Case Law[2025] ZALAC 45South Africa
South African Cabin Crew Association obo Members v South African Airways (Soc) Ltd and Others (JA40/2024) [2025] ZALAC 45; [2025] 10 BLLR 1048 (LAC) (21 July 2025)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
21 July 2025
Headnotes
the CCMA has jurisdiction to arbitrate the unions’ dispute (the jurisdictional ruling).
Judgment
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## South African Cabin Crew Association obo Members v South African Airways (Soc) Ltd and Others (JA40/2024) [2025] ZALAC 45; [2025] 10 BLLR 1048 (LAC) (21 July 2025)
South African Cabin Crew Association obo Members v South African Airways (Soc) Ltd and Others (JA40/2024) [2025] ZALAC 45; [2025] 10 BLLR 1048 (LAC) (21 July 2025)
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sino date 21 July 2025
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
reportable
LAC
Case No: JA40/2024
Court
a quo Case No: JR604/23
In
the matter between:
SOUTH
AFRICAN CABIN CREW ASSOCIATION
obo
MEMBERS
First Appellant
NATIONAL
UNION OF METALWORKERS OF SOUTH
AFRICA
obo MEMBERS
Second Appellant
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN AIRWAYS (SOC) LTD
First Respondent
COMMISSIONER
MOTLATSI PHALA N.O
Second Respondent
COMMISSION
FOR CONCILIATION
MEDIATION
AND ARBITRATION
Third Respondent
Heard
:
13 May 2025
Delivered
:
21 July 2025
Coram:
Van Niekerk JA, Nkutha-Nkontwana JA
et
Basson AJA
JUDGMENT
BASSON,
AJA
[1]
The two appellants, the South African Cabin Crew Association obo
Members (SACCA) and the National Union of Metalworkers of South
Africa obo Members (NUMSA), and South African Airways (SOC) Ltd (SAA)
(the first respondent) have, since 2020, been locked in a
protracted
dispute arising from the restructuring of the financially distressed
airline.
[2]
On 5 January 2025, Norton AJ handed down judgment in favour of SAA
reviewing and setting aside the following three rulings handed
down
by Commissioner Phala:
2.1
A ruling dismissing an application brought by SAA to dismiss the
appellants’ referral of an unfair labour practice dispute
to
the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) due
to the inordinate delay in the prosecution thereof (
the dismissal
ruling
).
2.2
A ruling in terms of which the Commissioner held that the CCMA has
jurisdiction to arbitrate the unions’ dispute (
the
jurisdictional ruling
).
2.3
A ruling granting the unions condonation for the late referral of
their dispute to the CCMA (
condonation ruling
).
[2]
In reviewing and setting aside the dismissal ruling, the court
a
quo
concluded that the Commissioner committed a material error in
law when it held that the CCMA does not have the power to dismiss
the
referral. The dismissal ruling was substituted with a decision that
the dismissal application succeeds, with the unions to
pay SAA’s
costs, limited to one counsel. Regarding the jurisdictional ruling,
the Labour Court likewise found that the Commissioner
committed a
material error in law when it was determined that the CCMA had
jurisdiction to arbitrate the dispute, as there was
no cognisable
unfair labour practice dispute before the CCMA.
[3]
The appellants sought leave to appeal the Labour Court's order. Only
the dismissal and jurisdictional rulings are relevant to this
appeal.
What
is before this court?
[3]
The appellants sought leave to appeal on the following four grounds,
namely, that the Labour Court erred -
3.1
by incorrectly finding that the Commissioner should have granted
SAA’s
dismissal application
(ground 1);
3.2
by
incorrectly finding that the exception to
section
158(1B)
of the Labour Relations Act
[1]
(LRA) found application in the matter (ground 2);
3.3
by incorrectly finding that the CCMA
lacked jurisdiction
based
on a finding that the dispute referred to by the appellant did not
constitute an unfair labour practice (ground 3);
3.4
in finding that the appellants should pay the costs of the dismissal
application (ground 4).
[4]
The Labour
Court held that ground 1 (relating to the dismissal application) had
no merit and that the costs order (ground 4) was
warranted and
justified. In respect of the dismissal ruling (ground 1) the Labour
Court dismissed leave to appeal in respect of
both the merits of the
dismissal application and the decision not to refer the matter back
to the CCMA but rather to substitute
the dismissal ruling with an
order that the dismissal ruling is reviewed and set aside.
