Bojosinyane v Ditsobotla Local Municipality and Others (2025/013682) [2025] ZALCJHB 87 (28 February 2025)

82 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Termination of Employment — Unlawful termination of contract — Applicant, previously employed as Municipal Manager, challenged the Municipality's decision to terminate his contract, claiming it was unlawful and void ab initio due to non-compliance with the Local Government Municipal Systems Act. The Municipality argued the termination was justified based on alleged contraventions of the Act. The Labour Court held that the Municipality's self-help approach to terminate the contract was unlawful, emphasizing that only a court could declare the appointment invalid. The Court ordered the reinstatement of the applicant, declaring the termination void and requiring the Municipality to allow him to resume his duties.

Comprehensive Summary

Case Note


Olaotse Theophilus Bojosinyane v Ditsobotla Local Municipality and Others

Case No: 2025-013682

Heard: 14 February 2025

Delivered: 28 February 2025


Reportability


This case is reportable due to its implications on the legality of employment contracts within public entities and the principle of legality in administrative actions. The judgment clarifies that public officials cannot unilaterally terminate contracts they deem unlawful without following due legal processes. This case serves as a significant precedent in reinforcing the rule of law and the necessity for proper judicial review in administrative decisions.


Cases Cited



  • Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and others 2004 (6) SA 222 (SCA)

  • MEC for Health, Eastern Cape and another v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a Eye and Lazer Institute 2014 (3) SA 481 (CC)

  • Mbashe Municipality v Dumezweni and Others [2015] ZALAC 18

  • Baloyi v Public Protector and others (2021) 42 ILJ 961 (CC)


Legislation Cited



  • Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000

  • Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995


Rules of Court Cited



  • None specified in the judgment.


HEADNOTE


Summary


The applicant, Olaotse Theophilus Bojosinyane, sought to challenge the termination of his employment contract as Municipal Manager of Ditsobotla Local Municipality. The court found that the termination was unlawful and void ab initio, as it was executed without following the necessary legal processes. The court ordered the reinstatement of the applicant, emphasizing the importance of adhering to the rule of law in public administration.


Key Issues


The key legal issues addressed in this case include the legality of the termination of a public servant's employment contract, the jurisdiction of the Labour Court in matters involving public employment, and the principle of legality in administrative actions.


Held


The court held that the termination of the applicant's employment was unlawful and void. It reaffirmed that public officials cannot disregard contracts based on their belief of illegality without a court order. The applicant was ordered to be reinstated as Municipal Manager.


THE FACTS


The applicant was employed as the Municipal Manager of Ditsobotla Local Municipality under a three-year fixed-term contract. Following allegations of misconduct against a council member, the council placed the applicant on special leave and subsequently terminated his contract, claiming it was unlawful under the Municipal Systems Act. The applicant contested this termination, arguing it was executed without due process and sought reinstatement.


THE ISSUES


The court had to decide whether the termination of the applicant's employment was lawful, whether the Labour Court had jurisdiction to hear the matter, and whether the principle of legality was violated by the council's actions.


ANALYSIS


The court analyzed the legality of the council's decision to terminate the applicant's contract, referencing established legal principles that administrative actions cannot be disregarded without judicial review. It emphasized that the council's actions constituted self-help, which is impermissible under the rule of law. The court also addressed the jurisdictional arguments raised by the respondents, affirming its authority to adjudicate the matter based on the principles of legality and breach of contract.


REMEDY


The court ordered the reinstatement of the applicant as Municipal Manager, declaring the termination of his contract unlawful and void ab initio. The court mandated that the applicant be allowed to resume his duties immediately.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment established key legal principles, including that public officials must adhere to legal processes when terminating employment contracts, the principle of legality must be upheld in administrative actions, and that contracts cannot be unilaterally disregarded without judicial intervention. The court reinforced that an invalid dismissal is treated as a nullity, and the employee remains in their position unless lawfully removed.




THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA , JOHANNESBURG

Reportable
Case No: 2025- 013682

In the matter between:
OLAOTSE THEOPHILUS BOJOSINYANE Applicant
and
DITSOBOTLA LOCAL MUNICIPALITY First Respondent
COUNCILOR MAZWI MORURI N.O. Second Respondent
RASUPANG CLARIUS MOOKETSI N.O. Third Respondent

MEC: COOPERATIVE GOVERNANCE, HUMAN
SETTLEMENT AND TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS, NORTH WEST Fourth Respondent

Heard: 14 February 2025
Delivered: 28 February 2025

2

JUDGMENT


MAKHURA , J

Introduction

[1] The applicant was until 30 January 2025 employed in the capacity of the
Municipal Manager of the Ditsobotla Local Municipality (Municipality), the first
respondent in these proceedings. He has approached this Court on an urgent basis to
declare the municipal council’s decision to terminat e his contract of employment
summarily to be in breach of his contract unlawful and invalid or void ab initio ,
inconsistent with the principle of legality and unconstitutional . In addition, the applicant
seeks specific performance in the form of reinstatement .
[2] The first to third respondents opposed the application and filed their answering
affidavit. The fourth respondent appear ed on the date of the hearing without filing any
opposing papers and indicated that it intended to raise a point of law of jurisdiction and
to argue that the matter was not urgent. These two points were also raised by the first to
third respondents.
Material facts
[3] On 4 July 2024, at the Municipality’s Special Council meeting, the municipal
council resolved to appoint the applicant on a three year fixed term contract , effective 8
July 2024. The Municipality and the applicant subsequently concluded a contract of
employment and signed it on 7 and 8 July 2024. Clause 1.1 of the contract of
employment stipulates that:
‘The Employer hereby employs the Employee on a performance based fixed term contract, and the Employee hereby accepts employment as MUNICIPAL
3
MANAGER, subject to the terms and conditions contained in this contract and
subject to the Local Government Municipal Systems Act, 32 of 2000 as amended
("Systems Act") . The Employee's attention is specifically directed to sections 56,
56A and 57 of the Systems Act, the Local Government: Regulations on
Appointment and Conditions of Employment of Senior Managers and the duties of top management as contained in section 77 and 78 in the Local Government: Municipal Finance Management Act, 56 of 2003, as amended, both in which the Employer will further refine during the signing of an annual performance agreement. ’ [Emphasis added]
[4] On 12 July 2024, the third respondent applied on an urgent basis to the North
West Division of the High Court, Mahikeng, to declare the applicant’s appointment unlawful and to set it aside. That application was opposed by the applicant and the
Court struck the matter from the roll with costs .
[5] On 4 October 2024, the fourth respondent launched review proceedings before
the High Court, Mahikeng. The fourth respondent s ought an order declaring the
appointment of the applicant to be in contravention of section 54A(3)(b) of the Systems
Act
1 and/or to review and set aside the appointment and/or the contract of employment
between the applicant and the Municipality.
[6] The applicant filed a notice to oppose the review application. On 22 October
2024, the m unicipal council resolved to oppose the “ frivolous and baseless ” review
application. On 29 October 2024, the Municipality delivered a notice of intention to
oppose the review application. No further steps were taken subsequently to prosecute
the application.


1 Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 0f 2000 (Systems Act).
4
[7] On 20 October 2024, a t the second ordinary council sitting, a report was tab led
which made serious allegations of misconduct committed by the third respondent during
his tenure as the acting municipal manager. The report reads, inter alia that:
‘There is a generally corrupt relationship between Mr Rasupang Mooketsi and
the law firm known as MPM Molefe and Associates Attorneys .
That instead of defending these frivolous claims against Ditsobotla Local
Municipality, he signed a deed of settlement with this law firm in an amount of R2
390 512.39. In signing the said deed of settlement, Mr Mooketsi committed the
Municipality to the amount of R2 390 512.39 payable within 1 month, while the Municipality is not in a financial position to commit to such payments. ’

