Case Law[2025] ZALAC 39South Africa
MEC for Social Development v Sam and Others (PA 14/24) [2025] ZALAC 39; [2025] 10 BLLR 1039 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 2430 (LAC) (26 June 2025)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
26 June 2025
Headnotes
he had produced no reason justifying the review and impliedly dismissed his application. [11] The Labour Court found that the Department was not entitled to disqualify the first respondent because he had made the disclosure of his interests to a subordinate of one Mr Zenzile, a Director in the Department. It held that even if the first respondent did not make a disclosure, he had established that failure to disclose such interests did not justify his disqualification
Judgment
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## MEC for Social Development v Sam and Others (PA 14/24) [2025] ZALAC 39; [2025] 10 BLLR 1039 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 2430 (LAC) (26 June 2025)
MEC for Social Development v Sam and Others (PA 14/24) [2025] ZALAC 39; [2025] 10 BLLR 1039 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 2430 (LAC) (26 June 2025)
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sino date 26 June 2025
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
no: PA 14/24
In
the matter between
MEC
FOR SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
Appellant
and
ZIMISELE
ARNOT SAM
First Respondent
MNYAMEZELI
BOMENI
Second Respondent
PUBLIC
HEALTH AND SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
SECTORIAL
BARGAINING COUNCIL
Third Respondent
DUMISANI
SONAMZI N.O
.
Fourth Respondent
CHANTEL
WILLIAMS
Fifth Respondent
Heard:
22 May 2025
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties’ representatives by email, publication on the
Labour
Appeal Court website and released to SAFLII. The time and date
for hand-down is deemed to be 26 June 2025.
Coram
Nkutha-Nkontwana JA, Mahalelo
et
Tokota AJJA
JUDGMENT
TOKOTA,
AJA
Introduction
[1]
The first respondent is an employee of the appellant (the
Department), and the second respondent is an employee of the
Department of Health. Both the first and second respondents applied
for the position of Director: Employee Relationship, Wellness
and
Health Programmes within the Department. After the respondents were
interviewed, they were subsequently disqualified from appointment
to
the position. They then declared a dispute of unfair labour practice
relating to promotion. The dispute was referred to the
Public Health
and Social Development Bargaining Council (the Bargaining Council).
[2]
After the dispute of unfair labour practice was referred to the
Bargaining Council, the arbitrator found that the Department
had
committed no unfair labour practice. The arbitration award was
challenged in the Labour Court, which found that the Department
had
committed an unfair labour practice in respect of the first
respondent. With leave of the Labour Court, the Department now
appeals against the whole of the judgment and order thereof.
Factual
Background
[3]
On 17 September 2017, the post of Director: Employee Relationship,
Health and Wellness Programmes was advertised by the
Department. Both
respondents applied for the position.
[4]
Both respondents were shortlisted in the recruitment process. On 2
March 2018, they were interviewed. The first respondent
scored the
best results and the second respondent came second. In terms of the
personnel suitability checks, they were required
to undergo a process
in terms of which the Department was obliged to verify the following
areas, namely, their respective criminal
records, finance records,
citizenship, qualifications, reference checks, licence and
directorships.
[5]
The verification tests were done by an independent company called
MIE. On 12 April 2018, a report was submitted to the
Department in
which it was stated that the first respondent was an active director
of the following institutions: (i) Ijelo Labafazi,
which was
compliant and in business as per the CIPC; (ii) Izigodlo Khanyisa
Agricultural and Multi-Purpose Primary Co-Operative
Limited, which
was also compliant and in business; and (iii) Zmish Trading
Enterprise, which was at the final stages of deregistration.
It was
also discovered that when the second respondent completed his Z83
application form, he had indicated that he had no previous
criminal
convictions. The first respondent did not disclose his financial
interests as required by the prescripts.
[6]
The abovementioned revelations resulted in them being disqualified
from consideration for the appointments. It was then
decided to
proceed by way of headhunting for the post. The headhunting process
culminated in the appointment of the fifth respondent
to the
position.
