Case Law[2025] ZALAC 41South Africa
Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union v Chamber of Mines of South Africa and Others (JA 20/2023) [2025] ZALAC 41 (14 May 2025)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
14 May 2024
Headnotes
the exception and gave AMCU 30 days to amend its statement of claim.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZALAC 41
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union v Chamber of Mines of South Africa and Others (JA 20/2023) [2025] ZALAC 41 (14 May 2025)
Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union v Chamber of Mines of South Africa and Others (JA 20/2023) [2025] ZALAC 41 (14 May 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZALAC/Data/2025_41.html
sino date 14 May 2025
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
no:
JA20/2023
In
the matter between:
ASSOCIATION
OF MINEWORKERS AND
CONSTRUCTION
UNION (AMCU)
Appellant
and
CHAMBER
OF MINES OF SOUTH AFRICA
First Respondent
NATIONAL
UNION OF MINEWORKERS (NUM)
Second Respondent
UNITED
ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH AFRICA (UASA). Third
Respondent
SOLIDARITY
Fourth Respondent
Heard:
20
February
2024
Delivered:
14 May 2024
Coram:
Savage ADJP, Musi JA and Jolwana AJA
Judgment
SAVAGE,
ADJP
Introduction
[1]
This
appeal, with the leave of the Labour Court, is against the judgment
and orders of that Court (
per
Prinsloo J) in which the appellant’s application to amend its
statement of claim in a discrimination dispute filed under
section
6(1) of the Employment Equity Act
[1]
(EEA) was refused with costs. A cross-appeal filed by the first
respondent, formerly the Chamber of Mines and now known as the
Minerals Council of South Africa (MCSA), is against the Court’s
failure to determine its counter-application to exclude certain
of
the evidence put up by the appellant, the Association of Mineworkers
and Construction Union (AMCU).
[2]
On 19 July
2021, AMCU gave notice of its intention to amend the statement of
claim that it had filed on 1 February 2017 against
the MCSA and the
two gold mining companies it represents, AngloGold Ashanti Limited
and Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited. After
the MCSA indicated
that it opposed the amendment sought, AMCU applied to the Labour
Court for leave to amend its statement of claim.
The MCSA filed a
counter-application in which it objected to the evidence put up by
AMCU, which related to the subject matter of
its amendment
application.
Background
[3]
Following the
conclusion of a 2015 - 2018 collective agreement (the collective
agreement) between majority unions and employers
in the gold mining
sector and the subsequent extension of such agreement to non-parties,
AMCU referred a discrimination dispute
to the Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA). In doing so, it
summarised the dispute as follows:
‘
The
extension of the collective agreement concluded on 2 October 2015 in
the gold sector to employees who are not members of the
registered
trade union or trade unions party to the agreement in terms of
section 23(1)(d) of the LRA, perpetuates growing income
inequalities
in breach of section 27 of the Employment Equity Act and the BCEA,
which amounts to unfair discrimination. The unfair
discrimination is
provided for in the collective agreement. The collective agreement in
its current formulation, fails to take
into account and address the
severe income disparity between different categories of employees in
contravention of section 27 of
the Employment Equity Act, and
continues to perpetuate income inequality between different
categories of employees over the three-year
period.’
[4]
The dispute
was not resolved at conciliation and in August 2016, AMCU referred
the matter as a discrimination claim under section
6(1) of the EEA to
the Labour Court for determination. The United Association of South
Africa (UASA), which subsequently has elected
to fall out of the
dispute, raised an exception to the claim
inter
alia
on
the basis that the employees in categories 4 - 8 were not all pleaded
to be black; and that a claim for discrimination on the
basis of
status alone was not cognisable under the EEA. The Labour Court (
per
Mooki AJ)
upheld the exception and gave AMCU 30 days to amend its statement of
claim.
[5]
AMCU delivered
an amended statement of claim during February 2017, in response to
which UASA filed a further objection. In addition,
the MCSA raised a
special plea and an objection to the amended claim. UASA’s
objection was that AMCU had failed to demonstrate
a cause of action
in that its claim was concerned with large-scale income differentials
and that section 27 of the EEA, as opposed
to section 6(1), provided
a specific remedy to address such a claim.
Further,
that AMCU had failed to demonstrate that race was a factor in the
appointment into positions in lower or higher categories
when it had
selected "
artisans,
miners and officers as its comparator
”
but failed to “
allege
that either the majority of or all persons employed as artisans,
miners, or officers are white
”.
Finally, UASA took issue with AMCU’s reliance on the difference
in the standard rate of pay on the basis that “
as
the arbitrary ground
”,
its reasoning was circular and that the difference in the standard
rate of pay cannot simultaneously be the result of and
reason for
discrimination, with “
AMCU
not plead[ing] that the difference is irrational and that this
irrationality amounts to discrimination
”.
[6]
The MCSA
objected to AMCU’s proposed amended claim
inter
alia
on
the basis that there was a pending review application on the same
cause of action between the same parties before the Labour
Court; and
that the proposed amendment was bad in law in that a cause of action
premised on section 6(1) of the EEA is confined
to unfair
discrimination between employees on the same or comparable
occupational levels, with income differentials between employees
in
different occupation levels to be addressed by the remedies in
section 27.
