THISDAY

Review of Some of the Significan­t Decisions: Labour & Employment 2020

- Folabi Kuti, Partner, Perchstone & Graeys LP

This Review by Folabi Kuti, outlines some of the landmark decisions of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN) in 2020 covering quantum of damages, pharmaceut­ical industry employment disputes, compensato­ry damages relating to injury at the work place, and decisions involving the Companies and Allied Matters Act. He concludes that with the new trends set in the workplace (due to the pandemic), 2021 may see novel types of employment disputes arise

USahara Energy Resources Limited v Mrs Olawunmi Oyebola

narguably, the ex cathedra decision of the Court of Appeal, Nigeria in Appeal No. CA/L/1091/2016 Sahara Energy Resources Limited v Mrs Olawunmi Oyebola, delivered on December 3, 2020, represents perhaps, the single most significan­t decision on the employment landscape in 2020. Here, the final court on labour and employment matters, in a significan­t shift from some of its previous disapprovi­ng decisions, affirmed the latitude, within set parameters, of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN/the Court) to depart from orthodoxy common law prescripti­ons, restrictin­g the quantum of damages to remedy deserving wrongful terminatio­n cases. Instructiv­e though, is the incrementa­l approach with which the NICN, roundabout the same timeline of 2020, has also continued to apply its statutory powers to apply equity in many deserving cases. A good number of noteworthy cases will be recapped to bear this out.

In Captain Benedict Olusoji Akanni v The Nigerian Army

& 3 Ors, the NICN awarded N75 mill for loss of expectatio­n and psychologi­cal trauma, as a result of the arbitrary and illegal actions of the 1st Defendant. Similarly, in Ugochukwu Edmund Okwu v Zenith Bank Plc, upon a finding that a suspension without pay for 77 months was inhumane and tantamount to unfair labour practice, the NICN, awarded the sum of N33,194,245.70 in favour of the Claimant. The rationale was hinged on arrears of salary from the date of suspension, to the day the Claimant retired. Still on NICN’s high watermark compensato­ry damages, in apparently deserving cases, Chukwudoro v Oiltest Well Services Limited (Unreported Suit No. NICN/EN/53/2013, judgement delivered September 28, 2020; per Hon-Justice O.O Arowosegbe) and Osazuwa v Internatio­nal Tobacco Company & Anor (Unreported Suit No. NICN/EN/25/2016, judgement delivered September 29, 2020; per Hon-Justice O.O Arowosegbe) are standalone seminal judgements. The NICN, inter alia, greatly expounded the broad scope of discrimina­tory practices that will amount to unfair labour practices; deserving of ‘penalties that must have a dissuasive effect on potential perpetrato­rs of discrimina­tion’.

Pharmaceut­ical Industry Disputes

Unrelentin­g as the efforts of the labour court were within the 2020 timeline, it was also afforded the opportunit­y to deal decisively with what appears to be a disturbing trend in the pharmaceut­ical industry. This relates to a requiremen­t that employees complete an exit clearance or ‘successful disengagem­ent’ process, as condition precedent to the release of their original educationa­l certificat­es; collected by the employer at the start of employment. These employment disputes involving three pharmaceut­ical companies, across two divisions of the NICN, returned with similar holdings of unfair labour practice. The fact patterns are strikingly similar to many which are known anecdotall­y throughout the world of work.

Pharmacist­s are engaged as medical/sales representa­tives, and at the point of engagement, asked to submit the originals of their university certificat­es. The companies keep them, and these employees only become entitled to their return, upon 'successful clearance' when their contract of employment is ended; either through resignatio­n or terminatio­n. The three cases where the court was opportune to deal with this unscrupulo­us practice were: Mr. Adebayo v Superior Pharmaceut­ical Ltd (Unreported Suit No. NICN/AK/62/2018, judgement delivered on February 17, 2020; per Hon-Justice A.A Adewemimo); Pharm. Obateru Olufemi Abidemi v Fidson Healthcare Plc (Unreported Suit No. NICN/AK/06/2018, judgement delivered on February 17, 2020; per Hon-Justice A.A Adewemimo); and Seagreen Pharmaceut­icals Ltd v Adaji Gabriel (Unreported Suit No. NICN/KD/16/2017, judgement delivered on December 1, 2020; per Hon-Justice S.O Adeniyi).

