LTE Consulting (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Meditation and Arbitration and Others (JR1289/14) [2017] ZALCJHB 291; [2017] 12 BLLR 1259 (LC) ; (2017) 38 ILJ 2787 (LC) (8 August 2017)

82 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Dismissal — Substantive fairness — Employee misrepresenting qualifications in CV — Employee dismissed for gross dishonesty regarding qualifications — Commissioner found dismissal substantively unfair — Review application by employer to set aside award — Court held that commissioner’s finding was unreasonable and that dismissal was fair.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned a review application in terms of section 145 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (LRA) brought in the Labour Court, Johannesburg. The applicant was LTE Consulting (Pty) Ltd (the employer). The first respondent was the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA), the second respondent was the CCMA commissioner who issued the arbitration award (Commissioner Malubane Buti), and the third respondent was Mr Lourens Francois Theron (the employee).


The procedural history began with the employee’s employment as financial manager from 1 December 2009. In December 2013 the employer charged him with gross dishonesty for allegedly misrepresenting, in his CV and during the interview process, that he was a chartered accountant (South Africa). Following a disciplinary enquiry, the employee was dismissed on 20 January 2014. He referred an unfair dismissal dispute to arbitration, where the commissioner found the dismissal substantively unfair and awarded the employee six months’ compensation (in excess of R300,000) in an award dated 30 April 2014.


The employer approached the Labour Court to review and set aside that award. The general subject matter of the dispute was the substantive fairness of dismissal for dishonesty, specifically involving misrepresentation of qualifications in a CV and whether the commissioner’s conclusion that dismissal was substantively unfair was reasonable on review.


2. Material Facts


The employee commenced employment with the employer as financial manager with effect from 1 December 2009. At the time of appointment he was approximately 82 years old, which was well beyond the employer’s ordinary retirement age of 65. The record also indicated that he may have performed functions associated with company secretary work at some stage, and later events revealed tension around retirement-related arrangements.


During 2013 the employer considered offering the employee a role as assistant company secretary on a fixed-term contract (running from 1 August 2013 to 31 January 2014). While processing matters connected to that proposed contract, the employer’s company secretary, Mr Vantyi, located the employee’s CV in the personnel file. The CV reflected outstanding certificates and claimed qualifications including a B.Com, a “chartered accountant (SA)” qualification, and an MBA from Wits. When the qualification certificates were queried internally, it emerged that they had been requested from the employee but had not been provided. An investigation followed, leading the employer to conclude that the employee was not a chartered accountant and did not hold an MBA from Wits. The employer also proceeded on the basis that he did not hold the claimed B.Com.


These aspects became central and were treated as effectively undisputed in the Labour Court review because the employee himself admitted in his arbitration evidence that he was not a chartered accountant, did not hold a B.Com from a South African university, and did not hold an MBA from Wits. The employee’s explanation at arbitration was not that the statements were accurate, but that he believed he had equivalent qualifications or recognition of prior learning.


The disciplinary charge formulated by the employer was that the employee committed gross dishonesty in that on his CV submitted for the position of financial manager he indicated that he was qualified as a chartered accountant (SA) and that he confirmed this in the interview with the panel on 26 November 2009. The employer’s evidence (particularly from Mr Chitenhe, the CEO and an interview panel member) was that the recruitment process was competitive, that the employee’s CV was before the panel, that it was taken at face value, and that the interview scorecard recorded high scores for qualifications and included annotations that the employee was “financially qualified and experienced” and a “chartered accountant”. The employer’s evidence was that the purported chartered accountant status was a factor influencing the appointment decision, even if not a formal requirement for the role.


There was, however, a dispute about the character of the meeting of 26 November 2009. The employee denied that he applied for the financial manager position or that the meeting was an interview for that position, though he conceded he attended a meeting that involved discussion of his experience and that he had his CV and qualifications with him, which he said he handed to HR. The commissioner later relied on a broader narrative suggesting the dismissal was connected to an attempt to force retirement; the employer disputed this and explained that the issue came to light when the CV was found and investigated in the course of the later contract discussions.


