Bhele v Super Squad Trading (Pty) Ltd (C266/19) [2025] ZALCCT 32 (19 May 2025)

58 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Review of arbitration award — Dismissal for misconduct — Employee accused of inciting another to engage handbrake of moving vehicle — Employee off duty at time of incident — Evidence of phone conversation between employees — Arbitrator found dismissal substantively fair — Review application dismissed. The applicant, Andile Bhele, sought to review an arbitration award that upheld his dismissal for allegedly inciting a colleague, Mr. Madola, to engage the handbrake of a moving truck. Bhele was off duty during the incident, but evidence indicated he was consulted by Madola for advice regarding his drinking. The arbitrator concluded that Bhele's actions constituted serious misconduct, justifying the dismissal. The legal issue centered on whether the arbitrator erred in relying on the evidence presented, including the interpretation of a phone recording and the classification of evidence as hearsay. The court held that the arbitrator did not commit material errors in the arbitration process, and the dismissal was substantively fair, leading to the dismissal of the review application.

Comprehensive Summary

Case Note


Bhele v Super Squad Trading (Pty) Ltd and Others

C266/2019

Heard: 28 August 2025

Delivered: 19 May 2025


Reportability


This case is reportable due to its implications for workplace misconduct and the standards of evidence required in arbitration proceedings. The judgment addresses the substantive fairness of a dismissal based on alleged incitement to commit misconduct, highlighting the importance of clear evidence and the interpretation of communications in disciplinary matters. The case serves as a precedent for future cases involving similar allegations of misconduct and the evidentiary standards that must be met.


Cases Cited



  • Mabitsela v Department of Local Government (2012) 33 ILJ 1869 (LC)


Legislation Cited



  • Law of Evidence Amendment Act, 45 of 1998


Rules of Court Cited



  • None cited.


HEADNOTE


Summary


The Labour Court reviewed an arbitration award that upheld the dismissal of Andile Bhele for allegedly inciting a colleague to engage in dangerous behavior by pulling the handbrake of a moving truck. The court found that the arbitrator's decision was substantively fair, as the evidence suggested that Bhele had indeed provided advice that led to the misconduct. The review application was dismissed, affirming the arbitrator's findings.


Key Issues


The key legal issues addressed in this case include the interpretation of evidence in disciplinary hearings, the admissibility of hearsay evidence, and the standards for establishing substantive fairness in dismissals for misconduct.


Held


The court held that the arbitrator's findings were reasonable and supported by the evidence presented. The dismissal of Bhele was deemed substantively fair, and the review application was dismissed without costs.


THE FACTS


Andile Bhele was employed as a driver by Super Squad Trading (Pty) Ltd. On the day of the incident, he was off duty when his colleague, Mr. Madola, who was driving a truck, was observed drinking alcohol. After a series of phone calls, including one to Bhele, Madola attempted to pull the handbrake of the moving truck, resulting in a near-accident. Bhele was accused of inciting Madola to commit this act, leading to his dismissal.


THE ISSUES


The court had to decide whether the arbitrator's reliance on the evidence presented was justified, particularly concerning the interpretation of the phone conversation between Madola and Bhele, the admissibility of hearsay evidence, and whether the dismissal was substantively fair.


ANALYSIS


The court analyzed the evidence presented during the arbitration, focusing on the credibility of witnesses and the interpretation of the recorded phone conversation. It was determined that the arbitrator had reasonably concluded that Bhele had advised Madola to pull the handbrake, despite Bhele's claims to the contrary. The court also addressed the hearsay nature of the evidence and found that it did not undermine the arbitrator's decision.


REMEDY


The court dismissed the review application, affirming the arbitrator's decision that Bhele's dismissal was substantively fair. No costs were awarded against either party.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The case established that in disciplinary proceedings, the burden of proof lies with the employer to demonstrate that a dismissal was substantively fair. It also highlighted the importance of clear and credible evidence in establishing the facts of a case, particularly in situations involving alleged misconduct and incitement. The court reaffirmed that hearsay evidence can be admissible if it does not rely on the credibility of the person making the statement.



