THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA , JOHANNESBURG
Not Reportable
Case No: 2025- 085510
In the matter between:
NHLANHLA GOBS CEBEKHULU Applicant
and
CITY OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY First Respondent
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY Second Respondent
MUNICIPAL MANAGER: CITY OF EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY Third Respondent
PHAKAMILE MBENGASE Four th Respondent
MEC: GAUTENG CO -OPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
AND TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS Fifth Respondent
MINISTER: GAUTENG CO -OPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
AND TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS Sixth Respondent
2
Heard: 24 June 2025
Delivered: 30 June 2025
JUDGMENT
PHEHANE , J
Introduction
[1] In this opposed urgent application, the applicant seek s interim interdictory
relief in essence, restraining the first, second and third respondents from concluding
the recruitment process related to the filling of the position of Head of Department:
Communications Marketing and Tourism (the position) , and in the event that an
appointment has been made in that position, rest raining that incumbent from
performing the function of the position pending relief in Part B .
[2] The relief sought in Part B is premised on section 157(2) of the Labour
Relations Act
1 and is for a n order that the advertisement of the position, the
appointment of the selection panel related to the filling of the position and any decisions of that panel be declared unlawful , and any decisions of the panel be
reviewed and set aside.
[3] The applicant’s case in a nutshell , as encapsulated in paragraphs 24 and 25
of its founding affidavit , is as follows:
2
‘24. I pray for the above Honourable Court to interdict and restrain the Fir st
to Third Respondents from proceeding with the unlawful recruitment process
to select [sic] and the appointment of a person for the vacant position of the
1 Act 66 of 1995, as amended.
2 At p 001- 17 of CaseLines.
3
Head of D epartment: Communications , Marketing and T ourism at the
Municipality p ending the review and s etting aside of the C ouncil's decision
and resolution dated 31 March 2025 to approve the appointment of the
recommended candidate based on the recommendations of the select ion
panel of the M unicipality .
25. For the reasons which appear below , it has emerged that the entire
recruitment process of the candidate to fill the position of the H ead of
Department : Communications , Marketing and T ourism from (i) the
advertisement; (ii) the selection; (iii) the interview; (iv) the recommendation of
candidates and (v) the appointment of the candidate for the filling of the above post, is tainted with illegality .’
[4] It is not disputed that , by the time this application was heard, the fourth
respondent was appointed in the position following a council resolution of 31 March
2025, and the fourth respondent has been performing the functions of the position
since early April 2025 , when he concluded a written contract of employment with the
first respondent. In the premises, the respondents contend that not only is this
application devoid of urgency, but that the relief sought is moot and therefore, this
application ought to be dismissed. [5] In an attempt to cure the problem that the interdictory relief sought is moot, in
his practice note, the applicant appears to distance himself from the interdictory relief sought and now seeks this Court to determine whether the decision to appoint the
fourth respondent to the position is lawful. In oral submissions, the applicant’s
counsel confirmed that the relief in Part B is now persisted with, as the applicant only became aware during these proceedings that the fourth respondent was appointed in
the role. The problem with this belated approach, firstly, is that the case the
respondent is to meet is the case as pleaded by the applicant. Second, the fourth
respondent is cited in these proceedings ; thus, it is not convincing on the applicant ’s
own version before this Court that he did not know that the fourth respondent was
mooted to be the successful candidate for the position.
Background
4
[6] In a resolution of November 2024, the second respondent resolved to
advertise the position. [7] The position was advertised on 11 December 2024, following a council
resolution by the second respondent. The advertisement recorded that if applicants
do not receive feedback within six weeks of the closure of the advertisement, they
should regard their application as unsuccessful. For the purposes of the argument on
urgency, the six -week period expired on 21 February 2025.
[8] The applicant applied for this position. He was not shortlisted for the position.
In e- mail correspondence dated 3 March 2025, the applicant complained to the
Executive Mayor that his exclusion from the shortlist and interviews , which he
discovered were held in February 2025, was unfair, irrational and unlawful as his
experience and qualifications were superior to the candidates interviewed - and he
directed t he council to correct this state of affairs.
