Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 484South Africa
National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa and Others v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd (36203/20) [2023] ZAGPJHC 484; [2023] 8 BLLR 852 (GJ); (2023) 44 ILJ 1807 (GJ) (15 May 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: High Court – Jurisdiction – Labour matters – Cause of action is based upon the express terms of the written contract of employment between each member and the respondent – High Court has jurisdiction to determine the application.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa and Others v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd (36203/20) [2023] ZAGPJHC 484; [2023] 8 BLLR 852 (GJ); (2023) 44 ILJ 1807 (GJ) (15 May 2023)
National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa and Others v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd (36203/20) [2023] ZAGPJHC 484; [2023] 8 BLLR 852 (GJ); (2023) 44 ILJ 1807 (GJ) (15 May 2023)
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sino date 15 May 2023
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 36203/20
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
15 MAY 2023
In
the matter between:
NATIONAL
UNION OF METALWORKERS FIRST
APPLICANT
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
THE
MEMBERS LISTED IN “X”
SECOND
APPLICANT
And
SCAW
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
National Union of Metalworkers of
South Africa and Others v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd
(Case No
36203/2020) [2022] 484 (15 May 2023)
Summary:
High Court – Jurisdiction – Labour matters – Cause
of action is based upon the express terms
of the written contract of
employment between each member and the respondent – High Court
has jurisdiction to determine the
application.
Labour
Law – Contract of employment included a more favourable
severance package than provided for in
section 41(2)
of the
Basic
Conditions of Employment Act 75 of 1997
– Defence in
section
41(4)
available to the employer – Applicant’s claim bad
in law as
section 41(6)
provides for a specialist statutory dispute
resolution dispensation on severance pay – Application
dismissed.
#
#
# ORDER
ORDER
1
The application is dismissed with costs.
#
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Windell
J:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application to declare the respondent, SCAW South Africa
(Pty) (Ltd)
(‘the employer’), in breach of the second
applicant’s (‘the members’) contract of employment,
and
an order for the payment of the members’ severance pay.
[2]
The facts
are common cause. On 13 December 2019 the employer dismissed the
members from its employment for reasons relating to its
operational
requirements.
[1]
The termination
letter informed the members that the employer would not be paying the
members any severance pay, due to their ‘unreasonable
refusal
to accept the alternative offer of employment’ as provided for
in s 41(4) of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act,
75 of 1997
(“BCEA”). Section 41(4) states that:
‘
(4) An employee
who unreasonably refuses to accept the employer’s offer of
alternative employment with that employer or any
other employer, is
not entitled to severance pay in terms of subsection (2)’.
[3]
Three
issues arise in this application: One, whether the high court has
jurisdiction to entertain the application. Two, whether
the defence
in s 41(4) is available to an employer if the claim is pleaded in
contract. Three, if s 41(4) is available to the employer,
can this
court determine the members’ entitlement to severance packages
as provided for in s 41(6)? In other words, is the
claim ‘good
in law’?
[2]
Jurisdiction
[4]
Payment of severance pay is governed by s 41 of the BCEA. Section
41(2) provides
that an employer must pay an employee who is dismissed
for reasons based on the employer’s operational requirements
severance
pay equal to a least one week’s remuneration for each
completed year of continuous service with that employer. The
applicants
contend that they do not rely on s 41(2) for the payment
of their severance packages, but on an express term of the members'
contracts
of employment that entitled them to be paid certain amounts
upon their retrenchment (including two weeks' severance pay for each
completed year of service and an ex-gratia payment also calculated
with reference to the terms of service).
[5]
The
employer contends that the applicants launched the application in the
high court, (alleging that their claim is founded purely
in
contract), only because they are attempting to avoid the
jurisdictional requirement of bringing their claim in the Commission
for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (“CCMA”) or a
bargaining council (as required by the BCEA
[3]
),
as well as the application of the employer’s defence in s 41(4)
of the BCEA . It is submitted that their strategy is fatally
flawed
because they can avoid neither the jurisdictional hurdle nor the
application of s 41(4) of the BCEA. As such, this court
lacks
jurisdiction to entertain the matter.
[6]
In
Gcaba
v Minister for Safety and Security and Others
,
[4]
the Constitutional Court held that in determining whether a court has
jurisdiction to entertain a matter, the question in such
cases is
whether the court has jurisdiction over
the
pleaded claim
,
and not whether it has jurisdiction over some other claim that has
not been pleaded, but could possibly arise from the same facts.
