Mnguni v MEC for the Department of Education, EC and Another (3865/2016) [2018] ZAECMHC 3 (23 January 2018)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Employment Law — Unlawful dismissal — Applicant sought to challenge the decision of the Department of Education to terminate her employment, claiming she was entitled to continue her contract based on an appeal outcome letter — Respondents raised points in limine regarding lack of jurisdiction and prescription — Court found it had jurisdiction to hear the matter and that the applicant's claims had not prescribed — Dispute of fact regarding the appeal outcome necessitated referral for oral evidence to resolve issues surrounding the applicant's dismissal and reinstatement.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This was an opposed application in the High Court of South Africa, Eastern Cape Local Division (Mthatha), in which the applicant, Ntombobom Nobom Mnguni, sought relief framed primarily as the setting aside of an alleged decision by the respondents not to allow her to continue with her employment contract, together with consequential relief in the form of reinstatement and back pay.


The respondents were cited as the MEC for the Department of Education, Eastern Cape, and another (the judgment does not identify the second respondent in the extracted text). The dispute arose from disciplinary processes within the Department of Education and the applicant’s contention that an internal appeal outcome had replaced dismissal with a lesser sanction, with the result that she was entitled to continue employment.


The matter came before the High Court after the applicant had referred a dispute to arbitration. She alleged that she only became aware during arbitration proceedings in July 2016 of a departmental letter dated 11 September 2013, which she interpreted as the appeal outcome setting aside her dismissal. The respondents raised two preliminary objections (points in limine)—lack of jurisdiction and prescription—both of which were determined before the court addressed whether the application could be decided on the papers.


In substance, the dispute concerned whether the applicant had in fact been dismissed in 2012, whether an appeal was properly lodged and adjudicated, and whether the 11 September 2013 letter related to the dismissal relied upon by the applicant. These questions were foundational to the applicant’s contractual enforcement case and her claim to reinstatement and remuneration.


2. Material Facts


The material facts relied upon by the court centred on a contested employment disciplinary history and, in particular, the provenance and meaning of a departmental letter dated 11 September 2013.


It was treated as common cause that the applicant only became aware of the alleged appeal outcome on 25 or 26 July 2016 during arbitration proceedings. This fact was significant to the prescription objection, because the respondents contended that the applicant’s claim should be time-barred.


The applicant’s case on the merits rested on the proposition that her internal appeal had succeeded and that she was therefore not dismissed. She relied on the 11 September 2013 letter which recorded that the appeal against the findings was dismissed but that the appeal against the sanction was upheld, with the sanction being replaced by a final written warning, counselling, and a fine equivalent to one month’s salary. The letter also recorded that the charges related to absenteeism during 2009, 2010, 2011, failure to submit work (including mark sheets), and non-co-operation.


The respondents, while acknowledging that the letter was furnished to the arbitrator (following a request for the appeal outcome), disputed that the letter related to the applicant’s alleged 2012 dismissal. They contended instead that it related to other disciplinary proceedings (their version shifting between “a series of hearings” and a single hearing covering the 2009–2011 period). They also disputed that an appeal against the 2012 dismissal had been properly lodged and served, pointing to deficiencies in the appeal documentation such as the absence of proof of receipt and uncertainty as to transmission.


The court treated as material the fact that there were significant disputes of fact on whether an appeal against the 2012 dismissal was lodged and adjudicated, and whether the 11 September 2013 letter related to that dismissal or to different disciplinary proceedings. The court also noted that the respondents’ answering papers were criticised for incompleteness, including the failure to place before court various annexures referred to in their affidavit; however, despite this criticism, the court did not regard the respondents’ version as consisting merely of bare denials.


A further background feature was that a dismissal “referred to in 2010” existed in the broader narrative. The court treated that earlier dismissal as not the subject of the present application and noted that the respondents had not brought a counter-application to enforce it, with the consequence that it was not considered determinative for the relief sought in this application.


3. Legal Issues


The court was required to determine, first, two preliminary legal issues: whether it lacked jurisdiction because the dispute fell within the exclusive domain of labour fora, and whether the applicant’s claims were defeated by prescription.


