Legal Question in Employment Law in California

If you are working off of a job description that was processed back September 2010, then in March 2012 you ask for a raise and the company redoes your job description then denies your raise is that legal in the state of California?


Asked on 5/10/12, 9:28 am

2 Answers from Attorneys

Unless you have an actual employment contract specifying raises will be given, you have no right to a raise. Your job description is not a contract, and your employer can change it whenever they want.

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Answered on 5/10/12, 2:46 pm
Terry A. Nelson Nelson & Lawless

The employer is entitled to set and change hours, duties, titles, compensation, benefits, leaves, vacations, holidays, policies, rules, etc. just not retroactively. Not only are there no laws against poor management, 'unfair treatment', or rude and obnoxious behavior by management or other employees, but in general unless an employee is civil service, in a union, or has a written employment contract, they are an 'at will' employee that can be disciplined or terminated any time for any reason, with or without �cause�, explanation or notice.

Therefore, any employee's goal should be to keep their supervisors happy and make them look good to the company, and make the company money. That�s how the company pays employee wages. If you don't, then don't be surprised to be replaced.

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Answered on 5/10/12, 3:30 pm


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