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[1988] ZASCA 134
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Consolidated Textile Mills Ltd. v President, Industrial Court and Another () [1988] ZASCA 134; 1989 (1) SA 302 (A); (1989) 10 ILJ 403 (A) (30 September 1988)
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(
APPELLATE
DIVISION
)
In the matter between:
CONSOLIDATED TEXTILE MILLS LIMITED
... appellant
and
THE PRESIDENT. INDUSTRIAL COURT
first
respondent,
and
SOUTH AFRICAN ALLIED WORKERS'
UNION AND OTHERS
second and
further respondents
CORAM
: CORBETT, HOEXTER, SMALBERGER,
STEYN et EKSTEEN,
JJA.
DATE OF HEARING
: 20 September 1988
DATE OF JUDGMENT
: 30
September 1988
JUDGMENT CORBETT JA
:
This is an appeal from a decision of the
Eastern Cape Division. The judgment (delivered by Zietsman J and concurred in by
Kannemeyer
J) has been reported: see
2
1987 (4) SA 665
(E). The full facts appear from the reported
judgment and need not be repeated in their en-tirety. I shall merely emphasize
those
factual aspects which are pertinent co the issues raised on appeal.
The appellant, Consolidated Textile Mills Limit-ed, is part of what is termed
"the Frame Group of Indus-trial Organizations". Appellant,
together with certain
other members of the Frame Group, carry on textile manu-facturing operations at
a factory complex in East London.
On 26 July 1984 a work stoppage occurred at
the factory, as a result of which certain employees were dismissed. Thereafter
new workers
were engaged and some of those who had been dismissed were
re-employed. At the time there were two trade unions to which members
of
appellant's work force belonged. They were (i) the South African Allied Workers
Union ("SAAWU"), an unregistered trade union,
which claimed to have more than
half the workers
3
at appellant's factory as members, and (ii) the Textile
Workers' Industrial Union, a registered trade union, said by SAAWU to be a
management-sponsored union. The work stoppage arose from attempts by SAAWU to
meet with the management of appellant so as to gain
recognition for the union
and to establish channels of communication, and the alleged rebuff of these
attempts by management. The
dismissed workers who were not re-employed were in
the employ of appellant and its associated companies, but this case concerns
only
appellant's former employees. Their dismissal gave rise to an industrial
dispute, it being al-leged by them, and by SAAWU on their
behalf, that their
dismissal and non-reinstatement and the attendant circum-stances constituted an
"unfair labour practice", within
the terms of sec 43(1)(c) of the Labour
Relations Act 28 of 1956, as amended ("the Act").
In due course and by means of a letter dated
2
4
November 1984 this dispute was referred to the
National
Industrial Council for the Textile Manufacturing Industry
of
South Africa ("the Industrial Council") in terms of sec
43 of the Act. The
letter was received by the Industrial
Council on 5 November
1984. Sec
46(9)(a)(i)
of the Act
provides that -
"If a dispute such as is referred to in section 43(l)(c) has been referred to
-
(i) an industrial council having
jurisdiction in respect thereof,
and that council has failed to
settle
such dispute within a period of 30
days reckoned from the date on
which
the dispute was referred to the coun-
cil, or within such further
period
or periods as the Minister may deter-
mine, the dispute shall be
referred
to the industrial court for
determination; "
A "dispute such as is referred to in sec 43(l)(c)" is a dispute concerning an
alleged unfair labour practice. Sec 46(9)(b) provides
that -
(b) The Minister may, in his discretion, from time to time, by writing under
his hand delegate his powers in
5
regard to the fixing of such further period or periods to any officer and may at
any time withdraw any such
delegation."
The Minister in question
is the Minister of Manpower (sec 1(1) of the Act).
On 20 November 1984 the secretaries to the Industrial Council wrote to the
Minister of Manpower requesting an extension of time until
15 February 1985
within which to endeavour to settle the dispute. This was done at the
instigation of appellant, which wished to
have more time within which to submit
its response to the representations of SAAWU and the other applicants, being the
dismissed
employees (to whom I shall refer as the "dismissed employees"). Power
to grant such an extension had been validly delegated by the
Minister in terms
of sec 46(9)(b) to a Mr L L L Olivier, Deputy Director, Labour Relations, of the
Department of Manpower. In the
course of a telephone conversation on 14 December
1984 (ie
6
after the lapse of the 30-day period stipulated in sec
46(9)(a)(i) ) Olivier purported orally to extend the period for the settlement
of the dispute to 15 February 1985, with retrospective effect as from 20
November 1984.
