Case Law[2025] ZALAC 38South Africa
Golden Arrow Bus Services (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration and Others (CA10/2024) [2025] ZALAC 38; [2025] 9 BLLR 915 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 2093 (LAC) (19 June 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Remedy in terms of section 193(1) and (2) of the Labour Relations Act – dismissal substantively unfair – objective facts showed that the circumstances surrounding dismissal such that a continued employment relationship would be intolerable – appeal succeeds – order of Labour Court set aside – substituted with order dismissing review application
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 38
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Golden Arrow Bus Services (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration and Others (CA10/2024) [2025] ZALAC 38; [2025] 9 BLLR 915 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 2093 (LAC) (19 June 2025)
Golden Arrow Bus Services (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration and Others (CA10/2024) [2025] ZALAC 38; [2025] 9 BLLR 915 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 2093 (LAC) (19 June 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZALAC/Data/2025_38.html
sino date 19 June 2025
FLYNOTES:
LABOUR
– Dismissal –
Reinstatement
–
Breakdown
in employment relationship – Threshold for intolerability is
high – Requires compelling evidence –
Employee refused
to co-operate with investigation – Unfounded accusations
against management – Lack of accountability
– Rendered
reinstatement impractical – Decision to deny reinstatement
was reasonable – Labour Court’s
intervention was
unjustified – Appeal upheld – Labour Relation Act 66
of 1995, s 193(2).
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, CAPE TOWN
Not
Reportable
Case
no: CA10/2024
In
the matter between:
GOLDEN
ARROW BUS SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Appellant
and
COMMISSION
FOR CONCILIATION MEDIATION AND
ARBITRATION
First Respondent
COMMISSIONER
SARAH CHRISTIE N.O
Second Respondent
KEVIN
JACOBS
Third Respondent
Heard:
15 May
2025
Delivered:
19 June 2025
Coram:
Savage JA, Musi and Waglay AJJA
Summary:
R
emedy in terms of section 193(1) and (2) of the
Labour Relations
Act – dismissal
substantively unfair – objective facts showed that the
circumstances surrounding dismissal such that a
continued employment relationship would be intolerable
–
appeal succeeds
–
order of Labour Court set
aside – substituted with order dismissing review application
JUDGMENT
SAVAGE,
JA
Introduction
[1]
This appeal is
concerned with the issue of remedy in terms of section 193(1) and (2)
of the Labour Relations
Act
[1]
(LRA)
following
an employee’s dismissal, having been found substantively
unfair.
[2]
Section 193(2) provides that where a dismissal is found to be
unfair:
‘
(2)
The Labour Court or the arbitrator must require the employer to
reinstate or re-employ the employee
unless –
(a)
the employee does not wish to be reinstated or re-employed;
(b)
the circumstances surrounding the dismissal are such that a continued
employment relationship would
be intolerable;
(c)
it is not reasonably practicable for the employer to reinstate or
re-employ the employee; or
(d)
the dismissal is unfair only because the employer did not follow a
fair procedure.’
Background
[3]
The third respondent, Mr Kevin Jacobs (the respondent), was
employed by the appellant, Golden Arrow Bus Services (Pty) Ltd, the
largest public transport operator in the Cape Metropolitan area, as
its support services manager. He was responsible for the rollout
of
the appellant’s new automated fare collection or smartcard bus
ticketing system. Although the smartcard rollout was scheduled
for 15
October 2018, the respondent took annual leave from 11 October 2018
to 18 October 2018. His leave was approved after he
assured the
appellant that the rollout was on track. However, on the day of the
rollout, no system was in place to sell the smartcards,
there was a
card shortage, and 18 000 smartcards were missing.
[4]
On his return from leave on 18 October 2018, a meeting was
called with the respondent to discuss the problems which had emerged
with the rollout, including the 18 000 missing smartcards. At the
meeting, the respondent indicated that he did not trust anyone,
which
included his direct line manager, who was also the General Manager,
and the in-house legal advisor, and he refused to co-operate
with the
investigation into the missing cards. As a result of his conduct, he
was charged with gross negligence, dishonesty and
bringing the
company’s name into disrepute. Following a disciplinary
hearing, he was dismissed from his employment on 13
March 2019.
