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[2015] ZALAC 49
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Hendor Mining Supplies (A Division of Marschalk Beleggings (Pty) Ltd) v National Union of Metalworkers of South Africa and Others (JA55/2014) [2015] ZALAC 49; (2016) 37 ILJ 394 (LAC); [2016] 2 BLLR 115 (LAC) (26 November 2015)
IN THE LABOUR
APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Case number: JA 55/2014
Reportable
In the matter between:
HENDOR MINING SUPPLIES (A DIVISION
OF
MARSCHALK
BELEGGINGS (PTY) LTD)
Appellant
and
NATIONAL UNION OF METALWORKERS OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
First respondent
MOSES FOHLISA &
41 OTHERS
Second to
further respondents
Heard:
17 September 2015
Delivered: 26 November 2015
Summary: Dismissal of respondents
found substantively unfair by Labour Court (Cele AJ) and
reinstatement ordered. Following unsuccessful
appeal by appellant,
writ of execution issued to execute payment of wages from date on
which reinstatement ordered until date of
actual reinstatement. Writ
set aside by Labour Court in that not founded on order sounding in
money. Respondents sought declaration
from Labour Court that
appellant liable to pay arrear wages. Gaibie AJ ordered appellant to
pay back pay to respondents from date
of reinstatement order to date
of actual reinstatement. On appeal judgment debt distinguished from
contractual claim for wages
in terms of employment contract. Claim
for arrear wages as claim in contract subject to 3-year prescription
period in terms of
s 11(d) of the Prescription Act. By date of
application to Labour Court such claim had prescribed. Appeal upheld
with costs.
Coram: Tlaletsi DJP, CJ Musi JA
et
Savage AJA
Judgment
SAVAGE AJA
[1]
This
is an appeal, with leave of this Court, against the judgment of the
Labour Court (Gaibie AJ) in which the appellant, Hendor
Mining
Supplies, a division of Marschalk Beleggings (Pty) Limited, was
ordered to pay to the second to further respondents (the
respondents), excluding deceased employees, remuneration for the
period from 1 January 2007, being the date on which the Labour
Court
(Cele AJ as he then was) had ordered their reinstatement, until the
date of their reinstatement by the appellant on 28 September
2009
with interest at the prescribed rate and costs. The appellant was
ordered to pay such remuneration to the estates of deceased
respondents, upon production of letters from the administrator or
Master of the High Court, provided that the respondents were
party to
the Labour Court proceedings.
[2]
The
relevant background to the order of Gaibie AJ is as follows. The
appellant dismissed the respondents on 18 August 2003 for
participating in an unprotected strike. Cele AJ found the dismissals
unfair and ordered that the respondents be reinstated from
1 January
2007 and report for duty on 23 April 2007. This Court dismissed the
appellant’s appeal against Cele AJ’s
judgment with costs
on 19 June 2009 and the appellant’s petition for leave to
appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal was similarly
dismissed with
costs on 15 September 2009.
[3]
On 29
September 2009 the appellant reinstated the respondents into their
employment but failed to pay them arrear wages from 1 January
2007
until the date of reinstatement. This caused the respondents to have
a writ of execution issued against the appellant. On
23 July 2011 the
Labour Court (Van Voore AJ) set aside the writ on the basis that it
related to no underlying judgment sounding
in money and directed the
respondents “to deliver a declaration setting forth the grounds
and amounts claimed” by the
respondents.
[4]
On 19
September 2012 the respondents applied to the Labour Court for an
order quantifying the arrear wages due to them. In addition,
the
respondents sought the substitution under Labour Court Rule 22(5) of
the names of deceased respondents with the names of the
executors of
their respective estates.
[5]
The
appellant opposed the application on the basis that the founding
papers were incomplete with various documents and confirmatory
affidavits outstanding and that the respondents’ claims had
prescribed. The appellant contended that the respondents’
claims for the payment of arrear wages from 23 April 2007 until 28
September 2009 did not relate to a judgment debt but were claims
in
contract which accrued weekly under the contract of employment; and
that such claims were therefore a “debt due”
within the
meaning of
s11(d)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
and subject to a
three-year prescription period. The appellant conceded that the
arrear wages due for the period from 1 January
2007 until 23 April
2007 amounted to a judgment debt and that a claim for payment of such
wages had not prescribed. Similarly,
it was conceded that the claims
for arrear wages from 19 September 2009 until reinstatement on 29
September 2009 had not prescribed
given that the respondents’
application was launched on 19 September 2012.