[7]
The Labour
Court dismissed both objections raised, finding that section 6(1),
read with section 10(2) of the EEA, enables a party
to refer a
dispute relating to alleged unfair discrimination within a specified
time period and that section 27 does not concern
the grounds of
discrimination as contained in section 6(1). AMCU was found to have
presented sufficient averments in respect of
the allegations of
unfair discrimination based on race and pleaded as the selected
comparator in respect of such claim, those employees
employed at the
level of artisans, miners and officers.
[8]
The Court
rejected the special plea of
lis
pendens
in
respect of the review application pursued by AMCU which sought the
setting aside
inter
alia
of
the extension of the same collective agreement to non-members of a
registered trade union on the basis that the relief sought
in the two
matters was not the same.
Further
application to amend
[9]
Shortly before
the trial was due to commence on 7 June 2021, AMCU filed an
application to further amend its statement of claim so
as to insert a
broad additional comparator group, described as “the CEO”,
“employees in higher categories”,
“senior
executives”, “directors and senior executives” and
the “highest paid worker”. AMCU
contends that the
insertion of this additional comparator group is merely clarificatory
in what is a novel test case. The amendments
sought by AMCU,
highlighted below, read in context, are as follows:
[10]
In paragraph
14:
‘
On
or about 12 May 2015 the union addressed correspondence to Harmony,
Ashanti and Sibanye concerning wages and other conditions
of
employment for the 2015 review period in which the union raised a
concern with the ever-widening income disparity gap between
ordinary
workers and members of management (
the
first comparator)
and in particular the
wage gap between category 4-8 employees and other employees in the
workplace.'
[11]
In paragraph
18:
'A
more pressing concern raised by the union during the course of the
gold sector negotiations was that in light of the way in which
the
agreement is framed, the income disparity between category 4 –
8 employees, on the one hand, and officials, miners and
artisans (
the
second comparator)
will grow at a rate over the three-year period
of the 2015-2018 collective agreement.’
[12]
Paragraph 30:
‘
There
are historical wage disparities and gaps between category 4 - 8
employees in the workplace and other classes of employees
i.e.
the first and second comparators.
These
disparities are discriminatory on the ground of race, and
alternatively are arbitrary.’
[13]
Paragraph 32:
‘
The
unfair discrimination is provided for in the collective agreement
itself and is reflected in the difference in the increase
calculations to the standard rates of pay between category 4 - 8
employees and
miners, artisans and
other officials
the
second comparator
over the three-year
period of the collective agreement.’
[14]
By the
following insertion in paragraph 34.1:
‘
Declaring
that there are at the first respondent (and its members that they
represent) historical age disparities and gaps between
category 4 –
8 employees in the workplace and others i
.e.
the first and second comparators
. These
disparities are discriminatory on the ground of race and
alternatively are arbitrary.’
[15]
In seeking to
make such amendments, AMCU relied on a reference in its statement of
claim, in its unamended form, to “members
of management”
in paragraph 14 and the reference in paragraph 15.2 to “
the
wage gap between the lowest paid employee and the CEO's salary
”.
It contends that in paragraph 14, reference is made to its
correspondence of 12 May 2015 in which it raised “
its
concern with the ever-widening income disparity gap between ordinary
workers and members of management and in particular the
wage gap
between category 4-8 employees and other employees in the workplace
”.
[16]
The MCSA took
issue with AMCU’s further amendment application on the basis
that it sought to introduce, at a late stage in
proceedings, a new
cause of action through the introduction of an additional management
comparator in an already complex and costly
wage discrimination
dispute, in which expert reports had already been delivered and the
matter had been determined to be trial
ready. The MCSA disputed that
the amendments sought were merely clarificatory, that the claim
constitutes a novel test case or
that it has sought to confine AMCU
to an unduly narrow case to insulate it from the discrimination claim
filed. In particular,
the MCSA took issue with the interpretation
sought to be given to paragraph 14 which referred to management as a
class of employees
against whom a comparison could be drawn when the
use of the words “in particular”
identified
the specific concern for purposes of the discrimination claim,
distinguishing the comparator from “members of management”.
The MCSA contended that paragraph 14 supports a narrower pleaded case
than the wider one contended for by AMCU.
[17]
In relation to
paragraph 15.2, the MCSA contends that the reference in this
paragraph to “
the
wage gap between the lowest paid employee and the CEO's salary
"
was made in the context of correspondence exchanged preceding or
during the wage negotiations and did not permit a reading
which would
allow AMCU to insert a new comparator into the dispute at such a late
stage. In addition, the MCSA argues that the
demand in paragraph 15.2
for “
an
overall review of the job grading system to address the closing of
the wage gap between the lowest paid employee and the CEO's
salary,
as per the Employment Equity requirement”
is a demand for a jobs review and is unrelated to the relief claimed
in AMCU’s discrimination claim. Furthermore, the reference
to
the review of the job grading system to eliminate vertical
discrimination “
as
per the Employment Equity requirement
”
refers to section 27 of the EEA which requires regular reviewing of
“
the
remuneration and benefits received in each occupational level of that
employer's workforce
”.
This, the MCSA contends, has nothing to do with a discrimination
claim under section 6(1) of the EEA.
[18]
The MCSA notes
that paragraph 18 of the statement of claim contains a clear
reference to the dispute before the Labour Court. The
paragraph
states:
‘
A
more pressing concern raised by the union during the course of the
gold sector negotiations was that in light of the way in which
the
agreement is framed, the income disparity between Category 4 - 8
employees, on the one hand, and officials, miners, and artisans
on
the other will grow at a rate over the three-year period of the 2015
- 2018 collective agreement.’
