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Review of Some Significant Decisions on Labour & Employment 2021 by Folabi Kuti SAN

By Folabi Kuti, SANĀ 

In line with the general trend in recent years, case law during the period under review has been driven, largely, by the far-reaching adjudicatory work of the National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN), the specialist labour court on employment and workplace issues.

Pensions and related mattersĀ 

The Court made important clarifications to possible gaps in the Pensions Reform Act (PRA), inĀ Mrs. Rakiya Bakari Girei v Sigma Pensions LimitedĀ (Unreported SuitĀ No. NICN/ABJ/379/2020, judgment delivered on 7thĀ December, 2021; per Hon. Justice B.B Kanyip (Ph.D (PNICN).Ā It reinforced the 25% withdrawal threshold allowed by the Pensions Reforms Act (PRA), as relating only to those who voluntarily retire (at/under 50 years), disengage, or are disengaged from employment. There is no such bar (in the legislation or the Constitution) restricting retirees who clock the retirement age of 60 years (or 35 years in service) from taking a 50% (or more) lump sum withdrawal from their Retirement Savings Accounts (RSA). The Court also found that where the claimant (in the instant case) had been disallowed from withdrawing 50% lump sum from her (RSA) ā€“ on grounds of being a female, no less, there was an infringement of constitutional provisions.

InĀ Jorge Allende Traquini v ASC Nig. LimitedĀ (Unreported SuitĀ No. NICN/LA/580/2017 judgment delivered on 10thĀ March 2021; per Hon. Justice N.C.S Ogbuanya), the recondite issue was compliance with the Pensions Reforms Actā€™s requirement (for employees) to open an RSA. Here, parties were no longer in an employment relationship, and the employee, a foreigner, had relocated outside the country, post-employment. The Court, applying a purposive interpretation to the PRA, decided this rare instance when unremitted pension funds could be paid directly to the employee in retirement.

Deduction from an employeeā€™s pensions account to pay checkoff dues was also held to be unlawful inĀ Yusuf Abdullahi & Anor v Pensions Transitional Arrangement Directorate & 4 OrsĀ (Unreported SuitĀ No. NICN/ABJ/97/2019 judgment delivered on 30thĀ September 2019; per Hon. Justice O.Y Anuwe).Ā Relatedly, inĀ Okunkpolor v Arik Air Nig LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/45/2017, judgment delivered on 4thĀ June 2021, per Hon. Justice Bassi), non-remittance of pensions and delay/non-payment of (a former employeeā€™s) entitlements after they had exited the company was deprecated as reprehensible. Where this happens, the employer may be liable in damages in deserving circumstances.Ā Regarding the unlawful practice of unremitted pensions deductions, the regulatory body, in at least four decisions handed down during the period under review, secured judgments that undoubtedly operateĀ in remĀ to ensure employers, at the peril of penal sanctions, remit monthly pension contributions to employeesā€™ retirement savings account, as and when due. These cases are: Ā National Pension Commission v Daar Communications PlcĀ (Unreported Suit No ABJ/395/2019, judgment delivered on 2ndĀ November 2021, per Hon. Justice E.N Agbakoba), Ā National Pension Commission v Ardent Energy Services (Unreported Suit No ABJ/386/2020, judgment delivered on 28thĀ October 2021, per Hon. Justice E.N Agbakoba),Ā National Pension Commission v NICON Insurance Plc (Unreported Suit No ABJ/63/2019, judgment delivered on 23rdĀ November 2021, per Hon. Justice O.O Oyewumi),Ā and National Pension Commission v Smart Products Nigeria Ltd (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/428/2014, judgment delivered on 11thĀ February 2021, per Hon. Justice G. Nweneka).

Unfair Labour Practice and Best Global PracticesĀ 

The National Industrial Court of Nigeria (NICN), based on the primacy of the facts presented before it, continues overall to draw from the immensely important influence of applicable international best practices in labour, employment, and industrial relations, as well as the appropriately pleaded interpretation of international labour standards. There is little doubt that this calling on best global practices, where necessary, has assisted immeasurably in filling the small gaps in the present world of work. Take, for instance, in the year under review, what constituted ā€˜unfair labour practiceā€™ continued to envelop an ever-widening array of factual matrix and legal issues.