On jurisdiction, the question was primarily one of law and legal characterisation: whether the applicant’s case was in truth a labour-law claim (such as a review of an unfair labour practice or dismissal) properly for the Labour Court or CCMA/bargaining council processes, or whether it was framed as a contractual enforcement matter in respect of continued employment, giving rise to concurrent jurisdiction.


On prescription, the court was required to apply the law to facts, specifically to decide when prescription could begin to run in circumstances where the applicant alleged she only obtained knowledge of the appeal outcome in July 2016, and whether any part (or all) of the relief sought constituted a “debt” that had prescribed.


On the merits, the central issue became procedural and evidential: whether the application could be properly decided on affidavit, given the disputes about the existence and service of the appeal, the disciplinary history, and what the 11 September 2013 letter actually related to. This was an issue of the application of motion-proceedings principles to contested facts, including whether to apply the Plascon-Evans approach or instead to refer specified disputes to oral evidence in terms of Uniform Rule 6(5)(g). A related issue was whether the court had competence to refer the matter to oral evidence, including consideration of referral mero motu, although in this case the respondents had sought such a referral.


4. Court’s Reasoning


Jurisdiction


In addressing jurisdiction, the court accepted the applicant’s characterisation that she was seeking to enforce an employment contract on the basis that her appeal had been decided in her favour, rather than seeking to set aside an unlawful labour practice or to review administrative action. The court regarded the matter as distinguishable from Chirwa v Transnet Limited and Others on the facts as presented, because the applicant’s pleaded case was not framed as a review of a dismissal decision but as a claim premised on the proposition that she was not dismissed.


The court also noted that whether the applicant’s reliance on the letter was correct was a matter for the merits, but that she could not be faulted at the jurisdictional stage for relying on the contents of a departmental letter furnished after an arbitrator’s request for the appeal outcome. On this basis, and with reference to authority indicating concurrent jurisdiction, the court held that it had jurisdiction and dismissed the point in limine.


Prescription


On prescription, the court relied on the fact—treated as common cause—that the applicant only became aware of the appeal outcome at the arbitration hearing in late July 2016. It reasoned that prescription could therefore not be said, on the respondents’ argument as advanced, to have commenced running against her from 2012.


The court acknowledged that an argument might be made that some part of the claim (particularly the claim for back pay dating to 2012) could fall within the concept of a “debt” under the Prescription Act, potentially rendering a portion of the monetary claim susceptible to prescription. However, the court noted that this argument was not properly presented in the manner required, and that the applicant had not been afforded an opportunity to respond pertinently to such a refined contention. The court accordingly refused to non-suit the applicant on prescription in respect of the application as a whole, holding that at least substantial aspects of the relief sought were not shown to have prescribed.


The court also considered the delay contextually, attributing it to the respondents’ failure to make the applicant aware of the appeal outcome prior to 2016, and noted that the applicant had referred the matter to arbitration within the relevant period. The prescription point in limine was therefore dismissed.


Referral to oral evidence and disputes of fact


On the merits as then presented, the court held that the application turned “exclusively” on the interpretation and relevance of the 11 September 2013 letter and whether it related to the applicant’s asserted dismissal dispute. The applicant’s position depended on the letter being the appeal outcome that replaced dismissal with a fine and warning; the respondents’ position was that the letter related to other disciplinary proceedings and that no proper appeal was lodged and adjudicated in relation to the 2012 dismissal.


The court identified multiple factual disputes that could not be resolved on affidavit, including the existence and scope of disciplinary proceedings for 2009–2011, what sanction followed, whether that outcome was appealed, and whether the applicant’s 2012 notice of appeal was served and adjudicated. In dealing with these disputes, the court accepted that the respondents’ case, though criticised for poor presentation and missing documentation, nonetheless raised triable issues and was not amenable to being dismissed as mere bald denials. The court concluded that deciding the matter on the papers would be inappropriate.


