Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 5South Africa
Kufa v National Research Foundation and Others (6055/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 5 (5 January 2023)
Headnotes
with costs;
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Kufa v National Research Foundation and Others (6055/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 5 (5 January 2023)
Kufa v National Research Foundation and Others (6055/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 5 (5 January 2023)
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sino date 5 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NUMBER: 6055/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
05
January 2023
In
the matter between:
MACGREGOR
KUFA
PLAINTIFF
and
NATIONAL
RESEARCH FOUNDATION
FIRST DEFENDANT
DR
MOLAPO QOBHELA
SECOND DEFENDANT
MR
BISHEN
SINGH
THIRD DEFENDANT
DR
DOORSAMY
PILLAY
FOURTH DEFENDANT
DR
NOEL SAMUEL ROCKY
SKEEF
FIFTH DEFENDANT
DR
NOMPUMELELO
OBOKOH
SIXTH DEFENDANT
PROF
LOYISO
NONGAXA
SEVENTH DEFENDANT
MR
JACOB
MAHLANGU
EIGHTH DEFENDANT
DR
BEVERLY
DAMONSE
NINTH DEFENDANT
REASONS
FOR ORDER OF 11 APRIL 2022
TLHAPI
J
[1]
These reasons pertain to a requested for them as a result of an order
granted on 11
April 2022 in the exception to the plaintiffs
particulars of claim, which read:
“
1. The Defendants’
Exceptions are upheld with costs;
2. The costs in question
shall:
2.1 Be paid by the
plaintiff on the scale as between party and party;
2.2 Include the costs of
two counsel; and
2.3 Include the costs
occasioned by the Plaintiff’s Rule 28(1) Notice of 6 November
2021, the Defendants’ Rule 28(3)
Objection of 10 November 2021
and postponement of this matter when it was previously set down for
16 November 2021.
3. The Particulars of
Claim are set aside.
4. 4.1 The Plaintiff is
granted leave to deliver amended Particulars of Claim having regard
to this order, within 15 days of the
date of this order.
4.2 Should the Plaintiff
fail to do so, then the Plaintiff’s action will be
automatically regarded as dismissed with costs
on the scale as
between party and party, including the costs of two counsel.
[2]
This order was preceded by one granted by agreement between the
parties on 15 November
2021 which read:
“
By agreement
between the parties and in light of the Plaintiff’s Rule 28(1)
Notice dated 8 November 2021 and the Defendants’
Rule 28(3) )
objection dated 10 November 2021, it is ordered as follows with
regard to the Defendants’ exceptions that were
enrolled for
hearing on the opposed roll of 15 November 2021;
1.
It is recorded that the Plaintiff is entitled (if so advised) to
bring application
in accordance with Rule 28(4) within 10 days of the
Defendants’ Rule 28(3) Objection, and that if the Plaintiff
should do
so, then the Rule 28(4) application and the remaining
Exceptions should best be heard together, with the consequence that
the remaining
exceptions cannot be heard in the week of 15 to 19
November 2021.
2.
In the premises the remaining exceptions are postponed
sine die
for later hearing (together with the Plaintiff’s Rule 28(4)
application, should such an application be timeously brought).
3.
The costs of the postponement are reserved.”
The
purpose of the agreement was to give the plaintiff an opportunity to
bring an application to amend the particulars of claim
in terms of
Rule 28(4) which application, in terms of the above order, the
plaintiff agreed to bring within 10 days of the Defendant’s
Rule 28(3) objection. The plaintiff failed to bring the said
application within the 10 days so allowed and the period expired on
24 November 2021.
[3]
Prior to the order of 15 November 2021 the defendants had already
filed and served
its Index to the Exception Application and the Heads
of Argument for the hearing on 15 November 2021. An application for
the exception
to be placed on this opposed roll was made by the
defendants’ on 2 February 2022 and a set down for the hearing
of the exception
11 April 2022 was served by email and receipt was
acknowledged on 7 February 2022 by the plaintiff’s attorneys.
There can
therefore be no excuse or mistaken belief that the
exception would not be heard on 11 April
2022.
