Case Law[2025] ZALAC 15South Africa
Potgieter v Samancor Chrome Limited ta Tubatse Ferrochrome (JA91/22) [2025] ZALAC 15; [2025] 5 BLLR 483 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 1708 (LAC) (10 March 2025)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
10 March 2025
Headnotes
the respondent’s special plea of prescription. The Labour Court held that:
Judgment
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## Potgieter v Samancor Chrome Limited ta Tubatse Ferrochrome (JA91/22) [2025] ZALAC 15; [2025] 5 BLLR 483 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 1708 (LAC) (10 March 2025)
Potgieter v Samancor Chrome Limited ta Tubatse Ferrochrome (JA91/22) [2025] ZALAC 15; [2025] 5 BLLR 483 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 1708 (LAC) (10 March 2025)
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sino date 10 March 2025
LABOUR
APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable
Case No: JA 91/22
In the matter between:
DIRK
WILLEM
POTGIETER
Appellant
and
SAMANCOR CHROME
LIMITED t/a
TUBATSE
FERROCHROME
Respondent
Heard:
19 September 2023
Delivered:
10 March 2025
Coram:
Molahlehi DJP, Smith AJA et Malindi AJA
JUDGMENT
MALINDI, AJA
Introduction
[1]
The appellant, Mr Potgieter, was dismissed
by the respondent on 24 October 2006. He referred the
matter to the Metal and
Engineering Industries Bargaining Council
(MEIBC) for arbitration, where he obtained an award in his favour on
25 June 2008.
[2]
This appeal lies against the whole judgment
and order of the Labour Court which upheld the respondent’s
special plea of prescription.
The Labour Court held that:
2.1.
prescription applied in respect of this claim;
2.2.
that the period of prescription commenced to run from the date of the
Labour Appeal Court’s
reinstatement order;
2.3.
that the running of prescription was not interrupted; and
2.4.
that the period of three years having elapsed, the debt had
prescribed.
[3]
The Labour Court refused leave to appeal,
but leave was granted on petition by the Labour Appeal Court. The
appeal is opposed by
the respondent.
Background
[4]
This dispute has a protracted history
emanating from the dismissal of the appellant on allegations of
misconduct. A dispute of alleged
unfair dismissal was referred to the
MEIBC. On 25 June 2008, the MEIBC issued an arbitration
award in terms of which
it found that the dismissal of the appellant
was substantively and procedurally unfair and awarded compensation
equivalent to 12
months remuneration.
[5]
After the arbitration award, litigation
proceeded in the following chronology:
5.1.
The appellant approached the Labour Court seeking the review and
setting aside of the award of
compensation and sought an order of
retrospective reinstatement. The review application was dismissed;
5.2.
Mr Potgieter, with the leave of the Labour Court, appealed against
the dismissal of the review
application;
5.3.
On 12 June 2014, the Labour Appeal Court (LAC) upheld the
appeal and substituted the
Labour Court’s findings with an
order that the appellant was reinstated retrospectively into his
position with the respondent;
and
5.4.
The respondent, Samancor, appealed the LAC order to the
Constitutional Court, and on 3 September
2014, the Constitutional
Court dismissed the respondent’s appeal against the judgment of
the Labour Appeal Court.
[6]
Consequently, the LAC's order of
retrospective reinstatement was implemented by Mr Potgieter’s
reinstatement on 23 July 2015.
He reported for duty and was
accepted back into the respondent’s employ.
[7]
On 30 November 2015, the parties,
through a mutual separation agreement,
terminated the employment
relationship.
[8]
This matter is about what transpired after
the LAC order, which Samancor unsuccessfully attempted to appeal at
the Constitutional
Court. Following a dispute between the parties as
to the meaning of the Labour Appeal order, in particular whether Mr
Potgieter
was entitled to retrospective payment for the whole period
from the date of the LAC order on 12 June 2014 (equal to eight
years),
or only from the date of his dismissal to the date of the
MEIBC award on 25 June 2008 (equal to some one year and eight
months).
[9]
The chronology of this second round of
litigation is as set out below.
[10]
On 23 July 2018, Mr Potgieter instituted a
claim for the payment of his outstanding remuneration consequent upon
the reinstatement
order. He claimed payment of monies owing from the
date of his dismissal until the reinstatement order of the LAC.
