About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Johannesburg Labour Court, Johannesburg
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Johannesburg Labour Court, Johannesburg
>>
2017
>>
[2017] ZALCJHB 297
|
|
Mashao v PHD Pharmaceutical Health Care (JR3506/09) [2017] ZALCJHB 297 (10 August 2017)
IN
THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
no: JR 3506/09
In the matter between:
L.J.
MASHAO
Applicant
and
PHD PHARMACEUTICAL HEALTH
CARE
Respondent
Heard:
11 July 2017
Delivered:
10 August 2017
JUDGMENT
DEALE,
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant applies for an order for the Respondent to pay the
Applicant’s arrear salaries for the period 11 January
2010 to 9
September 2016 (the back-pay period).
[2]
The claim arises from a judgment of this Court on 26 August 2016
under case number JR 3605/09. The judgment dismissed a review
application and made an award of reinstatement dated 30 November 2009
an order of court.
[3]
The Respondent opposes the application on the grounds, amongst
others, that it has paid the specified back-pay and complied
with the
award. In addition, it submits that the award did not specify that
the Applicant’s reinstatement was with retrospective
back-pay
for the period as claimed. It also contends that in any event, the
Applicant did not report for duty or tender his services
as required
by the award.
Background
[4]
On 23 June 2009, the Applicant was dismissed from his employment with
the Respondent as a Replenishment Supervisor.
[5]
On 30 November 2009, the Applicant secured a reinstatement award from
the CCMA under case number GATW 8437/09 (the “Award’).
The
following portions of the
Award are relevant to this application:
“…
29.
The dismissal of the applicant, Lebeko Mashao was substantively
unfair.
30.
The respondent is ordered to reinstate the applicant, Jonas Mashao to
his previous
position effective from 25 June 2009 on the same terms
and conditions as those that prevailed before his dismissal. The
applicant
is directed to report for duty on 11 January 2010 at 08:00.
31.
The respondent is further ordered to pay to Mr. Mashao back pay as
calculated below:
R5060-00 (monthly salary) x 5 (period
unemployed from 25 June 2009 to 25 November 2009) = R25300-00. The
period between 25 November
2009 and 11 January 2009 should be
regarded as unpaid leave.
32.
The provisions in paragraph 30 and 31 must be complied with within 14
calender days
of this award being received by the respondent, failing
which the applicant may elect to invoke the mechanisms in section 143
of
the [LRA], to seek enforcement of this award.
33. I make no order
as to costs”
[6]
On 8 January 2010, the Respondent filed an application in this Court
to review the Award. The Respondent failed to take further
steps to
prosecute the review. For this reason, the Applicant made an
application to dismiss the review.
[7]
On 26 August 2016, Molahlehi J delivered a judgment, which dismissed
the review application due to the unreasonable delay. It
also made
the Award an order of Court.
[8]
The Respondent complied with paragraph 31 of the Award by paying the
back-pay of R25 300, less statutory deductions, to
the
Applicant. It did not pay the back-pay for the period which forms the
subject matter of this judgment.
Points
in Limine:
[9]
The Applicant’s attorney, Mr Sehunane withdrew the Applicant’s
points in limine
in the hearing.
[10]
The Respondent’s
point in limine
goes to the root of the
purpose of the Applicant’s application and will be dealt with
in what follows. For this reason, it
is not necessary to deal with it
as a preliminary issue.
Evaluation:
[11]
The Award directed the
Applicant to report to the Respondent for duty on 11 January 2010 at
08h00
[1]
.
[12]
Mr Sehunane, stated in paragraph 6.5 of his Supporting Affidavit that
–
“
6.5
The Applicant was advised by the Respondent not to report for duty
pending the finalization of
the review application filed by the
Respondent.”
[13]
The Respondent’s representative, Ms Roxanne Doman replied to
this submission in paragraph 19 of her Opposing Affidavit
on the
Respondent’s behalf as follows –
“
19.
The content hereof is disputed. The applicant at no stage returned to
work or asked to continue
with his employment. In fact, from 2009 to
2016 the applicant never returned. The Applicant fails to provide
specific details as
to when he reported, to who he reported, who
informed him not to report for duty and whether the Respondent was in
fact placed
on terms in any way. The applicant is therefore put to
the proof thereof.”
[14]
There was no further evidence or information provided in the hearing
to determine whether the Applicant reported for duty or
not. In any
event, the issue is rendered irrelevant for the reasons which
follow.
[15]
The Constitutional Court has
recently dealt with the issue of back-pay in circumstances in which
the implementation of an award
has been considerably delayed pending
the outcome of a review application. In
National
Union of Mineworkers of South Africa OBO M Fohlisa and 41 Others vs
Hendor Mining Supplies (A Division of Marschalk Beleggings
(Pty)
Ltd
[2]
the court confirmed that “reinstatement” means that the
court orders that –
“
[48]…the
employee must be “put back into the same job or position he or
she occupied before the dismissal, on the same
terms and conditions.
This means that the court is ordering that the employee not only be
taken back to his or her job, but that
he or she be afforded her or
his benefits under the contract. The benefits include payment of
remuneration. Surely that covers
the date of the reinstatement and
the date on which the reinstatement actually takes place.”
[16]
In this case, it was common cause that the Applicant’s
reinstatement actually took place on 12 September 2016. This is
confirmed in paragraph 5.1 of the Respondent’s Opposing
Affidavit. The reinstatement was a consequence of Molahlehi J’s
judgment on 26 August 2016.
