss and propose recommendations to
resolve the dispute. The main function of mediation is to let the parties concerned negotiate. The
success of mediation is highly related to the parties' level of trust in the mediator.[229]
8.2 Arbitration
- Arbitration proceedings must in principle be conducted on the basis
of the parties' arbitration agreement, which must exist between the employer and the employee.
However, in Taiwan, labour arbitration is divided into voluntary and mandatory arbitration. If mediation
out of court is unsuccessful, both parties may jointly apply to hand over arbitration to the municipal
or county (city) competent authority. Labour arbitration may also be initiated without undergoing
the mediation procedure upon written consent of both parties (arbitration agreement). Nevertheless, it
may also be mandated ex officio by the municipal or
county (city) competent authority if such authority regards the dispute to have a great impact on public
welfare, or in response to a request from the competent authority of the related business. In addition,
if one of the parties is a worker in a telecommunication business or in a business which may affect
public safety, national security, or essential public interests, either party may apply to hand over
arbitration to the Central Competent Authority.[230] After the competent authority receives an
application for arbitration, the arbitration will be treated either by a designated arbitrator or the
Labour Arbitration Committee.[231] Including the investigation of evidence and
the declaration of the arbitration award, arbitration proceedings shall be completed within 45–55
days with an arbitrator and within 69–79 days with the committee, starting from the day the
arbitrator is designated or the committee is assembled. An arbitration award for interests dispute will
be deemed as a contract between the disputants, whereas an award for rights dispute will have the same
effect as the final ruling of a court.[232] Compared
to mediation, arbitration is used less in
labour dispute resolution in Taiwan.[233]
- In Japan, arbitration in relation to labour disputes[234] may only be
requested by the parties concerned, or by one or both of the parties concerned based on the provisions
of a group agreement, to the Labour Relations Commission. The Labour Relations Commission may not carry
out arbitration on its own authority.[235] Arbitration of a labour dispute by the Labour
Relations Commission is carried out by an arbitration commission that comprises three arbitration
committee members.[236] After asking the opinions of the parties concerned, the chairperson of the Labour
Relations Commission should nominate the arbitration committee members from among the members of the
Labour Relations Commission or from among special members for adjustment representing the public
interest. However, when there is an agreement on the nomination of a member of the arbitration committee
between the parties, the chairperson of the Labour Relations Commission should nominate according to
that agreement.[237] Lastly, an arbitration award has the same legal effect as a labour
agreement.[238]
- In the US, labour disputes are normally conducted following the
grievance procedure by the grievant proposing the complaint to their immediate supervisor. If the
dispute cannot be resolved in that procedure, the complainant must file a complaint in writing or be
represented by the grievant's union representative to file the complaint to the superior of the
supervisor, and therefore, the hierarchy of receipt of the complaint increases. The next grievance level
is the cooperative representative in the trade who files the complaint to the head of the human resource
department. There are generally three to four phases in a grievance procedure. Even when disputes cannot
be resolved via grievance procedure, it may be beneficial for the parties to clarify the issues of the
case and remove irrelevant arguments (such as a request that the complaint submitted be in written form)
during the second phase of the complaint as an effective way to eliminate unreasonable complaints;
procedurally, it may help both parties recognize each other's necessities and claims and may prompt
both parties into discovery. Moreover, the grievance procedure would also allow the trade union to be in
control of the process of the case, and they may decide to continue, drop, or settle the dispute.
- If the grievance procedure fails to resolve the dispute, a party may
seek resolution by arbitration according to the arbitration agreement. In the US, the early stage of
labour relations dispute resolution plays a role similar to the consensus-seeking mediator, the mission
of which is to assist both parties in deciding suitable labour conditions.[239] However, the modern labour
relations arbitrator plays the role of a private judge since the arbitrator may be required to interpret
the provisions of an employment agreement.[240]
- The US courts have adopted the ‘hands
off’ policy, strictly restricting judicial reviews of the award of labour arbitration.[241] Therefore, the court is not prone to overturn or modify the award. Even when the award might
misinterpret the facts, the court will not overturn the award simply because of a difference in
interpretation of the agreement. Statistically, only 1% of arbitration awards will be requested to be
reviewed by the court, and only a very small percent is overturned.[242]
8.3 Decisions on Unfair Labour Practices
- In Taiwan, the mechanism of the Decisions on Unfair Labour
Practices, established by Art 39-52 of the Act for the Settlement of Labour-Management Disputes, is to
provide an expeditious and professional treatment of unfair labour practices through the hands of labour
law experts and to avoid excessive costs caused by litigation, settle the dispute efficiently, and
prevent the employer from infringing on the worker's rights. The worker may initiate the proceeding
by filing a request to the Ministry of Labour; if a decision is requested during which an action for the
same cause is pending, the court shall rule ex officio a stay of action, and the dispute shall be
treated under the Board for Decisions on Unfair Labour Practices (referred to as the
‘Board’) that is assembled by the Ministry of Labour. The Board then designates one to three
persons to investigate, ex officio, the essential facts and evidence and presents a report within 20
days, following which the Board shall convene and the parties shall be notified for oral statements.
