Dont Ignore Extenuating Circumstances - Ivan Israelstam
Even when an employer finds an employee guilty of a serious offence this does not automatically entitle the employer to fire the employee.
There are numerous possible remedies for misconduct which could include:
• Dismissal – the most severe corrective action
•Demotion – provided that the employee is given the choice of dismissal or demotion
• Suspension without pay - provided that the employee is given the choice of dismissal or suspension
• A warning or final warning – which must be very carefully worded
• Training – where lack of skill/knowledge is the cause of the problem
• Treatment – for example where addiction or alcoholism is an important factor
Before deciding on the penalty or corrective action the employer should Consult the disciplinary code and consider, amongst other factors:
• the nature and seriousness of the misconduct
• aggravating circumstances
• the employee’s personal circumstances
• the employee’s length of service
• the employee’s disciplinary record
• extenuating circumstances.
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 manger 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.
Where such circumstances exist it would be folly for employers to ignore them.
This is because CCMA and bargaining council arbitrators expect the level of discipline to be in line with the circumstances of the case.
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:
• The employee had previously received and signed a memorandum stating that no employees were to drive company vehicles without a licence and that failure to comply with this rule would result in serious disciplinary measures
• the employee had used the vehicle due to an emergency at the workplace
• this was an extenuating circumstance
• the dismissal was therefore too harsh
• the employee was to be reinstated.
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:
Tuesday, October 19, 2010
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Good day
ReplyDeleteI was employed buy an outsource company for almost for years until the company got liquidated while I was on maternity leave I received no information from managers as to what was happening.Then I heard that the campaign I was working on employed the workers except the two that was on maternity leave.I queried this and all they said I was not employed because I was on maternity leave. The other girl that was also in the same predicament went to ccma and a few weeks later she was asked to come back and is now working for the same campaign but under a new outsourcing company.And I was also told if there was positions avalable I would be the first they would contact but I got no call.I would like to know if I haev ground to take the campaining company to the CCMA?
Hi Zeenat,
ReplyDeleteSend me an email address and I will communicate with you in that way. However, if you were employed by the campaigning company and they sold their business, whether you were on maternity leave or not, because you were still deemed an employmee, your dismissal was automatically unfair in terms of Section 187 of the Labour Relations Act. Now, the sale of any busniness as an ongoing concern, in terms of Section 197, the new owners assumes the responsibililty of all the employees in their existing capacity with the same and or similar conditions of employment.
You have 30 days within which to refer any dismissal to the CCMA from the date of the dismissal. I can assist if you are within the time frame that the law prescribe.
nkel@vodamail.co.za
0711 904 636
Call or email me.
Thanx.