Thanda Royal Zulu Football Club v Lester N.O. and Others (DA8/14) [2015] ZALAC 7 (21 April 2015)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Review of arbitration award — Employee dismissal — Employee claimed unfair dismissal under a one-year contract — Employer disputed jurisdiction of CCMA and employee status — Commissioner found dismissal unfair, awarding compensation — Appeal dismissed as employer failed to adduce evidence supporting claims of independent contractor status and jurisdictional challenge, leaving employee's version unrefuted.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter concerned an appeal in the Labour Appeal Court against a judgment of the Labour Court (per Whitcher AJ) which had dismissed an application to review and set aside a CCMA arbitration award. The arbitration award had been issued by a commissioner of the CCMA (Lester N.O.), who found in favour of the third respondent, Boniface Doe.


The appellant, Thanda Royal Zulu Football Club, had been unsuccessful before the CCMA, where Doe alleged that he had been employed as a football coach on a fixed-term contract and had been unfairly dismissed. The commissioner upheld Doe’s claim and awarded compensation equivalent to the remuneration Doe would have earned for the balance of the fixed term.


Procedurally, the dispute progressed from an alleged dismissal, to a CCMA arbitration award in Doe’s favour, to a review application in the Labour Court (dismissed), and finally to the present appeal in the Labour Appeal Court. The appellant’s case, both on review and appeal, rested primarily on (i) a jurisdictional objection to CCMA proceedings (based on an alleged private dispute-resolution regime in the National Soccer League structures), and (ii) a challenge to Doe’s status as an employee (as opposed to an independent contractor), together with a dispute about the duration of the contractual relationship.


The general subject-matter was therefore a labour dispute concerning employee status, CCMA jurisdiction, unfair dismissal on a fixed-term contract, and the reasonableness of an arbitration award on review.


2. Material Facts


Doe’s evidence (accepted in the absence of rebuttal) was that he was employed by the appellant as a football coach on an oral fixed-term contract concluded with a representative of the club, said to be Ngubane, commencing on 30 August 2009. He testified that the agreed remuneration was R20,000 per month, and that the term was 12 months.


On 13 November 2009, Doe was invited to sign a document described as a “voluntary release”. He refused to sign it, and his relationship with the club was terminated nonetheless. Thereafter, on 26 November 2009, Doe’s attorney wrote recording what was described as an unlawful termination and demanding specific performance. That demand was not met, and Doe referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the CCMA.


Certain facts were placed before the commissioner through documents rather than oral testimony from the club’s witnesses. A letter dated 3 November 2009 from the appellant to the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) confirmed a “one year” employment contract at R20,000 per month from 30 August 2009 until 30 June 2010 (a period of approximately ten months). Doe stated that the June 2010 end-date was an error. The author of the letter, Ngubane, was not called to testify, and no explanation was given for the failure to call him. The Labour Appeal Court treated the letter as corroborative of employment, while also noting that the alleged “error” about duration was not rebutted by evidence from the person best placed to do so.


In addition, the appellant produced purported invoices said to have been submitted by Doe, which were presented as indicative of an independent contractor relationship. Doe denied knowledge of the invoices, and the documents appeared, on their face, to have been prepared by Ngubane rather than by Doe. Again, Ngubane was not called to explain the provenance and significance of the invoices or to reconcile them with the SARB letter.


The appellant’s jurisdictional contention was that Doe’s contract (or the regulatory environment governing football clubs and coaches) required disputes to be resolved through the Dispute Resolution Chamber (DRC) of the National Soccer League (NSL) rather than the CCMA. However, Doe denied that the oral agreement included such a stipulation, and the appellant did not adduce evidence proving that a term of that kind formed part of the contract, whether expressly, tacitly, or by custom.


3. Legal Issues


The appeal required determination of the following central questions.


The first was whether Doe had proved that he was an employee of the appellant (rather than an independent contractor), because employee status was foundational to CCMA jurisdiction and to the unfair dismissal claim. This entailed a factual enquiry, and in particular an evaluation of whether Doe’s version stood unrebutted in the face of the documentary material produced by the appellant.


