Fired for not Working on the Sabbath
WE PROVIDE EXPERT LEGAL SOLUTIONS ACROSS A MULTITUDE OF LEGAL PRACTICE AREAS
“One of the hallmarks of an enlightened egalitarian society is the right to freedom of religion.” (Extract from judgment below)
Our courts do not tolerate unfair discrimination in the workplace, and employers need to tread particularly carefully when it comes to the concept of “automatically unfair discrimination”. Get that one wrong and you could be penalised with an order to pay your employee two years of earnings as compensation.
What is “automatically unfair discrimination”?
A dismissal is automatically unfair if based on any “arbitrary ground”, including, but not limited to, a person’s race, gender, sex, pregnancy, marital status, family responsibility, ethnic or social origin, colour, sexual orientation, age, disability, religion, HIV status, conscience, belief, political opinion, culture, language or birth (aspects relevant to this case have been highlighted).
However, “a dismissal may be fair if the reason for dismissal is based on an inherent requirement of the particular job” (emphasis added).
Let’s discuss these concepts with reference to a recent Labour Appeal Court (LAC) case.
“Sorry, I can’t work on the Sabbath”
Employed as a regional marketing manager by an international hospitality company, an employee signed a standard employment contract which, after specifying “normal hours of work” as being 8.30 a.m. to 5 p.m., Mondays to Fridays, with an hour for lunch, also provided for circumstances in which he could be required to work outside those hours.
Two months after starting work, the employee dropped what presumably came as something of a bombshell to his bosses. He said that as a Seventh Day Adventist, his religious beliefs precluded him from travelling or attending events on the Sabbath (i.e. from sunset on Friday until sunset on Saturday). He hadn’t made any mention of this in his job interviews, nor had he challenged the wording of his contract as to the required work hours.
Initially his line manager was able to accommodate him by covering for him on the problem days (travelling, it seems, to Kenya, Mozambique and Zambia as well as locally), but after 16 months she could not continue. He was offered an alternative position which didn’t require him to work on the Sabbath, but that came with a 45% pay cut.
The manager declined this offer, and he was dismissed after a disability enquiry. He challenged his dismissal, and the Labour Court, after finding it to have been automatically unfair, ordered his reinstatement.
His employer appealed this judgment to the LAC, which overturned that ruling and held that the dismissal was in fact fair.
Lessons to learn, points to ponder
The reasoning and the legal principles that underpinned the employer’s success in this case provide a useful blueprint for both employers and employees who might find themselves in a similar situation. Let’s address them point by point:
- Job interviews: It no doubt counted against the employee that he hadn’t mentioned the limitations on his working hours in his interviews, nor had he queried the wording of his employment contract. As a job applicant, be clear about any constraints on your work availability outside of normal hours, and query anything in your contract that might conflict with them. As an employer, make it an integral part of your interview process to check that the applicant understands your requirements as to both normal and additional work hours, and agrees to them.
- Employment contracts: The employer’s success in the LAC would not have been quite as easily won if its contract hadn’t clearly stated that the manager “will be required to work longer hours from time to time without additional compensation” (emphasis added). A “job flexibility requirement clause” also helped it when it came to the offer of an alternative position.
- Automatically unfair discrimination: There are two questions here. Was there discrimination? And if so, was it based on an arbitrary ground such as the employee’s religious beliefs? The employer in this case conceded on both aspects.
- “An inherent requirement of the job”: It was then for the employer to convince the court that the discrimination was permissible because the job requirement in question is “inherent or inescapable in the performance of the job”. Such a requirement has to be “rationally connected to the performance of the job”, “adopted in a genuine and good faith belief that it was necessary to the fulfilment of a legitimate work-related purpose” and “reasonably necessary to the accomplishment of that purpose.” The employer had no problem in proving all that. But that wasn’t the end of it…
- Accommodating the employee: As an employer, you can’t simply say “tough luck, your religious beliefs mean you can’t do the job as per its inherent requirements so off you go.” You must prove “that it is impossible [for you] to accommodate the individual employee without imposing undue hardship or insurmountable operational difficulty.” It was on this leg that the employer nearly came unstuck – while two of the judges agreed that it had passed this test, the third judge disagreed. If the decision had gone against it, the employer would have been penalised with a compensatory order of 24 months’ earnings.
Bottom line here is that you must act reasonably and in context in trying to enable an employee to continue in employment.
Our employment laws are complex and the penalties for getting them wrong are severe – so don’t hesitate to ask us for help if you’re in any doubt.