Case Law[2022] ZALAC 100South Africa
SASBO-The Finance Union and Another v Standard Bank and Others (JA32/2021) [2022] ZALAC 100; (2022) 43 ILJ 1794 (LAC); [2022] 10 BLLR 934 (LAC) (17 May 2022)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
17 May 2022
Headnotes
that: ‘In our law, fiduciary duties are not implied by law into all employment relationships. They
Judgment
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## SASBO-The Finance Union and Another v Standard Bank and Others (JA32/2021) [2022] ZALAC 100; (2022) 43 ILJ 1794 (LAC); [2022] 10 BLLR 934 (LAC) (17 May 2022)
SASBO-The Finance Union and Another v Standard Bank and Others (JA32/2021) [2022] ZALAC 100; (2022) 43 ILJ 1794 (LAC); [2022] 10 BLLR 934 (LAC) (17 May 2022)
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sino date 17 May 2022
IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG.
Not
reportable
Case
no: JA32/2021
In
the matter between:
SASBO
– THE FINANCE UNION
First Appellant
CHARLINE
FRAZENBURG
Second Appellant
and
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
First Respondent
COMMISSION
FOR CONCILIATION
MEDIATION
AND ARBITRATION
Second Respondent
COMMISSIONER
M.A. HAWYES N.O.
Third Respondent
Heard:
10 March 2022
Delivered:
May 2022
Neutral
Citation:
South African
Society of Bank Officials (SASBO) and Other v The Standard Bank Of
South Africa Limited and Others JA32/2021
Coram:
Phatshoane ADJP, Savage and Phatudi AJJA
Judgment
PHATSHOANE
ADJP
Introduction
[1]
In
National
Union of Metalworkers of South Africa obo Nganezi & others v
Dunlop Mixing and Technical Services (Pty) Limited &
others
[1]
the Constitutional Court held that: ‘In our law, fiduciary
duties are not implied by law into all employment relationships. They
may be inferred as a matter of fact from employment contracts and
moral notions of trust, confidence, loyalty and good faith.’
This
appeal concerns primarily the question
whether
the conduct of Ms Charline Frazenburg (the second appellant), insofar
as it is alleged by
Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited (the bank / the first respondent)
that
she falsified its records, amounted to dishonesty and thus breached
the duty of trust and fidelity she owed to the bank.
[2]
The appeal is with leave of
the Labour Court (
per
Rheeder
AJ) against the whole of its Judgment and order upholding the review
application filed by the bank; setting aside the arbitration
award
issued by Commissioner Hawyes (the third respondent), under the
auspices of the Commission for Conciliation Mediation and
Arbitration
(the CCMA/ the second respondent), in terms of which the CCMA had
concluded that Ms Frazenburg had been negligent as
opposed to being
dishonest and, consequently, that her dismissal was substantively
unfair.
The
factual background
[3]
Ms Frazenburg commenced
employment with the bank in January 2005. Prior to her dismissal, she
was a foreign exchange consultant
based at the bank’s
Cradlestone Service Centre. Her responsibilities included buying and
selling foreign notes, electronic
transfers, balancing travelers'
cheques, foreign notes and Rands. Ms Fawzia Cassim, a branch manager
where Ms Frazenburg was stationed,
conducted an investigation into
the allegations of misconduct against Ms Frazenburg and was the
initiator of her disciplinary enquiry.
She explained that Ms
Frazenburg, as a forex consultant, was required to operate an
automatic teller machine (ATM) safe which contained
her cash for the
day. She would use the cash in her safe to load various ATMs. Once
she had done so, she was required to adjust
the amounts that had been
loaded into the ATMs. The system would then reflect that the money is
no longer in the safe but in the
ATMs. At the close of business, Ms
Frazenburg had to ensure that all her transactions were adjusted.
Thereafter, she would balance
her safe by physically counting the
money in the safe and recording the balance in the system. The money
in the safe had to be
reflected in the bank’s records or system
as her balance for the day. Ms Frazenburg was fully trained as an ATM
branch custodian
during October 2016 and had last worked on the ATMs
in December 2016.
