Korir v Mediheal Group of Hospitals (Cause E053 of 2024) [2025] KEELRC 2738 (KLR) (3 October 2025) (Judgment)
Neutral citation:
[2025] KEELRC 2738 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Cause E053 of 2024
MA Onyango, J
October 3, 2025
Republic of Kenya In the Employment and Labour Relations Court at Eldoret Cause E053 of 2024 MA Onyango, J October 3, 2025
Between
Angela Chesang Korir
Claimant
and
Mediheal Group of Hospitals
Respondent
Judgment
1.The Claimant filed the Statement of Claim dated 8th July 2024 seeking the following orders:a.A declaration that the Claimant’s employment was procedurally and substantively unfair and amounted to constructive dismissal (sic)b.A declaration that the Claimant is entitled to be issued with a Certificate of service by the Respondentc.The Claimant be paid her dues and terminal benefits as particularized in the claimd.Interests on (c) at court rates until payment in fulle.Costs of this suitf.Any other relief that this Honourable Court may deem just and fit to grant
2.The Claimant avers that she was employed by the Respondent as a Pharmacist at a monthly salary of Kshs 90,678
3.The Claimant states that she diligently and faithfully served the Respondent until December 2023 when her employment was unfairly terminated.
4.According to the Claimant, the Respondent wrongfully withheld her salaries from July 2023 and subsequently, without notice, unfairly terminated her employment in December 2023.
5.She contends that withholding her salary from August 2023 was intended to frustrate her, amounting to constructive dismissal.
6.The Claimant further avers that throughout her employment, the Respondent failed to pay service pay, leave days, overtime, and dues for work on public holidays.
7.The Claimant asserts that during the subsistence of employment, she went for a 2 months’ unpaid maternity leave instead of the statutory guaranteed three months’ paid maternity leave.
8.The Claimant maintains that the Respondent’s conduct was unfair, malicious, and devoid of procedure.
9.The Claimant particularized her claim against the Respondent as follows: -i.12 months’ salary as compensation forunlawful termination…………………Kshs. 1,088,136ii.5 months’ salary arrears…………..…Kshs 453,390iii.3 months unpaid maternity leave salary…Kshs 272,034iv.1-month salary in lieu of notice………Kshs 90,678v.Service pay………………………………Kshs 906,780vi.Unpaid annual leave dues for 7 years….Kshs 507,797
10.The Respondent was served but failed to file reply to the claim or to attend court. The suit therefore proceeded undefended.
The Evidence
11.The Claimant testified on 10th December 2024 as CW1. She adopted her witness statement recorded on 8th July 2024 as her evidence in chief. She also relied on the documents she filed in support of her case.
12.The Claimant contended that she was employed by the Respondent on 18th July 2016.
13.She reiterated her claim and sought to be compensated for the days she worked without pay. She also sought for her terminal dues.
14.At the close of the Claimant’s case, the court directed that written submissions be filed. The Claimant filed her submissions dated 8th February 2025.
DETERMINATION
15.From the pleadings, the evidence adduced in court and the submissions of the Claimant, the issues that fall for determination are: -i.Whether the Claimant was constructively dismissed by the Respondent.ii.Whether the Claimant is entitled to the reliefs sought.
16.The central question is whether the circumstances under which the Claimant left employment amounted to constructive dismissal.
17.Black’s Law Dictionary (Tenth Edition) defines constructive dismissal or discharge as:
18.The Court of Appeal in the case of Cola East & Central Africa Limited v Maria Kagai Lugaga [2015] eKLR while addressing itself to the issue of constructive dismissal observed as follows;
19.Based on the above authority, the question that this court ought to answer is whether the circumstances under which the Claimant left employment would constitute constructive dismissal.
20.In her testimony, the Claimant averred that her last salary was paid in May 2023 but she continued working until December 2023 without further pay.
21.Withholding of salary strikes at the core of the employment relationship. Section 17(1) of the Employment Act obliges an employer to pay wages as and when they fall due, and subsection (10) criminalizes failure to do so. Further, Article 41 of the Constitution guarantees every worker the right to fair labour practices, which includes timely payment of wages.
