Naidu and Others v South African Bureau of Standards (D238/08) [2009] ZALCD 12 (16 March 2009)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Employment contract — Unilateral variation of remuneration structure — Lenny Naidu, an auditor at SABS, contested changes to the vehicle allowance scheme implemented by SABS, arguing it constituted a unilateral variation of his employment contract and reduced his remuneration. SABS restructured the vehicle allowance to comply with the Income Tax Act, presenting several options to employees. Naidu claimed the restructuring prejudiced his remuneration and benefits. The court held that SABS was required to restructure to comply with tax regulations, and Naidu failed to prove that the changes resulted in a reduction of his overall remuneration or pensionable amount, thus dismissing his application.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The proceedings took the form of an application in which the applicant sought declaratory and mandatory relief arising from changes implemented by the respondent to an existing vehicle allowance scheme forming part of employees’ remuneration arrangements. Although the notice of motion purported to include multiple applicants, the court recorded that the first applicant, Mr Lenny Naidu, attempted to represent 13 other employees under a power of attorney. Counsel for Mr Naidu conceded that he could not do so, with the result that the other employees were not properly before the court and the matter proceeded effectively only in relation to Mr Naidu.


The respondent was the South African Bureau of Standards (SABS), a statutory corporate entity established under the Standards Act 29 of 1993. The dispute concerned SABS’s restructuring of a vehicle allowance that had previously been paid to certain employees as a “tool of trade” allowance, and whether the restructuring amounted to an unlawful unilateral variation of employment terms and conditions, with attendant alleged prejudice to remuneration, salary progression, and pensionable remuneration.


In procedural terms, the matter was decided on the papers as an application for (i) a declarator that SABS’s conduct constituted a unilateral variation of the employment contract, and (ii) an order directing SABS to reinstate the prior scheme as it existed on 1 November 2007. The court dismissed the application with costs.


Material Facts


SABS implemented a vehicle allowance scheme with effect from 1 June 2005. The scheme created two relevant categories of employees and allowances. Employees on post level 8 to 18 received a tool of trade vehicle allowance, on the stated basis that they required a vehicle as a tool of their trade in order to perform their duties. Employees on post level 1 to 6 received vehicle allowances as part of their total cost-to-company remuneration package, with subsequent salary adjustments based on the total cost-to-company package (which included that allowance).


Under the scheme, SABS reimbursed business travel at different rates depending on the category of allowance. Employees receiving a tool of trade allowance were reimbursed for official kilometres travelled at 75 cents per kilometre (for a sedan), whereas employees whose allowance was not a tool of trade allowance were reimbursed at R1.30 per kilometre. Mr Naidu received a tool of trade allowance in an amount of R56 000 per annum (the judgment also refers to a figure of R56 400 in the options communication).


In 2007, SABS concluded that its tool of trade allowance scheme did not comply with the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962, because the tool of trade allowance exceeded the actual travelling expenses and was therefore not a permissible vehicle allowance structured in accordance with the statutory framework governing travel allowances. The court noted that Mr Naidu did not dispute material features relevant to this conclusion, including the composition of his existing package, his average mileage, the amount of the fixed allowance before and after restructuring, and that the allowance exceeded actual travelling expenses. The court also noted that the allowance was not based on the “expected business related expenditure” contemplated in SARS interpretation note 14 issue 2, to which the judgment referred for explanatory context.


To “synchronise” its vehicle allowance policy with the Income Tax Act, SABS proposed restructuring options. In summary form as recorded in the judgment, SABS proposed Option A, Option B, and later introduced Option C. Option A converted R30 000 per annum of the existing package into a fixed cost travel allowance and incorporated the balance into cost-to-company, coupled with a reimbursable variable travel component; Option B reduced the package by R30 000 per annum and replaced it with a reimbursable allowance of R2.46 per kilometre for business travel; Option C adjusted the fixed allowance so that (on the example presented) the combination of fixed and variable components would equate to an overall figure aligned with the previous arrangement, but with the variable component dependent on kilometres actually travelled.


Mr Naidu challenged the restructuring on the basis that it reduced his remuneration and benefits, including (as he alleged) future remuneration prospects and pensionable remuneration. He rejected Option A, contended that Option B would leave him worse off based on his calculations, and rejected Option C on the basis that his remuneration would decrease if he travelled fewer kilometres (because the variable component would then reduce). The court recorded that, on the calculations Mr Naidu himself presented for Option C, his “total old and new amounts remained the same” at R5 500 per month (on the assumed mileage in the table), whereas Option B reflected an apparent shortfall of R1 332 on the face of the figures presented, subject to the impact of taxation.