[7]
The respondents referred a dispute of unfair labour practice relating
to promotion to the Bargaining Council for conciliation,
mediation
and arbitration. The conciliation failed and the matter was then
referred to arbitration. On 14 May 2019, the arbitrator
issued an
award in favour of the Department, having found that the Department
had committed no unfair labour practice. Consequently,
so the
arbitrator found, the respondents were correctly disqualified for
appointment to the position.
[8]
Both respondents instituted proceedings in the Labour Court seeking
an order reviewing and setting aside the award. The
Labour Court
reviewed and set aside the award.
[9]
There was a faint challenge that the presence of one Mr Collins on
the headhunting panel was improper in that he was at
the time at the
level of middle management and not on the level of a Director. Since
we are not here dealing with the appointment
of the fifth respondent,
I need not deal with this challenge in that, even if it was improper,
though this is denied, the respondents
lacked locus standi to
challenge that. This process was conducted after they had been
disqualified. In any event, Mr Collins was
already promoted to the
rank of Director at the stage when the recommendations for the
appointment of the fifth respondent were
signed.
Review
proceedings in the Labour Court
[10]
The respondents instituted review proceedings challenging the
reasonableness of the arbitration award and sought an order
reviewing
and setting aside the award. The Labour Court found that, in respect
of the first respondent, the Department had committed
an unfair
labour practice and ordered that he be instated to the position of
Director: Employee Relationship, Health and Wellness
Programmes. The
Labour Court further ordered that the Department pay the first
respondent all of the remuneration to which he was
entitled in terms
of the instatement order, together with costs of the application.
With regard to the second respondent, the Labour
Court held that he
had produced no reason justifying the review and impliedly dismissed
his application.
[11]
The Labour Court found that the Department was not entitled to
disqualify the first respondent because he had made the
disclosure of
his interests to a subordinate of one Mr Zenzile, a Director in the
Department. It held that even if the first respondent
did not make a
disclosure, he had established that failure to disclose such
interests did not justify his disqualification
[12]
The Labour Court held further that the legislation on which the
arbitrator based his decision was irrelevant. It held
that the
relevant policies did not require the first respondent to make any
disclosure of financial interests. It held further
that if the
Department was of the view that financial disclosure should have been
made, its remedy was to institute a disciplinary
process against the
first respondent. It held that in the absence of a statutory or
cogent reason for the non-appointment, the
arbitrator’s award
was not reasonable and had to be reviewed and set aside.
Parties’
submissions
[13]
Counsel for the appellant submitted that the findings of the Labour
Court, on which it based its conclusion, were erroneous
and not
supported by the evidence of the first respondent. I agree. The
appellant contended that the first respondent testified
that he had
no financial interest to disclose. He testified that in any event, he
had no obligation to disclose anything because
according to him ‘
the
disclosure is not a requirement for recruitment’
. Counsel
submitted that the decision of the Labour Court was not supported
either by the evidence led at the arbitration or by
legislation.
Consequently, so the argument went, the appeal ought to succeed.
[14]
Mr
Mama Java,
for the first respondent, contended that the
appeal should fail. He submitted that the Labour Court was correct in
its decision.
He supported the view of the first respondent that he
had nothing to disclose. He contended that there were no companies in
which
he (the first respondent) had a financial interest. If there
were such companies, the first respondent did in fact disclose his
interest. This latter part of the argument cannot be found in the
evidence that was led at the arbitration.
[15]
Mr Java blew hot and cold in that, at some stage, he submitted that
there was nothing to disclose. He contended that
the first respondent
was not a Director of any company. He could not explain the results
of the CIPC reports, which revealed that
there were three companies,
of which the first respondent was a Director. He conceded, however,
that the first respondent was a
Director of Ijelo Labafazi, which was
a non-profit organisation. He conceded further that there may be a
financial interest in
the organisation because the directors are
entitled to monthly stipends. He persisted, however, that there was
no ob
l
igation on the first respondent to disclose anything to
the Department because he was not deriving any financial benefit from
Ijelo
labafazi.
