Case Law[2024] ZALAC 5South Africa
Department of Higher Education and Training v Commissioner Bheki Smiza General Public Service Sectoral and Others (JA53/2022) [2024] ZALAC 5; [2024] 5 BLLR 447 (LAC); (2024) 45 ILJ 1981 (LAC) (22 February 2024)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
22 February 2024
Headnotes
such a decision was neither capricious nor founded on wrong principles of law. This appeal is against that decision.
Judgment
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## Department of Higher Education and Training v Commissioner Bheki Smiza General Public Service Sectoral and Others (JA53/2022) [2024] ZALAC 5; [2024] 5 BLLR 447 (LAC); (2024) 45 ILJ 1981 (LAC) (22 February 2024)
Department of Higher Education and Training v Commissioner Bheki Smiza General Public Service Sectoral and Others (JA53/2022) [2024] ZALAC 5; [2024] 5 BLLR 447 (LAC); (2024) 45 ILJ 1981 (LAC) (22 February 2024)
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sino date 22 February 2024
IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
no: JA53/2022
In
the matter between:
Department
of Higher Education
and
TRAINING
Appellant
And
Commissioner
Bheki Smiza
First Respondent
GENERAL
PUBLIC SERVICE SECTORAL
BARGAINING
COUNCIL
Second Respondent
PSA
OBO LESETJA FRANS SEBOPELA
Third Respondent
Heard:
28 November
2023
Delivered:
22 February 2024
Coram:
Molahlehi AJP, Savage JA
and Malindi AJA
Judgment
SAVAGE
JA
Introduction
[1]
This appeal,
with the leave of this Court, is against the judgment and order of
that Court (per Mahosi AJ) in which the appellant’s
application
to review and set aside the arbitration award of the first
respondent, the arbitrator, was dismissed with no order
of costs. The
appeal is unopposed.
[2]
In September
2016, the appellant, the Department of Higher Education and Training,
advertised a vacancy for the post of Deputy Principal:
Corporate
Services in Tshwane North. An extensive number of applications were
received for the post, including that of the third
respondent
employee, Mr Lesetja Frans Sebopela (employee). The requirements of
the post recorded in the advertisement were:
‘
An
appropriate Bachelor’s Degree or equivalent qualification
relevant to the post. A relevant post-graduate degree/qualification
will be an added advantage. Five (5) years’ relevant work
experience. An understanding of the Department of Higher Education
and Training’s strategic vision and priorities. Knowledge of
all policies and legislation governing education and training
as well
as the Public Service and Employment Services in South Africa.
Experience in managing people and projects with the ability
to plan,
strategically willingness to work [sic], irregular hours and travel
extensively. Computer literacy (MS Word, MS PowerPoint,
MS Excel, MS
Excess and MS Outlook). A valid driver’s licence.’
[3]
Given the
number of applications received and in order to reduce the number of
candidates to be interviewed, the selection committee
introduced an
additional selection criterion related to additional years of
relevant work experience required beyond the five-year
period
advertised. It was common cause at arbitration that the appellant’s
selection policy permitted the committee to introduce
such an
additional selection criterion. The applicant was not shortlisted
given that he lacked the years of experience required
by this
additional criterion and he was not shortlisted or interviewed for
the post. Aggrieved, he referred an unfair labour practice
dispute to
the second respondent, the General Public Service Sectoral Bargaining
Council (GPSSBC).
[4]
At
arbitration, the employee contended that he had been treated unfairly
by the appellant in not being shortlisted for the post
although a
less qualified employee, Mr Serai, who had fewer years’
experience than the employee, was shortlisted and interviewed
for
promotion. Mr Serai was not unsuccessful in his application and was
not promoted to the post.
[5]
The
arbitrator found that, in not shortlisting and interviewing the
employee, the appellant had committed an unfair labour practice
against the employee and the appellant was ordered to pay the
employee eight months’ compensation. Dissatisfied with the
award, the appellant sought that it be reviewed by the Labour Court.
The Court dismissed the review application on the basis that
the
arbitrator’s decision was a reasonable one; and that an unfair
labour practice in terms of section 186 (2)(a) of the
Labour
Relations Act
[1]
(LRA) had been
committed by the appellant when it failed to shortlist the employee.
The Court further held that such a decision
was neither capricious
nor founded on wrong principles of law. This appeal is against that
decision.
