Legal updates and opinions
News / News
To dismiss or not to dismiss – That is the operational question
by Bradley Workman-Davies, Director
The recent Labour Court judgment in Inxuba Yethemba Municipality v Msweli & others underscores two important principles for both employers and commissioners at the CCMA: firstly, that dismissal is an operational business assessment even when the reason for the dismissal is the misconduct of the employee, rather than an expression of moral outrage in reaction to the employee’s conduct. Secondly, that the commissioner’s role is not to substitute their own sanction in the arbitration process, but to assess whether the sanction imposed by the employer falls within a band of reasonableness.
The matter arose when the municipality dismissed an employee for serious misconduct relating to irregular expenditure. The CCMA found the dismissal substantively unfair and reinstated the employee with a final written warning. On review, the Labour Court took a different view.
The Court confirmed that the decision by an employer to dismiss must be based on operational considerations, such as trust, the nature of the misconduct, and the potential risk to the employer’s operations – not on whether the employer is “morally offended” by the employee’s conduct. The operational lens focuses on whether the employee’s continued presence in the workplace is viable and consistent with the needs of the enterprise. In this context, an employer may properly conclude that the trust relationship is irretrievably broken without the need for punitive moral condemnation.
Equally significant was the Court’s reaffirmation of the Sidumo principle: the commissioner’s role is to determine whether the sanction of dismissal imposed by the employer was reasonable in the circumstances. It is not for the commissioner to impose what they consider to be the “correct” or “fair” sanction, but to assess whether the employer’s choice of sanction is one that a reasonable decision-maker could reach. By substituting dismissal with a final written warning without adequate consideration of the operational impact, the commissioner exceeded their mandate. In this case, since the employer was a municipality and was to additional statutory duties arising from the Municipal Finance Management Act, the court found that the CCMA should not “readily and without earnest reflection, second guess a [employer] which adopted strict, even harsh measures, to combat the cancer of corruption, patronage and maladministration and maintained, or sought to rehabilitate, the integrity of its systems of financial management.”
Ultimately, the Court set aside the award and upheld the dismissal, sending a clear reminder that fairness in dismissal cases rests on reasonableness, operational realities, and the preservation of the trust relationship – not on subjective moral judgments.
Latest News
BANKSY AND GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
By Janine Hollesen, Director We have written about the risks of not using a trade mark which could lead to [...]
CANNABIS REMAINS ABUZZ
By Donvay Wegierski, Director An adult may possess and use cannabis in private for personal consumption in South Africa. This [...]
Recognising subtle forms of sexual harassment in the workplace
The #METOO movement has correctly focused public attention on inappropriate workplace conduct. After all of the media attention, the obvious ways [...]
All beliefs are created equal – or are they?
Did you know that your beliefs may be protected by labour laws? But how far do these protections extend – [...]
Salary discrimination not automatically unfair
Unfair discrimination on the basis of an inequality in pay - between male and female staff, or staff of different [...]
False workplace racism allegations increasingly punished by courts
The problem of being accused of racism, when the allegation is untrue, is starting to come to the fore and [...]