Finally, the Board shall offer a decision award. The procedure takes approximately 84–134 days in
total. Where a party objects to a decision pursuant to Art 39 of the Act for the Settlement of
Labour-Management Disputes, they may file for civil litigation; where neither side of the party objects
to the decision, or if the party withdraws their lawsuit, it shall be deemed that the parties have
agreed on the decision award, which, according to Art 48 and 49, has the same effect as the final ruling
of a civil court. If a party objects to a decision made under Art 51, as such a decision is essentially
an administrative sanction, it shall be redressed through administrative litigation.[243]
- In Japan, the administrative remedy of unfair labour practice is
stipulated in Art 18–27 of the Labour Union Act to ensure the recovery of ordinary collective
labour relations.[244] It functions by an individualized administrative commission (the Labour Relations
Commission) for administrative relief. If the employer's labour practice is considered to be unfair,
the Labour Relations Commission may issue an order to restitute. The Labour Relations Commission is to
be composed of the same number of representatives as the employer, worker, and persons representing the
public interest.[245] However, only the representative member for public interest has the power to review the
labour practice and issue an order for administrative relief. The representative of the employer or the
worker may only participate in the hearing and investigating procedure and state the opinion of the
order for administrative relief.[246] When the worker files a motion, the Labour
Relations Commission must conduct an investigation without delay, and, if necessary, hold a hearing on
whether there are reasons for filing the motion. In this case, sufficient opportunity to submit evidence
and to cross-examine witnesses must be given to the employer and the worker as part of the procedures of
the hearing.[247] Prior to the commencement of the hearing, the Labour Relations Commission must hear the
opinion of both parties and establish an examination plan.[248] The examination plan should include the
issues and evidence recognized in the investigating procedure, the sessions of examination and times,
the number of witnesses, and the scheduled date for the issue of remedy to be made.[249] The Labour
Relations Commission and the parties must endeavour that the examinations be conducted according to the
examination plan to effect proper and expeditious examinations.[250] The Labour Relations
Commission may investigate evidence on its own authority and within the premise of identifying the
facts. It may order issues to make a disposition and to submit objects if it finds it difficult to
identify the facts, but considerations for the protection of individual and business secrets should be
made.[251] When the Labour Relations Commission finds it appropriate to issue an order for remedy,
the order should be based on the identification of facts and in accordance with the motion of the
applicant.
- In the United States, when a worker is discriminated against or
avenged due to attending group actions, the National Labour Relations Act (NLRA) does not endow its
personal rights; only the NLRB may prosecute such claims. The worker may file a charge on discrimination
and unfair labour practices to allow the NLRB to investigate, and, if after investigation the NLRB finds
the evidence sufficient, it must prosecute such claim.[252]
9 Conclusion
- Labour disputes are handled differently from ordinary civil disputes
due to their characteristics and the nature of labour relationships. Many countries have thus developed
their ways of attaining resolution. The systems for handling labour disputes vary from country to
country based on the specificities and differences in labour relations in their societies and cultures.
Despite these differences, some common elements in the resolution of labour
disputes across nations are observed, such as the involvement of experts besides
professional judges, the resolution of disputes in swift manners, and the promotion of resolution on
consensual grounds. Even in countries like the United States or Canada that are absent in specialized
labour litigation procedures or labour courts, there are specialized mechanisms outside of the court
system for resolving labour disputes.
- A comparative analysis of different national systems reveals that
countries with stronger out-of-court systems tend to have weaker judicial processes for labour dispute
resolutions. On the contrary, countries with weaker out-of-court ADR systems have integrated consensual
dispute resolution more thoroughly into their judicial systems. In such countries, there are additional
specialized rules that differ from those of ordinary civil
litigation. The establishment of specialized labour courts or tribunals, as well as specific procedural norms regarding
jurisdiction, costs, collection and investigation of facts and evidence, burden of proof, and collective
action, all underscore the tailored approach required for handling labour disputes effectively.
- Specialized labour proceedings within judicial systems have been
influenced by historical factors or through adaptations of experiences from other countries. This
evolution is not only related to the structure of the judicial system inherent to each jurisdiction but
also encapsulates the socio-cultural dynamics of labour
relations. For example, the civil litigation systems in Japan and Taiwan,
primarily transplanted from German law in the early twentieth century, have seen their labour dispute
resolution mechanisms in the judicial system evolve distinctly in the twenty-first century. They have
developed more emphasis on pre-trial mediations or conciliation processes in court, where professional
judges and experts from both sides of labour and employer work together to resolve disputes in
expectancy of a harmonious relationship. This accentuation on mediation comes from its importance in
Japanese and Taiwanese culture and highlights how judicial systems accommodate the different needs of
each society for harmonious labour relations. In recent years,
Taiwanese society has exhibited an increased inclination towards employee protection, empowering labour
judges with enhanced authority or discretion to modify the adversarial system in favour of labour
rights, particularly when mediation yields no resolution. Consequently, more specialized regulations
have been instituted regarding the collection of facts and evidence that favour employees, which
signifies a departure from German Law.