22.Kenyan courts have consistently held that non-payment of salary amounts to a repudiatory breach. In Mokaya v Christ the King Parish & another (Cause 386 of 2015) [2024] KEELRC 28 (KLR) (25 January 2024) (Judgment) the court held:-
23.Similarly, in Nyabuti v East African Safari Express Ltd, ELRC Cause E682 of 2022 [2024] KEELRC 2064 (KLR), the Court held that non-payment of salary for three months was sufficient to establish constructive dismissal.
24.In the instant case there is no doubt that the Respondent delayed in paying salaries for its employees for some months. The Claimant however did not mention either in her pleadings or testimony in court that there was termination of her employment. She did not prove that she terminated her employment due to breach of a fundamental obligation of the employment contract by the employer or that the employer unfairly terminated her employment.
25.What seems to have happened in this case is that the Claimant walked out of her employment because her salary had not been paid by the Respondent for some months.
26.For the court to find that there was constructive dismissal, there must be a termination of employment by the employee on grounds of breach of a fundamental term of employment by the employer. That was the essence of the decision in the case of Henry Ochido v NGO Co-ordination Board [2015] eKLR where the court observed as follows:
27.Applying the principles in above decisions, for a court to find that there was constructive dismissal, there must be a termination of employment by the employee on grounds of alleged fundamental breach by the employer. The alleged long delay in payment of salary must be followed by a resignation letter citing the grounds of resignation to be the breach of fundamental terms of the contract by the employer.
28.The Claimant herein did not indicate that she ever sent a letter of resignation to the Respondent. The Claimant’s action of walking out of employment without resigning was as much a breach of her employment terms as was the Respondent’s failure to pay her salary for the cited months. Two wrongs do not make a right and a person who breaches her contract because the other party has breached the contract cannot claim compensation from the other as both parties are in breach.
29.For these reasons I find that the Claimant has not proved constructive dismissal of her employment by the Respondent.
Whether the Claimant is entitled to the reliefs sought.
30.I now turn to the reliefs sought. In her Statement of Claim, the Claimant sought several reliefs which I will address in separate heads.i.A declaration that the Claimant’s employment was procedurally and substantively unfair and amounted to constructive dismissalHaving found that the Claimant did not prove that she was constructively dismissed from employment, she is not entitled to this prayer.ii.A declaration that allowing the Claimant to proceed on only 2 months’ unpaid maternity leave was unfair labour practiceNo evidence was adduced to prove that the Claimant went on maternity leave for which she was not paid or that she was denied maternity leave when she was entitled to the same. In the absence of evidence, this payer cannot issue.iii.12 Months’ salary as compensation for unfair terminationThe Claimant sought for the maximum compensation under this head. Having not proved unfair or constructive dismissal, the Claimant is not entitled to compensation under this head.iv.5 months’ salary arrearsThe only evidence adduced by the claimant in support of her claim for non-payment of her salary for 5 months is an Annual Salary Register Form for the period January to December, 2023. It reflects that the Claimant was paid salary up to November, 2023. This means that the only salary the Claimant is entitled to is for December, 2023 which I award he at Kshs. 90,678.v.3 months’ maternity leave salaryThis prayer has been dealt with under (ii) above.vi.One-month salary in lieu of noticeHaving not proved unfair termination, the Claimant is not entitled to this prayer.vii.Service payFrom the evidence on record, and in particular, the Claimant’s pay slip for November 2022, the Claimant was a contributing member of the National Social Security Fund (NSSF). She is therefore not entitled to service payviii.Leave duesThe Claimant did not adduce evidence in court that she never went on leave during the employment period. This prayer is declined.ix.Certificate of serviceThe Claimant is entitled to be issued with a Certificate of Service pursuant to Section 51(1) of the Employment Act 2007.
31.In conclusion, the claim herein fails except for the prayer for the Respondent to issue a certificate of service to the Claimant.
32.Each party shall bear its costs of this suit.
DATED, DELIVERED AND SIGNED THIS 3RD DAY OF OCTOBER, 2025. M. ONYANGOJUDGE