Case Law[2025] ZALAC 10South Africa
Standard Bank of South Africa v South African Society of Bargaining Officials and Others (JA 107/22) [2025] ZALAC 10 (27 February 2025)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
27 February 2025
Headnotes
the Bank’s Housing Policy was silent on Ms Ngcobo’s responsibility in the circumstances that she was charged for gross negligence under and that Ms Ngcobo be reinstated because she was remorseful and she never acted in a dishonest manner.[2]
Judgment
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## Standard Bank of South Africa v South African Society of Bargaining Officials and Others (JA 107/22) [2025] ZALAC 10 (27 February 2025)
Standard Bank of South Africa v South African Society of Bargaining Officials and Others (JA 107/22) [2025] ZALAC 10 (27 February 2025)
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sino date 27 February 2025
FLYNOTES:
LABOUR – Dismissal –
Banking
procedures
–
Acting
in breach of housing policy regarding lease agreement –
Alleged gross negligence – Commissioner at CCMA
ordering
reinstatement – Finding that employee remorseful and never
acted in dishonest manner – High Court agreeing
with
commissioner – Charges not borne out by evidence –
Interpretation of housing policy – Employee not
having
foresight of reasonable possibility of harm befalling employer –
Appeal dismissed.
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
no: JA107/2022
In
the matter between:
STANDARD
BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LTD
Appellant
and
SOUTH AFRICAN SOCIETY
OF BARGAINING
OFFICIALS
First Respondent
NONTOKOZO
NGCOBO
Second Respondent
THE COMMISSION FOR
CONCILIATION, MEDIATION AND ARBITRATION
Third
Respondent
COMMISSIONER
TSIETSI CHAKAKANE N.O.
Fourth Respondent
Heard:
28 November 2023
Delivered:
27 February 2025
Coram: Molahlehi
DJP, Savage and Malindi AJJA
JUDGMENT
MALINDI, AJA
Introduction
[1]
The
employee
,
Ms Nontokozo Ngcobo, the second respondent herein, was charged by the
Appellant (the Bank) as follows:
“
1.
It is alleged that you acted in breach of the Standard Bank Housing
Policy (processes) and acted
outside your mandate / authority as a
Human Capital Business Partner, in that:
(a)
On 21 May 2018, you captured and/or authorized a lease
agreement and the PRU between
the bank and Mr. Johannes Taljaard
(“Taljaard”).
2.
It is alleged that you acted in a manner that is Grossly Negligent,
in that:
(a)
when you received a copy of the lease agreement on 28
th
February 2018, you failed to check if the agreement was properly
signed by Taljaard.
(b)
When you captured the agreement and completed and authorized the
PRU,
[1]
you failed to enquire
from the Provincial Head Anton Nicoliasen and/or Brendon Jacobs
(“Jacobs”) as well as Khetsiwe
Mabuza (“Mabuza”)
whether they were aware that Taljaard had signed a lease agreement
with the bank.
(c)
You failed to obtain authorization from Provincial Head, Jacobs
and/or Mabuza prior to capturing
the agreement and authorizing PRU.
(d)
On 25 June 2028, you sent an email to Human Capital to
cancel the lease agreement without
notifying Jacobs and Mabuza.
[2]
The
matter was referred to arbitration under the auspices of the third
respondent, the Commission for Conciliation Mediation and
Arbitration
(the CCMA), and the Commissioner held that the Bank’s Housing
Policy was silent on Ms Ngcobo’s responsibility
in the
circumstances that she was charged for gross negligence under and
that Ms Ngcobo be reinstated because she was remorseful
and she never
acted in a dishonest manner.
[2]
[3]
The
Commissioner held further that the form of misconduct complained of
is one that “
can
be managed to coaching and training taking into account that the
applicant was only one year in service
”.
[3]
[4]
The Bank took the matter on review to the
Labour Court and Tulk AJ agreed with the Commissioner that the
dismissal was substantively
unfair and ordered the reinstatement of
Ms Ngcobo. In addition, the Labour Court reviewed the Commissioner’s
order of three
months’ back pay and ordered back pay of five
months.
Background
[5]
Ms
Ngcobo was employed as the Bank’s Human Capital Consultant
(HCC) on 1 July 2017. Her role included providing Human
Resources-related services to business clients in the Free State. The
Bank contends that she was the custodian of all the policies
and
procedures of the Bank.
[4]
[6]
In terms of the Bank’s Housing Policy
(the Housing Policy), Ms Ngcobo was expected to receive the Personal
Record Update (the
PRU) from Taljaard’s Line Manager, and as
HCC capture it on the Team Track/SAP and the file. This was the last
step to authorising
a lease agreement which falls within the province
of the lessee’s Line Manager.
[7]
Ms
Ngcobo was issued with a notice to appear before a disciplinary
inquiry to answer to allegations of misconduct related to a
contravention of the appellant’s Housing Policy and gross
negligence.
[5]
She was found
guilty of the allegations of misconduct and on 27 August 2018,
she was dismissed from the employ of the
appellant.
[8]
Aggrieved by her dismissal, Ms Ngcobo, with
the assistance of the first respondent, referred an unfair dismissal
dispute to the
CCMA. On 2 October 2018, the dispute was
declared as unresolved, and the matter was referred to arbitration.
The dispute
came before the Commissioner, who in turn issued the
impugned arbitration award.
The arbitration award
[9]
The Commissioner noted that even on Ms
Ngcobo’s version, she had accepted a lease agreement that was
irregular; signed the
PRU of an employee; that Ms Ngcobo had acted
negligently when she signed for the authorisation of the PRU without
verifying the
supporting documents. Furthermore, that Ms Ngcobo had
only realised that she had failed to inform the line manager when the
employee
had complained about the status of the lease agreement on or
about May/June 2018. Moreover, that Ms Ngcobo had apologised and
proffered motivation on why she should not be suspended.
