Dukiso v King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality (K.S.D) and Others (2056/2022) [2022] ZAECMHC 8 (19 April 2022)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Employment Law — Unlawful termination of salary — Applicant, an employee of the first respondent, sought urgent relief for the alleged unlawful termination of his salary without notice or consultation. The first respondent contended that the applicant had absented himself from work without authorization, triggering a clause in his contract that allowed for termination of employment. The court held that the first respondent's failure to provide notice or engage in a disciplinary process before terminating the applicant's salary constituted a breach of the employment contract, and the applicant was entitled to the payment of his salary for February 2022.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The proceedings took the form of an urgent application in the Eastern Cape High Court, Mthatha, in which the applicant sought final relief arising from the non-payment of his salary. The applicant, Ndiviwe Dukiso, was an employee of the first respondent, King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality (K.S.D). The second respondent was the Municipal Manager of K.S.D, and the third respondent, Dial Kettledas, was described as an agent of the municipality and the applicant’s direct line of reporting within the relevant department.


The matter was heard on 18 March 2022 and judgment was delivered on 19 April 2022. The respondents opposed the application. Although issues of urgency were raised by the respondents in relation to the applicant’s timetable for service and filing, the court accepted the respondents’ answering affidavit as timeously filed in the circumstances.


The general subject-matter concerned the lawfulness of the municipality’s conduct in terminating (or withholding) the applicant’s salary for February 2022, and whether the respondents were entitled to do so on the basis that the applicant’s contract of employment had allegedly terminated under a contractual “unauthorised absence” provision, or alternatively that the absence fell to be treated as leave without pay under the contract.


Material Facts


It was common cause that in September 2005 the applicant and the first respondent concluded a written contract of employment in terms of which the applicant was employed as a law enforcement officer. The employment letter embodied the terms and conditions of employment, and it was common cause that clause 43 incorporated the municipality’s Disciplinary and Grievance Codes and Procedures and other attached instruments into the contract. It was also common cause that the applicant was entitled to a monthly salary payable on the 25th day of each calendar month (or the last working day before that date) during the subsistence of the employment relationship.


It was further common cause that the applicant initially reported for duty at Mqanduli municipal offices, and that in November 2018 he agreed to the municipality’s requirement (facilitated and communicated by the third respondent) that he would report in Mthatha in the law enforcement by-law section.


The immediate event precipitating the litigation was that on the February 2022 salary pay date the applicant was not paid his salary. When he enquired at the salary section, an official (Sinalo) initially provided him with a payslip, but upon checking the computer system informed him that his salary had been terminated, with no reason recorded. The human resources department also could not provide him with a reason. He was advised that the termination was at the instance of the third respondent. A letter of demand sent by the applicant’s attorneys elicited no response.


The respondents’ version was that, after the applicant’s reporting site changed, his attendance became sporadic and that in February 2022 he did not report for work and rendered no services. They alleged that by 21 February 2022 fourteen days had elapsed without the applicant reporting for duty, without authorisation, and without the municipality being notified of a valid reason. On that basis, the respondents relied primarily on clause 22(h) of the contract, contending that the applicant’s unauthorised absence for more than fourteen days meant he had “discharged himself from service,” that the contract had terminated, and that no salary was due. They also asserted that the February 2022 salary advice had been issued in error.


In reply, the applicant disputed the allegation that he had been absent from work during the relevant period and contended that he had not been given notice, called upon to show cause, or consulted before the salary termination. He placed reliance on the contract’s integration with municipal policies and collective arrangements, including internal Human Resources Policies and Procedures and the Disciplinary Procedures Collective Agreement (DPCA) (circular 01/2018), which, on his version, required engagement and process before a termination (or deemed termination) could be implemented in circumstances of alleged absenteeism.


The court identified a material factual dispute as to whether the applicant was at work during February 2022. It noted that the applicant first learned that the asserted reason for non-payment was alleged absenteeism only from the answering affidavit, and therefore could only respond substantively in reply. Applying the approach to disputes of fact in motion proceedings, the court found it difficult to accept the applicant’s assertion that he was present at work during February 2022, particularly because the “recorded incidents” relied upon by the applicant were not tied to February 2022.


Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the applicant was entitled to payment of his salary for February 2022, and whether the respondents were entitled, without more, to terminate (or withhold) the salary on either of two bases.


The first basis was the respondents’ contention that the contract of employment had terminated by operation of clause 22(h) upon unauthorised absence exceeding fourteen days, such that the municipality had no ongoing obligation to pay salary. The second, alternative basis was that even if the contract had not terminated, the municipality was entitled under clause 30 to treat the absence as leave without pay, thereby justifying non-payment.


The dispute therefore required the court to address (i) a dispute of fact (whether the applicant was absent), (ii) a question of law and contractual interpretation (the meaning and operation of clause 22(h) in the context of the contract as a whole and incorporated policies), and (iii) the application of the interpreted contractual and policy framework to the established factual position, including evaluative consideration of whether the municipality’s process was premature or unjustified on the facts accepted for motion proceedings.


Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the factual dispute with reference to established principles governing final relief in motion proceedings. It applied the rule that final relief may be granted only if the facts stated by the respondent, together with admitted facts in the applicant’s papers, justify such relief, and it considered the clarification in later authority concerning the quality of denials. On that basis, and given the absence of February-specific substantiation for the applicant’s claimed attendance, the court held that it would be difficult to find that the applicant was present at work during February 2022.


Having proceeded on the footing that the applicant was absent as alleged, the court turned to the key interpretive and procedural issue: whether the respondents were entitled to treat clause 22(h) as bringing about automatic termination of the employment relationship without any notice or engagement. The respondents argued that once absence exceeding fourteen days without a valid notified reason was established, the contract terminated by operation of the clause, and no hearing, notice, or representations were required.


The court rejected that construction after interpreting clause 22 within the wider contractual scheme, including clause 43, which expressly incorporated disciplinary and grievance procedures and related municipal instruments. In doing so, the court applied interpretive principles emphasising the unitary exercise of considering text, context, and purpose, and the place of the provision within the scheme of the agreement as a whole. The court reasoned that reading clause 22 as permitting a “one size fits all” termination without process (save for clause 22(d), which explicitly refers to dismissal subject to disciplinary procedures) created difficulty, particularly given the breadth of clauses such as clause 22(i) (breach of contract) and clause 22(j) (any other lawful reason). In the court’s view, such an approach would undermine the incorporation of disciplinary and related policies via clause 43.


The court considered that even where clause 22(h) might apply, notice would not be a mere formality. Notice would identify the operative termination date and, importantly, provide the employee an opportunity to advance reasons for absence or otherwise engage the employer. The court stressed that, on the facts, the applicant had not been advised that his contract was regarded as terminated and had not been asked to explain the alleged absence, despite being at work at least on 4 March 2022. The court found further support for this conclusion in the municipality’s internal framework, including provisions in the Human Resources Management Policies and Procedures requiring notification to the employee about the status and termination of employment.


The court also took into account factual features inconsistent with a genuine, implemented termination of the employment relationship. It noted that the alleged termination did not appear to have been recorded within the municipality’s finance or human resources departments, and that the issuance of a salary advice was, in context, more consistent with an intention to pay than a mere administrative error. The court further regarded it as significant that the alleged termination rationale was communicated only when the answering affidavit was filed.


The court then addressed the respondents’ alternative defence based on clause 30, namely that unauthorised absence could be treated as leave without pay. Proceeding again on the footing that the applicant had been absent, the court accepted that clause 30 contemplated consequences for absence without leave, but it emphasised that the municipality had not communicated with the applicant to require an explanation or to advise him that the absence would be treated as leave without pay. This remained the case even after the applicant made enquiries about his unpaid salary and was at work at least on 4 March 2022.


