Case Law[2024] ZALAC 39South Africa
MEC Department of Education KZN and Another v Cumaio (DA06/23) [2024] ZALAC 39; [2024] 12 BLLR 1249 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 99 (LAC) (28 August 2024)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
28 August 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
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## MEC Department of Education KZN and Another v Cumaio (DA06/23) [2024] ZALAC 39; [2024] 12 BLLR 1249 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 99 (LAC) (28 August 2024)
MEC Department of Education KZN and Another v Cumaio (DA06/23) [2024] ZALAC 39; [2024] 12 BLLR 1249 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 99 (LAC) (28 August 2024)
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sino date 28 August 2024
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, DURBAN
Not Reportable
Case
no:
DA
06/2023
In
the matter between:
MEC:
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, KZN
First
Appellant
HOD:
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, KZN
Second
Appellant
and
HENDRICK
THEMBA CUMAIO
Respondent
Case
no:
DA
07/2023
In
the matter between:
HENDRICK
THEMBA CUMAIO
Appellant
and
MEC:
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, KZN
First
Respondent
HOD:
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION, KZN
Second
Respondent
Heard
:
23 August 2024
Delivered
:
28 August 2024
Coram:
Van Niekerk JA, Musi AJA and Jolwana AJA
JUDGMENT
VAN NIEKERK, JA
[1]
There are
two matters that serve before us. The first (DA 06/2023) is an
appeal, with the leave of this Court, against a judgment
of the
Labour Court (per Lawrence AJ) delivered on 10 June 2023. The Labour
Court was concerned with an application filed in terms
of s 158 (1)
(h) of the Labour Relations Act
[1]
(LRA) in which the respondent employee (employee) sought to review
and set aside a decision made by the Department of Education,
KwaZulu-Natal (Department) to refuse to reinstate him after invoking
the provisions of s 14 (1)(a) of the Employment of Educators
Act
[2]
(EEA). The Labour Court set aside the decision and reinstated the
employee with effect from the date of judgment. The second (DA
07/2023) is an appeal against the limitation of the Labour Court’s
order of reinstatement. The employee seeks reinstatement
with
retrospective effect from the date of his deemed dismissal. The
parties agreed that the matters should be consolidated and
an order
was granted to that effect.
[2]
The material facts are largely a matter of common cause. In February
1991, the employee was employed by the Department
as an educator.
During 2010, the employee was booked off work after a specialist
medical practitioner issued a medical certificate
in which the
employee was diagnosed with severe depressive episodes. Further
periods of absence ensued, with the consequence that
the employee’s
sick leave entitlement was exhausted in 2010. The employee applied
for temporary incapacity leave in terms
of the Department’s
policy on incapacity and ill-health retirement. Between 2010 to
December 2017, various periods of leave
were approved, and others
were not. In the interim, the parties were engaged in litigation in
the High Court, the Labour Court
and the bargaining council. That
litigation concerned, among other things, the Department’s
decision to freeze the employee’s
salary and alleged unfair
labour practices.
[3]
The events that gave rise to the proceedings in the Labour Court
occurred in the latter half of 2017. After a number of
medical
certificates issued during the preceding period, on 29 September
2017, the employee’s specialist psychiatrist issued
a
certificate in which the employee was declared unfit for work and in
need of long-term therapy. The specialist recommended sick
leave for
the period 1 October 2017 to 31 December 2017, with the reservation
that the “
onus of granting this sick leave is legally with
the patients (sic) employers
”.
[4]
After learning during an arbitration hearing in August 2017 that the
Department intended to invoke s 14(1)(a) of the EEA,
on 7 November
2017, the employee addressed a letter to the Department, headed
‘Request for gainful employment’. In
that letter, the
employee advised the Department that he would be reporting for work
on 14 November 2017, and sought a position
commensurate with his
medical condition. A similar letter was sent to the Department on 8
November 2017. On 14 November 2017, the
applicant reported for duty
at the district office. He submitted a letter to the Department dated
the same date in which he again
requested placement in a position
commensurate with his medical condition. The employee signed the
register on 14 November 2017
and waited throughout the day for a
response and assistance, but to no avail. The employee states that he
again reported at the
district office on 15 November 2017, when once
more, again no assistance was forthcoming. This is not disputed by
the Department.
