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# South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
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## University of Zululand v Dlongolo (DA23/2023)
[2025] ZALAC 1; [2025] 5 BLLR 503 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 1146 (LAC) (21 January 2025)
University of Zululand v Dlongolo (DA23/2023)
[2025] ZALAC 1; [2025] 5 BLLR 503 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 1146 (LAC) (21 January 2025)
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sino date 21 January 2025
FLYNOTES:
LABOUR – Pension –
Withdrawal
penalty
–
Labour
Court found that employee was misled to believe he would be
compensated by university – Quasi-mutual assent –
Acceptance of offer by email – Reasonable person would have
realised real possibility of mistake in framing of the
offer –
Employee snatched at bargain where reasonable person would have
acted more carefully by enquiring into matter
– No
consensus, actual or imputed – Alleged contract is of no
effect – Appeal upheld.
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, DURBAN
Not Reportable
case No:
DA23/2023
In the matter between:
UNIVERSITY OF ZULULAND
Appellant
and
SIPHO WILSON DLONGOLO
Respondent
Heard:
12 November 2024
Delivered: 21 January 2025
Coram: Savage ADJP, Van
Niekerk JA, Govindjee AJA
JUDGMENT
GOVINDJEE, AJA
Introduction
[1] Concluding contracts via an email exchange can be risky.
The language used may be overly informal, ambiguous, contradictory
or
shorn of the details necessary for the intended contract. A poorly
worded email might also be interpreted in a manner contrary
to what
was intended. As the facts of this matter illustrate, the peril is
heightened when the subject matter of an offer involves
various
permutations couched in technical language. The cross-pollination of
employment jargon with terminology contained in pension
fund rules in
an offer and acceptance by email resulted in the claim that is the
subject of this appeal.
[2] The respondent (Mr Dlongolo) was employed by the appellant
(the University) as Director: Physical Planning. Following
death
threats due to his role in implementing the University’s
insourcing process, and a period of absence from work, Mr
Dlongolo,
who was only 57 years of age at the time, requested permission to
take early retirement. Various discussions ensued.
Given the unusual
circumstances, the University indicated that it was prepared to
deviate from standard practice. It was willing
to compensate Mr
Dlongolo for ‘pension penalties’ imposed by the
University’s pension fund (the fund) as a result
of the early
retirement.
[3] On Mr Dlongolo’s pleaded case, the following
occurred:
’12. On or about December 2017, and as a
result of the negotiations, Mr RT Ngcobo, the Executive Director
Human Resources and on behalf of the respondent made a written offer
to the applicant to take early retirement with effect from
31
December 2017 and that his pension and other benefits to be paid by
the University … in one of the three following scenarios:
a. A full withdrawal from the Pension Fund by the
Applicant with the Respondent to pay the Applicant R850 006.06
[as compensation for the early retirement penalties less] …
his leave days amounting to R271 780.72;
b. A monthly pension amount; or
c. The Applicant to be paid a third of his pension
benefit, and the remaining benefit to be paid [as] a reduced
monthly
pension.
13. On or about December 2017, the Applicant duly
accepted the Respondents first offer in writing, the terms
of which
were as follows:
13.1 The Applicant would take early retirement from
employment with effect from 31 December 2017.
13.2 That the Respondent was to pay to the
Applicant a full withdrawal of his pension benefit [as well as] the
amount of R578 225.34 comprising of the Applicant’s
compensation benefit and leave days [as compensation for the
penalties
suffered due to early retirement]; and
13.3 The agreed amounts were to be paid on or
before 31 December 2017.’
[4] In effect, Mr Dlongolo elected to withdraw from the fund so
that he received his full account balance of R5,1 million,
without
any penalty deduction being imposed by the fund. The University
subsequently refused to make any payment to Mr Dlongolo
on the basis
that he had opted to withdraw from the fund rather than select
voluntary early retirement in terms of the fund rules
(the rules). Mr
Dlongolo instituted a claim in terms of section 77(3) of the Basic
Conditions of Employment Act.