[2]
Leave to appeal was granted in respect of only the following
two
legal issues
arising from grounds 2 and 3:
[3]
(i)
The circumstances in which the court may invoke the exception
provided for in section 158(1B) of the LRA and hear the review
in
medias res
.
(ii)
Whether attempts to mitigate and avoid retrenchment during a section
189A retrenchment process and which gave rise to a demotion
may be
challenged in the Labour Court through a section 189A(13) process, or
as an unfair labour practice dispute in terms of section
186(2)(a) of
the LRA though an arbitration process.
[5]
Leave to appeal was therefore granted on two limited legal grounds
only. To restate: Leave to appeal was expressly refused in respect
of
the
merits
of the dismissal application (ground 1).
Accordingly, should this Court conclude that the court
a quo
was justified in invoking the exception provided for in section
158(1B), the appellants will find themselves in the unfortunate
position that the appeal is thereby effectively disposed of since the
dismissal ruling (in respect of which no leave to appeal
lies)
remains in effect and binding. It follows, further, that the appeal
against the jurisdictional finding becomes moot, as the
referral of
the dispute to the CCMA stands dismissed pursuant to the dismissal
ruling.
What
is before this court?
[5]
A court on
appeal generally does not consider grounds of appeal that were not
the subject of the granted leave. A refusal of leave
by a lower court
is final in respect of those grounds, and, until a higher court
(usually on petition) grants leave, those grounds
cannot be
raised.
[4]
[6]
Despite the
limited scope of the appeal and notwithstanding the appellants’
acceptance that leave to appeal was granted only
in respect of
grounds 2 and 3, the appellants nonetheless persisted in advancing
all four grounds of appeal. In particular, the
appellants contended
that the refusal of leave in respect of the dismissal application
(ground 1) overlaps with grounds 2 and 3
and is therefore properly
before this Court. I do not agree. The Court, in both
Newlands
Surgical Clinic (Pty) Ltd v Peninsula Eye Clinic (Pty) Ltd
[5]
(Newlands)
and
S v
Safatsa and others (Sefatsa),
[6]
confirmed the principle that a lower court can validly restrict leave
to appeal to certain specific grounds. The decision in
Safatsa
is particularly relevant to this matter as leave to appeal in that
matter was also restricted to questions of law only. The SCA
considered whether leave to appeal can include the factual findings
made by the court
a
quo
or
whether the appeal was confined to the three legal questions. The SCA
held that the restricted leave to appeal excluded a consideration
of
findings of fact:
‘
[T]here
was
no reasonable prospect of success in relation to the facts found
proved by the trial Court, it is difficult to conceive that
he could
have intended to allow the accused to canvass the trial Court's
factual findings on appeal for,
ex
hypothesi
,
that would have been a futile exercise. This view is fortified by his
use of the words 'but on three other grounds, being questions
of
law', by which the findings of fact were implicitly excluded from
consideration. The manner in which the learned Judge enumerated
the
three specified grounds of appeal, as quoted above, also militates
against the possibility that he intended to grant leave
in general,
unrestricted terms, for it would be difficult to reconcile the way in
which he expressed himself with an intention
merely to state reasons
for granting leave generally. In that light his statement that he was
disposed to grant leave to all the
accused cannot, in my view,
properly be construed as granting leave generally, over and above the
three grounds of appeal which
had been specified.
’
[7]
[7]
In
Newlands
,
the Court held that where an appellant is dissatisfied with the
limitation placed on the grounds of appeal, the appropriate remedy
is
to petition the appeal court for an order removing the restriction on
the grounds upon which leave to appeal was granted.
[8]
[8]
There exists no reason why this court should adopt a different
approach. This approach is also consistent with section 166(3) of
the
LRA, which allows for a leave to be granted subject to any conditions
that the court may determine.
[9]
Reverting to the facts of the present case. The Labour Court has
specifically refused leave to appeal in respect of the
merits
of the dismissal application (ground 1) and specifically limited the
ambit of the appeal to two legal issues only. Absent a petition
to
grant leave in respect of the merits of the dismissal application,
the appeal is limited to the two legal grounds on which leave
to
appeal was granted.
