WeWork
A woman exiting a WeWork coworking space in New York City on January 8. Brendan McDermid

 

  • WeWork has sent combative legal letters to people it laid off in a round of job cuts earlier in 2019, warning them not to compete with its business.
  • The letters warn the former employees to stick to the terms of their contracts, or the company will pursue legal action. There didn’t seem to be any evidence, however, that the workers had breached their contracts.
  • It is normal to remind employees not to pass on confidential information once they’ve left a company, but UK employment lawyers described WeWork’s letters as “heavy-handed” and “aggressive.”
  • WeWork declined to comment.

WeWork has been sending “aggressive” legal letters to employees affected by global layoffs earlier this year, sources told Business Insider.

The letters warn the former employees to stick to the terms of their contracts, or the company will pursue legal action.

The former workers, who were full-time employees affected by a round of global job cuts earlier in 2019, were told that if they broke their terms, WeWork would “take action against you personally to recover any loss of profits that the company has suffered or is likely to suffer.”

Business Insider has seen a copy of one of the letters but is not sharing it to preserve the source’s privacy.

While it is normal to remind former employees about the terms of their contract after they leave a job, it is unusual to threaten them with legal action, especially if there is no proof of wrongdoing, legal experts say.

Employees often forget that they are bound by many of the terms of their employment contract for up to 12 months, the experts said.

Such letters often warn that former staff cannot reach out to clients they interacted with. Also, before they leave, they cannot take with them any proprietary information like documents, code, or confidential information about the company. But former WeWorkers who received the letters said they felt stressed by the reminders.

‘It felt heavy-handed’

Susan Thompson, a UK employment lawyer at Simkins, told Business Insider she had rarely seen this kind of communication in her 20-plus-year career.

“It feels heavy-handed,” Thompson said. “Ironically, I don’t think this makes them look stronger but weaker. The company is obviously feeling under pressure.”

While Thompson added that no business should ignore when employees break their contracts, but threatening a worker who was not even necessarily suspected of wrongdoing was unusual.

WeWork’s letter said, “If the company shall become aware that you have committed any fundamental breaches of your contract and/or there is clear evidence,” but it does not list any proof of wrongdoing.

“They clearly have no evidence,” Thompson said. “A mere suspicion isn’t enough to take anyone to court.”

Michelle Last, an employment lawyer with Keystone Law, also characterized the communication as “heavy-handed.”

“In the absence of any breach of contract this seems unnecessary and overly aggressive,” she said. “Couldn’t they achieve the same end, but without contacting someone in such a manner?”

Last said she would advise the former employees to ignore the letters.

She added: “If they continue to feel threatened by the company, they could respond and say: ‘I reserve my right to bring this matter as an attention to the court to consider if your conduct is correct in such a situation.'”

But, she said: “It’s probably best to ignore it.”

“In the absence of any breach of contract this seems unnecessary and overly aggressive,” she said. “Couldn’t they achieve the same end, but without contacting someone in such a manner?”

Last said she would advise the former employees to ignore the letters.

She added: “If they continue to feel threatened by the company, they could respond and say: ‘I reserve my right to bring this matter as an attention to the court to consider if your conduct is correct in such a situation.'”

But, she said: “It’s probably best to ignore it.”

As reported by Business Insider