Samancor raised
a preliminary point to the effect that the appellant
ought to have instituted contempt proceedings or caused a writ of
execution
to be issued.
[11]
The matter came before the Labour Court on
29 May 2020. On the date of the hearing, the parties
reached an agreement,
which was made an order of the Court by the
Labour Court (per van Niekerk J, as he then was). The order reads as
follows:
‘
1.
The applicant withdraws the action proceedings filed under the above
case number.
2. The parties will
engage with each other during the period 3 to 17 June 2020
with a view to formulating an agreed
stated case pertaining to the
effect of paragraph 2.1(ii) of the Labour Appeal Court’s order
under case number JA 71/12,
insofar as it pertains to the
respondent’s payment liability for the period between the days
of the applicant’s dismissal
and the date of the delivery of
the Labour Appeal Court’s order.
3. If the parties
are unable to agree to a stated case by 17 June 2020, the
respondent will deliver an application
within 14 days from
17 June 2020 seeking a declaration order pertaining to the
effect of paragraph 2.1(ii) of the Labour
Appeal Court’s order
under case number JA 71/12 insofar as it pertains to the
respondent’s payment liability for
the period between the date
of the applicant’s dismissal and the date of delivery of the
Labour Appeal Court’s order,
and seeking consequential or
associated relief.
4. The parties
shall approach the Court to request that it hear the matter in an
expedited manner.
5. There is no
order as to costs.’
[12]
The parties could not agree on the stated
case contemplated in the aforementioned order, and on 10 July 2020,
Samancor
delivered its application for a declaratory order in
accordance with the order of the Labour Court. The issue to be
considered
in terms of the application was whether the effect of the
reinstatement order was that the appellant was entitled to his full
salary
for the entire period despite having engaged in alternative
employment between the date of his dismissal and the reinstatement
order.
[13]
On 7 December 2020, the application served
before the Labour Court (per Snyman AJ).
[14]
On 16 February 2021, the Labour
Court delivered a judgment wherein it concluded that the dispute
before the Court gave
rise to two distinct rights
viz.
a judgment debt for the period between the dismissal and the
arbitration award, and a contractual claim in respect of Mr
Potgieter’s
remuneration for the period between the date of the
arbitration award and the reinstatement order of the LAC.
[15]
The order of the Labour Court (per Snyman
J) read as follows:
‘
1.
It is declared that for the period between the date of dismissal of
the respondent on 26 October 2006 and the
date of the
arbitration award on 25 June 2008 under case number
MEGA14544, the respondent is entitled to be paid his
full salary by
the applicant, as if he was not dismissed, without moderation or
adjustment.
2. It is declared
that for a period between 26 June 2008, being the date
following the reinstatement of the respondent
in terms of the
arbitration award of 25 June 2008 under case number
MEGA14544 and the date of the order of the Labour
Appeal Court on
1 June 2014 under case number JA 71/12, the respondent
is not entitled to be paid his full salary
by the applicant,
such
claim must still be determined
and is subject to moderation and
adjustment depending on the damages the respondent is able to prove
and any defences raised by
the applicant.
3. The respondent
is given leave to institute a claim as contemplated by paragraph 2 of
this order within 90 days of this
order.
4. The respondent
is ordered to make/disclose to the applicant any information and/or
documents in the possession of or known
to the applicant, of any
alternative income the applicant may have earned in the period from
26 June 2008 to 12 June 2014,
from any third
party other than the applicant, within 90 (ninety) days of the date
of this order.’
[16]
On 2 August 2021, Mr Potgieter
instituted a claim for the arrear remuneration. This was for the
period between the date
of the award and the judgment of the LAC.
[17]
In
those proceedings, the respondent contended that the appellant’s
claim had prescribed. The contention was that the claim
accrued each
month between the date of the award and the reinstatement order of
the LAC and that in terms of section 12(1) of the
Prescription
Act
[1]
, the debt became due on
14 June 2014, being the date of the reinstatement order. It
would, therefore, have prescribed
three years thereafter, being
13 June 2017.
The Labour Court
judgment
[18]
The
Labour Court held that monies owing consequent upon a reinstatement
order constitute a debt within the contemplation of the
Prescription
Act and that the period applicable is in terms of section 11(d) of
the Act, which stipulates that a debt prescribes
after three years.
