Paper Printing Wood & Allied Workers Union and Others v Sebba t/a Republic Brushware Newlands Wholesale (JA28/2000) [2001] ZALAC 18 (19 April 2001)

78 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Appeal — Application for clarification of order — Appellants sought quantification of compensation owed by respondent following a reinstatement order — Industrial Court dismissed application on grounds of functus officio and inapplicability of Rule 30 — Labour Appeal Court held that Industrial Court erred in finding it was functus officio, as the dispute regarding compensation remained unresolved — Appeal against dismissal of application for amendment of citation also upheld due to incorrect citation of respondent — Appeal partially successful, with each party to bear its own costs.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter concerned an appeal to the Labour Appeal Court against a decision of the Industrial Court dismissing an application brought under Rule 30 of the Industrial Court Rules. The application sought a form of quantification/clarification of the monetary consequences allegedly flowing from an earlier Industrial Court order granted on 7 October 1994.


The appellants were the Paper Printing Wood & Allied Workers Union and a group of individual employees (the second and further appellants). The respondent was cited in the earlier proceedings as Sebba t/a Republic Brushware – Newlands Wholesale, but the respondent contended (and it became common cause) that the correct legal entity was Granhotra (Pty) Ltd t/a Republic Brushware.


The procedural history was prolonged. The 7 October 1994 order was granted by default judgment. The respondent later sought rescission, which was dismissed on 6 October 1995. An appeal to the Labour Appeal Court against the refusal of rescission was dismissed on 30 October 1996, with a punitive costs order on an attorney-and-client scale. The respondent only permitted the employees to return to work on 18 November 1996. When the parties could not agree on compensation allegedly due under the 1994 order, the appellants brought a further application on 26 November 1997 in terms of Rule 30 seeking quantification/clarification.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was whether, using the procedural mechanisms of Rule 30 (clarification/correction of an award) and Rule 15(1) (correction of citation), the Industrial Court could (i) correct the respondent’s citation and (ii) make an order effectively determining the financial consequences said to arise because the reinstatement order was not implemented until after later litigation had concluded.


2. Material Facts


An Industrial Court order was granted on 7 October 1994 after default judgment. The relevant portion of the order reinstated applicants 2–16 on terms and conditions no worse than those prevailing on 14 April 1993, made the reinstatement retrospective to 8 April 1994 (six months), and made reinstatement conditional upon the employees reporting for work on Tuesday, 11 October 1994, failing which the reinstatement portion would fall away for any individual who did not report.


It was accepted that the employees reported for work in accordance with the order. It was further accepted that the respondent refused to allow them to resume work at that time.


The respondent applied for rescission of the default judgment on 21 July 1995, which was dismissed on 6 October 1995. The respondent appealed to the Labour Appeal Court, and that appeal was dismissed on 30 October 1996, with an order that the respondent pay costs on the attorney-and-client scale.


Only on 18 November 1996 did the respondent permit the employees to resume work. Thereafter the parties could not reach agreement regarding the compensation allegedly owed by the respondent to the employees, which was attributed to differing interpretations of the effect of the 1994 order in light of the subsequent litigation.


In opposing the Rule 30 application, the respondent raised a preliminary objection that it had been incorrectly cited. In reply, the appellants’ attorney conceded the incorrect citation, and the appellants brought an application under Rule 15(1) to amend the citation to Granhotra (Pty) Limited t/a Republic Brushware. The incorrect citation was therefore common cause.


The Industrial Court dismissed both the Rule 30 application (on the basis that the relief sought went beyond the terms of the 1994 order and did not fall within Rule 30) and the Rule 15(1) application (on the basis that the matter was at an end and the court was functus officio, so the citation could not be amended).


3. Legal Issues


The appeal required determination of two central questions.


The first question was whether the Industrial Court was empowered, under Rule 15(1), to correct a defective citation in circumstances where the Industrial Court considered that the lis had ended and that it was functus officio. This question involved the application of the functus officio doctrine to the procedural posture of the matter, and the proper interpretation of Rule 15(1) as to when it may be invoked.


The second question was whether the appellants’ request for an order “clarifying” or “quantifying” compensation allegedly payable under the 1994 order fell within the scope of Rule 30(1), which permits correction of an omission or error, or clarification of an ambiguity in an award. This question concerned the interpretation of Rule 30(1) and its application to the nature of the relief sought, including whether the dispute truly concerned an ambiguity in the original order or rather the subsequent legal effect of the order given later appeal proceedings.


The dispute thus primarily concerned questions of law, namely the interpretation and scope of procedural rules and the functus officio doctrine, together with the application of those rules to the procedural and historical facts.


4. Court’s Reasoning


Amendment of citation under Rule 15(1)


The Labour Appeal Court held that a tribunal becomes functus officio only once it has given a decision in respect of the matter to which the decision relates. It relied on authority indicating that the functus officio principle attaches after the tribunal has disposed of the matter before it.


