Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 904South Africa
South African National Defence Union and Others v Chief of the South African National Defence Force and Others (46769/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 904 (4 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## South African National Defence Union and Others v Chief of the South African National Defence Force and Others (46769/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 904 (4 September 2024)
South African National Defence Union and Others v Chief of the South African National Defence Force and Others (46769/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 904 (4 September 2024)
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sino date 4 September 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COUR OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number
: 46769/2020
Reportable:
No
Of
interest to other judges: No
Revised:
Yes
Signature
Date:
3/9/2024
In
the matter between:
SOUTH
AFRICAN NATIONAL DEFENCE UNION
First Applicant
KS
SETLOGELO PLUS 33 OTHERS
Second to Thirty Fifth Applicants
and
CHIEF
OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL DEFENCE
First
Respondent
FORCE
MINISTER
OF DEFENCE AND MILITARY VETERANS
Second Respondent
CHIEF
OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN ARMY
Third Respondent
SECRETARY
OF DEFENCE
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
/ their legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading
to the
electronic file on Case Lines. The date of hand-down is deemed
to be 4 September 2024.
TERBLANCHE
AJ
THE
PARTIES
:
[1]
The first applicant is SANDU, a registered military trade
union, as
provided for in Chapter XX, Part 3 of the General Regulations
promulgated under GNR998 of 20 August 1999.
[2]
The second
to thirty fifth applicants were members of the South African National
Defence Force (“
SANDF”
).
[1]
[3]
The respondents are the Chief of the SANDF, the Minister
of Defence
and Military Veterans, the Chief of the South African Army and the
Secretary of Defence.
INTRODUCTION
:
[4]
During 2015 the individual applicants, with some other
members of the
SANDF, were stationed in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (“
the
Congo”
) as part of the SANDF’s involvement in the
United Nations stabilisation mission in the Congo.
[5]
On the
night of 12 September 2015 certain events
[2]
occurred, which resulted in the termination of the applicants’
services on 10 November 2015.
[6]
The applicants and some other SANDF members applied to
Court for the
review of the decision to terminate their services.
[7]
The decision to terminate the services of the applicants
and the
other members was reviewed and set aside by Raulinga J on 30 August
2018. The Court further ordered that “
The second to
forty fourth applicants are reinstated in the service of the SANDF
with full retrospective effect, with retention
of full salaries and
benefits since date of the unlawful termination of their service.
”
[8]
At the time when the aforesaid order was granted by Raulinga
J, the
fixed term contracts concluded between the individual applicants and
the SANDF had already expired due to the effluxion
of time.
[9]
The Department of Defence (“
DOD
”), on the advice
of counsel, distinguished between members whose contracts had already
expired and those that had not.
The group whose contracts had
not yet expired were reintegrated and those whose contracts had
expired were excluded from the reintegration
process. Further,
there was an ongoing discussion between the various legal
representatives of the parties in an endeavour
to find a solution to
the impasse. It was not resolved and gave rise to the present
application.
THE RELIEF SOUGHT
BY THE APPLICANTS
:
[10]
In the
present application, launched by the applicants on 12 August 2020,
the applicants seek an order declaring that, in the absence
of the
commanding officer/s of the second to thirty fifth applicants’
applying for the non-renewal of the said applicants’
fixed term
contracts, the said applicants’ fixed term contracts were
automatically renewed on the same terms and conditions.
[3]
[11]
The
applicants also seek
[4]
that the
second to thirty fifth applicants are reinstated retrospectively with
retention of all salaries and benefits and on the
same terms and
conditions from the date immediately following after the expiry date
of their fixed term contracts.
