Case Law[2025] ZALAC 8South Africa
Zeda Car Leasing (Pty) Ltd t/a Avis Fleet and Others v Perlee and Others (JA01/24) [2025] ZALAC 8 (10 February 2025)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
10 February 2025
Headnotes
there had been a transfer and ordered Dealersbid to reinstate the respondents with full backpay. The
Judgment
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## Zeda Car Leasing (Pty) Ltd t/a Avis Fleet and Others v Perlee and Others (JA01/24) [2025] ZALAC 8 (10 February 2025)
Zeda Car Leasing (Pty) Ltd t/a Avis Fleet and Others v Perlee and Others (JA01/24) [2025] ZALAC 8 (10 February 2025)
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sino date 10 February 2025
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
case
No: JA01/24
In
the matter between:
ZEDA
CAR LEASING (PTY) LTD T/A AVIS FLEET
First Appellant
BARLOWORLD
LTD
Second
Appellant
DEALERSBID
(PTY) LTD (T/A DEALERSONLINE)
Third Appellant
DEALERSONLINE
(PTY) LTD (INTERVENING PARTY)
Fourth Appellant
and
BELINDA
PERLEE AND NINE OTHERS
Respondents
Heard
:
7
November 2024
Delivered
:
10 February 2025
Coram:
Savage ADJP, Van Niekerk
et
Nkutha-Nkontwana
JJA
JUDGMENT
NKUTHA-NKONTWANA,
JA
Introduction
[1]
This is an
appeal, with the leave of the Labour Court, against the judgment and
order it delivered on 3 November 2023 which found
the dismissal of
the respondents automatically unfair in terms of section 187(1)(g) of
the Labour Relations Act
[1]
(LRA). The dispute between the parties pertained to the question of
whether the dismissal of the respondents ensued from the first
respondent’s (Avis Fleet) operational requirements or a
transfer of business by Avis Fleet to the third respondent
(Dealersbid)
in terms of section 197 of LRA.
[2]
The Labour Court held that there had been a transfer and ordered
Dealersbid to reinstate the respondents with full backpay. The
respondents are cross-appealing this order. They seek an order to the
effect that Barloworld and Dealersbid are jointly and severally
liable to reinstate them with no loss of benefits.
[3]
I propose to deal first with the corporate structure of the
appellants and the citation of Dealersbid as a party in this
litigation,
a controversial tangled web that became apparent during
the first hearing of the matter on 15 August 2024. As a result, the
matter
was postponed at Dealersbid’s instance. Dealersbid was
granted leave to take necessary steps to prosecute the appeal on its
own behalf.
Appellants’
corporate structure
[4]
The second appellant (Barloworld) is a 100% shareholder of Barloworld
South Africa (Pty) Ltd (Barloworld SA), which in turn, wholly
owned
Avis Fleet. Barloworld SA owned a 51% stake in Crownmill Trading
(Pty) Ltd (Crownmill) trading as DealersOnline. The other
shareholders of Crownmill were Dealersbid and Rokewood Technology
(Pty) Ltd (Rokewood). With Barloworld having a majority stake,
Crownmill was part of its conglomerate. Barloworld had three distinct
operating segments (Barloworld Logistics, Barloworld Equipment,
and
Barloworld Automotive). Barloworld Automotive was constituted of (i)
Avis Fleet; (ii) Avis Budget Rent-a-Car; (iii) Barloworld
Motor
Retail; and (iv) Digital Disposal Solutions (DDS). Crownmill was part
of DDS.
[5]
The respondents were employed by Avis Fleet and held various
positions under the unit called Car Mall or Trade and Auction Centre
(Car Mall) which was responsible for the termination and disposal of
vehicles at the end of the lease terms. Avis Fleet was also
licenced
to utilise Crownmill’s online Auction Portal to terminate and
dispose of its fleet. The controversy in this matter
was brought
about by the decision by Barloworld to close Car Mall and to contract
Crownmill to take over the services rendered
by the respondents under
Avis Fleet’s Car Mall. I will return to this issue later in the
judgment, suffice it to say that
the closure of Car Mall led to the
retrenchment of the respondents.
[6]
Barloworld undertook major structural changes after the respondents'
retrenchment. Through an unbundling exercise, Barloworld disposed
of
Avis Fleet. Furthermore, in April 2023, Dealersbid and Rokewood
bought Barloworld's stake in Crownmill and changed its name
to
DealersOnline (Pty) Ltd (DealersOnline).
