The Labour Court addressed the question of the employer's vicarious liability in National Union of Metal Workers of South Africa and Another v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa JS1071/18 (23 September 2021) (the PRASA case).
The judge found that “this matter turns on the application of section
60 of the EEA [Employment Equity
Act 55 of 1998].
In my view, this section is a codification of the common law principle of
vicarious liability. Vicarious liability occurs in an instance where the
wrongful acts of an employee during the course and scope of employment are
imputed on the employer”.
60. Liability
of employers.
(1) If
it is alleged that an employee, while at work, contravened a provision of this
Act, or engaged in any conduct that, if engaged in by that employee's employer,
would constitute a contravention of a provision of this Act, the alleged conduct
must immediately be brought to the attention of the employer.
(2) The
employer must consult all relevant parties and must take the necessary steps to
eliminate the alleged conduct and comply with the provisions of this Act.
(3) If
the employer fails to take the necessary steps referred to in subsection (2),
and it is proved that the employee has contravened the relevant provision, the
employer must be deemed also to have contravened that provision.
(4) Despite
subsection (3), an employer is not liable for the conduct of an employee if
that employer is able to prove that it did all that was reasonably practicable
to ensure that the employee would not act in contravention of this Act.
In the PRASA case the court found that two of her managers had indeed sexually harassed a PRASA employee.
However, it concluded that the employer was not vicariously liable for its
managers’ conduct.
The
court considered the circumstances under which an employer is deemed to be a
perpetrator of unfair discrimination under section 60 of the Act,
notwithstanding the fact that an employee committed the sexual harassment and
not the employer.
The
court set out the steps an aggrieved employee should take to report a section
60 complaint. They must:
- Allege a
contravention at the workplace,
- Report the
contravention immediately,
- Prove the
alleged contravention,
- Allege and
prove the employer’s failure to take the necessary steps.
Only
if an employee proves these four steps will they be entitled to a deeming order
of liability. In order to escape liability, the employer must prove that it
took the necessary preventative steps.
The
judge found that the employee failed to meet the criterion of reporting the
contravention immediately within
the contemplation of section 60(1) of EEA. She only lodged a grievance two to three years after the sexual
harassment took place. As a result, the employee failed to demonstrate step two
as set out above.
Given
the delay, the court found that PRASA had been deprived of its statutory duty
to eliminate unfair discrimination and thus did not contravene section 60.
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