Public Investment Corporation v More and Others (JR 2121/2022) [2025] ZALCJHB 159 (16 April 2025)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Unfair Dismissal — Prescription — The First Respondent, Ms More, was dismissed by the Applicant, Public Investment Corporation, for misconduct related to a R350 million credit facility transaction. Ms More argued that the charges were prescribed as they were brought five years after the alleged misconduct, while the Applicant contended that the Prescription Act did not apply to disciplinary actions. The CCMA commissioners found the dismissal substantively and procedurally unfair, ruling that the charges had prescribed. The Labour Court held that the commissioners erred in applying the Prescription Act to disciplinary proceedings, concluding that such proceedings do not involve a claim for a debt under the Act, and remitted the matter for a new arbitration.

Comprehensive Summary

Case Note


Public Investment Corporation v Faith Matshepo More

JR 2121/2022

Heard: 11 March 2025

Delivered: 16 April 2025


Reportability


This case is reportable due to its implications on the application of the Prescription Act in the context of disciplinary proceedings within employment law. The judgment clarifies the boundaries of when an employer can invoke prescription as a defense against disciplinary actions, thereby impacting future cases involving similar legal questions.


Cases Cited



  • MacDonald’s Transport Upington (Pty) Ltd v Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union and others [2016] ZALAC 32; (2016) 37 ILJ 2593 (LAC).

  • Democratic Nursing Organisation of SA on behalf of Du Toit and Another v Western Cape Department of Health and Others [2016] ZALAC 15; (2016) 37 ILJ 1819 (LAC).

  • National Bargaining Council for the Road Freight and Logistics Industry v Deysel NO and Others Unreported judgment under case no: DA 19/2023, delivered on 7 April 2025.

  • Myathaza v Johannesburg Metropolitan Bus Services (SOC) Ltd t/a Metrobus and others [2016] ZACC 49; (2017) 38 ILJ 527 (CC).

  • Mogaila v Coca Cola Fortune (Pty) Ltd [2017] ZACC 6; (2017) 38 ILJ 1273 (CC).

  • Food and Allied Workers Union on behalf of Gaoshubelwe v Pieman’s Pantry (Pty) Ltd [2018] ZACC 7; (2018) 39 ILJ 1213 (CC).


Legislation Cited



  • Prescription Act 68 of 1969.


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were cited in the judgment.


HEADNOTE


Summary


The Labour Court reviewed the arbitration award concerning the dismissal of Faith Matshepo More, who was charged with misconduct related to a credit facility agreement. The court found that the commissioners erred in applying the Prescription Act to the disciplinary proceedings, leading to the conclusion that the charges against Ms. More were incompetent due to prescription.


Key Issues


The key legal issues addressed include:
- The applicability of the Prescription Act to disciplinary proceedings.
- The interpretation of what constitutes a "debt" under the Prescription Act.
- The procedural fairness of the dismissal and the implications of delay in instituting disciplinary action.


Held


The court held that the commissioners committed a material error of law by applying the Prescription Act to the employer's right to discipline an employee. The court set aside the arbitration award and remitted the matter for a new arbitration hearing.


THE FACTS


Faith Matshepo More, employed as CFO by the Public Investment Corporation (PIC), was involved in a controversial credit facility agreement with VBS Mutual Bank. Following an internal investigation, she was charged with misconduct for allegedly breaching her duties by recommending the execution of the agreement that did not comply with prior approvals. After a disciplinary hearing, she was dismissed. More contested her dismissal, claiming it was unfair, and the CCMA ruled in her favor, citing both substantive and procedural unfairness.


THE ISSUES


The court had to decide whether the Prescription Act applied to the disciplinary proceedings against Ms. More, whether the charges had prescribed, and the implications of any delay in instituting disciplinary action. Additionally, the court considered the procedural fairness of the dismissal and the validity of the commissioners' findings.


ANALYSIS


The court analyzed the commissioners' reasoning regarding the applicability of the Prescription Act, concluding that the Act is intended for civil litigation and does not apply to internal disciplinary proceedings. The court emphasized that a disciplinary process is not a claim for a debt but rather an exercise of the employer's prerogative to maintain workplace discipline. The court found that the commissioners' interpretation of the law was flawed and led to an incorrect conclusion regarding the prescription of the charges.


REMEDY


The court ordered that the arbitration award issued on 6 September 2022 be reviewed and set aside. The matter was remitted to the CCMA for a new arbitration hearing by a different commissioner, with the existing record serving as evidence.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment established that:
- The Prescription Act does not apply to internal disciplinary proceedings.
- A disciplinary charge does not constitute a claim for a debt under the Prescription Act.
- The employer's right to discipline is distinct from civil claims and should not be conflated with the concept of debt as defined in the Prescription Act.




THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA , JOHANNESBURG

Reportable
Case no : JR 2121/ 2022
In the matter between :
PUBLIC INVESTMENT CORPORATION Applicant
and
FAITH MATSHEPO MORE First Respondent

COMMISSION FOR CONCILIATION,
MEDIATION AND ARBITRATION Second Respondent

COMMISSIONER CAMERON MORAJANE N.O. Third Respondent

COMMISSIONER NTHABISENG THOKOANE N.O. Fourth Respondent
Heard: 11 March 2025
Delivered: 16 April 2025
This judgment was handed down electronically by consent of the parties’ legal
representatives by circulation to them via email. The date for hand- down is
deemed to be 16 April 2025.

2



JUDGMENT


PRINSLOO , J

Background

[1] The First Respondent (Ms More), a chartered accountant, was employed by
the Applicant (PIC) as its CFO, reporting directly to the then CEO, Dr Matjila. [2] In 2014, VBS Mutual Bank (VBS) applied to the PIC for a R350 million
revolving credit facility that was to be utilised solely for VBS’ s contract finance
scheme.
[3] On 9 July 2014, at a meeting attended by Ms More, the fund investment panel
(FIP) ratified/approved the VBS transaction, and its resolution listed six terms and
conditions for the investment, including that the loan amount was R200 million initially and then R150 million in line with performance, and that the minimum drawdown was R20 million and thereafter in multiples of R5 million.
[4] A revolving credit facility agreement was subsequently prepared, regulating
the VBS transaction together with a cession of underlying contracts and the right to cash flow relating thereto (the facility agreements).
[5] On or about 10 June 2015, Ms More was provided with a memorandum
compiled by Ms Leroke (legal associate), the purpose of which was to seek approval from the CEO for the PIC to execute the facility agreements (the Leroke memorandum). By the time Ms More received the Leroke memorandum, it had been
recommended by Ms Mdluli (investment associate), Mr Nesane (executive head: legal) and Mr Rajdhar (executive head: developmental investments), and Dr Matjila (CEO) had written on it “ CFO must recommend”. The CEO’s i nstruction fell outside
3


of the D elegations of Authority (DOA) in the sense that the DOA did not require the
CFO’s recommendation.