On 11 February 1985 the Industrial Council con-sidered the dispute. SAAWU,
being an unregistered trade union was not represented on
the Council. The
Council took a resolution, which in terms of sec 27(7) of the Act became the
decision of the Council. The resolution
was generally to the effect that the
employers had not intro-duced any unfair labour practices and that the dismissal
of the dismissed
employees had been justified.
On 25 March 1985 the attorneys for SAAWU and the dismissed employees wrote to
the Industrial Council claim-ing that the action taken
by it had been "entirely
without statutory warrant and therefore unlawful"; and stating that in view of
the Council's attitude the
dispute, which
7
still existed, would be referred to the Industrial Court for
determination.
In August 1985 and on application to the Eastern Cape Division appellant, as
applicant, obtained a rule
nisi
calling upon the President of the
Industrial Court, as first respondent, and SAAWU and the dismissed employees as
"second and further
respondents" to show cause why an order should not be
granted -
"(a) declaring that the National Industrial Council for the Textile
Manufacturing Industry of the Republic of South Af-rica has settled
the disputes
referred to it by H K V Siwisa and Company on behalf of the 2nd and Further
Respon-dents under cover of their letter
to the secretary of the said Industrial
Council dated 2 November 1984, as con-templated by Section 43(6)(a) of the
Labour Relations
Act, 1956 as amended, and accordingly that the 1st Respon-dent
has no jurisdiction to entertain proceedings in terms of Section 46(9)
of the
said Act for the determination of the said disputes; (b) interdicting and
restraining the 1st
8
Respondent from exercising or purport-ing to exercise
jurisdiction with re-gard to the said disputes; (c) that the costs of this
application
be paid by those respondents who opposes this application, jointly
and several-ly, the one paying the other/s to be absolved."
On the return day the confirmation of the rule
was
opposed and argument was heard. In the circumstances
described in the
reported judgment at p 670 I - 671 H the
hearing was postponed, the
Industrial Council was given
leave to intervene and a new point relating to
the valid-
ity of the extension of time granted by Olivier was argued
at
the postponed hearing. The application for leave to
intervene was to enable the Industrial Council to seek an
order -
"declaring that the National Industrial Council for the Textile Manufacturing
Industry of the Republic of South Africa is entitled
and obliged, with the
requisite majority, itself to settle disputes between employers or employers'
organisations and employees or
trade unions referred to
it
9
for settlement, regardless of whether the parties to the dispute agree to such
settlement and without the necessity of an agreement
as defined in the Labour
Relations Act, 1956 being
negotiated."
In its judgment the Court a
quo
decided
two
points: (a) that the Industrial Council's
authority to
settle the dispute between the parties terminated when
the
30-day period expired - in other words, that the
purported
determination of a further period by Olivier was not a va-
lid
one; and (b) that having regard to the meaning of the
word "settle" in,
inter alia
, secs 23(1) and 46(9)(a)(i)
of the Act, the intervening
applicant, the Industrial
Council, was entitled to the declaratory order
sought.
In the result the rule
nisi
was discharged and the
declaratory order granted. Appropriate orders were made
in regard to costs.
The appellant applied for leave to appeal against decision (a) above and
SAAWU sought leave to
10
"cross-appeal" against decision (b) above. The Court a
quo
granted both applications and ordered that the costs thereof be costs
in the appeal or "cross-appeal", as the case may be. In the
end only appellant
pursued its ap-peal, and that was noted against the part of the judgment
discharging the rule
nisi
with costs. No "cross-appeal" was noted or
pursued by SAAWU, but it and the dismissed employees oppose the appeal. The
President
of the In-dustrial Court does not participate in the appeal and abides
the judgment of the Court. Consequently, the pos-ition at
present is that this
Court is seized only of the appeal, ie the question as to whether or not the
rule
nisi
should have been discharged, and has no jurisdiction in regard
to the intervening application, and the order made thereon, as such.
As pointed
out in counsel's heads of argument, however, if this Court should come to a
dif-ferent conclusion from the Court a
quo
on point (a) above, ie decide
that a further period had validly been deter-
11
mined by Olivier in terms of sec 46(9)(a)(i), it would be
necessary for us to resolve point (b) as well, as part of the process of
adjudicating upon the correctness of the Court a
quo
's order discharging
the rule
nisi
. On the other hand, it is clear that should we decide that
the Court a
quo
was correct in respect of point (a), then point (b) falls
away.