[5]
Aggrieved with his dismissal, the respondent referred a
dispute to the first respondent, the Commission for Conciliation,
Mediation
and Arbitration (CCMA). The dispute was not settled at
conciliation. At arbitration, his dismissal was found to be unfair
and,
despite seeking reinstatement, he was awarded 12 months’
compensation. The respondent thereafter sought the review of the
arbitration award in the Labour Court. On review, the Labour Court
set aside the compensation award and ordered the respondent’s
retrospective reinstatement. It is against that order that the
appellant, with the leave of the Labour Court, now appeals.
Arbitration
award
[6]
The commissioner found at arbitration that, although he had
been negligent in his conduct, the dismissal of the respondent was
substantively
unfair. When he went on leave on 11 October 2018, ‘
he
knew there were likely to be problems
’ because if not, he
would not have had to be on call during his leave. His negligence was
evident from his failure to migrate
his own Excel spreadsheet to the
appellant’s database, or provide the degree of monitoring,
internal audit and oversight
required before and during the rollout.
This caused the unavailability of smartcards on 15 October 2018. At
the meeting held with
him on his return from leave on 18 October
2018, it was found to have been incumbent on the respondent as a
senior manager to offer
to assist the appellant and to do so
immediately. Instead, the respondent shifted the burden of
accountability to a junior person
and told the General Manager and
legal advisor that he could not trust them, that he would not provide
any information and suggested
that senior management was against him.
The commissioner found that –
‘
(t)his was unwise.
If a serious problem is identified it is an inherent aspect of
managerial responsibility to assist in the resolution
of the problem.
His failure to cooperate made it necessary for the GM and in due
course the CEO to launch an investigation and
to put contingent
measures in place: the recall and reallocation of Smart cards.’
[7]
Given his lack of cooperation with senior management at the
meeting, the commissioner found that it is more likely than not that
the respondent would have been uncooperative in any investigation and
may have undermined it.
[8]
At arbitration, the respondent claimed that senior management
had destroyed evidence that would have assisted him in his defence,
that the appellant was biased against him and that he had been set up
by them to fail. This was found by the commissioner not to
be
supported by any credible evidence, more so in circumstances that the
respondent and the General Manager had known each other
for many
years and were good friends. It was found that there was ‘
no
motive for anyone to set him up to fail’
. The respondent
instead had deliberately failed to accept the responsibilities that
came with his contract of employment, with
no evidence to show that
his approach to his obligations would change.
[9]
In addition, almost a year was found to have elapsed since his
dismissal and:
‘
Mr Jacobs is a
senior person; the relationship between him, the operations manager,
the IT department, the General Manager and the
CEO has broken down…
Although the applicant says that reinstatement would be tolerable, I
think there has been too much
relationship damage as a result of
[his] initial failure to cooperate and find solutions.’
[10]
In spite of the respondent’s 26 years of service and his
personal circumstances, neither reinstatement nor re-employment was
found to be appropriate. As a result, the commissioner awarded the
respondent the maximum compensation of 12 months but refused
reinstatement.
Judgment
of the Labour Court
[11]
Aggrieved with the outcome at arbitration and seeking
reinstatement, the respondent sought the review of the arbitration
award by
the Labour Court. The Labour Court found that no clear and
convincing reasons rooted in solid evidence were advanced to deny
reinstatement,
nor did evidence surrounding the dismissal indicate
that reinstatement was intolerable.
[12]
It was noted that the commissioner had found the dismissal of
the respondent to be unfair but relied on four reasons to justify the
finding that
a
continued employment relationship would be intolerable. These were:
(i) that the
respondent was a senior employee; (ii) that the relationship between
the respondent, the operations manager and the
IT department had
broken down following the respondent’s failure to co-operate on
his return from leave with the investigation
into what went wrong;
(iii) that the matter had taken over a year to be heard; and (iv)
that reinstatement would be unlikely to
succeed.