The court then applied Uniform Rule 6(5)(g), emphasising that it confers a wide discretion to ensure a just and expeditious decision, including directing that oral evidence be heard on specified issues. In addressing whether a court may order such referral mero motu, the court referred to authority cautioning that it is a “bold step” and generally undesirable for a judge to do so without a request, because litigants may have strategic and cost reasons for not seeking referral. The court nonetheless accepted, as a matter of principle, that such competence exists. In the present matter, however, the court’s decision to refer was supported by the respondents having requested referral, while the applicant argued the matter could be decided on the papers.


The court further located the referral decision within established motion-proceedings doctrine, citing the Plascon-Evans principle governing final relief where disputes of fact exist, and noting that where a genuine dispute of fact cannot be resolved on the papers, the matter should be referred to oral evidence. The court also emphasised that referral should not permit a “fishing expedition”; oral evidence should be confined to specified issues that can be expeditiously disposed of, consistent with authorities on managing factual disputes in application proceedings.


Having found that the dispute was genuine and irresolvable on affidavit, the court exercised its discretion to refer specific issues to oral evidence, narrowly framing them around the disciplinary proceedings, the appeal process, and the meaning and applicability of the 11 September 2013 letter, as well as the consequences for the relief sought if the letter was found to have set aside dismissal.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court did not finally determine whether the applicant was entitled to reinstatement or back pay. Instead, it ordered that the matter be referred to the hearing of oral evidence on specified issues directed at resolving the central disputes of fact concerning the disciplinary proceedings and the appeal outcome.


The respondents’ points in limine of lack of jurisdiction and prescription were dismissed. As a costs consequence of being “substantially unsuccessful” on these preliminary points, the first respondent was directed to pay the applicant’s costs of the opposed court hearing on 23 November 2017.


The costs of the application and other reserved costs were reserved for determination by the trial court hearing the oral evidence. The court further directed that the usual rules relating to pre-trials, additional affidavits by witnesses, annexures, and discovery would apply in relation to documentation not forming part of the existing papers.


Cases Cited


Chirwa v Transnet Limited and Others [2007] ZACC 23; 2008 (4) SA 367 (CC).


Makhanya v University of Zululand (218/08) [2009] ZASCA 69.


Cresto Machines (Edms) Bpk v Die Afdeling Speuroffisier SA Polisie, Noord Transvaal 1970 (4) SA 350 (T).


Pautz v Horn 1976 (4) SA 572 (O).


Joh-Air (Pty) Ltd v Rudman 1980 (2) SA 420 (T).


Metallurgical and Commercial Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Metal Sales Co (Pty) Ltd 1971 (2) SA 388 (W).


Standard Bank of SA Ltd v Neugarten and Others 1987 (3) SA 695.


Room Hire Co (Pty) Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Ltd 1949 (3) SA 1155 (T).


Hopf v Pretoria City Council 1947 (2) SA 752 (T).


Atlas Organic Fertilisers (Pty) Ltd v Pikkewyn Ghwano (Pty) Ltd 1978 (4) SA 696 (T).


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


South Peninsula Municipality v Evans and Others 2001 (1) SA 281 (SCA).


Ter Beek v United Resources CC and Another 1997 (3) SA 315 (C).


Legislation Cited


Prescription Act 68 of 1969.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(5)(g).


Held


The High Court held that it had jurisdiction to entertain the application on the basis that the applicant’s pleaded case was framed as one to enforce an employment contract premised on an alleged successful internal appeal, rather than as a review of a labour decision or an unfair labour practice claim falling exclusively within labour fora.


The court held that the respondents had not established that the applicant’s claims, taken as a whole, had prescribed, particularly because it was common cause that the applicant only became aware of the alleged appeal outcome in late July 2016, and because any more granular prescription argument regarding back pay had not been properly advanced in a manner that allowed a focused response.


The court held that the matter could not be properly decided on affidavit due to genuine disputes of fact concerning the disciplinary proceedings, the lodging and service of the appeal, and whether the letter dated 11 September 2013 related to the dismissal relied upon by the applicant. It accordingly referred the matter to the hearing of oral evidence on specified issues under Rule 6(5)(g).


