Case Law[2022] ZALAC 107South Africa
South African Municipal Workers Union obo Morwe v Tswaing Local Municipality and Others (JA 12/21) [2022] ZALAC 107; (2022) 43 ILJ 2754 (LAC); [2023] 2 BLLR 131 (LAC) (27 September 2022)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
27 September 2022
Headnotes
dismissal which constituted the act of breaching the contract because no disciplinary enquiry had preceded it.’ [6] The relevant foundation for the claim in contract before the Labour Court is sections 77(3) and 77A(e) of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act[3] (BCEA): ‘77 Jurisdiction of Labour Court
Judgment
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## South African Municipal Workers Union obo Morwe v Tswaing Local Municipality and Others (JA 12/21) [2022] ZALAC 107; (2022) 43 ILJ 2754 (LAC); [2023] 2 BLLR 131 (LAC) (27 September 2022)
South African Municipal Workers Union obo Morwe v Tswaing Local Municipality and Others (JA 12/21) [2022] ZALAC 107; (2022) 43 ILJ 2754 (LAC); [2023] 2 BLLR 131 (LAC) (27 September 2022)
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sino date 27 September 2022
IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Reportable
Case
no: JA 12/21
In the matters between:
SOUTH AFRICAN
MUNICIPAL WORKERS
UNION OBO MOGALE
DANIEL MORWE
Appellant
and
TSWAING LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent
MANOTO
ISAAC
MORUTI
Second Respondent
THE
MUNICIPAL COUNCIL OF TSWAING
Third Respondent
LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
THE
EXECUTIVE MAYOR OF TSWAING
LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
Fourth Respondent
Heard:
13 September 2022
Judgment:
27 September 2022
Coram:
Waglay JP, Sutherland JA and Kathree-Setiloane
JA
JUDGMENT
SUTHERLAND
JA
Introduction
[1]
This matter began life as an urgent application before the Labour
Court.
The relief claimed in the Notice of Motion was that:
‘
1.
The applicant’s non-compliance with the rules of this Court be
condoned and that this application
be heard as one of urgency in
terms of rule 8 of the rules of this honourable Court.
2.
The termination of the applicant’s contract of employment be
declared unlawful and
set aside.
3.
The applicant be granted an order of specific performance in terms of
section 77(e) [sic]
of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act 75 of
1997 (“BCEA”) reinstating the applicant’s contract
of employment
with immediate effect from the date of the grant of
this order.
4.
The second respondent [ie the municipal manager] be ordered to pay
the costs of this application
personally.’
[2]
The application was dismissed. In the judgment, two bases were
articulated
for the dismissal. First, that the Labour Court lacked
the jurisdiction to hear the pleaded case. Alternatively, even if it
did
have jurisdiction, the pleaded case was not established on the
papers. In our view, the first reason was incorrect and the second
reason was correct. Moreover, the application was not remotely
urgent. It could have been struck off or dismissed for the second
reason. The result is that the appeal must be dismissed.
[3]
At the hearing, only the appellant was represented, although heads of
argument had been filed on behalf of the respondent. A bizarre letter
had been sent to this Court by the respondent. It said that
the
opposition to the appeal was withdrawn. It did not say that the
judgment in its favour was abandoned. The consequence of that
is that
the appeal must be adjudicated.
The
Jurisdiction question
[4]
As the
Notice of Motion makes clear, the claim did not engage the provisions
of the Labour Relations Act
[1]
(LRA). That disavowal was also later expressly alleged.
[5]
Jurisdiction
is an issue decided on the pleadings.
[2]
In an application, the pleadings are constituted by the Notice of
Motion and the supporting affidavits. The founding affidavit
set out
several averments:
‘
(1)
In para 19, it was averred that the contract had been ‘unlawfully’
terminated. The averments then
went on to inappropriately state that
a ‘setting aside’ of the termination and a
‘reinstatement’ was sought.
This terminology belongs to a
claim under the LRA not in a claim in contract. As the plain
intention was to engage the jurisdiction
of the Labour Court under
section 77(3) of the BCEA, it is appropriate to take a charitable
view and treat the averments as if
they had averred that specific
performance of the terms of contract which had been breached by the
employer was sought. In the
absence of a charitable approach the
application could have been dismissed on the grounds that it sought
relief available only
in terms of the unfair dismissal jurisdiction
of the Labour Court under the LRA.
(2)
The pleadings continue somewhat turgidly. A written contract is
averred. In regard hereto,
it is averred that the contract, properly
understood, conferred on the appellant employee a protection in that
the contract could
not be terminated without the employer first
conducting a disciplinary enquiry in terms of a collective agreement
which was in
place.
