Firstly, it is common cause that the truck was transporting grape fruit and cartons on the day in question, not fuel. Secondly, there
is no evidence that the Applicant was driving a tanker. He said he was driving a horse and trailer. Incidentally, according to De
Waal’s oral evidence, the people he saw were standing on the driver’s side of the truck, not the front left.
33.
We reject the oral evidence of De Waal, and his report is of no evidential value. As a result, there is no direct evidence before
court that fuel was stolen from the truck driven by the Applicant. There is also no circumstantial evidence of a theft of fuel. No
evidence was led that fuel was missing or that tampering was detected. No evidence was led in court to prove excessive fuel consumption
by the applicant. We certainly cannot rely on the vague pronouncements made by Craig Dommisse at the disciplinary hearing. Not only
do his calculations of the fuel consumption on the 5th June 2001 appear to be statistically and logically unsound, but his comparisons also appear to be flawed because the Applicant was
on leave during the period of comparison. No attempt was made by the Respondent to tender Dommisse’s statistics in court for
proper scrutiny.
34.
The only evidence remaining against the Applicant is the co-driver report, which does indeed show that he stopped his truck at about
0410 hours and 1420 hours on 5th June 2001 for 10 minutes or less. This evidence standing alone does not prove that the stoppages were the occasion for the theft
of fuel.
35.
At the disciplinary hearing the Applicant explained that he stopped at robots near Mtubatuba. Jordaan and De Waal agreed that there
was road construction near Mtubatuba and traffic was controlled by robots. Jordaan failed to travel to Mtubatuba to verify the position
of the robots. De Waal says there were no robots at the Scorpion’s surveillance area. Even if we believe De Waal on this point,
there is no reliable evidence before court that the stops indicated in the co-driver report occurred within the surveillance area.
The Applicant’s explanation may reasonably be true.
36.
The co-driver report shows that the engine continued running when the truck stopped at about 0410 hours. This is consistent with the
Applicant’s explanation. De Waal on the other hand recollected that the truck’s engine was switched off at 0410 when
the theft of fuel is alleged to have taken place.
37.
During his evidence in chief the Applicant testified that he could not have stolen diesel from the fuel tank of his vehicle because
the vehicle was fitted with a non-removable sieve as an anti-syphoning device. This evidence was neither challenged in cross-examination
nor contradicted by any witness.
38.
At the appeal hearing the Applicant stated that he stopped to sleep at about 0300 hours between Mkhuze and Hhluhluwe. In court, this
statement was demonstrated to be untrue. No such stop was recorded in the daily log sheet or the co-driver report. The Applicant
was vigorously cross-examined on this issue. He persisted in his false statement until the very end of his testimony, when he finally
conceded that he did not stop to sleep.
39.
The Respondent’s counsel makes much of this false testimony and urges the court to find that it indicates a guilty mind and
proof that the Applicant stole fuel. In our view it is significant that the applicant first made the allegation at the appeal hearing
on 27th November 2001 when he was asked by the chairman to give an account of what happened on the 5th June 2001. At this stage he had still not been given the chance to peruse his daily log sheets or the co-driver report. We think
that it is quite likely that the Applicant simply made a mistake in saying that he stopped to sleep at 0300 hours. He made frequent
trips to Durban, and one trip must be very like another. He had nothing to gain by deliberately concocting such a statement, since
it was never alleged that he stopped to commit theft at 0300 hours. The reference to stopping to sleep was merely part of the applicant’s
narrative of the trip as he recalled it.
40.
It was demonstrated to the Applicant in court under cross-examination by means of the log sheets and the co-driver report that he
did not stop to sleep at 0300 hours. He damaged his credibility by persisting in the version he gave at the appeal even after it
must have become apparent to him that he had made a mistake. This was unfortunate, because the Applicant otherwise struck the court
as an honest and decent man.
41.
The onus of proving the theft of fuel by the Applicant rests on the Respondent. This onus cannot be discharged merely because it is
shown that the Applicant lied in the witness box. There is insufficient acceptable proof before us that the offence was committed
at all. As stated earlier, there is no direct or indirect evidence that the Respondent suffered a loss of fuel. The Applicant’s
evidence that fuel could not be siphoned from his truck has not been refuted. The evidence of De Waal regarding suspicious behaviour
has been rejected as unreliable. The Applicant has given a reasonable explanation for the stops shown on the co-driver report.
42.
The Respondent has not proved that it had a fair reason to terminate the Applicant’s services. We find that the dismissal of
the Applicant was substantively and procedurally unfair.
43.
The Applicant was earning E1750-00 at the date of his dismissal. He had completed 6 years of service. He is entitled to be paid his
notice and severance allowance.
44.
The Applicant has claimed payment of ‘wages for days worked’. No evidence was led to explain or prove this claim. We dismiss
the claim in the circumstances.
45.
The Applicant also claimed 44 days wages for the period he was under suspension. In terms of the minutes of a discussion on 27th September 2001 it appears that the parties agreed that the Applicant would not be paid his salary for the 14 days he was in prison
and for the first month of his suspension from 3rd July - 3rd August 2001. This is the 44 day period for which the Applicant is claiming payment of wages.
46.
Section 39 of the Employment Act 1980 permits an employer to suspend an employee without pay where the employee is remanded in custody,
or for a period not exceeding one month pending disciplinary action. This is subject to the condition that –
♦
where the employee is remanded in custody in respect of an offence relating to his employment on the complaint of his employer and
is subsequently acquitted of the charge, he shall be paid for the period he was in custody (section 39(5) of the Act); and
♦
if the employee is found not guilty at his disciplinary hearing he shall be paid for the period of suspension (section 39(3) of the
Act).
47.
The Applicant cannot contract out of the rights afforded him by the Employment Act (see section 3 of the Act). In our view the Applicant
is entitled to be paid for the period he was remanded in custody on a charge of stealing diesel from his employer. The Respondent
was the complainant, and the applicant was acquitted of the charge.
48.
We also consider that he should be paid for the month that he was suspended without pay. The verdict of the disciplinary chairman
was not only unfair but on the evidence before him he should have dis