It would appear that on that date, a Mr Mabinza, the
acting district director, notified legal services of the employee’s
attendance at the district office and was informed by legal services
that the employee was appointed to and holds a post at Curriculum
FET
and that he should report there. Legal services advised Mr Mabinza
that the employee should be informed accordingly. The employee
states
that he was never informed by Mr Mabinza that he should report to
Curriculum FET. This averment is disputed by the Department.
The
employee states that after reporting on 15 November 2017 and in the
absence of any response to his presence or his correspondence,
he
went home to wait for the Department to respond.
[5]
On 30 November 2017, the employee addressed a further letter to the
Department noting the Department’s ‘deafening
silence’
and advising that he intended to take medical leave in terms of the
certificate issued by his specialist psychiatrist
on 29 September
2017. It will be recalled that the certificate declared the employee
unfit for work and recommended sick leave
until 31 December 2017. The
employee concluded by saying: “
I sincerely hope that this
rigmarole will have been solved by the time the Department re-opens
in January 2018
”.
[6]
Further medical certificates were issued by the same specialist
psychiatrist in respect of the periods following 1 January
2018.
[7]
On 12 March 2018, the Department issued a letter to the employee
recording his deemed discharge in terms of s 14 (1)(a)
of the EEA,
with effect from 29 November 2017. The letter reads as follows:
‘
It is noted that,
notwithstanding attempts to locate your whereabouts, you have
continued to be absent from duty for a period of
fourteen (14) days
without furnishing a valid application for leave. Your absence since
15/11/2017 is without permission of the
employer, and, consequently
you are deemed to be discharged from service on account of misconduct
with the effect from 29/11/2017.
Your discharge from service is in
terms of section 14 (1)(a) in terms of the
Employment of Educators
Act 76 of 1998
…
As termination of service
is by operation of law in terms of 14(1)(a) of the mentioned Act,
such termination is not dependant (sic)
on the service of this
letter.’
[8]
The same letter advised the employee of his right to apply for
reinstatement, on good cause shown. The employee states
that he was
unaware of the letter until he became aware of it during a later
arbitration hearing involving the same parties. On
13 November 2018,
the employee’s attorney made written submissions on the
employee’s behalf, seeking his reinstatement.
In those
submissions, it was contended that none of the facts necessary to
trigger
s 14
(1)(a) were present, and that the Department was at all
times aware of the employee’s medical incapacity and also his
whereabouts
and contact details. No response was received from the
Department and the employee’s attorney addressed follow-up
correspondence
to the Department on 30 November 2019, 23 January
2019, 13 February 2019, and 22 February 2019. There was no reply to
any of these
letters.
[9]
In the absence of a response to his submissions on reinstatement, on
26 April 2019, the employee filed an application
in terms of
s 158
(1)(h) of the LRA in the Labour Court. The employee sought a
declaratory order to the effect that the jurisdictional requirements
necessary to trigger
s 14(1)(a)
were not present, that the employee’s
deemed dismissal was thus null and void, and that the Department’s
decision dated
15 March 2019 to refuse the application for
reinstatement be reviewed and set aside. The employee put the
Department on terms to
respond to his representations by 15 March
2019, failing which he would consider the Department to have taken a
decision on that
date to refuse to reinstate him.
[10]
The
Department responded to the employee’s submissions only on 21
May 2019, after the review application had been filed. The
response
recorded that the employee had failed to provide a legitimate and
reasonable explanation for his absence and that the
application for
reinstatement had been declined. The employee avers that he did not
receive the letter; it was only when the Department
filed the record
in the review application that he became aware that his application
for reinstatement had been dismissed on 21
May 2019. The employee
filed a supplementary affidavit as provided by
Rule 7A
[3]
in which he again disputed that he had been absent from work without
permission as contemplated by
s 14(1)(a)
, contended that the
Department had failed to respond to an application for temporary
incapacity leave, and averred that the Department
was aware of his
incapacity and his whereabouts.