[6]
The
appellant contended that the respondents’ claims for arrear
wages from 23 April 2007 to 28 September 2009 were new claims
in
contract and not a continuation of the unfair dismissal dispute that
had existed between the parties. Issue was also taken with
the
substitution applications which had purportedly been made by the
deceased respondents and not the executors of their respective
estates.
[7]
The
Labour Court (Gaibie AJ) rejected the appellant’s reliance on
prescription as “incongruous, if not illogical”
and found
that the appellant bore “the risk of additional financial
obligations which become fully executable at the date
of the order of
the highest court that pronounces on it, as a judgment debt rather
than a contractual claim”. With reference
to
Billiton
Aluminium SA Ltd t/a Hillside Aluminium v Khanyile (Billiton)
[1]
and
Equity
Aviation Services (Pty) Ltd v CCMA and Others (Equity Aviation),
[2]
the Court
a
quo
rejected as “not only odd but perverse” the appellant’s
contention that the claim for unpaid wages from 23 April
2007 was one
in contract in that the employees were entitled to back pay until 28
September 2009. Consequently, the respondents’
claims were
found not to have prescribed and the appellant was ordered to pay
back pay for the period 1 January 2007 to 28 September
2009 with
interest at the prescribed rate with costs. Although the Labour Court
did not expressly order a substitution under
Rule 22(5)
, payment to
those executors who had applied to be substituted on production of
letters of executorship was ordered.
Evaluation
[8]
The
remedies available to a court or arbitrator on finding a dismissal
unfair are limited by s193 of the Labour Relations Act 66
of 1996
(LRA) to those of reinstatement, re-employment or compensation. Of
these, reinstatement is considered the primary remedy,
placing the
employee in the position he or she would have been but for the unfair
dismissal by restoring the employment contract.
[3]
As was stated in
Equity
Aviation:
[4]
‘
The
ordinary meaning of the word “reinstate” is to put the
employee back into the same job or position he or she occupied
before
the dismissal, on the same terms and conditions. Reinstatement is the
primary statutory remedy in unfair dismissal disputes.
It is aimed at
placing an employee in the position he or she would have been but for
the unfair dismissal. It safeguards workers’
employment by
restoring the employment contract.’ (footnotes omitted)
[9]
The
court or arbitrator in ordering the restoration of the employment
contract may in terms of s193(1)(a) order reinstatement “from
any date not earlier than the date of dismissal”.
[5]
An order of retrospective reinstatement is not compensation as
contemplated in s193(1)(c) or s194 and the period of retrospectivity
of the reinstatement order is therefore not limited to the maximum 12
months compensation provided in the LRA.
[6]
[10]
In
Coca
Cola Sabco v Van Wyk
(
Coca
Cola
),
[7]
this Court cautioned that the LRA does not cater for prospective
relief beyond the date of reinstatement and that the retrospective
operation of a reinstatement order should not be conflated with an
employer’s contractual duty to pay wages. In its restoration
of
an employment contract, an order of reinstatement does not constitute
an order for the payment of prospective remuneration from
the date of
the order until the date of its actual implementation. This is so
because consequent to the restoration of the employment
contract, an
employee holds a contractual claim for the payment of any arrear
wages which accrued weekly or monthly under the contract,
to which
claim the employer holds any contractual defences available to it in
opposing such claim. I am satisfied that the decision
in
Coca
Cola
is correct and
the
order of reinstatement does not encompass an order quantifying the
arrear wages payable for the entire period from the date
of the order
of reinstatement to date of compliance with that order.
[11]
The
reinstatement order made by Cele AJ restored the employment contract
between the appellant and the respondents from 1 January
2007. With
the respondents only required to report for duty on 23 April 2007,
Cele AJ had applied his mind to the period of retrospectivity
to be
applied to the reinstatement order in the manner contemplated in
s193(1)(a). It followed that the appellant was required
under the
retrospective terms of the reinstatement order to pay wages to the
respondents from 1 January 2007 until 22 April 2007.
This order
constituted a judgment debt being “…
a
judgment from which there can be gathered what money or thing the
judgment debtor must deliver
.”
[8]
As such, it amounted to an independent cause of action that
prescribes after 30 years, in respect of which execution may be
levied
and against which an appeal may be sought.
[9]
[12]
The
appellant pursued its appeal remedies pending which the execution of
the judgment and order was suspended under both the common
law and
Uniform Rule 49(11).