A further relevant factual feature was that after appointment the employee drafted his own job description for financial manager, recording the required qualification as a “B.Com degree or relevant qualifications”. In addition, the employee adopted a position that the employer’s concerns were “stupid little things”, which the Labour Court treated as demonstrating an absence of remorse.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the commissioner’s finding that the employee’s dismissal was substantively unfair was one that a reasonable decision-maker could reach on the evidence, applying the review standard in a section 145 LRA review informed by the reasonableness threshold articulated in constitutional and Labour Appeal Court authority.


Within that overall enquiry, the review raised a focused controversy identified by the Labour Court: whether it was reasonable for the commissioner to find that the employee was not guilty of dishonestly misrepresenting his CV (or, in effect, that dismissal was not justified despite the misrepresentation). The dispute accordingly concerned the application of legal standards of review and substantive fairness to the factual record, rather than a pure question of law detached from the evidence.


The court also had to consider whether certain subsidiary contentions advanced for the employee could sustain the award, including whether the employer had proved that the employee was not “qualified” to be a chartered accountant (as distinct from being registered), whether the employee “confirmed” the CV contents during the interview, and whether the alleged misrepresentation was material given that chartered accountant status was not an express requirement for the job.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Labour Court approached the matter on the basis that the decisive enquiry on review was whether the commissioner’s outcome—substantive unfairness and compensation—was reasonable. The court identified the commissioner’s reasoning as unclear, but extracted its main thrust: that the dismissal was a sham intended to force retirement and that the CV misrepresentations were either not material, were neutralised by equivalent qualifications, or did not warrant dismissal when mitigation was considered.


On the employee’s primary submission that he was technically not guilty because the employer had not shown he was not “qualified” to be a chartered accountant, the Labour Court rejected the argument as unsustainable. It held that it was not credible to contend that the employee was “qualified” as a chartered accountant where, among other things, he had not passed the relevant board examination and was not registered with the appropriate professional body. The court also rejected the contention that the employee had not “confirmed” his CV in the interview, reasoning that handing in the CV at or before the interview constituted confirmation of its content for purposes of the misconduct charge as formulated.


On the question of materiality, the Labour Court held that the evidence—particularly the CEO’s testimony and the interview scorecard—demonstrated that the claimed chartered accountant status was a material factor in the appointment decision. The court further reasoned that even if chartered accountant status was not a strict job requirement, that did not mitigate the dishonesty inherent in claiming to hold such a qualification. The dishonesty was treated as the gravamen, rather than the degree to which the misrepresentation could be shown to be strictly determinative of appointment.


The court addressed procedural objections raised in argument, including alleged failures to cross-examine and the scope of the employer’s pleaded review grounds. It found that the employee had been cross-examined on material issues and that the employer’s review grounds, though brief, were sufficiently framed to permit an attack on the reasonableness of the award’s outcome.


Turning to the substantive reasonableness of the award, the court characterised the employee’s conduct as manifestly gross dishonesty, emphasising that he misrepresented himself as a chartered accountant and also misrepresented having a B.Com and an MBA. The court also treated the employee’s stance during evidence as aggravating because it demonstrated an absence of remorse. On this footing, the court found that dismissal was “patently warranted”, and that a finding of substantive unfairness could not be sustained by a reasonable commissioner on the record.


In reinforcing this conclusion, the Labour Court relied on three Labour Appeal Court decisions it considered directly relevant. It referred to SA Post Office Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation & Arbitration & others (2011) 32 ILJ 2442 (LAC) for the proposition that it is grossly unreasonable to reinstate an employee into a position where honesty is paramount when the position was secured through false statements, and that reinstatement or re-employment in such circumstances cannot be right and proper. It relied on Department of Home Affairs & another v Ndlovu & others (2014) 35 ILJ 3340 (LAC) as authority that even if a misrepresentation may not have induced appointment, it does not detract from the initial dishonesty, which underpins substantive fairness of dismissal. It further relied on G4S Secure Solutions (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Ruggiero NO & others (2017) 38 ILJ 881 (LAC) for the approach that dishonesty in securing employment, coupled with lack of remorse, can justify dismissal even where a lengthy period has elapsed and the employee has rendered long service; concealment over time does not negate seriousness.


