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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 1055
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## South African Medical Association Trade Union and Another v South African Medical Association NPC (A104/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1055 (25 October 2024)
South African Medical Association Trade Union and Another v South African Medical Association NPC (A104/23)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1055 (25 October 2024)
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sino date 25 October 2024
FLYNOTES:
LABOUR – Union –
Protection
of membership
–
Trade
union membership is not equivalent to being a business client –
Trade union is entitled to communicate with its
members –
Does not act unlawfully in doing so and is incapable of being
restrained in law – Trade union does
not compete unlawfully
when it seeks to protect continuation of trade union membership –
Order cast in wide and unspecified
terms defeats doctrine of
effectiveness – Appeal upheld.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
Number: A104/23
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 24/10/24
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
SOUTH AFRICAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION
TRADE
UNION
First Appellant
GERHARD
VOSLOO N. O
Second Appellant
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION NPC
First Respondent
Summary: Appeal
against an urgent order interdicting and restraining the appellants
to unlawfully or “otherwise”
interfere with the business
of the respondent by distributing any communication about the
business; interfering with “unspecified”
rights;
unlawfully competing; and taking any steps “whatsoever”
to encourage cancelation or renewal of membership.
An order cast in
wide and unspecified terms defeats the doctrine of effectiveness.
Trade union membership is not equivalent to
being a business client.
A trade union is entitled to communicate with its members. In doing
so, a trade union does not act unlawfully
and is incapable of being
restrained in law. A trade union does not compete unlawfully when it
seeks to protect continuation of
trade union membership. Held: (1)
The appeal is upheld. Held: (2) The order of the Court below is set
aside and replaced with an
order dismissing the application with
costs.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
(POTTERILL, J AND ENGELBRECHT, AJ CONCURRING)
Introduction
[1]
This
is an appeal against an order issued by a single judge of this
Division. As an opening gambit, it suffices to regurgitate what
the
Labour Court in
Ntlokose
v National Union of Metal Workers of South Africa (NUMSA) and Others
(
Ntlokose
)
[1]
said, which somewhat sets the tone of the present matter on appeal:
A
trade union is a continuous association of wage-earners for the
purpose of maintaining or improving the conditions of their
employment
[2]
. Thus trade unions
do
not
exist for the leaders but for the workers
.
The more that social democracy develops, grows, and becomes stronger,
the more the enlightened masses of workers will take their
own
destinies, the leadership of their own movement, the determination of
its
direction
into their own hands
[3]
.
The masses are in reality their own leaders, dialectically creating
their own development process
[4]
.
[2]
On 16 February 2023, the Supreme Court of
Appeal (SCA) (per Zondi and Weiner JJA) granted the appellants, the
South African Medical
Association Trade Union (SAMATU) and Gerhard
Vosloo N.O leave to appeal against the order made by Bam AJ on 9
March 2021. The written
reasons for the impugned order were provided
by Bam AJ on 28 May 2021. Having obtained leave to appeal, on or
about 6 March 2023,
the appellants launched the present appeal.
The present appeal is opposed by the South African Medical
Association Non-profit
Company (SAMA NPC).
Pertinent background
facts to the present appeal
[3]
The acrimony between the SAMATU and the
SAMA NPC comes a long way. For the purposes of this judgment, it
shall be obsolete to chronicle
the whole controversy appertaining the
present appeal. A brief summation of the salient facts shall suffice.
More than a century
ago, in 1927, the SAMA NPC was registered as a
legal entity and attracted medical professionals as its members.
Owing to the fact
that the SAMA NPC was unable to represent its
members in labour disputes, on 07 October 2002, SAMATU was
established and registered
as a trade union in terms of the
provisions of section 96(7)(a) of the Labour Relations Act, 1995
(LRA).
