Case Law[2024] ZALAC 47South Africa
Johannesburg Road Agency v Makhari (JA146/21) [2024] ZALAC 47 (16 October 2024)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
16 October 2024
Headnotes
in February 2020 as a partial success, as the commissioner ordered that he be compensated but not reinstated. He challenged the arbitration award to the extent that no provision was made for reinstatement.
Judgment
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## Johannesburg Road Agency v Makhari (JA146/21) [2024] ZALAC 47 (16 October 2024)
Johannesburg Road Agency v Makhari (JA146/21) [2024] ZALAC 47 (16 October 2024)
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THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not Reportable
Case No: JA 146/21
In the matter between:
JOHANNESBURG
ROAD AGENCY
Appellant
and
LUFUNO
KENNEDY MAKHARI
Respondent
Heard: 27 March 2024
Delivered: 16 October
2024
Coram:
Molahlehi AJP, Savage ADJP and Jolwana AJA
JUDGMENT
MOLAHLEHI, AJP
Introduction
[1]
This appeal, which is with the leave
of this Court, is against the judgment of the Labour Court made on 15
September 2021. That
Court reviewed and set aside the arbitration
award made by the third respondent, the commissioner of the
Commission for Conciliation,
Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA). It
further substituted the commissioner's arbitration award with an
order reinstating the first
respondent (employee) retrospectively to
the date of his dismissal, “
less
the compensation awarded by the third respondent
”.
Background facts
[2]
The initial relationship between the
parties arose from the employee's placement as an IT field technician
with the appellant. The
contract between the appellant and the labour
broker ended in February 2015. Towards the end of their placement,
the employee and
his colleagues were informed by their manager, Mr
Hlapolosa, that the positions they occupied were soon to be made
permanent.
[3]
Following the above announcement,
the appellant embarked on a recruitment process facilitated by a
third party. The employee and
others were interviewed and appointed
to their respective positions. The employee signed his employment
contract on 22 May 2015
and commenced work on 8 June 2015. After
three months, the appellant required him to sign a new three-month
fixed-term contract.
The employee refused to sign the new contract.
Despite the concerted efforts by the appellant, he persisted with his
refusal to
sign the new fixed-term contract.
[4]
Having failed to persuade the
employee to sign the second contract, the appellant convened further
interviews for the same position
that the employee occupied. The
employee agreed to participate in the second interview, understanding
that this would resolve the
impasse about the alleged error in the
signed permanent contract.
[5]
While awaiting the outcome of the
second interview, the respondent received a letter informing him that
his contract expired on
30 September 2015 and that he should
immediately cease his duties with the appellant. The appellant
terminated the contract based
on the amended contract, which the
respondent refused to sign.
[6]
In addition to the provisions of the
amended contract, the appellant contended that the respondent was
aware that the contract was
for a fixed-term period because he and
his colleagues were informed during the interview that the contract
was for a fixed-term
period.
[7]
Aggrieved by the dismissal, the
employee referred an alleged unfair dismissal dispute to the CCMA.
[8]
The employee's dismissal dispute was
heard twice before the CCMA. In the first hearing, which took place
in March 2016, the employee
was unsuccessful and accordingly launched
a review application. He partially succeeded in the review in that
the Labour Court reviewed
and remitted the matter for a fresh hearing
before a different commissioner of the CCMA. He regarded the second
arbitration award
held in February 2020 as a partial success, as the
commissioner ordered that he be compensated but not reinstated. He
challenged
the arbitration award to the extent that no provision was
made for reinstatement.
The arbitration award
[9]
As indicated earlier, the
commissioner found the employee's dismissal unfair. He found that the
employee was permanently appointed
to the position he occupied before
his dismissal and directed that he be compensated for seven months,
consequent to the unfair
dismissal. Concerning the reinstatement
relief, he found that the post the employee occupied had been frozen,
and thus, according
to him, the reinstatement would be inappropriate.
In the Labour Court
[10]
The employee disagreed with the
commissioner’s decision not to grant reinstatement relief and
thus launched a review application
in the Labour Court. The first
issue that faced the Labour Court concerned the incomplete record
placed before it. It, however,
found that the absence of a complete
record was, for the reasons set out below, not a bar from proceeding
with the determination
of the review:
‘
4.1.
No issue was raised in the third
respondent’s opposing papers regarding the state of the record.
4.2. In
terms of Rule 7A (6) the applicant must furnish the Registrar and
each of the other parties with a copy
of the record or portion of the
record as the case may be…
4.3.