[6] Ms More went on to sign the Leroke memorandum under her annotation, “ I
recommend”. On 30 June 2015, the facility agreements were entered into.
[7] Subsequent investigations revealed that the revolving credit facility agreement
did not correspond with the terms of the FIP approval in at least the three respects
set out in the charge of misconduct brought against Ms More – it contained a
subordination clause, did not provide for a R200 million/R150 million split in funding,
and contained different drawdown amounts .

[8] On 26 June 2020, Ms More was charged with misconduct relating to the VBS
transaction. The nub of the charge is that she recommended that the CEO enter into
the revolving credit facility agreement in breach of her “ duty to ensure that the terms
of the RCF agreement complied with the [FIP approval] prior to providing the confirmation and recommending that the RCF agreement be signed”.

[9] Adv. Redding SC was appointed as the chairperson of the disciplinary
hearing.

[10] In a finding dated 16 June 2021, Adv . Redding dismissed various objections
that Ms More had raised against the disciplinary proceedings , to wit prescription,
waiver and undue delay , and he found Ms More guilty of misconduct .

[11] Ms More subsequently brought an application for Adv . Redding’s recusal,
which was opposed by the PIC and ultimately rejected. Adv. Redding’s
recommendation on sanction followed, and he recommended to the PIC board that
Ms More be issued with a final written warning valid for a year . The board, however ,
decided not to accept the recommendation and instead decided to dismiss Ms More.
[12] Ms More was accordingly dismissed on 8 October 2021, and she was paid in
lieu of three months’ notice.

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[13] Ms More referred an unfair dismissal dispute to the Second Respondent
(CCMA) , and her dispute was arbitrated. Being a high- profile matter, Ms More’s
CCMA arbitration was presided over by two senior commissioners.

[14] At the CCMA arbitration, in addition to challenging guilt and sanction, Ms
More persisted with the same special pleas of prescription, waiver and undue delay
that she had raised at her disciplinary enquiry.
[15] An arbitration award was issued on 6 September 2022, and the Third and
Fourth Respondents (commissioners) found that Ms More’s dismissal was
substantively and procedurally unfair ; she was reinstated, and the PIC was ordered
to pay the costs. In a supplementary award, the commissioners quantified the
backpay and costs due as being R6 741 173.75 and R39 000, respectively.
The findings of the commissioners
[16] In the introduction of the arbitration award, the commissioners recorded that:
‘[7] This matter is fairly complex given the novel issues raised. As a result
of novel complexities raised in this matter, we thought it apt to start the award first with a ruling on the special defences raised by Ms More. These special defences raised are prescription, waiver and delay. For the record and clarity, these special defences are not raised to challenge the jurisdiction of the CCMA, but are defences against the charge and dismissal of Ms More. The intended effect of these defences is to quash the charge as well as the dismissal of Ms More by the PIC. If any one of the defences is gran ted or
upheld, we will proceed to deal with the remedies, as it will be moot to proceed and deal with the other defences and merits of the case.
[8] We will proceed to deal with the evidence only of the objections or
defences are dismissed or not upheld. The approach is that we will start with the evaluation of prescription first. Should we grant or uphold the prescription defence we will not proceed to consider waiver and delay because it would be moot. This is because prescription is extinctive in its effect. The first defence
that we are going to consider is prescription. ’

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[17] It is evident from paragraphs 7 and 8 of the arbitration award that the
commissioners’ approach was to deal with the ‘special defence’ of prescription first
and if it was upheld, they would not deal with the issue of waiver or delay or the merits of the case as all of that would be moot because “ prescription is extinctive in
its effect ”. They repeated their approach in paragraph 13 of the award, where it was
recorded that:
‘With regards to procedure, there are two issues raised by Ms More – which
issues are in dispute. The first relates to the legal objections of prescription, waiver and undue delay. These special defences that are raised in the
alternative have an effect of quashing the whole charge and outcome against Ms More, if granted or upheld. Consequently they affect both the substance and procedure. ’
[18] The commissioners reiterated that if any one of the three ‘special defences’
was granted or upheld, they would “ immediately proceed with the remedies ”.
[19] The commissioners considered the issue of prescription first.

[20] It was common cause that Ms More’s alleged misconduct happened around
June 2015 and that disciplinary action was instituted against her in June 2020.

[21] Ms More’s argument was that the alleged misconduct constituted a breach of
contract and that a breach of contract was a debt in the context of the Prescription Act
1 (Act) , as the Act covers and includes the rendering of a service as being a debt .
Ms More’s contract of employment obliged her to render her services to the PIC, therefore, she owed the Applicant the debt of service delivery or rendering of service.
If she performed her contractual duties defectively (misconduct), it would constitute positive malperformance, which is a form of breach of contract and therefore she is a debtor and once the debt has arisen, the PIC had three years to take action in terms of section 10(1), read with section 11(d) of the Act. As the PIC only instituted disciplinary action in June 2020, the debt had prescribed.


