Gogni Rajope Construction Company Limited Another V Omondi (Civil Appeal 321of2019) 2025KECA161 (KLR) (7february2025) (Judgment)
Gogni Rajope Construction Company Limited Another V Omondi (Civil Appeal 321of2019) 2025KECA161 (KLR) (7february2025) (Judgment)
Appeal 321 of 2019) [2025] KECA 161 (KLR) (7 February 2025) (Judgment)
Neutral citation: [2025] KECA 161 (KLR)
REPUBLIC OF KENYA
IN THE COURT OF APPEAL AT NAIROBI
CIVIL APPEAL 321 OF 2019
S OLE KANTAI, A ALI-ARONI & LA ACHODE, JJA
FEBRUARY 7, 2025
BETWEEN
GOGNI RAJOPE CONSTRUCTION COMPANY LIMITED ...... 1ST APPELLANT
CEBAUD ENGINEERING SERVICES LIMITED .......................... 2ND APPELLANT
AND
CORNEL OTIENO OMONDI ........................................................... RESPONDENT
(An appeal from the Judgment of the Employment and Labour Relations Court at
Nairobi (Abuodha, J.) delivered on 5th October 2018 in ELRC Case No. 865 of 2013)
JUDGMENT
1. To contextualize the dispute, a brief history will suce. The respondent was engaged as an Assistant
Projects Engineer at a gross salary of Kshs. 200,000 per month by a contract of service executed between
him and the 1st appellant on 9th January 2012. The contract was for a renewable period of two years,
and the payment of his salary and other emoluments were eected through the 2nd appellant, a sister
company to the 1st appellant.
By a letter dated 24th July 2012, the 1st appellant sent him on compulsory leave without purportedly
to allow investigations. He contended further that no investigations were conducted, nor was the
respondent accorded a hearing before the 1st appellant terminated his services by a letter dated 30th
August 2012, claiming that his contract had expired.
2. In a memorandum of claim dated 18th February 2013, the respondent claimed that his contract
was unlawfully terminated in breach of contract and against the dictates of the Employment Act;
he sought to be awarded Kshs. 3,420,790.50 comprising net pay for July 2012 at Kshs. 152,967,
net pay for August to 13th February 2013 at Kshs. 2,829,889.50, leave pay for two months at Kshs.
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305,934, communication allowance arrears for February, May, June, and July at Kshs. 21,000 and
communication allowance for August 2012 to February 2013 at Kshs. 111,000.
3. The appellants, in response, contended that there was a misjoinder of the 2nd respondent in the
pleadings in the absence of any privity of contract between it and the respondent. The appellants
also pleaded that the respondent was dismissed for lawful and proper reasons, including serious
failures, incompetence, negligence, and/or fraudulent acts or omissions causing the appellants' loss;
that the acts and omissions constituted gross misconduct; and that before dismissal, the respondent
was accorded a chance to defend himself but his response was not satisfactory leading to him being
sent on compulsory leave under the 1st appellant’s employment policy to pave way for investigations.
4. The appellants further contended that a notice to show cause dated 30th July 2012 was delivered to the
respondent asking him to respond to the charges against him within 14 days, but he failed to do so, and
hence he was dismissed; that before his dismissal, Eng. Raburu from the appellant’s oce called the
respondent to inquire whether a formal reply had been made when the respondent replied that he was
no longer interested in the said employment, having secured alternative employment; further, the 1st
appellant admitted retaining dues which would have otherwise been paid to the respondent claiming
that the respondent’s misconduct and breach of contract led to a massive loss to the 1st appellant.
5. In its determination the trial court was of the view that there existed reasonable grounds to terminate
the respondent’s services. For instance, the respondent did not deny his absence from the site when the
appellant’s director made an impromptu visit, failing to inform the director, who was his supervisor, of
his unscheduled absence from the site, nor the allegations against him of unauthorized hire of project
equipment and failure to compile and le site reports, which all constituted misconduct that would
justify termination of the contract.
