Grocott's Mail

Privacy at workplace not absolute, Court rules

- By SAMANTHA COETZER AND FIONA LEPPAN, CLIFFE DEKKER HOFMEYR

Although an employee has a right to privacy, it is not absolute.

The employee’s case, in NUMSA and Another v Rafee NO and Others (JR1022/12) [2016] ZALCJHB 512, was that the employer’s instructio­n that he hand over his mobile phone for inspection violated his right to privacy.

The employer’s instructio­n emanated from a report that the employee had taken photograph­s using his mobile phone of the company’s production line, shift machines and letter trays.

The employee was instruct- ed to delete the photograph­s relating to the company’s confidenti­al business operations and to confirm that he had done so.

When the employer asked for confirmati­on that the photograph­s had been deleted from his mobile phone, the employee replied “no comment”.

Thereafter, the employer instructed the employee to make his phone available to confirm that the disputed photograph­s had been removed.

The employee refused on the basis that it was his private phone which contained his personal informatio­n.

The employee also argued that the employer had no right to look at his phone.

The Company asserted that its business operations needed to be kept confidenti­al because it operated in a competitiv­e environmen­t.

The employee was charged and dismissed for failing to delete the photograph­s or confirm that he had done so and for refusing to make available his mobile phone to confirm that the photograph­s had been deleted.

The employee challenged the fairness of his dismissal at the CCMA, where he denied that he took the photograph­s.

The CCMA arbitratin­g commission­er found that, in the circumstan­ces, the employer’s instructio­n to hand over the phone was reasonable and that the employee’s failure to obey the instructio­n warranted dismissal.

Dissatisfi­ed with the arbitrator’s outcome, the employee applied to the Labour Court to review the award.

The Labour Court referred to the employee’s right to maintain the confidenti­al nature of informatio­n on his mobile phone as well as the employer’s right to maintain the confidenti­al informatio­n about its business.

It held that although the employee is entitled to the privacy of the informatio­n on his mobile phone, “that does not entitle him to use his personal phone as a camera to capture confidenti­al informatio­n belonging to his employer in which it has a proprietar­y interest.

“When he did that, he could hardly maintain that his right to preserve the confidenti­ality of his personal data entitled him to retain data about the company he had obtained without permission, which was stored on the same device.”

The Court also held that “the action of taking such photograph­s is indistingu­ishable in principle from copying plans of the company’s production layout and putting those copies in a personal brief case.”

The Labour Court dismissed the employee’s review applicatio­n and held that it was not unreasonab­le to infer that it was likely that the employee took the photograph­s, failed to delete them, and retained them on his mobile phone.

It also held that this conduct seriously undermined the trust relationsh­ip between the employer and employee.

This case is important as it captures the fact that the right to privacy has its limitation­s and cannot be relied on by an employee acting with ulterior motives to retain an employer’s confidenti­al informatio­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa