IMATU v CCMA and Others (C344/2016) [2017] ZALCCT 1; [2017] 6 BLLR 613 (LC); (2017) 38 ILJ 2027 (LC) (31 January 2017)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Review of arbitration award — Organisational rights — Independent Municipal and Allied Trade Union (IMATU) sought to review an arbitration award granting organisational rights to rival trade union MATUSA at Stellenbosch Local Municipality — The arbitrator failed to consider the provisions of section 21(8) of the Labour Relations Act, which requires consideration of various factors before granting rights to a minority union — The court held that the arbitration award was reviewed and remitted for reconsideration, as the arbitrator misconceived the nature of the inquiry regarding the organisational rights of MATUSA.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


The proceedings were a review application brought in the Labour Court in terms of section 145 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995 (LRA). The applicant, the Independent Municipal and Allied Trade Union (IMATU), sought to review and set aside an arbitration award issued under the auspices of the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA).


The first respondent was the CCMA, and the second respondent was the commissioner (cited as Joseph Williams N.O.) who issued the award under review. The third respondent, the Municipal & Allied Trade Union of South Africa (MATUSA), opposed the review and was the union in whose favour the award had been issued. SAMWU, SALGA, and Stellenbosch Local Municipality were cited as additional respondents, but the judgment records that only MATUSA opposed the review application.


The procedural history included an earlier and separate dispute regarding MATUSA’s registration as a trade union. The Registrar of Labour Relations initially refused registration after an objection by IMATU; MATUSA successfully appealed that refusal to the Labour Court and was registered pursuant to the court order. IMATU obtained leave to appeal further to the Labour Appeal Court, and that appeal was pending at the time of argument in this review. Although the parties requested a delay pending the appeal outcome, the Labour Court delivered judgment in the interests of expeditious dispute resolution.


The subject-matter of the review concerned the grant of organisational rights to MATUSA at the Stellenbosch Local Municipality, in circumstances where a threshold agreement existed in the local government bargaining structures and where the commissioner purported to act under section 21(8C) of the LRA to grant rights notwithstanding that threshold regime.


Material Facts


MATUSA sought to acquire organisational rights at Stellenbosch Local Municipality after the parties failed to reach agreement. It referred a dispute to the CCMA under section 21(8C) of the LRA, which permits a commissioner, subject to section 21(8), to grant rights in sections 12, 13, or 15 to a registered union that does not meet thresholds established by a section 18 agreement, provided that parties to the threshold agreement are given an opportunity to participate and the union represents a significant interest or substantial number of employees in the workplace.


A verification exercise was conducted at the municipality. The parties’ membership levels at the workplace were recorded as IMATU 29%, SAMWU 25%, and MATUSA 15%. These workplace representativity levels were treated as common cause for purposes of the arbitration and review.


It was also common cause that a collective agreement existed between the municipality and IMATU and SAMWU, and that SALGA had entered into a national agreement establishing a 15% threshold for registered trade unions seeking organisational rights in the local government sector. In the bargaining council context, IMATU and SAMWU were parties alongside SALGA, and a threshold agreement (as part of a main collective agreement for the period 1 July 2015 to 30 June 2020) confirmed that unions below the 15% threshold would not qualify for rights under sections 12, 13 and 15.


The commissioner issued an award granting MATUSA organisational rights under sections 12, 13 and 15, and ordered the municipality to deduct and pay over union levies to MATUSA as contemplated in section 13. The commissioner’s expressed basis for granting rights was that MATUSA was registered and had 15% membership at the workplace, which the commissioner treated as constituting a significant interest, and that the commissioner understood the LRA amendments to broaden access to organisational rights for unions that do not enjoy majority support.


The Labour Court’s review determination proceeded on the basis that the commissioner, in reaching the award, did not engage with the additional considerations stipulated in section 21(8) of the LRA, and instead relied essentially on the finding of “significant interest” as determinative.


Legal Issues


The central legal questions concerned the proper interpretation and application of section 21(8C) read with section 21(8) of the LRA in an organisational rights arbitration where a threshold agreement exists. The court had to determine whether, when a commissioner considers granting organisational rights under section 21(8C) to a union that does not meet an agreed threshold, the commissioner is still required to undertake the evaluative enquiry mandated by section 21(8).


A further question was whether the commissioner’s approach, in treating “significant interest” (section 21(8C)(b)) as effectively sufficient on its own, amounted to a misconception of the nature of the enquiry and therefore a reviewable defect under section 145, characterised as a gross irregularity in the conduct of the proceedings.