Abbreviations and Acronyms
ACAS
|
Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service
|
ADR
|
Alternative Dispute Resolution
|
AGEE
|
Act of Gender Equality in Employment
|
ALT
|
Administrative Labour Tribunal
|
ArbGG
|
Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (the Labour Court
Act) [Germany]
|
Art
|
Article/Articles
|
BetrVG
|
Betriebsverfassungsgesetz (the Works
Constitution Act) [Germany]
|
CCP
|
Code of Civil Procedure
|
CJC
|
Civil Justice Council
|
CLP
|
Commission des lésions professionnelles
|
CNESST
|
Commission des normes, de l’équité, de la
santé ET de la sécurité du travail
|
CRT
|
Commission des relations du travail
|
EC
|
European Council
|
ECLI
|
European Case Law Identifier
|
ed
|
editor/editors
|
edn
|
edition/editions
|
EEOC
|
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
|
ET
|
Employment Tribunal
|
etc
|
et cetera
|
ETPR
|
Employment Tribunal Procedure Rules
|
EU
|
European Union
|
ff
|
following
|
FLSA
|
Fair Labour Standards Act
|
FMCS
|
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service
|
GBP
|
Great Britain Pound
|
HMCTS
|
Her Majesty's Court & Tribunal Service
|
IT
|
Industrial Tribunal
|
JPY
|
Japanese Yen
|
LIA
|
Labour Incident Act
|
LRC
|
Labour Relations Commission
|
n
|
footnote (internal, ie, within the same chapter)
|
NLRA
|
National Labour Relations Act
|
NLRB
|
National Labour Relation Board
|
no
|
number/numbers
|
NYLL
|
New York Labour Law
|
para
|
paragraph/paragraphs
|
PRC
|
People's Republic of China
|
Sec
|
Section/Sections
|
the Fees Order
|
the Employment Tribunals and the Employment Appeal Tribunal Fees
Order
|
trans/tr
|
translated, translation/translator
|
UK
|
United Kingdom
|
US / USA
|
United States of America
|
USC
|
United States Code (US)
|
USFRCP
|
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (US)
|
USD
|
United States Dollar
|
v
|
versus
|
vol
|
volume/volumes
|
Legislation
International/Supranational
EU Directive 2000/43/EC
Regulation (EU) No 1215/2012 (the Brussels Ibis Regulation)
National
Act for the Settlement of Labour-Management Disputes (Taiwan)
Act of Gender Equality in Employment (Taiwan)
Act on Promoting the Resolution of Individual Labour-Related Disputes (Japan)
Act on Securing, Etc. of Equal Opportunity and Treatment between Men and Women in
Employment (Japan)
Act to Establish the Administrative Labour Tribunal (Canada)
Act to group the Commission de l'équité salariale, the Commission
des normes du travail and the Commission de la santé et de la sécurité du travail and
to establish the Administrative Labour Tribunal (Canada)
Allgemeines Gleichbehandlungsgesetz (General Equal Treatment Act) (Germany)
Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (the Labour Court Act) (Germany)
Betriebsverfassungsgesetz (Work Constitution Act) (Germany)
Civil Conciliation Act (Japan)
Code of Civil Procedure (China)
Code of Civil Procedure (Germany)
Code of Civil Procedure (Japan)
Code of Civil Procedure (Taiwan)
Commission des lésions professionnelles (Canada)
Commission des normes, de l’équité, de la santé ET de la
sécurité du travail (Canada)
Commission des relations du travail (Canada)
Employment Rights (Dispute Resolution) Act 1998 (UK)
Employment Rights Act 1996 (UK)
Employment Tribunal Procedure Rules (UK)
Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013
(UK)
Employment Tribunals Act 1996 (UK)
Employment Tribunals Rule of Procedure (UK)
Equality Act 2010 (UK)
Explanations of Applicable Laws for Labour Dispute Cases (1) (China)
Fair Labour Standards Act (USA)
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (USA)
Federal Rules of Evidence (USA)
Gerichtskostengesetz (Court Fees Act) (Germany)
German Labour Court Act (Germany)
Grundgesetz für die Bundesrepublik Deutschland (Basic Law of the Federal
Republic of Germany) (Germany)
Industrial Training Act 1964 (UK)
Judicial Code (Belgium)
Labour Code (France)
Labour Dispute Mediation and Arbitration Law (China)
Labour Incident Act (Taiwan)
Labour Incident Act 2018 (Taiwan)
Labour Relations Adjustment Act (Japan)
Labour Standard Act 2020 (Taiwan)
Labour Tribunal Act (Japan)
Labour Tribunal Act 2004 (Japan)
Labour Union Act (Japan)
National Labour Relations Act (USA)
New York Labour Law (USA)
Rules of Labour Tribunal Member (Japan)
the Employment Tribunals and the Employment Appeal Tribunal Fees Order (UK)
Trade Union and Labour Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 (UK)
Zivilprozessordnung (Code of Civil Procedure) Art (Germany)
Cases
National
Case 2009 (Su) 993 (Taipei High Administrative Court, Taiwan) Judgment 22 October
2009
Case 2010 (Jian) 110 (Taipei High Administrative Court, Taiwan) Judgment 28 October
2010
Case 2019 (Tai Shang) 1062 (Supreme Court, Taiwan) Judgment 4 July 2019
Case 2021 (Tai Shang) 576 (Supreme Court, Taiwan) Judgment 23 June 2022
Case 5 AZR 359/21 (BAG, Germany), Order 4 May 2022
[ECLI:DE:BAG:2022:040522.U.5AZR359.21.0]
Case GS 1/84 (BAG, Germany), Order 27 February 1985
Dandpat v University of Bath UKEAT/0408/09/LA
Lawson v Serco Ltd (HLUK), 2006 [ICR 250]
R (UNISON) v Lord Chancellor [2017] UKSC 51
Ravar v Halliburton Manufacturing and Services Ltd (UKSC 1), 2012 [ICR 389]
Taplin v C Shippam Ltd [1978] ICR 1068
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[1]* This
chapter was last updated on December 25, 2023.
