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EXTERNAL PRESSURE DOES NOT JUSTIFY DISMISSAL

Labour law expertise makes dismissals stick

BY lvan lsraelstam, Chief Executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. He may be contacted on (011) 888-7944 or 0828522973 or via e-mail address: labourlaw@absamail.co.za. Website: www.labourlawadvice.co.za.

Employers need to understand that:

So while the law does allow dismissals it also requires the employer to be able to prove that the dismissal was both procedurally and substantively fair.

“Procedurally fair” relates to whether the employee was given a fair hearing.

Whether a dismissal is “substantively fair” relates to the fairness of the dismissal decision itself rather than to the disciplinary procedures. Specifically, for the dismissal to be adjudged to be substantively fair, the employer would have to show that:

Properly trained CCMA arbitrators consider all the above factors together with the circumstances of each individual case in deciding if a dismissal was fair and whether the employee should stay dismissed or should be reinstated.

In the case of White vs Pinnacle Point Investments (Pty) ltd (2008, 1 BALR 91) White took up a post with the employer as CEO. Thereafter the employer discovered that White was in dispute with his previous employer which also happened to be the bank used by the new employer. The new employer then dismissed the employee claiming that the reason for the dismissal was the employee’s refusal to divulge the true reason for the dispute with the old employer. It also claimed that it had failed to hold a disciplinary hearing because of exceptional circumstances.

The arbitrator decided that:

The outcome of this case shows that employers will lose if they merely take the word of a third party as to the guilt of an employee or if they succumb to pressure from the third party to dismiss the employee.