IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF TANZANIA
AT
TANGA
(CORAM: MSOFFE, J. A., KILEO, J. A. And KALEGEYA,
J.A.)
CIVIL
APPEAL NO. 19 OF 2006
DAVID KAPOMA………………………………APPELLANT
VERSUS
THE GENERAL MANAGER
TANGA CEMENT COMPANY LTD………RESPONDENT
(Appeal
from the Judgment and decree of the
High
Court of Tanzania
at Tanga)
(Mkwawa,
J.)
dated
28th September
2001
in
Civil
Appeal No.8 of 2000
---------------------
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT
4 & 12 July 2007
KILEO, J. A.
The facts giving rise to this appeal are
simple and straightforward. The respondent, Tanga Cement Company, hereinafter
to be referred to simply as the “Company”, employed the appellant, David Kapoma,
in the capacity of a stores clerk at the Company premises in Tanga in 1991. On
17.02.1995 he was summarily dismissed from employment. Being dissatisfied with
the summary dismissal the appellant forwarded his complaint to the Labour
Conciliatory Board which ordered his reinstatement. The Company was aggrieved
by the decision of the Conciliatory Board and made a reference to the Minister
for Labour and Youth Development. It is common knowledge that in between the
decision of the Conciliatory Board and that of the Minister, the Company
decided to repatriate the appellant and his family to his place of domicile in
Wasa village in Iringa. The Company’s reference to the Minister was however
unsuccessful and it was ordered to reinstate the appellant in his employment.
Following the Minister’s decision, the Company wrote a letter to the appellant
the effect of which was to reinstate him to his employment. The Company also
transported him and his family back to Tanga. The appellant was however not
paid 30 days subsistence allowance upon his reinstatement. This forms the gist
of the conflict between the parties. The District Court found that he was
entitled to the 30 days subsistence allowance minus the housing allowance,
which he was paid for the time that he was in Iringa. The High Court, Mkwawa, J. declined to accede
to the appellant’s argument that his return from Iringa coupled with his
reinstatement should be equated to an employee who was being employed for the
first time or who was going on transfer. The learned judge declined to accept
the appellant’s argument because; according to him the argument was not “in
keeping with the practice, law or precedent”. The judge did not end there. He went on further
to state as follows: “in other words, what the respondent asserts may be
chivalrous but is not the practice or law”.
The appellant’s memorandum
contains three grounds: -
1)
That
the learned judge erred in law and fact by not holding that the Appellant was
improperly repatriated to his domicile place, while he had already observed
that it happened while disciplinary proceedings were in process.
2)
That
the learned Lord judge erred in law and fact by failing to give a correct
interpretation of the word ”reinstatement” to enable him to decide on whether
or not the appellant was entitled to subsistence allowance.
3)
That
the learned Lord judge erred in law and in fact in holding that the appellant
was not in keeping with the practice, law or precedent.
The appellant
appeared in person at the hearing of the appeal. Mr. Akaro, learned advocate,
represented the Company.
There is only
one issue, which is central to this appeal. The question is, given the
circumstances of this case, was the appellant entitled to be paid 30 days
subsistence allowance upon his recall from Iringa?
Both sides are
in agreement that 30 days subsistence allowance was payable to employees on
first appointment or on transfer in terms of the Tanga Cement Company Voluntary
Agreement. This kind of allowance is generally given to an employee to help
her/him settle in new surroundings.
The appellant argued that since his services in effect came to an
end by his summary dismissal, and since he was repatriated to his place of
domicile in Iringa, his recall to Tanga from Iringa amounted to starting
afresh. He pointed out that he had to look for new accommodation as he was
forced to release the one he had prior to his repatriation.
The appellant
also averred that the provisions of sections 31 and 41(2) of the Security of
Employment Act, Cap 387 R.E.2002 were violated by the Company and for this
reason it should be ordered to make good the violation.
It was further argued that the minute the Minister ordered his
reinstatement his employment contract was revived. The appellant made reference
to three cases in his submission. These were; General Marketing Co. versus
A. A. Shariff (1980) TLR 61, K.K. Kibaya versus U.A.C. (T) LTD (1996) TLR 76
and Esso (T) Ltd versus D. R. Kaijage, Civil Appeal No 6 of 1989 (unreported).
We have had occasion to look closely at these cases. We must however say that
we have found nothing in these cases, which can advance the case for the
appellant. The facts and circumstances of the cases were different from the
facts and circumstances of the present case. The High Court, (Biron,
J.) decided the General Marketing case, a decision by which we are not
bound. The issue in that case however, was whether the order of the Minister
given in Swahili in the following words “Mfanyakazi arudishwe kazini” meant
that he was to be re-employed. In interpreting the above words the High Court
held that the words “Mfanyakazi arudishwe kazini” meant that the employee was
to be “reinstated in his employment” and
not re-employed. In the present case there is no issue concerning the meaning
of “Mfanyakazi arudishwe kazini” or even the meaning of “reinstatement”. The
issue, as we have already pointed out is whether in the circumstances of this
case the appellant was entitled to be paid 30 days subsistence allowance upon
his recall. The question in the K.K. Kibaya case was whether the
employee was entitled to depreciation and toolbox allowances during the time of
his termination. The argument he advanced was that he was entitled because
those allowances were payable to him even in the period he was on leave. It is
obvious that this case is distinguishable from the present case. The Esso case
can also be distinguished from this case because the question whether an
employee who is summarily dismissed and repatriated should be entitled to 30
days subsistence allowance upon his recall did not arise.
