Case Law[2022] ZACC 7South Africa
Commercial Stevedoring Agricultural and Allied Workers' Union and Others v Oak Valley Estates (Pty) Ltd and Another (CCT 301/20) [2022] ZACC 7; [2022] 6 BLLR 487 (CC); 2022 (7) BCLR 787 (CC); 2022 (5) SA 18 (CC) (1 March 2022)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
1 March 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Right to strike — final interdict — leave to appeal is granted — interdictory relief is only competent if respondents are linked to the actual or threatened unlawful conduct — appeal is upheld in part
Judgment
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## Commercial Stevedoring Agricultural and Allied Workers' Union and Others v Oak Valley Estates (Pty) Ltd and Another (CCT 301/20) [2022] ZACC 7; [2022] 6 BLLR 487 (CC); 2022 (7) BCLR 787 (CC); 2022 (5) SA 18 (CC) (1 March 2022)
Commercial Stevedoring Agricultural and Allied Workers' Union and Others v Oak Valley Estates (Pty) Ltd and Another (CCT 301/20) [2022] ZACC 7; [2022] 6 BLLR 487 (CC); 2022 (7) BCLR 787 (CC); 2022 (5) SA 18 (CC) (1 March 2022)
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sino date 1 March 2022
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 301/20
In
the matter between:
COMMERCIAL
STEVEDORING AGRICULTURAL
AND
ALLIED WORKERS’
UNION
First
Applicant
WORKERS
IDENTIFIED IN ANNEXURE “A” TO
THE
APPLICANTS’ FOUNDING AFFIDAVIT
Second
to 174th Applicants
and
OAK
VALLEY ESTATES (PTY) LIMITED
First
Respondent
BOLAND
LABOUR (PTY) LIMITED
Second
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Commercial
Stevedoring Agricultural and Allied Workers’ Union and Others v Oak
Valley Estates (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2022]
ZACC 7
Coram:
Madlanga
J, Madondo AJ, Majiedt J, Pillay AJ, Rogers AJ,
Theron J, Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J
Judgment:
Theron
J (unanimous)
Heard
on:
31
August 2021
Decided
on:
1
March 2022
Summary
:
Right to strike — final interdict —
leave to appeal is granted —
interdictory relief is only competent if respondents are linked to
the actual or threatened unlawful
conduct — appeal is upheld in
part
ORDER
On
appeal from the Labour Appeal Court (hearing an appeal from the
Labour Court), the following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld in part.
3.
Save in respect of the 23rd applicant
[Mr Magaba], paragraphs 2.1 and 2.3 of the Labour Appeal Court’s
order are set aside.
4.
There is no order as to costs in this
Court.
JUDGMENT
THERON J (Madlanga J, Madondo AJ, Majiedt J,
Pillay AJ, Rogers AJ, Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
Can an employer faced with unlawful
conduct committed during a protected strike interdict employees
participating in that strike without
linking each employee to the
unlawful conduct? The Labour Appeal Court held that it can.
[1]
It said that it would be “a bridge too far”, in the
“fraught context of an industrial relations dispute”, to impose
such a requirement on employers seeking interdictory relief.
The applicants in this unopposed appeal – comprising the Commercial
Stevedoring Agricultural and Allied Workers’ Union (CSAAWU) and 173
striking workers, against whom the Labour Court granted a final
interdict – disagree. They contend that there must be a
rational factual connection between the actual or threatened unlawful
conduct and the persons against whom the interdict is sought, and
that in this case, no such link has been established.
Factual background
[2]
On 6 May 2019, a protected strike called
by the first applicant, CSAAWU, commenced at the premises of the
first respondent, Oak Valley
Estates (Pty) Limited (Oak Valley).
Oak Valley operates the Oak Valley Farm in Grabouw in the
Western Cape. The
grievances which underpinned the strike
action related to the alleged racially based allocation of
employee housing by Oak Valley
and its refusal to recognise
“seasonal”
[2]
workers as permanent employees.
[3]
The workers who participated in the
strike were either employed by Oak Valley in terms of permanent
contracts of employment or had
seasonal employment on Oak Valley’s
farm through a labour broker, Boland Labour (Pty) Limited
(Boland Labour), the second
respondent. Initially, some
364 workers participated in the strike. By the time CSAAWU
delivered its replying affidavit
in the Labour Court proceedings,
which are the subject of this appeal, only the second to 174th
applicants remained on strike.
[4]
On 2 May 2019, prior to the
commencement of the strike,
the
Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA)
determined Picketing Rules in terms of section 69 of the Labour
Relations Act.
[3]
In those Rules, the CCMA Commissioner noted that previous strike
action at Oak Valley Farm had resulted in violence and
damage to
property, and that it was therefore prudent to allow gathering and
picketing only in a designated area.
[4]
The Picketing Rules also prohibited, amongst others: preventing
suppliers, clients, customers and employees of Oak Valley
from
entering or leaving Oak Valley’s premises; committing any
unlawful action such as intimidating, coercing, or threatening
non-striking workers; wearing masks; and carrying dangerous weapons.
[5]
It is common
cause that the strike triggered incidents of intimidation, damage to
property, and unlawful interference with Oak Valley’s
business
operations and that there were numerous breaches of the Picketing
Rules. On 15 May 2019, the Commissioner convened
a meeting
following CSAAWU’s request for clarification of the Picketing
Rules. It appears that the complaint made by CSAAWU
at this
stage was that the demarcated picketing area was some 800 metres from
the entrance of the Oak Valley Farm which inhibited
the capacity
of the striking workers to dissuade customers from supporting Oak
Valley. The Commissioner encouraged the parties
to engage
further, but the Picketing Rules were not revised.
[6]
On 17 May 2019, Oak Valley’s
attorneys addressed a letter to CSAAWU seeking a written undertaking
that its members would comply
with the Picketing Rules and would
cease intimidating and threatening employees, engaging in violent and
dangerous conduct, and setting
alight objects on Oak Valley’s
premises. The letter indicated that if this undertaking was not
given, Oak Valley would launch
urgent proceedings in the
Labour Court. Also on 17 May 2019, CSAAWU’s attorneys
advised Oak Valley by letter that the
union denied that its members
had breached the Picketing Rules and explained that “the
unrest presently experienced in and
around your client’s premises
and the surrounding areas has been at the hand of the local
communities over whom [CSAAWU] has no
control or authority”.
The letter did not provide the undertaking sought by Oak Valley.
Instead, it proposed that the
matter be resolved urgently by
way of negotiations.
[7]
On the same
day, Oak Valley and Boland Labour
[5]
served an urgent application on the applicants, which was set down
for hearing on 20 May 2019.
[8]
In the
subsequent urgent proceedings before the Labour Court, Oak Valley
sought a rule nisi interdicting CSAAWU and each
of the 364
workers who had initially participated in the strike from, amongst
others, unlawfully interfering with Oak Valley’s
operations.
These 364 workers were referred to as “the Individual
Respondents”. Oak Valley also cited and sought
an
interdict against “the Unidentifiable Respondents”, who it said
were “people who associate themselves with the Individual
Respondents in the criminal and unlawful conduct”. Oak Valley
argued that although they could not be individually identified,
these
Unidentifiable Respondents had actively associated with the conduct
of the Individual Respondents. It insisted that the
interdict
against the Individual Respondents would have no practical effect
unless the Unidentifiable Respondents were also placed
under
interdict.
[9]
Oak Valley
contended
that the strike action triggered unlawful conduct, including the
alleged intimidation of some of its non-striking workers,
damage to
its property, the attempted burning of patches of veld and a shed on
Oak Valley Farm, the wearing of cold-weather
balaclavas (in
breach of the Picketing Rules), and the blocking of the entrance
to the Farm. Oak Valley also alleged
that the strike and
protest rippled out into the local community, and was related to
protest action that, at its height, briefly
blocked the N2 highway at
Sir Lowry’s Pass.