Referentially, inĀ Amanze v Union Bank PlcĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/LA/424/2018, judgment delivered on 29thĀ June, 2021, per Hon. Justice (Dr) I.J Essien),Ā the defendant bank, in response to the claimantā€™s wrongful termination claim, contendedĀ inter alia, that the claimantā€™s appointment was contingent upon meeting 100% of a set target. The claimant failed to meet this target, comprising principally of a minimum average monthly deposit from target customers. Noting the common law duty on the part of an employer to provide work ā€“ a duty which the employer cannot abdicate from ā€“ the Court declared the practice of setting deposit targets as a condition for an employeeā€™s continuing employment, as wrongful, unlawful, and an unfair labour practice. With respect, the only critique to the otherwise profound holding of the Court here, is the potentially extensive (or,Ā in rem) nature of the Order (ā€˜outlawingā€™ the practice) made against other financial institutions who were not parties in the matter, and thus never had an opportunity of contributing to, for/against the arguments with respect thereto.Ā 

 

In similar vein,Ā Chukwunonso v Ecobank LtdĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/EN/17/2019; judgment delivered 18THĀ November, 2021, per Hon. Justice O.O Arowosegbe)Ā is a remarkable decision for reasons more than one. The Court here deprecated as an unfair labour practice, banks holding their staff that processed loan documents, without more, as responsible for debtorsā€™ loan repayment defaults. The claimant in this case was 19 days shy of a 10-year-unbroken-service record, for entitlement to gratuity. The justice in the case therefore turned largely on availing him the equitable position of an inconsequential deviation from the standard rule that had been relied upon for his peremptory termination, a mere 19 days before the attainment of his 10 yearsā€™ unbroken service period.Ā 

Calling in aid applicable international best practices in labour, employment, and industrial relations, and the application or interpretation of international labour standards, the Court inĀ Chukwuemeka v Dorben Microfinance BankĀ (Unreported Suit No ABJ/63/2019, judgment delivered on 23rdĀ November 2021, per Hon.Justice O.O Oyewumi) held as unlawful the unilateral reduction of an employeeā€™s salary without prior consultation with him. Drawing a fair balance, the Court nonetheless held that the reduction, on the extant factual pattern, would not excuse the repayment of the employeeā€™s personal outstanding loan balance. Held: that his monthly salary was not tied to his personal loan. Similarly, inĀ Bolarinwa v Heritage BankĀ (Unreported Suit NoĀ NICN/AK/23/2019, judgment delivered on 23rdĀ February 2021, per Hon. Justice K.D Damulak)Ā the action of the defendant in disengaging the claimant one year two months into the 7-year term of the staff mortgage loan, for services not required, and then unilaterally converting the loan to a commercial loan, was held to constitute an unfair labour practice which the Court held that the defendant could not do.Ā 

Ugwuazor & 4 Ors v Sterling Oil Exploration & 2 OrsĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/AWK/24-28/2015; judgment delivered on December 9, 2021; per Hon.Justice Targema (Ph.D)Ā not only held the termination (of the claimants) Ā wrongful, but also deprecated the conditions of employment under which they were placed throughout their employment with the defendants, asĀ ā€˜amounting to servitude and unfair labour practiceā€™.Ā 

Still on application of public policy and international best practices, retroactive change of fundamental conditions and terms of employment contracts was frowned at, and deprecated as unfair on the employee-cum-victim; inĀ Anyalor Maureen v Alex Ekwueme Federal UniversityĀ (Unreported Suit No ABK/01/2021, judgment delivered on 9thĀ December Ā 2021, per Hon.Justice O.O Arowosegbe)Ā andĀ Elekwa Elizabeth v Alex Ekwueme Federal UniversityĀ (Unreported Suit No ABK/02/2021, judgment delivered on 15thĀ December Ā 2021, per Hon. Justice O.O Arowosegbe).