The
relevant facts
[5]
On 5 December 2019, SAA was placed in business rescue in an attempt
to transform the financially distressed airline into a potentially
sustainable enterprise. The stakeholders involved in the business
rescue proceedings acknowledged that the only way to achieve
this
goal was to reorganise and downsize SAA's operations and to reach an
agreement with employees on more sustainable terms and
conditions of
employment.
[6]
On 18 July 2020, SAA issued a notice in terms of section 189(3) of
the LRA to various consulting parties, including the two appellants
(SACCA and NUMSA). In the notice, SAA proposed a restructuring of its
business, which, if implemented, would necessitate staff
reductions
due to operational requirements. It was anticipated that, following a
consultation process, the restructuring would
result in dismissals
for operational reasons and a revision of the terms and conditions of
employment of those employees retained
under the new structure. By
the time SAA exited business rescue proceedings on 30 April 2021, its
workforce had been reduced from
approximately 4,700 to 1,000
employees. Those who remained in employment following the conclusion
of the section 189A process were
retained on different terms and
conditions.
[7]
Because the proposed retrenchment exercise involved a large-scale
retrenchment as defined in section 189A of the LRA, the consultation
process was facilitated by the CCMA. After eight consultation
meetings held between 11 August 2020 and 3 October 2020, an agreement
was reached between SAA, the Aviation Union of South Africa (AUSA),
the National Transport Movement (NTM), Solidarity, STAWU, and
the two
groups elected to represent non-unionised workers. SACCA and NUMSA
refused to agree to the new terms and conditions of
employment or to
conclude a collective agreement with SAA arising from the
consultation process.
[8]
On 4 November 2020, SAA sent a letter to all consulting parties,
including SACCA and NUMSA, informing them that the negotiation
process had been exhausted and that they would now proceed with
implementing a new organisational structure. Employees who could
not
be accommodated were retrenched, and the remaining staff were
assigned to new positions under revised terms and conditions.
SAA
exited business rescue on 30 April 2021.
[9]
Six months later, in August 2021, the unions (SACCA and NUSA)
referred an unfair labour practices dispute in terms of section
186(2)(a) of the LRA to the CCMA, claiming unfair treatment of their
members with SAA relating to promotion, demotion, and the provision
of benefits arising from or resulting from this section 189A process.
Proceedings
before the CCMA
[10]
On 27 August 2021, the matter was referred to conciliation when SAA
raised a jurisdictional issue. According to the jurisdictional
ruling
dated 30 September 2021, the CCMA was found to have jurisdiction to
determine the dispute. The matter was rescheduled for
conciliation,
but it failed to resolve the dispute.
[11]
The dispute was referred to arbitration on 23 November 2021 (the
first set down). At the hearing, the CCMA Commissioner directed
the
parties to conclude a pre-arbitration minute by 30 November 2021
(pre-arbitration ruling). Although SAA had prepared and circulated
the first draft, the parties were unable to agree on the contents of
the pre-arbitration minute, resulting in no minute being filed
with
the CCMA.
[12]
Despite the absence of the minutes, the matter was again set down for
arbitration on 10 February 2022 (the second set down). On
that date,
SAA challenged the jurisdiction of the CCMA to arbitrate the dispute,
arguing that the claim made by the unions related
to a reorganisation
or retrenchment that had been conducted by SAA. SAA submitted that
the complaints concerned the fairness of
the retrenchment process,
which does not give rise to a recognisable unfair labour practice
dispute and that the dispute therefore
fell outside of the CCMA's
jurisdiction. On 20 March 2022, Commissioner Phala issued a ruling
stating that the CCMA had jurisdiction
to arbitrate the dispute
(jurisdictional ruling).
[13]
The arbitration was again rescheduled for 20 June 2022 (the third set
down). On that day, the parties reached an agreement that
the unions
would deliver their statement of case, followed by a statement of
response from SAA. The parties’ respective pleadings
were
subsequently exchanged in accordance with the agreement.
[14]
On 15 August 2022, SAA's attorneys (ENS) requested that the unions’
attorneys provide them with revised pre-arbitration minutes
so that
they could be filed with the CCMA by 23 August 2022. When none was
forthcoming, ENS wrote to the unions' attorneys informing
them that
the delay had significantly hampered SAA’s preparations.
