Legal analysis
If you find that the company has forged evidence, you can apply for judicial expertise. Judicial expertise refers to the activities that appraisers use science and technology or specialized knowledge to identify and judge the specialized issues involved in litigation and provide expert opinions. In other words, judicial expertise refers to the activities that judicial organs or parties entrust legal expertise units to conduct identification and judgment in accordance with legal procedures in the course of litigation. Forging evidence is an act of deliberately making false evidence materials; Including imitating the real evidence to make false evidence, or fabricating false evidence out of thin air, changing the real evidence to make it disappear or weaken. When employees have disputes with enterprises at work, they can safeguard their legitimate rights and interests through labor arbitration. As we all know, in labor arbitration, we should provide relevant evidence in accordance with the regulations, so as to win more compensation for ourselves in arbitration. Some people will forge some evidence in order to benefit themselves from the arbitration results. If they falsify evidence, the first civil result is that the evidence will definitely not be recognized by the court or the arbitration commission. In criminal matters, if the circumstances are serious, criminal responsibility shall be borne. If the parties to labor arbitration forge evidence, they will certainly be punished accordingly.
legal ground
Article 111 of the Civil Procedure Law of People's Republic of China (PRC), if a litigant participant or other person commits one of the following acts, the people's court may impose a fine or detention according to the seriousness of the case; If the case constitutes a crime, criminal responsibility shall be investigated according to law: (1) forging or destroying important evidence, which hinders the people's court from hearing the case; (2) using violence, threats or bribes to prevent witnesses from testifying or instigating, bribing or coercing others to commit perjury; (3) Hiding, transferring, selling off or destroying the property that has been sealed up or detained, or transferring the property that has been counted and ordered to be kept; (4) Insulting, slandering, framing, beating or retaliating against judicial personnel, participants in litigation, witnesses, translators, expert witnesses, inspectors and assisting executors; (5) Obstructing judicial personnel from performing their duties by violence, threat or other means; (6) Refusing to perform a legally effective judgment or ruling of the people's court. The people's court may impose a fine or detention on a unit that commits one of the acts listed in the preceding paragraph; If a crime is constituted, criminal responsibility shall be investigated according to law.