The court reasoned that, without such engagement, the applicant was deprived of an opportunity to explain his absence and to trigger considerations which could be relevant under an employment framework, such as whether leave credits existed that could be set off, and how any deduction should be calculated and accounted for. The court held that the applicant’s litigation stance that he was not absent (a stance the court did not accept on the papers) did not exonerate the respondents from providing the opportunity contemplated by the broader contractual and policy context. The court also observed that the applicant’s failure to address clause 30 in detail occurred in circumstances where he had not been informed that absenteeism was the basis for the non-payment, contributing to the court’s view that the respondents’ approach caused the dispute to reach court without the circumstances being properly explored through appropriate internal steps.


Ultimately, the court concluded that the municipality’s termination of the applicant’s salary was premature and not justified, and noted that if, after due process, the municipality became entitled to deduct an amount equivalent to the days of absence, it could still do so from future emoluments or other monies due under the employment contract.


Outcome and Relief


The court ordered that the respondents reinstate the applicant’s salary retrospectively from February 2022.


The respondents were ordered to pay the costs of the application.


Cases Cited


Stellenbosch Farmers’ Winery Ltd v Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd 1957 (4) SA 234 (C).


Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd [1984] ZASCA 51; 1984 (3) SA 623 (A).


Capitec Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and Others (470/2020) [2021] ZASCA 99 (9 July 2021).


Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA).


Phenithi v Minister of Education and Others 2008 (1) SA 420 (SCA).


Masinga and Others v Chief of South African National Defence Force and Others (51 of 2021) [2022] ZASCA 1 (5 January 2022).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was expressly cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were expressly cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that, on the papers and applying motion-proceedings principles to the factual dispute, the applicant could not be accepted as having established that he was present at work during February 2022.


The court nevertheless held that the respondents were not entitled, without notice and compliance with applicable internal processes incorporated into the contract, to treat clause 22(h) as producing an automatic termination of employment and thereby to terminate the applicant’s salary. The non-payment of salary was found to be premature and unjustified in the circumstances, including because the alleged termination was not properly communicated or recorded and because the relevant notice-based process was not followed.


The court further held that reliance on the alternative “leave without pay” approach under clause 30 likewise required engagement and notice to the employee, which had not occurred. The salary was ordered to be reinstated retrospectively from February 2022, with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that where final relief is sought in motion proceedings and a material dispute of fact arises, the court determines the matter on the respondent’s version together with facts admitted by the respondent, unless the denials are not genuine or the facts cannot be denied. This approach was applied to resolve the contested question of the applicant’s attendance during February 2022.


The judgment applied modern principles of contractual interpretation requiring a unitary consideration of the language used, read in its context and in light of the purpose of the provision, as well as the place of the provision within the scheme of the instrument as a whole. The contract was interpreted as requiring that clause 22(h) be read together with incorporated disciplinary and human resources instruments, rather than as a self-standing mechanism producing automatic termination without process.


The judgment further applied the principle that where an employment contract incorporates disciplinary codes, grievance procedures, or human resources policies as part of the contractual framework, an employer’s reliance on contractual provisions dealing with termination or unpaid absence must be assessed in light of the procedural and notice requirements contemplated by that integrated framework, and a unilateral salary termination implemented without such steps may be premature and unjustified, even if absence is established on the papers.