The second was whether, assuming Doe was an employee, the CCMA lacked jurisdiction because the dispute was allegedly governed by a private dispute-resolution mechanism under the NSL (the DRC), said to exclude CCMA jurisdiction. This raised an issue of the application of legal principles to facts, including the evidentiary requirements to establish an agreement (or tacit term) that disputes would be resolved privately, and whether such a case had been made on the evidence before the commissioner.


The third was whether Doe had been unfairly dismissed, and if so, whether the commissioner’s award of compensation—calculated as remuneration for the balance of the fixed term—was reviewable on the basis that it was not one a reasonable arbitrator could reach. This involved the legal standard for review under the Sidumo/Heroldt reasonableness test, applied to the material that served before the commissioner.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Labour Appeal Court’s reasoning emphasised that the appellant’s case failed largely because it did not adduce evidence necessary to support factual contentions central to its defences. The Court addressed the issues sequentially: employee status, jurisdiction, unfair dismissal, and compensation/review reasonableness.


On employee status, the Court noted that Doe gave direct evidence that he was employed on an oral fixed-term contract at an agreed monthly salary. The appellant led no oral evidence to contradict Doe’s account. The Court treated the SARB letter as corroborating the existence of an employment relationship and the agreed remuneration, and considered the unresolved discrepancy about end-date (June 2010 rather than a 12-month term) in light of the appellant’s failure to call Ngubane. The Court held that, absent rebuttal from the author of the letter or other evidence contradicting Doe, Doe’s version remained the only version properly established before the commissioner, including on the 12-month term.


The purported invoices were considered by the Court to be, at most, suggestive of an independent contractor relationship, but the Court accepted that Doe denied knowledge of them and that they appeared to have been prepared by Ngubane. In the Court’s evaluation, the invoices could not displace Doe’s evidence in the absence of explanatory testimony from the person responsible for preparing them and in the absence of a coherent evidential case reconciling these documents with the SARB letter. The Court therefore held that Doe had discharged the onus resting on him to show that he was an employee.


On CCMA jurisdiction and the alleged displacement of jurisdiction by the NSL’s DRC, the Court held that once Doe had established employee status, the CCMA’s jurisdiction was established on the evidence. If the appellant wished to contend that jurisdiction was “trumped” by a private dispute-resolution forum, the appellant bore an evidentiary burden (and, as framed by the Court, an onus) to prove the basis for that contention. The Court found that the appellant did not prove that Doe agreed—expressly or tacitly—to a term requiring dispute resolution through the NSL’s DRC.


The Court considered two principal attempts by the appellant to support the DRC contention. The first was reliance on a different CCMA award involving a footballer (Dylan Kerr), where the parties in that matter had agreed that a written contract existed containing a DRC clause. The Labour Appeal Court held that this material did not establish that Doe’s oral agreement incorporated a similar clause, and further held that no evidence had been adduced to show an industry custom binding Doe to such a stipulation.


The second attempt was the appellant’s effort, raised for the first time in the review proceedings, to introduce the NSL Constitution and to argue for an “implied” (treated by the Court as intended to mean tacit) term. The Court accepted criticism that the partial reliance on NSL rule 18 was deficient and, importantly, held that in any event it was of no assistance if it was not put before the arbitrator as part of an evidentiary case. The Court also addressed the indicia relied upon in argument on appeal (registration requirements, an NSL handbook allegedly given to “everyone”, and a passage in Doe’s evidence). The Court regarded these as insufficient to establish a contractual submission to the DRC and noted that without evidence establishing the contractual mechanism by which the NSL could compel such submission, the “hints” could not bear the weight of the appellant’s jurisdictional case. Accordingly, the Court concluded that no competing jurisdiction was established that could have required the commissioner to defer to the DRC.


On unfair dismissal, the Court observed that Doe’s evidence stood alone and that there was no rebuttal of the attorney’s letter recording termination and demanding specific performance. The Court held that, on that evidentiary footing, the commissioner could not reasonably have reached a conclusion other than that Doe was summarily dismissed without a valid reason, particularly as no reason was given at the time of termination or at the arbitration hearing.


