Case Law[2024] ZALAC 58South Africa
Transnet Freight Rail v Mashaba (DA17/2023) [2024] ZALAC 58; (2025) 46 ILJ 1139 (LAC) (18 November 2024)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
18 November 2024
Headnotes
the consequence of the reviewing and setting aside of an award issued in terms of s 188A is the restoration of the status quo ante and specifically, that the dismissed employee is placed back in employment, as if the dismissal had never occurred. [8] The appellant contends, among other things, that the Labour Court erred in concluding that a direction issued by a Judge in Chambers in terms of clause 11.2.4 of the Practice Manual served as an order setting aside the award, that the setting aside of the arbitrator’s ruling had the automatic consequence that the dismissed employee is automatically reinstated.
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## Transnet Freight Rail v Mashaba (DA17/2023) [2024] ZALAC 58; (2025) 46 ILJ 1139 (LAC) (18 November 2024)
Transnet Freight Rail v Mashaba (DA17/2023) [2024] ZALAC 58; (2025) 46 ILJ 1139 (LAC) (18 November 2024)
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sino date 18 November 2024
THE
LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, DURBAN
Not Reportable
case
No:
DA 17/2023
In
the matter between:
TRANSNET
FREIGHT RAIL
Appellant
And
BENNETT
MASHABA
First
Respondent
COMMISSIONER
HILDA GROBLER
N.O.
Second
Respondent
TRANSNET
BARGAINING COUNCIL
Third
Respondent
Heard
:
12 November 2024
Delivered
:
18 November 2024
Coram:
Savage ADJP, Van Niekerk JA
et
Govindjee AJA
JUDGMENT
VAN NIEKERK, JA
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal, with the leave of the
Labour Court, against the whole of the judgment delivered on 11 July
2023, when the Court
ordered that the appellant pay the first
respondent the amount of R1 992 608.08, being arrear salary claimed
by the first respondent.
Factual background
[2]
The first respondent was employed by the
appellant as a senior manager: integrated resource scheduling. On 8
August 2019, the first
respondent was suspended and charged with
three counts of sexual harassment and two counts of intimidation and
bullying. After
a s 188A enquiry conducted by the second respondent
(arbitrator) and a comprehensive ruling that extended over 60 pages,
the first
respondent was found guilty on all counts and dismissed.
[3]
On 3 November 2020, the first respondent
filed an application to review and set aside the arbitrator’s
ruling. In the course
of preparing the record for filing, it became
apparent that the record was incomplete. An attempt to reconstruct
the record was
unsuccessful. The first respondent then requested the
Judge President to issue a direction in terms of clause 11.2.4 of the
then
applicable Practice Manual. The matter was allocated to a Judge
of the Labour Court who on 30 November 2021, issued the following
direction:
‘
The
First Respondent [appellant] must indicate by 10 December 2021
whether it objects to the dispute being remitted back to the
third
respondent for a hearing
de novo
,
and if so, why, failing which the matter will be so remitted.’
[4]
It is common cause that the appellant did
not file any objection in response to the direction and that there is
no record of any
order setting aside the award under review, nor is
there any order of the Labour Court remitting the matter to the third
respondent
(bargaining council) for rehearing.
[5]
On 13 December 2021, the first respondent’s
attorneys enquired whether any objections had been filed, and advised
that the
first respondent would report for work the next day. On the
same day, the appellant’s attorney responded by advising that
the first respondent had been suspended at the time of the hearing
and that the suspension remained in place pending arrangements
for a
fresh hearing. Later on the same day, the first respondent’s
attorney sought payment of the first respondent’s
arrear salary
from the date of dismissal to the date of the tender of his services,
on the basis that the first respondent’s
dismissal “
has
been vacated by order of court”
.
Labour Court
[6]
In the absence of payment as demanded, the
first respondent filed an application in which he sought a
declaratory order in terms
of which he was entitled to back pay “
from
the date of dismissal”
. The
application was heard on 8 March 2023 and judgment delivered on 11
July 2023. In essence, the Labour Court found that the
dispute had
been remitted to the bargaining council with the consequence that the
first respondent’s dismissal fell away
and that he was thus
entitled to payment for the period between the date of his dismissal
and the date on which he tendered his
services. The Court did not
order that the first respondent continue to be paid until the
de
novo
hearing had been completed.
[7]
The
Labour Court reasoned that the direction had served as an order
setting aside the arbitration award, with the consequence that
the
award revived the first respondent’s contract of employment,
thus entitling him to the back-dated remuneration that he
claimed.
The Court relied primarily on
Sampson
v SA Post Office SOC Ltd
[1]
where it was held that the consequence of the reviewing and setting
aside of an award issued in terms of s 188A is the restoration
of the
status
quo ante
and specifically, that the dismissed employee is placed back in
employment, as if the dismissal had never occurred.