Applying that principle, the Court reasoned that the Industrial Court could not have been functus officio until it had disposed of the Rule 30 application, because that application constituted live proceedings still requiring determination. On that basis, the Industrial Court retained the power to consider and grant an amendment of the citation under Rule 15(1) while the Rule 30 proceedings were still pending.


The Labour Appeal Court also rejected the Industrial Court’s view that the lis had come to an end upon the earlier judgment of the Labour Appeal Court in October 1996 (dismissing the respondent’s appeal arising from rescission proceedings). The Labour Appeal Court treated the Rule 30 dispute as a continuation of litigation concerning the consequences and implementation of the original order, and therefore not something that had terminated merely because an earlier appeal had been concluded.


Given that the incorrect citation was common cause, and given the Industrial Court’s continuing seisin of the Rule 30 proceedings, the Labour Appeal Court concluded that the Industrial Court had erred in not exercising its power to permit the correction of the respondent’s citation under Rule 15(1).


Clarification/quantification under Rule 30(1)


The Labour Appeal Court then considered whether the relief sought properly fell within Rule 30(1), which is directed at correcting an omission or error, or clarifying a provision of an award.


The Court emphasised that the relevant portion of the 7 October 1994 order was not ambiguous in its wording. This was reinforced by the concession made on behalf of the appellants that, had there been no subsequent appeal processes, the order’s wording would have presented no difficulty.


On the Court’s analysis, the appellants were not truly seeking clarification of an ambiguous term, nor correction of an error or omission in the order. Instead, they sought a supplementary order quantifying the amount payable, motivated by uncertainty said to have arisen from the suspension of the order during subsequent appeal proceedings and the fact that the matter was only finally disposed of in November 1996.


The Court considered that this kind of dispute—concerning the legal effect of subsequent appeal proceedings on the consequences of an existing order—did not fall within the category of matters contemplated by Rule 30(1). Rule 30(1) was treated as a mechanism for addressing defects intrinsic to the award (omissions, errors, or ambiguous provisions), not as a vehicle for obtaining new or additional relief because later procedural events altered the practical consequences of the order.


The Court also dealt with an attempt in argument to broaden the basis of the appeal by inviting the Court to engage with the substantive effect on the appellants’ rights caused by the respondent’s appeal and the ultimate dismissal thereof. The Court declined to entertain this approach because it had not been raised before the Industrial Court, was not reflected in the notice of appeal, and was not developed in the heads of argument with supporting authority. The appeal, as framed, was confined to whether the Industrial Court had erred in holding that the relief sought did not fall within Rule 30.


For these reasons, the Labour Appeal Court upheld the Industrial Court’s decision dismissing the Rule 30 application.


Costs (evaluative determination)


Because each side achieved success on one aspect of the appeal—appellants on the Rule 15(1) issue and respondent on the Rule 30 issue—the Court exercised a discretion to order that each party pay its own costs in the appeal.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Labour Appeal Court held that the Industrial Court had erred in refusing to amend the respondent’s citation under Rule 15(1), because the Industrial Court was not functus officio while the Rule 30 proceedings remained pending and because the defective citation was common cause.


The Labour Appeal Court nevertheless dismissed the appeal insofar as it sought to overturn the dismissal of the Rule 30(1) application, holding that the relief sought was not a correction of an omission or error nor a clarification of an ambiguous provision of the 1994 order, but rather a request for a supplementary quantification order arising from subsequent litigation events.


The Court ordered that, given divided success, each party was to pay its own costs of the appeal.


Cases Cited


Thompson t/a Maharaj and Sons v Chief Constable, Durban 1965(4) SA 663(D)(CLD) at 668D.


Legislation Cited


The Act governing the Industrial Court (referred to in the judgment as “the Act”), including section 17(11)(a), section 17(11)(bA), section 17(11)(f), section 45, and section 46.


Rules of Court Cited


Rule 15(1) of the Rules of the Industrial Court.


Rule 30(1) of the Rules of the Industrial Court.


Held


The Labour Appeal Court held that the Industrial Court was not functus officio while the Rule 30 application was still pending and therefore had the power to correct the respondent’s defective citation under Rule 15(1). It further held that Rule 30(1) did not permit the Industrial Court to grant the kind of supplementary quantification order sought, because the dispute did not arise from an ambiguity, omission, or error in the original reinstatement order but from the subsequent procedural history and the legal effect of later appeal proceedings. The result was partial success for each party, with an order that each party pay its own costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A tribunal becomes functus officio only after it has finally disposed of the matter requiring decision; while further proceedings in the matter remain live, the tribunal retains jurisdiction to deal with procedural incidents necessary for determining those proceedings.


