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2000
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[2000] ZALAC 20
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Administrator of the Province of Kwazulu Natal v Lot (DA3/00) [2000] ZALAC 20 (20 September 2000)
IN THE LABOUR
APPEAL COURT
HELD AT
DURBAN APPEAL NO: DA3/00
In
the appeal of:
THE
ADMINISTRATOR OF THE PROVINCE OF
KWAZULU
NATAL
APPELLANT
and
S.
LOT
RESPONDENT
____________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
____________________________________________________________________
JOFFE AJA:
The court a quo
determined that the dismissal of the present respondent by the
present appellant was an unfair labour practice.
It ordered the
reinstatement of the respondent. The appellant appeals against this
determination.
The events
which gave rise to the dismissal of the respondent occurred on 3
November 1994. A disciplinary inquiry was held in the
magistratesâ
court on 10 July 1995. The respondent was found guilty of the
unlawful possession of certain pharmaceutical products
which were
the property of the appellant. The presiding officer recommended
that a fine be imposed on respondent, and, in addition
thereto,
respondent be transferred to another post within the department
wherein he was employed.
Respondent
appealed against the finding of guilt. He was informed by letter
dated 5 September 1996 that the appeal was dismissed.
The
proceedings in the court a quo commenced early in 1997. The hearing
seems to have taken place some time in 1999.
This account of
the history of the matter is relevant in the assessment of the
credibility of the various witnesses and the cogency
of their
evidence. The witnesses, who were called on behalf the appellant,
testified as to events that occurred during the course
of their
working day, more than four years prior thereto. It would be
surprising, if, in that time, their memory of the events
of 4
November 1994 had not become somewhat clouded. Allowance must be
made for this in determining their credibility and the cogency
of
their evidence. The same applies, but to a lesser degree, in the
case of the respondent. He has a personal interest in the
events.
This would tend to keep his memory of the events sharp and more
focussed. Nonetheless the time elapsed would impact on
his memory
as well.
Difficulties
were encountered in the preparation of the record. The recording
of the evidence of Mr. J.F. Khumalo, appellantâs
last witness, and
the commencement of respondentâs evidence -in-chief was lost.
Appellantâs attorney of record reconstructed
that portion of the
record, principally from the hand-written notes of the presiding
officer in the court a quo. There is no suggestion
that the record,
as reconstructed, is not an accurate reflection of the proceedings
in the court a quo.
At the hearing
in the court a quo, appellant adduced the evidence of the following
witnesses;
Mr. T Zulu, he
is a security guard in the employ of appellant at the Addington
Hospital. He originally apprehended respondent
Mr. H.J.
Coetzee, he is a senior security officer in the employ of the
appellant at the Addington Hospital. At the time of the
relevant
events he was a security officer and Mr Zuluâs superior.
Mr. D.R
Gooden, he is the chief pharmacist at the Addington Hospital. At
the time of the relevant events he was the principal
pharmacist.
Mr B.W.
Munsamy, he was a pharmacy assistant at the Addington Hospital.
Mr. J.F.
Khumalo. He was the deputy director of the Provincial Services.
Respondent
testified at the hearing. He did not call any other witnesses. At
the time of the events respondent was employed as
a pharmacy
assistant at the Addington hospital.
The case
advanced against respondent relies principally on the evidence of
Mr. Zulu. He was on duty at the gate in front of the
Addington
hospital. He saw the respondent leaving the hospital. His
attention was attracted to the respondent by reason of the
fact that
respondent was carrying a jacket under his arm. It appeared to him
that there were bulges in the jacket. He asked to
see the jacket.
Respondent continued walking. When Zulu started following
respondent, respondent commenced running. Mr Zulu ran
after him. As
they approached a police station, respondent slowed down. Mr Zulu
caught up to respondent and apprehended him.
They went into the
police station. Members of the South African Police Services
searched the jacket at the request of Mr Zulu.
They found
pharmaceutical products in the pockets. Mr Coetzee was summoned.
Thereafter together with Mr Coetzee, Mr Zulu and
respondent returned
to the security office at the Addington hospital. Mr Gooden was
called to identify the pharmaceutical products
as being the property
of Addington hospital and to determine their cost. All this he did.
Thereafter Mr Coetzee and Mr Zulu took
respondent back to the
police station where he was charged.
Respondent
testified that he had arranged to leave work on the day in question
at 12h00. He had arranged a lift with a friend.
His friendâs car
was to be parked in front of the Addington hospital. In addition to
his allocated duties that day, respondent
had agreed to assist a
colleague Mr Munsamy. Mr Munsamyâs function that day was, inter
alia, to recover excess medicines from
certain wards at the
Addington hospital. Respondent did this for him. He placed the
excess medicines in a plastic bag. Whilst
going back to the
pharmacy he decided to approach the exit of the hospital to see if
his friendâs car was there. He confirmed
that the car was there.
He turned to go back into the hospital to go to the pharmacy. At
that stage he was still well within the
hospitals premises. Mr Zulu
approached him, grabbed him and took him off to the police station.
At the time he, that is respondent,
was wearing a white jacket which
was part of his hospital attire. He did not have a jacket under his
arm.
The court a quo
found that neither Mr Zulu nor respondent were good witnesses-the
latter being assessed as a slightly better witness
than the former.
