Wednesday, 23 January 2019

POPI AND PAIA...when?!

PoPIA Regulations – Responsibilities of the information officer

PoPIA Regulations – Responsibilities of the information officer
15 Jan 2019
The Protection of Personal Information Act, No. 4 of 2013 (“PoPIA”) seeks to govern the processing of personal information, and in so doing, imposes a variety of obligations which will need to be complied with.
Although the commencement date has not yet been announced, on the 14th of December 2018 the Information Regulator published regulations to the Act (the “Regulations”), suggesting that PoPIA’s commencement may be forthcoming.

The Regulations

The Regulations deal with a number of procedural aspects, and of particular note and importance are the responsibilities imposed upon the information officer.
In relation to a private company, the information officer will be the CEO, or a person duly authorised by the CEO for that purpose.
The Regulations require that, in addition to any other responsibilities, an information officer must:
  • develop, implement, monitor and maintain a compliance framework;
  • perform a personal information impact assessment;
  • develop, monitor and maintain a manual as prescribed in sections 14 and 51 of PAIA (which must be made available to any person upon request);
  • develop internal procedures which adequately process requests for information; and
  • conduct internal awareness sessions.
Compliance with the Regulations
Should an entity not comply with the provisions prescribed by PoPIA it may be found guilty of an offence which (aside from reputational harm) may be punishable by imprisonment or a fine. Fortunately, upon the commencement of PoPIA there is a grace period of one year to allow all affected parties to align their internal processes accordingly.
Notwithstanding the grace period, given the wide-ranging implications of PoPIA it may be prudent to begin making the necessary preparations to ensure compliance can be achieved within the time-period.
( Credit: Connor Alexander- Candidate Attorney)

Picketing, minimum wage and more...

Labour Relations: Important new legislation of 2018

Labour Relations: Important new legislation of 2018
16 Jan 2019

The Labour Relations Amendment Act, Basic Conditions of Employment Amendment Act & the National Minimum Wage Act.

2018 drew to a close and as we herald in a new year, so too have we seen the signing into law of the Labour Relations Amendment ActBasic Conditions of Employment Amendment Act and the National Minimum Wage Act. The Acts have been signed off by the President and are due to come into effect in January 2019. The below would be a brief summary of the amendments.
The Labour Relations Amendment Act significantly amends section 69 dealing with picketing. The amendment requires a commissioner/person appointed to deal with the dispute that may lead to the strike/lockout to determine the rules surrounding the picket. A conciliating commissioner is therefore compelled to try and secure a picketing agreement between the parties when conciliating the dispute, before the expiry of the conciliation time limit in Section 64(1)(a). Parties are therefore compelled to agree on ‘ground rules’ prior to embarking on Industrial Action. This would hopefully curtail violence and unrest which has become so commonplace in the current labour sphere. If no picketing agreement exists or the commissioner is unable to secure agreement between the parties, the conciliating commissioner must then determine picketing rules based on standard picketing rules to be prescribed under Section 208, the code of good practice, and any representations made by the parties. Picketing rules must be issued together with any certificate of failure to settle the dispute.
Unions may further apply to the CCMA on an urgent basis for picketing rules where the dispute relates to unilateral changes to terms and conditions of employment (s64(4)) and the employer has failed to restore the status quo or an unprotected lockout has been implemented. Section 69(6C) further specifies that no picket may take place in support of a protected strike or lockout without picketing rules. The Labour Court is further empowered to suspend pickets if it is just and equitable to do so.
With regards to the amended Basic Conditions of Employment Act, the Act has been amended to include its application of the National Minimum Wage Act 2017 as a basic condition of employment. The Act further confirms, by way of section 9A, that employees who work for less than four (4) hours a day are entitled to pay for four (4) hours. This means that, for example, if employees are present at work for two (2) hours and there is a power outage for the rest of the day preventing them from rendering service, then they will be compensated for four (4) hours provided employees earn under the section 6(3) threshold (currently R205 433.33 pa). The powers of the both Labour Inspectors as well as the CCMA have been expanded upon. Labour Inspectors are now able to issue compliance orders for violation of the National Minimum Wage Act. The CCMA is empowered to adjudicate disputes of this nature. Employees who earn below the earnings threshold also have the right to refer disputes regarding non-compliance with the BCEA, the National Minimum Wage Act and UIF Legislation to the CCMA (section 73A). Inspectors are furthermore entitled to demand compliance in the form of an undertaking from employers.
The National Minimum Wage Act has as its purpose, the advancement of economic development and social justice by way of protection of employees from unreasonably low wages, improving wages of the lowest paid employees, promoting collective bargaining and supporting economic policy. The Act goes on to state that the payment of the minimum wage is read into the employment contract as a term and condition of employment. It therefore cannot be changed unilaterally and can only be ‘ignored’ if the employee is offered a higher wage by way of agreement.
A Minimum Wage Commission is established to determine the minimum wage from time to time. A national minimum wage is determined under Section 4(1), which refers to the amount in Schedule 1, and which amount is adjusted annually in terms of Section 6. However, there is a once off prescribed review of the minimum wage within 18 months of the commencement of the Act, followed by an adjustment two years after the commencement of the Act. Thereafter, annual reviews of the minimum wage will be conducted by the Minimum Wage Commission in terms of Section 7.
Section 5 of the Act stipulates that the term ‘wages’ for purposes of the Act, excludes payments which enable an employee to perform their job, including transport, food or accommodation allowance; payment in kind such as accommodation; gratuities (including bonuses, tips or gifts) and any other prescribed category of payment.
Schedule 1 of the National Minimum Wage Act sets a minimum wage of R20 per ordinary hour. This equates to approximately R3500 per month for employees working a 40 hour week and R3900 for employees who work a 45 hour week. The Act does however further specify that the minimum wage for farm workers is R18 per hour; domestic workers is R15 per hour (irrespective of the area they operate in), workers employed on an expanded public works programme will be entitled to R11 per hour, and workers on learnership agreements will be entitled to allowances as stipulated in the bill according to their NQF level.
Chapter 4 provides for a process whereby employers may apply for an exemption from paying the National Minimum Wage. Should an employer receive an exemption though, it will only be granted for a specified period not exceeding one (1) year and must specify the wage to be paid. This process, therefore, does not provide a permanent exemption from compliance. The actual process relating to the exemption has been delegated to the Minister of Labour. Should an employer fail to comply with National Minimum Wage requirements, they will be liable for a fine according to section 76A of the BCEA Amendment Bill or further consequences such as a claim of Unfair Labour Practices if terms and conditions of employment are amended to ‘unfairly adapt’ to the implementation of the National Minimum Wage.
See also:
(This article is provided for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. For more information on the topic, please contact the author/s or the relevant provider.)