1 Act 68 of 1969.
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[22] The PIC’s case was that Ms More’s alleged breach of contract is not a debt in
terms of the Prescription Act and when it instituted disciplinary proceedings against
Ms More in June 2020, it was not claiming a debt from her, it was not claiming specific performance or damages but instead, was calling Ms More to account. Ms
More conflated a debt and the right to discipline.
[23] The question that leapt out for the commissioners to decide was whether the
Prescription Act was applicable. They tackled the question by considering that
section 16(1) of the Act provides that it applies to any debt and by deciding the meaning and concept of ‘ debt’. The commissioners ultimately found that Ms More
owed a duty of service to the PIC, which constitutes a debt in terms of the Prescription Act.
[24] Thereafter , they considered whether the debt had prescribed, and they found
that the PIC is deemed to have knowledge of the facts from which the debt arose and, therefore, as the debt arose in June 2015, prescription on the debt started to
run on 10 June 2015. The commissioners found that the debt prescribed in June 2018, “which would render the charges brought against Ms More in June 2020
incompetent ”. They found that the failure to act within three years caused the debt to
be extinguished by prescription. [25] Ultimately the commissioners found that “the claim (charging and dismissal)
that the PIC has against Ms More is extinct through the running of uninterrupted prescription. The charges and the subsequent dismissal are incompetent” and they confirmed once again that it was not necessary to consider the other defences, because they were pleaded in the alternative.
[26] Notwithstanding the aforementioned and the repeated confirmation that the
other defences and the merits would not be considered if the plea of prescription is upheld, the commissioners did not resist the temptation to deal with the very issues they made clear they would not deal with. [27] After finding that the charges and dismissal were incompetent as the case
against Ms More was extinct through the running of prescription, it should have been
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the end of that enquiry , and the commissioners should have moved to consider the
appropriate relief, as they indicated that they would do. Instead, the commissioners
considered the issue of delay and found that it took the PIC five years to charge Ms More, which delay was inordinate and unreasonable.
[28] They also recorded that “ before we proceed with the remedies applicable in
this case, it is important that we also include another factor that has a bearing on the outcome of the case, namely the instruction given to Ms More ”. The commissioners
found that “as the instruction was in contravention of the delegation of authority, Ms
More’s dismissal is therefore premised on an unlawful and unreasonable instruction.
On this point alone, the charges and the subsequent dismissal are unfair ”.
[29] The commissioners then concluded that “Ms More has succeeded in her claim
for prescription. The outcome is that the dismissal is substantively and procedurally unfair. The instruction issued by Dr Matjila as found above was unreasonable and unlawful ”.
[30] The difficulty with the reasoning and the findings of the commissioners is that
they recorded that they would first decide the ‘special defence’ of prescription, and if
it succeeds, they would not consider the issue of the delay, waiver or the merits of
the case. They ultimately found that Ms More was successful in raising the issue of prescription and that the effect thereof is that the charges brought against Ms More in June 2020 and the subsequent dismissal were incompetent and that her dismissal was substantively and procedurally unfair.
[31] Instead of deciding the issue of appropriate remedy, the commissioners
strayed and made findings in respect of the issue of delay , which was an alternative
‘special defence’ that they had indicated would not be decided if the plea of prescription was upheld. They also touched on the merits of the case when they made findings on the lawfulness of the instruction which was given to Ms More and found that because the instruction was unlawful, the charges and subsequent dismissal were unfair. These findings not only contradict the approach the
commissioners adopted from the onset, but they also contradict the finding that the
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charges and subsequent dismissal were incompetent – it cannot be incompetent and
unfair at the same time.

[32] Perusing the arbitration award in its entirety, it is evident that the
commissioners’ going off -route took its toll on the decision- making process.
[33] Be that as it may, Ms More was reinstated, and the PIC was ordered to pay
her backpay of R6 741 173.75 and costs in the sum of R39 000. [34] The Applicant filed an application for review, raising seven grounds for review
and seeking an order to set aside the arbitration award.
The grounds for review
[35] The first ground of review is that the commissioners committed a material
error of law in finding that “the claim (charging and dismissal) that the PIC has
against Ms More is extinct through the running of uninterrupted prescription. The charges and the subsequent dismissal are incompetent ”.
[36] The Applicant’s case is that the commissioners ’ legal conclusion that the
Prescription Act applied to the employer’s right to take disciplinary action against an employee for misconduct is a material error of law .
[37] The commissioners’ finding that the Act applied is a legal conclusion , which is
challenged on the ground that it is a material error of law. Errors of law are subject to
correctness review
2,that is, the wrong is reviewable.
[38] In MacDonald’s Transport Upington (Pty) Ltd v Association of Mineworkers
and Construction Union and others
3, the Labour Appeal C ourt (LAC) referred to

2 Genesis Medical Aid Scheme v Registrar , Medical Schemes and Another [2017] ZACC 16; 2017 (6)
SA 1 (CC) at para 21; National Union of Metalworkers of SA v Assign Services and Others [2017]
ZALAC 44; (2017) 38 ILJ 1978 (LAC) at para 32; MacDonald's Transport Upington (Pty) Ltd v
Association of Mineworkers & Construction Union and Others [2016] ZALAC 32; (2016) 37 ILJ 2593
(LAC) (MacDonald’s Transport ) at para 30.
3 MacDonald’s Transport supra .
9


Democratic Nursing Organisation of SA on behalf of Du Toit and Another v Western
Cape Department of Health and Others4, and held that :
‘[21] Since the advent of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa
1996 (the Constitution) , the concept of review is sourced in the justifications
provided for in the Constitution and, in particular, that courts are given the
power to review every error of law provided that it is material; that is that the
error affects the outcome …

[22] To recap, Navsa AJ said in Sidumo at para 105 that the review powers in
terms of s 145 “must be read to ensure that administrative action by the CCMA is
lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair ”. Given that the section must be interpreted
to be in compliance with the Constitution, it would appear that the concept of error of
law is relevant to the review of an arbitrator’s decision within the context of the
factual matrix as presented in the present dispute; that is a material error of law
committed by an arbitrator may, on its own without having to apply the exact
formulation set out in Sidumo , justify a review and setting aside of the award
depending on the facts as established in the particular case.’

[39] This question was recently considered by the LAC in N ational Bargaining
Council for the R oad Freight and L ogistics Industry v Deysel NO and O thers5 where
the question of material errors of law committed by an arbitrator was considered. The
LAC referred to the reasonableness standard established in Sidumo6 and found that
the ‘threshold of reasonableness’ established by the judgment recognises that in
relation to the penalty of dismissal, value choices may differ in relation to the same
factual matrix but nonetheless fall within a range of decisions to which a reasonable
decision- maker could come. The metaphor of an elastic band has been usefully
employed to illustrate the applicable threshold – the function of the review court is to
determine the point to which the elastic of reasonableness can stretch without snapping.
7


4 [2016] ZALAC 15; (2016) 37 ILJ 1819 (LAC) .
5 Unreported judgment under case no: DA 19/2023, delivered on 7 April 2025 (Deysel ).
6 Sidumo and Another v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others [2007] ZACC 22; [2007] 12 BLLR
1097 (CC).
7 Deysel ibid at para 31.
10