The issue to be determined by this court is limited to whether the
second respondent’s decision to
award a relief of compensation
is reviewable.
4.4.
There is no cross-review in the challenge of the finding that the
dismissal is unfair.’
[11]
The two reasons that influenced the
Labour Court in proceeding with the hearing despite the incomplete
record of the arbitration
proceedings were that such an approach
would not prejudice either of the parties and that expedition
dictated the finality of the
matter. It reasoned as follows in
paragraph [5] of its judgment:
‘
When
considering the above four factors, I find no reason to call for
further record as nothing is placed before this Court to suggest
any
prejudice is to be suffered by either party. Furthermore, this is an
ancient dispute that deserve(s) finality. I therefore
proceed with
determination of the matter with the record as it is.’
[12]
Concerning the merits, the Labour
Court noted that the respondent's pleadings were not a model of
clarity regarding the issue of
reinstatement. It noted that the
respondent did not “
express any
wish not to be reinstated
”. The
Labour Court criticised the approach adopted by the commissioner in
finding the freezing of the posts that the employee
occupied before
his dismissal was a hindrance to a reinstatement relief. It found
that the commissioner failed to apply his mind
to the issue of the
freezing of the position as he determined the issue based on a
misconception of the nature of the employee's
employment contract. He
treated the employee's employment contract concerning the remedy for
unfair dismissal to be arising from
a fixed-term contract when, in
fact, it was for an indefinite period. This is contrary to the
finding that the employee's employment
contract was indefinite.
[13]
Based on the above analysis, the
Labour Court correctly found that the commissioner’s decision
failed to satisfy the standard
required of an arbitration award. For
this reason, it found that the arbitration award should be reviewed,
set aside, and substituted
with a reinstatement order.
[14]
The perusal of the judgment clearly
shows that the Labour Court understood the employee's case as seeking
reinstatement. It correctly
adopted the general principle that labour
“
matters are not merely decided
based on their form but substance
”.
It found that the commissioner’s conclusion that the
reinstatement was inappropriate because the position had been
frozen
fell short of the reasonable standard required of the arbitration
award. For this reason, the Labour Court reviewed and
set aside the
arbitration award regarding the relief of reinstatement. It
substituted the commissioner's award with an order to
reinstate the
employee into his previous position.
The issues before this
Court
[15]
The appellant criticised the Labour Court’s
decision on various grounds in this appeal. The first ground of
appeal concerns
the Labour Court's approach in substituting the
commissioner's decision of non-reinstatement after finding that the
dismissal was
unfair and awarding only compensation.
[16]
The essence of the appellant's contention
concerning the above ground of appeal is that the Labour Court was
not entitled to interfere
with the commissioner's decision not to
reinstate the employee upon finding that the dismissal was unfair.
[17]
The second ground of appeal concerns the
allegation that the employee failed to state the grounds of review as
required by the provisions
of section 145 of the LRA. In this regard,
the appellant contended that the employee failed to provide the basis
for challenging
the arbitration award, particularly concerning the
commissioner's failure to reinstate him.
[18]
The third ground of appeal concerns the
complaint that the Labour Court failed to appreciate the consequence
of the employee's failure
to provide a complete record for the
review. In other words, the Labour Court should not have entertained
the review application
in the face of an incomplete record.
[19]
The fourth complaint is that the Labour
Court misconceived and ignored the relevance of the freezing of the
post by the appellant.
In other words, the freezing of the post
constituted a bar to the relief of reinstatement of the employee.
[20]
Before this Court, the appellant argued
that, in addition to freezing the post, the employee did not qualify
for the position as
advertised. This included the contention that the
employee, like all applicants, was informed by Mr Hlapolosa that the
employment
was for a fixed term of three months.
Discussion
[21]
The main issue in this appeal is whether
the Labour Court was correct in reviewing the commissioner's
decision, which limited the
employee's relief to compensation.
[22]
Although the appellant did not pursue the
issue of the incomplete record during the argument in this Court, it
seems appropriate
to deal with it as raised in the heads of argument
and do so before dealing with the main issue on appeal.
[23]
It
is trite that in a review application, an applicant has a duty to
ensure that a proper and complete record is placed before the
Labour
Court to assist it in exercising its powers under section 145 of the
Labour Relations Act
[1]
(LRA).