[4]
On
17 February 2017, Ms Frazenburg took over a safe which reflected a
balance of R1 442 000. The next day, on 18 February
2017,
she loaded two different ATMs with R248 000 and R148 000,
respectively. She later balanced her safe with the correct
figure of
R1 046 000. On 20 February 2017, she opened her safe with
this closing balance. She loaded two ATMs with R108 000
and R24
000, respectively. At the close of business on 20 February 2017, her
physical cash in the safe was supposed to reflect
a balance of
R914 000. She made three attempts to balance her safe and had
sought assistance from
Mr
Donovan
[2]
and Ms Ayanda Masola, her team leaders. At 13h35 she recorded a
balance of R1 442 000 which was her takeover amount of 17
February 2017, before loading the ATMs on 18 and 20 February, when
she did not have that amount in her safe. She did not physically
count the cash in her safe. Ms Masola certified that the R1 442 000
balance was checked and found to be correct in respect
of the monies
that were in the safe. A surprise cash count was conducted on 21
February 2017 because of the deficiencies and surpluses
that occurred
over that period of 17 to 20 February 2017. This was to ensure that
the balance reflected by Ms Frazenburg was accurate.
A difference or
a shortage of R528 000 was found. The bank did not suffer any
loss because the money was traced to a “house”
account.
[5]
Ms
Frazenburg’s evidence was largely not put to Ms Cassim. She
testified that she did not set the ATMs for the amounts she
had
loaded. She made a mistake because she did not adjust the figures
correctly. She recorded R500 000 instead of R148 000
and
R248 000, the actual amounts loaded into the two ATMs. When she
attempted to balance her safe, the system incorrectly
reflected R1.5
million as the money she had loaded on the ATMs. She called Donovan
who advised her to adjust the figures from the
safe. The figures did
not adjust properly causing a difference of R1.8 million. She had
also called Paul
[3]
, a service
consultant who was trained to be an ATM custodian and more
knowledgeable than she was. On Sunday 19 February 2017, Ms
Masola and
Donovan received WhatsApp text messages to the effect that the ATMs
were experiencing a shortage. Ms Frazenburg and
Donovan attempted to
reset the ATMs figures the same day.
[6]
On Monday, 20 February 2017, Ms Frazenburg
unsuccessfully attempted to recall all the ‘resets’ she
made. Her efforts
at balancing the figure in her safe came to naught.
She then called Paul who, together with Ms Masola, put the balance of
17 February
2017. Paul and Ms Masola had checked the balance in the
safe on the morning of 20 February 2017 and found it to be correct.
Ms
Frazenburg intimated that she was inundated with work as an ATM
custodian, a foreign exchange consultant, team leader and teller
when
the bank had been open for business and had to render assistance
where she could.
[7]
Ms Masola disputed that Ms Frazenburg was
dishonest when she balanced her safe because she did this in the
presence of her team
leaders. She acknowledged that Ms Frazenburg
would have entered the figures on the system as she alone would be
allowed to work
on the computer.
Ms
Masola was disciplined and dismissed for certifying ‘that the
teller’s cash amount of R1 442 000 had been
checked
and found to reflect an apparent surplus of R 396 000 as per the
teller’s cash balance specification.’
[8]
On 22 February 2017, Ms
Frazenburg was suspended pending an investigation into allegations of
misconduct. On 3 April 2017, she attended
a disciplinary hearing to
answer to the charge of alleged dishonesty in that she falsified the
bank’s records when she balanced
her till with money that she
did not have in order to show a balanced position during the period
18 to 20 February 2017. She was
subsequently found guilty and
dismissed. Aggrieved, she challenged this outcome at the CCMA.
The
CCMA proceedings and the arbitration award
[9]
Only the substantive fairness of the dismissal was
in dispute during the arbitration proceedings. Ms Frazenburg did not
dispute
that she acted in the manner already described. However, she
disputed that her conduct amounted to dishonesty. According to her,
she made a mistake with full knowledge of her supervisor, who had
been present when the cash balance was incorrectly entered into
the
system on 20 February 2017. Moreover, the bank did not suffer any
loss because the excess monies were found in the house account
where
unallocated monies were temporarily stored.
[10]
The CCMA commissioner recorded as common cause
that the bank did not prove theft or fraud and had suffered no loss
pursuant to Ms
Frazenburg’s actions. He found that Ms
Frazenburg had been negligent in that she inputted data into the ATMs
which made it
impossible to balance the books. The commissioner made
an observation that Ms Frazenburg’s actions, after entering the
data,
were desperate attempts to correct her original mistake. Her
intention was to rectify and not to falsify the records because
falsification
implied a devious intent.
