Case Law[2023] ZALAC 13South Africa
Acting National Commissioner for the Department of Correctional Services and Others v Ndara (CA14/22) [2023] ZALAC 13; [2023] 10 BLLR 991 (LAC); (2023) 44 ILJ 2665 (LAC) (21 June 2023)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
21 June 2023
Headnotes
jointly and severally liable for the respondent’s costs. The respondent cross-appeals against the Labour Court’s decision to dismiss his application to amend his pleadings.
Judgment
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## Acting National Commissioner for the Department of Correctional Services and Others v Ndara (CA14/22) [2023] ZALAC 13; [2023] 10 BLLR 991 (LAC); (2023) 44 ILJ 2665 (LAC) (21 June 2023)
Acting National Commissioner for the Department of Correctional Services and Others v Ndara (CA14/22) [2023] ZALAC 13; [2023] 10 BLLR 991 (LAC); (2023) 44 ILJ 2665 (LAC) (21 June 2023)
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sino date 21 June 2023
IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, CAPE TOWN
Not
Reportable
Case
no: CA14/2022
In
the matter between:
ACTING
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER FOR THE
DEPARTMENT
OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
First
Appellant
DEPUTY
MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Second
Appellant
DEPARTMENT
OF CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
Third
Appellant
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Fourth
Appellant
DEPARTMENT
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
Fifth
Appellant
DEPARTMENT
OF PUBLIC SERVICE AND
ADMINISTRATION
Sixth
Appellant
DIRECTOR-GENERAL
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
PUBLIC
SERVICE AND ADMINISTRATION
Seventh
Appellant
MINISTER
OF PUBLIC SERVICE AND
ADMINISTRATION
Eighth
Appellant
And
MZUKISI
LUBABALO NDARA
Respondent
Heard:
9 May
2023
Delivered:
21 June 2023
Coram:
Molahlehi ADJP, Musi JA and
Savage AJA
Judgment
SAVAGE
AJA
Introduction
[1]
This appeal, with the leave of the
Labour Court, is against the judgment and orders of that Court (per
Rabkin-Naicker J) in which
the termination of the employment of the
respondent, Mr Mzukisi Lubabalo Ndara, was found to be unlawful and
of no force and effect;
and the status
quo
ante
restored
for “
due consultation
[to]
take place as to the early
termination of the five-year employment contract between the
parties
”
.
In addition, the first and second appellants, the Acting National
Commissioner of the Department of Correctional Services and
the
Deputy Minister of Justice and Correctional Services respectively,
were ordered to reimburse the respondent R254 468,44
unlawfully
deducted from his salary within ten days of receipt of the order,
with the appellants held jointly and severally liable
for the
respondent’s costs. The respondent cross-appeals against the
Labour Court’s decision to dismiss his application
to amend his
pleadings.
[2]
At
the outset of the hearing of this appeal, the appellants sought its
reinstatement since, due to the late filing of the
appeal
record, the appeal was
deemed
to have been withdrawn, with no extension having been granted by the
Judge President.
[1]
Having
had regard to the limited delay, the reasons for it, as well as the
absence of prejudice and the prospects of success in
the matter, I am
satisfied that the appeal should be reinstated and the late filing of
the record condoned.
Background
[3]
On 11 March 2022, the first appellant,
the Acting National Commissioner for the Department of Correctional
Services, informed the
respondent in writing that:
‘
1.
You have been employed as
Director Technical Specialist (level 13) in the office of the
Deputy
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services linked to the term of
the contract of the Deputy Minister signed on 24 June
2019.
2.
Following your request for a transfer, I informed you in writing on 8
January
2022 that I am willing to accommodate you within the
Department of Correctional Services as a Director (level 13) linked
to the
term of office of the Deputy Minister and invited you to apply
for such transfer on your own time and cost in writing. You never
applied and such transfer is therefore no longer an option.
3.
You further indicated your desire to leave your employment with the
Deputy Minister.
The Deputy Minister has similarly indicated that the
working relationship between yourself and the Deputy Minister has
broken down
irretrievably.
4.
