Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Leslie and Others (JA31/2019) [2020] ZALAC 69; (2021) 42 ILJ 1080 (LAC) (18 December 2020)

75 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Unfair dismissal — Review of arbitration award — Employee dismissed for alleged dishonesty in cash handling — Commissioner found dismissal substantively unfair due to insufficient evidence of misconduct — Appellant's appeal against Labour Court's dismissal of review application — Labour Court's refusal to consider video evidence — Holding that the commissioner’s decision was reasonable given the lack of clear evidence of dishonesty, and the appeal was dismissed.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an appeal to the Labour Appeal Court against a judgment of the Labour Court which had dismissed an employer’s review application. The appeal arose from an unfair dismissal dispute that had been arbitrated under the auspices of the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA).


The appellant was The Standard Bank of South Africa Limited (the employer). The first respondent was Mr Heiden Leslie (the employee). The second respondent was Commissioner Desmond Lynch N.O., the CCMA commissioner who had issued the arbitration award. The third respondent was the CCMA itself.


The procedural history was that the employee was dismissed after a disciplinary hearing in May 2015 for alleged dishonesty involving the removal of R200 from the employer’s treasury cash centre. He referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the CCMA. The commissioner found the dismissal substantively unfair and ordered retrospective reinstatement. The employer then launched a review application in the Labour Court, which was dismissed (with no costs order). The employer appealed to the Labour Appeal Court.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether the commissioner’s award (both on substantive fairness and on the remedy of reinstatement) was reviewable, with particular focus on whether the evidence established dishonesty and whether reinstatement was permissible given the position involved (cash handling) and the alleged breakdown of trust.


2. Material Facts


The employee commenced employment with the employer on 1 July 2005 and, at dismissal on 14 May 2015, was deployed as a Custodian in the treasury department. In that role, he handled and counted cash under the employer’s Group Reference Guide Policy regulating bulk deposits and cash handling. The security procedures included dual control (two employees controlling cash at a time) and a rule that employees were not permitted to have cash in their possession while at work.


On 17 March 2015, the employee worked with Ms Dorcas Motsapi, who had been in the role for approximately three weeks. At the end of the employee’s shift, he was searched by security (as part of standard practice) and no money was found on him. After the end of her shift, Ms Motsapi reported to her team leader, Mr Shane Scaife, that she had observed the employee holding a calculator and that, under it, she saw what appeared to be a R100 note, which she said she then saw him place into his back pocket. Following this report, the FD40 box containing R100 notes was counted and found to be short by R200.


On 18 March 2015, the employee was suspended. He later received notice to attend a disciplinary hearing to answer an allegation framed as dishonesty, namely that he had removed R200 from the Johannesburg Cash Centre Treasury on 17 March 2015 without authorisation and/or business reason. After the disciplinary process, he was dismissed on 14 May 2015. His remuneration at that time was R14 271,67 per month.


At arbitration, the employer led evidence from three witnesses. The investigator, Mr Otto Arends, viewed CCTV footage of the relevant area. The footage showed that the employee was at the FD40 box on his own on two occasions, contrary to the dual-control procedure. Mr Scaife testified that he counted the FD40 box and found R200 missing. Ms Motsapi testified to her observation of what she believed to be a R100 note beneath the calculator and described the employee moving his left hand into his left pocket and then removing it with no cash visible in that hand.


The employee’s evidence was that he had been stressed because cash had not balanced earlier, although that issue was later resolved. He stated that he checked money in the FD40 box, first alone and then with a colleague (Leroy), because there was a shortage he wished to reconcile. He suggested that he might have put his hand in his pocket to take out a packet of chewing gum.


The commissioner found that the employer had not proved dishonesty, relying on the following material considerations: the CCTV footage was indistinct; no cash was found during the search of the employee; and, during questioning, the employee produced a blue packet of menthol gum, which he said had been in his back pocket. The commissioner concluded that the gum packet could have been what Ms Motsapi saw. On that basis, the dismissal was found substantively unfair, and the employee was retrospectively reinstated.


