employment contracts
mhees10076
12 Posts
Hi Everyone,
Need your help one more time. We have employees in several states. The CEO is in California and employee in question is an employee of Alaska. In regards to the employment contract signed by both parties, which state's employment laws preside? And in regards to employment references, if this employee has the intention of working for a company that we will shortly be partners with, can we be liable for giving employment history and problems with this employee to our future partner if we don't have an authorization from employee? I want to thank you all for your input as I am fairly new in this position. Thanks, Marlene
Need your help one more time. We have employees in several states. The CEO is in California and employee in question is an employee of Alaska. In regards to the employment contract signed by both parties, which state's employment laws preside? And in regards to employment references, if this employee has the intention of working for a company that we will shortly be partners with, can we be liable for giving employment history and problems with this employee to our future partner if we don't have an authorization from employee? I want to thank you all for your input as I am fairly new in this position. Thanks, Marlene
Comments
>Need your help one more time. We have employees in several states.
>The CEO is in California and employee in question is an employee of
>Alaska. In regards to the employment contract signed by both parties,
>which state's employment laws preside? And in regards to employment
>references, if this employee has the intention of working for a
>company that we will shortly be partners with, can we be liable for
>giving employment history and problems with this employee to our
>future partner if we don't have an authorization from employee? I
>want to thank you all for your input as I am fairly new in this
>position. Thanks, Marlene
The unemployment laws of the state in which his office or principal location is will be the ones that apply. If he does not have an office, it will be state opf his residence. Unless he is based physically in your state, your state regs will be irrelevant. On the other part of your question, I think it would be determined by the level of certainty that exists that this other company will actually become part of your company or might own your company. "Partnering with" I do not think is good reasoning for sharing personell files. Only if they are going to have a direct reporting relationship, up and down (or laterally/horizontally as might be the politically correct thinking) with the ee would I share the file. Otherwise, there doesn't seem a need to know all the details of the file.
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
615-371-8200
[email]mmorford@mleesmith.com[/email]
[url]http://www.thehredge.net[/url]
Margaret Morford
theHRedge
615-371-8200
[email]mmorford@mleesmith.com[/email]
[url]http://www.thehredge.net[/url]
In texas, you cannot agreed to apply another state's law for a non-compete. But you can agreed to apply another state's law for some other issues. It is a very technical legal question. It cannot be answered without an attorney looking at the contract and the facts behind the contract (where it was entered, where it is to be performed, etc) and the laws of each of the states.
Some states will reject other states laws on grounds of public policy, some states will require the person who wants the other state's laws rejected to prove that the other states laws will not give relief, and some states will apply the laws as selected. But a judge in Texas, for example, applying California law, can be expected to make a lot of mistakes in doing it.
Good Luck!!