Mamabolo and Others v Manchu Consulting CC (J850/98) [1999] ZALC 40; [1999] 6 BLLR 562 (LC); (1999) 20 ILJ 1826 (LC) (12 March 1999)

55 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Dismissal — Substantive fairness — Applicants claiming unfair dismissal due to retrenchment — Respondent establishing financial difficulties as reason for retrenchment — Court finding substantive fairness established as Respondent provided evidence of financial crisis and efforts to avoid retrenchment — Dismissal deemed fair despite procedural unfairness.

IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: J850/98
In the matter between
Applicants
and
Respondent
JUDGMENT
VAN NIEKERK AJ
Introduction
[1] Mr. Joe Manchu is an entrepreneur. After completing his articles of clerkship with  
a firm of accountants and a short career in the corporate world, he decided to start  
a   business.   His   vision   was   the   establishment   of   a   firm   of   black   professional  
management   consultants,   which   would   create   jobs   and   opportunity,   and   make  
some   money   in   the   process.   He   established   the   close   corporation   that   is   the

Respondent in these proceedings and offered a variety of management services  
relevant to the restructuring and transformation of businesses. 
[2] Sustained by his optimism and an overdraft, Manchu expanded his business during  
1996   and   1997.   During   that   period,   he   engaged   a   number   of   employees   as  
management consultants, including most of the applicants. 
[3] Regrettably, the business failed to prosper. The first warning signs were apparent  
in   July   1997,   when   cheques   issued   in   respect   of   travel   claims   submitted   by  
employees were dishonoured by the bank. 
[4] In the same month, Manchu and the consultants had a strategic planning meeting.  
The agenda of this meeting records an item relating to the Respondent’s finances.  
Proposals   were   made   on   monthly   and   annual   break­even   figures,   the   required  
monthly contribution per team of consultants, and a series of incentives based on  
individual and team performance. Although those of the applicants who testified  
said that these items were not discussed in the context of any looming financial  
crisis,  it  is  not  disputed  that  the  meeting  reached   agreement   on them.   Regular  
meetings were subsequently held with senior consultants,   inter alia , to monitor  
performance against the targets set in July. Again, although the context of these  
meetings   is   disputed,   Manchu’s   evidence   that   the   targets   relating   to   monthly  
income were never met subsequent to their establishment was not refuted.

[5] During December 1997, the bank advised Manchu that it would no longer honour  
salary   cheques.  After  further  discussions  with  the   bank,  and  on  the   basis  of  a  
second bond registered over property owned by the Respondent, it was able to pay  
December salaries. 
[6] On 22 January 1998, Manchu distributed a memorandum to all staff in which he  
reviewed   events   and   the   Respondent’s   performance   during   1997.   The  
memorandum   said   little   if   anything   about   the   Respondent’s   dire   financial  
situation. It acknowledged that although the year had started with great promise, a  
number of opportunities had not materialised. A particular shortcoming that was  
identified was the failure to engage in aggressive marketing. This had “caused the  
Firm significant financial losses and lost opportunities: and jobs were put at risk.”  
Despite   this   observation,   the   tone   of   the   memorandum   is   optimistic.   There   is  
nothing that suggests or hints at what was to transpire only 8 days later. 
[7] On 30 January 1998, Manchu distributed another memorandum to the consultants.  
The relevant provisions of the memorandum read as follows:
Further to my memo of Thursday, 22 January 1998, I regret to inform you that the  
problems facing the Firm have worsened and that we have two options open to us:
To close the firm down completely, or

To retrench most employees until prospects improve …
I have made every effort to protect the employment of each individual in the Firm.  
However, in view of the above, I am no longer able to do so  … Even though the  
immediate future looks bleak, I remain hopeful about the long­term prospects of  
the   firm.   I   therefore   believe   that   closing   down   will   not   be   in   our   long­term  
interest.   The   only   option   available   then   is   to   retrench   all   consultants   with  
immediate effect. 
For those retrenched employees, it need not be the end of the world. I shall do my  
utmost to assist employees to seek alternative employment wherever possible. I  
also   undertake,   when   projects   become   available,   to   invite   former   employees  
whose skills and experience match the requirements of the project to partner with  
me on a project by project basis. I believe that I will be able to conclude some  
client agreements before the middle of the year. Also, if any of you does manage  
to interest a client in our services, then I will be happy to partner with you in  
executing the project. Your remuneration will be by negotiation and will obviously  
tend to be higher than the salary you have been earning, as it will be related  
directly to your own performance. There are definite opportunities open to each  
one of you to exploit. However, it is up to you.
The decision to retrench employees is never taken lightly. In this case, where I  
have come to know and like each and every one of you, it is even more difficult. I