The Deputy Minister has therefore in terms of clause 3 of your
employment contract
decided to terminate your employment with one
months’ notice. Your last day of service will therefore be on
30 April 2022.
5.
You are required to liaise with the DCS human resource office (head
office) to
finalise your termination…’
[4]
Following receipt of this letter, on or
about 5 April 2022, the respondent instituted urgent proceedings in
the Labour Court against
the appellants. In an inelegantly drafted
notice of motion and founding papers, which referenced the incorrect
contract of employment,
the respondent sought that an interim order
be granted in respect of the relief sought in Parts A, B and C of the
notice pending
an unspecified return date.
[5]
In Part A, an interim order was sought
“
pending the final
determination of these proceedings
”
inter alia
that:
5.1
the Acting National Commissioner and the Deputy Minister be
interdicted and restrained from putting
into operation their
purported decision to terminate the respondent’s employment
with the Department of Correctional Services
(the Department); and
5.2
directed to reinstate the respondent’s contract of employment
immediately and allow him to continue
performing his duties as if his
contract of employment had never terminated.
[6]
In Part B, the respondent sought
inter
alia
a
declaration that:
6.1
the decision of the Acting Commissioner and Deputy Minister
purportedly to terminate the respondent’s
contract with effect
from 30 April 2022 was unlawful, null and void ab initio with no
force and effect for want of compliance with
clause 3.3 of the
contract of employment entered into on 25 June 2019 between the
parties, read together with sections 14 and 17
of the Public Service
Act, 1994 and section 23(1) of the Constitution, 1996, with an order
setting aside such decision;
6.2
the respondent was employed as Director: Head of Office to the Deputy
Minister at level 13 (Head of
Office) with effect from 1 June 2019
until 2 October 2019 when he was appointed and/or transferred to the
position of Special Advisor
to the Deputy Minister at level 14
(Special Advisor) with effect from 1 July 2019 to date; alternatively
that the appointment of
the late Mr Khaya Somgqeza to the Head of
Office position legally occupied by the respondent was invalid and
unlawful with no force
and effect “
unless it is declared
that on 2 October 2019 the Deputy Minister legally appointed the
[respondent] as Special Advisor with effect
from 1 July 2019 to date
and appointed Mr Somgqeza into his position as Head of Office with
effect from 1 July 2019 until his death
on 24 September 2021
”;
6.3
alternatively that the respondent remained legally appointed as Head
of Office with effect from 1 July
2019 to date.
[7]
In Part C, the respondent sought an order declaring that
the conduct
of the Government and the Department in deducting R254 468.44
from his gross salary as Head of Office was unlawful
and in
contravention of section 34 of the Basic Conditions of Employment
Act
[2]
(BCEA); alternatively
that the deduction of R922 364,44 from the respondent’s
gross salary as Special Advisor was unlawful
and in contravention of
section 34. An order was sought directing the Government and the
Department to repay such amounts, with
costs sought against the
appellants.
[8]
The respondent case, as set out in his
founding affidavit, was that he had been employed as Head of Office
with effect from 1 June
2019 until 2 October 2019 when he was
appointed as Special Advisor with effect from 1 July 2019 to date.
The Head of Office contract
was signed on 25 June 2019, operative
from 1 June 2019, for a five-year term linked to the term of the
Deputy Minister.
[9]
In the appellants’ answering
affidavit, it was denied that the respondent was employed as Head of
Office since that contract
had been cancelled by mutual agreement.
Instead, it was stated that the respondent was employed as Technical
Specialist, having
signed a contract to this effect on or about 5
August 2021, which contract was backdated to 24 June 2019. In his
replying affidavit,
the respondent admitted as much. There was no
dispute between the parties that at a meeting attended by the
respondent on 28 June
2019, the restructuring of the Deputy
Minister’s office was discussed. At this meeting, the
respondent agreed that he would
be appointed as Special Advisor, with
a new employee, Mr Somgqeza, to be appointed into his position as
Head of Office. On 1 July
2019, the respondent confirmed in writing
the oral agreement that he would be appointed to the Special Advisor
post.
