Direito Do Trabalho Apr 2026

Clara felt humiliated. She also noticed he had hired a new assistant, a young man named Pedro, who sat at the desk next to hers. Pedro did the exact same tasks she used to do. When she discreetly asked Pedro his salary, he whispered, "R$ 3,200."

Everyone stayed. Clara worked until 10 PM. She didn't ask about overtime. She was too eager to please.

A major client wanted a complete brand overhaul in 10 days. On a Tuesday at 5:45 PM, Mr. Siqueira gathered the team. "I know it's late, but this is what separates the good from the great. We need to stay tonight. Who's with me?"

That night, Clara cried to her older sister, who worked as a paralegal. "That's not 'family,'" her sister said. "That's a violation of almost every article of the CLT. You need to see Dr. Leticia." Direito do Trabalho

One Friday, after a 65-hour week (25 hours of unpaid overtime), Clara felt dizzy and exhausted. She made a minor mistake: she posted a client's draft instead of the final version on Instagram. The client was furious. The next Monday, Mr. Siqueira called her into his office.

He also stopped signing their timecards. The physical book where they used to record entry and exit times remained blank. "We trust you," he said.

"Clara, I’m disappointed. You’re not showing commitment. I’m reducing your responsibilities. Effective immediately, you'll be cleaning the database and doing administrative filing. And we need to talk about your attitude." Clara felt humiliated

When Clara politely asked if they would be paid for the extra hours, Mr. Siqueira laughed. "Clara, we're a family here. Families help each other. Besides, your contract is for a salaried position. You're expected to get the job done, no matter the hours. That's the startup spirit!"

Mr. Siqueira panicked. He tried to fire her "for just cause" (insubordination), but Dr. Leticia had already filed a preliminary complaint with the Labor Prosecutor's Office ( Ministério Público do Trabalho ).

Her heart sank. She was being paid less than a male colleague for identical work. And now she was being punished for an error caused by sheer exhaustion from forced overtime. When she discreetly asked Pedro his salary, he

Clara now works at a company with a transparent HR department, a union-negotiated collective bargaining agreement, and a real "family" culture—one that respects the law. And every time she sees a friend working late without pay, she tells them the story of Mr. Siqueira and says:

With Dr. Leticia's guidance, Clara documented everything. She sent an email to Mr. Siqueira (creating a paper trail) asking for a formal meeting to discuss "compliance with labor regulations." She secretly took photos of her computer's login/logout times.

At the labor court hearing, Mr. Siqueira arrived with a lawyer. He claimed Clara was "lazy" and "not a team player." But Clara had her evidence: emails sent at 9:47 PM, WhatsApp messages from him asking for "just one more hour," and the pay stub showing Pedro's higher salary for the same role.