Discussion
[16]
The main issue for determination is whether the first respondent was
a Director of any company and, if so, whether he
had an obligation to
disclose his financial interests therein. I find that the first
respondent was a Director of three companies,
one of which was on the
verge of being deregistered. It is common cause or not seriously
disputed, that he failed to disclose his
financial interests therein
during the financial year 2017/2018. This Court must then decide
whether there were any prescripts
in terms of which he was obliged to
disclose his financial interests. The Court must also make a finding
as to whether, in the
light of his failure to disclose his financial
interests, the Department was entitled to disqualify him from being
appointed to
the position.
[17]
It
is trite that the appellate court will not interfere with findings of
fact by a lower court, as they are presumed to be correct.
It
follows that it is not open to this Court to depart from findings of
fact by the Court a quo merely on the grounds that
this Court
considers the findings to be wrong or that the Court a quo has
misdirected itself in a material way or that it has based
its
findings on a misconception. It is only when there is no evidence, as
in this case, which could reasonably support a finding
of fact or
where the evidence is such that a proper evaluation thereof leads
inexorably to the conclusion that no reasonable
Court could have made
such a finding.
[1]
In that
event, then this Court will be entitled to interfere.
[18]
Where
it has been demonstrated, through the recorded evidence, that the
findings of fact by the court a quo constitute material
misdirection
and are wrong, the appellate court is entitled to make its own
findings based on the recorded evidence.
[2]
I find that the court a quo erred in finding that the first
respondent disclosed his financial interests during the year in which
he was supposed to do so. I hold further that the Labour Court erred
in finding that there was no legislation requiring a disclosure
of
financial interests. This Court is therefore at large to make its own
findings based on the recorded evidence and prescripts
of the
Department.
Legal
prescripts relating to financial disclosure
Senior
Management Service Handbook
[19]
In terms of paragraph 8.2 of the Senior Management Service Handbook
(SMS Handbook) applicable to senior members of the
service:
‘
[m]embers of the SMS are also required to disclose their
financial interests’
.
[20]
Regulation 11 provides: ‘
An employee shall abide by and
strive to be familiar with all legislation and other lawful
instructions applicable to his or her
conduct and official duties
’.
[21]
Regulation 18 provides that ‘
SMS members, except for a head
of department shall, not later than 30 April of each
year,
disclose to the relevant head of department, in a form prescribed for
this purpose by the Minister, particulars of all his
or her interests
in respect of the period 1 April of the previous year to 31 March of
the year in question’
.
[22]
Regulation 19 provides:
‘
The
following details of interests shall be disclosed;
(a
)
Shares, loan accounts or any other form of equity in a registered
private or public companies and other corporate entities
recognised
by law
(i)
The number, nature and nominal value of shares of any type in any
public or private company and its name; and
(ii)
other forms of equity, loan accounts, and any other financial
interests owned by an individual or held in any other corporate
entity and its name.
(
b
)
Income generating assets
(i)
A description of the income generating asset;
(ii)
the nature of the income;, and
(iii)
the amount or value of income received.
…
(
d
)
Directorships and partnerships
(i)
The name, type and nature of business activity of the corporate
entity or partnership; and
(ii)
if applicable, the amount of any remuneration received for such
directorship or partnership.’
[23]
It is common cause that the first respondent falls within the
category of employees required to disclose their financial
interests
in terms of the SMS Handbook.
Determination
and Directive by the Minister in terms of s 41(3) of the Public
Service Act, Proclamation 103 of 1993, read with Regulations
16(c)
and 18(3)
[24]
In
terms of s 41(3) of the Public Service Act
[3]
(the Act) ‘
the
Minister may issue directives which are not inconsistent with this
Act to elucidate or supplement any regulation’
.
