- Tribunal overturned the debarment due to a flawed and unclear notification timeline.
- The employer could not prove proper delivery or timing of the debarment notice.
- The ruling reinforces the obligation to uphold procedural fairness and protect rights under the FAIS Act.
The Financial Services Tribunal has overturned the debarment of financial adviser Johanna Ctharina Jansen van Rensburg, saying her employer did not follow the proper legal procedures.
This decision not only clears her name but also sends a message to financial services providers. Using backdated notices or WhatsApp messages is no substitute for the transparency and fairness needed when someone’s career and reputation are at stake.
The case focused on a confusing timeline that left Van Rensburg unsure about her legal and professional status. On 13 December 2024, she got a WhatsApp message from Runis Campher Brokers with a photo of a debarment letter. Weeks later, in January 2025, she received a formal debarment notice that was backdated to 6 November 2024. The tribunal pointed out that the employer could not show when or how this notice was actually delivered.
This confusion was important because the Financial Sector Regulation Act gives applicants 60 days from the date they are notified to ask for a review. Without proof of when she was notified, Van Rensburg did not know what her rights were. The tribunal said it was only fair to accept her late application, since she could not be expected to meet deadlines that were never clearly explained.
Why procedures matter
The tribunal also looked at whether the debarment followed Section 14 of the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act. The law says employers must give written notice, explain the reasons, share the debarment policy, and give the adviser a fair chance to respond before taking action. These steps are there to protect people’s jobs and make sure debarment only happens after a fair process.
In Van Rensburg’s case, these protections were not followed. She had a disciplinary hearing in November 2024, but never got a dismissal notice or a notice that she might be debarred. Instead, she found out through a WhatsApp photo and a backdated form.
The tribunal decided this was not a fair or legal process, so it set aside the debarment and sent the case back to the employer for proper review. As the tribunal stated, the process “was not effected lawfully, reasonably and procedurally fairly.”
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