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IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT JOHANNESBURG CASE NO J2499/01
In the matter between:
LEONARD DINGLER (PTY) LTD Applicant
and
NATIONAL ENTITLED WORKERS’ UNION (NEWU) First Respondent
SOUTH AFRICAN FOOD & ALLIED TRADE
WORKERS’ UNION (SAFATU) Second Respondent
THE EMPLOYEES LISTED IN ANNEXURE “A” HERETO Third and Further
Respondents
_______________________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
________________________________________________________________________
JAMMY AJ
1. On 21 June 2001, pursuant to an application brought that day as a matter of urgency by
the Applicant, a Rule Nisi was issued by this court calling upon the Respondents to show
cause on 25 June 2001 why a final order should not be granted in the following terms:
“1.1 Interdicting and restraining the Third and Further Respondents from committing any one or
more of the following wrongful or unlawful acts:
preventing access to and egress from the Applicant’s premises situated at corner Christopher and
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Siding Avenue, Boksburg East, Industrial Sites, Boksburg;
assaulting or intimidating any of the Applicant’s customers, suppliers or employees;
damaging any of the Applicant’s property or the property of any of the Applicant’s customers or
suppliers or that of surrounding businesses.
Evicting the Third and Further Respondents from the Applicant’s main entrance situated in
Siding Avenue and ordering them to remain at least 100 metres therefrom.
Ordering the Third and Further Respondents to pay the Applicant’s costs jointly and severally, the
one paying the other to be absolved”.
2. By virtue of what the court accepted was the urgency for the interim relief sought by the
Applicant, the viva voce evidence of the Applicant’s Managing Director, Mr M L Wraith,
was admitted by the court in support of the application. The Applicant was however
ordered to file a formal affidavit traversing the evidence presented by Mr Wraith, together
with any supplementary affidavits relevant thereto, by close of business the following
day, 22 June 2001 and duly did so.
3. An answering affidavit deposed to on behalf of all of the Respondents by Mr A T Chiliza, a
union official of the First Respondent, was thereafter served and filed and a
comprehensive replying affidavit by Mr Wraith followed in sequence.
4. It is unnecessary in my view, that I traverse the substance of those affidavits in detail.
One unusual feature thereof however was that the Respondents’ answering affidavit
purported to incorporate an application for an interdict restraining the Applicant and the
South African Police Services “from participating, inter alia, in Applicant’s unlawful lock-
out”. It is common cause however that on the return date, and in the light of picketing
rules which had in the interim been defined and agreed upon between the parties, that
application was not pursued.
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5. The return date of the Rule Nisi was ultimately extended to 25 July 2001, when its
confirmation and the issue of a final order based thereon, was opposed by the
Respondents. The substance of that opposition was couched in two documents file of
record.
6. The first of these was headed:
“SPECIAL PLEA IN ABATEMENT
(MISJOINDER): OBJECTION”;
The second, a comprehensive document headed:
“RESPONDENTS’ HEADS OF ARGUMENT”
incorporated three sections. The first was a subtitled –
“APPLICATION TO STRIKE OUT”
The second was subtitled:
“OBJECTION IN LIMINE”
7. Having, on 25 July 2001, heard submissions from the representatives of the parties, - Mr
M D Maluleke, a union official of the First Respondent on behalf of all the Respondents,
and Advocate A Myburgh for the Applicant, I dismissed the Respondents’ special plea of
misjoinder, as well as its in limine objection to the effect that this court had no jurisdiction
to confirm aspects of the Rule Nisi. The Rule Nisi was confirmed and a final order in
terms thereof was issued. The Third and Further Respondents were ordered jointly and
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severally to pay the Applicant’s costs. I indicated that I would furnish reasons for these
orders in due course and they are the following.
8. The Respondents’ special plea of misjoinder was based on a contention that no cause of
action had been shown in the Applicant’s founding affidavit to exist against the First and
Second Respondents and that no common basis between them and the Third
Respondents was in evidence to justify their citation as Respondents in the application.
In essence, Mr Maluleke argued, the two trade unions were not the agents of, but rather
the spokesmen for, the Third and Further Respondents. Their joinder was therefore
misconceived and should be struck out. That, Mr Maluleke conceded, was the only basis
upon which the First and Second Respondents opposed the confirmation of the Rule.
