begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZALAC 30
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa v Motor Industry Bargaining Council and Others (JA37/2022)
[2023] ZALAC 30 (23 August 2023)
National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa v Motor Industry Bargaining Council and Others (JA37/2022)
[2023] ZALAC 30 (23 August 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZALAC/Data/2023_30.html
sino date 23 August 2023
IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable
Case no: JA37/2022
In the matter between:
NATIONAL UNION OF
METALWORKERS
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
Appellant
And
MOTOR
INDUSTRY BARGAINING COUNCIL
First
Respondent
MOTOR INDUSTRY
STAFF ASSOCIATION
Second
Respondent
RETAIL MOTOR
INDUSTRY ORGANISATION
Third
Respondent
FUEL RETAILERS
ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH AFRICA
Fourth
Respondent
NATIONAL EMPLOYERS
ASSOCIATION
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Fifth
Respondent
MOTOR INDUSTRY
SICK, ACCIDENT AND
MATERNITY
PAY FUND
Sixth
Respondent
Heard: 18 May
2023
Delivered: 24
August 2023
Coram: Sutherland JA
et
Musi JA
et
Savage AJA
Summary: Dispute
concerning the interpretation or application of collective agreement
not conciliated before referred to Labour
Court – LRA
prescribes pathways to be followed in the resolution of disputes –
Labour Court does not have the power
to permit a pathway which is
specifically prohibited by the Act – Conciliation is a
jurisdictional fact and must occur before
a dispute is referred to
arbitration – Where a dispute has not been conciliated, the
Labour Court is not empowered to refer
it to arbitration or continue
with the proceedings in terms of s 158 (2) and the court will have no
other option but to strike
the matter off the roll – A court is
obliged to raise a lack of jurisdiction
mero motu
and require
the parties to deal with same but must forewarn the parties and
require them to address it on the point of law
– Deciding
a case on an issue not properly ventilated by the parties may be
unfair and prejudicial and the consequences thereof
will depend on
the facts and the issue on which the decision rests – Appeal is
dismissed
JUDGMENT
MUSI JA
Introduction
[1] This is an
appeal against an order of the Labour Court. It found that it did not
have jurisdiction to adjudicate a dispute,
because it was not
referred to conciliation. The appeal is with the leave of the court
a
quo.
Background
[2] The appellant,
National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA) and the second
respondent, Motor Industry Staff
Association (MISA) are registered
trade unions. The third respondent, Retail Motor Industry
Organisation (RMI), the fourth respondent,
Fuel Retailers Association
of South Africa (FRA), the fifth respondent, National Employers
Association of South Africa (NEASA)
are registered employers’
organisations. The sixth respondent, Motor Industry Sick, Accident
and Maternity Pay Fund (Fund)
is a Fund established in terms of a
collective agreement. The first respondent is the Motor Industry
Bargaining Council (MIBCO)
a bargaining council established in terms
of s 27 of the Labour Relations Act (LRA)
[1]
.
The appellant, MISA, RMI, FRA and NEASA are parties to MIBCO. MIBCO
also administers the Fund. Only the second and third respondents
opposed the appeal. They are henceforth referred to as the
respondents.
[3] On or about 28
August 2019, the appellant approached the court
a quo
seeking
the following relief against MIBCO, MISA, RMI and the Fund:
‘
1. It is
declared that the Resolution taken at the Annual General Meeting
(AGM) of the Motor Industry Bargaining Council (MIBCO),
on 9 November
2017, to suspend the payment of any administration fees by the Sick,
Accident and Maternity Pay Fund (the Fund) to
MIBCO, is invalid and
of no force and effect.
2. The Resolution taken
at the AGM of MIBCO on 9 November 2017 to suspend the payment of any
administration fees by the Fund to
MIBCO is hereby set aside.
3. It is declared that
MIBCO was, at all material times up to 9 November 2017 obligated, and
remains obligated, to charge administration
fees to the Fund for its
administration of the Fund.
4. It is declared that
the Fund is liable to pay to MIBCO the administration fees that ought
to have been charged by MIBCO for its
administration of the Fund for
the period 9 November 2017 to date of payment.
5. It is declared that
clause 14 of the Motor Industry Sick, Accident and Maternity Pay Fund
Agreement, concluded on 5 November
2015 between the Retail Motor
Industry Organisation (RMI) and the Motor Industry Staff Association
(MISA), (the 2015 Fund Agreement)
is invalid and of no force and
effect.
6. Clause 14 of the 2015
Fund Agreement is hereby set aside.