[8] The report made further allegations of breach of procurement processes on the
part of the third respondent , including the extension of contracts without following due
procedures and appointment of service providers in contravention of the supply chain
management processes. Following this report, the third respondent was suspended with effect from 8 November 2024.
[9] On 20 January 2025, the applicant was issued with a notice informing him of the
special council meeting that took place on 17 January 2025. In terms of this notice, the
special council had resolved t o place the applicant on special leave with immediate
effect. This notice of special leave reads that:
‘You are hereby informed that Council resolved to place yourself on special leave with immediate effect from 17 January 2025 following the consideration of the
report by the Member of the Executive Council for Cooperative Governance in
respect of your appointment as a Municipal Manager .
Your special leave shall remain in force pending the review application before the
High Court of South Africa, North West Division - Mahikeng filed by the Member
of the Executive Council for Cooperative Governance.
In furtherance, you are advised not to report for duty and not to communicate with any of municipal employees, councillors and any of municipal stakeholders.
5
Failure to comply with paragraph 4 above may constitute an act of misconduct.’
[Emphasis added]

[10] In addition to the decision to place the applicant on special leave, the special
council resolved to rescind the resolution of 8 November 2024 in terms of which it
suspended the third respondent, uplifted his suspension and appointed him with
immediate effect as the acting municipal manager .
[11] The applicant rejected the council’s decision to place him on special leave. As a
consequence, he filed an urgent application in this Court for an order inter alia declar ing
that the decision to place him on special le ave was unlawful and set ting aside the
special leave . This urgent application was enrolled for hearing on 31 January 2025. The
Municipality did not oppose the application.
[12] On 28 January 2025, the third respondent’s attorneys in the High Court
application that was struck from the roll on 12 July 2024, MPM Molefe & Associates ,
filed an application or a request for a date of hearing on the opposed motion roll in the
High Court, Mahikeng. In other words, the third respondent had now decided to re- enroll
the matter , after six months of inaction. MPM Molefe & Associates is the same firm of
attorneys that sued the Municipality for over R2 million, which the third respondent in his
capacity as the acting municipal manager at that time failed to defend the claim but
instead entered into a settlement agreement of R2 390 512.39. It is the same firm of
attorneys which in a report dated 20 October 2024 is alleged to have a “ generally
corrupt relationship” with the third respondent.
[13] At 19h26 on 30 January 2025, MPM Molefe & Associates, the attorneys who
represent the third respondent in his personal capacity in the application to challenge
the applicant’s appointment, addressed a letter to the applicant’s attorneys , this time
acting on behalf of the Municipality. This letter is attached to the council’s resolution
passed at a Virtual Special Council Meeting on 30 January 2025. The resolution reads,
inter alia:
6
‘That Council uplifts the special leave of Mr Olaotse Bojosinyane and terminates
his contract of employment with Council effective immediately.
That Council should not oppose the application filed by the MEC of COGTA but rather file a plea to be absolved from any costs associated with this litigation...’
[14] The second respondent , the mayor , communicated the decision of the council in
a letter to the applicant as follows:
‘You are herewith informed that C ouncil resolved to uplift your special leave
effective immediately during its special sitting held [on] the 30
th day of January
2025.
We regret t o inform [you] that Council resolved to terminate your contract of
employment … effective from 30th January 2025 following the assessment
outcome on the compliance evaluation on the appointment of Municipal Manager conduct.
Your appointment was found to be in contravention of Local: Regulations on appointment and conditions of employment of senior managers and consequently in contravention [of] Local Government: Municipal Systems Act No
32 of 2000.’
[15] The upliftment of the special leave and the termination of the contract of
employment with immediate effect in terms of the above resolution rendered the urgent
application set down for 31 January 2025 moot. The Municipality advanced this
argument and the Court agreed. The Municipality was however ordered to pay the costs
of the urgent application on attorney and client costs.
[16] The applicant then launched these proceedings. He contends that the
termination of his contract of employment is in breach of the contract and that it was not
for any reason recognized in the Regulat ions on Appointment and Conditions of
7
Employment of Senior Managers2. He also contends that the termination is unlawful and
invalid because it offends the principle of legality , that the Municipality was required to
approach the high court to seek an order to set aside his appointment and that it cannot
resort to s elf-help.