[4]
During 2016, the relationship between the
SAMA NPC and the SAMATU began to show cracks and took a downward
spiral. Such led to resolutions
taken by the SAMA NPC to dissolve the
SAMATU. Ultimately, on 19 October 2019, the SAMATU was placed under
administration within
the contemplation of section 103A of the LRA.
The second appellant, Mr Gerhard Vosloo was appointed as an
administrator of the
SAMATU. That notwithstanding, the fight between
the SAMA NPC and the SAMATU continued unabated. Such controversy
culminated in
an order issued by Van Niekerk J, as he then was,
sitting at the Labour Court in Johannesburg, which order effectively
directed
the SAMA NPC to provide the SAMATU with certain records and
information as well as directing it to remit subscriptions and levies
in terms of section 13 of the LRA to the SAMATU.
[5]
Additionally, the Labour Court declared
that the SAMA NPC members in respect of whom stop order deductions
are made through the
PERSAL payroll system are and remain members of
the SAMATU. The SAMA NPC unsuccessfully attempted to overturn the
order of the
Labour Court. Despite various court orders, the fight
continued and allegations and counter-allegations of poaching each
other’s
members were made. Ultimately, on 9 February 2021, the
SAMATU penned and distributed a circular to its members, which
ignited the
urgent proceedings that came before Bam AJ.
[6]
The proceedings before Bam AJ were
initiated by way of a motion on or about 23 February 2021. The SAMA
NPC sought to be heard on
an urgent basis and to be granted
interdictory reliefs. The SAMA NPC specifically sought an injunction
against the alleged unlawful
interfering with its business by
distributing communication about its business; interfering with its
rights; encouraging its members
to cancel or not to renew membership.
As indicated at the dawn of this judgment, the SAMA NPC, obtained the
order which is now
the subject of the present appeal.
Analysis of the issues
arising from this appeal
[7]
Before this Court engages with the merits
of this appeal, it suffices to mention that while the SAMA NPC
contends that the appellants
interfered with its business, when
regard is had to the contents of the offending circular, this case
involves union membership
as opposed to business activity of any
form. In order to contextualise the present appeal, it behoves this
Court to consider the
activities of both warring entities and the
legal framework within which they both operate.
The SAMA NPC and its
“business” activities
[8]
The SAMA NPC is a non-profit Company.
Regard being had to its memorandum of incorporation (memorandum), its
main objectives may
be summarised as, (a) represent the medical
profession; (b) serve the needs of the members to enable them to
function optimally
as professionals; (c) promote certain listed
interests; (d) regulate relations between members and employers’
organisation;
and (e) various ancillary objectives aimed at
influencing, shaping and promoting certain policy matters in the
health profession.
[9]
In ordinary parlance, a business means a
commercial activity. Commercial means making or intending to make
profit. A profit means
a financial gain. Regard being had to that,
the SAMA NPC is not an entity involved in commercial activity and
does not exist for
financial gain. Members of the SAMA NPC do not
constitute
per
se
a
business component.
[10]
In terms of the memorandum, two classes of
members are contemplated; namely voting and non-voting members.
Unlawful competition
encompasses a wide range of unfair and deceptive
business practices aimed at gaining an unfair advantage over
competitors. It includes
actions that violate trade laws,
intellectual property rights or the principle of good faith and
honest dealing in business.
[11]
Seeking to protect membership of a trade
union, cannot be equated to any form of business practice, let alone
one that is deceptive.
It cannot be seen as offending good faith or
honest business dealing. Inasmuch as the SAMA NPC and the SAMATU may
target the same
member, given their functions and purposes, they are
incapable of competing for a member. In fact, one member may be a
member of
both. The one is a professional body with different
objectives and the other is a trade union advancing the interest of a
member
differently.
[12]
This is typically not a case of two trade
unions fighting over organising same members. Having said that, this
Court does appreciate
that if the SAMA NPC, seek to perform the same
trade union functions as performed by the SAMATU as a trade union,
then, and only
then, there could be a speak of competition. In a
business world competition arises in a situation where one entity is
trying to
be more successful than another. In my view, the factual
situation in this case, which hinges entirely on the contents of the
9
February 2021 circular, does not give rise to competition properly
understood. In short, the SAMATU in the circular seeks to warn
its
members of being misled.