[1]
The University’s pleaded defence was that Mr Dlongolo’s
‘
withdrawal of his share of the pension fund did not
constitute an early retirement option in terms of clause 4.3 of the
pension
fund rules but rather a voluntary withdrawal in terms of
clause 7 of those rules.
’
[2]
The Labour Court judgment
[5] The Labour Court determined the dispute on the basis of
quasi-mutual assent, also referred to as the reliance theory:
[3]
‘…I find that the applicant was misled to believe that
he would be compensated by the university, irrespective of
which
option he exercised on his retirement. The undertaking by the
university to financially compensate the applicant for the
penalties
suffered by early retirement, in the large sum of R824 700.00,
in my view would most certainly induce and influence
any reasonable
person in the circumstances of the applicant to take the early
retirement. I find that that misrepresentation indeed
induced the
applicant to take early retirement … Ngcobo created the
impression that the parties were
ad idem
on the material terms
of the agreement. I find that the applicant has discharged the onus
and has established the necessary animus
contrahendi on the part of
both parties.’
[6] The court held that Mr Dlongolo had been misled by the
University to believe that he would receive separate compensation
for
the loss of pension benefits occasioned by the early retirement. He
had also been persuaded by this offer of compensation to
take early
retirement. A reasonable person in his position would also have been
misled, according to the court:
‘The fact that Ngcobo’s inclusion of the option of
withdrawal in the options to the applicant to receive his
retirement
benefit clearly demonstrated to any lay person that it formed part of
the special arrangements and negotiations between
the applicant and
the respondent relating to his early retirement due to these
particular special circumstances of his case. In
my view, the
university was being disingenuous to suggest the same and it appears
the university was attempting to renege on the
agreement with the
absurd contentions that it intended to pay the benefits to the fund
and not the applicant … when these
contradict the very wording
[of] Ngcobo’s emails.’
[7] The question to be answered in this appeal is whether the
parties concluded a contract on the terms suggested by Mr Dlongolo,
or based on quasi-mutual assent, in which event he would be entitled
to the contractual damages, interest and costs awarded by
the Labour
Court based on the university’s repudiation.
Consensus?
[8] A contract is an agreement entered into with the intention
of creating a legal obligation or obligations. The definition
postulates an agreement (a meeting of minds or mutual understanding)
between two or more persons as the basis of a contract. Without
agreement in this sense there can, generally speaking, be no
contract. The parties must not only be of the same mind, but know
that this is the case. Agreement is reached when parties have come
into ‘conscious accord’ on the fact that they intend
to
create between them an obligation (or obligations) with a specific
content. Persons cannot be said to be in agreement unless
there has
been a complete meeting of their minds, that is, unless the intention
of the one corresponds exactly to that of the other.
[4]
[9] Mr Dlongolo’s case is based on acceptance of an offer
made by Mr Ngcobo, on behalf of the University. The offer
in question
is contained in the following email sent by Mr Ngcobo on 14 December
2017 (the offer) and requires repetition in full,
including the
emphasis contained in the original:
‘As discussed at our last meeting on Friday 8
th
, the
scenario is as follows:
1. If you retire as at 31 December 2017 without
penalties, as if you were aged 60, the university has to pay
in
R1 614 644,63 to buy out the outstanding service. It was
made clear that because of budgetary constraints this cost
is
unaffordable.
2. If you retire as at 31 December 2017 with
penalties (see Clause 4.3 of the fund rules attached), the penalties
amount to R824 700.00. The university can consider this as a
contribution towards your retirement.
3. Your leave credit as at 31 December 2017 is 102
days, which in value is R297 086.78.
4. However there is a capping of 90 days (in terms
of the leave policy, upon termination of service, the university
only
pays out leave days up to a maximum of 90 days), the value of which
is R271 780.72. This amount will not be paid out
to you but
set-off against the penalty of R824 700.00.
5. You then requested that the difference of 12
days – R25 306.06 in leave values (R297 086.78
less
R271 780.72) be paid out to you.
In summary, at the end of the meeting, this was the understanding:
·
That you will retire as at 31 December 2017 with penalties
amounting to R824 700.00.
