February 17 2026

Higher Duties and Job Classification: Supreme Court Ruling 1212/2026

The Supreme Court, with Ordinance No. 1212 of January 20, 2026, has reaffirmed the strict methodological requirements for recognizing higher duties and the corresponding salary differentials. The Court clarified that trial judges cannot rely solely on witness testimony but must apply the "three-phase procedure." This process requires a factual assessment of the duties performed, an analysis of the National Collective Labour Agreement (CCNL) classifications, and a precise comparison between the two. The ruling emphasizes that the absence of such a comparative analysis results in a failure to prove the right to a higher job classification, leading to the appeal being upheld in favor of the employer. This principle serves as a key benchmark for managing litigation regarding professional grading and reclassification.

The Supreme Court has once again ruled on the stringent regulations governing the recognition of higher duties (mansioni superiori) and the subsequent right to back pay and salary differentials. In a recent order, the Court of Last Resort reaffirmed that determining a participant’s correct job classification requires a mandatory logical process by the trial judge. This ruling is of significant interest to both companies and employees, as it clarifies how the absence of a rigorous contractual analysis results in a failure to prove the legal right claimed, even in complex scenarios involving prior settlement agreements or the dismissal appeals.

The Case and the Regulatory Framework

The dispute originated from a claim filed by an employee, formally hired as a sales assistant, seeking recognition of a higher professional qualification (Store Manager) and the related financial adjustments. The employer opposed the claim, citing a prior judicial settlement agreement signed following a dismissal for objective justified reasons. According to the company, by signing that agreement, the employee had implicitly accepted the correctness of his original classification level.

While the Court of First Instance dismissed the employee’s claims—placing decisive weight on the judicial settlement—the Court of Appeal overturned the verdict. The second-instance judges based their decision exclusively on witness testimony. These testimonies confirmed that the employee performed managerial tasks, leading the Territorial Court to grant the right to the higher classification level without further investigation into the applicable collective agreement.

The Court’s Ruling: The "Three-Phase Procedure"

With Order No. 1212, filed on January 20, 2026, the Supreme Court criticized the approach adopted by the Court of Appeal, deeming it legally flawed. The Supreme Court focused its analysis on the method of assessment, establishing that a mere reconstruction of the facts is insufficient to award a higher professional qualification.

To legally recognize the performance of higher duties, settled case law requires the application of the so-called "three-phase procedure" (procedimento trifasico). This is a structured legal-logical path consisting of three mandatory steps:

  1. Factual Assessment: Determining the specific work activities actually performed by the employee.
  2. Contractual Identification: Identifying the qualifications and levels provided for in the abstract by the relevant National Collective Labour Agreement (CCNL).
  3. Comparative Analysis: A direct and precise comparison between the results of the factual inquiry and the definitions set out in the contract.

In the case at hand, the Supreme Court found that the appellate judges completely omitted this three-phase articulation. They relied on the description of tasks provided by witnesses but failed to identify the constituent elements of the claimed contractual level versus the one formally held, making a necessary legal comparison impossible.

Operational Implications and Partial Remand

A lack of reasoning in applying contractual criteria effectively results in a failure to provide the required evidence for obtaining a new classification level. Without this comparison, the judgment cannot be verified for its compliance with the law. Consequently, the Supreme Court partially upheld the employer’s appeal, vacating the challenged sentence and remanding the case to a different panel of the Court of Appeal for a new assessment based on the correct logical procedure.

This ruling provides essential guidance for legal practitioners and Human Resources departments. The assessment of job duties can never be reduced to a mere factual inquiry; it always requires an accurate legal subsumption within the contractual framework. Whether for employees claiming salary differentials or for companies defending their classification structures, the core of the litigation must necessarily focus on the interpretation and application of the relevant National Collective Labour Agreement.

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