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CASE NO : J2401/03
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Held at Johannesburg
In the matter between :
TSI HOLDINGS (PTY) LIMITED First Applicant
TSI SCAFFOLDING (PTY) LIMITED Second Applicant
TSI PAINTING (PTY) LIMITED Third Applicant
TS INSULATION (PTY) LIMITED Fourth Applicant
and
NATIONAL UNION OF METALWORKERS OF SOUTH AFRICA First Respondent
MAXWELL MASEKO & OTHERS Second and Further Respondents
______________________________________________________________________________
JUDGEMENT
FULTON AJ
1.INTRODUCTION
1.1This matter came before the Labour Court by way of an urgent application by the first applicant seeking
an order that a strike embarked upon by the first respondent’s members (“the employees”) be declared
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illegal and that the notice given by the respondents of their intention to strike be declared invalid. Notice of
the intended strike was given on 31 October 2003. The employees embarked on a strike on 4 November
2003. On the same day Schoeman AJ granted the first applicant the relief sought on a temporary basis.
1.2The return day was originally 11 November 2003, but the matter was postponed to 21 November 2003
to enable the respondents to file supplementary affidavits. The matter came before me on the return day
and the first applicant seeks confirmation of the order granted by Schoeman AJ.
2.JOINDER
2.1The original applicant in these proceedings, TSI Holdings (Pty) Limited, is the holding company of four
divisions, each of which operates as a wholly owned subsidiary. The subsidiaries were not cited as
applicants in the original application, but TSI Holdings in its founding affidavit did contend that it had four
divisions: TSI Insulation, TSI Sandblasting, TSI Scaffolding and TSI Projects. The respondents did not take
the point in its opposing papers that TSI Holdings did not have locus standi to launch the application or that
a pertinent distinction be drawn between the first applicant and its four divisions for the purposes of the
application. It is also apparent from the pleadings that the parties acted collectively in the course of the
dispute that forms the subject matter of this application.
2.2In its replying affidavit the first applicant explained that it consists of the four divisions referred to below
and sought to join these divisions to the application:
2.2.1TSI Scaffolding (Pty) Limited (“TSI Scaffolding”)
2.2.2TSI Painting (Pty) Limited (“TSI Painting”)
2.2.3TS Insulation (Pty) Limited (“TS Insulation”)
2.2.4TSI Projects (Pty) Limited (“TSI Projects”)
2.3The founding affidavit itself did not contain a list of employees alleged to have been on strike, but it was
alleged that 146 employees participated in the strike. In its replying affidavit the first applicant explains that
the employees that went on strike on 4 November 2003 were not the 146 employees referred to in its
founding affidavit but 123 employees made up as follows:
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2.3.1TSI Scaffolding – 2 employees (described in annexure “RA4(a)” to the replying affidavit)
2.3.2TSI Painting – 15 employees (described in annexure “RA4(b)” to the replying affidavit)
2.3.3TS Insulation – 62 employees (described in annexure “RA4(c)” to the replying affidavit)
2.3.4TSI Projects – 44 employees (described in annexure “RA4(d)” to the replying affidavit)
2.4The first applicant further alleged in its replying affidavit that on 5 November 2003 the balance of the
workforce of TSI Scaffolding went on strike for a few hours but returned to work after receiving a final
ultimatum. These employees are listed in annexure “RA4(e)” to the replying affidavit.
2.5The respondents deny that the two employees of TSI Scaffolding referred to above, Mr Nkosi and Mr
Baba, went on strike on 4 November 2003. The respondents state that Mr Nkosi was actually at work when
he was called into a meeting and suspended. Mr Baba is said not to have been at work on 4 November
2003 and that when he reported for duty on 5 November 2003 he was suspended. The respondents state
that Messrs Nkosi and Baba are shop stewards and for this reason are being targeted by the first applicant.
These allegations are contained in the respondents’ further answering affidavit. The further answering
affidavit, however, does not contain any confirmatory affidavits by Messrs Nkosi and Baba and it is not
clear to me how the deponent to the further answering affidavit, Mr E Nhlapo, a local union organiser,
would have personal knowledge of the facts alleged in relation to Messrs Nkosi and Baba. In the
circumstances I accept the first applicant’s version in relation to Messrs Nkosi and Baba.
2.6The respondents deny that any strike action took place in TSI Scaffolding on 5 November 2003. The
respondents also deny that any employees from TSI Projects participated in the strike. The respondents in
their further answering affidavit state that Mr Nhlapo addressed “a letter stating that the workers from
Scaffolding were supposed to join the strike on 6 November 2003.” There is no such letter in the pleadings.