[10]
The Commissioner further noted that the
allegations against Ms Ngcobo related to gross negligence. He found
that it was clear that
the Housing Policy was ambiguous on the roles
and responsibilities of a Human Capital Consultant. Thus, it was
probable that Ms
Ngcobo could have not foreseen the harm as she was
under the impression that the employee being a senior official was
aware of
the contents of the Housing Policy and it was for that
reason that Ms Ngcobo thought that she was allowed to authorise the
PRU.
[11]
The Commissioner noted that negligence
entails failure to comply with the standard of care that would be
exercised in the circumstances
by a reasonable person, and that it
was probable that Ms Ngcobo could not have foreseen the potential
harm. This was since she
was under the impression that the employee,
being a senior employee, was familiar with the Housing Policy and
thus, would have
complied with the Policy. Moreover, the Housing
Policy being unclear on her role and responsibilities, Ms Ngcobo
probably assumed
that she would have been authorised to sign the PRU
as the functionary which is the support to the business department.
[12]
In respect of the fairness of the sanction,
the Commissioner held that the appellant failed to discharge its
onus, particularly
since despite the assertion by the appellant that
Ms Ngcobo’s conduct was negligent, Ms Ngcobo had demonstrated
that she
and her department had regularly signed PRUs without the
supporting documents, and that others have never been disciplined for
such conduct.
Judgment of the Labour
Court
[13]
The Labour Court noted that the appellant
had the burden of proving the existence of the rule and this included
demonstrating that
the Housing Policy was explicit in terms of the
obligations which rested on Ms Ngcobo. It then held that based on the
uncertainty
on whether the authority to sign the PRU could be
delegated, together with the different interpretation emanating from
the evidence,
it was not unreasonable for the Commissioner to
conclude that the Housing Policy was not explicit in respect of the
role and responsibilities
of Ms Ngcobo.
[14]
It further held that the evidence was not
such as to vitiate the Commissioner’s award on the issue of
negligence. This was
since there was no evidence that demonstrated
that Ms Ngcobo had received the lease agreement in February 2018,
and moreover,
contradicting versions were proffered in respect of the
nature of the negligence. The Labour Court stated that initially the
contention
on behalf of the appellant was that the negligence flowed
from Ms Ngcobo’s approval of the PRU without verifying that the
lease agreement was correctly signed and it then morphed to the
allegation that Ms Ngcobo had signed the PRU without being in
possession of the lease agreement. As such, the allegations against
Ngcobo were mutually destructive since both situations could
not have
occurred simultaneously.
[15]
The Labour Court further held that the
contention that the Commissioner misconstrued the charge of breach of
the Housing Policy
could not be sustained since the Commissioner was
aware that he was confronted with the question of Ms Ngcobo’s
responsibilities
under the Policy and canvassed precisely this
question in the award. Furthermore, that it was incorrect that Ms
Ngcobo had never
disputed her awareness of the Housing Policy, since
this was even apparent from her email in which she proffered an
apology and
stated that she was unaware that she could not act as she
did.
[16]
It further held that the Commissioner was
cognisant of the fact that reinstatement was the primary remedy and
concluded that the
parties could still work together, particularly
since Ms Ngcobo did not act in a dishonest manner and showed
contrition. Moreover,
that since the misconduct was not proved, the
continued relationship could be managed through training and
coaching, particularly
since Ms Ngcobo had been with the appellant
for a short period. The Labour Court concluded that the ultimate
outcome in the arbitration
was reasonable.
The evidence
[17]
Ms Khetsiwe Mabuza, Ms Ngcobo’s Line
Manager, testified on behalf of the Bank. Ms Chauke led her evidence
in chief. Regarding
the gravity of Ms Ngcobo’s conduct and what
the appropriate sanction should be she testified as follows:
“
MS
CHAUKE
:
Okay and how did this conduct by the applicant authorising Mr
Taljaard’s lease agreement
affect the relationship with the
bank and or with you as well as the Line Manager?
MS
MABUZA
:
So for me my view is you know, if a person makes a mistake just
saying no, I actually
made a mistake, how can we rectify this, so I
think for me what I did not appreciate was the fact that Nontho and
Johan were now
cancelling leases and there were conversations that
were happening between the two of them, where I am sitting it is
after they
possibly realised that there is a bit of a blunder that
has happened here.
So
Nontho went ahead again with no authorisation to cancel the lease on
Johan’s instruction and you know, so in July when
I am now
asking to say please explain one, two, three, in June already she has
authorised, sent an e˗mail to authorise, to
cancel a lease and
not actually having followed the correct process and more especially
not reading and understanding the Company
Housing Police, which is
actually the proviso upon which evidence lies.
Had
she seen the policy and had she actually looked at the lease
agreement itself and realised that Johan had actually signed in
the
wrong place, that was the first red flag to say Johan, please go to
Brandon, you know you have signed where Brandon should
have signed,
so please take this up with Brandon, or if that did not happen she
had every right to escalate that to me to say to
me can I please do
that, if she did not know how.
MS
CHAUKE
:
So and how did that affect the relationship with the respondent?
MS
MABUZA
:
Look, like as the bank we work on honesty and integrity, it is very
key and it is very
critical and especially in any role, but for me in
the role as a Human Capital Business Partner and someone who is a
custodian
of company policies, if you yourself do not understand and
follow those policies then it really is a problem. And how then does
the bank trust you in that role to actually perform the roles that
you have to do if you are actually not aware of some of the
policies
and how you need to apply them?”
[18]
Ms
Mabuza went on to testify about dismissible forms of misconduct in
terms of the Disciplinary Code
[6]
with reference to gross negligence and loss of trust and intolerable
employment relationship for the Bank.
[7]
[8]
[19]
Under
cross examination Ms Mabuza explains that by the allegation that Ms
Ngcobo “captured and/or authorised” the lease
agreement
is meant that she “captured the information onto the PRU and
approved it”. She did not capture the lease
agreement.
[9]
What Ms Ngcobo did was to enter information on to the PRU and
approved it. As will appear under Ms Laveen Oswin’s (her
position?)
evidence later, Ms Mabuza misused the word “capture”
instead of “complete”. Ms Ngcobo completed the PRU
and
signed it, and someone else, a Ms Jessy C Mabuza (JC Mabuza),
captured the PRU by entering the request therein onto Mr Johannes
Taljaard’s personnel record or file. Ms Mabuza confirmed that
Mr Taljaard completed the lease agreement, not Ms Ngcobo.
