Case Law[2024] ZALAC 26South Africa
National Union of Food Beverage Wine Spirits andAllied Workers v Coca Cola Beverages South Africa (Pty) Ltd (JA 130/22) [2024] ZALAC 26; (2024) 45 ILJ 1813 (LAC); [2024] 9 BLLR 948 (LAC) (27 May 2024)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
27 May 2024
Headnotes
and the order of the Competition Appeal Court was set aside. Specifically, the Constitutional Court held that the Competition Appeal Court had failed to apply the correct test to determine whether the subsequent retrenchments were causally linked to the merger, and that there was thus no basis to interfere with the Tribunal’s decision that there was insufficient evidence to establish that the merger was the principal reason for the retrenchments. [6] On 21 September 2021, the Labour Court (per Moshoana J) delivered a
Judgment
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## National Union of Food Beverage Wine Spirits andAllied Workers v Coca Cola Beverages South Africa (Pty) Ltd (JA 130/22) [2024] ZALAC 26; (2024) 45 ILJ 1813 (LAC); [2024] 9 BLLR 948 (LAC) (27 May 2024)
National Union of Food Beverage Wine Spirits andAllied Workers v Coca Cola Beverages South Africa (Pty) Ltd (JA 130/22) [2024] ZALAC 26; (2024) 45 ILJ 1813 (LAC); [2024] 9 BLLR 948 (LAC) (27 May 2024)
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sino date 27 May 2024
THE LABOUR APPEAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not Reportable
of Interest to Other
Judges
Case
no:
JA
130/22
In
the matter between:
THE NATIONAL UNION OF
FOOD BEVERAGE
WINE SPIRITS AND
ALLIED WORKERS Appellant
and
COCA COLA BEVERAGES
SOUTH AFRICA
(PTY)
LTD
Respondent
Heard
:
7 May 2024
Delivered
:
27 May 2024
(This judgment
was handed down electronically by emailing a copy to the parties. The
27 May 2024 is deemed to be the date of delivery
of this judgment).
Coram:
Sutherland JA, Van Niekerk JA and Govindjee AJA
JUDGMENT
VAN NIEKERK, JA
Introduction
[1]
On 31 May 2019, after a process of consultation with representative
trade unions, the second to further appellants (the employees)
were
dismissed by the respondent (CCBSA) on account of its operational
requirements. A dispute about the substantive fairness of
the
employees’ dismissal was referred to the Labour Court for
adjudication, where the first appellant (the union) sought
their
reinstatement, alternatively, the payment of compensation for an
unfair dismissal. Where appropriate, the union and the employees
jointly are referred to as ‘the appellants’.
[2]
In the Labour Court, the appellants’ claim of substantive
unfairness comprised three elements: first, that the retrenchments
constituted a breach of certain conditions that attached to the
regulatory approval of a merger in terms of which CCBSA was
established;
secondly, that there was an insufficient commercial
rationale for the retrenchments and thirdly, that CCBSA had unfairly
implemented
criteria for the selection of those employees to be
retrenched.
[3]
The first
of these elements assumed some significance in the proceedings before
the Labour Court, since running parallel to those
proceedings were
proceedings initiated by another union, the Food and Allied Workers
Union (FAWU), based on a complaint lodged
against CCBSA in terms of
the Competition Act.
[1]
Those
proceedings had their origins in the same retrenchment process but
specifically, a complaint that CCBSA had retrenched staff
in breach
of conditions that restricted post-merger retrenchments. The context
of FAWU’s complaint was the establishment
of CCBSA in May 2016
as a subsidiary of Coca-Cola Beverages Africa (Pty) Ltd (CCBA),
consequent on a merger of four previously
independent authorised
bottlers for the Coca-Cola Company (TCCC), a company incorporated in
the United States of America and listed
on the New York stock
exchange. The merger conditions relevant to employment matters
extended to the maintenance of the aggregate
number of employees from
the four operations for a period of three years, a condition that no
‘bargaining unit employee’
be retrenched as a result of
the merger, and a limitation on the number of employees engaged
outside of the bargaining unit who
could be retrenched. Excluded from
the application of these conditions were “
necessary
steps taken by the Merger Parties in terms of section 189 of the
Labour Relations Act (LRA) should operational requirements
in the
ordinary course of business that are not merger specific necessitate
that such steps be taken”.
[4]
On 24 October 2019, some five months after the retrenchments that
form the subject of the present proceedings, and acting in terms
of s
39 (1) of the Competition Act, the Competition Commission issued a
notice of apparent breach, on the basis that the retrenchments
were
merger-specific. On 14 May 2020, CCBSA applied to the Competition
Tribunal to review the notice. On 8 August 2012, the Competition
Tribunal declared that CCBSA had substantially complied with the
relevant merger conditions and set aside the notice of apparent
breach. On 17 June 2022, during the course of the Labour Court trial,
that decision was overturned by the Competition Appeal Court.
The
Competition Appeal Court found that the retrenchments were
merger-specific. In their submissions before the Labour Court, the
appellants relied substantially on the Competition Appeal Court’s
judgment in support of their contention that the retrenchments
were
substantively unfair.
[5]
Shortly
before the hearing of this appeal, on 17 April 2024, the
Constitutional Court delivered its judgment in
Coca-Cola
Beverages Africa (Pty) Ltd v Competition Commission and another.