[19]
The MCSA
states that the reference in paragraph 19 to “(t)his income
disparity”, to “these very concerns”
in paragraph
20 and the detailed table setting out the differential wage increases
between the category 4 - 8 employees and the
miners, on the one hand,
and artisans and officials on the other, supports its contention that
the comparator AMCU has relied upon
has been miners, artisans and
officials, with no reference to management wage increases included in
the table. Paragraph 22 also
expressly refers to the miners, artisans
and officials’ increases and is pleaded as being “in
contradistinction”
with what the category 4 - 8 employees will
receive.
[20]
Paragraph 23
states:
‘
The
increases to be paid to the different categories of employees being
calculated in monetary term [sic] in respect of categories
4 - 8, and
in percentage terms or CPI in respect of, miners, artisans and
officials will continue to widen income inequality (particularly
at
Harmony) as miners and artisans all have a basic salary that is much
higher than categories 4 - 8, both prior to and during
the
subsistence of the 2015 - 2018 collective agreement on which their
percentage increases will be calculated, factoring inflation
into
account as well. These increases:
23.1
Prejudices the category 4- 8 employees;
23.2
Perpetuates income disparities and discriminatory wage
gaps in the workplace and
23.3
Perpetuates the discrimination against category 4-8
employees on the ground of their race and alternatively are
arbitrary.’
[21]
Paragraph 24
references AMCU's complaint about the extension of the collective
agreement only in respect of category 4 - 8 employees
and miners,
artisans and officials. Furthermore, paragraphs 25 to 29 concern the
referral of the dispute to the CCMA, with the
MCSA submitting that
the placement of these averments straight after the discrimination
case pleaded in relation to miners, artisans
and officials as a
comparator can only mean that the only dispute that was referred to
the CCMA was a dispute about discrimination
vis-à-vis miners,
artisans and officials.
[22]
Paragraph 30
refers to wage disparities between “
employees
in the workplace and other employees
”.
The MCSA contends that the only wage disparities that have been
properly pleaded in the paragraphs preceding it are those
of category
4 - 8 employees on the one hand and miners, artisans and officials on
the other hand. On that basis, the “other
classes of employees”
cannot include members of management.
[23]
Paragraph 32
states that:
‘
The
unfair discrimination is provided for in the collective agreement
itself, and is reflected in the difference in the increase
calculations to the standard rates of pay between category 4 to 8
employees and miners, artisans and other officials over the
three-year period of the collective agreement.’
[24]
This
paragraph, the MCSA submits, leaves it in no doubt that the unamended
claim does not relate to members of management as a comparator
for
the simple reason that members of management are not covered by the
collective agreement.
[25]
AMCU argues
that its claim is litigated in the context of the continued apartheid
wage gap in a country which remains the most unequal
in the world and
that it
approached
the matter, including its trial preparation, on the basis that the
comparators in its claim include members of management
of the
relevant mining companies, as well as miners, artisans and officials.
It argues that its pleadings refer to members of management,
including the CEO, as does the evidence included in its expert
reports and trial bundle, and that it gave full and proper
particulars
of its claim and comparators in such expert reports. It
recognises however that “
there
may be some ambiguity
”
in its statement of claim in relation to the comparators, but
contends that the MCSA “
sought
to exploit that ambiguity
”.
AMCU pleaded that, with the increase or adjustment to the salaries of
category 4 - 8 employees, an overall review of the
job grading system
is required to close the wage gap and that the “
wage
disparities and wage gaps… remain discriminatory as against
category 4 - 8 employees on the ground of their race and
alternatively on the arbitrary ground
”.
It is the income disparity which exists that, AMCU submits,
perpetuates such discrimination.
[26]
In its
counter-application, the MCSA objects to AMCU’s inclusion of
evidence, delivered in the report of Dr Forslund and the
witness
statement of its national treasurer, which related to the gap in
remuneration between the lowest and highest paid employee
and other
senior executives. The MCSA contends that it was impermissible to
introduce this evidence which relates to a new cause
of action which
is not reflected in the pleadings and that this evidence diverges
from the claim pleaded and the basis on which
the MCSA had prepared
for trial.
[27]
AMCU delivered
a second notice of intention to amend its claim which was attached to
its heads of argument filed in the Labour Court.
This amendment
stated that:
‘
The
unfair discrimination is provided for in the collective agreement
itself, and is reflected in the difference In the increase
calculations to the standard rates of pay between category 4 to 8
employees and miners, artisans and other officials (the second
comparator) over the three-year period of the collective agreement.
The unfair discrimination is also reflected in the wage rates
and
increases of the category 4 to 8 employees, relative to those of the
first comparator.’
[28]
The MCSA
contends that such proposed amendment sought is not simply
definitional since it finds no factual basis in the particulars
of
claim in their unamended form.
Pre-trial
minute
[29]
In a pre-trial
minute concluded between the parties in August 2019, it is recorded
that on 27 March 2015, the MCSA responded to
AMCU’s request for
information in respect of salary scales and the number of employees
per recognition unit. On 12 May 2015,
AMCU wrote to Harmony,
AngloGold Ashanti and Sibanye concerning wages and other conditions
of employment for the 2015 review.