(3)
Further it is averred that on 20 October 2020, the appellant was
given a letter of summary
dismissal which constituted the act of
breaching the contract because no disciplinary enquiry had preceded
it.’
[6]
The
relevant foundation for the claim in contract before the Labour Court
is
sections 77(3)
and
77A
(e) of the
Basic Conditions of Employment
Act
[3]
(BCEA):
‘
77
Jurisdiction of Labour Court
(1)
Subject to the Constitution and the
jurisdiction of the Labour Appeal Court, and except where this Act
provides otherwise, the Labour
Court has exclusive jurisdiction in
respect of all matters in terms of this Act.
(1A)
The Labour Court has exclusive jurisdiction to grant civil relief
arising from a breach of sections
33A, 43, 44, 46, 48, 90 and 92.
(2)
…
(3)
The Labour Court has concurrent jurisdiction with the civil courts
to hear and determine any matter concerning a contract of employment,
irrespective of whether any basic condition of employment constitutes
a term of that contract.
(4)
…
(5)
…
77A
Powers of Labour Court
Subject
to the provisions of this Act, the Labour Court may make any
appropriate order, including an order –
...
(e)
making a determination that it considers
reasonable on any matter concerning a contract of employment in terms
of section 77 (3),
which determination may include an order for
specific performance, an award of damages or an award of
compensation;
(f)
…
(g)
dealing with any matter necessary or
incidental to performing its functions in terms of this Act.’
[Own emphasis].
[7]
The Labour Court held that Section 77(3) must be interpreted to mean
that
the jurisdiction of the Labour Court is engaged only in respect
of a contract of employment during its existence and once it has
been
terminated, that jurisdiction evaporates. At paras [9] – [10]
the court held:
‘
[9]
… this Court shall have to live with the choice [by the
appellant], supposedly made with the
benefit of proper legal advice,
that the termination be challenged on the principles of the law of
contract. Section 77 (3) of
BCEA provides as follows:
‘’
The
Labour Court has concurrent jurisdiction with the civil courts to
hear and determine any matter
concerning
a contract of employment,
irrespective
of whether any basic condition of employment constitutes a term of
that contract
”.
[10]
In my view where a contract of employment is terminated or cancelled,
whether lawfully or unlawfully,
fairly or unfairly, the jurisdiction
of this Court under section 77 (3) cannot be invoked. In this regard,
I am fortified by the
language employed by the legislature. The word
‘concerning’ is used as a preposition in a present
continuous tense.
If the legislature had in mind a matter involving a
terminated contract, it could have used a verb like ‘concerned’.
The dictionary meaning of the word ‘concerning’ is
‘
regarding; touching; in reference or in relation to; or
about’.
Therefore, in my view, at the time of the Labour
Court hears and determines a matter, the contract must be still
extant. My view
obtains further sustenance and fortification from the
phrase “
irrespective of whether any basic condition of
employment constitutes a
term of that
contract.
Where a contract has been terminated or cancelled, its terms are
no longer binding on the parties. In short a cancelled contract
is
incapable of being enforced unless the right to cancel is placed in
dispute. The duty to hear and determine is shared with the
civil
Courts.’ [Underlining in the original]
[8]
In our
view, this interpretation is incorrect. The provisions of section
77(3) must be interpreted in accordance with the well-established
approach described in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Funds v Endumeni Municipality
,
at para [18].
[4]
The purpose,
context and text of the section must be considered holistically.
[9]
The notion that the phrase ‘concerning a contract of
employment’
means that a dispute about the termination of that
contract is outside the jurisdiction of the Labour Court is
misconceived. The
error is, in part, caused by not reading the whole
text of the sub-section. The whole text, properly understood, does
two things.
First, it confers on the Labour Court concurrent
jurisdiction with the civil courts. Second, it limits the scope of
that concurrency
to matters ‘concerning a contract of
employment’. What this must mean is that whatever a civil court
could hear ‘concerning
a contract of employment’ is what
the Labour Court could hear. The word ‘concerning’ and
the use of the present
tense does not point towards the scope of
jurisdiction being only in respect of contracts which it is common
cause are extant.
A controversy about whether or not a contract has
been cancelled validly or has been breached remains a dispute
‘concerning
a contract of employment’. This is the
ordinary grammatical meaning of the phrase and, perhaps more
importantly, from the
perspective of a purposive interpretation, any
other understanding would result in an absurdity. The notion that the
civil courts
can hear matters about the disputed validity of the
termination of a contract and the concurrent jurisdiction of the
Labour Court
did not extend to that category of dispute would make a
mockery of concurrency. Common sense and experience tells us that the
critical
mass of litigation about breaches of contracts of employment
are about the disputed validity of the termination of such
agreements.
