Case Law[2022] ZALC 2South Africa
Association of Mineworkers v UASA (D 2128/18) [2022] ZALC 2 (9 May 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Labour Court
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## Association of Mineworkers v UASA (D 2128/18) [2022] ZALC 2 (9 May 2022)
Association of Mineworkers v UASA (D 2128/18) [2022] ZALC 2 (9 May 2022)
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sino date 9 May 2022
IN
THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
no: D 2128/18
Reportable
In
the matter between:
THE
ASSOCIATION OF MINEWORKERS
AND
CONSTRUCTION UNION
APPLICANT
And
UASA
(FORMERLY
NAMED
UNITED
ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH AFRICA)
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
FOOD AND ALLIED WORKERS UNION
SECOND RESPONDENT
SUGAR
MANUFACTURERS AND REFINERS
EMPLOYERS
ASSOCIATION
THIRD
RESPONDENT
NATIONAL
BARGAINING
COUNCIL
FOR THE SUGAR
MANUFACTURING
AND REFINING INDUSTR FOURTH
RESPONDENT
L
SULLIVAN N.O.
FIFTH RESPONDENT
CCMA
SIXTH RESPONDENT
Application
heard: 20 January 2022 (via Zoom)
Delivered:
9 May 2022 (electronically)
JUDGMENT
WHITCHER
J
Introduction
[1]
In this matter, the Applicant (AMCU) has brought a number of
applications.
[2]
In the first, AMCU seeks an order:
2.1
Reviewing and setting aside, in terms of section 145 of the
Labour
Relations Act, 1995 (the LRA), the arbitration award dated 14
February 2018 and made by the Fifth Respondent (the Arbitrator).
2.2
That the award be substituted with one to the effect that the
agency
shop agreement (the 2017 Agreement) between the First, Second and
Third Respondent (UASA, FAWU and the SAMREA respectively)
be
interpreted and applied in a manner contended by AMCU. More
particularly, that:
2.2.1
The 2017 Agreement does not permit the deduction of agency shop
fees
from AMCU’s members for so long as AMCU is a member of the
Fourth Respondent (the NBCS).
2.2.2
All and any agency fee deductions made from AMCU’s
members
after 1 August 2017 be refunded to those members by UASA and FAWU
within one calendar month.
2.3
That UASA, FAWU and SAMREA are prohibited from amending the
2017
Agreement and/or entering into a further agency shop agreement
designed to circumvent the orders made in sub-paragraph 1.2
above.
[3]
In the event that the Review Application fails, AMCU seeks an order:
3.1
Declaring
the 2017 Agreement to be non-compliant either with the provisions of
section 25(3) of the LRA or, alternatively, the LRA
generally, and
thus invalid and void
ab
initio
.
[1]
3.2
Reimbursing AMCU’s members for
agency fees paid by them.
[4]
AMCU also seeks condonation in respect of the late filing of the
Review
Application.
[5]
All three applications are opposed by the NBCS.
Condonation
[6]
The late filing of the review application is condoned. While the
extent
of the delay is significant and the explanation for it not
above criticism, the case raises important legal issues.
The
review application
[7]
The Arbitration Award stems from the referral of an interpretation
and
application dispute in respect of an Agency Shop Agreement.
[8]
Section 25(1) and (2) of the LRA provides that:
(1)
A representative trade union and an employer or employer’s
organisation may conclude a collective agreement, to be known as an
agency shop agreement,
requiring
the employer to deduct an
agreed agency fee
from the wages of employees identified in the
agreement, who are not members of the trade union
but are
eligible for membership thereof.
(2)
For the purposes of this section, “representative
trade union”
means a registered trade union, or two or more registered trade
unions acting jointly, whose members are
a majority
of the
employees employed (a) by an employer in a workplace; or (b) by the
members of an employers’ organisation in a sector
and area in
respect of which the agency shop agreement applies. [Emphasis added]
[9]
During July
2017 FAWU, UASA, and SMREA
[2]
entered into the Agency Shop Agreement.
[3]
FAWU, and UASA together, at the time of conclusion of the agreement,
met the definitional requirements of a “representative
trade
union” in terms of section 25 of the LRA. AMCU agrees that the
Agency Shop Agreement was, as a result, properly concluded.
[10]
Clause 1.1 of the Agency Shop Agreement states:
The majority of the
employees employed by the members of the employer’s
organisation within the registered scope of the Bargaining
Council
for the Sugar Manufacturing and Refining Industry are members of the
unions.