7. It is declared that
clause 14 of the Motor Industry Sick, Accident and Maternity Pay Fund
Agreement, concluded on 5 December
2017 between RMI and MISA, (the
2017 Fund Agreement) is invalid and of no force and effect.
8. Clause 14 of the 2017
Fund Agreement is hereby set aside.
9. It is declared that
Rules 5 and 6 of the Motor Industry Sick, Accident and Maternity Fund
Rules, adopted in January 2019, (the
2019 Rules) are invalid and of
no force and effect.
10. Rules 5 and 6 of the
2019 Rules are hereby set aside.’
Facts
[4] The relief
sought was predicated on the following factual matrix. On 30 July
1982, the Minister of Manpower published
the Fund agreement, which
had been concluded by the employers and trade unions who were members
of the National Industrial Council
for the Motor Industry, in the
Government Gazette.
[2]
The Fund
was established in terms of clause 4 of the agreement. Clause 4
states:
‘
(1) There is
hereby established a Fund known as the “Motor Industry Sick and
Accident Pay Fund.
(2) The Fund shall
consist of –
(a) the moneys as at the
date of coming into operation of this Agreement, standing to the
credit of the “Misa Sick and Accident
Pay Fund”
established in terms of Government Notice R. 626 of 18 April 1969 and
continued heretofore in terms of a joint
Fund established by
Government Notice R. 350 of 3 March 1978;
(b) contributions
prescribed in this Agreement;
(c) interest on
investments; and
(d) any other moneys to
which the Fund may become entitled.
(3) The objects of the
Fund shall be, in accordance with the rules of the Fund as determined
from time to time, to assist members
of the Fund who suffer losses of
wages or salary through absenteeism resulting from incapacity owing
to accident or sickness.’
[5] Only employers
contributed to the fund. Clauses 13(1) and 14 of the Fund agreement
state that:
‘
13(1) In the event
of the expiration of this agreement, and unless within a period of 12
months after such expiration, either a
new agreement if negotiated in
terms of which the Fund is continued, or the Fund is transferred by
the Council to any other fund
constituted for a similar purpose to
that for which the Fund was originally established, the Fund shall be
liquidated.’
…
14 Upon liquidation
of the Fund in terms of clause 13(1) hereof, the moneys remaining to
the credit of the Fund after payment
of all claims, including
administration and liquidation expenses, shall be paid into the
general funds of the Council.’
[6] MIBCO’s
constitution, which is a collective agreement, states that its
objects are, inter alia –
‘
3.1.1 to
conclude collective agreements, and to enforce collective agreements
in terms of all applicable legislation and
in any appropriate forum
including in a Court of law;
…
3.1.3 to prevent and
resolve labour disputes;
3.1.4 to perform dispute
resolution functions;
…
3.1.8 to establish and
administer pension, provident, medical aid, sick pay holiday,
unemployment, training or similar schemes
of funds for the benefit of
any of the parties to the Council or their members…’
[7] The
constitution also regulates, the collection of MIBCO funds, the
conduct of meetings, the passing of resolutions at
meetings and
dispute resolution procedures. From 1982, the Fund agreement was
renewed annually. In 2004, MISA and FRA withdrew
from the Fund,
therefore only NUMSA and RMI remained parties to the Fund until 2013.
In January 2013, NUMSA and RMI entered into
the Motor Industry Sick,
Accident and Maternity Pay Fund Agreement of 2012 (2012 Fund
Agreement). The 2012 Fund Agreement contained
similar clauses as the
original Fund agreement. Significantly, clauses 13(1) and 14 of the
2012 Fund were the same as those in
the Fund. At a bilateral meeting
between NUMSA and RMI, the former gave notice of its intention to
withdraw from the 2012 Fund
Agreement and subsequently withdrew.
[8] On 6 October
2015, at a MIBCO Governing Board (MGB) meeting, clarity was sought on
how to deal with Sick, Accident and
Maternity Pay since NUMSA
withdrew from the 2012 Fund Agreement and there was no subsequent
collective agreement. The MGB resolved
that the 2012 Fund Agreement
would remain in force until the funds are liquidated by 31 March
2016, because there were workers
who were still benefiting from the
funds. On 5 November 2015, however, MISA and RMI concluded the Motor
Industry Sick, Accident
and Maternity Pay Fund Agreement (2015 Fund
Agreement). On the same day, the agreement was adopted at MIBCO’s
Annual General
Meeting (AGM).