[2]
In a unanimous judgment, the Constitutional Court concluded that
there was no basis for the Competition Appeal Court to interfere
with
the Competition Tribunal’s factual findings and that the
Tribunal’s analysis of the facts was cogent and disclosed
neither any misdirection nor clear error. In consequence, the appeal
was upheld, and the order of the Competition Appeal Court
was set
aside. Specifically, the Constitutional Court held that the
Competition Appeal Court had failed to apply the correct test
to
determine whether the subsequent retrenchments were causally linked
to the merger, and that there was thus no basis to interfere
with the
Tribunal’s decision that there was insufficient evidence to
establish that the merger was the principal reason for
the
retrenchments.
[6]
On 21
September 2021, the Labour Court (per Moshoana J) delivered a
judgment in which it found that, but for one of the employees,
[3]
the employees’ retrenchment was substantively fair. In reaching
this conclusion, the Labour Court rejected the appellant’s
contention that the employees’ dismissal was automatically
unfair because the reason for dismissal was a breach of s 187
(1) (c)
of the Labour Relations Act
[4]
(LRA), and also the alternative claim that the dismissals were unfair
for want of a substantively fair reason.
Factual
background
[7]
The factual background to the dispute is largely a matter of common
cause. TCCC manufactures concentrates for the production of
non-alcoholic beverages. The concentrates are distributed worldwide
in terms of standard agreements, in terms of which TCCC supplies
the
concentrates to bottlers and licences them to manufacture and
distribute its branded beverages. CCBSA is such a bottler, formed
in
2016, as recorded above, after the merger of four independent
bottlers.
[8]
During 2017, economic conditions deteriorated. In April 2018, the
Health Promotion Levy on Sugary Beverages, colloquially referred
to
as the ‘sugar tax’, was introduced. It is not disputed
that in the nine months between the introduction of the tax
and the
end of the 2018 financial year, CCBSA paid R2.1 billion in sugar tax.
In order to remain competitive, CCBSA was forced
to give discounts
amounting to R850 million and, in the same period, its sales volume
declined by 2%. CCBSA’s case was that
the burden of the sugar
tax and rising sugar input costs, emerging as they did in an already
challenging operating environment,
required it to reset the cost base
to ensure the short- and long-term viability of the business.
[9]
CCBSA initiated various strategies to streamline roles, introduced a
moratorium on new appointments from outside the company, used
natural
attrition such as early retirement,
ad hoc
resignations and
voluntary severance packages and the like, to reduce the impact of
the challenging operating environment. Ultimately,
CCBSA undertook a
review of its entire business model, one of the affected areas being
what was referred to as the ‘route-to-market’.
[10]
On 21 January 2019, CCBSA issued a notice in terms of s 189 (3) of
the LRA to the union and FAWU. The unions were advised that
after the
‘economic headwinds’ experienced in 2017, the
introduction of the sugar tax in 2018 had impacted on volumes
due to
a higher effective product price. It was expected that 2018 volume
projections would only be recovered in 2021. Further,
competitors
continued to gain market share. In consequence, CCBSA was considering
an urgent restructuring to establish more efficient
and
cost-effective structures. The notice further advised the unions that
a total of 1072 employees were likely to be affected
by the proposed
retrenchment. The s 189 (3) notice specifically contemplated a
restructuring across the logistics and commercial
functions, where
CCBSA proposed to review and optimise its route-to-market strategy,
to ensure future competitiveness and sustainability.
[11]
The present dispute concerns only two impacted roles, those of
pre-seller merchandisers (referred to as ‘pre-sellers’)
and merchandisers. The difference between the roles was explained by
Mr Rajbally, CCBSA’s commercial director, who testified
that
merchandisers were engaged in large retail outlets, packing fridges
and shelves. One of the employees who gave evidence at
the trial, Mr
Mashele, testified that as a merchandiser, he was responsible for
packing fridges, receiving stock, placing orders
and posting sale
notices. Pre-sellers, on the other hand, were engaged in smaller
outlets such as spaza shops, house shops, and
general dealers. The s
189(3) notice contemplated that there would be a reduction in the
number of pre-seller roles (‘same
job, fewer roles’), in
circumstances where CCBSA had identified that the outlets served by
pre-sellers accounted for a small
percentage of volume. The notice
further contemplated that the merchandiser role in its existing form
would be abolished. Specifically,
CCBSA envisaged that while the
title would remain unaffected, the level and structure of the role
would change, and remuneration
structures would be realigned to the
value of the new role, calibrated against conditions applicable to
employees engaged by third
party service providers, who performed the
bulk of the merchandising service. In essence, the existing role of
merchandiser was
to be abolished, a new role with the same title
created, and those employees currently engaged as merchandisers
offered employment
in the newly-defined role, at a commensurate
(lower) salary.
[12]
A consultation process was conducted in terms of s 189A, facilitated
by the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration
(CCMA).
At the conclusion of the consultation process, 368 employees employed
in the bargaining unit were retrenched, with effect
from 31 May 2019.
[13]
The dispute before the Labour Court concerned a single battle in a
much broader litigious offensive that emanated from the retrenchment
exercise implemented by CCBSA. The case involved only 21 employees,
all previously employed either as merchandisers or pre-sellers.