THE L ABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
AT CAPE TOWN

Of interest to other judges
Case no: C266/2019

In the matter between:
ANDILE BHELE Applicant
and
SUPER SQUAD TRADING (PTY) LTD First Respondent
NATIONAL BARGAINING COUNCIL FOR THE ROAD AND FREIGHT AND
LOGISTICS INDUSTRY (“NBCRFLI”) Second Respondent

A SINGH BHOOPCHAND Third Respondent

Heard: 28 August 2025
Delivered: 19 May 2025
Summary: (Review – Misconduct – incitement to commit misconduct – Alleged
incitement to halt a moving truck - Employee seeking urgent advice after being
accused of drinking – Evidence of his call to a third party seeking advice – activating
handbrake on conclusion of the call and running away – claim interpretation
inadequate – record not supporting that – Allegation of reliance on hearsay incorrect
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- Poor qualify of phone recording – audible portions capable of supporting an
inference - Review dismissed )


JUDGMENT


LAGRANGE, J
Nature of the application
[1] This is an opposed review application. The applicant, Mr A Bhele (‘ Bhele ’),
wants the court to set aside an arbitration award, by the Third Respondent (‘the arbitrator’), who found that his dismissal for inciting another employee, Mr N Madola (‘Madola’) to act illegally by engaging the handbrake of a moving vehicle was
substantively fair. Madola, a driver’s assistant, was dismissed for engaging the handbrake of a moving vehicle.
The review application
Factual background
[2] A brief summary of the pertinent evidence is necessary before turning to the
award and the grounds of review.
[3] Bhele was employed by the respondent (‘Super Squad’) as a driver. He was
off duty on the day when the incident giving rise to the disciplinary action occurred.
[4] Mr J Mouton (‘Mouton’) who was employed as a driver gave evidence of what
he had witnessed on 19 October 2019.
[5] On that day, Mouton was driving a truck from Cape Town to George,
accompanied by Madola, as a driver’s assistant . He became aware Madola was
surreptitiously drinking alcohol while they were in the truck. When they stopped to fill up with diesel in Paarl, Madola stood outside the truck and drank openly. When
Mouton told him to discard the liquor, Madola ignored him so he phoned his
supervisor for advice on what to do. The latter told him to return to the depot .
[6] After Mouton’s conversation with the supervisor, Madola made a phone call to
the supervisor to apologi se. Afterwards he made a number of calls to friends and to
Bhele. Initially , Madola’s call to Bhele was audible on speaker phone. After a while
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Madola asked Mouton to speak with ‘ Andile’ ( Bhele ’s first name), but he refused to
because he had no reason to speak with him. A recording made by Mouton of the
call was played at the arbitration hearing. Mouton had recorded Madola’s call but
only Madola’s side of the conversation was audible.
[7] The phone conversation between Madola and Bhele continued. The only
‘Andile ’ Mouton knew of at the company was the applicant . If the ‘Andile’ Madola was
talking to was not Bhele , Madola would not have referred to him as if he was an
‘Andile ’ whom Mouton knew. Mouton was under the impression Madola was phoning
around for advice about what he should do about his situation.
[8] As they were approaching an intersection Madola ended the call thanking the
person he had been speaking to. Immediately thereafter , Madola then insisted that
Mouton should stop and pull over, but Mouton said he couldn’t until they came to
robots or a stop street. Madola then attempted to grab the handbrake. He eventually
succeeded causing the truck to jack -knife on a bridge, nearly causing an accident.
Madola then jumped out the truck.
[9] Mouton testified that at the disciplinary enquiry Bhele did not dispute anything
about the recording of the phone conversation.
[10] During the arbitration the interpretation of Mouton’s recording of Madola ’s side
of his phone conversation was truncated because it had to be replayed and there
was a debate about whether the word ‘xela’ in isiKhosa means to ‘say’ or to ‘spy’ on someone. Combining all the pieces of the interpretation, the main portion of what Madola said to the ‘Andile’ he was speaking with reads:
“Yes we are turning around. He’s saying that I’m drinking. I’m not the driver. Yes,
advise me. We are going to the DC we are turning around. Here you are Jan. Jan doesn’t want to take it. Andile he doesn't want to talk to you. He’s saying we’re turning around we’re going to the DC. We’re not going to the Garden Route. I wanted to go on the Garden Route. I want to go on the Garden Route now we are going to the DC. He’s come back. He has reported me and saying that I’m drinking. He’s reported me to Sugen. I’m listening. I’m listening. If I was the one with the power must I do, we are going to the DC now. Joh ! I hear you brother…(slurred speech)…sure. I’m going to pull the handbrake. … Jan I want to get off here. I want
