Swartbooi v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others (PR169/23) [2026] ZALCPE 2 (21 January 2026)

75 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Unfair dismissal — Review of arbitration award — Employee dismissed for alleged dishonesty and gross negligence in connection with lost municipal laptop — Commissioner finding dismissal substantively unfair and ordering reinstatement with limited backpay — Court reviewing the award, finding material contradictions in employee's testimony and failure of the Commissioner to adequately consider evidence — Dismissal deemed fair based on the nature of the misconduct and breach of trust in the employment relationship.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an application in the Labour Court to review and set aside an arbitration award issued under the auspices of the South African Local Government Bargaining Council. The review was dealt with as an application in terms of section 145 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995.


The applicant was Mnquma Local Municipality (the employer). The first respondent was the South African Municipal Workers’ Union (SAMWU) on behalf of Ms Thandi Constance Hlazo-Bangani (the employee). The second respondent was Mr Mxolisi Alex Nozigqwaba N.O., the commissioner who issued the arbitration award. The third respondent was the South African Local Government Bargaining Council.


The matter arose from the employee’s dismissal following a disciplinary hearing on five misconduct charges. An unfair dismissal dispute was referred to arbitration, where the commissioner found the dismissal substantively unfair and ordered reinstatement with backpay limited to two months’ salary, while finding the dismissal not procedurally unfair. The municipality then launched the present review application seeking to set aside and substitute (or remit) the award.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned whether the commissioner’s findings—particularly on the charges of dishonesty and misrepresentation connected to the disappearance of a municipal laptop—were reviewable on the basis that the award was not reasonably connected to the evidence and outcome, and whether dismissal should ultimately be upheld as substantively fair.


2. Material Facts


Ms Hlazo-Bangani was employed by the municipality as Manager: Legal Services in the office of the Municipal Manager. She commenced employment on 2 November 2015 and was dismissed on 14 December 2021 after being found guilty on five disciplinary charges.


She had been issued with a municipal laptop for work purposes. On Friday, 9 July 2021, she drove to work, printed documents, and on her way home stopped at Ibika garage. After arriving home, it was discovered that the laptop was not in her vehicle.


On Monday, 12 July 2021, she and an intern searched her office for the laptop before cleaners arrived, but could not find it. She then attended the police station to report it stolen and was advised first to view CCTV footage at the garage where she suspected the theft occurred. She viewed the CCTV footage at Ibika garage with the garage manager and thereafter returned to the police station and made a sworn statement. In that statement she asserted, in substance, that the laptop had been in the boot of her vehicle and that upon arriving home she noticed it had been stolen, and she suspected it was stolen at the garage.


On 14 July 2021, she prepared and sent a memorandum to the municipality’s Director of Corporate Services with the subject “REPORT FOR STOLEN LAPTOP & OTHER DEVICES FOR WORK PURPOSES”, referring to the incident as theft involving municipal assets and indicating that a docket had been opened and that her statement was attached. Although the memorandum indicated the police statement was attached, it was only sent subsequently.


A disciplinary hearing was convened on five charges. These included gross negligence relating to loss of the laptop (with reference to section 78(1) of the MFMA), dishonesty and misrepresentation linked to the sworn statement and the CCTV viewing, gross insubordination for failing to attend meetings after being instructed by email, and gross misconduct for allegedly taking unauthorised leave.


It was common cause that the sworn statement referred to in the dishonesty charge was signed on 12 July 2021, after the CCTV footage had been viewed on the same day.


Ms Hlazo-Bangani did not participate in the disciplinary enquiry after preliminary points raised by her representative were dismissed. She was found guilty on all charges and dismissed, and her internal appeal failed. The value of the lost assets was deducted from her final payslips in two parts after dismissal.


At arbitration, the commissioner found the dismissal not procedurally unfair. On substance, the commissioner found she was guilty of charge 1 (gross negligence) and charge 5 (unauthorised absence), but held dismissal was not justified because the municipality’s policy contemplated repayment for lost assets and warnings as remedies. The commissioner found her not guilty on charges 2, 3, and 4 (dishonesty, misrepresentation, and insubordination), and ordered reinstatement with limited backpay.


In the review, although the municipality also did not accept the outcome on charge 4, its principal focus was on charges 2 and 3, namely the dishonesty and misrepresentation charges.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the arbitration award was vitiated by reviewable irregularity under section 145 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, in particular whether the commissioner’s conclusions (especially the acquittal on dishonesty and misrepresentation) were unsupported by, or inconsistent with, the material evidence and therefore not reasonably connected to the outcome reached.