The
Labour Court
[14]
The statement of claim filed by the appellants recorded some 13
grounds on which the appellants considered that the retrenchment
was
substantively unfair. The general need to retrench aside, the
appellants submitted that the selection criteria for the new
and
significantly changed jobs were unfair and not objective, that CCBSA
had failed to implement ‘bumping’ and the
criterion of
last-in first-out (LIFO), thus prejudicing employees with longer
service.
[15]
CCBSA called three witnesses, the financial director Mr Leonhardt,
the commercial director Mr Rajbally, and the employee relations
and
governance manager Mr Pheta. Leonhardt testified that in 2018, in
comparison to 2017, sales had dropped by some 5.6 million
cases.
Discounts passed to maximise sales increased by R850 million and R2.1
billion was paid in sugar tax, an expense incurred
for the first time
in the 2018 financial year after the introduction of the tax in April
2018. The result was an increase in the
total cost of goods of 11.5%
and a decrease in profitability of some R293.8 million. None of this
evidence was seriously challenged
in cross-examination.
[16]
Mr Rajbally gave evidence regarding the impact of CCBSA’s
operational requirements on the merchandisers and pre-sellers.
Merchandisers serviced the top-end grocer outlets (e.g. Pick n Pay,
Spar, and Checkers), packing fridges and shelves, facilitating
trade
visits to ensure that merchandising standards were met, and the like.
Merchandisers were not in the original organisational
design of the
business, since the role had been outsourced to a third party.
However, at the time of the 2016 merger, a number
of what were
described as the ‘legacy entities’ employed
merchandisers, who were absorbed into CCBSA. The restructuring
contemplated by CCBSA envisaged that the role of merchandiser would
fall away and a different role would be created. Rajbally explained
that the new role would be aligned to the actual value of work
performed, and reflect a commensurate, lower rate of pay. That rate
would reflect what CCBSA paid to its third party supplier to perform
the merchandising function. The pre-sellers were focussed
on smaller
establishments, visiting each outlet in the form of spaza shops,
general dealers and local liquor stores in what he
described as ’a
township-like environment’. Rajbally testified that at the
time, CCBSA was servicing approximately
190,000 customers on a weekly
basis in circumstances where 80,000 of those customers provided 90%
of the volume. The result was
an over-investment in a large part of
the customer base that was responsible for a small stream of revenue.
The strategy proposed
was to reduce costs with respect to small
outlets and invest in the bigger revenue outlets, thus maintaining
volumes and increasing
market share. The impact on the pre-sellers
was to reduce the number of posts within the organisational design,
with consequent
redundancy.
[17]
Mr Phetha testified about the s 189 (3) notice and the subsequent
consultation process. His evidence was that selection criteria
were
discussed during consultation, and agreed upon. What is clear from
his testimony is that CCBSA did not agree to bumping within
job
categories on a national, geographic basis, on account of the
disruption that it would cause. But otherwise, employees were
selected on the basis of the application of LIFO, subject to the
retention of skills.
[18]
For the appellants, Mr Mbatha, a pre-seller previously employed in
Bedfordview and servicing outlets in Daveyton, Etwatwa, testified
that he was retrenched from the position of pre-seller, that he was
the only pre-seller from Bedfordview who had been retrenched,
and
that he did not know how or why he had been selected for
retrenchment. A second witness, Mr Mashele, then testified that he
had been employed as a merchandiser at a salary of R11 436 per month.
The position of merchandiser in the new organisational structure
was
offered to him, at a lower salary of R5 090 per month. He refused the
offer.
[19]
In its judgment, the Labour Court identified three issues in dispute.
The first was the union’s claim that the retrenchment
constituted a breach of the merger conditions; the second, the claim
of automatically unfair dismissal in terms of s 187 (1) (c);
and the
third, the substantive unfairness claim. In regard to the first
claim, the Labour Court rejected the appellants’
submission
that the judgment of the Competition Appeal Court to the effect that
the retrenchments bore some nexus to the merger
demonstrated that the
asserted rationale for the retrenchments was a sham. The Labour Court
did not itself conduct any analysis
of the facts to determine any
causal link between the merger and the subsequent retrenchments; the
union’s claim was dismissed
on the basis that even if the
retrenchments had been effected in breach of any conditions that
attached to the merger, provided
that the dismissals were effected
for a fair reason related to CCBSA’s operational requirements,
there was no unfair dismissal
for the purposes of the LRA. Put
another way, the Labour Court considered that any merger-specific
condition did not preclude CCBSA
from seeking to justify any
post-merger retrenchment on account of its operational requirements.
The issue was whether, for the
purposes of the LRA, the dismissals
were substantively fair.
[20]
The Labour Court also rejected the submission that the employees’
dismissal was automatically unfair because the reason for
dismissal
was a refusal to accept a demand in respect of a matter of mutual
interest between them and CCBSA. To the extent that
the union had
submitted that the offers of alternative employment were designed to
compel the employees to accept substantially
reduced wages and other
conditions of employment, the Labour Court held that making an offer
of alternative employment “
is not akin to making a demand in
respect of a matter of mutual interest
”. Further, the
Labour Court found that there was no credible evidence of any demand
made by CCBSA followed by any refusal
on the part of the employees.
On the contrary, CCBSA had made offers of employment in alternative
positions in order to avoid retrenchments.
In any event, the ensuing
dismissals in the form of the retrenchments that followed, viewed
objectively, were not the result of
any refusal by the employees to
accept any demand made by CCBSA.
