South African Transport and Allied Workers Union and Others v Collett Armed Security Services (JS1280/09) [2013] ZALCJHB 111 (2 May 2013)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Amendment of pleadings — Application to amend statement of opposition — Respondent sought to withdraw admission that applicants' strike was protected — Legal principles governing amendments considered, including absence of mala fides and potential prejudice to the other party — Court's discretion to grant amendments emphasized — Respondent's application to amend granted, allowing for proper ventilation of issues regarding the nature of the strike and the reasons for dismissal.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an interlocutory application in the Labour Court in which the respondent employer sought leave to amend its statement of opposition by withdrawing an earlier admission that the applicants’ strike action was protected, and substituting an allegation that the strike was unprotected/illegal. The matter also raised a further procedural issue concerning an agreement recorded in the pre-trial minute that the Labour Court would sit as an arbitrator in terms of section 158(2)(b) of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (“LRA”).


The parties were the South African Transport and Allied Workers Union (first applicant) and W Masina and 42 others (second and further applicants), on the one hand, and Collett Armed Security Services (respondent), on the other.


The procedural history reflected that the applicants instituted the main action by filing a statement of case on 26 November 2009, alleging an automatically unfair dismissal on the basis that they were dismissed for participating in a protected strike. The respondent delivered its statement of opposition on 11 December 2009, which, read with the later pre-trial minute of 14 November 2012, treated the strike as protected but asserted that the dismissals were for misconduct. Shortly before trial, the respondent brought the present amendment application to withdraw that admission. The hearing was affected by the respondent’s request for a stand-down/postponement because its main witness was unavailable, with a tender of costs, and the matter stood down to allow the exchange of affidavits in the amendment application.


The general subject-matter of the dispute in the main action concerned whether the applicants’ dismissals were automatically unfair (dismissal for participation in a protected strike) or were instead misconduct dismissals related to conduct during the strike. The interlocutory application concerned whether the respondent could change its pleaded position on the protected nature of the strike, and whether the parties could effectively bind the Court to proceed as an arbitrator under section 158(2)(b).


2. Material Facts


The Labour Court treated the following as materially established from the pleadings and the pre-trial minute for purposes of the amendment application.


In the applicants’ statement of case, the applicants alleged that they were dismissed for engaging in a protected strike action. In response, the respondent’s statement of opposition admitted the dismissals but pleaded that the dismissals were for misconduct, and further pleaded that it was not required to issue an ultimatum because the dismissals were not for strike participation but for misconduct.


The parties’ pre-trial minute dated 14 November 2012 recorded a chronology as common cause, including that the respondent met with the union on 19 August 2009, that the union sent a 48-hour strike notice later that day regarding rotation, that on 20 August 2009 the union sent a further letter notifying of members’ intention to embark on a protected strike commencing on 22 August, and that on 22 August 2009 the union’s members embarked on protected strike action. The pre-trial minute also recorded that on 1 September 2009 the respondent succeeded in interdicting misconduct during the strike action.


The issues for determination in the main action were framed in the pre-trial minute as whether the dismissals were for reasons related to misconduct (respondent’s case) or for participating in a protected strike (applicants’ case).


The respondent’s amendment application sought to withdraw its admission that the strike was protected and to replace it with a denial that the strike action on 22 August 2009 was protected. The respondent explained this on the basis that when preparing its response to the statement of case it had erroneously admitted that the strike was protected.


In evaluating the explanation advanced, the Court considered that the concession regarding protection of the strike ran throughout the pleadings and was recorded in the pre-trial minute, and that the respondent’s counsel characterised the error as “perpetual” rather than isolated. The Court also considered that, prior to the unfair dismissal litigation, the respondent had brought two urgent interdict applications seeking to interdict the strike on the basis that it was unprotected (case numbers J1873/09 and J1808/09), and that those applications were unsuccessful in showing that the strike was unprotected. The Court treated those earlier steps as showing that the respondent previously took the position that the strike was unprotected, but found that this did not explain how the respondent came to make (and maintain) the later admission and recorded common-cause position in the pleadings and pre-trial minute.


