National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa and Others v Abancedisi Labour Services (857/12) [2013] ZASCA 143; (2013) 34 ILJ 3075 (SCA); [2014] 2 All SA 43 (SCA); [2013] 12 BLLR 1185 (SCA) (30 September 2013)

75 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Unfair Dismissal — Temporary Employment Service — Employees of a labour broker excluded from client’s premises and not reassigned work after refusing to sign a code of conduct — Employees’ claim of unfair dismissal upheld — Labour broker's failure to provide work and pay wages constitutes repudiation of employment contract — Employees entitled to compensation for unfair dismissal.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The matter concerned an appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal from a decision of the Labour Appeal Court, Johannesburg. The appeal raised the question whether certain employees placed by a temporary employment service (labour broker) had been dismissed and, if so, whether that dismissal was unfair under the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995.


The appellants were the National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa (NUMSA) and 46 individual employees (described in the judgment as the “second and further appellants”). The respondent was Abancedisi Labour Services, a temporary employment service provider that had employed the individual appellants and assigned them to work at its client, Kitsanker (Pty) Ltd, a division of Reinforcing Steel Holdings (Pty) Ltd (RSH).


Procedurally, after the employees were refused entry to the client’s premises and replaced, NUMSA referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the relevant bargaining council under section 191 of the Labour Relations Act. Conciliation failed. The employees then approached the Labour Court, which dismissed their claim (with costs), holding that the employees had not proved a dismissal because their employment relationship with Abancedisi continued. On appeal, the Labour Appeal Court reversed only the costs order, but otherwise agreed that the matter was premature and that the employees had not been dismissed. The employees (and NUMSA) then appealed further to the Supreme Court of Appeal. The appeal was unopposed, with the respondent filing a notice to abide the decision.


The general subject matter of the dispute was the operation of section 198 of the Labour Relations Act in the context of labour-broking arrangements, and whether the practical exclusion of workers from a client site, coupled with non-payment and non-reassignment by the labour broker, amounted to a termination of employment attracting the protections against unfair dismissal.


Material Facts


The court treated the background as mostly undisputed. The employees were members of NUMSA and had previously been employed directly by Kitsanker. In 1999, RSH decided to relocate Kitsanker’s operations and to manage its weekly paid production staff through a labour broker. Abancedisi was formed for this purpose, and in January 2001 it concluded a contract with RSH/Kitsanker under which Abancedisi would provide its employees to Kitsanker.


In February 2001, the employees were voluntarily retrenched by Kitsanker and immediately re-employed by Abancedisi, against NUMSA’s advice. Each employee signed a “Limited Duration Contract of Assignment”, making them employees of Abancedisi and placing their services at Kitsanker’s disposal. The court noted that, in substance, the work location and terms and conditions remained the same as before; what changed was the identity of the formal employer.


In July 2001, the employees engaged in a two-hour work stoppage at Kitsanker and raised complaints, including a demand relating to their supervisor. Kitsanker responded by requiring employees to sign a code of conduct largely aimed at regulating industrial action. The employees asked for a week to consult NUMSA but were given until the next morning.


On 6 July 2001, employees who refused to sign the code were refused entry to the premises. On 9 July 2001, they were again refused entry and were replaced with new workers, who were subsequently employed by Abancedisi. After the replacement, the excluded employees remained at the gates until threatened with removal by the police, after which they left to report to NUMSA.


After these events, Abancedisi’s representative, Mr van der Mescht, unsuccessfully attempted to persuade Kitsanker to take the excluded employees back and urged the employees to sign the code to return to work. He confirmed to the union organiser, Mr Tshoga, that the employees who refused to sign would not be permitted back and would not be paid wages because they were paid only for work performed. Despite this, Abancedisi maintained throughout that there was no dismissal because the employees remained “on its payroll”.


On 23 July 2001, NUMSA referred a dispute to the bargaining council alleging an unfair dismissal by Abancedisi. A meeting on 6 August 2001 followed, at which Mr van der Mescht reiterated that the contracts remained in place though wages would not be earned because no work was being done. He suggested three possibilities: signing the code and returning to Kitsanker; placement elsewhere if possible; or retrenchment if no placement could be found.