[21]
In respect of the substantive fairness of the retrenchment, the
Labour Court concluded that there was “
overwhelming and
uncontested evidence
” that the sugar tax impacted CCBSA’s
profitability. The extract from the 2018 income statement produced in
evidence
established that sales volumes had declined by 2%, discounts
to remain competitive had increased by R850 million, and gross profit
had decreased by R300 million. All these factors, together with other
adverse circumstances, had led to a decline in profit for
three
consecutive years. There was thus a commercial rationale for the
retrenchments. The Labour Court considered that it was not
for the
Court to determine whether the decisions made by CCBSA were correct –
the test to be applied was whether the solution
adopted by CCBSA was
fair and commercially rational. To the extent that the union had
argued that CCBSA erred in restructuring
only the positions of
merchandisers and pre-sellers, the Court held that for it to
second-guess CCBSA’s decision in these
circumstances would be
to apply a test of correctness. The Court accepted “
without
hesitation
” that CCBSA had a fair reason to dismiss based
on its operational requirements.
[22]
In respect
of the selection criteria adopted by CCBSA, the Labour Court
considered that, since all of the merchandisers’ posts
were no
longer part of the new organisational structure, all of the
merchandisers would be selected for retrenchment and the question
of
fair and objective selection criteria thus did not arise. In the case
of the pre-sellers, the number of posts was reduced, with
selection
to be implemented on the basis of LIFO, skills, qualification and
experience, or a combination of these. With regard
to the
merchandisers, the Court rejected evidence that the posts were never
redundant and that the new posts were, for all intents
and purposes,
the same as those abolished. On that basis, the Court concluded that
“
the
Merchandisers position that was occupied by the Merchandisers ceased
to exist, selecting them for dismissal after not being
placed was
fair”
.
[5]
[23]
The Labour Court then turned to the evidence of Mbatha, who had
testified that he was a pre-seller, part of a team of eight, who
was
selected for retrenchment. Phetha’s evidence had been that
where fewer jobs existed after the restructuring (as in the
case of
the pre-sellers), fair and objective criteria would be utilised,
including but not limited to LIFO, location of the job
and CCBSA’s
organisational diversity objectives. While that evidence was
accepted, the court considered that CCBSA had failed
to produce
evidence to explain why Mbatha had not been successful in his
applications for appointment in alternative positions
in Wadeville
and Midrand. In particular, Mbatha had not been afforded an
opportunity to respond to the assessment of his skills
and
qualifications. For that reason, the Court concluded that “
the
objective and fair selection criterion was not fairly applied to
Mbatha”
. As recorded above, Mbatha was awarded compensation
in an amount equivalent to four months’ compensation. The
Labour Court
dismissed the balance of the appellants’ claim of
unfair retrenchment, with no order as to costs.
In
this Court
[24]
In these proceedings, with the leave of this Court, the appellants
pursue three grounds for appeal. The first is that, despite
the
Constitutional Court’s judgment, the retrenchments constituted
a breach of the merger conditions and that for that reason,
the
retrenchments were substantively unfair. The second is that the
Labour Court erred when it found that the retrenchment was
not
automatically unfair because the true reason for dismissal was a
refusal by the employees to accept a demand in respect of
a matter of
mutual interest between them and CCBSA. Thirdly, the appellants
submit that the retrenchment was substantively unfair
because it
lacked a sufficient commercial rationale and because the selection
criteria were neither fairly nor objectively implemented.
Each
of the grounds of appeal is addressed below.
The
alleged breach of a merger condition
[25]
The judgments of the Competition Appeal Court and the Constitutional
Court were concerned only with the review of a ruling made
by the
Competition Tribunal in relation to a notice of apparent breach
issued in terms of Rule 39 of the Commission Rules. The
fairness or
otherwise of the retrenchment effected by CCBSA was not a matter on
which any of the competition regulatory authorities
were required to
express any view, nor was it an issue that came before the
Constitutional Court for decision. Although much of
the evidence
adduced in the Labour Court concerned an endeavour by the appellants
to establish a breach of the merger conditions,
the judgment of the
Constitutional Court, to which both parties referred in these
proceedings, is of neutral effect in the determination
of the central
issue that serves before us, i.e. whether the employees’
retrenchment was unfair either for a reason that
is automatically
unfair, alternatively, for want of substantive fairness. Mr Haffejee,
who appeared for the appellants, conceded
that there were no factual
findings made by the Constitutional Court that might assist this
Court and that it was thus not necessary
for this Court to engage
with that Court’s judgment in any determination of whether the
employees’ dismissal was automatically
or substantively unfair.
Automatically
unfair dismissal – s 187 (1) (c)
[26]
The appellants’ submissions in respect of the application of s
187 (1) (c) affect only the merchandisers, who consequent
on the
restructuring of CCBSA’s business operations, were offered but
refused employment in what CCBSA contended were new
posts, on less
favourable terms and conditions of employment. The appellants submit
that their dismissal was automatically unfair
because the reason for
dismissal was a refusal to accept a demand in respect of a matter of
mutual interest between them and their
employer. Specifically, the
appellants contend that retrenchment was designed to compel the
employees to accept lower salaries
for the same work, in essence, a
stratagem to compel the employees to accept new, less favourable
wages and other terms and conditions
of employment and that the true
reason for their dismissal was their refusal to accept those terms.