The
union’s demands were recorded as that all employees falling
within categories 4 – 8 receive an increase/adjustment
of R
7000.00 in addition to the current basic salary; that an increase of
R 6500 be granted to miners and artisans, and officials
at levels C1
to C5; and a review of the job grading system be undertaken to
address the closing of the wage gap between the lowest
paid employee
and the CEO's salary, as per the Employment Equity Requirement. It
was recorded that the agreement concluded concerned
three recognition
units, namely category 4 – 8 employees, miners and artisans,
and officials.
[30]
The facts in
dispute were recorded in the minute as including whether there was
differentiation based on race; whether the three
recognition units
covered by the agreement, namely category 4 – 8 employees,
miners and artisans and officials, include black
and white employees;
whether progression of category 4 – 8 employees occurs all the
time; whether there are other positions
and jobs performed by such
employees; and whether the union had raised its concerns regarding
the widening wage gap “
between
ordinary workers and members of management and in particular the wage
gap between category 4 – 8 employees and other
employees in the
workplace
”.
Also in dispute was whether the wage disparities and gaps were and
remain discriminatory against category 4 – 8 employees
on the
grounds of race, alternatively, on an arbitrary ground.
[31]
It was
recorded as disputed by the MCSA that “
a
more pressing concern raised by the union (during the course of the
gold sector negotiations) was that in light of the way in
which the
agreement is framed, the income disparity between category 4 - 8
employees, on the one hand, and officials, miners, and
artisans on
the other will grow at a rate over the three-year period of the 2015
- 2018 collective agreement
”.
[32]
Also recorded
as being in dispute was whether the income disparity prejudices
category 4 - 8 employees, perpetuates income disparities
in the
workplace and perpetuates discrimination against such employees on
the grounds of their race, alternatively on arbitrary
grounds. It was
stated that the MCSA contends that “
the
difference in income between the recognition units is a reflection of
various factors, including the work performed by the employees
in
each job, the value of the job and/or required training or licensing,
and is not based on race or an arbitrary ground
”.
[33]
Disputed was
also whether “
the
increases to be paid to the different categories of employees being
calculated in monetary terms in respect of categories 4
- 8, and in
percentage terms or CPI in respect of miners, artisans and officials
will continue to widen income Inequality (particularly
at Harmony) as
miners and artisans all have a basic salary that is much higher than
categories 4 - 8, both prior to and during
the subsistence of the
2015 - 2018 collective agreement on which their percentage increases
will be calculated, factoring inflation
into account
”.
[34]
The issues
agreed by the parties to be for determination by the Court were
recorded in the minute as:
‘
4.1
Whether there is unfair discrimination in terms of section
8(1) of the EEA, either directly or indirectly, on a listed
ground of
race, and alternatively on an arbitrary ground, being the difference
in the standard rate and pay attached to the positions
and job
functions of the employees, which undermines the dignity and
integrity of these workers in the workplace.
4.2
Whether the extension of the collective agreement on 2 October
2015 in the gold sector to employees who are not members
of the
registered trade union or unions party to the agreement in terms of
section 23(1)(d) perpetuates growing income inequalities
and
constitutes discrimination on the ground of race, and alternatively
on an arbitrary ground, in breach of section 8(1) of the
EEA, and
amounts to unfair discrimination.
4.3
Whether the unfair discrimination is provided for in the
collective agreement itself and is reflected in the difference
in the
increase calculations to the standard rates of pay between category 4
to 8 employees and miners, artisans and officials
over the three-year
period of the collective agreement.
4.4
Whether the collective agreement, in its current formulation,
fails to take into account and address the severe income
disparity
between different categories of employees in contravention of section
6(1) of the EEA, and continues to perpetuate income
inequality
between different categories of employees over the three-year period.
4.5
Whether the applicant has disclosed a cause of action under
section 6(1) of the EEA, either directly or indirectly on
the listed
ground of race, and alternatively on the arbitrary ground.’
[35]
It was
recorded that the relief sought by AMCU was a declaratory order
regarding the historical wage disparities and gaps between
category 4
- 8 employees in the workplace and
others on the basis that these disparities are discriminatory on the
grounds of race and alternatively,
on arbitrary grounds. In addition,
AMCU seeks a further declaratory order that the extension of the
collective agreement on 2 October
2015 in the gold sector to
employees who are not
members
of the registered trade union or trade unions party to the agreement
in terms of section 23(1d) of the LRA, perpetuates
growing income
inequalities and constitutes unfair discrimination on the ground of
race, and alternatively on an arbitrary ground
in breach of section
8(11) of the EEA and amounts to unfair discrimination. AMCU therefore
seeks an order adjusting the wages and
remuneration of category 4 –
8 employees to a minimum wage amount of R12 500 from 1 July
2015, alternatively a monthly
increase of R1000 from the same date,
with compensation in the sum of R50 000 each for the unfair
discrimination suffered
by category 4 - 8 employees as
solatium
.
Judgment
of Labour Court
[36]
The Labour
Court upheld the MCSA’s objection to AMCU’s application
to amend its claim on the basis that the agreement
concluded
regulated only the increase of wages in categories 4 - 8 and those of
miners, artisans and officials; and that the inclusion
of “members
of management” as a comparator into the dispute would render
the claim unsustainable and irregular in that
it would not reflect a
coherent or sustainable cause of action pleaded. It rejected AMCU’s
contention that the matter was
res
judicata
since Mabaso AJ had dismissed the exception raised by the MCSA in
relation to the case pleaded by AMCU relative to miners, artisans
and
officials.