[8]
The appellant contends, among other things,
that the Labour Court erred in concluding that a direction issued by
a Judge in Chambers
in terms of clause 11.2.4 of the Practice Manual
served as an order setting aside the award, that the setting aside of
the arbitrator’s
ruling had the automatic consequence that the
dismissed employee is automatically reinstated.
Analysis
[9]
I deal first with the Labour Court’s
conclusion that a directive issued in terms of clause 11.2.4 of the
Practice Manual served
as an order setting aside the arbitrator’s
ruling. Clause 11.2.4 reads as follows:
‘
If
the record of the proceedings under review has been lost, or if the
recording of the proceeding is of such poor quality to the
extent
that the tapes are inaudible, the applicant may approach the Judge
President for a direction on the further conduct of the
review
application. The Judge President will allocate the file to a judge
for a direction, which may include the remission of the
matter to the
person or body whose award or ruling is under review, or where
practicable, a direction to the effect that the relevant
parts of the
record be reconstructed.’
[10]
The wording of clause 11.2.4 contemplates
of the issuing of a ‘direction’ rather than an order.
There is nothing in
the LRA or the Rules that equates a direction
with an order of Court. This is not to say that a Judge allocated the
task of issuing
a direction is precluded from making an order of
Court in appropriate circumstances, but that is not what occurred in
the present
instance. The Judge did not issue an order. The lapse of
the 10-day period afforded the appellant to object to the matter
being
remitted to the bargaining council did not, without more, have
the effect of either setting aside the award under review or
remitting
it for rehearing.
[11]
The
respondent submits that the direction, signed as it was by the
registrar on behalf of a Judge, was tantamount to an order of
the
Court and had the effect of reviewing and setting aside the
arbitrator’s award. Put another way, the first respondent
contends that the direction was dispositive of the review
application. There is no merit in this submission. Remission is a
consequential
order, dependent on a setting aside of the award sought
to be reviewed. In
Police
and Prisons Civil Rights Union obo Cindi v General Public Service
Sector Bargaining Council and others
[2]
the Labour Court held that in the case of a ‘limping record’,
(i.e. an incomplete record not capable of reconstruction),
it was not
open to the Court simply to remit the dispute for a
de
novo
hearing, in the absence of an order by the Court that the award be
reviewed and set aside. To the extent that clause 11.2.4 of
the
Practice Manual contemplates the referral of a lost or inaudible
record to a Judge for direction, the Court held that a direction
was
not a court order and that the award remained intact unless and until
reviewed and set aside by an order of Court. This reasoning
is
compelling.
Not
every decision or ruling of a court during the progress of a suit
amounts to a judgment or order.
[3]
The Practice Manual makes clear that its intention is to promote
access to justice, efficiency and consistency in proceedings before
the Labour Court. It also makes clear that the Practice Manual is not
a substitute for the Rules
[4]
and that a directive issued by a Judge is not binding on other
Judges.
[5]
By definition
therefore, a practice direction is subordinate to any relevant
statute, the common law and the Rules. A direction
has as its purpose
the promotion of administrative efficiency; it is not a mechanism to
be utilised to draw substantive conclusions
of fact or law, nor is it
a substitute for an order of the Court. A direction cannot be applied
to restrict or undermine the provisions
of any applicable
legislation, the Rules or the common law.
[6]
A court’s inherent power in terms of s 173 of the Constitution
to protect and regulate its process (among other things, through
practice directives) does not include a power to effect changes to
legislation or the Constitution.
[12]
Further,
s 188A (8) provides that a ruling by an arbitrator issued under the
section has the same status as an arbitration award,
and the
provisions of s 143 to 146 of the LRA apply, with the changes
required, to any ruling. That being so, a ruling issued in
a s 188A
inquiry constitutes administrative action.
[7]
An administrative decision has legal effect until it is set aside. S
145 of the LRA, which is directly applicable to a s 188A ruling,
empowers the Labour Court to review and set aside an award, on
grounds founded in the constitutional right to lawful and fair
administrative action. What s 145 contemplates is that an award is
set aside only by an order of Court. As I have indicated, remittal
is
a consequential remedy within the discretion of the review court that
follows the setting aside of an award – there can
be no
remittal without the award being reviewed and set aside. Support for
this view is apparent in the text of the Practice Manual
itself.
Clause 11.2.4 makes provision for a direction to be requested “
on
the further conduct of the review application”
.
By definition, a direction issued in these circumstances is
process-related and can have no substantive consequence for the
underlying
review application. For the reasons reflected above, such
a consequence can only be effected by an order of the Court.