[27]
Section 187 (1) (c) is located in a section of the LRA that lists
reasons for dismissal that are automatically unfair. In other
words,
if the reason for dismissal is one of those identified in the
subsection, and unless one of the defences established by
s 187 (2)
applies, the dismissal must be found to be unfair, and the enquiry is
then limited to an appropriate remedy. Section
187 (1) (c) provides
that the dismissal is automatically unfair if the reason for
dismissal is “
a refusal by employees to accept a demand in
respect of any matter of mutual interest between them and their
employer
”. It is incumbent on an employee alleging that a
dismissal was effected for a reason that is automatically unfair, to
at
least lead evidence that establishes a credible possibility that
the true reason for dismissal is one that is listed as an
automatically
unfair reason.
[28]
Section 187
(1) (c) has a long and not uncontroversial history. The section was
the subject of recent consideration by the Constitutional
Court in
the matter of
National
Union of Metalworkers of SA & others v Aveng Trident Steel (A
division of Aveng Africa (Pty) Ltd) & another
.
[6]
That matter, not unlike the present, concerned the fairness of a
dismissal following a consultation process initiated by the employer
in terms of s 189 of the LRA, and an offer by the employer of
alternative employment within a new occupational structure. The
employer afforded affected employees the opportunity to be engaged in
the new ‘redesigned’ positions at the (lower)
rate on
offer as an effort to avoid contemplated retrenchments, stating that
should the offer be rejected, the employees would
be retrenched. The
offer was rejected and the employees were retrenched. The union
contended that the dismissals were automatically
unfair since the
true reason for dismissal was the employees’ refusal to be
placed in the redesigned jobs.
[29]
In granting
leave to appeal, the Constitutional Court noted that it was called on
to decide how s 187 (1) (c) was to be interpreted
in the context of
the LRA read as a whole, with regard to the section’s
structural integrity, as well as the jurisprudential
force of the
existing case law.
[7]
The Court
split evenly on the question of the test for causation, but the
following extract from the first judgment reflects a
common position
on the interpretation of s 187 (1) (c). In response to NUMSA’s
submission in that case, that the section
should be interpreted to
mean that dismissal was automatically unfair if employees are
dismissed for rejecting a demand that arises
from or as a result of
the employer’s operational requirements, the Court said the
following:
[67] A
careful analysis of the wording of the section, alongside the
explanatory memorandum, demonstrates that
the interpretation
contended for by NUMSA is incongruous with the section. What that
contention boils down to is that an employer
considering operational
requirements may never resort to retrenchments without contravening
the section. This, in my view, would
undermine an employer’s
right to fair labour practices as entrenched in s 23 (1) of the
Constitution, since it would take
away its right to resort to
retrenchments where operational requirements render them necessary.
The fallacy in NUMSA’s submission
can best be described in the
following scenario: employers are allowed to retrench for operational
requirements during a protected
strike, including a lock-out, but not
in a normal retrenchment situation where job losses could be
minimised or avoided. In my
assessment, the purpose of amending the
provision was to deal with the anomaly created by case law which had
the detrimental effect
of precluding employers from offering
alternative positions, short of dismissal, to employees, or from
offering any dismissed employee
reinstatement on amended terms and
conditions of employment following a restructuring process.
[68]
NUMSA’s submission is startling because it would perpetuate the
anomaly that the amendment sought to
cure. On that interpretation,
employers engaged in s 189 consultations would be wary of proposing
any changes to the terms and
conditions of employment which may, if
accepted, address their operational requirements and save jobs, for
fear of facing automatically
unfair dismissal claims if changes are
rejected and retrenchments follow. NUMSA’s construction would
render such consultations
nugatory and undermine the fundamental
purpose of s 189, which is to encourage engagement regarding viable
alternatives to retrenchment.’
[30]
Put another
way, it is not an automatically unfair dismissal for an employer to
dismiss an employee who refuses to accept an offer
of alternative
employment made in the context of a retrenchment process, where the
reason for dismissal is the employer’s
operational
requirements. As the Constitutional Court observed,
[8]
it does not necessarily follow that, simply because a proposed change
to terms and conditions of employment is refused by an employee
and a
dismissal ensues thereafter, the reason for dismissal is the refusal
to accept the proposed change.
[31]
The sole
enquiry under s 187 (1) (c) therefore is into the reason for
dismissal and specifically, whether the reason for dismissal
was a
refusal by the employee to accept a demand made by the employer
concerning terms and conditions of employment. On the approach
endorsed in the first judgment in the Constitutional Court, the
factual and legal causes of the dismissal ought to be determined
by
asking first whether the dismissal would have occurred had the
employees not refused the demand (a ‘but for’ test),
and
secondly, whether the refusal was the main, dominant or proximate
cause of the dismissal.
[9]
[32]
The
application of these principles assumes that a proper factual
foundation for the application of s 187 (1) (c) has been laid.
An
employee claiming to have been dismissed for a reason that is
automatically unfair is required to adduce some evidence to establish
at least on a
prima
facie
basis that a reason for dismissal that is automatically unfair is the
main for dismissal. In
Kroukam
v SA Airlink (Pty) Ltd
[10]
Davis AJA said:
‘
In my view, s 187
imposes an evidential burden upon the employee to produce evidence
which is sufficient to raise a credible possibility
that an
automatically unfair dismissal has taken place. It then behoves the
employer to prove to the contrary, that is to produce
evidence to
show that the reason for the dismissal did not fall within the
circumstance envisaged in s 187 for constituting an
automatically
unfair dismissal.’
