Sunbake Bakery Rustenburg v Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration and Others (JR1899/16) [2019] ZALCJHB 312 (14 November 2019)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Review of arbitration award — Procedural and substantive unfairness — The applicant sought to review an arbitration award which found the dismissal of the fourth respondent to be unfair. The Commissioner failed to properly evaluate evidence regarding charges of gross insolence and insubordination, linking them to an unaddressed grievance. The Labour Court held that the Commissioner misconceived the nature of the inquiry, necessitating a remittal for re-hearing before a different Commissioner, with no order as to costs.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an opposed review application in the Labour Court to review and set aside an arbitration award issued under case number NWRB92-16. The applicant was Sunbake Bakery Rustenburg (the employer). The respondents were the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (first respondent), Commissioner Kenneth Dlamini (second respondent), NUFBWSAW (third respondent), and Kumo Sehunoe (fourth respondent, the employee).


The procedural history reflected that the fourth respondent was dismissed following disciplinary charges. A dispute proceeded to arbitration at the CCMA, where the commissioner found the dismissal procedurally and substantively unfair and ordered reinstatement with back-pay. The employer then approached the Labour Court to review and set aside that award.


The dispute’s subject-matter was whether the arbitration award was reviewable on the basis that the commissioner failed properly to perform the arbitration enquiry—specifically in relation to the commissioner’s approach to the evidence underlying the charges of gross insolence and insubordination—and, if so, what remedy the Labour Court should grant (setting aside and substitution, or remittal for rehearing).


2. Material Facts


It was undisputed that the employee had lodged a grievance against her direct superior, Mrs Stapelberg, on 23 November 2015, and that the employer did not address that grievance. It was further undisputed that on 27 November 2015 the employee was suspended and then charged with misconduct.


The charges that led to dismissal were gross insolence (being disrespectful, rude, and abusive toward her direct superior), insubordination (failure to provide feedback or action tasks assigned by her direct superior), and gross negligence (failure to action payroll input accurately and timeously). The arbitration resulted in a finding that the dismissal was unfair both procedurally and substantively, with an order of reinstatement and back-pay.


In relation to the first two charges (gross insolence and insubordination), the arbitration record (as reflected in the award excerpts quoted in the judgment) contained conflicting versions about whether the employee screamed at the superior, the nature of the altercation, and who raised their voice. The employee’s version included that she raised her voice in retaliation and suggested she was charged and dismissed because she had lodged a grievance. The employer’s witnesses, as summarised by the commissioner, alleged that the employee screamed and acted in a manner disrespectful to authority.


A material feature for the Labour Court’s decision was not which version was correct on the merits, but that the commissioner stated that it would “not be prudent” to consider the allegations linked to those charges because they were linked to the prior grievance and because no evidence was presented that the grievance was dealt with.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the commissioner committed a reviewable irregularity by misconceiving the nature of the enquiry and failing to determine, on all the evidence before him, whether the employer had proved the charges on a balance of probabilities in a de novo arbitration hearing.


The dispute before the Labour Court primarily concerned the application of legal standards governing review to the commissioner’s conduct of the arbitration and reasoning process. In particular, it concerned whether the commissioner’s approach amounted to a failure to apply his mind to material considerations, and whether that failure caused him not to address the true question for determination, namely the fairness of dismissal on the charged misconduct.


A further issue was remedial: if the award was to be reviewed and set aside, whether the Labour Court should substitute its own decision or remit the matter for rehearing, taking into account the nature of the disputes and the need for credibility findings.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Labour Court identified the proper arbitration enquiry as requiring the commissioner, in a de novo hearing, to assess all the evidence and determine whether the employer had proven the employee’s guilt on the charges on a balance of probabilities, and thereafter to assess whether dismissal was fair. The court considered the commissioner’s stated refusal to consider the allegations relating to gross insolence and insubordination to be inconsistent with that enquiry.