Conciliation on 31 August 2001 failed. Thereafter, Abancedisi did not communicate with the employees again. The employees ultimately launched proceedings in the Labour Court. Abancedisi’s defence was a point in limine that the referral was premature because it had not dismissed the employees.


A further factual aspect relied upon by the Supreme Court of Appeal concerned the employment contract terms, particularly that the contract commenced with the Kitsanker client arrangement and continued until completion of the “last assignment” in accordance with schedule “A”, and that schedule “A” recorded that the assignment would endure until Kitsanker no longer required the employees’ services “for whatever reason”.


Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether, on the evidence and properly construed contractual terms, the employees were dismissed by Abancedisi when they were excluded from the client’s premises, replaced, not reassigned, and not paid wages.


Flowing from that, a further legal question was whether any dismissal found to have occurred was unfair in terms of sections 186(1)(a), 188(1), 192(2), and 194 of the Labour Relations Act, given Abancedisi’s stance that the relationship continued and its failure to initiate retrenchment procedures or otherwise justify termination.


The dispute involved application of law to fact, anchored in the interpretation of the employment contract (a legal question) and the legal characterisation of the respondent’s conduct as repudiation/breach and termination under the statutory definition of dismissal (a mixed question). It also entailed a consequential statutory fairness enquiry under section 188(1), which depends on the employer’s justification and procedure (again application of legal norms to the proved facts).


Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the enquiry by treating the employment contract as the starting point for determining the parties’ legal rights and obligations. It focused on the meaning of “assignment” in clause 2.1 (referring to the “last assignment” for which the employee is employed in accordance with schedule “A”) and on schedule “A”, which provided that the assignment would terminate when Kitsanker no longer required the services of the employees “for whatever reason”.


The Supreme Court of Appeal rejected the interpretation adopted by both the Labour Court and Labour Appeal Court, namely that “assignment” referred to the overall commercial relationship between Abancedisi and Kitsanker that could continue despite the exclusion of the particular employees. In the Supreme Court of Appeal’s analysis, that interpretation was inconsistent with the contract’s plain language and with the agreed factual setting that the contract was conceived for the Kitsanker project and did not guarantee work beyond that assignment. The court emphasised that the contract envisaged that the individual employee’s assignment would terminate when Kitsanker no longer required the employee’s services, and it considered it clear that this occurred when Kitsanker excluded the employees and filled their positions with replacement workers.


The court also relied on how Abancedisi’s own representative explained the contractual scheme in cross-examination, namely that the contract came to an end when Kitsanker indicated it did not want the employees any longer. The court treated this as reinforcing the conclusion drawn from the contractual text.


Having concluded that the assignment ended, the court analysed the consequences of Abancedisi’s conduct thereafter. It applied the principle that a refusal to allow an employee to do the work he was engaged to do may constitute wrongful repudiation and a fundamental breach of the employment contract, giving the employee an election either to stand by the contract or to terminate it. The court found that Abancedisi did more than simply leave employees without work after exclusion; it also did not pay wages and did not take steps consistent with an ongoing employment relationship. Beyond the asserted “retention on the payroll”, the court considered that nothing resembling a genuine employment relationship remained. On that footing, irrespective of whether Abancedisi subjectively intended repudiation, its conduct amounted to a material breach entitling the employees to cancel the contract.


On the Labour Appeal Court’s finding that the employees acted “too soon” and that the referral to the bargaining council was premature, the Supreme Court of Appeal disagreed. It reasoned that section 191(1)(b) requires referral within 30 days of dismissal, and on the court’s view the employees were dismissed between 6 and 9 July 2001, while the referral occurred on 23 July 2001, within the statutory period and after the union had ascertained the respondent’s position. The Supreme Court of Appeal also rejected the characterisation of the situation as an “indefinite suspension”, holding that this was unsupported by the evidence and that the alternative remedies suggested by the Labour Appeal Court were irrelevant to whether a dismissal had occurred.


