Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 308South Africa
Yako v National Lotteries Commission (NLC) and Others (2024/027585) [2024] ZAGPJHC 308; (2024) 45 ILJ 1352 (GJ) (26 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
26 March 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPJHC 308
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Yako v National Lotteries Commission (NLC) and Others (2024/027585) [2024] ZAGPJHC 308; (2024) 45 ILJ 1352 (GJ) (26 March 2024)
Yako v National Lotteries Commission (NLC) and Others (2024/027585) [2024] ZAGPJHC 308; (2024) 45 ILJ 1352 (GJ) (26 March 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_308.html
sino date 26 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024 – 027585
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
In
the application by
YAKO,
GUGULETHU Applicant
And
NATIONAL LOTTERIES
COMMISSION (NLC) First
Respondent
THE BOARD OF THE
NATIONAL LOTTERIES COMMISSION Second
Respondent
SCHOLTZ,
JODY-LYNN Third
Respondent
MKHATSHWA, ADV MANDLA,
NO
(in his capacity as the Chairperson of the Disciplinary
Hearing) Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MOORCROFT
AJ:
Summary
Final
and Interim interdict – requirements
A
court will intervene in incomplete disciplinary proceedings only in
exceptional circumstances – these circumstances must
appear
from the evidence
Order
[1]
In this matter I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed;
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the application,
including the costs of two counsel, on the scale as between attorney
and own client.
[2]
The reasons for the order follow below.
Introduction
[3]
This is a judgement in the urgent court. The applicant seeks an order
-
3.1
that the matter be heard as one of urgency in terms of rule 6 (12) of
the uniform rules,
3.2
that a ruling by the fourth respondent dated 1 March 2024 and
refusing an application for the postponement of disciplinary
proceedings
be set aside,
3.3
that the decision to appoint the fourth respondent as the chairperson
of the disciplinary hearing be set aside,
3.4
that the decision of the third respondent to suspend or charge the
applicant, or to institute disciplinary proceedings against
the
applicant is a contravention of
section 2G
(3) (b) of the
Lotteries
Act 57 of 1997
, be set aside.
3.5
that the continuation of the disciplinary hearing before the fourth
respondent be suspended pending the hearing and decision of
part A of
an application brought by the applicant on 5 February 2024 under case
number 2024 – 011466,
3.6
that the first respondent or any other respondent who opposes the
application pay the costs of the applicant.
[4]
The orders sought in paragraphs 3.2, 3.3, and 3.4 constitute final
relief. The relief in paragraph 3.5 is interim relief pending
the
hearing of and a decision in part A of the applicant’s
application of 5 February 2024.
[5]
The
applicant is employed by the first respondent as a legal manager. The
first respondent is the National Lotteries Commission
(the NLC), a
public entity established in terms of the
Lotteries Act. The
second
respondent is the board of the NLC, the governing body of the NLC.
The third respondent is the Commissioner
nomine
officio
appointed in terms of the
Lotteries Act and
the fourth respondent is
the chairperson appointed to hear and decide on charges brought
against the applicant by her employer.
[1]
It is not apparent why the second respondent was cited as the NLC is
already before the court, but nothing turns on this.
Urgency
[6]
The applicant was suspended on 16 October 2023 and she questioned the
authority of the third respondent to suspend her on 26 October
2023.
The third respondent replied in writing on 6 November 2023. She was
charged on 7 December 2023. The applicant was informed
on 12 January
2024 that the fourth respondent had been appointed to preside over
the disciplinary hearing.
The
present application was brought on 7 March 2023, some six months
after the suspension and three months after receipt of the
charge
sheet. No explanation is provided for the long delay since November
2023 and particularly for the delay from 12 January
2024 when the
identity of the fourth respondent and all other facts were known to
the applicant. In my view therefore no case is
made out invoke
rule 6
(12).
The jurisdiction of
the High Court
[7]
Section 157
(1) and (2) of the
Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995
reads
as follows:
157
Jurisdiction of Labour Court
(1)
Subject to the Constitution and section 173, and except where this
Act provides otherwise, the Labour Court has exclusive
jurisdiction in respect of all matters that elsewhere in terms
of this Act or in terms of any other law are to be
determined
by the Labour Court.