[10]
She also confirmed that Ms Ngcobo did not receive the lease agreement
on 28 February 2018.
[11]
[20]
Regarding charge 2 which concerns gross
negligence, Ms Mabuza testified that:
20.1
There
is no evidence that Ms Ngcobo received the signed lease agreement on
28 February 2018.
[12]
20.2
The gross negligence arises out of Ms Ngcobo’s failure to
“
enquire
from the Provincial Head, Anton Nicoliasen and/or Brandon Jacobs or
Ms Khetsiwe Mabuza (the witness) whether they were aware
that Mr
Taljaard had signed a lease agreement with the Bank”
.
[13]
20.3
The failure to enquire allegation is not because of a written
procedural requirement but Ms Ngcobo should
have known to enquire
because as a senior staff member she should have known to do so
before authorising the lease agreement.
[14]
20.4
The gist of the allegation is that Ms Ngcobo performed Mr Taljaard’s
Line Manager’s functions
or duties when the policy does not
give her such duties and had no delegation to do so.
[15]
[21]
It
was submitted on behalf of the Bank that by signing the PRU, Ms
Ngcobo was authorising the lease agreement. She did so despite
an
improperly signed lease agreement in that Mr Taljaard had signed it
as lessor instead of as lessee.
[16]
[22]
In
short, it was submitted, the lease agreement should have been signed
for lessor by the Line Manager, Mr Brandon Jacobs. After
Mr Jacobs
had finalised the process in terms of clause 2 of the Housing Policy,
he is required to submit the PRU to the Human Capital
Consultant, Ms
Ngcobo in this instance, who would process the information contained
in the PRU. This last step performed by Ms
Ngcobo would constitute
the authorisation of the lease agreement. However, she did not merely
process the PRU but signed it herself,
usurping the function of Mr
Jacobs. Further, she failed to enquire from Ms Mabuza about the
propriety of the defective lease agreement.
[17]
[23]
The essence of the charge is that Ngcobo
failed to enquire from the Provincial Head, Mr Anton Nicoliasen,
and/or Mr Brandon Jacobs,
as well as Ms Khetsiwe Mabuza (Ms Ngcobo’s
Line Manager) “
whether they were
aware that Mr Taljaard had signed a lease agreement with the Bank
”.
Meaning that Mr Taljaard had signed as “
lessor
”
instead of “
lessee
”.
Mr Brandon Jacobs should have signed on behalf of the Bank as
“lessor” because he was Mr Taljaard’s Line
Manager.
[24]
As will appear from the unchallenged
evidence of Ms Ngcobo, Ms Oswin and Ms Mabuza’s own evidence,
the step of capturing or
entering the request in the PRU was done by
Ms JC Mabuza. She is the one who was to enquire whether the lease
agreement was valid
in view of its defective signing (signed by Mr
Taljaard instead of Mr Jacobs and unsigned on behalf of the lessee).
Ms JC Mabuza
was the capturer, not Ms Ngcobo. Paragraphs 2.2 and 2.3
of the Charge Sheet assign conduct to Ms Ngcobo which was Ms JC
Mabuza’s.
Ms Ngcobo admits that she signed the PRU which should
have been signed by Mr Jacobs. Her conduct was to authorise the
deduction
of low cost housing rental as required by the Housing
Policy read with the lease agreement. Her evidence that she had not
seen
the lease agreement as Mr Taljaard had not returned it to her
when he presented her with the PRU is uncontradicted. She was
therefore
unable to make the enquiries that the charge sheet
characterises as constituting gross negligence. Furthermore, it is
not the Human
Capital Consultant or Human Capital Shared Services
that authorises the lease. It is the line manager of the prospective
lessee
by signing on behalf of the bank as lessor. She therefore is
incapable of being charged for “
failure
to enquire
” when she had had no
sight of the defective lease agreement.
[25]
Even if Ms Ngcobo was the one to make the
enquiries as to the validity of the lease agreement the question is
whether this was an
omission that could lead to a breakdown of trust
between the employer and the employee. Was Ms Ngcobo dishonest in any
of her responses
when this failure to enquire was discovered by Ms
Mabuza and she requested a response from Ngcobo?
[26]
Whether Ms Ngcobo’s conduct was
grossly negligent and whether the relationship of trust had been
broken is a factual enquiry.
Ms Mabuza testified to this as a
principle that Ms Ngcobo’s failures under paragraphs 2.2 and
2.3 of the charge sheet constituted
gross negligence and therefore
was intolerable because of the Bank’s rigorous adherence to
procedure
[27]
The
question is whether Ms Ngcobo failed to exercise the standard of care
that can reasonably be expected of her through conduct
that caused
loss or potential loss to the employer.
[18]
[28]
Ms Ngcobo’s defence is that after
having advised Mr Taljaard to consult with his Line Manager regarding
the lease agreement
in February 2018, he returned in May 2018 and
told her that he had a completed and signed lease agreement. He asked
her to complete
and sign his PRU. She only found out in July 2018
that the lease agreement was not properly authorised when Ms Mabuza
made enquiries
about its existence. The analysis of the evidence in
this regard by the Commissioner and the Labour Court was wrong. Her
evidence
was found to have been that she did not notice that Mr
Taljaard signed at the wrong place when she received the lease
agreement.
As stated above, she denies that she received the lease
agreement back after giving Mr Taljaard a blank copy to take to his
line
manager for completion and authorisation. Ms Mabuza confirmed
that despite the allegation in the charge sheet, there is no evidence
that Ms Ngcobo received the lease agreement on 28 February 2018. When
signing the PRU she had assumed that all procedures had been
complied
with between the line manager and Mr Taljaard.
[29]
Ms
Ngcobo’s evidence was that she signed the PRU, thereby
authorising the update of his personnel file to reflect that he
is
moving into low cost housing per the lease agreement. The PRU was
then given back to Mr Taljaard for submission to Human Capital
Shared
Services (HCSS).
