Deadlines & indemnités

Every governing date and amount, computed

Procedural délais, prescription, préavis and indemnité de départ — Clerk reads the case file, works out the figure, cites the article it relied on and puts the échéance on the matter calendar. In seconds, not an afternoon.

From file to figure

The délai, worked out while you read the email

A missed deadline is the one mistake a litigation practice cannot afford. Clerk reads the dates straight out of the case file, applies the governing rule and returns the échéance with the article it relied on — so the calculation is there to check, not to do.

  • Reads the relevant dates from the matter, not from your memory
  • Computes procedural délais, prescription, préavis and indemnité de départ
  • Cites the governing article for every figure it returns
  • Drops the échéance straight onto the matter calendar
Secondsfrom the dates in the file to a dated, article-cited échéance
What it computes

The calculations a Luxembourg practice runs every week

Each result is tied to the article it came from.

Procedural délais

Works out the deadlines that run from a judgment, an act or a notification — and dates the échéance from the trigger in the file.

Prescription

Computes prescription periods so you know whether a claim is still in time before you build on it.

Préavis

Calculates the notice period owed on a termination, sized to the facts of the employment in the file.

Indemnité de départ

Returns the severance figure owed, computed from length of service and the governing provisions.

Article cited every time

Each figure is grounded in the article it relied on — for example L.124-1 or L.124-7 — so you can verify the basis at a glance.

Échéance on the calendar

The computed deadline goes onto the matter calendar the moment it's worked out, so nothing depends on someone remembering to write it down.

See it work

Watch Clerk compute a délai and date the échéance

It shows the dates it read, the article it applied and the deadline it set — every step in view.

Clerk · Droit du travail · Licenciement

Mon client, cadre depuis 8 ans, a été licencié avec effet immédiat pour faute grave. Le licenciement est-il abusif ? Calcule les indemnités et trouve la jurisprudence.

Clerk
  1. Réflexion

    J’examine un licenciement avec effet immédiat pour faute grave après huit ans d’ancienneté. Je vérifie la procédure, j’apprécie la gravité de la faute, puis je chiffre les indemnités dues.

  2. Consultation de documents

    contrat_de_travail.pdfPDF
  3. Calcul des indemnités

    Préavis L.124-1 : 4 moisIndemnité de départ L.124-7 : 2 moisBase : 5 800 € brut
  4. Recherche dans la jurisprudence

    faute grave absences injustifiéesproportionnalité de la sanctioncharge de la preuve employeur
  5. Lecture d’une décision

    C.S.J., n° 145/23 — 14 mars 2023
  6. Réflexion

    La Cour exige une faute rendant immédiatement impossible la poursuite du contrat. De simples absences, sans avertissement préalable, sont rarement qualifiées de faute grave — le licenciement paraît abusif.

Why it holds up

Secondsfrom case file to a cited échéance
Every figuretied to its governing article
L.124-7the kind of provision Clerk cites for every figure
On calendarthe échéance, not a note to self

Deadlines & indemnités questions

Where do the dates come from?

From the matter itself. Clerk reads the relevant dates out of the case file — the judgment, the act, the notification — rather than relying on you to type them in, so the calculation starts from what's actually on file.

Can I check the basis of a figure?

Yes. Every délai, prescription period, préavis and indemnité de départ is returned with the governing article it relied on — for example L.124-1 or L.124-7 — so you can verify the basis before you act on it.

What exactly can Clerk compute?

Procedural délais, prescription periods, préavis and indemnité de départ. It returns the figure with the article that governs it, and dates the échéance onto the matter calendar.

Does the deadline get into my calendar automatically?

Yes. Once Clerk computes an échéance, it puts it on the matter calendar straight away — so the deadline doesn't depend on anyone remembering to record it.

How fast is it?

Seconds. Clerk reads the dates from the file, applies the rule and returns the dated, article-cited échéance — work that would otherwise take an afternoon of cross-checking.

Is the figure final?

Clerk gives you a computed result with its working and its citation, ready for you to review. The figure and the cited article are there precisely so a lawyer can confirm them before relying on the number.

Never recompute a délai by hand again

Let Clerk read the file, work out the figure, cite the article and date the échéance — while you check the reasoning.