[15]
On 30 August 2022 (the fourth down), SAA again raised a preliminary
issue challenging the CCMA’s jurisdiction to arbitrate
on the
basis that the unions’ referral was out of time and that
condonation was therefore necessary. Once again, the arbitration
hearing was unable to proceed. At that time, the unions had still not
provided ENS with the revised pre-arbitration minutes.
[16]
The unions delivered their application for condonation on 8 September
2022, and on 12 October 2022, the CCMA granted condonation
for the
late referral (condonation ruling).
[17]
By agreement, the CCMA set the matter down for arbitration on 13 and
14 December 2022 (the fifth set down). ENS, in the meantime,
once
again engaged with the unions regarding the outstanding
pre-arbitration minutes. At the hearing on 13 December 2022, the
Commissioner again directed the parties to comply with the
pre-arbitration ruling. The parties then agreed that the arbitration
would proceed on 27 to 30 March 2023 (the sixth set down).
[18]
Following further engagement on the pre-arbitration minutes, SAA
confirmed on 13 January 2023 that it accepted the amendments to
the
pre-arbitration minutes and requested the unions to furnish it with
the signed minutes. The unions’ attorneys advised
that the
unions could not sign the pre-arbitration minute because they were
unable to comply with the time period for delivering
their bundle.
SAA agreed that the unions may deliver their bundle by 10 February
2023. The unions were once again requested to
furnish SAA with the
signed pre-arbitration minutes.
[19]
On 2 March 2023, in the absence of both the signed pre-arbitration
minute and the unions’ bundle, SAA filed an application
to
dismiss the unions’ referral to the CCMA on account of the
unions’ failure to prosecute their referral with the
requisite
diligence. SAA contended that the unions’ conduct had caused
SAA to suffer serious prejudice. SAA further submitted
that
commissioners are enjoined to resolve disputes “
fairly and
quickly”
in terms of section 138(1) of the LRA and that a
commissioner therefore has the power to dismiss a referral to the
CCMA in order
to give effect to the primary objectives of the LRA.
The unions submitted that their non-compliance with the
pre-arbitration ruling
stemmed from receiving “
conflicting
and ever-changing instructions”
from their representatives,
and that they were still in the process of obtaining instructions
from their members. The unions also
submitted that the delay was not
inordinate.
The
dismissal ruling
[20]
On 11 April
2022, Commissioner Phala delivered the dismissal ruling finding that
the CCMA, as a statutory body, lacks in the absence
of a specific
statutory empowering provision in the LRA, the power to dismiss a
matter before the merits have been ventilated.
In justifying the
decision to refuse the application to dismiss, Commissioner Pala
relied on the Labour Court decision in
Solomons
v Phokela NO and Others
.
[9]
Commissioner Phala noted in the ruling that while some of SAA’s
concerns about delay were valid, he was not convinced that
there had
been 18 months of complete inactivity.
[21]
Commissioner Phala directed that the matter be set down for hearing
notwithstanding the absence of a pre-arbitration minute. The
arbitration was rescheduled for 24 to 26 May 2023. At that time, more
than 20 months had passed since the dispute was referred
to the CCMA,
and the matter had yet to proceed to the merits.
[22]
Dissatisfied with the latest ruling, SAA applied for an urgent review
to the Labour Court, seeking a review of not only the dismissal
ruling but also of the jurisdictional and condonation rulings. The
matter was argued before the Labour Court on 29 November 2023,
and
the judgment was handed down on 5 January 2024. Leave to appeal was
granted on 27 March 2023. On 17 April 2024, the appellants
noted an
appeal in this court.
[23]
The dispute before the CCMA, therefore, never progressed beyond the
initial stages. Almost twenty months later, and several
jurisdictional
rulings, the proceedings before the CCMA came to an
abrupt halt when SAA brought an application to dismiss the
appellants’
referral.
Labour
Court
[24]
The Labour Court concluded that the Commissioner committed a material
error of law when it found that the CCMA has no power to
dismiss a
referral. The court pointed out that, although the CCMA is a creature
of statute and not a court of law and therefore
unable to decide its
own jurisdiction, sections 138(1) and (9) read with section 1(d)(iv)
of the LRA confer on a commissioner that
power. Before us, the
parties agreed that the Commissioner erred in ruling that it lacked
the power to dismiss a referral.