Evaluation
Preliminary points: Jurisdiction and urgency
[17] The Municipality raised a jurisdictional point and also argued that the matter is
not urgent. With regard to jurisdiction, the Municipality contends that regardless of the
applicant’s pleaded case, the “ dispute is about the termination of the applicant’s
contract of employment and must be referred to the CCMA ”, which is the available
alternative remedy for the applicant . The Municipality further argues that the applicant is
trying to review the termination of his employment on the principle of legality and
therefore this Court lacks jurisdiction.
[18] This Court has jurisdiction in terms of section 158(1)(h) of the Labour Relations
Act
3 (LRA) review any decision taken or any act performed by the State in its capacity
as employer, on such grounds as are permissible in law .
[19] The termination of the contract of employment is not based on capacity or
conduct or any reasons envisaged in the LRA . The second respondent has made it
clear that the reason for the termination of the contract is that the appointment
contravene d the Systems Act .
[20] The respondents’ submission that this Court lacks jurisdiction after they
terminated the employment contract on the basis that the appointment contravened the
law is absurd. The South African Local Government Bargaining Council ’s (SALGBC)

2 GN 21 of 17 January 2014: Local Government: Regulations on Appointment and Conditions of
Employment of Senior Managers.
3 Act 66 of 1995, as amended.
8
mandate is to determine the fairness of the dismissal. However, it has no jurisdiction to
entertain legality or invalid claims .

[21] The jurisdiction of the Court is determined based on the pleadings.4 In Baloyi v
Public Protector and others5, the Cons titutional Court held that:
‘It is trite that the same set of facts may give rise to several different causes of
action. In some instances, the forum in which a particular cause of action may be pursued is prescribed in terms of legislation. In the labour context, where more than one potential cause of action arises as a result of a dismissal dispute, a litigant must choose the cause of action she wishes to pursue and prepare her pleadings accordingly. Had Ms Baloyi sought to pursue a claim of unfair dismissal, she would have been required, in terms of s 157(1) of the LRA, to approach the Labour Court. This is because unfair dismissal claims fall within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Labour Court.
Crucially, however, where a litigant is required to bring a certain cause of action before a specifically competent forum, it does not follow that they are bound to pursue a claim under that cause of action simply because it is possible to do so. Put differently, the fact that a cause of action is limited to certain fora must not be
interpreted as obliging an applicant only to pursue that particular cause of action.
The respondents cite the dictum of the Labour Appeal Court that ‘[i]f a cause of action meets the definitional requirements of an unfair labour practice or an unfair
dismissal, the dictates of constitutional and judicial policy mandate that the dispute be processed by the system established under the LRA for their
resolution’. In this case, they submit that, because Ms Baloyi has a claim meeting
the definitional requirements of an unfair labour practice or unfair dismissal claim, she is obliged to pursue that claim in the Labour Court. In this regard, the respondents also place reliance on this court’s statement in Steenkamp that ‘[a]

4 Gcaba v Minister for Safety and Security and others (2010) 31 ILJ 296 (CC); [2009] 12 BLLR 1145 (CC)
at para 75; Makhanya v University of Zululand (2009) 30 ILJ 1539 (SCA); 2010 (1) SA 62 (SCA) at paras
23, 52 – 54 and 71; SA Municipal Workers Union o n behalf of Morwe v Tswaing Local Municipality and
others (2022) 43 ILJ 2754 (LAC); [2023] 2 BLLR 131 (LAC) at para 5.
5 (2021) 42 ILJ 961 (CC); [2021] 4 BLLR 325 (CC).
9
cause of action based on a breach of an LRA obligation obliges the litigant to
utilise the dispute- resolution mechanism of the LRA to obtain a remedy provided
for in the LRA’.
The mere potential for an unfair dismissal claim does not obligate a litigant to frame her claim as one of unfair dismissal and to approach the Labour Court, notwithstanding the fact that other potential causes of action exist. In other words, the termination of a contract of employment has the potential to found a claim for reli ef for infringement of the LRA, and a claim for enforcement of a right
that does not emanate from the LRA (for example, a contractual right) …’
6