With dismissal established, the court turned to the statutory framework. It referred to section 186(1)(a), which defines dismissal as termination of a contract of employment by the employer with or without notice. It then applied section 192(2), which places the onus on the employer to prove fairness once dismissal is shown. Under section 188(1), a dismissal not automatically unfair is unfair if the employer fails to prove a fair reason related to conduct, capacity, or operational requirements, and fails to show compliance with a fair procedure. The court held that Abancedisi advanced no substantive defence and led no evidence justifying the dismissals, nor did it initiate retrenchment procedures. It therefore failed to discharge the onus to prove fairness.


The court expressly stated that it was not necessary to decide broader debates potentially raised by the matter, including the public policy and constitutional implications of automatic termination clauses. It nevertheless reiterated, in general terms, the Act’s purpose of giving effect to employee rights and the principle that termination should occur only for misconduct, incapacity, or operational requirements, in accordance with substantive and procedural fairness.


On remedy, the employees sought no reinstatement but requested 12 months’ compensation. The court held that substantial compensation was warranted and that the request fell within section 194, which permits compensation up to the equivalent of 12 months’ remuneration calculated at the employee’s rate of remuneration on the date of dismissal. The court saw no reason not to award the compensation sought.


Outcome and Relief


The Supreme Court of Appeal upheld the appeal with costs. It set aside the order of the Labour Appeal Court and substituted it with an order upholding the appeal in that court with costs, setting aside the Labour Court’s order, and replacing it with an order declaring that the dismissal of the second and further applicants was unfair in terms of section 188(1) of the Labour Relations Act.


The respondent was ordered to pay the second and further applicants 12 months’ compensation, calculated at their rate of remuneration on the date of dismissal. The respondent was also ordered to pay the costs of the Labour Court application, and the appeal costs followed the result.


Cases Cited


LAD Brokers (Pty) Ltd v Mandla [2001] 9 BLLR 993 (LAC)


SABroadcasting Corporation v McKenzie (1999) 20 ILJ 585 (LAC)


Niselow v Liberty Life Insurance Association of South Africa Ltd (1998) 19 ILJ 752 (LAC)


Myers v Abramson 1952 (3) SA 121 (C)


Stewart Wrightson (Pty) Ltd v Thorpe 1974 (4) SA 67 (D)


Stewart Wrightson (Pty) Ltd v Thorpe 1977 (2) SA 943 (A)


Info DB Computers v Newby & another (1996) 17 ILJ 37 (W)


Everson v Moral Regeneration Movement (2008) 29 ILJ 2941 (LC)


Council for Scientific & Industrial Research v Fijen (1996) 17 ILJ 18 (A)


National Union of Leather Workers v Barnard and Perry NNO 2001 (4) SA 1261 (LAC)


Legislation Cited


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (sections 186(1)(a), 188(1), 191, 192(2), 194, 198)


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (section 23)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Supreme Court of Appeal held that, properly construed, the employees’ contracts linked their employment to the specific assignment at Kitsanker, which ended when Kitsanker excluded them and no longer required their services. Abancedisi’s failure to provide work after that exclusion, coupled with its failure to pay wages and its lack of steps consistent with an ongoing employment relationship, amounted to conduct constituting a repudiation and material breach that entitled the employees to cancel the contract, and it brought about a termination falling within the statutory definition of dismissal.


Once dismissal was established, Abancedisi bore the onus to prove that the dismissal was fair. Because it advanced no justification and did not demonstrate a fair reason or procedure under section 188(1), the dismissals were held to be unfair. The employees were awarded compensation equal to 12 months’ remuneration, calculated at the remuneration rate on the date of dismissal, together with appropriate costs orders.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A court determining whether an employee has been dismissed must have regard to the substance of the employment relationship, including the contractual rights and obligations underpinning the relationship, rather than merely accepting an employer’s characterisation that employment continues.


Where an employment arrangement is structured around a specific assignment to a client, and the contract provides for termination when the client no longer requires the employee’s services, the end of that requirement and exclusion from the client’s premises may signify the end of the assignment contemplated by the employment contract.


