Judicial Surety Bond for Labor Claims
Replace the cash appeal deposit (depósito recursal) in a Brazilian labor lawsuit with an insurance policy — without tying up the company's cash or bank credit line, with acceptance grounded in law and TST case law.
A judicial surety bond for labor claims lets a company guarantee a labor lawsuit (appeal deposit, enforcement, or attachment) with an insurer's policy instead of depositing cash or blocking its bank credit line. It is accepted by the Brazilian Labor Courts (Civil Procedure Code, art. 835, §2; CLT and TST guidance), freeing working capital.
Key facts
- What it replaces: Replaces the cash appeal deposit (depósito recursal) and the bank letter of guarantee in a labor lawsuit.
- Impact on bank credit line: Does not consume the company's bank credit line — cash and credit stay free for operations.
- Basis of acceptance: Civil Procedure Code art. 835, §2, CLT (art. 899) and TST guidance (IN 3/1993 and related precedents) treat the policy as equivalent to a cash deposit.
- Typical cost: Around 0.5% to 2% per year on the guaranteed amount, depending on risk and term.
- Issuance time: Usually 24 to 72 hours after risk analysis and documentation.
Cash appeal deposit vs Bank letter of guarantee vs Judicial surety bond
| Criterion | Cash appeal deposit | Bank letter of guarantee | Judicial surety bond |
|---|---|---|---|
| Consumes cash / working capital | Yes, ties up the full amount in court | Not directly, but requires counter-guarantees | No |
| Consumes bank credit line | No | Yes, usually ties up the line | No |
| Cost | Opportunity cost of idle cash | ~2% to 5% p.a. + reciprocity | ~0.5% to 2% p.a. |
| Acceptance at the TST | Accepted | Accepted | Accepted (CPC 835 §2 + CLT/TST guidance) |
| Release | Withdrawn at case end, subject to blocking | Released with the bank's letter of consent | Policy discharged when the guarantee ends |
What is a judicial surety bond for labor claims
A judicial surety bond for labor claims is a policy issued by an insurer authorized by Susep, under which the insurer guarantees the labor court that it will pay an amount if the company (the principal) fails to meet the obligation under dispute. In practice, it replaces the cash that would otherwise be deposited as an appeal deposit or as an enforcement guarantee.
Instead of pulling funds from the treasury to deposit in court — or tying up the bank credit line with a letter of guarantee — the company takes out the policy and files the surety bond in the case. The claimant (employee) is equally protected: if the company loses and does not pay, the insurer honors the guarantee up to the policy limit.
It is the most efficient form of guarantee for companies that litigate frequently in the Labor Courts and need to preserve cash and credit. ERGO specializes in surety bonds and issues policies for appeal deposits, enforcement, attachment, and other guarantees required in a labor lawsuit.
Legal basis and acceptance (CPC 835 §2, TST)
Article 835, §2, of the Brazilian Civil Procedure Code treats a bank guarantee and a judicial surety bond as equivalent to cash for replacing attachment and securing enforcement, provided the amount is no less than the debt plus 30%. This 30% surcharge is also the usual reference for guaranteeing the labor appeal deposit.
In labor proceedings, article 899 of the CLT governs the appeal deposit as a condition for admitting an appeal, and TST Normative Instruction 3/1993, together with settled case law, allows the cash deposit to be replaced by a judicial surety bond or a bank guarantee, applying the Civil Procedure Code on a subsidiary basis. The policy must cover the appeal deposit amount with the typical 30% surcharge.
At the enforcement stage the same logic applies: the surety bond is accepted to secure the court, allow the debt to be challenged, and avoid account freezes (online attachment via Sisbajud). Acceptance depends on the policy meeting the formal requirements — the correct beneficiary (the court), an adequate guaranteed amount, and a term compatible with the duration of the case, with renewal when needed.
Appeal deposit: cash vs surety bond
A cash appeal deposit requires the company to take the full amount (capped at the appeal ceiling) out of its treasury and deposit it in court before appealing. That money sits idle, often for years, generating no return for the business — a significant opportunity cost for companies with many simultaneous cases.
A bank letter of guarantee solves part of the problem, but usually ties up the company's bank credit line and requires counter-guarantees and reciprocity, raising the total cost. A judicial surety bond, by contrast, does not consume the bank credit line: the guarantee sits with the insurer, and the cost is an annual rate on the guaranteed amount, typically in the 0.5% to 2% per year range for labor matters.
For companies with significant labor exposure, moving from cash deposits to a surety bond immediately frees working capital, keeps bank credit available, and preserves the same procedural weight — the appeal is admitted and the enforcement is secured just the same.
How to take one out
The process starts with the company's (principal's) risk analysis: corporate documents, financial statements, and case details (number, court, amount to guarantee, and the 30% surcharge when required). Based on this, the insurer sets the rate and issues the policy.
The policy is issued with the court as beneficiary and the guaranteed amount matching the obligation. The company then files the surety bond in the record, in place of the cash appeal deposit or as an enforcement guarantee. In many cases, an existing cash deposit can be replaced by a policy and the blocked funds withdrawn, subject to the court's decision.
ERGO handles the entire quotation and issuance process, advising on the guaranteed amount, the 30% surcharge, and the term, with issuance usually within 24 to 72 hours. Request a quote or talk to a specialist to size the guarantee for your case.
Frequently asked questions
Does the TST accept a surety bond instead of the appeal deposit?
Yes. Through Normative Instruction 3/1993 and settled case law, the TST accepts a judicial surety bond (and a bank guarantee) in place of the cash appeal deposit, applying art. 835, §2, of the Civil Procedure Code on a subsidiary basis. The policy must cover the deposit amount, usually with a 30% surcharge.
How much does a judicial surety bond for labor claims cost?
The typical cost is around 0.5% to 2% per year on the guaranteed amount, varying with the company's risk, the term, and the value at stake. It is generally far cheaper than keeping cash idle in a deposit or tying up the bank credit line with a letter of guarantee.
Does the surety bond replace an appeal deposit already made?
Yes, in many cases. You can file the policy and ask the court to replace the cash deposit already made, with the resulting withdrawal of the blocked amount. The decision lies with the court, which checks whether the guarantee offered is sound and sufficient.
Do the shareholders need to provide a guarantee?
It depends on the insurer's risk analysis. In many cases a counter-guarantee or shareholder guarantee is required, but this varies with the principal's financial profile, the guaranteed amount, and its track record — unlike a bank guarantee, the surety bond does not tie up the bank credit line.
How long does it take to issue the policy?
After the risk analysis and delivery of documentation, issuance usually takes 24 to 72 hours. Since the appeal deposit is subject to a procedural deadline, it is best to start the quote as soon as the decision requiring the guarantee is issued.
Is the surety bond valid for the labor enforcement stage?
Yes. Beyond the appeal deposit, the policy can secure the court during enforcement, allowing the debt to be challenged and avoiding account freezes (online attachment via Sisbajud), provided the guaranteed amount and term are compatible with the case.
Need to guarantee a labor lawsuit without tying up your cash?
ERGO issues judicial surety bonds for labor claims — appeal deposits, enforcement, and attachment — preserving your working capital and bank credit line.