[10]
However, on 22 July 2019, the respondent
was informed that the sixth appellant, the Department of Public
Service and Administration
(DPSA), had not supported the deviation
requested by the Deputy Minister, which would have permitted the
appointment of the respondent
as Special Advisor, on the basis that
such a deviation could only be sought by a Minister with more than
one portfolio and not
by a Deputy Minister in terms of the applicable
Ministerial Handbook. In spite of this, on 24 July 2019, Mr Somgqeza
was appointed
to the Head of Office post. During August 2019, the
respondent’s job title on the payroll system was amended to
reflect his
appointment as Technical Specialist.
[11]
On 6 January 2020, the Chief of Staff of
the fourth appellant, the Minister of Justice and Correctional
Services (Minister), confirmed
the DPSA’s view in relation to
the deviation sought. On 5 May 2020, the respondent was informed that
since the request to
appoint him to the Special Advisor post had been
declined, he was required to sign a contract of employment as
Technical Specialist,
which it was contended he had previously
refused to do. On 8 August 2020, the Minister confirmed in writing
that the appointment
of the respondent to the Special Advisor post
was not approved. In spite of this written indication, on 13 August
2020, the respondent
stated that he was informed that the Minister
had agreed telephonically to the creation of a level 14 post
additional on the establishment
to which the respondent should be
appointed and then seconded to the Deputy Minister’s office.
This was never actioned.
[12]
A contract in respect of the position of
Director: Technical Specialist in the Deputy Minister’s office
at level 13 (Technical
Specialist) was thereafter provided to the
respondent. In his founding affidavit, the respondent denied that he
had signed such
a contract and that in any event, Mr Emanuel Khoza,
the Department’s signatory to the contract, was not authorised
to sign
on behalf of the Department as he was no longer employed as
Deputy Commissioner: Human Resource Management but as Area
Commissioner
at Kgosi Mampuru Correctional Centre. In the appellants’
answering affidavit, it was stated that on or about 5 August 2021,
the respondent signed the Technical Specialist contract, backdated to
24 June 2019, which provided for a five-year contract linked
to the
term of the Deputy Minister. In reply, the respondent admitted for
the first time that he had signed the Technical Specialist
contract
on or about 5 August 2021 but reiterated that Dr Khoza, who had
signed on behalf of the Department was not authorised
to do so.
Judgment
of the Labour Court
[13]
Before the Labour Court, the respondent
sought leave to amend his pleadings
inter
alia
to
reflect his employment in the position of Technical Specialist. The
Labour Court refused the amendment on the basis that, to
grant it
would cause prejudice to the appellants, which could not be
compensated by a costs order. The Court nevertheless rejected
the
appellants’ submission that the urgent application must fail on
the basis that the relief sought by the respondent was
founded on his
claim that he was employed in the Head of Office position,
alternatively that of Special Advisor. The Court found
that a clear
right to relief had been shown to exist since the Head of Office and
Technical Specialist contracts were “
identical
in essentialia
”
.
[14]
The termination of the respondent’s employment was found
unlawful in
that it did not accord with the terms of the contract and
had not been imposed for any of the reasons contemplated in section
186
of the Labour Relations Act
[3]
(LRA). There was found to be no reason why the respondent was not
given the right to be heard, and “
difficult
to fathom why, short of exasperation on the part of the first
[appellant], the termination was issued, without regard
to the
necessary process being undertaken
”.
The Court took note of the fact that the respondent had sought to
negotiate a mutually acceptable termination following
the appellants’
refusal to appoint him as Special Advisor, as well as resolve the
issue of the deductions made from his remuneration,
but that his
efforts in this regard had not been reciprocated by the appellants.
This appeared to lead the Court to order the restoration
of the
status
quo
in order for the parties to consult about the early termination of
the respondent’s five-year contract.
[15]
The deductions from the respondent’s
gross salary were found to be unlawful, invalid and in contravention
of section 34 of
the BCEA. The first and second appellants were
consequently directed to ensure that the respondent was paid R
254 468,44 within
ten days of receipt of the order of the Court,
with the appellants to pay the costs of the application jointly and
severally.
