Once the paid leave is scheduled, the employer cannot change the schedule less than a month in advance, except in exceptional circumstances, such as the need to replace an employee who died suddenly or unforeseen orders (business opportunities) likely to save the company.
Please note: a different notice period may be provided for by the company agreement or, failing that, by the collective agreement applicable to the company.
But does this notice period apply only to the employee’s main leave (i.e., the 4-week summer leave, in principle) or to all paid leave?
In a recent case (
For his part, the employer considered that no notice period applied to the fifth week of paid leave, nor to the contractual leave. To support his reasoning, he argued that the fifth week of leave would obey different legal rules from those relating to the first four weeks since, according to him, on the one hand, it could not give rise to the acquisition of split days and, on the other, employees would have the possibility of waiving it to supplement a time savings account or to donate it to another employee.
But for the Court of Cassation, in accordance with the Labor Code, the employer is not authorized, except in exceptional circumstances, to change the date of departures on leave of his employees less than a month in advance. As this text makes no distinction between the first four weeks and the fifth week of paid leave, the one-month notice period applies to all paid leave. And according to the judges, in the absence of contractual provisions to the contrary, this rule also applies to days of contractual leave. Therefore, the leave imposed by the employer on his employees, without respecting the one-month notice period, was considered unlawful.
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