9. Relevant to the determination of that issue however is the salient fact that no relief of
any form is sought by the Applicant against either the First or Second Respondents. The
two trade unions are manifestly cited in their representative capacity. It was in that
capacity that they processed the referral of the individual Respondents’ dispute with the
Applicant to the Commission for Conciliation Mediation and Arbitration. The Certificate of
Non-Resolution issued by the Commission cites them as Respondents. The notice of
impending strike action was issued by them on behalf of the individual Respondents and
in that context, it was the unions who motivated and in effect instigated the strike action
legitimately thereafter embarked upon. They are manifestly participants in the process
and their conduct in that context is not the conduct of mere spokesmen but of active,
energetic collective bargaining agents of the individual Respondents. Their joinder in the
proceedings was therefore indicated and proper.
10. The objection in limine is couched by Mr Maluleke in the following terms:
10. The objection in limine is couched by Mr Maluleke in the following terms:
“The Applicant’s founding affidavit does not make out a prima facie case for the relief claimed and
this Honourable Court has no jurisdiction to grant or confirm order No. 1.1.1 and order No. 1.2
sought by the Applicant”.
11. Those orders, as I have indicated interdicted the Respondents from interfering with
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access to and egress from the Applicant’s premises and from assaulting or intimidating
any of its customers, suppliers or employees. The third order was that removing the
Third and Further Respondents’ from the main entrance to the Applicant’s premises.
12. The activities complained of, Mr Maluleke submitted, could only be interdicted if they
constituted criminal conduct or a breach of the picketing rules. No picketing rules had at
that stage been formulated and agreed upon and the conduct complained of, if indeed it
was occurring (which the Respondents’ denied) was not criminal in nature. The court
therefore lacked jurisdiction to have made the orders in question.
13. Those arguments in my view have no substance in law. The orders relating thereto were
based on allegations of fact placed before the court by Mr Wraith and subsequently
confirmed as directed. The Applicant was faced with a hostile demonstration causing, in
effect, the holding of some twenty to thirty people within the Applicant’s premises and
who were unable to leave, and the blockading of the forecourt of the building. The fact
that picketing rules were subsequently formulated and now regulate the situation is of no
relevance to the state of affairs which existed when the Applicants came urgently to
court. The court was satisfied, on the basis of that evidence, that the Applicant was
entitled to the relief which it sought and to suggest that it had no jurisdiction to afford it,
is a spurious submission. Indeed the nature of the relief granted is on all fours with that
provided by this court in a multitude of preceding and similar applications. It was for that
reason that the objection in limine was dismissed.
14. Finally Mr Maluleke argued strenuously against the admissibility of detailed submissions
made in the Applicant’s replying affidavit regarding the state of the affairs at the
Applicant’s premises and occurrences there taking place. All of these, he contended,
Applicant’s premises and occurrences there taking place. All of these, he contended,
constituted either new factual allegations or legal argument which the Applicant was not
entitled to introduce in a replying affidavit where they were not made in the founding
submissions. Much of Mr Wraith’s evidence was, moreover, hearsay and inadmissible as
such.
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15. Once again, there is no substance to these submissions. The application, as I have
stated, was brought as one of urgency and the orders made at that time were based on
oral evidence, submitted in the context of the exigencies existing. The Respondents’
answering affidavit in essence, constitutes nothing more than a bare denial of the factual
allegations orally made by Mr Wraith and thereafter substantiated in his affidavit and the
supporting and confirmatory affidavits filed therewith. In the face of those bare denials,
unsubstantiated by relevant factual submissions in acceptable form, the Applicant was
entitled, in its reply, to submit rebutting evidence and that, in Mr Wraith’s second
affidavit and the supporting and confirmatory affidavits filed simultaneously, is precisely
what it did.
16. On the final issue of costs, the matter was argued as an opposed application and I can
find no reason to deviate from the normal and conventional principle that an award of
costs in matters of this nature will ordinarily follow the result. Notwithstanding its lack of
legal substance however I do not regard the Respondents’ opposition to the application
and Mr Maluleke’s passionate argument in that cause, to have been either frivolous or
vexatious and it was for that reason that the award of costs which I made was on the
ordinary scale and not on the scale as between attorney and own client for which Mr
Myburgh contended.
___________________________
B M JAMMY
Acting Judge of the Labour Court
6 August 2001
Representation:
For the Applicant: Advocate A Myburgh instructed by MossMorris Inc.
For Respondents: Mr M D Maluleke