[11]
In the final analysis, the commissioner held, that
Ms Frazenburg was not charged with any other alternative misconduct
which bore
negligence as an element. In light of this, and further,
on the bases that the bank did not prove that Ms Frazenburg was
dishonest,
he concluded that the dismissal was substantively unfair.
Consequently, he ordered that Ms Frazenburg be retrospectively
reinstated
on the same terms and conditions which governed the
employment relationship prior to the date of her dismissal. The bank
was further
ordered to pay her R52 869, equivalent to her five
months’ remuneration.
Dissatisfied
with the results of the arbitration, the bank filed a review
application in terms of s 145 of the Labour Relations
Act 66 of 1995
(LRA) with the Labour Court.
The
judgment of the Labour Court
[12]
In its contrasting outcome, the Labour Court
reasoned that the commissioner committed an irregularity by failing
to separate the
conduct of Ms Frazenburg on days preceding her
wrongdoing from the offence itself. The court held that Ms Frazenburg
admitted to
counting the cash. She printed the balance at 13h30 and
knowingly recorded
a
false balance of her takeover amount of 17 February 2017. This, the
court reasoned, was an intentional act ‘to force balance
the
system or as she called it “to fix what had gone wrong”
as she was scared of being accused of theft.’ She
intended to
deceive the bank. She may not have intended to steal any money,
remarked the court, however, that was not the reason
she faced
discipline. According to the Labour Court, the fact that the bank
suffered no loss did not exonerate Ms Frazenburg from
her dishonest
conduct which the bank’s system was designed to obviate.
[13]
The
Labour Court held that, in finding differently, the commissioner
narrowly interpreted the charge to have required that theft,
fraud or
loss to the bank be established and thus misconstrued the nature of
the enquiry before him. The court was of the view
that the misconduct
complained of was of a serious nature to warrant a dismissal which it
found to have been for a fair reason.
It concluded that the
commissioner came to an unreasonable decision in characterising Ms
Frazenburg’s conduct as a mere desperate
attempt to correct her
mistake and failing to comprehend the dishonest and misleading nature
of her conduct. Therefore, the court
reviewed and set aside the award
and substituted it with an order that the dismissal of Ms Frazenburg
was substantively and procedurally
fair.
The
summary of the argument on appeal
[14]
Before us, it was contended
for Ms Frazenburg that this is not a case where the Labour Court
ought to have disturbed the outcome
of the arbitration proceedings.
It was argued
that the bank did not prove dishonesty. At best, Ms Frazenburg’s
conduct amounted to some form of negligence
or ‘foolishness’
in balancing the safe while knowing that the balance captured was
incorrect. She did not attempt to
hide that she could not balance her
ATM. Even if it were to be remotely found, it was argued, that there
was an element of dishonesty
it would be of such a nature that
equates to imprudence. Thus, the sanction of a dismissal would be
unfair.
[15]
Counsel for the bank
submitted that the bank’s complaint against Ms Frazenburg was
that she recorded information on the teller’s
cash balance
specification which she knew was false. By recording the takeover
figures of 17 February 2017, it was argued, she
misrepresented the
true nature of the position regarding the cash in her safe and
falsified the bank’s records in breach
of the disciplinary
code. Her actions were deliberate and calculated to mislead the bank.
Whether she reported the matter to her
team leaders, it was argued,
was immaterial to the question whether the bank records were
falsified.
The
issues arising for consideration
[16]
The issue central to the appeal is whether the
Labour Court correctly reviewed and set aside the commissioner’s
award. Allied
to this enquiry is the question whether Ms Frazenburg’s
conduct amounted to dishonesty which merited her dismissal or
negligence
of a trivial nature which would not justify her discharge.
The
discussion
[17]
Dishonesty
as an aspect of misconduct is a generic term embracing all forms of
conduct involving deception.
[4]
This Court in
Nedcor
Bank Ltd v Frank & others
[5]
defined
dishonesty as a lack of integrity or straightforwardness and, in
particular, a willingness to steal, cheat, lie or
act fraudulently.