[19]
HCSS then
captured the information and updated Mr Taljaard’s profile.
[20]
HCSS files the original agreement in the employee’s personnel
record folder.
[21]
[30]
Mr
Taljaard told Ngcobo that he has a signed lease agreement. What was
outstanding was the PRU. She signed the PRU and it was for
Mr
Taljaard to submit it together with the lease agreement to HCSS.
[22]
She had not seen the lease agreement until enquiries were made about
its authorisation. She testified that had she seen it she
would not
have signed the PRU as she would have noticed that the lease
agreement was not properly signed.
[23]
[31]
By
signing the PRU Ngcobo was authorising the deduction of rental per
month from Taljaard’s salary.
[24]
[32]
Ms Oswin testified that the lease agreement
is not for HCSS to assess as the lessee and Line Manager reach that
agreement separately.
The PRU is the last step required by the
Housing Policy as a recordal of the employee’s records. She is
a Human Capital Shared
Services Consultant.
[33]
Ms Oswin testified under cross examination
by Mr Mtetwa as follows:
“
MR
MTETWA
:
Okay, so the lease agreement, if it is not completed correctly by
both parties, am I correct
that it was supposed to be rejected?
MS
OSWIN
: No, because we do not look at
the lease agreement. I do not know who is going to sign the lease
agreement, where they are supposed
to sign, as long as they get the
authorised, an authorised signature on this to put that person’s
details on SAP or to change
those details on SAP, then that is where
my instruction comes from. The lease has got nothing to do with me as
the capturer.”
[34]
Ms
Oswin means that the capturer follows the PRU instruction and does
not scrutinise the lease agreement’s validity. The function
of
HCSS Consultants is to process any documents that are necessary to
update the personnel/personal record of an employee, for
example,
change of job grade, promotion, change of address, banking details,
salary, low cost accommodation rental etc. A PRU contains
the
information that requires to be upgraded and recorded in the
employee’s personnel file.
[25]
[35]
Ms
Oswin testified that Taljaard’s PRU was captured by Ms JC
Mabuza
[26]
, who was expected
to testify but was not called without any explanation by the
employer. Ms Oswin testified that she was available
and at the
office. An adverse inference ought to have been drawn in this regard.
It suggests that Ms J C Mabuza was deliberately
kept away from
testifying. Although the Commissioner refers to Ms JC Mabuza as the
capturer of the PRU he does not allude to the
discrepancy of this to
the Charge Sheet which says Ms Ngcobo was the capturer and thereby
authorising the lease agreement.
Evaluation
[36]
In reply during oral argument the Bank’s
legal representative, Mr Cithi, stated that the breakdown of the
employer/employee
trust relationship lies in the risk posed by Ms
Ngcobo’s conduct.
[37]
It
was found in
EOH
Abantu (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration and Others
[27]
above that:
“
[23]
The record in this matter is incomplete and was partially
reconstructed. In particular, there is no record of the
disciplinary
hearing and its decision on sanction. The parties nevertheless agreed
to proceed on the evidence before us. Given
the nature of the
offence, the seniority and role of Danney and his short period of
service in the employ of the appellant (less
than one year), the
appellant justifiably lost trust in the continuation of an employment
relationship. Dismissal was an appropriate
sanction in the
circumstances.”
[38]
Danney had disappointed his employer very
early on as an employee, hence the justification to dismiss him.
Herein, Ms Ngcobo has
not displayed any gross negligence or
dishonesty. She is not a candidate for dismissal. There is no
evidence that she would repeat
her conduct to usurp the functions of
a line manager if the Housing Policy prohibits a consultant or HCSS
staff member from signing
a PRU.
[39]
In
Grindrod
Logistics (Pty) Ltd v SATAWU obo Kgwele and others
[28]
,
negligence
was found for driving the employer’s carrier truck on a gravel
road and attempting to cross a tiny bridge where
a rivulet was
overflowing over the bridge and caused the trailer to be stuck. As a
result, five of the eight vehicles on board
were damaged by water and
had been declared uneconomical to repair. The trailer required
extensive repairs thereafter and tow truck
fees were incurred,
inter
alia
.
The finding of negligence arose from the fact that the employer had
established the injunction not to drive on gravel roads (unless
under
authorised supervision).
[29]
[40]
Mr
Kgwele
had been working for Grindrod for 6 years before the incident.
Although he was found to have been negligent, his dismissal was
held
to be substantively unfair for the reason that the policy had been
applied inconsistently. A number of drivers were found
to have
committed the same offence with no consequence of dismissal.
[30]
[41]
The employee was found to have been
negligent for not having raised the alarm the moment the prohibited
event happened instead of
driving some 157km on the gravel road
before pressing the panic button after the truck was stuck. His
evidence had also been less
than candid. There is no evidence in this
case that Ms Ngcobo had disregarded a prohibited conduct. Her
evidence was clear and
had apologised for having exceeded her powers
as she did and had proffered a reason therefore which the
Commissioner accepted.
[42]
In
DRS
Dietrich, Voigt and Mia t/a Pathcare v Bennet N.O. and Others
[31]
the employee, Mr Thulasizwe Thulani Ngcobo, was subjected to
disciplinary proceedings wherein the charges were grounded on
dishonest
conduct. The Court summarised the charges as follows:
“
[7]
The claim forms were all approved and signed off by the employee’s
line manager without any queries.
On 03 and 08 April 2014 the
employee was subjected to an internal disciplinary hearing on two
charges of dishonest conduct and/or
falsification of overtime claim
forms. In the first charge, it was alleged that during the period
October 2013 to January 2014,
on 13 occasions, he claimed full
overtime hours despite having taken lunch breaks or being off the
company premises. As a consequence
of this, he received overpayment
of R1 376.98. The second charge was that during July, November and
December 2013 he claimed overtime
at an incorrect hourly rate of 1.5
instead of 1.0 which resulted in an overpayment of R7 270.68. It
suffices to mention that, prior
to his disciplinary hearing, when the
overpayment was discovered, the employee refunded it.”