[10]
The appellant bore the risk of any prejudice which arose from the
delayed implementation of the order resulting from its unsuccessful
attempts to appeal the judgment.
[11]
When the appellant’s petition for leave to appeal was refused
on 15 September 2009, the suspension was uplifted and the judgment
and order became operative and enforceable. As a consequence, the
respondents’ employment contracts were restored retrospectively
to 1 January 2007 which entitled the respondents to claim arrear
wages until the date of their reinstatement on 29 September 2009.
[13]
It is
material that Cele AJ made no order concerning the payment of wages
prospective from the date of his judgment, nor would such
an order
have been competent under the LRA.
[12]
This is illustrated by the fact that the appellant would, by way of
example, have been entitled to raise a defence to a claim for
arrear
wages where a respondent had passed away subsequent to Cele AJ’s
order or in circumstances in which performance under
the contract had
become impossible. The respondents’ claims for wages from 23
April 2007 until date of reinstatement on 29
September 2009 were
therefore founded on a cause of action distinct from that of unfair
dismissal. These wage claims were claims
for payment under the terms
of the employment contract which had been reinstated by Cele AJ with
effect from 1 January 2007 and
were claims the Labour Court is
empowered by s77(3) of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act 75 of
1997 (BCEA) to determine.
[13]
[14]
It
follows that on 15 September 2009 when the suspension of the
execution of the judgment and order of Cele AJ was uplifted, the
respondents’ arrear wage claims from 23 April 2007 became a
“debt due” within the meaning of
s11(d)
of the
Prescription Act, which
debt prescribed three years from 15 September
2009.
[14]
Prescription began to run afresh in terms of
s15(4)
of the
Prescription Act on
the day on which the judgment became executable,
being 15 September 2009,
[15]
by which date the
respondents knew both the identity of the appellant as debtor and the
facts from which the debt arose in the manner
contemplated in
s12(3).
[16]
The respondents therefore acquired a complete cause of action for the
recovery of the debt on 15 September 2009, which debt prescribed
three years thereafter.
[17]
The debt did not become owing or payable, as was contended by the
respondents, only when the appellant failed or refused to pay
the
debt; nor from the date of actual reinstatement; nor on the date on
which the debt was quantified by the Court.
[15]
Reliance
was placed by Mr
Malindi
SC
on
Billiton
as support for the contention that the effect of the reinstatement
order was to order the payment of wages prospective from the
date on
which reinstatement was ordered until date of actual reinstatement.
In
Billiton
,
the employee’s entitlement to arrear wages under the employment
contract once restored was not disputed by the employer,
who took
issue rather with the constitutionality of the extent of the
employee’s entitlement to the payment of arrear wages
over a
number of years where extensive delays had arisen while appeal
remedies were extinguished.
While
ordinarily employers will not refuse to comply with an order of
retrospective reinstatement and will pay arrear wages to employees
until the date of actual reinstatement, such payment is made in spite
of the fact that the
lis
between the parties
has not been judicially resolved. This is so in that while the
reinstatement award creates a debt that is due
it does not, as is the
case in the current matter, constitute an order for the payment of
arrear wages prospective from the date
of the court order.
[18]
[16]
For
these reasons, it follows that the respondents’ claim for
arrear wages from 23 April 2007 until 19 September 2009 (when
the
respondents’ instituted their claims for payment of arrear
wages) have prescribed and the Court
a
quo
erred in finding differently. The appeal must therefore succeed.
[17]
Given
the finding on prescription, it is not necessary to determine whether
the Court
a
quo
erred in the manner of its approach to the respondents’
applications in terms of Labour Court
Rule 22(5)
[19]
to substitute the executors of the deceased estates of certain
respondents for certain deceased respondents. Nevertheless, quite
clearly, deceased respondents could not have sought the substitution
relief that they did and the Labour Court erred in failing
to dismiss
such applications on this basis.
[18]
The
appellant sought costs in this appeal, including the costs of two
counsel. The view I take of the matter is that an order of
costs is
not warranted.
Order
[19]
In
the result, an order is made as follows:
1. The appeal
is upheld with no order as to costs.
2. The
judgment of the Labour Court is set aside and substituted with the
following:
“
1.
The
applicants’ claims for the payment of arrear wages from 23
April 2007 to 18 September 2009 have prescribed.
2. The application is dismissed
with no order as to costs”.
___________________
Savage AJA
Tlaletsi DJP and CJ
Musi JA agreed with Savage AJA.