[10]
On 20 May
2019, the Labour Court granted the interim relief against CSAAWU, the
Individual Respondents and the Unidentified Respondents.
Thereafter, some of
the striking workers returned to work. When Oak Valley
again approached the Labour Court, this
time for final relief,
it abandoned its case against 191 of the Individual Respondents who
were no longer on strike. It therefore
sought relief only
against the Unidentifiable Respondents, CSAAWU, and the workers who
remained on strike, namely, the second to
174th applicants in this
Court.
[11]
In response,
the applicants raised three defences: (a) the Court lacked
jurisdiction regarding the alleged non-compliance with the
Picketing Rules because Oak Valley did not refer a dispute
regarding this alleged non-compliance in terms of either section
69(8) or 69(11) of the Labour Relations Act; (b) the interdict sought
by Oak Valley was unduly broad and interfered with lawful conduct
(in
particular, it effectively evicted certain of the workers from their
homes by restricting access to Oak Valley’s property);
and (c) Oak
Valley had failed to link any of the unlawful conduct complained of
to the respondents that it had cited (neither the
364 employees that
were striking at the time nor the “unidentifiable” members of the
public). The Labour Court accepted
that it could not interdict
the unidentifiable members of the public, but otherwise rejected the
applicants’ defences.
[12]
In
the Labour Appeal Court, the applicants were successful in relation
to the first two of their defences. Thus, the only issue
that
is still in contention is whether paragraph 2 of the Labour Appeal
Court’s order ought to be set aside. It reads:
“2. The order of the Labour Court is set aside and replaced with
the following order:
2.1 The second and further
respondents whose names are set out in Annexure “A1” and “B1”
attached to this judgment are interdicted from participating in any
unlawful or criminal acts in support or furtherance of their
protected strike;
2.2 The first respondent is
directed to call upon the individual respondents to desist from
unlawful
and/or criminal acts in support or furtherance of their
protected strike.
2.3 The second to further
respondents are interdicted and restrained from:
(a) Intimidating,
harassing, assaulting:
(i) any employee of
the first and/or second applicants whether such employee is employed
on a temporary, casual, fixed term, fixed purpose or permanent basis;
or
(ii) any other persons
involved in or connected with the conduct of the first applicant’s
operations or the business of the second applicant at Oak Valley
Farm, Grabouw (“the farm”); and/or
(iii) any customers of, visitors
to, suppliers and other business associates of the first applicant
wishing to visit the farm or do business with or support the first
applicant at the farm;
(b) in any way unlawfully
interfering with or obstructing the normal operations of the
first
applicant’s business at the farm and on the premises;
(c) prohibiting the
individual respondents from damaging any property of the first or
second
applicants;
(d) prohibiting the
individual respondents from setting fire or attempting to set fire
to
any property of the first applicant;
2.4 The first respondent is
interdicted and restrained from instigating, inciting the second
to
further respondents in engaging, inciting or instigating in any
unlawful conduct;
2.5 The first respondent is
directed to call on its members, including the individual respondents
to desist from unlawful conduct as set out above and comply with the
agreed Picketing Rules and the terms of this order;
2.6 There is no order as to
costs.”
[6]
[13]
T
he
Labour Appeal Court accepted the Labour Court’s rejection of “the
requirement of establishing a link between the individuals
who were
interdicted and the impugned conduct”.
[7]
It thus upheld the final
interdict on the basis that
Oak Valley
“was able to name certain individuals who participated in what it
considered to be unlawful acts together with a
further group of
unnamed but clearly identifiable individuals”.
[8]
The Court reasoned that “[t]o insist in the fraught context of an
industrial relations dispute that an employer can only
gain relief
against those employees it can specifically name from a group which
was involved in unlawful activity is surely a bridge
too far”.
[9]
[14]
The applicants
contend that, in this, the Labour Appeal Court erred. They say
that interdictory relief is only competent if
a rational factual
connection can be drawn between the alleged unlawful conduct and the
respondents sought to be interdicted.
In this case, they say,
there is “no link on the papers and the Labour Court and
Labour Appeal Court did not find there was
such a link”.
The applicants do not dispute that certain unlawful conduct took
place but maintain that Oak Valley failed
to establish that the
conduct could be attributed to the second to 174th applicants.
The applicants contend that, absent a
rational factual connection
between these incidents and the interdicted workers, members of the
public at large “could just as
easily have been responsible” for
the impugned conduct. They say that this not only violates
settled law on the requirements
for a final interdict, but is also
inimical to the rule of law, which requires that legal liability can
only be imposed upon a person
if a cause of action is made out
against her.
Jurisdiction and leave to appeal
[15]
This Court has on a number of occasions
confirmed that neither its constitutional nor its extended
jurisdiction will be engaged in
an application for leave to appeal
against the misapplication of a settled legal test.
[10]
It follows that the present application cannot get off the ground if
the alleged error committed by the Labour Appeal Court
was merely a
misapplication of the settled test for final interdictory relief. In
this case, however, the applicants allege
much more than the
misapplication of a settled legal test. They allege, instead,
that the Labour Court and Labour Appeal Court
got the law of
interdicts wrong. We are therefore required to ascertain rather
than merely apply the law. Moreover, the
legal question
identified requires that we determine the circumstances in which a
person exercising their rights in terms of sections
17 and 23(2)(c)
of the Constitution can be interdicted. Our constitutional
jurisdiction is thus engaged.
[11]
[16]
This Court’s extended jurisdiction is
also engaged because we are confronted by an arguable point of law of
general public importance.
It is arguable, because the law
reports are replete with conflicting answers to the legal
question.
[12]
And it is of general public importance, because it bears directly on
the regulation of strikes and protests, which are a commonplace
occurrence in South African society. In addition, as will
become apparent, the applicants have strong prospects of success.
Leave to appeal is thus granted.
The requirement of a link: general principles
[17]
At the outset, it is necessary to
draw a distinction between
the
identification by name
of the
respondents against whom an interdict is sought and
the
drawing of a link
between those
respondents and the unlawful conduct which an applicant reasonably
believes will persist or occur if an interdict is
not granted.
This case is concerned with the latter: the complaint is that the
final interdict against the second to 174th
applicants was not
competently granted due to a failure to establish this link between
each applicant and the actual or threatened
unlawful conduct.
[13]
The applicants do not fault Oak Valley for its inability to name
the persons against whom it sought an interdict.
With that in
mind,
the first
question for determination is whether our law as it stands requires
an applicant seeking a final interdict to establish
a factual link
between the respondents against whom the interdict is sought and the
actual or reasonably apprehended unlawful conduct.
[18]
The requirements for a final
interdict are settled. An applicant for such an order must show
a clear right; an injury actually
committed or reasonably
apprehended; and the absence of similar protection by any other
ordinary remedy.
[14]
[19]
In a
constitutional order, interdicts occupy a place of importance. In
granting an interdict a court enforces “the principle
of legality
that obliges courts to give effect to legally recognised
rights”.
[15]
The purpose of injunctive relief
is to “put an end to conduct in breach of the applicant’s
rights”.
[16]
An interdict is intended to protect an applicant from the actual or
threatened unlawful conduct of the person sought to be
interdicted.
Thus, for an interdict to be granted, it must be shown, on a balance
of probabilities (taking into account the
Plascon-Evans
rule,
[17]
where final relief is sought on motion), that unless restrained by an
interdict, the respondent will continue committing an injury
against
the applicant or that it is reasonably apprehended that the
respondent will cause such an injury.