[40] The LAC then considered the test or the standard to be applied when the
subject of the review admitted a single, correct answer and where the enquiry on
review is not whether the arbitrator’s ruling was justifiable rational or reasonable, but whether objectively speaking, it was correct.
[41] The LAC held that:
‘[39] In the constitutional era, the proper basis for a correctness challenge
brought in terms of section 145 of the LRA is section 33 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa 1996, and in particular, the right to administrative action that is lawful. Section 6 of PAJA establishes a material error of law as a ground for the review of administrative action. Sidumo holds that PAJA does
not apply to arbitration awards issued in terms of the LRA – at least in the
case of the CCMA and bargaining councils, the permitted grounds for review are those reflected in section 145 of the LRA. But Sidumo also holds that
section 145 is to be read subject to section 33 of the Constitution. In that instance, the Constitutional Court held that “… section 145 is now suffused by the constitutional standard of reasonableness” . But reasonableness is not a
universal standard, nor should it be applied as such. Section 33 (1) treats
lawfulness separately from reasonableness.
8 In Duncanmec (Pty) Ltd v
Gaylard NO and others9 the Constitutional Court held:
‘Since an award like the one we are concerned with here constitutes
administrative action, the Constitution requires it to be procedurally fair, lawful and reasonable. This means that an award that fails to meet these requirements is liable to be set aside on review. These requirements are in
addition to the grounds of review listed in s 145 of the LRA . However, to some
extent the latter grounds may overlap …’ (own emphasis)
[40] Reading down section 145 to incorporate a requirement of reasonableness is
wholly appropriate in a case such as Sidumo , concerned as it was with the exercise
of a value judgment by an arbitrator in relation to fairness as a penalty for misconduct, a judgment that by definition admits a range of responses. Matters such as the present, where the administrative action in issue involves a question of law

8 Hoexter and Penfold (supra) at 400.
9 (2018) 39 ILJ 2633 (CC); [2018] 12 BLLR 1137 (CC) at para 40.
11


that can produce a single correct answer, are best understood and assessed when
section 145 of the LRA is read as suffused by the constitutional standard of lawfulness. Put another way, just as the constitutional standard of reasonableness was found in Sidumo to have suffused section 145, the constitutional standard of
lawfulness does likewise. ’
10
[42] The LAC concluded that:
‘[42] What this approach recognises is that the right to review established by
s 145, where the applicant seeks to review an arbitration award on the basis of a material error of law committed by an arbitrator, is not limited to circumstances where the alleged error resulted in an unreasonable award.
11 A
material error of law is a discrete, substantive ground for review under s 145 of the LRA. It follows that a reviewing court, when faced with what is alleged to be an error in law in relation to the interpretation of an instrument, is empowered to interpret the relevant text itself, rather than assessing whether the arbitrator’s decision was reasonable.
12
[43] In short: although a material error of law may previously have been viewed as
no more than a side car on the motorcycle of reasonableness,
13 the constitutional
right to administrative action that is lawful requires that the grounds for review established by s 145 of the LRA be understood as admitting a material error of law as a discrete, legitimate ground for review. ’
[43] The LAC confirmed that a material error of law is a discrete, substantive
ground for review under section 145 of the LRA and that a reviewing court, faced
with what is alleged to be an error in law in relation to the interpretation and

10 Myburgh and Bosch Reviews in the Labour Courts (LexisNexis 2016) at 244.
11 At least in relation to an irregularity in the conduct of arbitration proceedings, this Court has,
reasonableness aside, previously acknowledged the remaining s 33 requirements as suffusing s 145
of the LRA. In Arends & others v SA Local Government Bargaining Council & others (2015) 36 ILJ
1200 (LAC); [2015] 1 BLLR 23 (LAC) at para 19, Murphy AJA found: “ the undertaking of the enquiry in
the wrong or in an unfair manner by an arbitrator is an irregularity in the conduct of the proceedings
reviewable in terms of s 145 of the LRA as suffused by the constitutional right to administrative action
that is lawful and procedurally fair” .
12 Hoexter 3 ed at 400.
13 The image is drawn from Alan Hyde “What is Labour Law?’ in Davidov and Langille (eds)
Boundaries and Frontiers of Labour Law (Hart 2006) at p 60, in relation to the relationship between
subordinate employment and labour law as a collection of regulatory techniques.
12


application of a statute, is empowered to interpret the relevant statute itself rather
than assessing whether the arbitrator’s decision was reasonable.
[44] It is on this basis that the grounds for review will be decided.
Did the commissioners commit a material error of law?
[45] In my view , the first ground of review sets out the main question of law to be
decided: Does the Prescription Act apply to an employer’s right to take disciplinary
action against an employee?
[46] The Applicant’s case is that the commissioners’ finding that the charging and
dismissal of Ms More was extinct through the running of prescription is reviewable because the Act only applies to civil litigation and not disciplinary enquiries, alternatively because a disciplinary enquiry does not involve a claim for a ‘ debt’
under the Prescription Act.

[47] Ms More’s case is that her alleged failure to render her services in terms of
her employment contract – as she had been charged – constituted a debt owed to
the PIC, which debt had prescribed after three years, thus by June 2018, more than two years before she was charged. This debt is to be understood to be a debt in terms of the Act, and as such , it prescribed after three years.
[48] The chairperson, Adv. Redding, did not agree with Ms More’s submissions ,
and he found that the Act had no application in the disciplinary proceedings instituted by the PIC. Adv. Redding found that the charge against Ms More was one of
misconduct , and he accepted that misconduct generally constitutes a breach of an
employment contract, usually the implied obligations to further the employer’s business and to behave properly during employment. However, the alleged breach of contract by Ms More did not constitute a debt and the em ployer’s right to discipline
and, if appropriate, dismiss her is not a claim for a debt. As a result, he rejected Ms
More’s special plea of prescription.

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[49] The commissioners found that Adv. Redding’s approach was “ illogical and not
cogent ”, and they even recorded that they share Ms More’s view that Adv. Redding’s
ruling was “ absurd because it is contradictory and lacks legal logic ”.

[50] The question to be decided is whether the commissioners committed a
material error of law by interpreting the provisions of the Prescription Act and drawing the legal conclusions as they did. Errors of law arise in relation to questions of law and refer to a wrong or mistaken interpretation of a legislative provision.
Questions of law are all issues that are determined by authoritative legal principles and include questions which a court is bound to answer in accordance with a particular rule or law, and questions as to what the law is.
14
[51] Chapter III of t he Prescription Act provides for the prescription of debt , and the
said chapter, save for the exceptions set out in section 16, applies to any debt arising after the commencement of the Act. The Act regulates the periods of prescription, and s ection 11 provides for the specific periods of prescription of debts .
Section 11(d) provides that , save where an Act of Parliament provides otherwise, the
prescription period of three years applies in respect of any other debt. Prescription,
in general, shall commence to run as soon as the debt is due.
Application of the Prescription Act
[52] The Applicant’s case is that the Act only applies to civil litigation and not
disciplinary enquiries.
[53] Ms More’s answer to this is that the Act “applies to debts, not to litigation”, and
prescription of a debt may be raised in any context. This is supported by section
16(1) of the Act, which provides that the Act applies ‘to any debt’.
[54] In my view , the position adopted by Ms More is too simplistic and not sound in
law. Ms More’s argument lost sight of the scope and the purpose of the Act, and it

14 Media Workers Association of SA and Others v Press Corporation of SA Ltd (1992) 13 ILJ 1391 (A)
(Press Corp ) at 1396F -H and 1397J .
14


seeks to introduce an application of the Prescription Act , which is at odds with the
correct legal position.

