as You Work
Legal Issues in the Workplace
In 1980, our State Supreme Court declared, in Pierce v. Ortho Pharmaceutical Corp. , 84 N.J 58 (1980), that it is unlawful for employers to fire their workers in violation of a clear mandate of public policy. Those types of cases have since come to be known as Pierce claims and preceded our state whistleblower’s law by six years. When viewed through a historical lens, Pierce claims created a way for at-will employees to claim that their firings were illegal because they violated an implied (unspoken) duty owed by employers to their workers involving issues that are generally recognized as sufficiently important. Once CEPA, New Jersey’s whistleblower law, was enacted, those claims largely took the place of Pierce claims. But New Jersey retaliation attorneys at Lenzo & Reis understand that Pierce claims still exist today. Today, such claims may be brought when employees are fired for raising issues about their employers’ conduct, which conduct the employees reasonably believe violates a public policy but not a law. Such claims may also be pursued when a professional code of ethics gives rise to a public policy claim. Lastly, employees may pursue Pierce claims when the claim would have been protected under the New Jersey Conscientious Employee Protection Act (CEPA), our State whistleblower law, but was not timely filed. The Conscientious Employee Protection Act requires claims to be brought within 1 year of the retaliatory act whereas a fired employee has 2 years to bring a Pierce claim. It is important to understand that employees who think they may have a whistleblower claim should talk to a qualified whistleblowing attorney, like the attorneys at Lenzo & Reis, immediately because there are significant benefits to bringing a CEPA claim that are not available to individuals pursuing Pierce claims.
Courts have found that entirely private disputes and/or disagreements between employees and employers do not give rise to Pierce claims. Similarly, opposing an employer’s policy, without more, will not result in a successful Pierce claim.
Being fired is incredibly stressful especially when you were fired for trying to do the right thing. You do not need to suffer in silence. If you believe that you were fired in violation of a clear mandate of public policy, you should contact the experienced lawyers at New Jersey’s wrongful termination law firm, Lenzo & Reis, by phone at (973) 845-9922 or e-mail. Our retaliation attorneys have successfully helped hundreds of New Jersey employees who were unlawfully fired, and we can help you, too.