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

 

Suspensions could be dangerous for employer

  By Ivan Israelstam


Employees are suspended from duty for different reasons that may include a temporary lay-off due to operational circumstances.
That is, during retrenchment consultations, either party may suggest temporary lay-offs as an alternative to retrenchment. This might be implemented where the employees agree to the lay-offs and there is some hope of more work and revenue being acquired in the future. In such circumstances the employees would not be paid, but would still be employees of the employer. Employers must be careful not to hire new employees in place of employees who have been laid off as this would indicate that there had been no good reason for the lay- offs and the employer could well be forced to pay the employees for the lay-off period.

Where there is a large number of workers or where the lay-off period is a long one this payment could come to an extremely high amount. The employer's intention behind a suspension may be to make the employee's working circumstances so uncomfortable that he/she resigns. This motive is both illegitimate and dangerous. Employees sometimes resign on being suspended and charge the employer at CCMA with constructive dismissal. However, the employee will not easily succeed with such a charge because such an employee is obliged to go through the disciplinary process rather than resign.

Should the employee claim at arbitration that the suspension was a sham on the employer's part the employer must be given the opportunity to show that it had good reason to suspend the employee and that there was some basis for the suspicion of misconduct. The employer may need to investigate serious allegations made against the employee. Where the employee is in a position of official or unofficial power, the suspension may be necessary in order to ensure that her/his presence at the workplace will not interfere with the investigation.

This is a legitimate reason for suspension, but the employee must be on full pay during the suspension period. The employer must be sure that the suspension does not have the effect of breaching a contractual right of the employee, otherwise a civil suit could result. The employer may have a need to avert the danger of the employee repeating the alleged offence. For example, if the employee is suspected of assaulting a colleague, a suspension may be merited to avert the possibility of a repeat assault.  Again, the employee must be on full pay during the suspension period and the danger in question must be real. The suspension of the employee may be as a form of punishment of the employee by the employer. Here, the employee is normally suspended without pay.

However, such suspensions are often illegitimate. This is because:

  • Cutting an employee's pay may breach the provisions of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act.
  • The employer may have no fair reason for punishing the employee and withholding his/her pay. Such suspensions are too often implemented while the employer is in a fit of rage.
                       

The dangers for the employer are that the employee could challenge the fairness of the suspension itself or could take the eviction as a dismissal and take the employer to CCMA or bargaining council on this basis. Suspension without pay may, in certain circumstances, be legitimate. This might be, for example, where the employee already has a final warning for the same type of offence, but the employer does not necessarily wish to dismiss the employee. The employer may then give the employee a choice of dismissal or an agreed suspension without pay for a limited period (preferably not more than two weeks).

In the case of Mabitsela v SAPS (2004, 8 BALR 969) the employee, a policeman, was suspended without pay pending a charge of murder. The police regulations do allow for such suspensions to be without pay. However, Mabitsela claimed at the bargaining council that his suspension was unfair because he had been on unpaid suspension for five months. The arbitrator found that the suspension itself was fair, but that it had been unfair to implement the suspension without pay.

This case shows that, even where regulations allow employers to suspend employees without pay, this may still be found to be unfair under the circumstances. If a suspected murderer can win such a case, it would be even easier for employees who have committed lesser offences to win their cases.

The issue of when suspensions are fair and appropriate is not clear cut and employers are warned not to implement suspensions until they have obtained advice from a reputable labour law expert.

  • Ivan Israelstam is chief executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. Phone him at 011 888 7944 or 082 852 2973 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

14 August 2012

Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks

 

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
17 August 2012
Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks
   
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

15 August 2012

Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks


The OHS Act and Responsibilities of Management

04 July 2012

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

16 August 2012

Kingfisher Conference Centre: Mount Edgecombe: Umhlanga Rocks

  
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