appeal   for   your   understanding   in   these   difficult   times,   and   assure   you   of   my  
support in your future endeavours.
[8] Despite Manchu’s appeal, the applicants were less than understanding about the  
termination   of   their   employment.   They   were   angry,   and   justifiably   so.   They  
testified that the memorandum came as a bolt from the blue. The applicants were  
not   in   the   business   of   risk;   they   had   accepted   offers   of   employment   with   the  
Respondent and had an expectation of a degree of security. Some of them had  
given up secure employment to join the Respondent. All of them had structured  
their affairs in expectation of continued employment and a salary at the end of  
each month. They had dependants who relied on these expectations being met.  
Their anger was exacerbated by what they perceived to be attempts by Manchu to  
evade   them   and   the   questions   they   wished   to   address   to   him.   Manchu’s  
explanation   is   that   he   was   busily   engaged   in   efforts   to   raise   cash   to   pay   the  
January salary bill, and pursuing potential client assignments to ensure the future  
viability of the business. 
[9] The   applicants   were   eventually   paid   their   January   salaries,   after   Manchu   had  
secured a bond against his home.
[10] On 30 March 1997 Manchu addressed a letter to each of the individual applicants  
in which he advised them that discussions with a potential business partner might

lead to an improvement in the prospects of the firm, and in anticipation of that  
outcome an offer of re­employment, on terms and conditions to be agreed, was  
made. The letter was sent by registered post. None of the applicants responded to  
the offer.
[11] Shortly afterward, on 20 April 1998, the applicants filed their statement of claim  
and initiated these proceedings. 
[12] On   7   May   1998   the   Respondent’s   attorneys   addressed   a   letter   to   each   of   the  
applicants.   The   applicants   were   advised   that   the   firm’s   business  prospects   had  
improved, and that each of them was offered re­employment on the same terms  
and conditions that prevailed on 31 January 1998, with effect from 1 June 1998. 
[13] The first applicant, Mr. Mamabolo, responded on behalf of all of the individual  
applicants. He noted that the applicants had seriously considered the offer of re­
employment, but that they believed that Manchu’s conduct in terminating their  
employment   had   effected   a   breakdown   of   trust   and   that   the   employment  
relationship   had   irretrievably   broken   down.   They   stated   further   that   “we   are  
prepared to consider compensation as pleaded in our papers and nothing else.” 
[14] On 1 June 1998, the Respondent’s attorney addressed a letter to the applicants’  
representative in which it made an open tender, without admission of liability, of

two months’ salary in settlement of their claim, and of the severance pay to which  
some of the applicants were entitled. The applicants rejected this tender. 
[15] The Respondent’s prospects subsequently improved. An alliance was ultimately  
formed   with   a   listed   company,   which   acquired   a   share   in   the   business.   A  
restructuring   of   the   business   resulted   in   the   issuing   of   debentures   to   secure   a  
capital injection sufficient to clear its debts. 
[16] After their dismissal on 30 January 1998, the applicants endeavoured to secure  
alternative   employment.   The   majority   of   them   were   able   to   do   so   within   a  
relatively short period. Of the three applicants who gave evidence, two (the 4th  
and 5th applicants)  found alternative  employment  in April 1998 at rates either  
commensurate with or in excess of the remuneration they earned while employed  
by   the   Respondent.   The   2nd   applicant   found   alternative   employment   from   23  
February 1998, earning considerably more than what he earned while employed  
by   the   Respondent.   The   evidence   of   the   applicants   relating   to   financial   losses  
sustained consequent on their dismissal was in large measure confined to the cost  
of   having   to   borrow   money   between   31   January   and   the   date   on   which   they  
resumed earning an income in their new employment. Those Applicants who did  
not give evidence during the proceedings submitted affidavits relating to events  
subsequent to their dismissal. The 3rd Applicant was employed on 1 May 1998,  
and the 1st and 6th Applicants were employed in July 1998.