[7]
Dealersbid, therefore, contends that it was mistakenly cited as a
party in this litigation as it was a shareholder of Crownmill.
That
being the case and as a result, it is not in a position to comply
with the order of the Labour Court to reinstate the respondents.
It
further contends that it was kept in the dark about this litigation
hence it could not object to its citation during the Labour
Court
proceedings. It refutes that it authorised Avis Fleet or Barloworld
to represent its interests in this litigation, particularly
in this
Court.
[8]
On the other hand, Crownhill's successor in title, DealersOnline,
seeks leave to be joined as a party in this appeal even though
it was
not cited in the proceedings before the Labour Court. Likewise,
DealersOnline contends that it was not aware of this litigation
hence
it could not have intervened in the proceedings before the Labour
Court. Furthermore, it seeks leave to lead new evidence
that was not
before the Labour Court which pertains to the nature of the business
transaction it had with Avis Fleet, including
the copies of the
relevant service level agreements it concluded with DDS and Avis
Fleet.
[9]
Both these
applications are not opposed, prudently so. It is apparent that
DealersOnline has a direct and substantial interest in
this
litigation and is a necessary party as Dealersbid is just a
shareholder and not a trading company capable of effecting the
impugned order of the Labour Court or the order this Court might
make.
[2]
In addition, I am
satisfied that the further evidence at stake is weighty and material
to a determination of the pertinent issue
in this appeal.
[3]
[10]
Accordingly, both applications are granted. DealersOnline, the
intervening party, shall be cited as the fourth appellant.
Factual
background
[11]
Car Mall had two core functions, which entailed collecting and
disposing of vehicles at the end of the lease terms. To do so, it
utilised an online platform called TradersOnline, which was open only
to Avis Fleet. Even so, Avis Fleet also utilised the online
Auction
Portal owned by DealersOnline to dispose of its vehicles.
DealersOnline services were open to other service users, including
the banks.
[12]
In 2020,
Barloworld undertook a rationalisation process which was triggered
by,
inter
alia
,
the adverse effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. On 3 July 2020, the
Avis Fleet’s Board of Directors resolved to embark on
a
restructuring process and to commence with a section 189A
[4]
consultation process. The employees were duly served with a section
189(3)
[5]
notice to commence the
consultation process. Three consultation sessions were held in June
2020 and were facilitated by the CCMA.
All Avis Fleet departments,
including Car Mall, were respectively represented by nominated
employees during the CCMA facilitation
sessions.
[13]
It was the evidence of Avis Fleets that Barloworld decided to close
Car Mall because two of its subsidiaries, Avis Fleet through
Car Mall
and DealersOnline, were dealing with vehicle disposal. The business
model of DealersOnline was found to be more cost-effective
as it was
based on a variable cost structure. Unlike the fixed cost structure
associated with Car Mall, a variable cost structure
meant that there
would be no fixed costs but that Avis Fleet would pay a rand value
per unit if terminated. However, if there was
no termination, there
would be no payment due and payable. DealersOnline was already set up
to do terminations and was providing
this service to other service
users in the market. Avis Fleet and DealersOnline concluded a service
level agreement.
[14]
The service that had been rendered by Car Mall was taken over by
DealersOnline. As a result, all the Car Mall staff members, including
the respondents, were retrenched on 31 July 2020 and 31 August 2020,
respectively. It is not in dispute that the decision to close
Car
Mall was a subject matter during the section 189A consultation
sessions. The respondents only took issue with the fact that
the
closure of Car Mall was only introduced during the last session of
the section 189A consultation process.
The
Labour Court proceedings
[15]
Displeased with their retrenchment, the respondents instituted the
action that served before the Labour Court. The nub of their
case was
that the closure of Car Mall and transfer of its activities by
DealersOnline triggered a section 197 transfer which, in
turn,
rendered their dismissal automatically unfair in terms of section
187(1)(g).
[16]
To support their claim that there was a transfer, it was the
respondents’ evidence that DealersOnline took over the
functions
that had been rendered by Car Mall; took possession of Avis
Fleet’s vehicles; was granted access to the AS400 system, a
leasing
management tool that records the entire life of a vehicle;
and employed six out of 53 retrenched employees.
[17]
The appellants refuted the respondents’ assertion that there
was a transfer as contemplated in section 197. They were adamant
that
the respondents were retrenched consequent to a section 189A process.
