Legal Question in Employment Law in New Jersey

Is it legal for an employer to look through an employee's email account and extract/print emails received if there is no written policy informing the employee that the employer reserves the right to do so?


Asked on 4/15/11, 5:34 pm

2 Answers from Attorneys

Barry Gartenberg Barry F. Gartenberg LLC

Thank you for your LawGuru question. A known policy of email monitoring by an employer certainly reduces the expectation of privacy in the workplace, and thus makes such monitoring more defensible. But, such action absent a policy to that effect does not necessarily make it illegal. I'd need to know more specifics before I could render an opinion. Please contact me ASAP so that we may explore your options and protect your legal rights. 973-921-0600.

Kindly note and remember that my response is merely a general comment on the law related to your question, and NOT legal advice or opinion. Also, your question and my response does NOT create an attorney-client relationship between us. You cannot rely upon what I have written, because I do not have all of the information that I need to advise you or render an opinion. Even simple facts you have not shared can completely change my answer. For me to give you legal advice or opinion, you would need to hire me to be your lawyer, and then we would need to discuss this in detail and go over the documents.

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With best wishes,

Barry F. Gartenberg, Esq.

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Answered on 4/15/11, 7:15 pm
John Corbett Corbett Law Firm LLC

The leading decisions in the area are to the effect that an employee (should) have no expectation of privacy in email or other communications that take place using an employer's servers. There are some exceptions for attorney-client privileged information (where the law is in a state of flux and may change). However, if you expect something to stay private, use a webmail service and an email client that does not maintain the information locally. Even then, there may be nothing that prevents the employer from evesdropping on traffic. Many better-equipped IT departments do that routinely as a security practice.

See also: http://info.corbettlaw.net/lawguru.htm

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Answered on 4/16/11, 6:55 am


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