On the authority of
National
Union of Metalworkers of SA on behalf of Fohlisa and Others v Hendor
Mining Supplies (a division of Marschalk Beleggings
(Pty) Ltd)
[2]
(
Hendor
),
it held that a claim in arrears in salaries constitutes a contractual
claim which becomes due once the employment contract has
been
restored subsequent to a reinstatement order. This is since, with
reliance on
Coca
Cola Sabco (Pty) Ltd v van Wyk
,
[3]
the reinstatement order does not include wages owing between the date
of the order or award and the eventual restoration of the
employment.
[19]
It found that Mr Potgieter’s claim
between June 2008, being the date of the reinstatement award,
and 12 June 2014,
being the date of the LAC order granting
reinstatement, constituted a contractual claim to which prescription
applied. Moreover,
that Mr Potgieter was constrained to issue
proceedings to enforce the reinstatement order prior to the
conclusion of the appeal
processes which the respondent had pursued.
[20]
As such, since the LAC restored the
employment contract on 12 June 2014, the debt became due
and enforceable on that date.
This was even if the order of the LAC
was suspended pending the finalisation of the appeal to the
Constitutional Court; that application
was finalised on
3 September 2014. Thus, the period of prescription either
commenced to run on 12 June 2014
or 3 September 2014.
[21]
The Labour Court held that Mr Potgieter
instituted his first claim in July 2018, which was withdrawn and
further instituted
a second claim on 2 August 2018. It
concluded that the claim was instituted more than three years after
the debt became
due and enforceable.
[22]
In considering whether the period of
prescription was interrupted, the Labour Court held that in terms of
section 15 of the Prescription
Act, the running of prescription shall
be interrupted by the service on the debtor of any process whereby
the creditor claims payment
of the debt. The Labour Court rejected Mr
Potgieter’s contention that his claim emanated from the
judgment of Snyman AJ
of 16 February 2021, which
granted the appellant leave to institute the claim for arrears in
salaries. It held that the
said judgment was not in relation to the
issue of prescription but rather that it interpreted the LAC order
granted on 12 June 2014,
which was subject to any
contractual defences. Moreover, the order granting leave to initiate
a claim could not be construed to
eliminate the accrued right of a
party to raise prescription as a defence.
[23]
Thus, the Labour Court held that Mr
Potgieter did not serve any process within the meaning of section 15
of the Prescription Act
claiming performance from the respondent, nor
were any other legal proceedings initiated within the period of three
years after
the debt became due and enforceable. This includes the
claim which was instituted in July 2018, which was initiated
subsequent
to the expiry of the three-year period. Effectively, the
claim prescribed either in June or September 2017.
Submissions
before this Court
[24]
It was contended on behalf of Mr Potgieter
that a debt is claimable once the creditor has acquired the right to
institute an action
for the recovery of the debt. This entails that
there must be a complete cause of action in respect of the debt. In
this case,
the cause of action partly arose on 23 July 2015,
being the date of his actual reinstatement by the respondent.
Moreover,
that the running of the period of prescription was
interrupted on 20 July 2018, when he instituted an action
for recovery
of the debt, which claim was withdrawn in accordance
with the order of the Labour Court (per van Niekerk J) on
29 May 2020.
[25]
In the alternative, the contention was that
prescription commenced after the judgment of Snyman AJ, which
declared that the judgment
debt in terms of the LAC judgment was
distinguishable from the claim for arrears in wages. It was contended
that prior to that
judgment, the appellant had not come to the full
realisation that he had to institute a claim separate from the
reinstatement claim.
Thus, the appellant became aware of his claim
because of the judgment of Snyman AJ.
[26]
It
was contended on behalf of Samancor that the claim for arrears in
wages accrued on 12 June 2014, being the date of
the LAC
judgment and the claim prescribed three years after that date, being
13 June 2017. The appellant having instituted
his claim on
20 July 2018 entails that the claim was initiated 13 months
after the deadline. It was contended that, in
any event, these
proceedings did not interrupt prescription as they were never pursued
but were withdrawn by agreement between
the parties on 29 May 2020.
Moreover, to compound matters, the claim was not instituted in terms
of section 77(3) of
the Basic Conditions of Employment Act
[4]
(BCEA), being the competent procedure for a claim for arrears in
wages.
Evaluation
[27]
The issue is when the debt became due and
payable. The Labour Court found that the debt became due and payable
at the date of the
reinstatement order or at the date on which
Samancor’s application for leave to appeal was dismissed by the
Constitutional
Court.