·
That the university will compensate you for the penalties
suffered because of early retirement. You will contribute your 90
days
leave pay-out of R271 780.72 towards the penalties.
·
That the leave difference (12 days) of R25 306.06 will be
paid out to you.
·
It is your option how you receive the retirement benefits as
reflected on the quotation issued by Absa directly to you, i.e.,
o
full withdrawal (estimated R5 117 233.79)
OR
o
monthly pension without commuting a third (estimated
R21 463.41)
OR
o
commuting a third (estimated R1 213 568.66) AND then
receive a reduced monthly pension (estimated R14 308.94).
NOTE THAT ALL OF THE AMOUNTS QUOTED ABOVE ARE BEFORE APPLICABLE
STATUTORY DEDUCTIONS.
THERE MAY BE SMALL VARIATIONS DEPENDING ON FINAL DATE OF CALCULATIONS
THESE VALUES (sic).
May I also point out to
you that
·
the undertaking by the university to compensate you for the
penalties suffered is not standard practice but is done to reach an
amicable solution to the predicament (your circumstances) that
presents.
·
The undertaking by the university is only valid if exercised
in the 2017 financial year as there is no budget for it in 2018.
It is, therefore, imperative that you communicate your decision to
management before 12h00, Friday 15 December 2017, in order for
the
amounts to be accrued.
If anything is unclear, please do not hesitate to contact me. Urgency
is of essence in this matter.’
[10] The rules were attached to this correspondence. Clause 4
deals with retirement and clause 7 with withdrawal, as follows:
‘4 Retirement
4.1 Retirement Benefits
On receipt of satisfactory proof of the retirement of a MEMBER and
subject to the provisions of RULE 13.13, a MEMBER shall retire
in
terms of RULE 4.2 or 4.3 as the case may be.
4.2 Normal Retirement
A MEMBER who retires on the NORMAL RETIREMENT DATE shall be entitled
to an annual pension equal to such MEMBER’S SCALE PENSION.
4.3 Voluntary Early Retirement
Subject to the written consent of the EMPLOYER, a MEMBER may retire
at any time after attaining the age of 55 (fifty-five) years.
In this
event no further CONTRIBUTIONS shall be payable by or in respect of
the MEMBER. The MEMBER shall receive an annual pension
from the date
of such early retirement and equal to such MEMBER’S SCALE
PENSION. Such annual pension shall be reduced by
0,4% for each month
by which the MEMBER’S RETIREMENT DATE precedes the date on
which such MEMBER would attain 60 (sixty).
4.4 Cash Option
4.4.1 A MEMBER shall be entitled to take up to one-third
of such MEMBER’S pension in cash…
7 Withdrawal
7.1 Withdrawal benefits
If a MEMBER leaves the service of the EMPLOYER before reaching NORMAL
RETIREMENT DATE and is not entitled to any other benefit
in terms of
the RULES … the MEMBER shall be entitled to one of the options
available under RULE 7.2, 7.3 or 7.5 as the case
may be…
7.2 Cash benefit
7.2.1 If a MEMBER leaves the service of the EMPLOYER, due
to any reason other than retrenchment, a lump sum benefit
shall be
payable…
7.3 Preservation benefit
7.3.1 In lieu of the cash benefit in terms of RULE 7.2, a
MEMBER may elect to transfer such benefit to another APPROVED
FUND
chosen by the MEMBER…’
[11] The record reveals that the parties each intended to make
a contract, but on different sets of terms. The university
was
willing to make a contribution to negate the anticipated penalty, to
be imposed in terms of the rules, due to early retirement.
That
penalty amounted to 0,4% for each month by which Mr Dlongolo’s
retirement preceded the date on which he would attain
the age of
60.
[5]
Importantly, the effect of the penalty would be to reduce the
annual
pension
he would receive after retirement.
[12] By way of illustration, Mr Dlongolo’s annual scale
pension was calculated to be R342 202,39 if he took normal
early
retirement at the age of 57, without any additional university
support, given the imposition of the prescribed early retirement
penalty. Allowing Mr Dlongolo to retire without imposing this penalty
would result in an annual scale pension of R454 909,72.