[9] In a letter dated 4 March 2025, the applicant’s attorney of record dispatched a
letter to the City Manager, recording inter alia , that the applicant’s exclusion from the
recruitment process contravened the provisions of section 56 of the Local
Government: Municipal Systems Act
3 (MSA) and the Regulations thereto relating to
the appointment of senior managers and demanded in essence, that the recruitment
process be set aside, and failing such undertaking, the applicant would seek reasons
for his exclusion and would approach the Court to interdict the appointment of the successful candidate.
[10] The second respondent held a meeting on 27 March 2025, which meeting
dealt with the recruitment process. The applicant was aware that the council would
table the appointment in the position at a meeting on 27 March 2025, as in email
correspondence dated 25 March 2025 at 09h30, the applicant’s attorney states that they are aware of this and that it was practically difficult for the applicant to approach the Court on an urgent basis. This practical difficulty is unexplained. Oddly, although
3 Act 32 of 2000.
5
legally represented at the time, the applicant avers that he had no funds to instruct
his attorney to approach this Court for urgent interdictory relief.
[11] A council resolution of 31 March 2025 resolved to adopt the recommendation
of the selection panel, including that the fourth respondent be appointed to the
position. The fourth respondent signed a contract of employment on 1 or 3 April
20254 and has been performing the functions of the position since then.
[12] On a proper construction of the applicant’s case, he seeks to interdict actions
that have already taken place. To place this dispute in context is not disputed: the
council is empowered to advertise senior positions, to appoint a selection committee, to approve the recommendations of the selection committee and to approve the appointment of the recommended candidate. The applicant asks this Court ,
therefore, to interdict actions that have already happened in March 2025 and April 2025. This renders the application not only devoid of urgency but also moot.
[13] The applicant engaged in attempts to have the fifth respondent ( MEC) and
Executive Mayor intervene in setting aside the recruitment process, including
launching an application in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act
5
(PAIA). He did not approach this Court for relief when he did not obtain a satisfactory
response following his PAIA application. [14] It was only when political parties such as the Democratic Alliance and the
Independent Citizens Movements challenged the MEC regarding the council
resolution relating to the filling of vacancies , including the position which is the
subject matter of this present application, that the applic ant jumped on the
bandwagon as it were, and now asserts that this Court is enjoined to urgently and
promptly come to his assistance to put a stop to unlawful conduct in the first
respondent in its recruitment processes . He belatedly asserts that the respondents’
conduct is unlawful for an additional reason, and that is, a manager employed on a
permanent bas is in terms of section 56 of the MSA ; however, the position was
advertised for a duration of five years.
4 Answering affidavit, at para 17.3 on p 003- 18 on CaseLines.
5 Act 2 of 2000.
6
Urgency
[15] Rule 38
6 provides that an affidavit in support of an urgent application must
contain averments setting out the reasons for urgency and why urgent relief is necessary.
[16] In East Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd and
Others
7, the Court s tated that an applicant in urgent proceedings must s et out
explicitly in his or her affidavit the circumstances she or he avers render the matter urgent. A delay in instituting proceedings on his own is automatically grounds to
refuse to hear the matter as urgent. An applicant must persuade the court that he or
she will not be afforded substantial redress at the hearing in due course.
[17] In the present application, the applicant complains that the entire recruitment
process is tainted for failure to comply with the MSA and it s Regulations. The first
step in the recruitment process was the advertisement in December 2024. The applicant intimated in correspondence on 4 March 2025 that he would approach this
court for urgent relief if the recruitment process was not set aside. He did not. He
also did not approach this court on 25 March 2025 when he knew that the second
respondent would table the appointment in the post on 27 March 2024. The applicant
was legally represented at that stage but elected not to approach this court for urgent relief. His reasons for not approaching this C ourt earlier are unconvincing. It was
only on 28 and 29 May 2025, when the applicant learned that political parties were
challenging the first respondent ’s recruitment process es, that he saw this as a
reason to approach this Court on an urgent basis , and avers that Court is enjoined
to act promptly and, as I understand the submission, hear applications on an urgent
basis where there is an abuse of power by organs of state.
[18] However, the applicant is complicit in the conduct that he complains of. He
applied for the position that was advertised in December 2024, in a process he terms
6 Rule 38 of the Rule s Regulating the Conduct of the Proceedings of the Labour Court published in
GN 477a in GG 50608 of 3 May 2024.
7 2011 JDR 1832 (GSJ) at para [9] .