[10]
Moreover,
the notion of the remedy of specific performance being available only
in respect of an existing contract is a misleading
statement. The
remedy follows on a finding that the contract has been breached and
such an order compels compliance with the obligations
in terms of the
contract. An act of purported termination does not unsuit an
aggrieved contracting party from access to the Labour
Court. The
concept of specific performance, despite its effect being the
equivalent of reinstatement as contemplated by section
193 of the
LRA, the judicial decision is wholly discretionary in respect of the
former and is constrained in the case of the latter.
[5]
[11]
In summary, any claim that could be brought in a civil court that has
to do with a dispute
over a contract of employment falls within the
jurisdiction of the Labour Court.
[12]
The stipulated powers of the Labour Court provided in section 77A (e)
are,
prima facie
, broader than that of a civil court, but that
aspect has no bearing on the interpretation issue and the scope of
the Labour Court’s
jurisdiction over employment issues in terms
of section 77(3).
[13]
Accordingly, the Labour Court indeed had jurisdiction to hear the
claim pleaded.
The
claim of breach of contract
[14]
The critical element in the cause of action pleaded by the appellant
is a
right in contract
to a disciplinary hearing. There should
be no confusion arising from the appellant’s pleading averments
that show he was
afforded
audi alterem partem
before the
dismissal or termination of the contract was effected: that conduct
by the employer has no effect on the interpretation
issue and no
inference can be drawn from that act.
[15]
It is plain that the alleged right must be found in the written
contract, either express
or implied. It is thus to the written
contract that we must now turn. Clause 5 of the contract of
employment provides:
‘
5.
Termination of Employment
Either you or the Council
will be entitled to terminate your employment on written notice given
to the other party, as follows:
5.1
If you have been employed for four (4)
weeks or less, either party is required to give the other party one
(1) week written notice.
5.2
If you have been employed for more than
four (4) weeks, but not more than one (1) year, either party is
required to give two (2)
weeks written notice.
5.3
If you have been employed for more than one
(1) year, either party is required to give four (4) weeks written
notice.
5.4
Notice of termination of your employment
may not be given:
5.4.1
during any period of leave to which you are
entitled to;
5.4.2
must not run concurrently with any period
of leave to which you are entitled to;
5.4.3
on any other day except the 1
st
day of the month, should the first day of the month fall on a public
holiday, or weekend then the first working day following such
day?
5.5
The Council will be entitled to
terminate your employment without notice in compliance with the
relevant Labour legislation, as
amended, and in terms of the Human
Resources Policies and Procedure Manual, which may include a
disciplinary hearing, if you –
5.5.1
commit any serious or persistent breach
of any of the provisions of this agreement;
5.5.2
are guilty of any serious misconduct or
deliberate neglect in the discharge of your duties under this
agreement;
5.5.3
are guilty of any other conduct which
will justify summary dismissal at common law;
5.5.4
…
5.6
Notwithstanding the above, your employment with
the Council will terminate at the end of the month in which you turn
65 (sixty five)
years of age, unless you and the Council agree
otherwise in writing…
[Own emphasis]
[16]
This clause is the principal alleged source of the right claimed. The
proposition cannot
be sustained. In general, provisions in agreements
that express subordination to the LRA and its norms are decorative
surplusage.
It is impossible in law to contract out of the regulation
of the LRA. In this clause, a generalised genuflection is articulated
which is then qualified by the permissive rather than a peremptory
allusion to an enquiry which ‘may’ be included.
There is
no policy imperative which compels a court to strain to find in a
contract that procedures and remedies provided by the
LRA have been
incorporated. The essential contingency of an enquiry as referred to
in clause 5.5 is not a sound basis to make the
claim that the
appellant relies upon.
[17]
The Labour Court approached the issue from the perspective that
‘procedural fairness’
is a species of complaint that is
exclusively within the realm of the LRA remedies and has no place in
purely contractual disputes.
There is some force to this view because
the common law of contract did not evolve an intrinsic procedural
fairness element. It
has been the very absence of such an element
which is the font of the demand for statutory labour law remedies.
However, it is
unnecessary in this judgment to express a firm view on
this aspect. It suffices to say that a contract of employment could
notionally
incorporate any procedures if they are expressly included.
However, in our view, on the facts of this case, this contract does
not include such provisions.