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[2022] ZAECMHC 8
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Dukiso v King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality (K.S.D) and Others (2056/2022) [2022] ZAECMHC 8 (19 April 2022)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN
CAPE LOCAL DIVISION – MTHATHA)
CASE
NO.:
2056/2022
Date
of hearing:
18 March 2022
Date
delivered: 19 April 2022
In
the matter between:
NDIVIWE
DUKISO
Applicant
And
KING SABATA DALINDYEBO LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
(K.S.D)
First Respondent
MUNIVCIPAL
MANAGER, K.S.D
Second Respondent
DIAL
KETTLEDAS
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
MAJIKI
J
[1]
On the applicant’s salary pay date for the month of February
2022, the applicant,
an employee of the first respondent, was not
paid. The payment of his salary is in terms of his contract of
employment. The applicant
approached this court on urgent basis
seeking an order that the respondents’ conduct of terminating
his salary be declared
unlawful. Further, that the respondents be
ordered to reinstate his salary, retrospectively and that they pay
the costs of the
application. The respondents oppose the application,
the second and third respondents are agents of the first respondent.
The applicant
was directly reporting to the third respondent.
[2]
The common cause facts, in the main, are that during September 2005,
the first respondent
and the applicant entered into a written
contract of employment (the contract). The applicant was employed as
a law enforcement
officer. His letter of employment embodied his
terms and conditions of employment. In terms of clause 43 thereof,
the Disciplinary
and Grievance Codes and Procedures and Machine
Regulations attached thereto, formed part of his contract. The
applicant was entitled
to salary, payable on the 25
th
day
of each calendar month, or last working day before the 25
th
,
during the period of his employment.
[3]
It is also common cause that the applicant first reported for work at
Mqanduli municipal
offices. In November 2018 the applicant agreed to
the first respondent’s requirement, facilitated and
communicated by the
third respondent, that he should report at
Mthatha in the law enforcement by-law section.
[4]
It is also common cause that when the applicant realised that the
first respondent
did not pay his salary, he approached the first
respondent’s salary section. The official who attended him, one
Sinalo was
not aware of the development, she provided him with a
payslip for the month. It was only after she looked up in the
computer system
that she learnt that the applicant’s salary was
terminated. She said there was no reason was recorded for the said
termination.
The human resources department could not furnish him
with the reason for the termination as well. He was only advised
that, his
salary was terminated at the instance of the third
respondent, the director in his department. Even when his attorneys
of record
addressed a letter of demand for the reinstatement of his
salary, no response was received.
[5]
According to the applicant, his impression was that his salary was
capriciously terminated.
[6]
The applicant averred that he was not given notice of the termination
of his salary.
He was not called to show cause or make
representations why his salary should not be terminated or he was
also not consulted before
his salary was terminated. According to the
applicant the decision to terminate his salary was unlawful. Further,
his contract
of employment still existed, the first respondent
breached it. His contractual right to a salary was violated by the
first respondent.
[7]
The applicant attached his payslips for the months of December 2021
to February 2022.
Therein, there is a provision for payment of a
shift allowance for the sum of R1 108.94.
[8]
According to the respondents, the first respondent in its case relied
on clauses 8
and 22 (h) of the contract of employment. In the
alternative, the first respondent relied on clause 30 of the
contract. The respondents
averred that since the applicant’s
reporting site was changed, the applicant’s work attendance
became very sporadic.
That conduct took time to be established. In
the middle of January 2022 the second respondent was made aware of
the state of affairs.
[9]
Further, in the beginning of February 2022 the third respondent was
asked by the second
respondent to monitor the applicant’s work
attendance. That whole month, the applicant did not report for work
and did not
render services. By 21 February 2022 fourteen (14) days
had elapsed without the applicant reporting to work, without his
absence
being authorised by the first respondent.
[10]
No reasons were furnished to the first respondent for such absence.