The court held that the commissioner’s approach illustrated a commissioner misconceiving the nature of the enquiry. Instead of evaluating the evidence relevant to the charges, the commissioner declined to do so because of a value judgment linked to the employer’s failure to deal with the grievance. The Labour Court treated this as a failure properly to apply the commissioner’s mind to material considerations bearing on the charges and the fairness of dismissal. This failure, in the court’s view, resulted in the commissioner not addressing the question that the evidence required him to determine—whether dismissal for those charges was fair.


In reaching that conclusion, the court indicated that the commissioner’s failure to engage with material evidence and the issues for determination rendered the award susceptible to review, with reference to the review principles associated with misconceived enquiries and material misdirection, as reflected in the authorities cited by the court.


On remedy, the court concluded that the dispute should be remitted to the CCMA for rehearing rather than substituted. The court emphasised that substitution was inappropriate given the importance of credibility findings that would need to be made. The court also noted that, because the employer criticised the manner in which the commissioner questioned the parties, reliance on the existing record would not be appropriate, reinforcing the need for a fresh rehearing before a different commissioner.


Finally, the court declined to award costs, reasoning that the fourth respondent was an individual defending the award.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Labour Court reviewed and set aside the arbitration award issued under case number NWRB92-16.


The dispute was remitted to the CCMA for rehearing before a commissioner other than Commissioner Kenneth Dlamini.


No order as to costs was made.


Cases Cited


Herholdt v Nedbank Ltd (Cosatu as Amicus Curiae) 2013 (6) SA 224 (SCA).


Palluci Home Depot (Pty) Ltd v Herskowitz & others (2015) 36 ILJ 1511 (LAC).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment text provided.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment text provided.


Held


The court held that the arbitration award was reviewable because the commissioner misconceived the nature of the arbitration enquiry by declining to evaluate evidence relating to the charges of gross insolence and insubordination on the basis that the allegations were linked to an unresolved grievance. This constituted a failure to apply his mind to material issues and resulted in him not determining the fairness of the dismissal on the evidence.


The court held that the appropriate remedy was to set aside the award and remit the matter for rehearing before a different commissioner, given that credibility findings were necessary and reliance on the existing record was inappropriate. The court made no costs order.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that in CCMA arbitration proceedings concerning dismissal, the commissioner is required to conduct a de novo enquiry and determine, on the totality of the evidence, whether the employer has proven the alleged misconduct on a balance of probabilities, and then to determine whether dismissal was fair.


The judgment further applied the review principle that an award is susceptible to review where the commissioner misconceives the nature of the enquiry or fails to apply their mind to material considerations, with the result that the commissioner does not address the real question that must be determined on the evidence.


On remedy, the judgment applied the principle that remittal (rather than substitution) is appropriate where the dispute requires credibility assessments and where the reviewing court considers it inappropriate to determine the matter on the record, including where concerns are raised about the conduct of the proceedings and the manner in which evidence was elicited.

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[2019] ZALCJHB 312
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Sunbake Bakery Rustenburg v Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration and Others (JR1899/16) [2019] ZALCJHB 312 (14 November 2019)

IN
THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not
Reportable
Case
no: JR 1899/16
In
the matter between:
SUNBAKE
BAKERY RUSTENBURG                                          Applicant
And
THE COMMISSION FOR
CONCILIATION
MEDIATION
AND ARBITRATION                                                 First

Respondent
COMMISSIONER
KENNETH DLAMINI

Second Respondent
NUFBWSAW

Third Respondent
KUMO
SEHUNOE

Fourth Respondent
Heard:
27 September 2019
Delivered:
14 November 2019
JUDGMENT
RABKIN-NAICKER,
J
[1]
This is an opposed application to review and set aside an arbitration
award under case number NWRB92-16.
The Second Respondent (the
Commissioner) found that the dismissal of the fourth respondent was
procedurally and substantively unfair
and ordered that she be
reinstated with back-pay.
[2]
The charges leading to her dismissal were the following:

Gross
Insolence: in that you were disrespectful, rude and abusive towards
your direct superior;
Insubordination –
failed to give feedback/action tasks given to you by your direct
superior;
Gross Negligence –
failed to action payroll input accurately and timeously.”
[3]
It was undisputed that the fourth respondent had laid a grievance
against her direct
superior, Mrs Stapelberg, on 23 November 2015 and
that this was not addressed by the applicant (the Company). On 27
November 2015,
the fourth respondent was suspended and charged with
the infractions above.
[4]
The Commissioner stated the following in his Award in relation to the
Charge of Gross
Insolence and Insubordination:

37.
It is the version of the Respondent’s first witness that the
Applicant screamed at her in the presence of other staff
members. The
Applicant threatened her by saying she had to treat everyone the same
and that she felt insulted by the Applicant’s
failure of not
sending an e-mail and as such the Applicant disregarded her
authority.
38.    The
version of the Respondent’s second witness was that she heard
the Applicant screaming at the first
witness, despite of the noise of
the invoice printing machine in her office nothing else.
39.    It
is the version of the Respondent’s third witness that there was
an argument. After leaving the office
she heard the first witness
cautioning the Applicant to stop talking to her like that. The
respondent’s first witness has
a louder voice that the
Applicant. But she heard the Applicant screaming at the Respondent’s
first witness. The Applicant
screamed at the first witness.
40.    It
is the Applicant’s version that she raised her voice during the
altercation in retaliation and that
she was charged and dismissed for
having lodged a grievance.
41.    The
Respondent’s first witness admitted having raised her voice
during the altercation, but the second
and third witnesses decided to
selectively listened. No evidence was presented establishing that the
Applicant’s grievance
was accordingly dealt with. I am
therefore of the view that it will not be prudent to consider these
allegations at all as they
are linked to the grievance lodged by the
Applicant prior to the disciplinary action being taken against the
Applicant….”
[5]
The applicant submits that the approach taken by the Commissioner in
paragraph 41
of his Award makes the Award susceptible to review. I
agree. This is an example of a Commissioner misconceiving the nature
of the
enquiry before him.
[1]
The enquiry before him required the Commissioner to consider whether
on all the evidence, in what was a
de
novo
hearing, the employer was able to prove on a balance of probabilities
that the employee was guilty of the charges for which she
was
dismissed. He declined to evaluate the evidence relating to the first
two charges. It appears that this was on the basis of
a value
judgment about the failure of the employer to hold a grievance
process. As a result, he failed to properly apply his mind
to these
material considerations which led him to misconceive the nature of
the enquiry by failing to address the question for
determination as
revealed by the evidence, namely whether the dismissal of the first
respondent for those charges was fair.
[2]
[6]
In my view, the dispute needs to be remitted back to the first
respondent for re-hearing.
It cannot be substituted given the
importance of credibility findings that will have to be made.
Further, given that the applicant
has taken issue with the manner in
which the Commissioner questioned the parties, reliance on the record
would be inappropriate.
I do not intend to award costs in this matter
given the fact that the fourth respondent is an individual defending
the award.
[7]
I make the following order:
Order
1.
The arbitration award under case number
NWRB92-16 is reviewed and set aside.
2.
The dispute is remitted to the first
respondent for re-hearing before a Commissioner other than second
respondent.
3.
There is no order as to costs
_________________
H. Rabkin-Naicker
Judge
of the Labour Court of South Africa
Appearances:
For
the Applicant:
Macgregor
Erasmus
For
the Fourth Respondent: Haffegee Roskam Savage Attorneys
[1]
Herholdt
v Nedbank Ltd (Cosatu as Amicus Curiae)
2013 (6) SA 224
(SCA)
at paragraph 25
[2]
See
for example Palluci Home Depot (Pty) Ltd v Herskowitz & others
(2015) 36 ILJ 1511 (LAC) para 42