Case Law[2023] ZALAC 1South Africa
Greater Taung Local Municipality v South African Local Government Bargaining Council and Others (JA113/21) [2023] ZALAC 1; (2023) 44 ILJ 761 (LAC) (16 January 2023)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
16 January 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Lapsed review application for failure to file the record – Labour Court held that the employer had the option to bring a reinstatement application to resurrect review, if it deemed that option fit. This notwithstanding, Labour Court then made the arbitration an order of court. This constituted an improper exercise of its discretion as, contrary to the demands of law and fairness, the Labour Court failed to take into account the employer’s entitlement, arising from the judgment itself, to bring a reinstatement application and that by making the arbitration order an order of court, it would deny the employer the opportunity to bring a reinstatement application.
Judgment
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## Greater Taung Local Municipality v South African Local Government Bargaining Council and Others (JA113/21) [2023] ZALAC 1; (2023) 44 ILJ 761 (LAC) (16 January 2023)
Greater Taung Local Municipality v South African Local Government Bargaining Council and Others (JA113/21) [2023] ZALAC 1; (2023) 44 ILJ 761 (LAC) (16 January 2023)
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# IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable
Case
No: JA113/ 21
In
the matter between:
GREATER
TAUNG LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Appellant
and
# SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
SOUTH
AFRICAN LOCAL GOVERNMENT
BARGAINING
COUNCIL
First
Respondent
IMATU
obo BAKANG SEBITLOANE
Second
Respondent
SR
MODIPA N.O
Third
Respondent
Heard: 01
November 2022
Delivered: 16
January 2023
Coram: Sutherland
JA, Coppin JA et Kathree-Setiloane AJA
Summary:
Lapsed review application for
failure to file the record – Labour Court held that the
employer had the option to bring a reinstatement
application to
resurrect review, if it deemed that option fit. This notwithstanding,
Labour Court then made the arbitration an
order of court. This
constituted an improper exercise of its discretion as, contrary to
the demands of law and fairness, the Labour
Court failed to take into
account
the
employer’s
entitlement,
arising
from
the
judgment
itself,
to
bring
a
reinstatement application and that by making the arbitration order an
order of court, it would deny the employer the opportunity
to bring a
reinstatement application.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
KATHREE-SETILOANE
AJA
Introduction
[1]
The Greater Taung Local Municipality
(appellant) appeals against the whole of the judgment and order of
the Labour Court (Mosime
AJ) in which it
inter
alia
made an arbitration award an
order of court.
[2]
The appeal has, however, lapsed and the
appellant has applied for condonation for its late filing of the
appeal record and, reinstatement
of the appeal. Both applications are
unopposed.
[3]
The
appeal lapsed because the appellant filed the appeal record 50 days
outside the prescribed period of 60 days from the date of
the Labour
Court’s order granting it leave to appeal.
[1]
The appellant’s explanation for the delay is that the service
provider, Urgent Court Records, was unable to finalise the
record on
time as it was awaiting missing portions of the transcript of
evidence from the first respondent, the South African Local
Government Bargaining Council (Bargaining Council). The appellant has
provided a reasonable explanation for the delay which covers
the full
period of the delay. As will become clear, the appellant has good
prospects of the appeal succeeding. Accordingly, the
late filing of
the appeal record is to be condoned and the appeal reinstated on the
roll.
Background
[4]
The second respondent, Mr Sebitloane
(employee), was employed by the appellant. He was charged with gross
insubordination and unbecoming
behaviour for taking unauthorised
leave, despite facing a similar charge of misconduct in the same
year. He was found guilty and
was dismissed by the appellant on 18
April 2017.
[5]
He referred an unfair dismissal dispute
to the Bargaining Council. The third respondent (arbitrator) issued
an arbitration award
in which he found the employee’s dismissal
to be substantively unfair and ordered the appellant to,
inter
alia
, retrospectively reinstate the
employee.
[6]
On
22 June 2018, the appellant instituted a review application against
the arbitration award in the Labour Court. The appellant
did not file
the review record within the prescribed period of 60 days as provided
for in paragraph 11.2.2 of the Practice Manual
of the Labour Court
[2]
(Practice Manual). On 14 February 2019, the second respondent, IMATU,
acting on behalf of the employee, brought a Rule 11 application
in
which it sought an order dismissing the review application. It also
brought an application in terms of section 158(1)(c) of
the Labour
Relations Act
[3]
(LRA) to make
the arbitration award an order of court.