[37]
Several
difficulties were found to exist with AMCU’s proposed amendment
to include members of management as the first comparator
for purposes
of its discrimination claim, with miners, artisans and officials
being the second comparator. These included that
the 2015 - 2018
collective agreement formed a fundamental basis of the pleaded case
and it did not concern management remuneration,
and that the material
facts pleaded as forming the basis of the case did not support such a
fundamental amendment to the claim.
The Court therefore refused
AMCU's application to introduce the new management comparator and
concluded that the matter should
proceed on the statement of claim as
it stood on the eve of trial. In doing so it ordered that costs,
including those of two counsel,
be borne by AMCU.
[38]
At paragraph
93 of its judgment, the Court stated that:
‘
If
the amendments are permitted, or if it is found that it ought not to
be permitted on the basis that the pleadings already encompass
members of management as comparators, it would render the
counter-application academic. Only if the application for leave to
amend
is refused, without it being found that the pleadings sans the
amendment encompass members of management as comparators, the counter
application is to be determined.’
[39]
Despite this,
the Court found there to be no need to determine the
counter-application. This was so despite having found that AMCU
could
not amend its statement of claim to introduce the new comparator
group and when the counter-application concerned an objection
to
evidence put up.
On
appeal
[40]
AMCU contends
on appeal that its claim has always been based on two comparators
pleaded by it, namely the comparison between the
salaries of category
4 - 8 employees as the lowest paid employees with those of the
highest paid employees, being management, including
the CEO; and the
comparison between the salaries of the lowest paid employees with
those of miners, artisans and officials. The
amendments sought, it
submits, are therefore clarificatory in nature and are
bona
fide
,
going no further than eliminating any scope for ambiguity and
introducing precision, without altering the scope of the case. If
the
amendments are refused, it argues that this will cause severe
prejudice to AMCU and its members in that the dispute will not
be
fully or properly ventilated as there will not be a determination of
whether, on the evidence, category 4 – 8 employees
were
discriminated against on the grounds of race, when compared to other
employees. It would be unduly narrow if the case were
to be limited
to a comparison with the salaries only of miners, artisans and
officials and did not address the long shadow of the
apartheid wage
gap and the Court would be unduly hamstrung in its determination of
the matter.
[41]
AMCU
submits that the MCSA’s objections were dismissed by Mabaso AJ,
that the issue is, therefore,
res
judicata
and that in the pre-trial minute, the demand for a review of the job
grading system was articulated to close the wage gap. AMCU
contends
that the Labour Court did not adopt a permissive approach to the
amendment application and that its refusal to allow such
amendment
has undermined AMCU’s right of access to court to ventilate the
dispute when its pleaded case is sufficiently broad
to include the
management comparator and even if it not, it was entitled to amend
its pleadings to broaden its case on the basis
of the material facts
pleaded. In addition, it submits that the Court failed to find that
sections 6 and 27 of the EEA are directed
at different wrongs and
contemplate different remedies, with section 6 confined to claims of
horizontal equality whereas section
27 concerned with vertical
equality. Further, the Court erred in finding that the amendments
proposed did not sustain a cause of
action in that AMCU had failed to
plead that the job functions are allocated according to race and that
salary differences exist
which are based on race and not the value or
nature of the work performed. Finally, AMCU contends that the costs
order made against
it was imposed without regard to the decision of
Union
for Police Security and Corrections Organisation v South African
Custodial Management (Pty) Ltd and Others
.
[2]
[42]
The MCSA
opposes the appeal on the basis that the proposed amendments are bad
in law since a cause of action brought under section
6(1) is confined
to unfair discrimination between employees on the same or comparable
occupational levels, while a claim of vertical
income disparities is
not justiciable under section 6(1), but falls to be addressed
exclusively by the remedies in section 27.
The MCSA submits that if
the amendment were to be granted it would make AMCU’s claim
excipiable. Furthermore, if permitted,
the statement of claim will
lack the averments necessary to sustain a cause of action. The
collective agreement, which is fundamental
to and underlies AMCU’s
claim was the sole basis for the referral to the CCMA. It does not
regulate wages of employees in
categories other than 4 - 8, miners,
artisans and officials. In addition, the allegations relating to the
management comparator
do not sustain a cause of action and are vague
and embarrassing. This, when to sustain a claim of discrimination on
the grounds
of race, alternatively on an arbitrary ground,
comparators must be identified with precision. In spite of this, the
amendment that
sought to introduce a management comparator is far
from clear, with it not indicating which members of management
reference is
made.
[43]
The MCSA
contends further that there is no causal link pleaded between the
wage differentiation and a listed ground of unfair discrimination
or
a specific, identifiable arbitrary ground of discrimination. This
when AMCU has since 2016 pleaded that its claim related to
category 4
– 8 employees having been unfairly discriminated against
vis-à-vis the two recognition units immediately
above, namely
miners, artisans and officials. It was on this basis that the MCSA
prepared intensively for the trial that was postponed
in June 2021,
as is apparent from the expert report and remuneration data it
advanced. A week before trial, AMCU for the first
time, in its expert
report and affidavit filed, sought to change the focus of its claim.
