Case Law[2025] ZALAC 13South Africa
Nutrichem (Pty) Ltd v Southern African Clothing and Textile Workers Union and Another (JA47/2023) [2025] ZALAC 13 (26 February 2025)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
26 February 2025
Headnotes
culminating in the meeting of 18 April 2019, in which the parties agreed to implement short-time consisting of a three-day work week. Mr. Cornelius Kodisang represented the Union during this meeting. The workers were to work from Monday to Wednesday until 30 September 2019. They further agreed that if the gross sales did not improve by 15% by 30 September 2019, then the affected employees would be retrenched on 31 October 2019.
Judgment
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## Nutrichem (Pty) Ltd v Southern African Clothing and Textile Workers Union and Another (JA47/2023) [2025] ZALAC 13 (26 February 2025)
Nutrichem (Pty) Ltd v Southern African Clothing and Textile Workers Union and Another (JA47/2023) [2025] ZALAC 13 (26 February 2025)
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sino date 26 February 2025
THE LABOUR APPEAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable/Not Reportable
LAC Case no: JA 47/2023
In the matter between:
NUTRICHEM (PTY)
LTD
Appellant
and
SOUTHERN AFRICAN
CLOTHING
AND TEXTILE WORKERS
UNION
First Respondent
ABEL MAHLABA AND
OTHERS
Second to Further Respondents
Heard:
12 November 2024
Delivered:
26 February 2025
Coram:
Nkutha-Nkontwana JA, Musi AJA and Mooki AJA
JUDGMENT
MUSI, AJA
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment and order of the Labour Court
(Swartz, AJ), in which it found that the second and
further
respondents’ (employees) dismissals were automatically unfair,
in terms of section 187(1)(d) of the Labour Relations
Act
[1]
(LRA). The appeal is with the leave of the Labour Court.
Facts
[2] The appellant
(Nutrichem (Pty) Ltd) manufactures and sells chemicals to farmers.
The employees were employed by the appellant.
They worked in three
departments, namely, general workers, leaf and soil sample collectors
and the production and product mixers.
[3] On 25 September
2018, the employees embarked on an unprotected strike because they
alleged that the appellant was not
implementing the minimum wage for
farm workers. On 26 September 2018 they joined the first respondent
(Southern African Clothing
and Textile Workers Union (Union)). By
March 2019, the union represented approximately 50% of the
appellant’s employees.
The union members elected Mr. Abel
Mahlaba and Mr. Sydney Pasiya as shop stewards.
[4]
During March 2019, the appellant contemplated retrenchments. It
issued a notice in terms of section 189(3) of the LRA
[2]
.
Mr. Senzo Myeni, the union organiser, got wind of the fact that the
appellant intends embarking on a retrenchment process. On
29 March
2019, he wrote to the appellant, lamenting the fact that the union
was not informed or invited to be part of the consultative
process.
He was informed that he is welcome to join the first consultation
meeting, which was scheduled for 1 April 2019. On 1
April 2019, he
wrote to the appellant requesting that the meeting be postponed to 10
April 2019. His request was refused and the
parties proceeded with
the meeting in his absence. On 3 April 2019, Mr. Myeni attended the
second consultative meeting and the
appellant confirmed that it
intended to retrench 12 employees.
[5]
Subsequent meetings were held, culminating in the meeting of 18 April
2019, in which the parties agreed to implement short-time
consisting
of a three-day work week. Mr. Cornelius Kodisang represented the
Union during this meeting. The workers were to work
from Monday to
Wednesday until 30 September 2019. They further agreed that if the
gross sales did not improve by 15% by 30 September
2019, then the
affected employees would be retrenched on 31 October 2019.
[6] On 29 April
2019, the appellant issued a warning to all union members,
complaining about the union members’ behaviour,
their
interference with management activities and their refusal to execute
orders relating to their core duties. It further demanded
that the
union members stop their recalcitrant behavior failing which it would
have no option but to continue with the retrenchment
process.
Additionally, it gave all the employees a written warning valid for
six months. It dispatched the warning letter to the
union and
requested a meeting to discuss the matter. The union members
complained to Mr. Myeni that they saw other persons on the
appellant’s premises doing their (employees’) work.
[7] Despite
numerous attempts, the union and the appellant eventually met on 31
May 2019, before then, on 20 May 2019, the
shop stewards wrote a
letter to the appellant. The letter, without emendation, reads as
follows:
‘
First
of all I would you to please understand and try to know the laws
regarding the workers and the workplace without undermining
and
discriminating.
2. The union have
asked the shop stewards to approach the company what is happening
inside the premises and what the law sys
and also what have been
agreed between the parties on the previous meeting.
3. We also want our
contracts of employment if the company have so that we can know what
to do next if it doesn’t have
one, so that we will correctly
deal with the current situation.
4. If the company
doesn’t change the situation of this three days we will further
go on in a good way to make extra
efforts to expose the unfair labour
practice inside this company all the way from the gate.’