On the consultation process, the court recorded that Mr Naidu did not dispute that SABS consulted and negotiated with staff, but alleged that SABS acted in bad faith by presenting restructuring as a fait accompli and that agreement was required before implementation. The court also recorded that SABS repeatedly invited staff to restructure their allowances within legal constraints, and that Mr Naidu provided no evidence that he responded to that invitation.


Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine were whether SABS was legally required to restructure the vehicle allowance scheme to comply with the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962, and whether the restructuring constituted an unlawful unilateral variation of Mr Naidu’s employment contract.


Flowing from those questions, the court also had to determine whether Mr Naidu proved the necessary factual basis for the relief sought, including whether the restructuring in fact caused him prejudice in the form of reduced remuneration, diminished pensionable remuneration, or reduced salary increase prospects. This required an application of legal standards (relating to statutory compliance, enforceability, and contractual mutability) to the facts as established or not disputed, together with an evaluative assessment of whether prejudice had been proved on the papers.


The dispute therefore concerned a combination of law (statutory compliance and legality), fact (what the scheme entailed; what was consulted; whether remuneration was reduced), and the application of law to fact (whether a compelled restructuring can properly be characterised as “unilateral” in the sense asserted, and whether the relief would in substance enforce an illegality).


Court’s Reasoning


The court began by treating as the starting point whether SABS had to restructure the remuneration arrangement in order to comply with the Income Tax Act. It held that SABS bore the onus of proving that the purpose of restructuring was compliance with the Income Tax Act’s treatment of travel allowances. On the facts before it, and given the significant elements that Mr Naidu did not dispute (including that the tool of trade allowance exceeded actual travelling expenses), the court found that SABS had established that the existing scheme fell foul of the statutory framework.


In addressing the statutory scheme, the court referred to the definition of “remuneration” and to section 8 of the Income Tax Act as permitting an allowance for actual travelling expenses, while treating amounts exceeding such expenses as taxable remuneration or gross income, with associated PAYE consequences. It accepted the explanation (as set out in the SARS interpretation note referred to in the judgment) that the legislative purpose is to prevent income being disguised as a travel allowance, and that employers may be exposed to liability for under-deduction of PAYE, interest, and penalties if allowances are structured outside the permissible framework.


On that basis, the court reasoned that restructuring to conform to the Income Tax Act inevitably meant changing the contract of employment insofar as the existing arrangement was inconsistent with the statute. The court held that failure to restructure would have rendered the employment arrangement (in the relevant respect) fraudulent, illegal, and unenforceable. It followed, in the court’s reasoning, that the second prayer (seeking reinstatement of the prior scheme as a status quo order) would compel the continuation of an arrangement inconsistent with the Income Tax Act and would therefore amount to giving effect to illegality, which the court would not do. The court also noted that SABS, as a statutory body, faced further responsibilities and potential liability under the Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999 and the Public Service Act of 1994 (Proclamation 103 of 1994), reinforcing the necessity of lawful compliance.


Turning to the alleged reduction in remuneration and benefits, the court held that Mr Naidu bore the onus of proving the essential facts to justify the relief claimed, including proof of the prejudice or harm suffered. The court reasoned that where an allowance is structured by reference to kilometres actually travelled, it follows that the allowance will decrease if mileage decreases and can increase if mileage increases; correspondingly, the employer’s cost-to-company would fluctuate. The court examined Mr Naidu’s own calculations and concluded that on Option C the totals appeared unchanged on the face of the figures presented, while Option B appeared to reflect a shortfall; however, the court emphasised that the overall position could be affected by tax consequences and that Mr Naidu had not provided a sufficient comparative calculation for each option (including Option A) to discharge the onus of showing actual prejudice. The court further held that Mr Naidu had advanced no facts from which it could find that his pensionable amount would be reduced.


Even assuming in Mr Naidu’s favour that pensionable remuneration or salary progression might be affected, the court characterised the relief sought as aimed at securing leverage to bargain for increased remuneration. It held that this objective did not require a status quo order, and that if prejudice existed in the form of reduced remuneration, an alternative appropriate remedy would be to continue bargaining for a better arrangement. The court added that there was no evidence that SABS treated the compliance obligation as an opportunity to profit at employees’ expense.