[43]
The Commissioner found the employee’s
negligence nothing more than tardiness and altered the disciplinary
sanction of dismissal
to a written warning to endure for 12 months.
He reinstated him with 12 months’ back-pay.
[44]
The
Labour Court agreed with the Commissioner’s finding that the
employee was careless, negligent and had no intention to
defraud
Pathcare. The Court found that Pathcare did not prove the intention
to falsify the overtime claim forms.
[32]
[45]
On
appeal the Labour Appeal Court put the issue as “
whether
the Commissioner’s conclusion that the employee was guilty of
negligence and not dishonesty, was reasonable”
.
[33]
It agreed with the Commissioner that the established negligence did
not warrant a sanction of dismissal as the employee had not
acted
dishonestly. This negated any plea of a breakdown of the
employer/employee relationship.
[46]
In
Mkhatswa
v Minister of Defence
[34]
,
the following is stated:
“
[23]
However, in the particular circumstances of this case the question of
culpability must ultimately be determined
not in relation to the
foreseeability of the events just described, but with regard to
whether those in command at Apex base could
reasonably have foreseen
that some substantial time thereafter one of the soldiers (Lawerlot)
would return to the base and wrongfully
appropriate the Samil 50 and
a number of rifles in order to mount, with the aid of colleagues,
what amounted to a revenge attack
involving innocent inhabitants of
Tamboville rather than those with whom they had previously clashed.
The members of D company
were disciplined and experienced soldiers -
in some respects (according to the evidence) the cream of the
infantry - from whom
conduct of this kind could not reasonably be
expected. There was no evidence of any previous incidents at Apex
base involving the
misappropriation or misuse of vehicles and
particularly rifles which could have served as a warning to those in
command. Furthermore,
there were structures in place in the form of
sentries to try to prevent the unauthorised removal of vehicles and
rifles from the
base. In my view the reasonable possibility of these
events occurring and harm ensuing to the plaintiff would not have
been foreseen
by a reasonable person in the position of those in
command. To have foreseen what happened would have required prophetic
foresight,
which is not an attribute of the reasonable person. (See
S
v Bochris Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another
1988 (1) SA 861
(A) at 867 A.) Consequently there can be no fault on
their part for not taking steps to prevent what was not reasonably
foreseeable.”
[47]
Mkhatswa
alerts
us that “
foresight of the
reasonable possibility of harm”,
not
“
mere possibility of harm
”
is the required test.
Conclusion
[48]
Taking into account Ngcobo’s evidence
as a whole and the circumstances leading to her signing the PRU,
together with her honest
response to Ms Mabuza, it can hardly be said
that she had the foresight of the reasonable possibility of harm
befalling the employer.
As far as she was concerned Mr Taljaard had
complied with the Housing Policy procedures and his Line Manager, Mr
Brandon Jacobs
had been engaged in the lease authorisation. I agree
with the Commissioner.
[49]
The Labour Court concluded as follows:
“
[29]
He [the Commissioner] accepted the second respondent’s version
that the Housing Policy was not clear on her
duties, whereas it
outlined the responsibilities of the Line Manager. He concluded that
the policy was quiet on what she had to
do, and that on a balance of
probabilities the rule was not clear and created confusion on the
different roles played by the relevant
officials.
[30] He
went on to reinstate the second respondent with three months’
back pay. The reinstatement was premised
on the finding that the
parties could still work together and that the second respondent was
remorseful and did not act dishonestly.
This was apparent from her
emails where she stated that she was not aware that she was not
supposed to sign the PRU. He found that
even though the alleged
misconduct was not demonstrated, it could be managed through coaching
and training taking into account
that the second respondent was only
in the employ of the bank for one year. He concluded that there was
no justifiable reason to
dismiss her.”
[50]
The Labour Court dismissed the review while
agreeing with the Commissioner to a large extent and finding that his
decision does
not fall outside the band of reasonableness as the test
for review is whether the decision of the Commissioner is one that a
reasonable
decision maker would not make.
[51]
The employer’s case was:
“
MS
CHAUKE
:
Yes, I do have further questions. Nontho, this PRU is basically
authorising this lease agreement,
this PRU says to the bank that I as
Nontho I am authorising that Johan Taljaard will therefore go and
occupy the bank owned property
in terms of the lease agreement, I am
putting the version to you that by you signing this PRU you were
authorising this lease agreement.”
[52]
As stated above, the interpretation of the
Housing Policy is clear that it is the line manager who authorises
that an employee occupy
a Bank’s property by signing a lease
agreement. The PRU is merely an instruction to update an employee’s
personal record
to reflect the low rental house occupation and that
appropriate rental be deducted from the employee’s salary. The
charges
against Ms Ngcobo are not borne out by the evidence.
Furthermore, since Ms Ngcobo did not capture the PRU (after signing
it), it
was the HCSS, in particular, Ms JC Mabuza, that had to ensure
that supporting documents are attached to the PRU.
[53]
The additional evidence that has been
canvassed above merely fortifies the reasonableness of the
Commissioner’s decision.
[54]
Therefore, the following order is made.
Order
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
pp
Malindi AJA
Molahlehi DJP agrees.
SAVAGE, AJA
[56]
I have had the benefit of reading my
colleague’s judgment, with which I am respectfully unable to
agree.
[57]
This appeal, with the leave of this Court,
is against the judgment of the Labour Court which dismissed the
application of the Bank
to review the arbitration award of the fourth
respondent, the commissioner, but varied the back pay awarded to the
second respondent,
Ms Nontokozo Ngcobo.
[58]
At the outset, I would condone the late
filing of the appeal record and reinstate the appeal, as well as
condone the late delivery
of the notice of appeal. The reason for
these applications is apparent from the record and no purpose is
served setting these out
in detail at this juncture, more so since
neither application is opposed by the respondents, save insofar as
they impact on the
issue of costs.