A further issue was the appropriate remedy if the award was reviewable, namely whether the Labour Court should substitute the award with a finding that the dismissal was fair, or remit the matter for a hearing de novo at the bargaining council.


The dispute primarily concerned the application of legal standards of review to the factual record, including evaluation of whether the commissioner properly engaged with material evidence, assessed credibility and contradictions, and reasoned from the evidence to the outcome. It also involved an evaluative judgment concerning trust, honesty, and misrepresentation in the employment relationship, and whether the proven misconduct justified dismissal.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Court approached the review on the basis that it was brought under section 145 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, and assessed whether the commissioner’s award was one that could be sustained on the evidence and reasoning reflected in the record.


In outlining the applicable employment principles, the commissioner had recorded that the employment relationship is founded on trust, that employees are expected to act with honesty in dealing with the employer’s affairs, and that dishonest conduct involves moral turpitude that can damage the trust relationship. The Labour Court accepted those general propositions as part of the framework, but found that the commissioner’s application of them to the evidence was materially deficient.


A central basis for intervention was that, in deciding the dishonesty and misrepresentation charges, the commissioner accepted Ms Hlazo-Bangani’s version in chief without engaging with contradictions and concessions that emerged during cross-examination. The Court held that the award did not reflect a reasoned engagement with material contradictions between (i) what was put to the municipality’s witnesses during cross-examination and (ii) what Ms Hlazo-Bangani later advanced during her own testimony, including new assertions that were not in her sworn statement and were not put to the municipality’s witnesses.


The Court highlighted that Ms Hlazo-Bangani’s sworn statement indicated that the laptop was in the boot and was stolen from there, whereas her later evidence included uncertainty about whether the laptop had been in the boot or behind the seat (where she often placed it), and uncertainty about whether the laptop had been stolen, lost, or misplaced. The Court regarded these inconsistencies as material because they bore directly on whether her prior representations to the employer were accurate and complete, and whether she had misled the employer regarding the circumstances of the loss.


The Court further noted that the evidence of the garage manager was that, having viewed the CCTV footage with Ms Hlazo-Bangani, it was evident from the aerial view that no incident occurred in relation to her vehicle at the garage. The Court considered that Ms Hlazo-Bangani’s accounts about what could be seen on the CCTV footage contradicted what had been put to that witness, and that the commissioner did not properly address these discrepancies.


Another material aspect of the Court’s reasoning was its rejection of the commissioner’s suggestion that the municipality should have undertaken further engagement or investigation with Ms Hlazo-Bangani before charging her. The Court stated that no evidence had been presented to establish such a duty, particularly where Ms Hlazo-Bangani had provided the statement for the employer to assess the disappearance of the municipal asset and did not provide an updated statement or indicate a desire to do so.


The Court considered it significant that Ms Hlazo-Bangani held a senior legal position as Manager: Legal Services and was an admitted advocate, which the Court treated as relevant to the expectation of heightened honesty and full disclosure in her dealings with the employer, especially where her statement was intended to assist the employer in determining whether her conduct was negligent or intentional.


Against this background, the Court concluded that the commissioner’s finding that Ms Hlazo-Bangani was not guilty of dishonesty and misrepresentation was contradicted by her own admissions that her statement contained inaccuracies and omissions. The Court reasoned that the statement insisted the laptop had been stolen from the boot, while her evidence conceded she was unsure what happened to the laptop, that she searched for it at the office, and that she could not recall where exactly it had been placed in the vehicle.


The Court also attached significance to the implications of whether the laptop was left in the boot or behind the seat. It reasoned that leaving the laptop behind the seat in view could have supported negligence allegations (with financial consequences), whereas theft from a locked boot would not have had the same implication. The Court found that, despite the sworn statement asserting the boot version, Ms Hlazo-Bangani’s evidence introduced uncertainty that undermined the truthfulness and completeness of her original account.


In the Court’s assessment, these failures to engage with material evidence and contradictions meant the award was not reasonably connected to the outcome, and fell outside the bounds of reasonableness. The Court accepted that, on the evidence, Ms Hlazo-Bangani was guilty of misrepresentation, that she misled the employer into believing the laptop had been placed in the boot and stolen at Ibika garage, and that the evidence of the garage manager was clear and should be preferred to her contradictory testimony. On this basis, the Court held that her dismissal should be upheld.