6. The trial court noted that the respondent was sent on indenite compulsory leave to allow for
investigation and was informed that the outcome of the inquiry would be made known to him in
reasonable time. A letter was addressed to the respondent through his postal address number, which
he did not deny receiving.
7. The court also noted that the appellants alleged that on 30th July 2012, a letter was issued to the 1st
respondent asking him to show cause by 15th August 2012 why his services should not be terminated,
listing the charges against him and calling upon him to respond to the allegations. The court further
observed that the appellant claimed the letter was delivered to the respondent personally but did not
have available proof that it was delivered. More so, the court noted that the respondent denied receiving
the same.
8. The trial court found it curious that, by a letter dated 30th August 2012, the 1st appellant purported
to terminate the respondent’s services with eect from 24 July 2012. The court wondered how the
respondent was to show cause why his services should not have been terminated by 15th August 2012,
yet his services were terminated on 24th July 2012.
9. The trial court also found that even if the appellant had valid and justiable reasons for terminating
the respondent’s contract, the process of termination was awed, leading to the conclusion that the
termination oended the provision of section 41(2) as read together with section 45(2)(c) of the
Employment Act (“the Act”). The court, therefore, awarded the respondent Kshs. 1,222,146.
10. Aggrieved by the judgment, the appellants in their memorandum of appeal dated 8th July 2019 raised
11 grounds of appeal as follows: that the learned judge misinterpreted the provisions of section 41(2)
and section 45(2)(c) of the Act to the detriment of the appellants; failed to make a nding that
the provisions of Section 45(3) of the Act barred the respondent from making any claim for unfair
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termination against the appellants; failed to make a nding that the respondent was properly issued
with sucient notice by the 1st appellant, which notice was deliberately ignored by the respondent;
made a nding condemning the appellants to pay the respondent one month’s salary in lieu of notice
and 4 months’ salary for unfair termination without any basis in law; failed to dismiss the claim by the
respondent against the 2nd appellant for mis-joinder; failed to exercise his discretion correctly; failed to
nd in favour of the appellants and awarded costs of the suit to the respondent as against the appellants
without any basis in law.
11. The appellants led submissions dated 28th March 2024. They distilled the issues for determination
to be;
(a) whether the trial judge misinterpreted and misapplied the provisions of Section 41(2) of the
Act and whether the respondent was given a hearing before termination;
(b) whether the trial judge misinterpreted Section 45(2) of the Act in making the award of Kshs.
800,000 for unfair termination and whether the provisions of Section 45(3) of the Act bars
the respondent from claiming unfair termination;
(c) whether the respondent was entitled to notice pay of Kshs. 200,0 00, leave allowance in the
sum of Kshs. 67,307.69, salary days worked in July 2012, and costs.
12. On the rst issue, the appellants submit that in their memorandum of defense, they averred that the
respondent was given a hearing and that failure by the respondent to le a reply to the defense, the
respondent joined issue with the appellant, and the onus shifted to the respondent to prove that the
meeting of 23rd July 2012, where he was given a letter sending him on compulsory leave did not take
place; that during the trial the respondent admitted that a meeting took place on 23rd July 2012. That,
indeed, the respondent was given a full and fair hearing in full compliance with the law.
13. On the second issue, the appellants cited the case of Kenfreight E. A. Limited vs. Benson K. Nguti, Civil
Appeal No. 31 of 2015, where the court held that an employee who has served for a continuous period
of 13 months could not make a claim for unfair termination. They submit further that the respondent
was disqualied by law from claiming unfair termination, having worked for only 6 months, yet the
court irregularly awarded Kshs. 800,000 as compensation for unfair termination.
14. On whether the respondent was entitled to one month's pay in lieu of notice, the appellants submit
that the respondent was issued with a notice to show cause letter dated 30th July 2012, and no rejoinder
was made as a reply to the defence to deny that averment that the notice to show cause accorded the
respondent 14 days to respond. Since he did not use the opportunity, the appellants had to dismiss
him summarily.