On this
scenario, he would effectively have been deemed to be 60 years of
age, so that no penalty was applicable, and taken to
have made the
necessary additional contributions to the fund, thereby qualifying
for the higher annual amount. To achieve that
result at age 57
required Mr Dlongolo’s fund credit to be bolstered to the tune
of R1,6 million, comprising actuarially-calculated
additional service
contributions as well as the cost of reversing the early retirement
penalty. The university was only prepared
to contribute the latter to
the fund, less 90 days’ leave pay-out due to Mr Dlongolo, to
enhance the annual scale pension.
[6]
[13] Mr Dlongolo, by contrast, wanted to leave the university’s
service early, withdraw from the fund and personally
receive the
early retirement penalty contribution promised by the university. As
a result, despite the purported acceptance of
the offer, there
remained dissensus in respect of the intended obligations.
[7]
There was therefore no agreement between the parties and, on the
standard theory, Mr Dlongolo failed to prove the contract on which
he
relied.
[8]
Quasi-mutual assent?
[14] On a strict approach to the pleadings that would be the
end of the matter. It is generally for the parties to identify
the
dispute and for the court to determine that dispute and that dispute
alone.
[9]
Mr Dlongolo’s case was poorly pleaded. He did not rely on any
oral variation of what was contained in the offer
[10]
despite it being obvious that he failed to accept within the
strict time period indicated, so that the written offer had
lapsed.
[11]
The pleaded case is simply that there was an express offer in writing
containing three options, one of which was properly accepted.
That
aside, he also did not plead a contract concluded with the University
based on quasi-mutual assent.
[12]
On appeal, however, he relied exclusively on this argument. It seems
fair to adopt a lenient approach and to consider the point
given the
equally imprecise state of the University’s pleadings and
considering that this dispute was fully ventilated before
the Labour
Court and determined on this basis.
[15] In cases of quasi-mutual assent, a party is precluded from
denying the existence of an agreement based on their own
conduct and
the circumstances.
[13]
The established test builds on the sentiments expressed in
Smith v
Hughes
:
[14]
‘If, whatever a man’s real intention may be, he
so conducts himself that a reasonable man would believe that
he was
assenting to the terms proposed by the other party, and that other
party upon the belief enters into the contract with him,
the man thus
conducting himself would be equally bound as if he had intended to
agree to the other party’s terms.’
[16] A three-fold enquiry is usually applied prior to accepting
a contract on this basis:
[15]
‘…firstly, was there a misrepresentation as to one
party’s intention; secondly, who made that representation;
and
thirdly, was the other party misled thereby?…The last question
postulates two possibilities: Was he actually misled
and would a
reasonable man have been misled?’
[17]
As is often the
case, the answers to the first two questions are readily
apparent.
[16]
Mr Ngcobo’s main error was to include in the offer the ‘full
withdrawal’ amount from the fund (in the amount
of R5,1
million), as received from ABSA, as an option linked to early
retirement with penalties. That was contrary to the rules,
which were
provided to Mr Dlongolo, which made it clear that withdrawal from the
fund was treated differently to retirement. Including
that option was
unintended and amounted to a material mistake on the part of the
University.
[17]
[18]
The decisive
question is whether the University, whose actual intention did not
conform to the common intention expressed in its
offer, led Mr
Dlongolo, as a reasonable person, to believe that the declared
intention represented its actual intention.
[18]
Answering this question inevitably requires a detailed examination of
the factual matrix.
[19]
As will be illustrated, the reasonableness of Mr Dlongolo’s
belief turns on the information provided to him in and with the
offer, as well as information he had requested and received prior to
the purported acceptance of the offer.
[19]
The terms
extracted from the bullet-point summary contained in the offer
received by Mr Dlongolo is a useful starting point:
19.1 Mr Dlongolo would ‘
retire
’
on 31 December 2017 ‘
with penalties amounting to
R824 700.00
’.
19.2 He would be compensated by the university for
the penalties that would be suffered due to early retirement.