It also did not approve the
applicant’s leave of absence or
give permission for the applicant to be absent from work. The
applicant therefore triggered
clause 22(h) of the contract, and
discharged himself from service. The contractual relationship
terminated and the first respondent
is no longer obliged to pay a
salary to the applicant. The salary advice for the month of February
2022 was issued in error.
[11]
In the alternative, the respondents averred that if the applicant had
not triggered clause 22
(h) of the contract, he still would not be
entitled to the reinstatement of his salary because the first
respondent would be entitled
to treat the days on which he was absent
as leave without pay.
[12]
In the circumstances, the respondents placed in issue the fact that
the applicant was entitled
to the relief sought. They averred that
the first respondent had not acted unlawfully and did not breach the
applicant’s
contractual right.
[13]
The third respondent denied that he terminated the payment of the
applicant’s salary. He
said he never employed the applicant,
therefore he could not terminate his salary. The third respondent
confirmed that the applicant
did not attend work in February 2022 and
that the second respondent asked him to monitor the applicant’s
attendance.
[14]
According to the respondents, once the provisions of clause 22 (h)
had been triggered, there
was no requirement for the applicant to be
called upon to show cause or make representations as to why his
salary should not be
paid.
[15]
Regarding urgency the respondents complained about the time table set
by the applicant. They
stated that it was not commensurate with the
degree of urgency of the matter, he himself did not act with
expediency. The founding
affidavit was signed on 7 March 2022 and
only issued and served on 9 March 2022. Had the papers been served on
the 7 March 2022,
that would have afforded the respondents more time
to attend to the matter. As a result, it was not possible for the
respondents
to comply with the applicant’s time table as set
out in the notice of motion. The applicant did not take issue with
the respondents’
failure to comply with the timetable set by
the applicant. The court also accepts the respondents’ filing
of the answering
affidavit in the time that it did.
[16]
The applicant in reply averred that clauses 43 and 47 are relevant in
the light of respondent’s
pleaded case based on clauses 22 (h)
and 30 of the contract. According to the applicant the reading of the
clauses in the contract
ought to be in a context that is harmonious
with the entire contract and all the other instruments referred to in
clause 43 of
the contract. Clause 47 provides that the appointment is
terminable by one calendar month notice from either side.
[17]
Further, according to the applicant clauses 4.5.7 (a) (v) and (vi) of
Human Resources Policies
and Procedures enjoin the human resources
manager of the first respondent to give notice to the employee of any
change in the employee’s
particulars of employment and that the
contract of employment shall expire. Further, clause 14.11 of
Disciplinary Procedures Collective
Agreement (DPCA), circular 01/2018
share the same sentiment, that of an engagement process when there
was contemplated change of
details contained in the letter of
appointment. Clause 4.12.3, repeated in clause 12 of DPCA, is
applicable when the employee has
allegedly been absent from work for
a period exceeding ten (10) working days, without having notified his
or her immediate supervisor.
The employee may be deemed to have
absconded and the service must be terminated, subject to the
disciplinary procedure.
[18]
The first respondent as a member of South African Local Government
Bargaining Council and a party
to DPCA, should have, before all else,
invoked the provisions of collective agreement relating to notice and
its human resources
policies and procedures. The requirements of
notice and consultation need be complied with, even if it was alleged
that the applicant
had been absent from work for more than fourteen
(14) days. There is no legal dispensation that permits punishment
without hearing.
[19]
According to the applicant, he was at work during the period that the
respondents allege that
he was absent. He said on 19 January 2022 and
4 March 2022, there were incidents that got to be recorded. According
to the payslips
he annexed, in February there was a provision for
shift allowance as well. According to clause 6 of the contract, that
is in respect
of stand-by, night work, Sunday work and public holiday
work allowance. According to the applicant the shift allowance is
computed
after having taken into account the hours worked and
applicable rate as contemplated in clause 5.20 of the municipality’s