The Labour Court then tested each of the commissioner’s key findings (as distilled by the court) against the evidence and principles. It found the “sham retirement” theory unreasonable because it could not be reconciled with the unchallenged evidence explaining how the qualification issue came to light, and because the seriousness of the misconduct objectively supported dismissal. It found the commissioner’s view that the misrepresentation was not material to be unjustified on the evidence, given the interview scorecard and testimony. It found the “equivalent qualifications” reasoning to miss the point because the misconduct was the making of false statements about qualifications, and because any supposed equivalence did not address the claim to be a chartered accountant. Finally, it regarded the commissioner’s apparent sanction evaluation as unreasonable in light of the seriousness of dishonesty and the approach in the cited Labour Appeal Court decisions.


On remedy, the parties agreed that if the award was reviewable the Labour Court should finally determine the dismissal dispute. Given its conclusion that the commissioner’s decision was unreasonable, the court substituted the outcome by determining that the dismissal was substantively fair.


On costs, the court declined to award costs against the employee, reasoning that it would not be just and equitable to hold the employee responsible for the commissioner’s unreasonable award, despite the employee’s unsuccessful opposition to the review.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Labour Court reviewed and set aside the commissioner’s arbitration award dated 30 April 2014.


The court substituted the award by declaring that the employee’s dismissal by the employer was substantively fair.


No order as to costs was made.


Cases Cited


Sidumo & another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd & others (2007) 28 ILJ 2405 (CC)


SA Post Office Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation & Arbitration & others (2011) 32 ILJ 2442 (LAC)


Department of Home Affairs & another v Ndlovu & others (2014) 35 ILJ 3340 (LAC)


G4S Secure Solutions (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Ruggiero NO & others (2017) 38 ILJ 881 (LAC)


Legislation Cited


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, section 145


Basic Conditions of Employment Act 75 of 1997 (referenced in relation to notice provisions)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Labour Court held that the commissioner’s conclusion that the dismissal was substantively unfair was unreasonable on the evidentiary record. The employee had dishonestly misrepresented that he was a chartered accountant (South Africa) and further misrepresented additional qualifications, and this dishonesty was sufficiently serious to justify dismissal. The commissioner’s findings that the dismissal was a retirement-driven sham, that the misrepresentation was not material, and that purported equivalent qualifications negated misconduct were each found to be unsustainable. The award was set aside and replaced with a finding that the dismissal was substantively fair, with no costs order.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that a section 145 review ultimately asks whether the arbitration outcome is one that a reasonable decision-maker could reach on the material before the commissioner, consistently with the review standard associated with Sidumo & another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd & others (2007) 28 ILJ 2405 (CC).


It applied the principle that dishonesty in the process of obtaining employment, particularly through false statements in a CV or application documents, is serious misconduct going to the heart of the employment relationship. In this context, the court treated the act of submitting a CV containing false qualifications as a confirmation of its content during the recruitment process.


The judgment further reflected the principle, drawn from Labour Appeal Court authority, that the substantive fairness of dismissal for CV dishonesty does not necessarily depend on proving that the misrepresentation was a formal job requirement or the sole determinant of appointment. The dishonesty itself is central, and an attempt to rely on “equivalent” qualifications does not neutralise the falsity of a specific claim to hold a particular qualification.


It also applied the principle that an employee’s absence of remorse aggravates dishonesty and that the passage of time or long service after concealment of the dishonesty does not, without more, negate the seriousness of the misconduct once discovered, as illustrated by the reliance on G4S Secure Solutions (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Ruggiero NO & others (2017) 38 ILJ 881 (LAC).

