Cesar Peres Dulac Müller logo

CPDMA BLOG

Category:
Date: April 22, 2019
Posted by: CPDMA Team

Slave labor and the consequences of the application of Criminal Law in the Labor Court

The practice of slave labor is one of the subjects most in evidence in the media and in the courts, incredible as it may seem, even in the 21st century. According to the International Labor Organization (ILO), 20 million people worldwide are victims of contemporary slavery.

Traditionally, this type of labor is employed in economic activities developed in the areas of charcoal production and in rural areas – in livestock and in the cultivation of sugarcane, soybeans and cotton. In recent years, this situation has also been verified in urban centers, especially in the textile industry and civil construction. Unfortunately, there are records of slave labor in all Brazilian states.

In the Brazilian legal system, the Penal Code, in its article 149, establishes a penalty of ''imprisonment, from two to eight years, and a fine, in addition to the penalty corresponding to violence'', for anyone who ''reduces someone to a condition analogous to slave, either by subjecting him to forced labor or an exhausting day, or by subjecting him to degrading working conditions, or by restricting, by any means, his locomotion due to a debt contracted with the employer or agent''. 

Contrary to what is imagined for slavery, to configure the crime of article 149 of the Penal Code, it is not necessary to prove the physical coercion of freedom to come and go or even the restriction of freedom of movement. It suffices to submit the victim ''to forced labor or an exhausting day'' or ''to degrading working conditions''.

Contemporary slave labor consists of the super-exploitation of workers by those who, by taking their services, aiming at maximum profit, deny them the fundamental rights guaranteed in the Constitution of the Republic, especially their dignity. 

It is important to emphasize here that slave labor cannot be characterized by mere labor infractions, but when a crime against the dignity of the worker is proven. Every human being is born with the same fundamental rights. These, when violated, pull us out of this condition and turn us into things, disposable instruments of work. When a worker maintains his freedom, but is excluded from minimum conditions of dignity, then we have characterized slave labor. 

However, the consequences of submitting the employee to work analogous to slavery are not only criminal, since the conduct also has repercussions in the Labor Courts. That is, companies that use this type of labor are subject to the payment of very high indemnities as collective moral damage. 

The Ministry of Labor and Employment (MTE) published on 10/16/2017 Ordinance MT 1,129, in which it provides for the concepts of forced labor, exhausting working hours and conditions similar to slavery to be observed by auditors at the time of inspections.

As already mentioned, it is not any failure to comply with labor standards that generates the incidence of the type provided for in article 149 of the Penal Code. Only conduct that entails the ''reduction to a condition analogous to that of a slave'' is incriminated, which presupposes total disregard for the dignity of the human person in the work relationship. In those cases in which this is provided without minimum hygiene, health and safety conditions or, even, in an extremely exhausting journey.

A degrading working condition is, therefore, one that transcends the regular exercise of work, it is what humiliates the worker beyond the conditions peculiar to the activity itself. 

On the other hand, the exhaustive working day does not consist of those simple overtime hours, even if usual and correctly paid, but rather the one that makes it impossible for the employee to relate and live in society through recreational, affective, spiritual, cultural, sports, social and of rest, which will bring you physical and psychological well-being and, consequently, happiness. Or it prevents you from executing, continuing or even starting over your life projects, which will, in turn, be responsible for your professional, social and personal growth or fulfillment.

In order to recognize the crime of reduction to a condition analogous to slavery, and consequently conviction in the labor court, proof must be required that the violation of labor rights has been intense and persistent.

The world of work is in constant transition. Thus, the magistrate must, weighing the constitutional principles and fundamental rights, adapt or not the employer's conduct to the criminal type described in article 149 of the Penal Code.

I emphasize that the Labor Court should not deal with offenses that do not affect, with such seriousness, the protected legal object – the dignity of the worker. In other words, criminal law should only be invoked as a last resort. In other words, only the subjection of the worker to absolutely unworthy conditions, with the violation of human dignity itself, should constitute work in conditions analogous to slavery.

Source: Alice Romero, attorney at Cesar Peres Dulac Müller, specializes in Process and Labor Law.

Return

Recent posts

STF suspends proceedings on the legality of service provision contracts across the country

The Supreme Federal Court (STF) has decided to suspend, nationwide, all legal proceedings that question the legality of service provision contracts, commonly known as “pejotização”. The decision, issued by Justice Gilmar Mendes, aims to standardize the interpretation on the matter and ensure legal certainty. The STF recognized the general repercussion of the issue when it […]

Read more

CPDMA's role was decisive in the Supreme Federal Court's ruling reaffirming the case law on the use of legal entities in labor relations.

Uma importante decisão proferida recentemente pelo Supremo Tribunal Federal (STF), a partir de atuação da equipe trabalhista Cesar Peres Dulac Müller Advogados, trouxe novamente à tona a relevância da observância aos precedentes vinculantes da Corte em matéria trabalhista, especialmente quanto à licitude de formas alternativas de contratação, como a prestação de serviços por pessoa jurídica — prática […]

Read more

Annual meeting for accounts review

The annual holding of the Ordinary General Meeting (OGM) for the accountability of the administrators is a legal requirement provided for in Law No. 6,404/1976 (Brazilian Corporations Law), specifically in Articles 132 and following. This provision establishes that the OGM must take place within the first four (4) months following the end of the fiscal year, usually by […]

Read more

The Full Bench of the Superior Labor Court rules on new binding precedents

The Full Bench of the Superior Labor Court, in a session held this Monday (24), established legal theses on new topics, as part of a procedure to reaffirm its jurisprudence. These are matters that, as they are already settled, were submitted to the repetitive appeals procedure to define a binding legal thesis. The establishment of qualified precedents has a direct impact […]

Read more
Thomas Dulac Müller discusses third-party liability in bankruptcy at TMA Brasil event in Porto Alegre

On March 18, 2025, at the Hotel Laghetto Stilo Higienópolis, Thomas Dulac Müller, a lawyer and expert in corporate restructuring, participated in the panel "Third-Party Liability in Bankruptcy", sharing his expertise alongside top industry specialists. The discussion provided strategic insights into the legal implications of bankruptcy for third parties involved in insolvency proceedings. […]

Read more
State Government launches Refaz Reconstruction: public notice for negotiation of ICMS debts

The Refaz Reconstruction (Decree 58.067/2025) will allow the regularization of debts with the State Revenue Service and the State Attorney General's Office (PGE) for companies owing ICMS, with a reduction of up to 95% in interest and fines. The initiative aims to reduce an ICMS debt stock of R$ 55.2 billion in the state. Currently, about 72% of this amount is in the judicial collection phase, […]

Read more
crossmenuchevron-down
en_USEnglish
linkedin Facebook pinterest youtube lol twitter Instagram facebook-blank rss-blank linkedin-blank pinterest youtube twitter Instagram