CEPPWAWU obo Konstable and Others v SAFCOL (C378/2001) [2002] ZALC 73; [2003] 3 BLLR 246 (LC) (30 August 2002)

60 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour Law — Dismissal — Misconduct — Employees dismissed for participating in an illegal work stoppage — Dispute over timing of payment for year-end function — Court finding no binding agreement on payment time — Employees' refusal to return to work deemed unlawful — Dismissals upheld as fair and justified.

OF INTEREST
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(SITTING IN CAPETOWN)
CASE NO. :
C378/2001
HEARD        : 26­28 AUGUST 2002
DELIVERED: 30 AUGUST 2002
In the matter between:
CEPPWAWU on behalf of
D Konstabel & 71 Others APPLICANT
and
SAFCOL RESPONDENT
___________________________________________________________

J U D G M E N T
PILLAY D, J :

1. The   first   applicant   was   a   sole   bargaining   agent   of   the     2 nd    to   73 rd 
applicants,   (“the   employees”).   The   employees   were   dismissed   for  
misconduct.  At the insistence of the respondent the dispute was referred  
to the Labour Court instead of Arbitration. 
2. The annual shut down of the respondent was from 15 December to 15  
January the following year.   The last working day was always a Friday.  
The employees usually stopped work at 9:00 on that day, collected their  
payslips and left.  It was also customary for the respondent to hold a year­
end function for the staff.
3. Towards   the   end   of   every   year   the   arrangements   for   the   function   were  
discussed between the respondent and the shop stewards.  The date, time  
and programme for the function were agreed.  Usually it involved a braai.  
4. Arrangements   for   the   function   in   2000   was   tabled   for   discussion   at   a  
meeting held on 30 October 2000.   Three proposals were made, two of  
which  involved  having  a  braai,   while   the   third   proposal  was  to   give  the  
employees cash in lieu of a braai.
5. According to the minutes of that meeting the function was to be held on 8  
December 2000 at 15:00.  The minutes were circulated about 3 November  
2000 to the shop stewards.  The first applicant alleged that after consulting  
the employees, the shop stewards Messrs Tu and Daphula informed Mr  
Niemand, the manager of the respondent, on 26 November 2000 that they

wanted to be paid cash at 12:30 on 8 December 2000 and not at 15:00.
6. The respondent undertook to pay the cash of R40,00 instead of holding a  
braai, but according to the applicants it insisted on making the payment at  
15:00 and not at 12:30.   Further discussions were held on 1 December  
2000 and informally on other occasions, the aaplicants alleged.
7. As far as the respondent was concerned the time of payment was not in  
issue as it believed it had been agreed that the payment would be made at  
15:00.  The respondent denied that there were discussions about the time  
of  payment being 12:30 at any stage before 7 December 2000.   When  
shop steward Mr Daphula communicated the desired time of payment as  
12:30 to the respondent, the latter reiterated its stance to Mr Daphula.
8. The respondent immediately attempted to reconvene an urgent meeting  
with  the applicant's organiser, Mr  Johnson Williams.   This  meeting took  
place at about 08:00 on 8 December 2000.  The respondent reiterated its  
position   that   payment   will   take   place   at   15:00.   It   alleged   that   this   was  
accepted by the shop stewards and Mr Williams. Such acceptance was  
denied by Mr Williams and the shop stewards.
9. A   memorandum  was  handed   out  to  the   employees  informing   them  that  
they would be paid R40, 00 at 15:00.   The shop stewards also informed  
them   about   the   respondent's   stance   on   the   matter.     The   employees  
insisted on being paid at 12:30.  Mr Niemand asked Mr Williams to return  
to the plant to resolve the matter.