Grounds
of appeal
[16]
The appellants contended on appeal that
the respondent had failed to make out his case in his founding
papers, with a material dispute
of fact existing between the parties
as to the contract in terms of which he was employed, which dispute
could only have been determined
in the appellants’ favour. The
Court had therefore erred in finding that the respondent had
established a clear right to
the relief sought when it was sought on
a pleaded contract which the respondent conceded was incorrect.
[17]
In addition, the finding that the
essentialia
of the two contracts were “identical”,
despite knowing that the appellant would be prejudiced by not being
able to deal
with the
essentialia
of the correct contract had it been
pleaded, was not sustainable. The result was that the Court
reinstated the respondent into a
position which did not exist at the
time, and when he had not sought reinstatement into the position of
Technical Specialist. As
to the issue of deductions, the appellants
disputed that the respondent had proved such claims. For these
reasons, the appellants
sought that the appeal be upheld with the
costs of two counsel.
[18]
The respondent opposed the appeal on a number of grounds. The first
was that
the appellants should be perempted from pursuing the
appeal
[4]
on the basis that they
had implemented the Court order by taking steps to restore the status
quo
ante
,
including sending the respondent a notice of reappointment effective
from 1 May 2022, requiring completion of a declaration of
his
financial interests, advising the medical scheme of the respondent’s
reappointment and restoring the respondent’s
salary on 31 May
2022. This conduct, it was submitted, was wholly inconsistent with an
intention to contest the Labour Court’s
order.
[19]
It was argued further that the respondent’s reference to the
incorrect
contract did not preclude the Labour Court from ordering a
restoration of the status
quo
ante
.
This was so since section 77(3) of the BCEA empowers the Labour Court
to determine any matter concerning a contract of employment.
The Head
of Office and Technical Specialist contracts are identical in their
terms and both afforded the right of
audi
alteram partem
to the respondent, with the respondent entitled to be consulted
before any decision to terminate his contract of employment. The
appellants’ approach to the pleadings was “
overly
technica
l”
and inimical to the objects of the LRA, including the promotion of
the effective and speedy resolution of labour disputes,
more so when
substance must prevail over form in employment matters. Pleadings, it
was submitted, are to be “
properly
construed to ascertain what the legal basis of the applicant’s
claim is
”.
[5]
The Court restored the status
quo
ante
after the patently unlawful termination of the respondent’s
contract of employment. Furthermore, there was no basis advanced
by
the appellants to justify why an appeal should succeed in relation to
the repayment of deductions made from the respondent’s
gross
salary. Consequently, for these reasons, the respondent contended
that the appeal falls to be dismissed with costs.
Evaluation
[20]
The first issue that arises in this appeal is whether the appellants
“
deliberately
and
undoubtedly abandoned or perempted their
right
of appeal
”.
[6]
The onus to establish peremption is discharged only when the conduct
or communication relied on points “
indubitably
and necessarily to the conclusion
”
that there has been an abandonment of the right to appeal and a
resignation to the unfavourable judgment or order.
[7]
[21]
There was no dispute that steps were taken by the Department to
implement the
orders of the Labour Court prior to the appeal being
pursued in this matter. Little explanation was advanced by counsel
for the
appellants as to why this occurred if the appellants intended
to appeal the matter, although some blame was placed on the conduct
of junior employees within the Department who were apparently unaware
of the consequences of their actions. However, distinguishable
from
the decision in
SA
Revenue Service v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration and others
[8]
,
the facts do not indicate that the relevant officials within the
Department had taken a deliberate and indubitable decision not
to
appeal against the order of the Labour Court. There was no express
indication that an appeal would not be pursued and no indication
that
the appellants’ lawyers, or other employees or officials who
were familiar with the matter, had deliberately and expressly
stated
as much. Having regard to the facts advanced, the respondent was
therefore unable to show that the appellants had, through
their
conduct, perempted their right of appeal.
[22]
In
any
event, even if it were to have been found that there had been a
deliberate and undoubted abandonment or peremption by the appellants,
the application of the doctrine is not absolute.