DIRECTOR CONUNDRUM...

Delinquent directors and the shareholder – Director conundrum

Delinquent directors and the shareholder – Director conundrum
21 Jan 2019

Introduction

The Companies Act[1] contemplates two distinct sets of instances in which a person may be declared delinquent, alternatively placed under probation. The wording of section 162(5) is peremptory, in that a court must make an order declaring a person to be delinquent in particular instances. The wording of section 162(7) grants the court a discretion, in that a court may make an order placing a person under probation in particular circumstances.
There are not many cases dealing with the declaration of delinquency as a director, but there are common threads to be gleaned, which guide litigators in this regard.
What of directors who are also shareholders of a company? Are they held to a different standard than other directors? Should they be? This article explores the abovementioned issues.

The existing jurisprudential fabric

A significant element in the jurisprudential fabric governing section 162 of the Act is the finding that the conduct of the director, called upon to be declared delinquent, must be of a particularly serious nature:
  • In Kukama v Lobelo and Others[2], Tshabalala J found that the evidence before him indicated that the director in question had, inter alia, failed to refund SARS R39,000,000.00, causing irreparable harm to the company and also exposing the said company and the applicant in that case to criminal liability; and (ii) failed to alert his co-director and co-shareholder of the fraudulent transaction and a repayment by SARS of R22,000,000.00 into an account of another company over which the applicant held no directorship. The aforesaid conduct is, obviously, of an extremely serious nature and the director was declared delinquent in such circumstances.
  • In Gihwala and others v Grancy Property Limited and Others[3], Wallace JA (Louis JA, Leach JA, Seriti JA and Tsoka AJA concurring) held that the directors in question were delinquent, having, inter alia, (i) used the company to provide themselves with financial benefits to the prejudice of the company’s only other shareholder; (ii) breached an investment agreement; and (iii) produced “hopelessly inaccurate and incomplete annual financial statements”. In respect of the notion of grossly abusing one’s position of director, the aforesaid Judges stated that “we are not talking about a trivial misdemeanour or an unfortunate fall from grace. Only gross abuses of the position of director qualify”.
  • Similarly, in Lewis Group Limited v Woollam and Others[4], Binns-Ward J held that “The relevant causes of delinquency entail either dishonesty, wilful misconduct or gross negligence. Establishing so called “ordinary” negligence, poor business decision making or misguided reliance by a director on incorrect professional advice will not be enough.” In this case, Binns-ward J considered that the adjective “gross” used in a context like gross abuse “denotes obvious and egregious conduct.
  • In Companies and Intellectual Property Commission v Cresswell and others[5], David J found a director to be delinquent in terms of section 162(5)(c)(iv) in circumstances where the director had, inter alia, allowed the company to continue business in parlous and insolvent circumstances and extracted company money in order to pay directors fees and to continue business, knowing that permission was required for the company’s business and had not been granted, the company being a public company, which required proper accounting systems.
  • Another instance of gross negligence warranting the declaration of a director to be delinquent occurred in Msimang N.O. and another v Katuliba and others[6], where the directors failed to hold the company’s annual general meetings and failed to prepare annual financial statements and to appoint an auditor, in contravention of the old Companies Act.

