Ndlovu v CCMA and Others (D544/99) [2000] ZALC 153; (2000) 21 ILJ 1653 (LC) (1 March 2000)

55 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Unfair labour practice — Promotion — Employee alleging unfair labour practice regarding non-promotion — Dispute referred to arbitration where arbitrator found no unfair practice — Employee seeking review of arbitration award — Court applying rational basis test and finding no grounds to interfere with the arbitrator's decision — Application dismissed with costs.

REPORTABLE
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT DURBAN                            
CASE NO: D544/99
In the matter between
D P NDLOVU  Applicant
and
CCMA  First Respondent
MR AUBREY NGCOBO Second Respondent 
DEPT OF SOCIAL WELFARE AND
POPULATION DEVELOPMENT Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
WALLIS AJ     
[1] The applicant in this case is an employee of the Department of  
Social Welfare and Population Development.  It is apparent from the  
documents that over a number of years he has felt a sense of grievance in  
regard to questions of promotion. Ultimately, his feeling of grievance was  
such that he raised a dispute concerning an unfair labour practice in terms  
of item 2(1)(b) of Schedule 7 to the Labour Relations Act which defines as  
one of the residual unfair labour practices in terms of the Act, any unfair  
conduct of the employer relating to the promotion of an employer.  
[2] In terms of item 3(1)(b) of that schedule that dispute was referred to  
a Commissioner and when it remained unresolved it was referred  
for arbitration by a Commissioner in terms of item   3(4) of Schedule  
7.   The   arbitration  was  held  in  Pietermaritzburg   on  29  April   1999.

The person appointed to act as Commissioner by the CCMA was  
Mr  Aubrey Ngcobo.  The applicant was represented by an attorney  
and there was no appearance on behalf of the Department.   That  
want of appearance is explained in the affidavits before me on the  
grounds   that   the   Department   was   not   properly   notified   of   the  
arbitration hearing.   Nothing, however, turns upon that for present  
purposes.
[3] After the arbitration hearing, Mr Ngcobo handed down an award in  
which he found that the Department had not committed an unfair labour  
practice   in   failing   to   promote   the   applicant   and   he   dismissed   the  
application.  
[4] The matter comes before me by way of an application in terms of  
section   145   of   the   Labour   Relations   Act   for   that   award   to   be  
reviewed and set aside. The order which the applicant asks me to  
make is not only to set aside the award but to substitute in its place  
an order directing the Department to promote him to the position of  
director.  
[5] Whilst it is fair to say that the correctness of some aspects of the  
judgment   of   the   Labour   Appeal   Court   in   Carephone   (Pty)   Ltd   v  
Marcus n.o. and Others  ( (1998) 19 ILJ 1425 LAC) in regard to the  
standard of review is open to debate, I propose for the purposes of  
this application to apply the test laid down in paragraph 37 of the

judgment  and  to  ask myself  whether  there  is  a rational   objective  
basis justifying the connection made by the arbitrator between the  
material properly available to him and the conclusion arrived at in  
the form of his award.   I make that assumption because it is the  
assumption most favourable to the applicant in this case.
[6] In the documents which were furnished to the arbitrator and, in  
particular, in a statement made by Mr Ndlovu but undated, which appears  
at pages 33 to 41 of the papers, Mr Ndlovu gives details of his  
accumulated grievances in regard to the question of promotion.  It is  
apparent from reading the statement that on a number of occasions he  
was not promoted in circumstances where in his view the persons who  
were appointed to particular posts lacked his qualifications, his abilities  
and his length of service.
[7] The last promotion in regard to which he raises a complaint in that  
document   is   an   application   which   he   made   during   July   or  
August  1995 for a post of Deputy Director. There are two letters in  
these papers, the one of which records the receipt of his application  
for that post and the other of which is a letter advising him that he  
had   not   been   appointed   thereto.     The   latter   letter   is   dated  
4  March  1996.
[8] It   is   in   my   view   clear   from   this   that   Mr   Soni   is   correct   when   he  
submits that whichever of these complaints formed the basis of the  
reference to arbitration, it was a complaint which had arisen before  
the   Labour   Relations   Act   came   into   force.     As   such   it   was   not  
appropriate   or   permissible   for   such   complaint   to   be   referred   to  
arbitration in terms of item 3.

[9] Be that as it may, however, it is clear from the arbitration award that  
Mr Ngcobo approached the matter on the basis that Mr Ndlovu's  
complaint   relates   to   his   non­appointment   at   the   level   of   Deputy  
Director   in   the   Department.     That   is   the   question   to   which   he  
addressed his mind and that is the most favourable approach to the  
application papers, from the point of view of Mr Ndlovu.
[10] In regard to that question Mr Ngcobo said the following and I quote:
"There   is   no   doubt   in   my   mind   that   the  
applicant   is   eminently   qualified   for   a   senior  
position in the ranks of Government.  It is also  
quite clear that he has rendered sterling service  
to   his   employer.     Is   he,   therefore,   on   the  
aforementioned   basis   entitled   to   a   senior  
position?   If indeed he is so entitled, does he  
stand head and shoulders above everyone else  
who is so qualified?   There is no evidence to  
persuade   me   that   the   answers   to   these   two  
questions   should   be   in   the   affirmative.  
Considering the applicant's  stated intention to  
obtain   a   severance   package   as   far   back   as  
1996, I question the wisdom of promoting him.  
It appears to me that the clamour for a senior  
post is intended to justify a demand for a more