[11]
In the answering affidavit filed by the Department, the deponent
states that for the period 15 to 28 November 2017, the
Department’s
“
cause of action was complete
” in that during that
period, the employee had not submitted a valid leave application and
that his continual absence from
duty for 14 consecutive days was
without the Department’s permission. The Department accordingly
denied that there were no
jurisdictional facts present to invoke the
deeming provisions of
s 14
of the EEA. Further, the Department
averred that the employee’s deemed dismissal was rationally
connected to the purpose
underlying the Policy and Procedure on
Incapacity Leave and Ill Health Retirement (PILLIR), being a
framework for the management
of incapacity and ill-health leave.
Finally, the Department averred that after his failure to report for
work for 14 consecutive
days, a continued employment relationship
with the employee had become intolerable.
[12]
Referring
to the judgment of this Court in
Member
of the Executive Council for the Department of Education Western Cape
Government v Jethro N.O & another
[4]
(
Jethro
)
,
the Labour Court held that, having regard to the reasons provided by
the Department, the decision not to reinstate the employee
had not
been properly and rationally taken. Specifically, the Department knew
full well where the employee was at the relevant
time, and
expediently and “
without
any rational application of the mind
”
refused his application to avoid an onerous misconduct or incapacity
process. Further, there was no reason why the employee
should not be
reinstated. In the result, the Labour Court upheld the review
application, and without giving reasons for the limitation,
reinstated the employee with effect from the date of the judgment,
with no order as to costs.
[13]
The Department appeals against the judgment on a number of grounds,
amongst others, that the Labour Court erred by overlooking
the fact
that the employee had been away from service for a lengthy period on
account of ill health, and that he could thus not
be assumed to have
fully recovered without him advising the Department that he was ready
to commence duty with immediate effect;
that the court erred by
ignoring the fact that the employee had already submitted a medical
certificate seeking a further there
months sick leave from 1 October
to 31 December 2017; that the court erred in finding that
s 14
(1) of
the EEA was a drastic measure; and that the order of reinstatement
ought not to have been granted given that the employee
was not ready
to assume duty and that other measures, including compensation, were
available in the event that the employee’s
discharge was found
to be unlawful. The appeal in DA07/2023, as indicated above, is an
appeal against the limitation of the order
of retrospectivity to the
date of judgment, and also against the Labour Court’s refusal
to grant costs in the employee’s
favour.
[14]
Three days
prior to the hearing, on 21 August 2024, the Constitutional Court
delivered judgment in
Mamasedi
v Chief of the South African Defence Force and Others
[5]
(
Mamasedi
).
In that matter, a member of the regular force had been absent from
duty from 29 November 2011 to 3 January 2012, a period of
more than
30 calendar days. Section 59(3) of the Defence Act
[6]
provides for a deemed dismissal in the event of a period of absence
for a period exceeding 30 days. At issue was whether ‘days’
should be interpreted as calendar days or days on which the member
was obliged to be on official duty. The Constitutional Court
unanimously held that for the purposes of calculating the 30-day
period, only the days on which the member was obliged to be on
duty
should be taken into account. Since the period of absence without
permission was less than 30 days so calculated, s 59 (3)
was never
triggered. The Court considered that in these circumstances, the
order of reinstatement sought by the member was incompetent
since
there was never any dismissal or discharge. The order granted was
accordingly one in terms of which it was declared that
for the period
after the date of his purported discharge, the member had remained a
member of the SANDF.
[15]
In the present instance, the calculation of the 14-day period
referred to in s 14(1)(a) was thus to be done by accounting
not for
calendar days, but only for those days on which the employee was
obliged to be at work. It follows that the 14-day period
on which the
Department relied to invoke s 14(1)(a) had not yet expired on 29
November 2017, calculated as it was as calendar days.