[33]
The only witness to testify about the retrenchment process and its
effect on the merchandisers, Mashele, proffered no evidence
of any
demand made by CCBSA in respect of a matter of mutual interest or
otherwise, nor did he testify concerning any refusal of
any demand.
What he said was that after being advised that he had been selected
for retrenchment, he was advised of a number of
alternative
positions, including positions as a merchandiser and as a cleaner. He
refused the offers of alternative employment
on account of the drop
in remuneration that he would suffer. What is significant is that
nowhere in his evidence does Mashele make
reference to any ‘demand’
– the questions put to him in evidence-in-chief and his
responses all refer to ‘offers’
of alternative employment
and his reasons for declining those offers. Moreover, there is no
evidence by Mashele of any refusal
of any demand made by CCBSA as
being the true reason for his dismissal. The offers that he refused,
for his own reasons, were exactly
that – offers of alternative
employment to avoid the prospect of dismissal and not demands that
changes to terms and conditions
of employment be accepted on pain of
dismissal. For these reasons alone, the claim of an automatically
unfair dismissal was correctly
rejected, since the necessary factual
basis for the claim had not been established.
[34]
Even if the claim were to be determined by applying the test for
causation referred to above, the application of the ‘but
for’
test leads to the conclusion that the merchandisers would not have
been dismissed had they accepted the new, less favourable
terms that
attached to what CCBSA stated were ‘new posts’. With
regard to legal causation, it is not in dispute that
the
restructuring occurred in a context where CCBSA had initiated a
consultation process in terms of s 189A in the face of adverse
economic conditions, a process that was facilitated by a CCMA
commissioner. CCBSA had proposed to remedy its deteriorating
financial
position by revisiting the occupational structure and
redesigning job descriptions, with a view to ensure increased
competitiveness
and improved market share. During the course of the
facilitated consultation process, attempts were made to accommodate
the redundant
merchandisers elsewhere within CCBSA’s
occupational structure, and it was in this context that suitable
alternative employment
opportunities were identified. Affected
employees were afforded the opportunity to apply for appointment in
those roles. Among
the obligations on an employer that s 189 of the
LRA contemplates is precisely the identification of alternatives to
retrenchment,
specifically, offers of suitable alternative
employment. The evidence discloses that certain of CCBSA’s
employees affected
by the restructuring took advantage of the offers
made, and retained their employment, albeit on less favourable terms.
Others,
including the employees party to these proceedings, did not.
[35]
To the extent that the appellants contend that the restructuring was
a chimera and that there was no substantial difference between
the
posts occupied by the merchandisers and the new posts on offer, the
evidence of Phetha and Rajbally establishes CCBSA’s
case that
its constrained economic circumstances necessitated a transition to a
more efficient and cost-effective operational structure.
The
appellants did not seriously dispute the substantial evidence
proffered by CCBSA regarding the primary reasons that it advanced
for
the retrenchments – the poor economic climate, the introduction
of the sugar tax and the increase in the prices of raw
materials.
[36]
CCBSA’s
operational requirements were thus the main or dominant cause for the
dismissals of the merchandisers who did not
accept the offer of
appointment into the new posts. The affected merchandisers were not
dismissed by reason of any refusal to accept
any demand made by CCBSA
related to matters of mutual interest and specifically, not any
refusal by the affected employees to accept
any proposals to change
their terms and conditions of employment. CCBSA did no more than
notify displaced employees of available
opportunities within the
restructured organisation for them to consider, should they so wish,
and for which they could apply. The
offer of alternative positions
was made in the course of a facilitated consultation process, and in
the discharge of the obligation
on an employer in the course of that
process to engage with consulting parties on appropriate measures to
minimise the number of
dismissals.
[11]
[37]
The appellants’ claim of an automatically unfair dismissal thus
stands to be dismissed.
The
substantive fairness of the retrenchment
[38]
Section 188 of the LRA provides that a dismissal that is not
automatically unfair is unfair if the employer fails to prove that
the reason is a fair reason based on the employee’s conduct or
capacity, or on that employer’s operational requirements
and
that the dismissal was effected in accordance with a fair procedure.
[39]
In the case
of a dismissal based on an employer’s operational requirements,
there must necessarily be some objective link
between the dismissals
and some economic, technological or similar need on the part of the
employer. This Court has held that while
employers have the
prerogative to restructure their operations to maximise profits and
operational efficiency, the courts do not
have to accept the
employer’s proffered rationale at face value, nor do the courts
defer to employers. Earlier decisions
by this Court limited
intervention to those instances where the employer was unable to
demonstrate that the ultimate decision arrived
at by the employer was
not genuine, or was merely a sham, or put in a positive sense, that
the dismissal was operationally and
commercially justifiable on
rational grounds. On this approach, the Court’s function is not
to decide whether the employer’s
decision was the best decision
in the circumstances; rather, the Court’s enquiry is limited to
whether it was a rational
commercial or operational decision,
properly taking into account what emerged during the consultation
process.