[18]
The requirement of a “reasonable apprehension of injury” was
explained by the then Appellate Division in
Nordien
:
“A
reasonable apprehension of injury has been held to be one which a
reasonable man might entertain on being faced with certain
facts.
The applicant for an interdict is not required to establish
that, on a balance of probabilities flowing from the undisputed
facts, injury will follow: he has only to show that it is reasonable
to apprehend that injury will result. However, the test
for
apprehension is an objective one. This means that, on the basis
of the facts presented to him, the Judge must decide whether
there is
any basis for the entertainment of a reasonable apprehension by the
applicant.”
[19]
[20]
Plainly, if the evidence is insufficient
to establish any link between the respondent and the actual or
threatened injury, the apprehension
of injury cannot be reasonable.
Put
differently, it follows that there must be
some
link
between the respondent and the alleged actual or threatened injury.
But this does not provide a complete answer to the
present appeal.
What must also be determined is whether mere participation in a
strike, protest or assembly, in which there
is unlawful conduct,
suffices to establish the required link.
[21]
If so,
inevitably, innocent participants in strike or protest action will
sometimes get caught in the net of an interdict.
The
Labour Appeal Court was satisfied that this prejudice is mitigated by
the fact that the interdict would “serve only as a starting
point”.
[20]
It explained:
“If
there was a contempt application brought on the basis of conduct in
breach of the order so granted, it would have to be shown
with
greater precision that a specified individual had the necessary mens
rea to breach the order of court. In short, a bystander
who had
not breached the picketing rules would have nothing to fear from an
order being so granted in that his or her conduct would
not have been
in breach of the order. No illegal act had been perpetrated by
such a person. To be in contempt, it would
also have to be
shown that the respondent had knowledge of the order and its
contents.”
[21]
[22]
This, however, fails to answer the
concern regarding innocent bystanders. A person is interdicted
from engaging in unlawful
conduct because the applicant has a
reasonable apprehension that she will act unlawfully if not placed
under interdict. This
reasonable apprehension is based on a
finding that the respondent has either acted unlawfully or threatens
to act unlawfully.
The innocent bystander thus suffers
prejudice regardless of whether she subsequently escapes conviction
in a contempt application.
This prejudice lies in the
imputation that she has acted unlawfully or threatened to act
unlawfully. This is a serious
imputation, which is borne out by
extensive litigation brought by interdicted parties seeking, in
essence, to clear their name.
[22]
[23]
In addition, it is not far-fetched to
conclude that the prospect of being implicated in a contempt
application – whether or not
such application is likely to succeed
– will have a chilling effect on the exercise of the constitutional
rights to strike and
protest. If mere participation in a strike
or protest carries the risk of being placed under an interdict, this
might well
serve to deter lawful strike and protest action.
Moreover, if a participant in a strike or protest is placed under an
interdict,
despite having conducted herself lawfully, she might well
refrain from further strike action out of the justifiable fear of
being
swept up in contempt proceedings in the event that other
persons in the crowd act in breach of the interdict.
[24]
In
Mlungwana
,
this Court held that the criminalisation of the assembly of more than
15 persons without notice had a “‘calamitous effect’
on those
caught within its net” and that the “deleterious consequences of
criminalisation severely discourage – and thus limit
– the
exercise of [the right to protest]”.
[23]
Notably, this Court also acknowledged that the chilling effect of
criminal sanction “extends beyond those who convene assemblies
without notice” and that “people may be deterred from convening a
gathering and prospective attendees might be dissuaded lest
they too
be deemed to have convened the gathering without notice”.
[24]
In short, even those who intend to strike in a lawful manner might be
discouraged from so doing out of fear of being deemed
to have acted
unlawfully if interdictory relief is granted too readily.
[25]
Accordingly, while the “so what?”
argument suggested by the Labour Appeal Court has intuitive
appeal, it offers no answer
to the contention that the indiscriminate
granting of interdicts prejudices innocent parties and, potentially,
has a chilling effect
on the exercise of their constitutional right
to strike.
The
requirement of a link: case law
[26]
The
cases make it clear that one of the inquiries undertaken by a court
asked to grant a final interdict is a careful assessment of whether
the injury committed or apprehended can be attributed to the conduct
of the respondent. In
Hotz SCA
,
the University of Cape Town contended that the evidence established
that the student respondents “had all been active participants
in
the protests and had not disavowed any of the conduct of the
protestors”.
[25]
In reaching its decision to grant a final interdict against the
students, the Supreme Court of Appeal
[26]
considered the factual allegations made against each student and the
grounds advanced for why the University was entitled to an interdict
against them.
[27]
It concluded that the evidence in respect of each student disclosed
that they were engaged in or parties to unlawful conduct
that
included the destruction of university property.
[28]
By implication, it rejected the contention that mere participation in
protest action, in which there is unlawful conduct, is
sufficient to
expose a person to interdictory relief.
[29]
[27]
Likewise, in
Rhodes
University
,
the High Court engaged in a painstaking analysis of each student’s
involvement in the unlawful conduct in order to determine what
relief, if any, could be granted against them.
[30]
[28]
Is the position any
different in cases where an interdict is sought against workers
engaged in strike action?
A
conspectus of jurisprudence from the High Court and Labour Court
reveals that courts have held steadfast to the requirement of a
sufficient link between the respondent sought to be placed under
interdict and the alleged unlawful conduct committed or apprehended,
even within the context of strike action.
[29]
The applicants placed considerable
reliance on
Consolidated Fine
Spinners
and
Mondi
Paper,
both High Court decisions
which confirm that an interdict ought not to be granted against a
striking worker in circumstances where
the worker cannot be linked to
the unlawful conduct complained of. In
Consolidated
Fine Spinners
,
the
employer was unable to identify the individual perpetrators of the
alleged unlawful acts and instead sought to interdict the individual
respondents on the basis that they were all employees who had not yet
returned to work. The employer conceded that the respondents
cited may well have included persons who were not in fact engaged in
strike action or involved in any of the conduct sought to be
interdicted but contended that it was practically impossible for it
to identify the individual perpetrators. The High Court
refused to grant the interdict on the basis that the employer had not
established a cause of action against the individual respondents.
Notably, the Court appeared open to counsel’s suggestion that
individual respondents could be interdicted on the basis of
their
membership of a group that had acted unlawfully.
[31]
Ultimately, however, it concluded on the facts before it that the
employer had not laid a factual basis for inferring that
the
individual respondents were members of such a group, as it was clear
that the only reason they were cited by the employer was
that they
had not returned to work. It therefore concluded that “[t]he
only fact which is common to all the respondents is
that they stayed
away from work yesterday” and there was no proof that they were
otherwise linked or that they had collectively
engaged in unlawful
conduct.
[32]
[30]
In
Mondi
Paper,
the High Court
held that a rule
nisi against a union and certain individual employees fell to be
discharged “
by
virtue of the failure of the applicant to identify any of the
respondents and link them with the alleged acts of intimidation and
sabotage”.
[33]
Nicholson J reasoned:
“
The
evil of intimidation of employees by striking workers and the
unlawful blocking of transport to company premises can never be
condoned. Juxtaposed against that evil is that of a court
granting orders against ‘innocent non participants’ without
evidence. The latter evil seems to me to outweigh the former.
It seems to me that the whole court system will lose the
respect of
the public at large if it grants orders against ‘innocent
non-participants’.”
[34]
[31]
The principles espoused in
Consolidated
Fine Spinners
and
Mondi
Paper
were endorsed in subsequent
decisions of the Labour Court and High Court.