[9]
It
remains open to a court to overlook acquiescence where the broader
interests of justice would otherwise not be served,
[10]
with
overriding policy considerations capable of militating against the
enforcement of peremption against an appellant’s right
of
appeal.
[11]
On the facts of this case, the interests of justice, in any event,
would weigh strongly against a finding of peremption.
[23]
Turning
to the merits of the appeal, the ordinary rule in motion proceedings
is that an applicant must stand
or fall by its notice of motion and the averments made in its
founding affidavit,
[12]
with
it impermissible for a case to be made out in reply for the first
time
.
[13]
As was made clear in
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
:
[14]
‘
Motion
proceedings, unless concerned with interim relief, are all about the
resolution of legal issues based on common cause facts.
Unless the
circumstances are special they cannot be used to resolve factual
issues because they are not designed to determine probabilities.
It
is well established under the
Plascon-Evans
rule that where in motion proceedings disputes of fact arise on the
affidavits, a final order can be granted only if the facts
averred in
the applicant's (Mr Zuma’s) affidavits, which have been
admitted by the respondent (the NDPP), together with the
facts
alleged by the latter, justify such order. It may be different if the
respondent’s version consists of bald or uncreditworthy
denials, raises fictitious disputes of fact, is palpably implausible,
far-fetched or so clearly untenable that the court is justified
in
rejecting them merely on the papers.
[15]
The court below did not have regard to these propositions and instead
decided the case on probabilities without rejecting the NDPP’s
version.
[16]
’
[24]
The respondent sought relief on the
erroneous basis that he was employed as Head of Office, alternatively
as Special Advisor to
the Deputy Minister. In reply, he accepted the
appellants’ averment set out in their answering affidavit that
he was, in
fact, employed in the position of Technical Specialist, a
contract which was signed on 5 August 2021 but backdated to 24 June
2019.
Following this admission there was no dispute of fact between
the parties as to the position in which the respondent was employed.
The respondent sought to take issue with the authority of Mr Khoza to
sign the contract on behalf of the Department, but since
he only
admitted having concluded the contract belatedly in reply, the issue
of authority was not inadequately pleaded nor was
any particular
relief sought in this regard in relation to the backdated contract
concluded. The result was that, by the time the
matter came before
the Labour Court, the parties had agreed that the respondent was
employed in the post of Technical Specialist
and, on the express
terms of the termination letter, that it was his employment in this
position that the Acting Commissioner sought
to terminate.
[25]
Having
belatedly accepted that he had been appointed into such position, the
respondent sought leave to amend his pleadings. The
Labour Court
refused such application on the basis that potential prejudice may
result and instead proceeded to determine the merits
of the main
application. Given that there was no dispute that the respondent was
employed as Technical Specialist, it is difficult
to conceive of any
prejudice which the appellants may have suffered were the amendment
granted. Nevertheless, since t
he
purpose of pleadings is
to
define the issues for adjudication,
[17]
following
the filing of the replying affidavit the issues had been clarified to
the extent that there remained no dispute between
the parties that
the respondent had signed the Technical Specialist contract of
employment on or about 5 August 2021. With this
common cause, the
appellants were aware that the dispute before the court for
adjudication concerned whether the termination of
the respondent’s
employment as such, and the deductions allegedly made from his
remuneration, were lawful.
[18]
This
was so despite the respondent’s incorrect recordal of his post
both in the notice of motion and in his founding affidavit.
For these
reasons, no purpose would be served by granting the cross-appeal in
this matter.
[26]
Since
the Technical Specialist contract was entered into between the
parties on or about 5 August 2021, by which time the Head of
Office
contract had by agreement been cancelled and was of no force and
effect, there can be no suggestion that the Technical Specialist
contract, backdated to 24 June 2019, had been novated by the
conclusion of the Head of Office contract on 25 June 2019.
