Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1188South Africa
Bidvest Steiner (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others (JR1849/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1188 (21 October 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: (Review – arbitrator misconstruing nature of the charge of misconduct - inconsistency finding not tenable on the facts)
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 1188
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Bidvest Steiner (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others (JR1849/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1188 (21 October 2024)
Bidvest Steiner (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others (JR1849/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1188 (21 October 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2024_1188.html
sino date 21 October 2024
THE
LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
AT JOHANNESBURG
Not reportable
case
no: J1849/2022
In
the matter between:
BIDVEST
STEINER (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
THE
COMMISSION FOR CONCILIATION, MEDIATION
& ARBITRATION
First
Respondent
LIVHU
NENGOVHELA
N.O.
Second
Respondent
NASA
WORKERS obo CHRISTINA MANYATHELA
Third
Respondent
Heard
:
23 October 2024
Delivered
:
21 November 2024
Summary:
(
Review – arbitrator
misconstruing nature of the charge of misconduct - inconsistency
finding not tenable on the facts)
JUDGMENT
LAGRANGE, J
Introduction
[1]
This is an application to review and set aside an award in which the
arbitrator found that the third respondent, Ms C Manyathela
(‘Manyathela’) was dismissed on a substantively unfair
basis and awarded her reinstatement with backpay. She did not
contest
the procedural fairness of her dismissal.
Brief
outline of factual scenario
[2]
The business of the applicant (‘Steiner’) is to render
hygiene services to clients in diverse industries.
[3]
Manyathela was employed as a help desk administrator until her
dismissal on 19 April 2021. She had worked for the Applicant
for more
than 11 years at the time of her dismissal. The current general
manager for the Florida branch, where she worked, Mr W
Ford (‘Ford’)
testified that the help desk, was a crucial business function and
that Manyathela was the first contact
point for clients. Her task was
to open a ‘ticket’ (a form of job card) for each customer
query and to follow up on
the completion of the task, so the ticket
could be ‘closed’ within 48 hours of the query being
logged.
[4]
Manyathela’s job description listed “handling all
ad
hoc
related queries” as the key objective of her job.
Amongst the tasks she had to perform to attain the objective were:
liaising
with clients on faulty equipment and ensuring complaints
were dealt with immediately; logging tickets; checking and
investigating
any overdue tickets on a daily basis; escalating
tickets and providing feedback on escalations to three other staff
and handing
in daily reports on overdue tickets. The operational
staff were responsible for resolving the various ‘open’
tickets
and a ticket could only be closed when the job was done.
[5]
In July 2020, Manyathela received a final written warning for
negligence relating to overdue tickets she was responsible for.
The
warning was valid for one year expiring on 7 April 2021. It also
cautioned her that any further disciplinary action during
the
currency of the warning could result in her dismissal. The
disciplinary finding read:
“
Negligence
A review of our branch
for the period 07 February 2020 and 1 July 2020, indicated that 306
tickets for which you were responsible
were overdue.76 of these
tickets were overdue for a period of longer than a month.
The ticket register for
which you are responsible, is not kept updated.
You have failed to ensure
that the tickets are signed for by the relevant staff members, no
record/date that tickets were issued.
You have not recorded or
closed completed tickets that were handed back from staff members.”
(
sic
)
[6]
By the end of March 2021, Manyathela was again sitting with a large
number of incomplete tickets. On 24 March, her former general
manager, Mr A Snyman (‘Snyman’), sent her the following
email:
“
Hi Christinah
Your work output has
escalated to unacceptable levels. Attached is various correspondence
with regards to tickets that have still
not been closed. The Ad-Hoc
Tickets alone on anything 3 days and older has escalated to 133, you
have a total of 157 tickets not
closed and this does not include
tickets raised on NCC level and tickets raised by Service audits.
At no stage have you
raised concerns with me that you need assistance or support to have
your tickets resolved. For more than a
month I assisted you by having
morning meetings and basically advised and helped you on how to close
your tickets, I have even
dedicated a maintenance team to assist you
with dealing with tickets. The last month I focussed on client
visitations and was hoping
that you have learned from what I have
been trying to guide you on, but it seem that you cannot effectively
complete your responsibilities
unsupervised.
Please treat this as a
formal instruction to have all your tickets resolved by 31 March
2021. Failure to adhere to this instruction
will necessitate me to
call for a disciplinary hearing.
Should you need
assistance please make sure that you and William discuss this with
me.
…”
(
sic
)
This
prompted Manyathela, on the same day, to send her own email to
various operational staff merely stating: “
Please find
attached tickets to be close by Friday as per Andre.”
She
did not respond to Snyman’s email or give any indication that
she disputed his claim that he had been assisting her and
that she
had not asked for help.
[7]
On 12 April 2021, she was charged and found guilty of gross
negligence, because 168 tickets for which she was “
responsible
”
for during the period 3 February up to and including 24 March 2021
“
were overdue
” and a number of those were overdue
for longer than 59 days. In addition, she had not kept ticket
registers, for which she
was responsible, updated. Based on this, and
the fact that her previous final written warning was still current,
she was dismissed.
The
arbitrator’s reasoning
[8]
The arbitrator found that Manyathela’s duties described above
were common cause. She noted that Manyathela had sent an
email to the
operations team to finalise jobs so tickets could be closed by 31
March 2021, and concluded that it was up to the
operations team
members to complete their jobs and revert to Manyathela. However,
Manyathela did not have supervisory power over
the operations staff
whereas her direct manager Mr W Ford, and Snyman did. The arbitrator
could not understand why they did not
give warnings to the operations
staff, or why Ford could not “lift a finger” to help when
he could see on a weekly
basis from emails and meetings that the
backlog was growing.
[9]
Turning her
attention to the requirements of Item 7 of the Code of Good Practice:
Dismissal
[1]
,
she found that the rule that tickets should be closed within 48 hours
was an established valid rule and Manyathela was aware of
it.
However, there was no evidence that she had not failed to close a
ticket when a job had been done. The arbitrator found that
Ford and
Snyman should have approached the operations team to solve the
problem of jobs not being completed rather than focussing
on
Manyathela’s role. For example, they could have asked the
operations team why a certain job was not finalised after 45
days.
[10]
The arbitrator also noted that Snyman had not testified and therefore
there was no evidence to show how he had allegedly
assisted
Manyathela. She also highlighted that the overdue tickets went back
to the beginning of 2020 and that the only time the
problem was
temporarily solved was when there were strongly worded emails issued
by Snyman instructing staff to finish outstanding
jobs and hand them
to Manyathela for closure. The arbitrator concluded that Manyathela’s
job was mainly to open and close
tickets. She also followed up with
all other departments so that they could finish the required tasks
which would allow her to
close the tickets. However, she was not able
to close any ticket until the departments have done their job and
have notified her
as such. The arbitrator commented that Manyathela
was not in full control of tickets that had been opened by the
National Call
Centre and Snyman’s secretary.
[11]
The arbitrator concluded that the real problem Steiner was having was
failure to jobs by the staff responsible for remedying
queries and
not the closure of the tickets, as such. Manyathela was only
responsible for closing a ticket once the work had been
done. She
could not close a ticket before that happened and could not be held
responsible for the operational staff neglecting
their duties.
Accordingly, she was not guilty of the charge.
[12]
Manyathela had also complained that Steiner had been inconsistent in
taking disciplinary action, because Snyman’s
secretary should
have been disciplined and dismissed too but had not been because of
an alleged improper relationship the latter
had with Snyman. The
arbitrator acknowledged that disciplinary proceedings had been
instituted against the secretary but commented
that such steps had
only been instituted three months after charging Manyathela. However,
the secretary’s disciplinary process
did not proceed because
she resigned in July 2021. The arbitrator found that disciplinary
charges against the secretary had not
been pursued with the same
enthusiasm that charges had been brought against Manyathela. In the
absence of evidence to show that
the secretary had also been charged
and dismissed by Steiner, there was inconsistency in the application
of discipline.
Grounds
of review
[13]
Essentially, Steiner contends that the arbitrator could not have
found Manyathela not guilty, and her conclusion to the
contrary was
one that no reasonable arbitrator could have arrived at given the
following alleged material errors in her reasoning:
13.1 The arbitrator
misconstrued the misconduct for which Manyathela was dismissed,
namely of failing to maintain ticket registers
and failing to take
appropriate steps once an open ticket had not been closed within the
48-hour period, including referring the
issue to senior management.
13.2 The arbitrator
misunderstood that Manyathela had a remedy if the operational staff
had not finished the work assigned
in the 48-hour period, namely, to
escalate the issue. As such, it was irrelevant that the responsible
individuals were not under
her line supervision.
13.3 The arbitrator
failed to appreciate that, in so far as Snyman’s secretary
ought to have faced disciplinary action
and assuming the charges were
similar, the arbitrator could not make a finding in circumstances
where the secretary had resigned
before the disciplinary procedure
had commenced.
13.4 The arbitrator
failed to appreciate that Snyman’s testimony was not required
as the contents of the letter complaining
about the number of
outstanding tickets was not disputed by Manyathela at the time it was
issued, nor at the arbitration hearing.
#
# Evaluation
Evaluation
[14]
The first two grounds of review both relate to the arbitrator’s
conception of the charge Manyathela faced. In the
first place,
Steiner argues that the arbitrator failed to appreciate that
Manyathela failed in performing her role by not keeping
registers up
to date and secondly, she was not expected to order the operational
staff to finalise the open tickets but was expected
to raise and
escalate outstanding tickets with her line manager.
[15]
It is common cause Manyathela was not directly responsible for
supervising staff who were responsible for performing
the work
required to close of each ticket. It is also true, as the arbitrator
emphasised, that she could not close off tickets
until operational
staff advised her that the work was done. The arbitrator’s
conception of Manyathela’s role was that
it was a relatively
passive one, in terms of which she had done what was expected of her
provided she closed off tickets when the
jobs were done. But her job
was to monitor open tickets and to ensure that customer queries were
dealt with promptly. Her job description
required her to check
tickets daily and investigate those which were overdue. Overdue
tickets had to be escalated daily. In short,
her role was to ensure
that that queries were not left unattended and tasks which were
delayed were promptly referred to management
to deal with the
problem. When making an opening statement at the arbitration hearing,
Manyathela’s representative said she
would give evidence that
she made numerous attempts to remind the responsible staff to
finalise open tickets, which confirms she
was aware that the import
of the charge concerned what she had done to try and rectify the
backlog of outstanding tickets. As it
happened, she gave no evidence
of her alleged efforts to chivvy the responsible staff to complete
outstanding work.
[16]
Ford was Manyathela’s direct line manager and testified that
she had never come to him in person or emailed him
to request the
escalation of an outstanding ticket. Manyathela did not dispute this
during his cross-examination, which focussed
largely on whether all
the outstanding tickets referred to the charge, were Manyathela’s
responsibility.
[17]
What is particularly telling, was Manyathela’s tepid email
response to Snyman’s email of 24 March 2021, in
which Snyman
effectively gave her an ultimatum to get up to date by the end of the
month or face disciplinary action. Her email
conveyed no sense of the
importance or that she needed help to do.
[18]
It was also never put to Steiner’s witnesses that the
accusations about the backlog in open tickets and the assistance
given to her, which Snyman had made in his letter, were false. Even
if he was not called as a witness, having left the company,
it was
necessary for her to demonstrate, when Steiner’s witnesses were
questioned that she disputed the claims made in the
letter. Her own
failure to promptly dispute or contest the allegations in his letter
is also inexplicable given the serious situation
she was facing.
[19]
When Manyathela was asked in her evidence in chief, how she responded
to the accusation that she did not follow up outstanding
work, her
response was that: “
Every day I would “sit down. I
even called our Service Manager [Snyman]. If he is not present I will
discuss with Andre [Ford].
Then I will report that so and so –
I am still waiting for their tickets.”
If indeed she was
raising matters for escalation in this manner on a regular basis, it
stands to reason she would not have simply
let Snyman’s claims
in the letter go unanswered and at the very least would have been put
to Ford under cross-examination.