19.3 He would himself contribute 90 days leave
pay-out of R271 780.72 ‘
towards the penalties
’.
19.4 The 12-day leave difference of R25 306.06
would be paid to him.
19.5 Mr Dlongolo could select to receive
‘
retirement benefits
’ in one of three ways: full
withdrawal; monthly pension or commuting a third and then receiving a
reduced monthly pension.
[20]
This summary
followed, and must be read together with, the five paragraphs that
explained the parties’ discussions, quoted
in paragraph 9
above. In particular, the repeated reference to ‘
penalties
’
in this synopsis must be construed in the light of what is contained
in the preceding portion of the offer. As that portion
of the
correspondence indicates, two broad scenarios had emerged during the
meeting on 8 December 2017. To retire ‘
without penalties
’
would require a ‘pay in’ of R1,6 million ‘
to buy
out the outstanding service
’, which was unaffordable from
the University’s perspective. But retirement ‘
with
penalties
’ in terms of clause 4.3 of the rules would be
possible, the University agreeing to contribute to the penalty
amount, less
the value of the leave pay-out due to Mr Dlongolo. As
framed in the offer, that leave amount (in the amount of R271 780,72)
was to be forfeited by Mr Dlongolo as his contribution ‘
towards
the penalties
’.
[21]
The University
specifically drew Mr Dlongolo’s attention to clause 4.3 of the
rules in explaining this option, and attached
the rules to the offer
to emphasise its importance. By attaching the rules the University
expected Mr Dlongolo to read at least
that particular clause when
construing its offer. His cross-examination suggests that, rather
than not having understood it, he
had failed to give any
consideration to the clause, let alone the rules in their entirety,
prior to communicating his acceptance.
[20]
Considering the circumstances that was an error.
[21]
Had he done so he would have immediately understood that the
‘
penalties
’ referred to the 0,4% per month fund
deduction from the annual pension due to him because of the voluntary
early retirement.
Given the discrepancy between an annual pension and
a lump-sum payment, a reasonable person would have proceeded to query
the terms
of the offer.
[22]
Such
indifference was not in evidence when Mr Dlongolo either telephoned
an ABSA financial advisor (Mr Mncube) from his hospital
bed to obtain
a retirement benefit quotation (the quotation) and / or left hospital
to visit him to clarify the contents of the
quotation received. Mr
Dlongolo’s evidence in this respect is unclear, contradictory
and lacking in detail. That aside, it
must be noted that Mr Dlongolo
was initially adamant, during cross-examination, that his request for
a quotation was nothing more
than a rote, annual enquiry, unrelated
to his impending early retirement. Only later did it transpire that
this was far from the
case given his interaction(s) with Mr Mncube.
[23]
The quotation
was received by Mr Dlongolo on 6 October 2017, some two months prior
to receipt of the offer, coupled with Mr Mncube’s
details. A
paragraph below the quotation, prominently headed ‘
please
note
’, contained the following information:
‘You are currently in a defined benefit fund, which means
that your final retirement benefit is based on your highest
average
salary multiplied by your years of service in the fund multiplied by
the scale of pension.’
[24]
Mr Dlongolo
maintained that he had failed to read the note. This is implausible
considering that he was seriously considering early
retirement, had
requested the information personally and engaged with Mncube on the
retirement benefits due to him. His version
was that his interest was
exclusively on the figures contained in this quotation. Even
accepting this to be the case, Mr Dlongolo
must have appreciated that
early retirement, in so far as fund benefits were concerned, was
restricted to one of only two easily
understandable options: either a
monthly pension of R21 463,41; or one-third commutation in the
sum of R1,2 million coupled
with a monthly pension of R14 308,94.
[22]
There was no mention of any possibility of a lump-sum payment until a
separate ABSA quotation based on withdrawal from the fund
reflected
the amount of R5,1 million. On the probabilities, Mr Dlongolo
received this second quotation at the meeting on 8 December
2017. The
offer made explicit reference to ‘
the quotation issued by
ABSA directly to you
’. This can only relate to the
withdrawal benefit memorandum from ABSA dated 21 November 2017, which
contained no reference
to monthly or annual benefits or penalties.
