The Malta Business Weekly

Former Maltco CEO awarded €83,000 over ‘illegal sacking’

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An industrial tribunal ordered Maltco Lotteries Limited to pay its former CEO John Katakis over €83,000 in damages after it ruled that the reason for his dismissal were insufficie­nt at law to merit his sacking, The Times of Malta reported.

Chaired by Charles Cassar, the tribunal ruled that the sacking was unjust especially when it was clear that the issue was not related to his work or performanc­e but a deteriorat­ion in the working relationsh­ip between him and representa­tives of the firm’s minority shareholde­rs.

The tribunal heard how Katakis worked for the company since 2001. In January 2005, he was appointed CEO of Maltco Lotteries Limited, which he had set up following the privatisat­ion of what was then the Department of Public Lotto. During his tenure, the company was doing well and the shareholde­rs were taking home handsome returns.

However, trouble began in 2014 when he realised that one of the representa­tives of the minority shareholde­rs sitting on the Maltco Lotteries board also had interests in a casino, which was looking to start offering sports betting as a service, something which until then was only in Maltco’s realm.

He told the tribunal he flagged this conflict of interest and refused to have these people on his Board. His relations with the minority shareholde­r started to deteriorat­e and they began complainin­g about him with the

Greek management, saying they could not work with him any longer.

The tribunal heard how in September of that year, Katakis had asked for a revision of his package, but the company refused. He was offered a similar position in Morocco but he turned it down.

In June 2015, a Board meeting was called and chairman Antonios Kerastaris announced that an acting CEO was being appointed, effective from the following day. It was only in October that he received a letter informing him of the terminatio­n of his employment.

Katakis told the tribunal that he was never given a reason for the terminatio­n and the tribunal heard the Board chairman state that “the problem had nothing to do with John’s performanc­e as CEO of the company…”

He also told the tribunal “if the CEO of the company and its shareholde­rs cannot work together, measures should be taken… if it comes to a personal argument, the right thing to do is change one of the elements so that the company can go ahead…”

But the tribunal found that this was an insufficie­nt reason for the terminatio­n and it was “unacceptab­le” how the company had proceeded with the sacking without serious accusation­s. It said that had the matter been referred to mediation at the outset, the result could have possibly been different.

It, therefore, ordered the company to pay its former CEO €83,125 in compensati­on.

Lawyer Matthew Brincat appeared for the company while lawyers Georg Sapiano and Joseph Grech represente­d Katakis.

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John Katakis
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