15. The appellants further submitted that before the dismissal of the respondent, it was established
that the respondent had been employed by Katarsan Construction Company Limited, a fact which
the respondent did not deny, which was in breach of the subsisting employment contract with the
appellant; that the respondent had failed to respond to the notice to show cause and having secured
employment elsewhere when his employment contract was still subsisting with the appellant, he was
not entitled to the one month pay.
16. The appellants concede to the relief of Kshs. 154,838.73, the net of one month’s salary in lieu of notice,
and Kshs. 67,307.69, the salary for days worked and leave allowance, respectively.
17. The respondent did not le written submissions. His counsel made brief oral submissions at the
plenary hearing, stating that the termination was unlawful as the procedure for termination was
not followed. Secondly, the meeting between the parties with some members of sta present, which
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culminated in the respondent being sent on leave, was not properly convened. Further, the respondent
never received the alleged show cause letter; no proof of service was provided.
18. This being a rst appeal, it is our duty, in addition to considering submissions by the appellants and the
respondents, to analyze and re-assess the evidence on record and arrive at an independent conclusion
as enunciated in the case of Arthi Highway Developers Limited vs. West End Butchery Limited & 6
Others (2015) eKLR where the court cited the case of Selle vs. Associated Motor Boat Co. (1968) EA
123 and held as follows; -
“ An appeal to this Court from a trial by the High Court is by way of retrial and the principles
upon which this Court acts in such an appeal are well settled. Briey put they are that this
Court must reconsider the evidence, evaluate it itself and draw its own conclusions though it
should always bear in mind that it has neither seen nor heard the witnesses and should make
due allowance in this respect. In particular, this Court is not bound necessarily to follow
the trial judge’s ndings of fact if it appears either that he has clearly failed on some point to
take account of particular circumstances or probabilities materially to estimate the evidence
or if the impression based on the demeanor of a witness is inconsistent with the evidence
in the case generally.”
19. Having considered the pleadings before us, the submissions by rival parties, the case law cited, and the
law, we discern the issues for our determination to be:
i. Whether the termination of the respondent by the 1st appellant was unfair and unlawful?
iii. If the answer to (i) above is armative, what award should be given to the respondent?
20. The 1st appellant and the respondent entered into a two-year employment contract on the 9th of January
2012, which was to commence on the 13th of February 2012. The respondent was employed as an
Assistant Project Engineer and reported to the Project Engineer. Some of the terms of the contract
included termination of the contract by giving a one (1) months’ notice in writing or payment of one-
month salary in lieu; termination by the employer without notice if one is guilty of serious misconduct
such as theft or in breach of a provision of the contract, including condentiality undertakings. The 2nd
appellant is described as a sister company to the 1st appellant, and it was conrmed in evidence by RW1
that the two appellants interchanged sta in the execution of the projects and that the respondent was
the overall supervisor.
21. In his memorandum of claim dated the 18th of February 2013, led at the defunct Industrial Court
on the 7th June 2013, the respondent’s case was that his services were terminated by a letter dated
24th July 2012 without any reasonable or justiable cause by the 1st appellant. He was initially sent
on compulsory leave purportedly to allow investigations on allegations that were ambiguous and
unclear and which investigations were never carried out; on the 30th of August 2012, his services were
terminated without him being accorded an opportunity to be heard in his defense. He claimed that
the appellants' action was unlawful, in breach of the employment contract, and against the dictates of
the Employment Act. He claimed for:
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iv. Communication allowance Kshs. 21,000
22. RW1, Hannington Juma, the 1st appellant’s managing director, informed the court in his witness
statement dated the 28th of October 2015 that the 1st appellant had engaged the respondent as an
Assistant Supervisor from the 13th of February 2013 and he was to work under his supervision. That
issues arose on the conduct of the respondent for example, the disappearance of a black hoe excavator
from the site, which the respondent admitted to having hired out without authority and, on being
confronted, was ready to account for the amount he had hired it out for, and on investigation it was
discovered that the hoe had been hired out variously, without authority; giving out of the vehicle
assigned to him to another employee without permission, which vehicle was stolen in the process;
obtaining money from the company on misrepresentation; and absconding from duty.