An employer’s conduct that prevents employees from performing the work for which they were engaged, particularly where accompanied by non-payment of wages and the absence of meaningful ongoing employment obligations, may constitute repudiation and a material breach of the employment contract, entitling employees to cancel the contract.


Under the Labour Relations Act, once the existence of a dismissal is established in terms of section 186(1)(a), the employer bears the onus under section 192(2) to prove that the dismissal was fair. If the employer fails to prove a fair reason and fair procedure as required by section 188(1), the dismissal is unfair.


Compensation for an unfair dismissal must be just and equitable and is capped at 12 months’ remuneration, calculated at the employee’s remuneration rate on the date of dismissal, as contemplated by section 194 of the Labour Relations Act.

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[2013] ZASCA 143
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National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa and Others v Abancedisi Labour Services (857/12) [2013] ZASCA 143; (2013) 34 ILJ 3075 (SCA); [2014] 2 All SA 43 (SCA); [2013] 12 BLLR 1185 (SCA) (30 September 2013)

THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Case No: 857/12
Reportable
In the matter
between:
NATIONAL UNION OF
METALWORKERS
OF SOUTH AFRICA
.............................................................................................
First
Appellant
A KETLHOILWE AND
OTHERS
...........................................
Second
and Further Appellants
(LISTED IN
ANNEXURE “A”)
and
ABANCEDISI LABOUR
SERVICES
........................................................................
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
NUMSA v
Abancedisi Labour Services
(857/12)
[2013] ZASCA 143
(30 September 2013
)
Coram:
Maya, Malan, Shongwe, Pillay and Saldulker
JJA
Heard:
12 September 2013
Delivered: 30
September 2013
Summary:
Labour
Relations Act 66 of 1995
– temporary employment service
agreement under
s 198(2)
– employment contract between labour
broker and its client terminable when client no longer required the
services of labour
broker’s employees for whatever reason –
employees locked out from client’s premises for refusing to
sign code
of conduct – labour broker’s failure to
reallocate work to employees and pay their wages thereafter
tantamount to repudiation
and a breach of their employment contract
entitling them to cancel it – employees unfairly dismissed in
terms of
s 186(1)(a)
read with
s 188(1)
of the Act –
compensation of 12 months’ remuneration calculated at their
remuneration rate at date of dismissal ordered.
____________________________________________________________________________________
ORDER
__________________________________________________________________
On appeal from:
Labour Appeal Court, Johannesburg (Ndlovu, Tlaletsi and Landman JJA
sitting as court of appeal):
1 The appeal
succeeds with costs.
2 The order of the
Labour Appeal Court is set aside and replaced with the following:

1
The appeal succeeds with costs.
2 The order of the
Labour Court is set aside and replaced with the following:

(a)
The second and further applicants’ dismissal is unfair in terms
of
s 188(1)
of the
Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995
.
(b) The respondent
is ordered to pay the second and further applicants 12 months’
compensation calculated at their rate of
remuneration on the date of
dismissal.
(c) The respondent
is ordered to pay the costs of the application.’”
_____________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
__________________________________________________________________
MAYA
JA
(MALAN,
SHONGWE, PILLAY and SALDULKER JJA concurring):
[1]
This matter, which has been pending for over a decade,
1
starkly illustrates
how the provisions of s 198 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995
(the Act)
2
may operate as a
stratagem to avoid an employer’s obligations and circumvent the
protections afforded an employee under the
labour legislation against
unfair dismissal.
[2]
The crisp issue on appeal is whether the second and further
appellants (the employees)
3
were unfairly
dismissed by the respondent, a temporary employment service provider
or labour broker (Abancedisi), when they were
(a) excluded from the
premises of its client to which they were assigned and replaced with
new workers; (b) thereafter not reassigned
work elsewhere; and (c)
not paid wages thereafter. The appeal is unopposed and Abancedisi has
filed a notice to abide this court’s
decision.
[3] The background
facts are mostly undisputed. The employees are members of the first
appellant (NUMSA), a registered trade union.
They are also former
employees of Kitsanker (Pty) Ltd (Kitsanker), a division of
Reinforcing Steel Holdings (Pty) Ltd (RSH). Kitsanker
manufactures
mining equipment. Towards the end of the second millennium, RSH
resolved to relocate Kitsanker’s operations
from Lichtenburg to
Rustenburg. It would further manage its weekly paid production staff,
constituted by the employees, through
a labour broker. Thus, in 1999,
Abancedisi was formed specifically for this purpose. Its members were
Mr Etienne van der Mescht,
a former Human Resources Manager at one of
RHS’s divisions, Cape Town Iron & Steel (Pty) Ltd in Cape
Town, and his wife
Mrs Philippina van der Mescht.
[4] In execution of
this process, during January 2001, RSH and Abancedisi concluded a
contract in terms of which Abancedisi would
provide its employees to
Kitsanker to work for the latter. During February 2001, the
employees, against NUMSA’s advice, were
voluntarily retrenched
by Kitsanker and immediately re-employed by Abancedisi. The effect of
this arrangement was that the employees
were each required to sign a
‘Limited Duration Contract of Assignment’ (the employment
contract) which rendered them
employees of Abancedisi and placed
their services at Kitsanker’s disposal. Beyond this, nothing
else changed. The location,
terms and conditions of their employment
remained precisely as before.
[5] During July
2001, the employees embarked upon a two-hour work stoppage at
Kitsanker’s premises. They complained about
certain management
practices and demanded the dismissal of their supervisor, Mr Koos
Mpopo, for his alleged abuse of workers at
the workplace.
Consequently, Kitsanker required the employees to sign a code of
conduct which was designed mainly to regulate industrial
action on
its premises and to avoid the responsibilities and effects of such
action. The employees requested a week within which
to consult NUMSA
about the legal consequences of signing the document. However,
Kitsanker’s management gave them until the
following morning to
comply.
[6] On 6 July 2001,
each employee was required to sign the code of conduct before
entering the work premises. Those who refused
to do so were refused
entry. On 9 July 2001, the employees who refused to sign the code of
conduct were refused entry again and
were replaced with new workers.
(These new workers were subsequently employed by Abancedisi.)
Nevertheless, they remained at Kitsanker’s
gates despite this
development and left the premises to report to NUMSA’s offices
only when Kitsanker’s management
threatened to have them
removed by the police.
[7] Mr van der
Mescht’s entreaties to Kitsanker to take the excluded employees
back, and to the employees to sign the code
of conduct so that they
could return to work, was met with intransigence from both sides. In
subsequent communications with Mr
Onismas Tshoga, the local union
organiser, Mr van der Mescht confirmed that the employees who refused
to sign the code of conduct
would neither be permitted back to
Kitsanker nor paid any wages since they were only paid for work
performed. But his stance, which
he maintained throughout the
litigation, was that the employees were nevertheless not dismissed by
Abancedisi as they remained
on its payroll.
[8] On 23 July 2001,
NUMSA referred a dispute to the Bargaining Council in terms of s 191
of the Act alleging an unfair dismissal
of the employees by
Abancedisi. On 6 August 2001, a meeting was held between the
representatives of the appellants and Abancedisi.
There, Mr van der
Mescht reiterated that the employees’ employment contracts with
Abancedisi remained extant although they
did not earn wages as they
were not actually working. According to him, the employees had three
options: to sign the code of conduct
and return to Kitsanker; to be
placed elsewhere if possible; or, if that failed, face retrenchment.
[9]
Conciliation conducted by the bargaining council on 31 August 2001
failed. Thereafter Abancedisi, dismayingly, did not communicate
with
the employees again. On 28 November 2001 the employees took the
matter to the Labour Court (the LC). Abancedisi opposed the

