Chubb Security SA (Pty) t/a Chubb Electronics Security v CCMA and Others (JR58/05) [2010] ZALCJHB 74 (15 January 2010)

85 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Review of arbitration award — Procedural and substantive fairness — Applicant sought to review an arbitration award that found the dismissal of the fourth respondent, a former employee, to be unfair and ordered reinstatement with back pay. The applicant contended that the CCMA lacked jurisdiction due to the nature of the dismissal being automatically unfair under section 187(1) of the LRA. The court found that the commissioner failed to address a critical point in limine regarding jurisdiction and proceeded to arbitrate the matter, constituting a gross irregularity. The award was reviewed and set aside, with a finding that the CCMA had no jurisdiction to arbitrate the dispute.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned a review application brought in the Labour Court in terms of section 145 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (the LRA). The applicant sought to review and set aside an arbitration award issued under the auspices of the CCMA, and also sought a stay of enforcement of the award pending finalisation of the review in terms of section 145(3).


The applicant was Chubb Security SA (Pty) Ltd t/a Chubb Electronic Security, the employer. The first respondent was the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA), and the second respondent was the CCMA commissioner, Mr N Mbelengwa, who issued the arbitration award. The third respondent was the trade union SATAWU, and the fourth respondent was Mr Hlayisane Shadrack Motaung, the dismissed employee.


The procedural history was that Mr Motaung was dismissed after an internal disciplinary process. He referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the CCMA, conciliation failed, and arbitration proceeded. The commissioner found the dismissal procedurally and substantively unfair and ordered reinstatement with back pay. The employer then approached the Labour Court to set that award aside.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the lawfulness of the CCMA’s jurisdiction to arbitrate the dismissal dispute once it emerged in evidence that the employee alleged dismissal for union-related activities, which would render the dispute one of automatically unfair dismissal reserved for adjudication by the Labour Court rather than arbitration by the CCMA.


2. Material Facts


Mr Motaung was employed by the applicant as a Reaction Officer. On 22 May 2003, he met with his Area Manager, Mr Willie Naude, who informed him that his monthly performance bonus would be reduced due to late-coming. The employer’s version was that Mr Motaung reacted by swearing and shouting and then leaving the office.


After leaving the office, Mr Motaung encountered another manager, Mr Philip Robertson, in the corridor. The employer alleged that Mr Motaung forcefully pushed Mr Robertson with his shoulder, and then pushed him again when they encountered each other a second time. It was further alleged that Mr Motaung threatened that he was prepared to beat Mr Robertson up outside the building. These factual allegations formed the basis of the disciplinary action.


Disciplinary proceedings were instituted and Mr Motaung faced charges framed as insubordination/disrespect/insolence towards superiors, intimidation/threat of violence, and rude, abusive, insolent behaviour/language. A disciplinary hearing commenced on 29 May 2003, where Mr Motaung indicated he was a shop steward and that his union should be notified, leading to a postponement to 5 June 2003.


On 5 June 2003, he pleaded not guilty and requested a postponement on the basis that the charges were unclear. Evidence was led to clarify the allegations, and the matter was postponed to 11 June 2003 to permit preparation. On 11 June 2003, Mr Motaung requested a postponement due to stress but did not then have a medical certificate. The chairperson refused the postponement, and Mr Motaung and his representative walked out. The hearing proceeded in their absence. Mr Motaung later obtained a medical certificate booking him off duty from 9 to 11 June 2003.


He was found guilty on the charges and dismissed. He referred a dispute to the CCMA on 7 July 2003; conciliation on 19 August 2003 was unsuccessful; arbitration took place on 22 November 2004; and an award issued on 13 December 2004 found the dismissal procedurally and substantively unfair and ordered reinstatement with back pay.


A further material procedural fact in the review proceedings was that the answering affidavit opposing review was deposed to by a union official who lacked personal knowledge of what occurred in arbitration and whose version was not confirmed by Mr Motaung. The Labour Court rejected that answering affidavit on that basis.


In relation to the core jurisdictional issue, it was common cause before the Labour Court that, during arbitration, Mr Motaung alleged that he was dismissed for participating in union activities. It was also not in dispute that the employer raised a point in limine at arbitration contending that the CCMA lacked jurisdiction if an automatically unfair dismissal was being alleged, but the commissioner proceeded without ruling on that point at the hearing.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the CCMA commissioner committed a reviewable irregularity by proceeding to arbitrate and determine the dispute despite evidence that the employee alleged dismissal for union activities, which would characterise the dispute as an automatically unfair dismissal.


Closely connected to that was whether, in those circumstances, the CCMA had jurisdiction to arbitrate the dispute under the LRA, or whether the dispute had to be referred to the Labour Court for adjudication in terms of the statutory scheme.