[18]
In
Old
Mutual Ltd v Moyo
[6]
(
Moyo
)
,
the employee alleged that the contract of employment could not be
terminated without an enquiry. That court found that no such
right
emerged from the terms of the written contract. The relevant text of
the contract relied on was cited at paras [8] - [9]
of the judgment:
‘
[8]
…
“
24.1
This contract of employment may be terminated as follows:
24.1.1
By either party providing six months’ notice to this effect, in
writing, to the other
party, subject to clause 24.3. Where such
notice is provided:
24.1.1.1
The employer may, at its sole discretion, elect whether the executive
should work during this period of notice. Notwithstanding this, the
employer shall pay the executive for the six months’
notice
irrespective of whether the employer has required him to work or not.
24.1.1.2
Should the executive give notice in terms of clause 24.1.1 and
request
that the employer waive the notice period, the employer may
exercise its discretion in this regard. Should the employer agree to
such waiver, the executive shall be paid only up to and including his
last day of actual work.
24.1.2
Upon the executive reaching the normal retirement age as determined
by the employer, or at
an agreed earlier retirement age, at which
point this agreement shall terminate and the executive shall commence
retirement.
24.1.3
By the employer on the basis of the grounds regarded as valid in the
Labour Relations
Act 66 of 1995,
with or
without the notice period as set out in clause 24.1.
24.1.4
For any other lawful and fair reason.
24.2
Without limiting the provisions of clause 24.1 above (inclusive of
clauses 24.1.1 to 24.1.4) the employer may, at any
time during the
currency of this agreement:
24.2.1
summarily terminate this agreement should the executive be guilty of
misconduct which would
entitle the employer, in law and/or equity, to
summarily dismiss him;
24.2.2
terminate this agreement with notice should the executive
not
meet
the employer’s required performance standards;
24.2.3
terminate this agreement with notice on the basis of the executive’s
incapacity on the
basis of ill health or injury;
24.2.4
terminate this agreement on the basis of the employer’s and/or
the group’s operational
requirements;
24.2.5
terminate this agreement with or without notice on the basis of
“FAIS” requirements
as set out in clause 17, or a breach
in terms of clause 18 of this agreement (the FICA);
24.2.6
terminate this agreement summarily where the executive has committed
a material breach of contract
and/or for reasons recognised and
accepted in law and equity as justifying summary termination of
employment;
24.2.7
terminate this agreement without notice if the executive is in breach
of any code or rules
or guilty of any offence under or in respect of
any financial services regulator (including, without limitation, the
Financial
Services Board (FSB) or any successor body, including any
prudential authority).”
[9]
Clause 25.1 of the
employment contract is also relevant. It deals with pre-dismissal
arbitration and reads thus:
“
25.1.1
Where allegations of misconduct or
incapacity have been raised against the executive, the employer will
be entitled, within its
sole discretion, to decide whether or not to
hold an internal disciplinary enquiry, or to proceed instead via the
pre-dismissal
arbitration procedure, contemplated in
s 188A
of the
Labour Relations
Act 66 of 1995,
and
subject to the executive’s remuneration at the time being equal
to or above that stipulated in
s 6(3)
of the
Basic Conditions of
Employment Act, the
executive hereby consents to such pre-dismissal
arbitration in terms of
s 188A
of the
Labour Relations Act.
25.1.2
Should
circumstances arise in respect of the executive where the
employer chooses to invoke clause 25.1.1 and pre-dismissal
arbitration
proceedings must be arranged, the employer shall decide
in its sole discretion as to whether to utilise the services of the
Commission
for Conciliation, Mediation & Arbitration (the CCMA)
or an accredited agency”.’ [Own emphasis].
[19]
The text in the
Moyo
contract reflects the same species of
ambivalence about an enquiry as that to be read in clause 5.5 of the
contract relied on by
the appellant. The High Court in
Moyo
held thus:
‘
[59]
It seems to me, with respect, that despite Mr Moyo’s express
disavowal of any reliance on his rights under the
LRA, the court a
quo viewed the interdict application through a labour-law prism, ie
the perceived unfairness of Old Mutual having
raised allegations of a
conflict of interest and misconduct on the part of Mr Moyo, and then
proceeding instead to terminate the
employment contract on notice in
terms of clause 24.1.1 without first affording him a hearing before
the termination. However,
there is no such self-standing common-law
right to fairness in employment contracts. A right to be treated
fairly when a contract
is terminated only exists if it is expressly
or impliedly incorporated in the contract.
[60]
In
SA
Maritime Safety Authority v McKenzie
2010
(3) SA 601 (SCA);
(2010)
31
ILJ
529 (SCA)
paras 32-33 and
55
-58
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal had occasion to consider a contract of
employment which provided for termination on notice. Wallis
AJA held
that a right to be treated fairly upon termination could only be held
to exist if it is expressly or impliedly incorporated
in the contract
and that such a term should not be imported into a contract by
developing the common law. It was held that the
contract in question
had been lawfully terminated on notice and there was no requirement
for fairness, expressly or impliedly,
incorporated into the contract.