[55] The Constitutional Court has deliberated , on three occasions , on the
application of the Prescription Act to disputes under the Labour Relations Act15
(LRA) .
[56] The first decision in Myathaza v Johannesburg Metropolitan Bus Services
(SOC) Ltd t/a Metrobus and others
16 (Myathaza) , contained three separate
judgments without yielding any majority ratio . Despite the differences in the
judgments, there was agreement on the order.
[57] The Constitutional Court’s subsequent decision in Mogaila v Coca Cola
Fortune (Pty) Ltd
17, did not decide whether the Prescription Act was applicable to
arbitration awards — the Court reasoned on the basis of the factual similarities
between the case before it and those in Myathaza that the outcome would be the
same.

[58] The third decision bearing on the application of prescription to claims under
the LRA is that of Food and Allied Workers Union on behalf of Gaoshubelwe v
Pieman’s Pantry (Pty) Ltd18 (Pieman’s Pantry) in which there was a majority decision
yielding a ratio for the judgment. Pieman’s Pantry concerned the question of if and
when a claim of unfair dismissal prescribes. Contrary to the views expressed in the first and third judgments in Myathaza, the majority held that the Prescription Act was
not inconsistent with the LRA. Also, that a claim of unfair dismissal which sought to
enforce three possible kinds of obligations against an employer, namely reinstatement, re -employment and compensation, amounted to an obligation to pay
or render something. As such, a claim for unfair dismissal constitutes a debt as contemplated in section 16(1) of the Prescription Act , and there was no

15 Act 66 of 1995, as amended.
16 [2016] ZACC 49; (2017) 38 ILJ 527 (CC).
17 [2017] ZACC 6; (2017) 38 ILJ 1273 (CC).
18 [2018] ZACC 7; (2018) 39 ILJ 1213 (CC).
15


inconsistency between the Prescription Act and the LRA. The crux of the C ourt’s
reasoning appears in the following paragraphs19:
‘[177] Are the time periods provided for in s 191 of the LRA inconsistent with
the provisions of the Prescription Act? As I have demonstrated, while they
both deal with time periods, they do so for different reasons and to achieve
different objectives. The time periods in the LRA indicate when a litigant is
expected to take the necessary steps in the dispute -resolution process to
properly prosecute a claim, while the Prescription Act provides a cut -off point
when those steps are no longer available to a litigant on account of the claim having prescribed.
[178] Simply on that analysis, it can hardly be said that there is inconsistency
between the provisions of the LRA and the Prescription Act, insofar as they relate to time periods. …’

[59] The decision in Pieman’s Pantry resolved the uncertainty regarding the
application of the Prescription Act to the LRA.

[60] The scope and purpose of the Act too has been articulated in a number of
Constitutional Court judgments. In Myathaza
20, it was held that:
‘The purpose of the Prescription Act is to prompt creditors to institute legal
proceedings without inordinate delays which may adversely affect the quality
of adjudication if witnesses are no longer available or their memories have
faded. Unquestionably the focus here is on having a claim settled without
undue delay. It is a legitimate government purpose. ’

[61] In Road Accident Fund and Another v Mdeyide21, it was held that:
‘[7] Rules of prescription — providing that claims become extinct after a
period of time — are common in our legal system and apply to all civil claims.
The Prescription Act and other Acts of Parliament, including the RAF Act,
provide for specific periods in respect of claims brought in terms of those Acts.
The origin of rules of prescription in our legal system dates back to Roman

19 Ibid at paras 177 – 179.
20 Myathaza supra at para 28.
21 [2010] ZACC 18; 2011 (2) SA 26 (CC) (RAF) at paras 7 and 10.
16


times. Under the common law the prescription period was generally 30 years.
These rules were codified in the Prescription Act 18 of 1943, which was
replaced by the current Prescription Act 68 of 1969 (Prescription Act).
… [10] The Prescription Act deals with prescription in general. In terms of s 10
a debt is extinguished by prescription after the lapse of the period which applies in respect of the prescription of the debt. A claim is thus after a certain
period of time no longer actionable and justiciable. It is a deadline which, if not met, could deny a plaintiff access to a court in respect of the specific claim. ’
[62] In Pieman’s Pantry
22, it was held that:
‘[179] The time periods in the LRA and in the Prescription Act regulate
different features of the litigation process and are not only reconcilable but can exist in harmony alongside each other.
[180] The application of the Prescription Act to the LRA would advance the
speedy resolution of employment disputes by firstly, leaving wholly intact the mandated time periods for referrals that s 191 provides for. The application of the Prescription Act cannot have as an unintended consequence the implied
extension of those time periods to coincide with the period of prescription.
Secondly, subjecting claims under the LRA to an outer time limit would considerably enhance the efficiency of the dispute- resolution process. Placing
an outer limit beyond which the litigation process simply cannot continue prevents employment disputes from being litigated after a considerable
passage of time. This may impact negatively on both the quality of
adjudication as well as I the important policy considerations that relate to the
quick and speedy resolution of employment related disputes, the ability of
workers to continue to earn a living, as well as the ongoing ability of businesses to continue operating. ’

[63] It is evident from the above mentioned authorities that the purpose of the Act
is to prompt creditors to institute legal proceedings without delay, that certain Acts of
Parliament, including the LRA, indicate timeframes when a litigant is expected to

22 Pieman’s Pantry supra at paras 179 – 180.
17


take the necessary steps to properly prosecute a claim and that the Prescription Act
provides a cut -off point when those steps are no longer available to a litigant on
account of the claim having prescribed. It is a deadline which, if not met, could deny
a plaintiff access to a court in respect of the specific claim .