[13]
The Labour Court
found that it was illogical for the commissioner to rely on the
respondent’s seniority and his attitude to
the investigation to
deprive him of reinstatement when the existence of these factors did
not make a continued employment relationship
intolerable. In
addition, the length of time taken to resolve the matter at
arbitration was found not to constitute a basis on
which to find
reinstatement intolerable. The Court rejected as circular reasoning
the commissioner’s finding that reinstatement
was unlikely to
succeed because it was unlikely to succeed.
[14]
For these reasons, it was found that
to
deny the respondent the primary remedy of reinstatement when his
dismissal was substantively unfair was a decision which fell
to be
reviewed and set aside, given that the reasons for it were not those
of a reasonable decision-maker.
The award of the commissioner denying the respondent reinstatement
was
set aside and substituted with an
order reinstating him retrospectively into his position with effect
from the date of his dismissal
on the same terms and conditions. Two
months’ remuneration was ordered to be excluded from the
calculation of backpay, given
delays in the prosecution of the review
application.
On
appeal
[15]
On appeal, the
appellant seeks that the order of retrospective reinstatement be set
aside. The appellant contends that, given the
seriousness of the
accusations made by the respondent against senior management, it is
difficult to see how any semblance of trust
or the prospect of mutual
future co-operation could survive. This was because the relationship
was beyond ‘strained’,
‘fraught’ or ‘sour’
as in
Booi
v Amathole District Municipality and Others
[2]
(Booi),
but
manifestly intolerable, and the Labour Court failed to engage with
this in its judgment. The commissioner’s finding that
reinstatement was intolerable was made on a proper consideration of
the circumstances and what constituted an appropriate operational
response to a senior manager’s expressed distrust in his line
manager and other members of management and his refusal to
assist
constructively in solving the problem identified. The commissioner
exercised the discretion vested in her in relation to
remedy
judicially, and there was no basis on which to interfere with her
award on review. For these reasons, the appellant sought
that the
appeal succeed.
[16]
The respondent opposed the appeal, accepting that
the
power to grant a remedy in section 193 is by its nature discretionary
and that such discretion must be exercised judicially.
The
overriding
consideration in the enquiry is the underlying notion of fairness
between the parties, assessed objectively on the facts
of the case,
bearing in mind that the core value of the LRA is security of
employment. Once the commissioner determined that the
respondent’s
dismissal was substantively unfair, it was contended that factors
related to misconduct should not be considered
as valid grounds on
which to determine intolerability. This was so in that if the
respondent’s seniority and conduct did
not warrant dismissal,
these factors could not subsequently be used to justify denying him
reinstatement. In addition, the year-long
delay in resolving the
matter did not justify denying reinstatement. The Labour Court, it
was submitted, correctly rejected this
reasoning, noting that delays
are common in CCMA processes and do not provide a valid basis for
denying reinstatement, nor did
the delay feature in the evidence as a
factor that made reinstatement impracticable. It followed that delay
was no bar on the facts
of this matter to reinstatement. The award of
the commissioner was unreasonable since the respondent’s
dismissal had been
found substantively unfair and the evidence did
not show that the trust relationship had broken down. For these
reasons, the respondent
sought that the appeal be dismissed.
Evaluation
[17]
Reinstatement
is the primary remedy in cases of unfair dismissal.
[3]
I
n
considering which of the remedies in section 193(1) is
appropriate,
[4]
regard must be
had to section 193(2)
[5]
which
requires that:
‘
[a]
court or arbitrator must order the employer to reinstate or re-employ
the employee unless one or more of the circumstances specified
in s
193(2)(
a
)
- (
d
)
exist, in which case compensation may be ordered depending on the
nature of the dismissal.’
[6]
[18]
Even
where
misconduct
has not been proven, the court or a commissioner must consider what
constitutes appropriate relief and determine whether
any of the
non-reinstatable conditions set out in section 193(2) exist.
[7]
In doing so, it must take
into account any relevant factor which it considers relevant.
[8]
[19]
In
Booi
[9]
,
it
was stated that:
‘
The
language, context and purpose of s 193(2)(b) dictate that the bar of
intolerability is a high one. The term “intolerable”
implies a level of unbearability, and must surely require more than
the suggestion that the relationship is difficult, fraught
or even
sour. This high threshold gives effect to the purpose of the
reinstatement injunction in s 193(2), which is to protect
substantively unfairly dismissed employees by restoring the
employment contract and putting them in the position they would have
been in but for the unfair dismissal.
