Case Law[2023] ZALC 1South Africa
Dlongolo v University of Zululand (D306/19) [2023] ZALC 1 (1 June 2023)
Headnotes
the post of Director: Physical Planning in the employment of the Respondent. In and around 2017 he began receiving death threats relating to his implementation of the insourcing process at the University of Zululand (“the University”). From August 2017 the applicant was placed on sick leave due to psychological harm suffered as a result of these death threats.
Judgment
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## Dlongolo v University of Zululand (D306/19) [2023] ZALC 1 (1 June 2023)
Dlongolo v University of Zululand (D306/19) [2023] ZALC 1 (1 June 2023)
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sino date 1 June 2023
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
Case no: D306/19
Not Reportable
In
the matter between:
SIPHO
WILSON DLONGOLO
Applicant
And
THE
UNIVERSITY OF ZULULAND
Respondent
Heard:
21 January 2022
Delivered:
01 June 2023
JUDGMENT
GOVENDER AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant launched a claim in terms of
section 77(3) of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act, 1977 as
amended (“BCEA”),
wherein he claims that a valid and
binding agreement was reached between him and the respondent
regarding the “
pension
contribution benefit compensation
”
that he would receive as a result of his early retirement.
[2]
The background to this agreement is as
follows: the applicant held the post of Director: Physical Planning
in the employment of
the Respondent. In and around 2017 he began
receiving death threats relating to his implementation of the
insourcing process at
the University of Zululand (“the
University”). From August 2017 the applicant was placed on sick
leave due to psychological
harm suffered as a result of these death
threats.
[3]
The applicant testified that he was
contacted by the Vice Chancellor of the respondent seeking to discuss
ways in which this issue
could be resolved. The respondent could no
longer afford the Applicant’s leaves of absence which were
impacting on the functioning
of that particular department. The
applicant held a meeting with the Vice Chancellor and respondent’s
Executive Director:
Human Resources, Thabo Ngcobo (Ngcobo). The
Applicant proposed a formal request that the Respondent assist him in
retiring early
since he was 57 years old at the time and he was
fearful of the death threats which severely impacted on his life. One
of the options
proposed by the Applicant was that he be compensated
for 03 years of service up to age of 60.
[4]
Following all the discussions between the
applicant and respondent’s representatives’ other options
were counter-proposed
to the Applicant.
[5]
Ngcobo advised the applicant that the
University could not afford to buy out the applicant’s
remaining years of service up
to the age of 60, which according to
the University’s calculation, amounted to R1 614 644.66
due to the University’s
budgetary constraints.
[6]
The applicant contended that Ngcobo instead
offered that the respondent would compensate the Applicant the amount
of R824 000.00
being the number of penalties that the applicant
would suffer as a result of him taking early retirement. The
Applicant had the
option of a full withdrawal from the Pension Fund,
alternatively a monthly pension amount, alternatively the Applicant
could be
paid a third of his pension benefit and a reduced monthly
pension.
[7]
At paragraph 12 of response to the
statement of claim, the Respondent records that:
3.1
On
08 December meeting, the respondent’s Executive
Director: Human Resources, Thabo Ngcobo (Ngcobo) confirmed
that
should the Applicant retire as 31 December 2017 with penalties
…………amounting to R 824 700-00
(eight
hundred and twenty four thousand rand), which respondent will
consider funding as a contribution towards the Applicant’s
retirement
[1]
.
3.2
On
14 December 2017, Ngcobo recorded in an email following a meeting
that if the Applicant elected early retirement, the Respondent
would
compensate the Applicant for the penalties suffered as a result
thereof.
[2]
[8]
The applicant contends, at paragraph 13 of
the statement of claim, that on or about December 2017 the applicant
duly accepted the
respondent’s first offer in writing, the
terms of which were as follows:
8.1
the applicant would take early retirement from employment with effect
from 31
st
December 2017.
8.2
that the respondent was to pay to the applicant a full withdrawal of
his pension benefit in the amount
of R578 225.34 comprising of
the applicant’s compensation benefit and leave days; and
8.3
the agreed amount is to be paid on or before
the 31
st
of December 2017
[3]
.