(2)
The Labour Court has concurrent jurisdiction with the High Court in
respect of any alleged or threatened violation of any fundamental
right entrenched in Chapter 2 of the Constitution of the Republic of
South Africa, 1996, and arising from-
(a) employment
and from labour relations;
(b) any dispute over
the constitutionality of any executive or administrative act or
conduct, or any
threatened executive or administrative act or
conduct, by the State in its capacity as an employer; and
(c) the
application of any law for the administration of which
the Minister is responsible.
[8]
The orders
sought by the applicant are aimed at setting aside and terminating
disciplinary proceedings flowing from her employment
by the NLC. The
Labour Relations Act contains
extensive provisions that govern legal
aspects of the employer/employee relationship, such as a guarantee of
freedom of association,
[2]
collective bargaining,
[3]
and,
most importantly in the present matter, dispute resolution.
[4]
The
Act provides for the establishment of the Commission for
Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA)
[5]
and the Labour Court.
[6]
[9]
The fairness or otherwise of disciplinary proceedings between
employer and employee is regulated by the
Labour Relations Act and
the respondents argue that no case is made out in the founding papers
to bring the matter within the jurisdictional ambit of the
High
Court.
[10]
The applicant on the other hand argues that her application is based
on constitutional principles and therefore that the High Court
has
jurisdiction in terms of
section 157
(2). It is correct that the
application is ultimately related to the constitutional right to fair
labour practices entrenched in
the constitution, but this is so in
the sense that the Constitution pervades all of the law.
[11]
A litigant can in my view not escape the restriction imposed by
section 157
(1) of the
Labour Relations Act merely
by referring also
to constitutionally entrenched rights in order to invoke
section 157
(2). I need not however decide this question in this application and
I shall assume without deciding that the High Court does enjoy
jurisdiction to hear this interdict application.
Section
217 of the Constitution and the principle of subsidiarity
[12]
The applicant submits that the fourth respondent was appointed in
contravention of section 217 of the Constitution, 1996, in that
a
competitive bidding process was not followed. There is no merit in
the argument. The principle of subsidiarity applies and the
Public
Finance Management Act 1 of 1999
was adopted by Parliament to give
effect to the provisions of section 217 of the Constitution.
[13]
Cameron
J
[7]
in the Constitutional Court
said in
My
Vote Counts v Speaker of the National Assembly
:
[8]
“
[53]
These considerations yield the norm that a litigant cannot directly
invoke the Constitution to extract a right he or she seeks
to enforce
without first relying on, or attacking the constitutionality of,
legislation enacted to give effect to that right. This
is the form of
constitutional subsidiarity Parliament invokes here. Once legislation
to fulfil a constitutional right exists, the
Constitution's
embodiment of that right is no longer the prime mechanism for its
enforcement. The legislation is primary. The right
in the
Constitution plays only a subsidiary or supporting role.”
[14]
The applicant does not take issue with the
Public Finance Management
Act and
how it was implemented.
The
decision to institute disciplinary proceedings
[15]
In terms of
section 2G
(2)
[9]
of the
Lotteries Act the
board of the first respondent shall institute
disciplinary proceedings against an employee who fails to comply with
section 2G.
The applicant is critical of the fact that the applicant
was suspended by the third respondent and not by the board.
[16]
The board
of the NLC received a report of the disciplinary action instituted
against the applicant in January 2024 and approved
of the action
taken. This is confirmed in a confirmatory affidavit by the
chairperson of the board. The right of the first respondent
to file
the supplementary affidavit is disputed but I am satisfied in any
event that the third respondent has personal knowledge
of these
affairs in her capacity as commissioner and that her evidence that
the report was made to the Board and approved can be
accepted. There
is no indication that any vested rights of the applicant were
affected by the subsequent ratification insofar as
it was necessary
to do so and the ratification is lawful.
[10]
[17]
The board of the NLC is responsible for the governance of the entity
while the third respondent as Commissioner is responsible
for the
day-to-day administration and management. The obligation of the board
is satisfied when the Commissioner initiates proceedings
but it
remains the responsibility of the board to ensure that steps are
taken when appropriate to do so. There is after all an
obligation on
the board to ensure the law is applied and to authorise disciplinary
proceedings in a case of a breach of
section 2G
of the
Lotteries Act.
