Case Law[2022] ZASCA 131South Africa
MEC for Economic Development, Environment and Tourism: Limpopo v Leboho (87/2021) [2022] ZASCA 131; (2022) 43 ILJ 2695 (SCA); [2023] 1 BLLR 56 (SCA) (6 October 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
6 October 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Contract – calculation of leave days – jurisdiction of the courts – clause 14.1 of the collective agreement between the parties – difference between ‘application’, ‘interpretation’ and ‘enforcement’ of a collective agreement – resolution 7(3) of Regulation 7 of 2000 issued in terms of the Public Service Co-ordinating Bargaining Council – leave credits audited prior to 1 July 2000 – employee entitled to retain those leave credits.
Judgment
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## MEC for Economic Development, Environment and Tourism: Limpopo v Leboho (87/2021) [2022] ZASCA 131; (2022) 43 ILJ 2695 (SCA); [2023] 1 BLLR 56 (SCA) (6 October 2022)
MEC for Economic Development, Environment and Tourism: Limpopo v Leboho (87/2021) [2022] ZASCA 131; (2022) 43 ILJ 2695 (SCA); [2023] 1 BLLR 56 (SCA) (6 October 2022)
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sino date 6 October 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
No: 87/2021
In
the matter between:
MEC
FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT,
ENVIRONMENT
AND TOURISM:
LIMPOPO
APPELLANT
and
SELLO
REUBEN
LEBOHO
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
MEC for Economic
Development, Environment and Tourism: Limpopo v Leboho
(87/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 131
(6 October 2022)
Coram:
GORVEN, MOTHLE and HUGHES JJA and KGOELE and MAKAULA AJJA
Heard
:
25 August 2022
Delivered
:
6 October 2022
Summary:
Contract – calculation of leave days – jurisdiction
of the courts – clause 14.1 of the collective agreement between
the parties – difference between ‘application’,
‘interpretation’ and ‘enforcement’ of
a
collective agreement – resolution 7(3) of Regulation 7 of 2000
issued in terms of the Public Service Co-ordinating Bargaining
Council – leave credits audited prior to 1 July 2000 –
employee entitled to retain those leave credits.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Limpopo Division of the High Court, Polokwane
(Muller J and Tshidada AJ sitting as court of appeal):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs of
two counsel where applicable.
JUDGMENT
Makaula
AJA (Gorven, Mothle and Hughes JJA and Kgoele AJA concurring):
[1]
This appeal originates from an order granted by the Regional Court
for the Regional
Division of Limpopo, Polokwane (the regional court).
It dismissed an action brought by the respondent against the
appellant for
payment of the amount of R400 000 for leave
credits. The respondent appealed to the Limpopo Division of the High
Court, Polokwane
(the high court) which upheld the appeal with costs.
The high court, per Muller J with Tshidada AJ concurring, substituted
the
order of the regional court with an order that the appellant pay
the respondent the amount claimed along with interest and costs.
The
appeal is before us with the special leave of this Court.
Background
Facts
[2]
The respondent commenced his employment in the public service in
1970. He worked in
various departments until his retirement on 30
April 2014. Prior to his retirement, the appellant’s electronic
system reflected
that he had 454 capped leave credits.
[1]
Shortly before the respondent retired, the appellant had conducted a
final leave audit which concluded that the 454 leave credits
were
actually unaudited leave credits which had accrued before 1 July
2000. The outcome of this audit was that the appellant calculated
that the respondent had only 271 leave credits for which it paid him
out on retirement. The respondent, not satisfied with the
result of
the audit and the payment he received, issued summons alleging a
shortfall of 183 leave credits. His contention was that
he was
entitled to be paid an amount an R467 204.49 at the applicable
rate of R2 553.03 per day. He abandoned the difference
and claimed
R400 000, presumably to bring it within the
jurisdiction of the regional court.