[59]
Ms Ngcobo was employed by the Bank as a
Human Capital Consultant in 2017. Her role and responsibilities
included providing human
resources related services to the Bank in
the Free State Province and acting as custodian of all policies and
procedures of the
Bank. Ms Ngcobo reported to the Head of Human
Capital for the Free State and Northern Cape Provinces, Ms Khetsiwe
Mabuza.
[60]
The Bank’s Housing Policy benefits
employees who qualify and are transferred into key roles in certain
non-metropolitan areas.
In terms of the Policy, in order to deploy
key skills where needed, the Bank may subsidise an employee’s
cost of housing
to make the move into a non-metropolitan area more
acceptable to the employee and aid the provision of adequate housing.
The Housing
Policy stipulates the procedure to be followed by an
employee taking occupation of one of the Bank’s subsidised
rental housing
units. Clause 2 of Annexure A requires that the
employee’s line manager “must” provide a new or
transferred employee
with a letter and lease agreement, which
stipulates the conditions of the low rental housing benefit; complete
a personal record
update (PRU) form; complete the low rental housing
details on a specified form; retain a copy of the lease agreement in
the branch/business
unit; and submit the documentation to Human
Capital Shared Services department for this to be captured on Team
Track/SAP and for
the PRU to be filed with the original lease
agreement and the letter of appointment/transfer in the employee’s
personal record
folder. The Policy provides that the proposed benefit
is to be put first to the Resourcing Allocation Committee for
approval. If
approved, the line manager provides the employee with a
letter and the lease agreement which stipulates the conditions of the
housing
benefit. Clause 5.3 of the Housing Policy makes it clear that
Provincial Human Capital Business Partners have knowledge of
the grant of such benefit and requires that such person maintain an
updated list of employees occupying Bank-owned houses in the
province
and ensure that the correct monthly rental is being deducted by
payroll in respect of the benefit granted.
[61]
On 21 May 2018, the Business Centre Manager
for Bethlehem, Mr Johannes Taljaard, who had been in the employ of
the Bank for more
than 20 years, signed a lease agreement to occupy
one of the Bank’s housing flats in Winburg, Free State. At the
time Mr
Taljaard had not been transferred to Winburg but was based
130km away in Bethlehem. He reported to Mr Brendon Jacobs, the Head
of Retail and Business Banking for the Central Free State Provinces,
who did not authorise the lease. Mr Taljaard signed the lease
agreement as the lessor instead of the lessee. No one signed the
agreement as lessee. Without ensuring that the lease had been
authorised by Mr Jacobs, Ms Ngcobo signed the PRU which was required
in order to process the benefit. By doing so Ms Ngcobo authorised
the
lease agreement between the Bank and Mr Taljaard, effectively
granting the low rental housing benefit to Mr Taljaard in
circumstances
in which it was clear from the policy she was not
entitled to do so.
[62]
On 22 June 2018 Ms Mabuza became aware of
the existence of the lease when Ms Ngcobo copied her on a response to
a query raised by
Mr Taljaard regarding the calculations of the
fringe benefit tax payable in respect of the benefit and the
deductions made from
his salary. Ms Ngcobo had not informed Ms Mabuza
that he had processed the benefit for Mr Taljaard and when on 25 June
2018 Mr
Taljaard indicated that he wished to cancel the lease
agreement, Ms Ngcobo sent an email to the Bank’s Shared
Services department
but failed to copy either Ms Mabuza or Mr Jacobs
on her email.
[63]
On 5 July 2018 Ms Ngcobo replied to an
enquiry addressed to her by Ms Mabuza regarding the matter and stated
that she acted on the
instruction of Mr Taljaard as a senior staff
member and that he did not indicate that he did not have any
authorisation for the
lease. She continued that:
‘…
Johan
spoke to me in February asking for the process and I advised him and
then two days after I gave him the lease agreement, and
end of April
he asked me to sign the lease. I was not aware that Johan had not
spoken to Brendan about moving into the house….I
apologise for
giving Johan the lease agreement and signing it, I did not know that
he did not speak to Brendan and moreover Brendan
was not aware that
he will be moving into the house.’
[64]
On 20 July 2018 Ms Ngcobo was given notice
to attend a disciplinary enquiry on 27 July 2018. In such notice it
was alleged that
she had:
‘
1.
…acted in breach of the Standard Bank Housing Policy
(processes) and outside your mandate/authority as a Human Capital
Business Partner in that:
(a)
On 21 May 2018, you captured and/or authorised a lease agreement and
the PRU between the Bank and Mr Johannes Taljaard (“Taljaard”).
2.
It is alleged that you acted in a manner that is Grossly Negligent in
that:
(a)
When you received a signed copy of the lease agreement on 28
th
February 2018, you failed to check if the agreement was properly
signed by Taljaard.
(b)
When you captured the agreement and completed and authorised the PRU,
you failed to enquire from the Provincial Head Anton Nicoliasen
and/or Brendon Jacobs (“Jacobs”) as well as Khetiwe
Mabuza (“Mabuza”) whether they were aware that Taljaard
had signed a lease agreement with the Bank.
(c)
You failed to obtain authorisation from Provincial Head, Jacobs
and/or Mabuza prior to capturing the agreement and authorising
PRU.
(d)
On 25 June 2018, you sent an email to Human Capital to cancel the
lease agreement without notifying Jacobs and Mabuza.’
[65]
Mr Jacobs testified at the disciplinary
hearing that he only became aware of the lease on 3 July 2018 and
that he did not delegate
his authority to Ms Ngcobo to sign the PRU
for Mr Taljaard on his behalf. Ms Ngcobo was found to have committed
the misconduct
alleged and was dismissed from her employment with the
Bank on 27 August 2018.
[66]
Dissatisfied with her dismissal, Ms Ngcobo
referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration (the CCMA). At arbitration
the fourth respondent, the commissioner, found that it was common
cause that the Housing
Policy outlined the responsibilities of the
line manager, but that the policy was not specific on the role and
responsibilities
of the Human Capital Consultant and that it was
probable that Ms Ngcobo might have not foreseen the harm as Mr
Taljaard as a senior
knew the policy and that Ms Ngcobo was allowed
to sign the PRU. The commissioner found that the rule was not clear
and confusion
was created regarding the different roles of employees.
