Case Law[2025] ZALAC 16South Africa
CTP Gravure (Pty) a division of CTP Limited v Statutory Council for Printing Newspaper and Packaging Industry and Others (DA 04/2024) [2025] ZALAC 16; [2025] 10 BLLR 1015 (LAC) (20 March 2025)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
20 March 2025
Judgment
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## CTP Gravure (Pty) a division of CTP Limited v Statutory Council for Printing Newspaper and Packaging Industry and Others (DA 04/2024) [2025] ZALAC 16; [2025] 10 BLLR 1015 (LAC) (20 March 2025)
CTP Gravure (Pty) a division of CTP Limited v Statutory Council for Printing Newspaper and Packaging Industry and Others (DA 04/2024) [2025] ZALAC 16; [2025] 10 BLLR 1015 (LAC) (20 March 2025)
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sino date 20 March 2025
FLYNOTES:
LABOUR
– Arbitration –
Hearsay
evidence
–
Dismissal
for making allegations that director used “k” word –
Arbitrator not allowing company legal representation
– Made
finding of provisional admittance of hearsay evidence – Not
allowing hearsay evidence – Only made
ruling on
admissibility in the award – Not sufficient grounds to set
aside arbitration award – Where company’s
case was
solely based on workplace rumour –
Law of Evidence Amendment
Act 45 of 1988
,
s 3(1)(c).
IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, DURBAN
Case
no: DA04/2024
In
the matter between:
CTP
GRAVURE (PTY) A DIVISION OF
CTP
LIMITED
Appellant
and
THE
STATUTORY COUNCIL FOR THE PRINTING,
NEWSPAPER
AND PACKAGING INDUSTRY
First Respondent
RAJENDRA
SHANKER
N.O
Second Respondent
THE
CHEMICAL, ENERGY, PAPER,
PRINTING,
WOOD AND ALLIED WORKERS’
UNION
OBO SIZWE HLONGWANE
Third Respondent
Heard:
11 March 2025
Delivered:
20 March 2025
Coram:
Van Niekerk JA, Waglay and Mooki AJJA
JUDGMENT
WAGLAY,
AJA
Introduction
[1]
This appeal, with leave of the court
a quo
, concerns the
treatment of hearsay evidence in an arbitration proceeding and
whether the failure to rule on the admission of such
evidence at the
outset of the arbitration proceedings constitutes gross irregularity
sufficient for the review of the arbitration
award. Further, the
appellant impugns the arbitrator’s refusal to allow it legal
representation during the arbitration proceedings,
which refusal, as
the argument goes, impacted its case before the bargaining council
and the eventual refusal to admit the hearsay
evidence presented.
[2]
The record of appeal is filed one day late, and the appellant has
sought condonation. The delay is minimal and explained, and in
that
respect, condonation is granted.
Background
[3]
The appellant, CTP Gravure, operates as a printing company engaged in
the printing of magazines and brochures. The union, CEPPWAWU,
enjoys
representivity within the appellant’s workplace.
[4]
The employee, Sizwe Hlongwane, commenced employment with the
appellant in 2005, and at the time of his dismissal, he was employed
as an RECMI operator. The employee further served as a shop steward
of the union.
[5]
On 17 September 2018, the employee, as shop steward, together with
senior employees of the appellant, being the Production Manager,
Johnathan Lawrence (Lawrence) and the Divisional Managing Director,
Jan Marius Logtenberg (Logtenberg), attended a
section 189A
facilitation meeting. At the facilitation meeting, the employee
alleged that the appellant had engaged the employment services
of
nine casual workers, which the appellant disputed. Given the claim,
it became necessary for the appellant to inspect its workplace
to
confirm the number of casual workers employed.
[6]
On their return to the workplace, Lawrence and Logtenberg conducted
an inspection to confirm the veracity of the employee’s
claims,
and it was during this inspection when a heated discussion or
confrontation, regarding the claims made by the employee
during the
facilitation meeting, ensued between the employee and Logtenberg.