[6]
Deceitfulness can manifest itself in various forms, which includes
providing false information, non-disclosure of information,
pilfering, theft and fraud. The fiduciary duty owed by an employee to
the employer generally renders any dishonest conduct a material
breach of the employment relationship, thereby justifying summary
dismissal.
[7]
In terms of
the bank’s disciplinary code, dishonesty would include, amongst
others, deliberately giving untrue, misleading
or wrong information
or instructing a subordinate to do so; falsification of the bank
records; theft, misappropriation or unauthorized
possession of
property or funds belonging to another employee or a customer; fraud
or forgery. These offences are regarded as ‘dismissible
actions
without previous warnings’ in the bank’s disciplinary
code.
[18]
The
courts have frequently upheld dismissal for dishonesty. However, it
is not an invariable rule that offences involving dishonesty
necessarily incur the supreme penalty of dismissal. The facts of
every case must be assessed and the mitigating features taken
into account.
[8]
[19]
In
issue, as said, is whether the employee’s actions were
intrinsically dishonest. The South African Society of Bank Officials
(SASBO), the first appellant, and Ms Frazenburg placed m
uch
reliance on the decision of this Court in
Nedcor
Bank
(supra)
and that of the Labour Court in
Arcelormittal
South Africa Limited v Pretorius and Others
[9]
in
their argument that the Labour Court ought to have found that
dishonest intention or intention to deceive was central to the
finding that Ms Frazenburg acted dishonestly by falsifying the bank’s
records. In amplification, it was argued that the Labour
Court’s
approach was directly opposite to that adopted in the two decisions.
[20]
The
facts in
Nedcor
Bank
and
Arcelormittal
are
entirely different from those which apply to this case. In
Nedcor
Bank,
one
employee was charged with dishonesty in that he deliberately and
knowingly disengaged the card-reader denying the clients
access in
the knowledge that the bank's monitoring system would be unable to
detect that the ATM did not have sufficient cash.
The other employee
was also charged with dishonesty and failure to adhere to the bank's
laid down policy and procedure. The two
employees had made no attempt
to conceal a material fact from the bank. They claimed an altruistic
motive of shielding the bank
from the wrath of the management of the
airport. They denied having known of any policy or practice
directive prohibiting
their conduct before the formal rule was
introduced.
[21]
In
Arcelormittal
South Africa,
an
employee
was
found guilty and dismissed on three charges of misconduct relating to
dishonesty. It was alleged that he submitted inflated
travel and
subsistence claims.
He
had tendered an explanation for the kilometres in which he
over-claimed and in respect of which the employer had failed to do
a
simple check on Google maps to verify the routes and the accusation
of over-claiming. The employee had also conceded
that
the total amount where he over-claimed was approximately R9 000 over
a period of 3 to 4 years. There was also some
484
kilometres he claimed in August 2009 which he said was a
bona
fide
mistake.
The arbitrator had found that the employer had failed
to
prove that the employee acted with the intention to benefit
inappropriately or to deceive and had failed to prove the essential
element of intent when disciplining the employee for dishonesty. He
awarded the employee the maximum compensation. The Labour Court
concluded that the arbitrator's award fell within a range of
decisions that a reasonable decision-maker could make.
[22]
Ms Frazenburg was not
charged with causing some financial loss to the bank or theft or
fraud which appears to have been key to the
commissioner’s
finding that she was not guilty of dishonesty. During the
cross-examination of Ms Cassim, the commissioner
put to her that ‘the
concept of dishonesty’ in this case was being stretched. He
made similar remarks during the
closing address that Ms Frazenburg was not charged for balancing her
safe but for dishonesty. He
went on to state: ‘I am not seeing
much in terms of dishonesty here, she certainly did not benefit from
anything, there was
no fraud there was no theft’. He carried on
questioning the bank’s representative and in the end said
‘Please
just one thing, just do not think that I have already
made up my mind here, i[t] may look that way, not at all, I am just a
little
concerned about things getting classified as dishonesty and
falsification when I have a different understanding of these things.’
[23]
The Labour Court correctly noted
that
the commissioner opined, in the course of the hearing, that there had
been no dishonesty as no money had been appropriated.
By so doing,
the court said, the commissioner appeared to have closed his mind to
the evidence tendered by the bank and searched
for theft or fraud to
demonstrate that Ms Frazenburg was not guilty of the offence.