Section
158(1B): Review in medias res
[25]
Returning to the first issue before this Court and bearing in mind
the concession that the commissioner committed an error of law
in
dismissing the application to dismiss the referral, it becomes
necessary to consider whether the Labour Court was justified
in
invoking the exception under section 158(1B).
[26]
Although
the Labour Court may review interlocutory rulings made by
commissioners under section 158(1)(g) of the LRA, sound reasons
underpin the Labour Court’s reluctance to intervene in
incomplete arbitrations. The first reason is policy-related: such
intervention
in
medias
res
would undermine the informal nature of the dispute resolution
process. The second reason is that piecemeal reviews would hinder
the
prompt resolution of labour disputes. This legislative policy was
confirmed in
Trustees
for the time being of the National
Bioinformatics
Network Trust v Jacobson & others
[10]
as follows.
‘
In other words, in
general terms, justice would be advanced rather than frustrated by
permitting CCMA arbitration proceedings to
run their course without
intervention by this court.’
[11]
[26]
Section
158(1B) of the LRA gives effect to the policy consideration that
judicial intervention would generally be deferred until
the issue in
dispute had been finally determined. To this end, this section
provides that the Labour Court may not review any decision
or ruling
made during consideration or arbitration proceedings before final
determination of the issue in dispute by the CCMA,
except if the
Labour Court is of the opinion that it is just and equitable to
review the decision or ruling.
[12]
The court in
South
African Broadcasting Corporation (SOC) Limited v Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others
[13]
noted
that “
[a]
case must be truly exceptional to warrant a departure from the norm
that a review is appropriate only once the dispute has been
finally
determined in a completed arbitration hearing. This is consistent
with the statutory purpose of expeditious dispute resolution
which
the LRA seeks to achieve”
.
[14]
[27]
Exceptional
circumstances justifying judicial intervention in incomplete
proceedings have been found to exist where such intervention
was
necessary to prevent illegality, to prevent grave injustice, or where
justice could not otherwise be achieved.
[15]
[28]
Judicial
intervention is all the more justified where a review is instituted
in
medias res
to challenge and set aside a ruling premised on a material error of
law. Because section 33(1) of the Constitution
[16]
affords everyone the right to administrative action that is lawful,
reasonable and procedurally fair, the courts are empowered
to review
errors of law, as long as such errors are material in nature.
[17]
An error of law arises from questions of law and generally relates to
a misinterpretation or misapplication of a legal principle
or section
in legislation.
[29]
The Labour
Court (and Labour Appeal) generally has no hesitation in reviewing
and setting aside awards and rulings where the arbitrator
or
commissioner has committed a material error of law.
[18]
Where a commissioner, for example, commits a material error of law in
the interpretation of a collective agreement, the award (or
ruling)
may be attacked either on the basis of being incorrect (a correctness
review) or on the basis that it is unreasonable (reasonableness
review). The LAC in
National
Union of Metalworkers of SA v Assign Services & others
[19]
explains:
‘
[32]
An incorrect interpretation of the law by a commissioner is,
logically, a material error of law which will
result in both an
incorrect and unreasonable award. Such an award can either be
attacked on the basis of its correctness or for
being
unreasonable.’
[20]
Conclusion
[30]
Turning to the first legal question before us,
namely, the circumstances in which a court may invoke the exception
provided for
in section 158(1B) of the LRA and consider a review
in
medias res
. It is not in dispute
that the commissioner committed a material error of law in holding
that the CCMA lacked the jurisdiction
to dismiss a referral on
account of an inordinate delay in its prosecution. In these
circumstances, the Labour Court was correct
in finding that it was
just and equitable to apply the exception to section 158(1B) and to
proceed with the review even though
the arbitration proceedings had
not yet been concluded.
However, as previously indicated, the
question whether the Labour Court erred in concluding that the
commissioner ought to have
granted the dismissal application does not
arise for determination in this appeal, leave to appeal on that
ground having been refused.
The dismissal ruling, accordingly,
remains undisturbed. As a consequence, the second ground of
appeal—namely, whether the
Labour Court erred in finding that
the CCMA lacked jurisdiction on the basis that the appellants’
dispute did not constitute
an unfair labour practice—has become
moot.
[31]
In the result, the appeal is dismissed. In respect of costs, the
requirements of the law and fairness are best served by each party
bearing its own costs.