In the review proceedings, the Labour Court was asked to consider the record, including the video evidence. Although requested to do so, the Labour Court refused to watch the video footage. It nevertheless found no reason to interfere with the commissioner’s conclusions and dismissed the review application.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the commissioner’s arbitration award was susceptible to review under the established reasonableness standard, and specifically whether the commissioner committed a reviewable irregularity in (a) assessing the evidence relevant to the alleged dishonesty and (b) granting reinstatement as a remedy.


In relation to the finding on misconduct, the dispute primarily concerned the application of law to fact under the Sidumo reasonableness enquiry: whether, on the evidentiary material before the commissioner (including the CCTV footage and the testimony of Ms Motsapi and Mr Scaife), the conclusion that dishonesty was not proven was a conclusion that a reasonable commissioner could reach.


In relation to remedy, the issue concerned the statutory framework in section 193 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, and whether the commissioner properly considered the exceptions to reinstatement, including whether the circumstances were such that continued employment would be intolerable or reinstatement was not reasonably practicable. This involved an evaluative judgment grounded in statutory criteria, particularly tied to the nature of the employee’s role in a cash-handling environment and the trust relationship.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Labour Appeal Court reaffirmed that a commissioner must decide a matter with appropriate regard to the conspectus of material placed before them and that the review test is well established. Relying on Sidumo and Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others, the Court emphasised that the distinction between appeal and review remains significant, and that the reviewing court’s task is to ensure that administrative decisions fall within the bounds of reasonableness, rather than to substitute its own view merely because it would have decided differently.


Applying these principles to the evidence on misconduct, the Court accepted that the video footage showed the employee at the FD40 box without a co-employee on two occasions and that he placed his hand in his back pocket shortly thereafter. The employee’s explanation that he was counting money at the box was noted, but the Court considered it significant that he did not explain why he was at the box alone despite a rule requiring dual control, and also did not explain how he could have reconciled money in the few seconds depicted on the recording. The Court characterised the employee’s conduct as giving rise to strong suspicion and described the explanation advanced as highly improbable, with the behaviour of placing his hand in his back pocket described as, at best for the employee, unusual.


Despite this, the Court held that suspicion—even strong suspicion—did not equate to proof of dishonesty on the terms contended for by the employer. The Court reasoned that the employer’s evidentiary case remained insufficient to prove that the employee removed money: for example, Ms Motsapi did not report the incident immediately during her shift (which might have enabled an immediate search and definitive resolution), and the employer did not lead evidence that the FD40 box was not already short of R200 when delivered for counting (which might have supported an inference that the shortage arose during the employee’s shift). In the absence of “clear and reliable evidence” of dishonesty, the commissioner’s conclusion that dishonesty had not been proved was found to be a conclusion that a reasonable commissioner could reach. On that basis, the Labour Appeal Court did not disturb the commissioner’s finding that the dismissal was substantively unfair.


The Court then turned to the remedy. It set out the statutory scheme in section 193(1) and section 193(2) of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995. While reinstatement is the primary remedy when dismissal is found unfair, section 193(2) obliges a decision-maker to order reinstatement or re-employment unless one of the listed exceptions applies, including that continued employment would be intolerable or that reinstatement is not reasonably practicable.


Relying on authority from the Labour Appeal Court, the Court stressed that the enquiry into intolerability can take account of an employee’s behaviour before or after dismissal, and that there must be an “extraordinary reason” to depart from reinstatement as the primary remedy. The Court nonetheless held that section 193(2) required the commissioner not to adopt a mechanical approach to reinstatement, but to evaluate the circumstances surrounding the dismissal to determine whether reinstatement should be refused under the statutory exceptions.


On the evidence, the Court considered that the employee had failed to comply with operating procedures and that the behaviour captured on recordings was “noticeably unusual and suspicious”. The Court concluded that, if the commissioner had carefully evaluated the employee’s unlikely explanation in conjunction with the evidence of Ms Motsapi and Mr Scaife, the commissioner ought reasonably to have found support for the employer’s position that the trust relationship had broken down. The Court placed weight on the fact that the employer operated in an environment where employees responsible for counting large sums of money must display honesty and integrity, and that it could not reasonably be expected of the employer to reinstate an employee into such a role where significant trust issues had arisen. The Court therefore held that reinstatement was inappropriate because the circumstances made continued employment intolerable.