23. In its judgment, the trial court determined that although the 1st appellant had valid and justiable
reasons for terminating the respondent’s contract, it had failed to follow due process. As a result,
the court found in favor of the respondent, awarding him damages. In Paragraphs 22-23 of the
determination, the judge stated:
“ 25. From the foregoing it is evidently clear that even if as noted earlier in the
judgement the respondent had a valid and justiable reasons for terminating
the claimant’s contract, the process followed in doing so was awed hence
leading to the conclusion that the termination oended the provision of
section 41(2) as read with section 45(2) (c) of the Employment Act.
24. Section 41 (1) & (2) of the Act, which applies in this instance, provides that:
2. Notwithstanding any other provision of this Part, an employer shall, before terminating the
employment of an employee or summarily dismissing an employee under section 44(3) or (4)
hear and consider any representations which the employee may on the grounds of misconduct
or poor performance, and the person, if any, chosen by the employee within subsection (1).
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3. An employee who has been continuously employed by his employer for a period not less than
thirteen months immediately before the date of termination shall have the right to complain
that he has been unfairly terminated.
4. A termination of employment shall be unfair for the purposes of this Part where—
b. it is found out that in all the circumstances of the case, the employer did not act in
accordance with justice and equity in terminating the employment of the employee.
5. In deciding whether it was just and equitable for an employer to terminate the employment of
an employee, for the purposes of this section, a labour Ocer, or the Employment and Labour
Relations Court shall consider—
a. the procedure adopted by the employer in reaching the decision to dismiss the
employee, the communication of that decision to the employee and the handling of
any appeal against the decision;
c. the extent to which the employer has complied with any statutory requirements
connected with the termination, including the issuing of a certicate under section 51
and the procedural requirements set out in section 41.
26. The behavior and conduct of the respondent, as enumerated by the RW1 and which the respondent
did not deny, of absconding duty to deal with his private construction; engaging in unauthorized
conduct of hiring out the excavator hoe without permission, and pocketing the proceeds; releasing the
vehicle to a fellow employee without authorization and the vehicle being stolen; and misrepresenting
facts leading to him obtaining Ksh. 120,000, and failing to account amounts to gross misconduct under
the Act and the contract signed between the parties. The 1st appellant is covered by section 43 of the
Act as it proved reasons for dismissing the respondent. The section states as follows:
1. In any claim arising out of termination of a contract, the employer shall be required to prove the
reason or reasons for the termination, and where the employer fails to do so, the termination
shall be deemed to have been unfair within the meaning of section 45.
2. The reason or reasons for termination of a contract are the matters that the employer at the
time of termination of the contract genuinely believed to exist, and which caused the employer
to terminate the services of the employee.
27. However, reasons by an employer per se are insucient for the termination to be deemed fair.
Employment has to be terminated following fair procedures as set out in sections 45(1), (2), & (4) of
the Act provide:
b. that the reason for the termination is a fair reason— (i) (ii) related to the employees
conduct, capacity or compatibility; or based on the operational requirements of the
employer; and
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c. that the employment was terminated in accordance with fair procedure.
(3) …
(4) A termination of employment shall be unfair for the purposes of this Part where—
(a) the termination is for one of the reasons specied in section 46, or
(b) it is found out that in all the circumstances of the case, the employer did not act in
accordance with justice and equity in terminating the employment of the employee.
(5) In deciding whether it was just and equitable for an employer to terminate the employment of
an employee, for the purposes of this section, a labor Ocer or the Employment and Labour
Relations Court shall consider—
(a) the procedure adopted by the employer in reaching the decision to dismiss the
employee, the communication of that decision to the employee and the handling of
any appeal against the decision;
(b) the conduct and capability of the employee up to the date of termination.
