Case Law[2024] ZALAC 60South Africa
Tshabalala v Moqhaka Local Municipality and Another (JA88/2024) [2024] ZALAC 60; [2025] 2 BLLR 189 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 590 (LAC) (21 November 2024)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
21 November 2024
Headnotes
– Local Government: Disciplinary Regulations for Senior Managers, 2010, reg 6.
Judgment
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## Tshabalala v Moqhaka Local Municipality and Another (JA88/2024) [2024] ZALAC 60; [2025] 2 BLLR 189 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 590 (LAC) (21 November 2024)
Tshabalala v Moqhaka Local Municipality and Another (JA88/2024) [2024] ZALAC 60; [2025] 2 BLLR 189 (LAC); (2025) 46 ILJ 590 (LAC) (21 November 2024)
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sino date 21 November 2024
FLYNOTES:
LABOUR
– Suspension –
Senior
municipal employees
–
Interpretation
of when a disciplinary hearing commences – Disciplinary
hearing did not commence within three months
of date of suspension
– Suspension thus lapsed – Appropriate orders ought
properly to be made against appellant’s
employer –
Councillor is municipality’s executive mayor –
Sufficient that declaratory order sought and
consequential order
of reinstatement be made against municipality – Appeal
upheld – Local Government: Disciplinary
Regulations for
Senior Managers, 2010, reg 6.
THE LABOUR APPEAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable
Case
no: J
A 88/2024
In
the matter between:
PORTIA
HALIO TSHABALALA
Appellant
and
MOQHAKA
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
.
First
Respondent
COUNCILLOR
ME MOKATSANE
Second
Respondent
Heard
:
19
November 2024
Delivered
:
21
November 2024
Coram: Savage
ADJP, Van Niekerk JA
et
Govindjee AJA
JUDGMENT
VAN NIEKERK, JA
[1]
Regulation 6 of the Local Government: Disciplinary Regulations for
Senior Managers, 2010 (regulations) provides for the
precautionary
suspension of senior municipal employees. Regulation 6 (6)(a)
provides:
‘
If a senior is
suspended, a disciplinary hearing must commence within three months
after the date of suspension, failing which the
suspension will
automatically lapse.’
[2]
This appeal raises the meaning of the word ‘commence’ and
in particular, whether for the purposes of the regulation,
a
disciplinary hearing commences when a municipality serves charges of
alleged misconduct in terms of regulation 8 (1), or when
the officer
leading evidence reads out the charges at a convened disciplinary
hearing. The first respondent (municipality) contends
for the former
meaning; the appellant for the latter. The difference in meaning has
profound consequences for the appellant. If
the former meaning is
correct, the appellant’s suspension, which commenced on 1 March
2024 remains extant; if the latter
meaning is correct, her suspension
lapsed on 31 May 2024 and she is entitled to return to work.
[3]
The appellant appeals against the judgment delivered by the Labour
Court on 12 July 2024, when the Court dismissed an application
for a
declaratory order that the appellant’s suspension had lapsed on
31 May 2024 in terms of regulation 6 (6).
Background
[4]
The background facts are not in dispute. The appellant is employed by
the first respondent, Moqhaka Local Municipality (the municipality)
as the municipal manager. On 1 March 2024 the appellant was
suspended, with immediate effect, pending an investigation into
alleged
misconduct. On 31 May 2024 the appellant was served with a
notice to attend a disciplinary hearing, accompanied by charges. On 3
June 2024 the appellant reported for work, contending that her
suspension had lapsed. An exchange of correspondence between the
parties’ respective attorneys followed. On 13 June 2024, the
appellant filed an urgent application in the Labour Court contending
that a continuation of her suspension beyond a period of three months
was in breach of her employment contract. Specifically, the
appellant
averred that her contract of employment incorporated the regulations,
and that the municipality was in breach of regulation
6 (6)(a).
[5]
In its judgment, the Labour Court held:
‘
[15] …A
disciplinary hearing commences upon the service of the disciplinary
charges and the notice of disciplinary charges.
