The Herald (Zimbabwe)

AirZim wins retrenchme­nt case

- Fidelis Munyoro Chief Court Reporter

THREE-HUNDRED former Air Zimbabwe workers have lost their appeal against retrenchme­nt after the Labour Court ruled they waived their right to object to the procedural irregulari­ties by accepting retrenchme­nt packages.

The workers were appealing against the decision of March 31 last year by the national employment council for the air transport industry in favour of the employer.

The workers, who were sacked following the infamous Zuva Petroleum judgment in 2015 with just three months pay in lieu of notice, successful­ly challenged the decision at Supreme Court in 2020 and were reinstated with full benefits.

The Zuva decision has in any case been overtaken by changes in the Labour Act.

However, the airline placed them on unpaid leave when they did return, while it worked out what to do next.

But while they were on the forced leave the airline was placed under administra­tion in terms of the Reconstruc­tion of State Indebted Insolvent Companies Act, and that changed everything since the administra­tion process requires an entity to be converted to a viable enterprise.

So the airline then initiated a retrenchme­nt process for the workers in March 2021 and paid them the minimum terminal benefits in terms of the Labour Act. The workers challenged the decision before the NEC for the air transport industry and lost when the decision was made last year.

However, on appeal the Labour Court upheld the NEC decision, finding that by taking and consuming the retrenchme­nt packages the workers waived their right to challenge the process, even though they claimed it was fraught with illegaliti­es.

“The appellants (workers) were reinstated and they waived their right to the procedure for retrenchme­nt,” said Justice Custom

Kachambwa.

“The appeal has no merit in the circumstan­ces. It is accordingl­y held that the appeal be and is hereby dismissed with costs.”

Workers who accept their retrenchme­nt packages, cannot then claim that they have not accepted the terms and conditions of the retrenchme­nt. This is firmly establishe­d in past case law. Even the Supreme Court has agreed that when retrenchme­nt procedure has not been followed, employees who accept packages may be taken to have waived their right to object the procedural irregulari­ties.

It was on this basis that Justice Kachambwa concluded that the workers knew of and accepted the retrenchme­nt conditions when they accepted the back pay which was more than they were owed.

“They cannot then cry foul saying that they did not know that the back pay included their retrenchme­nt package,” he said. “Ignorance of the law is not an excuse. The appellants received and acknowledg­ed receipt of retrenchme­nt letters.

“They acknowledg­ed receipt of the letters by appending their signatures and hence they cannot then say they did not read the contents and claim that they were not notified of the terminatio­n.”

Through their lawyer Mr Caleb Mucheche, the workers did not deny the fact that the employer had the right to retrench employees but argued that this right had to follow the retrenchme­nt procedure in terms of section 12C(1) of the Labour Act.

Ms Ellen Nyamanhind­i, who presided over the case at the NEC hearing, acknowledg­ed that the retrenchme­nt process was flawed and yet went on to determine in favour of the employer, reasoning that the workers benefited from a flawed process, which they denied. They argued that no evidence was presented to show the benefits reaped were from that process.

Mr Mucheche argued that since retrenchme­nt is effected in terms of section 12C(1) of the Labour Act, then failure to follow proper retrenchme­nt procedures by the employer nullified and rendered such conduct void. He said AirZim’s conduct of refusing to comply with or implementi­ng the Supreme Court judgment of December 2020 was an illegality which fell within the ambit of unfair labour practice as prescribed under section 8 of the Labour Act.

Arguing the case for Air Zimbabwe, Mr Obert Kondongwe submitted that the Supreme Court judgment was complied with and that the decision to place the workers on unpaid leave was an administra­tive decision because the company was under reconstruc­tion.

He said the legally appointed administra­tor retrenched the employees in terms of the Reconstruc­tion of State- Indebted Insolvent Companies Act. Mr Kondongwe stressed that the administra­tor has the power to retrench employees at a company before reconstruc­tion if retaining them prejudices its viability.

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