[18
]
The fourth respondent was appointed through a process in compliance
with the supply chain management policy of the NLC. The NLC
disciplinary standard operating procedure regulates the appointment
of a chairperson to chair disciplinary hearings. An external
chairperson with appropriate knowledge and at least five years’
experience in labour law may be appointed to preside over
a
disciplinary hearing. The fourth respondent meets the
requirement.
[19]
The
applicant has not challenged the authority of the fourth respondent
in proceedings before him. It was held in
Jiba
v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others
,
[11]
that there is no reason for the authority to dismiss an employee to
be determined by the court in motion proceedings initiated
on an
urgent basis when the tribunal itself has not made any ruling in this
regard.
[20]
The applicant chose to challenge the authority of the fourth
respondent in court proceedings but the evidence presented does not
justify granting the order sought.
The
disciplinary hearing
[21]
The applicant is facing a disciplinary hearing before the fourth
respondent and pending the finalisation of the hearing she was
suspended on 16 October 2023 with full pay and benefits. Serious
charges have been brought against her namely that she benefited
financially from a grant beneficiary of the NLC. This is strictly
prohibited. She admits that various amounts were paid into her
bank
account but says these were payments made by a suitor who at the time
wanted to impress upon her that he was in a financial
position to
care for her. They subsequently did enter into a relationship.
[22]
The applicant was informed on 12 January 2024 that the fourth
respondent had been appointed to preside over the disciplinary
hearing
and the hearing commenced on 5 February 2024 and convened
again on 15 February 2024. On both occasions the applicant objected
to
the continuation of the hearing and she informed the tribunal that
she was in the process of filing an application to review and
aside
the report of the Special Investigation Unit which formed the basis
of her suspension and the charges brought. It is argued
on behalf of
the applicant that the report is unlawful in that
inter alia
the applicant was not afforded a hearing before the Special
Investigation Unit made its recommendations.
[23]
I point out that the very purpose of the hearing that was convened
was and is to afford the applicant the opportunity to present
her
case and to answer the charges brought against her, and that the
purpose of the main application as well as this urgent application
is
to prevent the hearing from continuing.
[24]
In the review application that was brought on 5 February 2024 the
applicant seeks in part A an interdict to prevent the third
respondent from implementing the report of the Special Investigation
Unit and to suspend the disciplinary proceedings. In part B
of the
review application the applicant seeks orders to review and set aside
the report.
[25]
On 1 March 2024 the fourth respondent ruled that the disciplinary
hearing would continue despite the pending review application.
In so
doing the fourth respondent was exercising a discretion not to grant
a postponement or a stay, and there is no evidence presented
that
merits the inference that the exercise of his discretion is open to
attack on any ground of legality or any other ground.
[26]
The court
will intervene in incomplete disciplinary proceedings only in
exceptional circumstances. In
Laggar
v Shell Auto Care (Pty) Ltd and Another
,
[12]
Cleaver J said:
“
[14]
The Labour Court has held that it will not easily interdict the
holding of a disciplinary hearing and will do so only where
exceptional circumstances are established. See Moropane v
Gilbeys Distillers and Vintners (Pty) Ltd and Another (1998)
19 ILJ 635 (LC); Mantzaris v University of
Durban-Westville and Others
[2000] 10 BLLR 1203
(LC); Ndlovu
v Tansnet Ltd t/a Portnet
[1997] 7 BLLR 887
(LC). There is also
authority for the proposition that the High Court will be reluctant
to stop proceedings in inferior courts
and tribunals. See Wahlhaus
and Others v Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg, and Another
1959
(3) SA 113
(A); Van Wyk v Midrand Town Council and
Others
1991
(4) SA 185
(W). Applying these principles I am not persuaded that
the importance of the applicant's position in the company establishes
exceptional
circumstances or that any other exceptional circumstances
have been shown to exist.”