[7]
Three days after the inspection, on 20 September 2018, the employee
lodged an internal grievance against Logtenberg, alleging that
during
their discussion, Logtenberg had used abusive language towards him,
more specifically, as it was later established during
the grievance
meeting, that Logtenberg had referred to him as a ‘stupid
black’.
[8]
In the days following the altercation between Logtenberg and the
employee, Lawrence had come to learn, from numerous employees,
that
the employee was alleging that Logtenberg had called him a “kaffir”
during their confrontation. He was first alerted
to this allegation
by another shop steward, a Mr Thiyane, during a telephone call on 20
September 2018, who had indicated that
he had heard directly from the
employee that Logtenberg had used the slur during their
confrontation. Upon investigation by Lawrence,
the same rumour was
confirmed by several other employees.
[9]
On 17 October 2018, Lawrence received an email from another employee
who confirmed that he had heard the same rumour.
[10]
Pertinently, although several employees had confirmed hearing the
rumour, it was only Mr Thiyane who had allegedly got this information
directly from the employee.
[11]
On 24 October 2018, the appellant issued the employee with a notice
of suspension, a notice to attend a disciplinary hearing and
a letter
to the union informing it of its intention to take disciplinary
action against its shop steward, the employee. The employee,
per the
notice to attend the disciplinary hearing, was called to answer the
following charge:
‘
you
made false, malicious and damning allegations against [Logtenberg] in
that you misrepresented the fact that, in an interaction
between
yourself and [Logtenberg] on 17 September 2018 [Logtenberg] had
utilised offensive and derogatory terminology, namely that
he had
referred to you by utilising the “k” word.’
[12]
On the same date, the employee filed a criminal complaint against
Logtenberg for the use of abusive language. Similar to his grievance,
there is no mention in the criminal complaint that Logtenberg had
called him a “kaffir”.
[13]
On 26 October 2018, the disciplinary hearing proceeded in the
employee’s absence, and he was found guilty of the misconduct
alleged. The employee was subsequently dismissed, and an internal
appeal was sought but refused.
[14]
Aggrieved, the employee, assisted by the union, referred an unfair
dismissal dispute to the bargaining council, impugning the
substantive and procedural fairness of his dismissal.
Arbitration
[15]
At arbitration, the appellant applied for legal representation on the
basis that the dispute was fairly complex, particularly as
it
intended to rely on hearsay evidence to make its case against the
employee. The appellant further argued that due to the comparative
ability of the parties and that the dispute concerned an issue of
public interest, it was necessary for it to be represented by
an
attorney. The application for legal representation was opposed by the
employee.
[16]
The arbitrator refused the application for legal representation. He
further ruled that the parties would be allowed to submit hearsay
evidence provisionally; thereafter, they could argue whether the
evidence should be admitted, and that the parties were allowed
to
submit written arguments at the end of the proceedings in respect
thereof. Neither party objected to this.
[17]
In the arbitration award, the arbitrator refused to admit the hearsay
evidence led by the appellant, and as no other evidence was
presented
to sustain its case that the employee had committed the misconduct
alleged, it was determined that the appellant failed
to establish any
wrongful conduct on the part of the employee and the dismissal was
found to be unfair.
In
the Labour Court
[18]
On review,
the appellant submitted that the application for legal representation
was inextricably connected to its request for the
admission of
hearsay evidence and that the arbitrator failed to comply with the
principles expounded in the judgment of this Court,
Exxaro
Coal (Pty) Ltd v Chipana and others
[1]
(
Exxaro
),
in belatedly rejecting the admission of the evidence. The appellant
further submitted that the bargaining council did not have
jurisdiction to hear the dispute as, throughout the arbitration
proceedings, the “
underlying
theme and tone and the fundamental complaint
”
raised by the employee was that he was victimised for his trade union
activities and in effect, the misconduct charge was
merely a sham
intended to disguise the true reason for his dismissal. Thus, so the
argument went, the employee’s case before
the bargaining
council was actually one of an automatically unfair dismissal on the
grounds of discrimination or victimisation,
depriving the bargaining
council of jurisdiction to hear the dispute.