On the relief, the Court recorded that Doe waived reinstatement. The commissioner awarded compensation equivalent to the balance of the fixed term (about nine months, totalling R180,000). The Court accepted the commissioner’s reasoning that awarding less would, in effect, license breaches of fixed-term contracts, and noted the commissioner’s view that this amount aligned with common-law liability for the contractual remainder. The appellant’s contention that a lesser sum should have been awarded was not supported by cogent grounds demonstrating unreasonableness.


Finally, on the review standard, the Court held that the commissioner’s reasons demonstrated compliance with the reasonableness test associated with Sidumo, as reaffirmed in Heroldt v Nedbank, namely that a result is unreasonable only if it is one a reasonable arbitrator could not reach on all the material before the arbitrator. The Court also endorsed the Labour Court’s approach to costs, emphasising the burden placed on an individual litigant required to defend repeated challenges to an award.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Labour Appeal Court dismissed the appeal. It upheld the Labour Court’s dismissal of the review application and confirmed the CCMA award in effect.


The Court ordered the appellant to pay costs, including the costs of the review and of the appeal, as stated in the order.


Cases Cited


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


Heroldt v Nedbank Ltd [2013] 11 BLLR 1514 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


No specific legislative provisions were expressly cited in the text of the judgment provided, although the matter concerned unfair dismissal and CCMA arbitration within the statutory labour-law framework.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were expressly cited in the text of the judgment provided. The judgment referred to NSL rule 18 in the context of an alleged private dispute-resolution mechanism, but this was not a rule of court.


Held


The Court held that Doe’s evidence established that he was an employee of the appellant on an oral fixed-term contract, and that the appellant failed to adduce evidence to rebut that version or to substantiate the contrary contentions suggested by documents such as invoices.


The Court further held that the appellant did not prove that the CCMA’s jurisdiction was excluded by the NSL’s private dispute-resolution forum (the DRC), because the appellant failed to establish that Doe agreed to any contractual term (whether express, tacit, or by custom) compelling referral to the DRC.


On the merits, the Court held that in the absence of any evidence from the appellant offering a valid reason for termination, the commissioner could reasonably conclude that Doe was unfairly dismissed, and could reasonably award compensation equal to the balance of the fixed-term remuneration. The commissioner’s award was held to meet the Sidumo/Heroldt reasonableness standard, and the appeal was dismissed with costs, including the costs of the review and the appeal.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that material factual contentions must be supported by evidence, and that a party who bears an evidentiary burden (or onus) cannot succeed through assertion, insinuation, or reliance on vague indicia in circumstances where the opposing party’s direct evidence stands unrebutted.


In relation to CCMA jurisdiction, the judgment applied the principle that where jurisdiction is established on the evidence (here, through proof of employee status), a party alleging that jurisdiction is excluded by a private dispute-resolution agreement must prove the contractual foundation for that exclusion. The Court treated attempts to rely on other matters (such as a separate award involving different parties, or incomplete references to regulatory rules) as insufficient without evidence linking those rules to the particular contract in issue.


The judgment applied the review principle that an arbitration award is reviewable only if it is one that a reasonable arbitrator could not reach on all the material before the arbitrator, as articulated in Sidumo and Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others and reaffirmed in Heroldt v Nedbank Ltd. On the facts before the commissioner—particularly where the employer led no evidence to rebut dismissal allegations or to justify termination—the findings and the compensation award were held to fall within the bounds of reasonableness.


Finally, the judgment reflected an evaluative stance that awarding compensation equivalent to the balance of a fixed-term contract may be reasonable where dismissal is found to be unfair and no persuasive basis is advanced for a lesser amount, particularly where the award is consistent with the contractual consequences of premature termination as understood by the commissioner on the evidence before him.

