Case Law[2022] ZALAC 118South Africa
SGB Cape Octorex (PTY) Ltd v Metal and Engineering Industries Bargaining Council and Others (JA 90/2021) [2022] ZALAC 118; (2023) 44 ILJ 179 (LAC); [2023] 2 BLLR 125 (LAC) (18 October 2022)
Labour Appeal Court of South Africa
18 October 2022
Headnotes
the position of supervisor. On 23 March 2019, one of the appellant’s managers, Mr Desemele, received a call in the morning at work from his manager that the employee was seen smoking dagga whilst on duty at boiler 5 level 9. Mr Desemele then called the employee to his office and confronted him with the allegation. The employee denied that he had been smoking any
Judgment
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## SGB Cape Octorex (PTY) Ltd v Metal and Engineering Industries Bargaining Council and Others (JA 90/2021) [2022] ZALAC 118; (2023) 44 ILJ 179 (LAC); [2023] 2 BLLR 125 (LAC) (18 October 2022)
SGB Cape Octorex (PTY) Ltd v Metal and Engineering Industries Bargaining Council and Others (JA 90/2021) [2022] ZALAC 118; (2023) 44 ILJ 179 (LAC); [2023] 2 BLLR 125 (LAC) (18 October 2022)
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sino date 18 October 2022
IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
No: JA 90/2021
In
the matter between:
SGB
CAPE OCTOREX (PTY)
LTD
Appellant
And
METAL
AND ENGINEERING INDUSTRIES
BARGAINING
COUNCIL
First Respondent
NOKO
NKGOENG
N.O
Second respondent
UASA
OBO SIPHAMANDLA SHABANGU
Third Respondent
Heard:
15 September 2022
Delivered:
18 October 2022
Coram:
Sutherland JA, Coppin JA et Tokota AJA
JUDGMENT
TOKOTA
AJA
[1]
Mr Siphamandla Shabangu (the employee), who was employed by the
appellant, was dismissed
from his employment on 12 April 2019. He
referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the first respondent for
resolution. The conciliation
failed and the matter was referred to
arbitration before the second respondent (the commissioner). The
commissioner found that
the dismissal was substantively unfair and
ordered the reinstatement of the employee. An application by the
appellant for the review
of the commissioner’s decision was
dismissed by the Labour Court. After an application for leave to
appeal to this Court
was dismissed by the Labour Court, such leave
was granted on petition by this Court.
[2]
The employee was employed by the appellant on 15 February 2015. At
the time of his
dismissal, he held the position of supervisor. On 23
March 2019, one of the appellant’s managers, Mr Desemele,
received a
call in the morning at work from his manager that the
employee was seen smoking dagga whilst on duty at boiler 5 level 9.
Mr Desemele
then called the employee to his office and confronted him
with the allegation. The employee denied that he had been smoking any
drugs.
[3]
Mr Desemele then, with his consent, conducted tests to check the
presence of drugs
in his urine. The employee tested positive for THC.
THC is said to stand for dagga or cannabis. He was then taken to
Murray and
Roberts paramedics to conduct a second test of saliva.
Again he tested positive for THC.
[4]
Following the tests, the employee was suspended from duty pending the
finalisation
of a disciplinary process against him. He was
subsequently charged with having tested positive for THC. He was
found guilty and
dismissed.
[5]
Dissatisfied with the outcome of the disciplinary process, the
employee referred a dispute
of unfair dismissal to the Bargaining
Council. The commissioner held that the dismissal was substantively
unfair and ordered the
reinstatement of the employee, but without
back pay. The reasons for the commissioner’s finding were based
on his observations
of the following:
5.1
The employee pleaded guilty after the test results;
5.2
He was in the employ of the appellant for more than four years and
had a clean record;
5.3
This was his first offence;
5.4
The appellant did not suffer any prejudice;
5.5
Because of his behaviour, the employee was promoted to a supervisory
position;
5.6
He did not believe that the employee would repeat the same offence in
future; and
5.7
The relationship between the parties could still be restored.