[4]
On CaseLines the Amended Particulars of Claim and proof of service
were filed on 6
April 2022. The proof of service by email is dated 9
January 2022. The Plaintiff filed an application on 9 April 2022 for
an order
condoning the late service and or filing of the amended
particulars of claim in terms of Rule 28(5) read with Rule 27 of the
Rules
of Court; Condoning and extending the time frames of the Rule
28(1) Notice to Amend the particulars of claim served on the first
to
the ninth respondent on 21 December 2021; that the amended
particulars of claim be deemed to be filed in terms of Rule 28(5)
and
(7) and costs if opposed. The Plaintiff’s Heads of Argument
were loaded on CaseLines on 10 April 2022, a day before the
hearing
and were seen by me on the morning of the hearing.
[5]
Both counsel Mr Mullins for the excipient and Mr Mahasha for the
plaintiff had discussions
prior to the hearing. The Mr Mullins
contended that the Rules under which the application for condonation
was brought in particular
Rule 27 does not apply to a failure to file
amended pages, that failure to do so, the amendments would fall away.
Furthermore,
except for exception six, relating to the 10% of the
pension, the proposed amendment does address that it seeks to
withdraw the
plea relating thereto, even though he contended, the
withdrawal did not remedy the excipiability in that regard.
Otherwise, it
was contended that the remainder of the exceptions were
good, that it was better for the exceptions to be upheld if the court
agreed,
that the plaintiff consider the exceptions and seek to amend.
Another
issue addressed by Mr Mullins was the possibility of the matter being
postponed having regard to state the papers, the heads
for the
plaintiff being filed late, the duration that would be required to
argue the matter if proceeded with, which would exceed
five hours
which in terms of the practice manual the matter would have to be
allocated to the third court motion, that if I was
amenable to the
matter being postponed, which the excipients did not agree with, the
excipients would ask for wasted costs, which
costs would include
costs of two counsel. Mr Mahasha was not in agreement regarding the
issue on costs he contended that since
there was a main matter still
to be adjudicated upon, the excipients were not losing anything and
that the costs be reserved.
[6]
I took the view that before me were the exceptions which remained
extant and having
appraised myself of the heads of argument, which
were the only ones filed, the exceptions were good, and indicated
that I would
uphold the exceptions and a draft order was presented.
The only objection raised by Mr Mahasha was again the issue of costs
of
two counsel and that these be reserved. Both parties have engaged
more than one counsel, the plaintiff in preparation of the pleadings
expect for this application for condonation and the defendant has
always had two counsel throughout also with regard to the exception
before me and I regarded the issues as complex, hence my allowing
costs as requested.
[7]
In giving a brief outline of the matter it is such that the plaintiff
is suing the
defendants after his dismissal for exposing alleged
corrupt activities of the defendants. He seeks to set aside a
decision taken
by the First Defendant to use a forensic report and
that of the Second, Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh and Ninth
Defendants
to dismiss him from the employment of the First Defendant.
Summons were accordingly issued on 5 February 2021 against the
defendants,
and the following was prayed for:
a)
A declaratory order that the Plaintiff’s dismissal by the First
Defendant
was unlawful and the contract deemed to be extant;
b)
In respect of Claim on breach of employment contract, payment of
R17 000 000
(seventeen million rands);
c)
With ten percent of the claim being paid from the pension interest of
the Second,
Third, Fourth, Fifth, Eighth and Nine Defendant jointly
and severally each paying the other to be absolved;
d)
Interest on the amount at the rate of 15.5 percent per annum;
e)
Costs of suit on an attorney and client scale against the second to
the ninth
defendants personally inclusive of the employment of three
counsel;
f)
Alternatively, costs against all the Defendants jointly and severally
on
an attorney and client scale each paying for the other to be
absolved inclusive of costs of employment of three counsel;
[8]
The plaintiff alleged his dismissal was unfair and that this court
had jurisdiction
to hear the matter. The dismissal constituted a
material breach of his contract of employment and he claimed damages
being the
loss of emoluments up to retirement age for the alleged
“wrongful and intentional” dismissal. He relied on the
Common
Law; on the
Basic Conditions of Employment Act 57 of 1997
in
terms of
section 77(3)
read with 77A(e) thereof; on section 157(2) of
the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1965(as amended), Furthermore, the
summons was issued
in the public interest in terms of section 38 of
the Constitution Act 108 of 1996.
[9]
In light of the order granted on 11 April 2022 it is necessary to
mention the exceptions.