[9] The respondent
contends that whilst it was agreed that the applicant would be
compensated the pension penalty, this meant that
the penalties to be
paid would only be paid to the pension fund (because of the early
retirement) and not paid to the Applicant
directly. Further it would
only be paid, in the event that the Applicant did not take an early
retirement with full withdrawal
of his pension benefits. Further they
contend that since the Applicant elected to withdraw from the pension
fund instead of taking
early retirement, no penalties were payable as
he was no longer a member of the fund. Further the agreement to
“compensate”
the Applicant by contributing the penalties
was in order for the Applicant to receive his full pensionable
retirement amount.
CHRONOLOGICAL
SEQUENCE OF EVENTS
[10] I will briefly set
down the pertinent events and the time limits:
10.1
26 November
2017 the respondent’s Vice Chancellor contacted the
applicant to address his continued absence
from
work.
10.2
29 November 2017,
a meeting took place between the applicant, respondent’s Vice
Chancellor, and its Executor Director: Human
Resources (Ngcobo) who
was a witness to discuss the applicant’s continued absence from
work.
10.3
8 December 2017 a further
meeting took place between the applicant and Ngcobo where the
applicant was presented with two options,
namely that of a withdrawal
from the pension fund and the option of early retirement.
10.4
11 December 2017 the applicant
requested a financial breakdown of the respondent’s proposal
for the retirement benefit as
well as the respondent’s policy
regarding employment benefits.
10.5
14 December 2017 Ngcobo
confirmed the options available to the applicant via email.
10.6
15 December 2017 the
applicant, his Financial Advisor, Ibgal Khan (Khan) & Ngcobo met
in Ngcobo’s office to discuss his
email dated 14 December 2017.
10.7
18 December 2017 the
applicant elected to withdraw his funds per email from the
respondent’s pension fund and completed Allan
Gray forms to
transfer his pension fund withdrawal value to the preservation fund.
10.8
20 December 2017 the
respondent advised the applicant by way of email that the terms
proposed by the respondent for the applicant’s
early retirement
with compensation of penalties were no longer valid.
10.9
4 January 2018 the respondent
resent the email to the applicant that had been sent prior on 20
December 2017.
10.10
7 January 2018 the applicant indicated that
the early retirement option was his preference with the understanding
that the penalties
are still going to be statutorily affected.
10.11
8 January 2018 the applicant confirmed via
email to the respondent that his option preference remained
withdrawal.
10.12
22 January 2018, after discussion with the
respondent’s Remuneration and Benefits Manager, Constant
Ngxito, also witness for
the respondent, the applicant again
confirmed that his option remains renewal.
10.13
24 January 2018 the applicant completed his
withdrawal forms confirming that he was submitting a withdrawal claim
from the respondent’s
pension fund and not a retirement claim.
10.14
31 January 2018 the applicant completed the
clearance from as requested by the respondent in the email dated 8
January 2018 and
subject to the respondent’s explanation to the
applicant that he had opted to withdraw from the pension fund with no
compensation
penalties.
10.15
1 February 2018 the respondent paid the
applicant the leave pays due to him calculated on 90 days accumulated
leave.
10.16
19 November 2018 the applicant’s
attorneys submitted to the respondent a letter of demand for the
payment of R1 614 644.63
(one million six hundred and
fourteen thousand, six hundred and forty-four rand and sixty-three
cents).
10.17
29 November 2018 the respondent denied
liability.
10.18
4 February 2019 the applicant’s
attorneys submitted to the respondent a letter of demand for payment
of the R578 225.34
(five hundred and seventy-eight thousand two
hundred and twenty-five rand and thirty-four cents). The applicant
subsequently instituted
proceedings in this Honourable Court claiming
that amount.