Affirming a specie of pre-employment right, the Court inĀ Ms. Obienu v AIDS Healthcare FoundationĀ (Unreported Suit No ABJ/122/2020, judgment delivered on 29thĀ September 2021, per Hon. Justice O.O Oyewumi)Ā held as binding, a contract offering employment which the employee acted on by accepting, and further notifying her former employer of her resignation and exit. The defendant company was held liable in damages for a breach of contract in purportedly withdrawing the ā€˜offerā€™.Ā A fortiori, a defendant company/ā€™employerā€™ may nonetheless be able to successfully contend that there is/was no such employment where the purported employee fails to fulfill the preconditions (such as pre-employment medical report) for the said employment. Reliance is on the case citation ofĀ Godspower Josiah v Aiteo Energy Resources LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No. NIC/PHC/144/2018, judgment delivered on November 22, 2021; per Hon. Justice F.I Kola-Olalere).Ā 

Wage and benefit disparity between local employees and foreign staff was held to be discriminatory and an unfair labour practice, on the factual pattern inĀ Uzo Ejekwumadu v Blue Arrow TSW LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/242/2016,Ā Judgment delivered on March 18, 2021, per Hon. Justice O.A Obaseki-Osaghae)Ā andĀ Iseh Peter v Sterling Global Oil Exploration (Unreported Suit No. NICN/Ā YEN/ 42/ 2018; judgment delivered 30thĀ September, 2021; per Hon. Justice Bashar A. Alkali).

Disciplinary matters, Exit/Cessation of employment and allied matters.

InĀ Abdullahi v Intercontinental Bank Plc (Unreported Suit No ABJ/122/2011, judgment delivered on 31stĀ March 2021, per Hon. Justice E.N Agbakoba),Ā the Court held that it cannot by an injunction gag an employer from disciplining an employee where the need arises. Relatedly,Ā Ogunleye v Stanbic IBTC BankĀ (Unreported Suit No ABJ/120/2018, judgment delivered on 25thĀ November 2021, per Hon. Justice S. Kado)Ā is a compelling authority that an employer has a right to take disciplinary action against its employee notwithstanding that the employee is standing trial for a criminal offence emanating from the same factual pattern. The claimantā€™s discharge and acquittal cannot prevent or render disciplinary action illegal or unlawful. In similar vein, the Court inĀ Mr. Gerald Okpara v Borini Prono & Co (Nig.) LtdĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/ABJ/90/2017, judgment delivered on 7thĀ October, 2021, per Hon. Justice S.O Adeniyi)Ā restated the position that the prosecution of an employee before the law Court is not aĀ sine qua nonĀ to the exercise of the power of summary dismissal by an employer for gross misconduct.Ā 

In exercising its disciplinary power, the employer must ensure that the process deployed is fair and accords with principles of natural justice. Warning meted out as punishment cannot ground termination for the same infraction,Ā perĀ Dr. Emudanohowo v Delta State University, AbrakaĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/AWK/33/2016; judgment delivered on October 7, 2021; per Hon.Justice Targema, Ph.D).Ā The right to voluntarily disengage is absolute as seen inĀ Dr. Emmanuel v Federal University of Agriculture, MakurdiĀ (Unreported Suit No. MKD/02/2020, judgment delivered on 29THĀ November, 2021, per Hon. Justice (Dr) I.J EssienĀ ),Ā whilst indefinite suspension (not within the contemplation of contract of employment) can be construed as constructive dismissalĀ Henry Eyo v NTA-Star TV Network LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No ABJ/151/2019, judgment delivered on Ā 22ndĀ March 2021, per Hon.Justice O.O Oyewumi)Ā .Ā Similarly, suspension without pay is wrongful, unless exercised within ground(s) provided for in the terms and conditions of employment.Ā Anthony Momoh v Cedarwood School LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/PHC/50/2019, judgment delivered on November 17, 2021; per Hon. Justice Kola Olalere).Ā 

 

A marked statement common toĀ Omenogor v UBA PlcĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/142/2015, judgment delivered on 30thĀ June 2021, per Hon Justice O.A Obaseki-Osaghae),Ā Ogunlowo v Ventures and Trusts LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/451/2016, judgment delivered May 19, 2021, per Hon Justice O.A Obaseki-OsaghaeĀ andĀ Nwabugwu Benedeth v Uzondu Microfinance Bank Ltd. Ā  Ā (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/AWK/37/2018; judgment delivered on December 2, 2021; per Hon.Justice Targema, Ph.D)Ā is that disciplinary process or termination/dismissal cannot commence after, or override an earlier act of resignation by the employee, even asĀ Akpa v Sarplast West Africa LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No ABJ/106/2020, judgment delivered on 11thĀ October 2021, per Hon. Justice E.N Agbakoba)Ā reaffirmed the position that loss or forfeiture of any (attendant) benefits such as long service awards etc. that the employee could ordinarily have been entitled to, attends upon such resignation.Ā 