The court ordered the first respondent to pay the applicant’s costs of the opposed hearing on 23 November 2017, while reserving the remaining costs for determination by the court hearing oral evidence.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that jurisdiction in employment-related disputes depends on the legal characterisation of the claim as pleaded and pursued. Where an applicant seeks to enforce contractual employment rights (as opposed to reviewing a dismissal decision or asserting an unfair labour practice in the specialised statutory framework), the High Court may have concurrent jurisdiction with the Labour Court, depending on the claim’s true nature.


In relation to prescription, the judgment proceeded on the basis that prescription cannot fairly be assessed without proper attention to when the claimant acquired knowledge of the material facts underpinning the claim, and that a respondent seeking to rely on prescription must properly articulate the contention. The court accepted that, on the facts treated as common cause, prescription could not simply be assumed to run from the date of the alleged dismissal where the applicant only obtained knowledge of the alleged appeal outcome years later.


The judgment reaffirmed the motion-proceedings principle that final relief is generally not granted where there are genuine disputes of fact that cannot be resolved on affidavit, as reflected in Plascon-Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd [1984] ZASCA 51; 1984 (3) SA 623 (A). Where such disputes are material, the court may invoke Uniform Rule 6(5)(g) to ensure a just and expeditious outcome.


Finally, the judgment applied the principle that a referral to oral evidence under Rule 6(5)(g) is discretionary and should be structured to avoid a fishing expedition, by confining oral evidence to specified issues necessary to resolve the material disputes. The judgment also reflected the caution in the authorities that a court should be slow to order referral mero motu in opposed motion proceedings, given litigants’ legitimate strategic and cost considerations, even though the competence to do so exists in principle.

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[2018] ZAECMHC 3
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Mnguni v MEC for the Department of Education, EC and Another (3865/2016) [2018] ZAECMHC 3 (23 January 2018)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN
CAPE LOCAL DIVISION: MTHATHA)
CASE
NO:3865/2016
In
the matter between:
NTOMBOBOM
NOBOM
MNGUNI

APPLICANT
AND
MEC
FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF
EDUCATION,
EC AND
ANOTHER

RESPONDENTS
JUDGMENT
DAWOOD,
J:
1.
The Applicant herein sought the following relief:

1.
That the decision, of the Respondents, to wit, failing to allow the
Applicant to continue
with her employment contract with the
Department of Education be and is hereby declared unlawful,
unconstitutional, irregular and
be set aside as a nullity.
2.
That the Applicant be and is hereby allowed to resume and discharge
her duties
as an Educator at Atwell Madala Senior Secondary School,
Mthatha District or any school the Department may wish to place the
Applicant
and on conditions not less favourable than those which
existed as at 20 August 2012.
3.
That the Respondents be and are hereby directed to pay the
Applicant’s
salary with effect from 20 October 2012 and
continue to do so until the Applicant reaches her retirement age or
resigns from the
Department of Education.
4.
That the Respondents pay the costs of this application on an attorney
and own
client scale, such costs to include the appointment of two
Counsel.
5.
That the Applicant be and is hereby condoned for non-compliance with
any legislation,
which she ought to have compiled with before
instituting these proceedings.”
2.
The Respondent raised the following points
in
limine
:-
a)
Lack of Jurisdiction; and
b)
Prescription.
3.
It is necessary to deal with the points taken
in
limine
points before dealing with the merits.
3.1
On the
issue of jurisdiction the facts in this case are as correctly argued
by the Applicant, distinguishable from the facts in
Chirwa
V Tansnet Limited and Others
[1]
.
a)
The Applicant’s case is that the appeal
procedure was decided in her favour and accordingly she is seeking to
enforce a contract
of employment.
b)
She is not seeking to set aside an unlawful
labour practice nor is she seeking to review the decision of the
first respondent.
c)
Whether or not her averments are correct or not
is another issue. She is relying on a letter dated 11 September 2013,
received from
the department which was emailed pursuant to the
arbitrator requesting the department to furnish a copy of the outcome
of the appeal
lodged by the Applicant.
d)
She accordingly cannot be faulted to relying upon
the contents of this letter as being the findings of the appeal in
respect of
the findings of the disciplinary hearing that was referred
to arbitration.
e)
Her application to court is accordingly based on
the proposition that she was not dismissed and accordingly entitled
to continue
with her employment, in terms of a contract of
employment.
f)
The issue of whether or not the letter actually
deals with that disciplinary hearing is an issue to be considered
when dealing with
the merits of the matter.
g)
I
accept in the circumstances that this court has concurrent
jurisdiction with the labour court and the application is properly