The dispute before the Labour Court was primarily one of law (statutory jurisdiction and the correct forum under the LRA), and the application of that legal framework to the facts that emerged during arbitration. It also concerned the review standard in section 145, particularly whether the commissioner’s conduct amounted to a gross irregularity and whether he exceeded his powers.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Labour Court first addressed a preliminary issue concerning the adequacy of the opposing papers. It noted that the deponent to the answering affidavit was a union official who only became employed by the union after the conclusion of the arbitration hearing, and therefore did not have personal knowledge of the relevant arbitration events. It was further common cause that Mr Motaung, who would have had direct knowledge, did not confirm the contents of the affidavit. On that basis, the court rejected the answering affidavit and regarded it as unnecessary to deal with condonation for the late filing of the replying affidavit, because the replying affidavit could not be considered in the absence of a proper answer.


Turning to the merits of review, the court treated as central the commissioner’s failure to address the point in limine concerning the CCMA’s jurisdiction. The record showed that a jurisdictional challenge was raised when it became apparent from the employee’s evidence that he alleged dismissal for union activities, yet the commissioner proceeded with the arbitration without a ruling at that stage. Although the award later stated that the employee’s suspicion that he was dismissed for union activities did not preclude the CCMA’s jurisdiction, the court held that this reflected an erroneous understanding of the statutory position.


The court applied the LRA’s classification of dismissals for union activity. It reasoned that, in terms of section 187 read with section 5, a dismissal for participating in union activities constitutes an automatically unfair dismissal. The court then applied section 191(5)(b), which it understood as requiring that disputes about automatically unfair dismissals be referred to the Labour Court for adjudication, not to the CCMA for arbitration. On that legal footing, the court concluded that the CCMA lacked jurisdiction to arbitrate the dispute once it emerged that the employee relied on union activity as the reason for dismissal.


The Labour Court characterised the commissioner’s failure to decide the point in limine in these circumstances as a gross irregularity rendering the award reviewable. It further held that the commissioner, because of the incorrect view that the CCMA retained jurisdiction, exceeded his powers by arbitrating a dispute that the LRA allocates to the Labour Court.


The court accordingly set aside the award, not on the merits of procedural or substantive fairness of the dismissal, but because the dispute (as alleged by the employee) fell outside the CCMA’s arbitral jurisdiction and into the Labour Court’s adjudicative jurisdiction.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Labour Court reviewed and set aside the arbitration award dated 13 December 2004 issued under case number GA 23309-03.


The court substituted the award with an order that the CCMA had no jurisdiction to arbitrate the dispute.


No order as to costs was made.


Cases Cited


No external case authorities were cited in the judgment.


Legislation Cited


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995: section 145; section 145(3); section 187; section 5; section 191(1); section 191(5)(b).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Labour Court held that where, during CCMA arbitration, an employee alleges dismissal for participation in union activities, the dispute is one of automatically unfair dismissal as contemplated by the LRA. Such disputes must be referred for adjudication to the Labour Court and fall outside the CCMA’s jurisdiction to arbitrate. The commissioner’s failure to rule on the jurisdictional point in limine, and his continuation to arbitrate the dispute, constituted a gross irregularity and an instance of exceeding arbitral powers, warranting the review and setting aside of the award and its substitution with an order of no jurisdiction.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that a dismissal for union participation or union activities is characterised by the LRA as an automatically unfair dismissal, with the consequence that the statutory dispute-resolution path differs from ordinary unfair dismissal disputes.


It further applied the jurisdictional allocation in the LRA that disputes concerning automatically unfair dismissal must be referred to the Labour Court for adjudication, and that the CCMA therefore lacks jurisdiction to arbitrate such disputes.


The judgment also applied the review principle that a commissioner’s failure to determine a properly raised jurisdictional point in limine, coupled with proceeding to decide a dispute outside the CCMA’s statutory powers, may constitute a gross irregularity and an excess of powers justifying review under section 145.

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[2010] ZALCJHB 74
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Chubb Security SA (Pty) t/a Chubb Electronics Security v CCMA and Others (JR58/05) [2010] ZALCJHB 74 (15 January 2010)

IN
THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD
IN JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: JR 58/05
In
the matter between:
CHUBB
SECURITY SA (PTY) LTD t/a
CHUBB
ELECTRONICS SECURITY
APPLICANT
and
CCMA