Having found reinstatement inappropriate, the Court considered the appropriate alternative remedy. Taking into account the employee’s nine years’ service and the circumstances, the Court held that compensation was appropriate and that there was no reason to limit compensation below the maximum. The Court therefore awarded the maximum 12 months’ compensation permitted by section 194.


In relation to costs, the Court held that having regard to considerations of law and fairness, no costs order was appropriate.


5. Outcome and Relief


The appeal succeeded in part. The Labour Appeal Court set aside the Labour Court’s order and replaced it with an order that the review application succeeded only to the extent that the commissioner’s reinstatement remedy was reviewed and set aside.


The reinstatement order was substituted with an order directing the employer to pay the employee twelve months’ compensation in the amount of R171 260.00, payable within ten days of the date of the arbitration award.


No order as to costs was made.


Cases Cited


Sidumo and Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others [2007] ZACC 22; [2007] 12 BLLR 1097 (CC); 2008 (2) SA 24 (CC); (2007) 28 ILJ 2405 (CC); 2008 (2) BCLR 158 (CC).


Glencore Holdings (Pty) Ltd and another v Sibeko and others [2018] 1 BLLR 1 (LAC).


Afgen (Pty) Ltd v Ziqubu [2019] 10 BLLR 977 (LAC).


Maepe v CCMA and another [2008] ZALAC 2; [2008] 8 BLLR 723 (LAC).


Legislation Cited


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, section 193(1) and section 193(2).


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, section 194.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Labour Appeal Court held that, although the employee’s conduct created strong suspicion and his explanation was improbable, the evidentiary case remained insufficient to prove dishonesty. The commissioner’s conclusion that the employer had not proved dishonesty, and that the dismissal was substantively unfair, was not a conclusion that fell outside the range of reasonableness on review.


The Court further held that the commissioner erred in granting reinstatement without properly considering the statutory limitations on reinstatement under section 193(2), given the cash-handling context and the resulting trust issues. On the evidence, continued employment was intolerable, making reinstatement inappropriate.


The Court accordingly upheld the award of substantive unfairness but replaced reinstatement with an award of maximum compensation of twelve months.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The reasonableness standard on review requires that the reviewing court determine whether the arbitrator’s decision is one that a reasonable decision-maker could reach on the material before them, and the distinction between review and appeal remains significant. The reviewing court does not intervene merely because it would have arrived at a different outcome.


Proof of misconduct, particularly dishonesty, requires sufficient evidence, and suspicion alone—however strong—is not treated as equivalent to proof on the material presented. Where the evidentiary foundation does not permit a reliable inference of guilt, an arbitrator’s refusal to uphold dismissal for dishonesty may fall within the bounds of reasonableness.


Although reinstatement is the primary remedy for unfair dismissal under section 193 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, section 193(2) requires reinstatement unless specified exceptions apply. The decision-maker must consider whether the circumstances make continued employment intolerable or reinstatement not reasonably practicable, and is not permitted to approach reinstatement mechanically.


In assessing intolerability under section 193(2)(b), the circumstances surrounding dismissal, including the nature of the position and the trust relationship implicated by the employee’s conduct, are material. Where the employment relationship depends on a high degree of trust and integrity (such as in cash-handling functions), and the evidence demonstrates significant trust issues, reinstatement may properly be refused and substituted with compensation under the statutory framework.