7
as ‘tainted’ on the basis that the MSA and its Regulations were flouted, and he is
better experienced and qualified than the four th respondent . An inescapable
question that must be asked is the following: if the applicant had been shortlisted,
interviewed and appointed in the position, would he have launched this applicatio n?
The answer is no.
[19] In Gugu Malaza v City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality and Others8
(Malaza) , this Court was faced with facts that are on all fours with the present
application. In Malaza, this Court per Tlhotlhalemaje J , stated as follows :
‘[18] If I understood the applicant’s case, her case is that the resolution
leading to the advertisement was unlawful and not constitutionally compliant.
The significance of this proposition is that since the first step by Council in initiating the recruitment process is in itself unlawful, it follows in my view that anything else that flowed from that resolution, including the advertisement, appointment of the selection panel, short -listing, interviews, and ultimate
appointment into the post, is effectively a nullity to the extent that any such unlawfulness may be established.
[19] Thus since anything to do with the recruitment process is alleged to be
unlawful, this implies that the applicant cannot as a starting point, be a party to that unlawfulness by participating in that process, and then complain about the same unlawfulness at a later stage. Thus, it would be inconsistent with her posture and allegations of unlawfulness, to complain about not being
shortlisted in accordance with the very tainted process. This stance in my
view demonstrates a classic case of approbating and reprobating. The
applicant cannot blow hot and cold at the same time by seeking to impugn the legality of the entire recruitment process, whilst at the same time subjecting
herself to the very same process and claiming a ‘ legitimate expectation’ that
she would be one of the candidates selected since she met the minimum requirements of the post; or that she met the very same minimum requirements set through an illegal process. To repeat, once the applicant
8 Unreported judgment under case no: J729/2024, delivered 13 July 2024 at paras [18] to [20].
8
voluntarily subjected herself to an unlawful process, she cannot be heard to
complain at a later stage when she failed to get the desired outcome out of that same process. Equally odd was for the applicant on 17 June 2024, to
have to enquired about the stage at which the supposedly illegal recruitment process was, or to even complain about the terms of the tenure as stated in the advertisement.
[20] Other than the inconsistencies in the applicant’s approach, it is further
my view that she cannot claim to have satisfied the requirements of urgency when the very basis of the allegations of illegality in the recruitment process commenced from April 2024 when the post was advertised, and when she submitted her application.’
[20] Therefore, with the a fore-going in mind, not only is Part A of this application
devoid of urgency, it is also moot .
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[21] Insofar as the averment by the applicant that this Court should not turn a blind
eye to alleged illegalities in recruitment processes in the first respondent, on his own
version, the MEC is dealing with such allegations as he is empowered to do in terms
of the provisions of the MSA.
[22] In the premises, t he following order is made:
9 In National Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others [2012] JOL
29422 (CC) , the Constitutional Court stated as f ollows at para [50]:
‘The prima facie right a claimant must establish is not merely the right to approach a court in order to
review an administrative decision. It is a right to which, if not protected by an interdict, irreparable
harm would ensue. An interdict is meant to prevent future conduct and not decisions already made.
Quite apart from the right to review and to set aside impugned decisions, the applicants should have
demonstrated a prima facie right that is threatened by an impending or imminent irreparable harm ’.
See also: Solidariteit Helpende Hand NPC and Others v Minister of Co- operative Governance and
Traditional Affairs 2023 JDR 0964 (SCA), where the SCA held at para [12] :
‘The general principle is that a matter is moot when a court's judgment will have no practical effect on
the parties. This usually occurs where there is no longer an existing or live controversy between the
parties. A court should refrain from making rulings on such matters, as the court’s decision will merely
amount to an advisory opinion on the identified legal questions, which are abstract, academic or
hypothetical and have no direct effect; one of the reasons for that rule being that a court ’s purpose is
to adjudicate existing legal disputes and its scarce resources should not be wasted away on abstract
questions of law. In President of the Republic of South Africa v Democratic Alliance , the Constitutional
Court cautioned that “c ourts should be loath to fulfil an advisory role, particularly for the benefit of
those who have dependable advice abundantly available to them and in circumstances where no
actual purpose would be served by that decision, now”’.
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Order
1. The application is struck off the roll for lack of urgency.
2. There is no order as to costs.
M. T. M. Phehane
Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa
Appearances :
For the applicants : Ms Letoaba
Instructed by: Lesley Sedibe INC
For the respondents: Mr Sithole
Instructed by: M Matshiyane