[9] Cause 14 of the
2015 Fund agreement contained a far-reaching change, it states that:
‘
Upon liquidation
of the Fund in terms of clause 13(1) hereof, moneys remaining to the
credit of the Fund after payment of all claims,
including
administration and liquidation expenses, shall be transferred into a
Fund administered by the RMI for the purposes of
providing benefits
to its members.’
[10] On 9 November
2017, at an AGM, NUMSA objected to the manner in which the 2015 Fund
Agreement was adopted because its
adoption was not on the 5 November
2015 AGM’s agenda and that it was not given a copy of the 2015
Fund Agreement 14 days
before the AGM as required by MIBCO’s
constitution. It pointed out that it only had sight of the 2015 Fund
Agreement during
February 2016. It particularly objected to clause 14
of the 2015 Fund Agreement because it provided that all excess funds,
after
liquidation, should go to RMI for the benefit of its members
rather than to MIBCO.
[11] Despite
NUMSA’s protestations the AGM,
inter alia
, resolved:
(i) to immediately
suspend the payment of any administration fees by the Fund to MIBCO;
and
(ii) to change the Fund
Rules in order to permit payment of the full period sick leave
claimed by MISA members only.
[12] On 5 December
2017, RMI and MISA concluded the 2017 Fund Agreement and retained
clause 14 of the 2015 Fund Agreement.
[13] The Fund
Rules, dated 31 January 2016, made provision for compulsory members
(MISA members) and voluntary members (NUMSA
and non-union members).
MISA members who qualified for benefits in terms of Rules may be paid
100 percent of the member’s
ordinary daily remuneration by the
Fund, in respect of any working day on which she or he was prevented
from working by sickness.
However, qualifying NUMSA and non-union
members, may only be paid 75 percent of a member’s ordinary
daily remuneration. Clauses
6.2 and 6.3 of the Rules read:
‘
Claims for sick,
accident and maternity benefits for members of the Motor Industry
Staff Association, shall be disbursed directly
to the member, by the
employer, on the first day date following the date on which the claim
was submitted, whereupon the employer
shall remit and recover the
claim from the Fund thereafter.
Claims for sick, accident
and maternity benefits for Voluntary members shall be submitted by
the beneficiaries of the Fund, directly
to the Fund and shall not be
entitled to be paid directly by their employer in terms of clause 6.2
herein; provided that the employer
may, at his/her sole discretion,
apply the provisions of clause 6.2 herein, to Voluntary members
without such and indulgence constituting
the establishment of any
right or entitlement in favour of such Voluntary member in relation
to future claims.’
The Fund Rules, dated 1
January 2018, had similar provisions.
The October 2017
referral
[14] On 2 October 2017
NUMSA referred a dispute to MIBCO’s Dispute Resolution Centre.
It classified the dispute as the interpretation
or application of the
Sick, Accident, and Maternity Pay Fund Agreement (5 November 2015)
regarding NUMSA members and its implications
for MIBCO. It indicated
that the dispute arose on 13 June 2017 alternatively 29 September
2017.
[15] It alleged that its
members were not entitled to be members of the 2015 Fund Agreement
and that they were involuntarily and
unilaterally joined as members
of the 2015 Fund Agreement. It also alleged that in so far as its
members may be admitted as voluntary
members of the Fund and have
validly joined as members, the Rules 5 is unlawful. It further
alleged Rule 6 is unlawful because
it creates different ways in which
compulsory and voluntary members are required to claim and monies
disbursed to the claimants.
is unlawful. It finally alleged that
clause 14 of the 2015 Fund Agreement is unlawful because the parties
thereto were not empowered
by the previous Fund Agreements to divest
MIBCO of the proceeds of the Fund after liquidation.
In the court a quo
[16] In the court
a
quo
NUMSA contended that the resolution taken at the AGM held on
9 November 2017, relating to the suspension of the administration fee
payable to MIBCO by the Fund was taken contrary to MIBCO’s
constitution. It pointed out that the constitution contained
peremptory requirements with regard to the notice of the AGM. Cause
10 states that the notice of the AGM must set forth the business
that
will be transacted at the meeting. The notice of the 9 November 2017
meeting did not state that the business to be transacted
included the
adoption of a new Fund Agreement or the suspension of administration
fees payable to MIBCO. That being the case, the
discussions and
decisions relating to those issues were impermissible.
[17] It further contended
that all the Fund Agreements were a continuation of the 1982 Fund.
The Fund was an Industry Fund and MISA
and RMI therefore could not
lawfully amend clause 14 to divest MIBCO of any funds post
liquidation. It argued that the 2015 Fund
Agreement was adopted
contrary to MIBCO’s constitution because it was not presented
to all MIBCO members prior to its adoption.