28. According to RW1, he summoned the respondent on July 23rd, 2012, after failing to nd him on site.
The respondent arrived within 45 minutes and was questioned in the presence of other sta about
the Kshs. 120,000 he obtained by misrepresentation. In our view, the impromptu meeting cannot
be the meeting envisaged by Section 41 of the Act. The law requires the employer to explain to the
employee the alleged misconduct in a language he understands in the presence of another party, and
the employee's defense or representation be heard and considered. Proper notice would be necessary to
enable the employee to prepare for such a hearing; it should not be an impromptu and casual session,
as was the case.
RW1 further stated that after investigations, a notice to show cause was sent to the respondent,
followed by a phone call, after which a termination letter was issued. The respondent disputes that any
investigations were carried out and that the notice to show cause was ever sent to him. Indeed, the 1st
appellant did not prove service of the same.
29. The trial court, in its determination, observed that the alleged show cause letter dated 30th July 2012
required the respondent to show cause why his services should not be terminated by 15th August 2012,
yet the termination letter dated 30th August terminated the respondent’s services with eect from 24th
July 2012. The trial court found the two scenarios curious. So do we. The dates do not add up. We
agree with the respondent that the said show cause letter was an afterthought. Secondly, the purported
investigations were instituted after the meeting on 23rd July 2012. How could the services have been
terminated a day after the respondent was sent on compulsory leave? The notice dated 30th August
terminating service from 24th July was not a month’s notice in accordance with section 44(2) of the
Act, which stipulates the need to terminate a contract upon issuance of a notice.
30. Having noted the steps the 1st appellant took, we nd that the same fell short of the requirements of
section 41 as read with section 45(2)(c) of the Act, despite the reasons stated for termination having
been valid and justiable based on the various acts of misconduct. More was required: a notice of one
month or payment in lieu; in addition the respondent ought to have been informed of the alleged
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misconduct and allowed to defend himself or make representation. This Court, in the case of Ken
Freight (E.A.) vs. Benson K. Nguti (supra), had this to say:
“ The next and more critical question is whether the termination was unfair. It is considered
unfair to terminate the contract of service if the employer fails to demonstrate that the reason
for the termination is valid and fair, that the reason is related to the employee’s conduct,
capacity, compatibility, or is based on the operational requirements of the employer. The
employer must also prove that the termination was in accordance with fair procedure.
Section 43 specically places the burden to prove that the termination was fair on the
employer”.
31. The appellants relied on the case of Ken Freight (E.A.) vs. Benson K. Nguti (supra) to support their
contention that section 45(3) bars the respondent from claiming unfair termination of his services as
he had worked for the 1st appellant for only 6 months. It does not support the argument. The court’s
reference to the said section was obiter dictum. The court did not address itself to the application of
the said section as the matter did not arise in that case. The second complaint related to this ground is
that the trial court did not address the same. Indeed, the trial court did not address the issue at all.
32. Section 45(3) of the Act remains a live issue at the Employment and Labour Relations Court (ELRC),
and seems not to have received consensus fully. The issue has also not been seriously canvassed before
this Court. The High Court extensively discussed the application of the section in the much-cited case
of Samuel G. Momanyi vs. Attorney General & Another [2012] eKLR (Momanyi case), where the
High Court declared section 45(3) of the Act unconstitutional. The section states as follows:
An employee who has been continuously employed by his employer for a period less than
thirteen months immediately before the date of termination shall have the right to complain
that he has been unfairly terminated.
33. While holding the section unconstitutional in the Momanyi case (supra), the High Court (Lenaola J.
(as he then was)) had this to say; -
“19. In my view, there is clear merit in the arguments by the Petitioner. I say so because when
the Employment Act was enacted in 2007, the Constitution 2010 had not been promulgated
and there was necessarily a need to align the provisions of all statutes enacted prior to it, with
the said Constitution. This is what happened for example in South African where upon the
post- apartheid Constitution being enacted, the Basic conditions of Employment Act, 2007
was subsequently passed and its objects were to;
“… give eect to the right to fair labour practices referred to in Section 23(1) of
the Constitution by establishing and making provision for the regulation of basic
conditions of employment; and thereby to comply with the obligations of the
Republic as a member state of eh International Labour organization …”
….