[13]
Thus, the business activity of the SAMA NPC
is to advance and promote the interests of its own members. To the
extent that it may
be argued that members of the SAMA NPC resources
or financially sustain the SAMA NPC, in a case like this, it was
incumbent for
the SAMA NPC to allege and prove that the members to
whom the circular of 9 February 2021 was directed were its members.
Nowhere
in its founding papers does the SAMA NPC allege that the
recipients of the circular were its members. In alleging unlawfulness
on the part of the SAMATU, the SAMA NPC testified thus:
“
A
mere
reading of the circular makes it clear that SAMATU is attempting to
convince
SAMA members
not to renew their membership
with SAMA.”
[14]
This allegation is not supported by the
contents of the circular. The circular reads: “
Dear
SAMATU Member
” as opposed to
“
Dear SAMA NPC member
”.
Thus, there is no way in which a circular directed to the SAMATU
members can convince a SAMA NPC member to do anything.
If anything,
if a member of the SAMA NPC fortuitously received the circular, if he
or she is not also a trade union member, he
or she will simply ignore
the circular. Members of both entities are literate and actually
professionals. They cannot be lured
into oblivion by a mere read of
the circular. A further difficulty with the above allegation is that
nowhere does the circular
remotely suggest that the SAMA NPC members
must not renew their membership. Accordingly, even if this Court were
to accept that
members of the SAMA NPC constitutes a business
activity, there is no objective evidence to support any interference
with members
of the SAMA NPC.
The
SAMATU and its business activities
.
[15]
In terms of section 4(1)(b) of the LRA,
every employee has the right to join a trade union subject to its
constitution. Therefore,
every employee who joins a trade union is
constrained by the terms of its constitution. In terms of section
95(5)(b) of the LRA,
a constitution of a trade union must prescribe
qualification for, and admission to membership. Section 4(2)(a) of
the LRA provides
that every member has the right subject to the
constitution of that trade union to participate in the lawful
activities of the
trade union.
[16]
Section 12(2) of the LRA entitles a
representative trade union to hold meetings with its members. This
organisational right simply
implies an entitlement to communicate
with members of a trade union. Communication may be in a form of face
to face or physical
meeting or written communication. It is common
cause that the SAMATU is a registered trade union. The legal effect
thereof is that
it becomes a body corporate in terms of section 97(1)
of the LRA. Section 95(5)(f) of the LRA provides that the
constitution of
a trade union must provide for membership fees and
the method of determining membership fees and other payments by
members. Undoubtedly,
membership fees are the financial nerve of any
trade union. As correctly found by the Labour Court, the membership
fees collected
from the members of the SAMATU are transmittable to
it. Van Niekerk J has already declared that all the SAMA NPC members
in respect
of whom deductions were and continue to be made through a
PERSAL payroll system are and remain members of the SAMATU.
[17]
Based on the order of the Labour Court any
person in respect of whom deductions are made through a payroll
system is a member of
the SAMATU. This must be so because in terms of
section 13 of the LRA, deductions of subscriptions and levies by an
employer is
an organisational right available to a registered trade
union. The SAMA NPC is not a registered trade union as such it is not
entitled
to any organisational rights as provided for in the LRA. It
must follow axiomatically that the SAMATU, in terms of its
constitution
can only be joined by workers and or employees. A
professional medical practitioner, if not employed in the sector
within which
the SAMATU may organise in terms of its constitution,
such medical practitioner may not join the SAMATU. However, by virtue
of
being a medical practitioner, he or she may join the SAMA NPC.