[5]
A
claim before a court is, therefore, a matter of fact. In
Makhanya
v University of Zululand,
[6]
Nugent
JA explained as follows:
‘
[71]
Before turning to that explanation there are two observations that I
need to make. The first is that the claim that is before
a court is a
matter of fact. When a claimant says that the claim arises from the
infringement of the common-law right to enforce
a contract, then
that is the claim, as a fact, and the court must deal with it
accordingly. When a claimant says that the claim
is to enforce a
right that is created by the LRA, then that is the claim that the
court has before it, as a fact. When he or she
says that the claim is
to enforce a right derived from the Constitution, then, as a fact,
that is the claim. That the claim might
be a bad claim is beside the
point.’
……
.
[95]
In this case the claim is for the enforcement of the common-law right
of a contracting party to exact performance of the contract.
We know
this because that is what it says in the particulars of claim.
Whether the claim is a good one or a bad one is immaterial.
Nor
may a court thwart the pursuit of the claim by denying access to a
forum that has been provided by law. A claim of that kind
clearly
falls within the ordinary power of the High Court that is derived
from the Constitution and the jurisdictional objection
should have
failed. The appeal must accordingly succeed.’
[7]
The
applicants’ pleadings contain the legal basis of the claim
under which they have chosen to invoke this court's competence
and
are the determining factor.
[7]
The
applicants’ cause of action is not based upon the minimum
severance pay which is prescribed by the BCEA. Instead, their
cause
of action is based upon the express terms of the written contract of
employment between each member and the employer (which
provides for a
contractual entitlement to severance pay in excess of that prescribed
by s 41 of the BCEA). This court, therefore,
has jurisdiction to
determine the application.
Is
the defence in section 41(4) available to the employer?
[8]
The applicant submits that s 41(4) only provides an employer with a
statutory
defence to a statutory cause of action based upon s 41(2)
of the BCEA. It is submitted that s 41(4) of the BCEA has no
application
where the employee's cause of action is based upon the
express terms of his or her contract of employment. As the applicants
do
not rely upon s 41(2) of the BCEA, but seek specific performance
of an express term of the members' contracts of employment, s 41(4)
of the BCEA is not applicable and does not provide the employer with
a defence to the claim.
[9]
To bolster their argument, the applicants rely on s 4(c) of the BCEA.
This section
provides that a basic condition of employment
constitutes a term of any contract of employment except to the extent
that a term
of the contract is more favourable to the employee than
the basic condition. The applicants contend that because the members’
contracts contain provisions more favourable than the statutory
minimum severance pay entitlement under s 41(2), their claim is
founded purely in contract, with the result that they are not hit by
s 41(4).
[10]
Firstly,
one of the purposes of the BCEA is ‘to give effect to and
regulate the right to fair labour practices conferred by
s 23(1) of
the Constitution’.
[8]
Section 23(1) of the Constitution provides that ‘everyone has
the right to fair labour practices’. This right applies
to both
the employer and the employee. (See
National
Education Health & Allied Workers Union (NEHAWU) v University of
Cape Town and Others
.
[9]
)
I agree with counsel for the employer, Mr Bham SC, that the
provisions of the BCEA must therefore be construed in a manner that
recognises that the employer's interests are also at play, and not
only those of employees to whom protections are extended by
the BCEA.
The severance pay provisions in s 41 are no exception.
[11]
Secondly, s 4(c) only serves to, (a) ensure that a basic floor of
rights applies to all employees,
even if no provision is made for
such rights in an employment contract; and |(b) recognise that more
favourable terms may be extended
to employees by their employers. The
current matter is a good example of the interplay between s 4 (c) and
s 41(2). Section 41(2)
obliges an employer to pay severance pay of at
least one week's remuneration per completed year of service. When an
employer and
an employee enter into an employment contract, and a
severance package is not provided for in the contract, the severance
package
provided for in s 41(2) will, in terms of s 4(c),
automatically form part of the employment contract. The employee’s
‘entitlement’
to a severance package in that instance is
not found in contract, but in s 41(2). But, s 41(2) only provides for
the minimum that
is payable. The employer, may, of course, pay more.