to get off here. What are you doing? Wait, now what are you doing? I’m going to get
off here.
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Get out, get out. You know mos why your are getting out. Get out. Andile mos told
you. I hear mos Andile told you you must get out, so get out. He’s says you mad
you. Get out, there’s the police also he’s blocking the way here by me. You know you
guilty mos .”
The underlined portion reflects Madola ’s exchange with Mouton when the handbrake
was activated. ‘Sugen’ is Mr S. Reddy (‘Reddy’), the operations team leader for
Clicks Cape Town based at the Cape Town Distribution Centre (‘the DC’) , who
instructed Mouton to return to the DC after he reported that Madola was drinking and
would not heed his instruction to stop. Reddy also testified in the arbitration hearing.
[11] Bhele’s principal issues with Mouton’s recording were that:
11.1 There was no proof that Madola was talking to him when the incident
occurred. He said he had daily conversations with Madola, whom he said was his
best friend, but claimed to have been asleep in his truck at the Phillipi depot on the
night in question. At the disciplinary hearing he had said he was off duty at the time. He agreed that Madola had phoned him that day, but their conversation was a
private matter. He also challenged Mouton’s right to record the call. He queried the fact that Mouton did not mention in his written statement that he had instructed Bhele
to pull up the handbrake.
11.2 Even though, under cross -examination, he never challenged Mouton’s
account that he had made the recording, when it came to his turn to testify , Bhele
suggested the recording could just have been fabricated and should not be accepted
as evidence of anything that took place. He argued that it should be ignored in any
event because it was hearsay evidence. There was no evidence in the transcript of what the person speaking to Madola on the phone had said.
[12] What Bhele did not disput e is that , during the call , Madola asked Mouton to
speak to Andile. Further, he did not dispute that Madola acknowledged he was
listening to the person he had called and was asking the other person to advise him.
He confirmed that Madola had told that person, in Xhosa, that he was going to pull
up the handbrake.
[13] In the findings of the disciplinary enquiry chairperson, the chairperson noted
that Bhele had said that when Madola said he was ‘pulling up the handbrake’, in
isiXhosa, that simply meant he was ‘jumping off’. When asked in the arbitration hearing to confirm that he provided this interpretation, he simply attributed this to
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poor interpretation of what he said. He also said he would never have advised
Madola to pull up the handbrake because that would be a suicidal thing to do and he
would never have suggested that to him.
The arbitrator's reasoning/the award [14] Briefly, the arbitrator’s key findings were as follows.
[15] The arbitrator found that the Super Squad’s version that Bhele had been
phoned by Madola for advice was more likely as there was no reason to doubt
Mouton’s version that Madola was speaking to Bhele . She found it was the only
reasonable infererence to draw that Bhele had advised him to pull up the handbrake.
[16] The fact that Bhele was off duty at the time was not relevant because he still
owed a fiduciary duty to act in good faith towards his employer at all times.
[17] In view of the potentially serious consequences of what could have happened
when the handbrake was activated, the arbitrator found that the misconduct was serious and there were no mitigating factors . Because Bhele refused to take any
responsibility for what happened, the prospect of him improving his behaviour was remote.
[18] Accordingly she concluded that Bhele ’s dismissal was substantively fair.
Grounds of review
[19] The principle grounds of review raised were that:
19.1 The arbitrator ought not to have relied on the evidence because the
interpreter could not speak Xhosa properly and Bhele was entitled to proper
interpretation.
19.2 The arbitrator could not rely on Mouton’s evidence to determine what Bhele
allegedly said to Madola because it was hearsay evidence.
19.3 The arbitrator improperly relied on an inaudible telephonic recording.
Evaluation
Interpretation [20] It is trite that a party is entitled to interpretation
1. Unlike Mabitsela’s case,
where the arbitrator refused to arrange an interpreter, in this case there was an interpreter, but Bhele claimed the interpreter, a Zulu speaker, was not proficient
enough in isiXhosa. Plainly, if an interpreter is incompetent that is tantamount to