[28]
Emanating
from the authority in
Hendor
[5]
,
a reinstatement order merely revives the employment contract between
the parties and therefrom the reciprocal obligations to tender
services, acceptance of the tender and payment of wages arises. This
entails that for reinstatement to occur, the employee must
tender
services after the reinstatement order, and the employer must accept
the employee back into her previous position. In articulating
this
position, this Court in
Kubeka
Others v Ni-Da
[29]
Transport
(Pty) Ltd
[6]
held the following:
‘
[23]
In
Equity Aviation Services (Pty) Ltd v
Commission for Conciliation, Mediation & Arbitration & others
(Equity Aviation Services)
the
Constitutional Court held:
‘
The
ordinary meaning of the word “reinstate” is to put the
employee back into the same job or position he or she occupied
before
the dismissal, on the same terms and conditions. Reinstatement is the
primary statutory remedy in unfair dismissal disputes.
It is aimed at
placing an employee in the position he or she would have been but for
the unfair dismissal. It safeguards workers’
employment by
restoring the employment contract. Differently put, if employees are
reinstated they resume employment on the same
terms and conditions
that prevailed at the time of their dismissal.’
[24] These dicta do
not clearly affirm that the effect of a reinstatement order is merely
to direct the employer to accept
a tender of the employees’
services and that no right to arrear wages arises until it elects to
do so; though the ‘resuming’
of employment implies
that the contract of employment was not extant during the period of
litigation. However, the dicta can be
interpreted equally to mean
that the reinstatement order itself ‘puts the employee back
into the same job or position he
or she occupied before the dismissal
on the same terms and conditions’. Likewise, the reinstatement
order (not the employer’s
acceptance of the tender of services)
‘is aimed at placing an employee in the position he or she
would have been but for
the unfair dismissal’.’
And –
‘
[35]
The decision of the Constitutional Court in
Hendor
therefore leaves little doubt that a reinstatement order does not
restore the contract of employment and reinstate the unfairly
dismissed employees. Rather, it is a court order directing the
employees to tender their services and the employer to accept that
tender. If the employee fails to tender his or her services or the
employer refuses to accept the tender, there is no restoration
of the
employment contract. If the employer fails to accept the tender of
services in accordance with the terms of the order, the
employee’s
remedy is to bring contempt proceedings to compel the employer to
accept the tender of services and thereby to
implement the court
order.
[36] As the
employees in
Hendor
in fact tendered their services and were
reinstated, the Constitutional Court was not called upon to decide
what the position would
have been had the employees failed to take up
reinstatement pursuant to the order.
However, it follows plainly
from the reasoning in both judgments that an employee granted
retrospective reinstatement is not entitled
to any of the contractual
benefits of reinstatement, including backpay, without the contract
being restored through actual reinstatement
.
[37] As pointed out
earlier, this seems at first glance to put an unfairly dismissed
employee at a disadvantage when compared
to an employee seeking
specific performance at common law. That is not entirely true. The
protective scope of the unfair dismissal
jurisdiction is of course
much wider. Specific performance is available only for unlawful
termination, whereas a lawful dismissal
may be held to be unfair
under the LRA. But still, at common law, employees seeking specific
performance are not required to tender
prospective services to obtain
arrear wages for which they have tendered services.
[38] A requirement
that backpay is only due and payable on reinstatement is in keeping
with the remedial scheme and purpose
of s 193 of the LRA. As Mr
WattPringle SC, counsel for the respondents, correctly
submitted, if an employee in receipt of
a reinstatement order could
on the strength of the order alone claim contractual payment for the
retrospective part of the order
without actually seeking
reinstatement (tendering prospective services), it would convert a
reinstatement remedy (which requires
a tender of services) into a
compensation award (which does not), in excess of the statutory
limitation on compensation awards.
Such an outcome would be
inconsistent with the purpose of ss 193 and 194 of the LRA.