[17]
The practical effect of the Molahlehi J judgment was to revive the
Award and require its implementation. The implementation
logically
included the reinstatement of the Applicant from 11 January 2010 as
specified in the Award.
[18]
Before the most recent
amendments to the Labour Relations Act
[3]
(LRA)_in January 2015, the effect of making an application for review
in terms of section 145 of the LRA was to suspend the implementation
of the award pending the outcome of the review. The addition of
section 145 (7) of the LRA removed the automatic suspension. The
award will now only be suspended if the applicant files satisfactory
security to cover the payments due to the employee in terms
of the
award.
[19]
The Award in this case dated 30 November 2009 pre-dates the section
145 (7) of the LRA amendment. It follows that the Award
was suspended
under the “old” practice pending the outcome of the
Respondent’s application for review.
[20]
The Respondent filed its application for review on 8 January 2010.
This was a mere 3 days before the date of reinstatement
on 11 January
2010. The effect of filing the application before the date of
reinstatement was to invoke the “old” practice
which
applied at that time – namely, to suspend the implementation of
the Award pending the outcome of the Respondent’s
review.
[21]
Since the suspension of the Award was automatic, it would have been
pointless for the Applicant to have reported for duty on
11 January
2010 as directed in the Award. It follows that the issue of whether
he reported for duty on 11 January 2010 is rendered
irrelevant and of
no consequence to the determination of his entitlement to back-pay
for the intervening period.
[22]
The relevant date for the purpose of implementing the Award is the
date of the Molahlehi J judgment on 26 August 2016. It established
the “actual” date of reinstatement which the parties
agreed was 12 September 2016. It also revived the “original”
date of reinstatement specified in the Award as 11 January 2010.
[23]
The revival of the original date of reinstatement in turn can only
mean that the reinstatement was retrospective from the date
of actual
reinstatement on 12 September 2016 back to the date of the original
date of reinstatement on 11 January 2010.
[24]
For these reasons, the Respondent’s submissions to the effect
that the reinstatement is not retrospective cannot be sustained.
This
has been put beyond doubt by the Constitutional Court in the
Hendor
judgement.
[25]
The Respondent has made issue with the Applicant’s conduct post
the actual date of reinstatement. However, the conduct
after the
actual date is not relevant to the Applicant’s legal
entitlement to retrospective relief for the period before
the actual
reinstatement. The Respondent could have dealt with the Applicant’s
absenteeism in the post actual date in terms
of its disciplinary
policies.
[26]
I conclude from this reasoning that the Applicant is entitled to the
remuneration, otherwise called “back-pay”
that he would
have earned in his employment with the Respondent for the period from
11 January 2010 to 12 September 2016. The Applicant
claimed from 9
January 2010 but it will be accurate to align the date with the date
specified in the Award.
[27]
The Applicant has calculated the back-pay due for salaries during the
period as R546 486.00. He also applies for leave
pay in the sum
of R46 289.16 which he would have accrued in the period.
[28]
The Respondent did not dispute the calculation of the R546 486.00
portion of the claim for arrear salaries in its opposing
papers or at
the hearing. It must therefore be assumed that it accepts the quantum
of this aspect of the claim as correct for the
purpose this
judgement.
[29]
The Respondent did not appear to have expressed its view on the
Applicant’s R46 289.16 claim for leave pay in addition
to
the arrear salaries. However, the Applicant’s claim for accrued
leave pay for the period cannot be sustained. This is
because he
assumes he would not have taken his annual paid leave during the
entire period and that he would instead have worked
for the full
period of 6 years without taking leave. This is not a reasonable
assumption to infer from the facts of this case to
entitle the
Applicant to the payment of leave pay.
Costs
[30]
This case has played out over more than 6 years since the original
Award directed the Respondent to reinstate the Applicant
in his
employment with the Respondent. This has come at considerable cost to
all concerned – but mostly at the Applicant’s
cost as an
individual at the lower end of the pay scale.
[31]
It is clear that the reason for the delay was caused by the
Respondent’s action in filing its application for review.
It is
less clear what the Respondent’s true intention was in doing
so. Was it motivated by a genuine belief in its prospects
of success
in getting the Award set aside? Or was it motivated by a deliberate
strategy to suspend and delay the implementation
of the Award over
several years in the hope that the strategy would exhaust the
Applicant financially to the point that he would
simply give up and
abandon his entitlements under the Award? The Respondent’s
failure to pursue the review application with
no explanation points
strongly to the latter motive as the more probable. This must attract
an order for costs against the Respondent
in the ordinary course.
[32]
The Applicant applied for the costs order to be made on a punitive
scale. There is some merit in doing so. However, it was
common cause
that the Respondent did engage in meaningful negotiations with the
Applicant in an attempt to settle the matter, albeit
without success.
This to some extent mitigates the Respondent’s degree of
blameworthiness sufficiently to escape a punitive
costs order.
[33]
In the premises, the following order is made:
Order:
1.
The Respondent is ordered to pay the sum of R546 486.00 into the
Applicant’s
nominated bank account on or before Friday 19
August 2017.
2.
Interest will accrue at the rate of 10% per annum on any balance
which may be
outstanding from 20 August 2017 until date of payment.
3.
The Respondent is ordered to pay the Applicant’s taxed costs
for this application.
__________________
P
Deale
Acting
Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
M. Sehunane
Instructed
by:
Sehunane Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
Daniel Berry of Guardian Employer’s Organization
[1]
Award at para 30).
[2]
[2017] 6 BLLR 539 (CC),
[3]
Act 66 of 1995