[19]
Finally, the appellant submitted that the arbitrator had committed a
material contradiction by first finding that the evidence
of its key
witness, Lawrence, was credible and probably true and then later
finding that the hearsay evidence led by Lawrence could
not be
admitted.
[20]
On the
finding of procedural unfairness, the appellant impugned the finding
that it had failed, prior to the institution of disciplinary
action
against the employee, to consult effectively with the union in terms
of the provisions of the Code of Good Practice: Dismissal
[2]
.
[21]
The court
a quo
found that the arbitration award did not
contain any reviewable irregularities or defects, and the review
application was dismissed.
In
this Court
[22]
On appeal, and in its heads of argument, the appellant persisted with
the contention that the failure to timeously decide on the
admission
of hearsay evidence and the refusal to allow legal representation
during the arbitration proceedings, was unreasonable
and prejudicial
to the parties.
[23]
The grounds of appeal can be summarised as follows:
1.
The court
a quo
erred in its treatment of
Exxaro
and,
in particular, the failure by the arbitrator to decide the
admissibility of the hearsay evidence timeously;
2.
The court erred in failing to appreciate the unfairness occasioned in
the provisional admittance of the evidence, only for the
same
evidence to be later rejected;
3.
The court
a quo
erred in its reliance on the employee’s
answering affidavit as a starting point in considering the
arbitration award;
4.
The court erred in finding that the introduction of hearsay evidence
was objected to by the employee when it was first introduced;
5.
The court erred in finding that the arbitrator gave appropriate
reasons for his decision to refuse legal representation; and
6.
The court erred in its criticism of the appellant’s inability
to secure the attendance at arbitration of witnesses to corroborate
the hearsay evidence led.
[24]
The appellant did not continue with its jurisdictional challenge in
this appeal, nor did it dispute the court a
quo
’s
findings on procedural fairness. The Appellant also abandoned its
appeal on the arbitrator’s findings in relation
to legal
representation. The only challenge related to the admission of
hearsay evidence.
Admission
of hearsay evidence
[25]
Hearsay evidence is defined in
section 3(4)
of the
Law of Evidence
Amendment Act as
“
evidence, whether oral or in writing, the
probative value of which depends upon the credibility of any person
other than the person
giving such evidence
” and in terms of
section 3(1)
of the Act, such evidence shall not be admitted as
evidence in criminal or civil proceedings unless:
‘
(a)
each party against whom the evidence is to be adduced agrees to the
admission thereof as evidence at
such proceedings;
(b)
the person upon whose credibility the probative value of such
evidence depends, himself testifies
at such proceedings; or
(c)
the court, having regard to –
(i)
the nature of the proceedings;
(ii)
the nature of the evidence;
(iii)
the purpose for which the evidence is tendered;
(iv)
the probative value of the evidence;
(v)
the reason why the evidence is not given by the person upon whose
credibility the probative value
of such evidence depends;
(vi)
any prejudice to a party which the admission of such evidence might
entail; and
(vii)
any other factor which should in the opinion of the court be taken
into account,
is of the opinion that
such evidence should be admitted in the interests of justice.’
[26]
There are three circumstances wherein hearsay evidence may be
admitted: on consent between the parties; on provisional admittance
with an understanding that the person upon whose credibility the
probative value of the evidence depends is to testify at some
future
point in the proceedings; or by the court if the court, on
consideration of relevant factors, is of the opinion that it
would be
in the interests of justice to admit the evidence.
[27]
The employee had not consented to the admission of the hearsay
evidence, nor, as incorrectly stated by the court
a quo
and
argued by the union, was the provisional admission given on condition
that the witnesses who could corroborate the appellant’s
case
that the employee had committed the misconduct as alleged would later
give evidence. On a reading of the transcript, together
with the
arbitration award, the arbitrator was aware at the time that the
application for the admittance of hearsay evidence was
made that the
appellant was unable to secure the attendance of key witnesses who
could give evidence based on their first-hand
knowledge of the
rumour. Instead, the arbitrator made a finding of provisional
admittance where the parties would, at the close
of the proceedings,
make argument and written submissions on whether the evidence led
should be finally admitted or not. As the
arbitrator said:
‘
The
parties will be allowed to submit hearsay evidence provisionally and
argue at the end of the hearing as to why it should or
should not be
taken into consideration and the weight to be attached to it and I
will allow the parties to submit written arguments
at the end of the
proceedings.’
[28]
This position, that the provisional admittance of the evidence was
made without the condition that the hearsay evidence would be
later
corroborated, is further emphasised by the arbitrator in the
arbitration award where he stated:
‘
the
[employee] did not consent to the admission of the hearsay evidence
and had in fact strongly objected to it. It was clear from
the outset
that none of the staff that gave Lawrence the information were going
to give evidence at this arbitration. In determining
whether to admit
the hearsay evidence, I have therefore taken into account the
provisions of subsection 3(1)(c) of the Evidence
Amendment Act.’
[29]
Accordingly, the final decision on the hearsay evidence was premised
on the arbitrator’s discretion following a section 3(1)(c)
assessment of the circumstances of the disputes.
Timeous
rulings on hearsay evidence
[30]
In applying
the hearsay provisions of the Act, the Supreme Court of Appeal in
S
v Ndhlovu and Others
[3]
(
Ndhlovu
)
set out three safeguards to be applied:
‘
[17]
…
·
First, a presiding judicial
official is generally under a duty to
prevent a witness heedlessly giving vent to hearsay evidence. More
specifically under the
Act, 'It is the duty of a trial Judge to keep
inadmissible evidence out, [and] not to listen passively as the
record is turned
into a papery sump of ''evidence”’.
·
Second, the Act cannot be
applied against an unrepresented accused to
whom the significance of its provisions have not been explained. …
[18]
Third, an accused cannot be ambushed by the late or unheralded
admission of hearsay evidence. The trial court
must be asked clearly
and timeously to consider and rule on its admissibility. This cannot
be done for the first time at the end
of the trial, nor in argument,
still less in the court's judgment, nor on appeal. The prosecution,
before closing its case, must
clearly signal its intention to invoke
the provisions of the Act, and, before the State closes its case, the
trial Judge must rule
on admissibility, so that the accused can
appreciate the full evidentiary ambit he or she faces.’
[31]
This Court in
Exxaro
confirmed the applicability of the
safeguards set out in
Ndhlovu
within the context of
arbitration proceedings and held that:
‘
Those safeguards
and precautions, duly adapted, also apply to the application of s 3
of the LEAA in civil proceedings. Because of
the similarities between
civil proceedings and arbitration proceedings, the overwhelmingly,
adversarial nature of arbitration proceedings
under the LRA, and the
overarching requirement that such proceedings be fair, those
safeguards and precautions, duly adapted, apply
equally to
arbitration proceedings to ensure fairness and serve as an invaluable
guide for commissioners and arbitrators when confronted
with hearsay
evidence, and, particularly, when applying s 3 of the LEAA. Adapted
they would include the following: (1) section
3(1)(c) of the LEAA is
not a licence for the wholesale admission of hearsay evidence in the
proceedings; (2) in applying the section
the commissioner must be
careful to ensure that fairness is not compromised; (3) a
commissioner is to be alert to the introduction
of hearsay evidence
and ought not to remain passive in that regard; (4) a party must as
early as possible in the proceedings make
known its intention to rely
on hearsay evidence so that the other party is able to reasonably
appreciate the evidentiary ambit,
or challenge, that he/she or it is
facing. To ensure compliance, a commissioner should at the outset
require parties to indicate
such an intention; (5)
the
commissioner must explain to the parties the significance of the
provisions of s 3 of the LEAA, or of the alternative, fair
standard
and procedure adopted by the commissioner to consider the admission
of the evidence
;
(6)
the
commissioner must timeously rule on the admission of the hearsay
evidence and the ruling on admissibility should not be made
for the
first time at the end of the arbitration, or in the closing argument,
or in the award
.
