Legal updates and opinions
News / News
Normal retirement age versus agreed retirement age
by Jacques van Wyk, Director; Andre van Heerden, Senior Associate; Kelly Sease and Danelle Plaatjies, Candidate Attorneys
An agreed retirement age – Issue
Whether an employer consented to an agreed retirement age when the relevant employees were allowed to work beyond the normal retirement age.
Summary
The dismissal of employees who have reached and worked beyond the normal retirement age has been found to be fair. Employers do not waive their rights to enforce the normal retirement age by serving salary adjustment letters after their employees reach the normal age of retirement.
Work beyond the normal retirement age – Facts
This was the issue considered by the Labour Court (“LC“) in the case of Solidarity obo Gerhardus Viljoen Strydom & 5 others / State Information Technology Agency Soc Ltd.
In this matter, the employment contract of the employees provided that their retirement ages would be regulated by their relevant pension fund rules. The pension fund rules provided that, subject to the employer’s consent, an employee who reached the normal age of retirement of 60, “may remain in service and retire at a date not later than the last day of the month in which the member attains the age of 67”. In short, members of the pension fund were permitted to remain in service beyond the normal retirement age but no later than the age of 67 years.
After the employer had allowed the employees to work beyond the normal retirement age, the employer enforced the normal retirement age and served the employees with retirement notices. The notices informed the employees that they had reached their age of retirement and as a result, their employment contracts would terminate.
The employees lodged grievances challenging the company’s decision to enforce the retirement age.
The employees argued that the employer had consented to the employees remaining in service beyond the normal retirement age. In support of this contention, the employees relied on the letters the employer served on the employees which communicated the decision to approve annual salary increases.
The employees argued that the letters constituted tacit consent to allow the employees to remain in service beyond the normal retirement age. These letters were issued after the employees reached the normal age of retirement.
In contrast, the employer contended that the employees’ employment automatically came to an end when they reached the retirement age of 60 years, as stipulated in their contracts of employment. Furthermore, the employer contended that there had been no written amendment to provide a termination date beyond the normal retirement age of 60.
Labour Court (“LC”) Findings
The LC found that the employer’s contention that the contracts of employment automatically terminated when they reached the normal retirement age had no merit as the employees had continued to render services. The LC found that the employees’ contention that the salary adjustment letters constituted consent to extend the retirement age to 67 (“agreed retirement age“) had been “a bit of a stretch”.
The LC found that the scope of the letter had been limited to the amendment of the employees’ salaries and nothing more. The LC affirmed that the normal retirement age remained as stated. Therefore, an agreed retirement age could not be relied upon as the agreed age of retirement and the normal retirement age were mutually exclusive.
The LC further relied on, amongst others, Bank v Finkelstein t/a Finkelstein and Associates (JS219/15) [2016] ZALCJHB 428 (“Finkelstein“),in which the Court found that an employee who works beyond an agreed or normal retirement age had, in effect, been working on “borrowed time”. Similarly, the LC relied on Kumta and Others v Limpopo Legislature (JS886/09) [2014] ZALCJHB 357 (“Kumta“) and Marais v Aveng Grinaker Lta (JS602/14) [2019] ZALCJHB 259 (“Marais“).
The Kumta and Marais matters confirmed the position that once reached, the normal age of retirement cannot be reversed unless the normal retirement age is replaced by a new agreement. The Finkelstein case further noted that unless an employer specifically waived its rights to apply the retirement age, the employer is entitled to “at any point after the employee attained the normal or agreed retirement age place the employee on retirement”.
The LC found that the normal retirement age remained “uninterrupted and binding”. The dismissal of the employees had therefore been fair.
Read more on the Severance pay entitlement of an employee who continues to work after he reaches the contractual retirement age
Importance of case
The case reaffirms that if there is no agreement on the retirement date once the employee reaches the normal retirement age, then the employer is entitled to enforce the normal retirement age at any time thereafter.
Latest News
Employee entitlements in the event of employer death
and Danelle Plaatjies - Candidate Attorney When the employment relationship ends due to the death of the employer, it terminates [...]
Caught on the sidelines: The cost of employee sick leave abuse
Danelle Plaatjies - Candidate Attorney and Yendiswa Sithole - Candidate Attorney What is an employer to do when an employee [...]
Court orders un-redacted documents be provided to SARS
Section 46 of the Tax Administration Act, 2011 (TAA) allows SARS to request 'relevant material' in relation to a taxpayer [...]
The Competition Commission’s Revised Final Public Interest Guidelines: A Critical Framework for Merger Analysis
and Chiara Ferri - Candidate Attorney Introduction The South African Competition Commission ("Commission") has published its final revised Public Interest [...]
Constitutional Court considers evictions in the inner-city of Cape Town
On 27 February 2024, the Constitutional Court heard oral arguments in the matter of Charnell Commando and Others v City [...]
Newsflash: The Competition Authority of Kenya clarifies the position on Administrative Remedies and Settlement.
and Lwazi-Lwandile Simelane - Candidate Attorney On 21 March 2024, the Competition Authority of Kenya ("the CAK") announced that it [...]