The evidence of the other witnesses adduced by appellant was not
regarded as helpful, as they were not eye witnesses.
Finally, the
court a quo found, that the respondentâs version was slightly more
probable than the version advanced by Mr Zulu.
The presiding
officer in the court a quo misdirected herself in typifying
respondentâs version as being more probable than Mr
Zuluâs
version. The two versions have already been set out. On the mere
reading of respondentâs version, its inherent improbability
is
apparent. Why Mr Zulu should behave in such an inexplicable manner
is not apparent. Not only is there no basis for his inexplicable
conduct but a mala fide motive for such conduct is expressly
disavowed by respondent.
In addition to
misdirecting herself as to the basic improbability inherent in
respondentâs version, the presiding officer in
the court a quo
also failed to take into account evidence which tends to corroborate
Mr Zuluâs evidence.
It is central
to respondentâs version that he was wearing a white hospital
jacket at the time he was apprehended. Mr Zulu testified
that
respondent was carrying a jacket under his arm. He could not recall
the colour of the jacket but he emphasised that it was
not a white
jacket. Mr Coetzee testified that when he saw the respondent at the
police station, he saw a leather jacket on the
counter. He did not
see a white jacket. Likewise Mr Gooden testified that when he saw
the respondent in the security departmentâs
office, respondent was
not wearing a jacket. He did not see a white jacket in the office.
He testified that respondent was wearing
a windbreaker. Counsel for
the respondent pointed to the different descriptions of the garment
that respondent was wearing. Clearly
there are differences. All
the witnesses however concur that respondent was not wearing a white
jacket. It is not suggested,
nor can it be suggested, that the
three witnesses who testified in regard to the jacket conspired
against respondent. In the absence
of such conspiracy, the reason
for their different descriptions of the jacket, must be found
elsewhere. It is probably to be found
in the time lapse alluded to
earlier. In the circumstances the court a quo should have found
that the evidence of Mr Coetzee and
Mr Gooden in regard to the
absence of the white jacket, corroborated Mr Zuluâs evidence.
On respondentâs
version the pharmaceutical products found in his possession were
contained in a plastic bag. According to Mr
Zulu they were secreted
in the pocket or pockets of the jacket which respondent carried
under his arm. Mr Coetzee testified that
the products were taken
back to the hospital in a large official envelope. Mr Gooden
testified that he did not see a plastic bag
used to collect
medicines from the wards in the office of the security department.
Again this evidence, and in particular Mr Coetzeeâs
evidence,
corroborates Mr Zuluâs version. If the pharmaceutical products
were taken to the police station in a plastic container,
it is
probable that they would have been taken back to the hospital in the
same container. It would not have been necessary to
place them in
an envelope. The absence of the plastic container as testified to
by Mr Coetzee and Mr Gooden again tends to corroborate
Mr Zuluâs
evidence.
Finally in this
regard Mr Coetzee testified that whilst respondent did not say that
he stole the pharmaceutical products, he did
apologise and asked
that the charges against him be dropped. Mr Gooden testified to a
similar effect. Whilst there may not have
been an express admission
of guilt, the nature of the apology tendered by respondent is, in
the context, tantamount to such a
confession. Moreover any apology
emanating from respondent is totally inconsistent with his version
of the facts. On his version,
he should have been seeking an
apology, not tendering one. Again this evidence tends to
corroborate Mr Zuluâs evidence.
The court a quo
was not impressed with Mr Zuluâs evidence. Counsel for the
respondent likewise submitted that his evidence is
unacceptable. He
certainly cannot be described as a good witness. As already
intimated, the reason may be found in the lapse of
time alluded to.
At the end of the day, however, his evidence cannot be rejected, nor
was it rejected by the court a quo. Indeed,
regard being had to the
corroboration emanating from the evidence of Mr Coetzee and Mr
Gooden, Mr Zuluâs evidence must be accepted.
Weighing up the
two versions that were before the court a quo, the court a quo erred
in finding that the appellant had not discharged
the onus resting
upon it. The court a quo should have found that appellant had
proved on a balance of probability that respondent
was guilty of
the unlawful possession of the pharmaceutical products which were
the property of the appellant. That being so,
the court a quo erred
in finding that the dismissal of the respondent constituted an
unfair labour practice. It was not contended
on behalf of the
respondent that dismissal was not an appropriate sanction in the
event of it being found that appellant had discharged
the onus
resting on it. The appeal accordingly falls to be upheld.
As far as costs
are concerned, there is no good reason why costs should not follow
the result in both courts.
The following
order is made:
The appeal is
upheld with costs
The order of
the court a quo is set aside and substituted with the following
order:
â
The
application is dismissed with costsâ
_____________________
M
M JOFFE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
I
agree
_____________________
R
M M ZONDO
JUDGE
PRESIDENT
I
agree
_____________________
M
T R MOGOENG
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Counsel
for Appellant: Adv. R.J Seggie
Attorney
for Appellant: Shepstone & Wylie Tomlinsons
Representative
for Respondent: Mr I. Lawrence
Attorney
for Respondent: Garlicke & Bousfield Inc.
Date
of hearing: 25 August, 2000
Date
of judgment: 20 September 2000