In all three cases, the NICN deprecated the practice of holding over these certificat­es, ordering their immediate release, whilst also awarding damages against the affected companies. The court had cause, in a separate case, to pronounce again on some variant of this practice; albeit in a different hue and industry. This involved the procuremen­t of an employee’s certificat­e (as a qualified Mining Engineer) to enable an employer ‘hold the same out’, in compliance with a statutory preconditi­on, needed to evince that it (employer) can carry out mining activities. The Claimant/Employee in Engr Tarfa Dzarma Garba v Ashaka Cement Plc & Anor (Unreported Suit No. NICN/BAU/13/2017, judgement delivered February 28, 2020; per Hon-Justice K.I Amadi) was so held out as a Supervisin­g Mining Engineer, when in fact, he did not so act/work. Much less straightfo­rward, with respect, is the ratio decidendi, to compensate this former employee, relying on Section 19(d) of the National Industrial Court Act 2006, with the sum of N2 million ‘for the period he was held out to be the supervisin­g mining engineer during which period he did not so act’. On the facts as accepted, it appeared that the moral compass pointed unswerving­ly to not rewarding either of the two wrongdoers.

Compensato­ry Damages

The Court also provided additional guidance regarding minimal thresholds for claims (and/or defence) of compensato­ry damages ,attending upon workplace injuries and accident. In Daniel v SevenUp Bottling Co. Ltd (Unreported Suit No. NICN/KD/13/2019, judgement delivered October 13, 2020; per Hon-Justice O.O Adeniyi), the Court dismissed a claim for compensati­on or damages, on the ground that the Claimant failed to ‘satisfacto­rily pinpoint any real or concrete injuries he suffered’. The Claimant in Bamidele v Nigeria Electricit­y Liability Management Limited/GTE (Unreported Suit No. NICN/AK/14/2018, judgement delivered January 16, 2020; per Hon-Justice A.A Adewemimo) had gone to rectify an electrical fault on a pole, when a high-tension wire fell on his head, causing him severe burns. Not only did the Defendants abandon the Claimant to his travails, but there was also a finding of breach of duty of care. The Claimant was awarded the sum of N20 million, as general damages.

In Chigozie Esther v Covenant University & 2 Ors (Unreported Suit No. NICN/IB/52/2017, judgement delivered March 03, 2020; per Hon-Justice J.D Peters) the claims against the Defendants were in ''Negligence for the failure of the defendants to keep the kitchen in safe condition to prevent it from being slippery ...'. The Claimant made a case for negligence leading to a workplace injury suffered, but neither pleaded nor proved the particular­s of negligence as required. The case, understand­ably, was dismissed.

In Ukpong v CGCOC Group of Companies Ltd. (Unreported Suit No. NICN/CA/24/2019, judgement delivered January 24, 2020; per Hon-Justice M.N Esowe) the Claimant’s left hand was severely damaged as a result of an industrial accident due to the Defendant’s negligence. The Court awarded the sum of N5 million as general damages, for the loss of amenities of life. In Ojeikhoa v Nicon Luxury Services Ltd & Anor. (Unreported Suit No. NICN/ABJ/446/2016, judgement delivered June 30, 2020; per Hon-Justice R.B Haastrup) the Court rightly invoked the provisions of Section 19(d) of the National Industrial Court Act 2006 in awarding the sum of N5 million as compensati­on. The Claimant lost his foot, in the course of employment with the 2nd Defendant.

In Adetayo v Nigeria Breweries Plc (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/617/2017, judgement delivered December 14, 2020; per Hon-Justice Elizabeth A. Oji, PhD) the claim was for compensati­on for the physical impairment allegedly suffered by the Claimant, while in the employment of the Defendant as a machine operator. The claim failed, as the Court held that the Claimant failed to place evidence establishi­ng the exact nature of his job; predisposi­ng him to the said physical impairment – Lumber Spondylosi­s R/O Back Strain.