[8] At the meeting
of 31 May 2019, which Mr. Myeni attended, the employees were served
with letters terminating their employment
with effect from 31 May
2019. They were purportedly retrenched. The termination letters
stated that because the workers had by
their actions and in writing
confirmed their dissatisfaction with the short-time agreement, and,
further that they made unacceptable
threats towards the company and
its management and ‘
therefore in effect disputed and
cancelled the short-time agreement in writing’
.
[9] Mr. Myeni
testified that the appellant displayed animosity towards the union
and undermined its members. He further testified
that the meeting of
31 May 2019 did not take long and that the appellant had not been
interested to listen to his explanation and
interpretation of the 20
May 2019 letter. The termination letters were prepared before the
meeting and there were security guards
at the meeting venue.
[10] On 1 June
2019, the appellant entered into an agreement with Magnificent
Electrical to provide replacement employees.
It provided between 7
and 10 employees to do the work that the dismissed employees used to
do.
[11] Mr Hendrik
Swart, the CEO and Marketing and Technical Manager of the appellant
testified that there were no hostilities
or animosity between the
appellant and the union. He appreciated Mr. Myeni’s assistance
during the consultations. Mr. Swart
interpreted the letter of 20 May
2019 as a cancellation of the short-time agreement. According to him,
Mr. Abel Mahlaba verbally
confirmed the cancellation at the meeting
of 31 May 2019.
[12] When he was
asked about the reason for this meeting, he initially said that it
was to discuss the retrenchment process
and later added that it was
also to discuss the contents of the 20 May 2019 letter. Further, that
Mr. Botha, the appellant’s
labour relations advisor, wanted the
workers to confirm that the short-time agreement had been cancelled.
He confirmed that the
termination letters were prepared before the
commencement of the meeting. He denied that union members were
targeted for retrenchment,
and pointed out that Mr. Sewape who had
been a union member was not retrenched and that a Mr. Liebenberg, who
was not a union member,
but identified for retrenchment, opted to
take a voluntary severance package.
In the Labour Court
[13] The Labour
Court gave a well-reasoned judgment. It painstakingly analysed the
two versions and pointed out the improbabilities
in the appellant’s
version. It underscored the incongruity in the appellant’s
version and its pleaded case. It accepted
that the appellant had been
under financial stress. It found that regardless of a substantial
part of Mr. Myeni’s testimony
amounting to hearsay evidence,
the documentary evidence, the appellant’s witnesses’
testimonies and the probabilities
favoured the Union’s version.
[14] The Labour
Court pointed out that throughout the section 189 process only 12
workers were affected but after the 20 May
2019 letter the number
increased to 18, all of whom were union members. It distinguished Mr.
Liebenberg and Mr. Sewape’s
situations from that of the
dismissed employees. It found that the appellant corresponded with
the union during March 2019 but
it, strangely, did not invite the
union to the 1 April 2019 meeting.
[15] In conclusion,
the Labour Court found that the letter of 20 May 2019 was the actual
reason for the dismissals. It found
that, had it not been for that
letter the short-time agreement would have continued until at least
30 September 2019.
In this Court
[16] The appellant
launched a multipronged attack on the Labour Court’s judgment.
It challenged the judgment on the
following grounds:
16.1
jurisdiction;
16.2 findings on
the reason for the dismissals;
16.3 findings on
hearsay;
16.4
findings on substantive fairness;
16.5 findings on
relief; and
16.6 finding on
costs.
[17] The Union and
the workers supported the findings of the Labour Court. I will now
proceed to discuss these challenges
seriatim.
Jurisdiction
[18] The appellant
argued that the Labour Court lacked jurisdiction to adjudicate this
dispute because the union members were
not part of the dispute
referral and conciliation process. The fact that the matter was
referred by the union and conciliated is
not disputed. A list of the
workers who mandated the union to act on their behalf was not
attached to the referral form. Absent
a list of the dismissed
employees’ particulars, so the argument went, the referral fell
foul of the rules for the Commission
for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration (CCMA Rules). My conclusion on this issue renders it
unnecessary to delve into the
CCMA Rules.
[19] The improper
referral issue was not disputed or mentioned in the Labour Court. The
referral form was not presented as
evidence in the Labour Court. It
did not form part of the record. The appellant did not raise the
issue of the referral form in
any of its pleadings. The union and its
members specifically pleaded that:
‘
[o]n
26 June 2019 the union referred a dispute, about the fairness of the
dismissals of its members to conciliation. The dispute
was enrolled
for conciliation; but could not be resolved. A certificate of outcome
of conciliation was issued on 15 July 2019’.
The appellant responded
as follows:
‘
The
referral was made on 11 June 2019; this paragraph is otherwise
admitted. The referral was baseless and unjustified.’
[20] In this Court
the appellant attached a supplementary volume to the record, without
explanation or application that this
new material, that was not
before the Labour Court, be accepted by this Court. This is not only
unconventional but also totally
unacceptable. This Court is a Court
of Appeal and appeals are adjudicated based on the material that was
before the Labour Court.