In short, the
Department’s calculation of the
dies
was incorrect. 14
consecutive days from 15 November 2017, correctly calculated, had not
expired by 29 November 2017 and the Department’s
reliance on s
14(1)(a) was thus premature.
[16]
Ms Khuzwayo SC, who appeared for the Department, sought to
distinguish
Mamasedi
. She submitted that in
Mamasedi
,
the member concerned had reported for duty the day after the expiry
of the 30 calendar day period of absence on which the SANDF
had
relied as a basis to trigger his deemed discharge. In the present
instance, so the submission went, the 14-day period referred
to in
the letter addressed to the employee on 12 March 2018 was an
incorrect reflection of any period of absence by the employee,
but
the deemed discharge remained effective since the employee had been
intentionally and continuously absent from work, without
permission,
beyond that period. There is no merit in this submission. First, the
Department’s pleaded case on review was
that it was the
employee’s absence for the period 14 to 29 November 2017 that
triggered its application of s 14. The letter
advising the employee
of his deemed discharge says as much: “
Your absence since 15
November 2017 is without permission of the employer and
consequently
you are deemed to be discharged on account of misconduct
….”
(own emphasis). It was specifically the employee’s alleged
absence without permission specifically for the
period 14 to 29
November 2017 that formed the basis of the decision to invoke s 14
(1)(a). Indeed, in the answering affidavit filed
on behalf of the
Department, the deponent states the following:
‘
I further wish to
add that for the period between the 15
th
and the 28
th
of November 2017, that the Department’s “cause of action”
was complete in that during the period under discussion,
the
Applicant had not submitted a valid leave application as is required
under PILLIR and that, therefore, his continued absence
from duty for
14 consecutive days was without the Department’s permission.’
[17]
It is not open to the Department now to rely on any alleged absence
from work in respect of any other period on which
it did not rely to
justify the employee’s deemed discharge. The Department is
bound by the confines of the pleadings that
served before the Labour
Court, and it is not open to the Department at this late stage to
seek to make out a new case on the facts.
Secondly, on the facts, it
is far from clear that the employee’s absence from work after
he reported for duty on 14 and 15
November 2017 was without
permission. The employee made clear in his letter dated 14 November
2017 that he was tendering his services
and awaited placement. On 30
November 2017, in the absence of any response from the Department,
the employee recorded that he remained
on medical leave, and stated
that “
I have no option but to take the rest of the leave
”.
That period of leave extended from 1 October to 30 November 2017.
[18]
In any
event, the Department failed correctly to apply the principles that
regulate a deemed discharge in terms of s 14 (1) (a)
of the EEA and
other, similar legislation. In
Jethro
,
this Court stated that s 14 was to be used sparingly only in cases
where the employer is unaware of the whereabouts of an absent
employee or if the employee has evinced a clear intention not to
return to work.
[7]
In the
present instance, the Department was at all material times fully
apprised of the employee’s whereabouts. Indeed, the
Department
was engaged in litigation with the employee in the High Court, the
Labour Court and the bargaining council. There is
no reason to
interfere with the Labour Court’s decision to review and set
aside the refusal to reinstate the employee. As
in
Jethro
,
the employee’s whereabouts were known, there was no suggestion
that he had absconded, and he was contactable.
[19]
Turning then to the appeal in DA07/2023 against the limited remedy
granted by the Labour Court, the Court furnished no
reasons for
reinstating the employee only from the date of judgment. But as the
Constitutional Court pointed out in
Mamasedi
, in a case where
an employee is deemed discharged without any lawful basis, the remedy
is not reinstatement, since there was no
dismissal or discharge in
the first place. The appropriate order in these circumstances is one
declaring that the employee has
been and continues to be an employee.
In the present instance, because s 14(1)(a) was never triggered, the
employee has been and
continues to be an employee of the Department.