[11] Cleary there was an
agreement between the parties. The issues here seem to be what was in
fact agreed to by the parties. The
main dispute in a
nutshell , appears therefore to be whether or not there was
agreement between the parties
that the Respondent would compensate
the Applicant for taking an early retirement irrespective of the type
of exit chosen from
the pension fund, or whether the
offer of paying the “pension fund penalties” was only
applicable to the
scenario where the Applicant did not withdraw
in full his pension fund benefits and that in scenario the amount
would be paid to
the pension fund and not the Applicant.
### [12]ISSUES FOR
DETERMINATION
[12]
ISSUES FOR
DETERMINATION
12.1
What was the precise
agreement between the parties in respect of the Applicant’s
early retirement, in other words what was
the terms the agreement.
12.2
Is this agreement
between the parties a valid and binding contract.
12.3
Whether the
respondent breached the agreement in failing or refusing to pay the
Applicant the amount of R 578 225 -34.
12.4
Whether the Applicant is
entitled to the relief claimed.
THE LAW
[13] It is trite that the
onus is on the applicant to prove that a valid and binding agreement
was concluded between the parties
and that there was a breach of that
an agreement.
[14
] The basis of a contract is the meeting of minds or the mutual
understanding between two or more persons with the subjective
intention to create an obligation, or obligations, between them. The
essentialia is that there must be an offer and acceptance
of that
offer. The agreement need not be reduced to writing for its validity
unless there is sufficient proof that the parties
intended that a
written document should embody the agreement for obligations to arise
or the agreement is required by law to be
in writing. Hence, the
formation and conclusion of a contract is the conscious agreement
between parties, through one making an
offer and the other accepting
the offer. Our jurisprudence recognises three theories for the
formation of a contract, viz
the will, the declaration and the
doctrine of quasi-mutual assent.
[15]
Quasi-mutual assent is also known as the reliance theory with its
origins from English law and was best formulated in
Freeman
v Cooke.
[4]
This
doctrine was popularised after the following pronouncement by
Blackburne J in the case of
Smith
v Hughes
[5]
:
"I
apprehend that if one of the parties intends
to
make
a
contract on
one set
of
terms,
and the other intends
to
make
a
contract on
another set of terms, or, as
it
is sometimes expressed, if the parties are not ad idem, there is no
contract,
unless
the circumstances are such as to preclude one of the parties from
denying
that he has agreed to the terms of the other. The rule of law is that
stated in Freeman v Cooke.
If,
whatever
a
man's
real intention may be, he so conducts himself that
a
reasonable
man would believe that he was assenting to the terms proposed by the
other party, and that other party upon that belief
enters into the
contract with him, the man thus conducting himself would be equally
bound as if he had intended to agree to the
other party's terms."9
my emphasis)
[16]
The
test for the application of the quasi-mutual assent has been clearly
expressed by Majiedt JA, as he then was, in
Van
Huyssteen
as
formulated in
Sonap
Petroleum (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Pappadogianis
[6]
"[22]
In
Sonap
this court, in dealing with the law relating to
unilateral mistake,
confirmed
that
as a
general
rule, the law concerns itself with the external
manifestations
and not the workings of the minds of the parties to
a
contract.
In the case of alleged dissensus, the law has regard to other.
considerations.
In such cases, resort must be had to the reliance theory.
in
order to determine whether
a
contract
has come into being
.
This
court
stated
as follows:
.
..
(T)he
decisive
qu
estion
in
a
case
like the
p
resent
is this: did the
p
art
y
whose
actual intention did not conform to the common
intention
expressed,
lead
the other
p
art
y,
as a
reasonable man
,
to
believe
that his declared intention re
p
resented
his actual
intention?
...,
To
answer this
q
uestion
,
a
three-fold
en
q
ui
ry
is.
usuall
y
necessa
ry,
namel
y,
firstl
y,
was
there
a
misre
p
resentation.
as
to one
p
a
rty
's
intention
,
secondl
y
who
made that.
re
p
resentation
:
and
thirdl
y,
was the
other
p
art
y
misled
thereb
y
?
...