I turn now to consider point (a). The crucial issue is whether sec
46(9)(a)(i), which has been quoted above, empowers the Minister,
or his delegate
(in terms of sec 46(9)(b) ), to determine a further period for the settlement of
a dispute by an industrial council
after the expiry of the initial period of 30
days, or whether the determination of the further period must be done before the
expiry
of the 30-day period. This issue is dealt with at pages 672 B to 677 E of
the reported judgment of the Court a
quo
.
12
As is pointed out in the judgment a
quo
, there are a
number of sections of the Act in which a period is specified for the doing of a
certain act and provision is made for
some person or body, such as the Minister
or the Industrial Court or an industrial council, to fix a fur-ther period or
periods within
which the act may be done. In a number of these (see sec 35(3),
sec 43(3)(b), sec 49(6)(g), sec 49(6)(h) ) the formula used makes
it quite clear
that the Minister or other authority, as the case may be, is empowered to fix
the further period or periods either
before or after the expiry of the original
speci-fied period. The standard form of words used in these sections is -
".... or (within) such further periods as
the... (Minister or other
authority) may
fix from time to time either before or
after the expiry of
any such period "
13
The only variations are the authority in whom the power
is
vested and the position of the word "fix" in the word
order (in one case it
comes at the end of the formula).
In contrast to this, in a number of other
sections dealing
with the power to fix a further period or periods for
the
doing of the act, including the subsection now under con-
sideration
(see sec 45(8)(a), sec 45(8)(b), sec 46(2)(a),
sec 46(3)(b), sec 46(9)(a)(i)
and sec 46(9)(a)(ii) ) the
formula used follows much the same wording, but with the
important
difference that it omits the words "either be-
fore or after the expiry of any such period". Typical
is sec 45(8)(a)
which contains the words -
"has failed within a period of fourteen
days from the date of such decision
or
within such further period or periods as
the Minister may
from time to time fix
, to
decide "(My
emphasis.)
In
R v Sisilane
1959 (2) SA 448
(A), at p
453
F-G, Schreiner JA stated the following:
14
"It is a general rule in the construc-tion of statutes that a deliberate change
of expression is
prima facie
taken to im-port a change of intention. (See
Barrett, N.O. v Macguet
,
1947 (2) S.A. 1001
(A.D.) at p 1012;
Port
Elizabeth Municipal Coun-cil v. Port Elizabeth Electric Tramway Co. Ltd.,
1947 (2) S.A. 1269
(A.D.) at p 1279). That principle should operate
par-ticularly clearly where, as here, Parlia-ment was dealing with two parts of
a single provision and cannot be supposed to have lost sight of the one when
dealing with the other."
(See also
Read v SA Medical and Dental Council
1949 (3)
SA 997 (T), at pp 1008-9.)
In the present case the difference in wording, in relation to a granted power
to fix a further period or periods for the doing of
an act, occurs not only
once, but in a considerable number of provisions of the Act. In one instance
(sec 43(3)(b) ) both formulae
appear in the same subsection; in the other
instances they are in analogous provisions of the same Act. Furthermore, in
15
sec 48(4)(a), which deals with industrial agreements and
notices given by the Minister in regard thereto fixing periods of operation,
it
is provided that the Minister may from time to time at the request of the
industrial council concerned and if he deems it expedient
to do so -
(i) extend the period fixed in such notice by such further period as he may
fix in the new notice; or
(ii) if the period fixed in such notice has expired, declare that the
provisions of such notice shall be effective from a date and
for a further
period fixed by him in the new notice."
This subsection thus draws the distinction between the ex-tension of such a
period and its replacement, after expi-ry, by a further
period.
The
differences in the wording of the two formu-lae used for fixing, or determining,
a further period or periods for the doing of
the act in question must, in my
view, be taken to have been deliberate; and this delibe-rate change of wording
must represent a difference
of in-
16
tention. The only possible explanation seems to me to be that
where it is not expressly stated that the fixing of the further period
or
periods may be before or after the expiry of the original period, then the
intention was that such fixing has to take place before
the expiry of this
period; and, of course, where it is so expressly stated, then such fixing may
take place before or after such
expiry.