[11]
Clause 1.2 states:
It is recorded that
the unions have represented the majority of the employees employed by
the members of the employers’ organisation
within the
registered scope of the Bargaining Council for the Sugar
Manufacturing and Refining Industry since before 1 June 1997.
[12]
Clause 3.1 with 3.1.1 states:
An employer will
deduct the agreed agency fee of 1.4% of basic pay (subject to clause
3.3 of this Agreement) from the wages of employees
who are not
members of the unions but are eligible for membership thereof.
[13]
In August 2017 AMCU was welcomed as a party to the National
Bargaining Council for the
Sugar Manufacturing and Refining Industry
(“NBCS”).
[14]
AMCU was of the view that, it being now a member of the NBCS, and a
bargaining agent, that
its members no longer fell foul of the
mischief sought to be corrected by the Agency Shop Agreement and
would, as a result, no
longer be subject to the Agency Fee.
[15]
After failing to come to a resolution after engaging with the other
parties to the NBCS,
AMCU referred an interpretation and application
dispute in respect of a Collective Agreement (the Agency Shop
Agreement).
[16]
The Arbitrator correctly recorded the issue to be decided, namely
whether the Agency Shop
Agreement applies to AMCU’s members.
[17]
AMCU contended that the purpose of Section 25 and thus agency shop
agreements is to deal
with free-riders. Since it is now a bargaining
agent [in the NBCS], it is no longer a free-rider and by this logic
the Agency Shop
Agreement must be interpreted to mean that its
members are no longer covered by the Agreement.
[18]
In dismissing the case, the Arbitrator reasoned as follows:
Nowhere in the
section
[4]
is there any mention of unions that become bargaining council agents
having special dispensation. Neither…can it be said
that any
section even suggests…a special dispensation for unions who
are bargaining council agents. The agency shop agreement
likewise
does not give bargaining council agents any special dispensation.
The best [AMCU] can
argue is that it was the intention of the legislature to exclude
unions who are also bargaining agents. To succeed
it would obviously
have to prove the legislator’s intention.
The CCMA is able to
clarify any dispute relating to interpretation and application of
some legislation. It does not have the ability
to make binding orders
relating to the legislator’s intention.
If there is any
dispute about the interpretation or application of section 25 of the
LRA the CCMA is required to resolve the dispute
by setting out the
correct interpretation of the section.
In this matter the
interpretation and application of the section has already been
clearly set out: members of unions who are not
majority or majority
allied unions must pay the additional fee.
What [AMCU] is
effectively asking is that the CCMA add to the meaning of the
section…It is beyond the powers of the CCMA
to add to the law.
The interpretation is
clear. Employees who are not members of FAWU and UASA have to pay the
1.4% in addition to their own union
fees. There are no exceptions
provided by the existing sections and no exceptions can be read into
the wording of the existing
sections or of the agency shop agreement.
[19]
AMCU
contends that the Arbitrator got it wrong and,
inter
alia,
referred to the judgment in
Municipal
& Allied Trade Union of SA v Central Karoo District Municipality
& Others
[5]
in which the Labour Appeal Court stated [from para [21]:
“
The evident
intention of the section is to empower a majority union or unions to
conclude an agency shop agreement with the employer.
The employer is
then “required” and thus obliged to deduct the agreed
agency fee from the wages of employees identified
in the agreement,
including in this case from MATUSA’s members, who are not
members of the majority trade union(s) but are
eligible for
membership thereof. The meaning and effect of section 25 of the LRA,
therefore, is clear and unambiguous: IMATU and
SAMWU had the legal
right to conclude an agency shop agreement with the employer, which
agreement imposes a legal obligation on
the employer to deduct agency
fees from MATUSA members who do not belong to IMATU and SAMWU…
…
It is a fee for
work done to advance workers’ interests through collective
bargaining. It must be deducted by the employer
from the worker’s
remuneration if an agency shop agreement meets the requirements of
section 25 of the LRA has been concluded…
…
..
As mentioned earlier, the
purpose of section 25 of the LRA and an agency shop agreement is to
address the problem of free riders,
employees who choose not to join
the trade union with collective bargaining rights, but who benefit
from the fruits of the collective
bargain struck by that trade union.
In
National
Manufactured Fibres Employers Association v Bikwani (Bikwani
)
[6]
the Labour Court set out the rationale for the agency shop agreement
as follows:
‘
It takes time,
effort and money for a union to strike good deals with the employer
of its members. Time and effort - because proper
training and
preparation on the part of the union's negotiators are necessary if
the negotiators are to engage in effective bargaining.
Money -
because all of those things cost money. Where the benefits of the
deals secured through the efforts of the representative
trade union
in collective bargaining are passed on to other employees who are not
members of the representative trade union, such
employees should make
a contribution towards the costs which the representative trade union
incurs in connection with its collective
bargaining work. If they do
not pay that is unfair because members of the representative trade
union pay for those costs. An agency
shop agreement seeks to make
them pay without compelling them to join the representative trade
union.
…
The
Labour Court in
Bikwani
accordingly held that agency shop
agreements bind members of minority unions, even if this means they
must pay both the membership
fee of their own union, and the agency
fee. To hold that an agency fee is only payable by employees who
belong to no union, the
Labour Court reasoned, would be inconsistent
with the purpose of the agency shop provision because an agency shop
agreement is
not concerned with whether an employee is a member of a
minority union but with whether the employees contribute towards the
collective
bargaining costs of the representative union from efforts
of which they materially benefit.”
[20]
In my view the award is not subject to review.
[21]
I
accept that courts must adopt a purposive approach to interpreting
collective agreements and indeed also legislation. However,
there are
limits to how far a court can go in shoehorning an assumed purpose
into an ill-fitting statutory provision before a court
impermissibly
arrogates to itself legislative functions. Purposive interpretation
“should not be made an excuse for starting
with the underlying
purpose, and then forcing the words into a preconceived and strained
construction to fit that assumption”.
“Ordinarily, the
stage of applying this rule arrives after a plain meaning has been
given to the words of the statute and
these lead to absurdity,
injustice or anomaly. This should be the course of action, rather
than the other way round where, at the
outset, a statute is read
wearing spectacles tinted with the objects and purpose of the
statute”.
[7]
[22]
The plain meaning of section 25 of the LRA is
clear and its results are patently not absurd. It may be ironic or
even harsh that
members of a trade union that has a seat in a
bargaining council must nevertheless still pay additional fees to an
alliance of
majority unions in the bargaining council for bargaining
services, while paying union subscriptions to its chosen bargaining
agent,
in this case AMCU. This situation is however not absurd or
unjust. It is conceivable that non-members are paying for the potency
of the majority status of the union respondents who, as a majority,
have the capacity to conclude an agreement on substantive conditions
that binds all parties. While agency shop agreements recompense
unions for their time and effort, as well as training and preparation
of their negotiators, as the Court in
Bikwani
pointed out, the service being rendered by these negotiators is their
ability to engage in effective bargaining. Where a majority
union (or
alliance of unions) is present in a bargaining council, how effective
is the service provided by a minority union?
[23]
I am not convinced that the plain-meaning of
section 25 leads to such an absurd or iniquitous result that this
court should be tempted
to rewrite the provisions of the law under
the guise of rendering a purposive interpretation. It is easy to see
how applying section
25 to a non-free rider such as AMCU may perplex
it and its members. However, had the legislature had meant to exclude
the members
of
any
union party to a bargaining council, (no matter its likely influence
or effectiveness in that forum), from paying agency shop fees
to a
majority within that same bargaining council, it would have been easy
enough to include provisions to that effect. If the
legislature
indeed neglected to offer this protection from agency shops to unions
in the same position as AMCU, the outcome of
this case may well serve
as an invitation to explicitly do so by amendment.
Validity
of the Agency Shop Agreement
[24]
The
answer here is simple. In wording, content and format the agreement
complies with section 25, and that is all that is required.
This is
clear from the Labour Appeal Court judgment in
AMCU
v UASA and Others
.
[8]
Costs
[25]
Given the nature and importance of the matter, an adverse cost order
against AMCU is not appropriate.
Order
1.
The late filing of the review application is condoned.
2.
The review application is dismissed.
3.
The validity application is dismissed.
Benita
Whitcher
Judge
of the Labour Court of South Africa
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Futcher & Poppesqou Attorneys
For
the Fourth Respondent:
Norton Rose Fulbright Attorneys
[1]
I
questioned the propriety of such an application in these
proceedings, but both parties requested that I determine the
validity
of the agreement for completeness.
[2]
SMREA is an employers’ organisation.
[3]
There
were previous such agreements dating back years between the parties.
[4]
He
is obviously referred to section 25 of the LRA.
[5]
(2020)
41 ILJ 1918 (LAC).
[6]
(1999) 20 ILJ 2637 (LC) paras 20-21.
[7]
Lost
the source.
[8]
AMCU v
UASA and Others
(
JA
108/2019) (29 June 2021).
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