The
last question postulates two possibilities: Was he actually.
misled
and would
a
reasonably
man have been misled? .... "
[
17]
Intention is a subjective element. It often happens that a party may
have a different intention from the other contracting party
but fails
to clearly communicate this intention. The essence of the doctrine of
quasi mutual assent is to protect a party who would
not be able to
dispute the other contracting party's denial of their intention,
where there is dissensus and the latter party acted
contrary to
his/her intention.
ANALYSIS
[18] I am not going to
repeat verbatim the evidence of the witnesses as the same is well
summarised in the Heads of Argument.
[19] Briefly, the
Applicant testified on his behalf and led the further evidence of a
witness Khan, who was his financial advisor
and who attended a
meeting with the Applicant and Ngcobo on 15 December 2017.
[20]
The Applicant evidence was that due the circumstances (death threats
and his sickness) he had decided to retire at age 60 and
age 65 as
earlier planned and therefore requested the University to pay him for
the three years between age 57 and age 60 and buy
the time left and
compensate him for 60 years retirement benefit. This was
reduced also in email dated the 11 December 2017.
He confirmed he
received an email from Ngcobo dated 14 December 2017, wherein it was
recorded that if he retires with penalties,
the penalties will amount
to the R824 700-00, and the university would consider this as
contribution toward his retirement.
[7]
The contents of the email were confirmed by Ngcobo.
[21] It was further
recorded in the above email that:
“…
summary,
at the end of the meeting, this was the understanding:
That
you will retire as at 31 December 2017 with penalties amounting to
R824 700-00
That the university
will
compensate you
(my emphasis) for the penalties suffered
because of early retirement ……………..
………
..
It is your option
how you receive the retirement benefits as reflected on the quotation
…………..to you
i.e
Full withdrawal
Or
Monthly
pension without commuting a third ……
Or
Commuting a third
…………………..”
[22] It was further
recorded in the email that “My I also point out to you that the
undertaking by the university to compensate
you for the penalties
suffered is not standard practice but is done to reach an amicable
solution to your predicament (your circumstances)
that presents.”
[23] The applicant’s
evidence was that after consulting with Khan and Ngcobo he duly
accepted the respondent’s first
offer in writing, which he
confirmed via email on 18 December 2017. The terms of which were as
follows:
a)
the applicant would take early retirement
from employment with effect from 31
st
December 2017;
b ) that the
respondent was to pay to the applicant a full withdrawal of his
pension benefit in the amount of R578 225.34
comprising of the
applicant’s compensation benefit and leave days; and
c) the agreed
amount is to be paid on or before the 31
st
of December
2017.”
[24] The applicant
testified that he duly served his last day of employment on the 31
st
of December as per the agreement and this appears common cause
between the parties.
[25] He confirmed he
received the email dated 20 December 2017 only in Jan 2018 and by the
he already taken his retirement effective
31 December 2017. He
testified that he maintained to Ngcobo in January 2018 that his
decision remains as per his email 18 December
2017. He disputed the
Respondent’s version that the penalties amount was to be paid
by to the pension fund and not him. He
also denied that he would only
be entitled to the benefit as proposed by the university only if he
elected not to withdraw his
pension fund benefit in full.
[26] Khan confirmed in
his evidence that the meeting took place with Ngcobo. He
testified that at the end of the meeting it
was decided that the R
5 100 000-00 (five million and one hundred thousand rand)
will be transferred out of the fund
and the university would pay the
Applicant approximately R 552 000-00. Further he told Ngcobo he
will prepare the forms and
send it to Ngcobo on Monday (18 December
2017). On the Monday he sent the Allen Gray forms to Ngcobo.
[26] Ngcobo testified for
the respondent and a further witness Ngxito, the director:
remuneration and benefits also testified.
Her evidence
pertained to documents she handed to the Applicant in respect of
actuarial calculations and his discussions with the
Applicant
regarding his withdrawal of his pension fund benefit from the fund.
Her evidence was she explained to him that by withdrawing
from the
fund he was not accepting retirement but was resigning. Further that
he was not entitled to UIF benefits if he withdraws
as it was
technically a resignation.