[3]
At the trial, the respondent testified and also called Ms Noko
Georgina Ngoepe (Ms
Ngoepe) as his witness. Ms Ngoepe, who was at the
time of her testimony working for the Limpopo Provincial Treasury as
a personnel
officer testified that, in February 1999 she had audited
the leave credits of the respondent. She did so pursuant to the
policy
of the department in which they were both employed which
required an annual audit of leave credits. Ms Ngoepe issued the
respondent
with a letter reflecting that he had 468 leave credits. It
is common cause that after receiving the letter the respondent,
utilised
14 of those leave credits, leaving the balance of 454 days.
[4]
On 1 July 2000, Resolution 7 of 2000 (the Resolution) came into
effect. This was a
resolution of the Public Service Co-ordinating
Bargaining Council (PSCBC), and it is common cause that it formed
part of the contract
of employment between the respondent and the
appellant in terms of s 23 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995
(LRA). The Resolution
introduced a new, unified, leave dispensation.
Clause 7.3
(a)
of the Resolution provided:
‘
Employees,
who in terms of the dispensation applicable prior to 1
st
of July 2000, have earned audited leave accruals in terms of that
dispensation, shall retain the same. The employer shall pay such
accrued leave on:
(i)
Death;
(ii)
Retirement; or
(iii)
Medical boarding.’
[5]
Ms Ngoepe testified that due to the inconsistency in the calculation
of leave credits
by various departments, the Acting Director–General
of the Department of Public Service and Administration (PSA) issued a
directive dated 18 April 2001. The directive read in part ‘as
you are aware, employees are, in terms of paragraph 7 of the
(PSCBC)
Resolution 7 of 2000, entitled to annual leave as provided for in the
attached Annexure, for utilisation in a leave cycle
of twelve months
beginning in January and ending in December of each year’. The
directive gave an instruction that all leave
backlogs in various
departments had to be audited by 30 September 2001. Ms Ngoepe
confirmed that they had to implement the Resolution.
The sole
challenge to the testimony of Ms Ngoepe was that she had not
conducted her audit in 1999 in accordance with the Resolution.
She
readily agreed that she had not done so since it was not operative at
that time. The audit had been conducted in accordance
with the leave
dispensation of the relevant department in February 1999. This was
never challenged in cross-examination or by testimony
to the
contrary.
[6]
The respondent in his testimony confirmed his date of appointment and
retirement.
He further confirmed receiving the letter advising him of
the 468 leave credits. According to him, his salary advice dated 13
March
2009 reflected that he had 468 leave credits. In December 2012
he took 14 leave days and thus remained with 454 leave credits. He
was aware of the Resolution which directed that calendar days be
converted to working days under the new leave dispensation.
[7]
In tendering its evidence, the appellant called as a witness Ms
Dimakato Zonde Mokwena
(Ms Mokwena) who confirmed the evidence of the
respondent and Ms Ngoepe in material respects. She accepted that Ms
Ngoepe may have
audited the respondent’s leave credits before
the year 2000 and found them to be 468. She agreed that leave credits
accumulated
before 1 July 2000 were retained and that only after the
Resolution came into effect, were calendar days changed to working
days
for the purpose of auditing.
[8]
The cause of action in the particulars of claim is that as at the
date of retirement
the respondent had 454 leave credits which had
accrued to him in terms of clause 7.3(a) of the Resolution. Because
they had been
audited under the previous dispensation, he was
entitled to retain them and receive payment for them on retirement.
The
Issues
[9]
The appellant in essence relied on two issues in the appeal:
(a)
Firstly it contended that the regional and the high courts erred in
finding that the regional court had jurisdiction to hear
the dispute;
and
(b)
Secondly it contended that the high court erred in holding that the
respondent was entitled to the payment of R400 000
for the 454
leave credits that had accrued to him prior to 1 July 2000.
Jurisdiction
[10]
The appellant argued that the dispute between the parties involved
the interpretation or application
of clause 14.1 of the Resolution.