generous   severance   package.     It   appears   to  
me that any employer who acts conservatively  
in   order   to   avoid   being   saddled   with   an  
exhorbitant   severance   package   is   not  
committing an unfair labour practice.  Such 
an employer, in my view, can legitimately claim  
to   be   inspired   by   a   desire   for   proper  
governance.   In sum, I am not convinced that  
the   respondent   committed   an   unfair   labour  
practice in failing to promote the applicant.  It is  
nowhere evident that the applicant was entitled  
to the promotion deserved.  It is also not clear  
that the successful applicants was or were not  
more   deserving   than   the   applicant.     No  
evidence was led to show that the respondent  
was capricious or arbitrary in its decision."
[11] In   my   view,   the   questions   which   the   Commissioner   asked   in   the  
first  paragraph of that quotation were wholly justifiable questions in  
relation to a dispute over a matter of promotion.  It can never suffice  
in relation to any such question for the complainant to say that he or  
she   is   qualified   by   experience,   ability   and   technical   qualifications  
such as university degrees and the like, for the post. That is merely  
the first   hurdle.  Obviously a person who is not so qualified cannot  
complain if they are not appointed.

[12] The next hurdle is of equal if not greater importance.  It is to show  
that the decision to appoint someone else to the post in preference  
to the complainant was unfair.   That will almost invariably involve  
comparing   the   qualities   of   the   two   candidates.   Provided   the  
decision by the employer to appoint one in preference to the other  
is rational it seems to me that no question of unfairness can arise.
[13] On   the   papers   which   are   before   me   and   which   were   before   the  
arbitrator,   that   question   was   hardly   canvassed.     Certainly   no  
evidential basis was placed before the arbitrator to suggest that in  
relation to any of the appointments there was not proper reason for  
the relevant departments to appoint the persons whom they chose  
to   appoint   in   preference   to   Mr   Ndlovu.   In   the   absence   of   such  
evidence it is difficult to see how the arbitrator could have made a  
finding in favour of the applicant.  
[14] I   also  regard   the  arbitrator's   comments  in  regard   to  a  severance  
package   as   being   justifiable.     The   statement   to   which   I   have   referred  
included a very substantial claim in respect of a severance package.   In  
argument before me, Mr Ndlovu indicated that the claim was erroneously  
calculated but he apparently did not indicate that to the arbitrator.  
[15] As regards his position, he told me that if I granted the order which  
he seeks, namely that he be promoted to the position of

Director,   then   such   appointment   would   be   one   which   in   the  
parlance of the public service would be an appointment to a post  
"out of adjustment" and as a consequence Mr Ndlovu would then  
qualify for a severance package. That package would be calculated  
on the basis of his promotion post.  
[16] As was stressed in the   Carephone  case, an application for review  
under section 145 is not an opportunity to appeal from the decision  
of the arbitrator to this Court.  It is not open to this Court simply to  
substitute   its   view   of   the   merits   of   the   matter   for   that   of   the  
arbitrator.     Such  an  approach  would  be wholly  destructive  of  the  
intended purpose of arbitration, namely that it should be expeditious  
and, in general, not subject to judicial challenge.  
[17] It is irrelevant whether I agree with the finding by the arbitrator.  The  
only  thing that  is relevant is that  in the  light  of  what I  have  said  
earlier   in   this   judgment   it   is   manifest   that   there   was   a   rational  
objective basis connecting the evidential material placed before the  
arbitrator   with   the   decision   at   which   the   arbitrator   arrived.     That  
being so, there is no basis upon which I am entitled to interfere with  
the arbitration award.
[18] In   those   circumstances   Mr   Soni   asked   that   the   application   be  
dismissed and asked that the applicant be ordered to pay the costs  
of the application.  That is, of course, the usual order in the case of

ordinary disputes.  In this Court there is long standing jurisprudence  
to the effect that the Court must weigh up considerations of equity  
in deciding whether or not to award costs against an unsuccessful  
party.
[19] In doing so it must avoid making such stringent orders that it has a  
chilling effect on the willingness of people to bring their grievances  
to   this   Court.     It   is   also   well   established   that   where   there   is   a  
continuing   relationship   between   the   parties,   it   is   in   general  
undesirable   to   prejudice   that   relationship   by   making   an   adverse  
order for costs.
[20] On   the   other   hand,   Mr   Soni   is   quite   correct   in   submitting   that  
Government   Departments   are   particularly   vulnerable   to  
unmeritorious   litigation   in   pursuit   of   unsubstantiated   grievances.  
They employ a very large number of people.  Indeed, it is probable  
that   collectively   the   Government   is   the   largest   employer   in   this  
country.     The   salaries   of   those   people   and   the   costs   of   the  
department in resisting unmeritorious litigation are paid out of the  
public   purse.     In   other   words,   the   taxpayers   have   to   bear   those  
costs.  
[21] It   is   undesirable   that   the   taxpayers   should   be   burdened   with  
needless expense arising from unmeritorious litigation.   There are  
far more pressing things on which to spend   the money raised by

taxation.  
[22] Weighing all those factors up I am persuaded that this is a case so  
lacking in merit that it would be inappropriate to penalise the public  
purse   by   compelling   the   Respondent   to   pay   the   costs   of   the  
litigation without any prospects of recovery.  
[23] In   the   result   the   order   that   I   make   is   that   the   application   is  
dismissed with costs.
                              
WALLIS AJ