The respondent contended (in support of the proposed amendment) that the strike was unprotected because the dispute related to rotation had allegedly been resolved in a settlement agreement dated 14 August 2009, rendering a later referral invalid, and because the dispute allegedly fell within refusal to bargain requiring an advisory award under section 64(2) of the LRA. The Court treated these contentions as part of the respondent’s asserted justification for seeking to ventilate the issue, but the interlocutory decision turned on whether an amendment should be allowed, not on finally deciding strike protection.


3. Legal Issues


The first central legal question was whether the respondent had made out a proper case for the Court, in the exercise of its discretion, to permit an amendment withdrawing an admission—particularly an admission that had become entrenched in the pleadings and the pre-trial minute—so as to place the protected/unprotected nature of the strike in dispute.


This issue required the Court to apply established procedural principles governing amendments to the specific context of a withdrawal of a significant admission recorded not only in pleadings but also in the pre-trial minute. It therefore involved the application of law to fact and a discretionary evaluative judgment concerning bona fides, the adequacy of the explanation for the admission, and prejudice.


The second legal question concerned the status and effect of the parties’ agreement (recorded in the pre-trial minute) that the Labour Court should sit as an arbitrator in terms of section 158(2)(b) of the LRA, and specifically whether such an agreement could validly determine that the Court would proceed by way of arbitration, or whether the decision is one for the Court’s discretion under the statute. This issue was primarily one of statutory interpretation and jurisdiction, coupled with the Court’s characterisation of its power to deal with employment-related matters and matters incidental to its jurisdiction.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Court restated that it has a discretion when dealing with applications to amend pleadings. In exercising that discretion, the Court identified the established considerations as including whether the application is mala fide, whether granting or refusing it would cause an injustice, whether the amendment would cause prejudice to the other party, and whether any prejudice could be cured through a postponement and/or a costs order. The Court emphasised that where a party seeks to withdraw an admission, a full and satisfactory explanation of how the admission came to be made and why it should be withdrawn is required, and the explanation must demonstrate the applicant’s bona fides and disclose a triable issue.


In applying these principles, the Court treated it as significant that the admission the respondent sought to withdraw was not confined to a single passage but was effectively embedded throughout the litigation record, and, critically, was embodied in the pre-trial minute. The Court located the amendment application within the purpose of pre-trial procedures, namely to narrow issues and curb costs, and it relied on authority emphasising that pre-trial admissions are binding and that allowing a party to resile from deliberate pre-trial agreements without special circumstances undermines the purpose of pre-trial management.


On the explanation offered by the respondent, the Court held that the respondent had not provided a satisfactory explanation for what was described as a “perpetual” error. Accepting the respondent’s characterisation of the error as enduring across pleadings and pre-trial minute, the Court found that the respondent did not explain why the concession persisted through the litigation process up to and including the pre-trial minute. The Court considered that the respondent’s reliance on its earlier stance (including its prior interdict proceedings and contemporaneous correspondence indicating the strike was unprotected) did not explain why the respondent later pleaded and agreed that the strike was protected. Those prior events were thus not treated as curing the absence of an explanation; rather, they showed that the respondent’s stance had shifted during the litigation without a properly explained basis.


The Court further reasoned that the amendment application was brought late in the run-up to trial and would affect the applicants’ trial preparation. It rejected the respondent’s contention that prejudice had not been properly pleaded by the applicants, holding instead that the respondent bore the burden of showing that granting the amendment would not cause prejudice (or that it could adequately be addressed). While the respondent argued that any prejudice could be cured by a costs order, the Court was not persuaded on the facts that the respondent had made out a case meeting the threshold for withdrawing such a crucial admission embedded in the pre-trial minute.