Clause 14.1 reads:
‘
Disputes
about the interpretation and application of this agreement shall be
dealt with according to the dispute resolution procedure
of the
PSCBC.’
According
to the appellant, the respondent should have taken the matter for
conciliation, mediation or arbitration before the PSCBC
instead of
taking it to court.
[11]
The appellant placed reliance on the matters of
Aucamp
v South African Revenue Services
[2]
(
Aucamp
)
and
Ekurhuleni
Municipality v SAMWU obo Members
[3]
(Ekurhuleni)
in arguing that since the respondent was relying on a statutory
regulatory provision founded in a collective agreement, the dispute
between them was about the interpretation or application of the
collective agreement. The appellant submitted that the leave credits
and the consequential short payment made to the respondent was
irrelevant because the dispute was about the interpretation or
application of the collective agreement.
[12]
The respondent on the contrary contended that the appellant confuses
the two concepts dealt with
in Resolution 14.1 namely the
‘application’ or ‘Interpretation’ of a
collective agreement with its ‘enforcement’.
The
respondent submitted that the enforcement of a collective agreement,
as it applies to the respondent’s contract of employment,
is
distinct from ‘interpretation’ or ‘application’
thereof as it directly influences the question of jurisdiction.
The
respondent argued that his case is about the enforcement of or
compliance with the Resolution and not its application or
interpretation.
Relying on
Hospersa
obo
Tshambi
v Department of Health, KwaZulu–Natal
(
Hospersa
),
[4]
the respondent submitted that the dispute was never about the
interpretation of the Resolution nor about its applicability to the
dispute but it was about the number of audited leave credits the
respondent had accumulated upon retirement.
[13]
The
submission of the appellant is
incorrect as this matter is about the enforcement or compliance with
the collective bargaining agreement.
Ekurhuleni
was about the
interpretation of the collective agreement and this is confirmed by
what the court said:
‘
.
. . it is expressly averred by the respondent that the appellant’s
action in withholding the salaries and in asking deductions
from the
salaries . . . , was in breach of the main agreement. The Court thus
had to determine whether the main agreement had been
breached. This,
of necessity, required an interpretation of the main agreement.’
[5]
[14]
Similarly, in
Aucamp
the court dealt with the issue of
jurisdiction and found that the Labour Court had no jurisdiction to
hear the dispute because
the nature of the dispute involved an unfair
labour practice relating to benefits. The court reasoned thus:
‘
In
deciding what is the true issue in dispute in this matter, I have
little hesitation in concluding that the issue in dispute is
actually
about two issues in dispute, the first being an unfair labour
practice and the second being the issue of the interpretation
and
application of collective agreements. . . .’
[6]
[15]
In
Hospersa
, Sutherland JA dealt with the distinction between
‘application’ and ‘interpretation’ on one
hand and ‘enforcement’
on the other in relation
collective agreements. The court explained, in this regard:
‘
A
dispute about the interpretation of a collective agreement requires,
at minimum, a difference of opinion about what a provision
of the
agreement means. A dispute about the application of a collective
agreement requires, at minimum, a difference of opinion
about whether
it can be invoked. . . .’
[7]
About
the enforcement of a collective agreement the court found:
‘
The
bald statement by Thompson and Benjamin that “application”
includes “enforcement” is unmotivated and
is, in my view,
insupportable, if what is meant is that any breach of a collective
agreement triggers a right to invoke the collective
agreement as a
cause of action to be adjudicated, pursuant to section 24. A better
reading of Thompson and Benjamin is that it
is implied that once
“application” is proven, the referring party can procure
more than just a declaratory order, and
can obtain, pursuant to such
finding, substantive relief.’
[8]
[16]
The respondent’s cause of action rests squarely on the
enforcement of the collective agreement
as was held by Sutherland JA.