About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Labour Appeal Court
>>
2015
>>
[2015] ZALAC 7
|

|

Thanda Royal Zulu Football Club v Lester N.O. and Others (DA8/14) [2015] ZALAC 7 (21 April 2015)

REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE LABOUR
APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, DURBAN
Case no: DA 8/14
Not Reportable
In the matter
between:
THANDA ROYAL ZULU
FOOTBALL
CLUB
......................................................................
Appellant
and
LESTER, S N.O.
…......................................................................................................
First
Respondent
COMMISSION FOR
CONCILATION
MEDIATION AND
ARBITRATION
......................................................................
Second
Respondent
DOE,
BONIFACE
.......................................................................................................
Third
Respondent
Heard: 12 March
2015
Delivered: 21
April 2015
Summary: Review
of arbitration award – employee contending that he entered into
a one year contract with employer –
employee dismissed -
employer not rebutting employee’s version of dismissal _
commissioner finding dismissal unfair and awarding
compensation for
the remainder of the contract - Employer disputing jurisdiction of
the CCMA – employer contending the existence
of a tacit term in
the contract and giving jurisdiction to the Dispute Resolution Centre
of the National Football League–
no evidence adduced to prove
the existence of the tacit term – reliance on vague indiciae
suggestive of contradictory terms
unhelpful in absence of a rebuttal
of employee’s version of conclusion of the contract- Labour
Court’s judgment upheld
and Appeal dismissed with costs.
Coram: Ndlovu,
Landman and Sutherland JJJA
JUDGMENT
SUTHERLAND JA
Introduction
[1]
The appeal is against a
decision of the Labour Court (Whitcher AJ) dismissing a review
application of an award by the first respondent,
a commissioner of
the second respondent, the CCMA. The third respondent, Doe, alleged
that he was employed as a football coach
on a year’s fixed term
contract by the appellant. He claimed to have been unfairly
dismissed. He succeeded before the CCMA
and was awarded compensation
equivalent to the salary he would have earned over the balance of the
term of the contract.
[2]
The appellant
challenged the claim on two bases. First, the CCMA had no
jurisdiction to hear the matter and secondly, Doe was not
an
employee, but rather an independent contractor (though in argument
the appellant equivocated on the latter point). Also, it
was disputed
that the term of his “relationship” with the appellant
was for 12 months. In the review application, the
commissioner is
alleged to have committed irregularities. The notice of motion does
not reveal what the irregularities might be.
In the founding
affidavit, a rambling critique of the preliminary award and the final
award is given, the first on the jurisdiction
issue and the second on
the merits of the unfair dismissal claim and the compensation
granted. From this critique it may be gleaned
that the grounds of
review are essentially a failure to render an award that a reasonable
arbitrator would have given.
[3]
The appeal is, as was
the review, utterly without merit.
[4]
The discomfort of the
appellant is derived wholly from its own sublime bungling of the case
it claims to have had. An elementary
fact about litigation is that if
you need to rely on facts you need to adduce evidence of those facts.
The appellant tried to do
without adducing evidence in advancing its
case. The evidential deficiencies seem not to be really in dispute,
but instead the
arbitrator is alleged to have acted irregularly by
not being proactive to shepherd the appellant’s representative
from the
shadows of his forensic ineptitude onto the bright uplands
of cogency. The critique is unwarranted. The record reveals that the

arbitrator offered the usual hints and prompts and cautions
appropriate to steering a litigant towards the basic requirements of