[35]
In
Oconbrick
,
the employer asked the Labour Court to discharge a rule nisi
interdict against a union and certain named members of the union who
had embarked on a protected strike, since the relevant strike had
ended, but sought an order for costs. The union resisted
the
prayer for costs on the basis that apart from one isolated
individual, the employer had failed to identify any particular
individual
respondents as having engaged in unlawful conduct and the
rule nisi ought therefore not to have been granted in the first
place.
The Labour Court accepted that the effect of the
decisions in
Consolidated
Fine Spinners
was that—
“
an
interdict ought not to be ordered against a group of striking workers
in circumstances where individuals who form part of that
group make
themselves guilty of conduct which is unlawful, unless and until the
individual perpetrators of that conduct are identified
before court.
Such an interdict ought only to be granted it follows against workers
so identified.”
[36]
[32]
Ultimately,
the Court found that the matter was distinguishable on the facts from
Consolidated
Fine Spinners
because the respondents before it “formed a cohesive group” and
it was “uncontested that the individual respondents, acting
as a
group and in concert, obstructed access to the applicant's
premises”.
[37]
The Court found that “[t]hese were not isolated and individual
unlawful acts, but conscious acts of striking workers acting
in
concert”.
[38]
Pretorius AJ explained that these conclusions were based on
inferences drawn from common cause facts and photographic
evidence.
[39]
[33]
In
Makhado,
the Labour Court refused to grant a
final interdict against striking workers, because the applicant’s
case against the striking
workers “amount[ed] to a number of
unsubstantiated conclusions regarding alleged threatening or
intimidatory behaviour, without
any particularity supplied, or
perpetrator identified”.
[40]
The Court also concluded that the workers could not be
interdicted in the absence of evidence identifying them as a
prospective
perpetrator or accomplice in the acts of a
perpetrator.
[41]
[34]
Perhaps the most persuasive authority
for the requirement of a link is to be found in
Polyoak,
where the Labour Court emphatically
held that an interdict can only be granted against a respondent when
a link has been established
between the respondent and the actual or
threatened unlawful conduct. It held:
“Generally
speaking, a person can only be restrained by interdict if the
evidence demonstrates that, as a matter of probability,
he or she
will commit the act in question within the period encompassed by the
proposed order. The conclusion is competent
when the evidence
shows that person has undertaken or agreed to commit the act or that
an inference to this effect can be drawn from
the fact that he or she
has previously done so. In the absence of evidence identifying
the respondent as a prospective perpetrator
or accomplice in the acts
of a perpetrator, however, he or she cannot be interdicted, and it
matters not that the person is one of
a group of strikers containing
malefactors or that his or her interests as striker happen to be
promoted by the wrongdoing in question.
Our law knows no
concept of collective guilt.”
[42]
[35]
Brassey AJ decried an increasingly
common litigation strategy in which employers seek rule nisi
interdicts against striking workers
without laying a proper factual
basis for that relief:
“In
support of the application, affidavits are generally filed by a
member of management and by eyewitnesses to acts of misconduct.
Specific acts of misconduct are normally referred to but only
sometimes attributed to specific individuals. Allegations are
frequently made against ‘the individual respondents’ as a class
when it is clear from the context that the participation of every
one
of them is, if not inconceivable or impossible, then at least highly
improbable. Hearsay evidence is commonly included
for the
admission of which no basis is laid in the papers, and allegations in
support of such matters as balance of convenience and
claims of
urgency are quite often cursory and sometimes wholly overlooked.”
[43]
This
description, with a few alterations, aptly describes the case made
out by Oak Valley in this matter.
[36]
Importantly, in
Polyoak
,
Brassey AJ went on to hold that, in that case, interdictory relief
was competent because “[t]he allegation [was] pertinently made
that
[the respondents] ‘either directly or through association and
instigation have rendered themselves guilty of the criminal
conduct’
complained of’”.
[44]
[37]
There has, however, not been unanimity
in the Labour Court on this issue. The most striking outlier in
this regard is
Great North Transport
,
where the Labour Court, despite expressly finding that the
applicant had not linked any of the 166 individual respondents to
unlawful conduct, nevertheless confirmed a rule nisi interdict
against them. The Court reasoned that it had “found that
there
[had] been a number of incidents of harassment and intimidation
and that members of the first respondent were involved in them”,
but that there was no acceptable basis on the papers for it “to
conclude that all 166 cited members [had] been thus involved and,
therefore, no basis for determining which of them may not have been
involved at all.”
[45]
To resolve this “dilemma”, the Court decided to take “a robust
and practical approach geared to the promotion of the
object of
‘labour peace’ and ‘the effective resolution of labour
disputes’ as set out in section 1 of the [Labour Relations
Act]”.
[46]
The Court confirmed the rule nisi “notwithstanding the anomaly that
[the Court was] not satisfied that each of the 166 individual
respondents [had] been positively demonstrated to have made himself a
party to the misconduct”.
[47]
Notably, the Labour Court did not refer to
Consolidated
Fine Spinners
or
Mondi
Paper
,
and I have found no case in which the High Court or Labour Court
has endorsed this decision or adopted such a robust approach.
[38]
The other outlier is
Woolworths,
where it was noted that “[t]he
Labour Court has always been, and probably always will be,
sympathetic to employers in a situation
where violence has erupted
during a strike” and would “readily grant interdicts” against
such behaviour.
[48]
While the Court accepted, in rather vague terms, that striking
employees against whom an interdict is sought must be “properly
identified”, the Court remarked that it would have been prepared to
grant interdicts against impugned employees “if just a few
names
were put forward” and if it were satisfied that “at least some
specific individuals . . . have been shown to behave in
a certain
way”.
[49]
As in
Great North Transport
,
the Labour Court did not cite authority for this approach.
Conclusion on the requirement of a link
[39]
Faced with this conspectus
jurisprudence, it seems that, notwithstanding the “fraught context
of industrial relations”, our law
requires that for interdictory
relief to be competently granted, a factual link between an
individual respondent and the actual or
threatened unlawful conduct
must be shown. Of course, this Court is not bound by decisions
of the High Court and Labour Court,
but they nonetheless
provide persuasive authority. They are also consistent with the
requirement that a
reasonable
apprehension of injury must be shown
in order to obtain interdictory relief. Protest or strike
action cannot, without more,
give rise to a reasonable apprehension
of injury.
[40]
In addition, the line of cases detailed,
with the exception of
Great North
Transport
and
Woolworths
,
cohere with the jurisprudence of this Court. In
Garvas
,
citing the European Court of Human Rights with approval, this Court
held:
“[A]n
individual does not cease to enjoy the right to peaceful assembly as
a result of sporadic violence or other punishable acts
committed by
others in the course of the demonstration, if the individual in
question remains peaceful in his or her own intentions
or
behaviour.”
[50]
[41]
Where
a person lawfully exercises their right to protest, strike or
assemble, but is nonetheless placed under interdict, that person’s
constitutionally protected rights are impermissibly denuded. It
matters not that the person might subsequently escape liability
in
contempt proceedings.
[42]
Two important principles can be
distilled from this Court’s jurisprudence, and this line of cases.
First, mere participation
in a strike, protest, or assembly, in which
there is unlawful conduct, is insufficient to link the impugned
respondent to the unlawful
conduct in the manner required for
interdictory relief to be granted. Second, the necessary link
can however be established
where the protesters or strikers commit
the impugned unlawful conduct as a cohesive group. Whether this
is established will,
of course, turn on the particular facts of the
case. Where, for instance, unlawful conduct during protest
action is ongoing,
widespread, and manifest, individual protesters or
strikers will usually have to disassociate themselves from the
conduct, to escape
the inference that it is reasonably apprehended
that they will cause injury to the applicant. By contrast,
where a protest
or strike is substantially peaceful, but there are
isolated and sporadic instances of unlawful conduct, only those
protesters who
associate with those acts of unlawfulness can
permissibly be placed under interdict. In addition, where a
strike is beset by
unlawful conduct and large numbers of protesters
or strikers deliberately conceal their identities – for instance,
through the
wearing of masks – a Court may be entitled to more
readily conclude that an applicant has a reasonable apprehension that
the participants
in the strike will cause it injury.