[6]
The appellant took the award in favour of the employee on review to
the Labour Court.
The appellant contended that the commissioner
ignored the zero-tolerance approach adopted by the employer on the
use of drugs at
work. It contended that the decision by the
commissioner was not a decision that fell within the band of
reasonableness.
[7]
The Labour Court held that the contention that the commissioner
ignored the zero-tolerance
approach had no substance. It held that no
such evidence in that regard was adduced at the arbitration. It held
further that there
was no evidence that the employee had compromised
the safety and integrity of other workers. Accordingly, it dismissed
the review
application.
[8]
On appeal, Mr Soldatos for the appellant submitted that although the
employee was
not charged with smoking dagga, the testing followed a
tip-off that he was smoking dagga at the workplace. The inference is
irresistible,
so the argument ran, that he was smoking dagga hence he
tested positive. He submitted that the false claim that he last
smoked
dagga in 2017 (two years prior to the incident) demonstrated
his lack of candour. He contended that the appellant’s policy
on the use of drugs at work was concerned with the safety of workers
and, therefore, any sanction short of dismissal would invite
the
would-be offenders to break the rule.
[9]
In its judgment, the Labour Court did not deal with factors taken
into account by
the commissioner in arriving at the decision that the
dismissal was substantively unfair. I must therefore accept that it
agreed
with the commissioner in that regard.
[10]
However, I am unable to agree with the commissioner. Firstly, when he
was confronted by
Mr Desemele, the employee denied that he had used
any drugs. His admission of guilt only came when the test results
were positive.
Where a plea of guilty in the face of an open and shut
case is tendered, it becomes a neutral factor. He had no choice but
to plead
guilty after he tested positive.
[11]
Secondly, the question of a clean record can be dealt with together
with the fact that
it was his first offence. The policy is clear
about this. Regardless of whether an employee had a clean record, the
first offence
attracted dismissal. The employee conceded that he had
attended inductions and that these rules were explained to them. The
evidence
led was that the employer has been consistent in imposing
dismissals in all cases where this offence had been committed.
[12]
Thirdly, the question of the appellant’s prejudice is, in my
view, obvious. Where
an employer sets out the code of conduct for the
employees, it is expected from its employees that breaching such code
undermines
the authority of the employer. A breach thereof is
therefore prejudicial to the administration of discipline.
Furthermore, the
employer in this case was concerned about the safety
of its employees since they were working on heights. The employee was
working
either on the 8
th
or 9
th
level on the
day in question. Consequently, the reasoning that there was no
prejudice was unreasonable.
[13]
Fourth, there was no evidence led to the effect that the employee
“
behaved himself hence he was promoted to supervisory
position
”. As a matter of logic, the very fact that he was
a supervisor militates against a lenient sanction. The employer
placed
its trust in him to ensure that its rules are obeyed. He
betrayed that trust. It is expected of a supervisor to lead by
example.
In my view, the commissioner’s assessment in this
regard was unreasonable.
[14]
Fifth, there was no evidence which evinced any belief that the
employee would not commit
the same offence in future. On the
contrary, his evidence was that he was addicted to drugs. In my view,
there was no basis for
the commissioner’s belief.
[15]
Sixth, the commissioner found that the broken relationship could be
restored. No evidence
was adduced to lay the basis for this finding.
The finding itself presupposes that there was a breakdown in the
relationship. The
employee denied that he smoked any dagga when he
was first confronted but changed only after the test results. He was
the eyes
and ears of his employer but betrayed the trust bestowed on
him.