On the claim that the restructuring was “unilateral”, the court analysed the contractual instruments. It held that Mr Naidu’s employment was governed by a letter of appointment read with standard conditions of service, and rejected the contention that the appointment terms were immutable. The court noted that the standard terms and conditions expressly reserved to the SABS Council the right to amend its rules after consultation and negotiation with staff. It held that the letter of appointment conferred a right to a vehicle allowance as part of the remuneration package but did not prescribe the detailed structure, and that it invited the employee to structure the package, implying that restructuring was not contractually barred.


On the consultation question, the court accepted that SABS implemented restructuring without agreement, which in one sense could be described as “one-sided”, but concluded that the decision was not “unilateral” in the sense relied on by Mr Naidu because the decision to restructure was compelled by law and therefore not made freely or autonomously. The court held that compliance with the Income Tax Act rendered the decision to restructure a fait accompli, while the content of the restructured scheme was subjected to consultation and negotiation. It reasoned that SABS could not defend non-compliance by asserting that it was still negotiating, and that it had to act decisively to avoid statutory consequences. The court further held that SABS did not close its mind to staff input and repeatedly invited restructuring proposals within the legal constraints, and that Mr Naidu provided no evidence of engagement with that invitation. On these findings, the court concluded that the declaratory relief sought also could not be granted.


Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the application. It refused both the declaratory relief that the restructuring constituted a unilateral variation of the employment contract and the mandatory relief directing reinstatement of the prior vehicle allowance scheme.


The court ordered that the application be dismissed with costs.


Cases Cited


No external case authorities were cited in the judgment.


Legislation Cited


Standards Act 29 of 1993.


Income Tax Act 58 of 1962.


Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999.


Public Service Act of 1994 (Proclamation 103 of 1994).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that SABS was required to restructure the tool of trade vehicle allowance scheme to comply with the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962, because the existing scheme exceeded actual travelling expenses and therefore did not conform to the statutory framework for travel allowances. It held that restoring the prior scheme would amount to enforcing or giving effect to an illegality.


The court further held that Mr Naidu did not discharge the onus of proving actual prejudice arising from the restructuring, including any proven reduction in remuneration across the available options or a proven reduction in pensionable remuneration. It also held that the restructuring was not “unilateral” in the sense contended for, because the decision to restructure was compelled by law and SABS had engaged in consultation and negotiation on implementation options.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


An employer is required to structure remuneration-related allowances, including travel-related allowances, in compliance with the applicable statutory framework, and a court will not grant relief that would have the effect of restoring or perpetuating an arrangement found to be inconsistent with statute.


Where relief is sought to set aside or reverse changes to remuneration structures, the applicant bears the onus of proving the essential facts justifying the relief, including proof of prejudice or harm said to arise from the change, on the evidentiary material placed before the court.


A contractual entitlement to an allowance as part of a remuneration package does not necessarily fix the precise structure of the allowance where the contractual documents contemplate the possibility of amendment after consultation and negotiation, and where the implementation of change is compelled by legal compliance requirements.


A change implemented without employee agreement may be “one-sided” in a descriptive sense, but where the change is compelled by law and the employer consults on the form of compliance, the decision may not be characterised as “unilateral” in the sense of being independent or freely chosen, particularly where the employer remains open to proposals within the legal constraints and the employee does not demonstrate responsive engagement.

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[2009] ZALCD 12
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Naidu and Others v South African Bureau of Standards (D238/08) [2009] ZALCD 12 (16 March 2009)

LOM
Business Solutions t/a Set LK Transcribers
IN THE LABOUR
APPEAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
BRAAMFONTEIN
CASE
NO
:  D238/08
DATE:
2009-03-16
In
the matter between
LENNY
NAIDU &
OTHERS                                                                                        Appellant
And
SOUTH
AFRICAN BUREAU OF
STANDARDS                                                     Respondent
J U
D G M E N T
INTRODUCTION
PILLAY,
J
:  The first applicant is
Lenny Naidu who was employed as an auditor with SABS.  In this
application Naidu purported to
represent 13 of the employees under a
power of attorney.  SABS objected.  Mr Seery, counsel for
Naidu conceded that Naidu
could not act on behalf of the others and
that they were not properly before court.
The
Respondent is South African Bureau of Standards, SABS, a corporate
entity established in terms of the
Standards Act No. 29 of 1993
.
THE
ORDER SOUGHT
Naidu
sought an order in the following terms:

1.
Declaring that the respondent’s variation of the applicants’
remuneration structure so as
to effect changes to the vehicle
allowances paid to the applicants in terms of their conditions of
service constitutes a unilateral
variation of the employment contract
concluded between the applicants and the respondent.
2.
Directing the respondent to
reinstate the vehicle   allowance scheme to which the
applicants were party in the form of
which such scheme existed as at
1 November 2007…”
THE
BACKGROUND
On
1 June 2005 SABS implemented a vehicle allowance scheme.
In
terms of this scheme it provided two types of vehicle allowances for
two categories of employees.  Employees in post level
8 to
18 received a tool of trade vehicle allowance.  These employees
needed a vehicle as a tool of their trade to enable them
to perform
their duties.  Employees in post level 1 – 6 received
vehicle allowances as part of their total cost to company

remuneration package.  Salary adjustment thenceforth was based
on the total cost to company package which included the vehicle

allowance as a tool of trade.
[1]
SABS
reimbursed employees who received a tool of trade allowance for
official kilometres travelled at 75 cents per kilometre for
a sedan.
Those who received a vehicle allowance that was not a tool of trade
allowance were reimbursed at a rate of R1.30
per kilometre.
[2]
The applicant received a tool of trade allowance.  The
amount of the allowance was R56 000 per annum.
In
2007 SABS realised that its vehicle allowance scheme fell foul of the
Income Tax Act No. 58 of 1962 (the ITA).  It informed
the
workforce as follows:
[3]

5.1
Tool of trade.  A decision has been taken by Exco with regard to
Tool of Trade that
as of 1 July 2007 the below mentioned will apply:

Tool
of Trade will no longer apply to new appointments with immediate
effect.

The
Tool of Trade portion of salary will not be increased during the July
2007 increase.

R2.46
per kilometre will apply to everyone.

Those
who already have a tool of trade will have a choice of converting
immediately, lose R56 400 and receive R18 000 tax requirement
or wait
until end of sale agreement and Tool of Trade cease.

Auditors/Inspectors
will have an agreement that upon completion of their training they
will receive the Tool of Trade amount will
receive it if they
complete in by end of June”
The tool of trade
allowance did not qualify as a vehicle allowance because it amounted
to more than the actual expenses for travelling.
The
definition of “remuneration” included:

cA.
60% of the amount of any allowance or advance in respect of transport
expenses referred to in Section 8(1)(b) other
than any
such allowance or advance contemplated in Section 8(1)(b)(iii) which
is based on the actual distance travelled by the
recipient and which
is calculated at a rate per kilometre which does not exceed the
appropriate rate per kilometre fixed by the
Minister of Finance under
Section 8(1)(b)(iii). ”
Section 8(1)(a)(i):
There shall be included in the taxable of any person
(hereinafter referred to as a recipient) for any
year of assessment
any amount which has been paid or granted during that year by his or
her principle as an allowance or an advance
excluding any portion of
any allowance or advance actually expended by that recipient-
aa.
on travelling on business as contemplated in paragraph b
b.
for purposes of paragraph a.1.(aa)….
iii)
where such allowance or advance is based on the actual distance
travelled by the recipient in using a motor vehicle on business

(excluding the set private travelling) or such actual distance as
proved to the satisfaction of the commissioner to have been travelled

by the recipient, the amount expended by the recipient on such
business travelling shall, unless the contrary appears, to be deemed

to be an amount determined on such actual distance at the rate per
kilometre fixed by the Minister of Finance by notice in the
Gazette
for the category of vehicle used. ”
To
synchronise its motor vehicle allowance police with the ITA the SABS
proposed two options:
[4]
1. Option A – Of
the current package, R30 000 per annum will be converted to a fixed
cost travel allowance and the balance,
R26 400, will be considered as
being incorporated in their “cost to company”.  In
addition they will receive a
R1 per kilometre variable cost
reimbursable allowance for business travel.  The R30 000 per
annum will remain fixed for the
remainder of their current five year
vehicle cycle (employees will need to provide evidence of their
cycle).  Salary increases
and bonus calculations applicable in
July 2007 will be done as in 2006.  In future R30 000 will be
excluded from their “cost
to company” package in these
calculations.
2. Option B – The
current package will be reduced by R30 000 per annum and be replaced
by an all in reimbursable allowance
of R2.46 per kilometre for
business travel.  Salary increases and bonus calculations
applicable in July 2007 will be done
as in 2006.  In future they
will be based on the then “cost to company” package.
Subsequently
it put Option C on the table.
Naidu’s
before and after restructuring table is extracted as follows:
[5]
Before
After B          After
C
Average kilometre
travelled