Alleged unlawful
activities
[18]
This allegation of unlawfulness constitutes
the merits of the present appeal. The SAMA NPC, hinged its case for
an interdict and
unlawful competition claim on alleged injurious
falsehood paddled by the SAMATU in the 9 February circular. In motion
proceedings,
an applicant makes its case in the founding papers.
Earlier, in this judgment, the allegation that the SAMATU is
attempting to
convince the SAMA NPC members not to renew membership
was dealt with. During argument, counsel for the SAMA NPC submitted
that
although there is no express statement in support of this
allegation, this Court must find that such is implied. Sadly, this
Court
does not agree with such a submission. It cannot be implied
that a correspondence addressed to members of the SAMATU could be
attempting
to convince non-addressees. It is simply illogical to
conclude as such.
[19]
The SAMA NPC allege that the circular is
factually incorrect. Other than making this bald allegation of
factual incorrectness, no
evidence was provided in support of the
allegation. In the circumstances of this matter, it is difficult to
understand how a trade
union can communicate incorrect statement to
its members. Even if what was communicated to the members of the
SAMATU is factually
incorrect, such has nothing to do with the SAMA
NPC. The allegation of factual incorrectness is denuded of any
support. Having
scoured the founding affidavits together with the
allegations made by the SAMATU, which are not far-fetched, the
allegations of
unlawful activities remain unsupported and did not
justify an order sought in motion proceedings. What emerges from the
founding
papers is an interpretation of the contents of the circular.
Counsel for the SAMA NPC, unerringly conceded that the circular does
not expressly states what the SAMA NPC allege to be falsehood. When
quizzed by the bench on this significant aspect, counsel resorted
to
implication.
[20]
A
term in a written document, contract included, is implied if it is an
unexpressed provision inferred by a Court from the expressed
terms
and the surrounding circumstances. It requires application of the
“officious bystander test”
[5]
.
On application of this test, this Court is unable to conclude that
such an implication proposed by counsel can be made.
[21]
The judgment of the Court below is, with
respect, difficult to comprehend. It became common cause that the
SAMA NPC had issued renewal
of membership notices to some of the
members of the SAMATU. It also became common cause that the renewal
of membership was for
the membership of the SAMA NPC and not the
SAMATU. In the 9 February circular, the SAMATU, as it should, advised
its members that
such a renewal notice is not from them. This is
factually correct.
[22]
The SAMATU informs its members that it
views the undisputed sending of renewal notices to its members as a
motive to coerce termination
of the SAMATU membership and joining the
SAMA NPC. A motive is a reason for doing something. In other words,
what the SAMATU was
communicating to its members is what it considers
to be the reason of its members receiving the renewal notices from
the SAMA NPC,
when it cannot do such an act towards its members.
Clearly the SAMA NPC disagrees with the reason. This disagreement
brought to
the fore a dispute of fact as to what the reason for
renewal notice was. In recognising this clear dispute of fact, the
Court below
states the following:
“
15
Could the content of the renewal notice, as reproduced in paragraph
12 of this judgment
[6]
,
be
said to be an act of coercing
members of SAMATU to terminate their membership with the latter in
desperate attempt to remain relevant on the part of SAMA?
[23]
After dealing extensively with the pleaded
case of the SAMATU in support of its claim for the motive, the
learned judge does not
reject those claims as being far-fetched,
regard being had that the learned judge was dealing with motion
proceedings. Instead
the learned judge concludes thus:
“
19
… Besides, the issue before this Court concerns SAMATU’s
notice viewed against SAMA’s renewal
notice, which, as I have
already found with respect to the latter, contains nothing amounting
to the conduct described in SAMATU’s
notice… I conclude
that the notice must be read for what it is
,
falsehood published by SAMATU…”
[24]
It is unclear as to why the learned judge
reached a conclusion on falsehood particularly at the back of the
following finding made
before considering the pleaded version of the
SAMATU:
“
15
… Nothing in the
content of the
cover letter
of the renewal notice can,
by any stretch of imagination,
be
calculated to coerce members to terminate their membership
with SAMATU…”
[25]
It
is more apparent than not that the above finding was reached by an
interpretation process as opposed to considering the facts
as
admitted by the applicant as well as those averred by the SAMATU. It
is indeed so that an interpretation is a matter of law
and not fact.