Substantive Fairness
[17] Mr. Tyopo advised the court at the outset of the proceedings that he was disputing  
both the substantive and the procedural fairness of the applicants’ dismissal. Mr.  
Hardie, who appeared for the Respondent, confirmed his client’s concession at the  
pre­trial conference that the dismissal was procedurally unfair, and stated that he  
would be making submissions on the relief to which the individual applicants were  
entitled having regard to that concession and the time at which it was made. 
[18] The first issue that the Court is required to determine is the substantive fairness of  
the applicants’ dismissal. Section 188 of the Labour Relations Act, 66 of 1995  
(“the LRA”) requires an employer that dismisses an employee for reasons relating  
to   operational   requirements   to   establish   a   fair   reason   for   the   dismissal.   The  
approach adopted by this Court is to require the employer to provide substantive  
proof of a need to retrench in the form of a commercially rational and sustainable  
reason, but not to question the commercial imperatives that underlay that decision,  
unless some ulterior motive is established. In other words, it is not the function of  
the Court to second­guess the employer’s decision to retrench. It is not appropriate  
to intervene only because the decision taken by the employer was not the one to  
which the court would have come in same circumstances. See  SACTWU & Others  
v Discreto (A Division of Trump & Springbok Holdings)   [1998] 12 BLLR 1228

(LAC) at 1230E).
[19] There   can   be   no   doubt   that   at   the   time   the   applicants   were   dismissed,   the  
Respondent was in serious financial difficulties. The business relied on the income  
generated by the applicants and the other consultants for survival. It is common  
cause   that   they   failed   to   meet   the   agreed   targets   relating   to   fee   income.   The  
shortfall between the income that was generated and the monthly expenditure was  
funded by loans. It was inevitable that, at some point, the borrowed funds would  
no   longer   be   sufficient   to   cover   the   increasing   gulf   between   income   and  
expenditure. This happened in December 1997, when the bank refused to honour  
salary cheques or extend further credit. 
[20] In   his   evidence,   Manchu   submitted   bank   statements   that   establish   that   on   30  
December 1997, the Respondent’s bank account was overdrawn to the extent of R  
182   736.83.   The   financial   crisis   facing   the   company   is   also   evident   from   the  
Respondent’s income statement for the year ending February 1998. That statement  
records a net loss for the year of R1 683 495.
[21] The defining moment for Manchu was the bank’s refusal to extend further credit,  
and its demand for repayment of all outstanding loans. Manchu was faced with a  
hard   choice.   He   could   either   close   down   the   business,   or   retrench   all   of   the  
consultants.

[22] In the evidence presented by the applicants, there was some suggestion, in veiled  
terms, that the real reason for retrenchment was a strategy to dismiss all of the  
applicants   and   to   re­employ   some   of   them.   It   was   alleged   that   not   all   the  
consultants were dismissed, and that at least two of them were retained by the  
Respondent. To the extent that this suggestion implies the application of unfair  
selection   criteria,   there   is   no   evidence   to   support   that   conclusion.   Manchu’s  
unrefuted evidence was that he retained only the services of the two secretaries,  
and that the two consultants concerned were dismissed on 30 January 1998 and  
engaged as independent contractors in March 1998. The suggestion of selectivity  
also   overlooks   the   fact   that   by   30   March   1998,   only   2   months   after   the  
retrenchment, Manchu had addressed letters to all of the applicants offering them  
re­employment. The letter of 7 May 1998 was written to each applicant offering  
re­employment with effect from 1 June 1998. These offers are not consistent with  
a nefarious strategy of selective re­employment on Manchu’s part.
[1]
[23] During argument, the Applicants confined their attack on substantive fairness to 3  
grounds. First, it was alleged that most of the documentation produced in support  
of the Respondent’s financial state was produced by Manchu himself, and thus  
little   weight   could   be   attached   to   both   his   say­so   and   the   documents.   In   his  
evidence   Manchu   testified   that   in   addition   to   being   the   sole   member   of   the  
Respondent he was also its accounting officer. He submitted a copy of the relevant

