CCMA Information


Labour Court Judgements

Health and Safety



Most recent publications


UIF

AARTO



Discipline & Dismissal


Contracts of Employment

Poor performance



Conditions of Employment


Consumer Protection Act

Courses & Workshops 2012



Employment Equity


FAQs

Retrenchments



Contact Us


COID

Regular Concerns

 

Newsletter Signup

Your Email Address: *
 

1

 

facebook
twitter

 

CCMA commissioners face off in Labour Court

  

Dismissal unfair, but reinstatement found to be inappropriate

Ivan Israelstam


In the case of Maepe v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and another (CLL Vol 17 June 2008) a senior commissioner at the CCMA was brought to a disciplinary hearing on charges of sexual harassment and improper or disgraceful conduct.  A CCMA receptionist had accused the senior commissioner of having professed his love for her, blown her kisses and told her that he clutched her photo to his chest.


The disciplinary hearing was chaired by another senior commissioner. He dismissed the accused commissioner who then referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the CCMA.  The arbitrator found that the employee's conduct did not constitute sexual harassment because the receptionist had not indicated that the advances towards her were unwelcome and because the employee might not have realised that his actions were unwelcome.


While the arbitrator found that the employee was guilty of making inappropriate sexual advances, he replaced the dismissal with a final warning. This was despite having found the employee to have lied under oath at the hearing. The CCMA, in its capacity as an employer, applied to the Labour Court on review.


The court duly overturned the arbitrator's decision. On appeal the Labour Appeal Court (LAC) decided that the dismissal had been unfair but agreed with the employer that reinstatement was inappropriate because, a commissioner who cannot respect the oath when he testifies, cannot be allowed to continue in a job where he administers the oath to others.


The LAC found the dismissal to be unfair because there was no evidence that the employment relationship had either been materially damaged or had become intolerable. On the contrary, the employer had allowed the employee to continue working for five months after his conduct had been reported.


The LAC's decision is confusing. It agreed that the employee had been guilty of inappropriate behaviour towards the receptionist. It also agreed that, because of the fact that the employee had lied under oath, he should not be allowed to continue in his job.  This being so, why was the dismissal unfair? Did the court expect the employer to find a different post for the employee that did not involve administering the oath?


Had the employer attempted to find such an alternative vacancy without success, would the dismissal then have been fair?  The outcome of this case is a lesson to all employers not to delay the disciplining of an employee for too long because this can result in the CCMA or a court deciding that the employment relationship has not been irrevocably destroyed and that the dismissal is therefore unfair.


Item 3 (4) of the Code of Good Practice: Dismissal in Schedule 8 of the LRA states that: "Generally, it is not appropriate to dismiss an employee for a first offence, except if the misconduct is serious and of such gravity that it makes a continued employment relationship intolerable."


The item gives a few of examples of serious misconduct including gross dishonesty, wilful endangering of the safety of others, wilful damage to the property of the employer, physical assault on the employer, fellow employee or client, or gross insubordination.


The CCMA arbitrator and later the LAC appear to have taken this item of the code into account in deciding that the misconduct was not serious enough to destroy the employment relationship and to merit dismissal.


In the light of the above employers should:

  • If they believe that the misconduct does merit dismissal, be able to prove that the employee has made continued employment relationship intolerable by his/her actions;
  • Inform themselves as to how to prove that a particular act of misconduct does merit dismissal before deciding to dismiss the employee;
  • Not assume that every sexual act constitutes sexual harassment or that every perpetrator of such acts automatically deserves dismissal;
  • Understand that they not only have the legal duty, under the Employment Equity Act (EEA), to protect their employees from sexual harassment, but they also have, under the LRA, the duty to protect alleged perpetrators from unfair discipline.



This is a difficult and dangerous tightrope to walk. Employers should therefore get advice from a reputable labour law expert in order to decide how to deal with such matters.
 This will help avoid the employer falling off the tight rope hung between the EEA and the LRA. If CCMA commissioners cannot agree among themselves as to what is and is not fair, then lay employers and managers cannot expect to be able to make such judgements on their own.


One factor that could possibly have affected the judgment of the CCMA in the Maepe case is that the CCMA, as an employer, may have been too close to the case to be able to come to a consistent decision.


Employers should therefore realise that the use of an external expert is important in ensuring that a proper legal and objective decision is taken. 

  • Ivan Israelstam is chief executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. Contact him on 011-888-7944 or This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it  
  • Our appreciation to Ivan and the Star newspaper for permission to publish this article.
  Related Articles

Courses & Workshops


Investigators & Initiators

24 & 25 May 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport


Health and Safety Representative Course

25 May 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport


30, 31 May & 01 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

New Amendment Bills for the Labour Relations Act (LRA) and the Basic Conditions of Employment Act (BCEA)

07 June 2012

Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

13 June 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

  
Basic Labour Relations

07 June 2012 

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

08 June 2012

Southern Sun: Century City: Canal Walk: Cape Town  

Hazard Identification and Risk Assessment
08 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport
05 July 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town
 
Chairing Disciplinary Hearings
20 & 21 June 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

Recruitment, Selection and Appointment of Candidates
22 June 2012
Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town
27 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport

Policies & Procedures
14 June 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport


Managing Day to Day Issues/ Problem Employees

28 June 2012

Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport


Health and Safety Incident/Accident Investigation (OHS and Mine Health and Safety)
29 June 2012
Southern Sun: OR Tambo International Airport
06 July 2012

Southern Sun: Century City (Canal Walk): Cape Town

Our Clients

Click here for a list of companies/ institutions that attended public courses and/or in-house training courses presented by Labour Guide during 2011



 
seta

Contact Details
Training courses,seminars and conferences

Labour Law and IR Related Workshops
(012) 661 3208
Fax: (012) 661 1411
Peraldo This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it or Magda This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Manager: Susan Brits This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it

 

Contact Details
Health and Safety 


Health and Safety Related Workshops
(012) 666 8284
Fax: (012) 666 8264
Deidre This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it
Manager: Tinus Boshoff This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it