It involves a consideration of language, context and purpose.
[7]
However, the enquiry was not directed at an intention of the parties
but the factual question of falsehood. Falsehood is the state
of
being untrue. Determining falsehood involves a factual enquiry.
Nowhere in the reasons for the order does this Court find
an
engagement in a factual enquiry on this issue of falsehood. To the
extent that the Court below reached a conclusion that the
contents of
the circular in so far as the motive of the renewal notice being sent
to the members of the SAMATU is concerned amounts
to falsehood, the
Court below erred. On the contrary, falsehood as a fact was not
established.
[26]
This
Court finds that there is no falsehood contained in the circular of 9
February 2021. The statement that the SAMA NPC cannot
represent
members on employer and employee relationship related matters since
it has no legal standing in the public service to
function as a trade
union, is not only factually correct, it is also legally correct.
Section 200(1) of the LRA buttresses this
point. The learned judge
seems to have adopted, with respect, what appears to be contextually
a cavalier approach. When the SAMATU
refers to legal standing such
must be understood to mean exactly that. It is an equivalent of a
locus
standi
challenge mentioned in the preceding sentences in the self-same
circular. The Constitutional Court has already concluded in
Numsa
v Lufil Packages (Isithebe) and others
(
Lufil
)
[8]
that where the constitution of a trade union does not allow it to
organise in a particular sector, it cannot admit members from
the not
allowed sector. Such a statement of lack of legal standing cannot be
dismissed by simply having regard to what voluntary
associations
could do. Having done, the Court below was in error.
[27]
Something rings hollow if it seems
untruthful nor insincere. The statement about lack of legal standing,
viewed textually; contextually
and purposively cannot ring hollow.
Thus, the learned judge also erred in that regard. Having reached a
conclusion that there is
nothing that equates falsehood in the
notice, it is unnecessary for this Court to consider the claim’s
remaining elements
of intention; loss; and causation. Accordingly,
the conduct of the SAMATU as expressed by the notice of 9 February
2021 is not
unlawful.
Was the SAMA entitled
to a final relief of an interdict?
[28]
Although
the issue of hearing the application as one of urgency has not been
squarely challenged before us, this Court expresses
doubt as to
whether the requirements of rule 6(12)(a)-(b) of the Uniform Rules
were met. Motion proceedings are not suitable where
a final relief is
sought
[9]
.
[29]
Since
the decision of
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
[10]
,
the discretionary remedy of interdict existed to prevent any
continuation of unlawfulness. More recently, the Constitutional Court
in
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[11]
,
felicitously stated the law as follows:
“
An
interdict is an order by a court prohibiting or compelling the doing
of a particular act for the purposes of
protecting
legally enforceable right,
which is
threatened by continuing or anticipated harm.
…
In granting an interdict,
the court must exercise its
discretion judicially upon
consideration of all the facts and circumstances. An interdict is
‘not a remedy for the past invasion
of rights: it is concerned
with the present
and the future’. The past invasion
should be addressed by an action of damages. An interdict is
appropriate only when future
injury is feared.”
[30]
This Court has already reached a conclusion
that the issuing of the circular does not amount to an unlawful act.
There is no proven
falsehood in the contents of the circular. As
demonstrated above, the SAMATU as a trade union has a right to
communicate with its
members about any matter that seeks to threaten
the financial nerve (union membership) of the trade union. This right
stems deep
from the constitutional right of workers to participate in
the activities and programmes of a trade union. This right is also
realised
by every member of a trade union having a right, subject to
the constitution of the trade union, to participate in the lawful
activities
of the trade union. It is a lawful activity of a trade
union to, in line with its constitution, protect its membership where
it
is threatened.