[22] The applicant’s challenge to the Municipality’s decision to terminate his
employment with immediate effect is not grounded on the LRA and/or fairness. That he
could have opted to challenge the termination in terms of the LR A by referring an unfair
dismissal dispute to the SALGBC does not preclude him from pursuing other remedies.
The applicant has grounded hi s claim on the breach of contract and the principle of
legality or lawfulness . He contended that the termination breached his contract of
employment and offended the principle of legality . Accordingly, this Court has t he
necessary jurisdiction to entertain the matter and the power to issue an appropriate
order.
[23] The Municipality ’s argument that the matter is not urgent was influenced heavi ly
by the argument that the applicant must declare and refer an unfair dismissal dispute in
the normal cause and that this Court has no jurisdiction to entertain this application.
This matter involves alleged abuse of public power by a public functionary . It involves a
summary termination of a contract of employ ment without any hearing whatsoever. It
involves the important but trite issue of whether a public functionary can resort to self -
help to correct a wrongful or unlawful decision. The applicant is on a 3-year fixed term
contract which is to expire in approximately 26 months . If the matter is referred in the
ordinary course, or the LRA dispute resolution mechanisms are followed, which the

6 Ibid at paras 38 – 40.
10
applicant elected not to follow . For these reasons , I have decided to entertain the
application on an urgent basis .

The merits
[24] Although t he resolution did not set out the reason for the termination of the
contract of employment, the second respondent ’s letter made it clear that the contract
was terminated because it was in contravention of the Systems Act. The alleged
contravened law is section 54A(3) of the Systems Act, which provides:
‘A decision to appoint a person as municipal manager, and any contract
concluded between the municipal council and that person in consequence of the decision, is null and void if –
(a) the person appointed does not have the prescribed skills, expertise,
competencies or qualifications; or
(b) the appointment was otherwise made in contravention of this Act. ’

[25] The issue i n this matter is not novel. It is whether the Municipality, having entered
into a contract of employment on 7 and 8 July 2024, and now having decided that the
contract was unlawful and a nullity, ca n disregard that contract of employment and its
legal consequences . This question was answered by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and others
7 (Oudekraal) . The SCA
held that:
‘For those reasons it is clear, in our view, that the Administrator's permission was
unlawful and invalid at the outset. Whether he thereafter also exceeded his
powers in granting extensions for the lodgement of the general plan thus takes the matter no further. But the question that arises is what consequences follow
from the conclusion that the Administrator acted unlawfully. Is the permission that was granted by the Administrator simply to be disregarded as if it had never
existed? In other words, was the Cape Metropolitan Council entitled to disregard

7 2004 (6) SA 222 (SCA) ; [2004] 3 All SA 1 (SCA) .
11
the Administrator's approval and all its consequences merely because it believed
that they were invalid provided that its belief was correct? In our view, it was not.
Until the Administrator's approval (and thus also the consequences of the
approval) is set aside by a court in proceedings for judicial review it exists in fact
and it has legal consequences that cannot simply be overlooked. The proper
functioning of a modern State would be considerably compromised if all
administrative acts could be given effect to or ignored depending upon the view the subject takes of the validity of the act in question. No doubt it is for this
reason that our law has always recognised that even an unlawful administrative
act is capable of producing legally valid consequences for so long as the unlawful
act is not set aside. ’
8

[26] The majority judgment of the Constitutional Court in MEC for Health, Eastern
Cape and another v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a Eye and Lazer In stitute9 referred
with approval the principle enunciated in Oudekraal above. The majority held th at:
‘… The underlying principle, that public officials may not take the law into their
own hands when seeking to override conduct with which they disagree, has also
been given effect in three cases involving schools' policies on admission of
learners.
The fundamental notion - that official conduct that is vulnerable to challenge may
have legal consequences and may not be ignored until properly set aside -
springs deeply from the rule of law. The courts alone, and not public officials, are
the arbiters of legality . As Khampepe J stated in Welkom -
‘(t)he rule of law does not permit an organ of state to reach what may turn out to
be a correct outcome by any means. On the contrary, the rule of law obliges an
organ of state to use the correct legal process .’
For a public official to ignore irregular administrative action on the basis that it is
a nullity amounts to self -help. And it invites a vortex of uncertainty,
unpredictability and irrationality. The clarity and certainty of governmental

8 Ibid at para 26.
9 2014 (3) SA 481 (CC) ; 2014 (5) BCLR 547 (CC) .
12
conduct, on which we all rely in organising our lives, would be imperilled if
irregular or invalid administrative acts could be ignored because officials consider
them invalid. ’10