[64] All of this shows that the Act is about the litigation of claims or debts in civil
court proceedings. There is no indication in any of the authorities that the Act applies to informal and internal disciplinary proceedings. This is so, of course, because
internal disciplinary proceedings are not regulated by any act which prescribes a timeframe within which the necessary steps must be taken, failing which a claim would prescribe.
[65] Consistent with this, there are two key sections of the A ct which manifestly
cannot apply to disciplinary enquiries . Those are sections 15 and 17.
[66] Section 15 provides for the interruption of prescription and the relevant parts
read as follows:
‘15. Judicial interruption of prescription
(1) The running of prescription shall, subject to the provisions of
subsection (2), be interrupted by the service on the debtor of any process whereby the creditor claims payment of the debt.
(2) Unless the debtor acknowledges liability, the interruption of prescription
in terms of subsection (1) shall lapse, and the running of prescription shall not be deemed to have been interrupted, if the creditor does not successfully prosecute his claim under the process in question to final judgment or if he does so prosecute his claim but abandons the judgment or the judgment is set aside.
… (6) For the purposes of this section, 'process' includes a petition, a notice
of motion, a rule nisi, a pleading in reconvention, a third party notice referred to in any rule of court, and any document whereby legal proceedings are commenced. ’

18


[67] The Act provides for the interruption of the running of prescription, and the
courts have confirmed that it would be untenable if a party cannot interrupt the
running of prescription, where prescription runs against a claim or debt.
[68] For the purposes of interrupting the running of prescription, process must be
served on the debtor and ‘ process ’ has been defined in section 15(6). It is evident,
considering what ‘ process ’ is for purposes of interrupting prescription, that a
disciplinary charge sheet does not constitute ' process ’ whereby ‘legal proceedings ’
are commenced — a clear indication that the Act does not and cannot apply to
internal disciplinary proceedings.
[69] The issue of whether a CCMA conciliation referral constitutes ‘ process ’ for the
purposes of section 15(1) and thus interrupts the prescription of an unfair dismissal claim was finally settled in Pieman’s Pantry . The majority held that “ the referral of
disputes to the CCMA for conciliation constitutes the service of a process commencing legal proceedings ”
23.
[70] The same cannot conceivably be said of a disciplinary charge sheet — it is
not a process , and it does not commence legal proceedings.
[71] Section 17 provides that :
’17 Prescription to be raised in pleadings
(1) A court shall not of its own motion take notice of prescription.
(2) A party to litigation who invokes prescription, shall do so in the relevant
document filed of record in the proceedings: Provided that a court may allow prescription to be raised at any stage of the proceedings. ’
[72] Considering the wording of section 17, it is clear that prescription cannot be
raised at a disciplinary hearing because it does not involve litigation before a court and no document is filed of record. The LRA did not envisage the disciplinary process adopted by many employers and abused by some employees. On the contrary, and in its simplest terms , the LRA introduced a process that requires an

23 Ibid at para 199.
19


investigation into any alleged misconduct, an opportunity by any employee against
whom any allegation of misconduct is made, to respond after a reasonable period
with the assistance of a representative, a decision by the employer and notice of that decision. It is a process far removed from civil proceedings. An employer and
employee are just that — parties in an employment relationship and they are not and
do not become parties in litigation when disciplinary proceedings are initiated.
[73] In the arbitration award, the commissioners, recorded that “ the novel part of
the … case ” was that Ms More invoked prescription at the disciplinary enquiry stage,
they also accepted that the facts and circumstances of Pieman’s Pantry and Ms More’s case were distinguishable, however, they found the principle of law to be the same. The commissioners understood the principles to demonstrate that the applicability of prescription is not limited to the enforcement of arbitration awards. Therefore, they found that the Act applies to disciplinary enquiries .
In doing so, they
relied on the following extracts of passages from Pieman’s Pantry :
‘[206] While prescription has been broadly identified as limiting the right of
access to courts, the operation of the provisions of the Prescription Act and in particular s 12 were described as striking the necessary balance between
certainty and fairness by introducing the necessary flexibility in determining when a debt becomes due and, by implication, when such a debt prescribes.

[208] The unavoidable conclusion to be drawn from the above is that the
manner in which our courts have interpreted the Prescription Act does indeed
demonstrate a significant measure of flexibility, in striking the necessary
balance between fairness and certainty. The application of the Prescription
Act will accordingly import the same balance into the LRA processes, in the context of dealing with prescription. ’

[74] It is significant that the commissioners found, as was confirmed by the
Constitutional Court, that the conciliation process of the CCMA is indeed the
commencement of proceedings for the enforcement of the debt. They even recorded that they are “completely conscious of the fact that the Constitutional Court is
referring to a process already at the CCMA ”. How the commissioners made the leap
from that position to one where they found that the principles are to be applied “ even
20


at a time when the matter is at the workplace – before it is referred to the CCMA ” is
inexplicable.

[75] It seems that the commissioners relied on paragraph [ 203] of Pieman’s Pantry
to find that the various steps in the adjudication of disputes are intertwined and that disciplinary hearings or any process at the workplace is not exempt from this approach. The said paragraph reads as follows:
‘What is instructive from this decision is that it recognises that the judicial
process may consist of various steps that are intertwined and that it is not necessary that the process that commences proceedings must result in a judgment in the same action. Thus, it matters not that the process that constitutes a referral to conciliation does not result in a judgment. It may still, and does indeed, constitute the commencement of proceedings for the enforcement of a debt. ’
24
[76] A proper perusal and understanding of paragraph [ 203] show s that it refers to
another decision, where the C ourt has held that i t is sufficient for the purposes of
interrupting prescription if the process to be served is one whereby the proceedings
begun thereunder, are instituted as a step in the enforcement of a claim for payment
of the debt. A creditor prosecutes his claim under that process to a final, executable
judgment, not only when the process and the judgment constitute the beginning and end of the same action, but also where the process initiates an action, and the
judgment which finally disposes of some elements of the claim, and where the remaining elements are disposed of in a supplementary action instituted pursuant to and dependent upon that judgment.
[77] In paragraph [ 203], the Constitutional Court clearly referred to the fact that the
judicial process may consist of various steps that are intertwined. The commissioners ’ understanding and interpretation of the said dicta to mean that
various steps in the “ adjudication of disputes are intertwined” to include a disciplinary
hearing, or “any process at the workplace” for that matter , is wrong.