[2]** Distinguished Professor, College of Law, National Taiwan University.
[3] M Ebisui, S Cooney and C Fenwick,
Resolving Individual Labour Disputes: A Comparative Overview (International Labour Office 2016) 11 https://www.ilo.org/wcmsp5/groups/public/---dgreports/---dcomm/---publ/documents/publication/wcms_488469.pdf accessed 15 December 2022; S Corby and P Burgess, Adjudicating Employment Rights. A Cross-National Approach (Palgrave Macmillan 2014); S Araujo, B Safradin and L Brito, Comparative Report on
Labour Conflicts and Access to Justice: The Impact of Alternative Dispute Resolution. ETHOS (EU
Commission H2020 Research Project 2019).
https://www.ethos-europe.eu/sites/default/files/docs/d6.5_website_report_complete.pdf accessed 15
December 2022; P Windel, ‘Brauchen Wir Arbeitsgerichtsbarkeit‘ in M Henssler, J Joussen, M
Maties and U Preis (ed), Moderne Arbeitswelt, Festschrift für Rolf
Wank (2014), 679-694.
[4] For example, Labour Standard Act
2020 Art 9-1 (3) (Taiwan): ‘The period, area, scope of occupational activities and prospective
employers with respect to the business strife limitation shall not exceed a reasonable range’ (emphasis added).
[5] For example, Labour Standard Act
2020 Art 9-1 (4) (Taiwan): ‘The employer shall reasonably compensate the employee concerned so
long as they do not engage in business strife activities for the losses incurred by them’.
[6] For example, Labour Standard Act
2020 Art 10-1 (1) (Taiwan): ‘The employee shall be transferred based on business needs and without
improper motive or purpose’.
[7] Labour Standard Act 2020 Art 12 (4)
(Taiwan).
[8] Labour Standard Act 2020 Art 12 (6)
(Taiwan).
[9] K-L Shen, ‘Reconstructing the
Labour Mediation Process: Diversifying the Dispute Resolution System and Transforming the
Process’, in Seminar of the Civil Litigation Law Research Association (ed), Discussion of Civil Litigation Law 24 (Angle 2019) 211,
211-305; J-P Waite, A Payne QC, D Hobbs, The Employment Tribunals Handbook:
Practice, Procedure and Strategies for success (6th ed, Bloomsbury
Professional, 2021) 1, 124.
[10] See K Sugeno, R Yamakawa, Y
Saito, M Sadazuka, S Otozawa, Labour Trial System-Basic Purpose and
Ordinance Commentary (2nd ed, Koubundou 2007) 29.
[11] P Burgess et al, ‘The Roles, Resources and Competencies of Employee Lay
Judges: A Cross-National Study of Germany, France and Great Britain’ Working Paper
Forschungsförderung No 051’ (Hans-Böckler-Stiftung, Düsseldorf 2017)
https://www.econstor.eu/bitstream/10419/215982/1/hbs-fofoe-wp-051-2017.pdf accessed 25 December 2023. https://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:101:1-201711153217
accessed 15 December 2022.
[12] B Opolony, Der Arbeitsgerichtsprozess (C.H. Beck 2004) 6, para 17; R
Künzl, 'Die Beteiligung ehrenamtlicher Richter am arbeitsgerichtlichen Verfahren' (1990)
104 Zeitschrift für Zivilprozess 150, 156; Windel (n 1) 679-694, 683.
[15] Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (The Labour Court Act) Art 1 Gerichte
für Arbeitssachen (Germany): Die Gerichtsbarkeit in Arbeitssachen - §§ 2 bis 3 –
wird ausgeübt durch die Arbeitsgerichte -§§ 14 bis 31 -, die Landesarbeitsgerichte -
§§ 33 bis 39 – und das Bundesarbeitsgericht - §§ 40 bis 45 – (Gerichte
für Arbeitssachen).
[16] Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (The Labour Court Act) Art 47(2)
(Germany).
[17] Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (The Labour Court Act) Art 54, 61a
(2) (Germany); E Helml, ‘ArbGG § 61a’ in E Helml and S Pessinger (ed), Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz: ArbGG (C. H. Beck 2021),
para 8.
[18] Industrial Training Act 1964 Art
12 (UK).
[20] The Employment Tribunals
(Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013 Art 8 (UK).
[21] The Employment Tribunals Act 1996
Art 4(2) (UK).
[22] P Taelman and C V Severen,
Civil Procedure in Belgium, 75 (2021, Wolters
Kluwer).
[23] Taelman and Severen (n 20)
39.
[26] Corby, Burgess (n 1) 9, 44, 49,
53
[27] Corby, Burgess, (n 1), 9,
54.
[28] Corby, Burgess, (n 1), 9,
56.
[29] Corby, Burgess, (n 1), 14.