22. I have held as above because I am in agreement with the Petitioner that there is no explanation
oered by either the 2nd Respondent and the Attorney General why a person who has worked
for one (1) year and one 1. month is the only one who can claim that his employment has been
unfairly terminated and that one who has worked for less than that period cannot have the
benet of that claim. I have attempted on my own and without assistance from counsel to get
the justication for such a provision but my eorts have come to naught. I have elsewhere above
reproduced Section 36 of the South African Act and it is easy to see that a person who works for
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less than 24 hours a month may genuinely have no claim for unfair termination but how can
one explain that a person who has worked for a full year and more can be unfairly terminated
and have no recourse to the protection of the Law? Why discriminate in such a blatant manner,
and why close the doors of justice to an otherwise deserving litigant on account of the period
served, which is not legitimately too short to have any lawful meaning?”
34. The Employment Act is seen as a reformist document that moved away from the common law position
that deemed the employer/employee relationship to be on an equal pedestal, to a more realistic
position, where one party (the employer) would set the terms and conditions. The Act embraced good
labour practices. Therefore, section 45(3) of the Act does appear misplaced and not in tandem with
other sections of the Act. It is also not in consonance with the current legal regime in Kenya today. We
also recognize that the Employment Act 2007 came into being 3 years before the Constitution 2010 and
may not be entirely in line with the Constitution. Article 2(4) of the Constitution stipulates that any Law,
including customary law, inconsistent with this Constitution is void to the extent of the inconsistency,
and any act or omission in contravention of this Constitution is invalid.
35. Section 45(3) of the Act is not in tandem with several other Articles of the Constitution:
22.
(1) Every person has the right to institute court proceedings claiming that a right or a
fundamental freedom in the Bill of Rights has been denied, violated or infringed, or
is threatened.
24.
(1) A right or fundamental freedom in the Bill of Rights shall not be limited except by
law, and then only to the extent that the limitation is reasonable and justiable in an
open and democratic society based on human dignity, equality and freedom, taking
into account all relevant factors, including—
d. the need to ensure that the enjoyment of rights and fundamental freedoms
by any individual does not prejudice the rights and fundamental freedoms of
others; and
(d) the relation between the limitation and its purpose and whether there are less
restrictive means to achieve the purpose.
27
(1) Every person is equal before the law and has the right to equal protection and equal
benet of the law.
2. Equality includes the full and equal enjoyment of all rights and fundamental freedoms.
3. Women and men have the right to equal treatment, including the right to equal
opportunities in political, economic, cultural and social spheres.
4. The State shall not discriminate directly or indirectly against any person on any
ground, including race, sex, pregnancy, marital status, health status, ethnic or social
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origin, colour, age, disability, religion, conscience, belief, culture, dress, language or
birth.
5. A person shall not discriminate directly or indirectly against another person on any of
the grounds specied or contemplated in clause (4).
6. To give full eect to the realisation of the rights guaranteed under this Article, the State
shall take legislative and other measures, including armative action programmes and
policies designed to redress any disadvantage suered by individuals or groups because
of past discrimination.
7. Any measure taken under clause (6) shall adequately provide for any benets to be on
the basis of genuine need.
8. In addition to the measures contemplated in clause (6), the State shall take legislative
and other measures to implement the principle that not more than two thirds of the
members of elective or appointive bodies shall be of the same gender
48. The State shall ensure access to justice for all persons and, if any fee is required, it shall be
reasonable and shall not impede access to justice.
36. In the end, we agree with the nding of the trial court that the reasons explained by the 1st appellant,
though valid, it failed to follow the necessary steps in fairly and lawfully terminating the respondent’s
contract and equally failed to issue a proper notice of termination. We have also found that the
appellants cannot nd recourse in section 45(3) of the Act. The same is not aligned with best labor
practices and is against various Articles of the Constitution and was declared so by the High Court.
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