policies and procedures.
[20]
The issue for determination is whether the applicant is entitled to
the payment of his salary
for the month of February 2022. Further,
whether the respondents was, without more, entitled to terminate the
applicant’s
salary, on the basis that his contract of
employment was terminated or that he absented himself from work
without leave.
[21]
The relationship between the applicant and the first respondent is
regulated by the contract
of employment. In terms thereof, the
applicant was to render services and the first respondent in turn was
to pay him a monthly
salary. It is common cause that the contract of
employment had to be considered together with first respondent’s
policies
which contained conditions of service and other municipality
policies and applicable instruments. Clause 8 of the contract relates

to the fact that the place of work of the applicant would be
determined by the first respondent within its municipal area. Clause

22 (h) will be referred to in detail below.
[22]
With regard to whether the applicant was at work or not, there is a
material dispute. The applicant
was not aware of the fact that the
respondents’ non-payment of his salary was for the alleged
absence from work without authorisation.
All his attempts to be
advised of the reasons for the non-payment came to a naught. He heard
of that reason for the first time
upon the filing of the answering
affidavit. Therefore, he could only deal with it in the replying
affidavit. In that light, it
cannot be said he was not entitled to
deal with it in reply. However, a determination of the actual dispute
about his being absent
or not has to be made.
[23]
The general rule in determination of an application for a final
relief as formulated in
Stellenbosch Farmers’ Winery Ltd v
Stellenvale Winery (Pty) Ltd
1957 (4) SA 234
(C) dispute in
motion proceedings is :

where
there is a dispute as to the facts, a final interdict should be
granted in motion proceedings only if facts as stated by the

respondents, together with the admitted facts in the applicant’s
affidavit justify such an order, or where it is clear that
the facts,
although not formally admitted, cannot be denied and must be regarded
as admitted
‘.
The
clarification and qualification in
Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van
Riebeek Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) at 634 I – 635
C, about the respondent’s denial of fact alleged by the
applicant served to expand the application
of this principle. In this
light, it would be difficult to find that the applicant was present
at work during February 2022. More
so, the reference to the recorded
incidents in the applicant’s case do not relate to the month of
February 2022.
[24]
The next issue is whether the respondents were not required to comply
with certain requirements
before the termination of the applicant’s
salary. Clause 22 of the contract provides:

Your
contract of employment shall terminate in the following circumstances
(a)
On the date of your death, in the event of it occurring before you
reach superannuation
age;
(b)
Upon your resignation from the employ
of the Municipality;
(c)
Where you become incapacitated or are found incompetent and cannot
deliver the services
as expected of you, subject to the
Municipality’s incapacity policies and procedures;
(d)
Where you are dismissed from employment for any reason related to
your conduct, subject
to the Municipalities Disciplinary Code and
Procedure;
(e)
Upon your reaching of superannuation age, provided that you may, at
any time when you are
between 55 and 65 years of age, voluntarily
request to retire should you so desire and such request will be
approved by the Municipality
subject to the rules governing the
Retirement Fund of which you are a member at the time of your
request;
(f)
In the event of redundancy of your post, either as a result of
re-organisation, work
re-engineering or any re-structuring of the
Municipality subject to laid down Policy and relevant legislation;
(g)
In the event that operational requirements of the Municipality
warrant your retrenchment
or staff reduction, subject to Council
Policy on retrenchment of staff;
(h)
In the event of unauthorised absence for a period in excess of
fourteen days without the
Municipality being notified of a valid
reason for your absence;
(i)
In the event of breach of any of the provisions of your contract of
employment;
(j)
For any other lawful reason.
[25]
According to the respondents once it is accepted that the applicant
was absent for more than
fourteen (14) days, clause 22(h) kicks in,
and the termination of the contract is automatic by operation of the
terms provided
for in clause 22 (h). The applicant disagrees and
submits that the applicant was entitled to be given notice of
termination of
his salary and to be consulted first before the said
termination, by invoking the disciplinary and grievance codes and
procedures.
[26]
Regarding the interpretation of agreements the Supreme Court of
Appeal in
Capitec Bank Holdings Limited and another v Coral Lagoon
Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and others
(470/2020)
[2021]
ZASCA 99
(9 July 2021) at paragraph 25 stated:

The
much-cited passages from
Natal Joint
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni municipality
(2012
(4) SA 593
SCA) (Endumeni) offer guidance as to how to approach the
interpretation of the words used in a document. It is the language
used,
understood in the context in which it is used, and having
regard to the purpose of the provision that constitute the unitary
exercise
of interpretation. I would only add that the triad of text,
context and purpose should not be used in a mechanical fashion. It is

the relationship between the words used, the concepts expressed by
those words and the place of the contested provision within
the
scheme of the agreement (or instrument) as a whole that constitutes
the enterprise by recourse to which coherent and salient

interpretation is determined. As Endumeni emphasised, citing
well-known cases, ‘[t]he inevitable point of departure is the