[24]
The
workplace disciplinary hearings are not criminal proceedings. This
Court held in
Woolworths
(Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation & Arbitration
& others,
that
:
[10]
‘…
(T)he
misconduct charge on and for which the employee was arraigned and
convicted at the disciplinary enquiry did not necessarily
have to be
strictly framed in accordance with the wording of the relevant acts
of misconduct as listed in the appellant's disciplinary
codes,
referred to above. It was sufficient that the wording of the
misconduct alleged in the charge-sheet conformed, with sufficient
clarity so as to be understood by the employee, to the substance and
import of any one or more of the listed offences. After all,
it is to
be borne in mind that misconduct charges in the workplace are
generally drafted by people who are not legally qualified
and
trained…’
[25]
The
approach adopted by the commissioner was plainly incorrect. In any
event, having determined that Ms Frazenburg was negligent,
he ought
to have dealt with the charge on that basis. It was not open to him
to simply state that because the employee had not
been charged, in
the alternative, of negligence that was the end of the matter. The
trier of fact is expected, in the context of
discipline in the
workplace, to deal with the wrong committed by an employee even if
the charge may have been inelegantly phrased
provided that the
employee is not significantly prejudiced by the incorrect labeling of
the charge. In
Woolworths
(supra)
the court agreed with the example cited in the work of Le Roux &
Van Niekerk, that:
[11]
'Employers
embarking on disciplinary proceedings occasionally define the alleged
misconduct incorrectly. For example, an employee
is charged with
theft and the evidence either at the disciplinary enquiry or during
the industrial court proceedings, establishes
unauthorised
possession of company property. Here the rule appears to be that,
provided a disciplinary rule has been contravened,
that the employee
knew that such conduct could be the subject of disciplinary
proceedings, and that he was not significantly prejudiced
by the
incorrect characterization, discipline appropriate to the offence
found to have been committed may be imposed.’
[26]
The
main thrust of the charge against Ms Frazenburg was that she balanced
her till with money that was not in her safe in order
to show a
balanced position during the period 18 to 20 February 2017. According
to the bank, insofar as Ms Frazenburg entered an
incorrect figure of
her takeover of 17 February 2017, she falsified its records. To
consider whether Ms Frazenburg falsified the
bank records or that she
simply made a mistake requires a careful scrutiny of the evidence
presented. Ms Frazenburg sought to portray
a picture that, at all
relevant times, her team leaders had been around when she attempted
to balance her safe. Quite remarkably
she said that at around 13h30
she was alone when she printed the balance and used the same figures
that had been used in the morning
by Paul and Ms Masola during the
first reconciliation attempt at about 10h30 because she thought they
were correct. A simple exercise
that she was required to perform was
to count the money in her safe and record the balance on the system.
That she did not do.
[27]
Ms Frazenburg prevaricated on the question whether
she was present when the money was allegedly counted at 10h30 by her
colleagues.
Her responses were disingenuous. It could not have
escaped her mind that the 10h30 balance was incorrect. She did not
count the
money in the safe at 13h30, which she knew full well that
she had to do, but cavalierly set about reflecting the incorrect
takeover
figure of 17 February 2017 on the bank’s record.
Failure to count the money could never have been a mistake but a
deliberate
act. It is also significant that there was no evidence
that she informed her team leader that she would use the takeover
figure
of 17 February 2017 to balance her safe on 20 February 2017 at
13h30. This was entirely her own conscious decision to capture the
false balance. She, therefore, misled the bank in respect of the
correct balance or the balance of the money in her safe. Ms
Frazenburg
was also evasive in her response to the question when she
intended to declare to the bank that she had a shortage of R500 000
in her safe. She agreed that she is responsible for anything done on
her safe and under her name and that the bank views shortages
and
surpluses in a serious light. In her own words, employees of the bank
had been dismissed for this.
[28]
Ms Frazenburg agreed
to be honest in her dealings with the bank in her general terms of
employment which she concluded with the
bank. There was no debate, in
this case, that there is a rule in the workplace that prohibits
falsification of the bank’s
record which is legally sound and
operationally rational. Ms Frazenburg did not contest that she was
aware of the rule. As already
said, the bank’s disciplinary
code lists falsification of the bank’s records under examples
of dismissible offences
without previous warnings. In terms of the
bank’s balancing rules:
‘
Ány
differences found during a surprise check must be referred to the
team leader tellers. The team leader tellers must view
this in a
serious light as the teller had reflected a balanced position the day
before and this would be classified as falsification
of bank
records.’