They further disavowed any transfer of assets to DealersOnline
as a
result of the closure of Car Mall. They asserted that the furniture
and laptops were distributed throughout Avis Fleet. DealersOnline
was
only granted access AS400 software system; Avis Fleet remained the
title holder and owner of the vehicles in possession of
DealersOnline; the site that was occupied by Car Mall closedown.
[18]
The Labour Court found,
inter alia
, that:
‘
[63]
In my view, there was such a discrete, identifiable economic entity
within Avis Fleet, in the form of Car
Mall. Car Mall performed the
collection, inspection, termination, and vehicle disposal functions
for Avis Fleet. That Car Mall
was an economic entity is apparent from
the reasons given by Barloworld for the decision to close down Car
Mall, which is that
there was a duplication of functions within the
Barloworld Group of companies, by Car Mall and by DOL.
[64]
The definition of 'business' includes a part of a business. Car Mall
was definitely a part of Avis Fleet
and constituted an organised
grouping of 53 persons and assets facilitating the exercise of the
terminations and disposal of economic
activity. It was an
identifiable and discrete part of the Avis Fleet business. As Strydom
testified, Car Mall was an integral part
of the Avis Fleet and Avis
Budget Rent business, as car leasing and fleet management could not
be conducted without the terminations
and disposal business. This
version was not seriously disputed, other than to say that
terminations and disposals were now being
performed elsewhere. That
may be so because Avis Fleet chose to pay a fee to DOL for a function
that still forms an integral part
of its leasing and fleet management
business. That function constituted an economic activity capable of
being transferred.
…
[66]
Car Mall did not own any assets but had possession of and managed
Avis Fleet assets. Therefore, the fact
that no assets were
transferred from Avis Fleet to DOL is of no consequence as those
assets were never the assets of Car Mall to
begin with. Car Mall had
possession and benefit of Avis Fleet property, and this was
transferred to DOL. In my view that is sufficient
to satisfy the
transfer requirement, bearing in mind that ownership is not a
prerequisite for this court to find that there has
been a transfer of
a business. We know from Aviation Union that transfer of the benefit
(and not necessarily ownership) is sufficient
to trigger the
application of section 197.’
In
this Court
[19]
The appellants contend that the Labour Court erred in finding that
Car Mall was a district economic activity capable of being
transferred. Mr Boda SC, counsel for Avis Fleet and Barloworld,
submitted that the DealersOnline and Car Mall were conducting the
same functions before the closure of Car Mall. The differences were
that DealersOnline used a variable cost structure and its platform
was open to all dealers; while Car Mall used a fixed cost structure
and its online platform was not open to the market. Consequent
to the
closure of Car Mall, the fixed cost structure was done away with and
the disposal of the vehicles via the online platform
was open to any
car dealer to bid on and purchase.
[20]
While Mr Stelzner SC, counsel for Dealersbid and DearlersOnline,
submitted that what was transferred was a service and not a business
that supplied services. While it is true that before the retrenchment
of the respondents, DearlersOnline provided Avis Fleet with
a limited
service, it was already providing wide-ranging service to other
clients, such as banks, who, for a variety of reasons,
require
vehicles to be sold and are charged a fee per vehicle on a
transactional basis.
[21]
Mr Stelzner SC further submitted that, when Avis Fleet decided to
rationalise its operations, DearlersOnline was appointed to provide
the same type of services it was providing its other clients to Avis
Fleet. As such, the
causa
was the service level agreement
DealersOnline and Avis Fleet concluded. At no stage did DealersOnline
acquire the business of Avis
or any part thereof, let alone do so as
a going concern. Avis Fleet vehicles were made available to
DearlersOnline as its agent
to sell the vehicles on behalf of Avis.
Once sold, DearlersOnline would account to Avis for the proceeds of
the sale.
[22]
On the other hand, Mr Carratu, appearing for the respondents,
submitted that Barloworld’s decision to move the services that
were provided by Car Mall from a fixed cost structure to a variable
cost structure was the
causa
for the transfer and not a
restructuring process due to economic constraints. That is so because
the decision to implement a variable
costing structure was intended
to outsource an insourced business function to a third party and
accordingly triggered the application
of section 197, even if no
transfer of assets took place, so he further submitted.
Discussion
Section
197
[23]
Section 197(1) of the LRA provides:
‘
In
this section and in section 197A —
(a)
“business” includes the
whole or part of any business, trade, undertaking or service; and
(b)
“transfer” means the
transfer of a business by one employer (“the old employer”)
to another employer (“the
new employer”) as a going
concern.’
