begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAKZDHC 80
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Minister of Police v Babooram and Others (D8336/2022)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 80 (4 November 2024)
Minister of Police v Babooram and Others (D8336/2022)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 80 (4 November 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAKZDHC/Data/2024_80.html
sino date 4 November 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO: D 8336/2022
In
the matter between:-
MINISTER
OF POLICE
APPLICANT
and
ESHWALALL
BABOORAM
FIRST RESPONDENT
FREEDA
NAICKER
SECOND RESPONDENT
SAFETY
AND SECURITY
SECTORAL
BARGAINING COUNCIL
THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
ANNANDALE,
AJ
[1]
The Minister of Police seeks mandatory and prohibitory interdicts
aimed at bringing
to an end what the Minister regards as persistent
referrals of the same dispute to the third respondent (the Bargaining
Council).
[2]
Although cited as-the third respondent, the Bargaining Council has
taken no role in
these proceedings. I consequently refer to the first
and second respondents as the respondents unless differentiation
between the
two of them is required by the context, and to the third
respondent as the Bargaining Council
[3]
The dispute in question relates to the Minister's decisions not to
promote the respondents
to the rank of captain in the South African
Police Services. The respondents regarded this as an unfair labour
practice and referred
the matter to the Bargaining Council. That
referral was found to have been out of time, which in the Minister's
view brought matters
to an end. The respondents however referred the
same dispute again, and the Minister now seeks interdicts barring
them from instituting
further claims and directing them to withdraw
the referrals presently pending.
[4]
The interdicts sought are final in nature and effect. The Minister is
therefore required
to establish a clear right, an injury actually
committed or reasonably apprehended and the absence of similar
protection by any
other ordinary remedy.
[1]
The
Plascon-Evans
rule applies to disputes of fact.
[5]
This case bears significant similarities to Maphanga
[2]
in which similar relief
[3]
was
sought in terms of section 2(1)(b) of the Vexatious Proceedings Act 3
of 1956
[4]
(the Act),
alternatively the common law. Here however, the Minister relies only
on the common law because a Bargaining Council
is not a court to
which the Act applies.
[5]
The
facts
[6]
The decisions not to promote the first and second respondents were
taken in 2000 and
2002 respectively but the dispute was first
referred to the Bargaining Council in October 2016 (the first
referral). The respondents
explain that the reason for this
substantial delay was because they only became aware in around August
2016 that an internal panel
had recommended their promotion but that
recommendation was not implemented.
[7]
Be that as it may, there is no dispute that the first referral was
out of time and
the respondents consequently required condonation.
The condonation application was refused by Commissioner Booysen on 3
April 2018
(the condonation decision).
[8]
Despite this, in December 2018 the same underlying dispute was
referred to the Bargaining
Council for the second time (the second
referral). The Minister raised a point in
limine
that the
matter was
res judicata
by virtue of the condonation decision
which precluded the Bargaining Council from entertaining the dispute.
The special plea thus
amounted to a jurisdictional objection.
[9]
The Minister's plea
in limine
was upheld on 8 March 2019 by
Commissioner Lyster who ruled that until the condonation decision had
been reviewed and set aside,
it stood and the Bargaining Council
lacked jurisdiction to deal with the dispute.
[10]
Commissioner Lyster reached this decision without having regard to
the respondents' submissions
as they had not been placed before him
by the Bargaining Council. On 15 May 2019 he consequently granted an
application to rescind
his order upholding the Minister's special
plea (the Lyster recission) which the Minister did not oppose.
[11]
The respondents' submissions of which Commissioner Lyster only had
sight when dealing with the
recission application, were to the
following effect. The first referral was premature because the
respondents had not exhausted
the internal remedies which are a
prerequisite to a valid referral in terms of clause 3.5 of the
Bargaining Council's constitution.
The constitution describes a 5
step pre-referral process and the respondents had stopped short of
the final step of mediation.
As the first referral was premature,
Commissioner Booysen had no jurisdiction to entertain it. After the
condonation decision,
the respondents completed the outstanding steps
before initiating the second referral.
[12]
Commissioner Lyster correctly did not decide whether those arguments
were correct, but found
that the submissions made out at least a
prima facie
case in respect of the point
in limine
.
[13]
There is some contestation on the papers as to whether the second
referral was thereafter set
down for consideration on the merits, or
whether the respondents initiated a third referral under the same
case number and on the
same papers as the second referral. The
applicant contends for a third referral. The respondents on the other
hand state categorically
in their answering affidavits that there was
no third referral, but that the second referral was set down for a
hearing on the
merits following the Lyster recission. The applicant
does not deal with these assertions in reply.
[14]
That lack of contestation, together with the fact that even on the
applicant's case the papers
in what is styled as the third referral
were identical to those in the second, means that there is no basis
upon which the respondents'
version in this regard can be rejected.
[15]
I consequently decide this application on the basis that there have
been only two referrals of
the dispute.
[16]
Following the Lyster recission, the second referral came before
Commissioner Mbuli in January
2021. He ordered the Minister to file
an affidavit in respect of the point
in limine
. This led to
the Minister apparently filing extensive submissions on the special
plea.
[17]
The respondents again made submissions in answer, but these were yet
again not placed before
Commissioner Mbuli when he upheld the special
plea on 30 June 2021 as if it were unopposed. In his award,
Commissioner Mbuli expressly
confirmed that the condonation decision
stood.
[18]
When the respondents became aware of this decision, they immediately
brought it to Commissioner
Mbuli's attention that they had indeed
filed submissions and asked him
mero motu
to rescind his
decision upholding the special plea. Commissioner Mbuli declined this
invitation, but on 6 October 2021 granted
an application to rescind
his order upholding the plea of
res judicata
and requested the
Bargaining Council to set the mater down for hearing afresh before
another Commissioner (the Mbuli recission).
[19]
Both the Lyster and Mbuli recission orders envisaged that the special
plea and the respondents'
premature referral defence to it would be
dealt with on their merits. That has yet to happen.
[20]
A virtual hearing set down for 8 April 2022 did not proceed because
the Bargaining Council did
not send a link. The next hearing,
originally scheduled for 19 July 2022, was postponed at the second
respondent's request because
the Bargaining Council had double-booked
her legal representative with another part heard case on the
same day. Some three
weeks later, on 10 August 2022 ,the present
application was launched. The referrals to the Bargaining Council
have not progressed
since, and remain pending.
[21]
The central predicate of the Minister's case is that the condonation
stands as a valid decision
which precludes subsequent referrals of
the same dispute unless and until it is set aside on review.
Consequently, so the Minister's
argument runs, the recission
decisions setting aside the orders upholding the Minister's
jurisdictional objections are of no moment
and he is entitled to
orders directing the respondents to withdraw the pending proceedings
and interdicting them from pursuing
any further referral, unless and
until the condonation decision is set aside.
The
legal requirements
[22]
The clear right relied on by the Minister is the right to not have to
defend himself repeatedly
against a dispute that has already been
determined and where there is thus no just cause to resuscitate the
same complaint. Essentially
then, the Minister seeks to achieve under
the common law what he is unable to achieve in terms of the Act.
[23]
The insurmountable hurdle which lies in his way is that the Supreme
Court of Appeal in
Maphanga
[6]
has explained that a superior court's common law power to stop
frivolous and vexatious proceedings, as dealt with in cases such
as
Corderoy
,
[7]
stems from its inherent power to regulate its own process. The
court's common law power thus relates solely to proceedings before
that court and does not extend to proceedings in inferior courts or
other courts or tribunals. Indeed, the Act was promulgated
specifically to address these limitations, but it did not change the
common law principles and its reach did not extend to proceedings
before bargaining councils as already discussed.
[24]
The Minister relies on the dictum in
Hudson
v Hudson and another
,
[8]
approved by the SCA in
Beinash
v Wixley
[9]
that when "the court finds an attempt made to use for ulterior
purposes machinery devised for the better administration of
justice,
it is the duty of the court to prevent such abuse." The Minister
submits that is as authority for the proposition
that the court's
powers can equally apply to abuses of the processes of bargaining
councils because they forms part of that machinery.
[25]
That proposition is unsustainable for two reasons.
[26]
First,
Beinash v Wixley
concerned an application to set aside
a subpoena issued out of the court concerned. The focus of the
judgment was thus the court's
powers to regulate its own processes
and the
dictum
relied on by the Minister must be read in that
context.
[27]
That the dictum is limited to court process is also clear from what
is said immediately before
and after the quoted dictum on which the
Minister relies. Before quoting
Hudson
v Hudson
,
the judgment records that
[10]
:
'There can be no doubt that every Court is entitled to protect itself
and others against an abuse of its processes." Shortly
thereafter, when describing the concept of abuse of process the court
held
[11]
:-
"There can be no
all-encompassing definition of the concept of abuse of process. It
can be said in general terms, however,
the abusive process takes
place with the procedures permitted by the rules of the court to
facilitate the pursuit of the truth
are used for a purpose extraneous
to that objective".
[12]
[28]
Second, and more fundamentally, the proposition is inconsistent with
the rejection of a similar
line of argument in
Maphanga
.
[13]
There, counsel for the MEC had had argued that
Corderoy
did not limit the kinds of orders which could be granted in the
exercise of the court's inherent powers and did not exclude orders
in
respect of other forms of persistent or vexatious conduct which
resulted in extra curial as opposed to judicial proceedings.
[29]
It follows that the applicant is not entitled to relief.
lnterdictory
relief
[30]
Even if this court did have the power to grant interdictory relief in
respect of proceedings
in other
fora
,
the Minister has failed to meet the threshold for the grant of that
relief. I deal with each of the requirements briefly to the
extent
that my reading of
Maphanga
may be viewed as incorrect, although the judgment is in my view clear
as is the manner in which it has been construed.
[14]
[31]
The Minister relies on the alleged right not to have to defend
himself repeatedly against a dispute
that has already been determined
and where there is thus no just cause to resuscitate the same
complaint. This formulation of the
Minister's case required a showing
equivalent to what is required in proceedings under the Act, namely
that a person has brought
legal proceedings "persistently and
without just grounds".
[15]
[32]
Persistence in this context means recurring, constantly repeated or
continuous.
[16]
As is apparent
from the earlier exposition of the facts which I must accept for
present purposes, there have only been two referrals,
the first which
occurred prematurely, and the second which occurred after all the
mandatory dispute resolution steps had been completed.
[33]
It can also not be found that such referrals as have already occurred
are without just grounds.
To meet that threshold, the Minister would
have to demonstrate that the respondents' claims are obviously
unsustainable as a matter
of certainty, and not merely on a
preponderance of probability.
[17]
[34]
The Minister's case in this regard rests squarely on the proposition
that the condonation decision
remains extant unless and until it is
set aside on review as it cannot be altered by another Commissioner.
[35]
The respondents sought to meet this difficulty by relying on
Avgold
.
[18]
which held that if a referral is premature, the council does not have
jurisdiction to hear it. The result is that a commissioner
dealing
with a premature referral acts
ultra
vires
and any award made would be susceptible to review.
[36]
At a level of principle this is not contentious. The issue here is
whether another commissioner
could entertain a subsequent referral
which was no longer premature, absent a review of the decision made
in the premature referral.
[37]
The respondents submit that commissioners are empowered by CCMA rule
22 and its counterpart in
article 3.5.1(k) of the Bargaining
Council's constitution to deal with the second referral even though
the condonation decision
has not be reviewed and set aside. CCMA Rule
22 provides that "if during the arbitration proceedings it
appears that a jurisdictional
issue has not been determined, the
panellist must require the parties to prove that the Council has
jurisdiction to arbitrate the
dispute."
[19]
[38]
In
Avgold
,
relying on CCMA rule 22, an arbitrating commissioner considered a new
jurisdictional objection not raised previously
[20]
The respondents argue that subsequent commissioners have jurisdiction
to deal with the second referral because the prematurity
of the first
referral, which is a matter that bears on jurisdiction, was not
raised before Commissioner Booysen.
[39]
Counsel for the applicant however correctly pointed out that CCMA
rule 22 is concerned with a
very different situation to that which
pertains here.
DETAWU
on behalf of Tshwili v Bidvest Services (Pty) Ltd
[21]
explains that CCMA rule 22 extends only to the duty of an arbitrating
commissioner to determine the jurisdiction to conciliate
afresh in
arbitration proceedings if new arguments regarding conciliation
jurisdiction are raised. Commissioner Booysen was sitting
as an
arbitrating commissioner subsequent to a certificate being issued in
the conciliation proceedings.
[40]
However that does not mean that the respondents were obliged to seek
review relief from the Labour
Court. This is because
section 144
of
the
Labour Relations Act 1995
provides that a decision may be
rescinded by the commissioner who made it or by another commissioner.
[41]
If the first referral was indeed premature, the condonation decision
would be suspectable to
rescission as it was erroneously sought or
made as a result of all parties to the proceedings mistakenly
believing that the Bargaining
Council had jurisdiction to deal with
the referral whereas the prescribed internal procedures had not been
exhausted as required
by clause 3.1 and 3.2 of the Bargaining
Council's constitution.
[42]
This means that I cannot find as a matter of certainty that the
second referral is obviously
unsustainable, or that the condonation
decision can only be set aside in review proceedings.
[43]
Even if the second referral was doomed to failure, the Minister has
the alternative remedy of
finishing what he started in the Bargaining
Council.
[44]
There is no dispute that the Bargaining Council has jurisdiction to
deal with the special plea.
Both recission orders envisaged the
Minister's
res judicata
plea and the respondents' defence to
it would be dealt with on their merits in a subsequent hearing before
the Bargaining Council.
If the special plea is upheld, that will be
the end of the matter.
[45]
Pursuing to finality the course of action the Minister deemed
appropriate at the outset, is an
entirely adequate means of
addressing the Minister's complaint. Moreover it is a remedy which
does not impinge on any party's rights,
in terms of section 34 of the
Constitution, to have their disputes ventilated before a public and
independent forum.
[46]
In the circumstances, even if it were legally competent for this
court to grant interdictory
relief in respect of the conduct
complained of, the requisites for the grant of such relief have not
been established.
Respondents'
points
in limine
[47]
This conclusion makes It unnecessary to deal with the four points
in
Iimine
raised by the respondents, each said to warrant dismissal
of the application, other than
en passant
.
[48]
The first and fourth points
in limine
are inter-related. Both
are to the effect that this court lacks jurisdiction. They rest on
the mischaracterisation of the present
proceedings as a review of
decisions of the Bargaining Council, over which the Labour Court
enjoys exclusive jurisdiction.
[49]
The second point
in limine
relates to the alleged fatal
non-joiner of the National Commissioner of Police. The respondents
assert that it is the Commissioner
and not the Minister who employs
the police and so the Commissioner has a direct and substantial
interest in the proceedings.
[50]
Even if the contentions were factually correct, the legal conclusion
fails. The orders sought
were directed at the respondents alone and
had no effect on their employer. If granted, the orders could be
given effect to without
in any way affecting the employer's interests
and his joinder was therefore not necessary.
[51]
In argument, counsel for the respondent explained that the objection
was actually that the applicant
did not have
locus standi
because he was not the employer, but that was not the case pleaded.
[52]
The third point
in limine
of
lis pendens
is based on
the assertion that the litigation pending before the Bargaining
Council was between the same parties, based on the
same cause of
action and respect and in respect of the same subject matter. Quite
apart from the fact that upholding a plea of
lis pendens
would
stay the present proceedings rather than bring them to an end the
relief sought in the two sets of proceedings is entirely
different,
as is the cause of action.
Costs
[53]
It remains only for me to consider the question of costs. It is
entirely appropriate for costs
to follow the result as is usual, but
the respondents seek costs against the minister
de bonis propriis
and on the scale as between attorney and client.
[54]
Such a drastic order is said to be appropriate because the Minister
has repeatedly raised the
same point
in limine
before the
Bargaining Council and instituted the present proceedings as a means
of circumventing the effect of the recission decisions.
This, so the
respondents argue, renders the institution of these proceedings an
abuse of process. In addition, the respondents
accuse the Minister of
raising "minor technicalities" in opposition to their
Bargaining Council referrals, which they
assert also amounts to an
abuse of process.
[55]
I have some difficulty with the notion that the manner in which the
Minister conducted himself
in the proceedings before the Bargaining
Council is a matter to which I may properly have regard in
determining the costs of this
application. Moreso when the full
records of those proceedings are not before me.
[56]
To the extent however that the respondents' contentions should be
understood as suggesting that
the manner in which the Minister has
conducted the present proceedings is an extension of an earlier abuse
of process, the respondents'
complaints are not borne out by the
evidence.
[57]
The
res judicata
plea was mounted twice because the first
decision upholding it was rescinded and Commissioner Mbuli directed
the filing of submissions
on it following the second recission. That
special plea has yet to be determined on its merits. It raises issues
of substance and
cannot be said to be a minor technicality.
Similarly, the Minister's submissions on the late referral were
substantive and were
dealt with cogently and comprehensively in the
condonation decision.
[58]
The central tenet of the Minister's case reveals that he did not
believe it was necessary to
review the recission decisions because he
regarded them as being of no moment since the condonation decision
had not been set aside.
That stance lost sight of the fact that
whilst the second referral did not, in terms, seek a recission of
that decision, it did
so in substance. But the Minister could not
have applied to review and set aside the recission decisions when he
had, quite correctly,
not opposed either of them because the
decisions against which they lay had been taken in ignorance of the
respondents' submissions.
[59]
I consequently find that there is no basis for a punitive costs
award.
Order
[60]
In the result, I make the following order: The application is
dismissed with costs.
ANNANDALE,
AJ
JUDGMENT
RESERVED:
22 OCTOBER 2024
JUDGMENT
HANDED DOWN: 4 NOVEMBER 2024
Appearances
For
applicant:
MS TRYON
Instructed
by:
THE STATE ATTORNEY
Email:
RSchlkwayk@justice.gov.za
and
ZMnikathi@justice.gov.za
Ref: 32/0013331/22/B/P15
For
first and second respondents: MS A NAIDOO
Instructed
by:
ANGENI NAIDOO LAW FIRM
Email:
an.legalpractitioner@gmail.com
Ref: AN/E BABOORAM &
F NAIKER/clv
No
appearance for third respondent.
[1]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
at 227.
[2]
MEC for
the Department of Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs v
Maphanga
2021
(4) SA 131
(SCA).
[3]
Maphanga
para 6.
[4]
Which reads : 'If, on an application made by any person against whom
legal proceedings have been instituted by any other person,
or who
has reason to believe that the institution of legal proceedings
against him is contemplated by any other person, the court
is
satisfied that the said person has persistently and without any
reasonable ground instituted legal proceedings in any court
or in
any inferior court, whether against the same person or against
different persons, the court may, after hearing that other
person or
giving him an opportunity of being heard, order that no legal
proceedings shall be instituted by him against any person
in any
court or any inferior court without the leave of that court, or any
judge thereof, or that inferior court, as the case
may be, and such
leave shall not be granted unless the court or Judge or the inferior
court, as the case may be, is satisfied
that the proceedings are not
an abuse of the process of the court and that there is prima facie
ground for the proceedings.'.
[5]
Maphanga
paras 18-19.
[6]
Paras 25 to 28.
[7]
Corderoy
v United Government (Minister of Finance)
1918 AD 512
at 519.
[8]
1927 AD 259
at 268.
[9]
[1997] ZASCA 32
;
1997 (3) SA 721
(SCA) p 734 E- F.
[10]
Ibid
p 734 D-E.
[11]
Ibid
p 734 F-G.
[12]
Cited with approval by the Constitutional Court in
Lawyers
for Human Rights v Minister in the Presidency
2017 (1) SA 645
(CC) para 20.
[13]
Maphanga
para 27
[14]
The manner in which
Maphanga
has been construed by the Constitutional Court in
Mineral
Sands Resources (Pty) Ltd and others v Reddell and others (Centre
for Applied Legal Studies and another as amicus curiae)
2023 (7) BCLR 779
(CC) paras 56 - 59, and most recently by the
Electoral Court
Umkhonto
Wesizwe Political Party v The Electoral Commission of South Africa
and Others
[2024] ZAEC 26 (25 October 2024) paras 19 to 23 is consonant with my
reading of the case.
[15]
Maphanga
para 28
[16]
Maphanga
para 20.
Maphanga
para 20.
[17]
African
Farms and Townships Ltd v Cape Town Municipality
1963 (2) SA 555
(A) at 565 D- E
[18]
Avgold-Target
Division v CCMA
[201OJ
2 BLLR 159
(LC) para 46.
[19]
Ibid
paras 43 and 44.
[20]
Ibid
paras 43 and 44.
[21]
C 725/2021 2023 ZALCCT 42 paras 5 - 8.
sino noindex
make_database footer start