Case Law[2023] ZAKZDHC 46South Africa
Ralushai and Others v KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Executive Committee of the South African Clothing and Textile Workers Union and Another (D9549/2019) [2023] ZAKZDHC 46 (21 July 2023)
Judgment
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
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAKZDHC 46
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Ralushai and Others v KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Executive Committee of the South African Clothing and Textile Workers Union and Another (D9549/2019) [2023] ZAKZDHC 46 (21 July 2023)
Ralushai and Others v KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Executive Committee of the South African Clothing and Textile Workers Union and Another (D9549/2019) [2023] ZAKZDHC 46 (21 July 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAKZDHC/Data/2023_46.html
sino date 21 July 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
Case
no:
D9549/2019
In
the matter between:
THANDAZILE
RALUSHAI
FIRST APPLICANT
SIYABONGA
BOPHELA
SECOND APPLICANT
SIYATHEMBA
KUNENE
THIRD APPLICANT
and
KWAZULU-NATAL
PROVINCIAL EXECUTIVE
FIRST RESPONDENT
COMMITTEE
OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN CLOTHING
AND
TEXTILE WORKERS UNION
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN CLOTHING AND TEXTILE
SECOND RESPONDENT
WORKERS
UNION WORKERS
(SACTWU)
Coram:
Mossop J
Heard:
21 July 2023
Delivered:
21 July 2023
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The
application is dismissed.
2.
The applicants
are to pay the respondents costs jointly and severally, the one
paying the others to be absolved.
JUDGMENT
Mossop
J
:
[1]
This is an ex tempore judgment.
[2]
This
application was launched as an urgent application on 12 November
2019. It is now 21 July 2023, and the matter has still not
been
finalised. This delay in concluding the matter is of some
significance because some, if not all, of the relief claimed by
the
applicants is date specific. The order sought, in the form of a rule
nisi, reads as follows:
‘
2.1
That the decision of the first (sic) Respondent to suspend the first
Applicant as a Treasurer of the
Southern African Clothing and
Textiles Workers Union Newcastle Branch be declared unlawful and set
aside;
2.2
That the decision of the first Respondent to suspend the Applicants
from attending the National
Executive Committee meetings and National
Co-Ordinating Committee meetings for a period of twelve months be
declared unlawful and
set aside;
2.3
That the first Respondent immediately attend to arrange for
travelling and accommodation of the
Applicants for the extended
National Executive Committee meeting scheduled to take place on the
13
th
to 15
th
November 2019 at Cape Town.
2.4
That in the event of the first Respondent failing to comply with the
provisions of paragraph 2.1
to 2.3 above, the second Respondent be
interdicted from proceeding with the extended National Executive
Committee meeting scheduled
to take place on the 13
th
to
15
th
November 2019 or/and any other Executive meeting
pending the final determination of this matter;
2.5
That the first Respondent pays costs of this application.
3.
That the orders as contained in 2.1 to 2.2 hereof operate as Interim
Orders forthwith
pending the final determination of this
application.’
[3]
This morning
when the matter was called, Mr Aldworth appeared for the respondents.
There was no appearance for the applicants, who
also did not deliver
any heads of argument or a practice note. Mr Aldworth is thanked for
his helpful submissions.
[4]
This matter
involves two distinct complaints. The first is that the first
applicant has allegedly been wrongly suspended from the
second
respondent. I shall refer to this as the ‘primary relief’.
The second complaint is that all the applicants have
unjustly been
prevented from attending an extended National Executive Committee
(NEC) meeting of the second respondent over the
period 13 to 15
November 2019. I shall refer to this as ‘the secondary’
relief. The way in which the founding papers
is crafted has tended to
blur the distinction between the two distinct types of relief
claimed.
[5]
What
looms large in this matter insofar as the question of the secondary
relief is concerned is the question of mootness. As indicated,
this
application was moved initially as an urgent application. It appears
that the catalyst for the urgency was the relief claimed
in respect
of the secondary relief. This would appear to be the case by virtue
of the fact that the application was brought the
day before the NEC
meeting was to be held. Thus, it is safe to assume that the
application was designed to achieve a result that
would allow the
applicants to attend the NEC meeting. Those dates are now nearly four
years distant. That some of the relief claimed
by the applicants is
thus now moot permits of no doubt. Even if the court was disposed to
grant the relief identified in paragraphs
2.2, 2.3 and 2.4 of the
notice of motion, such an order would have no practical effect.
[6]
It
appears to me that the only relief that could be regarded as still
being potentially alive
is
the relief claimed in respect of the primary relief in paragraph 2.1
of the notice of motion, although I make that comment hesitantly
because the suspension mentioned in these paragraphs must also have
come and gone. However, notionally, I suppose that the first
applicant may still wish to impugn the decision that led to her
suspension.