[31]
When a trade union seeks to protect its
union membership which is under a threat of any nature, it cannot be
said that there is
unlawful competition. Trade unions are
institutions that owe their origin from the Constitution. Section
23(4) of the Constitution
specifically accords trade unions a right
to determine their own programmes and activities and the right to
organise. The right
to organise is illusionary if trade unions are
unable to protect their membership base when threatened. Section 25
and 26 of the
LRA provides a clear intention that a membership base
is important to trade unionism and is worthy of protection.
The
doctrine of effectiveness
[32]
Section
165(5) of the Constitution provides that an order or decision issued
by a Court binds all persons to whom it applies. This
provision
enjoins a Court to issue an effective judgment. A judgment is
effective if it is clear and executable. Usage of statements
like
“otherwise” and “interfering with rights of the
applicant” renders an order of Court unintelligible,
ambiguous
and ultimately ineffective. In
Hulisani
Viccel Sithangu v Capricorn District Municipality
(
Hulisani
)
[12]
,
the Court concluded that Court orders are required to be clear and
unambiguous
[13]
. An order
prohibiting interference of rights that are not specified is
ambiguous and unclear. Nevertheless, this Court interferes
with the
order of the Court below on the basis that it was not justified on
application of the
Plascon
Evans
principle; namely a relief should be granted only if the facts stated
by the respondent, together with the admitted facts in the
applicant’s affidavit justifies the order. On the facts of the
present appeal the principle was not satisfied.
Conclusions
[33]
In summary, the Court below erred in
concluding that there was any falsehood in the circular of 9 February
2021. Since no
falsehood was demonstrated the actions of the
SAMATU were not unlawful. The SAMATU was entitled to protect its
membership base
which was clearly under threat by communicating with
its members and warning them of the traps laying ahead.
[34]
For all the above reasons, I propose the
following order:
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The order made by Bam AJ on 9 March 2021 is
set aside in its entirety.
3.
It is replaced with an order dismissing the
application with costs, which costs includes the costs of employment
of two counsel
taxable at scale C.
4.
The respondent is to pay the costs of this
appeal, which costs include the costs of employing two counsel
taxable at scale C.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
S POTTERILL
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
(I agree and it is so
ordered)
ENGELBRECHT AJ
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
(I agree and it is so
ordered)
Delivered: This judgment
was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is
handed down electronically by circulation
to the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The
date and for hand-down is deemed to
be 25 October 2024.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellant:
Mr D
Groenewald
Instructed
by:
Serfontein
Viljoen & Swart Attorneys, Brooklyn
For
the Respondents:
Mr TP
Kruger SC
Instructed
by:
Welman
& Bloem Inc, Garsfontein
Date
of the hearing:
09
October 2024
Date
of judgment:
25
October 2024
[1]
(2022)
ILJ 2562 (LC) at para 1.
[2]
Sidney
and Beatrice Webb: The History of Trade Unionism 1894 chapter 1.
[3]
Rosa
Luxemburg.
[4]
Rosa
Luxemburg.
[5]
See
Alfred
McAlpine and Son (Pty) Ltd v TPA
1974 (3) SA 506 (A).
[6]
Paragraph
12 of the judgment does not do so instead paragraph 13 does
reproduce the renewal notice.
[7]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
(920/2010)
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA
593
(SCA) (16 March 2012) case and
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
(CCT 70/20)
[2021] ZACC 13
;
2021 (8) BCLR 807
(CC);
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC) (11 June 2021) case.
[8]
[2020]
7 BLLR 645 (CC).
[9]
See
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009] 2 All SA 243 (SCA).
[10]
1914
AD 221.
[11]
An
unreported judgment (CCT 39/21)
[2022] ZACC 34
(22 September 2022)
at para 47 and 48.
[12]
(593/2022)
[2023 ZASCA 151
(14 November 2023)
[13]
At
paragraph 16 of
Hulisani
.
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