[12]
During
argument before me Mr van der Westhuizen, for the applicants, made it
clear that it was not an application to hold the respondents
in
contempt of the Order granted by Raulinga J and that it was not an
application for the review of any decision taken or not taken
by the
commanding officer/s concerned. However, Mr van der Westhuizen,
at a later stage, invited me, if I were against the
applicants on the
relief sought for the declaratory order in prayer 1, to consider the
application as an application for the review
of the decision of the
commanding officer, or rather the failure to take a decision, and to
extend the prescribed 180 day period
[5]
in the interests of justice. This request cannot be acceded
to. The application is not an application for the review
of any
decision and an application for the extension of time in terms of
section 9 of PAJA cannot be made informally. There
is, in any
event, nothing before the Court indicating that the interests of
justice require the extension of time sought by the
applicants.
[13]
Mr van der Westhuizen, for obvious reasons, did not persist with the
relief
sought in prayer 2 of the notice of motion that the individual
applicants be reinstated again. In my view, this concession
was
properly made. There is no basis for again making the Order
already made by Raulinga J and there is furthermore no case
made out
in the founding papers for the reinstatement of the applicants.
[14]
Mr van der Westhuizen for the applicants thus confined himself to the
relief
sought in prayer 1, i.e. the declarator to the effect that the
applicants’ fixed term contracts were automatically reviewed
on
the same terms and conditions as applied at the time of the expiry of
their contracts.
[15]
The respondents, in their belatedly delivered answering affidavit,
explained
that the individual applicants could not be brought back
into the military system because of the fact that their contracts had
expired. The respondents contended that the applicants’
contracts were reinstated as per the Court Order granted by
Raulinga
J until the last day of their contracts. The respondents
tendered to pay compensation for the unexpired contract
periods to
the relevant applicants.
[16]
In the answering affidavit the respondents further explained the
difference
between the so-called Military Skills Development System
(“
MSDS
”) contract, where members are
enlisted within the SANDF only for the purpose of receiving military
skills for a period
of 2 years (and no further contracts are given to
them unless so selected through the contracts selection boards by
their respective
arms of service), and the Core Service System
(“
CSS
”) contracts awarded to members for a short
or a mid-term contract for a period of 1 to 10 years after having
served as MSDS
members.
[17]
In terms of the CSS contracts the DOD has an option of renewing such
a CSS
contract for a further fixed term.
[18]
The CSS / fixed term contracts provide as follows:
“
2.
The member shall be employed in the medium service term for the CSS
for 5 years, which term shall
lapse upon the last day of the month
following the day the member completed the agreed years of service.
3.
There is no obligation on the part of government to offer a
subsequent contract to the member
on the lapsing of this contract.
”
[19]
Section 59(1)(b) of the Defence Act, 42 of 2002 (“
the
Defence Act”
>) on which the respondents based their decision
not to reinstate the individual applicants, provides as follows:
“
59.
Termination of service of members of the Regular Force –
(1)
The service of a member of the regular force is terminated –
…
(b)
on the termination of any fixed term contract concluded between the
member and the department
or on the expiry of any extended period of
such contract;
…”
[20]
The respondents contend that they implemented the Court Order granted
by Raulinga
J by paying or tendering to pay those applicants whose
contracts had expired until the last day of their contracts.
This,
the respondents contend, amounted to effectively reinstating
those applicants in line with the Court Order until the expiry of
their contracts. It was, however, not possible to reinstate the
applicants once their temporary appointments had terminated.
[21]
The application was not prosecuted with any degree of urgency by any
of the
parties and for various reasons, explained by the respondents
in their application in terms of Rule 6(5)(e) for leave to deliver
a
further affidavit. The respondents also applied in prayers 6
and 7 of their counter application for an order that the Order
of
Raulinga J is incapable of being complied with for failure to comply
with the doctrine of effectivity applicable to court orders
and that
a compensatory order be issued in terms of which the respondents be
ordered to pay each applicant (to the extent that
any applicant has
to date not received payment) such amount, which the applicants would
have earned including all benefits until
the date of expiry of their
respective contracts.
[22]
I allowed the further affidavit in the interest of justice. The
further
information provided in the supplementary affidavit and the
annexures thereto provide important information necessary for the
decision
of the issue between the parties, some of which information
should have been contained in the applicants’ founding
affidavit.
