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French court rules employer responsible for worker's death after sex

6:27
News headlines today: Dec. 23, 2020
Bloomberg via Getty Images, FILE
ByIbtissem Guenfoud
September 10, 2019, 4:09 PM

Paris -- During a business trip, an employer is liable for any employee accidents -- or an employee's death -- in just about any circumstance, a French court has ruled, including the consequences of an amorous encounter.

A man only identified by his first name, Xavier, a railway construction technician, died of a heart attack while on a business trip in the Loiret province, about 60 miles south of Paris. The man was found dead at the home of a woman with whom he had just had sex, according to a reproduction of the court document posted on LinkedIn (in French).

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The case dates back to 2013. In its judgment dated May 27, 2019, relayed by labor lawyer Sarah Balluet, the court ruled the death a "workplace accident," setting a pathway for workplace compensation.

A courtroom, at the Palais de Justice in Paris, France, Dec. 12, 2016.
Bloomberg via Getty Images, FILE

The worker's health insurance fund (Cpam), a party in the case, particularly stressed the fact that sexual intercourse "relates to acts of everyday life like to take a shower or a meal."

The fact that the employee had sex in a place other than the hotel room booked by his employer does not, according to the court, signify "that he had placed himself outside the sphere of authority of the employer."

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Xavier had worked for TSO, a railway construction company, reported Quartz. The company failed to sway the court with its argument that the worker's death "occurred when he had knowingly interrupted his mission for a reason solely dictated by his personal interest, independent of his job."

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