[27] Ngcobo confirmed the
contents of his emails. Further that there were discussions to
resolve the issue of the Applicant. However,
the compensation to be
paid to the applicant as agreed to by himself and the applicant was
only to be paid if the applicant had
exercised the option of a full
withdrawal. He confirmed that after his meeting with Khan and the
Applicant there was the understanding
that the Applicant could
respond by 18 December 2017. Further he testified that the
Applicant did not suffer because he withdrew
his pension, so
penalties incurred. He further confirmed that he tried to explain to
the Applicant that compensation will not work
if he withdrew his
pension in full only after the Applicant confirmed that he is
withdrawing his pension in full. Further
he confirms that his
email did not inform the Applicant that he can reconsider and change
his mind only that the “compensation”
was no longer
applicable. He also conceded that the arrangement between the
Applicant and the university was separate from the
relationship with
Applicant and the pension fund.
[28] The respondent
submitted in its heads of argument, that the rules regarding offer
and acceptance in terms of the Law of Contract,
must be understood in
the light of their underlying premise, namely that a contract entails
the formation of a common intention
by the parties through an
exchange of declarations which express their respective intentions.
One of these requirements in respect
of consensus and offer and
acceptance, are facts from which consensus may be inferred. The
common law requirements for a valid
acceptance of an offer are:
a.
the offer must be clear, unequivocal and
unambiguous;
b.
the acceptance must correspond with the
offer;
c.
the acceptance must be made in the mode
prescribed with the offer;
d.
the offeree must communicate acceptance of
the offer to the offeror.
[29] The respondent also
contends that the Applicant cannot rely on the principles of
quasi
mutual assent
as there was no meeting of minds according to the
evidence as his and Khan’s conduct was not reasonable. This
contention
is based on the assertions by the respondent that Khan
failed to properly explore the understanding of the respondent’s
proposal.
[30]
It is trite that in order to decide whether a contract exists, or an
agreement is binding on the parties, one looks first for
the true
agreement of two or more parties and because such agreement can only
be revealed by external manifestations one’s
approach of
necessity must generally be objective
[8]
.
The doctrine of quasi mutual assent imports an objective approach to
the conclusion of a contract. The critical question to ask
is whether
the party whose actual intention did not conform to the declared
intention lead the other party to, as a reasonable
man, to believe
that his declared intention represented his actual intention.
[9]
[31] In
Pillay V
Shaik
, (above) the SCA said that the answer to the above question
necessitates a threefold enquiry, namely: firstly, was there a
misrepresentation
as to the intention of the one of the parties;
secondly who made that representation; and thirdly was the other
party misled thereby?
The last question, the court said should be
divided into two separate questions, namely: firstly, was the other
party misled; and
secondly, would a reasonable man (in his position)
have been misled.
[32] I disagree with the
respondent that the principle of quasi-mutual assent finds no
application herein. In fact, I am of
the view that the facts of
this case call for an application of this doctrine.
[33] It is common cause
that the university wanted a solution to the Applicant’s
prolonged leave of absence, the root cause
of which was the death
threats received by him, resulting in him being unwell. On a
careful scrutiny of the wordings of the
various emails, it quite
clear that the applicant’s termination of employment was based
on and influenced by special circumstances.
There was a special
request by the applicant, in his letter dated 29 November 2017, that
initiated the discussions between himself
and the Vice Chancellor of
the university and Ngcobo. He specifically requested that the
university compensate him for the time
left between his age then and
the benefits he would receive if he retired at age 60 in the normal
course of events.
This led to a meeting
where further discussions took place.
Email of
14 December 2017 sent by Ngcobo to the applicant.
[34] Further and more
pertinent is the contents of the email of 14 December 2017(14
December email). In this email, the applicant
was informed that
the university could not afford to “buy out the outstanding
service” in the amount of R 1 614 644.63
if he were
to retire without penalties. However, it proposed that if he
retired with penalties the university would consider
the penalties
amount of R 824 700-00 as a contribution towards his
retirement. The email goes on to talk about the leave
credit
and capping of the leave days as well. However, most
significant is the recording at the end of the email which is
a
summary of the understanding between the parties and states that:
“…
summary,
at the end of the meeting, this was the understanding:
That
you will retire as of 31 December 2017 with penalties amounting to
R824 700-00.