THE
ISSUES
:
[23]
The only remaining issue in respect of the applicants’
application is
whether, as a result of the commanding officer’s
failure to apply for the non-renewal of the members’ fixed term
contract,
the contract is renewed automatically.
[24]
The issues in respect of the respondents’ counter application,
are whether:
[24.1.]
The Order issued by Raulinga J is incapable of being complied with;
and
[24.2.]
Whether a compensatory order in terms of which the respondents be
ordered to make payments to the
applicants should be ordered.
[25]
I deal separately with each of these issues hereinbelow.
The
automatic renewal of the contracts
:
[26]
Mr van der Westhuizen emphasised that the issue that lies at the
heart of the
dispute between the applicants and the respondents is
whether the failure of the commanding officer to decide not to renew
the
fixed term contracts resulted in the automatic renewal of those
contracts.
[27]
It is common cause that the policy “
PROCESS AND PROCEDURES
”
of the management of the separation of officials from the DOD, which
policy is part of the conditions of service, also of
the individual
applicants, in terms of the
Defence Act, finds
application to the
non-renewal of fixed term contracts. Clause 17 of the policy
provides (in relevant part) as follows: “
Whenever the need
exists for the non-renewal of a fixed term contract of member the
following administrative actions must be effected
(Defence Act,
section 59(1)(b) (Reference C):…
”.
[28]
The said clause 17 then prescribes the administrative action to be
followed
in the event of the commanding officer being of the view
that the fixed term contract ought not to be renewed.
[29]
From the provisions of clause 17, the applicants deduce that in the
event of
the administrative actions not being effected, it follows
that the contract is renewed automatically.
[30]
In my view, it does not follow. The fact that a procedure is
prescribed,
which is only to be followed in the event of the
commanding officer being of the view that the contract ought not to
be renewed,
does not have as a corollary that in the absence of the
procedure being followed, the contract is renewed automatically.
[31]
The provisions of the policy cannot override the clear and
unambiguous provisions
of
section 59(1)(b)
of the
Defence Act.
It
also does not override the CSS contract which in terms provides
for the lapsing of the contract or the expiry of the term thereof.
A fortiori
the case of the MSDS contract which cannot be
renewed. It, in any event, goes without saying that in in the
event of the DOD
intending to renew the contract, on such terms and
conditions and for such a duration as it deems fit, there is no need
to comply
with the onerous provisions of clause 17. Clause 17
is clearly intended to protect the member in the event of the
commanding
officer being of the view that the contract should not be
renewed. It provides a separate administrative procedure, which
must be followed but which does not change the law on the contracts.
[32]
I can find no support for the argument in favour of an automatic
renewal.
There is no provision to this effect in the policy
and, moreover, it is indeed contrary to the provisions of
section
59(1)(b)
of the
Defence Act and
the contracts themselves. It
also does not make sense to give the DOD the option to either renew
the contract or not and
to then stipulate that in the absence of a
failure to effect the administrative action prescribed by clause 17
of the policy, that
the agreement would be renewed automatically.
It immediately raises the question as to the duration of the renewed
contract
and the terms of the renewed contract.
[33]
Apart from the fact that the interpretation of clause 17 contended
for by the
applicants is untenable, such an interpretation would also
conflict with the provisions of
section 59(1)(b)
of the
Defence Act
and
would clearly be
ultra vires
.
[34]
I must point out that the respondents, in their answering affidavit,
admitted
the automatic renewal of the CSS contracts. In
argument Mr Avvakoumides S.C. argued that the admission was
incorrect, that
it was an admission of a conclusion of law and that
it was therefore not binding on the Court. I agree. For
the aforestated
reasons no admission by a party which is clearly in
conflict with the relevant provision of the
Defence Act can
be
binding on the Court.