Where an incorrect or defective citation is common cause and proceedings remain pending, Rule 15(1) empowers the Industrial Court to correct the citation; the existence of prior related litigation does not necessarily mean the lis has ended for purposes of correcting a citation in ongoing proceedings.


Rule 30(1) is confined to correcting an omission or error in an award or clarifying an ambiguity in the award’s provisions; it is not a mechanism to obtain additional or supplementary relief, such as quantification of monetary consequences arising primarily from subsequent procedural events (including the effect of appeal proceedings) rather than from any intrinsic ambiguity in the award itself.


An appellate court will not ordinarily entertain a substantive argument not advanced before the court a quo and not properly raised in the notice of appeal or developed in the heads of argument, where the appeal as pleaded is confined to a narrower procedural issue.

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[2001] ZALAC 18
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Paper Printing Wood & Allied Workers Union and Others v Sebba t/a Republic Brushware Newlands Wholesale (JA28/2000) [2001] ZALAC 18; [2001] 7 BLLR 726 (LAC) (19 April 2001)

IN THE LABOUR APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT
BRAAMFONTEIN
Case No. JA28/2000
In the
matter between:
PAPER PRINTING WOOD & ALLIED WORKERS UNION
First Appellants
JOSEPHINE SHAKANGA & OTHERS 2nd and
Further
Appellants
And
SEBBA T/A REPUBLIC BRUSHWARE
-
NEWLANDS WHOLESALE
Respondent
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ON 19 APRIL 2001
DAVIS AJA
Introduction.
[1]
This is an appeal against the dismissal by the Industrial Court of
an
application in terms of Rule 30 of the Rules of the Industrial Court
in
which appellants sought quantification of the amount payable by
respondent
to the second and further appellants in terms of an
order of the Industrial
Court dated 7 October 1994 ('the
order').
[2] The order was granted after default judgment had
been entered
against respondent. Although the employees reported
for work in accordance
with the order, respondent refused to allow
them to resume work. On 21 July
1995 respondent applied to the
Industrial Court for the rescission of the
default judgment which
application was dismissed on 6 October 1995. On 11
November 1995
respondent appealed to the Labour Appeal Court against the
dismissal
of its rescission appeal, which appeal was dismissed on 30
October
1996 with the respondent being ordered to pay costs on an
attorney and
client scale.
[3] Respondent finally allowed
the employees to resume work on 18
November 1996 after the
dismissal of its appeal to the Labour Appeal Court.
The parties
failed to reach agreement on compensation owed by respondent to
the
employees, apparently because of differing interpretations of the
order.
Consequently, on 26 November 1997 appellants applied in
terms of Rule 30 of
the Rules of the Industrial Court for an order
clarifying the order by
quantifying the compensation payable by
respondent to employees granted in
terms of the order.
[4]
Respondent opposed the application both on the merits and in terms
of
a point raised in limine which disputed the relief sought on the
grounds
that respondent had been incorrectly cited. In response to
this point, an
application was brought by appellants to amend the
citation in terms of Rule
15(1).
[5] The presiding officer,
Mr Shear, found that the Industrial Court was
not empowered to
make a ruling in terms of Rule 30 which went beyond the
terms of
the order. As the order did not require clarification nor did
the
dispute relate to an omission or error on the part of the
Court, Rule 30(1)
was inapplicable to the dispute. The Court went
on to find in favour of
respondent in respect of the objection in
limine in that as the lis had come
to an end upon the judgment of
the Labour Appeal Court, the Court was
functus officio to grant
the relief sought in terms of Rule 15(1), namely
an order amending
the citation of respondent.
[6] Appellants now appeal both
against the dismissal of the application
in terms of Rule 15(1)
and the application in terms of Rule 30.
The application in
respect of the incorrect citation.
[7] In its answering affidavit
in response to appellant's notice in
terms of Rule 30, Mr Sebba on
behalf of respondent stated, "Although
respondent was cited
as Sebba Group trading as Republic Brushware - Newlands
Wholesale,
I have brought it to the attention of the applicants that the
true
and proper entity of the respondent is Granhotra (Pty) Limited
t/a
Republic Brushware. This is apparent for instance in the
application for
rescission referred to paragraph 5.1 of the
replying affidavit of attorney
Christopher Orr".
[8]
In his replying affidavit appellant's attorney, Mr Orr, admitted
that
the respondent was incorrectly cited and consequently he made
an
application in terms of Rule 15(1) to correctly cite the
respondent as
Granhotra (Pty) Limited t/a Republic Brushware.
[9]
Rule 15(1) provides as follows:
"If in any proceedings it
appears that any party in the
proceedings had been incorrectly or
defectively cited, the court may, unless
precluded by the Act from
doing so, on application, correct the error or
defect, or order
the substitution of a party and, if the matter relates to
the
function of the Court under section 17(11)(a),(bA), or (f) of the
Act,
make such order as to costs as it may deem fit."
[10]