800      800                800
Prior rate per
kilometre

R1         R2.46
R2.46
Amount received
variable compensation  R800       R1
968         R1
968
Amount received fixed
allowance
R4 700    R2
200        R3
532
Total amount
received

R5 500     R4 168        R5
500
Difference
between new and old

R1 332
THE
ISSUES IN DISPUTE
Naidu
contested the changes to the vehicle allowance on two grounds:
Reduction
of remuneration and benefits
Naidu
accepted that SABS had to deduct taxes from his remuneration in
accordance with the ITA.  However, he disputed that the

restructuring entitled SABS to reduce his remuneration and benefits.
If SABS needed to restructure, and Naidu did not concede
this, SABS
did not have to restructure in a way that reduced Naidu’s
remuneration, salary increases and pensionable amount.
By
reducing the allowance by R30 000 the SABS reduced Naidu’s
remuneration, his prospects of increasing his remuneration in
future
and his pensionable amount.
[6]
For this reason Naidu rejected Option A.  Under Option B Naidu’s
average vehicle costs would have been his average
kilometres of 860
kilometres per month at R2.46 per kilometre amounting to R1 255.60
per month.  Annually, this estimated
to R15 067.20.
With the reduction of his package by R30 000 Naidu stood to lose R14
932.80 per month.  Under Option
C SABS increased the fixed
vehicle allowance so that when this allowance is added to the actual
travelling expense calculated at
R2.46 per kilometre it would equate
to R30 000.  Naidu rejected Option C because his
remuneration would drop if he travelled
less kilometres. So Mr Seery
submitted for Naidu
ANALYSIS
The
starting point of the inquiry is to establish whether SABS had to
restructure the remuneration package of its employees.
SABS
bears the onus of proving that the purpose of its restructuring was
to comply with the ITA regarding the vehicle allowance.
Naidu
did not dispute the composition of the existing package, the average
mileage he travelled, the amount of the fixed
allowance before and
after the restructuring and, most of all, that the tool of trade
allowance exceeded the actual travelling
expenses.  The
allowance was not based on the “expected business related
expenditure” stipulated in paragraph
3.1 of SARS interpretation
note 14 issue 2.
The
clear purpose of the definition of “remuneration” is to
prevent income being passed off under the guise of a travelling

allowance.  This purpose and how it is achieved is explained in
SARS’s interpretation note 14 issue
2.
The definition of “remuneration” read with section 8 of
the ITA permits an allowance for actual travelling
expenses.
Payments, additional to actual expenses, are treated as gross
income.  An allowance is a business expense
of the employer.
An allowance an employer pays to an employee is something additional
to ordinary wages.  Allowances
that exceed the anticipated
business expenses will result in SARS treating the excessive portion
as normal remuneration or as gross
income or as being subject to
normal PAYE.  SARS holds employers liable for under-deduction of
PAYE plus interest and penalties.
The
Court finds that SABS had to restructure its vehicle allowance to
conform with the definition of remuneration read with section
8.
Restructuring the vehicle allowance inevitably meant changing the
contract of employment.  Not to have done so would
have rendered
the contract fraudulent, illegal and therefore unenforceable.
To grant a
status quo
order that Naidu seeks in the second prayer of his notice of motion
would be to give effect to an illegality.  In addition
to its
common law responsibilities as an employer, as a statutory body SABS
incurs liability under the
Public Finance Management Act
No. 1 of 1999
and the Public Service Act of 1994
proclamation 103 of 1994.
Naidu
bears the onus of proving essential facts to justify the relief he
claims.  To succeed in claiming any relief, Naidu
has to prove
the prejudice or harm he suffers as a result of the restructuring.
Did the restructuring reduce Naidu’s
remuneration?  For as
long as the allowance is based on mileage actually travelled it
follows that the allowance will decrease
as the mileage decreases.
Equally it can increase if the mileage increases.  The
restructuring also impacted on SABS
with the cost to company
fluctuating with every increase and decrease in the mileage.
On
the calculations Naidu presented, his total old and new amounts
remained the same at R5 500 per month if he exercised Option
C.
On the face of it, Naidu appears not to suffer any reduction in his
remuneration.  If he exercised Option B the difference
between
the old and new allowance was R1 332.  On the face of it, Naidu
appears to suffer a reduction in remuneration. Much
depends on the
taxes levied on each option. Option C might be less favourable once
the tax is assessed.  Option B might be
more favourable once the
tax is assessed.
Mr Smithers
for SABS contended that Option A would have served Naidu’s
interest best. Naidu has not proffered a similar
calculation for
Option A.   Naidu has not discharged the onus of proving
how each option prejudices him in this instance
insofar as his
remuneration will be reduced in respect of each option nor has he
advanced any facts from which the Court can find
that his pensionable
amount will be reduced.
However,
assuming in favour of Naidu, that his pensionable remuneration will
be reduced and that for future salary increases he
will be
negotiating from a lower base, what Naidu hopes to achieve in
obtaining a
status quo
order is an opportunity to bargain further for increases in
remuneration.  That Naidu can do without a
status
quo
order.
The
Court is not convinced that Naidu suffers any prejudice by the
restructuring.  If he is prejudiced in that his remuneration
is
reduced, he has an alternative appropriate remedy of continuing the
bargaining for a better deal. There is no evidence that
SABS sees the
obligation to restructure as an opportunity to profit at the expense
of Naidu and other employees.
Was
the restructuring unilateral?
Naidu’s
employment was in terms of a letter of appointment,
[7]
read with the standard conditions of service.  Contrary to Mr
Seery’s submissions, the terms of the letter of appointment
are
mutable. For instance, Naidu’s package and travel allowance has
increased since 2006.  The standard terms and conditions