On costs for the amendment application, the Court accepted that costs should follow the result but declined to order punitive costs in respect of the amendment application. It nevertheless held that the costs should include the wasted costs of the stand-down on 29 April 2013, because the late filing of the amendment application occasioned the need for additional steps.


Turning to the section 158(2)(b) issue, the Court analysed the statutory provision as conferring a discretion on the Court to continue with proceedings while sitting as an arbitrator only if it becomes apparent after referral to the Labour Court that the dispute ought to have been referred to arbitration, and then only with the consent of the parties and where it is expedient to do so. The Court accepted (as common ground between the legal representatives) that the Court is not bound by the parties’ agreement and that section 158(2) confers a discretion on the Court; the Court emphasised that it will sit as arbitrator only when it finds it expedient, not merely because the parties desire it.


The Court additionally explained its approach to jurisdiction by stating that the Labour Court has power to deal with employment-related matters within its jurisdiction and matters incidental thereto, particularly in the context of strike-related conduct, so as to avoid piecemeal dispute resolution. It distinguished this from cases where the main cause of action falls within the jurisdiction of the CCMA or a bargaining council, in which event section 158(2)(b) becomes relevant as a mechanism for conversion (but still one controlled by the Court’s discretion). On this basis, the Court concluded that the “conversion” process under section 158(2)(b) is initiated by the Court when the statutory conditions are met, and is not something the parties can pre-determine by agreement in the pre-trial minute.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Court declared that the agreement between the parties (recorded in the pre-trial minute) that the Court should sit as an arbitrator in terms of section 158(2)(b) was of no force and effect.


The Court dismissed the respondent’s application to amend its statement of defence, including its attempt to withdraw the admission that the strike was protected, and ordered the respondent to pay the applicants’ costs of that application, including the costs occasioned by the matter standing down on 29 April 2013.


The Court postponed the main action to 2 September 2013 and ordered the respondent to pay the costs of the postponement on the attorney and client scale.


Cases Cited


Transport & Allied Workers Union & another v SA Airways (Pty) Ltd (2010) 31 ILJ 1938 (LC).


Moolman v Estate Moolman & another 1927 CPD 27.


MacDuff & Co v Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Co Ltd 1923 TPD 309.


Twani and Others v Premier for the Province of the Eastern Cape and Others (460/99) [2008] ZAECHC 169.


CEPPWAWU v CTP Ltd and Another [2013] 4 BLLR 378 (LC).


MEC for Economic Affairs, Environmental & Tourism, Eastern Cape v Kruizenga and Another 2010 (4) SA 122 (SCA); (2010) 31 ILJ 1629 (SCA).


Price NO v Allied-JBS Building Society 1980 (3) SA 874 (A).


Filta-Matix (Pty) Ltd v Feudenberg and Others [1997] ZASCA 110; 1998 (1) SA 606 (SCA).


NEHAWU v University of Cape Town (2000) 7 BLLR 819 (LC).


Legislation Cited


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, section 64(1).


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, section 64(2).


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, section 158(2)(b).


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, section 191.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 37.


Held


The Court held that the respondent failed to provide a satisfactory explanation, consistent with the requirements for withdrawing an admission, for why it admitted (and maintained through the pleadings and pre-trial minute) that the strike action was protected and why it should now be permitted to plead the opposite. Given the binding character of pre-trial minutes and the heightened duty to explain the withdrawal of a crucial admission, the amendment was refused.


The Court also held that an agreement by the parties that the Labour Court should sit as an arbitrator under section 158(2)(b) cannot bind the Court and is ineffective, because the statutory power to proceed as arbitrator is exercised at the Court’s discretion when it becomes apparent that the dispute ought to have been arbitrated and when it is expedient to do so. The Court declared the parties’ recorded agreement to that effect to be of no force and effect.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The Labour Court applies a discretionary test to applications to amend pleadings, considering bona fides, the avoidance of injustice, the presence and curability of prejudice, and whether any prejudice can be addressed by postponement and/or costs. Where an amendment entails the withdrawal of an admission, a party bears a heavier burden to provide a satisfactory explanation for the making of the admission and the need to withdraw it, and must show that the amendment raises a triable issue.