An
unfairly dismissed employee must elect his or her preferred remedy
and, if granted reinstatement, must tender his or her services
within
a reasonable time of the order becoming enforceable. If reinstatement
has become impracticable through the effluxion of
time, for instance
where the employee has found alternative employment, he or she should
seek to amend his or her prayer for relief
to one seeking
compensation
.’ [Own emphasis]
[30]
It follows that any contractual claim that
arises as a result of the reinstatement order accrues once the
employee is actually accepted
back into his previous position. This
is because an employee granted retrospective reinstatement is not
entitled to any of the
contractual benefits of reinstatement,
including backpay, without the contract being restored through actual
reinstatement. In
this instance, the LAC judgment did not entitle the
appellant to contractual claims but rather bestowed them with the
right to
restore the contract through a tender and a reciprocal
acceptance.
[31]
Thus, it follows that any claim in respect
of arrear wages only became due and payable on 23 July 2015,
being the date
Mr Potgieter was accepted back into his previous
position. Thus, on the objective facts, the period of three years
would have elapsed
on 24 July 2018. It is common cause that
the appellant instituted an action in the Labour Court to recover,
inter alia,
arrears
in wages on 20 July 2018. Moreover, that the action was
withdrawn on 29 May 2020 on account of a question
of
whether enforcement procedures were competent in the circumstances.
[32]
The provisions of section 15 of the
Prescription Act read as follows:
‘
15
Judicial interruption of prescription
(1)
The running of prescription shall,
subject to the provisions of
subsection (2)
, be interrupted by the service on the debtor of
any process whereby the creditor claims payment of the debt.
(2)
Unless the debtor acknowledges liability
,
the interruption
of prescription in terms of subsection (1) shall lapse
,
and
the running of prescription shall not be deemed to have been
interrupted
,
if the creditor does not successfully prosecute
his claim under the process in question to final judgment
or
if
he does so prosecute his claim but abandons the judgment or the
judgment is set aside
.
(3)
If the running of the prescription is interrupted as contemplated in
subsection (1) and
the debtor acknowledges liability, and the
creditor does not prosecute his claim to final judgment, prescription
shall commence
to run afresh from the day on which the debtor
acknowledges liability or, if at the time when the debtor
acknowledges liability
or at any time thereafter the parties postpone
the due date of the debt, from the day upon which the debt again
becomes due.
(4)
If the running of prescription is interrupted as contemplated in
subsection (1) and the
creditor successfully prosecutes his claim
under the process in question to final judgment and the interruption
does not lapse
in terms of subsection (2), prescription shall
commence to run afresh on the day on which the judgment of the court
becomes executable.’
[Own emphasis]
[33]
Samancor contended that it did not, at any
stage, concede to Mr Potgieter’s claim and that there were no
completed proceedings
which interrupted prescription as the relevant
action was abandoned by Mr Potgieter. The effect of this contention
is that in terms
of section 15(2) of the Prescription Act, the action
instituted on 23 July 2018 did not interrupt prescription.
[34]
The
Constitutional Court in
Food
and Allied Workers Union on behalf of Gaoshubelwe v Pieman's Pantry
(Pty) Ltd
[7]
(
Pieman’s
Pantry
),
held the following in respect of the commencement of proceedings
within the meaning of section 15(1) of the Prescription Act:
‘
[202]
In addition, given the mandatory nature of conciliation as a
requirement for arbitration or a referral to the Labour
Court, it
follows, in my view that the proceedings for the recovery of the
debt, that arise from an unfair dismissal, commence
when a dispute is
referred to conciliation. To hold otherwise would simply mean
airbrushing the important and legally mandated
process of
conciliation, from what can only be seen as a continuum in the legal
process from conciliation to adjudication that
the LRA evidences. In
Cape Town Municipality
,
the Court held that a process that initiates proceedings for
enforcement of payment of a debt interrupts prescription:
“
It
is sufficient for the purposes of interrupting prescription if the
process to be served is one whereby the proceedings begun
there under
are instituted as a step in the enforcement of a claim for payment of
the debt.
A
creditor prosecutes his claim under that process to final, executable
judgment, not only when the process and the judgment constitute
the
beginning and end of the same action, but also where the process
initiates an action, judgment in which finally disposes of
some
elements of the claim, and where the remaining elements are disposed
of in a supplementary action instituted pursuant to and
dependent
upon that judgment.
”
[203] What is
instructive from this decision is that it recognises that the
judicial process may consist of various
steps that are intertwined
and that
it is not necessary that the process that commences
proceedings must result in a judgment in the same action
.