[24]
Where there is a transfer of a business as a
going concern, the consequences listed in section 197(2)
automatically follow by operation
of law which provides,
inter
alia
, that “
the
new employer is automatically substituted in the place of the old
employer in respect of all contracts of employment in existence
immediately before the date of transfer
…”.
What
was the causa?
[25]
The
Constitutional Court has, on several occasions, underscored the
importance of a
causa
or legal cause in
determining
whether the jurisdictional facts for the application of section 197
are present.
[6]
This notion was
niftily expounded in
Rural
Maintenance (Pty) Ltd v Maluti-A-Phofung Local Municipality
[7]
(
Rural
Maintenance)
,
per
Froneman
J, as follows:
‘
This provides a
useful illustration of what role the
causa
, or legal
cause, of any transfer of a business may play in the application of
section 197 of the LRA. It is settled that the enquiry
to determine
whether the business is transferred as a going concern is a factual
one. But the parameters of the factual enquiry
are determined by the
legal cause from which the transfer stems from. The legal cause may
be the invalidity of the underlying contract.’
[26]
In this case, it is not in dispute that Avis Fleet embarked on a
restructuring process due to economic constraints as a result
of the
COVID-19 pandemic. The decision to migrate to a variable cost
structure and sourcing the services of DealersOnline was implemented
within the context of the restructuring process that was undertaken
in terms of section 189A. To my mind, that was the
causa
which
marked the confines within which the factual enquiry on the
applications of section 197 had to be undertaken. The respondents'
attempt to divorce the restructuring process, which was undertaken in
terms of section 189A, from Barloworld’s decision to
adopt a
variable business structure is accordingly untenable.
Transfer
of a business as a going concern
[27]
In
Mobile
Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd & others v CCI SA
(Umhlanga)
(Pty)
Ltd and
Others
[8]
,
this
Court, per Sutherland JA, tersely expounded the test applicable in
section 197 enquiry as follows:
‘
[13]
…Notable is the fact that, unlike the procedural regulatory
mechanics for unfair dismissal for alleged
misconduct in ss 185 to
188 and for unfair operational dismissals in ss 189 to 189A, the job
protection element in s 197 is qualitatively
different. The
protection against the risk of job loss is rooted, not in a
procedural straitjacket imposed on the employer, but
rather, is
located in the objective existence of a commercial reality, ie, a
business as a going concern having been transferred.
This means, in
concrete terms:
13.1 a
discrete business unit in the hands of the former owner (ie a
business which performs a service, not the
service itself, the unit
being discernible by a grouping of workers set about a common
objective);
13.2
which business is, as a fact, transferred from one owner to another;
13.3
and which business is a going concern at the time of transfer (ie it
has intrinsic productive capacity);
13.4
which is recognisable as that going concern in the hands of the
subsequent owner (ie it retains the character
of the initial business
unit).
[14]
What this means is that the judicial investigation into the entrails
of such circumstances alleged to result
in s 197 being properly
triggered, is an endeavour to determine whether or not that
commercial phenomenon exists. This exercise
is not the imposition of
a moral construct on the circumstances. The job protection objective
hangs wholly by the thread of the
banal concrete elements of s 197
being proven to exist.’
[28]
Whether a
business has been transferred as a going concern is an enquiry
undertaken based on the test provided by the Constitutional
Court in
National
Education Health and Allied Workers Union v University of Cape Town
and Others
[9]
where it was said:
‘
The phrase “going
concern” is not defined in the LRA. It must therefore be given
its ordinary meaning unless the context
indicates otherwise. What is
transferred must be a business in operation “so that the
business remains the same but in different
hands.” Whether that
has occurred is a matter of fact which must be determined objectively
in the light of the circumstances
of each transaction. In deciding
whether a business has been transferred as a going concern, regard
must be had to the substance
and not the form of the transaction. A
number of factors will be relevant to the question whether a transfer
of a business as a
going concern has occurred, such as the transfer
or otherwise of assets both tangible and intangible, whether or not
workers are
taken over by the new employer, whether customers are
transferred and whether or not the same business is being carried on
by the
new employer. What must be stressed is that this list of
factors is not exhaustive and that none of them is decisive
individually.
They must all be considered in the overall assessment
and therefore should not be considered in isolation.’
[10]
[29]
It is
therefore not enough to consider the fact that the execution of the
same services would continue, albeit under different hands
alone.
Something more is required.
[11]
Whether a transfer of business as a going concern occurred must be
determined within the whole context of what transpired.
