Herbst and Others v Fidelity Guards (J164/99) [2001] ZALC 84; (2001) 22 ILJ 1828 (LC) (7 June 2001)

62 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Retrenchment — Unlawful termination of employment — Applicants claiming unfair retrenchment after receiving notice of retrenchment — Court finding that the respondent could not unilaterally revoke the retrenchment notice — Dismissal for desertion deemed unfair — Applicants entitled to severance pay as a result of the unlawful retrenchment process.

J164/99-SSL
JUDGMENT
Sneller Verbatim/ssl
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(TRANSVAAL PROVINCIAL DIVISION)
BRAAMFONTEIN CASE NO: J164/99
2001-06-07
In the matter between
A L HERBST & OTHERS Plaintiff
and
FIDELITY GUARDS Respondent
________________________________________________________________
J U D G M E N T ________________________________________________________________
PILLAY J : This is an alleged retrenchment dispute which was argued on agreed
statement of facts.
The first issue the court is required to determine is whether the applicants
were retrenched on or about 30 September 1998. On 15 September 1998 the
respondent advised the applicants individually in writing as follows:
"We now give you formal notice of retrenchment which will become effective on 30
September 1998."
The notice went on to state:
"We thank you for your services with the company and wish you every success for the
future."
This notice unequivocally terminated the services of the applicants on grounds
of retrenchment.
The next question was whether in law the respondent could unilaterally revoke
the retrenchment and reinstate the applicants and whether the applicants were in
fact reinstated subsequently. A general principle of the Common Law of Contract is
that once notice of cancellation of a contract is given it cannot unilaterally be
revoked. Wallis, Labour & Employment Law, Butterworths 1992 at 10 Part 5. This
principle is applied evenhandedly to employers and employees, thus an employee
its notice of resignation without leave of the employer. Rustenburg Town Council v
Minister of Labour & Others 1942 TPD 220. Similarly it has been held that an
employer may not revoke its retrenchment of employees unilaterally. Du Toit v
SASCO (Pty) Ltd 1999 20 IOJ 1253 LC and McCullough v Kalvinator Group Services of
SA (Pty) Ltd 1998 19 IOJ 1399. Nor can employer withdraw its acceptance of an
offer of voluntary retrenchment if it transpires that the employee's is no longer

offer of voluntary retrenchment if it transpires that the employee's is no longer
redundant. National Employees Trade Union & Other v Kalvinator of SA , case
number J480/97, unreported.The respondent could not therefore unilaterally revoke
the notice of retrenchment.
It was submitted for the respondent that as the retrenchment was unlawful
everything done in terms thereof and consequent thereto would also have been
unlawful, more specifically no severance pay or compensation was payable.
The appropriate method of remedying such a situation was to revoke the
notice of retrenchment so to return to the status anti quo. As the respondent had
revoked the notices, alternatively offered to reinstate the applicants the latter's
refusal to return to the status anti quo was unfair, so it is submitted for the
respondent. To this the applicant replied that the respondent had not unequivocally
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signalled that it withdrew the retrenchment because it acknowledged that it had
erred. The applicants were entitled to be sceptical about the respondent's intention
and motives. Furthermore, as it transpired further retrenchments occurred after
about October 1998, so it was submitted for the applicants.
On 1 October 1998 after the notices of retrenchment took effect the applicants
attended on the respondent to inter alia return their uniforms and be informed
about the retrenchment packages. The respondent advised them that they had not
been retrenched and that the respondent would endeavour to obtain alternative
permanent employment with the group for them. They were also advised that they
needed to report daily for duty and would be paid their normal remuneration. None
of the applicants reported for duty from 2 October 1998. The applicants were of the
view that they had been retrenched unfairly and that they should be paid severance
packages. They advised the respondent accordingly. The offer to retain the
applicants in employment and to find alternative employment for them was also
communicated on 2 October 1998 to the trade union representing the applicants.
On 9 October 1998 the applicants were instructed to report for duty, on 13
October 1998 failing which they would be deemed to have deserted and their
services would be terminated. None of the applicants reported for duty as
instructed.
On 14 October the respondent sent another telegram to each of the applicants
to advise that a disciplinary inquiry would be held on 16 October 1998 on a charge
of desertion as a result of their failure to report for duty on 13 October 1998. The
inquiry proceeded in the absence of the applicants who were then dismissed for
desertion.
By adopting an unlawful procedure for retrenching the applicants the
respondent terminated the contract of employment unlawfully. Even if this

respondent terminated the contract of employment unlawfully. Even if this
conclusion is wrong it was common cause that the respondent had not complied
with the provisions of Section 189 of the Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995. The
respondent had therefore committed a material breach of an essential statutory
term implied in the contract of employment. Wallis, Contract of Employment ,
paragraph 34 and 12, footnote 2(a).
As a result of such breach the applicants were entitled to elect whether to
accept the repudiation and cancel the contract or reject the repudiation and claim
enforcement thereof. By their conduct the applicants clearly accepted the
repudiation and cancelled the contract. The remedy available to the applicants on
cancellation would be a claim for damages. Christie, The Law of Contract in South
Africa 3rd edition 596-8.
In terms of the Labour Relations Act this is pegged at 12 months' pay for
unfair retrenchment. The election is a right which the Common Law confers on the
innocent party to a contract that is repudiated. However, whether the innocent
party exercises that right fairly is a matter of Industrial Relations Labour and
Employment Law. In the interests of good industrial relations and the premise of
employment a party who errs in terminating a contract of employment should be
given an opportunity to remedy its fault unless there are compelling considerations
not to do so, such as bad faith by the errant party.
On the agreed facts there is no evidence that the respondent acted in bad
faith in recalling the applicants to work. If it were absolutely impossible in Labour
and Employment Law for the respondent to remedy its fault at the earliest moment
it may just as well capitulate there and then. Conciliation would be a farce,
adjudication would merely be a rubber stamp of a foregone conclusion.
As it transpires the respondent did capitulate in this case by offering to return

J164/99-SSL
JUDGMENT
to the status anti quo. It is speculative whether any of the applicants would have
remained in employment beyond the October 1998 retrenchment. However, as
notice of the further retrenchment had been issued on 13 October 1998 the
applicants could reasonably have been apprehensive about their job security. Their
cancellation of the contracts was therefore not unreasonable. Their demands at the
time for severance pay only was also not unreasonable.
The dismissal for operational reasons was the court finds, and is admitted, to
be unfair. The respondent was entitled to offer reinstatement which the applicants
legitimately refused. Having refused such reinstatement the applicants accepted
their dismissal. In so doing they limited their claim to severance pay only.
In the circumstances the court makes the following order:
The respondent is ordered to pay the 23 applicants listed in paragraph 1 of the stated
case severance pay at the rate of one week per year of service and costs of suit.
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