The point at which a ruling on the admissibility of evidence is made
is crucial to ensure fairness in a criminal trial. The same
ought to
be true for an arbitration conducted in an adversarial fashion
because fairness to both parties is paramount.’
[4]
(emphasis added)
[32]
In
National
Union of Metalworkers of South Africa obo Mokase v Nissan South
Africa (Pty) Ltd and others
[5]
(
Nissan
),
this Court expanded on the importance of timeous rulings on the
admission of the hearsay evidence:
‘
The importance of
a timeous ruling on the admissibility of the hearsay evidence is that
it provides parties with the opportunity
to make submissions on the
issue and, if informed that such evidence is to be excluded, to
consider whether it is possible to rely
on other evidence or not.
Given the nature of the evidence and the reliance placed on it in the
proceedings before the commissioner,
the failure to determine the
issue and the decision later simply to exclude such evidence, without
having regard to the provisions
of section 3 or make a timeous ruling
on its admissibility, constituted a material misdirection on the part
of the commissioner
and led to a gross irregularity in the conduct of
the proceedings.’
[33]
Although
section 138 of the Labour Relations Act
[6]
gives an arbitrator discretion to conduct the arbitration proceedings
in a manner that they consider appropriate to determine the
dispute
fairly and quickly, this does not mean that an arbitrator may treat
evidence in a manner which is unfair to the parties.
[7]
[34]
The arbitrator had regard to the provisions of section 3(1)(c) in
assessing the hearsay evidence led, undertaking a fairly extensive
consideration of the factors set out in the Act against the facts of
the dispute. However, and contrary to the above dictums in
Ndhlovu
and
Exxaro
, the arbitrator had only made his ruling on the
admissibility of the hearsay evidence in his arbitration award.
[35]
The
prejudice to the parties, particularly the party leading the hearsay
evidence, in receiving a belated section 3(1)(c) ruling
on the
admissibility of its evidence at judgment or award stage is obvious:
such party leading the hearsay evidence is unable to
decide whether
to lead further evidence in light of the ruling. Here, the arbitrator
provisionally admitted the hearsay evidence
and advised the parties
to make written submissions at the tail end of the arbitration
proceedings on whether he should accept
such evidence. This decision,
according to the appellant, had the effect of prejudicing its case by
delaying the timing of the
ruling to after its case had closed and as
such, as stated in
Exxaro
,
“
it
was too late for either party to do anything to save their
(respective) situations
”
[8]
.
[36]
However, a late ruling on the admissibility of hearsay evidence may
not necessarily warrant the setting aside of the award and
for the
matter to be remitted back to CCMA or the bargaining council for a
hearing
de novo.
[37]
This Court in
Nissan
stated:
‘
[18]
A material misdirection and gross irregularity caused by the
commissioner’s failure to have regard
to the admissibility of
the hearsay evidence in the manner required may warrant a decision to
set aside the award with the matter
referred back to the CCMA for a
new hearing. …
[19]
This is so in that the result reached by the commissioner was also
unreasonable given the failure to have
regard to the circumstantial
evidence adduced at arbitration. Despite the recognition that legal
formalities may be kept to a minimum
during the course of arbitration
proceedings, evidence adduced must be appropriately considered by a
commissioner and cannot simply
be ignored. …’
[9]
[38]
That being said, this dispute is not like
Exxaro,
where the
commissioner had belatedly
and
incorrectly decided on the
issue of the admissibility of the hearsay evidence. As set out above,
the arbitrator had assessed the
section 3(1)(c) factors in his
consideration of whether it would be in the interests of justice to
admit the evidence.