24 Ibid at para 203.
21


[78] When the abovementioned paragraphs from Pieman’s Pantry are read in full,
within their proper context and meaning, it is patently obvious that they are no
support for the commissioners’ conclusion that the Prescription Act applies to internal disciplinary hearings. The Constitutional Court made it clear that the conciliation process of the CCMA is indeed the commencement of proceedings for the enforcement of the debt. It follows that the provisions of the Prescription Act are only triggered when proceedings commence at the CCMA , and they find no
application before such process commences and do not apply to internal disciplinary
hearings.
[79] Let this be clear: the Prescription Act applies to civil litigation in a court of law
— it is about the litigation of claims or debts in civil court proceedings. A disciplinary
process is not civil litigation, a disciplinary hearing is not a court of law , and there is
no litigation of a debt involved in a disciplinary hearing. All this indicates that the
Prescription Act is not applicable to disciplinary hearings , and the commissioners
committed a material error of law in finding that it applies to disciplinary hearings.

[80] The question of waiver and delay may remain relevant in that an employer
may have waived its right to rely on certain misconduct to institute disciplinary action, or the delay in doing so may render the dismissal procedurally unfair. But it does not mean that the employer cannot take disciplinary action because the disciplinary charges have prescribed.
[81] The first ground for review succeeds , and in my view , it is dispositive of the
entire application, and it is not necessary to consider the other grounds for review.
A debt?
[82] I deem it necessary to say something about the Applicant’s alternative
argument that the commissioners’ finding is reviewable because a disciplinary
enquiry does not involve a claim for a ‘ debt’ under the Prescription Act.

22


[83] The Prescription Act does not define the term ‘ debt’. It has been given
different interpretations by the courts, but t he controversy was resolved by the
Constitutional Court in Makate v Vodacom Ltd25 (Makate) :
‘[92] However, in present circumstances it is not necessary to determine the
exact meaning of 'debt' as envisaged in s 10. This is because the claim we
are concerned with falls beyond the scope of the word as determined in cases
like Escom , which held that a debt is an obligation to pay money, deliver
goods or render services . Here the applicant did not ask to enforce any of
these obligations. Instead, he requested an order forcing Vodacom to commence negotiations with him for determining compensation for the profitable use of his idea.
[93] To the extent that Desai went beyond what was said in Escom it was
decided in error .
26 There is nothing in Escom that remotely suggests that
'debt' includes every obligation to do something or refrain from doing
something, apart from payment or delivery . It follows that the trial court
attached an incorrect meaning to the word 'debt'. A debt contemplated in s 10 of the P rescription Act does not cover the present claim. Therefore, the
section does not apply to the present claim, which did not prescribe. ’ (Own
emphasis)
[84] In Pieman’s Pantry , the Constitutional Court construed the ‘debt’ as follows :
‘[155] To that extent, this Court cautioned against such a broad approach and
supported the approach taken in Escom , that the word “debt” should be given
the meaning ascribed to it in the Shorter Oxford Dictionary, namely:
“1. Something owed or due: something (as money, goods or service)
which one person is under an obligation to pay or render to another.
2. A liability or obligation to pay or render something; the condition of
being so obligated.”
[156] If regard is had to this [i.e. the Escom definition of a ‘debt’], then it must
follow that a claim for dismissal is, as pointed out in the second judgment in Myathaza, a claim that seeks to enforce three possible kinds of obligations

25 [2016] ZACC 13; 2016 (4) SA 121 (CC).
26 Electricity Supply Commission v Stewarts and Lloyds of SA (Pty) Ltd 1981 (3) SA 340 (A) (Escom )
at 344E -G.
23


against an employer: reinstatement, re -employment, and compensation. All
three obligations fit neatly within the definition of debt that Escom and Makate
accepted, as they constitute either an obligation to pay or render something. ’
(Own emphasis)

[85] Also relevant is the Constitutional Court’s judgment in Off-Beat Holiday Club
and Another v Sanbonani Holiday Spa Shareblock Ltd and Others Off -Beat Holiday
Club27:
‘In my view the correct characterisation of a claim for purposes of the
Prescription Act is the characterisation arising from the relevant legal
provisions on which the claim is based. Here the claim is based on s 252 of
the Companies Act, the plain text of which discusses an entitlement to an
equitable judicial determination. Thus, according to s 252, the applicants'
claim is for declaratory relief, not an alteration of the terms of a contract or a money award. … My solution is that courts restrict themselves to the text of
the legal provision on which the claim is based. In order to identify what the
relevant claim is, the court should use the applicants' cause of action as
guidance. However, the court is not beholden to the applicants'
characterisation of the claim, which might be at variance with the relevant legal provision. The latter governs. ’ (Own emphasis)

[86] It is now trite that an unfair dismissal claim brought by an employee in terms
of section 191 of the LRA involves a claim for a ‘ debt’ of reinstatement, re-
employment, or compensation.
[87] The commissioners found that Ms More’s contract of employment expressly
provides for rendering of service to the PIC as an obligation that Ms More must discharge. They construed the debt as being Ms More’s breach of contract, described as the “ defective rendering of service” or “positive malperformance ”, giving
rise to the misconduct with which she was charged. They found that “ this begs the
question why such service is not sufficient to be used and applied as a debt ”.


27 [2017] ZACC 15; 2017 (5) SA 9 (CC) at para 34.
24


[88] The commissioners found that a disciplinary enquiry is “ an investigation into
the circumstances of a breach of contract of employment ”, and that “ upon
confirmation of a breach the employer must make an election which includes
terminat ion of the contract ( like they did with Ms More ), claim damages which they
did not and could have or call for specific performance which may involve
counselling (PIC could have), training for the employee to meet the standard of
performance depending on the nature and gravity of the violation (PIC elected not
to). It may also elect to discipline (which the PIC did). However, it is still liable to be extinguished by prescription if the action is delayed for more than three years ”.
[89] This finding is misconceived and lost sight of the fact that the LRA recognises
three grounds on which a termination of employment might be legitimate – these are
the conduct of the employee, the capacity of the employee and the employer’s operational requirements. Those would constitute fair reasons for dismissal. An employer has to effect a dismissal on any of the permissible grounds in accordance with a fair procedure, which includes an employee’s right to be informed of the
allegation, be afforded an opportunity to state a case in response and be provided
with an outcome or decision after the enquiry.
[90] A disciplinary hearing is held within the ambit of the LRA, and it is not purely
an investigation into the breach of contract within the ambit of a contractual dispensation. It is not the enforcement of a contractual right to terminate, but it is the enforcement of a statutory right to terminate an employment relationship on the
grounds recognised by the L RA.
[91] Considering the authorities on what would constitute a debt for purposes of
the Prescription Act, what begs the question is what debt is claimed by an employer
that calls an employee to a disciplinary enquiry, which may or may not result in dismissal?
[92] In my view, the PIC as an employer has the prerogative to take disciplinary
action against its employees , and if appropriate and justified, it may terminate the
employment relationship on account of the conduct of an employee. The disciplinary
25