And this is what occurred in the current matter. The members’
contracts
of employment included a clause providing for the payment
of a severance package that is more favourable than what is provided
for in s 41(2). The minimum amount payable under s 41(2) is therefore
not payable to the members, but the more favourable amount
agreed
upon in the contract of employment. The
entitlement
to a
severance package, whether it is demanded under s 41(2) or under a
contract of employment, however, still remains subject
to the
provisions of s 41, which includes the qualification in s 41(4).
[12]
This interpretation of ss 41(2) and 41(4) gives effect to the
employer's right to fair labour
practices by excluding liability on
its part in the event of an employee's unreasonable refusal to accept
an offer of alternative
employment which would avoid the
retrenchment. An agreement to pay an amount of severance pay higher
than the minimum can never
serve to exclude, from application, the
protection afforded to employers in s 41(4). The applicants'
construction of s 41 would
lead to absurd results because it would
deprive the employer of the protection afforded to it in s 41(4), on
the basis of the employer
having been more generous than it was
statutorily obliged to be, in agreeing to a higher severance pay rate
than the minimum. Such
a construction would be contrary to the
underlying purposes of the BCEA. It would disincentives employers
from offering employees
severance pay which is higher than the
statutory minimum, for fear of losing the protection in s 41(4). This
is inimical to the
objective of protecting employees' interests, and
of giving effect to the right to fair labour practices.
[13]
This interpretation afforded to s 41, is also in accordance with a
number of cases in which the CCMA
and bargaining councils entertained
severance pay claims in excess of the minimum of one week per
completed year of service, under
s 41(6), which provides:
‘
If
there is a dispute only about the entitlement to severance pay in
terms of this section, the employee may refer the dispute in
writing
to-
(a)
a council, if the parties to the dispute
fall within the registered scope of that council; or
(b)
the CCMA, if no council has
jurisdiction’.
[14]
In
Secker
v Beacon Sweets & Chocolates (Pty) Ltd (Secker)
,
[10]
the
arbitrating commissioner had to consider whether s 41 of the BCEA
applies to disputes over agreed severance packages or is restricted
to a failure and/or refusal to pay the statutory minimum in terms of
s 41(2). The commissioner found that the CCMA has jurisdiction
under
s 41(2) to determine a dispute regarding the failure and/or refusal
of an employer to pay an agreed severance package,
and that s 41
does not restrict the CCMA's jurisdiction to the statutory minimum
under s 41(2). It was further held that
the
‘entitlement’ to severance pay in terms of s 41, which
can form the subject of a claim justiciable by the CCMA,
‘derives
either from the Act or an agreement, whether collective or
individual’. The words ‘at least’ in
s 41(2) were
held to ‘suggest... that s 41(1) contemplates or includes in
its embrace disputes about payments other than
the statutory
minimum’. This conclusion was endorsed by the Labour Court in
Telkom (Pty ) Ltd v
Commission for Conciliation, Mediation & Arbitration &
Others,
[11]
wherein it was held that:
‘
[11] Section 41(6)
provides: "If there is a dispute only about the entitlement to
severance pay in terms of this section, the
employee may refer the
dispute in writing to a council or the CCMA”. The reference to
"in terms of this section"
restricts the court and a
commissioner to make a determination only in terms of the statutory
minimum
or an agreement if there is one
. In my view if the
rate formula or method of calculation is agreed the court or a
commissioner may enforce it even if it is more
than a week per year
of service."(Own emphasis.).
[15]
The
applicants’ reliance on
Zietsman
& Others v Transnet Ltd
[12]
and
Sibanye
Gold Ltd v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation & Arbitration &
Others,
[13]
in support of their argument, is therefore misconceived. Both
judgments dealt with s 35(5), that
provides
for the calculation of remuneration and wages, based on the number of
hours the employee ordinarily works.
In
Zietsman,
the Labour Court found that s 35(5)
did
not apply to the calculation of the amount of severance pay due to an
employee under a contract of employment which provided
for more
severance pay than the statutory minimum under s 41(2). The court
reasoned that such a payment is a payment made pursuant
to the
agreement, and not pursuant to the provisions of the Act. The dictum
in
Zietsman
does
not assist the applicants as it dealt with the
calculation
of severance pay and found, (correctly in my view) that the
calculation
should be done in terms of the contract and not in terms of the
BCEA.