before court
[2]
.
h)
The respondents point in limine in respect of
lack of jurisdiction is accordingly dismissed.
3.2
I now turn to the issue of prescription.
a)
It is common cause that the applicant only became
aware of the outcome of her appeal on the 25 or 26 July 2016 at the
arbitration
hearing.
b)
Prescription could in the circumstances not be
said to have commenced running against her from 2012.
c)
It may well be argued that the part of her claim
relating to the repayment of the salary from 2012 may well fall
within the ambit
of the definition of debt in the Prescription Act
and her claim can be reduced to that extent but this argument was not
presented
nor was the applicant given an opportunity to pertinently
reply to the same.
d)
However it cannot be argued that her claims as a
whole have prescribed and that she should be non-suited.
e)
There are aspects of her claim that do not fall
within the ambit of the prescription Act at all.
f)
In any event the delay in launching the
proceedings was due to the failure on the part of the respondent to
make the applicant aware
of the outcome of the appeal prior to 2016.
The Applicant had in fact referred the matter to arbitration well
within that period.
g)
There is a sufficient basis to find that the
applicant’s entitlement to a substantial part of the relief
sought has not prescribed,
if indeed prescription of a portion is
established.
h)
In the event that the ultimate decision is that
she should be re-instated then the issue of prescription as already
indicated in
respect of some of the back pay may well be arguable.
However her entitlement to claim back pay as a whole would not have
prescribed
and she would be entitled to her relief to the extent
proven even in respect of that claim. She would accordingly not be
non-suited
on the basis that part of the claim may have prescribed.
i)
In the circumstances the respondent’s point
in limine
that the
applicant’s claims has prescribed, is dismissed.
4.
I now turn to the merits of the matter.
a)
The application by the applicant revolves
exclusively around the findings made by the department on the letter
dated 11 September
2013 which reads as follows:-