10. At   12:30   the   start   of   the   normal   half   hour   lunch   break   the   employees  
assembled   at   the   administration   offices   and   demanded   payment.     Mr  
Williams reiterated  the respondent's  position  and read out  an ultimatum  
that   the   employees   return   to   work   or   face   disciplinary   action.     The  
employees refused to return to work.   The ultimatum was also translated  
by the shop stewards.
11. A collective disciplinary hearing was held on 14 December 2000.   Those  
employees who were already on a final written warning were dismissed,  
those who had no final written warnings were issued with such warnings  
and not dismissed. 
12. I turn to consider  the material issues in  dispute:  
Was there an agreement on 30 October 2000 that the employees would  
be paid at 15:00 as alleged by the respondent ?
13. The   time   of   payment   as   well   as   the   other   terms   of   the   respondent's  
proposal were to be taken back to the employees for a mandate.   It was  
conceded for the respondent that in the past a part of the working hours  
was taken up by the function.
14. The respondent's proposal meant that this benefit was no longer available  
if the time for payment was accepted as 15:00.  It is unlikely that the shop  
stewards would have agreed to abandon a benefit without a mandate from

the employees.  In my view no agreement about the time of payment was  
concluded on 30 October 2000. The entire proposal, including the timing of  
the payment, if the payment option was exercised, was to be referred to  
the employees for a mandate.  
When   was   the   respondent   alerted   to   the   employees'   stance   that   they  
wanted to be paid at 12:30?
15. Although   Mr   Niemand   was   cross­examined   about   meetings   with   the  
applicant's   representatives   on   26   November.     That   there   were   other  
meetings with them thereafter about the payment and its timing was not  
put to him.
16. When and how often the respondent was engaged about the issue was  
important.   If the first applicant had engaged the respondent as soon as  
possible   after   it   had   obtained   a   mandate   from   the   employees   and  
frequently   thereafter   as   alleged,   then   the   probabilities   are   that   the  
applicants viewed the matter seriously and pursued it vigorously with the  
respondent.
17. An adverse inference must be drawn from the applicants’ failure to cross­
examine   Mr   Niemand   about   the   further   meetings.     Even   if   the   first  
applicant communicated the employees' position before 7 December 2000  
to the respondent, it could not have done so in the manner that signaled

the   seriousness   and   importance   of   the   matter   as   far   as   the   employees  
were concerned.  Having regard to Mr Niemand's prompt attempt to secure  
the  intervention  of   Mr  Williams  when  he  did   learn  about   the   applicants’  
demand, I am satisfied that he would have acted similarly if he had been  
alerted sooner. 
Did the applicants embark on an illegal work stoppage for about two hours  
on 8 December 2000?
18. The applicant alleged that it was a term or condition of their employment  
that they would have a year­end function on the Friday before the shut  
down at 12:30.  
19. Mr Whyte submitted for the applicants that the function was a historical  
practice which became an entitlement either because it was a tacit term of  
the   contract   of   employment   or   because   it   was   covered   by   a   collective  
agreement regulating terms and conditions of service.  
20. With regard to the alternative argument that it was a term in a collective  
agreement Mr Whyte relied on the written agreement that was concluded  
at the end of their relationship building intervention on 20 October 2000,
( the” RBI agreement”).  In terms of that agreement the respondent, it was  
submitted,   had   to  negotiate  with  the  first   applicant  about   any   departure  
from historical practices.

21. The respondent had unilaterally withdrawn the entitlement and breached  
the collective agreement which regulated matters of mutual interest so it  
was   submitted.     In   either   event   it   was   a   right   that   the   employees   had  
acquired to have two hours off on the day of the function.   As they were  
merely exercising such a right, their refusal to return to work could not be  
construed as a work stoppage, so it was submitted for the applicants.
22. The respondent denied that the year­end function was a term or condition  
of employment, or a practice.  It was not a right, but a discretionary benefit  
to acknowledge the employees' service, it was submitted.  Every year the  
arrangements for the function were discussed.   In 1997 the function was  
held on a Saturday at 11:00 and in 1998 on Monday 14 at 13:00.
23. In 1999 it was held two weeks before the shut down, on 3 December 1998  
at 12:30.   The function was dispensed with in favour of cash.  There was  
not only no right, but no need for time off to hold a function.  
24. As all the arrangements were discussed every year there was no historical  
practice. In so far as I might find that there was a custom or practice then it  
was   submitted   that   the   respondent   had   no   greater   obligation   than   to  
consult with the workforce before implementing or changing it. That was  
done in this case. So it was submitted for the respondent.
25. For  the determination of a tacit term in a contract in a contract Mr Whyte  
relied   on   Alfred   McAlpine   &   Son   (Pty)   Ltd   v   Transvaal   Provincial  
Administration 1974(3) SA 506(a) at 531 where the tacit term was defined