1
ST
RESPONDENT
COMMISSIONER
N MBELENGWA
2
ND
RESPONDENT
SATAWU

3
RD
RESPONDENT
HLAYISANE
SHADRACK MOTAUNG
4
TH
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Nyathela
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for review in terms
of section 145 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (the LRA) of an
award issued by
the second respondent on 13 December 2004 under case
number GA 23309-03.
[2]
In terms of the award, second respondent
found that the dismissal of the fourth respondent was procedurally
and substantively unfair
and ordered the applicant to reinstate
fourth respondent with back pay.
[3]
Applicant seeks to review and set aside the
arbitration award. Applicant further seeks an order to stay the
enforcement of the award
pending the finalization of the review in
terms of section 145(3) of the LRA.
[4]
Third respondent is opposing the review
application.
The
parties
[5]
The applicant is Chubb Security SA (Pty)
Ltd t/a Chubb Electronic Security, a private company with limited
liability duly incorporated
in accordance with the company laws of
the Republic of South Africa.
[6]
The first respondent is the Commission for
Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration (the CCMA), a juristic person
established in terms
of the LRA.
[7]
The second respondent is Norman Mbelengwa,
a commissioner of the first respondent. The second respondent is
cited herein in his
capacity as the commissioner who presided at the
arbitration proceedings under case number GA 23309-03.
[8]
The third respondent is the South African
Transport and Allied Workers Union (SATAWU), a registered trade union
established in terms
of the LRA.
[9]
The fourth respondent is Hlayisane Shadrack
Motaung, a former employee of the applicant.
Point
in Limine:
Answering
affidavit
[10]
Applicant raised a point in limine that
respondent’s affidavit should be rejected since the deponent
did not have personal
knowledge of the facts to which she deposed to
and that such affidavit had not been confirmed by fourth respondent
who had personal
knowledge of the facts.
[11]
It is common cause that the deponent to
respondent’s affidavit is a union official who was only
employed by fourth respondent’s
trade union after the
conclusion of the arbitration hearing which is the subject of this
review application.
[12]
It is further common cause that fourth
respondent who had knowledge of what transpired in the arbitration
hearing did not confirm
the correctness of the facts deposed to by
the said union official.
[13]
I therefore find that the deponent to the
answering affidavit had no personal knowledge of the facts deposed to
in the affidavit
and thus I reject the said answering affidavit.
[14]
In view of the ruling that the answering
affidavit is rejected, I do not deem it necessary to deal with the
condonation application
for the late filing of the replying affidavit
as the contents thereof cannot be considered in the absence of an
answering affidavit.
The
Facts
[15]
The fourth respondent was employed by the
applicant as a Reaction Officer.
[16]
On 22 May 2003, fourth respondent
approached his Area Manager Mr Willie Naude’ in his office.
Whist in the office, Mr Naude’
informed fourth respondent that
he was going to reduce his monthly performance bonus as a result of
applicant’s late coming.
According to the applicant, fourth
respondent swore and shouted at Naude’ and left the office.
[17]
After leaving the office, fourth respondent
met one Philip Robertson, a manager employed by the applicant, in the
corridor and forcefully
pushed him aside using his shoulder. As
Robertson walked back from Naude’s office, he again met fourth
respondent who once
more pushed him aside with his shoulder. Fourth
respondent also told Robertson that he was prepared to beat him up
outside the
building.
[18]
Robertson initiated disciplinary
proceedings against fourth respondent. Fourth respondent was charged
for insubordination / disrespect
/ insolence towards superiors,
intimidation / threat of violence and rude, abusive, insolent
behaviour / language.
[19]
The disciplinary hearing was took place on
29 May 2003. At the disciplinary hearing, fourth respondent advised
the chairperson that
he was a shopsteward and that his union should
be notified of the disciplinary hearing. The hearing was consequently
postponed
to the 05
th
June 2003.
[20]
On 05 June 2003 fourth respondent pleaded
not guilty to the charges and thereafter his representative requested
for the postponement
of the case as the charges were not clear.
Applicant led evidence in chief to clarify the allegations against
fourth respondent.
The hearing was postponed to 11 June 2003 in order
to allow fourth respondent and his representative time to prepare
their case.
[21]
On 11 June 2003, fourth respondent
requested that the hearing be postponed due to the fact that he was
suffering from stress but
did not have a medical certificate at the
time. The chairperson dismissed the application for postponement.
Fourth respondent and
his representative walked out of the hearing.
The chairperson proceeded with the hearing in their absence.
[22]
Fourth respondent went to consult with a
doctor and obtained a medical certificate which booked him off duty
from 09 to 11 June
2003.
[23]
Fourth respondent was found guilty of the
three charges and was dismissed from employment.
[24]
On 07 July 2003, fourth respondent referred
a dispute to the CCMA. The dispute was conciliated on 19 August 2003
and remained unresolved.