an effective presentation of evidence. To demand more of an
arbitrator would imperil the impartiality of the arbitrator. The
critical
omission of evidence to substantiate the contentions sought
to be advanced by the appellant was expressly addressed but the
appellant’s
representative obdurately ignored the guidance.
[5]
The two aspects of the
controversy are addressed in turn.
Was Doe an
employee?
[6]
The referral of the
dispute to the CCMA by Doe had to be supported by evidence that he
was an employee of the appellant. He gave
evidence that Ngubane,
acting for the appellant, employed him on a 12 month contract, from
30 August 2009. The pay was said to
be R20,000 per month. The
agreement was oral. On 13 November 2009, he was invited to sign a
“voluntary release”. He
refused. The result was that his
employment was terminated anyway. Doe’s attorney, on 26
November 2009, recorded the unlawful
termination and demanded
specific performance. None was forthcoming and he referred a dispute
to the CCMA.
[7]
No evidence to
contradict this evidence was offered. Instead, certain documents were
adduced.
[8]
First, a letter of 3
November by the appellant to the SA Reserve Bank (SARB) confirming a
‘one year’ employment contract
at R20,000 pm from 30
August 2009 until 30 June 2010, ie 10 months. Doe said the latter
date was an error. That allegation was
not rebutted by the author of
the letter, Ngubane, who was not called. No explanation was offered
for not calling him. The upshot
is that the letter corroborates the
claim of employment and the unexplained failure to rebut it, leaves
the only version of Doe
before the arbitrator that the term was 12
months.
[9]
The second species of
documents are invoices purportedly submitted by Doe which,
self-evidently, even if not conclusively, would
point strongly to an
independent contractor relationship. The documents were put to Doe.
He denied knowledge thereof, and indeed,
the documents appear to have
been prepared by Ngubane, not by Doe. Again, Ngubane’s evidence
to explain why the invoices
were prepared and the ostensible
contradiction with the representations made to the SARB, was crucial
to the appellant’s
case and such evidence was not adduced.
[10]
The relationship of
employment contended for by Doe, and upon whom an
onus
of proof rested, was therefore held to be proven.
If
Doe is an employee, on what basis did the CCMA not have jurisdiction?
[11]
On the evidence
addressed above, Doe had established the jurisdiction of the CCMA. If
the CCMA’s jurisdiction was trumped,
as alleged by the
appellant, by the Dispute Resolution Chamber (DRC) of the National
Soccer League (NSL), it was incumbent on the
appellant to adduce
evidence of a basis to prove that trumping. This was an evidential
burden and, also, properly speaking, an
onus
of proof on that issue. The onus to prove a fair dismissal was also
on the appellant.
[12]
The appellant’s
contention is that Doe’s contract of employment contains a
stipulation that any employment dispute must
be resolved in terms of
the private arbitration process in the rules of the NSL. How was this
sought to be proven?
[13]
Significantly, no
evidence was adduced that Doe concluded an agreement incorporating
such a stipulation, and Doe denied that the
oral agreement he
concluded with Ngubane included such a stipulation.
[14]
Two attempts were made
to put up a case to try to support the idea that an inference could
be drawn that such a stipulation was
included.
[15]
First, the appellant
produced a copy of a CCMA award involving a footballer, Dylan Kerr
who was in dispute with his club. In that
matter, the disputants
agreed several facts, including that a written agreement existed
including a clause stipulating that disputes
were to be heard in the
DRC. The case put up on behalf of Kerr did not challenge that
agreement, but rather argued that the CCMA
and the football dispute
resolution agency had concurrent jurisdiction. That argument was
rejected by that arbitrator who ruled
the private arbitration
agreement excluded the CCMA’s jurisdiction. The appellant in
brandishing this award, pointed to a
partial citation of the NSL rule
18 which provides for that process.
[16]
This is fascinating
information but plainly contributes absolutely nothing to
establishing whether Doe’s oral agreement included
such a
stipulation. Moreover, no evidence was adduced that could have
established a custom in the “football industry”
that
bound Doe and the clubs to such a stipulation.
[17]
The second attempt was
a contention advanced, for the first time in the review application.
The appellant sought to introduce the
whole Constitution of the NSL
(which had not been put before the arbitrator) upon which an argument
was to be proffered that the
private arbitration stipulation was an
“implied” (I assume what was meant was to allege a
“tacit”) term.
Counsel for the respondent drew attention
to the basic deficiencies in the attempt to show the arbitrator rule
18 of the NSL rules;
ie the citation was partial, it was from a
version of the rules not stated, and as
Kerr’s
case was conducted in April 2011, ie about a year and a half after
Doe had contracted, the notion that the rule existed or was

applicable to Doe in August 2009 could not cogently be advanced.
Plainly, the appellant’s argument is flawed on its own terms