The purpose of s162

The principles underpinning the provisions of section 162 are undoubtedly concomitant with the perceived role of the company, which was expressed in the case of Bernstein and Others v Bester and Others 1996 (2) SA 751 (CC), in which the Court held as follows:
“The establishment of a company as a vehicle for conducting business on the basis of limited liability is not a private matter. It draws on a legal framework endorsed by the community and operates through the mobilisation of funds belonging to members of that community. Any person engaging in these activities should expect that the benefits inherent in this creature of statute will have concomitant responsibilities. These include, amongst others, the statutory obligations of a proper disclosure and accountability to shareholders.”
In Grancy, the background and purpose of the provisions of the Act were contemplated in respect of objectives including (i) increased protection of “the public and investors” against “unscrupulous company directors”; (ii) an enforcement mechanism for those harmed by delinquent conduct; and (iii) eliminating delinquent directors from operating.

A director acting in his personal interests, as a shareholder

What must be borne in mind, throughout the assessment of alleged delinquency in the case of a shareholder-director, is:
  • whether the individual was conducting himself as a director or as a shareholder in the relevant circumstances forming the basis for the ground of alleged delinquency; and
  • whether the alleged harm, or potential harm, was suffered, or had the potential to be suffered, by the company or by other shareholders.
This principle was succinctly expressed in Johnson v Gore Wood and Co[7] as “each [shareholder or director] may sue to recover the loss caused to it by breach of the duty owed to it but neither may recover loss caused to the other [director or shareholder] by breach of the duty owed to that other.”
Can a shareholder, who is also a director, ever seek to advance his position as shareholder, if it affects, or is affected by, his duties as a director in any manner? Would this constitute toeing the brink of impropriety, or is it actually unlawful? And can one justify the oppression of shareholders’ interests, obliging directors to act, at all times, in such capacity?
Certainly, one individual may act in different capacities at different times, each capacity attracting its own duties and interests. The cases examined below illustrate the position in our law.
To start, one must consider the principle expressed in Gundelfinger v African Textile Manufacturers Ltd[8], by Stratford, C.J (Tindall J.A and Centlivres, J.A concurring) – which responded to the postulate raised by a party in the case that “directors who had improperly voted at the board meeting could not properly vote to the same purpose at the shareholders meeting”, it was stated that this notion contradicts the “well-established rule that shareholders may vote at a meeting of a company in favour of their own interests – always assuming, of course, an absence of fraud.” The adverse of such principle would prevent shareholders from “voting in an ordinary legitimate manner on a matter within the scope of the company’s powers” [emphasis added].
There is no suggestion that the principle that shareholders’ rights to vote in their own interests cannot co-exist with directors’ voting rights, nor is there any qualification to the rule in this regard.
The only qualification which appears to apply to the said rule was, as stated in the case of Sammel v President Brand Gold Mining Co Ltd[9] by Trollip JA, that majority shareholders could not use the power to “discriminate between themselves and the minority shareholders so as to give themselves an advantage at the expense of the minority”. Further, resolutions passed bona fide for the benefit of the company, and by the required majority, cannot amount to a fraud on minority shareholders.
More recent case law has taken the principle further – in BenTovim v BenTovim[10], HJ Erasmus AJ, at 1088, held that shareholder-directors may act “entirely in [their] personal interests without taking any account of any conflicting interests of the company, provided he is not guilty of fraud or oppression of minority shareholders.
In the said case, the learned Judge quoted two other cases supporting the point – North-West Transportation Co Ltd v Beatty[11] and Northern Counties Securities Ltd v Jackson and Steeple Ltd[12]. In the latter case, Walton J spelled out that shareholder-directors may act differently in their respective capacities on the same matter.

