Case Law[2023] ZALAC 21South Africa
Economic Freedom Fighters v Brightstone Trading 3 CC t/a Gordon Road Spar and Others - Appeal (JA129/2021) [2023] ZALAC 21; [2023] 11 BLLR 1148 (LAC); (2023) 44 ILJ 2679 (LAC) (17 August 2023)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
17 August 2023
Headnotes
that: ‘[3] … The true position is that ostensible or apparent authority cannot be founded upon a representation made by the agent alone. In
Judgment
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## Economic Freedom Fighters v Brightstone Trading 3 CC t/a Gordon Road Spar and Others - Appeal (JA129/2021) [2023] ZALAC 21; [2023] 11 BLLR 1148 (LAC); (2023) 44 ILJ 2679 (LAC) (17 August 2023)
Economic Freedom Fighters v Brightstone Trading 3 CC t/a Gordon Road Spar and Others - Appeal (JA129/2021) [2023] ZALAC 21; [2023] 11 BLLR 1148 (LAC); (2023) 44 ILJ 2679 (LAC) (17 August 2023)
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sino date 17 August 2023
IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable
case
no:
JA129/2021
In
the matter between:
ECONOMIC
FREEDOM FIGHTERS
Appellant
and
BRIGHTSTONE
TRADING 3 CC t/a GORDON ROAD SPAR
First
Respondent
PATRICIA
BAFEDILE
Second
Respondent
DORA
BATSIJANG
Third
Respondent
PRECIOUS
Fourth
Respondent
OLIVIA
BULANI
Fifth
Respondent
IGNATIA
MASHIFANE
Sixth
Respondent
HAPPINESS
NDAWONOLE
Seventh
Respondent
SIBUSISO
BONGA
Eighth
Respondent
TSHOLOFELO
MSINDO
Ninth
Respondent
NELLY
ZUMMA
Tenth
Respondent
EMMA
LOBAKENG
Eleventh
Respondent
EUNICE
SEBOLA
Twelfth
Respondent
Heard
:
23 February 2023
Delivered
:
17 August 2023
Coram:
Waglay JP, Savage
et
Gqamana AJJA
JUDGMENT
THE
COURT
Introduction
[1]
This is an appeal, with the leave of this
Court, against both a final order and costs order made by the Labour
Court against the
appellant, the Economic Freedom Fighters (“EFF”).
[2]
On 1 June 2021, the Labour Court granted a
rule
nisi
interdicting and restraining “[the EFF]
and
its members and all other persons acting on their instructions
”,
and the second to fourteenth respondents (“the employees”)
from engaging in unlawful action which disrupted
the business
operations of the first respondent, Brightstone Trading 3 CC t/a
Gordon Road Spar (“Spar”) in Roodepoort.
[3]
The EFF opposed the interdict application,
distancing itself from the protest action and the unlawful activities
associated with
it. It denied that Mr Sechaba Sono, a local EFF
branch official who was not cited as a party to the application, had
been authorised
to act on the EFF’s behalf. On the return date,
the Labour Court confirmed the rule
nisi
,
making a costs order against the EFF in doing so.
Background
[4]
On 15 April 2021, the eleventh respondent,
Ms Emma Lobakeng, was demoted from the position of floor manager to
that of cashier.
Almost a month later, on 12 May 2021, Mr Sono
addressed a letter to Spar, on the letterhead of the EFF local
branch, in which he
requested a meeting with management on 16 May
2021 to discuss the issues set out in his letter.
[5]
After Spar did not respond to the letter,
on 16 May 2021 Mr Sono arrived at Spar’s premises. He demanded
the reinstatement
of Ms Lobakeng into her previous position and
threatened to shut down the store if the demand was not met. The
demand was not met.
Mr Sono and a number of protesters then forced
the store’s closure. Cashiers were shouted at, shoppers were
threatened and
all were instructed to leave the store. The entrance
to the shopping centre was barricaded and the store was required to
close
for the day.