The defendants excepted to the Plaintiff’s
Particulars of claim as lacking averments necessary to sustain an
action, that
some allegations were vexatious, irrelevant and
scandalous and that some allegations had no bearing to the actual
claim or claims
as briefly stated below. Not all exceptions have been
quoted:
“
1. The First
Exception- Incoherence: That the 91-paragraph particulars of claim
are replete with irrelevant, scandalous and vexatious
allegations, so
as to fail to make out an action, Examples were outlined in 1.3.1
-1.3.16.
1.3.1 In paragraphs
14 -19 the second, third, fourth, and eighth defendants (para 14) or
the second, third, fourth, sixth, seventh
and eighth defendants (para
18) are alleged to have misappropriated funds “either
individually or collectively” without
laying a foundation for
the allegations;
1.3.2 …….;
1.3.3 Allegations about
ghost workers. An “elaborate fraudulent scheme, sexual
impropriety or delinquency that have no bearing
on the actual claims
or claims as seen in paragraph 21; 30,3 41, 61 and 62 of the
particulars of claim;
1.3.4 ……..
1.3.5 ………;
1.3.6 Allegations about
the first defendant’s board’s tenure “marked by
decay and financial ruin (para 25);
1.3.7 …….;
1.3.8 Allegations about
the ‘unlawfulness of [the] actions’ of the first
defendant and that they ‘keep evading
legal consequences and
fly under the radar of corruption’ (para 28);
1.3.9 ……..;
1.3.10 ……..;
1.3.11 Paragraph 31
contains the allegation that an unspecified factor ‘is one of
the reasons why the employment contract
of the second defendant could
not be renewed;
1.3.12 ………;
1.3.13 ………
;
1.3.14
(a) a number of
paragraphs contain gratuitous remarks which cannot be
pleaded and
do not belong in pleadings;
(b) three examples are
(a) paragraph 40.9 (‘was hell bent and had an inkling’),
(b) paragraph 40.10 (‘[u]ndeterred
by the onslaughts of
victimisation’), and (c) paragraph 40.16(‘that’s
when the night to (
sic)
the long knives transpired’);
1.3.15 (a) the
particulars of claim are replete with footnotes, sourcing authority
for one purpose or another.
(b) footnotes have no
part in particulars of claim and cannot be pleaded to.
(c) the inclusion of the
footnotes renders these particulars of claim incoherent.
1.3.16 There is an
allegation in paragraph 68 to the effect that the ‘plaintiff
will in due course be bringing a review application
to set aside the
Deloitte Report which is nonsensical
2. The Second Exception –
A Claim for contractual damages is inconsistent with a challenging of
the dismissal allegedly giving
rise to the contractual damages:
2.1 It is apparent from
prayers (a) and (b) of the particulars of claim that the plaintiff
claims both reinstatement (‘that
the….. contract [is]
deemed extant’) and payment of damages consequent upon
dismissal.
2.2 see also, to the same
effect, paragraphs 78 and 81 (the dismissal must be set aside) and 82
(the plaintiff must be paid damages
for what he would allegedly have
earned up to retirement age, had he not been dismissed) of the
particulars of claim.
2.3 claiming damages for
breach of contract on the basis of the consequences of that breach
(loss of employment) is inconsistent
with at the same time, and in
the same document, claiming the setting-aside of that breach, which
setting aside if granted, obviate
the alleged contractual damages.
2.4…..the claim
for the alleged breach of contract of employment is inconsistent with
(and in effect contradicted by) the
claim for reinstatement, and by
virtue of this contradiction the allegations in the particulars of
claim consequently do not sustain
an action against any of the
defendants.
3. The Third Exception –
Parallel Proceedings in the Labour Court:
3.1 It is apparent from
paragraph 4 of the particulars of claim, read together with Annexure
“M2” thereto, that at the
same time as the plaintiff is
pursuing this action in the High Court seeking the setting aside of
his dismissal (and payment of
damages based on the consequences of
that dismissal), he is seeking reinstatement in the Labour Court.
3.2 See in this regard
annexure ‘M2’to the particulars of claim and the
allegation in paragraph 4 of the particulars
of claim that the
plaintiff is challenging such [allegedly] automatically unfair
dismissal at the Labour Court under the statutory
framework in
question.
3.2 A claim for
contractual damages pursuant to dismissal in inconsistent with a
challenging of that dismissal under the statutory
framework in
question.
3.3………
3.4………
3.5……..