[35]
Both
counsel referred me to the judgment in
Minister
of Defence v Xulu
,
[6]
in support of their arguments. The Judgment of Wallis JA, far
from lending support to the argument for the applicants, in
fact
destroys that argument. In paragraph [43] of the Judgment
Wallis JA held that the policy was correct to describe as
administrative action the steps it prescribed to be taken when
considering the non-renewal of the fixed term contract of a member
of
the SANDF. It was further held in paragraph [46] that the
decision not to renew Mr Xulu’s fixed term contract as
a member
of the SANDF constituted administrative action, which was subject to
review in terms of
section 6
of PAJA. This, in itself, puts
paid to the contention that there was an automatic renewal of the
contracts. The remedy
available to the applicants was to apply
for the review of the decision, or the failure to take a decision in
terms of
section 6
of PAJA. Had such an application been
successful, the decision not to renew the applicants’ contracts
could have been
set aside with ancillary relief granted to the
applicants. That has, however, not happened and the applicants
must accordingly
stand or fall by their argument that there was an
automatic renewal of the fixed term contracts.
[36]
It is necessary to point out that the MSDS contracts of the relevant
applicants
would have expired on 31 December 2015. Those
contracts were for a fixed term of 2 years and, as pointed out
hereinbelow,
could not have been extended, but if they were capable
of being extended, and even if they were extended for a further full
2 year
term, such extended period would have elapsed by 31 December
2017. That date has also come and gone, and it certainly cannot
be seriously contended that those contracts have since then been
extended automatically on 3 more occasions.
[37]
It is made clear in the Letter of Appointment of Mr S Simonyana,
Annexure “EZM6”
to the supplementary affidavit, that the
appointment in terms of the MSDS contract is a temporary appointment
with effect from
12 January 2014 to 31 December 2015. It also
appears from the application for Military Skills Development Training
in the
South African National Defence Force of Mr Setlogelo, the
second applicant, Annexure “EZM5” to the supplementary
affidavit,
that:
[37.1.]
The appointment is a temporary appointment; and
[37.2.]
That it is for a maximum period of 24 months – thus clearly not
extendible.
[38]
It is also made clear that if the MSDS member is needed, he will be
offered
employment in the regular force. This demonstrates that
the MSDS contracts were temporary contracts and that the members
appointed in terms of the MSDS contracts were not members of the
regular force. They were temporary members, not entitled
to any
extensions of contract as of right.
[39]
The CSS contracts stand on a slightly different footing. Those
contracts
are for 1 to 10 years in respect of regular force members.
The provisions of clause 17 of the policy clearly find application
to
these members. To contend, however, that there was an automatic
renewal of these contracts due to the failure by the commanding
officer to follow the administrative action prescribed by the policy,
is untenable on the basis already discussed hereinabove.
[40]
In my view therefor, there is no basis for the contention that there
was an
automatic renewal of the contracts of the applicants and the
applicants are not entitled to the relief sought by them.
The
enforceability of the reinstatement order
:
[41]
Raulinga J granted the reinstatement order on 30 August 2018.
By then
the MSDS contracts had already expired and had not been
automatically renewed.
[42]
The respondents submit that they implemented the Order by paying or
agreeing
to pay monetary compensation to those applicants.
[43]
All the CSS contracts that had not expired at the time of the
granting of the
Order by Raulinga J, have since expired and have not
been automatically renewed.
[44]
The order was to reinstate the applicants under the same conditions
that applied
to their employment at the time of the decision that was
ultimately reviewed and set aside. Those conditions included
the
expiry dates of their contracts. Those dates have come and
gone, thereby rendering the Order of Raulinga J with purely financial
consequences.
[45]
There is no basis suggested in terms whereof I am empowered to
further extend
those expired contracts beyond the original expiry
dates.
[46]
The respondents are accordingly correct that the Order of Raulinga J
would
be complied with by the payment of monetary compensation for
the unexpired terms of those contracts.