for want of a connection to Doe, but even were it to enjoy a smidgen
of merit, it is of no assistance if it was not put before
the
arbitrator.
[18]
On appeal, Counsel for
the appellant endeavoured to found an argument relying upon several
induciae which tended to suggest that
Doe was bound by the rules of
the NSL and consequently he must therefore have been bound to subject
his case to the NSL’s
DRC. The submission resurrected the idea
of, somehow, a tacit term being found. Apart from the absence of a
platform upon which
to build that contention, a case for a tacit term
had not been made to the arbitrator. First, it was common cause that
Doe had
to be registered and get an identification card to be
recognised as a member of the coaching staff. This fact is unhelpful
because
the inference that all the rules apply cannot be derived from
it. Additional evidence about the registration system would have been

essential to carry the idea forward. Secondly, a handbook setting out
the regime of the NSL was said by the club owner Delvoix
to be given
“to everyone”. Ergo, it was submitted, Doe must have got
one too and was thus fully aware of his subjection
to the DRC. This
is a non-sequitur, but moreover, Delvoix’s relationship with
the club post-dated the Doe contract, and obviously
what Delvoix
could say about general practice was inapplicable to the earlier era.
Thirdly, it was contended that Doe’s evidence
contains an
acknowledgement of being bound to the NSL rules and to the DRC
stipulation. In the passage relied on, Doe says that
he went to the
CCMA, because in the absence of a written contract, which was
outstanding, he was unsure what the attitude of the
NSL would be.
[Record 250-251]. That passage needs to be read with what follows.
Doe says that the NSL prescribes terms of contracts
for footballers
but not for coaches; that the clubs and coaches make their own
arrangements, and the NSL has no interest in a coach
unless there is
a dispute. These passages indeed do hint at the prospect of some
support for the appellant’s contentions
but remain no more than
hints because the circumstances under which, if at all, the NSL would
exercise a jurisdiction are unknown.
Plainly, the only way that the
NSL could compel the subjection of coaches to its DRC is a contract
which includes such a stipulation.
The absence of evidence to
establish that fact is the persistent barb in the flesh of the
appellant’s failed case.
[19]
Accordingly, the case
to establish a competing jurisdiction by the DRC that might have
triggered the need for the arbitrator to
exercise a discretion to
defer to the DRC must fail.
Was
there an unfair dismissal?
[20]
The only evidence
adduced was that of Doe. The letter of his attorney was not rebutted.
[21]
What could the
arbitrator have found other than that Doe was summarily dismissed for
no valid reason? No reason was offered on 13
November when he was
dismissed and again at the CCMA hearing no reason was offered.
The
relief awarded
[22]
Doe waived a claim to
reinstatement.
[23]
The compensation
awarded was calculated to result in the appellant paying Doe the
balance of the fixed term contract, ie about nine
months of a 12
month term, a sum of R180,000. The Arbitrator reasoned that a lesser
sum would in effect grant employer a licence
to breach fixed term
contracts. Moreover, it is the very sum that the appellant would be
liable for under the Common Law. The argument
for appellant was that
a lesser sum was appropriate. However, nothing cogent has been
presented to suggest why the award was unreasonable.
In balancing the
interests of contending parties, requiring the defaulting party to
pay what was contractually owed, is not unreasonable.
Is the Arbitrator
to be criticised?
[24]
In our view, the
reasons offered for the decision by the arbitrator manifestly
demonstrate compliance with the test set out in the
Sidumo
test, most recently affirmed by the SCA in
Heroldt
v Nedbank
[2013] 11
BLLR 1514
(SCA) at [25], ie “…A result will only be
unreasonable if it is one that a reasonable arbitrator could not
reach on
all the material that was before the arbitrator”.
[25]
Moreover, the judgment
of the Labour Court was wholly appropriate in dismissing the
application with costs, having regard to the
expense to which an
individual litigant, unassisted by a union, has been put to twice
defend challenges to an award in his favour.
The Order
[26]
The appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of the review
and of the appeal.
____________________
Sutherland JA
I
agree.
____________
Ndlovu JA
I
agree.
______________
Landman
JA
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE APPELLANT:
Adv C. Goosen
Instructed by Van
Gaalen Attorneys
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
Adv M Pillemer SC
Instructed by Jafta
Inc