Cementation (African Contractors) (Pty) Ltd v Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration and Others (J1526/99) [2000] ZALC 8; [2000] 5 BLLR 573 (LC) (29 February 2000)

55 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Review of arbitration award — Applicant contesting dismissal of employee on grounds of desertion — Court finding that the commissioner did not commit gross irregularity in managing time during arbitration — Commissioner correctly inferred constructive dismissal based on lack of accommodation and rations — Review application dismissed with costs.

IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: J1526/99
In the matter between
Applicant
and
1st Respondent
2nd Respondent
3rd Respondent
JUDGMENT
PILLAY AJ
1]This   is   a   review   of   an   award   made   by   the   Second   Respondent,   a   commissioner   of   the   Commission     for  
Conciliation   Mediation   and   Arbitration   (CCMA).   At   the   arbitration   the   Applicant   contended   that   Mr  
Motsanana, the employee, had deserted his place of employment. The Third Respondent submitted that he  
had been dismissed.
2]The first ground of review was that the Second Respondent committed a gross irregularity by insisting that the  
evidence   be   completed   within   about   two   hours,   the   time   allocated   for   the   arbitration,   and   by   further  
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directing that only relevant information   be adduced. As a result, it was submitted, the Applicant’s  
representative, Ms Nkosi, did not request a postponement or an adjournment to call a material  
witness, Mr Duiker, to testify for the Applicant.
Mr Landman, who appeared for the Applicant, submitted it behoved an arbitrator to consider an  
adjournment   mero   motu   in   certain   circumstances.   In   this   case,   the   Applicant   was   taken   by  
surprise   by   Mr   Motsanana’s   evidence   which   was   inconsistent   with   the   Third   Respondent’s  
opening   statement.   That   warranted   the   arbitrator   intervening   mero   motu   to   adjourn   the  
proceedings.  In support of this submission he referred to the case of   DIMBAZA FOUNDARIES  
LTD v COMMISSION FOR CONCILIATION, MEDIATION & ARBITRATION & OTHERS (1999) 20  
ILJ 1763 (LC)
 
[2] The Third Respondent accepted that a commissioner should intervene if it appears that a party is  
so taken by surprise that it is unable to continue with its case, as in  DIMBAZA. Ms Nkosi made no  
application   for   postponement.   Nor   did   she   give   any   indication   whatsoever   to   the   Second  
Respondent that she was not in a position to proceed. She also did not indicate to the Second  
Respondent whether Mr Duiker was willing and able to testify if the matter was postponed.
[3] Mr Bruinders submitted for the Third Respondent that the Applicant would have been made aware  
from the referral to arbitration that it was always the intention of Mr Motsanana to challenge the  
fairness of his dismissal.
[4] There   is   nothing   irregular   about   the   Second   Respondent   requesting   the   parties   to     confine  
themselves to the time allocated to the case. That is precisely what commissioners are enjoined  
to do. It can hardly be inferred from the Second Respondent’s request that the parties adduce  
relevant facts within the time available that he was “insisting” on the matter being completed within

the   allocated   time.   Nor   do   these   requests   amount   to   intimidation   as   suggested   by   Ms   Nkosi.  
Commissioners are required by law to consider only relevant facts. It would serve no purpose  
therefore   to   have   wasted   time   on   irrelevant   information.   Furthermore,   commissioners   have   to  
manage time and the process so that the CCMA operates efficiently.
[5] To expect the Second Respondent to have known that Ms Nkosi would need a postponement  
when she did not even hint as much, is placing too high a burden on him.
[6] I find therefore that the Second Respondent did not unduly insist on completing the proceedings  
expeditiously. Even if he had done so, it was open to Ms Nkosi to apply for a postponement. It  
was not incumbent on the Second Respondent to postpone the matter of his own accord in the  
absence   of   any   indication   that   such   a   postponement   was   sought   or   that   it   would   serve   any  
purpose.
[7] The second ground of review was that the Second Respondent had failed to appreciate that the  
issue in dispute was whether Mr Motsanana had deserted or was dismissed. As a result, it was  
submitted, the Second Respondent failed to consider that Mr Motsanana bore the onus proving  
the dismissal.  
[8] The   arbitration   recorded   as   the   “ issues  to   be   decided”   the   question   “whether   the   respondent  
dismissed   the   applicant   unfairly   and   what   remedies   to   institute   should   it   be   found   that   the  
Applicant was indeed unfairly dismissed.”   In amplification of the award the Second Respondent  
confirmed   that   he   was   convinced   that   there   had   been   a   dismissal   “on   grounds   where   the  
employer made it impossible for the employee to fulfil his duties as no accommodation and food  
was made available to him...”
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[9] Mr   Motsanana’s   evidence   was   that   he   had   been   told   by   Mr   Duiker   that   his   services   were  
terminated.   He  left   work   because   he   no   longer   had   company   accommodation   from   30   March  
1998. He was also denied his rations that day. The Second Respondent inferred from the fact that  
Mr Motsanana   had been denied accommodation and rations, that he had been constructively  
dismissed.   It   was   not   the   only   inference   to   draw.   Another   reasonable   inference   was   that   the  
accommodation and rations were terminated simultaneously with and as a consequence of the  
termination   of   his   employment.   The   latter   inference   would   be   consistent   with   Mr   Motsanana’s  
version that he had been dismissed.     
[10] The Second Respondent’s identification of the issues in dispute and his finding that dismissal was  
procedurally and substantively unfair do not  per se  manifest that he was alive to the onus being  
on the Third Respondent to prove the dismissal first before its fairness could be considered.
[11] The Second Respondent   justified the reasons for concluding that the dismissal was procedurally  
and substantively unfair. However, having made the incorrect inference about the termination of  
accommodation and rations, he  was forced to hedge his bets on dismissal at the instance of the  
Applicant and constructive dismissal at the instance of Mr Motsanana.
[12] However,   the   Second   Respondent   appears   to   have   accepted   Ms   Nkosi’s   submission   that   the  
onus rested on Mr Motsanana to prove the dismissal as he allowed the latter to begin leading  
evidence. Furthermore, it must follow from his finding that Mr Motsanana did not absent himself  
from the workplace, that he accepted that he had been dismissed at the instance of the Applicant.  
The Second Respondent must therefore have been alive to the fact that the dismissal had to be  
established first.

