BIFAWU & another v Mutual & Federal Insurance Company Ltd (2006) 15 LAC 8.23.1

substantive fairness in dismissal – dishonesty – misconduct – dishonest statements – company suffering prejudice – deliberately deceitful – intentionally mislead – breakdown of employment relationship – appeal dismissed

Mini Summary

The second appellant had been employed by the respondent until his dismissal for misconduct. The alleged misconduct related to an arbitration hearing in which the second appellant had represented another employee. The respondent alleged that the second appellant had made certain dishonest statements in that hearing, leading to the company’s suffering prejudice.

According to the appellants, the second appellant’s dismissal amounted to victimisation in that he was punished for having represented his fellow employee against the company.

Held that although the facts which gave rise to the second appellant’s dismissal occurred while he was representing a fellow employee, he was not dismissed for representing a fellow employee but for his dishonesty. The breakdown of the employment relationship was a justifiable reason for the dismissal. The appeal was dismissed.

SAA (Pty) Ltd v SATAWU (2006) 15 LC 9.6.2

Industrial action – unprotected industrial action – employees in dispute with transnet – striking against employer not party to transnet bargaining council – strike unprotected – employer wholly owned by member of council

Mini Summary

After the respondent unions referred a dispute concerning the restructuring of Transnet to the Transnet Bargaining Council, they issued a notice to the council indicating that they intended to commence strike action in KwaZulu-Natal. The applicant itself received no notice of either a primary or a secondary strike. The applicant which, after its formation as an independent company wholly owned by Transnet, was not a member of the council, contended that it was not a party to the dispute, and that a strike by its employees would accordingly be unprotected because any dispute with it should have been referred to the CCMA.

The Court noted that the dispute revolved around the “unbundling” of Transnet and that among the unions’ demands was one that the applicant should be transferred to the government. It was accordingly clear that there was a nexus between the business interests of the applicant and those of Transnet. However, since the applicant could play no role in Transnet’s decision-making, it would be unfair to permit its employees to join the strike. The mere fact that Transnet held all the shares in SAA did not make the applicant part of Transnet or a party to the Transnet Bargaining Council. The unions should therefore have engaged separately with the applicant and then referred a dispute to the appropriate dispute-resolution forum – in this case the CCMA – or they should have tried to compel the applicant to join the Transnet Bargaining Council by collective bargaining. Any strike action by the applicant’s employees on the strength of the referral would accordingly be unprotected.

The unions’ members were ordered to resume work.

Swiss South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Louw NO & others (2005) 14 LC 2.2.1

evidence – hearsay evidence – evidence amendment act, 1998 – e-mail in which one of the passenger’s had communicated his complaint – untested report – rejecting hearsay evidence on which employer relied to dismiss employee – dismissal unfair

Mini Summary

The applicant, a check-in agent of the respondent’s passenger division, was dismissed after having been found guilty of soliciting and accepting a bribe from passengers in return for not charging them the prescribed amount for excess baggage. The respondent commissioner ruled the dismissal substantively and procedurally unfair, and ordered the applicant to reinstate her with retrospective effect. On review, the applicant contended that the award was irrational and that, in particular, the commissioner had misdirected himself by not accepting as evidence an e-mail in which one of the passenger’s had communicated his complaint.

The court noted that after the respondent employee had given her version at the disciplinary hearing, the initiator had remarked that, although the employee had not been given an opportunity to cross-examine the applicant’s evidence, “cross-examination would not have made much difference”. Those proceedings had been initiated by a complaint from a passenger, who had sent the respondent an e-mail complaining that the employee had asked him for money. The employee had denied that the luggage of the passengers concerned was overweight. She had been singled out simply because she happened to be at the boarding gate when the same group of passengers had passed through after she had she checked their baggage earlier. A member of the group had pressed 20 dollars into her hand, which she was unable to return because of the rush at the boarding gate. The initiator had argued that the company did not permit staff to accept tips. The applicant had claimed that she intended to declare the tip to her supervisor, but had forgotten to do so.

The court noted further that the procedure adopted at the arbitration hearing was informal; none of the witnesses had given evidence under oath, but the applicant’s representative was given an opportunity to cross-examine the employee after she had given her version. The applicant’s representative, in turn, had merely stated the version set out in the e-mail from one of the passengers upon which the initiator in the disciplinary hearing had relied proved the commission of the offence.

The court held that, while the procedure followed at the disciplinary inquiry was “less than perfect”, this had not resulted in a failure of justice. However, the applicant’s main complaint was that the commissioner had erred by finding that the applicant was unable to prove the facts contained in the e-mail upon which it had relied in the disciplinary hearing. The court held that, with the exception of circumstances envisaged in the Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1998, hearsay evidence is inadmissible in civil and criminal proceedings. Since arbitration proceedings held under the auspices of the CCMA are neither criminal now civil proceedings, it was unlikely that the legislature should expected commissioners to apply a stricter test for hearsay than that envisaged in the Evidence Act. The commissioner had correctly applied the Act. The applicant had given no reason why the passenger could not have been called to testify personally. Admission of his e-mail as evidence would have been highly prejudicial to the employee. The applicant had acted on the e-mail in the full knowledge that it would result in a dispute of fact. It would have been totally unfair to deprive the applicant of her livelihood on the basis of an untested report. The admission of hearsay evidence would accordingly not have been in the interests of justice. Furthermore, the employee’s version was not so improbable that it fell to be rejected. The act of receiving a tip was did not constitute misconduct.

The application was dismissed.

Jamafo obo Mokoena and Pick ’n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd (Bethlehem Branch) (2006) 15 CCMA 6.9.2

The applicant, a baker at one of the Pick ‘n Pay branches, applied for a post as trainee bakery manager but was unsuccessful. He claimed that an unfavorable reference by his superior unfairly prejudiced him.

 Pick ‘n Pay submitted that the employee was not yet fit to fulfill the position of bakery manager because his work as a baker still needed constant supervision.

 The employee wanted to introduce into evidence tape recordings he had procured without Pick ‘n Pay’s consent.

The commissioner ruled that the tapes could not be admitted because the employee did not furnish the employer with copies thereof in terms of a previous ruling.

Evidence was led  that the applicant had been one of 65 applicants for 13 trainee posts. The employee was effectively asking the CCMA to replace  the employer and to decide whether he was competent to fill position. The commissioner was convinced that the employee was not yet suited for the position of  trainee manager. The applicant had accordingly failed to prove an unfair labour practice.

The application was dismissed.

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