4. The Fourth
Exception – Contractual Damages are limited in Common Law:
4.1 …….the
plaintiff’s claims are couched in the particulars of claim as
being common law contractual claims
for contractual damages for
alleged breach of contract in the form of an alleged unlawful
dismissal.
4.2 The plaintiff’s
contract of employment:
4.2.1 is not on the face
of it a fixed term contract (no allegation to that effect is made in
the particulars of claim.
4.2.2 On a proper
construction of the allegations contained in the particulars of
claim, read with
section 37
and
38
of the
Basic Conditions of
Employment Act 75 of 1997
, is a monthly contract terminable at the
instance of either party on a month’s notice; and
4.2.3 Does not, on the
face of it, entitle the plaintiff to continued employment until
retirement, without the possibility of termination
by notice.
4.3 A common law claim
for contractual damages for alleged unlawful dismissal is limited to
the amount the plaintiff would have
earned were it not for the
alleged breach.
4.4………
4.5………
4.6………
4.7……
5. The Fifth Exception –
The particulars of claim do not make out a case for contractual
breach:
5.1…………
5.2 The grounds on which
the plaintiff was dismissed are outlined inparagraph 40.21 of the
particulars of claim (insolence, verbal
abuse, making false
allegations against a fellow employee, bringing of the name of the
first defendant into disrepute).
5.3 ………..
5.4 ……….
5.5 The allegations in
paragraphs 45 to 56 of the particulars of claim do not go far enough
to establish that the plaintiff’s
dismissal constituted a
breach of his contractual rights.
5.6…………
5.7………
6. The Sixth Exception –
No basis for the plaintiff’s predilection for payment out of
the second, third, fourth, fifth,
eighth and ninth defendant’s
pension funds:
6.1 The sixth exception:
6.1.1. Relates to the
component of the plaintiff’s claim against the second, third,
fourth, fifth, eighth and ninth defendants.
Personally, in terms of
10% thereof 10% is claimed from their pension interests, as per
paragraph 84 read together with prayer
(c) of the particulars of
claim; and
6.1.2…….
6.2………………
6.3. The particulars of
claim lack averment necessary to sustain this distinct component of
the claim
6.4 More particularity,
but without thereby derogating from the generality of what was stated
in paragraph 6.3 above:
6.4.1. The particulars of
claim do not make out any basis on which the plaintiff would be
entitled to payment out of the second,
third, fourth, fifth, eighth
and ninth defendant’ pension interests (as opposed to any other
source) in the event the plaintiff
is entitled to any payment
whatsoever from them;
6.4.2. The particulars of
claim lack averments that would be necessary to overcome the
provisions of section 37A of the Pensions
Funds Act 24 of 1956 in
terms of which ‘no benefit provided for in the rules of a
registered fund….or right to such
benefit …shall, be
capable of being reduced, transferred or otherwise ceded…all
be liable to be attached or subjected
to any form of execution under
a judgment or order’.
6.5…………..
6.6……………
7. The Seventh Exception
– No case is made out for the Personal Liability of the second
to ninth defendants:
7.1……….
7.2………..
7.3. As appears from
paragraphs 40.1 and 42 to 44 of the particulars of claim, the
plaintiff’s contract of employment was
with the first
defendant.
7.4. The plaintiff fails
to make averments that would render the second to ninth defendants
personally liable to the plaintiff for
an alleged breach of the
plaintiff’s contract of employment with the First Defendant.
7.5. More particularly,
but without thereby derogating from the generality of the aforegoing:
7.5.1. The plaintiff does
not allege that any of the second to ninth defendants were party to
his employment contract, and in the
premises does not, and cannot
allege that any of them breached contractual obligations to him.
7.5.2. The plaintiff does
not allege grounds on which any of the second to ninth defendants
owed him a duty of care in relation
either to his employment, or to
the termination thereof.
7.5.3. Although the
plaintiff alleges certain conduct on the part of the second
(paragraph 86.1), third, fifth and eighth (paragraph
86.2), sixth and
seventh (paragraph 86.3) and ninth (paragraph 86.4) defendants:
(a) the plaintiff does
not even allege conduct on the part of fourth defendant; and
(b) the allegations which
the plaintiff makes with regard to the second, third, fifth, sixth,
seventh, eighth and ninth defendant
do not lay a basis for personal
liability on the part of such defendants
7.6……….
7.5……………..”