[10]
And, my approach to s 193(2)(b) is fortified by the jurisprudence of
the Labour Appeal Court and the Labour Court, both of which
have
taken the view that the conclusion of intolerability should not
easily be reached, and that the employer must provide weighty
reasons, accompanied by tangible evidence, to show
intolerability.’
[11]
[20]
It
was recognised i
n
Booi
that
the evidentiary burden to establish intolerability is heightened
where the dismissed employee has been exonerated of all charges
in
that, as a general proposition, to punish employees ‘
with
unemployment, even if this is accompanied with some compensation,
without finding them guilty of any wrongdoing is grossly
unfair
’
.
[12]
It noted that guidance should be sought from
Billiton
Aluminium
SA Ltd t/a Hillside Aluminium v Khanyile and Others
[13]
,
in
which it was stated that:
‘
If
[the conduct] did not justify dismissal I find it difficult to
understand why, at the same time, it could nevertheless provide
a
ground to prevent reinstatement.’
[14]
[21]
This led the Court in
Booi
to make it clear that:
‘
It
should take more to meet the high threshold of intolerability than
for the employer to simply reproduce, verbatim, the same evidence
which has been rejected as insufficient to justify dismissal.’
[15]
[22]
Where a commissioner, in terms of
section 193(2), has considered all the evidence and found that
intolerability has or has
not been established, and made a decision
whether or not to grant the primary remedy of reinstatement, the
commissioner’s
decision should not readily be interfered with
by a review court.
[23]
This
is so since the Labour Court is not entitled to set aside the
decision of the commissioner simply because it would, on the
facts of
the matter, have come to a different conclusion. It may interfere on
review with the decision taken only when it appears
that the
commissioner had not exercised their discretion judicially, has been
influenced by wrong principles or a misdirection
on the facts, or
that they had reached a decision which in the result could not
reasonably have been made by a court properly directing
itself to all
the relevant facts and principles.
[16]
[24]
The
discretion exercised by the commissioner in relation to the issue of
remedy under section 193(2) is one in a wide sense, requiring
that
regard is to be had to all the relevant circumstances.
[17]
It remains a value judgment subject to review by the Labour Court,
with the weight to be attached to particular factors, or how
a
particular factor affects the eventual determination of the issue,
being a matter for the commissioner to decide in good faith,
reasonably
and
rationally.
[18]
The task of a
review court in such circumstances is to determine whether the
decision reached by the commissioner was one that
a reasonable
decision-maker could not reach, on the well-known test set out
in
Sidumo
and Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others
.
[19]
[25]
An
enquiry into whether
there
has been a breakdown of the employment
relationship
is an objective
one
and is not to turn on subjective and possibly
irrational
views of the
employer.
[20]
Intolerability in the working
relationship
is not
to
be confused with
mere
‘incompatibility’ between the parties.
[21]
W
eighty
reasons,
accompanied
by tangible evidence, must be produced to show that
intolerability
exists
.
[22]
It has previously been found that, where unwarranted and
unfounded,
[23]
or serious and
scandalous
[24]
allegations
have been made by an employee against management, despite no finding
of misconduct, a continued working relationship
is intolerable. An
acrimonious approach to review proceedings in
First
National Bank - A Division of FirstRand Bank Ltd v Language and
Others,
[25]
in which the employee alleged that the employer had falsified
documents, stolen money, been unscrupulous and lacked
bona
fides
,
has similarly been found to make reinstatement inappropriate.
[26]
In casu
, the commissioner found that while the
dismissal of the respondent was substantively unfair, he had failed
to ensure that proper
internal audit and oversight procedures were in
place before he went on leave, which indicated negligence. When
confronted with
his conduct, he sought to shift the burden of
accountability to a junior employee. At the meeting called to discuss
the issues
which had arisen, the respondent indicated that he did not
trust anyone, which included the General Manager and the appellant’s
legal advisor, and he expressly refused to co-operate with the
investigation into the missing cards. At arbitration, the respondent
claimed that senior management had destroyed evidence that would have
assisted him in his defence, that the appellant was biased
against
him and that he had been set up by them to fail.