language of the provision itself. (Endumeni paragraph 18) (Citation
and explanatory notes added).’
[27]
Mr Bodlani, counsel for the applicant, submitted that the respondent
categorised the clause of
the contract that envisages termination by
reason of application of disciplinary procedure against those that do
not. He said only
clause 22(d) requires the application of the
municipality Disciplinary Code and Procedure. The rest do not require
the invoking
of the Disciplinary Code and Procedures. The notice
would only serve to advise applicant of the state of affairs.
[28]
It is difficult to contend with this submission. For example, if the
Disciplinary Code and Procedure
and the notice requirement, among
others, would not be invoked in clauses 22(i) and (j), which are
broad provisions of ‘
breach of any provisions of your
contract of employment’
and ‘
any other lawful
reason’
, one struggles to think of any circumstance that
the first respondent would have to comply with the disciplinary code
and procedure
and the like. The question would then arise as to why
reference was made to those documents in clause 43 of the contract.
[29]
In the circumstances of this case, the applicant was not advised that
the contract was to be
or was terminated, for the reason of
unauthorised absence for a period in excess of fourteen (14) days,
without the first respondent
being notified of a valid reason for his
absence. In my view, in accordance with the tools of interpretation,
referred to in paragraph
24 above, that state of affairs would not be
the correct interpretation of clause 22, when considered in its
entirety. Firstly,
such notice would advise him of the operative date
of the intended termination of contract of employment. Further, it
would afford
the applicant an opportunity to make an election whether
to advise the first respondent of the reason for the absence. It has
not
been disputed that the applicant was at work on 4 March 2022, the
fist respondent still did not enquire from him about the reasons
for
his absence, absence of which the applicant was not aware had
consequences of termination of his contract of employment.
[30]
In my view, attending work is a contractual obligation on the
applicant. That the contract shall
terminate, as provided for in
clause 22 of the contract, I am not of the view that, save for clause
22 (d), the provisions of clause
22 are to be construed as allowing a
one size fits all termination, without more. The reason for absence,
the previous conduct
which blemished employee’s record and the
employee’s attempt to contact the employer, the employee’s
intention
to return to work, among others, ought to be up for
consideration, even when clause 22(h) applies. Clause 43 of the
contract calls
for application of policies, disciplinary codes and
procedures and etc. I am therefore not persuaded that clause 22(h)
envisaged
termination of contract of employment as suggested by the
respondents.
[31]
I am unable to agree with the submission made by Mr Bodlani, counsel
for the respondents that
once the criteria in clause 22(h) is met,
the contract terminates on its own automatically, without more.
Further, clause 4.5.7
(v) of Human Resources Management Policies and
Procedures (HR policies and procedures) enjoins the Human Resources
Manager to notify
the employee about various aspects regarding the
status of his employment, in particular termination thereof. Other
than the termination
of salary, it does not seem as if there was any
indication of a further step that would be a consequence of the
alleged termination
of contract. I am not of the view that, there was
termination of contract of employment. It is not supported by the
facts, of which
none are indicative of the fact that the respondents’
actions of termination of the applicant’s salary was a result

of the contract having been terminated. The termination was not even
recorded with the finance or human resources departments of
the
respondents. The issuing of the salary advice seems to be more of an
indication of an intention to pay the applicant’s
salary than
an error in these circumstances. Finally, it is difficult to
understand why the alleged termination was only communicated
upon the
respondents’ filing of the answering affidavit in these
proceedings.
[32]
In my view, even in circumstances where clause 22(h) was applicable
clause 4.5.7 of Human Resources
policies and procedures and 14.11 of
DPCA and other relevant legal instruments regarding the issuing of
notices had to be complied
with. I do not agree with Mr Bodlani, in
his submission, that any notice to the applicant would only be for
information purposes.
It would serve as an initiation of a relevant
process, in terms of the relevant municipal policies meant to be read
in conjunction
with the contract. The process would allow the
applicant to advance reasons for his absence, for example. I am
inclined to agree
with Mr Zono, attorney for the applicant, that in
Phenithi v Minister of Education and others
2008 (1) SA 420
(SCA) and
Masinga and others v Chief of South African National
Defence Force and others
(51 of 2021)
[2022] ZASCA 1
(5 January
2022), the court was considering statutes. The jurisdictional
requirements provided for therein were found to have been
met.
Further, the employees were advised of the steps to be taken if they
failed to return to work. In the present matter the issue
relates to
the interpretation of a contract, which contract, itself, directs
that it has to be read with other internal policies
of the first
respondent.
[33]
The alternative defence of the respondents’ action is that of
absence without leave as
provided in clause 30 of the contract. The
only issue for determination therein, is whether the respondents were
entitled to terminate
the applicant’s salary, without more, in
effecting clause 30 of the contract. The evidence tendered by the
respondents in
this regard is that the applicant’s absence was
not authorised or approved by the first respondent. He did not inform
the
first respondent of reasons of his absence, during the period he
was absent. He did not apply for leave and none was granted. There