On costs, the Court exercised its discretion and held that, although the award was to be set aside, the union could not be blamed for defending an award in its favour. It therefore made no costs order.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Labour Court reviewed and set aside the arbitration award issued under case number ECD122023 dated 18 April 2023.


The Court substituted the award with an order that the dismissal of Ms Hlazo-Bangani was procedurally and substantively fair.


The Court made no order as to costs.


Cases Cited


No reported cases were cited in the judgment.


Legislation Cited


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (as amended).


Local Government: Municipal Finance Management Act 56 of 2003 (section 78(1), as referenced in the disciplinary charge).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Labour Court held that the commissioner’s arbitration award was reviewably defective because it failed to engage with material contradictions, concessions, and inconsistencies in the employee’s evidence concerning the circumstances in which a municipal laptop went missing and the accuracy of her sworn statement and report to the employer. The Court found that the award did not fall within the bounds of reasonableness on the record and that, on the evidence, the employee was guilty of misrepresentation (and related dishonesty concerns) sufficient to uphold dismissal. The award was set aside and substituted with a finding that the dismissal was procedurally and substantively fair, with no costs order.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that an arbitration award issued under the Labour Relations Act may be reviewed and set aside under section 145 where the commissioner’s approach to the evidence and reasoning results in an outcome that is not reasonably connected to the evidentiary material and conclusions required.


It reaffirmed that the employment relationship is premised on trust, and that honesty in dealings with the employer is expected. Dishonest conduct may include withholding information, making false statements, or misrepresentations intended to mislead the employer, and such conduct may damage the trust relationship underpinning employment.


It emphasised that the proper determination of dishonesty- and misrepresentation-related misconduct requires engagement with material contradictions, concessions under cross-examination, and differences between what is put to witnesses and what is later testified to. A failure to grapple with these aspects, and to reason through their implications, may render the resulting award unsustainable on review.


It further reflected that the nature of an employee’s role may be relevant in evaluating expectations of candour and integrity: where an employee occupies a senior legal position, the expectation of full and accurate disclosure in matters affecting the employer’s assets and potential culpability may be heightened.

THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, GQEBERHA
Not Reportable
Case No: PR103/23
In the matter between:

MNQUMA LOCAL MUNICIPALITY Applicant
and
SAMWU OBO THANDI CONSTANCE HLAZO-BANGANI First Respondent
MXOLISI ALEX NOZIGQWABA N.O. Second Respondent
SOUTH AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
BARGAINING COUNCIL Third Respondent
Heard: 07 August 2025
Delivered: 19 January 2026

JUDGMENT
ERASMUS, AJ
(1) Reportable: Yes/No
(2) Of interest to other Judges: Yes/No
(3) Revised

____________ ______________
Signature Date

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Introduction
[1] This is an application for the review and setting aside of an arbitration award
issued by the Second Respondent (Commissioner) under case number
ECD122023 dated 18 April 2023 in terms of which the Commissioner found
that Ms Hlazo-Bangani’s dismissal was substantively unfair and that she must
be reinstated with backpay limited to two months’ salary.
Factual background
[2] Ms Hlazo-Bangani was employed by the Applicant as the Manager of the
Legal Services Department in the office of the Municipal Manager. She
commenced employment with the Applicant on 2 November 2015 and was
dismissed on 14 December 2021 following a disciplinary hearing involving five
charges of misconduct.
[3] Ms Hlazo-Bangani was issued with a laptop for work purposes . On Friday,
9 July 2021, she drove to work where she printed documents. O n her way
back home, she stopped at Ibika garage where she bought something to eat.
Upon her arrival at home, her children assisted her with unpacking her vehicle
and it was established that the laptop was not in her vehicle.
[4] She contacted the intern that worked with her in her office and both of them
conducted a search of her office for the laptop on Monday , 12 July 2021
before arrival of the cleaners, to no avail. Later that day, Ms Hlazo-Bangani
went to the Mso bomvu Police Station for purposes of reporting the laptop
stolen. The police informed her to first view the CCTV footage at the garage
where she suspected the laptop got stolen from her vehicle and to return to
the station thereafter for purposes of deposing to a sworn statement.
[5] Ms Hlazo-Bangani attended at the Ibika garage and viewed the CCTV footage
with the garage manger, whereafter she returned to the police station and
deposed to a sworn statement. The relevant paragraphs of the statement read
as follows:
“2. On 2021/07/09 Friday of about 12 I was at Ibika Garage from my work
place. I was driving [registration number] white Polo Vivo. My work