[43]
Regrettably, the law reports are replete
with cases involving employers besieged by unlawful conduct catalysed
by strike action.
[51]
Judgments of the Labour Court describe a scourge of strike related
misconduct
[52]
that represents “a blight that has come to characterise the South
African industrial relations landscape”.
[53]
They lament that the Labour Court has been “inundated by
applications by employers seeking to interdict and stop unlawful
conduct, violence and intimidation in the course of protected strike
action”.
[54]
At the same time, courts have warned that
interdict
proceedings are susceptible to abuse by employers with ulterior
motives
[55]
and that granting relief against striking workers too readily can
undermine collective action.
[56]
And, as the Labour Court remarked in
Polyoak
,
if interdicts are granted against striking workers indiscriminately
and without due process, their value as a means of upholding
the rule
of law is debased.
[57]
Indeed,
as Lord Wedderburn noted,
“[w]ithout scrupulous care by the judiciary – and sometimes even
with it – the interlocutory labour
injunction can become a great
engine of oppression against workers and their unions”.
[58]
[44]
The
requirement of a link, which has, save for a few instances, been
consistently applied by our courts, appropriately balances these
conflicting interests. On the one hand, it ensures that
interdicts are not granted indiscriminately. On the other, it
affords employers the required measure of protection. The
requirement does not entail that an employer must lead direct
evidence
establishing conclusively that the interdicted employee was
responsible for specific unlawful conduct. The employer could
discharge
its onus by putting up facts from which an inference can be
drawn that it is more probable than not that the employee herself
engaged
in unlawful conduct or associated herself with it.
[45]
As the High
Court noted in
Mondi
Paper
,
“the production of proper proof either directly or by
circumstantial evidence is not beyond the ingenuities of employers,
given
the modern technology that is available” to them.
[59]
Likewise, in
Durban
University of Technology
,
the High Court remarked that—
“
with
the modern methods of access control, CCTV cameras, etc, there is
ample opportunity for the applicant’s security services to
be able
to identify those persons who were on the campus when the violence
occurred, and steps could be taken to identify them”.
[60]
Does the evidence establish the required link?
[46]
Where disputes
of fact arise on the affidavits, a final order can be granted only if
the facts averred in the applicant’s affidavits,
which have been
admitted by the respondent, together with the facts alleged by the
latter, justify such an order.
[61]
Of course, “[i]t may be different if the respondent’s version
consists of bald or uncreditworthy denials, raises fictitious
disputes of fact, is palpably implausible, far-fetched or so clearly
untenable that the court is justified in rejecting [that version]
merely on the papers”.
[62]
[47]
There are
instances, like here, where this Court is required to determine
factual disputes in order to appropriately dispose of the
case before
it.
[63]
In an appeal to this Court emanating from an action, the court
of first instance enjoys an advantage in respect of its determination
of the facts
[64]
as it hears oral evidence and is best placed to assess the demeanour
of witnesses.
[65]
For this reason, in action proceedings, save in narrowly
specified circumstances, we defer to the factual findings of the
lower
court.
[66]
By contrast, in motion proceedings decided on the papers, the lower
courts enjoy no such advantage and we owe no deference
to the lower
court’s factual findings. As this Court held in
Railway
Commuters
:
“Where
an applicant seeks constitutional relief, and there is a dispute of
fact on the papers before the Court, the identification
of the facts
upon which the constitutional matter should be adjudicated
constitutes an issue connected with a decision on a constitutional
matter which falls within this Court’s jurisdiction.
In
such circumstances, this Court is not bound by the facts as
determined by the Supreme Court of Appeal in its application of the
rule as stated in Plascon-Evans
.”
[67]
(Emphasis added.)
To the extent that the Labour Court and Labour
Appeal Court made factual findings about the connection of the
respondents to the alleged
unlawful conduct, we are accordingly not
bound by those findings.
The case against the second to 174th applicants
[48]
When Oak Valley initially brought its application for urgent
relief, it made a case against CSAAWU, the Individual Respondents
(then
comprising 364 striking workers, including the second to 174th
applicants) and the Unidentifiable Respondents (who were members of
the public). By the time Oak Valley filed its replying
affidavit, it had abandoned its case against 191 of the Identifiable
Respondents. In this Court, we are asked to determine only
whether a final interdict ought to have been granted against CSAAWU
and the second to 174th applicants.
[49]
In both its founding and replying
affidavits, Oak Valley referred to video footage, photographs, and
audio recordings which it claimed
would provide proof that at least
some of the Individual Respondents were involved in or associated
with the unlawful conduct.
Oak Valley indicated that it would
make this evidence available to the Court but there is nothing in the
Labour Court or Labour Appeal
Court judgments, or in the applicants’
founding affidavit in this Court, which suggests that Oak Valley made
any video footage
or audio recordings available to either court.
In its judgment, the Labour Court refers to photographs made
available
by Oak Valley, but does not say what those photographs
depicted and, crucially, whether Oak Valley had identified the
persons in
the photographs. And, despite allegedly having these
incriminating materials at the ready when it filed its founding
affidavit,
it was only in its replying affidavit that Oak Valley
eventually identified specific persons who had been captured in a
handful
of photographs. As for Oak Valley’s claim that it had
made video footage available to the applicants’ attorneys, the
correspondence
evidencing this is not before this Court and cannot be
verified.
[50]
In summary, Oak Valley’s case on the
facts amounted to the following. At the outset, it made the
general allegation in its
founding affidavit that the Individual
Respondents (who included the second to 174th applicants in this
Court and many others) had
been “involved in the unlawful conduct
and criminal acts referred to hereafter more fully to varying
degrees”. The conduct
of the Individual Respondents allegedly
consisted of: preventing access to and from Oak Valley’s property;
causing damage to its
property and the property of other persons on
Oak Valley’s premises; intimidating and assaulting Oak
Valley’s employees;
obstructing the N2 highway at Grabouw; and
engaging in other unlawful acts and criminal conduct during the
strike. These allegations
appear to have been amplified later
in the founding affidavit but are then made against “the
Respondents” (comprising both the
Individual and Unidentifiable
Respondents). As indicated, Oak Valley made allegations in
relation to specific individuals
in its replying affidavit.
[51]
The applicants contended that Oak Valley
“had not connected any of the respondents with the conduct they
[sought to be] interdicted”
and they denied that the Individual
Respondents had or were engaged in unlawful conduct. They noted
that the contents of the
respondents’ affidavit “consist[ed]
mainly of unsubstantiated hearsay evidence which is not true”, that
the deponent had “liberally
generalised” and “failed to
disclose what allegations in the affidavit had come from sources who
wish to remain anonymous”.
The applicants do not deny that
the unlawful conduct complained of occurred. Instead, they
contend that Oak Valley had failed
to identify which of the
Individual Respondents (and, more specifically, which of the second
to 174th applicants in this Court) were
guilty of unlawful conduct.
[52]
A careful analysis of the allegations of
unlawful conduct made by Oak Valley bears this out.
Because the order granted
by the Labour Appeal Court, which is the
subject of this appeal, does not cover breaches of the Picketing
Rules or the conduct of
members of the public in the Grabouw area
more generally, I do not deal with the allegations Oak Valley has
made in relation to those
issues.
Arson allegedly committed by five unnamed men
[53]
It was alleged that five unnamed men
entered Oak Valley’s farm and attempted to set fire to the veld at
two separate places.