[18] With regard to the
impugned Rules, it argued that they are unlawful because they
unfairly discriminate against NUMSA members.
[19] MISA and RMI
vehemently opposed the application and raised numerous points
in
limine
against the granting of the relief. The direction which
this matter took renders it superfluous to deal with the points
in
limine
. With regard to the impugned Rules, they argued that the
disputes were not referred to conciliation and that the court
a
quo
therefore did not have jurisdiction to determine the
application.
[20] The court
a quo
found that it did not have jurisdiction to determine the
constitutional disputes because they concerned the interpretation or
application of a collective agreement. It further found that the
unfair discrimination disputes under s 5 of the LRA had to be
referred to conciliation in terms of s 9 of the LRA. In the absence
of any conciliation, it had no jurisdiction to determine the
dispute.
Additionally, it found that the Rules are part of a collective
agreement and that the same considerations regarding the
interpretation or application of a collective agreement would apply.
It therefore struck the matter off the roll for want of jurisdiction.
Aggrieved by that order, the appellant approached this Court.
In this court
[21] In this Court the
appellant contended that the court
a quo
erred:
(i) in finding that it
did not have jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute because it
related to the interpretation or application
of MIBCO’s
constitution;
(ii) in relying on s
157(5) of the LRA when it had not been pleaded by the respondents or
raised by the court during the proceedings;
(iii) in failing to apply
its discretion in terms of s 158(2) either by staying the proceedings
and referring the matter to arbitration
or by continuing with the
proceedings, as it would have been expedient for it to do so;
(iv) in finding that it
did not have jurisdiction in respect of the 2019 Fund Rules because
the appellant did not attempt to resolve
the discrimination dispute
through conciliation; and
(v)
in failing to have regard to the fact that the appellant had
referred the unfair discrimination dispute for conciliation on 2
October
2017 and that a certificate of non-resolution was issued on
24 October 2017.
[22] The respondents
conceded that they did not pertinently raise the jurisdiction point
with regard to the interpretation or application
of MIBCO’s
constitution, but argued that the fact that the court
a quo
considered it
mero motu
was not fatal. Additionally, they
argued that the court
a quo
exercised its discretion to strike
the matter off the roll propitiously. Apropos the 2019 Fund Rules,
the respondents argued that
the appellant did not refer the dispute
for conciliation because the October 2017 referral did not pertain to
a dispute about the
2019 Fund Rules. They further contended that, in
as far as the appellant relied on that referral during argument, it
was being
opportunistic because it abandoned that process.
[23] The court
a quo
disaggregated the dispute into two parts, namely, the
constitutional disputes and the Fund Rules dispute. I propose to
follow the
same pragmatic approach. I now turn to discuss the
constitutional interpretation or application point.
Constitutional
disputes
[24] The parties were
correctly in agreement that MIBCO’s constitution is a
collective agreement as provided for in s 213
of the LRA.
[3]
Section 24 of the LRA prescribes that a collective agreement must
provide for a dispute resolution procedure in disputes about
the
interpretation or application of the collective agreement. It further
prescribes that the procedure must first require the
parties to
attempt to resolve the dispute through conciliation and, if the
dispute remains unresolved, to resolve it through arbitration.
[4]
The collective agreement generally binds all the parties to the
collective agreement and their members.
[5]
[25] Clause 16.1 of
MIBCO’s constitution enjoins the parties subject to and bound
by it to resolve any dispute about its interpretation
or application
by referring the dispute to a mediator and, if the matter is not
settled, to an arbitrator approved by MIBCO.
[26] The disputes
between the parties related to resolutions that had been taken
contrary to the prescripts of MIBCO’s
constitution. The
appellant’s case was that the notice of the Annual General
Meeting held on 9 November 2017 did not comply
with the provisions of
the constitution, specifically clause 10.3 thereof which reads:
‘
Notice of any
meeting of the Council or any committee showing the business to be
transacted shall be given to representatives by
the General Secretary
or his/her duly authorised agent in writing at least two weeks before
the date of such meeting, provided
that for the purposes of special
meetings the Chairperson of the Council or of the committee concerned
may authorise the convening
of such meetings at shorter notice.’
[27] The
appellant’s primary complaint is that the majority (RMI and
MISA) introduced and presented motions at the meeting,
which resulted
in the resolutions which form the subject matter of the litigation
being taken. The appellant averred that the impugned
motions were
deliberated upon while they were not properly placed on the agenda.