expressly reserves for the Council of the SABS the right to amend its
rules “after consultation and negotiation with the
staff”.
The
letter of appointment merely confers on Naidu the right to a vehicle
allowance as part of his remuneration package.  It
does not
prescribe how the package should be structured.  It invites
Naidu to structure his remuneration package.  Once
Naidu
structured his package, his letter of appointment did not bar him
from restructuring it.  Any suggestion that the letter
of
appointment is immutable would run counter to the letter and spirit
of contracts of employment, which must be sufficiently flexible
to
respond to fluctuating market conditions.
Naidu
did not dispute that SABS consulted and negotiated with its staff;
however, he denied that it did so in good faith because
it presented
its decision to restructure as a
fait
accompli
at the very first meeting with
the staff.  Furthermore, he contended that SABS had to reach an
agreement in restructuring
otherwise its implementation of the
restructuring would be unilateral.
According
to Thesaurus “unilateral” means “one sided;
independent”.  Insofar as SABS implemented
the
restructuring without Naidu and his union’s agreement, it was
one sided; however, its decision was not independent
in the
sense of being made freely or autonomously.  Its decision to
restructure was compelled by law.  In that sense,
SABS’s
decision to restructure the vehicle allowance was not unilateral.
Compliance with the law rendered the decision
to restructure a
fait
accompli
.
What the restructured scheme would be was subjected to negotiation
and consultation.
SABS
could hardly raise as a defence against non-compliance with the ITA
that it was negotiating until it reached agreement with
its staff.
It had to act decisively as soon as possible lest it incurred
interest and penalties for itself.  Having
taken the decision to
restructure SABS did not close its mind to suggestions from the
staff.  SABS repeatedly invited the
staff to “restructure
their allowances according to the needs and within the permissible
legal constraints”.
[8]
Naidu
has proffered no evidence that it responded to this invitation at
all.  It cannot protest, therefore, that the decision
was a
fait accompli,
that it was unilateral or that the consultations were in bad faith.
Naidu’s first order prayed for a declarator must
also fail.
In
the circumstances, the application is dismissed with costs.
Pillay
D, J
Edited:
26 March 2009-03-26
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant: Adv T Seery instructed by Henwood Britter & Caney
For
Respondent: Adv M D C Smithers
[1]
page
34 of Pleadings Bundle
[2]
page
36 of Pleadings Bundle.
[3]
page
91-92 of Pleadings Bundle
[4]
page
73 of Pleadings Bundle
[5]
pages
82, 82(a) of Pleadings Bundle.
[6]
page
19 and 20 of Pleadings Bundle
[7]
page
29 of Pleadings Bundle
[8]
page
57 Pleadings Bundle