Did your employer fail to honor the terms of your employment agreement? The Lacy Employment Law Firm helps New Jersey employees understand and address disputes involving compensation, severance, termination terms, commissions, bonuses, and other workplace promises.
Employment contracts define what an employer and employee have agreed to provide. When an employer fails to follow those terms, the employee may have a breach of contract claim.
Not every unfair workplace decision is a contract violation. A valid claim generally depends on whether an enforceable agreement existed, what the agreement required, whether you fulfilled your obligations, how your employer failed to perform, and whether the breach caused you a financial loss.
A New Jersey breach of contract lawyer can review the complete agreement and help you understand which terms may be enforceable.
NEW JERSEY PRACTICE AREAS
Employment contract disputes may involve:
The wording of the agreement matters. Definitions, deadlines, conditions, discretionary language, amendment clauses, and dispute-resolution requirements can all affect the strength of a claim.
A person bringing a breach of contract claim in New Jersey generally must establish that:
Evidence may include an employment agreement, offer letter, compensation plan, commission policy, severance agreement, employee handbook, emails, text messages, payroll records, performance records, and communications with management or human resources.
A workplace agreement may be created through several related documents, including:
Some oral promises or workplace policies may also be relevant, but these claims can be more difficult to prove. Employee handbooks may create contractual obligations in certain circumstances, while a clear and prominent disclaimer may show that the employer did not intend the handbook to form a contract.
The full employment record should be reviewed rather than relying on a single document or conversation.
Most New Jersey employees are employed at will unless an agreement provides otherwise. At-will employment generally allows either party to end the employment relationship for a lawful reason.
However, an at-will employee may still have enforceable rights involving earned commissions, promised bonuses, severance, confidentiality obligations, compensation plans, or other specific employment terms.
The key question is often not whether the employer could terminate the employee, but whether the employer violated a separate promise while doing so.
The Lacy Employment Law Firm can help employees:
Employment disputes often involve more than one area of law. Reviewing the complete situation can help prevent important claims or defenses from being missed.
Depending on the contract and circumstances, recoverable losses may include:
The purpose of contract damages is generally to place the injured party in the financial position they would have occupied if the agreement had been performed. The employee may also have a responsibility to take reasonable steps to reduce avoidable losses.
You generally need to show that an enforceable contract existed, you performed your obligations, your employer failed to perform a required obligation, and the breach caused you to suffer a loss. The exact terms of the agreement and supporting evidence will be important.
Possibly. At-will employment may allow an employer to end the employment relationship for a lawful reason, but it does not necessarily eliminate contractual rights involving commissions, bonuses, severance, compensation, confidentiality, or other specific promises.
An employee handbook may create contractual obligations in some situations, depending on its language, how the policies were communicated, and whether the handbook contains a clear disclaimer. The entire handbook and acknowledgment documents should be reviewed.
Many New Jersey contractual claims are subject to a six-year limitation period beginning when the claim accrues. However, a contract may contain shorter notice or dispute deadlines, and different claims may follow different rules. It is safer to obtain legal advice promptly rather than relying on the general deadline.
You may have a claim if the payment was earned under the applicable agreement or compensation plan. Eligibility can depend on whether the payment was guaranteed or discretionary, whether conditions were satisfied, and what the agreement says about termination.
Some oral agreements may be enforceable, but proving their exact terms can be difficult. Emails, messages, witnesses, payment records, and the parties’ conduct may help establish what was promised. Certain agreements may also need to be in writing.