The
monetary compensation payable
:
[47]
The application by the applicants could have been dismissed on the
basis of
my findings hereinabove and had I not allowed the
supplementary affidavit and the counter application to be delivered,
I would
have had no basis for the granting of the relief sought in
paragraph 7 of the notice of counter application. It was,
inter
alia
, for this reason that I deemed it appropriate and in the
interest of justice to allow the delivery of the further affidavit
and
to allow the counter application to be prosecuted.
[48]
Mr Avvakoumides S.C. for the respondents tendered the payment of
compensation
and it is accordingly not necessary to further consider
the basis for the making of such an order. I am of the view
that
there is a sound basis for the order, as discussed by Wallis JA
in the
Xulu
judgment and I am of the view that the tender by
the respondents is an appropriate tender.
[49]
I am accordingly of the view that it is appropriate to grant the
order relating
to monetary compensation sought by the respondents, in
the terms offered by the respondents.
COSTS
:
[50]
I have already ordered the respondents to pay the costs associated
with the
condonation application and the application for leave to
deliver further affidavits in terms of
Rule 6(5)(e).
[51]
Although the applicants have been unsuccessful with the relief sought
by them,
they have, largely due to the responsible attitude displayed
by the respondents, enjoyed a measure of success in that they stand
to receive compensation for the unexpired period of their contracts.
[52]
Mr Avvakoumides S.C. also indicated that his instructions were not to
ask for
costs against the applicants.
[53]
I accordingly do not intend to grant any costs order in addition to
the costs
order already granted.
THE
ORDER
:
[54]
I accordingly grant the following Order:
1.
The respondents’ various condonation
applications are granted,
and the respondents are ordered to pay the applicants’ costs in
respect of such condonation applications.
2.
The applicants’ main application is
dismissed with no order as
to costs.
3.
The respondents’ counter application
is granted with no order
as to costs in the following terms:
3.1.
The respondents are jointly and severally ordered to pay compensation
to the
second to thirty third applicants, who held Core Services
Contracts (CSS), to the extent that any such applicants have not
received
compensation, for the period commencing on the date of their
administrative discharge to the date upon which their CSS contracts
would have expired.
3.2.
The respondents are jointly and severally ordered to pay compensation
to the
second to thirty third applicants who at the time of their
administrative discharge, were employed under Military Skills
Development
Systems (MSDS), to the extent that any such applicants
have not received compensation, for the period commencing on the date
of
their administrative discharge to the date upon which their MSDS
contracts would have expired.
3.3.
All payments that may be due under this order shall be made within 30
(thirty)
calendar days of this order, subject to each relevant
applicant providing copies of their certified identity documents and
confirmation
of banking details to Defence Legal Services Division at
A[...] Building, 3[...] Cnr Nossob and Boeing Streets, Erasmuskloof,
Pretora
East.
3.4.
The amounts which may be due to the CSS and MSDS members shall be
agreed upon
between the parties within 30 (thirty) calendar days of
having furnished the required documents mentioned in paragraph 3.3
above,
failing which such amounts shall be determined summarily on
the written presentations of the parties by an arbiter chosen by them
or, in the absence of agreement, appointed by the chair for the time
being of the Pretoria Bar.
TERBLANCHE
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
PRETORIA
Heard
:
20 August 2024
Delivered
:
4 September 2024
APPEARANCES
:
Applicants’
counsel:
GL
van der Westhuizen
Applicants’
attorneys:
Griesel
Breytenbach Attorneys
Respondents’
counsel:
G
Avvakoumides S.C.; SP Nkosi
Respondents’
attorneys:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
[1]
It is alleged
that they were regular members but this is disputed, as
will appear
hereinbelow.
[2]
The
applicants refer to it as the breaking of a curfew whilst the
respondents
call it mutiny.
[3]
Notice of
motion, Prayer 1
[4]
Notice of
motion, Prayer 2
[5]
Section 7 of
the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000 (“
PAJA
”)
[6]
(337/2017)
[2018] ZASCA 65
(24 May 2018)
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