Admissions and agreements recorded in a pre-trial minute serve the purpose of narrowing issues, shortening trials, and curbing costs, and they are generally binding on the parties. A party may be relieved from that binding effect only with the other party’s consent or by the Court exercising its discretion on good cause shown; absent special circumstances, allowing a party to resile from deliberate pre-trial agreements undermines the purpose of pre-trial procedure.


Section 158(2)(b) of the LRA does not permit the parties, by agreement, to require the Labour Court to sit as an arbitrator. The decision to proceed as arbitrator depends on the Court’s assessment that the dispute ought to have been referred to arbitration and that it is expedient to continue in that form, with party consent operating as a statutory requirement once the Court is otherwise satisfied. The Labour Court also recognised a broad jurisdictional approach in which it may determine matters incidental to issues properly before it, particularly in strike-related disputes, to avoid fragmented litigation.

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[2013] ZALCJHB 111
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South African Transport and Allied Workers Union and Others v Collett Armed Security Services (JS1280/09) [2013] ZALCJHB 111 (2 May 2013)

15
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
JUDGMENT
Reportable
case no: JS 1280/09
In the matter between:
SOUTH AFRICAN TRANSPORT
AND ALLIED WORKERS UNION
....................................................................
Applicant
W MASINA AND 42 OTHERS
............................................................
Second
Applicant
and
COLLETT ARMED SECURITY SERVICES
................................................
Respondent
Heard: 30 April 2013
Delivered: 02 May 2013
Summary: Application to amend. Principles governing application to
amend- applicant to show no injustice, no mala fide, no prejudice.

Whether prejudice can be addressed by cost order. Court has powers to
consider matters incidental to its jurisdiction which are
labour
related. Agreement between the parties that the Court should sit as
arbitrator in terms of section 158 (2) (b) of the LRA
of no force and
effect.
judgment
MOLAHLEHI J
This is an interlocutory application in terms of which the
respondent seeks to amend its statement of opposition in which it

had admitted that the strike action by the applicants was protected.
The respondent also applied to have the matter stand down
for the
following day 30 April 2013 or be postponed
sine die
as its
main witness was not available. The respondent tendered costs.
The hearing stood down for the following day, 30 April 2013 and the
applicants were granted leave to file their answer to the

respondent’s application to amend its pleadings by 17H00 on 29
April 2013. And the respondent was to file its reply in
the morning
of 30 April 2013.
The applicants’ attorney, Mr Daniels indicated that the
applicants would be ready to proceed if the respondent’s

application to amend was unsuccessful. He indicated that the
applicants would however not be ready to proceed if the application

to amend was granted. Mr Vetten, counsel for the respondent
indicated that the respondent would consider its position whether
or
not to proceed once the decision regarding its application to amend
was made.
The main matter in this case relates to a dispute concerning an
alleged automatically unfair dismissal arising from the strike

action which was undertaken by the applicants. The applicants in
their statement of case contend that the dismissal was automatically

unfair because the respondent dismissed them for participating in a
protected strike action. The statement of case launching
the main
action was filed with the Court on 26 November 2009. In relation to
the nature of the strike action the applicants had
embarked upon the
applicants specifically state at paragraph 3.1 of the statement of
case that:

3.1.1.
The individual applicants were dismissed by the respondent for
engaging in a protected strike action . . .”
In its response to the above paragraph the respondent states in
statement of opposition, which was filed on 11 December 2009,
that:

22.2.
Save to admit the dismissal the Respondent state that the Applicants
were dismissed for engaging in misconduct.”
And at paragraph 25 of its statement of opposition the respondent
states that:

The
allegations contained herein are admitted and the Respondents states
that it was not required from the Respondents to issue
an ultimatum
as the Applicants were not dismissed for alleged engagement in a
strike, but their misconduct.’
On 14 November 2012, the parties filed their pre-trial minutes
wherein they recorded amongst others the following as common cause

facts:

2.11
On 19 August 2009, the respondent met with the union . . .
2.12 Later that same day, the
union sent a 48 hour strike notice to the respondent, regarding the
rotation.
2.13 On 20 August 2009, the
union sent a further letter to the respondent notifying it of its
members’ intention of embarking
on a protected strike
commencing on 22 August.
2.14 On 22 August 2009, the
union’s members embarked on protected strike action.’
The pre-trial minutes further states that on 1 September 2009 the
respondent succeeded in interdicting misconduct during the
strike
action.
Concerning the issue to be determined by the Court the pre-trial
minutes states the issues to be the following:

4.1
Whether the dismissals of the individual applicants were for reasons
related to misconduct, as alleged by the respondent or
for their
participating in a protected strike, as alleged by the applicants . .
.’
The application to amend
As indicated above the respondent is seeking to amend its statement
of opposition to the applicants’ statement of case.
The
respondent specifically seeks to amend its admission that the
applicants’ strike was protected. The amendment which
the
respondent wishes to introduce is to the effect that the applicants
were dismissed for allegedly participating in an illegal
strike.
The deponent to the founding affidavit in this application states
that when preparing the response the applicants’ statement
of
case he erroneously admitted that the strike was protected under the
law. In this respect the respondent seeks leave to amend
paragraph
18 of its opposition to the applicants’ statement of case,
(this would include paragraph 2.14 of the pre-trial
minutes) for it
to read as follows:

Save
to deny that the strike action embarked upon on 22 August 2009 was
protected, the allegations contained herein are admitted.’
In support of its application to amend its papers the respondent
contends that it was always its intention to dispute the legality
of
the strike embarked upon by the applicants.
It was argued on behalf of the respondent that but for denying that
the respondent committed an error, and that the application
was
mala
fide
, the applicants have not pleaded prejudice in the event the
application for the amendment of the statement of opposition was to

be granted. It was also argued in this respect that any prejudice
that the applicants may suffer can be addressed through a costs

order.
In relation to the concession made about the legality of the strike,
it was argued on behalf of the respondent that the error
was based
on the legal principle.
The respondent contends that it had from the beginning challenged
the legality of the strike. In this respect the respondent
contends
that the issue that gave rise to the strike was the rotation of the
employees, which was resolved in terms of the settlement
agreement
dated 14 August 2009. The referral which was made on 17 August 2009,
by the applicants was therefore invalid because
at that stage the
parties had settled the matter by agreeing to a meeting.
The respondent further contended that the strike was unprotected
because the dispute upon which the applicants relied on in embarking

on the strike relates to refusal to bargaining in terms of section
64 (2) of the Labour Relations Act which requires an advisory
award
before employees can be entitled to embark on a protected strike.
It was for the above reasons that it was argued on behalf of the
respondent that there is a need to ventilate the issues in order
to
come to a fair and reasonable conclusion as to the application to
amend.
The legal principles governing an amendment
It is trite that the Court has a discretion to exercise when
considering an application to amend pleadings. The factors which
the
Court will take into account in considering whether to grant an
application to amend pleadings include amongst others: (a)
is the
application mala fide; (b) will the granting or refusal amount to an
injustice (c) will the granting of the amendment
prejudice the other
party and; (d) can prejudice that may result be cured by a cost
order. In a case involving a withdrawal of
an admission made in the
pleadings, the Court will consider whether a full explanation of the
circumstances in which the admission
was made and the reason for
seeking its withdrawal.
1
In
Twani and Others v Premier for the Province of the Eastern
Cape and Others,
2
the Court held that:

