Constitutional Court to consider compensation for domestic workers

Court asked to declare legislation excluding domestic workers from Compensation Fund unconstitutional

10 March 2020 - 08:16 By Ohene Yaw Ampofo-Anti
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Domestic workers protested outside parliament in June last year, demanding access to the Compensation Fund.
Domestic workers protested outside parliament in June last year, demanding access to the Compensation Fund.
Image: GroundUp/Mary-Anne Gontsana

On Tuesday, the Constitutional Court will hear argument in a case which has significant implications for the rights of domestic workers. Domestic workers are challenging legislation which excludes them from claiming from the Compensation Fund for death, injury or disease during their employment.

The Pretoria high court ruled in their favour and the Constitutional Court must now decide whether to uphold the ruling.

The purpose of the fund is to provide compensation to employees who die, are injured or contract disease during the course of their employment, and their dependents. The employee does not have to prove the employer was at fault to be entitled to compensation.

This means the fund provides a speedy and cost-effective alternative to litigation. Instead of suing their employer, employees can lodge a claim with the Compensation Fund. It includes compensation for permanent or temporary disablement, medical costs and death benefits. However, the legislation establishing the Compensation Fund expressly excludes domestic workers from the definition of “employee”.

The plaintiff in the case is Bongi Mahlangu, the daughter of Maria Mahlangu, a domestic worker who is deceased. Maria worked for the De Clerq family for 22 years. On 31 March 2012, she drowned at the De Clerq’s family home while on duty.

Bongi and her son were financially dependent on her and sought compensation. The De Clerq family offered them R5,000, according to court papers. Bongi approached the department of employment & labour to ask whether there was any possibility of compensation. However, she was informed that because her mother was a domestic worker she was not entitled to any claim in terms of the applicable legislation.

She was then approached by a member of the South African Domestic Service and Allied Workers Union (Sadsawu), who encouraged her to take the matter to court. She asked the Pretoria high court to declare the legislation unconstitutional because it excluded domestic workers from the definition of employee.

Mahlangu argued that the legislation was unconstitutional because it was irrational. Also, that it violated the rights to equality, dignity and access to social security.

The high court ruled in her favour. The order was to have immediate effect and be retrospective.

In terms of the constitution, any order declaring legislation unconstitutional must be confirmed by the Constitutional Court to have a final effect. It is for this reason that the decision has been referred to the that court.

Bongi and Sadsawu argue that the legislation is unconstitutional because:

  • The legislation is irrational because it differentiates between domestic workers and all other categories of employee. The purpose of the legislation is to provide social security for workers. There is no legitimate government purpose which is advanced by excluding domestic workers. The state has also failed to establish why this differentiation is legitimate.
  • The legislation amounts to unfair discrimination on several grounds, including gender, race and social origin. This is because the exclusion has a disproportionate impact on poor black people, most of whom are women and girls. The domestic worker sector is the third largest employer of women in the country.
  • Domestic workers are a historically disadvantaged group. Furthermore, their disadvantage is not an accident; it was created by a system of racial discrimination and patriarchy which has resulted in socio-economic inequality.
  • Domestic workers are the only category of employee who are not protected by other pieces of legislation. This fuels the perception that the work which domestic workers do is not “real work” worthy of respect.
  • The exclusion violates the right to social security. The legislation which establishes the Compensation Fund is social security legislation which aims to protect employees against economic and social distress. The exclusion of domestic workers is inconsistent with the state’s obligation to respect, protect and fulfil the right of access to social security.
  • The legislation infringes the right to human dignity because the exclusion denies domestic workers the equal protection and benefit of the law.
  • The exclusion of domestic workers worsens their vulnerable position because they especially require protection because they are employed by private households who are even more likely to be unable to provide compensation in the event of injury or death. The Compensation Fund ensures that employees can claim compensation irrespective of whether their employers can afford to pay.

Mahlangu and Sadsawu want the order to be made retrospective.

The Women’s Legal Centre has made submissions as a friend of the court, asking it to take an approach which addresses the multiple forms of discrimination domestic workers face based on their race, gender and socio-economic status. Historically, domestic work has been stigmatised and consequently undervalued, unrecognised and unpaid, they say. In addition to the constitution, they also rely on international sources, such as the UN Sustainable Development Goals and the ILO Convention on Domestic Work, to support their submissions.

The respondents, the minister of labour, the director-general of the department of employment & labour and the compensation commissioner, concede that the legislation is unconstitutional for the reasons advanced by Mahlangu and Sadsawu. They do not oppose the order sought.

This article was first published by GroundUp.


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