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laptop was in the boot with harddrive, 3G MTN, 3G Vodacom,
Statutes, USB. I drove to my place of residence and when I arrived I
noticed that my laptop was stolen from the boot, I suspect that it was
stolen at the Garage (Ibika).
3. No one has the right to steal from me, I request police to take further
investigation to this case.’ (sic)
[6] On 14 July 2021, Ms Hlazo -Bangani prepared and sent a memorandum
regarding the incident to the Applicant ’s Director of Corporate Services with
the subject: “REPORT FOR STOLEN LAPTOP & OTHER DEVICES FOR
WORK PURPOSES”. It reads as follows:
‘The above matter has the following reference:
I wish to confirm and/or declare that on or about Monday, 12 th day of July
2021, have reported an incident of theft which same happened to involve
Municipal asset, namely HP Laptop with IMEI No …..; 3G device; Hard drive,
USBs and portable statutes. The docket was opened at Msobomvu Police
Station under CAS… … for further investigations on the matter. Attached
herewith is a statement made before Sergeant ….., marked “ HB-1”.
Trusting you will find all in order.’
[7] Despite the memorandum indicating that the police statement was attached, it
was only sent through subsequently.
[8] On 24 August 2024, Ms Hlazo -Bangani was issued with a notice to attend a
disciplinary hearing where she was to face three charges of gross negligence,
dishonesty and misrepresentation at a hearing scheduled for 8 September
2021.
[9] On the same day, she applied for annual leave in respect of the period
30 August 2021 to 7 September 2021. S he did not receive approval of her
leave requested but nonetheless did not work on 30 August 2021 and visited
a doctor on 31 August 2021, followed by further doctors’ visits thereafter. She
did not attend at work and she did not submit an application for sick leave in
respect of the periods of her absence.

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[10] Ms Hlazo-Bangani did not attend a scheduled meeting on 29 August 2021
and on the same day, an email was sent to her private email address, as was
custom and practice by then, informing her to attend a meeting at 08h30 on
30 August 2021. Although it was not disputed that the email had been sent, it
was disputed that it had been received. It is common cause that Ms Hlazo -
Bangani did not attend the meeting. This resulted in two more charges being
added to the hearing notification.
[11] Ms Hlazo-Bangani faced the following charges in her disciplinary hearing:
‘CHARGE 1
GROSS NEGLIGENCE – in that
1. On 09/07/2021 you negligently lost the municipal laptop and thereby
contravening section 78(1) of the M FMA which states that “the assets
of the municipality are managed effectively and that asses are
safeguarded and maintained to the extent necessary”. The
municipality incurred financial loss of approximately R30 100,00
inclusive of other accessories.
CHARGE 2
DISHONESTY – in that
2. On 09/07/2021 you signed a statement at Msobomvu Police Station
under oath that there was a theft in your motor vehicle, a white polo
registration …. On the 12/07/2021 you had an opportunity to withdraw
your statement from the pol ice because you w ere at the Ibika garage
to view the CCTV footage which showed no incident of theft from you
motor vehicle.
CHARGE 3
MISREPRESENTATION – in that
3. On 14 /07/2021 you made a false claim regarding your laptop that it
was stolen whilst you knew that the CCTV footage at the garage
showed no evidence that your motor vehicle was a victim of crime and
thereby you made a fraudulent misrepresentation and attempted to

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provide misleading information to the employer because you saw the
footage at the garage and that you were not a victim of crime at Ibika
garage.
CHARGE 4
GROSS INSUBORDINATION – in that
4. On 29th August 2021 at 4:56 pm received an email from the Municipal
Manager instructing you to meet with Mr David Magadla at 08h30 on
30th August 2021 and discuss the contingency liabilities for inclusion in
the Annual Financial Statements that were to be submitted to the
Auditor General on 31 st August 2021. You failed to honour that
meeting and that on the 29 th August 2021 you w ere also invited to be
part of the Audit Committee meeting which you did not attend without
an apology. Therefore you failed to carry out lawful instructions from
the Municipal Manager thereby undermining his authority.
CHARGE 5
GROSS MISCONDUCT – in that
5. Between 30 th of August and 07 [September] you took unauthorised
leave of absence. The approved leave policy states that “It is
incumbent upon the employee to ensure that their leave application
has been approved prior to going on leave.” Therefore your absence
from work without proper leave approval from your supervisor
constitutes gross misconduct.’
[12] It is common cause that the statement referred to at charge 2 was signed on
12 July 2021 after a viewing of the CCTV footage on the same day.
[13] Ms Hlazo-Bangani did not participate in the disciplinary enquiry after the
preliminary points raised by her representative were dismissed. She was
found guilty of all the charges and dismissed. Her internal appeal was also
dismissed. The value of the assets lost under her care, was deducted in two
parts from her final payslips after her dismissal.