[29]
From the aforegoing, the capturing of the false
balance on the bank’s records points to a dishonest conduct and
not foolhardiness
as found by the commissioner who clearly paid no
attention to the operational needs of the banking industry. Ms
Frazenburg’s
persistent plea of a mistake cannot avail her. The
Labour Court
correctly reasoned that in the banking environment, as fully set out
in the general terms of employment, the employees
are expected to be
honest and not to circumvent the checks and balances put in place to
prevent the misconduct of a kind committed
here. The court’s
assessment of the evidence that Ms Frazenburg altered the bank
records to reflect a false picture cannot
be faulted.
[30]
Ms
Cassim testified that Ms Frazenburg’s conduct had an impact on
the relationship of trust and continued employment relationship
because she did not live up to one of the values of the bank which is
to act with honesty and integrity. The need for employees
to act with
honesty and fidelity is so fundamental in the financial services
industry, more so, where the employees deal with large
sums of money.
A breach of trust in the form of conduct involving dishonesty is one
that goes to the heart of the relationship
and is destructive of
it.
[12]
It can hardly be
argued that the dismissal was not justified.
[31]
In conclusion: the
commissioner’s award is characterised by an
insufficient
and misdirected assessment of the evidence which had a distorting
effect on the enquiry he was enjoined to undertake
.
It is not a decision that a reasonable decision-maker could have
reached in light of the material placed before him.
It
follows that the appeal must, therefore, fail. In accordance with the
requirements of law and fairness as set out in s 162 read
with s 179
of the LRA, this is not a case where an order of costs should be
made.
In the result,
I make the following order.
Order
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
MV
Phatshoane
Acting
Deputy Judge President - The Labour Appeal Court
Savage
and Phatudi AJJA concur in the judgment of Phatshoane ADJP
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT:
Adv J G Rautenbach SC
Instructed
by BJ Erasmus Pieterse Attorneys
FOR
THE FIRST RESPONDENT:
Mr D Cithi
Instructed
by Mervyn Taback Inc
[1]
(2019)
40 ILJ 1957 (CC) para 62.
[2]
Donovan’s surname was not disclosed on the record.
[3]
Whose
surname is not reflected on the record.
[4]
CI
Tshoose & R Letseku: ‘
The
breakdown of the trust relationship between employer and employee as
a ground of dismissal: Interpreting the Labour Appeal
Court's
decision in
Autozone’
2020 SA Merc LJ 162.
[5]
(2002)
23 ILJ 1243 (LAC).
[6]
Nedcor
Bank Ltd v Frank & others
(2002)
23 ILJ 1243 (LAC) para 15.
[7]
Van
Niekerk A
et
al,
Law@work
4
th
ed
(LexisNexis 2017) 299
.
[8]
Toyota
SA Motors (Pty) Ltd v Radebe & others
(2000)
21 ILJ 340 (LAC) paras 43-44.
[9]
(JR999/2014) [2016] ZALCJHB 351 (14 September 2016).
[10]
(2011)
32 ILJ 2455 (LAC) para 32.
[11]
P
A K le Roux & Andre van Niekerk
The
SA Law of Unfair Dismissal
(Juta
& Co 1994) at 102.
[12]
Central
News Agency (Pty) Ltd v Commercial Catering & Allied Workers
Union of SA & another
(1991)
12 ILJ 340 (LAC) at 344;
Standard
Bank of SA Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation &
Arbitration & others
(1998)
19 ILJ 903 (LC) para 38.
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[2022] ZALAC 6Labour Appeal Court of South Africa97% similar
Makuleni v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd and Others (JA125/2021) [2023] ZALAC 4; (2023) 44 ILJ 1005 (LAC); [2023] 4 BLLR 283 (LAC) (8 February 2023)
[2023] ZALAC 4Labour Appeal Court of South Africa97% similar
South African Revenue Service v National Education, Health And Allied Workers Union obo Kulati and Another (JA101/2021) [2023] ZALAC 11; (2023) 44 ILJ 1929 (LAC); [2023] 10 BLLR 1019 (LAC) (21 June 2023)
[2023] ZALAC 11Labour Appeal Court of South Africa97% similar