Bank employee clears her name

30th June 2017

Bank employee clears her name

Is it enough that the commissioner dropped off to sleep during evidence to get your CCMA award reviewed and set aside? This judgment by Steenkamp J caught my eye, Gordon v JP Morgan Equities SA (Pty) Ltd and others [2017] JOL 38130 (LC). 

Deanne Gordon was employed as an equity strategist and after her father became ill – she resigned.
She had been with the Bank for over 20 years with a clean record. Gordon’s resignation was accepted and she was put on three months’ garden leave.

During this period, she emailed some company documents to her husband’s home email address. The Bank responded quickly and summarily dismissed her, alleging the documents were confidential and proprietary to JP Morgan.

There is no shortage of review judgments but this one is of interest for the following reasons:

Reviews take too long to get to court. Gordon was dismissed in September 2013. The matter was heard on 4 and 5 May 2017 and very efficiently, judgment was handed down on 6 June 2017.

All that time, Gordon had this cloud over her head. She was awarded costs, so at least that will assist with recouping the legal fees for the past 4 years.

For a neat list of judgments where the commissioner’s conduct during the arbitration has resulted in a successful review – see Reviews in the Labour Court by Anton Myburgh SC and Craig Bosch, chapter 14 Errors in the conduct of proceedings. The book provides excellent guidance for labour practitioners and is a must-have manual for all labour lawyers, advocates, judges, CCMA commissioners, bargaining council arbitrators, unions, HR/IR practitioners, in-house counsel, lecturers and post-graduate students It is available at the LexisNexis Bookstore.

Written by Kate Staude – New Content Manager, LexisNexis South Africa