If the proposed amendment was permitted,
it would cause severe
prejudice in the further delay of a trial which will proceed on an
entirely new basis. The Labour Court erred
in failing to determine
the MCSA’s objection to the inclusion of this evidence, which
was unrelated to the pleaded case.
Consequently, the MCSA seeks that
the cross-appeal be upheld.
Evaluation
[44]
The
immediate purpose of a statement of claim is to provide an opponent
with sufficient detail of the material facts and legal issues
arising
from such facts on which the applicant will rely to enable the other
party to respond to the claim. As was made clear in
Candy
and others v Coca Cola Fortune (Pty) Ltd
[3]
:
‘
In
its simplest terms, the statement of case must at least inform the
respondent party what the pertinent facts are on which the
applicant
will rely in the case, and further, what the cause of action is that
the applicant will pursue as founded on these facts.
That must be
done in sufficient particularity so as to enable the respondent to
provide a proper answer to these facts and the
related cause of
action. The statement of claim and the answering statement thereto
are not just for the benefit of the parties.
They also serve the
court, in that the issues in dispute are properly determined and
other possible alternative causes of action
are eliminated from
having to be considered by the court. A proper statement of claim and
answering statement are imperative to
the fundamental requirement of
expeditious resolution of employment disputes in terms of the LRA.’
[45]
A
party may apply for an amendment of its pleadings at any time prior
to judgment being handed down in a matter. In determining
an
application for amendment, the court must have regard to whether the
amendment seeks to introduce a new cause of action or rather
to
introduce new or alternative facts in support of the original cause
of action.
[4]
The court may, in
the exercise of its judicial discretion, grant or refuse such an
application having regard to whether the amendment
sought raises a
triable issue, which would if granted allow the
proper
ventilation of the real dispute between the parties,
with
due regard to issues of prejudice.
[5]
A
delay
in seeking an amendment is not in itself, in the absence of prejudice
to the other party, a basis on which to refuse the amendment.
An
appeal court will not lightly interfere with the exercise of such
discretion unless it is satisfied that the lower court misdirected
itself or failed in its exercise of the judicial discretion.
[46]
Section
6(1) of the EEA, as amended,
[6]
provides that:
‘
No
person may unfairly discriminate, directly or indirectly, against an
employee, in any employment, policy, or practice, on one
or more
grounds, including race, gender, sex, pregnancy, marital status,
family, responsibility, ethnic social, origin, colour,
sexual
orientation, age, disability, religion, HIV status, conscience,
belief, political opinion, culture, language, birth, or
on any other
arbitrary ground.’
[47]
Section 6(4)
of the EEA states that:
‘
A
difference in terms and conditions of employment between employees of
the same employer performing the same or substantially the
same work
or work of equal value that is directly or indirectly based on any
one or more of the grounds listed in subsection (1),
is unfair
discrimination.’
[48]
The
Labour Court correctly noted that the test set out in
Harksen
v Lane NO and others
[7]
(
Harksen
)
applies in the determination of a discrimination claim under section
6(1); and that in order for the alleged grounds of arbitrary
discrimination to qualify as such, these must, objectively,
constitute grounds based on attributes and characteristics which have
the potential to impair the fundamental human dignity of persons as
human beings or to affect them adversely in a comparably serious
manner to a listed ground. The unequal treatment alleged must
therefore be based on attributes and characteristics attached to
a
person before it will fall within the meaning of discrimination. In
Naidoo
and others v Parliament of the Republic of South Africa
[8]
,
this Court made it clear that an “
arbitrary
ground
”
must be analogous to a listed ground of discrimination in the sense
that it has the potential to impair human dignity in
a comparable
manner or have a similar serious consequence.
[49]
The amendment
sought by AMCU in paragraph 14 of its claim is made in the context of
a paragraph, which the Labour Court correctly
identified, concerned
correspondence addressed to Harmony, Ashanti and Sibanye concerning
wages and other conditions of employment
for the 2015 review period.
AMCU pleads that it raised the issue of the wage gap and the
disparity “
between
ordinary workers and members of management
”.
The amendment sought, in this context, is that the words “members
of management”, and the words “the
first comparator”
be inserted. The Labour Court accepted MCSA’s objection to this
amendment on the basis that AMCU
failed to plead which persons,
offices, and all occupational classes or categories constitute
“members of management”
for purposes of the litigation,
when, to succeed, discrimination must be shown to be relative to
another person or a clearly identified
category of persons.
Correctly, the Court noted that, for purposes of such a claim, a
comparator must be clearly and precisely
identified.
[50]
The
Labour Court cannot be faulted for finding that the amendment in
paragraph 14 is sought when no facts have been pleaded to make
out a
discrimination case based on any comparator other than miners,
artisans and officials, with as much further apparent from
the agreed
nature of the dispute set out in the pre-trial minute. Had AMCU
intended that members of management would constitute
a comparator, it
would have been reasonably expected that it expressly recorded as
much in its statement of claim, which it did
not. And to justify the
insertion of members of management as a new comparator, which amounts
to a significant amendment of its
claim, both material facts and the
relevant legal issues would have had to have been pleaded or sought
to have been inserted into
the particulars of claim, to allow the
claim to be determined on this basis. Having done so, the Labour
Court cannot be faulted
for finding that the amendments sought
amounted to a belated attempt to broaden the dispute to include all
levels of employees,
without clarity as to the basis on which such
extended claim is pursued or pleading the necessary material facts to
support such
a broad claim. This, when the agreement concluded, on
which the Court correctly noted the discrimination claim is based,
makes
no reference to remuneration for members of management. It
follows that in the absence of the material facts pleaded to support
the amendment sought, the Labour Court cannot be faulted for
concluding that were the amendment to be permitted, it would not
arise from the material facts pleaded and would not comply with the
requirements of Rule 6(1)(b)(iii).