[1]
[7]
No relief was
granted to the applicants when this application was first considered
by this court on 13 November 2019. No relief
having been afforded the
applicants at that hearing, it appears that all the steam that had
been fuelling the application dissipated.
Indeed, the applicants have
failed to even deliver a replying affidavit and appear to have
completely lost interest in the matter.
The last affidavit filed in
the matter was the answering affidavit, which was delivered on 6
December 2019. Since then, the matter
has slumbered in a state of
hibernation until it was recently set down, not by the applicants,
but by the respondents.
[8]
It
is perhaps convenient first to consider the secondary relief. The
general principle is that a matter is moot when a court’s
judgment will have no practical effect on the parties.
[2]
Courts should not make rulings on matters that are properly moot, as
the court’s decision will simply amount to an advisory
opinion
on the identified legal questions, which are abstract, academic or
hypothetical.
[3]
In
President
of the Republic of South Africa v Democratic Alliance
,
[4]
the Constitutional Court stated that:
‘
courts
should be loath to fulfil an advisory role, particularly for the
benefit of those who have dependable advice abundantly available
to
them and in circumstances where no actual purpose would be served by
that decision, now’.
[9]
This
general principle is, however, not an absolute bar to the
determination of matters that are now recognised to be moot. Such
matters may still be considered by a court if they involve issues of
public importance that may have some future e
ffect
on like matters and on which the adjudication of a court is
required.
[5]
This is not such a
matter.
[10]
I am therefore not prepared to grant
the secondary relief set out in paragraphs 2.2, 2.3 and 2.4 of the
notice of motion.
[11]
As regards the
primary relief, Section P of the second respondent’s
constitution deals with the question of discipline. Important
clauses
in that document are the following:
(a)
Clause 23.1,
which provides that:
‘
A
member may be suspended, fined or expelled as may be determined by
the Provincial Executive Committee, National Co-ordinating
Committee
or by the National Executive Committee if he/she infringes any of the
terms of this Constitution or acts in a manner
which is detrimental
to the interests of the Union.’
(b)
Clause 23.2,
which states:
‘
No
member may be suspended, fined or expelled unless he/she has been
afforded the opportunity to state his/her case personally at
a
disciplinary hearing which shall be a meeting of the Committee in
Clause 23.1 which intends to consider the matter. Such member
shall
be given not less than four (4) days’ notice in writing from
the Secretary of the Committee. The matter with which
the member is
charged shall be set out in such notice.’
(c)
Clause 23.3,
which provides, inter alia, that:
‘
If
the Committee hearing the matter is satisfied that the person charged
has though absent, received the prescribed notice, or if
the person
charged is present, the Committee may proceed to hear and determine
the charge, and if it finds the charge proved to
its satisfaction
may:
23.3.1
…
23.3.2
suspend the member for a definite period from membership
of the
Union.’
[12]
The
first applicant appears to contend that this prescribed procedure was
not followed when she was suspended. One of the difficulties
with the
founding papers is that reference is made to annexures which will
buttress submissions made by the deponent but those
annexures are not
attached. That I have been able to refer to the constitution of the
second respondent is due entirely to the
fact that the second
respondent put it up. Another annexure put up by the respondents is a
letter dated 5 November 2019 (the suspension
letter) in which it is
alleged that the first respondent failed to fulfil her constitutional
responsibilities in relation to clause
13.5 of the SACTWU
constitution.
[6]
She was thus to
be suspended from that position for such failure. The interesting
thing to note about the suspension letter is
that it states the
reason for the suspension to be the following:
‘
The
KZN Provincial Executive Committee therefore resolved that the
Newcastle Branch Treasurer has neglected to perform her
constitutional
responsibilities as a branch treasurer as entrenched
in Clause 13.5 of the SACTWU constitution and she should be
provisionally
suspended pending an investigation into allegations of
financial mismanagement at SACTWU Newcastle Branch.’
[13]
The suspension
letter is not addressed to the first respondent at all. Nor does it
suggest that the first respondent was given the
required notice of
the intention to suspend her or that she was provided with the
opportunity to provide any reasons why she should
not be suspended.
Moreover, in dealing with the first respondent’s suspension,
the deponent to the answering affidavit indicates
that:
‘
The
reasons were, briefly:
11.1
Mismanagement of funds at the Newcastle Branch; and
11.2
Misleading the National Congress.’