[10]
It is common course that the plaintiff on 8 November 2021 by notice
in terms of Rule 28(1) informed
the defendants of the intention to
amend the particulars of claim. The defendant objected by the filing
of a notice of objection
in terms of Rule 28(3) on 10 November 2021.
The parties agreed and consented to an order being made allowing the
plaintiff within
10 days of the objection so filed to launch an
application to amend his particulars of claim in terms of Rule 28(4).
Applicable
in the circumstance are Rules 28(1). 28(2), 28 (3) and 28
(4). The plaintiff failed to comply with his undertaking to bring
such
application which period expired on 24 November 2021. The
failure to bring such application and the failure to file the
amendments
sought rendered the exceptions extant. The plaintiff was
served with a set down for the hearing of the exception on 7 February
2022, service was acknowledged and the plaintiff did nothing.
[11]
The plaintiff proceeded to effect its amendments and ignored that in
terms of Rule 28 (4) an
application had to be launched since the
proposed amendments were objected to. The application in terms of
Rule 28(4) would have
allowed the parties to engage the legal
principles governing applications for amendment as summarised in
Commercial Union Assurance
Co Ltd v Waymark NO
[1]
and would have also addressed some of the issues in exception.
[12]
The plaintiff brought an application for condonation in terms of Rule
28 (5) read with Rule 27.
Counsel for the defendant correctly pointed
out that reference to these Rules were not applicable to the
application before the
court which was solely for the determination
of the exceptions which remained extant after the plaintiff failed to
comply with
the deadline to bring an application in terms of Rule
28(4) by the 24 November 2021. There was an objection filed in terms
of Rule
28(3) on 10 November as confirmed by the parties in the Order
dated 15 November 2021. In as far as Rule 28(5) is referred to by
the
plaintiff, this does not reflect the true status of the matter before
the court on 11 April 2022. Rule 27
[2]
of the Uniform Rules of Court deals with removal of bar, extensions
of time and condonation for late pleas and had no relevance
in
determining the issues at hand. In my view the papers as they stood
meant that there was virtually no opposition to exceptions
raised by
the defendants, furthermore, the amendments raised after the 24
November 2021 are not as a result of an application launched
in terms
of Rule 28(4).
[13]
In as far as the plaintiff’s heads of argument which deal in
particular with the exceptions
are concerned, Mr Mullins for the
excipient contended that the exceptions taken were good. The heads of
argument filed on behalf
of the plaintiff a day before the hearing
and were seen by me on the morning of the hearing deal primarily with
the application
for condonation as it was contended that the
exceptions could not be dealt with in view of the condonation
application which stayed
such hearing. I have already expressed
agreement that the Rule 28(5) read with Rule 27 were not applicable
to the condonation application,
therefore there was no opposition to
the exceptions, which are good and remain extant. I have appraised
myself of all the exceptions
summarised above and accompanying heads
of argument of the excipient and deal very briefly with a few (while
not excluding the
remaining not dealt with) , which in my view render
the particulars of claim excipiable.
[14]
The Second, Third, Fourth and First Exceptions:
Second
Exception
(a)
It is contended for the defendants that the plaintiff could have sued
for damages for dismissal in the alternative to his claim
for
reinstatement before the Labour Court, that is ‘without in any
way rendering the one remedy dependent on the other not
being
granted’. The second claim as stated in paragraph 78 and 81 and
in the prayers sought are inconsistent “ in paragraph
78: “
the
plaintiff seeks to set aside a decision taken by the first defendant
…to dismiss”
and paragraph 81: “
as a result
the plaintiff seeks a declaratory order that his dismissal by the
first defendant was unlawful and the contract deemed
extant”.
Prayer (a) “
a declaratory order that the plaintiff’s
dismissal by the first defendant was unlawful and the contract deemed
extant”,
of the particulars of claim the plaintiff seeks
both orders to be granted simultaneously.
Third
Exception
(b)
It is contended for the excipient that this court cannot entertain a
claim for damages arising out of a dismissal when the exact
relief is
sought in another court (the Labour Court as per annexure “M2”
to the particulars of claim – seeking
reinstatement in the
Labour Court and seeking damages for dismissal in this court). The
particulars of claim “should have
explicitly stated the claim
for damages is conditional upon the reinstatement failing”.