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[2017] ZALCJHB 291
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LTE Consulting (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Meditation and Arbitration and Others (JR1289/14) [2017] ZALCJHB 291; [2017] 12 BLLR 1259 (LC) ; (2017) 38 ILJ 2787 (LC) (8 August 2017)

THE
LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable
Case
no: JR1289/14
In
the matter between:
LTE
CONSULTING (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
COMMISSION
FOR CONCILIATION,
MEDIATION
AND ARBITRATION
First Respondent
COMMISSIONER
MALUBANE BUTI
LOURENS FRANCOIS THERON
Second
Respondent
Third Respondent
Heard:
3 August 2017
Delivered:
8 August 2017
Summary:
Employee misrepresenting qualifications in CV
– commissioner’s finding that employee’s dismissal
substantively
unfair unreasonable – award set aside on review –
employee’s dismissal determined as having been fair
JUDGMENT
MYBURGH,
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The central issue in this section 145 review
application is whether the commissioner’s finding that the
employee was not guilty
of dishonestly misrepresenting his CV was
reasonable.
[2]
The essential background is this. With effect
from 1 December 2009, the employee was employed by the company as its
financial manager.
Four years later, on 13 December 2013, he was
charged with gross dishonesty -

in that on your [CV] submitted
to the employer for your employment application for the position of
financial manager you indicated
that you were qualified as a
chartered accountant (South Africa) and that you confirmed this
submission in your interview with
the employer’s interview
panel on 26 November 2009.”
[3]
On 20 January 2014, and following a disciplinary
inquiry at which he was found guilty as charged, the employee was
dismissed. A
dispute arising from the employee’s dismissal
proceeded to arbitration before the commissioner. In an award dated
30 April
2014, the commissioner determined that the employee’s
dismissal was substantively unfair and awarded him six months’

compensation amounting to in excess of R300 000. The company
seeks to set aside this award on review.
Broad
overview of evidence at arbitration
[4]
The company called three witnesses: Mr Vantyi
(the company secretary), Mr Moatswi (an HR officer) and Mr
Chitenhe (the CEO).
The employee then gave evidence, and did not call
any witnesses in his defence. What follows is a broad overview of the
evidence
(which runs to in excess of 400 pages in transcript).
[5]
When the employee was appointed as financial
manager with effect from 1 December 2009, he was turning 82,
well beyond the company’s
ordinary retirement age of 65.
Although unclear from the evidence, the employee may have performed
the role of company secretary
for a short while before his
appointment as financial manager. Also noteworthy is that the
employee was offered the position of
assistant company secretary on a
fixed-term contract running from 1 August 2013 to 31 January 2014,
but refused the offer (and
a subsequent offer of a permanent position
of assistant company secretary). On the face of it, this appears to
have been an attempt
at effectively retiring the employee.
[6]
It was in the process of considering the
fixed-term contract that Mr Vantyi  came across the employee’s
CV (which was
on file), which reflected that certain certificates
were outstanding, including the employee’s B.Com, “chartered
accountant
(SA)” qualification, and MBA from Wits. When he
raised this with the HR department, Mr Vantyi was told that the
certificates
had been requested but never provided by the employee.
This was substantially confirmed by Mr Moatswi. Mr Vantyi thus
commenced
with an investigation, which revealed that the employee was
not a chartered accountant and that he did not have an MBA from Wits,

with it also apparently being assumed that he did not have an
under-graduate degree, i.e. a B.Com. The disciplinary charges against

the employee followed upon the completion of the investigation.
[7]
In regard to the events of the interview of 26
November 2009 which form the basis of the charges, Mr Chitenhe, who
was part of the
interview panel, testified as follows. The interview
was a competitive one with three candidates having been interviewed,
including
the employee. Although it was not expressly discussed
during the interview, he had been provided with a copy of the
employee’s
CV before the interview, and it was taken at face
value, with there being no reason to doubt the contents thereof. The
employee’s
interview scorecard reflects high scores for
tertiary qualifications and job knowledge, with recorded annotations
including that
the employee was “financially qualified and
experienced” and that he was a “chartered accountant”.
According
to Mr Chitenhe, the employee was the preferred candidate
and he recommended his employment based on his CV and interaction
during
the interview. Asked if there was anything in particular in
the employee’s CV that had motivated him to make his
recommendation,
Mr Chitenhe made mention,
inter
alia
, of the employee having a B.Com and
being a chartered accountant. He did, however, accept that being a
chartered accountant was
not an express requirement for the job –
stating that some companies would require a financial manager to be a
chartered
accountant, and others not.
[8]
Turning to the employee’s evidence, on his
version, he was appointed as company secretary on 19 November 2009,
and then as
financial manager with effect from 1 December 2009, which
position subsumed that of company secretary. Although he accepted
that
he attended a meeting on 26 November 2009, he denied that he
applied for the position of financial manager or that the meeting
constituted an interview for that position. On his own version,
however, the meeting was “a discussion of my experience”,