[30] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art 1
(Taiwan).
[31] Labour Incident Act Art 4 (1)
(Taiwan).
[32] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art 21
(1) (Taiwan).
[33] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art 28
(1) (Taiwan).
[34] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 1
(Japan): ‘The purpose of this Act is to establish procedures whereby, with regard to a dispute
concerning civil affairs arising between an individual employee and an employer about whether or not a
labour contract exists or about any other matters in connection to labour relations’.
[35] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 2
(1) (Japan).
[37] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 7
(Japan).
[38] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 10
(1), (2) (Japan).
[39] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 8
(Japan).
[40] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 13
(Japan).
[42] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 12
(1) (Japan).
[43] N Satosi, Labour Law (3rd ed, Nippon Hyoron sha 2020) 148.
[45] Korea Judicial Policy Research
Institute (n 42) 44.
[47] Korea Judicial Policy Research
Institute (n 42) 15.
[48] W Zhuang and F Chen,
‘“Mediate First”: The Revival of Mediation in Labour dispute Resolution’
(2015) The China Quarterly, 380-402.
[52] C Beveridge, Employment Litigation Handbook, (2nd ed, American Bar
Association 2010), 1, 67, 222.
[53] Canada and USA, see Ebisui,
Cooney and Fenwick (n 1) 11.
[54] Labour Dispute Mediation and
Arbitration Law of the People's Republic of China (China).
[55] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n 1)
311.
[56] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n 1)
330.
[57] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n 1)
330.
[58] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n 1)
10.
[59] E K Connors and B Bashore-Smith,
'Employment Dispute Resolution in the United States: An Overview' (1991) 17 Canada-United States
Law Journal 319, 332.
[60] W B Gould IV, A Primer on American Labour Law (C-K Chiao tr, 3rd ed,
National Institute for Translation and Compilation 1996) 259-261.
[61] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n 1)
10.
[62] Commission de norms du travail
before 2016, Commission des normes, de l'équité, de la santé et de la
sécurité du travail after 2016.
[63] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n 1)
70─71.
[65] D J Brown, ‘The
adjudication of labour relations disputes in Canada’ (1991) 17(2) Canada-United States Law Journal
343, 348.
[66] Y Jiang, ‘Prospect to
Establish Labour Court in People’s Court of China’(2007) 25(11) Habei Law Science, 38,
42,
[67] E Berscheid, '§ 54
Güteverfahren' in N Schwab and S Weth (ed), Kommentar zum
ArbGG (DE Gruyter 2008) § 54, para 2.
[68] H Prütting ‘ArbGG § 54a’ in C-H Germelmann, H-C Matthes and H
Prütting (ed) Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz: ArbGG (C. H. Beck 2022), para 1.
[69] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n 1)
269.
[70] P Urwin, V Karuk, P Latreille, E
Michielsens, L Page, B Siara, S Speckesser with A Boon and P-A Chevalier, Evaluating the use of judicial mediation in Employment Tribunals (Ministry of Justice 2010)
https://www.justice.gov.uk/downloads/publications/research-and-analysis/moj-research/evaluating
-judicial-mediation-march10.pdf
accessed 15 December 2022.
[71]A Boon, P Urwin and V Karuk,
‘What Difference Does It Make - Facilitate Judicial Mediation of Discrimination Cases in
Employment Tribunals’ (2011) 40 (1) Industrial Law Journal 52.
[72] The Employment Tribunals Act 1996
Sec 18 (7) (UK).
[73] The Employment Tribunals Act 1996
Sec 7B (3) (UK).
[74] Labour Incidents Act Art 16
(Taiwan).
[75] Labour Incidents Act Art 21
(Taiwan).
[76] Labour Incident Act Art 27
(Taiwan).
[77] Labour Incident Act Art 24
(Taiwan).
[78] K Shen, ‘Multi-tier Dispute
Resolution in Taiwan’ in A Reyes (ed), Multi-tier Approaches to the
Resolution of International Disputes: A Global and Comparative Study (Cambridge University Press 2021) 110, 126.
[79] Labour Incident Act Art 29
(Taiwan).
[80] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art 30
(Taiwan).
[83] Simon (n 23) 8, 9; Storck
(n 80) 25.
[85] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 20
(3) (Japan).
[86] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 21
(4) (Japan).
[87] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 7
(Japan).
[88] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 8
(Japan).
[89] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 10
(Japan).
[90] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 9
(Japan): (1) Labour tribunal members, as provided for by this Act, participate in the labour tribunal
proceedings held by the labour tribunal and perform the duties necessary for processing the labour
tribunal case from a neutral and fair standpoint. (2) Labour tribunal members are appointed from among
persons who have expert knowledge and experience in labour relations. (3) Labour tribunal members serve
part-time and, in addition to what is provided for in the preceding paragraph, the necessary matters
concerning their appointment and dismissal are prescribed by the Rules of the Supreme Court. (4) Labour
tribunal members are paid an allowance as separately provided by law as well as travel expenses, a daily
allowance, and lodging expenses, at amounts specified by the Rules of the Supreme Court.
[91] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 13
(Japan).
[92] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 14
(Japan): The labour tribunal judge must specify a date for labour tribunal proceedings and summon the
persons concerned with the case to appear.
[93] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 27
(Japan).