Fourth
Exception
(c)
It is contended for the excipient that the plaintiff had a choice to
seek his remedy under the Common Law or in terms of the
Labour
relations Act and
Basic Conditions of Employment Act both
referred to
as the Labour Law dispensation
[3]
.
It was contended that a claim based on the Common Law had
limitations. Where the employment was not for a fixed term, on
termination
by the employer the employee would be entitled to a
salary equivalent to a month
[4]
;
the employee had no right to a ‘perpetual employment’.
Furthermore, it was contended that the plaintiff’s claim
to
entitlement of a salary ‘he would have earned had he been in
the first defendant’s employ until retirement isn’t
in
accordance with his common law rights. Where the plaintiff relies on
a Labour Law dispensation the remedy available to the plaintiff
rests
with such statutory remedies afforded by the statutes. For example in
Baloyi
supra
[5]
First
Exception
It
is contended that the particulars of claim as submitted in paragraphs
1.1 and 1.4 consist of irrelevant, scandalous and vexatious
allegation and innuendo rendering them totally defective. Further,
that a striking out application would be unnecessarily burdensome
especially where it would require of the excipient to deal with each
and every allegation. In my view, this would render the task
burdensome where the excipient would still in addition have to deal
with the rest of the grounds of exception.
[15]
The above concludes my reasons for the order granted.
V.V.
TLHAPI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCE
ORDER
GRANTED ON
: 11 APRIL 2022
FOR
THE FIRST APPLICANT
: Adv L Mahasha
INSTRUCTED
BY
: MAKHAFOLA & VERSTER INCORPORATED
FOR
THE 1
st
to 9
th
DEFENDANTS : Adv K
Magano
INSTRUCTED
BY
: SAVAGE JOOSTE & ADAMS INC
DATE
OF JUDGMENT
: 05 JANUARY 2023
[1]
1995 (2)SA 73 (TK) at 77F-I
[2]
Rule 27
(1) In the
absence of agreement between the parties, the court may upon
application on notice and on good cause shown,
make an order
extending or abridging any time prescribed by these Rules or by an
order of court or fixed by an order extending
or abridging any time
for doing any act or taking any step in connection with any
proceedings of any nature whatsoever upon such
terms as it seems
meet,
(2) Any such
extension may be ordered although the application therefore is not
made until after the expiry of the
time prescribed or fixed, and the
court ordering any such extension may make such order as to it seems
meet as to the recalling,
varying or cancelling of the result of the
expiry of anytime so prescribed or fixed whether such results flow
from the terms
of any order or from these Rules.
(3) The
court may on good cause shown condone any non-compliance with these
Rules.
(4) After a
rule nisi has been discharged by default of appearance by the
applicant the court or a judge may revive
the rule and direct that
the rule so revived need not be served again.
[3]
Fedlife Assurance Ltd v Wolaardt
2002 (1) SA 49
(SCA) ; Transman
(Pty) Ltd v Dick and Ano
2009 (4) SA 22
(SCA); Baloyi v Public
Protector & Others
2021 (2) BCLR 101
(CC) paras [ 28]. [39],
[40], [48]…..”[But] the fact a cause of action is
limited in certain for a must not be interpreted
as obliging an
applicant only to pursue that particular cause act…….
……
.[D]isputes
arising from contracts of employment do not, without mare, fall
withing the exclusive jurisdiction of the Labour Court…..
The
mere potential for an unfair dismissal claim does not obligate a
litigant to frame her claim as one of unfair dismissal and
to
approach the Labour Court notwithstanding the fact that other
potential causes of action exist.....
A
claim for contractual breach, absent reliance on any provision of
the LRA can be identified on Baloyi’s papers.
[4]
South African Maritime Safety Authority v Mckenzie 2010(3)SA 601
(SCA) “[a] cause of action based on a breach of an LRA
obligation obliges the litigant to utilise the dispute resolution
mechanism of the LRA to obtain a remedy provided for in the
LRA”
[5]
Paragraphs [38] and [30] “Had Ms Baloyi sought a claim
of unfair dismissal, she would have been required, in terms
of
section 157(1) of the LRA, to approach the Labour Court. This is
because unfair dismissal claims fall within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Labour Court. The reason for this delineation is
that the Labour Court and the Labour Appeal Court were ‘designed
as specialist courts that would be steeped in workplace issues and
be best able to deal with complaints relating to labour practices
and collective bargaining”
sino noindex
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