process does not call upon an employee to comply with an obligation to render
services, but it rather calls the employee to account for his or her conduct. [93] Put differently, while a debt in terms of the Act is an obligation to pay money,
deliver goods or render services, a disciplinary enquiry does not require the employee to perform any obligation at all, let alone one to pay money, deliver goods or render services. The employer merely invokes a labour law mechanism available to it to investigate a prima facie case of alleged misconduct and its impact on a
continued employment relationship.
[94] When it comes to prescription, the plaintiff’s claim is for the correlative ‘ debt’.
What is an employer’s claim or cause of action when it elects to call an employee to a disciplinary enquiry? In my view , the institution of disciplinary action is the
exercising of an employer’s prerogative, which is generally guided by the terms of a disciplinary code or procedure, where there is a prima facie case of alleged
misconduct. There is no correlative debt that is being claimed by the employer from the employee.

[95] It is wrong to characterise a disciplinary enquiry or any ensuing dismissal as a
claim for a breach of contract , constituting the debt. A disciplinary enquiry or
dismissal is rooted in labour law and its fairness dispensation, not in the common law
of contract.
At a disciplinary enquiry, the employer is not claiming contractual relief of
specific performance or cancellation and damages arising from a breach of contract.

[96] A debt is an obligation to pay money , deliver goods or render services. Ms
More rendered her services, but the Applicant’s case is that in doing so, she misconducted herself and, therefore, the employer is entitled to take disciplinary
action. The PIC did not seek to call upon Ms More to comply with her obligation to render a service, but rather it took disciplinary action, which is not a claim for a debt,
and it terminated the employment relationship, which is also not a claim for a debt. No debt arises in the scenario of internal disciplinary action. To find differently would
constitute an absurdity.

26


[97] The commissioners’ findings, as alluded to supra, were wrong and are to be
reviewed.

Relief
[98] Having found that the arbitration award is reviewable, it leaves the issue of
relief.
[99] The Applicant submitted that an unusual feature of the award is that – given
the commissioners’ findings on substantive unfairness – they did not get around to
deciding the merits of the charges against Ms More, save for the finding on Dr Matjila’s instruction. The consequence of this is that if the C ourt were to set aside the
commissioners’ decision on substantive unfairness, there would be a gaping hole in the award. The difficult question that would then confront the Court is whether it
should sit as a decision -maker of the first instance and determine what was the
central factual issue at the arbitration (i.e. whether Ms More was guilty of misconduct), which the commissioners avoided doing.
[100] The Applicant submitted that this would not be appropriate.

[101] Mr Bishop for Ms More, on the other hand, submitted in his heads of
argument that if the Court does not uphold the defence of prescription, this Court
should find that the PIC had waived its right to bring charges against Ms More in respect of the VBS transaction. If this C ourt finds that the commissioners’ finding on
prescription should be set aside or if the C ourt does not uphold the defence of
waiver, then Mr Bishop submitted that the Court should determine the defence of
undue delay .
[102] Mr Bishop further submitted that there would be nothing improper about this
Court making a determination on the questions of procedural and substantive fairness, outside of Ms More’s special defences. A substantial portion of his heads of argument was dedicated to submissions on substantive and procedural fairness.
27


[103] The question I am faced with in casu is how does the C ourt get to decide the
merits of Ms More’s dismissal when this was not determined by the commissioners,
where there is no decision on the merits to be set aside on review, and where there is nothing for this C ourt to substitute its own decision for?
[104] To ask the C ourt to finally determine the merits of Ms More’s dismissal would
be to call upon the Court not to act as a reviewing court, but to act as a decision -
maker of first instance. However wide this Court’s powers are under section 145(4),
this would not be ‘appropriate’ . Section 145, as a whole, makes it clear that this
Court is here to scrutinise the legality and regularity of CCMA arbitration awards on
review, not to do the work of CCMA commissioners .
[105] This leaves the option of remittal either back to the commissioners who heard
the arbitration or to a new commissioner for a hearing de novo.
[106] The PIC submitted that it would be disinclined towards remittal to the existing
commissioners. It may , in the circumstances , be unfair to expect of the
commissioners to bring a fresh mind to bear on the matter and asking too much of
them.

[107] Considering the matter, the findings made by the commissioners (as well as
the findings not made) and the grounds for review raised by the PIC, I am of the view that the only just and equitable option is to remit the matter to a new commissioner
for an arbitration de novo.
[108] In argument, this issue was canvassed with counsel , and Mr Bishop submitted
that if this Court were to find that prescription does not apply, the matter must be remitted , and if this Court finds that it must be decided by another commissioner, the
Court must give direction as to how the matter must proceed. Mr Bishop submitted that Ms More, as an individual, had already incurred great expense and the evidence already presented, should be the evidence before another commissioner, as may be supplemented by ar gument.

28


[109] Mr Itzkin for the Applicant submitted that a senior commissioner should decide
the matter de novo. Mr Itzkin had no difficulty for the matter to be remitted and that it
be determined on the existing record, with the right to adduce new evidence.

[110] I am mindful of the fact that the arbitration took place over five sittings
between February and July 2022 and that the record of the arbitration runs to a
whopping 4281 pages, including a 1358- page transcript and a 120- page pre-
arbitration minute. It is for these reasons that I grant the relief as per the order infra.
[111] In the premises , I make the following order:
Order
1. The arbitration award issued on 6 September 2022 and the
supplementary award issued under case no GATW13421- 21 are reviewed
and set aside;
2. The matter is remitted to the CCMA for arbitration de novo by a senior
commissioner or commissioners, as the case may be, other than the Third
and Fourth Respondents;
3. The record of proceedings generated under case number
GATW13421- 21 shall serve as the evidence before the appointed
commissioner or commissioners;
4. The arbitration de novo is to be conducted on such terms and in such
manner as the appointed commissioner or commissioners may determine;
5. The CCMA is directed to enrol the matter for arbitration;
6. There is no order as to costs.

Connie Prinsloo
Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa
Appearances:
For the Applicant: Advocate R Itzkin
Instructed by: Fasken Attorneys

29


For the First Respondent: Advocate A Bishop
Instructed by: Petersen Hertog Attorneys