[30]
An
immediate point to make in this regard pertains to the dictum in
Food
and Allied Workers Union v Cold Chain (Pty) Ltd and Another
[12]
,
copiously referred to by the Labour Court, where the outsourcing of a
warehouse was found to constitute a section 197 transfer.
I do not
think the court intended to create an inflexible principle that every
outsourcing transaction would automatically trigger
the application
of section 197 despite the prevailing factual circumstances that
could militate against such a conclusion.
[31]
What transpired in this case is simply that a function that was
performed by Car Mall to dispose of Avis Fleet vehicles at the
end of
the applicable lease period was contracted out to Dealers Online. No
assets were transferred to DearlersOnline. DearlersOnline
used its
own online Auction Portal to dispose of Avis Fleet vehicles, a system
used to service other clients such as banks. The
AS400 software was
never transferred to DearlersOnline. It was not seriously disputed
that DearlersOnline had its infrastructure
and manpower, hence there
was no transfer of tangible or intangible assets like operating
systems, employees, furniture, laptops
and premises.
[32]
Mr Currata was invited to direct us to the evidence of what was
precisely transferred from Avis Fleet to DearlersOnline. In response,
other than a sweeping submission that it was the service that was
rendered by Car Mall, he could only refer to the six Car Mall
employees that were recruited by DearlersOnline. This evidence alone
cannot justify a conclusion that there was a section 197 if
regard is
had to all the circumstances.
[33]
The fact that there were no assets transferred from Avis Fleet to
DearlersOnline was obviously acknowledged by the Labour Court
but
took a view that it was inconsequential as “
those assets
were never the assets of Car Mall to begin with”
. This
finding is untenable as Car Mall was a mere unit comprised of the
employees of Avis Fleet. Thus, the Labour Court erred in
treating Car
Mall as a business entity independent from Avis Fleet.
[34]
I
accordingly accept the respondents’ submission that Avis Fleet
continued as an economic entity leasing and selling fleet
cars at the
end of the lease period. What transferred to DealersOnline is an
activity or service. To find otherwise, would essentially
relegate
Avis Fleet to its activity.
[13]
This case is distinguishable from
Aviation
Union
[14]
and Tasima
[15]
where
the transfer of tangible and intangible assets was found to have
occurred and accordingly, the business transferred was a
going
concern. As well, the dictum in
Cold
Chain
[16]
is
distinguishable as the overall factual matrix in this case evinces a
transfer of a service and nothing more.
[35]
In sum, it is my view that what transpired, viewed holistically and
in the context of restructuring, was not a transfer of the
business
as contemplated in section 197.
The
main, dominant and proximate cause of the dismissal
[36]
Even if the
Labour Court was correct in its finding that there was a transfer, it
still had to embark on enquiry to determine the
main, dominant and
proximate cause of the dismissal, a well-accepted test.
[17]
Sadly, that enquiry was not undertaken. For completeness sake, I will
make a few observations as I have already found that the
causa
for the
transfer was the decision by Barloworld to restructure its business
due to the COVID-19 pandemic. This decision was implemented
by Avis
Fleet.
[37]
The proposed business structure and the rationale for closing the Car
Mall were explained during the section 189A consultation
process. The
need to restructure Barloworld and, in turn, the Avis Fleet, was not
seriously challenged. It was further shown that
the restructuring
process affected about 2000 employees within the Barloworld group.
[38]
It follows
that the dominant cause of the dismissal of the respondents was Avis
Fleet’s operational requirements. As such,
section 187(1)(g)
finds no application. That being that case, it does not mean
respondents are hung out to dry as “
the
protection of workers is not solely governed by section 197 in these
kinds of situations. Employees are also protected by the
retrenchment
provisions in section 189. The choice here is which employer
should be responsible for the workers affected by
the change in
circumstance
”.
[18]
[39]
Nonetheless, the respondents nailed their colours on the mast of
section 187(1)(g). With no alternative claim in terms of section
189,
the finding that there was no transfer is dispositive of this matter.
Conclusion
[40]
In all the circumstances, the labour Court erred in finding that
there was a transfer of a business as contemplated in section
197
which triggered the application section 187(1)(g). Because of this
finding, the respondents’ cross-appeal has become
superfluous.
Costs
[41]
The is no reason to depart from the general rule
that costs do not follow the result in labour matters; save for the
costs occasioned by the postponement of the matter on 15
August 2024. Given the fact that the postponement was caused by the
appellants'
internal strife, they should pay the respondents’
wasted costs, jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
absolved.