About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
>>
2020
>>
[2020] ZALAC 69
|

|

Standard Bank of South Africa Limited v Leslie and Others (JA31/2019) [2020] ZALAC 69; (2021) 42 ILJ 1080 (LAC) (18 December 2020)

IN
THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Case
no: JA31/2019
In
the matter between:
THE
STANDARD BANK OF SOUTH AFRICA
LIMITED                             Appellant
and
HEIDEN
LESLIE                                                                              First

Respondent
COMMISSIONER
DESMOND LYNCH N.O.                              Second

Respondent
THE
COMMISSION FOR CONCILIATION MEDIATION
AND
ARBITRATION                                                                       Third

Respondent
Heard:
9 December 2020
Delivered:
18 December 2020
Coram:
Waglay JP, Coppin JA and Savage
AJA
JUDGMENT
SAVAGE
AJA
[1]
This
appeal is against the judgment and order of the Labour Court (Mahosi
J) delivered on 6 February 2019 in which the review application

brought by the appellant, Standard Bank of South Africa Limited,
against the arbitration award of the second respondent, a
commissioner
of the third respondent, the Commission for Conciliation
Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA) was dismissed with no order of
costs.
This followed the commissioner’s finding that the
dismissal of the first respondent, Mr Heiden Leslie (the employee),
was
substantively unfair, with the employee retrospectively
reinstated into his employment with the appellant.
[2]
The
employee commenced employment with the appellant on 1 July 2005,
initially as a Machine Room Operator. At the date of his dismissal
on
14 May 2015, he had been deployed to the appellant’s treasury
department as a Custodian. In that capacity, he was responsible
for
counting and handling cash on behalf of the appellant in accordance
with the appellant’s Group Reference Guide Policy,
which
regulates bulk deposits and cash handling in its treasury department.
The security procedures, which were to be followed
at all times given
the volume of cash handled, included the dual control of cash by two
employees at a time, with employees not
permitted to have cash in
their possession while at work.
[3]
On
17 March 2015, the employee was paired to work with Ms Dorcas
Motsapi, who had at the time been a custodian in the treasury
department for approximately three weeks. The employee was searched
at the end of his shift by security, as was standard practice,
but no
money was found on him. After the end of her shift, Ms Motsapi
reported to her team leader, Mr Shane Scaife, that she had
noticed
that Mr Leslie had a calculator in his hand under which he held a
R100 note and that she saw him placing the cash in his
back pocket.
The FD40 box containing R100 notes was counted and found to be short
by R200. The next day on 18 March 2015, the employee
was suspended
from work. He received notice to attend a disciplinary hearing on 20
April 2015 to face the allegation of:

Alleged
dishonesty on your part in that you abused your position of trust in
the bank when you:
Removed
an amount of R200 from the Johannesburg Cash Centre Treasury on the
17
th
of March 2015, without the necessary authorisation and/or business
reason.’
[4]
On
14 May 2015, following the disciplinary hearing, the employee was
dismissed. At the date of his dismissal, he earned R14 271,67

per month. The employee referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the
CCMA which, after conciliation had been unsuccessful, was referred
to
arbitration.
[5]
Three
witnesses testified for the appellant at arbitration. The
investigator, Mr Otto Arends, viewed the CCTV camera footage of
the
area in which the employee had worked on the day. Contrary to
operating procedures, the employee was seen at the FD40 box on
his
own and without a co-employee on two occasions. The evidence of Mr
Scaife was that he had counted the FD40 box which contained
R100
notes and found R200 missing. Ms Motsapi testified that she saw
something under the employee’s calculator which appeared
to be
a R100 note; and that he moved his left hand into his left pocket