Oak Valley averred that there was video
footage and intimated that it would institute disciplinary
proceedings against the employees
involved, but inexplicably did not
name these individuals in either its founding affidavit or replying
affidavit. While Oak
Valley does annex photographs depicting
evidence of “arson by unidentifiable strikers”, the photographs
show only scorched earth.
This evidence fell woefully short of
establishing the required link.
Damage to Oak Valley vehicles
[54]
Oak Valley alleged that during the
evening of 5 May 2019, one of its delivery trucks was “stoned,
causing a window of the truck
to shatter”. Oak Valley did not
provide the name of any person or ascertainable group of persons that
were linked to the
incident. There is, however, a more specific
allegation that on 9 May 2019, a delivery truck driven by Mr Japie
Nel, one of
Oak Valley’s employees, was “pummelled with rocks
while driving on the N2 highway”. In the applicants’
answering affidavit,
Mr Karel Swart, CSAAWU’s National Organising
Secretary, said that he had “no knowledge” of these events and
that Oak Valley
had provided “insufficient particularity for the
named respondents to respond” to the allegation. Oak Valley’s
counter,
in its replying affidavit, was that on 28 May 2019, before
the applicants filed their signed affidavit, its attorneys sent the
applicants’
attorneys a voice recording via WhatsApp in which Mr
Nel identified Zamekile Nomganga (41st applicant in this Court) as
one of the
persons who had thrown stones at the vehicle. This
allegation was made in reply and in the absence of a confirmatory
affidavit
by Mr Nel or a transcript of the recording. Oak
Valley indicated that the voice recording would be made available to
the Court,
but, as indicated above, there is nothing in the record to
suggest that this was done. While in urgent proceedings, the
rule
that an applicant cannot make out its case in reply may
sometimes be relaxed,
[68]
the allegations concerning Zamekile Nomganga in any event amounted to
inadmissible hearsay evidence. Accordingly, Oak Valley
failed
to link the second to 174th applicants to the damage of its vehicles.
Intimidation
[55]
Oak Valley alleged several incidents of
unlawful intimidation of its employees. It alleged that on 5
May 2019, one of its managers
received calls from a farm worker
advising that workers living on the Oak Valley Farm were receiving
intimidating telephone calls
and text messages threatening them not
to work on 6 May 2019. It also alleged that on the day the
strike commenced, Oak Valley’s
employees were again threatened to
not attend work, that access to Oak Valley’s premises was impeded
and that employees attempting
to attend work were prevented from so
doing. Further acts of intimidation were alleged to have
occurred on 10 May 2019.
Oak Valley said that, on this
day, temporary workers it had enlisted to harvest fruit were unable
to report for work, because they
“had been threatened with physical
harm if they were to work at [Oak Valley]”. It also said
that one of its employees,
Mr Pieter Fielies, was “forced to return
home as some of the respondents threatened to damage his car if he
went to work”.
Oak Valley further alleged that on 14 May
2019, the “[r]espondents intimidated [Oak Valley’s]
employees who wanted
to work” and Oak Valley’s security
manager, Mr Johann le Roux, advised Oak Valley’s manager, Mr Gerco
Engelbrecht, that
the “[r]espondents were intending to throw rocks
at Johann le Roux’s vehicle and set it alight”. Finally, in
a confirmatory
affidavit, Mr le Roux stated that a member of a group
of striking workers threatened “today you will burn”, while other
members
of the group made gestures indicating that he would be
executed.
[56]
The common thread in these allegations
is a total absence of specificity. In particular, Oak Valley
failed to explain who had
made the alleged threats, via telephone
call, text message or otherwise, and failed to annex the text
messages to its founding affidavit.
No confirmatory affidavit
was produced to confirm the allegations concerning Mr Fielies, and
these allegations therefore amounted
to inadmissible hearsay.
As for Mr le Roux, it is inexplicable why he was unable to identify
at least some of the implicated
striking workers. While certain
of these workers were alleged to be wearing balaclavas, Mr le Roux
did not say that this was
the case for all of the workers, or even
those who made the threats. The allegations concerning these
acts of intimidation
therefore fell short of linking the applicants
to the unlawful conduct.
[57]
In reply, and in the face of the
applicants’ strenuous denial of the allegations of intimidation,
Oak Valley alleged, and Mr Engelbrecht
confirmed by way of a
confirmatory affidavit, that he was “informed by workers who wished
to work that they were not able to do
so because their lives had been
threatened and they were told their houses would be burnt down”.
It said that it could not
disclose the names of the employees who had
provided this information because it needed to preserve their
confidentiality.
It failed to explain, however, why it could
not disclose the names of the persons who had allegedly made the
threats and there is,
in any event, no explanation why Oak Valley did
not take steps to introduce the details of these allegations as
evidence, in a manner
that could have protected the confidentiality
of the employees. Oak Valley also failed to explain whether the
threats were
communicated by one person or a group of persons, and
whether the threats were communicated in person or via text message
or phone
call.
[58]
Oak Valley referred, in its replying
affidavit, to video footage which revealed strikers attempting to
dissuade Oak Valley employees
from working. However, as
indicated above, there is nothing in the judgments of the Labour
Court or Labour Appeal Court suggesting
that this footage was indeed
made available and that Oak Valley identified any of the second
to 174th applicants in the footage.
In its replying affidavit,
Oak Valley complained that the applicants had not taken the
opportunity “to scrutinise the video material
which [was made]
available on which certain of the individuals in question [could] be
identified”. This is a baffling complaint:
if the persons in
the footage were indeed striking workers, why did Oak Valley
staff not view the footage and identify them?
And if the second
to 174th applicants were involved in unlawful intimidation, the
employees and workers who had been intimidated
would have been
intimidated by co-workers known to them and Oak Valley.
Photographic evidence
[59]
It appears that only a handful of
photographs were made available to the Labour Court as annexures
to Oak Valley’s founding
affidavit. A news article which
included photographs was also annexed to Oak Valley’s replying
affidavit. Oak Valley
alleged that the photographs depict
picketing outside of the area designated in the Picketing Rules; the
wearing of balaclavas and
masks; “interference” with Oak Valley
security at the entrance of the Farm; protest action in front of the
police station;
and damage to one of Oak Valley’s delivery trucks
which occurred on Ou Kaapse Weg, approximately four kilometres from
the picketing
area. Leaving aside the photographs which merely
depict breaches of the Picketing Rules, as opposed to unlawful
conduct relevant
for present purposes, all that the photographs
reveal is that Oak Valley’s vehicle was damaged (the
applicants have at no
stage denied this) and that there was an
unauthorised fire on its property. For this reason alone, Oak
Valley’s eventual
attempt to link specific individuals to the
photographs, made in reply, and which in any event was
incomprehensible, took its case
no further.
Allegation regarding Mr Nikelo Magaba
[60]
In Oak Valley’s founding affidavit
reference is made to a 15 May 2019 news report during which Mr Nikelo
Magaba (23rd applicant)
“stated that if the demands of the
respondents were not met, they would force their way on to the
premises” and “kill”.
The applicants did not squarely
address the allegation against Mr Magaba in their answering affidavit
and did not present an affidavit
from Mr Magaba.
The case against CSAAWU
[61]
Oak Valley alleged in its founding
affidavit in the Labour Court that on 13 May 2019, Mr Swart
was arrested on charges of
public violence. Oak Valley said
that this was “clear proof of [CSAAWU’s] active role in
supporting the strikers . . .
not only in their strike but also in
their unlawful and criminal acts in furtherance of the strike”.