Mr Shear found that, as the wording of Rule 15 made clear that
an
application may only be brought during the course of the
proceedings, the
application could not be successfully brought in
the present dispute because
it had been brought after the
proceedings had been terminated.
[11] A tribunal is only
functus officio once it has given a decision in
respect of the
matter to which it relates. See, for example, Thompson t/a
Maharaj
and Sons v Chief Constable, Durban 1965(4) SA 663(D)(CLD) at 668
D.
In the present case the Industrial Court could not have been
functus officio
until such time as it disposed of the Rule 30
application. Accordingly it
was duly empowered in terms of Rule
15(1) to grant the amendment of a
citation. In any event it was
common cause that the original citation of
respondent was
incorrect. Furthermore, it could not be said that the lis
had come
to an end upon the judgment of the Labour Appeal Court and
that
"therefore, this Court is functus officio to grant any
relief sought under
Rule 15(1)". The dispute continued, both
at the Industrial Court in respect
of the Rule 30(1) application
and on appeal to this Court in respect of the
same matter. For
these reasons I find that the Industrial Court erred in
not
exercising its power in terms of Rule 15(1) to grant the
necessary
amendment.
Clarification of the Order.
[12]
Rule 30(1) provides as follows:
"A party to an award made by
a Court in terms of section 45
or 46 may request the Court to
correct an omission or error or clarify any
provision of such
award by delivery of a notice to the Registrar or parties
upon
which such award is binding and the Industrial Court
having
jurisdiction".
[13] As appellant had launched
an application in terms of this Rule, the
question which arises
for determination is whether there was an omission,
an error or an
ambiguity which required clarification of the order.
[14] The
relevant paragraph of the order reads as follows:
"The
Applicants No's. 2 - 16 included on the said Schedule
are hereby
reinstated in the employ of the Respondent on terms and
conditions
no worse than those prevailing on 14 April 1993. The
reinstatement
order is made retrospective to 8 April 1994 (6 months).
This
reinstatement order is subject to the individual Applicants
on the list
reporting for work time on Tuesday 11 October 1994,
failing which this
portion of the order will fall away in respect
of anyone who does not report
for work."
[15] Mr
Kennedy, who appeared on behalf of appellants, conceded that if
there
had been no further appeal after the order was granted on 7
October
1994, there would have been no difficulty with the order
in that the wording
per se was clear. Thus, the dispute did not
turn on ambiguous wording. The
presiding officer, Mr Shear,
summarised the nature of the dispute succinctly
as follows: "In
effect, the applicants seek an order where they are entitled
to
receive the money payable in respect of the Court order from the date
of
the Order, until the matter is finally disposed of by the
Labour Appeal
Court, in November 1996".
[16] In
essence appellants sought to obtain a supplementary order
quantifying
the amount of money which had to be paid by respondent in terms
of
the order. This second order was sought because quantification of
moneys
to be paid by respondent was required as a result of the
uncertainty created
by the order having been suspended pursuant to
an appeal and the matter
having only been finally disposed of in
November 1996 when the Labour Appeal
Court delivered
judgment.
[17] For this reason, the application in terms of
Rule 30 had little to
do with an inherent ambiguity or uncertainty
of the order but rather with
the legal effect upon an order of an
appeal which was subsequently
dismissed. It cannot be said that
the application brought by appellants had
anything to do with the
kind of ambiguity or omission in an order which
would thus fall
within the scope of Rule 30.
[18] Mr Kennedy directed his
argument to the question of the entitlement
of appellants as a
result of the matter having been finally determined by
the Labour
Appeal Court in November 1996, that is more than two years after
the
granting of the order. He submitted that this Court should not apply
a
formalistic interpretation of the Rules but should engage with
the clear
substance of the matter, namely the effect on the rights
of appellants
caused by respondents' prosecution of an appeal and
the ultimate dismissal
of that appeal by the Labour Appeal Court.
The difficulty with this
submission is that it was never raised
before the Industrial Court nor in
the notice of appeal to this
Court. The record of this case reflects that
this issue was never
canvassed. The notice of appeal sets out the essential
nature of
the appeal as being that the Industrial Court had erred in
finding
that the relief sought in the application did not fall
within the ambit of
Rule 30. I should add that nowhere in
appellant's heads of argument was
any argument directed to this
argument nor was any authority cited in
support of appellant's
interpretation of the effect of a judgment against
which an appeal
has been lodged and in which the appeal is
ultimately
dismissed.
[19] For these reasons I find that
the appeal in respect of the
Industrial Court's decision as to the
application of Rule 30(1) should be
dismissed. Given that each
party has been successful in respect of one
aspect of the appeal,
each party is to pay its own cost.
_____________
DAVIS
AJA
__________
I agree
ZONDO JP
_____________
I
agree
DU PLESSIS AJA