With employments that are regulated by statute, the Court, construing applicable statutes, boldly held inĀ Peter v Ambrose Alli University, Ekpoma & 6 Ors.Ā (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/BEN/26/2020; judgment delivered 25thĀ March, 2021, per Hon. Justice A.A Adewemimo)Ā that the Commissioner of Education in the state cannot unilaterally overrule the decision of the Governing Council of the University in relation to the employment and discipline of the stateā€™s university staff.Ā Ms. Fajemibola Aanu Mercy & 85 Ors v Vice Chancellor, Ekiti State UniversityĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/AK/06/2020, judgment delivered on 28thĀ January 2021, per Hon Justice K.D Damulak), Dr. Ogunshe v University of IbadanĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/IB/85/2016, judgment delivered on June 24, 2021; per Hon. Justice J.D Peters);Ā Dr. Ekpe v Registrar, University of UyoĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/UY/11/2016; judgment delivered 20thĀ May 2021; per Hon. Justice M.A Namtari)Ā and andĀ Ogunjnmi v Board of Inland Revenue, Oyo State (Unreported Suit No. NICN/IB/19/2016, judgment delivered 28thĀ September, 2021, per Hon.Justice J.D Peters)are some of the case citations (in the year under review) on nullification of disciplinary measures (including termination/dismissal) for non-compliance with the applicable Rules. The successful claimants in the cases under reference were all ordered re-instated to their posts/offices. In checkmating the abuse of executive powers, the Court inĀ Rt. Hon. Jonas Okeke v Governor of Imo State (Unreported Suit No. NICN/OW/44/2020, judgment delivered on 24thĀ June, 2021, per Hon. Justice I.S Galadima),Ā noted that the applicantsā€™ appointments, being offices statutorily created and entrenched within the Imo State House of Assembly Law, and having not exhausted their tenures in office, cannot be removed ā€œat the pleasure of the Governorā€.

 

MiscellanyĀ 

Commendably, the decision inĀ PENGASSAN v Chevron Nigeria LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/LA/411/2020, judgment delivered 26thĀ February 2021, per Hon Justice E.A Oji PhD)Ā poignantly sums up as: ā€˜ā€¦work on the constructive task of finding the intention of Parliamentā€¦not only from the language of the statute, but also from considerations of the social conditions which gave rise to it, and of the mischief which it was passed to remedy, and then supplementing Ā the written words so as to give ā€˜force and lifeā€™ to the intention of the legislatureā€¦ā€. Lord Denning,Seaford Court Estates Ltd. v. Asher (1949) 2 K.B. 481.Ā In a masterly analysis of relevant laws and prudential guidelines from case law, the Court was able to arrive at the conclusion that there is nothing in the relevant laws (Petroleum Act, etc.) that gives the Minister of Petroleum power to regulate private contracts of employment, or to introduce terms into the contracts of employment between parties. Further, that the Petroleum Act did not contemplate the type of regulation contained in theĀ Guidelines for the Release of Staff in the Nigeria Oil and Gas Industry 2019,Ā and thus cannot operate to obligate the oil and gas companies to obtain the written approval of the Minister of Petroleum Resources before embarking on any staff reduction and/or redundancy exercise.

The potential width of a reasonable restriction (on trade) imposed by a training bond, again came to the fore inĀ Overland Airways Ltd v Engr. Shehu SekulaĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/LA/599/2018, judgment delivered 12thĀ April 2021, per Hon. Justice I.G Nweneka),Ā andĀ ATB Techsoft Solutions Limited v Eniola Grace AkeĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/LA/100/2020, judgment delivered 16thĀ March 2021, per Hon. Justice I.G Nweneka).Ā In the former, the 1st defendant was held liable to a training bond by which he was sponsored for an aircraft type rating course by the claimant. He was ordered to pay for failing to give requisite notice of cessation of employment, and a refund of the course fee paid by the claimant for his type rating training. On the facts before the Court in the latter case, the Court held that there was nothing in the claimantā€™s evidence justifying the restriction to bind the defendant to the employerā€™s business for three years. Ā  Ā Ā 