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[14] After an unfair dismissal dispute referral to the Third Respondent, t he
Commissioner conducted the arbitration on several days and ultimately found
that the dismissal was not procedurally unfair. I n addition thereto, the
Commissioner found that although Ms Hlazo -Bangani was guilty of charges
one and five, same did not justify dismissal as the Applicant’s policy provides
for repayment of the value of the lost assets and warnings as appropriate
remedies. The Commissioner furthermore found that Ms Hlazo-Bangani was
not guilty of the remaining charges two, three and four.
Grounds of review
[15] The Applicant raised several grounds of review in its application and seeks an
order that the award be set aside and be substituted with an award that
Ms Hlazo-Bangani’s dismissal is fair , alternatively that it be remitted back to
the Third Respondent for a hearing de novo. The review was considered as
one under section 145 of the Labour Relations Act (LRA)1.
[16] Although the Applicant did not accept the Commissioner’s outcome in respect
of the fourth charge against Ms Hlazo-Bangani, the Applicant’s focus in its
review application was directed specifically in relation to charges two and
three, being the charges relating to dishonesty and misrepresentation.
[17] The Commissioner confirms that an employment relationship is based on trust
and that honesty in dealing with the affairs of the employer is expected of all
employees. He further confirms that dishonest conduct by an employee
involves moral turpitude which damages the trust relationship on which the
contract of employment is founded and that such dishonest conduct may
consist of withholding information from the employer or making a false
statement or misrepresentation with the intention of deceiving the employer.
[18] In deciding the matter, the Commissioner accepted the version of Ms Hlazo-
Bangani during her evidence in chief, without any reference to her evidence

Bangani during her evidence in chief, without any reference to her evidence
and parts of her evidence during cross -examination which were contradictory.
He also did not make any reference to, consider or deal with Ms Hlazo-

1 Act 66 of 1995 (as amended).

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Bangani’s version that differed in many respects from the version that was put
to the Applicant’s witnesses during cross-examination. He furthermore did not
deal with or reason his way through the concessions made by Ms Hlazo-
Bangani during cross-examination.
[19] During cross-examination of the Applicant’s witnesses, it was put to them that
the sworn statement deposed to by Ms Hlazo-Bangani was correct. During
her own testimony, it however became clear that there were material
contradictions and new evidence was also introduced, which evidence did not
appear in her sworn statement and was also not put to the Applicant’s
witnesses, such as that the CCTV footage that she viewed at Ibika garage
was unclear and not of a high quality, that there was a possibility that the
laptop had been lost or stolen elsewhere or in a different manner, that the
laptop might have been placed behind the right seat of the vehicle rather than
in the boot as she used to place the laptop either in the boot or behind the
seat and her testimony that she was not sure what had happened to the
laptop and that same may have gone missing at a different location or in a
different manner. Her version with regards to which parts of the v ehicle was
visible on the CCTV footage also materially contradicted the version put to the
Applicant’s witnesses, in particular the manager of Ibika garage who testified
during the arbitration proceedings that he viewed the footage in relation to Ms
Hlazo-Bangani’s vehicle with her and due to the aerial view he had of the
vehicle, it was evident that no incident occurred in relation to her vehicle.
[20] In addition thereto, she did not make any mention in her statement that she
had viewed the footage and why she believed that theft may have occurred at
the garage despite the garage manager having maintained that it did not
transpire at the garage as confirmed by the CCTV footage.
[21] These were just some of the material statements, contradictions and

[21] These were just some of the material statements, contradictions and
inaccuracies there were not considered or dealt with by the Commissioner in
his award.
[22] The Commissioner also confirms that by the time of her t estimony, Ms Hlazo-
Bangani was still not sure what had happened to the laptop. She confirmed