[94] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art
19-20 (Japan).
[95] Labour Tribunal Act 2004Art 21
(1) (Japan).
[96] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 21
(4) (Japan).
[97] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art 21
(3), 22(1) (Japan).
[98] L-J Lin, 'An Analysis of the
Japan Labour Tribunal Act from Dispute Resolution: Comparison with the Legislative Policy Meaning of the
Mediation System in Taiwan Labour Incidents' in C-G Huang (ed), Litigation on Labour Law Issues and Labour Incident Act (Angle 2021) 283, 302.
[99] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art 32
(Taiwan).
[100] Sugeno, Yamakawa, Saito,
Sadazuka, Otozawa (n 8) 90.
[101] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art
15 (1) (Japan).
[102] 14.2 months to 14.7 months
between 2015 and 2018, and then 15.5 months in 2019 and 15.9 months in 2020. See Asano (n 34).
[103] The Employment Tribunals
(Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013, Schedule 1 The Employment Tribunals Rule of
Procedure 29 (UK).
[104] The Employment Tribunals
(Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013, Schedule 1 The Employment Tribunals Rule of
Procedure 45 (UK).
[105] Zivilprozessordnung (Code of Civil Procedure) Art 91
(Germany).
[106] Gerichtskostengesetz (The Court Fees Act) (Germany).
[107] M Ford, ‘Employment
Tribunal Fees and the Rule of Law: R (Unison) v Lord Chancellor in the Supreme Court.’ (2018)
47(1) Industrial Law Journal 1, 1–45.
[109] Waite, Payne QC, Hobbs (n 7)
1.
[114] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 330-331.
[115] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 332.
[116] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 333.
[117] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 87-88.
[118] R Künzl ‘ArbGG § 46’ in C-H Germelmann, H-C Matthes and H
Prütting (ed) Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz: ArbGG (C. H. Beck 2022), para 1-3; Helml (n 15) para 17.
[119] Case 5 AZR 359/21 (BAG,
Germany), Order 4 May 2022 [ECLI:DE:BAG:2022:040522.U.5AZR359.21.0] para 18-19, 29.
[121] C Roloff ‘AGG § 22’ in C Rolfs, R Giesen, R Kreikebohm and P Udsching
(ed) Arbeitsrecht: BeckOK ArbR (C. H.
Beck 2011), para 3; M Schlachter ‘AGG §
22’ in R M-Glöge, U Preis and I Schmidt (ed) Erfurter
Kommentar zum Arbeitsrecht (C. H. Beck 2023) para 2 ff.
[122] Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (The Labour Court Act) Art 56 (1)
(Germany).
[123] Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (The Labour Court Act) Art 56 (2)
(Germany).
[124] Waite, Payne QC, Hobbs (n 7)
138.
[125] The Employment Tribunals Act
1996 Sec 10A (Confidential information) (UK); The Employment Tribunals (Constitution and Rules of
Procedure) Regulations 2013 Rule 41 (UK).
[126] The Employment Tribunals
(Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013 Rule 41 (UK).
[127] The Employment Tribunals
(Constitution and Rules of Procedure) Regulations 2013 Rule 29-40 (UK).
[128] Equality Act 2010 Sec. 136 (UK).
[129] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art
17 (Japan): ‘(1) The labour tribunal may study facts on its own authority and may examine evidence
that it considers necessary upon petition or on its own authority. (2) Examination of evidence is
governed by the rules of civil procedure’.
[130] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art
17 (Japan).
[131] Sugeno, Yamakawa, Saito,
Sadazuka, Otozawa (n 8) 93.
[132] Sugeno, Yamakawa, Saito,
Sadazuka, Otozawa (n 8) 93-94.
[133] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art
17 (2) (Japan).
[135] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
33 (1) (Taiwan).
[136] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
33 (2) (Taiwan).
[137] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
19 (1) (Taiwan).
[138] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
28 (1) (Taiwan).
[139] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
44 (Taiwan).
[140] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
35 (Taiwan).
[141] Labour Standard Act 2020 Art
30 (5) (Taiwan): Employers shall prepare and keep worker attendance records for five years; Labour Standard Act 2020 Art 23 (2)
(Taiwan): an employer shall keep a worker payroll roster in order to record entries such as wages
payable, the details of wage computation and the total sum of wages paid. This payroll roster shall be
kept on file for at least five years.
[142] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
37 (Taiwan).
[143] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
38 (Taiwan).
[144] The Purpose of Statute of Art
31 of the AGEE.
[145] Case 2010 (Jian) 110 (Taipei
High Administrative Court, Taiwan) Judgment 28 October 2010.
[146] Case 2009 (Su) 993 (Taipei
High Administrative Court, Taiwan) Judgment 22 October 2009.
[147] B-S Fu, ‘The Burden of
Proof and Concerns of Labour Discrimination Cases in Labour Incident Act – Taipei District Court
(100) Jhong Lao Su Tzu No. 3 Judgment’ (2020), 97 Court Case Times 76, 87; B-S Fu, ‘The
Burden of Proof and the Similarly Situated Comparator in the Employment Discrimination Law - A
Comparative Research between America and Taiwan Law’ (2018), 69(9) The Law Monthly 73,
93-96.