[13]
To the extent that the Labour Court relied
on
Sampson
to
support the conclusion that a direction remitting a matter for
rehearing had the consequence of restoring the
status
quo,
that case concerned a review
application that served before the Labour Court by way of an
application for default judgment, on the
merits of the application.
The Court granted an order that the award be reviewed, set aside and
remitted to the dispute resolution
agency concerned for rehearing
before a different arbitrator. The remittal of the matter for a
de
novo
hearing was thus the subject of an
order of the Court, made after due consideration of all of the facts,
arguments and the law.
Sampson
can thus be distinguished on the basis that the finding that the
contract of employment had been revived was predicated on the
existence of an order of Court reviewing and setting aside the award
in question.
[14]
The Rules of the Labour Court that came
into operation on July 2024 repeal the Practice Manual. The new Rule
37 regulates review
applications and specifically provides, as did
clause 11.2.4 of the Practice Manual, that if in a review
application, the record
is lost or of such poor quality so as to
compromise the integrity of the record, the applicant may approach
the Judge president
for a direction on the further conduct of the
review application. Rule 37 (27) (c) provides that on allocation to a
Judge for direction,
the Judge must meet with the parties to discuss,
among other things, the remittal of the matter to the person or body
whose award
is sought to be reviewed. A meeting held in terms of this
Rule contemplates that the parties will make representations on the
further
conduct of the review application, which may include consent
to an order that the award be reviewed and set aside on the basis
that no record can be placed before the review court in circumstances
where it is not possible for the Court to determine the application
in the absence of a record. It should be recalled that s 145 (4) of
the LRA empowers the Court, when it sets aside an award, either
to
determine the dispute on terms that are appropriate or to make any
order than it considers appropriate regarding the procedures
to be
followed to determine the dispute. In matters that concern the review
of rulings issued in terms of s 188A, where collateral
matters
regarding the employment status of a dismissed employee may arise,
sufficient flexibility is afforded to the presiding
Judge to tailor
an order of the Court to address the consequences that may flow from
the arbitrator’s ruling being set aside.
[15]
In sum: the direction on which the first
respondent relied in support of his claim for remuneration does no
more than advise the
parties that the appellant was to indicate
within a defined period whether it objected to the matter being
remitted for a
de novo
hearing. The direction does not in itself have the legal effect of an
order of the Court in terms of which the arbitrator’s
ruling is
reviewed and set aside. No such order was granted. It follows that in
these circumstances, the second respondent’s
ruling remains
extant. There is thus no basis for any revival of the first
respondent’s contract of employment, or any claim
for
retrospective payment of remuneration. The Labour Court accordingly
erred in coming to the finding that the first respondent’s
contract had been revived consequent of the direction issued in
Chambers and that the first respondent was entitled to the
remuneration
he claimed. The appeal accordingly stands to be upheld.
Costs
[16]
Neither party pursued the issue of costs
but for the costs of the appellant’s application for the late
filing of the notice
of appeal and the reinstatement of the appeal
consequent on it having lapsed. Mr Mhlanga, who appeared for the
first respondent,
commendably took the view that although initially
opposed, the matter was of sufficient importance for the first
respondent not
to pursue his opposition to either application. In
these circumstances, the appellant ought to bear the costs of the
applications
to reinstate the appeal and condone the late filing of
the notice of appeal.
[17]
I make the following order:
Order
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The Labour Court’s order is
substituted by the following:
“
The
application is dismissed”.
van Niekerk JA
Savage ADJP
et
Govindjee AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE
APPELLANT:
Mr P Maserumule, Maserumule Attorneys
FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT: Mr S Mhlanga, Mhlanga Inc.
[1]
(2017) 38
ILJ
2368 (LC)
;
[2017] ZALCJHB 145
.
[2]
[2021] 10 BLLR 1059
(LC)
;
[2021] 10 BLLR 1059
(LC)
.
[3]
Constantia
Insurance Co Ltd v Nohamba
1986 (3) SA 27
(A);
[1986] ZASCA 43
, citing
Dickinson
and Another v Fischer’s Executors
1914 AD 424
at 427.
[4]
See
clause 1.2 of the Practice Manual and also
Samuels
v Old Mutual Bank
(2017)
38
ILJ
1790
(LAC) where this Court noted that ‘
The
practice manual is not intended to change or amend the existing
Rules of the Labour Court but to enforce and give effect to
the
Rules, the Labour Relations Act as well as various decisions of the
courts on the matters addressed in the practice manual
and the
Rules’
(at para 15).
[5]
See
clause 2.1 of the Practice Manual.
[6]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions (Ex Parte Application)
[2018]
ZASCA 86
;
2018 (2) SACR 176
(SCA) at para 31.
[7]
Sidumo
& another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd & others
[2007]
12 BLLR 1097
(CC);
2008 (2) SA 24
(CC).
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