[6]
Two weeks later, on 29 May 2021, a similar
incident occurred and the store was closed again. Consequently, Spar
instructed its attorneys
to address a letter to the EFF’s
Johannesburg James Sofasonke Mpanza Region (the region) demanding
that the EFF and its members
cease all illegal conduct and
interference with its business operations. The letter was emailed to
individuals cited as “Joseda”,
“Sasakhe” and
Mr Mandla Ndzuta. In spite of the letter sent, the protest action
intensified. This led to Spar approaching
the Labour Court for an
urgent interdict.
Labour Court
[7]
In confirming the rule
nisi
,
the Labour Court found that –
‘…
the
enquiry is not whether the [EFF], through the provisions of its
constitution or otherwise, conferred authority on Mr Sono and
its
members to protest at the applicant’s premises. It is whether,
on the probabilities of the pleaded facts this court can
conclude
that Mr Sono and the protesters created the appearance that they had
the power to act on behalf of the [EFF].’
[1]
[8]
The EFF was found liable for Spar’s
costs on the basis of the doctrine of ostensible authority, on the
basis that:
‘
The
[Spar] has succeeded in showing that it relied on a
misrepresentations by Mr Sono and the protesters that they acted on
behalf
of the [EFF]. This is the end of the inquiry for ostensible
authority. It is only open to the [EFF] to contend that the [Spar’s]
reliance was, on the probabilities, unreasonable or misguided. This
it has failed to do.’
[2]
Evaluation
[9]
The
primary issue for determination in this appeal is whether the
doctrine of ostensible authority finds application on the facts
of
this matter or not. As was made clear by the Constitutional Court in
Makate
v Vodacom
[3]
(
Makate
):
‘
[45]
Actual authority and ostensible or apparent authority are the
opposite sides of the same coin. If an
agent wishes to perform a
juristic act on behalf of a principal, the agent requires authority
to do so, for the act to bind the
principal. If the principal had
conferred the necessary authority either expressly or impliedly, the
agent is taken to have actual
authority. But if the principal were to
deny that she had conferred the authority, the third party who
concluded the juristic act
with the agent may plead estoppel in
replication. In this context, estoppel is not a form of authority but
a rule to the effect
that if the principal had conducted herself in a
manner that misled the third party into believing that the agent has
authority,
the principal is precluded from denying that the agent had
authority.
[46]
The same misrepresentation may also lead to an appearance that the
agent has the power to act on behalf of the principal. This is
known
as ostensible or apparent authority in our law
. While this kind
of authority may not have been conferred by the principal,
it is
still taken to be the authority of the agent as it appears to others
…
[47]
A closer examination of the original statement on apparent authority
by Lord Denning, quoted
below, reveals that the
presence of
authority is established if it is shown that a principal by words or
conduct has created an appearance that the agent
has the power to act
on its behalf. Nothing more is required
. The means by which that
appearance is represented need not be directed at any person. In
other words
the principal need not make the representation to the
person claiming that the agent had apparent authority
. The
statement indicates the absence of the elements of estoppel. It does
not mention prejudice at all…’ [Own emphasis]
[10]
It follows that ostensible authority is established if it can be
shown that
the conduct of the principal created an impression that
the agent had the power to act on its behalf. It is therefore the
conduct
of the principal that must be examined in order to determine
whether it created the appearance that the agent had the authority
to
bind the principal. The agent does not authorise herself or himself.
Rather, authorisation flows from the principal’s
conduct.
[11]
Subsequent
to the decision in
Makate
,
this Court in
Western
Platinum
Ltd v National Union of Mineworkers obo Mathulatsipi and Others
[4]
held
that:
‘
[3]
… The true position is that ostensible or apparent authority
cannot be founded upon
a representation made by the agent alone. In
order for the principal to be bound by virtue of an estoppel, the
representation must
be made by the principal itself…
[4]
The conduct of the principal plays a crucial role in determining
whether it had ratified
its agent’s action. This was much the
case in
NBS Bank Ltd v Cape Produce Co (Pty) Ltd & others
where the court held that ostensible authority flows from the
appearances of authority created by the principal… Where a
principal is held liable because of the ostensible authority of an
agent, agency by estoppel is said to arise. But the law stresses
that
the appearance, the representation, must have been created by the
principal himself. The fact that another holds himself out
as his
agent cannot, of itself, impose liability on the principal.’