It also annexed an email
from Mr Swart in which he advised Oak Valley
that “the emotion and the frustration [was] running very high”
and the strike would
“spill over in the community”. Mr
Swart’s response was that he had met with workers in an open field
about a kilometre
from the Siyanyanzela Informal Settlement to
provide feedback on CSAAWU’s request that the municipality
intervene in the strike.
He said that, thereafter, he was
followed and arrested by the police who said that he had “incited
violence by inciting the workers
not to go to work” and that he was
subsequently charged with intimidation.
Conclusion on the case made out against CSAAWU
and the second to 174th applicants
[62]
The
allegations made by Oak Valley in its founding affidavit were so
vague that it was simply not possible for the applicants to respond
to them and offer substantiated denials. While Oak Valley may
have made allegations of specific instances of unlawful conduct,
it
did not allege that any person or sub-group within the striking
workers was responsible for this conduct, had associated with
it or
even failed adequately to dissociate with it. In effect, the
allegations made by Oak Valley amounted to: (a) certain
unlawful
conduct took place and (b) the Individual Respondents together with
unidentifiable members of the public were responsible.
[63]
The allegations against Mr Magaba stand
on a different footing. His incendiary remarks created the
reasonable apprehension that
he would cause harm to Oak Valley,
and linked him to the ongoing unlawful conduct. The applicants
failed to squarely address
Mr Magaba’s alleged conduct in their
answering affidavit. These allegations therefore stand
uncontroverted and the interdict
against him should be confirmed.
[64]
Likewise, Mr Swart’s arrest for
intimidation linked both him and CSAAWU to the ongoing unlawful
conduct or, at a minimum, to the
threatened unlawful conduct.
Mr Swart was both a CSAAWU leader and its mouthpiece during the
strikes. He also admitted
to being present at the picketing
site on several occasions. His arrest occurred in the midst of
ongoing common cause acts
of unlawfulness on Oak Valley’s property,
and numerous instances of alleged intimidation of its employees.
In that context,
Oak Valley’s fear that Mr Swart and CSAAWU
would intimidate its workers, or encourage unlawful activity, could
hardly be faulted
as unreasonable. Of course, we do not know
the veracity of the charges against Mr Swart. But to require
Oak Valley to
establish this would indeed be “a bridge too far”.
[65]
Accordingly, save for CSAAWU and the
23rd applicant, Oak Valley failed to draw the required link between
the applicants and the unlawful
conduct. It therefore failed to
show that it had a reasonable apprehension that it would suffer
injury at the hands of these
applicants if they were not placed under
interdict.
[66]
In these circumstances, while I
understand that Oak Valley was exposed to unlawful conduct, and have
sympathy in this regard, it has
made exactly the sort of tenuous case
which Brassey AJ said in
Polyoak
ought not to sustain a final interdict. Save in respect of Mr
Magaba and CSAAWU, the ineluctable conclusion is that the appeal
must
succeed.
Costs
[67]
The Labour Court made no order as to
costs given the ongoing relationship between the parties, and I see
no reason to interfere with
this order. That order was also
confirmed by the Labour Appeal Court but, surprisingly, in respect of
the application before
that Court, Oak Valley was mulcted with costs
because CSAAWU succeeded in its appeal of the Labour Court’s order
as to the Picketing
Rules. No explanation was given for this
order, but it seems that the Labour Appeal Court applied the rule
that costs follow
the result. This part of the Labour Appeal
Court’s order has not been appealed and we are therefore not at
large to interfere
with it. I thus note only that, as this
Court has held on various occasions, costs do not usually follow the
result in labour
matters.
[69]
In this Court, Oak Valley has not opposed the application, and there
is therefore no compelling reason why it should be mulcted
in costs.
Conclusion
[68]
The appeal substantially succeeds,
except in respect of the orders granted against CSAAWU and Mr Magaba.
Order
[69]
In the result, the following order is
made.
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld in part.
3.
Save in respect of the 23rd applicant
[Mr Magaba], paragraphs 2.1 and 2.3 of the Labour Appeal Court’s
order are set aside.
4.
There is no order as to costs in this
Court.
For
the Applicants:
S
Wilson and I De Vos, instructed by the Socio-Economic Rights
Institute
[1]
Commercial Stevedoring Agricultural and Allied
Workers’ Union and Others v Oak Valley Estates (Pty) Limited,
unreported judgment of the Labour Appeal Court,
Court Case No CA11/19 (17 November 2020) (Labour Appeal Court
judgment).
[2]
The applicants contend that these workers were inappropriately
labelled as “seasonal” when in reality they performed work
indistinguishable from Oak Valley’s permanent employees.
They contend that, as a result, these workers unfairly received
lower pay than Oak Valley’s permanent employees.
[3]
66 of 1995.
[4]
This being the corner of Oak Avenue and R321
Road, Grabouw, Western Cape.
[5]
I refer to these parties collectively as Oak Valley, save where the
context makes clear that I am referring to Oak Valley Estates
(Pty)
Limited alone.
[6]
Labour Appeal Court judgment above n 1 at para
37.
[7]
Id at paras 18 and 28.
[8]
Id at para 28.
[9]
Id.
[10]
University of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary
[2021] ZACC 13
;
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC);
2021 (8) BCLR 807
(CC)
at
para 49;
General Council of the Bar of South Africa v Jiba
[2019] ZACC 23
; 2019 JDR 1194 (CC);
2019 (8) BCLR 919
(CC) at para
49.
[11]
Hotz v University of Cape Town
[2017] ZACC 10
;
2018 (1) SA
369
(CC);
2017 (7) BCLR 815
(CC) (
Hotz
) at para 14.
[12]
Decisions affirming the requirement of a link include
ABSA Bank
Limited v South African Clothing and Textile Workers Union
2014
JOL 31586
(KZD) (
Absa Bank v SACTWU
);
Makhado Municipality
v SA Municipal Workers Union
2006 27 ILJ 1175 (LC);
2006 JOL
17074
(LC) (
Makhado
);
Polyoak (Pty) Ltd v Chemical Workers
Industrial Union
1999 20 ILJ 392 (LC) (
Polyoak
);
Oconbrick Manufacturing (Pty) Ltd v SA Building and Allied
Workers Organization
1998 19 ILJ 868 (LC);
1998 4 BLLR 408
(LC)
(
Oconbrick); Mondi Paper (A Division of Mondi Ltd) v Paper
Printing Wood and Allied Workers Union
(1997) 18 ILJ 84 (D)
(
Mondi Paper
); and
Ex Parte Consolidated Fine Spinners and
Weavers Ltd
(1987) 8 ILJ 97 (D) (
Consolidated Fine Spinners
);
and decisions rejecting the requirement of a link in certain
situations include
Woolworths (Pty) Ltd v SA Commercial Catering
& Allied Workers Union
2006 27 ILJ 1234 (LC);
2006
JOL 16643
(LC) (
Woolworths
) and
Great North Transport
(Pty) Ltd v TGWU
1998 6 BLLR 598 (LC) (
Great
North Transport
).
[13]
In the circumstances, the applicants’ reliance on cases which
merely concern the improper identification of respondents (such
as
The City of Cape Town v Yawa
2004 JDR 0074 (C);
2004 2 All SA
281
(C) (
Yawa
)) does not take the matter much further.
[14]
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
at 227.
Injury
in this sense means an unlawful infringement (actual or threatened)
of the applicant’s clear right.
[15]
Hotz v University of Cape Town
[2016]
ZASCA 159
;
2017 (2) SA 485
(SCA);
2016 4 All SA 723
(SCA) (
Hotz
SCA
) at para 39.
[16]
Id
at para 36.
[17]
Plascon-Evans Paint Ltd v Van Riebeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984]
ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) (
Plascon Evans
) at
634E-635C.