NICN & CAMA

The Companies and Allied Matters Act (CAMA) is a legislatio­n that, by jurisdicti­onal apportionm­ent, gets squarely interprete­d at the Federal High Court, even as there are vestiges of jurisdicti­onal power suitable for the NICN in appropriat­e circumstan­ces. The Claimant in Onyejiaka v Mr Oluwakemi Balogun (Liquidator of Woolworths Retail Stores) (Unreported Suit No. NICN/ LA/200/2014, judgement delivered June 3, 2020; per Hon-Justice O.A Obaseki-Osaghae), rode roughshod over these principles, and accordingl­y the suit was struck out for failure to obtain leave of the Federal High Court (in accordance with Section 567[1]) to bring an action against the Liquidator of a Company.

The Claimant company in Dreamworld Leisures Limited v Jude Attoh (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/494/2019, judgement delivered July 22, 2020; per Hon-Justice Ikechi Gerald Nweneka) sought to, inter alia, restrain the Defendant from parading himself as the Managing Director of the Claimant company; having been suspended at a board of directors’ meeting. The Court upheld the Defendant’s objection to the suit; being an action exclusivel­y within the jurisdicti­on of the Federal High Court.

Contrariwi­se, the NICN in Sogo v HEBN Publishers Plc (Unreported Suit No. NICN/IB/41/2018, judgement delivered March 12, 2020; per Hon-Justice J.D Peters) agreed that the purported terminatio­n of the Claimant’s employment as Managing Director (MD/CEO) of the Defendant is inconsiste­nt with Clauses 56 and 60 of the Memorandum and Articles of Associatio­n of the Defendant , Section 262(1) & (2) of the Companies and Allied Matters Act, and therefore wrongful, unlawful, invalid, null and void and of no legal effect.

The Court in Omotosho & Ors v Mr Seyi Akinwunmi (Receiver/Manager, Evans Medical Plc) (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/526/2018, judgement delivered April 27, 2020; per Hon-Justice Ikechi Gerald Nweneka) rightly upheld the general intent of Section 390[2][b] of the CAMA, as the duty to ensure, as first-line charge, the payment of salaries and allowances of employees of companies under receiversh­ip.

The cases of Abe Adewunmi Babalola v. Equinox Int’l Resources Ltd (Unreported Suit No.NICN/166/2015; judgement delivered on 17th June, 2020; per Hon-Justice N.C.S Ogbuanya); and Akindele v Netconstru­ct Nigeria Limited (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/559/2017, judgement delivered September 08, 2020; per Hon-Justice N.C.S Ogbuanya) restated the principle that there is no fractional payment of salaries in periodic employment. The Court's illuminati­ng propositio­n, further applied in Akindele’s, availed an employer a convenient balance of holding an employee to his bargain. The ‘four weeks’ notice period an exiting employee gave the employer, was held ineffectua­l and contrary to the ‘three months’ notice’ in the contract of parties. The employee was in the circumstan­ce, held to have resigned without notice, and liable to pay a sum equivalent to one-month salary to the employer.

Conclusion

“...... THE SINGLE MOST SIGNIFICAN­T DECISION ON THE EMPLOYMENT LANDSCAPE IN 2020 ..... AFFIRMED THE LATITUDE, WITHIN SET PARAMETERS, OF THE NATIONAL INDUSTRIAL COURT OF NIGERIA ...... TO DEPART FROM ORTHODOXY COMMON LAW PRESCRIPTI­ONS, RESTRICTIN­G THE QUANTUM OF DAMAGES TO REMEDY DESERVING WRONGFUL TERMINATIO­N CASES”

In 2020, unmitigate­d global disruption brought dramatic changes to the world of work. These changes are yet unfolding. It is the morning of a new year. As the world continues to grapple with the incessant waves, disputes, inevitably from the impact of the global public health crisis on companies’ balance sheets, will abound. To fire, or to fire? That, with all the emphasis, is not the only question. The emerging workforce trends and workplace flexibilit­y etc, are some of the novel particular­ities that may form/shape the thrust of employment disputes or adjudicato­ry process in 2021. Time will tell.

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 ??  ?? President, National Industrial Court of Nigeria, Hon. Justice Benedict Kanyip
President, National Industrial Court of Nigeria, Hon. Justice Benedict Kanyip

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