[14]
There is no
reference at all to the first applicant misleading the National
Congress in the suspension letter. There is, however,
a mention of
the events at the National Congress in the founding affidavit.
Briefly stated, the applicants allege that they were
suspended for
alleging that certain delegates at a National Congress of the second
respondent held in Durban in September 2019
were not entitled to be
in attendance. They may or may not have claimed that this was known
by them because of them having investigated
this. This is a disputed
issue.
[15]
It seems to me
that there may have been merit in the first applicant’s
complaint regarding her suspension as branch treasurer.
There is
certainly no indication that that the prescribed procedure was
followed before she was suspended. But, as was pointed
out by Mr
Aldworth, the first applicant never challenged the decision
internally as she was entitled to do. The observations above
are mine
and are not raised on the papers.
[16]
Given the age
of the matter and its state of dormancy, it occurs to me that the
true issue why this matter is before me is the issue
of costs. The
respondents want their costs of opposing this application paid by the
applicants. Because the applicants appear to
have lost interest in
the application, it is tempting to merely order them to pay the
costs. Oscar Wilde once said that he could
resist everything but
temptation. I must do better than that: I must consider whether there
was initially any cause for the applicants
to have approached the
court for assistance. If there was, then that cause may have an
impact on the issue of costs.
[17]
Generally
considered, the application was poorly and inexpertly constructed.
Looking beyond that, the applicants have claimed, but
cannot be
granted, the secondary relief. While there may have been prospects of
the first respondent having grounds to approach
the court over her
suspension she, in the end, appears to have abandoned the application
entirely. It seems to me that in these
circumstances the respondents
are entitled to the following order:
1.
The
application is dismissed.
2.
The applicants
are to pay the respondents costs jointly and severally, the one
paying the others to be absolved.
MOSSOP
J
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicants:
No
appearance
Instructed
by:
A P
Shangase and Associates
467
Che Guevara Road
Glenwood
Durban
Counsel
for the respondent:
Mr D
W D Aldworth
Instructed
by:
Purdon
and Munsamy Attorneys
Suite
1302
13
th
Floor, The Marine Building
22
Dorothy Nyembe Street
Durban
Date
of argument:
21
July 2023
Date
of Judgment:
21
July 2023
[1]
In
his heads of argument,
Mr
Aldworth explains that, in truth, the applicants were not suspended
but were merely withdrawn as delegates to the NEC meeting.
[2]
A B and
Another v Pridwin Preparatory School and Others
[2020]
ZACC 12; 2020 (9) BCLR 1029 (CC); 2020 (5) SA 327 (CC).
[3]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
[1999] ZACC 17
;
2000
(2) SA 1
(CC);
2000 (1) BCLR 39
(CC) para 21 fn 18.
[4]
President
of the Republic of South Africa v Democratic Alliance and Others
[2019]
ZACC 35
;
2019 (11) BCLR 1403
(CC);
2020 (1) SA 428
(CC) para 35.
[5]
Centre
for Child Law v The Governing Body of Hoërskool Fochville and
Another
[2015]
ZASCA 155
;
[2015] 4 All SA 571
(SCA);
2016 (2) SA 121
(SCA) para 14.
See also
MEC
for Education, KwaZulu- Natal and Others v Pillay
[2007]
ZACC 21
;
2008 (1) SA 474
(CC);
2008 (2) BCLR 99
(CC) para 32.
[6]
Clause
13.5 reads as follows: ‘The Branch Treasurer shall be in
charge of all monies and assets of the Branch and in the
case of a
Branch, he/she shall sign all cheques drawn on behalf of the Branch.
He/she shall initial the books of account each
month. Together with
the Branch Secretary he/she shall present monthly statements of
finance to the Branch Executive Committee
and submit such monthly
financial statement to the Provincial Secretary. He/she shall
generally exercise supervision over the
financial affairs of the
Branch and perform such duties as by usage and custom pertain to the
office.’
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
S.H.G v T.S.P and Others (1622/23P) [2023] ZAKZDHC 82 (31 August 2023)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 82High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
U.H N.O and Another v S.L and Others (D14148/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 103 (20 December 2024)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 103High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
W.S v N. V (D376/2020 ; D1062/2021) [2025] ZAKZDHC 35 (6 June 2025)
[2025] ZAKZDHC 35High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
Zulu and Others v Zulu and Others (D429/2023) [2023] ZAKZDHC 25 (6 April 2023)
[2023] ZAKZDHC 25High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar
Khoza and Others v National Executive Committee, African National Congress Women's League and Others (D9489/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 5 (6 February 2024)
[2024] ZAKZDHC 5High Court of South Africa (KwaZulu-Natal Division, Durban)99% similar