By means of a directive dated 16 March 2017 as envisaged in s 41(3)
of the Act read with Regulation 16(c) and 18(3) of the Public
Service
Regulations, 2016
[4]
, the
Minister, by directive dated 16 March 2017, directed that designated
employees, who included the respondents, must disclose
their
financial interests using the financial disclosure form for each
financial year for the period 1 April of the previous financial
year
to 31 March of the financial year in question.
[25]
In light of these prescripts, the Labour Court erred in holding that
‘
[t]he legislation
[which]
the arbitrator based his
decision on is irrelevant’
.
[26]
Failure to make proper disclosure, as required by the prescripts,
strikes at the very core of employment and/or the promotion
of
employees into senior positions. The objectives of the financial
disclosure framework, as introduced in 2001, were to assist
the
Executive Authorities in identifying and managing conflicts of
interest amongst employees in Senior Management positions. It
is a
tool through which the Executive Authority can promote open and
accountable government as espoused in s 195(1) of the Constitution.
The scourge of corruption bedevilling this country can be minimised
only if proper monitoring of managerial employees is enhanced.
[27]
Accordingly, failure to disclose financial interests in circumstances
where the employee knew or ought to have known
that such information
was material and the employer would rely on such disclosure or
non-disclosure in appointing him/her to a
higher position, then such
deliberate act of non-disclosure must amount to a fraudulent
misrepresentation. It was indeed a condition
attached to the
advertisement of the post that ‘
suitable candidates will be
subjected to a personnel suitability check (including criminal record
checks and financial/asset record
checks)
’. It becomes
worse where an employee persists, as the first respondent did, that
there is no need to disclose, notwithstanding
clear instructions in
terms of directives and regulations.
[28]
It
has also been held that failure to disclose the complete truth in
circumstances where there can be no doubt that silence may
amount to
a misrepresentation, such an omission will
invariably
give
a misleading impression.
[5]
[29]
In terms of Chapter 2 of the Public Service
Regulations, any designated employee who fails to disclose an
interest
or wilfully provides incorrect or
misleading details is guilty of misconduct.
[30]
The
power to appoint and promote employees of the State is located in the
heartland of the Executive Authority.
[6]
The Executive Authority is therefore entitled to set norms and
standards by which it will measure the appointment criteria. In
terms
of Regulation 18, all SMS members ‘shall’ disclose their
interests to the Head of the Department in respect of
the previous
year from 1 April to 31 March of the year in question. It does not
lie in the courts’ hands to simply ignore
the norms and
standards set by the Minister and regard them as irrelevant. In my
view, the test is whether the failure to disclose
was material, and
as such, would have inevitably influenced the decision to appoint the
first respondent to the advertised position.
[31]
In my view, the first respondent’s non-disclosure was material
to a decision whether or not he was fit to be appointed
in a
managerial position as advertised, which demands absolute integrity
and impartiality. It follows, therefore, that a senior
employee, like
the first respondent, had a fiduciary duty to disclose his financial
interests in the companies aforementioned.
[32]
As alluded to above, the first respondent was inclined to approbate
and reprobate in that at some stage he said he disclosed
his
interests and at some other stage he argued that he was not aware
that he had a duty to disclose his financial interests. Regulation
11
makes it plain, as a code of conduct, that an employee must abide by
and strive to be familiar with all legislation and other
lawful
instructions applicable to his or her conduct and official duties.
Regulation 14 makes it obligatory that an employee must
promote
sound, efficient, effective, transparent and accountable
administration. Failure to adhere to the code of conduct constitutes
a misconduct. Therefore, the first respondent cannot be taken
seriously when he argued that he was not aware that he had a duty
to
disclose.
[33]
The duty of disclosure is rooted in the duty of impartiality, but was
also an implied (if not express) term of the first
respondent’s
appointment to the advertised post. To that end, an essential
corollary of the implied requirement of the first
respondent to act
fairly should include the legal duty to make disclosure.