[25]
For this reason
too, the subsequent expression in the offer of a full withdrawal
option, coupled with the monthly pension estimates
and reference to
compensation for penalties, should have raised a flag. The various
options emanated from two separate ABSA quotations,
one provided
following Mr Dlongolo’s request for information about early
retirement benefits, the other containing information
about
withdrawal from the fund. It may be added that Mr Dlongolo recalled
during cross-examination that Mr Ngcobo had advised him
during the
meeting of 8 December 2017 that there would penalties for early
retirement payable to the fund. He also conceded that
withdrawal from
the fund implied that he would no longer be a member of the fund so
that there would be no penalties payable to
the fund.
[26]
The options
contained in the offer must be considered with this in mind. If Mr
Dlongolo realised (or should have realised as a
reasonable person)
that there was a real possibility of a mistake in the offer, he would
have had a duty to speak and to enquire
whether the expressed offer
was the intended offer. Only thereafter could he accept.
[23]
[27]
Leaving aside
the inconsistencies highlighted above, I am prepared to accept that
Mr Dlongolo probably did not realise the University’s
mistakes.
The conduct of both Mr Ngcobo and a financial advisor, Mr Iqbal Khan,
supports this approach. Mr Ngcobo, by his own admission,
was
uncertain about the information he conveyed to Mr Dlongolo at the
meeting on 8 December 2017. His lack of clarity is also reflected
in
the offer and continued at the meeting of 15 December 2017. He could
not explain why the commutation amount was not one third
of the
withdrawal amount, despite that being the reason for the meeting. He
resorted to calling the ABSA consultant who had arranged
the
actuarial penalty calculation so that she could explain the matter to
Mr Khan. He also appears to have simply copied and pasted
the various
figures received from ABSA without appreciating the impact of the
promised ‘contributions’ (on the part
of both the
University and Mr Dlongolo) towards reducing the penalty. This is the
only plausible explanation for the offer containing
identical monthly
pension figures to what was already provided in the October
quotation. Given the special arrangement proposed,
those figures were
outdated and wrong. To make matters worse, Mr Dlongolo was pushed to
make a quick decision without an updated
actuarial calculation
reflecting the penalty contributions.
[28]
Mr Khan was
engaged to provide financial advice to Mr Dlongolo since November
2017. The offer containing both the monthly pension
estimates and the
withdrawal amount was received by Mr Dlongolo and shared with Mr Khan
a day before they met with Mr Ngcobo to
clarify the figures on 15
December 2017. He was consulted on various occasions before and after
receipt of the offer for his ‘
calculation
’,
‘
quotes
’ and ‘
further advice
’.
Despite this, he restricted his focus mainly to accessing and
investing the lump sum to be withdrawn from the fund. There
was
little consideration of the broader picture and seemingly no
appreciation of the rules provided to him or the manner in which
the
compensation towards the penalties would impact on the two monthly
pension options. He had seen the quotation and, on the probabilities,
perused a letter drafted by Mr Dlongolo before this was sent to the
University at the end of November 2017. He clearly understood
that
the promised contribution was something separate from the lump sum
amount under consideration but acknowledged that the offer
was
unclear to him in respect of what would happen to the penalties in
the case of a full withdrawal. He appeared not to have any
understanding of the meaning of a defined benefit fund or the notion
of penalties. This is surprising, to say the least, considering
his
years of experience as a financial advisor.
[29]
Considering
these circumstances, as well as the underlying reason for his
hospitalisation and need for early retirement, there
must be a
measure of sympathy for Mr Dlongolo’s position.
[30]
In the final
analysis, the appeal turns on whether Mr Dlongolo had a ‘
duty
to speak and to enquire
’ based on the facts of the
case.
[24]
He was a senior employee who proactively engaged with ABSA about the
retirement benefits due to him and who solicited advice from
both
Messrs Mncube and Khan. The quotation received in October afforded
two clear, easily understandable early retirement options,
both
resulting in a monthly pension. Yet the summarised options contained
in the offer conflated those options with full withdrawal
from the
fund, based on an amount contained in a separate actuarial
calculation received from ABSA.