Akinola v Ocean Marine Solutions LtdĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/LA/410/2019, judgment delivered 25thĀ October 2021, per Hon Justice I.G Nweneka)Ā is a landmark judgment about workplace employment discrimination/harassment based on health disability (HIV/AIDS)[1].Ā Olalere v Olam Nigeria LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No. KN/08/2009, judgment delivered on 25thĀ March 2021, per Hon. Justice D.E Isele)Ā examined,Ā inter alia, when employeeā€™s act can be held to constitute abandonment of duties.Ā Uduak Akpan & 8 Ors v Caverton HelicoptersĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/YEN/38/2015, judgment delivered 28thĀ May 2021, per Hon. Justice P.I Hamman)Ā is apt citation (for the proposition) that disengaged employees would have to do more than merely allege that redundancy payments were not made, or procedure (for declaring redundancy) not followed where indeed the termination of employment, on proof of documentary details, is strictly in accordance with employment contract.

Amalgamated Union of Public Corporations, Civil Service and Recreational Services Employees of Public Corporations, Civil Service Technical and Recreational Services Employees (AUPCTRE) v Corporate Affairs Commission (CAC)Ā (Unreported Suit No. NICN/ABJ/62/2021, judgment delivered 7thĀ October 2021, per Hon.Justice B.B Kanyip (PNICN)Ā is a firm pronouncement reiterating judicial disapproval of an employerā€™s interference in trade union activities in its workplace. This is in consonance with the express lettering of the Trade Unions Act on the right of employees to unionise without interference by the employer. Based on the primacy of facts in the instant case, the Court held, inter alia, that theĀ ā€˜defendant cannot dissolve, regulate, supervise, inquire into, probe and interfere with the existence, running, finances and investment activities of the claimant unionā€™.Ā Still on not fettering the activities of the unions, the Court inĀ NLC v Gov, Kaduna State (Unreported Suit No. NICN/KD/06/2021, judgment delivered on 6thĀ October 2021, per Hon Justice S.O Adeniyi),Ā  had an opportunity to address Ā the claimantsā€™ grievance with respect to non-remittance of the checkoff dues deducted from members of theĀ Nigeria Union of Local Government Employees working in all Local Governments in Kaduna StateĀ without appropriate remittance to its registered office as stipulated by the Trade Unions Act.Ā Ā The Court returned a favourable outcome on the claimantsā€™ suit in this regard.Ā 

Compensatory damagesĀ 

Stimulating new insights based on the primacy of the facts presented before it, the Court made a few inroads incrementally pushing the frontiers of compensable damages confirmed by the final court on labour and employment matters (inĀ Sahara Energy Resources Ltd v Oyebola (unreported) CA/L/1091/2016Ā judgement delivered on 3rdĀ December 2020) Ā can be awarded in deserving cases ā€“ a radical departure from orthodoxy common law restrictive prescriptions on quantum of damages in successful employment claims.

 

InĀ Ogunsakin v MTN Nigeria Communications LtdĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/ABJ/468/2016; judgment delivered 28thĀ July, 2021, per Hon. Justice E.N Agbakoba),Ā the termination of the claimant from his employment with the defendant was held wrongful as the disciplinary process leading to the termination failed to adhere to the common law rules of natural justice. A sum of N10,000,000.00 (Ten Million Naira) was awarded as general damages against the defendant. Much less straightforward it would appear, with respect, is what appears to be the double compensatory regime in the award ofĀ ā€˜three years salary each as compensation for wrongful dismissal/termination of the defendantsā€™ employmentā€™, and,Ā ā€˜two yearā€™s salary as compensation for unfair labour practiceā€™Ā inĀ Oyayero v British High CommissionĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/ABJ/144/2017; judgment delivered 28thĀ July, 2021, per Hon. Justice E.N Agbakoba).Ā 