Thus,
it matters not that the process that constitutes a referral to
conciliation does not result in a judgment. It may still, and
does
indeed, constitute the commencement of proceedings for the
enforcement of a debt
.’ [Own emphasis]
[35]
It is clear that the Constitutional Court
(within the context of conciliation proceedings) interpreted section
15(1) of the Prescription
Act not to require that the instituted
process must culminate in a judgment in the same proceedings. It is
sufficient for the party
to approach the recovery of the debt in a
staggered fashion. In this instance, it cannot be said that the
proceedings initiated
on 23 July 2018 were not proceedings
competent in terms of section 15(1) of the Prescription Act. As
mentioned above,
the action was withdrawn for the delivery of a legal
question, which ultimately served before Snyman AJ. Clearly, the
proceedings
before van Niekerk J were aborted with the
proviso
that the respondent would initiate
proceedings for declaratory relief within the stipulated timeframes.
That relief was contemplated
to discern the form and extent of the
claim prosecutable. This evinces proceedings which sought to finally
dispose of some element
of the claim, that is, whether the claim for
arrears in wages constituted a judgment debt or a contractual claim.
[36]
This was in line with the order per van
Niekerk J, which required that a legal question as to whether the
claim was a judgment debt
or a contractual debt should be resolved
first before the appellant could proceed with the action proceedings
for the recovery
of the debt. Clearly, the proceedings before van
Niekerk J and those before Snyman AJ were intertwined, as alluded to
in
Pieman's Pantry
. Thus, it cannot be said that the
appellant did not successfully prosecute his claim within the meaning
of section 15(2) of the
Prescription Act when he withdrew the claim.
It is clear from the reading of the order of the
Labour Court (per van Niekerk J) that albeit the action was
withdrawn, nevertheless
the appellant did not abandon his claim and
merely sought to crystallise his claim by finally disposing of some
of the elements
of the claim.
[37]
This is discernible from the fact that when
the parties could not agree on a stated case as mandated by the
aforesaid order, the
parties hastily initiated the proceedings, which
ultimately served before Snyman AJ. It follows that, as at the time
that declaratory
judgment was delivered on 20 May 2020, the
period of prescription was not exhausted on 16 February 2021.
Therefore,
it cannot be said that the aborted proceedings did not
interrupt the running of prescription. They did.
[38]
I conclude, therefore, that the appeal
stands to succeed, and that the following order be made:
Order
1. The late
delivery of the respondent’s heads of argument is condoned.
2. The appeal is
upheld with no order as to costs.
3. The order of the
Labour Court is set aside and substituted with an order that reads as
follows:
‘
1.
the respondent’s special plea of prescription is dismissed with
no order as to costs.'
G. MALINDI AJA
Molahlehi
DJP and Smith AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellant:
A. Goldberg,
of Goldberg Attorneys Incorporated
For
the Respondent:
A. Redding SC,
instructed by
Solomonholmes Incorporated attorneys
[1]
Act 68 of 2969.
[2]
[2017] ZACC 9
;
(2017)
38 ILJ 1560 (CC).
[3]
[2015] ZALAC 15
;
(2015)
36 ILJ 2013 (LAC).
[4]
Act
75 of 1997, as amended.
[5]
Hendor
at paras 37 – 51 and 173 - 177.
[6]
[2020] ZALAC 55
; (2021) 42 ILJ 499 (LAC) at paras 23 – 24 and
35 – 38.
[7]
[2018] ZACC 7
; (2018) 39 ILJ 1213 (CC) at
paras
202 – 203.
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SGB Cape Octorex (PTY) Ltd v Metal and Engineering Industries Bargaining Council and Others (JA 90/2021) [2022] ZALAC 118; (2023) 44 ILJ 179 (LAC); [2023] 2 BLLR 125 (LAC) (18 October 2022)
[2022] ZALAC 118Labour Appeal Court of South Africa97% similar
Strado Remanufacturing (Pty) Ltd v Diphoko N.O and Others (JA 103/23) [2025] ZALAC 19; [2025] 6 BLLR 576 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 2103 (LAC) (20 March 2025)
[2025] ZALAC 19Labour Appeal Court of South Africa97% similar
Samancor Chrome Ltd t/a Samancor Eastern Crome Mines v NUM obo Matshebele and Others (JA69/2022) [2024] ZALAC 40; [2024] 12 BLLR 1281 (LAC) (6 September 2024)
[2024] ZALAC 40Labour Appeal Court of South Africa97% similar