As a general rule, the Labour Court may, when faced with an
incomplete record, either dismiss the application or remit the
matter
to the CCMA or bargaining council for a hearing afresh. This means
the Labour Court has discretion, which it can exercise
when dealing
with a review application involving an incomplete record. In that
situation, it can either strike the matter off the
roll, dismiss it,
or direct that it be remitted to the CCMA or bargaining council for a
hearing afresh.
[24]
The essential question to answer in
determining whether to dismiss a review application for want of the
record depends on the missing
portion's materiality concerning the
dispute's determination. In other words, whether the Labour Court can
deal with the review
application in the absence of the missing
portion of the record depends on whether such missing portion is
material to the determination
of the dispute.
[25]
In
Palluci
Home Depot (Pty) Ltd v Herskow
itz
and Others
,
[2]
this Court held that:
‘
Where
all the facts required to make a determination on the disputed issues
are before a reviewing court in an unfair dismissal
or unfair labour
practice dispute such that the court 'is in as good a position' as
the administrative tribunal to make the determination,
I see no
reason why a reviewing court should not decide the matter itself.
Such an approach is consistent with the powers of the
Labour Court
under s 158 of the LRA, which are primarily directed at remedying a
wrong, and providing the effective and speedy
resolution of disputes.
The need for bringing a speedy finality to a labour dispute is thus
an important consideration in the determination
by a court of review
of whether to remit the matter to the CCMA for reconsideration to
substitute its own decision for that
of the commissioner.’
[26]
In the present matter, it is clear that the
Labour Court cannot be faulted for proceeding to determine the matter
despite the incomplete
record of the arbitration proceedings before
it. The approach the Labour Court adopted accords with established
case law, and in
that respect, this ground of appeal stands to fail.
[27]
I now deal with the main issue for determining this matter.
The issue is limited to
whether
the Labour
Court correctly reviewed and set aside the commissioner’s
arbitration award denying the employee the reinstatement
remedy.
[28]
It is trite that the issue of reinstatement is the primary
remedy in cases of unfair dismissal
and
unfair labour practice and is governed by the provisions of section
193 (2) of the LRA. The exceptions to the general rule that
reinstatement is the primary remedy in cases of unfair dismissal and
unfair labour practice are the following:
‘
(a)
the employee does not wish to be reinstated or employment.
(b)
the circumstances surrounding the dismissal are such that a continued
employment relationship
would be intolerable.
(c)
it is not reasonably impractical for the employer to reinstate or
re-employ the employee.
(d)
the dismissal is unfair only because the employer did not follow a
fair procedure.’
[29]
Section
193 (1) and (2) of the LRA
provides the CCMA, Bargaining Council or the Labour Court with the
discretion whether to order the reinstatement
or re-employment of an
employee who has been unfairly dismissed. The exercise of discretion
by either the commissioner of the CCMA
or the Bargaining Council not
to order reinstatement in an unfair dismissal or unfair labour
practice case may be challenged on
review before the Labour Court, as
was the case in the present matter.
[30]
In
considering
the review, the Labour Court will determine whether the commissioner,
in exercising his or her discretion, considered all the facts
and
circumstances of the case. It will, in essence, determine whether the
decision refusing reinstatement is judicially correct.
[3]
[31]
The
consideration
of whether reinstatement, reemployment or compensation in the context
of a finding of unfair dismissal is underpinned by fairness
to both
parties.
[4]
[32]
The
leading case on the approach to adopt when dealing with the issue of
the remedy in
cases
involving unfair dismissal is the Constitutional Court case of
Booi
v Amathole District Municipality and Others
.
[5]
The Constitutional Court, in dealing with the issue of reinstatement
in that case under section 193 of the LRA held that:
‘
It is plain from
this Court's jurisprudence that where a dismissal has been found to
be substantively unfair, "reinstatement
is the primary remedy"
and, therefore, "[a] court or arbitrator must order the employer
to reinstate or re-employ the
employee unless one or more of the
circumstances specified in section 193(2)(a) (d) exist, in which case
compensation may be ordered
depending on the nature of the
dismissal.”’
[6]
[33]
The
Constitutional
Court further
held that:
‘
It is accordingly
no surprise that the language, context and purpose of section
193(2)(b) dictate that the bar of intolerability
is a high one. The
term "intolerable" implies a level of unbearability, and
must surely require more than the suggestion
that the relationship is
difficult, fraught or even sour. This high threshold gives effect to
the purpose of the reinstatement
injunction in section 193(2), which
is to protect substantively unfairly dismissed employees by restoring
the employment contract
and putting them in the position they would
have been in but for the unfair dismissal. And my approach to section
193(2)(b) is
fortified by the jurisprudence of the Labour Appeal
Court and the Labour Court, both of which have taken the view that
the conclusion
of intolerability should not easily be reached, and
that the employer must provide weighty reasons, accompanied by
tangible evidence,
to show intolerability.’