[20] The following principles applicable to
the question whether an amendment which is opposed should be granted
may be recorded.
The Court has the greatest latitude in granting
amendments and it is very necessary that that be so. The object of
the Court is
to do justice between the parties. Court proceedings are
not a game in which, if some mistake is made, the forfeit is claimed.
Subject to what follows, the general approach of the Court is to
grant the amendment in order to promote the proper ventilation
of the
dispute between the parties and to have the true issues between them
the subject of decision. An amendment is, however,
not to be had
merely for the asking; some explanation therefore must be offered.
This is especially so where the proposed amendment
involves the
withdrawal of an admission and the Court will generally require to
have before it a satisfactory explanation of the
circumstances in
which the admission was made and the reasons for seeking to withdraw
it. The explanation offered must demonstrate
the bona fides of the
applicant. The applicant must show that prima facie the amendment
sought discloses “something deserving
of consideration, a
triable issue”. The amendment must not cause prejudice to the
other side which cannot be met by a postponement
and/or an order for
costs.’ (footnotes left out).
Evaluation
The application to amend and withdraw the concession, in the present
matter, was made by the respondent in the context of the
preparation
for the trial and more importantly in the pre-trial minutes. The
pre-trial minutes is an outcome of the pre-trial
conference
conducted by the attorneys of both parties.
In the amendment the respondent seeks to withdraw its admission that
the applicants’ strike was protected. The object of
the
amendment sought is to record that the strike was unprotected. In
this regard the application has to be considered within
the context
of the effect and object of the pre-trial conference. The object of
pre-trial minutes is set out in
CEPPWAWU v CTP Ltd and Another
,
3
in the following terms:

[103]
In MEC
for Economic Affairs, Environmental & Tourism, Eastern Cape v
Kruizenga and Another (Kruizenga)
, the
SCA said the following about the role and importance of pre-trial
conferences and the significance of admissions of fact made
in the
course thereof:

The rule (ie rule 37) was introduced to
shorten the length of trials, to facilitate settlement between the
parties, narrow issues
and to curb costs. One of the methods the
parties use to achieve these objectives is to make admissions
concerning a number of
issues which the pleadings raise. Admissions
of fact made at a rule 37 conference, constitute sufficient proof of
those facts.
The minutes of the pre-trial conference merely signed
either by a party or his or her representatives. Rule 37 is thus of
critical
importance in the litigation process."
It is trite that the parties are generally bound by the pleadings
and the concessions made therein.
4
The effects and the consequences of a pre-trial conference are set
out in
Filta-Matix (Pty) Ltd v Feudenberg and Others
,
5
as follows:

To allow a party, without special
circumstances, to resile in from an agreement deliberately reached at
the pre-trial conference
would be to negate the object of rule 37,
which is to limit issues and to curtail the scope of the litigation.
If a party elects
to limit the ambit of his case, the election is
usually binding.’ (footnotes omitted).
It is clear from the above authorities that the contents of the
pre-trial minutes are binding on the parties. A party can escape
the
binding effect of the pre-trial minutes if the other party consent
thereto or if the Court was to exercise its discretion
in favour of
allowing the amendment of the pre-trial minutes. As indicated
earlier the Court will in general grant permission
to amend a
pre-trial minutes if justice between the parties so dictates.
In the present instance the key issue for consideration is whether
the respondent has provided a satisfactory explanation for
the
amendment. The duty of the respondent to provide a satisfactory
explanation is even heavier when regard is had to the fact
that the
object of the amendment is to withdraw a crucial admission that the
strike in which the applicants participated in was
protected.
In my view, the respondent has failed to make out a case providing a
basis for granting the amendment.
Mr Vetten for the respondent disagreed with Mr Daniels that the
error which the respondent says its attorney made was repeated

throughout the pleadings. He argued that the error made was
perpetual rather than repeated. In other words if one accepts his

analysis of the nature of the error it would mean that the error did
not occur only in the pre-trial minutes, but also throughout
the
pleadings in the matter. Accepting this analysis the point is that
there is no explanation why the error made is "perpetual."
It is apparent that at some point in the history of the dispute
there was a disagreement between the parties as to the nature
of the
strike. This is more so when regard is had to the two urgent
interdicts which the respondent lodged before this Court.
In one of
the applications to interdict the strike which was brought under
case number J1873/09, which was heard on the 1 September
2009, the
respondent sought to interdict the strike on the basis that it was
unprotected. The applicant was unsuccessful in showing
that the
strike action was unprotected.
The other case where in the respondent sought to interdict the
strike on the basis that it was unprotected and that the conduct
of
the applicants in the furtherance thereof was unlawful, was filed
under case number J1808/09. That application was also unsuccessful.