and “I had my [CV] and my certificates, qualifications, and I
handed it to the HR manager at the time”.
[9]
Insofar as his CV is concerned, the employee
admitted that he is not a chartered accountant and that he does not
hold a B.Com from
any university in South Africa or an MBA from Wits.
What followed was an extraordinary explanation by the employee who
sought to
deflect his dishonesty either on the basis of recognition
of prior learning or that he had equivalent qualifications.
Incredibly,
in relation to the chartered accountant issue, the
employee testified that “I wrote the examination for B.Com
first year
accountancy, which is equivalent to CA”. Equally
striking is this passage which also bears testimony to the brazen and
unremorseful
attitude adopted by the employee (the quote is
verbatim):
“…
my impression is that
very few people know that equivalent certificates and diplomas are
very often better than degrees, and very
few people know of, well, at
least many people know that the Chartered Institute of Secretaries is
all round practical course which
includes all these other little
degrees than what you can do at university.”
[10]
Subsequent to this appointment, the employee
drafted his own job description for the position of financial
manager. In doing so,
he set the required qualification as being a
“B.Com degree or relevant qualifications”.
[11]
Moving forward in time, according to the
employee, he was told on 3 June 2013 that he was removed as company
secretary and that
Mr Vantyi had been appointed in his place, which
was motivated on the basis of BEE considerations. On 13 November
2013, and in
circumstances where he had carried on his role of
financial manager in the interim, a meeting was held to discuss the
employee’s
retirement. At this meeting, the employee was
offered the position of assistant company secretary on a fixed-term
contract running
from 1 August 2013 to 1 January 2014. The employee
refused to sign the contract because it was backdated to 1 August
2013. The
employee also declined to accept a permanent position of
assistant company secretary – this on account of the fact that
he
was not satisfied with the notice provisions in the contract
(which replicated the BCEA provisions) and because he was already an

employee.
[12]
Finally, as far as the employee was concerned,
“the employer [was] looking for something to put me in a
position where I have
to retire … and that is why they come up
with all these stupid little things”.
The
commissioner’s award
[13]
The commissioner’s award is, regrettably,
not a model of clarity. But it seems to me that the central thrust of
his finding
is that the employee’s dismissal was (according to
him) a sham designed, in effect, to secure his retirement. As the
commissioner
put it:

The
company realised that the applicant was the only employee in the
company who was without a retirement age and came with the
plan to
force him to retire … . …
The logical conclusion that I can make
is that should the applicant [have] accepted the offer of a company
assistant secretary there
would be no need for the company to dig
into his CV as a means to get rid of him.”
[14]
The commissioner also seems to have been of the
view that the representations in question by the employee in his CV
were not material
in securing the position of financial manager, and,
in any event, that he had equivalent qualifications. As the
commissioner put
it:

One thing crystal clear is that
the applicant’s CV was not an entry gate when he was appointed,
it cannot be an issue now.
However in trying to emphasise why the
applicant’s CV should not be an issue in this case, in his
evidence in chief, the
applicant demonstrated that his F.C.I.S is
equivalent to M.Com and his diploma business management from Damelin
is equivalent to
MBA. He mentioned B.Com in his CV because he was
accredited B.Com courses when he joined the chartered secretaries of
Southern
Africa.”
[15]
In conclusion, the commissioner found:

After having scrutinized the
evidence of both parties, their mitigation[ing] and aggravating
circumstances, the balance of probability
favours the conclusion that
the respondent failed to discharge its onus to prove that the
applicant’s dismissal under the
circumstances was substantively
fair.”
[16]
Although confusing, from an overall perspective,
it seems that the commissioner found that, insofar as the employee
was guilty of
any misconduct, he was not deserving of dismissal
because: (i) his dismissal was a sham designed to, in effect, secure
his retirement;
(ii) the misrepresentations about qualifications were
not material in securing the position of financial manager; (iii) in
any
event, the employee had equivalent qualifications; and (iv) an
assessment of factors in mitigation / aggravation demonstrated that

the sanction of dismissal was inappropriate.
Analysis
and evaluation
[17]
Mr Hayward,
who appeared for the employee, made the following main submissions in
oral argument. Firstly, the employee was technically
not guilty of
the charge of misconduct because the company had not established that
he was not “qualified” to be a
chartered accountant (as
opposed to not being registered as one), and because the employee had
not “confirmed this submission
in [his] interview”.
[1]
Secondly, insofar as the employee had misrepresented that he was a
chartered accountant, this was not material because this was
not a
requirement for appointment to the position of financial manager.
Thirdly, there had been a failure to cross examine on certain
aspects
of the matter. Fourthly, the company’s pleaded grounds of
review were limited and, in effect, prohibited it from
attacking the
reasonableness of the outcome of the award. Fifthly, in any event,
the outcome of the award was reasonable.
[18]
To my mind, there is no merit in any of these
points. As to the first point, it is facile to contend that the
employee is qualified
to be a chartered accountant – he is not,
inter alia
, because he
has not passed the board examination and because he is not registered
as a chartered accountant with the relevant regulatory
authority. It
can also not be contended that the employee did not confirm that he
was a chartered accountant during the interview
– he did so by
handing in his CV at or before the interview.
[19]
Regarding
the second point, it is clear from the evidence of Mr Chitenhe and
the employee’s interview scorecard that the fact
that the
employee was (purportedly) qualified as a chartered accountant was a
material factor in his appointment as financial manager
(and
understandably so). In any event, accepting that such a qualification
was not a requirement for the job, this does not detract
from the
employee’s dishonesty in misrepresenting that he was a
chartered accountant.
[2]
[20]
Regarding the third and fourth points, the
employee was cross examined over the material aspects of the matter,
and the company’s
pleaded grounds of review (albeit brief) are
framed widely enough to permit an attack on the reasonableness of the
outcome of the
award.
[21]
That leaves
the central controversy between the parties, namely whether a
reasonable commissioner could have found the employee’s

dismissal substantively unfair.
[3]
To my mind, the answer is clearly “no”. Manifestly, the
employee was grossly dishonest in misrepresenting that he is
a
chartered accountant. To aggravate this grave misconduct, he also
lied about having a B.Com and MBA, and showed no remorse whatsoever.

This to the extent of describing the company’s concerns as
being about “stupid little things”. Dismissal was

patently warranted.
[22]
I am
fortified in my view that the commissioner’s decision was
unreasonable by three judgments of the LAC, which are directly
in
point. The first is
SA
Post Office Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation &
Arbitration & others
(2011) 32
ILJ
2442 (LAC). The employee had misrepresented that she had a driver’s
licence in her application for employment
[4]
and was dismissed for dishonesty. A CCMA commissioner found her
dismissal substantively unfair and reinstated her, with the award

having been upheld on review by this court. But the LAC reversed this
court on appeal, with Waglay DJP (as he then was) finding
the award
unreasonable,
inter
alia
,
on this basis:

[34] … To place an
employee who was guilty of dishonesty back in her position where
honesty and integrity are paramount to
the execution of duties, is to
my mind grossly unreasonable, but more importantly, it cannot be
right and proper to reinstate or
re-employ a person in a position
that was secured by the making of false statements.”
[23]
The second judgment is
Department
of Home Affairs & another v Ndlovu & others
(2014) 35
ILJ
3340
(LAC). The employee had misrepresented in his CV that he had a degree
in technology marketing and was dismissed for dishonesty.
A
bargaining council commissioner upheld the dismissal, with the award
having been set aside on review by this court. But the LAC
reversed
this court on appeal, and restored the commissioner’s award. In
the process, Dlodlo AJA held:

The fact that the
misrepresentation in the CV might very well not have induced the
first respondent's appointment to the post most
certainly does not
detract from the fact of the first respondent's initial dishonesty.
The dishonesty as contained in the CV is
ultimately what underpins
the substantive fairness of the first respondent's dismissal.
Why did the first respondent put
in his CV that which is untrue? He
knew how to describe the MBA degree which was then unfinished. He
could have described the bachelor
of technology marketing degree
similarly if he found it necessary to mention it at all in his CV.”
[24]
The third and most recent judgment is
G4S
Secure Solutions (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Ruggiero NO & others
(2017) 38
ILJ
881
(LAC). The employee failed to disclose a criminal conviction in his
application for employment as a security guard and was
dismissed for
dishonesty (14 years later). A CCMA commissioner found the dismissal
substantively unfair and awarded the employee
compensation, with the
award having been upheld on review by this court. But, again, the LAC
reversed this court on appeal and
set aside the award, with Savage
AJA finding:

[30] …  The false
misrepresentation made by the third respondent was blatantly
dishonest in circumstances in which the
appellant is entitled as an
operational imperative to rely on honesty and full disclosure by its
potential employees. It induced
employment and when discovered was
met with an absence of remorse on the part of the third respondent.
The fact that a lengthy
period had elapsed since the
misrepresentation, during which time the third respondent had
rendered long service without disciplinary
infraction, while a
relevant consideration, does not compel a different result. This is
so in that the fact that dishonesty has
been concealed for an
extended period does not in itself negate the seriousness of the
misconduct or justify its different treatment.
To find differently
would send the wrong message.”
[25]
Turning to the five findings made by the
commissioner identified in para 16 above, I consider each of them to
be unreasonable in
themselves. To begin with the commissioner’s
central finding that the dismissal was a sham designed to effectively
secure
the employee’s retirement, it is unreasonable in that it
cannot be reconciled with Mr Vantyi’s (unchallenged)
explanation
about how he came to learn of the problems with the
employee’s CV. What further belies the finding of a sham is the
fact
that, objectively, the employee’s misconduct was very
serious and deserving of dismissal. Regarding the finding that the
misrepresentation about the chartered accountant qualification was
not material, as already mentioned, there is also no justifiable

basis for this in the evidence. Regarding the finding that the
employee had equivalent qualifications, this is unreasonable because

it misses the point, and, in any event, did not extend (on the
commissioner’s own findings) to the employee’s claim
that
he is a chartered accountant. That leaves the commissioner’s
unarticulated assessment of factors in mitigation / aggravation
in
favour of the employee in relation to sanction, which is unreasonable
on the basis of the three LAC judgments referred to above.
[26]
In relation to the issue of relief, the parties
agreed that, in the event of it being found that the award is
reviewable, this court
should finally determine the dismissal
dispute. In circumstances where I have found that the commissioner’s
decision not
to uphold the employee’s dismissal was
unreasonable, it follows that I consider it to have been
substantively fair.
[27]
Regarding costs, in circumstances where the
employee cannot be held responsible for the commissioner’s
unreasonable award,
I do not believe that it would be just and
equitable that he be made to pay the costs of the review, despite
having been unsuccessful
in his opposition thereof.
Order
[28]
In the result, the following order is made:
1)
The second respondent’s award is reviewed
and set aside;
2)
The dismissal of the third respondent by the
applicant is declared to have been substantively fair;
3)
There is no order as to costs.
________________________________
Myburgh,
AJ
Acting
Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa
Appearances
For
the applicant: Adv BZ Kela instructed by Ndumiso Voyi Inc
For
the third respondent: Adv S Hayward instructed by Van Hysteens
Attorneys
[1]
See the text of the charge quoted in para 2 above.
[2]
See the quotation from
Department
of Home Affairs & another v Ndlovu & others
(2014) 35
ILJ
3340 (LAC) in para 23 below.
[3]
Sidumo & another v
Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd & others
(2007) 28
ILJ
2405 (CC) at para 110.
[4]
She only had a learner’s licence, but obtained a full licence
during the course of her employment.