[148] Code of Civil Procedure Art
3-4 (2) (Japan): ‘An action involving a dispute over a civil matter that arises between an
individual worker and that worker's employer with regard to the existence or absence of a labour
contract or any other particulars of their labour relations (hereinafter referred to as an
‘Individual Civil Labour Dispute’),which is brought by the worker against the employer, may
be filed with the Japanese courts if the place where the labour is to be provided as per the labour
contract to which the Individual Civil Labour Dispute pertains (or if such a place is not established,
the location of the place of business that hired the worker) is within Japan’.
[149] Code of Civil Procedure Art
3-7(6) (Japan).
[150] Code of Civil Procedure Art
3-8 (Japan).
[151] Code of Civil Procedure Art
3-2 (1) (Japan).
[152] Code of Civil Procedure Art
3-7(6)(ii) (Japan).
[153] Lawson v Serco
Ltd (HLUK), 2006 [ICR 250]; Ravar v
Halliburton Manufacturing and Services Ltd (UKSC 1), 2012 [ICR 389].
[154] Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (The Labour Court Act) Art 46 (2)
(Germany), which refers to Zivilprozessordnung (Code of Civil Procedure) Art 12 f (Germany).
[155] Zivilprozessordnung (Code of Civil Procedure) Art 29 (1)
(Germany).
[156] Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (The Labour Court Act) Art 48 (2)
(Germany).
[157] Labour Tribunal Act Art 2
(Japan).
[158] Labour Tribunal Act Art 3 (1)
(Japan): When the court finds that the whole or a part of a labour tribunal case is not under its
jurisdiction, it will, upon petition or on its own authority, transfer the case to a court with
jurisdiction. (2) Even where a labour tribunal case brought before the court is under its jurisdiction,
when the court finds it appropriate in order to process the case, it may, upon petition or on its own
authority, transfer the whole or part of the labour tribunal case to another court with
jurisdiction.
[159] Sugeno, Yamakawa, Saito,
Sadazuka, Otozawa (n 8) 63.
[160] Sugeno, Yamakawa, Saito,
Sadazuka, Otozawa (n 8) 63-64.
[161] Sugeno, Yamakawa, Saito,
Sadazuka, Otozawa (n 8) 64-65.
[162] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 330.
[164] Code of Civil Procedure
(Germany) Art 78.
[165] Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (The Labour Court Act) Art 12 a (1)
(Germany).
[166] Arbeitsgerichtsgesetz (The Labour Court Act) Art 12-1 (2)
(Germany).
[167] Employment Tribunals Act 1996
Sec 6 Conduct of hearings (UK).
[168] Judicial Code §3 Art 728
(Belgium); Taelman and Severen, (n 20) 63, 107.
[170] Sugeno, Yamakawa, Saito,
Sadazuka, Otozawa (n 8) 69-70.
[171] C Hodges, 'Europeanization
of civil justice: trends and issues' (2006) 28 Civil Justice Quarterly 96, 114-115.
[172] Z Rasnača,
'Collective redress in labour and social law disputes: An (attractive) option for the EU?'
(2021) 12(4) European Labour Law Journal 415, 415-435.
[173] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 333.
[174] Code of Civil Procedure Art
44-1 (Taiwan).
[175] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
42 (Taiwan).
[176] K-L Shen, ‘Developments of Labour Collective Action and New Changes’ (2020), 49(4) National Taiwan University Law Journal,
1979, 2006; K-L Shen, ‘The Developments of Collective Redress in Taiwan’ (2019), 23(3), KCI
Civil Procedure, 167, 196-197. DOI: https://doi.org/10.30639/cp.2019.10.23.3.167.
[177] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
41(1) (Taiwan).
[178] 29 USC § 216(b):
‘No employee shall be a party plaintiff to any such action unless he gives his consent in writing
to become such a party and such consent is filed in the court in which such action is
brought[…]‘.
[179] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 334; J-S Gonzalez, ‘Solving Fair Labour Standards Act Collective Action Law’(2023), 58
Tulsa Law Review 45.
[180] W Jhaveri-Weeks and A Webber,
‘Class Actions Under Rule 23 and Collective Actions Under the Fair Labour Standards Act:
Preventing the Conflation of Two Distinct Tools to Enforce the Wage Laws’ (2016), 23(2) The
Georgetown Journal on Poverty Law & Policy, 233, 246.
[181] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 334.
[182] Betriebsverfassungsgesetz Art 102 (5) (Works Constitution
Act) (Germany).
[183] Case GS 1/84 (BAG, Germany),
Order 27 February 1985 ,C. I. 1.
[184] Labour Incident Act Art 46 to
50 (Taiwan).
[185] M-H Korinth, Einstweiliger Rechtsschutz im Arbeitsgerichtsverfahren, (3rd
edn, Verlag Dr. Otto Schmidt 2015) 260-261.
[186] Code of Civil Procedure Art
538 (4) (Taiwan).
[187] Labour Incident Act Art 50
(Taiwan).
[188] The circumstances under which
monetary relief may be requested are stipulated in the Employment Rights Act 1996 Art 128(1) (UK) and the Trade Union and Labour Relations
(Consolidation) Act 1992 Art 161(1) (UK).
[189] Labour Incident Act 2018 Art
48 (Taiwan).