An appeal is a ‘record review’:
this Court is generally restricted to consider the record of the
matter as it unfolded
in the Labour Court.
[21]
In
Moroka
v Premier of the Free State Province
[3]
the legal position was succinctly stated:
“
The
law governing the raising of a new point of law on appeal is trite.
In Provincial Commissioner, Gauteng South African Police
Services and
Another v Mnguni, this court expressed itself as follows:
‘
It
is indeed open to a party to raise a new point of law on appeal for
the first time, with the provision that it does not result
in
unfairness to the other party; that it does not raise new factual
issues and does not cause prejudice. In
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC) Ngcobo J said the following (para 39):
“
The
mere fact that a new point of law is raised on appeal is not itself
sufficient reason for refusing to consider it. If the point
is
covered by the pleadings and its consideration on appeal involves no
unfairness to the party against whom it is directed, this
Court may
in the exercise of its discretion consider the point. Unfairness may
arise, where for example, a party would not have
agreed on material
facts, or on only those facts stated in the agreed statement of facts
had the party been aware that there were
other legal issues involved
and that “[it] would similarly be unfair to the party if the
law point and all its ramifications
were not canvassed and
investigated at trial.”.’ (Emphasis added.)
In developing the
jurisprudence on this matter, the Constitutional Court has laid a
further requirement that it must be in the interests
of justice that
the new point of law be entertained. The court in
Mighty Solutions
CC t/a Orlando Service Station v Engen Petroleum Ltd and Another
(Mighty Solutions), per Van der Westhuizen J, expressed itself as
follows in this regard:
‘
It
would hardly be in the interests of justice for an appeal court to
overturn the judgment of a lower court on the basis that Court
was
never asked to decide. As lawyers always say, “on this basis
alone” this Court should not entertain the enrichment
argument.’”
[4]
[22] The union and
its members were led to believe that the propriety of the referral
was not an issue. Both parties presented
their respective cases with
that understanding. The Labour Court was never asked to consider this
point. The issue was not foreshadowed
in the pleadings. The appellant
has not shown that it would be in the interests of justice for this
Court to consider the new material.
Raising this point on appeal for
the first time would involve prejudice to the respondents. The
appellant is therefore precluded
from raising the issue.
Hearsay evidence
[23] The appellant
urged us to find that the Labour Court’s conclusion that the
probabilities favour the version that
the employees were dismissed as
a result of joining the union is wrong. The appellant argued that the
Labour Court erred when it
favoured Mr. Myeni’s hearsay
evidence over the appellant’s evidence. The appellant further
contended that the Labour
Court erred by regarding Mr. Myeni’s
evidence as direct evidence and or primary facts.
[24] The Labour
Court was alive to the fact that Mr. Myeni’s testimony was
predominantly hearsay evidence. It, however,
considered the totality
of the evidence before arriving at the conclusion that the employees’
version should be favoured
above that of the appellant. It said that
it did so after ‘
having considered the documentary evidence,
together with Nutrichem’s witnesses’ evidence as well as
the probabilities
highlighted by the chronology of this matter’
.
[25] The relevant
facts of this matter were to a great extent common cause. The Labour
Court correctly found that there was
a genuine reason to initiate the
section 189 process: being the appellant’s dire financial
position. It, however, found there
were alternatives that could have
been implemented to avoid retrenchments. The chronology and documents
exchanged between the parties
support the Labour Court’s
conclusion.
[26] Mr. Myeni’s
testimony with regard to the following facts is not hearsay:
26.1
the appellant’s reluctance to
recognise the union and to grant it organisational rights;
26.2 that the union
was not notified about the first consultative or information sharing
meeting;
26.3 that he
contacted the appellant to enquire why the union was not informed and
his request for a postponement;
26.4
that the employees were not satisfied with
the manner in which the short-time agreement was implemented;
26.5 that the
employees spoke to him before writing the 20 May 2019 letter;
26.6 that the
appellant took umbrage at the contents of the 20 May 2019 letter;
26.7
that the appellant did not discuss the
aforesaid letter; and
26.8
that the appellant went to the 31 May 2019,
with its finger on the trigger: ready to dismiss the employees.
[27] The appellant
submitted that the Labour Court conflated aspects pertaining to the
procedural fairness of a retrenchment
with the proximate cause for
the dismissal test as all of the factors mentioned by it related to
procedural deficiencies of the
process, which should be adjudicated
under the consideration of the procedural fairness of a retrenchment.
[28]
This submission is not cognisant of the intertwined nature of the
evidence in these kinds of matters. A procedural lapse
or deficiency
might on the one hand be innocent or caused by inadvertence, on the
other it might indubitably point to malice and
the state of mind of
the employer. It has been said that courts should be slow to infer
that the reason for a dismissal is an illegitimate
reason such as
union activities unless there is sufficient evidence to justify such
a conclusion.
[5]
However, if a
proper factual basis exists for a Court to make such an inference,
the Court should not hesitate to make it.