[7]
[34]
The
burden is on the employer to provide the reason and evidence why the
primary remedy of reinstatement in an unfair dismissal
should not
apply. It is also
important
to note that the test for determining whether the remedy of
reinstatement is appropriate is objective and not subjective.
[8]
[35]
As indicated earlier, the appellant did not challenge the
finding that the employee's dismissal in the present matter was
unfair.
The commissioner denied the
employee
the primary remedy based on the contention that the post occupied by
the employee before his dismissal had been frozen.
[36]
In my view, the allegations that the appellant relied on in
seeking to oppose the
employee's reinstatement
were unsustainable. They are irrelevant to the outcome of the main
dispute –the unfair dismissal.
[37]
There is no evidence that the employee did not wish to be
reinstated in terms of section 193 (2) (a) of the LRA. Similarly,
there
is no evidence that any of the conditions in subsection (2)
finds application in this matter.
[38]
The appellant's case before the commissioner was that the
employee's
reinstatement
was inappropriate
because the nature of his employment contract was for a fixed term
which was subsequently frozen. This is unsustainable
because the
commissioner rejected the appellant's contention that the contract
was for three months. As alluded to earlier, the
appellant never
challenged the finding that the employment contract was for an
indefinite period. The well-established principle
of our law is that
a contract is valid and enforceable until rescinded or set aside.
[39]
I agree with the
Labour
Court that
the commissioner misconceived the nature of the employment contract
when determining the relief sought by the employee.
To emphasise, the
employment contract was based on an indefinite employment contract,
and thus, even on the appellant’s version,
the post could not
have been frozen for that reason.
[40]
Similarly, the contention that Mr Hlapolosa informed the
employee that the interview was
intended
to
find temporary workers does not assist the appellant's case. The
factor the commissioner ought to have considered in determining
the
remedy under section 193 of the LRA was that the dismissal arose from
an indefinite contract of employment between the
parties.
[41]
The other aspect of the appellant’s case is that the
indefinite employment contract was
concluded
on the mistaken belief that it was for a fixed term period. However,
it is unclear what the nature of the mistake was. Is it a
unilateral
mistake or a mutual mistake? Be that as it may, the issue before the
Labour Court was not about the enforceability or
invalidity of the
employment contract.
[42]
In light of the above, I agree with the Labour Court that
there are no practical reasons why the primary remedy provided in
section
193 of the LRA should not apply in the present matter. In
implementing the reinstatement, an account should be taken of the one
year and six months when the employee worked at another employer,
Aspen Pharmacare.
[43]
In
the
circumstances, the following
order is made:
Order
1. The appeal is
dismissed with no order as to costs.
2. The order of the
Labour Court dated 15 September 2021 is upheld.
3. In calculating
the backpay due to the respondent, the appellant is entitled to
exclude the period the respondent was employed
with Aspen Pharmacare
being, 20 June 2018 to 20 October 2020.
E
Molahlehi
Acting
Judge President of
The
Labour and Labour
Appeal
Courts
Savage
ADJP and Jolwana AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellant: Adv N Seme
Instructed
by: Nchupetsang Attorneys
For
the Respondent: Self represented
[1]
Act 66 of 1995, as amended.
See:
South
African Social Security Agency v Hartley and others
[2023] ZALCJHB 50; (2023) 44 ILJ 1334 (LC).
[2]
[2014] ZALAC 81
; (2015) 36 ILJ 1511 (LAC).
[3]
Kemp
t/a Centralmed v Rawlins
[2009] ZALAC 8
; (2009) 30 ILJ 2677 (LAC) at paras 55 - 56.
[4]
See:
Dunwell
Property Services CC v Sibande and Others
[2011] ZALAC 20
;
[2012] 2 BLLR 131
(LAC) at para 31.
[5]
[2021]
ZACC 36
, (2022) 43 ILJ 91 (CC).
[6]
Id
at para 38.
[7]
Id
at para 40.
[8]
Engen
Petroleum Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration and Others
[2007] ZALAC 5
; (2007) 28 ILJ 1507 (LAC) at para 84.
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