Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 98South Africa
Municipal Workers Retirement Fund v South African Local Government Bargaining Council and Others and Other Related Matters [2023] ZAGPPHC 98; 2905/2022; 4580/2022; 30396/2022 (20 February 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Application for review of a collective agreement entered into by a bargaining council – agreement seeks to impose accreditation criteria upon pension funds in the local government sector by making it conditional upon agreement to effect immediate and future rule changes – such requirement inimical to independence of the board of a pension fund as required by the Pension Funds Act – furthermore proposed rule changes not consistent with the Act – collective agreement reviewed and set aside – costs followed the result.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Municipal Workers Retirement Fund v South African Local Government Bargaining Council and Others and Other Related Matters [2023] ZAGPPHC 98; 2905/2022; 4580/2022; 30396/2022 (20 February 2023)
Municipal Workers Retirement Fund v South African Local Government Bargaining Council and Others and Other Related Matters [2023] ZAGPPHC 98; 2905/2022; 4580/2022; 30396/2022 (20 February 2023)
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sino date 20 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 2905/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED NO
DATE:
20 February 2023
In
the matter between:
MUNICIPAL
WORKERS RETIREMENT FUND Applicant
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
BARGAINING
COUNCIL First
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
ASSOCIATION Second
Respondent
INDEPENDENT
MUNICIPAL AND ALLIED TRADE
UNION Third
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN MUNICIPAL WORKERS’ UNION Fourth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF EMPLOYMENT AND LABOUR Fifth
Respondent
FINANCIAL
SECTOR CONDUCT AUTHORITY Sixth
Respondent
CASE
NO: 4580/2022
In
the matter between:
MUNICIPAL
RETIREMENT ORGANISATION First
Applicant
GERMISTON
MUNICIPAL RETIREMENT FUND Second
Applicant
MUNICIPAL
GRATUITY FUND Third
Applicant
PIETER
JOHANNES VENTER Fourth
Applicant
And
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
ASSOCIATION First
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
BARGAINING
COUNCIL Second
Respondent
INDEPENDENT
MUNICIPAL AND ALLIED TRADE
UNION Third
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN MUNICIPAL WORKERS’ UNION Fourth
Respondent
CASE
NO: 30396/2022
In
the matter between:
MUNICIPAL
EMPLOYEES’ PENSION FUND
RETIREMENT
FUND First
Applicant
AKANI
ADMINISTRATORS (PTY) LTD Second
Applicant
KENNYATTA
CHOMANE Third
Applicant
And
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
BARGAINING
COUNCIL First
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
ASSOCIATION
Second
Respondent
INDEPENDENT
MUNICIPAL AND ALLIED TRADE
UNION Third
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN MUNICIPAL WORKERS’ UNION Fourth
Respondent
FINANCIAL
SECTOR CONDUCT AUTHORITY Fifth
Respondent
Coram:
Van der Schyff J, Mbongwe
& Millar JJ
Heard
on: 13 & 14 October 2022
Delivered:
20 February 2023 - This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
by
email, by being uploaded to the CaseLines system of the Gauteng
Division and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down
is
deemed to be 10H00 on 20 February 2023
Summary:
Application for review of a collective agreement
entered into by a bargaining council – agreement
seeks to
impose accreditation criteria upon pension funds in the local
government sector by making it conditional upon agreement
to effect
immediate and future rule changes – such requirement inimical
to independence of the board of a pension fund as
required by the
Pension Funds Act – furthermore proposed rule changes not
consistent with the Act – collective agreement
reviewed and set
aside – costs followed the result.
ORDER
IT
IS ORDERED:
A.
It is ordered in cases 2905/2022, 4580/2022 and 30396/2022:
A.1
The Retirement Fund Collective Agreement signed on 15 September 2021
is reviewed and set aside save in respect of
clause 8 thereof.
A.2
The first to fourth respondents are ordered to pay the applicants
costs on the scale as between party and party
which costs are to
include the costs consequent upon the employment of more than one
counsel, where apposite:
A.2.1
3 counsel in case no 2905/2022
A.2.2
2 counsel in case no 4580/2022
A.2.3
1 counsel in case no 30396/2022
JUDGMENT
MILLAR
J (VAN DER SCHYFF & MBONGWE JJ CONCURRING)
INTRODUCTION
1.
On 15 September 2021, the first to fourth
respondents in the three matters before us entered into a “collective
agreement”
(CA). The agreement was entitled “Retirement
Fund Collective Agreement” and was intended to inter alia
“Establish
a uniform approach to the provision of retirement
fund benefits to employees in the sector” – in the
present matters,
the local government sector.
2.
Both the applicant funds and the
respondents exist to ensure that interests of employees in the sector
are represented, albeit at
different times. The applicants exist to
ensure that at the time of retirement of the employees, the end of
their working lives,
they are provided for. The respondents represent
their interest at the commencement and for the duration of their
working lives
until retirement.
3.
Such
is the importance of the functions of both that they are governed by
separate statutory provisions – in the case of the
applicant
funds, the Pension Funds Act
[1]
(PFA)
and in the case of the respondents, the Labour Relations Act
[2]
(LRA).
The pension funds are and remain at all times separate and distinct
entities from both the employers and their employees
[3]
.
4.
The applicants take issue with the
agreement insofar as it seeks to impose obligations upon them.
5.
Firstly, it is their contention that “the
content of the Collective Agreement is not within the domain of the
respondents’
because it seeks to impose conditions for the
continued operation of the retirement funds by coercive force; and
with disregard
to the autonomy of the affected funds and the
obligations of the trustees”, and in its terms usurp the
independence of the
trustees and the oversight provisions applicable
to them in terms of the PFA.
6.
Secondly, they contend that the conclusion
of the Collective Agreement itself is impeachable because it is not a
collective agreement
contemplated in section 213 of the LRA because
the matters which it seeks to regulate are inherently not matters
which can form
the subject matter of collective bargaining.
7.
Thirdly,
it was contended that the content of the CA intrudes upon a domain
not permitted by the terms of reference governing the
bargaining
council.
[4]
Accordingly,
the respondents did not have a mandate to conclude the CA at all.
8.
Lastly, it was also argued that “The
Collective Agreement is also unconstitutional in that it violates the
employees’
rights to freedom of association under section 18 of
the Constitution and pension funds’ freedom of trade and must
be declared
unconstitutional and invalid on this basis. In addition,
the Collective Agreement is contrary to the public policy and it
stands
to be declared invalid, alternatively unenforceable, on this
additional basis.”
9.
In our view the substantive issue to be
determined is not whether the respondents were entitled to conclude a
collective agreement
inter partes
or for that matter whether they were properly mandated to do so or
not. These issues are in our view peripheral. The substantive
issue
for determination is whether the conclusion of the CA, which includes
terms relating to the imposition of the requirement
for
accreditation, the manner and maintenance thereof (‘the
accreditation terms’) is within the ambit of such agreements
as
prescribed by the LRA.
10.
Does
it fall within the ambit of the LRA or not and does the imposition of
the accreditation regime amount to a decision that is
susceptible to
review, either under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
[5]
(PAJA)
or under the principle of legality? The constitutionality or
otherwise only arises for consideration if the CA is found not
to be
reviewable.
11.
Put differently - holistically viewed can
it be said that the ‘accreditation terms’ are binding
upon the applicants
(and other pension funds) and would their
implementation impinge upon the discretion of the board? Furthermore,
could it result
whether intended or not, that one or more or all the
pension funds in the sector would be rendered unviable.
THE
CA GENERALLY
12.
In
terms of s 23(1) of the LRA, a CA only binds the parties to an
employment relationship, within the ambit of the application of
the
particular CA.
[6]
However,
in terms of s 31 read together with s 32(1) of the LRA, the Minister
of Labour may at the request of a Bargaining Council
extend the scope
of a CA concluded within it to non-parties.
13.
Such an application is however subject to s
32(3)(d) which provides that the Minister of Labour may not extend
the scope of the
CA to non-parties unless the “non-parties
specified in the request fall within the
bargaining
council’s
registered scope”
and that in terms of s 32(3)(g) “the terms of the
collective
agreement
do not discriminate against
non-parties”. In the three matters before us, there has been no
application for the extension
of the CA to bind pension funds.
14.
The CA provides that: ”(t)his
agreement will apply to all employees and all employers who fall
within the registered scope
of the Council, subject to clause 1.2.”
15.
The objectives of the agreement are to:
“
2.1
Establish a uniform approach to the provision of retirement fund
benefits to employees in the sector.
2.2 Provide
equitable access to retirement fund benefits for employees in the
sector.
2.3 Provide
uniform rates of contribution to retirement funding for employees in
the sector subject to preserving the
accrued rights of employees in
existing defined benefit arrangements.
2.4 Improve
overall efficiency and governance of funds.
2.5 Give
employees an opportunity to exercise an election to move from one
local, regional or national fund in which
their employer participates
to another, within parameters established by this agreement.”
16.
A “collective agreement” as
defined in s 213 of the LRA means “a written agreement
concerning terms and conditions
of employment or any other matter of
mutual interest concluded by one or more registered trade unions; on
the one hand and, on
the other hand-
(a)
One or more employers;
(b)
One or more registered employer’s
organisations; or
(c)
One or more employers and one or more
registered employer’s organisations”
17.
The
entire ambit of collective agreements are matters of “mutual
interest.”
[7]
Axiomatically,
such matters of mutual interest are matters that arise during and in
consequence of the existence of the employment
relationship between
the employers and employees.
[8]
This
has been interpreted to mean:
“
It
brings the complete array of employment and labour relations matters
within the scope of collective agreements. Almost anything
in which
the parties have an interest – shared or opposing –
and
which is capable of joint and autonomous regulation,
is
fit for inclusion in a collective agreement.”
[9]
[My
emphasis]
.
ACCREDITATION
18.
Central to the achievement of the
objectives of the CA, the respondents have introduced an
accreditation regime in terms of which
all pension funds, including
the applicant funds are to be accredited. Significantly, the
agreement provides-
“
Employers
in the sector will contribute as participating employers to
accredited funds
only
”
(my emphasis)
19.
The
effect of this is that the agreement to which the funds are not party
does not provide for maintaining of the status quo in
circumstances
where the achievement of a pool of ‘accredited funds’ is
developed. It is common cause that every employee
within the sector
has as a term and benefit of their employment, that they should join
a pension fund. The decision as to which
fund to join is made at the
commencement of the employment relationship. To regulate this, is
entirely permissible and consistent
with the purpose of entering into
collective agreements and falls squarely within the ambit of s 23
(1)(c)(i)
[10]
of
the LRA.
20.
It is not in issue in the present matters
that insofar as new employees are concerned, that the respondents are
quite within their
rights to decide that henceforth all new employees
should as a term of their employment be required to join one or other
particular
pension fund. What is in issue is the approach of the
respondents that “retirement fund arrangements forming part of
the
remuneration package of employees” are in fact a matter of
‘mutual interest’ falling within the ambit of the CA.
The
rationale for this is that the ongoing obligation to contribute to
the pension fund is extant during the currency of employment
and
therefore falls squarely within the scope of the CA.
21.
In
this regard, clause 8
[11]
of
the CA which specifically provides for this is unquestionably a
permissible matter of mutual interest which withstands the scrutiny
of these proceedings. Insofar as the provisions of clause 8 of the CA
are concerned, these fall squarely within the ambit of s
23(1)(c)(i)
of the LRA.
22.
For so long as the pension fund is
financially viable and able to meet its present and future
obligations to employees and pensioners,
there is no ‘mutual
interest’ that could permissibly be the subject matter of a
collective agreement. However, the
scope of the CA in question, goes
beyond merely being satisfied that a pension fund is viable. The
entirety of the implementation
of the agreement having regard to the
stated purpose for which it was concluded, is the accreditation
regime and its requirements.
23.
Accreditation
can be sought by either SALGA (the SA Local Government Association)
or any of the employers, employees, or pension
funds themselves.
[12]
Furthermore
the same parties that may apply for accreditation on behalf of a
pension fund may also apply for the withdrawal of that
accreditation.
[13]
24.
The
requirements for accreditation are not finite. The contemplated
accreditation regime is fluid and determined solely by an
accreditation
committee established by the respondents.
[14]
The
pension funds are subject to meeting the requirements for
accreditation as may be determined “
from
time to time”.
[15]
If
accreditation is withdrawn then the pension fund has a right of
appeal to the same accreditation committee that both established
the
criteria and also determined that the particular fund had “failed
to meet the required criteria to a material degree”.
25.
The CA seeks to impose what is argued to be
an immediate, fundamental, radical, and compulsory realignment of the
pension funds
operating within the local government sector. For
reasons that appear later in this judgment, it is not open to
existing pension
funds, the applicants in particular, to simply
decline to seek accreditation and to maintain only their existing
membership –
employees and pensioners.
26.
Unless the applicant funds obtain and
maintain accreditation, they will no longer be supported by employers
in the sector. It is
the accreditation and its requirements and
consequences for the applicants that are at the heart of the dispute.
ACCREDITATION
AND RULE CHANGES
27.
The fulcrum upon which the efficacy of the
implementation of the CA balances is to be found in clauses 3.1 to
3.3 of the agreement
which provide:
“
3.1
The fund must be registered in terms of the Pension Funds Act. (The
criteria for accreditation must be satisfied, where
applicable, by
the terms of the registered rules of the fund or the board of the
fund must have adopted a resolution approving
amendment to the rules
of the fund to bring these rules into compliance with the provisions
below.
Requirements
of the rules
3.2 The rules
of the fund
3.2.1 must permit
the transfer of members to another accredited fund as contemplated in
clauses 7 and 9.3 of the collective
agreement, in which case the
members shall cease to contribute to the fund from the effective date
of transfer and those members
may choose either to leave their
interests in the fund on a “paid up” basis or to transfer
their interests in the fund
to that other fund in terms of section 14
of the Pension Funds Act;
3.2.2 must permit
members, employed by an employer who participates in the fund and who
have elected or been required to transfer
into the fund as
contemplated in clauses 7 and 9.3 of the collective agreement, to
join the fund with effect from the transfer
date. In such a case,
those members and their employer shall start contributing to the fund
from that date in respect of service
after the transfer date and
those members may elect to transfer their interest in the fund from
which they are transferring to
the fund in terms of section 14 of the
Pension Funds Act;
3.2.3
must provide that, where a member changes employment from one
participating employer (“the old employer”)
to another
participating employer (“the new employer”), both of
which participate in the same fund, the member does
not become
entitled to a benefit from the fund, but rather continues membership
as an employee of the new employer with the same
service,
contributions and pensionable remuneration, up to the effective date
of transfer between employers, as the employee enjoyed
under the old
employer; where relevant, corresponding assets must be transferred
between any sub-fund or the old employer to that
of the
new
employer;
3.2.4 must permit
the withdrawal or termination of participation in the fund by an
employer or employers, after giving due
notice, in which case
(a)
the members employed by that employer may
elect to leave their interest in the fund on a “paid up”
basis or may elect
to transfer their members’ interests in the
fund to another accredited fund in terms of clause 3.2.1 above;
(b)
contributions by members and the employer
will cease, except for any amounts required to address a shortfall;
(c)
the employer or employees, as the case may
be, will assume responsibility for funding any shortfall applicable
immediately prior
to the transfer multiplied by the transfer ratio
less any part of that shortfall transferred to another fund with the
transferring
members’ interests;
3.2.5 must restrict
membership to employees of a particular municipality or region;
3.2.6 must provide
that no amount will be paid to an investment or other professional
adviser except for services rendered
to it to the fund in the
ordinary course of the governance, management, investment or
administration of the fund; provided that,
in the case of members of
a defined contribution category or members participating in a living
annuity provided from a fund, the
member or members may request that
a professional adviser receive a fee, as approved by the member or
members in writing, for the
provision of investment advice to them,
and deducted from the member’s or members’ amounts.
Reporting
obligations
3.3. A fund must
report to the Council full and transparently, annual by a date
determined by the Council”
3.4
information referred to in clause 3.3 may be published by the Council
in full or in a summarized form to members
and employers in the
sector.”
28.
What is readily apparent from the clauses
of the CA quoted above is that the pension funds who are to be
accredited must firstly
be registered in terms of the PFA and
secondly, must, as a precursor to accreditation, immediately consent
to and amend their existing
rules. Whether or not amendments to the
rules would be considered by members of a pension fund’s board
would of course always
depend upon whether those amendments would
enhance the object for which the fund had been established.
29.
The
PFA does not provide for a specific definition of a ‘pension’
but does provide that a ‘pensioner’ is
“a person
who is in receipt of a pension paid from the (a) fund.”
[16]
The
pension becomes payable at ‘normal retirement age’ which
is “the age at which a person becomes entitled to
retire from
employment.” The term is defined in the Income Tax Act.
[17]
30.
A
‘pension’ is “a regular payment from a fund etc. to
which a recipient has contributed (freq. with an employer)
as an
investment during his or her working life in order to realize a
return upon retirement.”
[18]
‘
Retirement’
is when a person “reaches the normal age for leaving
service.”
[19]
31.
It
is not in issue that all the employees who are engaged to work in the
municipal sector are required to join a pension fund when
they
commence their employment. Once they have joined, and for the
duration of their employment, they together with their employers
contribute
[20]
to
the fund.
32.
The fruits of this arrangement are only
reaped when the employee reaches retirement age and can no longer
work.
33.
Every
pension fund has a board. The PFA prescribes the object of the board
which is to “direct, control and oversee the operations
of a
fund in accordance with applicable laws and the rules of the fund.”
[21]
Section
7C (2) of the PFA prescribes that in pursuing its object the board,
acting collectively but also its members acting individually,
of each
pension fund shall:
“
(a)
take all reasonable steps to ensure that the interests of
members in terms of the rules of the fund and the provisions
of this
Act are protected at all times, especially in the event of an
amalgamation or transfer of any business contemplated in
section 14,
splitting of a fund, termination or reduction of contributions to a
fund by an employer, increase of contributions
of members and
withdrawal of an employer who participates in a fund
(b) act with
due care, diligence and good faith
(c) avoid
conflicts of interest
(d)
act with impartiality in respect of all
members and beneficiaries.
(e)
act independently
(f)
have a fiduciary duty to members and
beneficiaries in respect of accrued benefits or any amount accrued to
provide a benefit, as
well as a fiduciary duty to the fund, to ensure
that the fund is financially sound and is responsibly managed and
governed in accordance
with the rules and this Act and
(g) comply
with any other prescribed requirements.”
34.
It
is the members of the board, often referred to as trustees, who are
tasked with ensuring that the objects for which the board
is
established are realised and it is the members of the board who must
decide whether it is in the interests of the fund concerned
to
associate itself with the regime set out in the CA.
[22]
The
members of the board are independent and the imposition of any regime
that impinges, undermines or renders this nugatory is
not
permissible.
[23]
35.
The applicants have argued that the
accreditation regime and in particular the requirement that the rules
of a pension fund must
be amended as determined from time-to-time
conflict with the provisions of the PFA. It was argued that if the
pension funds were
to agree to the accreditation regime, then this
would in effect create a situation where the pension funds would
acquiesce to a
de facto curatorship under the respondents through the
accreditation committee. Such a situation would be in contravention
of sections
7C(2)(a) and (e) of the PFA.
SOME
SPECIFIC REQUIRED RULE CHANGES
36.
In considering whether this argument is
sound, regard must be had to the mandatory rule changes which the CA
requires – at
least those that are presently formulated. There
are five separate rules, referred to in paragraph 18 above which in
my view merit
consideration. I intend to deal with the first and
then, the second and third together and fourth and fifth together.
37.
To
begin with,
[24]
the
requirement that “…the board of the fund must have
adopted a resolution approving amendment to the rules of the
fund to
bring these rules into compliance with the provisions below.”
38.
The
amendment of the rules of a pension fund is not simply a matter for
decision by the board. In terms of s 11 of the PFA any amendment
to
the rules must be submitted to the Registrar of Pension Funds for
consideration and will only be registered if such amendment
is
approved and registered.
[25]
39.
In the present matters before us, none of
the funds concerned have sought the guidance of the Registrar
regarding whether the proposed
rules would be registered. We were
informed that certain pension funds have sought accreditation in
terms of the CA but there is
nothing before this court to indicate
whether the rule changes envisaged by the CA were ever submitted to
the Registrar for consideration.
The entire implementation of the
accreditation regime depends upon whether the Registrar is prepared
to register the rules that
the accreditation committee decides should
be adopted from time to time.
40.
No
amendment will be approved or registered unless the registrar is
satisfied that the financial viability of the fund is not
imperiled
[26]
thereby
and that the proposed amendment is not inconsistent with the
provisions of the PFA
[27]
.
It is of course permissible to make amendments to the rules, but such
amendments must meet this threshold as once approved they
have the
effect of binding not only the members but the pension fund
itself.
[28]
41.
Additionally
[29]
the
requirement that the rules must “…permit the transfer of
members to another accredited fund…” and
“must
permit the withdrawal or termination of participation in the fund by
an employer or employers…” and the
third
[30]
requirement
that the fund “must restrict membership to employees of a
particular municipality or region;” both address
the current
and future membership of the funds, both in terms of currently
employed members and retired members. Do these rules
which permit the
election by members to transfer between accredited funds imperil the
financial viability of the funds?
42.
S
12(3)
[31]
of
the PFA provides that in considering whether any proposed amendment
‘may affect the financial condition’ of a fund,
it is
necessary to submit a certificate or statement of ‘financial
soundness’ to the Registrar. In issuing such a certificate
or
making such a statement, the valuator – usually an actuary, or
the fund must consider several factors. These include:
“
The
value of accrued benefits, particularly in retirement funds and life
insurance instruments, is determined with reference to
actuarial
liabilities. In calculating these liabilities, the actuary is guided
by several assumptions. These relate to economic
assumptions, which
refer to the
investment
income likely to be earned
,
future rates of inflation or salary growth, future tax rates and
changes in the regulatory environment. Demographic assumptions
also
have to be made, factoring in elements such as rates of mortality,
disability and
emigration
from the scheme
.
Various factors, such as the impact of medical advances and HIV/AIDS
have to be considered. Assumptions as to the rates of accrual,
that
is the rates at which occupational benefits accrue, must also be
made. Finally,
surpluses
and shortfalls are also the subjects of assumptions
.”
[32]
(my
emphasis)
43.
It
is also important to bear in mind that regarding the rates of accrual
to be assumed, “these rates are important for two
reasons
namely: (a) withdrawal and transfer benefits from the scheme depend
on the benefits accrued; and (b) the rate of asset
accumulation is
influenced by the accrual rate.”
[33]
44.
Any
valuation or statement as to the financial soundness will necessarily
have to consider the factors referred to above. The proposed
rules,
besides limiting the new membership base also provide for the
election by employed members to move between accredited funds.
A
restriction on the transfer of members has been found by the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Municipal
Employees Pension Fund v SAMWU National Provident Fund
[34]
to
be justified.
45.
The limit of the membership base together
with the right of members to transfer periodically between funds have
as their effect
a deprivation on the part of a fund to engage in any
long-term investment with the consequence that the investment income
to be
earned is likely to be materially affected. Of course, this is
not in respect of a single emigration of members from a scheme but
would be a material and ongoing factor that would have to be
considered given that the CA provides that:
“
The
parties agree that employees will, subject to any applicable law and
subsequent collective agreements concluded between them,
be given a
similar election three years after the implementation date, and at
intervals of five years thereafter.”
[35]
46.
The provision of a rule that permits a
periodic movement of employee members from non-accredited fund to
accredited funds or even
within accredited funds would have a
material effect on the determination of an investment strategy,
projection of future membership
as well as the assumptions to be made
in respect of surpluses and shortfalls.
47.
These are all factors that must be
considered in determining the financial soundness of a pension fund.
Any uncertainty created
by the rules, the effect of which is to
either call into question or make it difficult, if not impossible to
either issue a certificate
or statement of financial soundness is
inimical to the provisions of the PFA and which would not be
registered by the Registrar.
48.
Any
externally imposed limitation on new members together with a rule
that permits the movement of employee members from time to
time has a
direct impact upon the determination of whether there would be any
surplus or shortfall. It is no panacea that the agreement
provides
for the employers who participated in a fund once its new membership
base is limited, and its employee members have transferred
to another
or other funds whether
en
masse
or
incrementally to “assume responsibility for funding any
shortfall”
[36]
for
pensioner members.
49.
Whether
it is practicable for employers to simply assume liability for
funding shortfalls as and when these arise is uncertain.
S 71 of the
Local Government: Municipal Systems Act
[37]
(MSA)
provides that:
“
71(1)
Organised local government must, before embarking on any negotiations
with parties in the bargaining council established
for
municipalities, consult
(a) the
Financial and Fiscal Commission established in terms of section 220
of the Constitution
(b) the
Minister and
(c)
any other parties as may be prescribed.
(2)
Organised local government must, in concluding any collective
agreement resulting from negotiations contemplated
in subsection (1),
take into account
(a) the
budgets of municipalities
(b) the
fiscal capacity and efficiency of municipalities and
(c)
national economic policies.
(3)
Municipalities must comply with any collective agreements concluded
by organised local government within its
mandate on behalf of local
government in the bargaining council established for municipalities”.
50.
There
is nothing placed before this court by the respondents which
indicates whether the employer parties to the CA, in concluding
the
agreement, considered either the budgets of the municipalities or
their fiscal capacity and efficiency. The CA is silent on
this
aspect. The only reference in it to the MSA in the CA is in clause
4.2
[38]
–
dealing
with the date it would become operable for non-parties. Put
differently, without knowing how many employee members would
transfer
from one fund to another, the identity of the specific funds and what
the specific shortfall would be, it is simply not
possible for the
employer parties to the CA to have properly considered its impact
upon the budgets of the municipalities. That
the requirement to do so
is peremptory is apparent from the wording of the section.
51.
In
any event, the effect of clause 3.2.5 of the CA, provides
pre-emptively
[39]
for
the winding up of a fund and thus would, were it binding and
practicable, enable the mechanism of the CA to be used through
the
transfer of members and irrespective of the financial status of the
pension fund to present
a
fait accompli
for that purpose. It thus offers no answer for the respondents to
contend that the CA “seeks to achieve equity, affordability
and
sustainability for retirement fund arrangements in the sector”.
These criteria are taken into account by individual employers
in
deciding which particular pension fund/s that their new employees are
required to join. Having made an election and without
any evidence
that any of the funds are neither equitable, affordable or
sustainable, it does not behove them to
ex
post facto
seek
to impose a new regulatory regime through accreditation in terms of
the CA.
52.
Penultimately,
[40]
the
CA provides for a rule change that:
“
must
provide that no amount will be paid to an investment or other
professional adviser except for services rendered to it to the
fund
in the ordinary course of the governance, management, investment or
administration of the fund; provided that, in the case
of members of
a defined contribution category or members participating in a living
annuity provided from a fund, the member or
members may request that
a professional adviser receive a fee, as approved by the member or
members in writing, for the provision
of investment advice to them,
and deducted from the member’s or members’ amounts”
and
lastly
[41]
,
“A fund must report to the Council full and transparently,
annual by a date determined by the Council” and information
“may be published by the Council in full or in a summarized
form to members and employers in the sector.”
53.
The composite effect of both the fourth and
fifth rules is that besides imposing limitations on the conduct of
the business of the
pension fund in the ordinary course and thereby
intruding upon the obligation of the board to act independently,
having done so,
the board must then subject itself to reporting on an
‘as and when’ basis to the very party that has divested
it of
the ability to act independently.
EFFECT
OF RULE CHANGES
54.
The rule changes, at least presently,
provide for a third party who is neither an employee nor pensioner
member to dictate to the
pension funds what rules the funds should
adopt and in terms of which their affairs are to be conducted.
55.
Even
if the Registrar were to refuse to register one or more of the rules
and these were subsequently amended, the very fact that
pension
funds, in order to ensure their continued existence within the sector
would have to bind themselves to such a scheme is
constative and
inimical to the independence of the board, purpose for which the
funds were established and to the statutory regime
of the PFA. This
has been held by our Courts to be so.
[42]
56.
The CA, its accreditation regime and its
attempt to reach to the applicants (save in respect of clause 8) does
not pass muster as
a true collective agreement.
57.
This
is because it intrudes upon the constitution and operation of the
applicants in circumstances where there is no suggestion
that the
financial viability of the applicants or for that matter any other
pension funds within the sector is in issue
[43]
.
58.
The argument of the respondents that the
payment of the pension fund contributions during the currency of
employment of contributing
employees brings the subject matter of the
present CA within the ambit of collective agreement is not
sustainable. It is predicated
on the contention that pension payments
are ‘deferred emoluments’ – factually this is not
so. The pension payment
which is ultimately received is an
aggregation of both employee and employer contributions together with
net investment growth
over the period during which the employee
contributed. The entitlement to a pension bears no relation to the
actual amount of work
done for services rendered historically or
contributions by or on behalf of any particular employee and thus
cannot be characterized
as a payment of a deferred emolument.
59.
The
terms of the CA stray impermissibly beyond the scope of a collective
agreement as provided for in the LRA – beyond any
matter of
‘mutual interest’ extant during the employment
relationship between the employee members and their employers.
The
subject matter of the CA insofar as the pension funds are concerned
is neither “capable of joint” nor “autonomous”
regulation.
[44]
60.
The very terms upon which accreditation is
to be granted requires the applicants to acquiesce to rule changes.
If these changes
were to be registered, it would have the effect of
divesting a board of its independence and imperiling management by
limiting
the ability to properly plan for any long-term investment,
beyond the time periods which the amended rules would grant to
employee
members to make an election to transfer to a different fund
from time to time.
61.
The
respondents argued that even if trustees acquiesced to the rule
changes and in particular the rules relating to the transfer
of
members, that this was not an absolute and that the trustees were “at
liberty to ensure that the amended rules retain
the trustees
discretion to determine whether terminations or transfers are in
particular circumstances reasonable and equitable.”
In support
of this assertion, they referred to
Sasol
Limited v Chemical Industries National Provident Fund.
[45]
While
this may have provided an answer were the rules changes to be imposed
by the CA being only the specific rules set out therein,
the CA
provides for an ongoing accreditation process with ongoing rule
changes. This means that even if the trustees retained the
authority
to veto any specific transfer or transfers, it is entirely possible
that a subsequent criteria for accreditation could
be introduced
requiring the removal of such authority.
62.
Finally, having regard to the specific rule
changes which are to be effected if accreditation were sought
together with the fact
that the CA permits its accreditation
committee to change rules and compel the adoption of those new rules,
this would subvert
the entire regulatory and directory regime of the
PFA by imposing a parallel supervisory regime under the auspices of
the respondents.
63.
The
entire construction of the accreditation regime is inimical to the
separation of identity and interests between employers and
the
pension funds and fundamentally amounts to a rule-based intrusion on
the statutorily protected independence of the trustees
of pension
funds
[46]
.
64.
The applicants argued that the specific
terms of reference of the main agreement establishing the bargaining
council, at least insofar
as pension funds are concerned, did not
permit an agreement beyond ‘contributions to medical schemes’.
There is no
merit to this. It is not the conclusion of a collective
agreement but the substantive content thereof that remains in issue
here.
IS
THE CA REVIEWABLE?
65.
It
was argued by the respondents that the conclusion of the CA was not
‘administrative action’ as provided for in the
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act (PAJA)
[47]
.
In this regard they referred to
Trustees
for The Time Being of the Legacy Body Corporate v Bae Estates and
Escapes (Pty) Ltd
[48]
in
which it was held:
“
When
regard is had to the structure of the definition if an administrative
action, the requirement that the decision be of an administrative
nature is a gateway to determining whether a particular decision
constitutes administrative action”
and
“
There
is nothing bureaucratic about trustees’ decision, nor does it
involve ‘application of policy’. Instead,
the decision
seems more commercial or managerial in nature, rather than
administrative. The trustees’ decision was made in
the course
of running and managing the scheme. The nature of the power is thus
managerial or business-related”.
66.
The
terms of the CA do not simply relate to the bureaucracy of pension
fund management or to ensure that the trustees conduct themselves
in
a manner that is consistent with their statutory obligations under
the PFA. The requirement that pension funds, in order to
obtain and
maintain accreditation, must agree to effect amendments to the rules
of a pension fund is a distinguishing feature in
the present
instance. Furthermore, when one considers the nature of the CA and
the fact that it does not seek to regulate only
the parties to the
agreement being the employers and trade unions (and their members)
but also third parties being pension funds
and also non-member
employees
[49]
,
its conclusion is manifestly ‘administrative action’
within PAJA.
67.
It
was held in
Free
Market Foundation v Minister of Labour & Others
[50]
that:
“
[81]
From the foregoing discussion it is evident that any determination of
whether a bargaining council resolution is
administrative action in
terms of PAJA will depend in the final analysis on the peculiar
facts. I incline to agree with Cosatu,
Numsa, the Minister and the
bargaining councils that PAJA ordinarily will apply and thus that the
decision of the bargaining council
will be subject to PAJA review.
The strongest argument against such a conclusion may be that the
resolution, being deliberative,
is not a decision of an
administrative nature. Unfortunately, as said, no argument was
presented in relation to this issue, which
was not specifically
raised in the affidavits. If the decision is administrative action,
then it will be reviewable on grounds
of reasonableness (at least
rationally), legality and due process. If, on the other hand, the
bargaining council resolution is
not administrative action under
PAJA, it still will be subject to rationality and legality review
under the rule of law provision
in s 1 of the Constitution. Review in
terms of the principle of legality may involve a lower standard of
scrutiny than a reasonableness
review under PAJA, but it still can be
far reaching and includes the requirements of rationality, legality
and a duty not to act
arbitrarily, capriciously or with ulterior
purpose. There must be a rational relationship between the exercise
of the power and
the purpose for which the power was given. Moreover,
there is explicit statutory protection against discrimination. In
terms of
s 32(3)(g) of the LRA the collective agreement may not
discriminate against nonparties, a matter I will discuss later. And
hence
the charge of inconsistency with the Constitution for want of
adequate judicial supervision of the bargaining council process is
not sustainable”.
68.
The
respondents argued that reliance on the Free Market Foundation by the
Applicants is inapposite. They argue that dictum of the
Constitutional Court in
Association
of Mine Workers and Construction Union & Others v Chamber of
Mines of South Africa & Others
[51]
more
clearly explains whether collective agreements constitute
administrative action or the exercise of public power when the Court
stated:
“
[83]
That their exercise of power entailed public law consequences does
not mean that it was “administrative action”
as defined
in PAJA. This is because the decision to conclude an agreement that
the statute, upon fulfilment of the conditions it
specified, extends
to non-parties, was not “of an administrative nature”.
The parties were not administering policy
or statutory powers, they
were agreeing amongst themselves. Their agreement had wide-ranging
public consequences. But in concluding
it they did not act
administratively. Their conduct was public, but not administrative,
in nature.
[84] This typology
has the important consequence that the conclusion of an agreement
under section 23(1)(d) is subject to
judicial scrutiny. An agreement
concluded under the provision is reviewable under the principle of
legality. The principle requires
that all exercises of public power –
including non-administrative action – conform to minimum
standards of lawfulness
and non-arbitrariness. Invoking the statute’s
enormous clout by using a statutory power may not occur irrationally
or arbitrarily”.
69.
The
nature of the CA is that its effects extend beyond the direct
employment sphere and seek to bind already existent third-party
pension funds who are not members of the bargaining council. It is
this fact which distinguishes the present matters from
Calibre
Clinical Consultants (Pty) Ltd v NBCRFI.
[52]
It
was argued by the applicants that not only the contents of the CA but
the effects of acquiescence by existing pension funds and
implementation cast it squarely as administrative action and within
the remit of PAJA. This is clearly so.
70.
The
grounds of review are set out in s 6 of PAJA. It was argued that the
conclusion of the CA offends s 6(2)(a)(i)
[53]
and
6(2)(f)(i)
[54]
of
PAJA and for that reason is reviewable and should be set aside.
71.
Having regard to what is set out above in
regard to the specific rules which the CA seeks to introduce as a
pre-requisite for accreditation,
it is clearly so.
72.
It
was also argued that even if a case was not made for review under
PAJA, the CA would in any event be reviewable in terms of the
principle of legality. It follows that the terms of reference of the
bargaining council and the mandate of the parties to conclude
the CA
cannot include a mandate to conclude an agreement that is unlawful.
The terms of reference
[55]
in
any event refer only to the fact that “Retirement Funds”
shall be the subject of collective bargaining at national
level.
73.
For
the reasons set out above, and in particular, the effect of
compelling amendments to the rules which have the effect of
undermining
the statutory scheme and obligations imposed on the funds
and their trustees by the PFA, the conclusion of the CA (with the
exception
of clause 8) can neither be said to be rational nor
lawful.
[56]
Even
if PAJA was not applicable, the CA would not in my view withstand a
legality review. On the basis of the finding that the decision
to
conclude the CA is administrative action and that it is to be
reviewed, the argument relating to the unconstitutionality of
the CA
does not arise.
COSTS
74.
The award of costs in this matter will
follow the result. The present matters are ones of great importance
to the applicants, respondents,
past and present employees as well as
retirees whose rights and interests are directly impacted by the
terms of the CA. Over 250 000
employees and an unknown number of
retirees in the local government sector are directly affected by the
terms of the CA. The briefing
of more than one counsel where this was
done was a wise and reasonable precaution and it is for this reason
that the costs of more
than one counsel (where employed) are to be
awarded.
75.
In the circumstances, I propose that it is
ordered in cases 2905/2022, 4580/2022 and 30396/2022:
75.1 The
Retirement Fund Collective Agreement signed on 15 September 2021 is
reviewed and set aside save in respect
of clause 8 thereof.
75.2 The
first to fourth respondents are ordered to pay the applicants costs
on the scale as between party and party
which costs are to include
the costs consequent upon the employment of more than one counsel,
where apposite:
75.2.1 3
counsel in case no 2905/2022
75.2.2 2
counsel in case no 4580/2022
75.2.3 1
counsel in case no 30396/2022
A MILLAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I
CONCUR AND IT IS SO ORDERED E VAN DER SCHYFF
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
CONCUR
M
MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
13 & 14 OCTOBER 2022
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON: 20 FEBRUARY 2023
CASE
NO: 2905/2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS: ADV.
C WATT-PRINGLE SC
ADV. S KHUMALO SC
ADV H DRAKE
INSTRUCTED
BY: SHEPSTONE
WYLIE ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR.
J ESTERHUIZEN
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS: ADV. H MAENETJE SC
(1
st
to 4
th
)
ADV. R TSHETLO
INSTRUCTED
BY: BOWMAN
GILFILLAN INC.
REFERENCE:
MR.
D PRETORIUS
NO
APPEARANCE FOR 5
th
AND 6
TH
RESPONDENTS
CASE
4580/2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS: ADV.
C LOXTON SC
ADV. A MILANOVIC-BITTER
INSTRUCTED
BY: JJ
JACOBS ATTORNEYS INC.
REFERENCE:
MR.
J JACOBS
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS: ADV. H MAENETJE SC
(1
st
to 4
th)
ADV. R TSHETLO
INSTRUCTED
BY: BOWMAN
GILFILLAN INC.
REFERENCE:
MR. D PRETORIUS
CASE
NO: 30396/2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT: MR.
V MOVSHOVICH
INSTRUCTED
BY: WEBBER
WENTZEL
REFERENCE:
MR.
V MOVSHOVICH
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS: ADV. H MAENETJE SC
(1
st
to 4
th
)
ADV. R TSHETLO
INSTRUCTED
BY: BOWMAN
GILFILLAN INC.
REFERENCE: MR.
D PRETORIUS
NO
APPEARANCE FOR THE 5
TH
RESPONDENT
[1]
24
of 1956
[2]
66
of 1995
[3]
Section
5(1)(a) and (b) of the PFA; see also
Tek
Corporation Provident Fund & Others v Lorentz
1999 (4) SA 884
(SCA) at paragraph 15 in which it was stated: “.
. .
The
pension fund, the powers and duties of its trustees, and the rights
and obligations of its members and the employer are governed
by the
Rules of the fund, relevant legislation, and the common law. The
fund is a legal persona and owns its assets in the fullest
sense of
the word “owns”. The object of the fund is ‘to
provide retirement and other benefits for employees
and former
employees of the employers in the event of their death’. The
trustees of the fund owe a fiduciary duty to the
fund and to its
members and other beneficiaries. The employer is not similarly
burdened but owes at least a duty of good faith
to the fund and its
members and beneficiaries. The rules of the fund spell out the
circumstances in which the employer must contribute
to the fund and
how the quantum of the contribution is to be determined.”
(references omitted)
[4]
The
terms of reference are set out in what is referred to as the “Main
Collective Agreement” which was concluded between
the employer
and employee organizations establishing the South African Local
Government Bargaining Council.
[5]
3
of 2000
[6]
See
for instance the references to the parties to a collective
agreement, members of a registered Trade Union, members of an
employer’s organization and employees who do not fall under a
Trade Union but are nevertheless specifically included in
ss 23 (1)
(b) (c) and (d).
[7]
Defined
as “held in common or shared between two or more parties”-
Shorter Oxford English Dictionary ibid, Volume
1, page 1876.
[8]
See
Department
of Home Affairs & Another v Public Servants Association &
Others
(2017) 38 ILJ 1555 (CC) at paragraph 7
;
Chirwa
v Transnet Ltd & Others
[2007] ZACC 23
;
2008 (4) SA 367
(CC) at paragraph 110
;
Vanachem
Vanadium Products Pty Ltd v National Union of Metal Workers of South
Africa and Others
[2014] 9 BLLR 923
(LC) at paragraph 18 – if an interpretation
does not result in a limitation of fundamental rights, it is to be
preferred.
[9]
Thompson,
C & Benjamin, PS, ‘South African Labour Law (1965) Volume
1 at page AA1-135 as referred to in “Matters
of Mutual
Interest” For Purposes of a Strike by ME Manamela, Obiter 2015
[10]
Which
provides that a collective agreement may regulate “terms and
conditions of employment”.
[11]
Clause
8.1, 8.2 and 8.3 respectively provide:
“
8.1
Each new employee in the sector will be required and permitted to
become a member only of a defined contribution retirement
fund in
which his or her employer participates, and which is accredited as
contemplated in this agreement.
8.2 The
employer contribution rate to an accredited defined contribution
retirement fund will be 18% of pensionable salary,
subject to clause
8.3
8.3 If an
employer is, as at the date of signature of this agreement, paying a
higher contribution rate than the rate referred
to in clause 8.2 on
behalf of a member of a defined contribution fund, the employer
will, unless otherwise agreed by collective
agreement, and for so
long as the fund is accredited and the employee remains a member,
continue to pay the higher contribution
rate in respect of that
employee.”
[12]
Clause
2.1 of the CA provides “
A
request for accreditation of a fund may be made by SALGA, by an
employer with employees in the sector, by a trade union with
members
employed in the sector, or by a fund with members employed in the
sector.”
[13]
Clauses
2.6 and 2.7 of the CA respectively provide “
Any
party referred to in clause 2.1 may request, on grounds that a fund
no longer meets the requirements for accreditation, that
the
accreditation of that fund should be withdrawn. In such case, the
requesting person must supply evidence of the non-compliance
with
the requirements for accreditation with the request.”
and “
If
the fund ceases to meet the requirements for accreditation (either
as a result of an annual review of compliance or a request
in terms
of clause 2.6 above) the Council shall withdraw accreditation,
subject to the rights to appeal set out further below.”
[14]
Clause
5.3 provides “
The
Accreditation Committee will develop application forms, processes
for assessment of applications, and such guidelines as may
be
necessary to assist in the assessment process.”
[15]
Clauses
2.5 and 5.6 of the CA respectively provide that “
Once
accredited, a fund that in the determination of the Accreditation
Committee continues to meet the requirements for accreditation,
as
may be amended from time to time on reasonable notice to accredited
funds, will remain accredited until a decision is taken
to withdraw
accreditation.”
and
“
A
fund will not be accredited if it fails to meet the required
criteria to a material degree. Materiality for this purpose will
be
determined by the Accreditation Committee, and the fund will be
given an opportunity to make representations as to why its
failure
to meet the required criteria is not material.”
[16]
Section
1 of the PFA.
[17]
Ibid
read together with section 1 of the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 which
states that ‘normal retirement age’ means
–
“
(a)
in the case of a member of a pension fund or provident fund, the
date on which the member becomes entitled to
retire from employment
for reasons other than sickness, accident, injury or incapacity
through infirmity of mind or body;
(b)
in the case of a member of a retirement annuity fund, a pension
preservation fund or a provident preservation fund,
the date on
which the member attains 55 years of age; or
(c)
in the case of a member of any fund contemplated in this definition,
the date on which that member becomes permanently
incapable of
carrying on his or her occupation due to sickness, accident, injury
or incapacity through infirmity of mind or body;”
[18]
Shorter
Oxford English Dictionary, Sixth Edition, Oxford University Press,
2007, Volume 2, p2149.
[19]
Ibid
p2558.
[20]
A
percentage by the employee from their remuneration which is matched
by the employer.
[21]
Section
7C (1) of the PFA.
[22]
PPWAWU
National Provident Fund v Chemical Energy Paper Printing Wood and
Allied Workers Union
2008
2 (SA) 351 (W) at paragraphs [24] – [25].
[23]
Tek
Corporation Provident Fund & Others v Lorentz
supra
at paragraph 15.
[24]
Paragraph
14 supra – paragraph 3.1 of the CA.
[25]
Section
12(1)(b) read together with section 12(4) of the PFA.
[26]
Section
12(3).
[27]
Section
12(4).
[28]
Section
13 of the PFA; See also
Chemical
Industries National Provident Fund v Sasol
Ltd
& Others
2014 (4) SA 205
(GJ) at paragraph [43] and Sasol Ltd v
Chemical Industries National Provident Fund 2015 (JDR) 1853 (SCA) at
paragraph [13].
[29]
ibid
– paragraph 3.2.1 of the CA.
[30]
ibid
– paragraph 3.2.5 of the CA.
[31]
“
(3)
If any such alteration, recission or addition may affect the
financial condition of the fund, the principal officer shall
also
transmit to the registrar a certificate by a valuator or, if no
valuator has been employed, a statement by the fund, as
to its
financial soundness, having regard to the rates of contributions by
employers and, if the fund is not in a sound financial
condition,
what arrangements will be made to bring the fund into a sound
financial condition.”
[32]
LAWSA,
Lexis Nexis, 2
nd
Edition, 2012, Volume 13 Part 2 para 194.
[33]
ibid
LAWSA footnote 2.
[34]
[2019]
3 BPLR 611 (SCA) at paragraph 60.
[35]
CA
clause 7.4.
[36]
Clauses
9.3.4 and 9.3.5 of the CA which provide respectively that “If
the old fund is not liquidated, the employer or employers
participating in the fund immediately prior to the cessation of
participation by the employer, as the case may be,
will
assume responsibility for funding any shortfall
in the fund as at date of transfer of the members; and If the old
fund is liquidated, the employer or employers participating
in the
fund immediately prior to the cessation of participation by the
employer
will
assume responsibility for funding any shortfall
in terms of section 30(3) of the Pension Funds Act.”
[37]
32
0f 2000.
[38]
“
This
Agreement shall come into operation in respect of non-parties (which
include but are not limited to municipal entities as
defined in the
Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000) who fall within the registered
scope of the Council on a date to be determined
by the Minister of
Employment and Labour and shall remain in operation until 30 June
2027 and thereafter for such further period
as may be determined by
the Minister of Employment and Labour at the request of the
Parties.”
[39]
See
particularly section 28 of the PFA which governs the dissolution,
whether wholly or in part of a pension fund.
[40]
ibid
– paragraph 3.2.6 of the CA.
[41]
ibid
– paragraphs 3.3 and 3.4 of the CA.
[42]
Ibid
PPWAWU at paragraphs [28]-[29].
[43]
It
was argued t
he
basis for entering into the CA in the form that it was and to
achieve the purposes which it seeks to do is based on
unsubstantiated
allegations of inter alia variable contribution
rates, weak governance, funding deficits, inefficiencies, lack of
proper communication,
excessive contribution to fund, excessive
benefits and the inequity and unjustifiability of differences
between individual employers
and employees and others in the sector
generally.
[44]
Paragraph
16 supra together with fn 7 supra.
[45]
[2015]
ZASCA 113
(7 September 2015) paragraph 28.
[46]
See
Van
Eck NO & Van Rensburg NO v Etna Stores
1947 (2) SA 984
(A) at 996-998.
[47]
3
of 2000.
[48]
2022
(1) SA 424
(SCA) at paragraphs 14 and 18.
[49]
If
the agreement is extended to non-party employees in terms of s 32 of
the LRA.
[50]
2016
(4) SA 496
(GP) at paragraph 81.
[51]
2017
(3) SA 242
(CC); see also
Grey’s
Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Public Works
[2005] ZASCA 43
;
2005 (6) SA 313
(SCA) at paragraphs 23-24.
[52]
2010
(5) SA 457
(SCA) at paragraphs 38 to 41
.
[53]
“
was
not authorized to do so by the empowering provision.”
[54]
“
contravenes
a law or is not authorised by the empowering provision.”
[55]
Section
C of the main agreement which was made available only in Case No.
4580/2022.
[56]
See
Democratic
Alliance v President of South Africa & Others
2013 (1) SA 248
(CC) at paragraphs 28-29.
sino noindex
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