[6]
[29] How can an
employer’s failure to consider obvious alternatives to
retrenchment be irrelevant when a Court is endeavouring
to discern
the true reason for the termination or the motive of the employer? By
the same token, how can the employer’s intention
to dismiss 12
workers but ultimately dismissing 18 union members be irrelevant to
the inquiry? In order to come to a particular
conclusion in such
matters, the Court is enjoined to consider the totality of the
evidential material presented by the parties
and the probabilities.
This is par for the course and it is exactly what the Labour Court
did. The Labour Court was thus justified
to consider all the relevant
aspects, including those that point to procedural lapses in order to
make the inference that it did.
[30] The hearsay
and the conflation submissions are without merit. I now turn to
consider the reason for the dismissal.
Reason for the
dismissals
[31]
Since this matter involves an automatically unfair dismissal it is
opportune to set out some of the relevant Constitutional
and
legislative provisions. I turn to consider the relevant
Constitutional provisions
[7]
.
Section 16 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996,
states that everyone has the right to freedom of expression.
In terms
of section 17 everyone has the right, peacefully and unarmed, to
assemble, to demonstrate, to picket and to present petitions.
Section
23 reads as follows:
‘
(1)
Everyone has the right to fair labour practices.
(2) Every worker
has the right –
(a) to form and
join a trade union;
(b) to participate
in the activities and programmes of a trade union…’
[32]
The LRA gives effect to the right to fair labour practices. In its
preamble, it is stated that it is enacted to change
the law governing
labour relations and, for that purpose to give effect to section 23
of the Constitution.
[8]
A party
should therefore rely on the provisions of the LRA to vindicate their
right to fair labour practices.
[9]
[33]
Section 4(1)(a) of the LRA provides that every employee has the right
to participate in forming a trade union. Every
member of a trade
union, subject to its constitution, has the right to participate in
its lawful activities.
[10]
Section 5(1) states that no person may discriminate against an
employee for exercising any right conferred by the LRA.
[34] Section
187(1)(d) provides that a dismissal is automatically unfair if the
employer, in dismissing the employee, acts
contrary to section 5 or,
if the reason for the dismissal is that the employee took action, or
indicated an intention to take action,
against the employer by (i)
exercising any right conferred by the LRA; and (ii) participating in
any proceedings in terms of the
LRA.
[35]
The Labour Court correctly found that the employees carried an
evidential burden (onus) to prove that they were automatically
unfairly dismissed and therefore they had to produce evidence to
raise a credible possibility that they were so dismissed. The
employer thereafter had to prove that the dismissal was not
automatically unfair.
[11]
After considering the evidence, the Labour Court concluded that the
employees were automatically unfairly dismissed in terms of
section
187(1)(d). Was this conclusion justified?
[36]
The appellant pleaded that the reason for the dismissal was not the
aggressive and unacceptable letter but was due entirely
to the
respondent’s operational requirements. It denied that the real
reason for the dismissals was the employees’
union membership
or their participation in the union’s activities.
[37] It is common
ground that the union was not informed by the appellant about the
contemplated retrenchments and it was
not invited to attend the first
meeting. After Mr. Myeni got wind of this development, he wrote an
email to the appellant, on 29
March 2019, informing it that it had
come to his attention that the appellant intends embarking on a
section 189 process. He pointed
out that the appellant and the union
are scheduled to meet on 10 April 2019, and, requested that the
meeting scheduled for 1 April
2019 at 9h00 be postponed to the former
date. In response, the appellant informed the union that it was
welcome to attend the meeting.
[38]
The appellant was aware that the union represented approximately 50%
of its workforce, yet the union was not properly invited to
the first
consultation. Mr. Botha, the appellant’s labour relations
consultant, denied knowing that a sizable number of the
employees
belonged to the union.
[39]
This is improbable because, firstly, Ms. Dané Oosthuizen from
his firm had corresponded with the union from as early as
6 March
2019. On 6 March 2019, Mr. Swart had informed Mr. Myeni that Ms. Dané
Oosthuizen from Maruis Botha consultants would
request certain legal
documents from him before they could schedule a meeting to discuss
the granting of organisational rights.
On the same day at 15h20, Ms.
Oosthuizen requested the union to furnish her with,
inter alia
,
its constitution and proof of the number of workers it represents at
the appellant. Secondly, Mr. Botha, as a labour relations
practitioner is supposed to know that union involvement in a section
189 process is crucial and he would therefore have enquired
from the
appellant whether there was a representative union.
[40]
Mr. Swart knew about the union’s presence at the workplace. It
is improbable that he would not have told Mr. Botha that some
of the
employees are represented by a union. Mr. Swart kept on emphasising
that they received the union’s request for a postponement
late:
two minutes after the commencement of the meeting. Neither he nor Mr.
Botha testified that the union requested a postponement
on 29 March
2019. Mr. Swart testified that it was only after the first meeting
that Mr. Botha said that the union must be involved.