Form CK2 to verify his appointment. However, none of the Applicants who gave  
evidence could dispute Manchu’s evidence of the Respondent’s financial situation  
or the terms of the  documentation  adduced by him. In addition, certain  of the  
documents,   for   example   the   copies   of   the   Respondent’s   bank   statements,   are  
consistent with the figures presented by Manchu.   Documentation from Nedcor  
Bank relating to the existence of two mortgage bonds support Manchu’s evidence  
of his efforts to raise additional  finance.  For these reasons, I accept  Manchu’s  
evidence of the Respondent’s financial situation.
[24] Secondly, it was suggested by Mr Tyopo that at the time of the retrenchment, there  
were   projects   that   were   generating   income,   and   that   the   financial   state   of   the  
company  was not as precarious  as Manchu suggested.  The  2nd applicant  gave  
evidence of projects current during January. These were small projects and were  
not   expected   to   generate   any   significant   fee   income.   The   5th   Applicant   gave  
evidence of a project in which she was involved. The income from that project  
was sufficient to pay half her salary for a quarter of a month. The 4th Applicant  
also gave evidence of a project proposal anticipated to bear fruit in February 1998.  
That project, however, was expected to last some 2 weeks, and would generate an  
amount of R40 000. That amount did not take into account a share to which a  
collaborating consultancy would be entitled. On the applicants’ own evidence, the  
projects that had some possibility of generating work at the time the applicants  
were   retrenched   were   not   sufficiently   lucrative   to   address   the   Respondent’s

financial   difficulties,   or   of   such   a   magnitude   so   as   to   affect   the   commercial  
rationality of the choice Manchu made on 30 January 1998.
[25] Finally, it was suggested that the business ran two bank accounts, and that the  
accounts introduced by Manchu into evidence related to only one of them. The  
implication,  as I understood it, was that the second account was used to settle  
certain of the obligations incurred in respect of the first, and that things were not  
as bad as they might appear. Manchu gave evidence to the effect that there was a  
current account in the name of Manchu Consulting, but that for all intents and  
purposes it was a personal account. His salary was paid into this account. On one  
occasion, he had drawn cheques from the account to pay employees when cheques  
drawn on the CC’s account had been dishonoured. When funds permitted, a refund  
was effected by drawing a cheque on the CC’s account in favour of the Manchu  
Consulting   account.   This   explanation   was   not   refuted   either   by   those   of   the  
applicants who gave evidence, or in cross­examination. I accept therefore that the  
existence of two bank accounts in the circumstances described by Manchu does  
not impact on the existence or otherwise of a fair reason to dismiss the applicants.  
[26] As I have noted, it is not for this Court to determine whether or not Manchu made  
the right choice. Manchu cannot be criticised either for formulating the choices  
before   him  in   the  way  he   did,  or  for  exercising   the   alternative   that   led  to   the  
retrenchment   of   the   individual   applicants.   His   decision   was   not   commercially

irrational, nor was it made in bad faith.  I find therefore that the dismissal of  
the applicants was substantively fair.
Procedural Unfairness
[27] Section 189 of the LRA provides that when an employer contemplates dismissing  
employees for operational reasons, the employer is required to consult with them  
or   their   representatives   over   a   range   of   issues.   A   failure   to   comply   with   this  
section will almost invariably result in the dismissal being unfair on procedural  
grounds.   (See   Johnson   and   Johnson   (Pty)   Ltd   v   Chemical   Workers   Industrial  
Union  [1998] 12 BLLR 1209 (LAC) at 1217D).
[28] As I have noted, the Respondent conceded that the dismissal was procedurally  
unfair in that it failed to comply with any of the requirements imposed by s189.  
All that remains therefore is for the Court to determine the relief, if any, to which  
the individual applicants are entitled as a consequence of that concession. 
[29] The applicants do not seek reinstatement or re­employment. They seek only to be  
compensated   for   the   unfairness   of   their   dismissal.   Section   194   of   the   LRA  
regulates awards of compensation when a dismissal has been found to be unfair,  
both in a substantive and a procedural sense. That section provides:

(1) If a dismissal is unfair only because the employer did not follow a fair procedure,  
compensation must be equal to the remuneration that the employee would have  
been paid between the date of dismissal and the last day of the hearing of the  
arbitration or the adjudication, as the case may be, calculated at the employee’s  
rate of remuneration on the date of dismissal. Compensation may however not be  
awarded in respect of any unreasonable period of delay that was caused by the  
employee in initiating or prosecuting a claim.
(2)  The compensation awarded to an employee whose dismissal is found to be unfair  
because   the   employer   did   not   prove   that   the   reason   for   dismissal   was   a   fair  
reason related to the employee’s conduct, capacity or based on the employer’s  
operational requirements, must be just and equitable in all the circumstances, but  
not   less   than   the   amount   specified   in   subsection   (1),   and   not   more   than   the  
equivalent   of   12   months’   remuneration   calculated   at   the   employee’s   rate   of  
remuneration on the date of dismissal. 
(3)  The   compensation   awarded   to   an   employee   whose   dismissal   is   automatically  
unfair must be just and equitable in all the circumstances, but not more than the  
equivalent   of   24   months’   remuneration   calculated   at   the   employee’s   rate   of  
remuneration on the date of dismissal.
[30] The   manner   in   which   the   provisions   of  section   194  (1)   are   to   be  applied   was  
clarified by the Labour Appeal Court in  Johnson and Johnson (Pty) Ltd v CWIU ,

supra. 
[31] The Labour Appeal Court summarised the position as follows:
If a dismissal is found to be unfair solely for want of compliance with a proper  
procedure the Labour Court, or an arbitrator appointed under the LRA, thus has  
a discretion whether to award compensation or not. If compensation is awarded it  
must   be   in   accordance   with   the   formula   set   out   in   s.194   (1);   nothing   more,  
nothing less. The discretion not to award compensation in particular cases must,  
of course, be exercised judicially.
(at 1219J­1220A)
[32] The Labour Appeal Court provides at least one example of what might constitute a  
basis for a refusal to award compensation. At page 1220D of the report the Court  
adds that:
The nature of an employee’s right to compensation under s.194 (1) also implies  
that   the   discretion   not   to   award   that   compensation   may   be   exercised   in  
circumstances   where   the   employer   has   already   provided   the   employee   with  
substantially the same kind of redress (always taking into account the provisions  
of s.194 (1)), or where the employer’s ability and willingness to make that redress

is frustrated by the conduct of the employee.
[33] An order for payment of compensation for failing to give effect to the right to a  
fair   procedure   is   not   based   on   patrimonial   or   actual   loss.   The   nature   of   the  
compensation is a   solatium  for the loss of a right, it is a form of redress, in the  
nature of a fixed penalty for a legal wrong (at 1220B). If an employer has either  
tendered substantially the same kind of redress, or if an employee frustrates the  
ability or willingness of the employer to make that redress, the employee should  
not be entitled to benefit.
[34] In   the   exercise   of   my   discretion   I   must   obviously   take   into   account   that   the  
procedure   prescribed   by   section   189   was   not   followed   at   all.   Had   Manchu  
consulted   with   the   applicants,   had   he   made   proper   financial   disclosure   of   the  
company’s   affairs   and   had   he   explored   alternatives   to   retrenchment   with   the  
applicants, this dispute may never have arisen. 
[35] The compelling consideration, however, is the offer made by the Respondent and  
the  attitude   adopted  by  the  applicants   to those  offers.  There  is no  evidence   to  
suggest   that   the   various   offers   made   by   Manchu   were   not   bona   fide,   or   as   a  
genuine attempt to make redress for the wrong he realised that he had committed  
by failing to comply with s189. In so far as any breach of trust may have inclined  
the applicant to look at Manchu’s various offers of re­employment with a degree