proceedings. It raised only a point
in
limine
that the referral of
the dispute was premature because it had not dismissed the employees
as they remained on its payroll. The matter
went on trial and the
evidence set out above was adduced by the respective parties.
Afterwards, the LC (Molahlehi J) found that
a holistic consideration
of the employment contract, particularly clauses 1.2 and 1.3 thereof,
showed that it ‘envisaged
the continuation of the relationship
between [the employees and Abancedisi] even after the conclusion of
the assignment at Kitsanker’.
And in terms of clause 1.3 a new
assignment, if secured, ‘would be regulated by terms very
similar to those in schedule “A”’
of the
contracts.
4
The LC then
concluded that the appellants had failed to prove that Abancedisi
dismissed the employees and dismissed their claim
with costs.
[10] The employees’
appeal to the Labour Appeal Court (the LAC) succeeded only to the
extent that the costs order awarded
against them was found unfair and
reversed. The LAC (Ndlovu, Tlaletsi JJA and Landman AJA concurring)
reckoned that the employees
‘were the principal contributors to
their expulsion from Kitsanker before the completion of their
assignment’ as they
refused to sign a reasonable and fair code
of conduct, but that their employment relationship with Abancedisi
nonetheless continued
as the LC had found. The LAC accepted
Abancedisi’s argument that the proceedings were premature and
added that finding alternative
employment or engaging a retrenchment
process for the large contingent of workers ‘would not have
been an overnight exercise’.
In the LAC’s view, the
employees’ situation amounted to an ‘indefinite
suspension’. Thus, they could have
contested the ‘suspension’
at the bargaining council as an unfair labour practice or resign and
sue for constructive
dismissal, options which interestingly, the
court itself doubted would yield success. The appeal was then
dismissed with no order
as to costs.
[11] The nub of the
appellants’ argument before us was that the evidence
cumulatively established that the employees were
dismissed by
Abancedisi by the time they referred their dispute to the bargaining
council on 23 July 2001. It was argued further
that by accepting the
employer’s mere say so that it had not dismissed the employees,
rather than looking at the substance
of the employment relationship
between the parties, the Labour Courts permitted Abancedisi to escape
the consequences of the unfair
dismissal provisions of the Act.
[12]
The starting point in the enquiry (whether or not the employees were
unfairly dismissed) is a consideration of the parties’

employment contract as it underlies their legal rights and
obligations in the employment relationship.
5
The provisions of
particular relevance here read:
‘…
1.2 The employee
should understand that the employer, as a labour broker is dependent
for its income on the assignment of contracts
to it. The award of
assignments to the employee will therefore depend on the availability
of work, which is afforded to the company
by its clients, the
duration of those contracts and upon the company’s assessment
of the employee’s suitability to
carry out the available
assignments. There is accordingly no guarantee of work being given to
the employee …
1.3 In the event
that a suitable assignment becomes available, [Abancedisi] will
furnish to the employee an assignment agreement,
substantially in the
form of Schedule “A” to this agreement. This assignment
agreement will stipulate the assignment
position the employee will
hold, the anticipated dates of the assignment, the name and address
of the client with which the employee
will be placed as well as the
grade and rate of pay per hour the employee will receive for work
done.

2.1 This contract
shall commence on the commencement date the company has with its
client, Kitsanker and shall continue until the
completion of the last
assignment for which the employee is employed in accordance with
schedule “A”, unless terminated
earlier in accordance
with this agreement.
2.2 The employee
should not have any expectation of continued employment after the
fixed period, even in the event that the employee
is afforded various
assignments from time to time.’
Clause 2 of schedule
“A” provides that the assignment would commence on 5
February 2001 and endure until Kitsanker no
longer required the
services of the employees for whatever reason.
[13] Central to both
Labour Courts’ conclusion was their common understanding of the
‘assignment’ referred to
in clauses 2.1 and 2 of the
employment contract and
schedule “A”,
respectively. According to the Courts, the term referred to the
overall assignment between Abancedisi
and Kitsanker which continued
beyond the exclusion of the employees. But this interpretation has
insuperable difficulties. First,
it overlooks the agreed fact that
the employment contract was conceived specifically for the Kitsanker
project and made clear,
in clause 2.2, that Abancedisi guaranteed no
further work beyond that assignment. Indeed, Abancedisi made no
effort whatsoever,
and manifested an attitude that it had no
obligation, to secure alternative work for the employees after their
expulsion from Kitsanker.
This is patent from Mr van der Mescht’s
cross-examination which proceeded as follows:

[Y]ou
never made an offer to them … you never wrote to the union and
said … I know you guys have referred a dispute
and so on, but
you know … I can get people jobs at the following places, from
the following people…
No, I did not
specifically do that…
Did you go and
explore if there were other vacancies? …
No … but the
workers knew that we had premises in other areas … and that if
someone said he would like to investigate
the option of going to JE,
I would explore that.’
[14]
Yet more compelling is the plain language of the employment contract
which, in clause 2.1, expressly refers to the ‘last
assignment
for
which the employee is employed in accordance with schedule “A”

.
And schedule “A” in turn specifically refers to ‘
his
assignment’
that will terminate when Kitsanker no longer requires his services
for whatever reason. Clearly, that assignment
ended when Kitsanker
excluded the employees from its premises and filled their positions
(ironically with new workers who would
join Abancedisi’s fold).
This is how Mr van der Mescht himself explained the import of these
contractual provisions when
pressed under cross-examination: that the

contract came
to an end the moment Kitsanker said [to the employees] we do not want
you anymore’.
[15]
A refusal to allow an employee to do the work he was engaged to do
may constitute a wrongful repudiation and a fundamental
breach of the
employment contract which vests the employee with an election to
stand by the contract or to terminate it.
6
Here, Abancedisi did
not just leave the employees to languish in idleness after their
exclusion from Kitsanker. It also did not
pay them any wages.
Thereafter, nothing even slightly resembling the characteristics of
an employment relationship remained between
the parties beyond the
illusory retention of the employees on Abancedisi’s payroll
upon which Mr van der Mescht harped. Whether
or not Abancedisi
intended to repudiate the employment contract, the effect of its
conduct constituted a material breach of the
employment contract that
entitled the employees to cancel it.
7
To that end, the
employees took a step that is sanctioned by the law and referred a
dispute to the bargaining council.
[16] The LAC made a
related finding that this action; ie the employees’ referral,
was made ‘too soon’ and was
‘premature’. With
respect, I do not agree. Section 191(1)(
b
) of LRA expressly
requires this to be done in writing within 30 days of the date of the
dismissal. Evidently, the employees did
not blindly rush to the
bargaining council. They were dismissed between 6 and 9 July and
approached the bargaining council on 23
July 2001, two weeks already
into the four week period envisaged by the legislature. This was
after their union representative,
Mr Tshoga, had communicated with Mr
van der Mescht and ascertained Abancedisi’s position. The LAC’s
view that their
situation was akin to an ‘indefinite
suspension’, with which I disagree as it is not supported by
the evidence, and
the courses the LAC considered should have been
followed by the employees are, with respect, irrelevant.
[17]
In deciding whether there was an unfair dismissal justifying the
order sought by the employees, reference must first be had
to s
186(1)(
a
)
of the Act in terms of which the term dismissal means that ‘ an
employer has terminated a contract of employment with or
without
notice’: ie the employer has engaged in an act which brings the
contract of employment to an end in a manner recognised
as valid by
the law.
8
Section 192(2) of
the Act places an onus on an employer, where the existence of a
dismissal is established, to prove that it is
fair. In terms of s
188(1), a dismissal that is not automatically unfair as the present
one, is unfair if the employer fails to
prove that the reason for
dismissal is a fair reason; that it is related to the employee’s
conduct or capacity; or that it
is based on the employers’
operational requirements; and that it was effected in accordance with
a fair procedure. Abancedisi,
which, in addition to the conduct set
out above, did not even bother to start retrenchment procedures (and
this attitude in my
view is consistent with an attitude that the
employees were already dismissed) neither advanced a defence in its
pleadings nor
adduced any evidence at the trial to justify the
dismissals. It dismally failed to discharge its onus.
[18] It is not
necessary in this matter to pronounce on the other interesting
debates that it potentially raises, such as whether
an employment
contract that contains an automatic termination clause as the present
one conflicts with the employees’ right
not to be unfairly
dismissed under the Act and the Constitution and offends public
policy. Suffice it to reiterate that it is well
for labour brokers to
bear in mind that the intention of the Act – which governs
labour relations with the object, inter
alia, to give effect to the
employee rights contained in s 23 of the Constitution – is that
employment may only be terminated
upon the employee’s
misconduct, incapacity or operational requirements and these reasons
must meet the requirements of substantive
and procedural fairness set
out in the Act.
[19]
The employees do not seek reinstatement and asked only for 12 months’
compensation. Due regard had to all the circumstances
of this matter,
they are indeed entitled to a substantial amount of compensation. The
prayer falls squarely within the parameters
of s 194 of the Act
9
and I see no reason
why it should not be awarded.
[20] Accordingly,
the following order is made:
1 The appeal
succeeds with costs.
2 The order of the
Labour Appeal Court is set aside and replaced with the following:

