When can you suspend an employee?
This article discusses the three minimum requirements for a fair suspensio
The Labour Court judgment of Mogothle v the Premier of the North West Province and the MEC for Agriculture, Conservation and Environment (delivered
on 6 January 2009) concerned the suspension of the Deputy Director
General of the Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Development
in the North West Province (the DDG). He was suspended by the MEC
pending an investigation into allegations that he had approved a state
grant to an entity in which he and his family had an interest. The DDG
was not given the opportunity to make representations why he should not
be suspended.
The
DDG approached the Labour Court on an urgent basis, seeking the
upliftment of his suspension. He relied on a contractual right to audi alteram partem
– that is the right to be heard before a decision is taken that is
adverse to your rights or interests. The DDG did not rely on the Labour
Relations Act (LRA). Rather, he based his claim on a contractual right:
effectively that the MEC and the Premier had breached their contractual
obligation to deal fairly with him.
Van
Niekerk J decided that he could consider the DDG’s claim in the Labour
Court since the Constitutional Court case of Chirwa did not remove
contractual rights - which an employee can enforce either in the Labour
Court or the High Court. Every employment contract requires that the
employer treat the employee fairly. This meant that an employee can only
be suspended for a fair reason and following a fair procedure. Since
the DDG was not afforded a hearing before he was suspended, the
suspension was found to be procedurally unfair. The MEC should have
given him an opportunity to state his case before deciding to suspend
him.
In relation to the merits of the suspension, the
following three minimum requirements were identified for a fair
suspension: the employer must have a justifiable reason to believe that
the employee has engaged in serious misconduct; there must be an
objectively justifiable reason to deny the employee access to the
workplace based on the integrity of any pending investigation into the
misconduct (or another relevant factor that would jeopardise the
investigation or the interests of affected parties); and the employee
must have an opportunity to state a case before the employer makes any
final decision to suspend him. There was no evidence of any
risk to the Department nor any third parties if the DDG remained at
work. Nor was there evidence of any danger that the DDG might pose to
anyone’s safety or wellbeing.
For these reasons, Van Niekerk J ordered that the decision to suspend the DDG be set aside.
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