1 Mabitsela v Department of Local Government (2012) 33 ILJ 1869 (LC) at paragraphs 15 – 19.
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denying the party needing one of their right to interpretation. In this instance, i f one
examines the record, there is only one occasion when there was a dispute over the
interpretation. It concerned the interpretation of one isiXhosa word occurring in
Mouton’s recording of Madola’s telephone call. That was whether Madola was saying
that Mouton was ‘spying on him’ or just saying that he was drinking. This was
discussed above. Whichever, version one relies one, nothing much turns on this, as the import of what Madola said was to the effect that Mouton had told Reddy that he
was drinking.
[21] For the remainder of the record, Bhele was content to rely on the interpreter,
except on occasion when he did not wait for interpretation and chose to speak directly in English. He emphasised in English that his phone call with Madola on the
day of the incident, had nothing to do with it and challenged what he characterised as the ‘hearsay’ nature of Mouton’s testimony.
[22] It is also significant that Madola had been speaking on the phone in isiXhosa ,
so no translation was necessary for that crucial evidence. In relation to Mouton’s and
Reddy’ s evidence, Bhele never once indicated any difficult y in understanding it. In
his grounds of review Bhele makes no mention of what portion of their testimony he
did not understand at the time , nor does he explain in what respect his case might
have been misconstrued or poorly presented as a result.
[23] In the circumstances, the record does not demonstrate a witness prejudiced
by the quality of interpretation, and I am not persuaded the arbitrator committed misconduct, by not replacing the interpreter.
Hearsay
[24] In terms of s3(4) of the Law of Evidence Amendment Act, 45 of 1998,
hearsay is ‘”… evidence, whether oral or in writing, the probative value of which
depends upon the credibility of any person other than the person giving such
evidence”.
[25] In relation to the hearsay claim, Mouton was not testifying about what Madola
said on the phone for the purpose of relying on the truth of anything Madola said. He
was simply giving his direct testimony of what he observed Madola doing in the
course of their trip. None of his evidence depended on the credibility of Madola for its
probative value. Consequently, his evidence did not constitute hearsay evidence. He
did not claim to understand everything Madola said in the phone call, but could
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confirm that he had recorded it, and could testify to the fact that Madola asked him to
speak to someone called ‘Andile’ during the course of the phone conversation. He
also testified about Madola’ s action in proceeding to grab the truck handbrake
immediately on ending the call. None of that evidence was hearsay. As far as the evidence of what Madola said on the call Mouton’s recording was played in the
hearing to prove what Madola said. That was also not hearsay evidence led to
establish the truth of what Madola had said.
[26] From Mouton’s evidence an inference could be drawn that Madola was in
conversation with someone called “Andile”, and Madola was seeking advice from
him on what to do about the situation he was in. The evidence relied on was circumstantial in nature. It is true Bhele could not cross -examine Madola, but he
could have called as him as a witness if he wished to challenge Mouton’s evidence
or to testify about whom he was speaking to and what the true nature of the conversation was.
Inaudibility of the recording of Madola ’s call.
[27] It is true there were portions of the recording of Madola’s part of the phone
conversation, which were not clear. Ironically, it was Bhele who confirmed that what
Madola was saying at the end of the call was that he was going to pull up the
handbrake. The gist of what was audible and was translated was mentioned in the summary in paragraph 10 above. The arbitrator was entitled to take account of that
portion of the recording. If Bhele wished to contend that crucial bits of what Madola
said were not recorded, he was at liberty to summons Madola, whom he claimed was his best friend, to fill in the gaps.
[28] On the testimony of Mouton and the audible portions of Madola’s call it was
not unr easonable to draw an inference that Madola had phoned Bhele because he
was his close friend and a driver at the same company, and he needed urgent advice about how to deal with the serious situation he had got himself into. It is evident that Madola assumed Mouton knew which ‘Andile’ he was referring to and Mouton testified the only one he knew was Bhele. No evidence was led to identify a
single other person having the name Andile that he might have been speaking to. It
is also not unreasonable to believe that Bhele would have tried to help his good
friend in his hour of need.
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[29] Because Madola was desperately seeking advice on what to do, it would
make sense that when he said he was ‘ listening ’ to the person he called, that he was
being given advice. When he then confirmed that he had ‘heard’ him and that he was
going to lift up the handbrake, it is not implausible to infer that he was acting on the
advice received from the person he was speaking to.
[30] It is true that Bhele testified he would never had advised Madola to do
something so dangerous, but the evidence points strongly to a finding that that was
the advice conveyed to Madola who was desperate to avoid being returned to the
depot. Bhele did not admit to being the other party to the Madola ’s phone
conversation, and went so far as to suggest that the recording was a fabrication, so
he could not offer an alternative explanation for Madola ’s reckless action as he
ended the call.
Conclusion
[31] In conclusion, I am not persuaded there were material flaws in the conduct of
the arbitration, which had the effect of depriving Bhele of a fair hearing. Secondly, in
the arbitrator’s evaluation of the evidence she did not arrive at conclusions no
reasonable arbitrator could have reached .
Order
1. The review application is dismissed
2. No order is made as to costs.

R Lagrange
Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa.
Appearances:
For the Applicant: Z Mapoma instructed by Mphahlwa Ndlamhlaba Inc.
For the Respondent: M Chenia from Cliffe Decker Hofmeyer Inc.