[12]
A different
approach was later adopted in
BMD
Knitting Mills (Pty) Ltd v SA Clothing & Textile Workers
Union
[13]
where Davis AJA rejected the test for fairness predicated on the
approach to judicial review of administrative action and said
the
following:
[14]
‘
The word ‘fair’
introduces a comparator, that is a reason which must be fair to both
parties affected by the decision.
The starting-point is whether there
is a commercial rationale for the decision. But, rather than take
such justification at face
value, a court is entitled to examine
whether the particular decision has been taken in a manner which is
also fair to the affected
party, namely the employees to be
retrenched. To this extent the court is entitled to enquire as to
whether a reasonable basis
exists on which the decision, including
the proposed manner, to dismiss for operational requirements is
predicated. Viewed accordingly,
the test becomes less deferential and
the court is entitled to examine the content of the reasons given by
the employer, albeit
that the enquiry is not directed to whether the
reason offered is the one which would have been chosen by the court.
Fairness,
not correctness, is the mandated test.’
[40]
In
SA
Transport & Allied Workers Union v Old Mutual Life Insurance Co
SA Ltd
,
[15]
the Labour Court said the following:
[16]
‘…
[A]s
stated in
BMD Knitting Mills
, the court is entitled to look at
the content of the reasons given to ensure that they are neither
arbitrary nor capricious and
are indeed aimed at a commercially
acceptable objective. The second leg of the enquiry is directed at
the investigation of the
proportionality or rationality of the
process by which the commercial objectives are to be achieved. Thus,
there should be a rational
connection between the employer’s
scheme and its commercial objective, and through the consideration of
alternatives an attempt
should be made to find the alternative which
least harms the rights of the employees in order to be fair to them.
The alternative
eventually applied need not be the best means, or the
least drastic alternative. Rather it should fall within the range of
reasonable
options available in the circumstances allowing for the
employer’s margin of appreciation to the employer in the
exercise
of its managerial prerogative. The formulation of the test
in this way adds nothing new. It simply synthesises what has already
been said in
Disreto
and
BMD Knitting Mills
.’
[41]
To the extent that the appellants pursue the submission that there
was no general need to retrench and that the retrenchment was
substantively unfair for that reason, this is not a submission that
can be sustained by reference to the evidence. The economic
case for
restructuring and the consequent redundancies in particular
occupational posts was made in the s 189 (3) notice and elaborated
on
in detail in the evidence given by Leonhardt, Rajbally and Phetha.
Although certain of the English authorities to which the
Labour Court
referred in its judgment may reflect an overly deferential approach,
the Labour Court acknowledged that fairness,
rather than correctness,
was the applicable benchmark and that the Court was obliged to
determine the rationality between the retrenchment
and CCBSA’s
commercial objectives and in particular, whether the decision to
retrench was a reasonable option in all the
circumstances. This
approach cannot be faulted.
[42]
To the extent that the appellants challenge CCBSA’s decision to
abolish the existing positions of merchandisers and replace
them with
new posts, the differences in the posts and the rationale for the
restructuring was the subject of evidence by Rajbally,
who testified
that historically, the post was a ‘legacy’ post, one that
was continued to be done in-house in circumstances
where, in respect
of the bulk of the business operation, the function was undertaken by
a third party. There is nothing irrational
nor unreasonable in a
decision to the effect that considerations of business efficiency
would be better served by bench-marking
and aligning the remuneration
attached to the post with industry norms, and to restructure the
business organisation to give effect
to these considerations. In the
case of the pre-sellers, CCBSA’s analysis indicating that only
80 000 of its outlets produced
90% of its volume and revenue and that
the existing route-to-market structures were over-invested in 110 000
outlets that produced
minimal volume and revenue, was not contested.
There is nothing irrational or unreasonable in CCBSA’s decision
in these circumstances
to reduce the number of pre-sellers, employed
as they were in over-invested outlets that provided little by way of
return.
[43]
In short: CCBSA’s response to the crisis precipitated by the
introduction of the sugar tax, increased costs and a declining
market
was a rational response to arrest the economic decline that it
experienced, and its decision to restructure the commercial
division,
and in particular the structure within which merchandisers and
pre-sellers were engaged, is not unreasonable having regard
to its
operational requirements.
Selection
criteria
[44]
The
appellants submit that the retrenchment of the pre-sellers was unfair
on account of the failure by CCBSA to implement LIFO fairly
and
objectively. Specifically, the appellants contend that in respect of
the pre-sellers, there was no evidence presented by CCBSA’s
witnesses as to how they chose the pre-sellers to be retrenched and
that CCBSA did not show that it applied the selection criteria
fairly
and objectively. It will be recalled that the Labour Court found the
application of selection criteria unfair only in the
case of Mbatha,
who had testified that on CCBSA’s invitation, he had applied
unsuccessfully for alternative employment at
CCBSA’s Midrand
and Wadeville operations. The basis of the Labour Court’s
finding was that Mbatha ought to have been
afforded an opportunity to
respond to the assessment of his skills and experience and that in
the absence of that opportunity,
“
the
objective and fair selection criterion was not applied fairly to
Mbatha
”.
[17]
As recorded above, the Labour Court’s finding is not the
subject of challenge in these proceedings, nor is the limited remedy
of compensation afforded to him. The sole issue for determination is
what the appellants contend to be the unfair application of
the
selection criteria employed by CCBSA.