[27]
The commissioner found that, on the objective facts, the
respondent refused to take responsibility for the problems which had
emerged
with the rollout when he was responsible as a senior manager
for the process. He sought to blame others for the problem, claimed
he did not trust his senior colleagues, including the General Manager
who was his good friend, refused to assist in solving the
problem,
snubbed the invitation to help solve it and made serious and
unfounded accusations against senior management in relation
to the
issues raised with him and his case at arbitration. In this context,
the commissioner’s finding that the respondent
lacked insight
into his behaviour can hardly be found to be unreasonable. This, when
the respondent’s allegations were found
not to be supported by
any credible evidence and with it having been found that there was
‘
no motive for anyone to set him up to fail’
.
Despite his seniority, the respondent refused to cooperate or accept
the responsibilities which came with his role, with his unfounded
accusations of bad faith on the part of his colleagues not supported
by the facts. The commissioner’s finding that it was
more
likely than not that he would have been uncooperative in any future
investigation and that, in fact, he ‘
may have undermined it
’
was therefore a reasonable conclusion to reach on the material before
her.
[28]
It followed that on the undisputed facts before the
commissioner, there existed ‘
weighty reasons, accompanied by
tangible evidence, to show intolerability
’ of as required
by the Court in
Booi
. The objective facts cumulatively
considered met the
high threshold of compelling
evidence required, and the
decision taken by the commissioner
not to reinstate the respondent was not one that a reasonable
decision-maker could not have made.
The finding that the
circumstances surrounding the dismissal were such that the continued
employment of the respondent would be
intolerable was one that fell
within the bounds of reasonableness required. This was so given the
respondent’s own conduct
in the circumstances surrounding his
dismissal and the reasonableness of the appellant’s operational
reaction to his conduct.
[29]
As
has been emphasised, a
court
reviewing an award to refuse reinstatement on the basis of
intolerability does not itself conduct the intolerability enquiry
afresh. Instead, it assesses whether the enquiry conducted by the
commissioner in the exercise of their discretion in relation
to
remedy resulted in a decision which could not have been reached by a
reasonable decision maker conducting that enquiry.
[26]
[30]
The
Labour Court was not entitled, on
review, to interfere with the commissioner’s decision unless
this was warranted. On the
facts of this case, it was not since the
commissioner had reasonably and rationally exercised her discretion
in relation to remedy
and there was no basis on which to interfere
with it. It was not
illogical
for the commissioner to find reinstatement intolerable and unlikely
to succeed given the respondent’s seniority
and his attitude to
the
investigation.
On the
material before the commissioner, the decision reached fell within
the ambit of reasonableness required.
[31]
It follows for these reasons that the appeal must succeed, and
the orders of the Labour Court set aside and substituted with an
order that the review application is dismissed. Having regard to
considerations of law and fairness, a costs order is not warranted
in
this matter.
[32]
For these
reasons
, the following
order is made:
Order
1. The appeal
succeeds with no order as to costs.
2. The orders of
the Labour Court are set aside and substituted as follows:
‘
1. The review
application is dismissed with no order as to costs.’
SAVAGE
JA
Musi
and Waglay AJJA agree.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANTS: G Leslie SC
Instructed
by Macgregor Stanford Kruger Inc
FOR
THE THIRD RESPONDENT: R Parker, Parker Attorneys
[1]
Act
66 of 1995, as amended.
[2]
(2022) 43 ILJ 91 (CC).
[3]
Equity
Aviation Services (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation
and Arbitration and Others
[2008] ZACC 16
;
2009
(1) SA 390
(CC)
(Equity
Aviation)
at
para 33.
[4]
Section
193(1) states:
‘
If
the Labour Court or an arbitrator appointed in terms of this Act
finds that a dismissal is unfair, the Court or the arbitrator
may—
(a)
order the employer to reinstate the employee from any date not
earlier than the
date of dismissal;
(b)
order the employer to re-employ the employee, either in the work in
which the employee
was employed before the dismissal or in other
reasonably suitable work on any terms and from any date not earlier
than the date
of dismissal; or
(c)
order the employer to pay compensation to the employee.’