APPEARANCES:
FOR THE APPELLANT:
C E Watt-Pringle SC and K S McLean
Instructed by Fairbridges Attorneys
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
G Malindi SC and B Lekokotla
Instructed by Ruth
Edmonds Attorneys
[1]
[2010]
5 BLLR 465 (CC).
[2]
[2008] ZACC 16
;
2009
(1) SA 390
(CC);
2009 (2) BCLR 111
(CC).
[3]
Equity
Aviation Services (Pty) Ltd v CCMA and Others
[2008] ZACC 16
;
2009 (1) SA 390
(CC) at para 1.
[4]
[2008] ZACC 16
;
2009
(1) SA 390
(CC) at para 36.
[5]
Section
193
states 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 reinstate 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. See too
NUMSA
and Others v Fibre Flair CC
t/a
Kango Canopies
[2000] 6 BLLR 631
(LAC);
Kroukam
v RSA Airlink (Pty) Ltd
[2005] 12 BLLR 1172
(LAC) at paras 61-64.
[6]
Coca
Cola Sabco v Van Wyk
[2015] 8 BLLR 774
(LAC) at para 17;
Equity
at
para 42;
Billiton
A
;
Republican
Press
(Pty)
Ltd v CEPPWAWU and Others
[2007]
SCA 121 (RSA);
2008 (1) SA 404
(SCA) at para 19.
[7]
At
para 17
[8]
McNutt
v Mostert
1949
(3) SA 253
at 255;
De
Crespigny v De Crespigny
1959
(1) SA 149
(N) at 150F-G.
[9]
EA
Gani (Pty) Ltd v Francis
1984
(1) SA 462
(T) at 466E-H;
Bulsara
v Jordan & Co Ltd (Conshu Ltd)
[1995] ZASCA 106
;
1996 (1) SA 805
(SCA) at 464F-G.
Kilroe-Daley
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 90
;
[1984] 2 All SA 551
(A);
1984 (4) SA 609
(A) at 21.
Section
11(a)(ii)
of the
Prescription Act 68 of 1969
.
[10]
Uniform
Rule 49(11)
repealed with effect from 22 May 2015
(s18
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
now applies).
[11]
Billiton
(supra)
;
Republican
Press (supra)
;
Performing
Arts Council of the Transvaal v Paper Printing Wood and Allied
Workers Union and Others
1994
(2) SA 204
(A)
at 219H-I in relation to the previous Labour Relations Act 28 of
1956.
[12]
Coca
Cola
at
para 21.
[13]
Section
77(3) states: “
…
(3)
The Labour Court has concurrent jurisdiction with the civil courts
to hear and determine any matter concerning a contract
of
employment, irrespective of whether any basic condition of
employment constitutes a term of that contract…”
[14]
Section
11(d)
of the
Prescription Act provides
for a three-year period of
prescription in respect of "
any
other debt save where an Act of Parliament provides otherwise
”.
[15]
Section
15(4) states:
“
(4)
If the running of prescription is interrupted as contemplated in
subsection (1) and the creditor successfully prosecutes his
claim
under the process in question to final judgment and the interruption
does not lapse in terms of subsection (2), prescription
shall
commence to run afresh on the day on which the judgment of the court
becomes executable
.”
[16]
Section
12(3) provides that:
“
(3) A
debt shall not be deemed to be due until the creditor has knowledge
of the identity of the debtor and of the facts
from which the debt
arises: Provided that a creditor shall be deemed to have such
knowledge if he could have acquired it by exercising
reasonable
care
.”
See too
Truter
and Another v Deysel
at para 17 quoting Loubser para 4.6.1 at p 80 and the authorities
there cited;
Evins
v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
2006
(4) SA 168 (SCA) at para 15-16
[insert]
at
838D-839A.
Deloitte
Haskins & Sells Consultants (Pty) Ltd v Bowthorpe Hellerman
Deutsh (Pty) Ltd
[1990] ZASCA 136
;
1991
(1) SA 525
(A) at 532H-I.
[17]
Truter
and Another v Deysel
[2006] ZASCA 16
;
2006 (4) SA 168
(SCA) at para 16.
[18]
Coca
Cola
at
para 18.
[19]
Rule
22(5) states: ‘
If
in any proceedings it becomes necessary to substitute a person for
an existing party, any party to such proceedings may, on
application
and on notice to every other party, apply to the court for an order
substituting that party for an existing party
and the court may make
such order, including an order as to costs, or give such directions
as to the further procedure in the
proceedings as it deems it fit
.’