[9]
[51]
The amendment
sought to paragraph 18 seeks to record for the first time that
officials, miners and artisans are “the second
comparator”.
This when the paragraph expressly indicates that AMCU raised during
negotiations that “income disparity
between category 4 –
8 employees, on the one hand, and officials, miners and artisans”
will grow during the period
in which the agreement has force. There
was no prior indication in the statement of claim and no material
facts previously pleaded
which would support an amendment to the
effect that the miners, artisans and officials’ categories of
employees pleaded is
not the only comparator but one of two
comparators to be considered in determining the claim. Similarly, the
amendment sought to
paragraph 32 seeks to record that miners,
artisans and officials are part of “the second comparator”
group.
[52]
In paragraph
30, AMCU relies on the reference to the “
historical
wage disparities and gaps between category 4 - 8 employees in the
workplace and other classes of employees
”,
in an attempt to justify the insertion of the words “the first
and second comparators” after the word “employees”.
This when there had been no prior indication that “other
classes of employees” are to be the first comparator for
purposes of its discrimination dispute. In paragraph 34.1, AMCU seeks
a declaration that there are “
historical
age disparities and gaps between category 4 – 8 employees in
the workplace and others
”,
with the insertion of the words “i.e. the first and second
comparator” immediately thereafter. The amendments,
which seek
to insert members of management or “other classes of employees”
as a comparator, are not based on material
facts pleaded, nor are
they appropriately specific, but are unduly broad and far-reaching.
This is far from the claim as pleaded
in its unamended form and is
not simply clarificatory in nature, as AMCU suggests, nor was this
the dispute referred to the CCMA
for conciliation. In exercising its
discretion to refuse the introduction of an amendment to include
members of management or the
broad reference to “other classes
of employees” who are unspecified as the first comparator
group, it follows that
the Labour Court did not err and cannot be
faulted for arriving at the conclusion that if the amendment of the
claim was permitted
on the basis sought, this would render the
consequent amended pleading excipiable and irregular.
[53]
This is so
since the amendments sought did not sustain a pleaded cause of action
in relation to a comparator involving management
employees or “other
classes of employees”. AMCU failed to plead that the job
functions of category 4 - 8 employees
and those of this broad “first
comparator” group of employees are allocated on the basis of
race, what the differences
in the rate of pay attached to the job
functions of category 4 - 8 employees and other such necessary
material facts on which its
claim is based. The Labour Court cannot
be faulted for noting its concern that the result is that the attempt
to include the “first
comparator” employees appears to
seek to impose vertical pay differentials which would be better dealt
with under section
27 of the EEA.
[54]
As to the
issue of prejudice, the Labour Court rejected AMCU’s submission
that it and its members would suffer severe prejudice
if the
amendments were not permitted and members of management were not
included as a comparator in the matter. AMCU, on the other
hand,
contended that the dispute would not be fully ventilated and that the
determination was unduly limited to miners, artisans
and officials as
comparators and that the main issue between the parties, namely
whether category 4 – 8 parties were unfairly
discriminated in
their level of pay, would remain the same. AMCU is not barred from
bringing a discrimination claim, properly pleaded,
in due course. It
has shown no prejudice to exist which would warrant this Court
reaching a different conclusion to that of the
Labour Court when it
failed to make out a case for the relief it sought.
[55]
Section 27 of
the EEA is concerned with income differentials in the workplace.
Section 27(1) requires every designated employer
to submit a
statement to the Employment Conditions Commission (the Commission) on
the remuneration and benefits received in each
occupational category
and level of that employer’s workforce. Where disproportionate
income differentials exist, a designated
employer is obliged in terms
of section 27(2) to “take measures to progressively reduce such
differentials subject to guidance
as may be given by the Minister as
contemplated in section (4)”. The measures which may be taken
include, in terms of section
27(3), collective bargaining, compliance
with sectoral determinations made by the Minister, applying the norms
and benchmarks set
by the Commission and relevant measures contained
in skills development legislation. The Commission is required by
section 27(4)
to “research and investigate norms and benchmarks
for proportionate income differentials and advise the Minister on
appropriate
measures for reducing disproportional differentials”,
with parties to a collective bargaining process entitled to request
for collective bargaining processes the information contained in the
employer’s statement submitted in terms of section 27(1).
[56]
Section 27 is
distinct from a claim for discrimination under section 6(1) in that
it is aimed at addressing income disparities across
the workplace and
provides for a clear process by which to do so. The remedies
contained in section 27 remain available to AMCU,
or any other party,
to address income differentials which exist. The Labour Court cannot
therefore be faulted for finding that
the amendments sought amounted
to an attempt to broaden the dispute to address such differentials
across the workplace when section
27 provides for the process by
which to do so and when such a case was neither referred to the CCMA
for conciliation, nor was the
basis on which the discrimination claim
was pleaded in the Labour Court. To permit the far-reaching
amendments sought by AMCU would
be to allow it to proceed with an
entirely different claim in circumstances in which the necessary
underlying basis for such claim
has not been pleaded, nor reflected
in the contents of the agreed pre-trial minute. There is consequently
merit in the MCSA’s
contention that were the amendment
application to have been permitted this would risk such amended claim
being excipiable. It follows
for all of these reasons that the Labour
Court did not err in refusing the amendment application and the
appeal cannot therefore
succeed.