It again means that the respondent had failed to show that the
strike was unprotected.
It follows from the above that the two applications do not assist
nor provide any explanation as to the alleged error which the

respondent seeks to rely on in seeking the amendment. All what the
two cases show when contrasted with the pleadings is that
the stand
which the respondent took before the applicants declared an unfair
dismissal dispute was that the strike was unprotected.
The stand
taken by the respondent leading to and during the strike change in
the course of the engagement with the applicants
in the process of
preparing for trial. The same applies to the two letters which the
respondent addressed to the applicants on
20 August 2009. In one of
the letters the respondent’s attorneys advised the applicants
that their notice of intention
to embark on the strike was defective
because it did not comply with the provisions of section 64 (1) of
the Labour Relations
Act and in the other letter, the applicants
were advised that their planned strike action at the time was
unprotected. The same
applies to the ultimatum which the respondent
issued on 1 September 2009.
The concession that the strike was protected runs throughout the
pleadings or to use the words of the respondents counsel is

perpetual throughout the pleadings. The concession is more
importantly recorded in the pre-trial minutes which serves not only

to narrow the issues but also serves as an agreement between the
parties which the Court is enjoined to uphold unless there are
good
reasons not to do so.
In short what the respondent has explained is the stand it took
prior to the commencement of the litigation about the alleged
unfair
dismissal dispute. The facts surrounding the stand which the
respondent took prior to the commencement of the litigation
does not
provide any explanation regarding the alleged error which the
respondent claims to have made.
In light of the above reasons, I am of the view that the
respondent’s application stands to fail. The respondent’s

application further stands to fail because the respondent has failed
to make out a case that the applicant would not suffer prejudice
if
leave to amend was to be granted. I do not agree with Mr Vetten that
it was for the applicant to make out a case of prejudice.
As concerning costs, it was argued on behalf of the applicants that
consideration should be given to awarding punitive costs.
In my
view, whilst I see no reason why costs should not follow the
results, I am not persuaded that the facts and the circumstances
of
this case support the contention for a punitive costs order. It is
also my view, taking into account the circumstances of
this case
that the costs should include the wasted cost of 29 April 2013. This
is the case notwithstanding the fact that the
respondents were
granted leave to file this answer. The leave to file an answer
granted to the respondent was occasioned by the
late filing of the
application to amend.
The other issue that arose in this matter concerns the agreement
recorded in the pre-trial minutes that the Court shall in terms
of
section 158 (2) (b) sit as an arbitrator. Section 158 (2) (b) of the
LRA reads as follows:
(2) If at any stage after a
dispute has been referred to the Labour Court, it becomes apparent
that the dispute ought to have been
referred to arbitration, the
Court may-
(b) with the consent of the
parties and if it is expedient to do so,
continue with the proceedings
with the Court sitting as an arbitrator, in which case the Court may
only make any order that a commissioner
or arbitrator would have been
entitled to make.
[35]
The agreement is
based on dual causes of action arising from the facts in this matter.
The legal representatives agreed that the
Court was not bound by the
agreement and that on the proper reading of section 158 (2) of the
LRA, the Court has a discretion whether
to sit as an arbitrator. The
Court will sit as an arbitrator when it is expedient for it and not
at the expediency of the parties
to do so.
[36] In my view the fact that certain aspects
of the case does not fall within the jurisdiction of the Court does
not mean that
the Court lacks jurisdiction. The broad principle
governing the jurisdiction is that the Labour Court has power to deal
with all
employment related matters that fall within its jurisdiction
and matters that are incidental thereto. It is therefore my view,
that where the Court is dealing with strike related conduct which
will in general confer jurisdiction on the Court, and the Court

should be able entertain other issue that may arise in that context
to avoid piecemeal approach to a dispute resolution. Mlambo
J as he
then was, put it succinctly and correctly in
NEHAWU
v University of Cape Town
6
when he said:

In my
view it is unnecessarily restrictive to interpret
the
Act in a way that
excludes
matters that are incidental
to
the
relationship between employer and
employee
from the processes of the LRA’
.
[37] It is also my view that it is for the
trial Court to determine, once all the facts have been placed before
it, whether it would
be expedient to deal with matters that would
ordinarily fall within the jurisdiction of the CCMA or the Bargaining
Council if those
matters are incidental to the main cause of action.
I need to pause and indicate that different consideration would apply
in a
case where the main cause of action is based on issues that fall
within the jurisdiction of the CCMA or the Bargaining Council
7
.
It is in those kind of cases where the provisions of section 158 (2)
(b) of the LRA becomes relevant. In other words if it becomes

apparent to the Court that the dispute ought to have been referred to
arbitration the Court may if it deems expedient to do so,
seek the
consent of the parties that it continues with the proceedings but
convert them into arbitration proceedings. The process
of initiating
the “conversion” from adjudication to arbitration vests
with the Court and not the parties.
[38] In my view it is not for the parties to agree that the Court
should sit as an arbitrator but it is for the Court once it finds

that it is expedient to do so, and the matter must have already been
referred to the Court.
Order
In the premises, the following order is made:
The agreement between the parties that the Court should sit as an
arbitrator is declared to be of no force and effect.
The respondent’s application to amend its statement of
defence is dismissed with costs including the costs of matter

standing down on 29 April 2013.
The main action is postponed to 2 September 2013, with costs on
attorney and client scale, to be paid by the respondent.
_________________
Molahlehi J
Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa
Appearances:
For the Applicant: Mr R Daniels of Cheadle Thompson & Haysom
For the Respondent: Adv Vetten instructed by Makhafola & Verster
Attorneys
1
See
Transport & Allied Workers Union & another v SA Airways
(Pty) Ltd (2010) 31 ILJ 1938 (LC). In Moolman v Estate Moolman
&
another
1927 CPD 27
at 29, where
the
court held that: 'The practical rule adopted seems to be that
amendments will always be allowed unless the application to
amend is
mala fide or unless such amendment would cause an injustice to the
other party which cannot be compensated by costs,
or in other words,
unless the parties cannot be put back for the purposes of justice in
the same position as they were when the
pleading which is sought to
amend was filed.' And in MacDuff & Co v Johannesburg
Consolidated Investment Co Ltd
1923 TPD 309
, the court held that:
'However negligent or careless may have been the first omission and
however late the proposed amendment,
the amendment should be allowed
if it can be made without injustice to the other side. There is no
injustice if the other side
can be compensated by costs.'
2
(460/99)
[2008] ZAECHC 169.
3
CEPPWAWU
v CTP Ltd and Another
[2013] 4 BLLR 378 (LC)
4
See
Price No v Allied –JBS Building Society
[1980)
(30) SA 874 (AD).
5
[1997] ZASCA 110
;
1998
(1) SA 606
(SCA) at 614 para C-D
6
(2000)
7 BLLR 819
(LC) at para H-I
7
Section
191
of the
Labour Relations Act of 1995
provides as follows:
Disputes about unfair dismissals and unfair labour practices
-
If there is a dispute about the fairness of a dismissal or a dispute
about an unfair labour practice, the dismissed employee
or the
employee alleging the unfair labour practice may refer the dispute
in writing within to- 1. a council, if the parties
to the dispute
fall within the registered scope of that council; or- 2. the
Commission, if no council has jurisdiction.