[19]
[27]
Clause
3.3 of the Technical Specialist employment contract (as was also
recorded in the Head of Office contract) states that:
‘
3.3
Subject to the provisions of the Act, and the
Labour Relations Act,
1995
, either party may, after consultation and agreement, terminate
the Contract before the expiry of an original term of office or an
extended term of office, by giving to the other party one month’s
notice of termination, which notice shall –
3.3.1
Be given in writing…’
[28]
Notic
e
of termination of the respondent’s employment from the post of
Technical Specialist was unlawful given that no proper process
preceded it. The termination notice was issued without any
consultation and was not founded on any of the other reasons
contemplated
in the LRA. Since the right to be consulted was
expressly provided for by the contract, it followed that the contract
could not
have been lawfully terminated on notice by the Acting
Commissioner in the absence of such consultation.
[20]
In giving notice of termination on 11 March 2022, the Acting
Commissioner, therefore, acted unlawfully and in breach of the
contract’s
express terms. In finding as much the Labour Court
cannot be faulted
.
[29]
Having
found the termination of the respondent’s contract to be
unlawful, the Court exercised its discretion to order the
restoration
of the status
quo
ante
.
In doing so it correctly distinguished the matter from the decision
in
Old
Mutual Ltd and others v Moyo and another
[21]
in
which specific performance was not granted for expressed reasons of
both misconduct and intolerability. Specific performance
is a primary
and not a supplementary remedy for breach of contract.
[22]
A court will, as far as possible, give effect to the choice exercised
by a litigant to claim specific
performance
while retaining the discretion to refuse such a claim and allow
damages. Each case must be judged in the light of its
own
circumstances.
[23]
[30]
No reason was advanced by the appellants why the Labour Court, having
found
his termination unlawful, should exercise its discretion
against the respondent to refuse his claim for reinstatement.
Furthermore,
on appeal, the appellants do not contend for any grounds
that would warrant interference by this Court with the exercise of
that
discretion.
[24]
However,
despite the Labour Court’s order that the status
quo
ante
be restored, interference with such order by this Court is
nevertheless warranted in that an unqualified order was not made but
rather one “
in
order that due consultation can take place as to the early
termination of the five-year contract between the parties
”.
In ordering as much, the Labour Court failed to direct itself to the
relevant facts and principles, including that the
respondent was
entitled to unqualified reinstatement as the primary remedy. In
finding differently the Labour Court
reached
a decision which could not
reasonably
have been made by a court properly directing itself to all the
relevant
facts and principles
.
[25]
[31]
Turning to the claim for repayment of deductions allegedly unlawfully
made
from the respondent’s gross salary, the Labour Court found
that the appellants had failed to make out a case on the papers
regarding why such deductions had been made. However, clear disputes
of fact existed between the parties on the issue, a final
order could
only have been made if the facts averred by the applicant (the
respondent in this appeal) had been admitted by the
respondents (the
appellants in this appeal) and, together with the facts alleged by
the latter, such an order was justified. The
appellants’ denial
was not bald or uncreditworthy, nor did it raise fictitious disputes
of fact, or was palpably implausible,
far-fetched or clearly
untenable.
[26]
The Labour
Court could not properly have resolved the dispute of fact between
the parties on the papers and its orders made concerning
the
repayment of the deductions claimed cannot be sustained and must be
set aside. With a clear dispute of fact in existence between
the
parties, the issue should properly have been referred for the hearing
of oral evidence. On appeal, such an order is consequently
warranted.
[32]
The appellants took no issue with the
costs order made by the Labour Court and there is no reason why this
Court should interfere
with such order, particularly given that the
respondent, on the primary issue of the lawfulness of his
termination, succeeded before
that Court. For all of the reasons
advanced, the appeal must succeed in part. There is no reason, having
regard to considerations
of law and fairness, that an order of costs
should follow in this appeal.
[33]
In the result, the following order is
made:
Order
1.
The
appeal
is
reinstated and the late filing of the appeal record is condoned.
2.
The
appeal is upheld in part, with paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of the order of
the Labour Court set aside and replaced with the following
orders:
‘
2.
The status quo ante is restored, with the applicant to be reinstated
retrospectively with
immediate effect into the position of Director:
Technical Specialist (level 13) in the office of the Deputy Minister
of Justice
and Correctional Services, on the terms and conditions as
set out in the contract dated 24 June 2019, linked to the term of
office
of the Deputy Minister.