was no express permission given to him to be absent from work. The
applicant did not address the said allegations, his pleaded
version
was that he was not absent.
[34]
That the applicant was absent at work had to be determined on the
respondent’s version
as explained above. In relation to the
alternate defence, the applicant’s salary was not paid because
he would not be entitled
to a remuneration when he had not worked.
Clause 30 of the contract provided that, unless the applicant
advanced valid reason for
his absence, it would be treated as leave
without pay. In court, Mr Bodlani submitted that the standard amount
paid for shift allowance
suggests that it was predetermined. The
manner in which it appears to have been computed is not indicative of
the fact that the
applicant actually worked standby, night work,
Sunday work or public holiday work, as provided for in clause 6 of
the contract.
It was rather a standard amount payable to employees
who ordinarily did that work. I do not deem it necessary to resolve
this,
however it appears to be so that, the figure suggests that, the
applicant would have been entitled to it by virtue of the nature
of
his duties, that is, it was not calculated according to the actual
hours he discharged those duties during the specified period.
[35]
With regard to the alternate defence, it has to be considered that,
again there was no communication
requiring the applicant to explain
his absence and or advising him that it was to be treated as leave
without pay. This was so,
despite the fact that he went to make
enquiries from the offices of the first respondent and was present at
work, at least on 4
March 2022. Consequently, he remains without
having had the opportunity to explain the absence. That in his
defence in these proceedings,
he said he was at work, which could not
be accepted, does not in my view, exonerate the respondents from
affording the applicant
an opportunity to explain his absence or to
be given notice that the first respondent intended to treat it as
leave without pay.
Without that exercise, there is also no indication
in the respondents’ case that the respondents considered if he
had no
credit of leave days, for example, which would have been a
factor for consideration as a possible set off for the number of days

he was absent. Finally, there is no indication of the calculation of
and accounting of the number of days he ought not to receive
payment
for. Had the applicant been given notice of the fact that his absence
would be treated as leave without pay, he would have
been entitled to
those considerations.
[36]
The court is mindful of the fact that the applicant did not address
the issue relating to clause
30. However, within clause 30, it is
envisaged that the respondent should have shown that the applicant
failed to advance the reason
for the absence. Common cause facts
indicate that he could not do so as he was not advised about his
absenteeism. Further, in my
view, such a failure had a consequence of
the applicant coming to court without properly exploring the entire
circumstances regarding
the respondents’ action.
[37]
In the circumstances, I am of the view that the first respondent’s
termination of the applicant’s
salary was premature and not
justified. In any event, if the first respondent, after due process
is entitled to a deduction equivalent
to the days the applicant was
absent, the first respondent would still be able to make the said
deduction from his future emoluments
or other monies that may remain
due to the applicant, in terms of his employment contract.
In
the result,
1.
The respondents are hereby ordered to
reinstate the applicant’s salary retrospectively, from February
2022.
2.
The respondents are hereby ordered to
pay costs of this application.
B
MAJIKI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Counsel
for the Applicant      :
Mr A S Zono
Instructed
by

:     Messrs A S Zono & Associates
Suite
153 – 1
st
Floor
ECDC
Building
MTHATHA
Counsel
for the Respondent  :     Mr S A M Bodlani
Instructed
by

:     Messrs T. L. Luzipho Attorneys
No.
26 Cnr Victoria & Madeira Street
First
Floor-Steve Motors Building
MTHATHA