[20]
Had the arbitrator not misconstrued the real nature of Manyathela’s
duties, he would have been compelled to decide
if she had
successfully rebutted the evidence that she had allowed a large
number of overdue open tickets to remain unresolved,
and had not
systematically escalated them to her managers, when the 48-hour
period was up. She also did not challenge Snyman’s
accusation
that she did not ask for help to close the backlog of outstanding
tickets. In this regard she could only refer to one
email sent out in
August 2020 by another manager, calling on staff to co-operate with
her so she could close tickets. It is correct
that on 1 April 2021,
she did ask Snyman to sit down with her to discuss his secretary’s
outstanding tickets, though she
only did this after the expiry of the
deadline in his letter.
[21]
On the charge itself, Manyathela did contest that some of the open
tickets were not her responsibility but did not dispute
that she was
responsible for most of them. She did not provide any evidence of
investigations she had undertaken to discover the
reason for an
overdue ticket remaining unresolved, nor did she identify any overdue
ticket that she had specifically escalated
to Ford or Snyman to
address. In the circumstances it is difficult to escape the
conclusion that she had not done what was expected
of her to close
open tickets. It is also noteworthy that Manyathela herself did not
so much try and dispute the veracity of the
misconduct charge but
argued that she should have been demoted instead of dismissed.
[22]
Manyathela had also been issued with a severe warning for the same
misconduct and must have been alive to the fact that
if it recurred
she could face dismissal. Under these circumstances, it cannot be
said that her dismissal was substantively unfair.
The fact that
management might have tackled the problem differently, or that better
solutions to the outstanding ticket issue could
have been devised,
does not detract from this.
[23]
On the question of inconsistency, there was no concrete evidence to
show that the non-performance component of the charges
pending for
Snyman’s secretary was comparable with the misconduct
Manyathela was charged with. In any event, the secretary’s
resignation led to the abandonment of the charges, so there was no
lesser disciplinary sanction for similar misconduct to compare
with
Manyathela’s case. The fact that Steiner did not act as quickly
as the arbitrator thought it should have to discipline
the secretary,
is a very slender basis on which to found a claim of unfair dismissal
which relies, in part, on inconsistency. An
employer has a choice
whether to accept a resignation or insist on proceeding with an
enquiry during the notice period. It would
very onerous and somewhat
absurd to require an employer to proceed with an enquiry during a
notice period of an employee who had
handed in their resignation,
just for the sake of demonstrating it would have treated a similar
disciplinary infraction in the
same way as a matter in which an
enquiry had been concluded. In my view, this cannot be the basis of a
claim of inconsistent treatment,
even assuming the facts of the two
cases were plainly very similar, which was not evident here.
[24]
The arbitrator also misconstrued the significance of Snyman not
testifying. Manyathela had ample opportunity to provide
detailed
evidence about her interactions with Snyman, but made only the
vaguest statement in that regard. She made no attempt to
directly
dispute the allegations made in his letter either at the time or in
the arbitration, nor was any indication given in the
arbitration when
the letter was referred to in evidence that its content was a matter
of dispute.
[25]
In the circumstances, the review application succeeds and the
arbitrator’s finding must be substituted with an
order that
Manyathela’s dismissal was substantively fair.
#
# Order
Order
1.
The
arbitration award of the Second Respondent dated 11 August 2022,
issued under case number GAJB10011-21 (‘the award’)
is
reviewed and set aside.
2.
The
award is substituted with an award that the Third Respondent’s
dismissal by the Applicant was substantively fair.
3.
No
order is made as to costs.
R Lagrange
Judge
of the Labour Court of South Africa
.
Representatives:
For
the Applicant:
L
Hutchinson
Instructed
by:
Soldatos
Copper Inc Attorneys
For
the First respondent:
M
Booysen from NASA Workers
[1]
Schedule
8 of the
Labour Relations Act, 66 of 1995
.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Bidvest Bank Limited v Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd (A24/048690) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1137 (11 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1137High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Bidvest Bank Limited v Surtee (2024/073198; 2024/073203) [2025] ZAGPJHC 1134 (10 November 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 1134High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Bidvest Bank Limited v Waste Partner Investments (Pty) Ltd (55825/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1126 (5 October 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1126High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Bidvest Services (Pty) Ltd ta Bidvest Steiner v Urwin and Another (091828/2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 876 (9 September 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 876High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar
Bidvest Bank v E Q Emporium (2023/020892) [2024] ZAGPJHC 296 (26 March 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 296High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)100% similar