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that she did not know whether the laptop was lost, misplaced or stolen. Yet
the Commissioner does not reason his way through his finding that her
statement maintains that the laptop had been stolen, irrespective whether it
took place at Ibika Garage or elsewhere.
[23] This Court agrees with the Applicant that the Commissioner’s finding that
Ms Hlazo-Bangani was not guilty of dishonesty and misrepresentation i s
contradicted by her own admission that her statement contained inaccuracies
and omissions. In this regard, her statement insisted that theft took place in
that the laptop was taken from the boot of her vehicle, whilst Ms Hlazo-
Bangani admitted that she did not know what had happened to the laptop to
the extent that she had her intern help her look for the laptop at the office. She
could also not recall whether she left the laptop behind the seat of her car
where she usually left it, or whether she left it in the boot of the car as she
claimed in her statement.
[24] I pause to mention at this stage that leaving the laptop behind the seat of her
vehicle in view of perpetrators whilst running errands inside the garage as
opposed to leaving it in the boot of her car, would automatically have caused
allegations of negligence to be raised against her which in turn would have
resulted in her being required to make good to her employer the loss incurred
to the value of R30,200. Ms Hlazo-Bangani admitted to warnings having been
circulated, warning against leaving valuables in open sight. However, the
laptop being stolen from a locked boot would not have resulted in such finding
of negligence. And despite her statement clearly indicating that the laptop was
placed in the boot, her testimony was that she was not sure whether she had
indeed placed it in the boot, or whether she had placed it behind her seat
which is where she had placed it most of the time.
[25] The Applicant also contended that the Commissioner had fabricated a

[25] The Applicant also contended that the Commissioner had fabricated a
defence for Ms Hlazo-Bangani in circumstances where such defence was not
raised by Ms Hlazo-Bangani in the arbitration and could also not be sustained
on the available facts . In this regard, the Commissioner stated in his a ward
that the Applicant did not engage Ms Hlazo-Bangani further in an investigation
to ascertain the likely state of affairs pertaining to the loss before charging

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her. No evidence was presented to suggest that the Applicant had such a duty
or obligation. The statement was submitted by Ms Hlazo-Bangani to the
Applicant to assess the circumstances surrounding the disappearance of the
laptop. At no stage did Ms Hlazo-Bangani provide a further updated statement
or intimate a desire to do so.
[26] Ms Hlazo-Bangani is the Applicant’s Manager of Legal Services. She is an
admitted advocate of the High Court of South Africa. She theref ore had a
heightened duty to maintain honesty in her dealings with her employer and
was obliged to disclose all relevant information regarding the loss of the
assets. She confirmed that the statement she deposed to was meant to
assist the Applicant in determining whether her conduct in relation to the
laptop was negligent or intentional. The statement was therefore critical.
[27] Considering the errors made by the C ommissioner and the inadequate
consideration of material evidence before him , one cannot find that the
Commissioner’s award is reasonably related to the outcome. His a ward does
not fall within the bands of reasonableness.
[28] From the evidence of Ms Hlazo -Bangani during the arbitration proceedings, it
is evident that she was guilty of misrepresentation. She mislead her employer
into believing that the laptop had been placed in the boot of her car, from
where it had been stolen at Ibika Garage, whilst her evidence demonstrated
that she may negligently have left it behind the driver seat in full view of
criminals and that it may not even have been stolen. Rather than admitting
her negligence and paying for the replacement of the l ost assets, she
continued asserting theft from the boot. The payment in respect of the lost or
stolen assets was only made by means of deductions from her salary after her
dismissal. The evidence of the manager of Ibika Garage was clear and
without contradictions and stands to be accepted above that of Ms Hlazo-

without contradictions and stands to be accepted above that of Ms Hlazo-
Bangani whose testimony and versions were contradictory as referred to
hereinabove. The dismissal of Ms Hlazo-Bangani stands to be upheld.
[29] In relation to costs, this Court has a discretion to exercise. Albeit that the
award stands to be reviewed and set aside, one cannot blame the First

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Respondent for attempting to defend a reinstatement award made in their
favour.
[30] In the premises, the following order is made:
Order
1. The award under case number ECD122023 dated 18 April 2023 is
reviewed and set aside and replaced with the following award:
‘The dismissal of Ms Hlazo-Bangani is procedurally and substantively
fair.’
2. There is no order as to costs.

__________________
L. Erasmus
Acting Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa





Appearances:
For the Applicant: Adv FT Pretorius
Instructed by: Wesley Pretorius and Associates Inc.
For the First Respondent: Adv M Thys
Instructed by: Jolwana Mgidlana Inc.

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