[45]
The pre-trial minute identified the fairness and objectivity of the
selection criteria as an issue in dispute. Phetha testified
that the
criterion of LIFO subject to skills was agreed upon during the
consultation process. In response to a question regarding
the
requirement that displaced employees attend interviews for
alternative roles, he explained that if the role in which appointment
was sought was the same role, no interview was required; if the role
was different or presented a promotional opportunity, the
affected
employee would attend an interview for the position. During the
course of the trial, it emerged that the criteria themselves
were not
in dispute; rather, what was placed in issue was the implementation
of those criteria. Mbatha testified that he was not
aware why he had
been selected for retrenchment from the group of pre-sellers employed
in Bedfordview, but conceded that he had
been advised of other
opportunities within CCBSA, particularly in Wadeville. He had applied
for a position there as a picking administrator.
He was called to an
interview and learned later that he had not been appointed on account
of the fact that his background was in
sales.
[46]
This is not
one of those case where an employer restructures its business and
then invites existing employees in a competitive process
to apply for
positions in the new structure, and where non-placement becomes the
criterion for retrenchment.
[18]
In those cases, this Court has held that the placement process and in
particular, decisions on placement, must meet the objective
standard
of fairness. In respect of the redundant pre-sellers this is a case,
no more and no less, where alternative employment
in the form of
opportunities within the organisation were drawn to the attention of
employees already selected for retrenchment
on the basis of agreed
criteria, and where they were free to seek appointment to those
positions. An employee seeking to claim
an unfair retrenchment in
these circumstances must at least plead the fact of the exclusion and
the grounds on which the employee
asserts that the exclusion was
unfair.
[47]
In the present instance, this was not the case pleaded by those
employees previously engaged as pre-sellers. Further, as the Labour
Court observed, only Mbatha, of the 14 affected pre-sellers, and for
reasons that were not apparent, gave evidence of his exclusion
from
the alternative employment for which he had applied. There was no
evidence before the Labour Court to the effect that Mbatha’s
circumstances were the same or similar to any of the other
pre-sellers selected for retrenchment. The Labour Court noted in
respect
of those employees that:
‘
It would engage in
a realm of speculation in respect of their respective case,
particularly in an instance where the applicants
alleged in the
pre-trial agreement that CCBSA’s insistence that the employees
be interviewed for alternative jobs introduced
a subjective criteria
(sic). Without knowing that the 13 applicants were interviewed or
not, how could the Court investigate the
alleged subjectivity?
[48]
The Labour Court was correct to refuse to extrapolate Mbatha’s
circumstances to those employees previously engaged as pre-sellers
and who failed to plead a case of unfair exclusion from alternative
employment, or give evidence at the trial.
[49]
In the result, the submissions advanced on appeal do not call into
question the correctness of the order made by the Labour Court,
and
the appeal thus stands to be dismissed.
Costs
[50]
Neither party sought an order for costs, and none will be granted.
The
order of this Court is as follows:
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
A van Niekerk JA
Sutherland
JA and Govindjee AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE APPELLANT:
Mr I. Haffejee, Haffejee Roskam Savage Attorneys Inc.
FOR THE RESPONDENT: Adv.
G. Engelbrecht SC
Instructed
by Moeletsi Attorneys Inc.
[1]
Act
89
of 1998
.
[2]
(CCT 192/22)
[2024] ZACC 3
(17 April 2024)
.
[3]
The successful applicant was Mr.
Raymond
Mbatha,
who was awarded compensation
equivalent
to four months’ remuneration
.
The order made in favour of Mr Mbatha does not form any part of
these proceedings; CCBSA does not
contest
the Labour Court’s finding in respect of the unfairness of Mr
Mbatha’s dismissal, nor is there any cross-appeal
against the
remedy of compensation.
[4]
Act
66 of 1995, as amended.
[5]
Judgment
of the court a
quo
at
para 49.
[6]
[2020]
ZACC 23
;
(2021)
42
ILJ
67 (CC) (Aveng Trident).
[7]
Aveng
Trident
at
para
36.
[8]
Aveng
Trident
at
para 69.
[9]
Aveng
Trident
at
para 76. The test, as it applied in the Labour Courts, has its roots
in
SA
Chemical Workers Union & others v Afrox Ltd
[1999] ZALAC 8
; (1999) 20
ILJ
1718
(LAC).
[10]
[2005]
ZALAC 5
;
[2005]
12 BLLR 1172
(LAC) at para 28.
[11]
Section
189 (2)(a)(ii).
[12]
SA
Clothing & Textile Workers Union & others v Discreto—A
Division of Trump & Springbok Holdings
[1999]
ZALAC 8
;
(1998)
19 ILJ 1451 (LAC)
.
[13]
(2001)
22 ILJ 2264 (LAC) (
BDM
).
For a discussion on the jurisprudential evolution of the test for
substantive fairness, see R le Roux ‘
Retrenchment
Law in South Africa’,
LexisNexis at pp 191-198.
[14]
BDM
at
para 19.
[15]
[2005]
ZALC 50
; (2005) 26
ILJ
293 (LC).
[16]
Ibid
at
para
85
.
[17]
Judgment
of the court
a
quo
at
para 59.
[18]
See,
for example,
MTN
Group Management Services (PRTY) Ltd v Mweli & another
(2021) 42
ILJ
775
(LAC);
Telkom
SA SOC v Van Staden & others
(2021)
42
ILJ
869 (LAC).
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