That the university
will
compensate you for the penalties suffered because of early
retirement ……………. (My emphasis)
………
..
It is your option
how you receive the retirement benefits as reflected on the quotation
…………..to you
i.e
-
Full withdrawal
Or
-
Monthly pension without
commuting a third ……
Or
-
Commuting a third …………………..”
Was there a
misrepresentation and if so by whom?
[35] This email from
Ngcobo (Executive Director HR), served to summarise the negotiations
between the parties up to that point,
it records very importantly,
that the understanding is that university will compensate the
Applicant for penalties suffered because
of early retirement.
[36] It is
significant to point out, that the email does not in any way record
or infer that if the applicant elected a full
withdrawal, the option
of compensation will no longer be paid to him. Further, it does not
record that the compensation will be
paid to the pension fund.
[37] Instead the email,
clearly and unambiguously records that in the event that the
applicant elected early retirement:
a)
the respondent would
compensate
the applicant
(my emphasis)
for
the penalties suffered as a result thereof.
b)
the applicant would contribute his
leave days pay-out amounting to R271 780.72 towards the
penalties.
c)
the applicant’s accrued annual
leave difference of 12 days amounting to R25 306.06 would be
paid to the applicant.
d)
the applicant would have the option
of how to receive his retirement his benefits.
e)
the amounts recorded in the email
were subject to statutory deductions.
f)
the undertaking by the
respondent to compensate the applicant for penalties
suffered
was not standard practice but was done to reach an amicable solution
to the predicament (applicant’s circumstances)
at the time.
g)
respondent’s undertaking was
only valid if exercised in the 2017 financial year.
h)
applicant
needed to confirm his decision to the respondent’s management
before 12h00 on Friday 15 December in order for the
amount to be
accrued.
[10]
[38] The email further
records that it is the Applicants options how he receives his
retirement benefits as reflected on the quotation
issued by Absa
directly to him and includes the option of a full withdrawal.
[39] From the above, it
conclusive that the Applicant was misled by Ngcobo. The Applicant was
misled to believe, as he testified
on his version as well, that he
understood the agreement between the parties to be that the
university would separately compensate
him for the loss of pension
benefits because he was taking an early retirement. Even if this was
not the intention of Ngcobo, Ngcobo
clearly misrepresented through
his conduct, via emails and in the meetings held, especially that on
15 December 2017, that the
university would compensate the Applicant
directly and not the pension fund. If the intention was different,
Ngcobo had to simply
state so in his rather detailed and long email
of 14 December. He simply had to record that offer to compensate was
dependant on
the Applicant not electing to exercise a full withdrawal
and further that the compensation would not be paid to the Applicant
but
rather to the pension fund on the Applicant’s behalf and
for his benefit. This was not done at all. One would reasonably
expect Ngcobo, being a Director of HR to record such conditions and
terms if indeed they were so.
[40] I, therefore, reject
in its entirety the contention by the respondent that what was
intended was in fact a contribution towards
the pension fund benefits
which would ultimately benefit the Applicant to receive full benefits
as if retiring at age 60. The Applicant,
as pointed by the respondent
was employed on a director level and is not a layman and I am not
persuaded at all, that he would
not understand the negotiations and
terms agreed to by the parties.
Did
the Applicant mislead by the representation
?
[41] I find that is most
conclusive from the evidence that the Applicant was misled. He
testified and it is common cause that Applicant
on 18 December
informed the Ngcobo of his decision to the terms as set out in
writing in the 14 December email and as further discussed
on 15
December 2017. This email was a clear acceptance of the respondents
offer. It was also conceded by Ngcobo under cross examination
that he
and the Applicant had agreed to confirm a final decision by 18
December 2017. This was done by the Applicant. I reject,
with
the contempt the contentions and assertions that the Applicant failed
to reply by 15 December 2017 and the agreement fell
away.