[27] The Labour Appeal Court (LAC) judgment i n Mbashe Municipality v Dumezweni
and Others11 is apposite in this matter. There, the L AC had to determine whether the
contract of employment or appointment of the municipal manager complied with the Systems Act. The LAC first noted that section 54A(1) of the Systems Act requires a municipal council to appoint a m unicipal manager as head of the administration of the
Municipal Council (or an a cting municipal manager) and that the appointed candidate
must at least have the skills, expertise, competencies and qualifications as prescribed.
Section 54A(3) must not be construed to confer the power to the council to disregard
the appointment and its consequences , without first seeking the C ourt’s determination.
The LAC concluded:
‘I do not understand subsection (3) to mean that the appointment of a Municipal Manager may be treated conclusively by a municipality, or anybody else, as null and void without the intervention of a court. The principle of legality does not permit this. Contracts are binding but may be void or voidable.’
12

[28] The Municipality decided that it could correct this decision by passing a
resolution. It passed a resolution to place the applicant on special leave pending the
determination of the review application filed by the fourth respondent. The applicant
sought urgently to challenge this decision. Confronted by this urgent application, the
Municipality elected to constitute an urgent special meeting on 30 January 2025. This
special meeting passed a resolution to (1) not oppose the application, (2) uplift the
special leave and (3) terminate the applicant’s employment contract with immediate
effect. The Courts have pronounced that this conduct is not allowed . The decision to set
aside the appointment can only be taken by the High Court or this Court on review

10 Ibid at paras 102 – 103.
11 [2015] ZALAC 18.
12 Ibid at para 23.
13
because only a C ourt of law is the final arbiter on legality issues. The Municipality was
therefore obliged to follow the correct legal process of applying to review and set aside
the appointment. It cannot resort to self -help. Its decision to correct the wrong is
therefore unlawful and void.

Reme dy
[29] The applicant seeks specific performance in the form of reinstatement . In South
African Broadcasting Corporation SOC Ltd v Phasha
13 (Phasha) , the LAC considered
the appropriate remedy to be awarded where the court found that the employer subverted the agreement or as in this case, the legal prescripts . The LAC found that a
party to a contract that has been wrongfully rescinded by the other party could elect to hold the other party to the contract.
14 Referring to Santos Professional Football Club
(Pty) Ltd v Igesund and another15, the LAC held that the C ourt has the discretion to
refuse or grant specific performance. The order for specific performance may be
refused if it would operate “ unreasonably hardly on the defendant, or where the
agreement giving rise to the claim is unreasonable, or where the decree would produce injustice, or would be inequitable under the circumstances ”
16. The LAC continued:
‘The argument on behalf of the appellant was that if there was a case of wrongful
dismissal, it had to be grounded in the concept of fairness. But under the reasoning employed in this judgment, the ultimate finding is that by attempting to circumvent the process in terms of s 188A of the LRA, the appellant acted unlawfully. The distinction between fairness and unlawfulness was emphasised
by the Constitutional Court in Steenkamp & others v Edcon Ltd (National Union
of Metalworkers of SA intervening) 2016 (3) SA 251 (CC) ; (2016) 37 ILJ 564
(CC) paras 189 and 192 where the court said that:
‘[189] An invalid dismissal is a nullity. In the eyes of the law an employee whose
dismissal is invalid has never been dismissed. If, in the eyes of the law, that

13 [2020] ZALAC 50; (2021) 42 ILJ 816 (LAC).
14 Ibid at para 32.
15 (2002) 23 ILJ 2001 (C).
16 Phasha at para 33.
14
employee has never been dismissed, that means that the employee remains in
his or her position in the employ of the employer …
[192] It is an employee whose dismissal is unfair that requires an order of
reinstatement. An employee whose dismissal is invalid does not need an order of reinstatement. If an employee whose dismissal has been declared invalid is prevented by the employer from entering the workplace to perform his or her duties, in an appropriate case a court may interdict the employer from preventing the employee from reporting for duty or from performing his or her duties. The court may also make an order that the employer must allow the employee into
the workplace for purpose of performing his or her duties. However it cannot
order the reinstatement of the employee.’
That must be the position in this case given the finding to which this court has
arrived; that unlawfulness renders the initial decision void. And that means that the respondent is entitled to be put back into a position from which she was unlawfully removed…’
17
[30] The principle enunciated above that an employee whose contract was invalidly
terminated does not need reinstatement applies equally in this matter. Accordingly, the
appropriate remedy is to order the applicant , who has been unlawfully removed from
work , to resume his duties as the municipal manager and for the first to third
respondents to allow him to do so.