The service of such
is an external manifestation that another party is beginning to claim
something from the other party. As stated
in the
Goba
matter, it will be incongruent to suggest that the proceedings
commence only when the matter sits for trial.’
[16] In this case,
the disciplinary proceedings against the applicant commenced upon the
service of the notice of disciplinary
proceedings, which was before
the expiry of the three-month period. Her suspension has not lapsed.’
[6]
The appellant submits that the Labour Court erred by failing to draw
a distinction between the commencement of disciplinary proceedings
and the commencement of a disciplinary hearing. There is merit in
this submission. While disciplinary proceedings in a broad sense
may
commence with the service of a charge sheet, the regulations contain
an internal definition of the point at which a disciplinary
hearing
commences. Regulation 5 contemplates the appointment of an
independent external presiding officer and an officer to lead
evidence. The officer leading evidence must formulate and serve
charges of misconduct within 30 days of appointment. Regulation
6
provides that if a senior employee is suspended, the disciplinary
hearing must commence within three months of the date of suspension;
regulation 10 (3) provides that
‘
The officer
leading evidence –
(a)
must commence the disciplinary hearing by reading out the charges to
the senior manager.’
[7]
What this construction contemplates is a disciplinary process that is
commenced by the service of charges on the employee and which
culminates in the conclusion of a disciplinary hearing. A
disciplinary hearing is an integral part of the disciplinary process
or proceedings; it does not constitute the proceedings in themselves.
Read sequentially, the regulations contemplate that the disciplinary
hearing is convened by the presiding officer and commenced by the
reading of the charges to the senior manager accused of misconduct.
[8]
This construction has previously been upheld and applied by the
Labour Court. In
Mgengo
v Lekwa-Teemane Local Municipality
[1]
Nkuta-Nkotwana J (as she then was) said the following:
‘
[22] The
issuing of the charge sheet and the notice to attend the disciplinary
hearing do not commence the disciplinary
hearing but facilitates the
process towards its commencement. I agree with Cele, J that the
disciplinary hearing can only commence
in the actual sitting when the
presiding officer officiates over the proceedings or proverbially
takes the captainship and navigate
the ship. This construction
accords with Regulation 10(1)(a) which states that the disciplinary
hearing must commence within three
months from the date that the
Municipal Council resolved to institute a formal disciplinary
hearing.
[23] I
get the impression that the purpose of the Disciplinary Regulation is
to ensure that the suspension and
disciplinary hearing of a senior
manager in the Municipality is attended to expeditiously so as to
avoid prolonged leadership vacuity
which could impede the rendering
of the Municipal services. Also, it cannot be overstated that
‘
suspension is a measure
that has serious consequences for an employee, and is not a measure
that should be resorted to lightly’. Hence
it is perfectly
logical that,
once
the three-month period of suspension lapses, the Municipal Council is
debarred by Regulation 6(6)(b) from extending it.
In
my view, it is incumbent upon the Municipal Council to act with the
speed of a gazelle consequent to the resolution to institute
a formal
disciplinary hearing against a senior manager.’
[9]
To that construction I would add that the regulation of precautionary
suspension is directed not only at the interests and protection
of
the affected employee; the general public has an interest in the
funds expended on public sector employees who remain on suspension
for inordinate periods. As the Court in
Mgengo
observed, the
regulations holds municipalities to tight timetables. The
interpretation for which the municipality contends is more
likely
than not to protract periods of suspension, particularly where
charges of misconduct are served and the convening of disciplinary
hearings are delayed.