[7]
On 6 February 2019, the appellant filed
its notice to oppose the Rule 11 application. It thereafter filed its
answering affidavit
some seven months out of time but failed to make
a substantive application for condonation. IMATU objected to the late
filing of
the answering affidavit without a condonation application.
The Labour Court refused to condone the late filing of the
appellant’s
answering affidavit. As a result, IMATU’s
Rule 11 application remained unopposed.
Judgment
of the Labour Court
[8]
The Labour Court addressed the
appellant’s delay in filing the review record within the
prescribed period as provided for
in paragraph 11. 2.2 of the
Practice Manual. It observed that by the time IMATU lodged its Rule
11 application for the dismissal
of the appellant’s review
application, the appellant had made no attempt to reinstate the
review application and seek condonation
for the late filing of the
review record. Having considered paragraph 11 of the Practice Manual,
the Labour Court stated that the
appellant should have sought IMATU’s
consent to extend the 60-day period for the submission of the review
record, and in
the event of its refusal to do so, it should have
applied to the Judge President for consent.
[9]
The Labour Court went on to hold that
the appellant’s failure to do so resulted in the review
application being deemed to
have been withdrawn pursuant to paragraph
11.2.3 of the Practice Manual, and that the only option available to
the appellant would
be to bring an application for the reinstatement
of the review application. It held in this regard that “
since
the Practice Manual does not “trump” the Rules of Court,
[the appellant] still has the option open to it to make
application,
if it deems that option fit, for the reinstatement of the review
application, accompanied by a substantive application
for condonation
for the delay in filing the review record on time
”.
[10]
Concerning the relief sought by IMATU
for the arbitration award to be made an order of court, the Labour
Court found that there
were “
no
legal constraints to making that order
”.
As a result, it made the following order:
‘
1.
The application for review as brought by [the appellant] is deemed to
have been withdrawn by virtue of the provisions of
clause 11.2.3 of
the Practice Manual of this Court.
2.
The arbitration award issued by the
Third Respondent [arbitrator] as nominee official of the SALBGC (the
First Respondent), under
case number NWD 041714, is hereby made an
order of this Court.
3.
There is no order as to costs.’
[11]
The
Labour Court is empowered by section 158(1)(c) of the LRA to make an
arbitration award an order of court. This is a discretionary
power
which must be exercised judicially.
[4]
An arbitration award that is made an order of court is not
reviewable. Such an order is, nonetheless, appealable because it has
a final effect.
[5]
The order,
therefore, stands until set aside on appeal.
[12]
As
held by this Court in
PLSMIDTH
Buffalo (Pty) Ltd v Hlakola
,
[6]
an appeal court will only interfere with the exercise of a discretion
by a lower court, in the limited circumstances that it was
exercised
improperly or unreasonably. Thus, for an appeal court to interfere
with the exercise of a discretion, the appellant must
“
show
that the court a quo acted capriciously, or acted upon a wrong
principle, or in a biased manner, or for insubstantial reasons,
or
committed a misdirection or an irregularity”
[7]
.
[13]
The appellant contends that the Labour
Court committed a misdirection as it made the arbitration award an
order of court, in terms
of section 158(1)(c) of the LRA, in
circumstances where the appellant indicated its intention to bring an
application to reinstate
the lapsed review application, and the
Labour Court accepted as much by holding that it may bring an
application to reinstate the
review application if it deems that
option fit. The appellant, however, argues that this holding is
inconsistent with the Labour
Court’s order which made the
arbitration award an order of court, as they are incapable of
operating simultaneously.
[14]
In response, IMATU argues that an appeal
lies against an order of a lower court and not its reasons. Hence,
the Labour Court’s
acknowledgement that the appellant may bring
an application to reinstate its review application has no impact on
its order which
made the arbitration award an order of court. IMATU,
accordingly, contends that the Labour Court’s order is
unassailable
because the appellant’s review application had
lapsed and the appellant did not apply for it to be reinstated.
