February 25th, 2013, 2:06 pm
"Duress" varies a lot from place to place.Being offered money to sign something is hard to qualify as duress, so an employer may say "we really like your work and want to show commitment to you, so your bonus will be X this year after you sign this contract".In UK law there is a specific case where BZW was sold by Barclays to Credit Suisse.Useful people were offered money not to leave.They took the money, which was not only large in absolute terms but was large enough to them personally to alter their motivations.Then they left.Under European law, as implemented in England, you can't sign away your rights during a takeover, no matter how good the price you are offered.Given that they were offered seriously money to keep doing a job they had already chosen to do, hard to see this as duress, but the law was designed to protect much more junior people who might be offered a tiny amount of cash and told "sign this or we fire you" and claiming the rights were "compensated for".DISCLAIMER DO NOT try this stunt without a serious lawyer OKing it first.Duress also requires evidence, since UK & US courts assume you have read and understood and agreed to anything you sign unless you produce evidence that it was not kosher.Saying "a lot of people were being fired and I feared for my job" sucks.