[10]
A contrary view, on which the Labour Court relied, was expressed by
the Labour Court in
Goba
v Rand West City Local Municipality
[2]
where the Court held that a disciplinary hearing commenced when the
charge sheet was served on the employee. The reasoning of the
Court
in that matter, that the grammatical meaning of the word ‘commence’
means to begin or start (in a legal context,
by the issuing of a
statement of claim or summons or notice of motion), overlooks the
fact that the object of the verb ‘commence’,
as
regulation 10 (3)(a) indicates, is ‘the disciplinary hearing’,
and not the disciplinary proceedings. The error in
Goba
,
and perpetrated by the Labour Court in the present instance, is
demonstrated in the Labour Court’s conclusion that ‘
(a)s
stated in the Goba
matter, it will be incongruent to suggest that the
proceedings
commence
only when the matter sits for trial
’
(own
emphasis). Regulation 6 makes no reference to the commencement of
‘proceedings’ - what is at issue is the commencement
of
the disciplinary hearing.
[11]
The appellant raised the issue of authority of the second respondent
to oppose the application, and of the respondents’
attorneys,
in the absence of a resolution of the first respondent’s
council authorising the attorneys to oppose the application.
In
regard to the former, the Labour Court held that the second
respondent had the necessary authority to oppose the application.
It
did so on the basis that the second respondent was the deponent to
the answering affidavit, and a party to the proceedings.
There is no
basis to interfere with the Labour Court’s conclusion in
relation to authority. It is not clear from the notice
of motion and
founding affidavit that the second respondent was cited in a
representative capacity, and he was entitled as a named
respondent to
oppose the application in that capacity. In so far as the authority
of the respondents’ attorneys is concerned,
the Labour Court
has held that when the mandate of an attorney is challenged, the
procedure contemplated by rule 7 of the Uniform
Rules is to be
followed. The appellant did not avail herself of that procedure, and
there is thus no merit in the appellant’s
submissions regarding
the respondents lack of authority to oppose the proceedings before
the Labour Court.
[12]
In sum: the disciplinary hearing did not commence within three months
of the date of her suspension, 1 March 2024. The
suspension thus
lapsed on 31 May 2024. The Labour Court thus erred in applying the
ratio
in
Goba
, and the appeal stands to be upheld. The
appropriate orders ought properly to be made against the first
respondent, the appellant’s
employer. The second respondent, so
it transpires, is the first respondent’s executive mayor. It is
sufficient that the declaratory
order sought and the consequential
order of reinstatement be made against the first respondent.
[13]
In so far as costs are concerned, the application to the Labour Court
was brought in terms of section 77(3) of the Basic
Conditions of
Employment Act
[3]
, in which the
appellant in effect, sought to enforce a term of her employment
contract. In the case of contractual claims referred
to the Labour
Court as an alternative to the civil courts, the ordinary rule to be
applied is that which applies in the civil courts,
i.e. in the
ordinary course, costs follow the result. There is no reason to
deny the appellant her costs in the Labour Court,
or the costs of the
appeal.
[14]
I make the following order:
Order
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The order of the Labour Court is substituted by the following:
‘
1. It is
declared that the Applicant’s suspension lapsed automatically
on 31 May 2024 in terms of Regulation 6 (6)(a)
of the Local
Government: Disciplinary Regulations for Senior Managers.
2. The First
Respondent is ordered to reinstate the Applicant as Municipal Manager
of Moqhaka Local Municipality, with immediate
effect.
3. The first
respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the application.’
3.
The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the appeal.
A.
van Niekerk JA
Savage ADJP
et
Govindjee AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT:
Instructed
by MM Baloyi Attorneys
Mr
MD Maluleke, with him Mr DF Makhubele
FOR
THE THIRD RESPONDENT:
Instructed
by Peyper Attorneys
Mr
LA Roux
[1]
(J452/20) [2020] ZALCJHB 255 (11 June 2020)
.
The judgment by Cele J to which the Court refers is
Moloto
and Another v Kagisano Molopo Local Municipality and Others
(J4415/18
[2019] ZALCJHB (21 February 2019).
[2]
J1069/21
[2021] ZALCJHB 301, 20 September 2021, following
Ntsimane
v Tshwane Municipal Council and another
(J
761/21,10 May 2021).
[3]
No.
75 of 1997.
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