With looting and violence continuing unabated in many parts of South Africa and with the reams of video footage depicting the brazenness of the looters, the question on many employers’ minds is whether, if spotted looting while off duty, can they dismiss their employees?
The kneejerk reaction of many employers would be, “Of course! They are committing a crime.” However, it is not that simple. Ordinarily, what an employee does outside of working hours is of no consequence to the employment relationship and dismissing an employee for committing a criminal act while off duty is unlikely to pass the test for substantive fairness.
Having said that, in a variety of cases, South African courts have held that off-duty misconduct can, in certain circumstances, constitute a valid reason for dismissal. This is even more pertinent where the employee’s misconduct constituted a criminal offence, where the employee's behaviour involved gross dishonesty and corruption, and where the nature of such resulted in the destruction of the relationship of trust between the employee and the employer.
This approach is in line with Item 7(a) of Schedule 8 of the Code of Good Practice: Dismissal, which provides that the contravention of a rule regulating conduct in the workplace, or of relevance to the workplace, as being capable of being the subject of disciplinary action. The test for determining “relevance” to the workplace is that:
Accordingly, if a nexus and interest exist, an employer will be entitled to take disciplinary action against an employee for their off-duty misconduct.
But what does this nexus look like? South African courts have identified that a nexus between the employee's off-duty misconduct and the employer's business exists where the employee's conduct has a detrimental or intolerable effect on the efficiency, profitability, continuity or good name and reputation of the employer’s business.
There are many conceivable instances where there could be a connection between looting employees and their employer’s business. These include where:
What this means for employers is that the mere fact that an employer has identified employees in the looting footage does not mean that they automatically have a right to discipline or dismiss employees. In these emotionally charged times, employers should evaluate each of these situations with a level head, ensuring that a nexus exists between the looting and the employer’s business in every instance that the employer elects to take action. This, of course, presumes that there is a business to which employees could return.
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Read the original publication at ENSafrica.