of   skepticism,   I   do   not   accept   for   the   purposes   of   determining   their   right   to  
compensation that they were entitled to adopt that attitude. The fact of the matter  
is that the applicants refused to consider any of the alternatives put to them; they  
resolutely   maintained   their   intention   to   hold   out   for   what   they   termed   “the  
maximum compensation”. All of the applicants obtained alternative employment  
in a relatively short period, and in most instances, at levels of income that ensured  
that any financial loss they suffered was not excessive. Although their patrimonial  
or actual loss is not relevant to their entitlement or otherwise to the fixed penalty  
established   by   s194,   their   financial   loss,   and   the   extent   of   it,   is   relevant   to   a  
consideration   of   the   reasonableness   of   Manchu’s   offers,   and   to   the   degree   of  
redress   those   offers   represent.   The   Applicants   motive   in   rejecting   the  
Respondent’s various offers can only have been mercenary  in the  
sense   of   an   expectation   that   they   would   be   more   generously  
compensated by this Court. 
[36] This   is   one   of   those   instances   referred   to   in   Johnson   &   Johnson   where   the  
employer’s willingness to make redress was frustrated. On balance, I am of the  
view that to deny the applicants compensation would be less unfair than to award  
them the equivalent of 12 months’ remuneration each which would otherwise be  
required by s194.
Severance Pay

[37] Finally,   there   is   the   question   of   severance   pay.   Section   196   (10)   of   the   LRA  
provides that:
  If the Labour Court is adjudicating a dispute about a dismissal based on the  
employer’s operational requirements, the court may inquire into and determine  
the amount of any severance pay to which the dismissed employee may be entitled  
and the court may make an order directing the employer to pay that amount.
[38] In   Whall v Brandadd Marketing (Pty) Ltd   (Case No. J1130/97), after grappling  
with the stark choice established by the rule in  Johnson and Johnson , Grogan A J  
adopted the view that s196(1) read with s196(10) confers a discretion on the Court  
to inquire into and determine the amount of severance pay to which the employee  
might be entitled. This, he suggested, could then be ordered to be paid in lieu of  
compensation, and he made an order to that effect. Mr Hardie submitted that I  
should adopt a similar view if I were inclined to grant the applicants something  
less than the statutory amount to which they would be entitled should I decide to  
award compensation.
[39] I am not persuaded that s196 confers any latitude on the part of the Court to make  
orders   for   compensation   other   than   in   terms   of   the   minimum   of   one   week  
remuneration   for   every   year   of   completed   service.   Neither   s196   nor   s158

specifically  confers the  power on this Court to make such orders. Section  196  
incorporates the various alternatives by which variation of the statutory formula  
may be effected. Section 196(2) provides that the Minister, after consultation with  
NEDLAC and the Public Service Co­ordinating Bargaining Council, may vary the  
amount of severance pay in terms of subsection (1) by notice in the Government  
Gazette. Exemptions from the obligation to pay severance pay can only be granted  
by the Minister. Severance pay is also a matter over which parties are required to  
consult (See s189). In my view, it is not appropriate for this Court to intervene  
either   to  upset   any agreement  on  the  amount  of  severance  pay,  or  to interfere  
where   the   parties   are   unable   to   reach   consensus   on   an   improvement   over   the  
statutory formula.
[40] Despite the Respondent’s tender of severance pay, those of the applicants entitled  
to severance pay did not accept that offer. However, their failure to do so cannot  
preclude the Court from ordering payment of what is their statutory right.  
[41] Finally, there is the question of costs. When the Respondent made its tender of  
two months’ compensation on 1 June 1998, it warned the applicants that in the  
event of their refusing the tender and being awarded a lesser amount by this Court,  
the Respondent would be seeking an appropriate order for costs. The applicants  
have   failed   to   secure   the   payment   of   any   compensation   at   all.   In   these  
circumstances, the Respondent is entitled to its costs from 1 June 1998.

[42] I accordingly make the following orders:
1. The dismissal of the applicants  on 30 January 1998 was substantively  fair but  
procedurally unfair.
2. The applicants are not entitled to compensation in consequence of their dismissal.
3. The first, second and fifth applicants are each to be paid the equivalent of one  
weeks’ remuneration, to be calculated in accordance with their respective rates of  
remuneration on 31 January 1997, within 7 days of the date of this judgment.
4. The   applicants   are   to   pay   the   costs   of   the   Respondent,   from   the   date   of   the  
Respondent’s tender on 1 June 1998 , jointly and severally, the one paying  
the other to be absolved.

ANDRÉ VAN NIEKERK A J 
Judge of the Labour Court
DATE OF HEARING: 22, 23 February 1999
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12 March 1999
Mr Mxolisi Tyopo of TYOPO NCUBE ATTORNEYS
For the Respondent: Mr Stephen Hardie of EDWARD NATHAN AND  FRIEDLAND