[16]
In my opinion, the Labour Court failed to appreciate the importance
of the policy. Furthermore,
the findings of facts were erroneous. It
is not correct that there was no evidence of a zero-tolerance
approach. This finding flies
in the face of Mr Desemele’s
evidence that firstly, the company’s ‘Golden Rule’
was that anyone who violated
the policy prohibiting the use of drugs
at the workplace would be faced with a dismissal even if it was that
person’s ‘first
offence’; and, secondly, the
employee was not the only person who had tested positive for THC. Mr
Desemele testified that
“
a lot of them
” were
discovered and “[
e]veryone is getting dismissed as per the
company procedure”.
This evidence was never challenged. In
my opinion, from this evidence, it is clear that there was a
zero-tolerance approach when
it came to a violation of this rule.
[17]
It is
permissible for the employer to adopt its own disciplinary rules that
establish the standard of conduct required of its employees.
[1]
The purpose of the adoption of these rules is to create certainty and
consistency in the enforcement of discipline. These rules
must be
made clear and be readily available to employees in a manner that is
easily understood. The employee conceded that inductions
were held in
this regard.
[18]
Furthermore,
the Code of Good Practice
[2]
(Code)
provides that “
[t]he
employer should apply the penalty of dismissal consistently with the
way in which it has been applied to the same and other
employees in
the past, and consistently as between two or more employees who
participate in the misconduct under consideration.
[3]
[19]
This Code has been consistently applied by the appellant.
[20]
In my view,
the commissioner failed to recognise that the employer is entitled to
set its own standards to enforce discipline in
its workplace. In
Rustenburg
Platinum Mines Ltd (Rustenburg Section) v Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and others
[4]
,
Cameron
JA, as he then was, said:
‘
The mere fact that
a CCMA commissioner may have imposed a different sanction does not
justify concluding that the sanction was unfair.
Commissioners must
bear in mind that fairness is a relative concept, and that employers
should be permitted leeway in determining
a fair sanction. As Myburgh
and Van Niekerk suggest:
'The first step in the
reasoning process of the commissioner should be to recognise that,
within limits, the employer is entitled
to set its own standards of
conduct in the workplace having regard to the exigencies of the
business. That much is trite. The employer
is entitled to set the
standard and to determine the sanction with which non-compliance with
the standard will be visited.'
[5]
Todd
and Damant explain:
“
The court must
necessarily recognise that there may be a range of possible decisions
that the employer may take, some of which may
be fair and some of
which may be unfair. The court's duty is to determine whether the
decision that the employer took falls within
the range of decisions
that may properly be described as being fair
[6]
’.’
[21]
In my view, the decision of the appellant to dismiss the employee was
fair, taking into
account the nature of its business and similar
sanctions which have been imposed on other offending employees.
[22]
In the premises, the Labour Court erred in its assessment of the
commissioner’s reasoning.
Accordingly, the review ought to have
succeeded.
[23]
The general rule in labour matters is that costs do not necessarily
follow the result but
are determined on the basis of fairness and the
law I see no reason to make an order of costs.
[24]
In the result, the following is ordered:
Order
1
The appeal is upheld;
2.
The order of the court
a quo
is set aside and substituted with
the following order:
“
(a)
The review application succeeds;
(b)
The arbitration award of the commissioner is set aside.
(c)
It is declared that the dismissal was procedurally and substantively
fair.
(d)
There is no order as to costs.”
B
R Tokota AJA
Sutherland
and Coppin JJA concurring.
APPEARANCES:
FOR
THE APPELLANT:
Ari Saldatos of Soldatos Cooper Inc.
FOR
THE THIRD RESPONDENT: UASA
[1]
Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Ltd v Ramdaw NO and others
(2001)
22 ILJ 1603 (LAC) at para 98.
[2]
Schedule
8 of the
Labour Relations Act no 66 of 1995
, as amended.
[3]
Item 6 of the Code.
[4]
(2006) 27 ILJ 2076 (SCA) at para 46.
[5]
(2000) 21 ILJ 2145 at 2158.
[6]
Chris
Todd and Graham Damant 'Unfair dismissal - operational requirements'
(2004) 25 ILJ 896 at 907.
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