The dispute was arbitrated on 22 November
2004.
[25]
The dispute was arbitrated by second
respondent who found that the dismissal of the fourth respondent was
both procedurally and
substantively unfair and ordered the applicant
to reinstate fourth respondent with back pay.
Grounds
for review
[26]
In the founding affidavit the applicant
stated amongst others the following as grounds for review:
26.1 Second respondent
committed misconduct in relation to his or her duties as arbitrator
26.2
Second respondent committed a gross
irregularity in the conduct of the the arbitration proceedings
26.3
Second respondent exceeded his or her
powers
26.4
Second respondent’s award falls to be
reviewed in terms of section 145 of the LRA and / or the principles
of fair administrative
action and/or because his award is not
rationally justifiable on the evidence that was placed before him,
for,
inter alia
the
following reasons:
26.4.1
Second respondent unjustifiably and/ or
incorrectly and or committed a gross irregularity by failing to deal
with the point in limine
raised by Venter at the commencement of the
arbitration proceedings. Second respondent should have ascertained on
what grounds
Motaung alleged unfair dismissal and on that basis made
a ruling on whether or not the CCMA had jurisdiction to hear the
matter,
before proceeding with the arbitration
26.4.2
Second respondent unjustifiably and/ or
incorrectly and/ or committed a gross irregularity by failing to make
a ruling that he did
not have jurisdiction to hear the matter when it
became apparent during the cross-examination and re-examination of
Motaung that
he was alleging an automatically unfair dismissal in
terms of section 187(1) of the LRA
26.4.3
Second respondent unjustifiably and/ or
incorrectly and/ or committed a gross irregularity in finding that
Motaung had correctly
referred the dispute to the CCMA in terms of
section 191(1) of the LRA. Second respondent failed to take into
account the fact
that Motaung stated both under cross-examination and
re-examination that he was dismissed for exercising his rights as a
shop steward
and recruiting members for SATAWU, in other words, he
alleged an automatically unfair dismissal and therefore the CCMA had
no jurisdiction
to hear the matter. Rather, the matter should have
been referred to the Labour Court.
26.4.4
Second respondent unjustifiably and/ or
incorrectly and/ or committed a gross irregularity in finding that
the fact that, although
Motaung alleged during cross-examination and
re-examination that he suspected that he was dismissed for union
activities, this
did not preclude the CCMA from having jurisdiction
to hear the matter. A commissioner is not empowered to assume
jurisdiction to
hear a matter which falls outside of the CCMA’s
jurisdiction
Analysis
Second
respondent’s failure to deal with the point in limine:
[27]
It is common cause that fourth respondent
alleged during the arbitration hearing that he was dismissed for
participating in union
activities. The said evidence appears on page
216 of the paginated bundle of documents. It is further not in
dispute that applicant
raised a point in limine that the first
respondent lacked jurisdiction to arbitrate the dispute in view of
fourth respondent’s
allegation that he was dismissed for
participation in union activities.
[28]
According to the record of the arbitration
proceedings, second respondent proceeded with the arbitration hearing
without making
a decision on this point in limine.
[29]
However, in his award, second respondent
stated the following with regard to the point in limine “
The
fact that the applicant alleged during cross-examination that he
suspects that he was dismissed for union activities does not
preclude
the CCMA from having jurisdiction to hear the matter”.
[30]
It is evident from the above extract from
the arbitration award that second respondent erroneously held the
view that first respondent
had jurisdiction to arbitrate a dispute
where an employee has been dismissed for participating in union
activities hence he did
not make any ruling on the point in limine
during the arbitration hearing.
[31]
In terms of section 187 read with section 5
of the LRA, a dismissal for participating in union activities is
classified as an automatically
unfair dismissal.
[32]
Section 191(5)(b) of the LRA, provides that
a dispute regarding an automatically unfair dismissal should be
referred to the Labour
Court for adjudication. Thus the first
respondent lacks jurisdiction to arbitrate disputes about
automatically unfair dismissals.
[33]
I therefore find that second respondent’s
failure to decide on the point in limine raised in the circumstances
of this case
constituted a gross irregularity which renders the award
reviewable.
[34]
I further find that as a consequence of the
erroneous view held by second respondent, the latter proceeded to
exceed his powers
as stipulated in the LRA by arbitrating a dispute
regarding an automatically unfair dismissal.
Order
[35]
In the premise I make the following order:
34.1 The award issued by
second respondent under case number GA 23309-03 dated 13 December
2004 is reviewed and set aside.
34.2 The award is
substituted by the following order:
28.2.1
First respondent has no jurisdiction to arbitrate the dispute.
34.3 I make no order as
to the costs
_______________
Nyathela
AJ
Date
of Hearing     :
19 June 2009
Date
of Judgment   :
15January 2010
Appearances
For
the Applicant   :
Adv F. Venter
Instructed
by:
Van Gaalen Attorneys
For
the Respondent:        Mr S.T
Mabaso