InĀ Obakhume v Fidelity Securities LtdĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/BEN/34/2018; judgment delivered 15thĀ March, 2021, per Hon. Justice A.A Adewemimo)Ā from the aggregate of the compelling facts adduced in the case, the successful claimant was awarded N10,000,000.00 (Ten Million Naira) as general damages for the conversion of his employment in breach of the employment contract document. InĀ Chinwo v Port Harcourt Electricity Distribution CompanyĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/PHC/89/2020, judgment delivered June 29,2021, per Hon Justice N.C.S Ogbuanya)Ā the sum of N2, 000,000. 00 (two million naira) was awarded as consequential relief/general damages in favour of the claimant against the defendants, for the ā€˜wrongful withholding of his accrued salary, allowance and pension fund contribution upon resignation of his employment, and (not paid) until he has filed suit in court challenging the conduct of the defendants, thereby exposing him to undue financial difficulties, which conduct constitute unfair labour/employment practiceā€™.Ā 

InĀ Dr. Oyeyemi v Covenant UniversityĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/758/2016, judgment delivered on 28thĀ September 2021, per Hon Justice O.A Obaseki-Osaghae)Ā the defendant unilaterally reviewed the claimantā€™s employment contract to Senior Lecturer (Contract) which was unsolicited and would make the workplace intolerable to him. Coupled with the wrongful termination of his employment by the issuance of two letters of termination with immediate effect without any reason, the claimant was found to be entitled to an award of monetary equivalent of 24 monthsā€™ salary as general damages. Similarly, inĀ Ngozi Iteogu v International Energy Insurance PlcĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/LA/444/2016, judgment delivered on 12thĀ February, 2021, per Hon. Justice O.A Obaseki-Osaghae)Ā the Court held that the claimant was entitled to an award of general damages (sum equivalent of 24 monthsā€™ salary) for the stigma associated with the defendantā€™s unfounded and unjustified allegation of fraud against her.Ā 

For workplace physical/permanent injury/accident claims, the injured claimant inĀ Davidson Iloh v Alo Aluminium Manufacturing Co. LtdĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/EN/61/2017, judgment delivered on March 16, 2021; per Hon Justice Arowosegbe )Ā succeeded in proving his claims,Ā inter alia, that the defendant company failed in its duty of care to provide a safe workplace, for which (breach of duty on the part of the employer) the claimant employee consequently suffered permanent disability in his right hand that led to amputation of his little finger and right hand being dormant.Ā The Court awarded the sum of N30,000,000.00 (Thirty Million Naira) to the claimant as compensation for ā€˜the permanent disability and disfigurement, loss of amenities of life, bodily pain and suffering which the claimant has suffered and may suffer in future, loss of earning and a future that is fraught with uncertainties as a result of the injury he sustained, while working for the defendantā€™.Ā 

InĀ Mr Egejuru v Niger Construction LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No. NICN/PHC/13/2019, judgment delivered on 18thĀ October, 2021, per Hon. Justice P.I Hamman), the claimant, accountant with the defendant company, was shot by armed robbers while he was paying the workers at the site of the defendantā€™s company. The attack has since left him permanently partially incapacitated. On the facts before the Court, the Court found, inter alia,Ā a deserving case for the award of N10, 000,000.00 (Ten Million Naira) as general damages in favour of the claimant ā€˜to take care of the pains, trauma and permanent partial incapacity of the claimant considering his earning power in the futureā€™. Ā The claimant inĀ Ndifon v Bel Impex LimitedĀ (Unreported Suit No.Ā NICN/LA/262 /2020; judgment delivered 28thĀ October, 2021, per Ā Hon. Justice R.H Gwandu)Ā was not so lucky as he failed to prove to the CourtĀ ā€˜that his injuries resulted as a result of the defendantsā€™ negligence or lack of proper working conditionsā€™.Ā 

CONCLUSIONĀ 

The labour courtā€™s judicial strides in 2021, offer a renewed sense of optimism for a labour jurisprudence that is firmly minded to meet modern challenges. In the seemingly unattainable balancing act that often (perhaps unintentionally) pits best practices/international labour standards (perceived by some as biased in favour of employees), against commercial interests, the work of the Court is, indeed, an uphill task. It continues to steer the rudder towards a more equitable workplace for both employer and employee, progressively edifying substance over mere formalistic approaches that once dominated the world of work.Ā 

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