It is probable
that the exclusion of the union was deliberate rather than
inadvertent.
[41]
During the meeting of 12 April 2019, Mr. Swart first warned Mr. Myeni
and later Mr. Mahlala not to interfere with the management
of the
business. Mr. Myeni requested the appellant not to undermine them and
to watch their language. At this meeting, Mr. Myeni
pointed out that
the proposed retrenchments only affect union members. Mr. Swart
responded by pointing out that Chris Liebenberg,
who was not a union
member, took a voluntary severance package. There is no evidence as
to when and how this severance package
was offered. Neither the
section 189 notice nor the minutes of the meeting reflect any offer
or discussion of voluntary severance
packages. There is no evidence
indicating why he was treated differently.
[42]
Mr. Sewape, who was a union member was not dismissed. Mr. Sewape’s
union membership was initially disputed but the respondents
later
conceded that he paid his union dues. Mr. Sewape was a driver and was
not affected by the short-time agreement. This probably
explains his
apathy which made his co-employees conclude that he was no longer a
union member. He also informed the appellant that
he intends to
resign from the union. His situation is distinguishable from the
dismissed employees.
[43]
The union pleaded that ‘
on 20 May 2019, two shop stewards
wrote a letter to the company protesting the discriminatory way it
had implemented the short-time
’. To this the appellant
responded by admitting the paragraph and stated that:
‘
The
contents of the letter are wrong, and the allegations therein made
are false. The allegations are made
contra
the agreements reached by the parties.
The conduct of the first
applicant (union) is disingenuous and
mala fide
.’
[44]
In the pre-trial minute the parties couched the issue to be
determined with regard to the letter as follows:
‘
Whether
the contents of the letter written by the shop stewards on 20 May
2019, were wrong and the allegations in the letter [were]
false and
contra
the
agreements reached by the parties and that the conduct of the first
applicant [is] mala fide’
[45]
During the trial, the appellant mounted a different case. Both
Messrs. Botha and Swart testified that the letter of 20 May 2019
cancelled the short-time agreement. Mr. Swart went further to state
that Mr. Abel Mahlaba verbally confirmed, on 31 May 2019, that
the
intention behind the letter was to cancel the short-time agreement.
This was not pleaded. Mr. Swart embellished his testimony.
The
difference between the pleadings and the
viva voce
testimonies
is palpable. On any interpretation of the 20 May 2019 letter, there
is no way that anyone, except the appellant, can
reach the conclusion
that the letter cancelled the short-time agreement. More about the
letter later.
[46]
Mr. Myeni testified that the meeting of 31 May 2019 was very short
and the appellant and Botha did not give the union a chance
to
explain its contents. Mr. Swart testified that it was a long meeting:
approximately an hour. Mr. Botha could not remember its
duration. The
probabilities favour Mr. Myeni’s version. There was no reason
for a protracted meeting when the appellant already
prepared the
termination letters. The meeting was probably requested to discuss
the contents of the letter but morphed into a meeting
to hand over
the termination notices. When the appellant could not timeously
secure a meeting with the union it became annoyed
and decided to
dismiss the employees, regardless of the fact that some of them were
not necessarily going to be retrenched.
[47]
On 29 April 2019, the appellant wrote a missive to all union members
in which it stated:
‘
Please
take note that the union members are interfering with management
activities and refusing to execute orders that form part
of their
core duties. This conduct is unacceptable to the employer and does
not show good faith on the part of the employees involved.
It will
also lead thereto that the agreed upon three-day work week is not
feasible. This conduct and behavior must stop immediately,
alternatively the employer will have no other option available than
to continue with the retrenchment procedure. Henchforth, all
employees involved will receive a written warning valid for 6 months.
We hereby further request
a formal meeting with the union in order to discuss this as a matter
of urgency.’
[48]
This missive was written two days before the 31 May 2019 meeting. The
appellant conflated discipline with the retrenchment process.
It used
the retrenchment process as a threat. The appellant could institute
disciplinary proceedings against the employees.
[49]
The appellant accepted that there were alternatives to the
dismissals, for example, it could have dismissed fewer employees and
that it could utilise the others as seasonal workers. These
alternatives were not implemented. Instead, the appellant mentioned
that it complied with a demand by the union that it improved the
ablution facilities, which it did at a cost of approximately R45.000.
Despite this and the fact that it increased the employees’
wages during September 2018 and adjusted it in January 2019, they
still demanded a salary increase.
[50] The union
pleaded that the appellant failed to comply with section 189(7) of
the LRA because it failed to select the
employees for dismissal
according to criteria that had been agreed upon; or according to
criteria that were fair and objective.
The appellant responded that
the retrenchments were based on ‘
criteria that were fair and
objective, namely due to the respondent’s (appellant)
decreasing production, sales and orders’
. This can hardly
amount to a sensible response to the union’s plea. The
appellant’s inability to properly respond to
the union’s
allegation is because it did not apply any discernable criteria
except union membership.