as:
"An unexpressed revision of the contract which derives from the  
common intention of the parties as invoked by the Court from the express terms  
of the contract and the surrounding circumstances."
26. A   Court,   he   said,   should   seek   to   give   workability   and   efficacy   to   the  
contract   based   on   the   practice   between   the   contracting   parties.     An  
employment   contract,   it   was   submitted,   is   not   static,   but   changes   over  
time.  This theoretical proposition does not fit the facts of this case.
27. Mr Oosthuizen for the respondent referred me to the Law of Con­tract in  
South Africa by RH Christie, Fourth Edition, Butterworth.  At page 193 the  
learned author quotes thus from the judgment of   Scrutton LJN Reigate v  
Union Manufacturing Companies Ramsbottom  1981 (KB) 592,609: 
"A term can only be implied if it is necessary in the business sense  
to give efficacy to the contract; that is if it is such a term that it can confidently be  
said that if at the time the contract was then negotiated someone had said to the  
parties: ‘What will happen in such a case?’ they would both have replied: ‘Of  
course so and so will happen and we did not trouble to say that, it is too clear.’”
28. Nothing   from   all   the   facts   can   necessarily   or   reasonably   imply   that   the  
parties   had   the   common   intention   of   conferring   such   a   benefit   as   a  
contractual right, a breach of which entitled the employees to redress.  The  
year­end function was not a term and condition of employment. It was a  
discretionary   benefit   offered   to   employees   whose   attendance   was  
voluntary.  This was conceded by shop steward  Mchitwa who testified at  
the disciplinary inquiry.

29. The function was not a right. Consequently the two hours time off work  
was also not a right.  Because of the regularity of its occurrence it acquired  
the   status   of   a   practice.   However,   it   always   remained   within   the  
respondent's   discretion   to   offer   or   withdraw   it   in   order   to   meet   the  
objectives   for   which   it   was   intended.   As   an   acknowledgement   by   the  
respondent of the employees' services  for the year, it had to be voluntary  
and discretionary. If it was elevated to a right of the employees then the  
respondent's performance was an obligation and not a gesture of goodwill.  
That was never the mutual intention of the parties and it cannot be implied  
as a term or condition of a contract of employment.
30. However, the regularity of its occurrence resulted in the function acquiring  
the status of a customary practice without losing its purpose as a voluntary  
gesture of appreciation.  The practice could therefore not be elevated to a  
right.   If the respondent wished to vary the practice it had to consult with  
the applicants.  This he did on 30 October 2000.  As the applicants failed  
to engage the respondent expeditiously, the latter cannot be accused of  
acting unilaterally.  
31. With regard to the alternative argument that the function was provided for  
in a collective agreement, the RBI agreement records the position relating  
to the historical practices thus at (A)18:
"3.1 All agreements between the parties will be reassessed through  
a   process   of   negotiation.     They   will   either   be   confirmed,   modified   or

terminated.
3.2  In preparation for the above the union will provide details  
of all unwritten agreements (or historical practices).
            3.3  The   parties   will   agree   on   a   dispute   procedure   to   be  
followed in the event of non­consensus.
3.4 The   parties   commit   themselves   to   the   application   of   the   recognition  
agreement and all other agreements."
32. In addition the first applicant was to provide a provisional and final list of  
unwritten   agreements  by  20  and  24   October   2000  respectively.     These  
were the express terms of the agreement.  On the authorities  cited above  
it cannot be implied from these terms that the employees had acquired a  
substantive   right   to   the   function   as   a   historical   practice.   The   applicants  
have to first prove the existence of the practice before they can assert any  
rights thereto. 
33. It is common cause that the first applicant did not supply the list as agreed.  
It was also common cause that the parties had not engaged each other  
about   what   the   historical   practices   were   prior   to   8   December   2000.The  
procedures agreed in the RBI agreement therefore did not take place. 
34. The respondent cannot be blamed for that as the initiative lay with the first  
applicant.  The applicants failed to either prove in these proceedings or by  
invoking the procedures in the RBI agreement that the historical practice