[27]
Similarly,
in
Jiba
v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others
,
[13]
van Niekerk J said:
“
[11]
I wish to deal with the application in so far as it relates to the
chairperson’s
ruling on a more preliminary basis. Exceptional
circumstances aside, it is undesirable for this court to entertain
applications
to review and set aside rulings made in uncompleted
proceedings. In The Trustees for the Time Being of the National
Bioinformatics
Network Trust v Jacobson and others (unreported,
C249/09, 14 April 2009), I said the following in relation to the
review of interlocutory
rulings made by commissioners:
“
There are at
least two reasons why the limited basis for intervention in criminal
and civil proceedings ought to extend to uncompleted
arbitration
proceedings conducted under the auspices of the CCMA, and why this
court ought to be slow to intervene in those proceedings.
The first
is a policy-related reason – for this court to routinely
intervene in uncompleted arbitration proceedings would
undermine the
informal nature of the system of dispute resolution established by
Act. The second (related) reason is that to permit
applications for
review on a piecemeal basis would frustrate the expeditious
resolution of labour disputes. In other words, in
general terms,
justice would be advanced rather than frustrated by permitting CCMA
arbitration proceedings to run their course
without intervention by
this court.” (at para 4).
[12]
The same considerations apply to internal disciplinary hearings, with
the additional point that for this court to routinely consider
applications such as that before me would entirely undermine the
statutory dispute resolution system. By asking the court to rule
that
the disciplinary action initiated against the applicant was
unauthorised and unprocedural, the applicant is effectively asking
the court to bypass the bargaining council and to ignore its role in
a carefully crafted scheme that acknowledges and gives effect
to the
value of self-regulation. This court, through its review powers, is
mandated to exercise a degree of oversight over labour-related
arbitrations - its powers as a court of first instance are
constrained by the LRA, and that constraint must be respected.”
[28]
I refer
also to the judgement by Phatsholane DJP in
Ndhlovu
v Department of Health, Northern Cape Province and Another
[14]
where
the learned deputy judge president said that the court should be
careful not to usurp the functions entrusted to a disciplinary
tribunal. Intervention in uncompleted processes would result in
piecemeal adjudication of issues and frustrate the expeditious
resolution of labour disputes.
[29]
The applicant argues that her suspension and the subsequent
appointment of a disciplinary tribunal was done by the third
respondent
and not by the board of the first respondent and that the
fourth respondent was not appointed in a transparent process. These
averments
do not constitute exceptional circumstances. I have already
dealt with the fact that the proceedings were initiated on behalf of
the first respondent by its Commissioner, the third respondent who is
in the position of its chief executive officer above as well
as with
the appointment of the fourth respondent.
The
requirements for an interdict
[30]
The
requirements for a final interdict
[15]
are –
30.1
a clear right;
30.2
an injury actually committed or reasonably apprehended;
30.3
the absence of any other satisfactory remedy.
[31]
The
requirements in an application for an interim interdict are also not
contentious.
[16]
They are –
31.1
a
prima facie
right, coupled with a balance of convenience in
favour of the granting of the interim relief OR a clear right
obviating the need
to show a favourable balance of convenience (and
in which case a final interdict may follow);
31.2
a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim
relief is not granted and the ultimate relief is eventually granted;
and
31.3
the absence of any other satisfactory remedy.
[32]
The applicant does not identify any right that was infringed. It is
of course not contentious that she is entitled to
inter alia
the rights granted under the Constitution and the
Labour Relations
Act but
nothing on these papers support an argument that these rights
have been threatened. Her
audi alteram
rights are intact. She
is entitled to dispute the allegations made and the evidence
presented against her but she is not entitled
to prevent the
investigation of complaints or to prevent a disciplinary hearing from
taking place.
[33]
The applicant was suspended with full pay pending the final outcome
of the disciplinary proceedings and there is no reasonable
apprehension of harm. She is entitled to participate in the
disciplinary proceedings.
[34]
The applicant has alternative remedies in that:-
34.1
her first review application of February 2024 has not been enrolled
yet and no explanation is given for the failure to enrol the
application,
34.2
she was in a position to present her case before the fourth
respondent, and
34.3
It was possible for the applicant if so advised to apply for the
recusal of the fourth respondent and he would have had to consider
such an application.
[35]
I conclude that no case is made out for an interdict.
Costs
[36]
Both sides
sought a punitive cost order including the cost of two counsel.
Punitive cost orders are not easily made but exceptional
circumstances may justify such an order when a litigant conducted
itself can in a “
clear
and indubitably vexatious and reprehensible manner.”