[14]
In
Sibanye
the parties had concluded a retrenchment agreement which provided
that severance pay and notice pay were to be calculated on the
basis
of the employee's basic salary. In the arbitration, the commissioner
proceeded to apply s 41(2) to the matter by
calculating
severance pay in the manner provided for in s 41(2). The court
expressly distinguished the issue that it was dealing with (i.e,
an
entitlement to an acting allowance in the context of calculating
remuneration), from that in
Telkom
v CCMA
(i.e.
the enforcement, under s 41, of a severance pay claim above the
statutory minimum). The court concluded that the commissioner
had
misconstrued the enquiry when he disregarded the binding agreement
between the parties which evidently ousted the application
of s 41 of
the BCEA. The court therefore recognised that the principle in
Telkom
v CCMA
,
to the effect that s 41 applies in severance pay claims above the
statutory minimum, holds good - and did not deviate from it.
[16]
Consequently, the applicants’
entitlement
to severance
pay is founded in s 41(2) and if the employment contract provides for
a more favourable severance package than what
is provided for in s
41(2), the calculation of the severance pay must be done in terms of
the contract. The wording of s 41(4)
is therefore capable of being
interpreted as having application to private contracts dealing with
severance pay and the distinction
the applicants seek to draw between
contractual severance pay arrangements and the provisions of the BCEA
on severance pay, is
not sustainable. The two are not mutually
exclusive — and the statutory regime on severance pay,
including s 41(4), remains
applicable even if there is an agreement
on enhanced severance pay amounts.
The
implication of s 41(6)
[17]
Before approaching this court, the applicants first referred the
dispute about the entitlement to severance
pay to the Engineering
Industries Bargaining Council (“MEIBC”) in terms of s
41(6) of the BCEA. They, however, withdrew
the dispute from the
MEIBC, when they ‘realized that its members' claims did not
relate to the statutory minimum’.
Although the applicants agree
that a dispute in relation to whether an employee is entitled to
severance pay under s 41(2) must
be referred to the CCMA (or a
bargaining council — if one exists), they submit that a dispute
in relation to an entitlement
to severance pay under an express term
of the contact of employment need not be referred to the CCMA.
[18]
However, during the hearing of this application the applicants
argued that even if ss 41(2) and
41(4) of the BCEA applies, the
employer did not make an offer of alternative employment to each of
the members, but only made a
general proposal which entailed 54
members being retrenched with the remaining members continuing to be
employed on less favourable
terms. As a result, so it was argued,
there was no unequivocal offer of definite employment made to any
employee.
[19]
Although this argument is a new case not foreshadowed in or supported
by the evidence in the affidavits,
I am not convinced that the
entitlement to severance pay and concomitant with that, the question
whether the refusal to accept
it was unreasonable, can be determined
by this court. That is because s 41(6) of the BCEA specifically
provides for a bargaining
council or the CCMA to determine severance
pay disputes. This specialist statutory dispute resolution
dispensation on severance
pay, applies to severance pay claims both
for the statutory minimum severance pay amount as per the BCEA, and
for contractually
agreed amounts in excess thereof. The applicants
cannot avoid the jurisdiction of the CCMA by alleging that if a
better deal has
been struck in a contract for severance pay then the
high court has jurisdiction to decide the entitlement to severance
pay. This
is unsustainable.
[20]
In
Secker
the commissioner, in dealing with the CCMA’s
jurisdiction to
determine a dispute regarding
the failure and/or refusal of an employer to pay an agreed
severance package,
said the following:
‘
Section
41 is the only section that deals exclusively with severance pay.
Interestingly, it is the Labour Court's jurisdiction that
is
qualified in that
it
may deal with the issue of
severance pay if it is also adjudicating a dispute about a dismissal
for operational reasons. It
appears that, giving effect to an
important purpose of the Act ie that of ensuring the speedy,
inexpensive and effective resolution
of disputes in the CCMA, this
less formal, less costly and quicker body is meant to deal with
all severance pay disputes which
can be determined on the basis of
statutory or contractual entitlement. This purpose is frustrated if
the CCMA is to have no jurisdiction
in severance pay disputes just
because they are distinguished by arising from an agreement. Neither
will the purposes of the Act
be served should such simple disputes be
referred to the Labour Court. There is nothing inherently difficult
about the kinds of
disputes I have described, especially since the
CCMA is deemed capable of arbitrating reasonably complex disputes
regarding, for
instance, the interpretation and application of
collective agreements as well as certain dismissals.