The dismissal of Ms Ngcobo was therefore found to be unfair with the
Bank
having failed to “discharge the onus”. Ms Ngcobo was
retrospectively reinstated into her employment with the Bank with
three months’ backpay on the basis that the parties could still
work together since Ms Ngcobo had been remorseful, had not
acted
dishonestly and was not aware that she could not sign the PRU.
[67]
Aggrieved with the outcome at arbitration,
the Bank sought the review of the arbitration award by the Labour
Court. The Court found
that the Housing Policy was explicit on the
roles of the line manager and the HCSS and noted that Ms Ngcobo had
conceded that the
Policy did not permit her to sign Mr Taljaard’s
PRU. This was found to accord with the evidence of Ms Mabuza that a
Human
Capital Consultant could not sign a PRU unless the delegated
authority to do so had been provided. The Court found that based on
the uncertainty as to whether the authority to sign the PRU could be
delegated, together with different interpretations emanating
from the
evidence, it was not unreasonable for the Commissioner to conclude
that the Housing Policy was not explicit in respect
of the role and
responsibilities of Ms Ngcobo. The Court dismissed the review
application finding that the commissioner had understood
the charge
faced by Ms Ngcobo. The Court however increased the back pay awarded
to Ms Ngcobo from three to five months given a
necessary variation
application brought by Ms Ngcobo to correct the reference in the
arbitration award to the charges she had faced
at the disciplinary
hearing.
Discussion
[68]
The Bank’s Housing Policy is express
in its requirement that Mr Taljaard’s line manager, Mr Jacobs,
“must”
provide a new or transferred employee with a
letter and lease agreement, which stipulates the conditions of the
low rental housing
benefit. It is the line manager who must complete
a PRU form and the low rental housing details. The line manager is
required to
retain a copy of the lease agreement in the
branch/business unit and it is the line manager who must submit the
documentation to
Human Capital Shared Services department for this to
be captured on Team Track/SAP and for the PRU to be filed with the
original
lease agreement and the letter of appointment/transfer in
the employee’s personal record folder. This is, in terms of the
Policy, after the proposed benefit has been approved by the
Resourcing Allocation Committee. In addition, the Policy provides
that Provincial Human Capital Business Partners are required to
maintain an updated list of employees occupying Bank-owned houses
in
the province and ensure that the correct monthly rental is being
deducted by payroll.
[69]
There was no dispute that Mr Taljaard
signed an incorrectly completed lease agreement which had not been
authorised by the Resourcing
Allocation Committee nor his line
manager in circumstances in which he was not entitled to lease the
property or receive the benefit
of a preferential rent on it. The
Housing Policy expressly required that Ms Ngcobo receive Mr
Taljaard’s completed PRU from
Mr Jacobs as his line manager
before she captured the agreement in Mr Taljaard’s personal
records on the Bank’s human
resources system. This in
circumstances in which the capture of this information was the last
step in the authorisation of the
lease agreement and the receipt of
the benefit of a reduced rental by Mr Taljaard. In her evidence Ms
Ngcobo accepted that she
had advised Mr Taljaard on the steps to be
taken and conceded that the Policy did not permit her to sign Mr
Taljaard’s PRU,
which she had done “
because
I was under the impression that
[Mr
Taljaard]
has done it correctly
.”
[70]
The Policy was express and in no way
ambiguous that Mr Jacobs as the line manager was to authorise the
lease and permit the PRU
to be updated. Ms Ngcobo on her own version
accepted that she was not permitted to authorise the PRU. The finding
that the Bank’s
Housing Policy was ambiguous on her role was
therefore not borne out by the evidence. In finding differently, and
in concluding
that Ms Ngcobo had not acted in breach of the Policy,
the commissioner committed a material misdirection and reached a
decision
which fell outside the ambit of reasonableness required. In
supporting the conclusion reached by the commissioner that the Policy
was unclear and not explicit in respect of the role and
responsibilities of Ms Ngcobo, the Labour Court erred.
[71]
My
colleague finds, with reference to
Mkhatswa
v Minister of Defence
[35]
that “
it
can hardly be said that
[the employee]
had
the foresight of the reasonable possibility of harm befalling the
employer
”.
I am unable to agree. Ms Ngcobo in her human resources role was
required to ensure compliance with all relevant policies
and
procedures. She had knowledge of the Housing Policy and its terms
sufficient to advise Mr Taljaard on the steps he was required
to take
to enjoy the benefit. A simple reading of the Policy indicated that
it was his line manager who was required to authorise
the benefit and
provide Ms Ngcobo with the completed PRU before she captured it in Mr
Taljaard’s personal records on the
Bank’s human resources
system; and on her own version she was not permitted to sign the PRU
but nevertheless did so. There
can be no doubt that Ms Ngcobo knew
that the lease provided a benefit to Mr Taljaard which, if he was not
entitled to receive it
but did, led to his receipt of a financial
benefit in circumstances in which the Bank sustained a
financial loss as a result
of her conduct.
[72]
The misconduct committed by
Ms
Ngcobo was not insignificant but was of a serious nature given her
role and responsibilities and her knowledge of the Policy.
The Bank
contended that a
breakdown in the trust
relationship had occurred as a result of Ms Ngcobo’s conduct
and the risk posed by it. I agree. The
majority find that Ms Ngcobo
is not a candidate for dismissal given that there exists no evidence
that she would repeat her conduct
to usurp the functions of a line
manager and she had apologised for having exceeded her powers and had
advanced a reason for doing
so.
[73]
With this I cannot agree. Ms Ngcobo acted
in breach of a policy with which she was required to ensure
compliance. Her conduct led
to Bank suffering financial loss. She did
not advise her seniors of her conduct and, even after they had
questioned her conduct,
she proceeded to process the cancellation of
the benefit on behalf of Mr Taljaard, without informing them of this
and not copying
them on her correspondence.