[17]
In the
present matter the applicant makes serious and scurrilous allegations
against the respondents without presenting any factual
evidence in
support of these allegations of bad faith and ulterior motive on the
part of the respondents.
[37]
The applicant also launched this urgent application under
circumstances where an application for the review of the report of
the
Special Investigation Unit was already pending. No explanation is
given for the failure to prosecute that application to finality
and
to opt instead for this urgent application.
[38]
It is impossible to avoid the inference that the present application
was launched as a tactic to delay rather than finalise the
disciplinary proceedings in good time. Under these circumstances I am
of the view that a punitive cost order is justified.
Conclusion
[39]
in summary,
39.1
the applicant makes out no case for an order setting aside the ruling
by the fourth respondent of 1 March 2024 in which the fourth
respondent refused an application for the postponement of the
disciplinary proceedings,
39.2
the applicant fails to make out a case for an order setting aside the
appointment of the fourth respondent as the chairperson of
the
disciplinary hearing,
39.3
the applicant similarly fails to make out a case for the setting
aside of the decision to suspend or charge the applicant or to
institute disciplinary proceedings against the applicant,
39.4
lastly, no case is made out for an interim order suspending the
continuation of the disciplinary hearing before the fourth
respondent.
[40]
For all the reasons set out above I make the order in paragraph 1.
MOORCROFT AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Electronically
submitted
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
26 March 2024
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT: MH MHAMBI
C
JONES
INSTRUCTED
BY: VOYI
INC
COUNSEL FOR THE FIRST
AND THIRD
RESPONDENTS: SESI
BALOYI SC
P
SOKHELA
INSTRUCTED
BY: CHEADLE
THOMPSON & HAYSOM INC
DATE OF
ARGUMENT: 25
MARCH 2024
DATE OF
JUDGMENT: 26
MARCH 2024
[1]
The fourth respondent abides the decision of the court.
[2]
Chapter II.
[3]
Chapter III.
[4]
Chapter VII.
[5]
Section 112.
[6]
Section 151.
[7]
Cameron J (Moseneke DCJ, Froneman J and Jappie AJ
concurring).
[8]
My
Vote Counts v Speaker of the National Assembly
2016 (1) SA 132
(CC) para 53, and
Airports
Company SA SOC Ltd v Imperial Group Ltd and Others
2020 (4) SA 17
(SCA) with reference to section 217 of the
Constitution. See also the judgment by Khampepe J in
South
African Human Rights Commission obo South African Jewish Board of
Deputies v Masuku and Another
2022 (4) SA 1 (CC) para 102.
[9]
Only one of the charges relate to
section 2G
(2) of the
Lotteries Act.
[10
]
See
Smith
v Kwanonqubela Town Council
1999 (4) SA 947 (SCA) paras 12 to 14.
[11]
Jiba
v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others
(2010) 31 ILJ 112 (LC), [2009] ZALCJHB 2 para 16.
[12]
Laggar
v Shell Auto Care (Pty) Ltd and Another
2001 (2) SA 136 (C)
para 14.
[13]
Jiba
v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others
(2010) 31 ILJ 112 (LC), [2009] ZALCJHB 2 paras 11 and
12.
[14]
Ndhlovu
v Department of Health, Northern Cape Province and Another
[2023] ZANCHC 26
para 39.
[15]
Van
Loggerenberg
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
,
vol 2, 2023, D6-14, footnote 122.
[16]
See
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
at 227, followed by South African courts overt the
last century and the authorities listed by Van Loggerenberg
Erasmus:
Superior Court Practice
,
vol 2, 2023, D6-16C, footnote 165.
[17]
Mkhatshwa
and Others v Mkhatshwa and Others
2021 (5) SA 447
(CC) para 21.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Y.Y v G.Y (13718/21) [2024] ZAGPJHC 439 (6 May 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 439High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Yende v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (53968/2021) [2025] ZAGPJHC 392 (22 April 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 392High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Y.R.D v K.L.D (2021/28640) [2023] ZAGPJHC 218 (14 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 218High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Y.R.D v K.L.D (2021/28640) [2023] ZAGPJHC 600 (30 May 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 600High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
K.Y.B v L.B.B (2024/016242) [2025] ZAGPJHC 926 (12 September 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 926High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar