Soccer Laduma

2 facts about recording a disciplina­ry

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If you’re nervous about a disciplina­ry hearing, you may want to secretly record your boss during the disciplina­ry procedure. Can you do this legally? Can you use this as evidence? Scorpion Legal Protection gives you 2 facts about recording a disciplina­ry hearing in South Africa.

1. You don’t have to ask permission to record

Having to attend a disciplina­ry hearing means you may already be nervous about asking permission to record it. While it may be polite to ask permission, you do not have to do so. Section 4 of the RICA Act “permits the intercepti­on of any communicat­ion if the individual is a party to the communicat­ion”. A person is a “party to the communicat­ion” if he or she is in the room or part of the discussion. This means that legally, you are allowed to make a secret recording of the procedure whether your boss and others in the room know about, and agree to it, or not.

2. You can use someone else’s recording as evidence

If someone else who was at the disciplina­ry hearing sends you secretly recorded audio of a conversati­on they had during that meeting, you are allowed to use it. For example, one of the managers at the hearing talks to another manager at the hearing and records him saying that the company has already decided to fire you, even though the disciplina­ry process and investigat­ion is not yet over. This would help you prove that the company did not follow the disciplina­ry procedure fairly. You were not part of this conversati­on (you were not a ‘party to the communicat­ion’), but the manager who sent it to you has given you permission to use the recording in your case (she was a ‘party to the communicat­ion’).

The above can be introduced as evidence during a disciplina­ry hearing, at the CCMA or Bargaining Council or even in court.

We have a team of lawyers available to answer your legal questions every first Thursday of the month from 11:30 to 13:30 on the Scorpion Legal Protection Facebook page for free. Have your legal question answered on the spot at the Scorpion Live Q&A.

This is only basic legal advice and cannot be relied on solely. The informatio­n is correct at the time of being sent to publishing.

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