The
argument that disputes about severance pay agreements such as the
present one, are matters for the civil courts, in my
view,
untenable. A dispute about the payment of an agreed upon severance
amount exists within the 'jurisdictional milieu' of labour
law. It is
a labour dispute, not a civil matter, properly decided by whatever
structures are brought into being by the LRA, which
I have found
above to be the CCMA in this instance.’
[15]
[21]
I agree
with the views expressed in
Secker
.
In
Chirwa
v Transnet Ltd and Others,
[16]
the Constitutional Court recognised that the
Labour Relations Act 66
of 1995
created a
specialised
set of forums and tribunals to deal with labour and
employment-related matters. Ngobo J explained it as follows:
‘
[102]
It [the LRA] establishes an interlinked structure consisting of,
among others, various bargaining councils, the CCMA, the
Labour Court
and the Labour Appeal Court. It also creates procedures designed to
accomplish the objective of simple, inexpensive
and accessible
resolution of labour disputes, which is one of the purposes of the
LRA. In this scheme the role of the CCMA and
the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Labour Court are vital. The Labour Court does not
itself generally hear disputes as a court of
first instance. But
neither does the CCMA have exclusive jurisdiction as against the
Labour Court. The Labour Court sits as a court
of first instance in
certain matters. And in some cases it does so after conciliation has
been unsuccessful. The dispute resolution
scheme of the LRA is
therefore all-embracing and leaves no room for intervention from
another court.’
[22]
In the same vain, Skweyiya J remarked
that:
‘
[47]
The purpose of labour law as embodied in the LRA is to provide a
comprehensive system of dispute resolution mechanisms, forums
and
remedies that are tailored to deal with all aspects of employment. It
was envisaged as a one-stop shop for all labour-related
disputes. The
LRA provides for matters such as discrimination in the workplace as
well as procedural fairness; with the view that
even if a labour
dispute implicates other rights, a litigant will be able to approach
the LRA structures to resolve the disputes.’
[23]
Viewed in this context,
s 41(6)
of the
BCEA created a specialist statutory dispute resolution dispensation
to determine an employee’s entitlement to severance
packages.
The applicants were bound to pursue their dispute through this
bespoke and specialist dispute resolution dispensation.
[24]
In the result the following order is made:
1
The application is dismissed with costs.
L.
WINDELL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
(Electronically
submitted therefore unsigned)
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the 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 for
hand-down is deemed to be 15 May 2023.
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicants:
Advocate
L. Spiller
Attorney
for the applicants: Cheadle
Thompson & Haysom Inc
Counsel
for the respondents: Advocate
A. Bham SC
Attorney
for the respondent: Wilken
Incorporated
Date
of hearing: 6
February 2023
Date
of judgment: 15
May 2023
[1]
Section 41(1)
of the
Basic Conditions of Employment Act, 75 of 1997
provides that:
(1)
For the purposes of this section,
'operational
requirements'
means
requirements based on the economic, technological, structural or
similar needs of an employer.
[2]
Makhanya
v University of Zululand
2010
(1) SA 62
(SCA) para 95.
[3]
Section 41(6)
of the BCEA.
[4]
2010 (1) SA 238
(CC). See also
South
African Maritime Safety Authority v Mckenzie
2010 (3) SA 601
(SCA) para 7.
[5]
At para 75.
[6]
2010 (1) SA 62 (SCA).
[7]
Gcaba
v
Minister for Safety and Security and Others
para 75.
[8]
Section 2
of the BCEA.
[9]
2003 (3) SA 1
(CC) paras 36 to 40.
[10]
Secker
v Beacon Sweets & Chocolates (Pty) Ltd
2000 21 ILJ 2767 (CCMA).
[11]
Telkom
(Pty) Ltd v CCMA
[2004] 8 BLLR 844 (LC).
[12]
(2008) 29 ILJ 779 (LC).
[13]
(2021) 42 ILJ 2467 (LC).
[14]
See also
SA
Typographical Union obo Van As & others v Kohler Flexible
Packaging (Cape) (A Division of Kohler Packaging Ltd)
(2001)
22 ILJ 1892 (LC)
para 17.
[15]
2000 ILJ p2771at A-G.
[16]
[2007] ZACC 23
;
2008 (4) SA 367
(CC).
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