The dispute was primarily one of law and the application of law to fact. The material factual platform (membership levels, existence of threshold agreements, and the commissioner’s limited basis for the award) was largely common cause; the decisive controversy concerned whether the statutory scheme required a broader set of considerations and whether failure to consider them constituted a reviewable irregularity without further recourse to a reasonableness enquiry.


Court’s Reasoning


The court situated MATUSA’s claim for organisational rights within the broader statutory framework of the LRA and the collective bargaining arrangements in the local government sector. It emphasised that, although section 21(8C) empowers a commissioner to grant organisational rights to a union that does not meet section 18 thresholds, the subsection is expressly stated to be “subject to the provisions of subsection (8)”. The court treated this as a substantive constraint that shapes the enquiry and does not merely serve as background or optional guidance.


The court analysed the function of section 21(8C)(b), which requires that the union represent a significant interest or substantial number of employees in the workplace. It accepted that this requirement may operate as a basis upon which a commissioner can consider overriding a threshold agreement. However, it drew a clear distinction between a basis to override the threshold and a basis to grant organisational rights, holding that “significant interest” does not, without more, justify granting rights. The commissioner must still comply with the mandatory considerations listed in section 21(8).


On the court’s reading, section 21(8) imposes peremptory obligations on a commissioner when the dispute concerns representativeness for organisational rights, including duties to seek to minimise the proliferation of union representation in a single workplace and to minimise the financial and administrative burden of granting rights to more than one union. The commissioner must also consider enumerated contextual factors, including the nature of the workplace, the nature of the rights sought, the nature of the sector, organisational history at the workplace, and the composition of the workforce (including the presence of non-standard employment). The judgment identified several concrete topics that should have been assessed on the evidence and submissions, such as the implications of an existing agency shop agreement and the institutional history of bargaining arrangements involving SALGA, IMATU, and SAMWU.


The court found that the commissioner’s award disclosed that the commissioner had effectively decided the dispute on the narrow footing that the parties to the threshold agreement had participated and that MATUSA had a “significant interest” by virtue of its 15% membership. The court held that the commissioner did not consider the section 21(8) factors and therefore failed to ask and answer the questions the statute required. This, the court concluded, constituted a misconception of the nature of the enquiry, which is a reviewable irregularity.


In reaching the review standard, the court applied the principles in Herholdt v Nedbank Ltd and the Labour Appeal Court’s application of those principles in Xstrata South Africa (Pty) Ltd (Lydenburg Alloy Works) v NUM obo Masha. The court treated the commissioner’s error as one that went to the structure of the enquiry itself. On that approach, where the commissioner misconceives the nature of the enquiry, the award is reviewable on that basis, and it is not necessary in addition to conduct a separate assessment of the reasonableness of the outcome.


Finally, on remedy, the court held that it was not positioned to substitute its own decision for that of the commissioner because the matter required a proper reconsideration of the evidence and submissions through the lens of all the mandated factors. The appropriate course was therefore to set the award aside and remit the matter for a fresh arbitration before a different commissioner.


Outcome and Relief


The Labour Court reviewed and set aside the CCMA arbitration award issued under case number WECT 15859-15 dated 22 March 2016.


The dispute was remitted to the CCMA for a new arbitration before a commissioner other than the second respondent.


No costs order was made. The court considered that a costs award was not appropriate in law or fairness, particularly because the dispute would be determined afresh and MATUSA had merely defended the award it had obtained.


Cases Cited


Municipal and Allied Trade Union of South Africa (MATUSA) v Crouse N.O and Another [2015] ZALCCT 56; [2015] 11 BLLR 1172 (LC); (2015) 36 ILJ 3122 (LC).


Herholdt v Nedbank Ltd (2013) 34 ILJ 2795 (SCA).


Head of Department of Education v Mofokeng (2015) 36 ILJ 2802 (LAC).


Toyota SA Motors (Pty) Ltd v CCMA (2016) 37 ILJ 313 (CC).


Xstrata South Africa (Pty) Ltd (Lydenburg Alloy Works) v NUM obo Masha [2016] ZALAC 25; (2016) 37 ILJ 2313 (LAC).


Legislation Cited


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995, including sections 12, 13, 15, 18, 21(7), 21(8), 21(8C), 96, 111(3), and 145.


Labour Relations Amendment Act 6 of 2014 (as the instrument by which section 21(8C) was inserted).