Evaluation
[6]
An unfair
labour practice is defined in section 186(2) of the LRA as –
‘
(2)
…any unfair act or omission that arises between an employer
and an employee involving –
(a)
unfair conduct by the employer relating to the promotion,
demotion, probation (excluding disputes about dismissals for
a reason
relating to probation) or training of an employee or relating to the
provision of benefits to an employee…’
[7]
Th
e
test for the review of an arbitration award in an unfair labour
practice dispute, as in a dismissal dispute, is whether the
commissioner
misconceived the nature of the enquiry, or arrived at an
unreasonable result in the sense that the decision made is one that a
reasonable decision-maker, on the material before them, could not
have reached
.
[2]
[8]
A
determination as to the fairness of a promotion decision is typically
weighted heavily on an evaluation of the process and the
justification given for the
promotion
decision made by the decision-makers.
[3]
An
employer is required to act lawfully and adhere to the objective
standards of fairness and the criteria that it has set for promotion,
including its own policies,
[4]
in order to ensure that an eligible employee is provided with a fair
opportunity to compete for the post.
[5]
Conduct
that does not allow an employee such a fair opportunity will usually
be found to constitute an unfair labour practice.
[6]
The
evaluation of the suitability of a candidate for promotion is
required to be assessed fairly, rather than mechanically, with
a
justifiable element of subjectivity or discretion reserved for the
employer
.
[7]
[9]
To
succeed
in an unfair labour practice claim related to promotion usually
requires an employee to prove that they were not given a
fair
opportunity to compete for a post.
[8]
This may involve evidence that the process was unfair and that
despite the employee having the necessary experience, ability and
technical qualifications for the post, an unfair appointment decision
was taken.
[9]
An arbitrator is required by section 193(4) to determine an unfair
labour practice dispute on terms that are deemed reasonable
and may,
where it is just and equitable, in terms of section 194(4), award
compensation to an employee
.
[10]
T
he
evidence
before the arbitrator did not show that the appellant had committed
an unfair act or omission or engaged in unfair conduct
in relation to
the employee in the context of a promotion. Neither the shortlisting
process nor the decision taken not to interview
the employee was
unfair. There was no dispute that the selection committee was
entitled to impose the additional criterion which
it did to limit the
number of applicants shortlisted and interviewed and there was
nothing irrational or unfair in the additional
criterion imposed.
There was also no dispute that the employee lacked the years of
experience
required
by the selection committee in terms of its additional criterion
imposed. Even if Mr Serai lacked the requisite experience
and was
incorrectly shortlisted, he was not appointed to the post and the
fact of his erroneous shortlisting is not
sufficient
to prove unfairness on the part of the appellant against the
employee.
[10]
[11]
The
appellant
was therefore not shown to have acted in bad faith,
[11]
with
ulterior motive,
[12]
arbitrarily, capriciously
[13]
or in a manner which was grossly unreasonable in relation to the
employee in undertaking the promotion.
[14]
This
was so despite the erroneous shortlisting of Mr Serai. That
shortlisting caused no prejudice to the employee since the employee
lacked the relevant years of experience required in order for him to
be shortlisted and Mr Serai was not appointed to the post
for the
very reason that he lacked the requisite qualification added as an
additional criterion by the interview panel. It follows
therefore
that the failure to shortlist the employee for the post was not
unfair in the circumstances
.
[12]
The
finding
of the arbitrator that the appellant had committed an unfair labour
practice against the employee was therefore one that
a reasonable
decision-maker on the material before him could not reach.
Furthermore, since there was no evidence that the employee
was
treated unfairly, no just and equitable basis existed to award the
payment of compensation to him.
[15]
In finding differently the Labour Court erred. Furthermore, the
Court’s finding that the appellant was required to comply
strictly with its policies and procedures was on the facts of the
matter erroneous and the shortlisting of Mr Serai in error did
not
translate into an unfair labour practice committed against the
employee
.
The review application should therefore properly have been granted
and the award of the arbitrator set aside.
[13]
For these
reasons, the appeal must succeed. Having regard to considerations of
law and fairness, a costs order is not warranted
in this matter.
[14]
In the result,
the following order is made:
Order
1.
The appeal is
upheld with no order of costs.
2.
The orders of
the Labour Court are set aside and substituted as follows:
‘
1.
The review application succeeds.
2.
The arbitration award issued by the third respondent is set
aside and substituted with a finding that no unfair labour
practice
was committed against the employee, Mr Lesetja Frans Sebopela.’