[13] The Second Respondent appears to have considered all the evidence and concluded, correctly in  
my view, that there had been a dismissal.
[14] The second ground of review is not sustained.
[15] The third ground of review was that the Second Respondent exceeded his powers by hearing the  
dispute as it fell to be determined by this Court in terms of section 191 (5) (b).
[16] It does not follow necessarily from Motsanana’s evidence that being told that there was “no more  
work” for him meant that he was being retrenched. It is not the Applicant’s case that there was a  
retrenchment. There could have been no work for him for any number of valid and invalid reasons.  
When he was asked during cross­examination why the Applicant dismissed him, his response  
suggested   that   he   did   not   know   himself   what   the   reason   was.   The   Second   Respondent   was  
obliged to hear the matter particularly in the absence of any objection about jurisdiction.
[17] The   fourth   ground   of   review   was   that   the   Second   Respondent’s   analysis   and   reasoning   in  
concluding that Mr Motsanana was dismissed was fatally flawed and objectively unjustifiable in  
the light of the material before him.
[18] Not all the “material” presented on behalf of the Applicant qualified as evidence. The status of the  
documents   is   not   evident   from   the   transcript.   Except   for   the   “blue   card”   none   of   the   other  
documents were put to any of the witnesses.    Assuming that they were admitted to be what they  
purported to be then pitted against the oral evidence of Mr Motsanana, the Second Respondent  
correctly preferred   the latter’s version. The evidence of the Applicant’s only witness was hearsay  
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on   the   material   issues,   such   as   Motsanana’s   last   day   of   work   and   whether   Mr   Duiker   had  
terminated his services.
[19] The Second Respondent appears to have rejected the Applicant’s “material” correctly in my view.  
He ought   nevertheless to have given brief reasons therefor. However, his failure to do so does not  
amount to a ground of review in terms of section 145 of the Act. One of the reasons the Second  
Respondent found in favour of Mr Motsanana was because the Applicant could not refute that Mr  
Duiker had told him that there was no more work for him. That was the crux of his reason for  
rejecting the Applicant’s version.
[20] That Mr Duiker did not have the authority to dismiss him ­ unchallenged   as it might be ­ did not  
prove that Mr Duiker did not in fact dismiss Mr Motsanana.
[21] The fifth ground of review was that the Second Respondent did not apply his mind properly to the  
remedy   of   reinstatement.   As   a   result,   the   Second   Respondent,   it   was   submitted,   created   a  
contract of indefinite duration contrary to the terms of the original contract.
[22] Despite   Ms   Nkosi’s   promise   during   the   opening   statement   to   lead   evidence   to   prove   that   Mr  
Motsanana was employed on a one year fixed term contract which commenced on 15 April 1997,  
the Applicant’s witness was  unable  to  say when  the  contract   expired.  Mr  Motsanana  was  not  
cross­examined about being on a fixed term contract.
[23] In the absence of evidence as to when the contract expired the Second Respondent was entitled  
to treat it as a fixed term contract the expiry date of which was unknown. The onus was on the  
Applicant to prove that the contract was for a fixed term and when that term commenced and

expired. It would have been a gross irregularity in the circumstances if the Second Respondent  
came to the aid of one party and called for evidence about the date on which the contract expired,  
as suggested by Mr Landman. It is not a case of Ms Nkosi not knowing that the Applicant had to  
lead this evidence.
Order:­ 
The application is dismissed with costs.
D PILLAY A J 
Acting Judge of the Labour Court
DATE OF HEARING: 24 February 2000
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 29 February 2000
Adv T. Bruinders
For the Respondent:  Adv A.P. Landman
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