[42]
In the result,
the following order is made:
Order
1.
The application brought by DearlersOnline for leave to intervene as a
party and to lead further evidence is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld and the order of the Labour Court is substituted
as follows:
“
The applicants'
claim is dismissed with no order as to costs.”
3.
The
appellants shall pay the respondents’ wasted costs occasioned
by the postponement of the matter on 15 August 2024, jointly
and
severally the one paying the other to be absolved.
Nkutha-Nkontwana JA
Savage ADJP
et
Van
Niekerk JA concur.
Appearances:
For
the first and second appellant’s:
Adv Feroze Boda SC
Instructed
by
Cliffe Dekker
Hofmeyr Inc
For
the third and fourth appellant’s:
R G L Stelzner SC
Instructed
by
Bernadt
Vukic Potash & Getz Attorneys
For
the respondent:
Adv Roberto Carratu
[1]
Act 66 of 1995, as amended.
[2]
See:
Absa
Bank Limited v Naude N.O and Others
[2015]
ZASCA 97
;
2016 (6) SA 540
(SCA) at para 9;
Gordon
v Department of Health, KwaZulu-Natal
[2008] ZASCA 99
;
2008 (6) SA 522
; para 9.
[3]
See:
De
Aguiar
v Real People Housing (Pty) Ltd
[2010]
ZASCA 67
;
2011 (1) SA 16
(SCA) at para 11;
Asla
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality and
Another
[2017] ZASCA 23
;
2017 (6) SA 360
(SCA) at para 23.
[4]
A section 189A process is triggered when dismissals based on
operational requirements by employers with more than 50 employees
[5]
Section 189(3) provides: “
The
employer must issue a written notice inviting the other consulting
party to consult with it and disclose in writing all relevant
information, including, but not limited to… the reasons for
the proposed dismissals… the alternatives that the
employer
considered before proposing the dismissals, and the reasons for
rejecting each of those alternatives… the number
of employees
likely to be affected and the job categories in which they are
employed… the proposed method for selecting
which employees
to dismiss
…”.
[6]
See:
Road
Traffic Management Corporation v Tasima (Pty) Limited; Tasima (Pty)
Limited v Road Traffic Management Corporation
[2020] ZACC 21
; (2020) 41 ILJ 2349 (CC)
(Tasima)
at paras 34-49
;
Rural Maintenance (Pty) Ltd and Another v Maluti-A-Phofung Local
Municipality
[2016] ZACC 37
; (2017) 38 ILJ 295 (CC)
(Rural
Maintenance)
at
para 39;
Aviation
Union of SA and Another v SA Airways (Pty) Ltd
and
Others
[2011] ZACC 31
; (2011) 32 ILJ 2861 (CC) (
Aviation
Union
)
at para 113.
[7]
Rural
Maintenance supra
fn 7 at para 39.
[8]
[2023] ZALAC 10
; (2023) 44 ILJ 1906 (LAC)
(MTN
)
at para 13.
[9]
[2002] ZACC 27
;
(2003)
24 ILJ 95 (CC) at
para 56.
[10]
Id.
[11]
See:
Aviation
Union supra
fn
6 at para 75, an observation by the minority judgment.
[12]
[2009] ZALC 109
; (2009) 30 ILJ 2919 (LC) (
Cold
Chain
).
[13]
See:
Kruger and Others v Aciel Geomatics (Pty) Ltd
[2016]
ZALAC 92
; (2016) 37 ILJ 2567 (LAC) at paras 42 - 43.
[14]
Aviation
Union supra
fn
6 at paras 53 and 120.
[15]
Tasima
supra
fn
6 at para 75.
[16]
Cold
Chain supra
fn
12 at para 28.
[17]
See:
SA
Chemical Workers Union and Others v Afrox Ltd
[1999] ZALAC 8
; (1999) 20 ILJ 1718 (LAC) at paras 46 - 49, referred
to with approval in
National
Union of Metalworkers of SA and Others v Aveng Trident Steel (A
Division of Aveng Africa (Pty) Ltd) and Another
[2020]
ZACC 23
;
(2021)
42 ILJ 67 (CC) at paras 75 - 76.
Long
v Prism Holdings Ltd and Another
[2012] ZALAC 5
; (2012) 33 ILJ 1402 (LAC) at paras 34 - 37.
[18]
See:
Rural
Maintenance supra
fn 7 at para 36; see also
Aviation
Union supra
fn 6 at para 189.
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