When Investigations Fail

Why Strong Misconduct Allegations Still Collapse

Recent Labour Court jurisprudence has once again highlighted a critical truth for employers: even serious misconduct allegations will not survive scrutiny if the investigation is weak.

In Mpact Operations (Pty) Ltd v Metal and Engineering Bargaining Council & Others (C181/2024), the Labour Court in Cape Town dismissed an employer’s review application and upheld an arbitration award that found the dismissal of an employee for alleged theft to be substantively unfair. The Court ordered reinstatement, with limited retrospective back pay.

While the allegation itself was serious, the outcome turned not on the gravity of the accusation, but on the quality of the investigation and the evidence presented.

The Employer’s Burden of Proof Remains Central

A recurring theme in misconduct cases is the misconception that suspicion, discovery, or circumstantial indicators are sufficient to justify dismissal. The Court reaffirmed that:

  • The onus rests squarely with the employer to prove misconduct on a balance of probabilities.
  • The mere possession of an item by an employee does not automatically establish theft or dishonesty.
  • Employers must prove both ownership of the item and unlawful intent.

 

Without clear, admissible evidence on these elements, a misconduct charge cannot succeed.

Evidence Preservation Is Not Optional

One of the decisive weaknesses in this matter was the employer’s handling of physical evidence. Where misconduct depends on tangible items, documentation, or comparative samples, those items must be:

  • properly secured,
  • clearly identified,
  • preserved in their original condition, and
  • supported by contemporaneous records.

 

Failure to do so creates evidentiary gaps that are difficult—if not impossible—to repair at arbitration or review stage.

Video Evidence Can Undermine as Much as It Supports

Video footage is often relied upon as objective proof. However, this case illustrates that footage must be assessed holistically.

Where video evidence showed the employee leaving the premises without challenge or intervention, it weakened the employer’s version that the employee was attempting to unlawfully remove company property. The Court regarded this as inconsistent with the employer’s allegation and damaging to its credibility.

Intent Is a Critical Element in Theft Allegations

The judgment reinforces a well-established principle: theft and dishonesty require a mental element.

An employer must prove:

  • intention to appropriate property, and
  • intention to do so unlawfully.

 

Absent proof of intent, even the presence of company property in an employee’s possession will not automatically justify dismissal.

Sanction Cannot Cure an Unproven Charge

A key takeaway for employers is that sanction is only relevant after misconduct has been proven.

Where the charge itself fails, arguments about seriousness, operational impact, or breakdown of trust cannot salvage the dismissal. In such cases, the enquiry effectively ends at the point where guilt is not established.

Practical Lessons for Employers and HR Practitioners

This judgment underscores several practical imperatives:

  • Investigations must be conducted promptly, objectively, and methodically.
  • Evidence must be secured at the earliest opportunity.
  • Charges must be framed with reference to what can realistically be proven.
  • Decision-makers must test whether the evidence would withstand scrutiny beyond the disciplinary hearing.

 

Poor investigations do not merely weaken cases—they expose employers to reinstatement orders, back pay, and reputational damage.

Strong suspicions do not equate to strong cases. In the absence of proper evidence, lawful intent, and defensible investigative processes, dismissals for serious misconduct are vulnerable to being overturned.

For employers, the message is clear: disciplinary outcomes are won or lost at investigation stage. Investing in sound investigative practices is not optional—it is a necessary safeguard against avoidable legal and financial risk.

Unsure whether your investigation will hold up under scrutiny? 🤔
Even serious misconduct allegations can collapse if the investigation is flawed — exposing your business to reinstatement orders, back pay, and reputational risk.

HR Consult supports businesses with sound workplace investigations, correct charge formulation, and fair disciplinary processes that meet legal standards while treating employees with dignity ⚖️.

If you want to protect your business, reduce disputes, and manage misconduct matters with confidence:

✔️ Chat to HR Consult today and ensure your processes are fair, compliant, and defensible.

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Adapted by HR Consult, specialists in South African labour and employment law compliance.

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