Costs
[31] The application is opposed by the Municipality and the second and third
respondents. The applicants argued for a punitive costs order against the respondents.
[32] It is evident from the papers that the respondents understand this legal principle
against self -help. They are well aware that in order to declare the appointment unlawful

17 Ibid at paras 34 – 35.
15
and have it revoked, they must go to the High Court or this Court. They are aware that
they cannot help themselves by merely rescinding their decision to employ the applicant and ending the employment contract because they believe it to be unlawful or void . The
third respondent has applied to set aside the appointment and so did the fourth respondent. Therefore, the second and third respondents are aware or should reasonably be aware that the decision to terminate the contract is unlawful. Yet, they decided to oppose the application.
[33] For the above reasons, the applicant argued that the Municipality constituted the
special meeting of 30 January 2025 to circumvent the urgent application, and I must
add, to circumvent the judicial processes that are pending before the High Court,
Mahikeng. The Municipality rejected the applicant’s argument and contended that:
‘[T]he special meeting was prompted by the need to address MEC of Cogta's
report on the appointment of the applicant in a proper and speedily manner .
[T]he issue relating to the special leave of the applicant was also on the agenda,
including the report about his unlawful appointment as Municipal Manager in July
2024.
The other issue on the agenda was the first respondent's withdrawal of its notice
to oppose the MEC of Gogta's review application…’ [Emphasis added]

[34] The need to address the fourth respondent’s or MEC’s report properly and
speedily cannot be done at the expense of the rule of law. The fourth respondent has
followed a judicial review process. This particular council considered itself immune from the law . It undermined the pending legal processes. The council wanted the applicant
out of its employment by hook or by crook.
[35] On 17 January 2025, the Municipality decided to place the applicant on special
leave. When the applicant challenged the decision, the council, on the eve of the
hearing of the application to overturn the decision to place the applicant on special leave, and in a legally ‘skillful’ and contrived move, uplifted the special leave with
immediate effect and terminated the applicant’s employment with immediate effect. This
16
was the council’s show of power to the applicant . It acted rogu e, in bad faith and abused
its power . The second and third respondents elected to oppose the application together
with the Municipality.

[36] Taxpayers’ monies should not be funding what appears to be personal and
emotional battles and self -created litigation. For these reasons, I have decided to order
that the second and third respondents each file an original affidavit with the Registrar as
to why they should not be ordered to pay the applicant’s costs , on a client and attorney
scale.

[37] In the premises, the following order is made:

Order :
1. The first respondent’s decision to terminate the applicant’s contract of
employment with effect from 30 January 2025 is hereby declared unlawful and void ab initio .
2. It is declared that the contract of employment dated 7 and 8 July 2024
between the applicant and the first respondent remains in force and effect and
the applicant remains the first respondent’s municipal manager .
3. The applicant must report for duty on the next working day and the first to
third respondents are ordered to allow the applicant to report for duty and resume
his duties as the first respondent’s municipal manager.
4. The second and third respondent s are each direct ed to file the affidavit
with the Office of the Registrar of this Court within 5 Court days of thi s judgment ,
to show cause why they should not be ordered to pay the costs of the application
on attorney and client scale, jointly or jointly and severally in their respective
personal capacit ies.
5. The costs of the application are reserved pending the filing of the affidavits
in terms of paragraph 4 above

17
M. Makhura
Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa

Appearances:
For the Applicant: Mr WP Scholtz
Instructed by: Scholtz Attorneys
For the 1st – 3rd Respondent s: Mr K Phuroe
Instructed by: MPM Molefe & Associates
For the Fourth Respondent: Ms WN Sidzumo
Instructed by: The State Attorney, Mahikeng