[12]
The
Labour Court in
Maye
Serobe (Pty) Ltd v Labour Equity General Workers Union of South
Africa obo Members and others
[5]
,
with reference to the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Northern
Metropolitan Local Council v Company Unique Finance (Pty) Ltd and
others
,
[6]
found that to hold a party liable on the basis of ostensible
authority, there must be shown to have been (a) a representation by
words or conduct; (b) made by the appellant and not merely by the
agents that they had authority to act as they did; (c) in a form
such
that the appellant should reasonably have expected that outsiders
would act on the strength of it; (d) with reliance placed
by the
respondents on such
representation
;
(e) which reliance was reasonable; and (f) caused consequent
prejudice to the respondents.
[13]
There is no dispute that the principal in the current
context is the EFF as a voluntary association and national political
party.
With almost half a million members, the
EFF’s highest decision-making body
in terms of its constitution is its
Central Command Team (CCT). Neither
individual members, nor members holding local branch or regional
leadership positions, are entitled
to act on behalf of the EFF
without the necessary authorisation.
There was no dispute that
Mr Sono sent a letter to Spar on an EFF letterhead and that
correspondence was thereafter exchanged between
Spar’s
attorneys and the EFF region.
[14]
It was contended for Spar that the only reasonable
impression that could be reached from this communication was that the
protesters
were acting on the instruction, or at least with the
knowledge of the EFF, and as such that Spar had established the
ostensible
authority of the EFF sufficient to warrant the imposition
of a costs order against the EFF.
[15]
For the doctrine of ostensible
authority to find application,
the
Labour Court was required to find that the EFF, as
a voluntary association, had created an
appearance or representation by words or conduct that Mr Sono and/or
his other EFF members
involved in the protest action
had authority to act as they did. There
is no evidence of such appearance or representation
having been made by the EFF, nor one
that the EFF should reasonably have expected that outsiders would act
on the strength of and
that would lead Spar reasonably to rely on
such
representation
to its consequent prejudice. The fact
that Spar wrote to the regional office of the EFF indicates that it
was aware that higher
authority within EFF structures may be called
upon to intervene to halt the unlawful conduct of Mr Sono and the
protestors. This
gives credence to a finding that the EFF had not
created an appearance or representation by words or conduct that Mr
Sono and/or
other protestors had the authority to act on behalf of
the EFF as they did.
In finding differently the Labour Court
erred.
[16]
It follows for these reasons that the
appeal must succeed, that the final order issued against the EFF
discharged and the costs
order of the Labour Court made against the
EFF set aside. The EFF would nevertheless be well advised to take
appropriate steps
to prevent future such unlawful conduct from
arising.
[17]
Insofar as the costs of this appeal are
concerned, having regard to considerations of law and fairness, no
costs order is warranted.
[18]
In the result, the following order is made:
Order
1.
The appeal is upheld with no order as to
costs.
2.
The order of the Labour Court is set aside
in part and the order is substituted as follows:
“
1.
The rule
nisi
issued on 1 June 2021 is confirmed against the second to further
respondents, but discharged against the first respondent.
2
No order of costs is made.”
THE
COURT
PER
WAGLAY JP, SAVAGE AND GQAMANA AJJA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellant:
T
Ramagale (together with Advocate F Sangoni)
Instructed
by Ian Levitt Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
C
Goosen (Together with Advocate N Nortjie)
Instructed
by ML Schoeman Attorneys
[1]
Court
a
quo
judgment at para 42.
[2]
Ibid
at para 58.
[3]
[2016]
ZACC 13
;
2016 (4) SA 121
(CC) at paras 46 – 47.
[4]
(2020)
41 ILJ 2617 (LAC) at paras 3 - 4.
[5]
[2015] JOL 33143
(LC) at para 30.
[6]
[2012] 3 All SA 498
(SCA).
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