amounted to a substantive right  arising from the  RBI  agreement or  any  
other   collective   agreement.     Consequently,   the   question   whether   the  
respondents breached the collective agreements does not arise.  
The penalty . 
35. Those   employees   who   had   been   issued   with   previous   final   written  
warnings for participating in work stoppages were dismissed while those  
who had not been previously disciplined received final written warnings.  
No distinction was drawn between those with several written warnings and  
those   with   only   a   single   written   warning.   This   approach,   Mr   Whyte  
submitted, was arbitrary and unfair as such a policy  had not been applied  
in the past.   He   further   submitted   that   if   I   were   to   find   that   the  
applicant had participated in an illegal work stoppage then I should also  
find   that   it   was   triggered   by   the   unjustified   conduct   on   the   part   of   the  
respondent.  The conduct referred to was:
a. The respondent's withdrawal of an existing benefit;
b. The respondent undertaking in the RBI agreement to negotiate with the  
first applicant before departing from the unwritten agreement;
c. The respondent taking drastic action because of the concerns of senior  
management that it was unprofitable.
d. The   respondents'   breach   of   the   RBI   agreement   which   enraged   the

employees. 
36. I have already found that the respondent's conduct did not depart from the  
RBI   agreement.     I   have   also   found   that   the   existing   benefit   was  
discretionary   and   as   such,   the   respondent   could   withdraw   it   after  
consultation.  If the drastic action referred to was a withdrawal of the two  
hours   time   off   that   was   normally   taken   up   by   the   function,     then   the  
respondent's actions and reasons therefor were entirely justified as it was  
common   cause   that   productivity   was   low.   Furthermore,   Mr   Niemand  
testified that if the logs were not worked on before the employees went off  
duty there would be wastage. 
37. It is to the conduct of the applicants that I must turn to determine whether  
they acted reasonably in all the circumstances.  The applicants could not  
reasonably have believed that they were exercising a right not to work and  
accordingly were not participating in an illegal stoppage. I say so because  
firstly,   there   was   apparently   a   difference   of   opinion   amongst   the   shop  
stewards about whether the function was a right or a gesture of gratitude.  
Here  I  refer  to  the  evidence  of  Mr  Mchitwa.    This should  at  least  have  
caused the applicants to doubt or reconsider their assertions and adopt a  
more cautious method of enforcing what they believed were their rights. 
38. Secondly, the point was not raised  in limine  at the disciplinary inquiry or in  
these proceedings that the employees should not have been disciplined

and dismissed in the first place because they were exercising their right.  
They   would   have   sought   a   determination   as   to   whether   they   were  
participating   in   an   illegal   work   stoppage   at   the   outset   if   they   genuinely  
believed that they were exercising the right to their time off.
39. Thirdly, even if the applicants were   bona fide   in the belief that they were  
exercising a right not to work, they were warned at least twice orally and in  
writing.   Such warnings ought to have cured any doubt or belief that the  
applicants   might   have   had   about   the   correctness   of   their   assumptions.  
(Coin Security Group (Pty) Ltd v Adams & Others  2000(4) BLLR 371 LAC.)
40. Fourthly, the applicants participated in the stoppage because they believed  
that   they   had   a   right   to   the   time   off.     It   was   submitted   that   it   was   not  
because they wanted to organise a function themselves.  That reason was  
never communicated to the respondent at the time.   It emerges in these  
proceedings as an afterthought.
41. Fifthly, the shop stewards and organiser of the first applicant chose not to  
advise the employees on what course of action they should take. I note on  
the other hand that they did not exhort the applicants to persist in their  
conduct. 
42. Sixthly,   the   applicants   had   not   even   contemplated   using   a   less   drastic  
dispute resolution procedure. 
43. Seventhly, the first applicant did not provide the list of historical practices  
as agreed. It therefore failed to initiate an engagement with the respondent