[39]
What is relevant here is that, not only did the arbitrator find that
the hearsay evidence was oral in nature, he also found that
the
evidence presented by Lawrence , in respect of specific employees,
constituted third or even fourth-hand hearsay evidence where
the
employees who had reported to Lawrence had heard the rumour from
their fellow co-workers or the ‘shop floor’. Only
one
employee, Thiyane, had heard the alleged claim of the use of the ‘k
word’ directly from the employee himself, and
Thiyane was not
called to testify during the arbitration proceedings.
[40]
Although reasons were given as to why the employees did not appear at
the disciplinary hearing to testify as to their knowledge
of the
rumour, no reasons were proffered as to why they could not testify at
the arbitration hearing. Nor did the appellant give
reasons why the
employees were not subpoenaed to present their evidence in a case
where they were unwilling to appear voluntarily
before the
proceedings. Arbitration proceedings are conducted
de novo
,
and as such, the appellant needed to present new evidence to explain
why the employees, and more specifically Thiyane, were not
called to
give evidence and why, despite the step being available to it, did
the appellant not subpoena him to appear at the arbitration
hearing.
[41]
Importantly, it was the evidence of the appellant that it had no
intention to call the employees to give evidence against the ‘errant’
employee.
[42]
The lack of first-hand evidence, coupled with the lack of an
acceptable explanation for failing to call its employee, Thiyane,
to
testify at the arbitration, was, in the arbitrator’s view,
fatal to the appellant’s case for the admission of the
hearsay
evidence. This, in my view, was not open for the labour Court to
interfere with the arbitrator’s decision, nor is
it open for
this Court to do so.
[43]
In any event, the appellant was aware from the commencement of the
leading of its evidence that the arbitrator had only intended
to make
a determination on the admissibility of the hearsay evidence as part
of his award on the merits of the dismissal. It should,
therefore,
have realised the risk associated with such a decision and should
have presented argument as to why that route would
severely prejudice
it. It should have at that time or at least before deciding to close
its case, argue that the absence of the
decision on the admissibility
of the hearsay evidence would prejudice it in the further conduct of
its case.
[44]
In the circumstances of this case, I do not believe that there are
sufficient grounds to set aside a (on the whole) reasonable
arbitration award in a case where the appellant’s case was
solely based on a workplace rumour.
[45]
Finally, I must add that while affidavits normally constitute
evidence in application proceedings, in an application to review
an
award or any other decision, the evidence is the record that served
before the commission or the decision maker, not the affidavits
in
support or in opposition to the review application. The affidavits
may provide submissions and averments as to why the award
or decision
should be reviewed or not, but the grant or refusal of the review is
based on the four corners of the record. The court
a quo
thus
erred in relying on the employee’s answering affidavit to form
the view that the arbitrator had in fact handed down
a ‘decision’
in respect of the admission of the hearsay evidence when the record
clearly demonstrated that this was
not the case, and both parties
where satisfied that the record filed was sufficient to deal with the
review application that was
before the court
a quo
and this
Court.
[46]
In the circumstances, the appeal must fail. I also see no reason to
award costs.
[47]
In the result, the following order is made:
Order
1.
Condonation for the late filing of the record of appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is dismissed with no order as to costs.
WAGLAY AJA
Van Niekerk JA and Mooki
AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT:
Mr. A Soldatos of Soldatos
Cooper Inc.
FOR
THE 3
rd
RESPONDENT: Mr. J Phillips of
Cheadle Thompson &Haysom Inc
[1]
[2019] ZALAC 52
; (2019) 40 ILJ 2485 (LAC).
[2]
Schedule 8 of the LRA.
[3]
2002
(6) SA 305 (SCA).
[4]
Exxaro
at
para 24.
[5]
[2024] ZALAC 16; [2024] 9 BLLR 967 (LAC).
[6]
Act
66 of 1995, as amended.
[7]
See:
Exxaro
at para 21; and
Nissan
supra
at 14.
[8]
Exxaro
at
para 34.
[9]
Nissan
ibid
at
paras 18 – 19.
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