Mr. Akaro,
learned counsel for the Company, argued that the judge did not err in not
holding that the appellant was improperly repatriated while disciplinary
proceedings were in process. He contended further that the law was complied
with and that in any case, there is no law, which states that subsistence
allowance should be paid upon reinstatement.
This case, which
is rather peculiar, has indeed exercised our minds a great deal. The
circumstances of this case are not catered for in the law; in other words, the
law is silent on whether or not, an employee who has been repatriated to his
home village at a time when reference to the Minister is pending should be
entitled to subsistence allowance upon recall following a Minister’s order for
reinstatement.
We are of the
view that the circumstances of this peculiar case are akin to the definition of
transfer given under the Regulations of Wages and Terms of Employment Order,
Government Notice No. 85 of 1996, which defines transfer “to include
movement of an employee from one geographical location to another”.
The appellant’s
recall and reinstatement meant that he had to begin afresh in terms of seeking
for accommodation and settling down.
We note that
under the provisions of both sections 31 and 41 (2) once the reference was made
to the Minister in relation to the summary dismissal, the order of the
Conciliatory Board was suspended. The relevant provisions provide as hereunder:
“31. Stay of certain orders on further
reference to Minister
Notwithstanding the provisions of
subsection (1) of section 26, where the employer makes a reference to the
Minister against the refusal of the Board to confirm the summary dismissal or
proposed summary dismissal of an employee, such employer shall not be required
to give effect to the provisions of subsection (1) of section 26 unless he
abandons such reference, or until the reference has been determined by the
Minister, and the provisions of subsection (1) of section 26 in relation to the
decision of the Board shall be subject to any decision made by the Minister”.
Section
26(1) provides as follows:
“26. Implementation of certain decisions
(1) Where, in the exercise of its
powers under this Part, a Board orders–
(a) the re-engagement or re-instatement of an employee, the employer
shall (unless such employee refuses to be re-engaged or reinstated, as the case
may be) re-engage or re-instate the employee in his former employment, and such
re-engagement or re-instatement shall have effect for the purpose of the
payment of wages, entitlement to severance allowance and other retiring
benefits, and otherwise in relation to any benefits of employment, from the
date of the employee's summary dismissal or suspension, as the case may be, but
the employer may deduct from any wages due on or after any re-instatement any
half pay paid during the period of suspension;”
and section 41 (2)
provides:
“(2) Where an employer makes a reference to
the
Minister in respect of any order of the
Board under this Part, the order shall be
suspended until the reference is decided by
the Minister”.
Though the order
of reinstatement made by the Conciliatory Board appears to have been by law
suspended when the reference was made to the Minister, we do not think however,
that it was prudent on the part of the Company to repatriate the appellant
before the Minister had given his decision. As it happened, following the
Minister’s decision confirming the Conciliatory Board’s decision, the Company
had to recall the appellant, who upon return had to resettle, by among other
ways, looking for new accommodation.
The above considerations take care of ground
no 1 and no 2 in the memorandum of appeal.
As for ground no 3 we are of the opinion that the circumstances of this
case being peculiar, the learned judge should at least have elaborated on what
practice, law or precedent that the appellant’s arguments were not in keeping
with. The decision of the learned judge lacked that elaboration.
We have studied the decision of the
Principal District Magistrate (PDM) and we have observed that she ordered the Company
to pay Bank rate interest on the principal sum from the date the case was filed
in court to the date of judgment and till the time the whole claim is paid in
full. The PDM did not state what the Bank rate was then, and moreover, she
awarded that which had not been asked for. According to the calculations
appearing in the amended plaint, the principal sum of shs. 2,675,946/= included
interest for three years which was set between 7.5% and 8.5%. We have failed to
find the basis for this calculation. The subsistence allowance, which was due
before inclusion of the interest, was shs. 1,419,600/-. This was the principal
amount. The principal amount should have remained the principal amount until a
decision was made and a rate of interest fixed by the court. Further still,
there was no justification to award interest at Bank rate because, as we have
already noted, it was not asked for in the first place.
In the event we allow the appeal but vary
the decision of the PDM to the following extent:
The appellant is to be paid only the
principal sum of shs.
1, 419,600/=. The order for deduction, from
the decretal amount, of housing allowance paid to the appellant remains.
We make no order as to costs.
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