[31]
The requirement
of reasonableness implies that a party asserting a contract should
not be negligent but must exercise proper care
in concluding that the
parties have reached consensus. The contradiction in the offer was
evident: on the one hand, the University
and Mr Dlongolo would each
contribute to negate the penalties associated with the annual benefit
amount to be received, with or
without one-third commutation, upon
early retirement; on the other, Mr Dlongolo could withdraw from the
fund, suffer no penalty
in terms of the rules yet receive the
equivalent penalty amount in cash.
[32]
A reasonable
person would have read the offer in its entirety, noting the
cross-reference to clause 4.3 of the rules. Considering
that clause,
the contrast between receipt of an annual benefit as opposed to a
lump-sum withdrawal was glaring and a reasonable
person would have
realised the real possibility of a mistake in the framing of the
offer.
[25]
The conclusion is that Mr Dlongolo acted unreasonably in construing
the offer as he did, by selectively relying on part of the
offer and
by ignoring information previously gleaned, without any further
enquiry. Moreover, he communicated acceptance despite
his own
financial advisor being unable to make sense of a key component of
the offer. Borrowing from
Sonap
, Mr Dlongolo snatched at a
bargain in circumstances where a reasonable person would have acted
more carefully by enquiring into
the matter, having realised the real
possibility of a mistake in the framing of the offer.
[26]
[33]
There was,
therefore, no consensus, actual or imputed and, reading Mr Dlongolo’s
pleadings generously, the alleged contract
is of no effect. The
Labour Court erred in concluding to the contrary, based on its
limited assessment of whether a reasonable
person would have been
misled by the offer. The appeal succeeds. Given the circumstances
already described, it is appropriate that
there be no order as to
costs.
[34]
The following
order is made:
Order
1. The appeal is upheld, with no order as to costs.
2. The order of the court below is set aside and substituted
with the following:
‘1. The applicant’s claim is dismissed.
2. There is no order as to costs.’
Govindjee AJA
Savage ADJP
et
Van Niekerk JA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE APPELLANT:
G Cassells of Maserumule Inc
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
NSV Mfeka
Instructed by TL Mbili Attorneys
[1]
Act 75 of 1997.
[2]
It is also pleaded that Mr Dlongolo did not
exercise the option of early retirement before the time stipulated
by the University.
[3]
Van Huyssteen N.O. and another v Milla
Investment and Holding Company
(593/16)
[2017] ZASCA 84
(2 June 2017) at para 23: ‘
the
doctrine of quasi-mutual assent constitutes an application of the
reliance theory in cases of dissent’
,
enabling ‘
the ‘contract
asserter’ to contend that the ‘contract denier’
misled him or her into the reasonable belief
that the contract
denier had actually assented to the contractual terms in question
’.
[4]
ADJ Van Rensburg ‘Contract’ in
The
Law of South Africa
(3
rd
Ed) (vol 9) (LexisNexis) (2014) paras 295 – 305.
[5]
The calculation provided by ABSA reflected the
reduction factor as 14,4%, being calculated as follows based on
retirement three
years prior to the age of 60: (0,40% x 12) x 3 =
14,4%.
[6]
Mr Ngcobo’s hand-written, signed note that
appears on Mr Dlongolo’s letter dated 29 November 2017
confirms this: the
university was willing to ‘pay in amount to
buy service once costs determined and approved’. The reference
to ‘pay
in’ and subsequent engagement with the fund to
clarify the amounts confirms the intention. Mr Dlongolo had
requested the
Vice-Chancellor of the University to ‘
buy
the time left between now and sixty years and compensate me for 60
years retirement benefit’
as
well as ‘
buy my leave days
towards my pension / retirement fund
’.