[15]
The
Labour Court may only make an order in terms of section 158(1)(c) of
the LRA if it is satisfied that: (a) the agreement or award
is
sufficiently clear to enable the defaulting party to know exactly
what it should do to comply with it, and (b) the defaulting
party has
failed to comply with the terms of the agreement or award. Once
satisfied that these conditions are present, the Labour
Court must
exercise its discretion in favour of granting or refusing the order.
In so doing, it must take into account “
all
relevant facts and circumstances
”
that are “
necessary
to satisfy the demands of law and fairness
”.
[8]
[16]
IMATU sought the dismissal of the
appellant’s review application in its Rule 11 application as a
result of the appellant’s
failure to bring an application to
reinstate the lapsed review. The Labour Court did not dismiss the
review application as sought
by IMATU. Nor did it dismiss the Rule 11
application. Instead, it held that the appellant has the “
option,
open to it, to make application, it if deems it fit, for
reinstatement of the review application, accompanied by a substantive
application for condonation
”.
However, contrary to the demands of fairness and the law, the Labour
Court failed to take this factor into account when
it exercised its
discretion in favour of making the arbitration award an order of
court. It furthermore failed to take into account
the impact that
this order would have on the appellant’s entitlement, arising
from the judgment itself, to bring an application
for reinstatement
of the review application. The Labour Court committed a misdirection
in failing to take these factors into account
in exercising its
discretion in favour of making the arbitration award an order of
court.
[17]
Crucially,
once an arbitration order is made an order of court it is not
reviewable. Thus, by making the award an order of court,
the Labour
Court denied the appellant the opportunity to bring an application to
reinstate the review application. The Labour Court
furthermore made
the arbitration award an order of court in the full awareness that
the appellant intended to, forthwith, bring
an application for the
reinstatement of the appeal.
[9]
Having acknowledged, in the judgment, that the appellant had this
option open to it, the Labour Court proceeded to make the arbitration
award an order of court. This constitutes an improper exercise of its
discretion. The Labour Court should have, instead, made an
order: (a)
dismissing the Rule 11 application; (b) directing the appellant to
file its reinstatement application; and (c) postponing
the
application to make the arbitration award an order of court.
[18]
For all these reasons, the appeal must
succeed.
Costs
[19]
I consider it fair and just not to make
a costs order in the appeal.
Order
[20]
In the result, I make the following
order:
1.
The
late
filing
of
the
appeal
record
is
condoned
and
the
appeal
is
reinstated.
2.
The appeal is upheld with no order as to
costs.
3.
The order of the Labour Court is set
aside and replaced with the following order:
“
1.
The Rule 11 application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is ordered to file its
application for reinstatement of the review application within 7 days
of this order.
3.
The application to make the arbitration
award an order of court in terms of
section 158(1)(c)
of the
Labour
Relations Act 66 of 1995
is postponed
sine
die
.
4.
There is no order as to costs.”
F
KATHREE-SETILOANE AJA
Sutherland
JA and Coppin JA concur.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT
:
Fatima Mahomed
Instructed
by Kgomo
Attorneys
FOR
THE SECOND RESPONDENT: S
Grobler SC
Instructed
by IMATU
Northern Cape Office
[1]
Rule 5(6)
of the Rules for the conduct of proceedings in the Labour
Court.
[2]
Practice Manual of the Labour Court of South Africa, effective 1
April 2013.
[3]
Act 66 of 1995, as amended.
[4]
SADTU and others v Head of the Northern Province Department of
Education [2001] 7 BLLR 829 (LC).
[5]
Gauteng Department of Education v Saunders: In re Saunders v Gauteng
Department of Education and others
[2015] 12 BLLR 1187
(LAC).
[6]
[2019] 4 BLLR 363
(LAC) (PLSMIDTH Buffalo).
[7]
Supra at para 16.
[8]
South African Post Office Ltd v Communication Workers Union obo
Permanent Part-Time Employees
[2013]
12 BLLR 1203
(LAC). Although this case dealt with an application to
make a settlement
agreement
an order of court in terms of section 158(1)(c) of the LRA, the LAC
held in PLSMIDTH Buffalo
that
the same principle applies to making an arbitration award an order
of court.
[9]
The appellant’s counsel informed the Labour Court that the
appellant intended to bring a reinstatement application.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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