[18]
National Council of Societies
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals v Openshaw
[2008] ZASCA 78
;
2008 (5) SA 339
(SCA) at para 21.
[19]
Minister of Law and Order v Nordien
1987 (2) SA 894
(A)
(
Nordien
) at 896G-I citing with approval
Nestor v Minister
of Police
1984 (4) SA 230
(SWA) at 244.
[20]
Labour Appeal Court judgment above n 1 at
para
29.
[21]
Id.
[22]
See for example
Hotz
above n 11 and
Rhodes University v
Student Representative Council of Rhodes University
2016 JDR 2239;
2017 1 All SA 617
(ECG) (
Rhodes
University
)
,
the latter of which was pursued on appeal in this Court in
Ferguson
v Rhodes University
[2017] ZACC 39
;
2017 JDR 1768 (CC); 2018 (1) BCLR 1 (CC).
[23]
Mlungwana v S
[2018] ZACC 45
;
2019 (1) SACR 429
(CC);
2019 (1) BCLR 88
(CC) at
para 87.
[24]
Id at
para 88.
[25]
Hotz SCA
above n
15 at para 34.
[26]
Whose decision, save on the issue of costs, was
confirmed by this Court. See
Hotz
above
n 11.
[27]
See, for example, para 75 of
Hotz SCA
above n 15, where the
Court concluded:
“Given the vehemence
with which the appellants expressed their complaints against the
university and its management it was probable
that they would have
continued their protest and the actions related to it if able to do
so. (The interim interdict excluded
them from the campus,
which precluded that.) In the absence of any undertaking from
the appellants not to repeat the conduct
described above, the
university had a reasonable apprehension that unless an interdict
was granted the students would continue
with conduct of the same
type in breach of its rights. Accordingly, the first two
requisites for a final interdict were established.”
[28]
Hotz SCA
id at
para 70.
[29]
Id at para 40.
[30]
Rhodes University
above n 22 at paras 95 and 146-7. The Labour Appeal Court took
the view that—
“
neither
the judgment in
Hotz
nor
in
Rhodes University
supports
the argument raised on behalf of the appellants, namely that it was
impermissible to grant an order against the various
individual
employees, notwithstanding that some of them may not have comported
themselves illegally”.
This
assessment is difficult to square with the judgments in
Hotz SCA
and
Rhodes University
, which took great pains to evaluate
the extent to which each of the students under interdict had engaged
in unlawful conduct.
[31]
Consolidated Fine Spinners
above n 12 at 99A-B.
[32]
Id at 99B-C.
[33]
Mondi Paper
above n 12 at
90H-I.
[34]
Id at 93A-B.
[35]
Oconbrick
above n 12;
Absa Bank v SACTWU
above n 12;
and
Makhado
above n 12.
[36]
Oconbrick
id at
para 16.
[37]
Id at
para
18.
[38]
Id.
[39]
Id at
para
19.
[40]
Makhado
above n 12 at
para 23.
[41]
Id at
para 24.
[42]
Polyoak
above n 12 at 395H-B.
This
dictum has been cited with approval in subsequent decisions,
including
Makhado
above
n 12 at para 24.
[43]
Id at 394E-H.
[44]
Id at 397A-H.
[45]
Great North Transport
above n 12 at para 30.
[46]
Id at para 32.
[47]
Id at para 34.
[48]
Woolworths
above
n 12 at para 5.
[49]
Id at para 7.
[50]
South African Transport and Allied Workers Union v Garvas
[2012] ZACC 13
;
2013 (1) SA 83
(CC);
2012 (8) BCLR 840
(CC) (
Garvas
)
at para 53. In
Mlungwana
,
above n 23 at para 55, this Court, endorsing
Garvas
, added
that for so long as a person exercising her constitutional right to
strike “act[s] within the parameters prescribed for
the exercise
of this important right they will be assured of constitutional
protection”.
[51]
See for example:
Dis-Chem Pharmacies
Limited v Malema
2019 40 ILJ 855 at para 13;
Tsogo
Sun Casinos (Pty) Ltd t/a Montecasino v Future of SA Workers Union
2012 33 ILJ 998 (LC);
2012 JOL 28755
(LC) at
paras 4 and 11-3; and
National Union of Food Beverages v
Universal Product Network
2016 37 ILJ 476 (LC); 2015 JOL 34910
(LC) at para 37. In
GRI Wind Steel South
Africa v Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union
(2018) 39 ILJ 1045 (LC)
[2007] ZALC 94
; ;
2018 3 BLLR 273
(LC)
(
GRI Wind Steel
)
the Court lamented at para 1 that the application arose—
“in the all too
common South African context of a protected strike turning violent;
striking workers committing violent and unlawful
acts; and the SA
Police Service standing idly by, playing an observer’s role
without arresting a single perpetrator.”
[52]
KPMM Road and Earthworks (Pty) Ltd v
Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union
(2018)
39 ILJ 609 (LC);
2019 JOL 43092
(LC) (
KPMM
Road
) at paras 5-6; and
GRI
Wind Steel
id at para 1.
[53]
Ram Transport SA (Pty) Ltd v SA Transport and
Allied Workers Union
(2011) 32 ILJ
1722 (LC);
2011 JOL 26805
(LC) at para 9.
[54]
KPMM Road
above
n 52 at para 5.
[55]
Midlands Pine Products (Pty) Ltd v Chemical
Energy Paper Printing Wood and Allied Workers Union
(2002) 23 ILJ 2276 (LC);
2002 12 BLLR 1200
(LC)
at paras 17 and 25.
[56]
See
Plascon Evans
Paints (Natal) Ltd v Chemical Workers Industrial Union
(1987) 8 ILJ 605 (D) at 695.
[57]
Polyoak
above n
12 at 394A-B.
[58]
Wedderburn
The Worker and the Law
3
ed (Sweet & Maxwell Ltd, London 1986) at 686.
[59]
Mondi Paper
above
n 12 at para 93B-C.
[60]
Durban University of Technology v Zulu
2016 JDR 1284 (KZP) at para 27.
[61]
Plascon-Evans
above
n 17 at 634E-635C.
[62]
National Director of Public Prosecutions v
Zuma
[2009] ZASCA 1
[2009] ZASCA 1
; ;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA);
2009 (4) BCLR
393
(SCA) at para 26.
[63]
For an example of another such case, see
Mashongwa v PRASA
[2015] ZACC 36; 2016 (3) SA 528 (CC); 2016 (2) BCLR 204 (CC).
[64]
Bernert v Absa Bank Ltd
[2010] ZACC 28
;
2011 (3) SA 92
(CC);
2011 (4) BCLR 329
(CC) at para
106.
[65]
Id.
[66]
Id; see also
Makate
v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd
[2016] ZACC 13
;
2016 (4) SA 121
(CC);
2016 (6) BCLR 709
(CC) at para 39.
[67]
Rail Commuters Action Group v Transnet Ltd t/a Metrorail
[2004] ZACC 20
;
2005 (2) SA 359
(CC);
2005 (4) BCLR 301
(CC)
(
Railway Commuters
)
at para 53.
[68]
Polyoak
above n
12 at 395D.
[69]
Union
for Police Security and Corrections Organisation v South African
Custodial Management
(Pty)
Ltd
[2021] ZACC 26
at para 42;
South
African Commercial, Catering and Allied Workers Union v Woolworths
(Pty) Limited
[2018] ZACC 44
;
2019 (3) SA 362
(CC);
2019 (3) BCLR 412
(CC) at para
60; and
Zungu
v Premier of the Province of KwaZulu-Natal
[2018] ZACC 1
;
2018 (39) ILJ 523 (CC);
2018 (6) BCLR 686
(CC)
at para 24.
sino noindex
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