TEMPLATE JUDGMENT
THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA, JOHANNESBURG
Not Reportable
Case no: JR 270/21
In the matter between:
DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE AND
CONSTITUTIONAL DEVELOPMENT Applicant
and
PSA on behalf of MUKHAMBI First Respondent
GENERAL PUBLIC SERVICE SECTORAL
BARGAINING COUNCIL Second Respondent
COMMISIONER DP SEOPELA N.O. Third Respondent
Heard: 15 January 2026
Delivered: 23 January 2026
JUDGMENT
H A VAN DER MERWE, AJ
(1) Reportable Yes/No
(2) Of interest to other Judges: Yes/No
(3) Revised
____________ ______________
Signature Date
2
[1] This is an application for the review of an arbitration award rendered by the
third respondent (the commissioner) in an unfair dismissal dispute referred to
the second respondent (the bargaining council) by the first respondent (the
employee).
[2] The employee was employed by the applicant (the department) as an e-
scheduler clerk. She was placed at the Randburg Magistrate’s Court. One
part of her duties was to receive payment of bail moneys on behalf of the
department. Bail can be paid either by way of an electronic funds transfer
(EFT) or in cash. Whether paid in cash or by EFT, when bail is paid, the
employee was supposed to issue a bail receipt to the person who pays the
bail. Thereafter the payment should be entered into the department’s
accounting system as either a payment in cash or EFT.
[3] When the employee came to capturing the payment of bail monies received
by her on behalf of the department during January 2017, the cash actually in
the possession of the department was R170 000 short. Even though the
employee knew that the R170 000 was received by her in cash, she recorded
the four payments that made up the amount of R170 000 as EFT payments.
That way the cash shortage would be hidden, albeit only for the time being.
This was the employee’s own version.
[4] The most natural, probable inference to be drawn from these facts is that,
absent an acceptable explanation by the employee, on a balance of
probabilities, the employee took the amount of R170 000 for herself and then
tried to conceal her theft by the false entries in the department’s accounting
system. After all, if there were an innocent explanation for the cash shortage,
the employee would have had no reason to deliberately mis -record the
payments as EFTs when it was, to her knowledge paid in cash.
[5] As there was no explanation from the employee, it should have been a
straightforward matter to prosecute the employee’s disciplinary proceedings.
straightforward matter to prosecute the employee’s disciplinary proceedings.
[6] In the internal disciplinary proceedings, the first allegation of misconduct
proffered against her was gross dishonesty, in the form of the deliberately
false manner in which she recorded the four bail payments in issue as EFT
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payments. The second allegation was theft. There were alternative allegations
on both the first and second allegations, but those alternatives are not
relevant for this application.
[7] In her initial disciplinary enquiry, the employee was found guilty of theft in the
amount of R20 000 (the second allegation) and gross dishonesty (the first
allegation). The amount of R170 000 was made up of three payments of
R50 000 and one of R20 000. Why the internal disciplinary enquiry found her
guilty of theft of only the amount of R20 000 is not obvious.
[8] In an internal appeal, the appeal tribunal found that it amounted to splitting of
‘convictions’ to have found the employee guilty of both theft and gross
dishonesty. The initial disciplinary enquiry’s finding of guilty on the allegation
of theft was in the result set aside, but the finding on gross dishonesty was
upheld. One would have expected the more severe transgression of theft to
have been upheld, instead of the false accounting, but that matters not for
present purposes.
[9] In the arbitration proceedings before the bargaining council, the commissioner
based his award on the plainly wrong factual premise that the employee was
found not guilty in the internal appeal proceedings on the allegation of gross
dishonesty. As the employee was exonerated on the allegation of theft, so
reasoned the commissioner, the employee had no case to answer.
[10] This matter offers a clear example of a reviewable arbitration award. Plainly
the commissioner failed to apply his mind to facts – if he did, he would not
have based his award on the erroneous factual premise that the employee
was exonerated on the allegation of gross dishonesty. The award is also
clearly reviewable on the test as set out in Sidumo and another v Rustenburg
Platinum Mines Ltd and others
1, that is that no reasonable decision- maker
could have found on the facts before the commissioner that the employee had
no case to answer. As set out above, on her own version, absent an
no case to answer. As set out above, on her own version, absent an
acceptable explanation, on a balance of probabilities, the employee is guilty of
1 [2007] 12 BLLR 1097 (CC) para 110. See also: Head of Department of Education v Mofokeng and
Others (2015) 36 ILJ 2802 (LAC) at para 33.
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both theft and deliberately making false entries in the department’s accounting
system. Whether that amounts to splitting or not is hardly the point as either
transgression clearly warrants dismissal.
[11] The department has therefore made out a case for the review and setting
aside of the award. The only proper finding that is available on the facts is that
the employee’s dismissal was substantively fair. As procedural fairness is not
in issue, that is the end of the matter.
[12] Both parties were agreed that no costs order should be made.
[13] In the results the following order is made:
Order
1. The arbitration award rendered by the third respondent under the
auspices of the second respondent under case number GPBC 777- 18
is reviewed and set aside, to be substituted with the following:
1.1 “ The employee party’s referral is dismissed”.
2. There is no order as to costs.
_______________________
H A van der Merwe
Acting Judge of the Labour Court of South Africa
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Appearances:
For the applicant : Adv S Nhlapo
Instructed by : State Attorney, Johannesburg (M Mdibogo)
For the first respondent : Adv P. Serogole
Instructed by : Makhoka Attorneys Inc.