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that, when a commissioner is asked to grant organisational rights under section 21(8C) to a union that does not meet a threshold agreement, the commissioner’s powers remain subject to section 21(8). A finding that the union represents a significant interest or substantial number of employees is not, on its own, sufficient to grant organisational rights; the commissioner must still consider the peremptory factors in section 21(8), including the statutory imperatives aimed at limiting proliferation and minimising administrative burden, as well as the enumerated contextual factors.


Because the commissioner granted rights based essentially only on “significant interest” and did not consider the section 21(8) factors, the commissioner misconceived the nature of the enquiry. This constituted a reviewable gross irregularity under section 145. The award was accordingly set aside and remitted for rehearing before a different commissioner.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that the statutory power in section 21(8C) of the LRA to grant organisational rights to a union that does not meet a section 18 threshold agreement is expressly conditional upon compliance with section 21(8). The “significant interest” requirement in section 21(8C)(b) enables consideration of a departure from agreed thresholds but does not replace the broader enquiry required by section 21(8).


The judgment reaffirmed the review principle derived from Herholdt v Nedbank Ltd (2013) 34 ILJ 2795 (SCA), as applied in Xstrata South Africa (Pty) Ltd (Lydenburg Alloy Works) v NUM obo Masha [2016] ZALAC 25; (2016) 37 ILJ 2313 (LAC), that an arbitration award is reviewable under section 145 where the commissioner commits a gross irregularity by misconceiving the nature of the enquiry. Where such a misconception is established, it constitutes a sufficient basis for review without requiring a further, separate evaluation of the reasonableness of the result.

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IMATU v CCMA and Others (C344/2016) [2017] ZALCCT 1; [2017] 6 BLLR 613 (LC); (2017) 38 ILJ 2027 (LC) (31 January 2017)

Reportable
Of interest to
other judges
THE
LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, CAPE TOWN
JUDGMENT
C
ase
no: C 344/2016
In the
matter between:
IMATU
Applicant
and
CCMA
First Respondent
JOSEPH WILLIAMS N.O.
Second Respondent
MATUSA
Third Respondent
SAMWU
Fourth Respondent
SALGA

Fifth Respondent
STELLENBOSCH
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY

Sixth Respondent
Heard
:
18 November 2016
Delivered
:
31 January 2017
Summary:
Review – organisational rights – LRA
ss 145 and 21(8C) – misconceiving nature of inquiry –
arbitration award
reviewed and remitted.
JUDGMENT
STEENKAMP
J
Introduction
[1]
The
Independent Municipal and Allied Trade Union (IMATU) seeks to have an
arbitration award reviewed and set aside in terms of s
145 of the
LRA.
[1]
In terms of the award, Stellenbosch Local Municipality
[2]
was ordered to grant organisational rights to a rival trade union,
MATUSA.
[3]
[2]
MATUSA
was formed as a breakaway union from the South African Municipal
Workers’ Union (SAMWU). The Registrar of Labour Relations

initially refused to register it after an objection by IMATU. MATUSA
appealed to this Court in terms of s 111(3) of the LRA. The
appeal
was successful. In terms of a judgment handed down on 1 September
2015
[4]
,
the decision of the registrar refusing to register MATUSA was set
aside. The registrar was ordered to register MATUSA as a trade
union
in terms of section 96 of the Labour Relations Act and to issue a
certificate of registration in its name within 14 days
of the order.
He did so.
[3]
IMATU
was granted leave to appeal to the Labour Appeal Court. The appeal
[5]
was argued on 10 November 2016, one week before this matter. The
parties to this dispute agreed that it would be prudent to hold
over
this judgment until the beginning of the 2017 term, as it would be
rendered moot if the LAC upheld the further appeal and
ruled that
MATUSA should be deregistered. However, at the start of the 2017 term
the LAC judgment had not yet been handed down
and I deemed it in the
interests of justice and expeditious dispute resolution to hand down
this judgment in its absence.
Background
facts
[4]
MATUSA sought to obtain organisational
rights at the Stellenbosch Local Municipality (the sixth respondent).
[5]
The
parties could not reach agreement. MATUSA referred a dispute to the
CCMA in terms of s 21(8C) of the LRA. That subsection
[6]
reads:

Subject
to the provisions of subsection (8), a commissioner may in an
arbitration conducted in terms of subsection (7) grant the
rights
referred to in sections 12, 13 or 15 to a registered trade union, or
two or more registered trade unions acting jointly,
that does not
meet thresholds of representativeness established by a collective
agreement in terms of section 18, if—
(a)

all parties to the collective agreement have been given an

opportunity to participate in the arbitration proceedings; and
(b)

the trade union, or trade unions acting jointly, represent
a
significant interest, or a substantial number of employees, in the
workplace.’
The
arbitration award
[6]
The arbitrator correctly identified the
dispute. Quite simply, he had to decide whether to grant MATUSA
organisational rights at
the Municipality.
[7]
The parties had conducted a verification
exercise. The various unions have the following membership
percentages at the municipality:
7.1
IMATU 29%
7.2
SAMWU 25%
7.3
MATUSA 15%.
[8]
It was common cause that the municipality
had entered into a collective agreement with IMATU and SAMWU. The
South African Local
Government Association (SALGA) has also entered
into a national agreement establishing a 15% membership threshold for
registered
trade unions seeking organisational rights in the local
government sector. That agreement was entered into after this Court
had
ruled that MATUSA should be registered as a trade union in terms
of sections 95 and 96 of the LRA.
[9]
MATUSA now wanted to obtain organisational
rights at Stellenbosch Municipality. It did so by relying on s
21(8C).
[10]
The arbitrator considered the new provision
in s 21(8C) in the following context:

The
rationale for the new amendments of section 21 of the LRA is an
attempt to adopt a more holistic approach by broadening/adjusting
the
scope to grant organisational rights to unions that do not enjoy a
majority at the workplace. The amendments give effect to
the
principles of freedom of association in that employees have the right
to choose their representation and that minority unions
can approach
the CCMA where they have not been granted organisational rights. The
amendments are also an attempt to provide for
the recruitment and
protection of workers in atypical forms of employment taking
cognisant of the ideal of decent work.”
[11]
The arbitrator accepted that MATUSA is a
registered trade union and that its representivity at the workplace –
being the municipality,
rather than its representivity nationally –
was 15%.
[12]
In this context, the arbitrator held:

I
have considered [SAMWU’s and IMATU’s] submissions and
whilst I respect that they are bound by the collective agreement

concluded in the Bargaining Council as parties to the council, I’m
not persuaded that I do not have the powers in granting
section 12,
13 and 15 rights to [MATUSA]. I am I have persuaded that section 21
of the LRA and in particular section 21(8A) empowers
commissioners to
grant organisational rights at the workplace when applicant does not
meet the threshold as per the collective
agreement. I’m further
persuaded that Stellenbosch Municipality is an independent entity and
that it constitutes the workplace
and that [SAMWU and IMATU] are not
the majority at the workplace, and thus as per section 21(8A) grant
organisational rights to
[MATUSA] in this matter. I’m further
not persuaded by [SAMWU’s and IMATU’s] submissions that
if section 12, 13
and 15 rights are granted to [MATUSA], that it
would undermine the collective bargaining system at the council
level. [MATUSA]
has not applied for bargaining rights and has applied
for organisational rights which are in line with section 21 of the
LRA, including
giving effect to the principles of freedom of
association in allowing members of a trade union to exercise their
rights as provided
for in the LRA.
I
have considered the submissions by [MATUSA] including those of [SAMWU
and IMATU] and decided that as per section 21(8A-C), that
despite the
threshold agreement that was concluded in the Bargaining Council and
that the new amendments make provision for a Commissioner
to granting
organisational rights to a minority union who has a significant
interest in the workplace [
sic
]. I do find that [MATUSA] has a
significant interest in the workplace with a 15% membership at the
Stellenbosch Municipality and
that it would be prudent to granting
[MATUSA] organisational rights in terms of section 12, 13 and 15.
And, in addition, these
rights will also be subject to the
submissions that [the three trade unions] made to me in the
arbitration hearing. The [Municipality]
shall deduct and pay over
union levies to [MATUSA] commencing from 15
th
day of the
new month together with a schedule of deductions made to the union as
per section 13 of the Act.’
Review
grounds
[13]
Mr
Myburgh
argued that the Commissioner had
misconceived the nature of the enquiry. He was tasked with having to
decide whether MATUSA should
be granted organisational rights,
despite not having met the threshold of representivity established in
the national threshold
agreement. He also failed to recognise that
the operation of section 21(8C) is “subject to the provisions
of subsection (8)”,
and thus did not undertake the enquiry
envisaged by that subsection.
Evaluation
/ Analysis
[14]
MATUSA’s quest for organisational
rights must be considered in the context of the LRA and of the
collective bargaining regime
in the local government sector.
[15]
The current parties to the South African
Local Government Bargaining Council (SALGBC) are SALGA (representing
the employers); and
IMATU and SAMWU. They have agreed in the
Council’s constitution that another registered trade union –
such as MATUSA
– may be admitted as an additional party to the
Bargaining Council “provided… that such trade union has
a membership
equivalent to not less than 15%… of the total
number of employees within the scope of the Council”.
[16]
On 9 September 2015 the parties to the
Bargaining Council concluded a main collective agreement for the
period 1 July 2015 to 30
June 2020. The main agreement includes a
threshold agreement for the purpose of organisational rights,
confirming that threshold
as 15%. It concludes that any registered
trade union with fewer members than the threshold of 15% “will
not qualify for any
rights set out in sections 12, 13 and 15 of the
Act”.
[17]
As Mr
Myburgh
pointed out in his argument, the whole of section 21(8C) – in
terms of which MATUSA sought organisational rights at the
municipality – is “subject to the provisions of
subsection (8)”. Section 21(8C) empowers the commissioner to
grant organisational rights to a trade union that does not meet the
thresholds of representativeness established by the main agreement
if
the trade union represents “a significant interest, or a
substantial number of employees, in the workplace”. But
those
considerations are still “subject to” the provisions of
subsection (8) as a whole. And that subsection includes
the following
considerations:

(8)
If the unresolved dispute is about whether or not the registered
trade union is a representative trade union, the commissioner—
(a)
must seek—
(i)
to minimise the proliferation of trade
union representation in a single work-place and, where possible, to
encourage a system of
a representative trade union in a work-place;
and
(ii)
to minimise the financial and
administrative burden of requiring an employer to grant
organisational rights to more than one registered
trade union;
(b)
must consider—
(i)
the nature of the workplace;
(ii)
the nature of the one or more
organisational rights that the registered trade union seeks to
exercise;
(iii)
the nature of the sector in which the
workplace is situated;
(iv)
the organisational history at the
work-place or any other work-place of the employer; and
(v)
the composition of the work-force in the
workplace taking into account the extent to which there are employees
assigned to work
by temporary employment services, employees employed
on fixed term contracts, part-time employees or employees in other
categories
of non-standard employment.”
[18]
In this case, the arbitrator based his
decision to grant MATUSA organisational rights solely on his finding
that the union had a
“significant interest” in the
workplace, i.e. the Municipality. He had no regard to the other
considerations set out
in subsection (8).
[19]
I agree with Mr
Myburgh
that, properly interpreted, the
requirements of s 21(8C)(b) of “a significant interest or a
substantial number of employees”
serves as a basis for a
commissioner to override a threshold agreement; but it does not,
without more, serve as a basis to grant
a minority union
organisational rights. The commissioner may only grant those rights
(set out in ss 12, 13 and 15) if he or she
has considered the other
factors set out in s 21(8).
[20]
That means that the commissioner in this
case should, amongst other things have considered the following
factors:
20.1
He should have sought to minimise the
proliferation of trade union representation in a single workplace,
i.e. the Stellenbosch Municipality
[s 21(8)(a)(i)];
20.2
He should have sought to minimise the
financial and administrative burden on the Municipality to grant
organisational rights to
a third trade union [s 21(8)(a)(ii)];
20.3
He should have considered the nature of the
workplace, being a single municipality within the local government
sector;
20.4
He should have considered the nature of the
organisational rights that MATUSA seeks to exercise; for example, the
deduction of trade
union subscriptions in a workplace where there is
already an agency shop agreement in place;
20.5
He should have considered the nature of the
local government sector;
20.6
He should have considered the
organisational history at the workplace, e.g. the Municipality’s
and SALGA’s agreements
with IMATU and SAMWU; and
20.7
He should have considered the composition
of the workforce.
[21]
The arbitrator considered none of these
factors. He was compelled to do so by s 21(8) read with s 21(8C). His
failure to do so means
that he misconceived the nature of the
enquiry. That is a reviewable irregularity.
[22]
IMATU led evidence at the arbitration on
the factors that the commissioner had to consider in terms of s
21(8). It also addressed
those factors in its heads of argument. Yet
the arbitrator failed to consider those factors.
[23]
One of the issues that IMATU raised
pertinently is that MATUSA members would continue to be bound by the
agency shop agreement.
Yet the commissioner failed to consider that
factor at all.
[24]
In
Herholdt
[7]
the Supreme Court of Appeal found that a commissioner commits a gross
irregularity if he, through an error of fact or law, misconceived
the
whole nature of the enquiry, and thus undertook the enquiry in the
wrong manner. And where a commissioner misconceives the
nature of the
enquiry (and thus commits a gross irregularity) this, in itself, is a
basis for review, without having to consider
the reasonableness of
the outcome.
[8]
[25]
In
Xstrata
[9]
the LAC applied
Herholdt
as follows:

In
Herholdt v Nedbank Ltd
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that a review of an award is
permissible in terms of section 145 of the LRA if the defect in
the
proceedings falls within one of the grounds in section 145(2)(a) of
the LRA, including the ground of “gross irregularity”
in
section 145(2)(a)(ii). For a defect in the conduct of the proceedings
to amount to such a gross irregularity, the arbitrator
must have
misconceived the nature of the enquiry or arrived at an unreasonable
result. In this case, the arbitrator failed to grasp
the meaning of
the term “not reasonably practicable”, took irrelevant
considerations into account and ignored relevant
factors. His
interpretation constituted a material error of law resulting in a
misconception of the enquiry which prevented a fair
and proper
determination of the issue of reasonable practicability.”
[26]
As appears from the commissioner’s
ratio decidendi
quoted in his award in para [12] above, he did not consider the
factors and considerations listed in sections 21(8)(a) and (b).
He
decided that the mere fact that the parties to the threshold
agreement had been given an opportunity to participate in the
arbitration proceedings and that MATUSA, in his view, represented a
“significant interest” in the workplace was in itself

sufficient basis to grant it organisational rights.
[27]
In doing so, the Commissioner misconceived
the nature of the enquiry and undertook the enquiry in the wrong
manner. He did not ask
himself the questions he ought to have asked
in order to decide the matter, taking into account the peremptory
factors set out
in subsection (8).
Conclusion
[28]
The Commissioner’s failure to take
into account the peremptory factors set out in s 21(8)(a) and (b)
makes the award reviewable.
[29]
The award should be set aside. However,
this court is not in a position to substitute its decision for that
of the Commissioner.
Another commissioner will have to consider
afresh the evidence and submissions of all three trade unions and the
Municipality before
applying his or her mind to all the factors set
out in s 21(8) and s 21 (8C).
[30]
A costs award is not appropriate in law or
fairness. The dispute has to be considered afresh and MATUSA merely
sought to defend
its rights arising from the arbitration award in
these proceedings.
Order
[31]
I therefore make the following order:
31.1
The arbitration award under case number
WECT 15859-15 dated 22 March 2016 is reviewed and set aside.
31.2
The dispute is remitted to the CCMA for a
new arbitration before a Commissioner other than the second
respondent.
_______________________
Anton
Steenkamp
Judge
of the Labour Court of South Africa
APPEARANCES
APPLICANT:
Anton Myburgh SC
instructed by Savage, Jooste &
Adams Inc.
THIRD RESPONDENT:
(MATUSA)
Adrian Montzinger
instructed by Hannes Pretorius
Bock & Bryant.
[1]
Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995
.
[2]
The sixth respondent.
[3]
The Municipal & Allied Trade Union of South Africa (the third
respondent). The South African Municipal Workers Union (SAMWU)
and
the South African Local Government Association (SALGA) were cited as
the third and fourth respondents respectively. Only
MATUSA opposes
the review application.
[4]
Municipal
and Allied Trade Union of South Africa (MATUSA) v Crouse N.O and
Another
[2015] ZALCCT 56;
[2015] 11 BLLR 1172
(LC); (2015) 36
ILJ
3122
(LC).
[5]
CA 20/15.
[6]
Inserted by Act 6 of 2014.
[7]
Herholdt v Nedbank Ltd
(2013) 34
ILJ
2795 (SCA) paras 10, 19 and 21.
[8]
Herholdt
para
25;
Head of Department of
Education v Mofokeng
(2015)
36
ILJ
2802 (LAC) para 33;
Toyota
SA Motors (Pty) Ltd v CCMA
(2016)
37
ILJ
313 (CC) para 118.
[9]
Xstrata South Africa (Pty)
Ltd (Lydenburg Alloy Works) v NUM obo Masha
[2016]
ZALAC 25
; (2016) 37
ILJ
2313 (LAC) para 12 [per Murphy AJA].