Conclusion

  • For a director to be considered “delinquent”, conduct must be of a very serious nature, constitute a gross abuse and go beyond negligence.
  • Reliance by a director on incorrect professional advice will not be enough to render the conduct delinquent, in itself.
  • Shareholder-directors may act entirely in their own interests as shareholders, provided there is no fraud and they are not majority shareholders attempting to discriminate against minority shareholders (the proper relief may not be in section 162, but section 163).
  • Shareholder-directors may act differently in their respective capacities on the same matter. This alone will not give rise to delinquency.
References:
[1] 71 of 2008.
[2] (38587/2011) [2012] ZAGPJHC 60 (12 April 2012).
[3] 2017 (2) SA 337 (SCA).
[4] 2017 (2) SA 547 (WCC).
[5] (21092/2015) [2017] ZAWCHC 38 (27 March 2017).
[6] 2013 1 All SA 580 (GSJ).
[7] [2001] 1 all ER 481 (HL) at 503.
[8] 1939 AD 314.
[9] 1969 (3) SA 629 (A) (at 680).
[10] 2001 (3) SA 1074 (C).
[11] (1887) 12 App Cas 589 (PC).
[12] [1974] 2 All ER 625 (Ch).
(This article is provided for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. For more information on the topic, please contact the author/s or the relevant provider.)

Monday, 21 January 2019

POLSC402: Global Justice - Leon Terblanche : Accredible : Certificates, Badges and Blockchain.

POLSC402: Global Justice - Leon Terblanche : Accredible : Certificates, Badges and Blockchain.: Detailed exploration of contemporary debates and controversies regarding global justice. Topics include: human rights theory, the moral significance of national and cultural boundaries, the currency of distributive justice, global inequality and poverty, environmental devastation, and violence against women and children.

Tuesday, 15 January 2019

Nothing in life is "fixed"

Is a fixed term contract really that fixed?

Is a fixed term contract really that fixed?
08 Jan 2019
Currently employers believe that:
  • if they prematurely terminate a fixed-term employment contract, they will have to pay the employee the remainder of contract; and
  • they can only retrench employees employed on fixed term contracts if the contract contains a clause specifically allowing them to do so.
This does not appear to be the case in terms of contract law.
Very recently the High Court, in the case of Joni v Kei fresh produce Market, held that nothing prevents an employer from terminating a fixed term contract (“FTC”) prematurely where this is specifically catered for in the contract.
In this case Joni instituted a claim for damages against her employer for unlawfully terminating her FTC in that her employer terminated same, for operational requirements, prior to the termination date. She stated that she understood that she would be entitled to the monetary equivalent of the balance of her contract in the event of premature termination.
In this case:
  • The FTC commenced on 1 July 2010, to continue for a period of 5 years until 30 June 2015.
  • It was an express term of the FTC that either party could terminate the fixed term contract on one calendar month’s written notice to the other party.
  • The employer terminated the FTC on 30 November 2011 by giving Joni one calendar month’s written notice of cancellation and citing the company’s operational requirements as the reason for termination.
The High Court held that while it is trite that a fixed term contract cannot be terminated in the absence of a repudiation or a material breach of contract by the other party in terms of the common law, the exception to this rule is where the contract provides for such termination.
In this case the clause was clear – either party could terminate the FTC on one calendar month’s written notice to the other. There was no restriction on the grounds for the premature termination and, therefore, the High Court held that the clause could not be restrictively interpreted to exclude the possibility of retrenchment and is wide enough to cover this situation. In the circumstances, the High Court held that the FTC was lawfully terminated in accordance with the provisions of the agreement and Joni was not entitled to damages.
This case makes it clear that:
  • if the FTC allows for premature termination then the employer will not be liable to pay the employee in respect of the remainder of the term of the contract; and
  • an employer can retrench an employee employed on a FTC even if the contract does not specifically mention that this is permissible, but rather allows for premature termination as a general statement.
However, this judgment speaks merely to an employee’s contractual claim for premature termination, if any. An employee may still have a claim in terms of the Labour Relations Act for unfair dismissal if the dismissal was not for a fair reason in law and/or if the employer did not follow a fair procedure in dismissing the employee.
In order for an employer to mitigate and understand its risks, it is always advisable for them to have their FTC’s reviewed by an attorney and to consult with an attorney before terminating a fixed term contract prematurely.
(This article is provided for informational purposes only and not for the purpose of providing legal advice. For more information on the topic, please contact the author/s or the relevant provider.)

Tax Alert: South Africa’s employment tax incentive

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