3.
The dispute relating to deductions allegedly
made from the applicant’s gross salary is referred
to oral
evidence at a date and time to be arranged with the Registrar on the
following basis:
3.1
the affidavits filed in this matter are to serve as pleadings in the
determination of that issue;
3.2
the parties are entitled to call any witness who deposed to any
affidavit in these application proceedings;
3.3
the parties are entitled to call any further witnesses who were not
deponents to affidavits in these
application proceedings:
3.3.1
provided that such party has at least thirty court days before the
date of the hearing of the oral evidence served
on the other party an
affidavit or statement of the evidence-in-chief to be given by such
person;
3.3.2
but subject to the court, at the hearing of the matter,
permitting any further witnesses to be called notwithstanding
that no
such statement has been served in respect of his or her evidence;
3.4
the parties may subpoena any witness to give
evidence at the hearing or to furnish documents whether such
person
has consented to furnish a statement or not in relation to the issue
referred to oral evidence;
3.5
the rules pertaining to the discovery of documents shall apply.’
4.
The cross-appeal is dismissed.
5.
There is no order of costs.
SAVAGE
AJA
Molahlehi
ADJP and Musi JA agree.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANTS:
J
van der Schyff and C-A Daniels
Instructed
by
the
State Attorney
FOR
RESPONDENT:
F
Sangoni
Instructed
by
Ximbi
Ncolo Inc. Attorneys
[1]
Rule
5(8)
of the Rules for the conduct of proceedings in the Labour
Appeal Court GN 1666 of 14 October 1996 states:
The
record must be delivered within 60 days of the date of the order
granting leave to appeal, unless the appeal is noted after
a
successful petition for leave to appeal, in which case the record
must be delivered within the period fixed by the court under
rule
4(9).
’
Rule
5(19)
states:
‘
If
the respondent delivers a notice of intention to prosecute a
cross-appeal, the respondent is for the purposes of subrule (8)
deemed to be the appellant, and the period prescribed in subrule (8)
must be calculated as from the date on which the appellant
withdrew
the appeal or on which the appeal was deemed to have been
withdrawn.’
[2]
Act 75 of 1997.
[3]
Act 66 of 1995, as amended.
[4]
With reference to cases including
Booi
v Amathole District Municipality and others
[2021]
ZACC 36
;
[2021] JOL 51358
(CC); (2023) 44 ILJ 109 (LAC) at para 29;
Dabner
v South Africa Railways and Harbours
1920
AD 583
(
Dabner
);
SA
Revenue Service v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration and others
[2016]
ZACC 38
; (2017) 38 ILJ 97 (CC);
[2017] 1 BLLR 8
(CC) (
SARS
)
at para 26;
National
Union of Metalworkers of SA and others v Fast Freeze
(1992)
13 ILJ 963 (LAC) at 969I-970A.
[5]
See:
MEC
of the Executive Committee of the Western Cape Provincial Government
Health Department v Coetzee and others
[2015]
ZALAC 35
; (2015) 36 ILJ 3010 (LAC)
[2015] 11 BLLR 1108
(LAC) at para
89.
[6]
Dabner
supra
.
[7]
SARS
supra
at
para 26.
[8]
SARS
supra
at
para 25.
[9]
Minister
of Defence v South African National Defence Force Union
[2012]
ZASCA 110
(
SANDU
)
at para 23.
[10]
Ibid.
[11]
SARS
supra
.
[12]
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South African Rugby
Football Union and others
[1999]
ZACC 11
;
2000 (1) SA 1
;
1999 (10) BCLR 1059
(
SARFU
)
at para 150;
Betlane
v Shelly Court CC
[2010]
ZACC 23
;
2011 (1) SA 388
(CC);
2011 (3) BCLR 264
(CC) (
Betlane
)
at para 29 with reference to V
an
der Merwe and another v Taylor NO and others
[2007]
ZACC 16
;
2008
(1) SA 1
(CC);
2007
(11) BCLR 1167
(CC)
(
Van
der Merwe
)
at para 122;
SARFU
supra
at
para 150.