[51]
The employees had become a thorn in the appellant’s flesh.
After it locked itself into the short-time agreement, as an
alternative
to retrenchments, the only way out of it was to cancel
it. The letter presented an imperfect solution. I now turn to Mr.
Swart’s
testimony about the effect of the letter.
[52]
I will demonstrate, with the assistance of Mr. Swart’s
testimony, that the impugned letter was the direct or proximate cause
for the dismissals. During Mr. Swart’s cross-examination by Mr.
Daniels, for the respondents, the following exchange happened:
‘
Mr
Daniels
: … in the absence
[if] the short-time agreement, [in your,] in your version if the
short-time agreement had not been
cancelled there would have been no
need to retrench the workers not so?
Mr.
Swart
:
According, that is correct Sir According to the agreement then we
must carry on until 30 September 2019
with the agreement.’
[53]
Mr. Botha also confirmed that the letter of 20 May 2019 cancelled the
short-time agreement. Later during cross - examination the
following
was said:
‘
Mr.
Daniels
: Okay. Okay. And we know that
you started initially with the possibility of retrenching 12 workers
and ultimately you retrenched
18.
Mr.
Swart
: Yes.
Mr.
Daniels
: And that decision to increase
the number would have occurred after the letter of [the] 20 May’
Mr.
Swart
: That is correct.
Mr.
Daniels
: And as a result of the letter.
Mr.
Swart
: that is correct. The initial
retrench number was 12.’
[54]
It is clear from Mr. Swart’s testimony that the number
increased to cover all affected union members.
[55]
Mr. Swart testified that the appellant accepted that the 20 May 2019
letter was written on behalf of the union and its members.
However,
he stated that Mr. Myeni informed Mr. Botha that he was not pleased
with the contents of the letter. Neither Mr. Myeni
nor Mr. Botha
confirmed that Mr. Myeni was not pleased with the contents of the
letter. Mr. Swart probably embellished his testimony
in this regard.
Mr. Daniels then delivered the
coup de grâce
:
‘
Mr.
Daniels
: Okay. Then this letter, do you
accept that this letter relates to a union activity.
Mr.
Swart
: That is correct.
Mr.
Daniels
: Okay. And it is a union
complaint.
Mr.
Swart
: That is correct, M’Lady.
Mr.
Daniels
: And it relates to the union’s
members.
Mr.
Swart
: The union, according to me this
letter relates to the shop steward and the union members.’
[56]
The latter exchange clearly indicates that Mr. Swart correctly
accepted that the letter contained a complaint on behalf of union
members and that it therefore related to a union activity. The next
question is whether the union activity was a lawful union activity.
[57]
In
National
Union of Public Service and Allied Workers obo Mani and Others v
National Lotteries Board
[12]
it was said:
‘
Although
it may not be necessary on the facts of this case to give an
exhaustive definition of the phrase “lawful activities”
in sections 4(2)(a) and 5(2)(c)(iii), it seems to me that, on a
proper restrictive approach, the phrase must exclude illegal
activities
or activities that constitute contraventions of the law.
It definitely excludes conduct that constitutes criminal offences.
The
provisions include participation by union members in union
activities that form part of the core functions of a trade union.
These
include taking up its members’
complaints
or grievances with their employer, representing them in grievance and
disciplinary proceedings, collective bargaining,
attending statutory
tribunals to represent their members’ interests and
communicating with its members’ employer about
workplace
issues.’
[13]
[58]
It has been said that in interpreting any document one must have
regard to the text, context and purpose of the document. In
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[14]
it was summarised as follows:
‘
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document
as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence.
Whatever the nature of the document, consideration must
be given to
the language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears;
the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and the material known to those
responsible for its production. Where more than one
meaning is
possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of all these
factors. The process is objective not subjective.
A sensible
meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or
unbusinesslike results or undermines the apparent purpose
of the
document. Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation
to substitute what they regard as reasonable, sensible
or
businesslike for the words actually used. To do so in regard to a
statute or statutory instrument is to cross the divide between
interpretation and legislation. In a contractual context it is to
make a contract for the parties other than the one they in fact
made.
The ‘inevitable point of departure is the language of the
provision itself’, read in context and having
regard to
the purpose of the provision and the background to the preparation
and production of the document.’
[15]
[59]
The letter, firstly, contains a plea that the appellant should not
discriminate against or undermine [the employees]. Secondly,
that the
union mandated the letter. Thirdly, that the shop stewards were
requested to enquire about what is happening at the appellant’s
premises, in light of the agreement entered into and the law. This
probably refers to the ‘new faces’ which were seen
at the
appellant. Fourthly, it contains a request for the employees’
employment contracts. Lastly, it informs the appellant
that if it
does not change the three-days a week short-time agreement, the
employees would in a good [legal?] way expose the unfair
labour
practice at the appellant all the way from the gate.
[60]
The letter certainly does not cancel any agreement, instead it voices
the dissatisfaction of the employees with the short-time
agreement.
