Rotek Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration and Others (J20/01) [2003] ZALC 40 (29 April 2003)

62 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Dismissal — Review application — Employee dismissed for falsifying invoice to claim guaranteed commission — Employee's defense that senior employee suggested invoice alteration — Arbitrator finding dismissal substantively unfair based on probabilities — Review court upholding arbitrator's decision as justifiable despite disagreement on procedural fairness.

IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(HELD AT JOHANNESBURG)
  Case No.  J20/01
In the matter between:
ROTEK ENGINEERING (PTY) LTD Applicant
and
THE COMMISSION FOR CONCILIATION
MEDIATION AND ARBITRATION First Respondent
MARCUS M. N. O. Second Respondent
STANTON R. Third Respondent
                                                                                                                                  
JUDGMENT
                                                                                                                                  
1. This is a review application.  
2. The   Third   Respondent   was   dismissed   by   the   Applicant   after   a   disciplinary  
inquiry held in order to investigate charges about falsifying a document with  
fraudulent intent.

3. The background to the aforesaid complaint is that when the Third Respondent  
was employed by the Applicant during May 1999, as a sales executive, he  
requested that the Applicant pay to him a guaranteed upfront commission of  
R10 000,00, apparently in order to assist him in purchasing a motor vehicle.  
The Third Respondent discussed that request with Mr Warner, the Applicant's  
Dealer Principal and General Manager. 
4. It is common cause that this payment was never effected by the Applicant, it  
being   Mr   Warner's   evidence   that   although   he   personally   may   have   been  
sympathetic to the request, Mr Burger, the Managing Director of the Applicant  
(and   Mr   Warner's   boss)   had   refused   to   pay   the   aforesaid   amount.  
Furthermore, Mr Warner testified that he told the Third Respondent about Mr  
Burger's attitude to the matter.
5. Notwithstanding this, the Third Respondent persisted in the view that he was  
entitled   to   a   guaranteed   commission   upon   commencement   of   employment  
and in order to procure payment of R10 000,00 in that connection, he inflated  
an invoice which he had received from a furniture removal company by the  
sum   of   R10   000,00.     The   Applicant   had   agreed   to   assist   with   the   Third  
Respondent's furniture removal costs and by presenting an inflated invoice to

the Applicant in this regard, the Third Respondent hoped to procure payment  
of   the   sum   of   R10   000,00   which   he   believed   he   was   entitled   to.     The  
presentation of the inflated invoice was the reason that the Third Respondent  
was dismissed by the Applicant.
6. The Third Respondent's defence both during the disciplinary proceedings and  
in the CCMA was that the entire scheme of presenting an inflated invoice was  
the idea of Mr   Warner.   The Third Respondent maintained that Mr Warner  
remained   sympathetic   to   his   request   for   a   guaranteed   commission   and  
because   the   Applicant   had   agreed   to   help   out   with   the   furniture   removal  
costs, Mr   Warner suggested inflating the applicable invoice so as to include a  
fictitious amount of R10 000,00 which would enable the Third Respondent to  
be paid that amount.   The Third Respondent argued that because a senior  
employee like Mr Warner had suggested altering the invoice that excused the  
Third   Respondent   from   any   misconduct   in   regard   thereto.     The   Third  
Respondent's case was that he therefore lacked any intention to commit a  
fraud because the Dealer Principal and General Manager had agreed to pay  
the aforesaid amount to him and was simply devising a scheme in terms of  
which payment could legitimately be effected to the Third Respondent, at the  
same time avoiding the problem of calling it a guaranteed commission.

7. Mr Warner's evidence was that he had never suggested altering any invoices  
to the Third Respondent.  He says that he had made it quite clear to the Third  
Respondent that his boss, Mr Burger (the Managing Director) had refused to  
pay to the Third Respondent the sum of R10 000,00 or any other amount as  
an   agreed   upfront   commission.     When   the   inflated   invoice   came   to   his  
knowledge he requested the  Human Resources Department to  call  for  the  
original in order to verify the invoices because he was suspicious about the  
copy thereof.  He testified that it would have been well within his power and  
managerial prerogative to have approved payment of the inflated invoice as it  
was well within his budget.  He would have approved payment of the invoice  
had he been author of the fraudulent scheme.
8. The Second  Respondent preferred  the version of the  Third Respondent to  
that   of   Mr   Warner   and   he   accordingly   found   that   the   dismissal   was  
substantively unfair (as well as procedurally unfair for other reasons).   This  
finding is strenuously attacked on review.
9. Whilst I may not agree with the Second Respondent's findings in this matter, I  
am   not   at   large   to   substitute   my   own   decision   for   his.     This   is   a   review  
application and the parameters for me to upset the award are clearly narrower  
than   those   applicable   to   an   appeal.     Having   regard   to   those   parameters,

which   have   been   clearly   defined   in   the   most   recent   Labour   Appeal   Court  
decisions, it seems to me that there are a number of reasons which make the  
Second Respondent's award justifiable on the material that was available to  
him.  They are set out below.
10. The Second Respondent played an active part in the arbitration proceedings.  
It is apparent from the record of the proceedings, the questions that he posed  
to the parties and his arbitration award that he considered all of the material  
that was before him in coming to a decision.  The Second Respondent says  
that   his   rejection   of   the   evidence   of   Mr   Warner   is   not   founded   on   any  
unfavourable   assessment   of   Warner's   credibility   as   a   witness   but   stresses  
that not too much can be made of Warner's  prima facie  credibility because of  
the   Third   Respondent's   inability   to   successfully   discredit   Warner   in   cross­
examination having regard to the limited extent of his efforts and the :
"obvious limitations of capacity in that direction ".
11. The Second Respondent therefore based his award on the probabilities of the  
matter and, based on the probabilities, found that Warner was involved in the  
alteration   of   the   invoice   in   question.     The   Second   Respondent   found   that  
there were four probabilities in favour of the version advanced by the Third