[13]
Betlane
at
para 29 with reference to
Van
der Merwe
at
para 122;
SARFU
at
para 150;
Director
of Hospital Services v Mistry
1979
(1) SA 626
(A)
at 636A-B; and
Bayat
and others v Hansa and another
1955
(3) SA 547
(N) at 553D
.
[14]
[2009]
ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA);
2009 (1) SACR 361
(SCA);
2009 (4)
BCLR 393
(SCA);
[2009] 2 All SA 243
(SCA) (
Zuma
)
at para 26.
[15]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) (
Plascon-Evans
)
634-5;
Fakie
NO v CCII Systems (Pty) Ltd
[2006] ZASCA 52
;
2006
(4) SA 326
(SCA) (
Fakie
NO
)
at para 55;
Thint
(Pty) Ltd v National Director of Public Prosecutions and others;
Zuma
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2008]
ZACC 13
;
2008
(2) SACR 421
(CC);
2009
(1) SA 1
(CC);
2008 (12) BCLR 1197
(CC) (
Thint
)
at paras 8 - 10.
[16]
Sewmungal
NNO and another v Regent Cinema
1977
(1) SA 814
(N);
Trust
Bank van Afrika Bpk v Western Bank Bpk NNO
en
andere
1978
(4) SA 281 (A).
[17]
See
Media
24 (Pty) Ltd v Nhleko and another
[2023]
ZASCA 77
at
para 16 with reference to
Moolman
v Estate Moolman and another
1927
CPD 27
at
29 and
Affordable
Medicines Trust and others v Minister of Health and others
[2005]
ZACC 3
;
2006
(3) SA 247
(CC);
2
005
(6) BCLR 529
(CC)
at para 9.
[18]
Zuma
supra
at
paras 15 and 17;
Fischer
and another v Ramahlele and others
[2014]
ZASCA 88
;
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA);
[2014] 3 All SA 395
(SCA)
at
para 13.
[19]
Tauber
v Von Abo
1984
(4) SA 482
(ECD) at 485C.
[20]
South
African Maritime Safety Authority v McKenzie
[2010]
ZASCA 2
;
2010 (3) SA 601
(SCA);
[2010] 3 All SA 1
(SCA); (2010) 31
ILJ 529 (SCA);
[2010] 5 BLLR 488
(SCA) paras 32 - 33 and 55 - 58.
## [21][2020]
ZAGPJHC 1; [2020] 4 BLLR 401 (GJ); [2020] 2 All SA 261 (GJ); (2020)
41 ILJ 1085 (GJ).
[21]
[2020]
ZAGPJHC 1; [2020] 4 BLLR 401 (GJ); [2020] 2 All SA 261 (GJ); (2020)
41 ILJ 1085 (GJ).
[22]
Santos
Professional Football Club (Pty) Ltd v Igesund and another
2003
(5) SA 73
(C)
[2002] 10 BLLR 1017
(C).
[23]
See:
Haynes
v King Williams Town Municipality
1951
(2) SA 371
(A)
at 378 - 379;
Masetlha
v President of the Republic of South Africa
and
another
[2007]
ZACC 20
;
2008 (1) SA 566
(CC);
2008 (1) BCLR 1
(CC),
Moyane
v Ramaphosa
[2018]
ZAGPPHC 835;
[2019] 1 All SA 718
(GP) and
Gama
v Transnet SOC Limited
[2018]
ZALCJHB 348.
[24]
See for example,
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and others v Minister of Home
Affairs and others
[1999]
ZACC 17
;
[1999] ZACC 17
;
2000
(2) SA 1
(CC);
2000 (1) BCLR 39
(CC) (
National
Coalition
)
at para 11.
## [25]National
Coalition supraat
para 11.
[25]
National
Coalition supra
at
para 11.
[26]
Plascon-Evans
supra
at
634-5;
Fakie
NO
supra
at
para
55;
Thint
supra
at
paras
8-10.
sino noindex
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