as agreed in  the RBI agreement.   The  applicants also did not  alert the  
respondent timeously to their position that they believed they were entitled  
to the two hours off.
44. It was submitted that as the respondent had decided to change its strategy  
towards its workforce, it should have exercised discipline more sensitively  
by not dismissing the employees. In the past the respondent had issued  
two   written   warnings   without   dismissing   after   the   first   warning.     The  
employees   should   have   been   given   an   opportunity   to   adjust   to   the  
changes.     Furthermore,   in   the   RBI   agreement   first   applicant   and   the  
respondent committed themselves to jointly communicating the disciplinary  
code and procedure to the employees.   This had also not been done.
45. The applicants conceded that  discipline  was not suspended by the RBI  
agreement.     The   relationship   building   initiative   recommended   that  
management should also act firmly in relation to managing its labour.  This  
was   acknowledged   on   behalf   of   the   applicants.     The   respondent   had  
endured three work stoppages that year. For the first two it issued letters  
of   warning.     After   the   third   stoppage   the   respondent   and   first   applicant  
agreed to subject themselves to the relationship building initiative without  
taking disciplinary action.
46. Before   disciplinary   action   was   taken   in   December   the   employees   were  
warned   of   the   consequences   of   their   actions.   They   could   not   have  
entertained any reasonable doubt that the respondent will  not act firmly

against them.   There was no evidence that they were confused as was  
suggested   during   the   cross­examination   of   the   respondent's   witnesses.  
They ought to have realised that they risked their jobs when they tested  
the tolerance of the respondent.
47. I   find   that   the   conduct   of   the   applicants   was   in   all   the   circumstances  
intransigent   and   unreasonable.     The   argument   that   clause   9.1   of   the  
collective agreement  which precluded dismissal within 48 hours after the  
commencement   of   industrial   action   indemnified   the   employees   against  
dismissal in this case, was withdrawn.
The previous warnings .
48. Some employees had been issued with warnings following the industrial  
action in May and July.  The first applicant admitted that there were work  
stoppages   on   those   two   occasions   but   denied   that   employees   were  
disciplined before.  No hearings were held and no warnings were issued.
49. Mr Niemand testified that the warnings were handed to the employees and  
some of  them  threw   them  away.   None of  the  employees to  whom the  
respondent   alleged   it   had   given   warnings   was   called   to   refute   Mr  
Niemand's   evidence.     The   evidence   of   their   organiser   and   the   shop  
stewards   that   they   would   have   been   aware   if   the   warnings   had   been  
issued, is not an adequate rebuttal of Mr Niemand's testimony. An adverse

inference   must   follow   the   failure   to   call   an   employee   as   a   witness   in  
rebuttal.
50. It was admitted that the letters of warning relating to the July stoppage was  
created   on   28   July   2000,   that   is   the   day   of   the   stoppage.     On   the  
probabilities it is hardly likely that the respondent would generate letters of  
warning   and   simply   file   them   without   alerting   the   employees   concerned  
that he or she was warned. 
51. The   applicants   were   therefore   aware   of   the   letters   of   warning.  
Consequently,   their   failure   to   challenge   the   warnings   as   soon   as   they  
became aware of them must be seen as an acceptance of the warning.  
Bias.
52. The witnesses for the applicants testified that on 12 December 2000 they  
per chance discovered that the respondent's management was having a  
strategic planning meeting at the King George Hotel where they were also  
meeting.
53. Mr Krige, the respondent's human resources manager was beckoned out  
of   the   meeting   and   asked   whether   the   first   applicant's   representatives  
could meet with Mr Niemand. As first applicant's general secretary from  
Johannesburg   was   available,   it   had   hoped   that   the   disciplinary   action