and
when he took his hand out of there, there was no cash in that hand
anymore
.”
The evidence of the employee was that he had been stressed on the day
as the cash had not balanced, although that issue
was ultimately
resolved. He said he had checked the money in the FD40 box, first
alone and then with his colleague, Leroy, as there
had been a cash
shortage, which he was anxious to reconcile. He said he could have
put his hand in his pocket to take out a packet
of chewing gum.
[6]
In
his arbitration award, the commissioner found that the appellant had
not proved dishonesty on the part of the employee. This
was so since
the video evidence was indistinct; no cash was found on the employee
when he was searched; and during questioning,
he had produced a blue
packet of menthol gum which he had put in his back pocket. The
commissioner found that the packet of chewing
gum is what could have
been seen by Ms Motsapi. The dismissal of the employee was therefore
found to be substantively unfair and
he was retrospectively
reinstated into his employment with the appellant.
[7]
Dissatisfied
with the arbitration award, the appellant sought its review by the
Labour Court. Although requested to do so, the Labour
Court refused
to watch the video evidence which had formed part of the record
before the commissioner. The Court found no reason
to interfere with
the findings of the commissioner and concluded that the arbitration
award did not fall to be set aside on review.
The review application
was consequently dismissed with no order as to costs.
[8]
On
appeal it was contended for the appellant that the Labour Court erred
in overlooking the fact that the commissioner had committed
a
reviewable irregularity in ignoring the evidence of Ms Motsapi and
the corroborative nature of the video footage. It was submitted
that
there was no basis to find that Ms Motsapi may have confused the R100
with blue packet of chewing gum when this was not put
to her in
cross-examination; and that on a conspectus of the evidence before
the commissioner the appellant had proved that the
employee had
conducted himself dishonestly. Consequently, the appellant sought
that the appeal be upheld with the dismissal of
the employee found to
be substantively fair.
[9]
In
opposing the appeal, it was contended for the employee that the
appellant’s case had been based on suspicion, without
corroboration. Since an employee cannot be dismissed on suspicion of
misconduct, the commissioner’s award was not one that
a
reasonable commissioner could not reach and the Labour Court
correctly dismissed the review application. The appeal, for these

reasons, it was submitted should fail, with costs to follow the
result.
Discussion
[10]
A
commissioner is required to arrive at a decision having appropriate
regard to the conspectus of material placed before him, with
the test
on review now well established.
[1]
In
Sidumo
and
Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others,
[2]
t
he
Court stressed that the distinction between appeals and reviews
continues to be significant.
[3]
A judge’s task is to ensure that the decisions taken by
administrative agencies fall within the bounds of reasonableness
as
required by the Constitution, cautioning against “
judicial
overzealousness in setting aside administrative decisions that do not
coincide with the judge’s own opinions
.”
[4]
[11]
The
video evidence clearly showed the employee at the FD40 box on two
occasions without a co-employee and placing his hand in his
back
pocket shortly after having been present at the box. His explanation
for being there was that he was counting money. He did
not explain
why he was there alone when the appellant’s rule required the
contrary or how he could have reconciled the money
in the seconds he
was present at the box.
[12]
On
the evidence before the commissioner, the employee’s conduct
aroused strong suspicion. His explanation that he was at the
box to
reconcile the money in the box in a matter of seconds was highly
improbable. His behaviour in shortly thereafter placing
his hand in
his back pocket was, at best for him, most unusual. His failure to
explain why he breached procedure by proceeding
to the box alone was
glaring. Yet, despite this, on a conspectus of the evidence before
the commissioner, the finding that the
appellant had not proved that
the employee had conducted himself dishonestly was not one that a
reasonable commissioner could not
reach.
[13]
The
evidence put up by the appellant at arbitration was simply, in spite
of the strong suspicion which the employee’s conduct
aroused,
insufficient to prove misconduct on the terms contended by the
appellant. Had Ms Motsapi reported the incident immediately
during
her shift, this may have led to the employee being searched
immediately, which could have resolved the matter decisively
one way
or the other. Had the appellant led evidence that the FD40 box had
not been short of R200 when it was delivered for counting,
this may
have allowed a finding that R200 was removed during the employee’s
shift. But this was not the case and without
clear and reliable
evidence of dishonesty on the part of the employee the commissioner’s
finding of unfairness was not unreasonable.
[14]
Section
193(1) of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (“the LRA”)
provides that:

(1)
If the Labour Court or an arbitrator appointed in terms
of this Act finds that a dismissal is
unfair, the
Court or the arbitrator may—
(a)
order
the employer to re-instate the employee from any date not
earlier than the date of dismissal;
(b)
order
the employer to re-employ the employee, either in the work in
which the employee was employed before the dismissal or

in other reasonably suitable work on any terms and from any date not
earlier than the date of dismissal; or
(c)
order
the employer to pay compensation to the employee.’
[15]
Section
193(2) states that:

(2)
The Labour Court or the arbitrator must require the employer to
re-instate or re-employ the employee unless—
(a)
the employee does
not wish to be re-instated or re-employed;
(b)
the
circumstances surrounding the dismissal are such that a
continued employment relationship would be intolerable;
(c)
it is not
reasonably practicable for the employer to re-instate or re-employ
the employee; or
(d)
the
dismissal
is
unfair only because the employer did not follow a fair procedure.’
[16]
This
Court in
Glencore
Holdings
(
Pty
)
Ltd
and another v Sibeko and others
[5]
found that an employee’s behaviour, whether before or after
dismissal, can be taken into account in determining whether,
in terms
of s 193(2)
(b),
the
circumstances surrounding the dismissal are such that a
continued employment relationship would be intolerable. In
Afgen
(Pty) Ltd v Ziqubu
[6]
it was
made
clear that t
here
must be an
extraordinary
reason to deviate from reinstatement as the primary remedy.
[7]
In
Maepe
v CCMA and another
[8]
this Court refused reinstate
me
nt
on the basis that it was impracticable given that the employee was
employed as a commissioner of the CCMA but had given false
evidence
under oath.
[17]
In
the current matter, the appellant is entitled to expect honesty,
integrity and rely on a high degree of trust with its employees
who
are responsible for counting large sums of money in its treasury
department. In applying his mind to the appropriate remedy,
section
193(2) required that the commissioner not simply to adopt a
mechanical approach to the award of reinstatement as the primary

remedy, but to consider the circumstances surrounding
the dismissal to determine whether these were of such a
nature
that a continued employment relationship between the parties
would either be intolerable or not reasonably practicable.
[18]
Properly
construed the evidence before the commissioner showed that the
employee had failed to comply with the appellant’s
operating
procedures and that his behaviour as viewed on the recordings had
been noticeably unusual and suspicious. Had the commissioner

carefully applied his mind to the employee’s unlikely
explanation for his conduct, coupled with the evidence of Ms Motsapi

and Mr Scaife, he ought reasonably to have found support for the
appellant’s view that the trust relationship with the employee

had broken down. Given the employee’s behaviour and his
explanation for it, considered against the appellant’s evidence

that he could no longer be trusted, it was apparent that significant
trust issues had arisen. These issues were of such a nature
that they
made reinstatement intolerable. It could not reasonably have been
expected of the appellant in such circumstances to
reinstate the
employee into a position in which a high degree of trust and
integrity was required when from the evidence he had
failed to
display precisely such behaviour.
[19]
Since
the employee had nine years’ service with the appellant, and
having regard to the circumstances of the matter, an award
of
compensation was the appropriate remedy in this matter. There was no
reason shown why such compensation should be limited. The
employee
should therefore, given his unfair dismissal, be granted the maximum
compensation of twelve (12) months permissible in
terms of section
194.
[20]
Having
regard to considerations of law or fairness it is appropriate that no
order of costs be made.
Order
[21]
For
these reasons, the following order is made:
1.
The
appeal succeeds in part.
2.
The
order of the Labour Court is set aside and replaced as follows:

The
review application succeeds only to the extent that the order of
reinstatement is set aside and substituted with an order that
the
applicant, Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd, pay twelve (12) months’
compensation to the respondent, Mr Heiden Leslie,
amounting to
R171260.00, within ten (10) days of the date of the arbitration
award.

SAVAGE
AJA
Waglay
JP and Coppin JA agree.
APPEARANCES
FOR
THE APPELLANT:                        Doctor

Cithi
Mervyn
Taback Inc.
FOR
THE FIRST RESPONDENT:        Ditheko
Lebethe Attorneys
[1]
Sidumo
and
Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others
[2007]
ZACC 22; [2007] 12 BLLR 1097 (CC); 2008 (2) SA 24 (CC) ; (2007) 28
ILJ 2405 (CC); 2008 (2) BCLR 158 (CC) at para 107.
[2]
Supra.
[3]
At
para 108.
[4]
At
para 109.
[5]
[2018] 1 BLLR 1
(LAC).
[6]
[2019] 10 BLLR 977 (LAC).
[7]
Afgen
(Pty) Ltd v Ziqubu
(s
upra
)
at para 18.
[8]
[2008] ZALAC 2
;
[2008] 8 BLLR 723
(LAC).