IS IT ALWAYS NECESSARY TO CONDUCT A HEARING BEFORE DISMISSAL?
[Monday, May 12, 2008 19:27:51]
IS IT ALWAYS NECESSARY TO CONDUCT A HEARING BEFORE DISMISSAL?
What happens if an employee refuses to be subject to a hearing as the decision to dismiss had already been made?
The above-mentioned questions were discussed by Prof. Luther Backer in his article
“Judgment shows code is not cast in stone.”
The Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) and the
A personal assistant for a group of advocates was requested to attend a meeting with her employers and was informed that her employment contract would be terminated. She protested on the grounds that the correct procedure had not been followed and asked that the meeting be postponed.
The employer then offered to appoint a third party of the employee’s choice to serve as chair of the disciplinary hearing. She declined the offer. Her contract was therefore terminated without a hearing. She then referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the CCMA.
Both the CCMA Commissioner and the
The employer indicated that they could not conduct a hearing in which the employee was no longer interested and stated that their failure to conduct a hearing under such circumstances had not rendered the dismissal procedure unfair. The employee’s reaction was that the offer of a hearing had come too late because she had already been dismissed.
It was found that the employer had in fact dismissed the employee without a hearing but that she had in a decisive manner declined the employer’s offer to conduct a hearing chaired by an independent person.
The
The Court also rejected the employee’s argument that the hearing would have served no purpose because, according to her, the dismissal was already a fait accompli. The reason is that she could have used such hearing to argue against the fairness of her dismissal.
Although the employer had made a mistake by deciding to dismiss her without first conducting a hearing, they had remedied the situation by means of their subsequent offer.
The Court therefore found that both the CCMA Commissioner and the
The appeal was rejected with costs.
Our appreciation to Prof Backer for permission to publish this article.