against the employees could be discussed.
54. Mr Krige, it was alleged by the applicants, reported back that a meeting  
was not possible and that the issue of the work stoppage was the very  
subject of discussions that day. Mr Krige denied saying this. He and other  
witnesses for the respondent testified that there was no discussion about  
the   disciplinary   action   that   was   to   be   taken   against   the   employees   two  
days later.
55. The only direct evidence I have of what transpired at the meeting at the  
King   George   Hotel   is   that   of   the   respondent's   witnesses.     They  
acknowledged   that   the   work   stoppage   was   discussed   in   a   strategic  
context.   The minutes reflect that they decided to follow a "conservative  
approach" as a first option and then a "drastic approach" if that failed.  By  
this it was meant that if firm management of the labour force did not work  
then the mill would be closed down.
56. I doubt that Mr Krige as an experienced human resources manager would  
have been so naive as to inform the applicant's representatives that the  
disciplinary   action   was   to   be   discussed.     If   he   had   done   so   then   the  
applicants   would   have   protested   immediately   that   the   outcome   of   the  
disciplinary   action   was   being   pre­judged.   This   they   did   not   do   at   the  
disciplinary   hearing.     The   complaints   that   Mr   Taylor   who   chaired   the  
inquiry   was   biased   because   he   attended   and   was   influenced   by   the  
strategic   planning   meeting,   was   raised   for   the   first   time   in   these

proceedings.
57. As a manager Mr Taylor could not be expected to be neutral in the sense  
of being devoid of all opinion about managing labour in the interests of the  
respondent.   Whether he attended the meeting or not he must have had  
some preconceived ideas about the respondent's approach to discipline.
58. I would be surprised if he was not mindful of the respondent's strategy for  
managing its labour force.   The test is, however whether the applicants  
reasonably  feared that  he  would  not  exercise sufficient  self­discipline  to  
determine   their   case   impartially.     As   the   applicants   representative,   Mr  
Williams,   an   experienced   organiser,   did   not   at   the   time   express   any  
reservations   about   Mr   Taylor   chairing   the   hearing,   I   infer   that   the  
applicants had no fears about his competence as an impartial adjudicator.
59. It may have been inferred  that Mr Taylor's decision manifested bias after it  
was   disclosed   to   the   applicants   because   of   his   slavish   acceptance   of  
aggravating circumstances presented by the respondent and his rejection  
of the mitigatory circumstances. That goes to the penalty to be imposed on  
the employees.  I note that the finding of guilty is not seriously challenged  
in   these   proceedings   as   a   manifestation   of   his   bias.   If   it   was,   then   the  
finding  that   the  employees   were  guilty   of  misconduct  would  have  to  be  
examined to determined whether it was tainted by bias. 
60. As far as the penalty is concerned, Mr Taylor adopted a formula that is  
objectively   justifiable   in   labour   law   jurisprudence   relating   to   collective

discipline.   Modise & Others v Steve Spar Blackmead  2000 BLLR 496 LAC  
at 522(g).
61. In   the   circumstances   I   find   that   the   complaint   of   bias   is   also   an   after­
thought.  
62. With regard to costs I take into account the applicant's conduct and the  
submissions   they   have   made   in   pursuit   of   retaining   their   jobs.     It   is  
disturbing that Mr Williams misled the disciplinary inquiry by submitting that  
the first applicant became aware of the dispute on 8 December, the very  
day of the stoppage.   As a result thereof he claims that he did not know  
and did not have time to follow the dispute procedure.  
63. The submission is untrue because the evidence for the applicants in these  
proceedings   was   that   they   were   aware   of   a   dispute   by   at   least   26  
November 2000.   It is also their evidence in these proceedings that they  
had   not   considered   the   grievance   procedure   at   all.   Such   conduct   is  
dishonourable and must be censured with some cost. 
64. On   the   other   hand   there   is   the   ongoing   relationship   between   the  
respondent and the first applicant.   The latter was duty­bound to protect  
and defend the rights of such a large number of its members.
65. In the circumstances I grant an order in the following terms:
a. The dismissal of the employees was procedurally and substantively fair;

b. The claim of the applicants is dismissed;
  
c. The first applicant is to pay 20% of the respondent's costs.
          
FOR THE APPLICANT : J. WHYTE
INSTRUCTED BY : CHEADLE THOMPSON AND HAYSE 
FOR THE RESPONDENT : A. OOSTHUIZEN
INSTRUCTED BY :  BARNARD WHITEHEARD INC.                                                         
__________________
JUDGE D. PILLAY