Adoption of a specific clause for employers
The first new provision is the requirement for employers to set out the authorisation to carry out a private investigation and the terms and conditions of private investigations in regulations if the person concerned by the private investigation is employed by the instructing party. This means that unless an appropriate provision is included in a regulation, an employer will not be able to use private investigation services for an assignment concerning one of its employees.
While the law does not specify the legal nature of the regulations that must contain the clause in question, the travaux préparatoires (preparatory works) refer to labour regulations, a company’s collective labour agreement or a decision by the works council.
Companies have 2 years from the date the law comes into force to comply with this new provision. If the company has not adopted a valid clause of this kind, the law stipulates that the investigation report is null and void, and cannot therefore be used in legal proceedings. The Antigone jurisprudence, which in certain cases allows the admission of evidence gathered in violation of certain rules, could therefore not be applied.