STF Justice Nunes Marques overturns labor court ruling on pejotization

Supreme Court Justice Kassio Nunes Marques overturned a labor court decision examining employment ties in a Prudential insurance franchise contract and ordered the process suspended. This follows a prior suspension of pejotization cases by Gilmar Mendes. The case challenges a Tribunal Superior do Trabalho (TST) ruling.

Brazil's Supreme Federal Court (STF) has again intervened in labor disputes involving pejotization, a practice where companies hire services through legal entities to sidestep employment obligations. In a recent ruling, Justice Kassio Nunes Marques quashed a Tribunal Superior do Trabalho (TST) decision that allowed a broker's lawsuit against insurer Prudential to proceed. The broker claims an employment relationship with the company.

Nunes Marques granted Prudential's appeal, stating that the TST disregarded a prior STF order. He noted that the tribunal "manteve a regular tramitação dos autos, em manifesta inobservância à decisão proferida por este Supremo Tribunal". This marks the second such action by the justice: he previously nullified another TST ruling and eight regional labor court decisions.

The backdrop is a 2025 order by Justice Gilmar Mendes suspending all national pejotization cases pending full STF review. That merits hearing will address the validity of pejotization contracts, the labor courts' jurisdiction, and the burden of proof—whether on the worker or the contractor.

Pejotization continues as a contentious issue in Brazilian labor law, affecting sectors like insurance and franchises. The STF has not set a date for the definitive ruling, but the suspensions aim to standardize jurisprudence.

Makala yanayohusiana

Dramatic illustration of Brazil's CPI rejecting a report against STF justices in a 6-4 Senate vote.
Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Brazil's organized crime CPI rejects report against STF justices

Imeripotiwa na AI Picha iliyoundwa na AI

Brazil's Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry (CPI) on Organized Crime rejected Senator Alessandro Vieira's (MDB-SE) final report on Tuesday (April 14), which proposed indicting three Supreme Federal Court (STF) justices and the Attorney General. The report was defeated 6-4 after changes in the commission's composition. The substitutions favored government-aligned members, swaying the vote outcome.

The Supreme Federal Court formed a majority to authorize payment of accumulated indemnity benefits to judges and Public Ministry members. The virtual judgment continues until Tuesday.

Imeripotiwa na AI

Brazil's Superior Electoral Court (TSE) must rule if Cláudio Castro's resignation was a maneuver to dodge cassation and indirect election in the state assembly. Former deputy Marcelo Freixo and a coalition appealed to annul the ex-governor's diploma. This could lead to a direct popular vote for his successor in Rio de Janeiro.

Argentina's Sala IV of the Contencioso Administrativo Federal Appeals Chamber ruled that the General Confederation of Labor (CGT)'s ongoing constitutional challenge to labor reform law 27.802 belongs in administrative jurisdiction, not labor courts. Judges Rogelio Vicenti and Marcelo Duffy sided with the national government in a win against the union confederation's efforts to block the reform, first challenged judicially in March.

Imeripotiwa na AI

In response to a rejected CPI report proposing his indictment, STF Justice Gilmar Mendes on April 15 requested Attorney General Paulo Gonet investigate Senator Alessandro Vieira for abuse of authority, citing deviation from the commission's organized crime focus.

Tovuti hii inatumia vidakuzi

Tunatumia vidakuzi kwa uchambuzi ili kuboresha tovuti yetu. Soma sera ya faragha yetu kwa maelezo zaidi.
Kataa