[190] Labour Tribunal Act Art 29 (2)
(Japan): The provisions of Arts 11, 12, 16, and 36 of the Civil Conciliation Act (Act No. 222 of 1951)
apply mutatis mutandis to labour tribunal cases.
[191] Civil Conciliation Act Art
12(1) (Japan).
[192] Civil Conciliation Act Art
12(2) (Japan): The measure set forth in the preceding paragraph shall not be enforceable.
[193] Labour Tribunal Act 2004 Art
32 (Japan).
[194] A Ishikawa and T Kachimura,
Civil Conciliation Act [Civil Conciliation Rule] (Seirin-Shoin 1993) 184-185.
[196] Act for the Settlement of
Labour-Management Disputes Art 20-21 (Taiwan).
[198] Act on Promoting the
Resolution of Individual Labour-Related Disputes Art 5 (1) (Japan).
[199] Act on Promoting the
Resolution of Individual Labour-Related Disputes Art 12 (1) (Japan).
[200] Act on Promoting the
Resolution of Individual Labour-Related Disputes Art 13 (Japan).
[201] Act on Securing, Etc. of Equal
Opportunity and Treatment between Men and Women in Employment Art 17 (1) (Japan).
[202] Act on Securing, Etc. of Equal
Opportunity and Treatment between Men and Women in Employment Art 18 (Japan).
[203] Act on Securing, Etc. of Equal
Opportunity and Treatment between Men and Women in Employment Art 22 (Japan): The Commission may prepare
a conciliation proposal and recommend its acceptance to the parties concerned.
[205] The mediation of collective
labour disputes is provisioned in Art 10-16 of the Labour Relations Adjustment Act (Japan).
[206] Labour Relations Adjustment
Act Art 11, 13 (Japan).
[207] Labour Relations Adjustment
Act Art 14 (Japan).
[208] The conciliation of labour
disputes is provisioned in Art 17-28 of the Labour Relations Adjustment Act.
[209] Labour Relations Adjustment
Act Art 18 (Japan).
[210] Labour Relations Adjustment
Act Art 19 (Japan).
[211] Labour Relations Adjustment
Act Art 26 (1) (Japan): The conciliation committee may draft a conciliation proposal, present it to the
parties concerned and recommend that it be accepted, as well as publish the conciliation proposal
together with a statement of the reasons therefor. If necessary, the conciliation committee may request
the cooperation of newspapers and radio stations in making these matters public.
[212] The Trade Union and Labour
Relations (Consolidation) Act 1992 Section 247 (UK).
[213] Employment Tribunals Act 1996
Sec18a (UK).
[216] An Act to group the Commission
de l'équité salariale, the Commission des normes du travail and the Commission de la
santé et de la sécurité du travail and to establish the Administrative Labour
Tribunal (the ‘Act’); Act to Establish the Administrative
Labour Tribunal (Canada) https://www.legisquebec.gouv.qc.ca/en/document/cs/t-15.1 accessed 15 December 2023.
[217] Act to Establish the
Administrative Labour Tribunal Section 21 (Canada).
[218] Act to Establish the
Administrative Labour Tribunal Section 23(2) (Canada).
[219] Act to Establish the
Administrative Labour Tribunal Section 24 (Canada).
[220] Act to Establish the
Administrative Labour Tribunal Section 27 (Canada).
[221] Act to Establish the
Administrative Labour Tribunal Section 35 (Canada)
[222] Act to Establish the
Administrative Labour Tribunal Section 45 (Canada).
[223] Act to Establish the
Administrative Labour Tribunal Section 51 (Canada).
[224] Act to Establish the
Administrative Labour Tribunal Section 49 (Canada).
[226] C-C Cheng, 'A Study to
Improve the Labour Dispute Mediation and Arbitration System in Taiwan—A Focus on Sole Mediator and
Sole Arbitrator' (2011) 80 Taipei University Law Review 117, 135.
[228] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 13.
[229] Cheng (n 224) 137-138.
[230] Act for the Settlement of
Labour-Management Disputes Art 25 (Taiwan).
[231] Act for the Settlement of
Labour-Management Disputes Art 26 (1) (Taiwan).
[232] Act for the Settlement of
Labour-Management Disputes Art 37 (Taiwan).
[234] In Japan, rules of arbitration
are provisioned Art 29 to 35 of the Labour Relations Adjustment Act (Japan).
[235] Labour Relations Adjustment
Act Art 30 (Japan).
[236] Labour Relations Adjustment
Act Art 31 (Japan).
[237] Labour Relations Adjustment
Act Art 31-2 (Japan).
[238] Labour Relations Adjustment
Act Art 34 (Japan): An arbitration award has the same effect as a labour agreement.
[239] Cheng (n 224) 138-148.
[242] Connors and Bashore-Smith (n
57) 328.
[245] Labour Union Act Art 19 (1)
(Japan).
[246] Labour Union Act Art 27-12(2)
(Japan).
[247] Labour Union Act Art 27
(Japan).
[248] Labour Union Act Art 27-6 (1)
(Japan)
[249] Labour Union Act Art 27-6 (2)
(Japan).
[250] Labour Union Act Art 27-6 (4)
(Japan).
[251] Labour Union Act Art 27-7 (1)
(Japan).
[252] Ebisui, Cooney and Fenwick (n
1) 319-320.