In argument before us, the appellant was constrained to accept
that there were no disputes concerning either the ‘interpretation’
or ‘application’ of the Resolution. It clearly applied
and there was no issue as to the interpretation of Resolution
7(3)
(a)
. The action had simply been one to enforce what the
parties agreed was the employment contract between them. That put
paid to the
issue concerning jurisdiction and the appellant correctly
conceded that the regional court had jurisdiction to decide the
claim.
Entitlement
to Payment
[17]
On the second issue, the appellant submitted that, because the audit
of February 1999 had not
been in accordance with the provisions of
the Minister’s directive and had counted calendar days instead
of working days,
the respondent did not have 454 leave credits but
only 271, for which he had been paid. The contention was that a fresh
audit of
the respondent’s leave credits had to be done
accordingly.
[18]
This, however, disregards the plain meaning of Resolution 7(3) as a
whole which reads:
‘
(a)
Employees, who in terms of the
dispensation applicable prior to 1
st
of July 2000, have earned audited leave accruals in terms of that
dispensation, shall retain the same. The employer shall pay such
accrued leave on:
(i)
death;
(ii)
retirement; or
(iii)
medical boarding.
(b)
Parties to the PSCBC shall negotiate the method of
calculating the value and payment of the audited accrued leave.
(c)
Where there are no records an audit shall be
conducted by the employer in order to determine whether there are
periods which are
audited or unaudited. Should there be a period
which is not audited and a period which is audited then the leave
pay-out shall
be paid on the basis of 6 days per completed year of
service up to 100 days for unaudited leave, plus the value of the
audited
leave.
(d)
The employer shall allow employees to utilise their accrued leave
credits accrued prior to 1st July 2000. Departments shall develop
procedures and measures to ensure that accrued leave is utilised in a
manner that does not detrimentally affect service delivery.’
There
is therefore specific provision in Resolution 7(3)
(c)
for
persons whose leave credits had not been audited prior to 1 July
2000. It is only those persons who were subject to a subsequent
audit. Resolution 7(3)
(a)
makes clear that, where an audit has
been conducted under the old dispensation, those leave credits are
retained by the employee
and paid out, inter alia, on retirement.
[19]
When confronted with this in argument, the appellant conceded that
this was the position. It
is manifestly so. There was no dispute that
the audit conducted by Ms Ngoepe in February 1999 had been conducted
according to the
dispensation operative at the time. As a result, as
at 1 July 2000, the respondent retained the leave credit of 468 days.
Because
he used 14 of these, the balance of 454 leave credits should
have been paid to him when he retired. There is accordingly no reason
to interfere with the decision of the high court.
[20]
Regarding costs, both parties utilised two counsel and agreed that
the costs of two counsel were
merited. I do not take issue with
that position. Furthermore the successful party should be awarded
costs of the appeal.
[21]
In the result, the following order is issued:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs of
two counsel where applicable.
M
Makaula
Acting Judge
of Appeal
APPEARANCES
For
appellant: Z Z
Matebese SC, with M Raphahlelo
Instructed
by: The State
Attorney, Polokwane
The State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
For
respondent: R G Beaton SC, with P Eilers
Instructed
by: Pratt Luyt &
De Lange Attorneys, Polokwane
Phatshoane Henney
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Leave
credits are equivalent to leave days. When they have not been taken,
there is a formula for payment of leave
credits. The
formula is not in dispute.
[2]
Aucamp
v South African Revenue Services
[2013] ZALCJHB 266;
[2014]
2 BLLR 152
(LC) paras 21- 22.
[3]
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v SAMWU obo Members
[2015]
1 BLLR 34
(LAC) para 25-26.
[4]
Hospersa
obo Tshambi v Department of Health, KwaZulu-Natal
[2016] ZALAC 10
;
[2016] 7 BLLR 649
(LAC); (2016) 37 (ILJ) 1839
(LAC).
[5]
Ibid
para 22
.
[6]
Ibid
para
20
.
[7]
Ibid fn 3 para 17.
[8]
Ibid
fn 3 para 22.
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