Whether they were justified in raising their discontent so soon after
they entered into the agreement is neither here
nor there. The letter
further conveys in no uncertain terms that the workers would expose
the unfair labour practice in a good
way. There is nothing in the
letter that suggests that the workers would act illegally. In fact,
the indication is that they were
going to act in a good way to expose
what they perceived to be an unfair labour practice.
[61]
Mr. Botha’s testimony that he interpreted the letter to mean
that the employees were going to ‘
cause a riot at the gate…
and not do the work any further
’ is clearly not supported
by the text. His hypothesis that they wanted to deliver a petition at
or from the gate is more
plausible. There is nothing unlawful for
union members to gather at the employer’s gate to hand over a
petition. The testimonies
of Messrs. Botha and Swart that the letter
cancelled the short-time agreement is untenable.
[62]
The employees had a right in terms of section 4(2)(a) of the LRA to
participate in the lawful activities of the union including
associating themselves with the lawful contents of the letter. The
union was entitled to the support of the employees. The employees
were entitled to give their union support in lawfully promoting their
dissatisfaction, grievance or demand. Their dismissal for
exercising
a right guaranteed in the LRA: taking part in lawful union activity,
renders their dismissal automatically unfair in
terms of section
187(1)(d)(i) of the LRA.
Substantive fairness
[63]
The appellant argued that the Labour Court accepted that there was a
valid reason for retrenchment by referring to the ongoing
drought,
and decline in sales. The appellant asserted that the Labour Court
should therefore have found that the appellant had
a valid rationale
to embark on the retrenchments.
[64]
The appellant might have had a valid rationale to commence the
retrenchment process. The consultations yielded a positive result:
the short-time agreement. This agreement was implemented in order to
avoid retrenchments. When the employees misbehaved it should
have
instituted disciplinary proceedings against them. According to Swart,
there would not have been dismissals had the short-time
agreement not
been cancelled by the employees. There was no cancellation therefore
there was no need for the dismissals.
[65]
The appellant’s case was that the dismissals were as a result
of its operational requirements. According to Mr. Swart, there
were
other viable options to avoid dismissals but those were not
implemented because at the 31 May 2019 meeting, the employees
said
all in or all out. He conceded that there was no need to dismiss all
18 because the operations of the appellant could continue
with fewer
workers. He could not coherently explain why when the contemplation
was to retrench 12 workers the number inexplicably
rose to 18.
[66]
There were no selection criteria discussed, let alone, agreed upon.
No fair or objective criteria was applied. The ineluctable
conclusion
is that union membership was the only criteria. These factors
rendered the dismissals substantively unfair. This finding
is of no
moment because of my finding that the workers were automatically
unfairly dismissed.
Remedy
[67]
The appellant argued that the Labour Court should not have ordered
the reinstatement of the workers because it was clear that the
trust
relationship had broken down. This argument is captured as follows in
the appellant’s heads of argument:
‘
Despite
Swart’s undisputed evidence in relation to the trust
relationship having broken down, the members having threatened
to
burn down the appellant’s premises during September 2018 during
their illegal strike action, the members’ threats
to go on
strike if the bathrooms [are] not renovated, their refusal to comply
with the short-time agreement and the clear threat
enunciated in the
20 May letter at paragraph 4, the court a quo finds at paragraph 131
that “Nutrichem has failed to make
out a case that a continued
employment relationship would be intolerable”.’
[68]
Section 193(2) of the LRA provides that after a finding that an
employee’s dismissal was substantively unfair, the Labour
Court
must require the employer to reinstate or re-employ the employee
unless: the employee does not want to be reinstated or re-employed;
the circumstances surrounding the dismissal are such that a continued
employment relationship would be intolerable; it is not reasonably
practicable for the employer to reinstate or re-employ the employee;
or the dismissal was only procedurally unfair.
[69]
Retrenchments are no fault dismissals. The trust relationship is
generally still intact, at the time of dismissal, but due to the
employer’s operational requirements the relationship cannot
continue. The considerations that apply in dismissal for misconduct
cases would not necessarily apply in retrenchment cases. However,
since the appellant gallantly argued that we should consider
the
conduct of the employees in order to determine whether the trust
relationship has been damaged irretrievably, I shall do so.
[70]
The threat, if there was one, was in September 2018. No disciplinary
proceedings were instituted against those workers. The employer
agreed to renovate the ablution facilities in order to avert a
strike. The workers have a right to strike. All that they have to
do
is follow the right processes to strike about an interest dispute.
Their threat was lawful. They did not threaten to embark
on an
unprotected strike. In any event, the appellant kept them in its
employ beyond the renovations. As stated above, the 20 May
2019
letter did not contain an unlawful threat. The trust relationship was
not affected by the conduct of the employees. There
is no indication
that the continued employment would be intolerable. The appellant is
grasping at straws. The finding of the Labour
Court is unassailable.
