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Take Mitigating Circumstances Seriously

BY Ivan Israelstam, Chief Executive of Labour Law Management Consulting. He may be contacted on (011) 888 7944 or 082 852 2973 or on e-mail address: ivan@labourlawadvice.co.za. Go to:www.labourlawadvice.co.za


Too often, when an employer finds an employee guilty of a serious offence, the employer fires the employee right away. However, being guilty of a very serious offence does not automatically entitle the employer to fire the employee. The employer must consider other remedies for misconduct which could include:

Before deciding on the penalty or corrective action the employer should Consult the disciplinary code and consider, amongst other factors:

Extenuating circumstances are those related to the case itself that might render the misconduct less serious. For example, where an employee refuses to obey an instruction from a manager due to a genuinely mistaken belief that the manager did not have the authority to give the instruction, this might merit a lighter sanction. This is because, while the employee disobeyed the instruction, he/she did not do so out of defiance but rather out of ignorance.

Arbitrators will not hesitate to overturn dismissal decisions that are substantially out of line with what is just in terms of the unique circumstances of each individual case.

For example, in the case of NUM obo Khanye vs South African Region Business Services (2001, 1 BALR 92) the employee was dismissed for driving a vehicle without permission and without a licence and for damaging the vehicle in an accident. The arbitrator decided that:

In the case of of NUMSA obo Madobeng vs Macsteel Tool and Pipe (2006, 10 BALR 982) the employee was dismissed on a charge of assault. The employee’s colleague had accused her of treating the company’s changeroom as a bedroom and of sleeping with her grandfather. A scuffle ensued and the employee was brought to a disciplinary hearing. The arbitrator at the Metal and Engineering Industry Bargaining Council found that:

Where employers are unsure as to whether extenuating circumstances exist they should obtain expert labour law advice before acting against the employee.

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