[5]
Toyota
SA Motors (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration
(2016)
37 ILJ 313 (CC) (
Toyota
)
at para 135.
[6]
Equity
Aviation
id
fn 3 at para 33.
## [7]See:Booiid
fn 2 at paras 36 -37.
[7]
See:
Booi
id
fn 2 at paras 36 -37.
[8]
Mediterranean
Textile Mill (Pty) Ltd v SACTWU and Others
[2012]
2 BLLR 142
(LAC)
at
para 30, confirmed in
Booysen
v Safety and Security Sectoral Bargaining Council and Others
(2021)
42 ILJ 1192 (LAC) at paras 16 - 17.
[9]
Supra
at
footnote 2.
[10]
Equity
Aviation
id
fn 3 at para 36.
[11]
Booi
id
fn 2 at para 40 with reference to
National
Transport Movement and Others v Passenger Rail Agency of SA Ltd
(2018)
39 ILJ 560 (LAC) (
National
Transport Movement
)
and
Jabari
v Telkom SA (Pty) Ltd
(2006)
27 ILJ 1854 (LC) (
Jabari
).
[12]
Booi
id
fn 2 at para 42 with reference to
Amalgamated
Pharmaceuticals Ltd v Grobler N.O. and others
(2004)
25 ILJ 523 (LC) at para 13.
[13]
(2010)
31 ILJ 273 (CC)
(
Billiton
)
at para 29.
[14]
Ibid
at
para 29.
[15]
Booi
id
fn 2 at para 42.
[16]
See
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and others
[1999] ZACC 17
;
2000 (1) BCLR 39
(CC) at para 11 in the context
of a postponement application.
[17]
National
Union of Metalworkers of South Africa obo Motloung and others v
Polyoak Packaging (Pty) Ltd and others
[2025]
3 BLLR 227
(LAC) at para 50.
[18]
See:
MEC
for Environmental Affairs and Development Planning v Clairison’s
CC
2013
(6) SA 235
(SCA)
at paras 18 and 20 in a different but related context.
[19]
(2007) 28 ILJ 2405 (
CC)
at para 110.
[20]
Concorde
Plastics (Pty) Ltd v NUMSA and Others
1997
(11) BCLR 1624
(LAC)
(
Concorde
Plastics
)
at 1648A-C.
[21]
Booi
id
fn 2 at para 41.
[22]
National
Transport Movement
id
fn 11. See too
Jabari
Id
fn 11.
[23]
Matsekoleng
v Shoprite Checkers (Pty) Ltd
[2013]
2 BLLR 130
(LAC) at para 68.
[24]
Dunwell
Property Services CC v Sibande and Others
(2011)
32 ILJ 2652 (LAC) at paras 32 -34.
[25]
(2013)
34 ILJ 3103 (LAC) at paras 27 -31.
[26]
Booi
id
fn 2 at para 44.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
South African Road Passenger Bargaining Council v Golden Arrow Bus Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (CA16/2023) [2025] ZALAC 61; [2026] 2 BLLR 150 (LAC) (13 November 2025)
[2025] ZALAC 61Labour Appeal Court of South Africa97% similar
Macdonals Transport Upington (Pty) Ltd v National Bargaining Council for Road Freight and Logistic Industry and Others (JA130/24) [2025] ZALAC 53; [2026] 1 BLLR 48 (LAC) (30 October 2025)
[2025] ZALAC 53Labour Appeal Court of South Africa96% similar
Govender and Others v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others (DA 2/2022) [2024] ZALAC 6; [2024] 5 BLLR 453 (LAC); (2024) 45 ILJ 1197 (LAC) (26 February 2024)
[2024] ZALAC 6Labour Appeal Court of South Africa96% similar
Algoa Bus Company (Pty) Ltd v TASWU obo Mzawi and Others (PA05/23) [2024] ZALAC 42; [2024] 12 BLLR 1224 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 89 (LAC) (10 September 2024)
[2024] ZALAC 42Labour Appeal Court of South Africa96% similar
Khumalo and Another v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others (JA94/24) [2025] ZALAC 54; [2026] 1 BLLR 39 (LAC) (29 October 2025)
[2025] ZALAC 54Labour Appeal Court of South Africa96% similar