[7]
This is also readily apparent from the
University’s response, on 20 December 2017, to Mr Dlongolo’s
selection, emphasizing
that the selected option was not ‘early
retirement’ in terms of clause 4.3 and highlighting, that
there would be
no compensation for penalties that would have been
suffered because of early retirement and that the maximum 90-days
leave payout
would be made to Mr Dlongolo. There is also a further
basis to arrive at the same conclusion: Mr Dlongolo did not
unconditionally
accept the whole offer (including voluntary early
retirement and receipt of a penalised annual pension in terms of
clause 4.3
of the rules) and effectively made a counter-offer to be
accepted or rejected by the University.
[8]
Vincorp (Pty) Ltd v Trust Hungary ZRT
(061/2017)
[2018] ZASCA 35
(27 March 2018)
(
Vincorp
)
at para 25.
[9]
Fischer and another v Ramahlele and others
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA) at paras 13–14;
Novartis SA (Pty) Ltd v Maphil Trading
(Pty) Ltd
2016 (1) SA 518
(SCA)
(
Novartis
)
at para 11.
[10]
Cf
Novartis
above n 9 at para 11.
[11]
Laws v Rutherfurd
1924
AD 261
at 262. Mr Ngcobo’s evidence was that he agreed, at the
meeting on 15 December 2017, that Mr Dlongolo and Khan, his
financial
advisor, could respond by 18 December 2017, but this was
not the pleaded basis of the claim. Mr Dlongolo’s suggestion,
during cross-examination, that Mr Ngcobo had offered to pay the
penalties directly to him, instead of to the fund, was similarly
not
the basis of the pleaded claim.
[12]
See: GB Bradfield
Christie’s
The Law of Contract in South Africa
(8
th
Ed) (LexisNexis) (2022) at 36–37;
Constantia
Graswerke BK v Snyman
1996 (4) SA 117
(W) at 124I–J cited in
Vincorp
above n 8 at para 32. Also see
Vincorp
above n 8, especially at paras 27–33.
[13]
Slip Knot Investments 777 (Pty) Ltd v Du Toit
2011 (4) SA 72
(SCA) at para 9:
‘
contractual liability, however,
arises not only in cases where there is consensus or a real meeting
of the minds, but also by
virtue of the doctrine of quasi-mutual
assent.
’
[14]
Smith v Hughes
(1871)
LR 6 QB 597
at 607.
[15]
Sonap
Petroleum
(SA) (Pty) Ltd (formerly known as Sonarep (SA) (Pty) Ltd) v
Pappadogianis
[1992] ZASCA 56
;
1992 (3) SA 234
(A)
(
Sonap
)
at 239J–240B.
[16]
See for example:
Constantia
Insurance Co Ltd v Compusource (Pty) Ltd
2005 (4) SA 345
(SCA) (
Constantia
)
para 18.
[17]
See:
Botha v Road
Accident Fund
2017 (2) SA 50
(SCA) at
para 10.
[18]
Sonap
above n 15
at 239I–J.
[19]
Novartis
above n
9 at para 35. This includes all the facts proven that show what the
intention was in respect of entering into a contract:
the
contemporaneous documents, the conduct in negotiating and
communicating with one another and the steps taken to implement
the
contract.
[20]
‘
Mr Cassells: ‘… that
sentence, the member shall receive an annual pension from the date
of such early retirement
and equal to such member’s scale
pension. It clearly indicates that if you elect early retirement,
you remain a member
of the university’s pension fund.
Mr Dlongolo: ‘But what was given to
me by Mr Ngcobo, he said it is up to me how I want to receive
my
pension. So now, if I’m reading this, it’s totally
different from what Mr Ngcobo gave to me.’
[21]
See, for example,
Africa
Solar (Pty) Ltd v Divwatt (Pty) Ltd
2002 (4) SA 681 (SCA).
[22]
An ABSA employee had sent him the quotation,
including the details of a financial advisor, containing pension
estimates based
on a 1 January 2018 retirement date.
[23]
Sonap
above n 15
at 240J–241B.
[24]
Ibid
.
[25]
Constantia
above
n 16 para 22.
[26]
Sonap
above n 15
at 241D: ‘
the snapping up of a
bargain, however, in the knowledge of the possibility that the
declared intention did not represent actual
intention, would not be
bona fide.’
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