Order
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
AC Basson AJA
Van Niekerk JA and
Nkuta-Nkontwana JA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANTS:
WP Bekker SC
Instructed
by Serfontein Viljoen & Swart Attorneys
FOR
THE RESPONDENTS: A Redding
SC and P Maharaj-Pillay
Instructed
by Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
[1]
Act
66 of 1995, as amended.
[2]
South
African Airways (SOC) Ltd v South African Cabin Crew Association obo
Members and Others
(J604/2023)
[2024] ZALCJHB 148, dated 27 March 2024. Judgment in the application
for leave to appeal at para 14.
[3]
Ibid at para 27.
[4]
Harlech-Jones
Treasure Architects CC and others v University of Fort Hare
2002
(5) SA 32
(E) at para 56.
[5]
2015
(4) SA 34 (SCA); [2015] 2 All SA 322 (SCA).
[6]
1988
(1) SA 868
(A) 877A
[1987] ZASCA 150
; ;
[1988] 4 All SA 239
(AD).
[7]
Ibid at 875B – E. See also:
S
v Langa en andere
1981 (3) SA 186
(A) at 189C.
[8]
Newlands
supra note 3: “
[14]
It has by now become well settled that when a High Court grants
leave to appeal it may limit the grounds of appeal or it
may grant
leave generally. In the latter event, all relevant issues may be
canvassed, including — so it was held in Yannakou
and other
cases — issues of legality albeit that those had not been
pleaded or raised by the defendant, as long as they
appear from the
evidence before the court. But when the High Court has limited the
grounds of appeal, as it did in this case,
this court has no
jurisdiction to entertain an appeal on grounds which had been
specifically excluded. The fact that these excluded
grounds involve
issues of illegality does not detract from this principle. If an
appellant is dissatisfied with the High Court's
decision to limit
the grounds of appeal, its remedy is to petition this court to do
away with the limitation. Since Newlands
has failed to do so, it
follows that this court has no jurisdiction to entertain the ground
of appeal resting on public policy
or illegality, which had
specifically been excluded from the ambit of leave granted by the
court a quo.”
[9]
(JR99/2021) [2021] ZALCJHB 192, dated 2 August 2021 (
Solomons
).
[10]
(2009) 30
ILJ
2513 (LC); [2009] 8 BLLR 833 (LC).
[11]
Ibid
at para 4.
[12]
See
generally Andrea Joy Zitzke ‘”Just and Equitable”
Grounds for Review in Section 158(1B) of the LRA’
(2025) 46
ILJ
1550.
[13]
[2019] ZALCJHB 318; (2020) 41 ILJ 493 (LC).
[14]
Ibid at para 14.
[15]
Booysen
v The Minister of Safety & Security & others
(2011) 32 ILJ 112 (.LAC);
[2011] 1 BLLR 83
(LAC) at paras 53 –
54.
[16]
Act 108 of 1996.
[17]
Genesis
Medical Aid Scheme v Registrar, Medical Schemes and another
2017 (6) SA 1
(CC);
2017 (9) BCLR 1164
(CC): “
[21]
This seems an inappropriately rigid characterisation of both the
ground of review and of what happened between the parties
here.
Constitutional precepts caution against adopting so rigid an
approach. By explicitly affording the right to just administrative
action, the Constitution bestows on courts the power to review every
error of law, provided of course it is 'material'. PAJA
[Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000] embodies this right, in
explicit terms”.
[18]
See
National
Bargaining Council for the Road Freight & Logistics Industry v
Deysel NO & others
(2025)
46
ILJ
1679
(LAC);
[2025] ZALAC 25
;
National
Union of Metalworkers of SA v Motor Industry Staff Association &
others
(2025) 46
ILJ
109 (LAC);
Skulpad
& another v Department of Health, Eastern Cape & others
(2025)
46
ILJ
193 (LC);
[2025] 1 BLLR 70
(LC);
Khanya
Cleaning Group (Pty) Ltd v SA Transport & Allied Workers Union &
others
(2025) 46 ILJ 363 (LC).
[19]
(2017)
38 ILJ 1978 (LAC).
[20]
See
National
Union of Metalworkers of SA v Motor Industry Staff Association &
others
(2025) 46
ILJ
109 (LAC) at para 27.
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