[34]
In
the context of an ex parte application for a search warrant, with
reference to full disclosure of material information, the
Constitutional Court in
Thint
(Pty) Ltd v National Director of Prosecutions and Others; Zuma v
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others
[7]
stated thus:
‘
A
similar view was expressed in
Powell
[8]
in the context of search and seizure under the NPA Act under section
29(5). In this case, the Supreme Court of Appeal had to consider,
among other things, a challenge to the validity of a search and
seizure warrant based on a failure to disclose material facts.
In the course of dealing with this challenge, the court held:
“
In
invoking a procedure without notice to the party sought to be
subjected to it, Ferreira engaged the processes of justice in an
inevitably one-sided process. She was consequently under a duty to be
ultra-scrupulous in disclosing any material facts that might
influence the Court in coming to its decision.”’[9]
[35]
In view of the above, it is clear that the Labour Court misdirected
itself both on the findings of fact and law. Accordingly, the
appeal
must succeed.
[36]
Before
conclusion, there is one procedural aspect relating to the record of
appeal which requires some comments. In terms of Rule
6(11) (h) and
(i) of the Rules of this Court
[10]
,
the record of appeal must not contain the record of oral argument and
heads of argument. Further, the Rules provide that a document
must
not be included in the record more than once.
[11]
Volume 8 of the record consisted of heads of argument before the
Labour Court by both parties. The judgment of the Labour Court
appears twice in volume 9. By including unnecessary documents, the
appellant may attract an order of costs. Care should be taken
when
preparing records of appeal not to include unnecessary material, as
this goes to costs. Legal practitioners often charge for
perusal of
the whole record, which may not be fair to clients where it is not
necessary to do so.
Costs
[37]
What
remains is a question of costs. In terms of section 162 of the Labour
Relations Act
[12]
, an order of
payment of costs may be made in accordance with the rules of law and
fairness. Unlike civil matters, costs in labour
disputes do not
necessarily follow the result.
[13]
This remains a discretion of the court, taking into account the
conduct of the parties during the proceedings and the relationship
that exists between the employee and employer. I do not consider an
order of costs as appropriate in this matter.
[38]
In the result, the following order is made:
Order
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The order of the Labour Court is set aside and substituted with an
order in the following terms:
‘
The
application for review is dismissed with no order as to costs.’
3.
There is no order
as to costs.
B
R Tokota
Nkutha-Nkontwana
JA and Mahalelo AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT:
F T Pretorius and Z Zito
Instructed
by the State Attorney
FOR
THE FIRST RESPONDENT:
Mr M Java of Java attorneys
[1]
Betha
and Others v BTR Sarmcol (A Division of BTR Dunlop Ltd)
(1998) 19 ILJ 459 (SCA) at 473F - G.
[2]
S
v Hadebe and Others
1997
(2) SACR 641
(SCA) at 645E - F. See:
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Strathmore Consolidated Investments Ltd
1959 (1) SA 469
(A) at 475 et seq;
Secretary
for Inland Revenue v Trust Bank of Africa Ltd
1975 (2) SA 652
(A) at 666B--D.
[3]
Proclamation No.103 of 1994.
[4]
GN
877 of 2016: Public Service Regulations, 2016.
[5]
Marais
v Edlman
1934
CPD 212.
[6]
Section 9 of the Act.
## [7]2008
(2) SACR 421 (CC) at para 299.
[7]
2008
(2) SACR 421 (CC) at para 299.
[8]
Powell
NO and Others v Van der Merwe NO and Others
2005
(5) SA 62
(SCA)
(
Powell
).
[9]
Id at para 42.
[10]
GN
4775 of 2024: Rules Regulating the Conduct of the Proceedings of the
Labour Appeal Court.
[11]
Rule 6(10).
[12]
Act
66 of 1995, as amended.
[13]
Union
for Police Security and Corrections Organisation v South African
Custodial Management (Pty) Limited and Others
(2021) 42 ILJ 2371 (CC) at para 24;
Zungu
v Premier of the Province of KwaZulu-Natal and others
(2018) 39 ILJ 523 (CC) at para 24.
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