Site icon Talent 360 Jobs

Disciplining an employee after they quit

EMPLOYEES often resign with immediate effect when facing disciplinary action.

Employers may be unsure whether they can continue with an intended disciplinary action. Unfortunately, the Labour Court’s decisions on this issue have not always been clear or consistent. Having gone full circle on the issue, the latest decision of the Labour Court has held that employers lack jurisdiction to discipline employees once they have resigned with immediate effect. We set out below some background to the various Labour Court’s decisions to date. In 2017, in Kalipi Mtati v KPMG Services an employee facing disciplinary action resigned on notice. The employer informed the employee that the disciplinary action would continue notwithstanding her resignation. The employee, fearing dismissal, submitted a second resignation – this time with immediate effect. Despite the second resignation, the employer proceeded with disciplinary action and dismissed the employee.

The employee approached the Labour Court for relief, claiming that the employer did not have jurisdiction to dismiss her as she had resigned with immediate effect. Although the Labour Court found that the employer did not have jurisdiction to dismiss her because she had resigned with immediate effect, it noted that the employer could have disciplined the employee if the employee had resigned on notice. In 2018, the Labour Court ruled in Coetzee v Zeitz MOCCA Foundation Trust and Others held that an employee may still be disciplined even when they have resigned with immediate effect. Two key factors for the decision were that the employment relationship only terminates once the notice period has been concluded and resignations with immediate effect are only permitted where the employer commits a material breach of the employment contract or the employer accepts the resignation with immediate effect.

This issue was considered again most recently in Tristyn Naidoo and Sedayshum Naidu v Standard Bank SA Ltd and SBG Securities. In this matter, two employees resigned with immediate effect pending disciplinary action – but the employer (following Coetzee) continued with the disciplinary hearing. The employer informed the employees that their resignations were rejected and that the disciplinary proceedings would go ahead, in effect holding them to their notice periods. The employees approached the Labour Court for urgent relief. The Labour Court was called upon to determine whether:

The Labour Court held that:

In conclusion, there are conflicting Labour Court judgments that deal with the issue of whether employers may discipline an employee after a resignation with immediate effect. As matters stand, it appears that employers lack jurisdiction to discipline employees once they have resigned with immediate effect. The remedy available to employers is to seek an order of specific performance or to accept the repudiation and cancel the employment contract and claim for damages.

Lizle Louw and Dumisani Ndiweni are both employment law specialists at Webber Wentzel.