He is entitled to an order to that effect. To the extent that the
Department submits
that the employment relationship has broken down
and that an award of compensation is appropriate, the employee does
not claim
an unfair dismissal. Reliance of s 193 of the LRA, to which
we were referred, is misplaced. The employee challenged the refusal
to reinstate him by way of a legality review. He succeeded because
the requirements necessary to trigger his deemed dismissal were
not
present. In the absence of a deemed discharge, the decision to refuse
to reinstate him was a nullity. In these circumstances,
fairness does
not enter the picture and s 193 finds no application.
[20]
The granting of an order for costs in the Labour Court and this Court
are regulated by s 162 and s 179 of the LRA respectively.
Both
sections provide that orders for costs may be made according to the
requirements of the law and fairness. This means that
costs do not
ordinarily follow the result and that some basis, rooted in law and
fairness, must exist for costs to be ordered.
The Labour Court’s
judgment is silent on the issue of costs. In the present instance, it
is necessary to take into account,
both in respect of the proceedings
before the Labour Court and before us, that since the inception of
this dispute, the employee
has attempted to seek an amicable
resolution to his employment situation,
inter alia
by writing
letters explaining his circumstances, requesting gainful employment
and tendering his services. These were met by the
‘deafening
silence’ to which the employee referred, a silence that is
inexplicable. As early as 13 November 2018, the
Department was
advised that the requirements to trigger s 14(1)(a) were absent and
the employee’s reinstatement was demanded
on that basis. The
Department refused to comply with that demand, preferring to oppose
the review application and file this appeal
after the Labour Court’s
judgment in favour of the employee. Even at the stage of appeal, the
Department chose to vigorously
proceed with the appeal despite the
judgment in
Mamasedi
being drawn to the parties’
attention before the hearing. The employee is an individual who has
been forced to expend his
own resources in his quest for justice.
Finally, the employee was substantially successful in the proceedings
before the Labour
Court, and he has substantially succeeded in this
Court in his challenge to the limitation imposed by the Labour
Court’s
order. Finally, the Department’s failure to
properly manage the employee’s ill health and its impact on his
employment,
the unanswered correspondence and the failure properly to
ensure that important correspondence such as the letter of discharge
and the refusal of the application for reinstatement actually reached
the employee, demonstrate a manifest failure of efficient
and
effective human resource management. For all these reasons, the
requirements of the law and fairness are best satisfied by
an order
for costs, both in respect of the proceedings in the Labour Court and
in these proceedings.
[21]
In the result, the following order is made:
Order
1. The appeal in DA
06/2023 is dismissed and the appeal in DA 07/2023 is upheld, to the
extent that the order of the Labour
Court is varied to read:
‘
1. The First
and Second Respondents’ decision not to reinstate the
Applicant, made on 22 May 2019 in terms of
s 14(2)
of the
Employment
of Educators Act, 76 of 1998
, is reviewed and set aside, with costs.
2. It is declared
that for the period from 14 November 2017 to date, the Applicant has
been and continues to be an employee
of the Department of Education,
KwaZulu-Natal.’
2. The Respondent
in DA 06/2023 must report for work within seven calendar days of the
date of this order.
3. The Appellants
in DA 06/2023 are ordered to take all steps necessary to secure that
the Respondent is paid his remuneration
for the period 14 November
2017 to the date of handing down this judgment, within 30 calendar
days of that date.
4. The Appellants
in DA 06/2023 are ordered to pay the costs of the appeals in both DA
06/2023 and DA 07/2023.
A van Niekerk JA
Musi AJA
et
Jolwana AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Adv N Kuzwayo SC
Instructed by State
Attorney
FOR THE RESPONDENT: A
Naidoo
Instructed by Angeni
Naidoo Law Firm
[1]
Act
66 of 1995, as amended.
[2]
Act
76
of 1998
.
[3]
Rule
7A of the Rules for the Conduct of Proceedings in the Labour Court:
GN 1665 of 1996 (repealed, effective 17 July 2024).
[4]
[2019] ZALAC 38
; [2019] 1
0
BLLR 1110 (LAC)
.
[5]
(CCT 359/22)
[2024] ZACC 17
(21 August 2024)
.
[6]
Act
42 of 2002.
[7]
Jethro
at
para 34.
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