[74]
The effect of Ms Ngcobo’s conduct was
to authorise a benefit to Mr Taljaard in circumstances in which he
was not entitled
to receive it. This caused clear financial loss to
the Bank and amounted to a serious breach of her responsibilities,
her duty
to ensure adherence to the Bank’s policy and safeguard
the financial resources of the Bank as her employer. In this regard
and in her subsequent attempt to cancel the benefit without informing
her seniors of this, Ms Ngcobo failed to act with the honesty,
integrity and fidelity required of employees in the financial
services industry. This was evident form Ms Ngcobo’s admission
of her misconduct in evidence, while at the same time seeking to
contend that the Policy was not clear and did not specify her
responsibilities. The Bank was entitled to rely on Ms Ngcobo’s
diligent adherence to the terms of the Policy given her position,
more so when a high premium placed in the banking sector on the
adherence by employees to rules and procedures to ensure the
preservation
of the Bank’s financial resources. The misconduct
committed by Ms Ngcobo was of a serious nature and impacted directly
on
the trust relationship in causing financial harm to the Bank. In
such circumstances, given her relatively limited period of service,
dismissal was an appropriate response to the misconduct committed
.
[75]
In
SA
Society of Bank Officials and another v Standard Bank of SA and
others
[36]
an
employee was dismissed for altering bank records on the basis that
banking
employees are expected to be honest and not to circumvent the checks
and balances put in place to prevent misconduct. The
employee’s
conduct was found to have an impact on the relationship of trust and
continued employment relationship because
she did not live up to one
of the values of the bank which is to act with honesty and integrity,
with the need for employees to
act with honesty and fidelity being
fundamental in the financial services industry. The same applies to
Ms Ngcobo.
[76]
There is no reason, having regard to
considerations of law and fairness, why a costs order would be
warranted in this matter.
[77]
For all of these reasons I am of the view
that the dismissal of Ms Ngcobo was substantively fair and I would
therefore make the
following order:
Order
1.
The appeal is reinstated with the late
filing of the appeal record and the notice of appeal condoned.
2.
The appeal is upheld with no order as to
costs.
3.
The orders of the Labour Court are set
aside and substituted with an order that the review application is
upheld with no order of
costs and that the award of the commissioner
is set aside and substituted as follows:
“
The
dismissal of the employee, Ms Nontokozo Ngcobo, is found to be
substantively fair”.
Savage AJA
APPEARANCES
For
the Appellant:
Mr D Cithi
Instructed by Mervyn
Taback Inc
For
the Respondent:
Adv C Goosen
Instructed by BJ Erasmus
Pieterse Attorneys
[1]
Personal
Record Update.
[2]
Award:
076-30, para 40.
[3]
Award:
Ibid
.
[4]
FA, para 9, 076-12.
[5]
The
allegations of misconduct read as follows:
“
1.
It is alleged that you acted in breach of the Standard Bank Housing
Policy (processes)
and acted outside your mandate / authority as a
Human Capital Business Partner, in that:
(a)
On 21 May 2018, you captured and/or authorized a lease
agreement and the
PRU between the bank and Mr. Johannes Taljaard
(“Taljaard”).
2.
It is alleged that you acted in a manner that is Grossly Negligent,
in that:
(a)
When you received a copy of the lease
agreement on 28
th
February 2018, you failed to check if the agreement was
properly signed by Taljaard.
(b)
When you captured the agreement and
completed and authorized the PRU, you failed to enquire from the
Provincial Head Anton Nicoliasen
and/or Brendon Jacobs (“Jacobs”)
as well as Khetsiwe Mabuza (“Mabuza”) whether they were
aware that Taljaard
had signed a lease agreement with the bank.
(c)
You failed to obtain authorization from
Provincial Head, Jacobs and/or Mabuza prior to capturing the
agreement and authorizing
PRU.
(d)
On 25 June 2028, you sent an
email to Human Capital to cancel the lease agreement without
notifying Jacobs and Mabuza.
[6]
Pagination:
Vol 2, p 170, part 6.
[7]
Pagination: Vol 2, p 171.
[8]
076-263,
line 7.
[9]
076-268,
lines 8 – 20.
[10]
076-268,
line 18 to 076-269, line 3.
[11]
076-272
line 20 to 076-273 line5
[12]
076-272,
line 20 to 076-273, line 5.
[13]
Charge sheet: para
2.2
[14]
076-275,
line 18 to 076-275, line 22.
[15]
076-280,
line 1 to 076-281, line 13.
[16]
Bank’s
HOA, para 10, 11; FA, para 14, 076-13.
[17]
Bank’s
HOA, para 9, read with para 7; 078-22/24.
[18]
EOH
Abantu (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration and Others
(2019)
40 ILJ 2477 (LAC) at 19, hereinafter referred to by the employee’s
name,
Brett
Danney
.
[19]
076-379, lines 4 to 16.
[20]
Oswin’s
evidence, at 076-367 to 076-368)
[21]
PRU: Item 5.6 (076-158).
[22]
076-395, lines 9 to 16.
[23]
076-396, lines 10 to 23; PRU: 076-152, item 16.
[24]
076-388, line 7 to 076-389, line 13.
[25]
076-361, lines 1 to 15; 076-362, lines 3 to 13.
[26]
076-364, line 20 to 076-365, line 9.
[27]
(2019)
40 ILJ 2477 (LAC) at para 23.
[28]
(2018)
39 ILJ 144 (LAC) (18 October 2017). (hereinafter referred to by the
name of the employee,
Kgwele
)
[29]
Kgwele
Ibid
at 41 and 45.
[30]
Kgwele
(Id fn 31)
at
55.
[31]
(2019) 40 ILJ 1506 (LAC) at para 7 (
Pathcare
).
[32]
Pathcare
(
Ibid)
at 12.
[33]
Pathcare
(
Id
fn 33) at 15.
[34]
2000
(1) SA 1104
(SCA) at 112H, para 23.
[35]
2000 (1) SA 1104
(SCA) at 112H at para 23.
[36]
(2022)
43 ILJ 1794 (LAC).
sino noindex
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