SAVAGE
JA
Molahlehi
AJP and Malindi AJA agree.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT:
M H Mhambi
State
Attorney, Pretoria
FOR
THE RESPONDENTS:
No appearance
[1]
Act
66 of 1995, as amended.
[2]
Sidumo
and another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and others
[2007]
ZACC 22
;
(2007)
28 ILJ 2405 (CC) at
paras
98 - 100
.
## [3]Khumalo
and another v Member of the Executive Council for Education:
KwaZulu-Natal[2013]
ZACC 49; (2014) 35 ILJ 613 (CC)(Khumalo)at
para 63.
[3]
Khumalo
and another v Member of the Executive Council for Education:
KwaZulu-Natal
[2013]
ZACC 49; (2014) 35 ILJ 613 (CC)
(Khumalo)
at
para 63.
[4]
Health
and Other Service Personnel Trade Union of SA and others v Member of
the Executive Council for Health, Eastern Cape and
others
[2016]
ZALAC 64
; (2017) 38 ILJ 890 (LAC);
Minister
of Home Affairs v GPSSBC and others
[2008] JOL 21773
(LC) at paras 19 - 20.
## [5]Ncane
v Lyster NO and others[2017]
ZALAC 1; (2017) 38 ILJ 907 (LAC)(Ncane)at
para 24 referringtoKhumaloat
paras 62 - 63,Nainaar
v Department of Works, KwaZulu-Natal and Others[2015] ZALCD 26; [2015] JOL 33268 (LC) andManana
v Department of Labour and Others[2010]
ZALC 26; [2010] 6 BLLR 664 (LC).
[5]
Ncane
v Lyster NO and others
[2017]
ZALAC 1; (2017) 38 ILJ 907 (LAC)
(Ncane)
at
para 24 referring
to
Khumalo
at
paras 62 - 63,
Nainaar
v Department of Works, KwaZulu-Natal and Others
[2015] ZALCD 26; [2015] JOL 33268 (LC) and
Manana
v Department of Labour and Others
[2010]
ZALC 26; [2010] 6 BLLR 664 (LC).
## [6]Transnet
SOC Ltd v United National Transport Union on behalf of Coetzee and
others[2021]
ZALCJHB 240; (2021) 42 ILJ 2478 (LC) (Transnet)
at paras 3 –4.
[6]
Transnet
SOC Ltd v United National Transport Union on behalf of Coetzee and
others
[2021]
ZALCJHB 240; (2021) 42 ILJ 2478 (LC) (
Transnet
)
at paras 3 –4.
[7]
Ncane
supra
at
para 25.
[8]
Noonan
v Safety and Security Sectoral Bargaining Council and others
[2012] ZALAC 9
; (2012) 33 ILJ 2597 (LAC).
[9]
See also
Ndlovu
v CCMA and others
[2000]
ZALC 153
;
[2000] BLLR 1462
(LC) paras 11–12.
[10]
Sun
International Management (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation,
Mediation and Arbitration and others
[2016] ZALCJHB 433 at para 9.
[11]
See
Transnet
supra
at
para 21, where the decision not to promote a white candidate
supposedly in terms of an employment equity plan that was not
yet in
effect and bore no resemblance to the approved criteria was found to
be grossly unfair and the stated reasons for that
decision were
‘dishonest and irrational’. See also
Du
Plooy v National Prosecuting Authority
(2006)
27 ILJ 409 (BCA), where the arbitrator found that the
applicant’s superiors had ganged up to deny her promotion
because she had earlier lodged a grievance concerning her
non-promotion to another post.
[12]
Communications
Workers Union on behalf of Starck and Telkom SA Ltd
(2005)
26 ILJ 353 (CCMA).
[13]
See
Transnet
;
SA
Police Service v Gebashe and others
[2014]
ZALCD 68; (2015) 36 ILJ 1620 (LC);
National
Tertiary Education Union on behalf of Grooff and Nelson Mandela
Metropolitan University
(2020)
41 ILJ 2719 (CCMA).
[14]
SAPS
v Safety and Security Sectoral Bargaining Council and others
[2010]
ZALC 58
;
[2010] 8 BLLR 892
(LC) at para 15.
[15]
See
McGregor
v Public Health and Social Development Sectoral Bargaining Council
and others
[2021] ZACC 14
; (2021) 42 ILJ 1643 (CC).
sino noindex
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