Legal Question in Employment Law in New York
Harrassment leading to termination
If I have suffered from harrassment and misrepresentation by an employee of the firm in a supervisory position (not of a sexual nature), and this leads to termination for me, can I file a lawsuit? What are my chances? I have documentation to prove knowledge by other co-workers and repeated attempts to bring this to management's attention. If I do not take on a full fledged lawsuit, do I use the information in unemployment court - should unemployment benefits be under dispute? I am an assistant, can I ask for/request severance, cobra? Thank you.
2 Answers from Attorneys
Re: Harrassment leading to termination
The fact pattern certainly appears to provide a basis for a sexual harassment lawsuit, an action under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. Please telephone me at (212) 618-1830 to discuss the relative merits (and demerits) of your case.
Re: Harrassment leading to termination
Since the "harassment" is not of a sexual nature, you would need to establish that the "harassment" was somehow discriminatory on the basis of some protected area, i.e., race, gender, religion, etc.
Simple "harassment," per se -- meaning harassment that you were not performing your work adequately, for example -- is not actionable.
Also, if you have some sort of employment contract that changes the default of being an "employee at will," you may have a claim for breach of such contract if, in fact, the "harassment" constitutes a breach.
Thus, to summarize: You need to establish an unlawful discriminatory basis for the harassment in order to maintain a statutory claim or a breach of an employment contract.
-- Kenneth J. Ashman; www.AshmanLawOffices.com
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