1
The appeal succeeds with costs.
2 The order of the
Labour Court is set aside and replaced with the following:

(a)
The second and further applicants’ dismissal is unfair in terms
of s 188(1) of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995.
(b) The respondent
is ordered to pay the second and further applicants 12 months’
compensation calculated at their rate of
remuneration on the date of
dismissal.
(c) The respondent
is ordered to pay the costs of the application.’”
___________________________
MML Maya
Judge of Appeal
APPEARANCES
For Appellant:
TMG Euijen
Instructed by:
Cheadle Thompson &
Haysom Inc.; Johannesburg
McIntyre & Van
Der Post, Bloemfontein
1
The
appellants launched the court proceedings on 28 August 2001
following an unsuccessful conciliation process which commenced
in
July 2001.
2
Section
198 provides:

(1)
In this section, “temporary employment service” means
any person who, for reward, procures for or provides to
a client
other persons –
who render
services to, or perform work for, the client; and
who are
remunerated by the temporary employment service.
(2) For purposes of
this Act, a person whose services have been procured for or provided
to a client by a temporary employment
service is the employee of
that temporary employment service, and the temporary employment
service is that person’s employer.’
3
Some
of the individual appellants (Messrs Petrus Moralo, Hedbid Mmelesi
and Molefe Mosimanegape Wilson) are not listed in the
proceedings
although they have deposed to affidavits, and others who were
initially listed (Messrs Constantine Mafethe and Sello
Ben Mmitsi)
withdrew at trial stage. Those currently involved in the proceedings
are 46 in number and their names are recorded
in Annexure “A”
of this judgment.
4
Schedule
“A” set out the particulars of Abancedisi’s client
to which an employee was assigned, the duration
of the assignment,
the work hours and remuneration.
5
LAD
Brokers (Pty) Ltd v Mandla
[2001] 9 BLLR 993
(LAC) para 15;
SABroadcasting Corporation v McKenzie
(1999) 20 ILJ 585
(LAC);
Niselow v Liberty Life Insurance Association of South
Africa Ltd
(1998) 19 ILJ 752 (LAC) at 754C.
6
Myers
v Abramson
1952 (3) SA 121
(C) at 123E-G;
Stewart Wrightson
(Pty) Ltd v Thorpe
1974 (4) SA 67
(D) at 78 E-79C
; Stewart
Wrightson (Pty) Ltd v Thorpe
1977 (2) SA 943
(A) at 951G-952A;
Info DB Computers v Newby & another
(1996) 17 ILJ 37 (W)
at 35I-36F;
Everson v Moral Regeneration Movement
(2008) 29
ILJ 2941 (LC) para 12.
7
Council
for Scientific & Industrial Research v Fijen
(1996) 17 ILJ
18 (A) at 25H-26D.
8
National
Union of Leather Workers v Barnard and Perry NNO
2001 (4) SA
1261
(LAC) para 23.
9
In
terms of s 194 of the Act,
the
compensation awarded to an employee whose dismissal is found to be
unfair either because the employer did not prove that the
reason for
dismissal was a fair reason relating to the employee’s conduct
or capacity or the employers’ operational
requirements or the
employer did not follow a fair procedure, or both, must be just and
equitable in all the circumstances, but
may not be more than the
equivalent of 12 months’ remuneration calculated at the
employee’s rate of remuneration
on the date of dismissal.