…
[67]
Mr
Moyo’s interpretation that clause 25.1.1 affords him a
contractual right to a disciplinary hearing also militates against
the long-standing precept of interpretation that every word must be
given a meaning. A court should not conclude, without good
reason,
that words in a single document are tautologous or superfluous. (See
National Credit Regulator v Opperman
& others
2013 (2) SA 1
(CC) para 99;
African Products (Pty) Ltd v AIG SA Ltd
2009 (3)
SA 473
(SCA)
para 13.)… Furthermore, Mr
Moyo’s interpretation would lead to absurdity and the
unbusinesslike result that the employer
would be obliged in every
instance where allegations of misconduct have been raised against the
executive, to hold either an internal
disciplinary enquiry or
pre-dismissal arbitration, even though the employer, for reasons of
its own, does not wish to pursue the
matter any further or to take
disciplinary action.’
[20]
The critical point in the case before this court, as in
Moyo
,
is that although the employer
could
have held an enquiry, the
contract does not, on its terms, compel the employer to do so. Thus,
on this ground, the pleaded cause
of action fails.
[21]
An ancillary contention advanced is that clause 19.3 of the written
agreement supports
the claim. That clause merely states that any
disciplinary action taken shall be in terms of the disciplinary code.
The contention
that this confers a right to an enquiry is incorrect.
All that is achieved by this text is that if an enquiry is held it
must conform
to a stipulated procedure.
The
remedy of specific performance
[22]
There is a
further acute vulnerability in the case pleaded and the relief sought
in the form of specific performance. The remedy
of specific
performance is discretionary.
[7]
Given the facts alleged about the conduct of the parties explaining
why they fell out, i.e. the alleged mutinous and disruptive
behaviour
of the employee, even were the employer to have been found to have
been in breach of compliance with an obligation to
hold an enquiry,
the factors relevant to the grant of specific performance indicate
that it would probably be inappropriate to
do so. That would leave
the appellant with the prospect of damages, a form of relief not
sought in this application.
Conclusion
[23]
Accordingly, the appeal must be dismissed.
[24]
Both parties sought costs in their heads of argument. The application
was fundamentally
misconceived. In a contractual dispute under the
concurrent jurisdiction of the Labour Court, the ordinary rule should
apply that
costs follow the result. In any event, where public money
is at stake as it is in this case, it is appropriate that such costs
that have been incurred ought to be recovered.
Order
1.
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
Sutherland
JA
Waglay
JP and Kathree- Setiloane AJA concur.
APPEARANCES:
For
the Appellant:
E Mokutu SC, with him, Y Ndamase
Instructed by Fihla &
Associates
For
the Respondent:
No appearance
Heads of argument
prepared by G Mamabolo
[1]
Act 66 of 1995, as amended.
[2]
Gcaba v
Minister for Safety and Security and others
(2010)
31 ILJ 296 (CC) at para [75]:
‘Jurisdiction
is determined on the basis of the pleadings, as Langa CJ held in
Chirwa
,
and not the substantive merits of the case. If Mr Gcaba's case were
heard by the High Court, he would have failed for not being
able to
make out a case for the relief he sought, namely review of an
administrative decision. In the event of the court's jurisdiction
being challenged at the outset (in limine), the applicant's
pleadings are the determining factor. They contain the legal basis
of the claim under which the applicant has chosen to invoke the
court's competence. While the pleadings - including in motion
proceedings, not only the formal terminology of the notice of
motion, but also the contents of the supporting affidavits - must
be
interpreted to establish what the legal basis of the applicant's
claim is, it is not for the court to say that the facts asserted
by
the applicant would also sustain another claim, cognizable only in
another court. If however the pleadings, properly interpreted,
establish that the applicant is asserting a claim under the LRA, one
that is to be determined exclusively by the Labour Court,
the High
Court would lack jurisdiction. An applicant like Mr Gcaba, who
is unable to plead facts that sustain a cause of
administrative
action that is cognizable by the High Court, should thus approach
the Labour Court.’
[3]
Act 75 of 1997.
[4]
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) at para [18].
[5]
See:
Pilanesberg
Platinum Mines (Pty) Ltd v Ramabulana
(2019)
40 ILJ 2723 (LAC) at para [31]; but also, see
Benson
v SA Mutual Life Assurance Society
1986
(1) SA 776
(AD
)
pp 782 - 783 (
Benson
).
[6]
(2020) 41 ILJ 1085 (GJ).
[7]
See:
Benson
supra.
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