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[2018] ZALCJHB 194
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De Beers Consolidated Mines Limited - Venetia Mines v National Union of Mine Workers and Others (JR2545/15) [2018] ZALCJHB 194 (15 May 2018)
IN
THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
No
.:
JR2545/15
In
the matter between:
DE
BEERS CONSOLIDATED MINES LIMITED
–
VENETIA
MINES
Applicant
and
THE
NATIONAL UNION OF MINE
WORKERS
First
Respondent
EVODIA
RATHIPA
LANDELA
Second
Respondent
THE
COMMISSION FOR CONCILIATION
MEDIATION
AND ARBITRATION
Third
Respondent
COMMISSIONER
KHUTOS ELIAS MPAI N.O
Fourth
Respondent
Heard:
21 July 2017
Delivered:
15 May 2018
JUDGMENT
MONI.
AJ
[1]
This is a review application of an arbitration award (CCMA case no.:
LP4876-15) heard on 20 September 2015 and 15 November 2015,
respectively, by the Fourth Respondent (the Commissioner). The award
dated 26 November 2015 went against the applicant, De Beers
Consolidated Mines Limited – Venetia Mines (the Applicant).
[2]
The Commissioner found that the second respondent, Evodia Rathipa
Landela (Landela), was substantively unfairly dismissed and
awarded
her retrospective reinstatement. It is noted at paragraph 75 of the
arbitration award that Landela’s dismissal is
substantively
fair. This is an obvious error, as such fair is read by this Court as
unfair.
[3]
Landela worked for the applicant since September 1996. At the time of
her dismissal she was a Procurement Clerk, responsible
for contract
management and procurement of outside service providers. She was
dismissed on 23 March 2015 for gross misconduct in
that she
contravened the applicant’s code of business conduct and ethics
by failing to declare and avoid a conflict of interest.
In doing so,
she did not perform her duties conscientiously, honestly and in the
best interests of the applicant.
[4]
As an aside, the charge also states that Landela acted in conflict of
interest with the applicant’s shareholders. This
I find heavy
handed as such one’s duties and obligations as an employee are
toward the company only.
[5]
The facts of this matter are seen by this Court as follows. The
applicant procured the services of Grace Security (the Contractor)
to
install an alarm system on one of their properties. The contractor
subcontracted this job to Genesis Security (the Subcontractor).
The
applicant was purportedly not aware of this. The subcontractor
purportedly invoiced the contractor R20 000 (Twenty Thousand
Rand) or
the amount was made up of a loan and an invoice. Nevertheless, the
contractor remitted payment to Landela instead of the
subcontractor.
Further, the remittance came from a clearing house and was named
Marine Loans. Because of this Landela states that
she did not
recognize that the payment came from the contractor. The
subcontractor was neither paid by the contractor, the applicant
nor
Landela; as a result, the subcontractor threatened to expose the
applicant to the media.
[6]
Landela’s version is that two of the subcontractor’s
employees lived on her property. They paid rent, they are named
by
her as ‘Lodgers’. They requested her assistance as they
did not have bank accounts. In or during August 2014, Landela
provided her bank account as a conduit for them to do business. she
was unaware that the contractor had subcontracted the applicant’s
business to the subcontractor at a time when the money was deposited
into her bank account. She acceded to her lodger’s request,
without asking sufficient questions, she increased her daily
withdrawal limit and handed R15 000 (Fifteen Thousand Rand) to one
of
the subcontractor’s employees, a man by the name of Sam.
Further, Landela gave her bank card and pin number to Sam to
allow
him to withdraw the remaining R5000 (Five Thousand Rand) which he
subsequently did. The employees remained living at Landela’s
property as such she declared her outside business interest to the
applicant’s Tender Board on 9 September 2014.
[7]
The applicant’s version is that Landela placed herself in
conflict of interest to the applicant, which is in breach of
their
code of ethics. The subcontractor’s owner, Takie Mudau was
unaware that it had already been paid by the contractor,
by Mr Safe
Mabasa, for services rendered. It believed that the applicant had not
paid the contractor and lodged a formal complaint
with the
applicant’s head office. The applicant could not extricate
Landela from the above.
[8]
The applicant charged Landela and held a disciplinary enquiry on 23
January 2015 which recommended her dismissal.
[9]
In his arbitration award, the Commissioner held that the applicant
must prove that Landela’s dismissal was fair and aligned
to s
192(2) read with s 188 of the Labour Relations Act
[1]
(the LRA). Further, that the above sections must be read with items
2, 3 and 4 of Schedule 8 Code of Good Practice: Dismissal.
He found
that the witnesses’ testimony for the applicant was
corroborated but for the issue of whether Landela should have
declared her receipt of the amount of R20 000 (Twenty Thousand Rand).
According to the Commissioner, Nomsa Shabangu, Landela’s
manager, believed that the money deposited into Landela’s
account had nothing to do with the applicant and was a private
transaction. Further, Andrew Fourie, the chairperson of the enquiry
went beyond the charges by finding that Landela was dishonest
and
fraudulent as money was loaned on behalf of the contractor to the
subcontractor to do work, but it never reached them. The
Commissioner
believed that Safe Mabasa from the contractor should have been called
to corroborate Andrew Fourie’s evidence.
Further, that Landela
was a sacrificial lamb as the dispute between the contractor and
subcontractor had nothing to do with Landela
or the applicant.
[10]
The Commissioner in applying the reasonable employer test found that,
in all probability, the applicant did not break the rule
for which
she was charged. Further, there was no business interest that the
applicant was to have declared. The Commissioner retrospectively
reinstated Landela.
[11]
The applicant’s grounds of review are as follows:
11.1
The Commissioner committed a material error in that he believed there
was no evidence showing conflict of
interest and failed to deduce
that there was a clear conflict;
11.2
The Commissioner committed a reviewable irregularity in finding that
the dispute between the contractor and
subcontractor had nothing to
do with Landela and/or the applicant. There was no nexus between the
parties and the applicant to
cause any reputational risk; and
11.3
The Commissioner was wrong to call Landela a sacrificial lamb.
[12]
The record depicts the following:
12.1 It
is common cause that once the contractor had paid Landela, no payment
was made to the subcontractor;
12.2
It is common cause that the owner of the subcontractor threatened to
go to the media, purportedly,
because the applicant did not remit
payment to the contractor;
12.3
Due to the subcontractor’s complaint, their contract was
terminated. Approximately, 27 people
lost their jobs;
12.4
Eman Nel believed that the transaction was the impetus for the
declaration and that after the transaction,
Landela decided to
declare her business interests.
12.5
According to Nomsa Shabangu, Landela did not appreciate her actions,
albeit that she went through an
induction. Landela did not disclose
the facts of the transaction to the applicant because ‘it’
(the subcontractor’s
business) ‘is not in the mine’.
In other words, she did not know that the subcontractor held a nexus
to the applicant
via the contractor;
12.6
Nomsa Shabangu changes her original thought on Landela’s
dismissal stating that her non-disclosure
pointed to a conflict of
interest and the lack of transparency and for that reason the
dismissal was fair. This change of statement
went unexplained;
12.7
Andrew Fourie, the chairperson of the disciplinary enquiry believes
that Landela was dishonest and
committed fraud in that the money
remained unpaid to the subcontractor;
12.8
In accordance with the applicant’s code of conduct dishonesty
is a dismissible offence;
12.9
Whilst the complainant stated that the trust relationship was not
broken, the chairperson took a decision
not to be informed by this;
12.10
Andrew Fourie struggled with understanding the charges as such there
is no such sanction in the disciplinary code that
covers same.
Further, there is no such sanction in the code of ethics. In coming
to a decision, Andrew Fourie likened Landela’s
gross misconduct
to dishonesty which carries a sanction of dismissal;
12.11
Andrew Fourie fails to decide the matter on the charge as alleged. He
does not judge Landela on the rule that she broke,
although he
understands conflict of interest as: ‘Landela worked with
people who were to tender for business with the applicant
whilst she
worked with the applicant’.
[13]
An applicant in a review application stands and falls by its founding
papers. It must show the Court where the factual and
legal errors are
and how they have caused an unreasonable result, only then the award
is liable for review.
[14]
At arbitration, the applicant should have, on a balance of
probabilities satisfied the Commissioner regarding the ‘reasonable
employment test’. Was Landela guilty of the charge? The
Commissioner finds that she is not. The charge is: failing to declare
and avoid a conflict of interest. In doing so, there is a failure to
perform duties conscientiously, honestly and in the best interests
of
the applicant. The Commissioner’s reasoning stems from the poor
and unhelpful testimony of the applicant’s witnesses.
The
witnesses fail to satisfy the Commissioner’s enquiry into
whether Landela broke a rule. Landela purportedly does not
know that
the subcontractor worked for the contractor (who worked for the
applicant). Had she known she would have been able to
make the
requisite judgment call, regarding the transaction which, had she
proceeded with it, would have been in conflict of interest
with the
applicant’s business because she failed to declare it and
omitted to avoid same.
[15]
Further, it was for the applicant to show the potential or actual
reputational risk caused by Landela’s transaction.
I can find
nothing in the record that Landela was part of a syndicate or group
to scam the subcontractor and contractor thereby
causing reputational
damage to the applicant. In dismissing Landela, was the applicant
able to mitigate its risk? I do not believe
so.
[16]
Further, had Landela known where the purported loan was coming from,
the applicant would have been successful on its charge,
but the
applicant failed to prove same on a balance of probabilities.
[17]
The Commissioner believes that Landela is a sacrificial lamb. With
respect to Landela, she is so far from it, she has pulled
the
proverbial wool over the Commissioner’s eyes. She collaborated
in a dodgy transaction with men whose surnames she knew
not. In a
capital venture that attracted income tax and purportedly no
pecuniary benefit to her, which this Court finds hard to
believe or
perhaps this lamb is filled with the milk of human kindness that she
would prejudice herself in this way? Further, Landela
works in
procurement, she knows how business should be done. At the time of
her dismissal, Landela had worked for the applicant
for well over 19
years without a blemish on her record. Her length of services
aggravates against her. This is an employee who
knows what a business
transaction looks like and the information one needs to effect same.
Yet, she obliviously transacts, in a
manner that concerns this Court.
When the dodgy transaction is highlighted she does nothing to
mitigate the subcontractor’s
risk because she has purportedly
done nothing wrong. This thinking is irrational and frivolous. Let’s
examine this, considering
the applicant’s concerns around this
transaction, the subcontractor was not paid. Landela was paid by the
contractor. But
she is not the subcontractor. She pays money to an
individual who is not the subcontractor, either, whose surname she
does not
know and who does not have a bank account. She further gives
him her bank card to withdraw the money that remains in her account.
There is something sinister about this transaction but who needs to
put their finger on it? Who needs to prove on a balance of
probabilities that the dismissal of Landela is substantively fair? It
is not for the Commissioner to do so.
[18]
It is the primary responsibility of the applicant, as the employer,
to prove on a balance of probabilities that what Landela
did was
wrong and she can no longer be trusted to conduct herself without
fear or favour in her procurement position. The applicant
cannot
expect the Commissioner to do so.
[19]
the applicant is in the invidious position as such the Commissioner
believes the above type of employee should be placed back
into a
position of trust. Had the applicant proved the charge, then the
Commissioner would have had to hear evidence on factors
that
mitigated for upholding the dismissal such as dishonesty and any
losses. I remind the reader that Andrew Fourie could not
cogently
explain why he believed Landela to be dishonest and fraudulent or
guilty of the alleged charge.
[20]
At arbitration, which is a hearing
de
novo
,
the applicant provided little evidence to prove,
inter
alia
,
the breach of the rule. The conclusion provided, by the Commissioner,
is rationally connected to the reasons given based on the
material
available to him and is therefore under the circumstances
reasonable
[2]
but for the
sacrificial lamb comment. Is the comment sufficient to overturn the
Commissioner’s Award? I do not believe so.
[21]
When Eman Nel testifies he excruciatingly explains why Landela should
have declared her interest in the transaction. Had she
done so then
there would possibly have been no conflict of interest or rather the
tender board would have decided on the conflict.
This compliance
approach is complicit in allowing the Commissioner to believe that
what Landela did was not serious, a mere tick
and cross scenario
would have sufficed. The Commissioner retrospectively reinstates
Landela due to the way the applicant ran its
case. Eman Nel’s
testimony in this regard makes little sense especially when the
charge is acting in conflict of interest
and not failure to declare
one’s interest.
[22]
In
Sidumo
and Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others
[3]
the Court held that ultimately, the Commissioner’s sense
of fairness is what must prevail and not the employer’s
view.
[23]
There are no sufficient reasons to overturn the Commissioner’s
arbitration award, same is upheld.
Order
1.
The
review application is dismissed.
2.
There
is no order as to costs.
Natasha
Moni
Acting
Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa
Appearances
For
the Applicant
: Mr D Cithi of
Mervy Taback Inc.
For
the First Respondent : Adv Makoti
Instructed
by
: Mothobi Attorneys
[1]
Act
66 of 1995 as amended.
[2]
See:
Edcon
Ltd v Pillemer NO & others
[2010] 1 BLLR 1
(SCA) para 23.
[3]
[2007] 12 BLLR
1097
(CC).