[28] It is common
cause that the constitutional dispute was not referred for
conciliation before the declaratory orders were
sought in the court
a
quo
. Section 157 (5) of the LRA states:
‘
Except as provided
for in section 158 (2), the Labour Court does not have jurisdiction
to adjudicate an unresolved
dispute if this Act
or any
employment law
requires the
dispute
to be resolved through
arbitration.’
[29] The court
a
quo
correctly characterized the constitutional dispute as one
that concerns the interpretation or application of MIBCO’s
constitution.
In order to determine whether the impugned resolutions
were taken in terms of MIBCO’s constitution a process of
interpreting
or applying of the constitution will have to be embarked
upon. The LRA and MIBCO’s constitution makes it manifestly
plain
that such disputes should be referred to mediation and if it
remains unresolved, or a period of thirty days expired after the
dispute
had been properly referred, it must be referred to
arbitration. The conclusion of the court
a quo
that it did not
have jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute is unassailable. Should,
the court
a quo,
have invoked the provisions of s 158 (2)?
The section 158 (2)
argument
[30] Section 158
(2) states:
‘
If at any stage
after a
dispute
has been referred to the Labour Court, it
becomes apparent that the
dispute
ought to have been referred
to arbitration, the Court may –
(a)
stay the
proceedings and refer the
dispute
to arbitration; or
(b)
if it is
expedient to do so, continue with the proceedings, in which case the
Court may only make any order that a commissioner
or arbitrator would
have been entitled to make: Provided that in relation to the question
of costs, the provisions of section 162(2)
(a)
are applicable.’
[31] The appellant
argued that the moment the court
a quo
found that it had no
jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute, it had no option but to
either stay the proceedings and refer the
dispute to arbitration or
to continue with the proceedings. I now pass to consider this binary
approach to s 157 (5) read with
s 158 (2) of the LRA.
The binary approach
[32] The jurisdiction and
powers of the Labour Court are statutorily constraint. The LRA
prescribes pathways to follow to the resolution
of labour disputes.
The Labour Court does not have the power to permit a pathway which is
specifically prohibited by the LRA. The
prescribed pathway to resolve
disputes about the interpretation or application of collective
agreements is first conciliation and
if it fails then and only then,
does the pathway to arbitration open.
[33] The conciliation
process is crucial in the resolution of labour disputes. This is so
because litigants in labour disputes are
not like typical litigants
in civil courts. Unlike most other litigants the parties have to go
back and engage each other regularly.
A dispute that is mediated or
conciliated and the outcome is seen as right or reasonable by the
parties to the dispute enhances
industrial harmony. The parties in
effect settle their own dispute with the assistance of a mediator. A
winner-loser outcome mostly
achieves the opposite. It is for that
reason that labour disputes must be referred to conciliation before
arbitration or adjudication.
Conciliation is a jurisdictional fact
that must occur before a dispute such as the present is referred to
arbitration. Absent conciliation,
a dispute about the interpretation
or application of a collective agreement may not be referred to
arbitration.
[34] In
September
v CMI Business Enterprise CC
[6]
(
September
v CMI Business
),
the minority judgment lucidly explained when section 158 (2) may be
invoked. It stated:
‘…
In any
event, section 158 (2) cannot be resorted to in the case of a dispute
that was not referred to conciliation. It is only available
in
respect of a dispute that was referred to conciliation and either the
commissioner issued a certificate that the dispute remained
unresolved or a period of 30 days expired after the dispute had been
received by the CCMA.’
[35] The majority did not
take issue with this exposition of s 158 (2). The binary approach,
suggested by the appellant, is rendered
senseless by what was said in
September v CMI Business
and the importance of conciliation.
When confronted with a dispute that was not referred for
conciliation, the court would be confronted
with a stalemate
situation. It would not be empowered to refer the dispute to
arbitration or to continue with the proceedings,
even if it might be
expedient to do so. What is the court to do under such circumstances?
In order to break the deadlock, the only
option is to strike the
matter off the roll. In my judgment, the court
a quo
was
correct in striking the matter off the roll.
Failure to hear the
parties
[36] The appellant argued
that the case pleaded by the respondents was not that the Labour
Court did not have jurisdiction to adjudicate
the dispute because the
LRA or any other law required the dispute to be referred for
conciliation and the arbitration. It asserted
that the court
a quo
erred in deciding the matter on the lack of jurisdiction issue. It
contended that none of the parties were forewarned that the
court
a
quo
was inclined to decide the matter on this basis. It further
contended that, in failing to give the parties an opportunity to
address
it on the jurisdiction point, it committed a fundamental
error, because the effect of the order granted was to non-suit the
appellant
in circumstances where it was not afforded a hearing on the
point that determined the case.
[37] The lack of
jurisdiction to adjudicate a matter is a point of law. It is common
cause that the parties were not requested to
address the court
a
quo
on
the point. In
CUSA
v Tao Ying Metal Industries and Others
[7]
it was held that:
‘
Where a point of
law is apparent on the papers, but the common approach of the parties
proceeds on a wrong perception of what the
law is, a court is not
only entitled, but is in fact also obliged,
mero motu,
to
raise the point of law and require the parties to deal therewith.’
[38] It has been said
that “
an
intolerable situation would be created if a Court were to be
precluded from giving the right decision on accepted facts, merely
because a party failed to raise a legal point, as a result of an
error of law on his part
…”
[8]
[39] I agree with the
appellant that the court
a quo
was supposed to forewarn the
parties and require them to address it on the point. It is desirable
to do so in order to avoid surprising
the parties and to adhere to
the long standing practice and convention that cases should be
decided on the issues presented by
the parties. Deciding a case on an
issue not properly ventilated by the parties may be unfair and
prejudicial, especially to the
party against whom the decision is
taken.
[40] The appellant did
not argue that it was prejudiced by the course taken by the court
a
quo
. Except for alleging that the omission to hear it was a
fundamental error, the appellant did not allege that the court
a
quo’s
decision against it involved any unfairness. The
appellant did not make any submission on what the consequences of the
omission
should be.
[41] In my view, the
consequences to be visited upon such an omission would depend on the
facts and the issue (point of law) on
which the decision rests. An
approach akin to the approach taken when a point of law is raised for
the first time on appeal should
be followed. We should therefore
consider whether the point utilized by the court
a quo
to
determine the case involved any unfairness to the appellant and
whether any other or further evidence would have been produced
or
adduced had the court
a quo
brought its inclination to the
attention of the parties and required them to address it.
[42] As already
indicated, the appellant did not argue that it was prejudiced or that
the decision involved unfairness to it. It
also did not argue that
any further evidence could have shown that the court
a quo
had
jurisdiction to adjudicate the dispute. Jurisdiction either exists or
it does not. In the absence of conciliation, there can
be no
arbitration in disputes relating to the interpretation or application
of collective agreements. Therefore, the court
a quo
did not
have jurisdiction to deal with the matter. The parties cannot give
the Labour Court jurisdiction, it must, as a matter
of law, have
jurisdiction. Referring the matter to the court
a quo
to hear
the parties on the issue will produce the same result.
Discrimination of the
Fund Rules
[43] The court
a
quo
found that the appellant did not refer a discrimination in
contravention of s 5
[9]
dispute
for conciliation in terms of s 9
[10]
of the LRA. It further found that the impugned Rules 5 and 6 of the
Fund Rules are part of a collective agreement and that the
dispute is
therefore about the interpretation or application of a collective
agreement.
[44] The appellant
contended that the court
a quo
erred in finding that it did
not refer a dispute as contemplated in s 9 of the LRA. It argued that
it did refer a dispute in October
2017 in which it alleged that the
“
differences in benefits between compulsory and voluntary
members as set out in paragraph 5 of the Rules are unlawful
”
and additionally that the different ways in which the different
categories of fund members are required to claim in terms
of Rule 6
is unlawful.
[45] The appellant’s
argument is at odds with its case. The appellant did not mention the
October 2017 referral in its founding
affidavit. It was only when the
respondents in their answering affidavit pointed out that the
appellant previously referred a similar
dispute as an interpretation
or application dispute to MIBCO that the October 2017 referral was
mentioned for the first time. The
respondents went further and stated
that the appellant abandoned the October 2017 referral. In its
replying affidavit, the appellant
did not deny that it abandoned the
referral. In fact, in its replying affidavit it categorically states
the following:
‘
NUMSA seeks to
invoke the protections afforded to employees by section 5 of the LRA.
There is no dispute regarding the interpretation
or application of
section 5 and there was therefore no duty upon NUMSA to refer this
dispute to the Bargaining Council or the CCMA.’
[46] It must be
emphasised that the appellant described its dispute in the October
2017 referral as: “
interpretation or application of the
Sick, Accident, and Maternity Pay Fund Agreement (5 November 2015)
regarding NUMSA members
and its implications for MIBCO
”.
[47] In the referral the
appellant stated that the dispute arose on 13 June 2017,
alternatively 29 September 2017. The relief that
the appellant sought
was consequential monetary compensation and a finding that its
members may be validly admitted as members
of the SAF.
[48] It is clear that the
dispute that was referred was an interpretation or application of the
2017 Fund Rules, which is a collective
agreement. There was no
dispute referred in terms of s 9 of the LRA. There is another twist
in the appellant’s contorted
case. In the relief sought in the
court
a quo
, the appellant attacked Rules 5 and 6 of the 2019
Fund Rules only and wanted them declared unlawful. A dispute about
the 2019 Rules
was never conciliated. It could not have been
conciliated before it came into existence. Every collective agreement
about the Fund
makes it clear that it is a new agreement that states
that the Fund is continued in terms thereof. Clause 13 (1) of all the
agreements
from 1982 to 2019 states that:
‘
In the event of
the expiration of this agreement, and unless within a period of 12
months after such expiration, either a new agreement
is negotiated in
terms of which the Fund is continued…’
[49] The respondent’s
case with regard to the Rules is that the differentiation does not
amount to discrimination because
there is a commercial rationale
behind the differentiation: the appellant’s members take far
more sick leave than those of
MISA. The respondents referred us to
statistical proof of this assertion. They further argued that
voluntary joining a sick, accident
or maternity fund is not a right
in terms of the LRA.
[50] It is manifestly
clear that there is a dispute about the interpretation or application
of s 5 of the LRA and therefore the
dispute was supposed to be
referred for conciliation and if it remained unresolved to
adjudication by the Labour Court, in terms
of s 9 (4) of the LRA. The
respondents took the lack of jurisdiction point with regard to the
Fund Rules issue and the appellant’s
response was that there
was no need to refer the dispute for conciliation. In its pleadings,
the appellant did not rely on s 9
or the October 2017 referral, at
all.
[51] The appellant blew
hot and cold. It wanted to ride two horses at the same time. The
appellant must be held to its election
firstly, not to refer the
dispute for conciliation in terms of s 9 and secondly, to abandon the
conciliation process by not referring
the dispute to arbitration. I
am convinced that it conceived of the stratagem of approaching the
court
a quo
seeking declaratory relief as a way to circumvent
the clearly defined pathways in the LRA. A party should not be
allowed to ingeniously
or ingenuously bypass the LRA in circumstances
where it creates a clear pathway for the resolution of a dispute.
Ruling
[52] The appeal
ought to be dismissed. In my view, the dictates of the law and
fairness militate against a costs order in
this matter.
Order
[53] I accordingly
make the following order:
The appeal is dismissed
with no order as to costs.
CJ Musi JA
Sutherland
JA
et
Savage AJA
concur in the judgment of Musi
JA.
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE APPELLANT:
Mr D Berger SC
Instructed by Cheadle
Thompson & Haysom Inc
Braamfontein
FOR
THE SECOND RESPONDENT: Dr GJ Ebersöhn
Gerrie
Ebersöhn Attorneys Inc
Randburg
FOR THE THIRD RESPONDENT:
Mr WP Bekker
Instructed by Barnard Inc
Attorneys
Centurion
[1]
Act
66 of 1995, as amended. Section 27(1) reads: ‘
One
or more registered
trade
unions
and
one or more registered
employers'
organisations
may
establish a
bargaining
council
for
a
sector
a
nd
area
by
–
(a)
adopting a
constitution that meets the requirements of section 30; and
(b)
obtaining
registration of the
bargaining council
in terms of section
29.’
[2]
The agreement was published in terms of s 48(1)(a) of the Labour
Relations Act, 1956.
[3]
Section
213 reads:
‘
'collective
agreement'
means a written agreement concerning terms and
conditions of employment or any other matter of mutual interest
concluded by one
or more registered
trade unions
, on the one
hand and, on the other hand –
(a)
one or more
employers;
(b)
one or more
registered
employers' organisations
; or
(c)
one or more
employers and one or more registered
employers' organisations
…’
See
SA Clothing and
Textile Workers’ Union and Others v Yarntex (Pty) Ltd t/a
Bertrand Group
(2013) 34 ILJ 2199 (LAC) at para 64.
[4]
‘
(1)
Every
collective
agreement
excluding
an agency shop agreement concluded in terms of section 25 or a
closed shop agreement concluded in terms of section 26
or a
settlement agreement contemplated in either section 142A or 158 (1)
(c)
,
must provide for a procedure to resolve any dispute about the
interpretation or application of the
collective
agreement
.
The procedure must first require the parties to attempt to resolve
the
dispute
through
conciliation and, if the
dispute
remains
unresolved, to resolve it through arbitration.
(2)
If there is a
dispute
about the interpretation or application
of a
collective agreement
, any party to the
dispute
may
refer the
dispute
in writing to the Commission if –
(a)
the
collective
agreement
does not provide for a
procedure as required by subsection (1);
(b)
the procedure provided for in the
collective agreement
is
not operative; or
(c)
any party to the
collective
agreement
has frustrated the
resolution of the
dispute
in
terms of the
collective agreement
.
(3)
The party who refers the
dispute
to the Commission must
satisfy it that a copy of the referral has been
served
on all
the other parties to the
dispute
.
(4)
The Commission must attempt to resolve the
dispute
through
conciliation.
(5)
If the
dispute
remains unresolved, any party to the
dispute
may request that the
dispute
be resolved through
arbitration.’
See also section 30 of
the LRA which provides:
‘
(1) The
constitution of every
bargaining council
must at least
provide for –
(a)
the
appointment of representatives of the parties to the
bargaining
council
, of whom half must be appointed by the
trade unions
that are party to the
bargaining council
and the other
half by the
employers' organisations
that are party to the
bargaining council
, and the appointment of alternates to the
representatives…
(d)
rules for the
convening and conducting of meetings of representatives, including
the quorum required for, and the minutes to be
kept of, those
meetings;
(e)
the manner in
which decisions are to be made…
(h)
the
determination through arbitration of any
dispute
arising
between the parties to the
bargaining council
about the
interpretation or application of the
bargaining council
's
constitution;
(i)
the procedure
to be followed if a
dispute
arises between the parties to the
bargaining council
;
(j)
the procedure
to be followed if a
dispute
arises between a registered
trade
union
that is a party to the
bargaining council
, or its
members, or both, on the one hand, and employers who belong to a
registered
employers' organisation
that is a party to the
bargaining council
, on the other hand…’
[5]
Section 23 provides:
‘
(1) A
collective
agreement
binds –
(a)
the parties
to the
collective agreement
;
(b)
each party to
the
collective agreement
and the members of every other party
to the
collective agreement
, in so far as the provisions are
applicable between them;
(c)
the members
of a registered
trade union
and the employers who are members
of a registered
employers' organisation
that are party to the
collective agreement
if the
collective agreement
regulates
–
(i) terms and
conditions of employment; or
(ii) the conduct of the
employers in relation to their
employees
or the conduct of
the
employees
in relation to their employers;
(d) employees
who
are not members of the registered
trade union
or
trade
unions
party to the agreement if –
(i) the employees
are identified in the agreement;
(ii) the agreement
expressly binds the employees; and
(iii) that
trade
union
or those
trade unions
have as their members the
majority of
employees
employed by the employer in the
workplace
.
(2) A
collective
agreement
binds for the whole period of the
collective
agreement
every person bound in terms of subsection (1)
(c)
who was a member at the time it became binding, or who becomes a
member after it became binding, whether or not that person continues
to be a member of the registered
trade union
or registered
employers' organisation
for the duration of the
collective
agreement
.
(3) Where applicable, a
collective agreement
varies any contract of employment
between an
employee
and employer who are both bound by the
collective agreement
.
(4) Unless the
collective agreement
provides otherwise, any party to a
collective agreement that is concluded for an indefinite period may
terminate the agreement
by giving reasonable notice in writing to
the other parties.’
[6]
[2018] ZACC 4
;
2018 (4) BCLR 483
(CC) at para 105.
[7]
[2008]
ZACC 15
;
2009
(2) SA 204
(CC) at para 67.
[8]
Paddock
Motors (Pty) Ltd v Igesund
1976
(3) SA 16
at 23F-G.
[9]
Section 5(1) reads:
‘
No person may
discriminate against an employee for exercising any right conferred
by this Act.’
[10]
Section 9 reads:
‘
(1) If there is a
dispute
about the interpretation or application of any
provision of this Chapter, any party to the
dispute
may refer
the
dispute
in writing to –
(a)
a
council
,
if the parties to the
dispute
fall within the
registered
scope
of that
council
; or
(b)
the
Commission, if no
council
has jurisdiction.
(2) The party who refers
the
dispute
must satisfy the
council
or the Commission
that a copy of the referral has been
served
on all the other
parties to the
dispute
.
(3) The
council
or
the Commission must attempt to resolve the
dispute
through
conciliation.
(4) If the
dispute
remains unresolved, any party to the
dispute
may refer it
to the Labour Court for adjudication.’
sino noindex
make_database footer start