Other rules of statutory interpretation point in the same direction. There
is, generally speaking, a presumption that the same words
and expressions in the
same Act are intended to bear the same meaning (see Steyn,
Die Uitleg van
Wette
, 5 ed, p 126 and the authorities there cited); and it is also a
well-established canon of construction that a statute should be so
construed
that, if it can be prevented, no clause, sentence or word should be superfluous,
void or insignificant (
CIR v Shell
17
Southern Africa Pension Fund
1984 (1) SA 672
(A), at
p
678 C). The two formulae have the following words in com-
mon -
"such further period or periods as the .... may fix from time to time".
In accordance with the first-mentioned rule of statutory
interpretation
one would expect those words to bear the
same meaning in each formula. If
that is so and if it
be postulated, as argued on appellant's behalf in
relation
to sec 46(9)(a)(i), that those words mean that the fixing
of the
further period can occur either before or after the
expiry of the original
period, then in those cases where
the words "either before or after the
expiry of any such
period" were expressly added, such words would be
totally
redundant. This would run counter to the second canon
of
construction referred to above. This impels one to
the view that, where these
additional words do not appear,
the power to fix a further period or periods
is not so ex-
18
tensive: and this points obviously to the power being
exercisable only before the expiry of the original period.
This interpretation does, of course, prompt the question: why should the
Legislature have wished to draw this distinction - to allow
an ex
post
facto
fixing of a further period in some situations and not in others? It
was suggested by respondents' counsel that the following general
pattern was
discernible: where ex
post facto
fixing was permitted, this related to
purely procedural matters, such as the time for filing written representa-tions;
whereas where
it is not permitted, the period in question was of more serious
significance in that it de-termined the jurisdiction of a particular
party to
conduct an arbitration (sec 45(8)(a) and (b) ) or of an industrial council or a
conciliation board to settle a dispute (sec
46(2)(a), 46(9)(a)(i) and (ii) ).
There is some cogency in this argument, although sec 43(3)(b) does not
readily
19
conform to the suggested pattern.
Respondents' counsel also pointed to the uncer-tainty which could arise if
sec 46(9)(a)(i) were inter-preted to mean that the Minister
(or his delegate)
could determine a further period after the expiry of the origi-nal, specified
period. He emphasized that, on this
in-terpretation, there being no time limit,
a further period might be fixed after the matter had in the meanwhile and on the
lapse
of the original period, been referred to the Industrial Court; and that
this anomaly could cause was-ted expense and confusion. Appellant's
counsel
countered this argument by arguing that in such circumstances the Minister would
refuse to grant a further period. There
is some force in the argument of
respondents' counsel and, it does in my opinion, tend to reinforce what appears
to me to be the
correct interpretation, as derived from a consideration of the
language of sec 46(9)(a)(i), read
20 in the context of the Act as a
whole.
Appellant's counsel quoted the same cases as were referred to in the Court a
quo
; and in addition to the English case of
The King v Lewis
[1906] 2 KB 307.
None of these cases, which all turned on their own parti-cular
facts and instruments to be interpreted, is, in my view, at all helpful.
In none
does one find the same language or the same compelling contextual considerations
as exist in the present case.
For these reasons I hold that the Court a
quo
came to the correct
conclusion in regard to the interpre-tation of sec 46(9)(a)(i) and as to whether
the period for the settlement
of the dispute between appellant and the
respondents by the Industrial Council had been validly ex-tended by Olivier on
14 December
1984. Consequently, the further question canvassed in the Court a
quo
(point (b)) does not arise for decision by this Court.
21
In regard to costs, there is one point to be noted. It will be
recalled that the Court a
quo
, when granting leave to respondents to
"cross-appeal", ordered that the costs of the application for leave to
"cross-appeal" be costs
in the "cross-appeal". Because respondents have not
"cross-appealed" this order has become ineffective. It was agreed by counsel
for
respondents that in the circumstances this Court could and should make an order
that the respondents pay the costs of this application.
The following order is accordingly made:
(1)
the appeal is dismissed
with costs;
(2) the respondents are ordered to pay the costs of the application to the Court
a
quo
for leave to "cross-appeal" jointly and severally, the one paying
the others to be absolved.
M M CORBETT
HOEXTER, JA) SMALBERGER, JA) CONCUR STEYN, JA) CONCUR.
EKSTEEN, JA)