Respondent   in   the   arbitration.     He   made   this   finding   based   on   the   factual  
evidence presented before him and, whilst I may not agree with the findings,  
that does not mean the award is unjustified.
12. In this regard it is, for example, justifiable for the Second Respondent to have  
concluded, as he did, that :
"had   Applicant   acted   on   his   own   in   contriving   the   scheme   of  
submitting a fictitious invoice for transport costs to secure payment  
for   his   claim,   I   find   it   inconceivable   that   he   would   have   stated  
openly   at   the   earlier   hearing   of   16   September   1999   to   address  
complaints about his performance that Warner had asked him to  
create a fictitious invoice to claim the guaranteed commission … "
13. At the time the Third Respondent volunteered his involvement in the scheme  
in   question,   during   a   hearing   about   his   performance   (in   other   words  
unconnected with the invoice in question) there were no charges against him  
arising out of the altering of the invoice.   In fact, there was a considerable  
delay in bringing charges of dishonesty against the Third Respondent arising  
out of his involvement in the scheme in question.  Some two months elapsed

from the time the Applicant became aware of the allegations to the time that  
they charged the Third Respondent with fraud.  The delay was explained by  
Mr   Warner   as   follows.     He   was   prevailing   upon   Mr   Burger   not   to   take  
disciplinary action because no loss had been suffered and he was worried  
about the " Brophy" connection.  Although Mr Warner testified that Mr Burger  
remained steadfast in his view that disciplinary action should be taken, Mr  
Burger was never called to testify in the arbitration proceedings in order to  
explain   what   is   a   rather   extra­ordinary   delay   in   taking   disciplinary   action  
concerning fraud.   In fact, disciplinary action was not initiated by Mr Warner  
and neither was it initiated by Mr Burger.  At a time when the Applicant knew  
about the Third Respondent's alleged fraud, the Applicant strangely initiated  
other inquiries against the Third Respondent for poor performance but did not  
deal with the allegations of fraud.  It was only when the Applicant volunteered  
the   facts   giving   rise   to   the   alleged   fraud   that   a   further   inquiry   was   then  
convened in order to deal with this volunteered information.
It was therefore justifiable, in my opinion, for the Second Respondent to  
conclude   that   this   demonstrated   an   innocent   intent   on   the   part   of   the  
Second Respondent in relation to the so ­called fraudulent scheme.
14. The other probabilities which the Second Respondent says were against Mr

Warner's   evidence   were   also   justifiable   and   rationally   connected   to   the  
evidence before the Second Respondent.
15. Finally, it was contended, on review, that even if Mr Warner was involved in  
the scheme in question, that results in, at best for the Third Respondent, a  
situation where he was a party, with Mr Warner, to a serious fraud on his  
employer.   That was never the basis of the Applicant's case in the CCMA.  
The Third Respondent was never cross­examined on that basis and, in fact,  
the Applicant's representative in the arbitration proceedings (see page 320 of  
the   record,   page   182   of   the   record   of   the  arbitration   proceedings)   said,   in  
response to a question from the Second Respondent which was " if Warner  
did what he (Mr Stanton) says then the dismissal was not justified ", then " yes, 
it   was   not   justified.     If   Warner   had   instructed   him   then   Warner   should   be  
dismissed himself ".  Had the Applicant's case been that the two employees in  
question had colluded to commit a fraud then, clearly, Mr Warner should have  
been dismissed as well.  He was not because that was never the Applicant's  
case, it was not the basis upon which the Applicant proceeded in the CCMA  
and therefore the Applicant may not proceed on that basis now.
16. In view of all of the above the Second Respondent's award in this matter in  
regard to substantive unfairness is justifiable and in my opinion is not capable

of   being   upset   on   review.     I   do   not   agree   with   the   Second   Respondent's  
findings in regard to procedural unfairness and, in my opinion, the Second  
Respondent confused procedural issues with substantive ones.  However, in  
my opinion, that does not alter the award given by the Second Respondent.  
The Third Respondent was dismissed in October 1999.   He gave evidence  
during the CCMA proceedings that he had only been employed " within the  
last two months ".  This means that he had a lengthy period of unemployment.  
In   any  event,   by   reason  of  the   substantive   unfairness  of  his   dismissal   the  
Third Respondent would have been entitled to a retrospective re ­instatement 
had   that   been   his   claim.     His   claim   was   compensation   and   in   the  
circumstances   of   the   matter   an   award   of   twelve   months   compensation   for  
substantive unfairness is justifiable.   On this basis, the fact that the Second  
Respondent's award in regard to procedural unfairness may be reviewable is  
irrelevant.   In the result the review application fails and I make the following  
order :
16.1. The application for review is dismissed with costs.
DATED at DURBAN this   29 th   day of APRIL 2003.

_____________________
N P WOODROFFE AJ