Costs
[71]
It is correct that generally costs orders are not made in labour
matters. However, when there has been such a grave violation of
the
employees’ constitutional rights then the Courts must show its
deprecation by means of appropriate costs orders. The
dismissals were
clearly part of a plan to get rid of perceived troublesome employees.
It was a ruse. Employers should be discouraged
from utilising the LRA
for nefarious purposes. One of the ways of doing that is through
appropriate costs orders.
[72]
In conclusion, there is no reason to interfere with the Labour
Court’s order. I therefore make the following order:
Order
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
CJ Musi AJA
Nkutha-Nkontwana JA
et
Mooki AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
For the
Appellant:
C. Higgs
Instructed
by Steenkamp van Niekerk Inc
For the
Respondents: J. Phillips
Instructed
by Cheadle Thompson & Haysom Inc
[1]
No.
66 of 1995, as amended.
[2]
Section
189
Act 66
of 1995 reads:
‘
(1)
When an employer contemplates dismissing one or more
employees
for reasons based on the employer's
operational requirements
,
the employer must consult
(a)
any person whom the employer is
required to consult in terms of a
collective
agreement
;
(b)
if
there is no
collective agreement
that
requires consultation-
(i)
a
workplace forum
, if the
employees
likely to be
affected by the proposed
dismissals
are employed in a
workplace
in respect of which there is a
workplace forum
;
and
(ii)
any registered
trade union
whose members are likely to be
affected by the proposed
dismissals
;
(c)
if
there is no
workplace forum
in
the
workplace
in
which the
employees
likely
to be affected by the proposed
dismissals
are employed, any registered
trade
union
whose members are likely to be
affected by the proposed
dismissals
;
or
(d)
if
there is no such
trade union
,
the
employees
likely
to be affected by the proposed
dismissals
or their representatives nominated for
that purpose.
(2)
The employer and the other consulting parties must in the
consultation envisaged
by subsections (1) and (3) engage in a
meaningful joint consensus-seeking process and attempt to reach
consensus on
(a)
appropriate
measures
(i)
to avoid the
dismissals
;
(ii)
to minimise the number of
dismissals
;
(iii)
to change the timing of the
dismissals
; and
(iv)
to mitigate the adverse effects of the
dismissals
;
(b)
the
method for selecting the
employees
to
be dismissed; and
(c)
the
severance pay for dismissed
employees
.
(3)
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
(a)
the
reasons for the proposed
dismissals
;
(b)
the
alternatives that the employer considered before proposing the
dismissals
,
and the reasons for rejecting each of those alternatives;
(c)
the
number of
employees
likely
to be affected and the job categories in which they are employed;
(d)
the
proposed method for selecting which
employees
to dismiss;
(e)
the
time when, or the period during which, the
dismissals
are likely to take effect;
(f)
the
severance pay proposed;
(g)
any
assistance that the employer proposes to offer to the
employees
likely to be dismissed;
(h)
the
possibility of the future reemployment of the
employees
who are dismissed;
(i)
the
number of
employees
employed
by the employer; and
(j)
the
number of
employees
that
the employer has dismissed for reasons based on its
operational
requirements
in the preceding 12
months.
[3]
Moroka
v Premier of the Free State Province and Others
(295/20)
[2022] ZASCA 34
(31 March 2022).
[4]
Moroka
(Ibid)
at
paras 36 to 38.
[5]
Kroukam
v SA Airlink (Pty) Ltd
(2005)
26 ILJ 2153 (LAC) at para 86 of the minority judgment. The majority
judgment did not express a view about this conclusion.
[6]
Kroukam
(
Ibid).
[7]
The
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.
[8]
See:
section 1(a) of the LRA.
[9]
Minister
of Health and Another v New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others
(CCT
59/2004)
[2005] ZACC 14
;
2006 (2) SA 311
(CC);
2006 (1) BCLR 1
(CC)
(30 September 2005) at paras 434 to 436.
[10]
Section
4(2)(a) of the LRA.
[11]
See:
Kroukam
(Id
fn 5) at para 28 of the majority judgment.
Section 10 of the LRA
reads: ‘In any proceedings-
(a)
A party who alleges that a right or
protection conferred by this Chapter has been infringed must prove
the facts of the conduct;
and
(b)
The party who engaged in that conduct must
then prove that the conduct did not infringe any provision of this
Chapter.’
[12]
National
Union of Public Service and Allied Workers obo Mani and Others v
National Lotteries Board
(CCT
75/13)
[2014] ZACC 10
;
2014 (3) SA 544
(CC);
2014 (6) BCLR 663
(CC);
[2014] 7 BLLR 621
(CC); (2014) 35 ILJ 1885 (CC) (10 April 2014).
[13]
National
Union of Public Service
(
Ibid)
at para 153.
## [14]Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v EndumeniMunicipality(920/2010)
[2012] ZASCA 13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA)
(16 March 2012).
[14]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni
Municipalit
y
(920/2010)
[2012] ZASCA 13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA)
(16 March 2012).
[15]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund
(Ibid)
at
para 18, footnotes omitted.
sino noindex
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