[57]
Turning to the
counter-application, despite recognising that the MCSA’s
counter-application was to be determined in the event
that the
amendments sought by AMCU to the statement of claim were refused, the
Labour Court found that there was no need to decide
such
counter-application. In finding as much, the Court clearly erred.
Since it cannot be faulted for exercising its discretion
in the
manner it did in relation to the amendment application, the Labour
Court ought properly to have determined that the objection
raised
held merit given that such evidence pertained to the issues which
form the basis for the appellant’s unsuccessful
application to
amend its the statement of claim. For these reasons, the cross-appeal
must be upheld.
[58]
As
to costs, the Labour Court noted that it held a broad discretion in
terms of section 162 to make orders for costs according to
the
requirements of law and fairness and found that the issues which
formed the subject of the application were of a technical
nature and
that the MCSA was entitled to the full costs, including those of two
counsel. While AMCU tendered the costs of the amendment,
it argued
that it should not be burdened with all the costs and that the costs
order made against it should be limited. The MCSA,
on the other hand,
contended that the costs order made by the Labour Court in its
favour, including the costs of two counsel, was
warranted given the
nature of the amendment application and the fact that such
application was found to have been without merit
and refused. In
making a costs order, the Labour Court exercised a true discretion
and on appeal,
this
Court will not interfere with the exercise of that discretion unless
there was a material misdirection by the lower court.
[10]
No basis has been advanced which would warrant a finding that in the
exercise of its discretion to make a costs against AMCU, the
Labour
Court committed any such material misdirection. No basis consequently
exists to justify the setting aside of such an order
by the Labour
Court.
[59]
Turning to the
costs of the appeal, with regard had to the nature of the dispute
between the parties, the issues raised on appeal,
the nature of the
continued relationship between the parties and considerations of law
and fairness, a costs order is not in my
mind justified on appeal.
[60]
In the result,
the following order is made:
Order
1
The
appeal is dismissed
.
2
The
cross-appeal is upheld.
3
The
objection raised by the first respondent, the MCSA, to the evidence
filed by the appellant, AMCU, in the expert report of Dr
Forsland and
the affidavit of the appellant’s national treasurer, which
evidence pertains to the issues which form the basis
for the
appellant’s application to amend its the statement of claim, is
upheld.
4
No
order of costs is made in respect of this appeal.
SAVAGE
ADJP
Musi
JA and Jolwana AJA agree.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANTS
: F A Boda
SC and R Itzkin
Instructed
by LDA Inc.
FOR
THE RESPONDENT
:
A
Myburgh SC
, J Raizon and P
Maharaj-Pillay
Instructed by ENS Africa
[1]
Act 55 of 1998.
[2]
[2021]
ZACC 26
; (2021) 42 ILJ 2371 (CC).
[3]
[2014] ZALCJHB 320;
(2015)
36 ILJ 677 (ILC) at para 38.
[4]
National
Union of Metalworkers of SA and others v Driveline Technologies
(Pty) Ltd and another
[1999] ZALC 157
; (2000) 21 ILJ 142 (LAC);
Sondorp
and another v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
[2013] ZALAC 13
; (2013) 34 ILJ 3131 (LAC) (
Sondorp
).
## [5]Sondorpat
para 49.See also: Erasmus Superior Court Practice at D1-338.
[5]
Sondorp
at
para 49.See also: Erasmus Superior Court Practice at D1-338.
[6]
With
effect from 1 August 2014.
[7]
[1997] ZACC 12;
1998
(1) SA 300 (CC).
[8]
[2020] ZALAC 38
;
(2020)
41 ILJ 1931 (LAC).
[9]
Rule 6(1)(b)(iii) of the Rules for the Conduct of Proceedings in the
Labour Court GN 1665 of 1996.
[10]
Zuma
v Office of the Public Protector and
Others
[2020]
ZASCA 138
at para 19.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union v Chamber of Mines of South Africa and Others (JA20/2023) [2024] ZALAC 74; (2024) 45 ILJ 1954 (LAC) (14 May 2024)
[2024] ZALAC 74Labour Appeal Court of South Africa100% similar
Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union and Others v Piet Wes Civils CC and Others (JA95/2023) [2024] ZALAC 50 (16 October 2024)
[2024] ZALAC 50Labour Appeal Court of South Africa98% similar
Edge Line Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (AMCU) (JA104/24) [2025] ZALAC 65 (29 December 2025)
[2025] ZALAC 65Labour Appeal Court of South Africa98% similar
Sibanye Rustenburg Platinum Mine v Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union obo Sono and Others (JA32/2022) [2024] ZALAC 23; (2024) 45 ILJ 1623 (LAC) (2 May 2024)
[2024] ZALAC 23Labour Appeal Court of South Africa98% similar
Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union v UASA (Formerly named United Association of South Africa) and Others (DA13/2022) [2023] ZALAC 16; [2023] 11 BLLR 1134 (LAC); (2023) 44 ILJ 2479 (LAC) (17 August 2023)
[2023] ZALAC 16Labour Appeal Court of South Africa98% similar