[42] On the 18
th
of December 2017, the applicant advised the respondent by email that
“
After careful consideration I have made the decision to
accept the University’s proposal for my voluntary early
retirement
for my safety, including that of my family and University
community. I shall be withdrawing from the University pension fund
managed
by ABSA. I have attached a completed application form from
Allan Gray where my pension will be deposited until I make the final
decision on the funds. I shall await the deposit into my account. The
agreed amount is laid down in your email dated 14 December
2017.”
[43] The last two
sentences infers that the Applicant understood that the monies
referred to in the email, other than the pension
fund (to be paid to
Allen Gray), will be “deposited into my (his) account”.
There can be doubt from the evidence
lead, that the Applicant was
persuaded by the offer of compensation to him, in a rather large sum
at that, to take the early retirement.
Would a reasonable
person in the Applicant’s position have been misled?
[44] I find in the
affirmative. When has reference to the wording and phrases of the
email communications and the numerous meetings
held with the most
senior staff of the respondent (the Vice Chancellor and Executive
Director HR), I conclude that there can be
no doubt that any
reasonable person in the Applicant’s position would also be
mislead by the actions of the respondent through
Ngcobo. There is no
issue with the authority of Ngcobo to represent the university and
the evidence in any event was even that
the Vice Chancellor met the
Applicant to find a solution. The respondent does not plead that
Ngcobo lacked the requisite authority
to conclude the agreement on
the terms as pleaded by the applicant and to bind the respondent
thereto. The evidence clearly illustrates
that there was actual,
ostensible or apparent authority of Ngcobo and the Vice Chancellor to
conclude the agreement on behalf of
the respondent.
[45] I reject the
evidence and contentions of the respondent that the withdrawal of the
applicant’s pension fund did not constitute
early retirement
and that because of the pension fund rules, the university could
never have intended to directly compensate the
applicant.
Further since there was no agreement on the terms there was no
animus
contranendi
on the part of the parties. This agreement between
the Applicant and the university was a private agreement between the
parties
to compensate the applicant for taking an early retirement.
This agreement had no bearing on the pension fund at all, neither was
the pension fund a party to this agreement. It is significant that
the respondent’s offer to the applicant to compensate
him for
penalties was not standard practice at the University. In fact,
Ngcobo records this in his email. Therefore, I agree with
the
applicant’s contention that the pension fund rules are not
relevant to the validity of the agreement and do not in any
way
impact on the agreement. The benefits in terms of the pension fund
are a separate arrangement from the University to compensate
the
applicant for terminating his services earlier than at age 60. The
fact that Ngcobo’s inclusion of the option of withdrawal
in the
options to the applicant to receive his retirement benefit clearly
demonstrated to any lay person that it formed part of
the special
arrangements and negotiations between the applicant and the
respondent relating to his early retirement due to these
particular
special circumstances of his case. In my view, the university
was being disingenuous to suggest the same and it
appears the
university was attempting to renege on the agreement with the absurd
contentions that it intended to pay the benefits
to the fund and not
the Applicant etc. when these contradict the very wording Ngcobo’s
emails. Again, I re-iterate who is
a very senior HR employee.
