Vodacom 'Please Call Me' case in court: report

06 August 2013 - 11:11 By Sapa
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A pedestrian walks past a Vodacom-branded billboard at a taxi rank near Vodaworld, the headquarters of Vodacom Group Ltd. File photo
A pedestrian walks past a Vodacom-branded billboard at a taxi rank near Vodaworld, the headquarters of Vodacom Group Ltd. File photo
Image: Nadine Hutton/Bloomberg via Getty Images

Vodacom failed in a bid in the High Court in Johannesburg to have the Please Call Me case against them scrapped, according to a report.

Business Report reported on Tuesday that the court denied an attempt by Vodacom to have the case set aside on Monday, and it was expected to resume this week.

Former Vodacom employee Nkosana Makate claims he invented the Please Call Me service in 2000. He said his boss at the time, Philip Geissler, promised in an oral agreement to facilitate remuneration negotiations with the company.

Geissler submitted the idea and said he would negotiate remuneration between Makate and Vodacom once it was developed and the technical and commercial feasibility was ascertained, according to the report.

Makate wants the court to compel Vodacom to discuss a reasonable compensation and first approached the High Court in Johannesburg in 2008, after he sent letters to Vodacom in 2007.

According to the report, Vodacom does not compensate employees for their ideas above normal remuneration.

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