Ms N
Ngezana
Persal No:[....]
Atwell Madala Senior Secondary
School
C/O The District Director
Mthatha District Office
Mthatha
Dear Ms Ngezana
RE: YOUR APPEAL AGAINST
THE FINDINGS AND THE SANCTION OF THE PRESIDING OFFICER IN YOUR
DISCIPLINARY MATTER
The above matter refers.
I have considered your appeal
against the findings and the sanction of the presiding officer of the
disciplinary enquiry. The reasons
for my decision are as follows:-
You were charged with
absenteeism during 2009, 2010, 2011 failure (sic) to submit work,
including mark sheets and non co-operation.
The evidence tendered was not
actually disputed but there were attempts made to justify your
conduct.
Your behaviour is not in
accordance with the responsibility of you position. There is no
justification for your behaviour. Several
attempts where made to
remedy the situation by the school but in vain. Learners suffered as
a result of your conduct.
Your appeal against the
findings is dismissed and upheld against the sanction which is
replaced with a final written warning, counselling
and a fine
equivalent to one month’s salary (2011 notch).
Yours Faithfully
__________________________________________
MEC FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF
EDUCATION
PROVINCE OF THE EASTERN CAPE”
b)
This letter was furnished upon the request by the
arbitrator pertaining to the outcome of the appeal against the
decision to dismiss
her.
c)
The applicant upon becoming aware that the
sanction had been overturned on appeal sought to be placed back at
the school that she
had been teaching and withdrew her matter before
the arbitrator as she could not pursue a claim for unfair dismissal
when she had
not been dismissed according to the document furnished
pertaining to the request.
d)
The respondents dispute that the letter pertained
to the dismissal despite the fact that:
(i)
The document was furnished to the arbitrator;
(ii)
It was furnished upon him apparently requesting
the decision that was taken by the department in respect of the
appeal that was
the subject matter of the Arbitration, being the
dismissal of the applicant.
(iii)
It was furnished by the Department.
e)
The respondent further dispute that any appeal
was lodged with them pertaining to the applicant’s dismissal in
2012 and even
if it was it was out of time if one has regard to the
applicant’s version that she became aware of it in August 2012
f)
The notice of appeal differs from the previous
appeal lodged by the applicant and annexed to her papers and it is
not addressed
to any particular person.
g)
There is no proof of receipt of the document on
any person, nor does it indicate that it was sent by pre-paid
registered post or
delivered to the respondent.
h)
It appears to have been faxed but there is no
indication with regard to whom the fax number belongs to nor whether
indeed there
is proof of receipt of the fax.
i)
The respondent’s contention that they did
not receive the notice of this appeal is accordingly not
inconceivable.
j)
However the respondent had received the
arbitration proceedings where mention is made of the appeal and even
when asked for the
outcome of the appeal instead of stating that
there is no appeal because there was no referral to appeal they
instead sent an outcome
of an appeal.
k)
There clearly is a dispute of fact with regard to
whether or not the notice of appeal was indeed served upon the
respondent and
adjudicated upon and accordingly whether or not the
outcome furnished did indeed refer to the appeal pertaining to the
applicant’s
dismissal.
l)
The respondent stated that the letter furnished
did not relate to the outcome of the appeal of the sanction of
dismissal but rather
to different proceedings and to a different
outcome. They initially referred to a series of hearings then stated
that it pertained
to one hearing that covered 2009, 2010 and 2011
conduct and put up a letter from an attorney claiming to be a notice
of appeal
in respect of that hearing.
m)
The respondent failed to put up most of the
annexures they referred to and despite the fact that these appear to
have been furnished
to the applicant these annexures did not form
part of the indexed and paginated papers in this matter and were not
placed before
court.
n)
The manner in which the respondent presented its
case in its answering affidavit can clearly be criticised, let alone
the incompetent
and incomprehensible manner in which they dealt with
the applicant, from about 2008 and through the various disputes.
o)
The document furnished however clearly states it
relates to conduct complained of in 2009/2010 and 2011 and that
sanction is altered
and that the applicant had made attempts to
justify her behaviour, which she did not do in her notice of appeal
in respect of the
2012 dispute.
p)
The applicant cannot wish away the contents of
the document and insist that it relates to the sanction of dismissal,
because on
her version it dealt with conduct of the latter part of
2011 only not 2009/ 2010 and 2011.
q)
There clearly is a dispute of fact regarding
whether or not the applicant had lodged any other appeal or whether
this was the only
appeal and accordingly this outcome could only
relate to the outcome of the dismissal.
r)
This matter cannot be decided in favour of one or
the other party without the hearing of oral evidence.
s)
The respondent case is not clear cut to enable a
decision to be made in its favour but it does raise triable issues
that cannot
simply be regarded as bare denials warranting a decision
in favour of the applicant.
t)
I am accordingly of the view that this matter, as
argued by the respondent, does have material disputes of fact that
warrant a referral
to the hearing of oral evidence.
u)
The dismissal referred to in 2010 is not the
subject matter of this application and the respondent has not sought
reliance on that
dismissal to warrant its refusal to re-instate the
applicant.
v)
There clearly are disputes of facts pertaining to
that dismissal and the failure on the part of the department to
implement that
decision.
w)
The respondent have not brought a
counter-application seeking to enforce that decision so despite the
disputes of fact pertaining
to that dismissal in my view it is not
relevant to these proceedings and it would not be prudent to refer
this dispute to the hearing
of oral evidence.
x)
The real dispute pertains to the 2012 dismissal
and whether or not the sanction of dismissal was overturned on Appeal
or whether
no Appeal was properly launched pertaining thereto by the
applicants.
y)
The respondent have a right of recourse should
they wish to enforce the alleged 2010 dismissal.
z)
The respondent did make an application for the
matter to be referred to the hearing of oral evidence. However the
applicant argued
that the matter could be decided on the papers as
they stand.
5.
The question that
arises is whether the court hearing an opposed application has the
competence to
mero
motu
order a
referral to oral evidence.
a)
Rule of Court 6(5)(g)
provides as follows:

Where
an application cannot properly be decided on affidavit the court may
dismiss the application or make such order as to it seems
meet with a
view to ensuring a just and expeditious decision. In particular, but
without affecting the generality of the aforegoing,
it may direct
that oral evidence be heard on specified issues with a view to
resolving any dispute of fact and to that end may
order any deponent
to appear personally or grant leave for him or any other person to be
subpoenaed to appear and be examined and
cross-examined as a witness
or it may refer the matter to trial with appropriate directions as to
pleadings or definition of issues,
or otherwise.”
b)
The Rule extends a wide discretion to the court.
See
Cresto Machines (Edms) Bpk v Die Afdeling
Speuroffisier SA Polisie, Noord Transvaal
1970
(4) SA 350
(T) 365A-H and
Pautz v Horn
1976
(4) SA 572
(O) 575H.
c)
The undesirability of a
Judge
mero motu
ordering a referral to oral evidence or to trail was highlighted and
conclusively dealt with by a full court of the then Transvaal

Provincial Division in
Joh-Air
(Pty) Ltd v Rudman
1980
(2) SA 420
(T) where Myburgh J writing for the court, said the
following (428H):

It
requires in my view a bold step, by a presiding Judge in an opposed
application, to refer the matter to evidence or trial mero
motu,
because it is a real possibility that the applicant had decided not
to ask for such procedure to be followed because: he
may not want to
be involved in the cost thereof; his prospects of success, after
studying the answering affidavits, may be slender;
it may possibly
lead to an undesired protracted hearing; the amount involved may be
small; the respondent may be a man of straw
or on account of any of
the other usual considerations in deciding whether or not to apply
for the provisions of Rule 6(5)(g) to
be invoked.  In the
present case the amount involved is only half of R5 375. In my view
is should not be left to the presiding
Judge to determine, in the
light of what I have said, whether the application should be decided
on the affidavits or not. In proper
circumstances the presiding Judge
may, in his discretion, decide to do otherwise.   In the
present case, in my view,
the Judge cannot be faulted for not having
referred the case to trial, notwithstanding that he had not been
requested so to do.”
[3]
The
court in Sentino held, that in practice an application for a referral
is typically made at the hearing of an opposed application
by the
applicant who is faced with the reality of irresoluble disputes of
fact having arisen on the papers. Held, further, that
no doubt that
the court in principle has the competence to mero motu order such
referral, but this in the Judges’s experience
as well as in the
experience of a number of his colleagues in this Division whom the
Judge had consulted on this aspect, has never
occurred.
Held, further, that applied to
the present matter the learned Judge a quo quite clearly was neither
obliged nor can he be faulted
for not having mero motu referred the
matter to the hearing of oral evidence.”
d)
In resolving to refer a matter to evidence a
court has a
wide discretion
,
to be exercised according to the principle explained by Colman J in
Metallurgical and Commercial Consultants (Pty)
Ltd v Metal Sales Co (Pty) Ltd
1971 (2) SA
388
(W) at 396 E-G:

It
is the respondent who would fail on the disputed issue if it fell to
be decided on the papers; an oral hearing is being granted
at its
instance, in order to afford it an opportunity of altering, if it
can, the incidence of the probabilities as they emerge
from the
papers, and of displacing the inference which flows from the signed
document. Thus, as matters now stand, the applicant
needs no oral
evidence to strengthen its case; it will need such evidence only if
and when the respondent creates, prima facie,
a balance of
probability in its favour. There is no reason why I should compel
anyone to testify. What I should do is give the
respondent the
opportunity which it has sought, and to give the applicant an
opportunity of answering, if he wishes the case made
out by the
respondent.‟
e)
Where a referral to oral evidence is
granted the parties would not be allowed to engage in a fishing
expedition. Oral evidence will
be heard on specified issues with a
view to resolving any dispute of fact. The court will adopt this
approach where the factual
dispute is within a narrow compass and can
be expeditiously disposed of, see
Standard
Bank of SA ltd v Neugarten & others
1987
(3) SA  695 at 699C see also
Room Hire
Co   (Pty Ltd v Jeppe Street Mansion (Pty) ltd
1949 (3)  SA 1155 (T)  at 1164,
Hopf
v Pretoria City Council
1947 (2) SA 752
(T)
at 768;
Atlas Organic Fertilisers (Pty) Ltd v
Pikkewyn Ghwano (Pty) Ltd
1978 (4) SA 696
(T)
at 699A-B.  The is my view allows the court to specify
specify
the issues that need to be determined in oral examination.
f)
The law as it relates to resolution  of
genuine dispute of facts was laid in  Plascon-Evans Paints LTD v
Van Riebeeck
Paints (PTY) LTD
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) S.A 623
at 634 F
to
be:-
“…
where
there is a dispute as to the facts a final interdict should only be
granted in notice of motion of proceedings if the facts
as stated by
the respondents together with the admitted facts in applicant’s
affidavits justify such an order…Where
it is clear that facts,
though not formally admitted, cannot be denied, they must be regarded
as being admitted”. In making
the assessment whether there is a
bona fide dispute of facts, this court should proceed with caution
and must ‘guard against
the danger of an injustice being done
(more particularly to an injustice to the respondent) if unpleaded
issues are readily treated
as being fully canvassed’ (see South
Peninsula Municipality v Evans and others
2001 (1) S.A. 281
E). The
law as laid down in Plascon Evans is that where there is a genuine
dispute of facts which cannot be resolved on the papers,
the matter
must be referred to oral evidence.”
6.
I am satisfied that there is a genuine dispute of
facts in this case that is irresolvable on the papers which in the
interest of
justice ought to be referred to the hearing of oral
evidence.
7.
In the exercise of my discretion I refer this
matter to the hearing of oral evidence on the following issues:-
a)
Whether or not a hearing took place pertaining to
absenteeism from 2009/2010 and 2011.
b)
If a hearing took place, what was the sanction
imposed.
c)
If it is established there was a hearing, whether
or not the outcome of that disciplinary hearing was appealed against
by the Applicant.
d)
If indeed it was, whether or not the outcome of
the appeal dated 11 September 2013 pertained to that appeal or of it
did not then
what was the outcome of that appeal.
e)
Whether or not the notice of appeal dated the 11
September 2012 was served on the respondent and adjudicated upon the
by respondents.
f)
If it is found that it was duly served and
adjudicated upon then whether or not the outcome of the appeal dated
11 September 2013
related to an overturning of the sanction of
dismissal of the disciplinary hearing of the 10 May 2012 and
replacing it with a fine.
g)
If letter dated 11 September 2013 related to the
setting aside of the sanction of dismissal whether the applicant is
entitled to
the relief sought and to what extent.
8.
I accordingly make the following order:
a)
That the matter is referred to the hearing of
oral evidence on the issues set out in paragraph 7 above.
b)
That the first respondent is directed to pay the
Applicant’s costs of the hearing in the opposed court on the 23
November
2017 in light of it being substantially unsuccessful in
respect of the points
in limine
that were raised by the Respondents.
c)
The costs of the application and other reserved
costs are reserved for determination by the trial court hearing oral
evidence in
this matter.
d)
The usual rules of court are applicable
pertaining to pre-trials, furnishing of affidavits by additional
witnesses and annexures
and discovery of documentation that do not
presently form part of the papers.
__________________________
DAWOOD
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
HEARD:

23 November 2017
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED:
23 January 2018
FOR
THE APPLICANT:

Mr Bodlani with Ms Nhantsi
PLAINTIFF’S
ATTORNEYS:
M. WAKABA ATTORNEYS
SUITE 158, 1
ST
FLOOR
ECDC BUILDING
CNR YORK AND ELLIOT
RD
MTHATHA
FOR
THE RESPONDENTS:
Mr Pitt
DEFENDANT’S
ATTORNEYS:       STATE ATTORNEY
BROADCAST HOUSE
94 SISSON STREET
FORTGALE
MTHATHA
REF:1525/16-A2
[1]
[2007] ZACC 23
;
2008 (4) SA 367
CC
[2]
Makhanya v University of Zululand (218/08) [2009] ZASCA 69
[3]
See
also
Ter Beek v United
Resources CC and Another
1997
(3) SA 315
(C) 337G