[46] Despite the
respondent being aware that the applicant, by his email of the 18
th
of December, had accepted the proposal of the 14
th
of
December email, and hence service would terminate on the 31
st
of December, the respondent nevertheless sent the email of the 20
th
of December 2017 and once again on the 4
th
of January 2018
to the applicant. What was significant about this email, is that it
did not come to the attention of the applicant
prior to 31 December
2017, being the date, the retirement was effective. In any event, the
agreement between the parties was concluded
when the Applicant
accepted the offer by 18 December 2017. The email of the 14
th
of December provided that the applicant’s termination, if any
of the options were accepted, would be affected 31
st
December. The applicant, in his acceptance email, stated that he was
accepting that his service would terminate on 31
st
of
December. It is common cause that he had not received this
email on the 20
th
of December and therefore, he was not
aware of it. Hence, the agreement between him and the respondent
concluded effective the
31
st
of December. It was therefore
not open to the respondents after that to seek a variation of the
agreement without the applicant’s
consent. Clearly the
applicant did not consent to vary the first agreement and maintained
that he was proceeding with it. The applicant
responded to this email
on the 7
th
of January 2018 where he confirmed that he
still thinks that the early retirement withdrawal option is his
preference with the
understanding that penalties are still going to
be statutorily affected as the applicant had no other means to
sustain him except
to make a withdrawal of one third from the pension
and then get a monthly salary. On the 8
th
of January 2018
the applicant submitted a further email to the respondent confirming
that he had discussed his option with the
Vice Chancellor and that
his option preference remained a withdrawal. The respondent
acknowledged the applicant’s confirmation
of his option for a
final withdrawal and requested that the applicant submit a completed
exit form to the respondent’s Human
Resources Department so
that all monies due to the applicant could be processed and paid out
to him with the termination date being
the 31
st
of
December 2019.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[47]
From all the evidence, it is patently clear that the Applicant was
misled by the representations of the university. Upon a
scrutiny of
the emails and from the evidence of the Applicant, I find that the
applicant was misled to believe that he would be
compensated by the
university, irrespective of which option he exercised on his
retirement. The undertaking by the university
to financially
compensate the Applicant for the
penalties
suffered by early retirement
[11]
,
in the large sum of R 824 700-00, in my view would most
certainly induce and influence any reasonable person in the
circumstances
of the Applicant to take the early retirement. I find
that that misrepresentation indeed induced the Applicant to take the
early
retirement.
[48] I am of the view
therefore, after having considered the conspectus of all the
evidence, that the respondent through the actions
and conduct of
Ngcobo, mispresented to the Applicant that it would compensate him
personally if he took early retirement.
As a result, Ngcobo
created the impression that the parties were
ad idem
on the
material terms of the agreement. I find that the applicant has
discharged the onus and has established the necessary animus
contradendi on the part of both parties.
[49] For the reasons
above, I find that there was valid and binding agreement between the
Applicant and the respondent.
[50] The respondent has
breached the agreement by failing to pay the Applicant the amount as
claimed. The penalties compensation
was R 824 700-00 and
if you subtract the leave days capped at 90 days in the amount of R
271 780-72, the amount due is
R552 919.66. However, the
Applicant claimed R578 225-34 and then amended the relief to R
552 919-28.
Costs
[51] The Applicant was
compelled to institute this application, to seek payment of monies
that the respondent had agreed
to be paid to him by way
of compensation. This is not simply an ordinary dispute pertaining to
terms of an employment contract.
The Applicant was employed for many
years and on the eve of his retirement, he had had to be saddled by
unnecessary litigation.
I find that the Applicant was treated
unfairly and therefore in light of all the circumstances of this
case, I find that it will
be only appropriate to make an order that
costs must follow the result.
[52]
Order
In the circumstances I
make the following order: Judgment is granted against the respondent
as follows:
1.
Payment of the sum of R552 919.28 to
the Applicant, Sipho Wilson Dlongolo.
2.
Interest thereon at the rate of 9% per
annum from 4 February 2019 to date of final payment; and
3.
Costs of suit.
Nalini Govender
Acting Judge of the
Labour Court of South Africa
APPEARANCES:
APPLICANT:
Adv
NSV Mfeka instructed by TB Mbili Attorneys
RESPONDENT:
Mr
Casells instructed by Maserumule Attorneys
[1]
Page
12 Index to Pleadings para 7.1.2
[2]
Page
13 Index to the Pleadings para 7.3.1
[3]
Page
5 Index to Pleadings para 13
[4]
(1848)2
Ex 654
[5]
(1871)
LR 6 QB 597
at 607
[6]
1992
(3) SA 234 (A)
[7]
Page
6 Bundle of Documents
[8]
RH
Christie The Law Of Contract in South Africa , Butterworths , 2001
4
th
edition page 26
[9]
Pillay
v Shaik
2009 (4) SA 74
SCA
[10]
Para 7 of the response to the statement of claim at p14 of the
indexed pleadings.
[11]
Email
page 7 Bundle of Documents
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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