Background checks are extremely important in the trucking business. They are regularly at issue in the litigation of cases of negligent hiring. Recently, when reviewing changes
in the law regarding employee background
checks (LSA R.S. 23:291), I noticed that several cases cited the statute addressing non-compete
agreements.
For example, Elite Coil Tubing Solutions, LLC v. Guillory 93 So.3d 861, (La. App.
2 Cir. 2012) and Bellard v. Gautreaux 675
F.3d 454 (La App. 5 Cir 2012) referenced the statute giving an employer
qualified when checking a prospective employee’s background.
I was trying to figure out HOW an
immunity statute had anything to do with a non-compete agreement, but I figured
out that the citations transposed ONE number. The non-compete statute is LSA R.S. 23:921, while the immunity statute
is LSA R.S. 23:291.
I was surprised that there was insufficient
proofreading by someone in the appellate courts. Then again, it’s completely understandable
to transpose a number, right? Maybe not since there are over 500 cases
accurately citing the non-compete statute.
There aren't as many references to the employer immunity for background statute, but there are some excellent law review articles and the procedure to conduct background checks has been addressed in a few law review articles. So I assumed someone was “cutting
and pasting” too much because I noticed the same erroneous citation in the
following cases:
- Emergency Staffing Solutions, Inc. v. Morehouse Parish Hosp. Service Dist. No. 1 2011 WL 1337371, (W.D.La 2011),
- Arthur J. Gallagher & Co. v. Babcock 2011 WL 121891, (E.D.La. 2011),
- Arthur J. Gallagher Risk Management Services, Inc. v. Todd 2010 WL 2179753, (La.App. 3 Cir. 2010)
- West Carroll Health System, LLC v. Tilmon 93 So.3rd 1131 (La. App 2 Cir 2012)
To be clear, I make mistakes
regularly...er uh...occasionally; however when SIX of the most recent cases dealing with NON-COMPETE agreements
referenced the employer immunity statute, something was troubling. Knowing that
this could not be accurate, I pulled up the official citation, which costs
more to use, for each of these cases and discovered that the
statute was accurately cited in the official text, but WESTLAW made a mistake
in transposing the numbers in the unofficial overview of the cases and
statutes.
Thanks Westlaw, I wasted an hour
reviewing the cases that inaccurately referenced the incorrect statute. Westlaw, please make sure you have better proof-reading!
To assist employers and attorneys
who want to review the law on properly conducting background checks of
prospective employees, the statute is LSA-R.S.
23:291
§ 291. Disclosure of employment related
information; presumptions; causes of action; definitions