I assume, however, that the respondents are referring to the strike notice of 31 October 2003 in which Mr
Nhlapo states that the strike action would commence on 4 November 2003 and would consist of the total
withdrawal of labour by the workforce at “ TS Insulation and Sunblasting (Pty) Ltd ” and that the first
respondent’s members working for “ TS Scaffolding (Pty) Ltd and TSI Project (Pty) Ltd would follow ” with
secondary strike action. In the replying affidavit the deponent, Mr Stopforth, contends that on 5 November
2003 the employees of TSI Scaffolding on strike were given a verbal ultimatum at 07h00 and then a first
written ultimatum at 08h00 and a final written ultimatum at approximately 10h30 on 5 November 2003.
However, the first written ultimatum is headed “ULTIMATUM TO STRIKING EMPLOYEES OF TSI
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INSULATION” but the second written ultimatum does refer to the striking employees of TSI Scaffolding.
There are no similar allegations in relation to the employees of TSI Projects.
2.7In the case of disputes of fact in motion proceedings the general rule as accepted in PlasconEvans
Paints (Pty) Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd SA 1984 (3) 623 (AD) is that relief should only be
granted if the facts as stated by the respondent together with the admitted facts in the applicant’s affidavit
justify the relief sought. Where it is clear that facts, though not formally admitted, cannot be denied, they
should be regarded as admitted. Moreover, in certain instances the denial by the respondent of a fact
alleged by the applicant may not be such as to raise a real, genuine or bona fide dispute of fact. If in such
case the respondent has not availed himself of his right to apply for the deponents concerned to be called
for crossexamination and the court is satisfied as to the inherent credibility of the applicant’s factual
averment, it may proceed on the basis of the correctness thereof and include this fact among those upon
which it determines whether the applicant is entitled to final relief.
2.8Applying the principles enunciated by PlasconEvans, supra, I find that there was strike action by the
employees employed by TSI Scaffolding on 5 November 2003. I am, however, unable to make the same
finding in relation to the alleged strike in TSI Projects.
2.9I consequently order the joinder of TSI Scaffolding, TSI Painting and TS Insulation to these
proceedings, but deny the application to join TSI Projects.
3.THE FACTS
3.1On 19 June 2003 two of the union’s members, Mr Elias Mayisela and Mr Albert Moholala were
instructed to perform a certain task by Mr Attie Van Zyl. Messrs Mayisela and Moholola commenced the
task as instructed but could not complete it without a ladder and they returned to Van Zyl to inform him that
they required a ladder to complete the task. Although there are different versions on the papers as to
exactly what Van Zyl’s response was, the version contained in the answering affidavit is that Van Zyl
responded “poes kaffirs, ek wil nie met julle praat nie.” Van Zyl then instructed Mr Mayisela and Mr
Moholola to perform another task.
3.2The two members concerned then approached a shop steward, Mr Maxwell Maseko, who filed a
grievance on their behalf. Several grievance hearings were held without a resolution of the grievance.
Management appear to have had difficulty determining who was telling the truth: the two members or Mr
Van Zyl who admitted swearing at the members but denied using any derogatory racist language. Mr Van
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Zyl’s version was in one of the hearings corroborated by another employee, Derek Coetzer.
3.3Mr Jurie Swart, a director of the first applicant, chaired the third and final grievance hearing. Mr Swart
explained to the parties that he was facing two mutually destructive versions and that there were only two
options available to him namely a polygraph test by the parties, alternatively a hearing to be held by an
independent person with legal qualifications such as a lawyer. As a further alternative Mr Swart indicated
that a date could be set for such a hearing on 14 October 2003 and that both the aggrieved parties, as well
as Mr Van Zyl should in the interim subject themselves to polygraph testing. Mr Swart says that Mr Maseko
and the aggrieved parties accepted this proposal. This is denied by the respondents who agree that Mr
Swart stated that he wanted to bring in an independent lawyer to chair the process but disagree that any
mention was made of polygraph testing and say that the minute reflects that no mention was made of
polygraph testing. That is not in fact the case and the minute refers to a “lie detector test” . Also the last
portion of the minute supports Mr Swart’s version as it says “Postpone until 14 October 2003. Organise a
lawyer and prosecute.”
3.4The day after this grievance hearing Mr Tseane, another director, wrote to the three parties involved
advising them that polygraph tests had been arranged. No mention is made in Mr Tseane’s letter of an
independent enquiry chaired by an independent person. In response Mr Maseko writes to Mr Tseane to
inform him that polygraph testing is not the most appropriate step and makes an appeal that the matter be
referred to arbitration which Mr Maseko viewed as the most appropriate step. Mr Maseko ends his letter by
informing Mr Tseane that the first respondent would assist the employees in referring the matter to the
CCMA for “further corrective actions.” Mr Nhlapo in the answering affidavit denies that Messrs Mayisela
and Moholola agreed to the polygraph tests and says that they approached him for advice and he advised
them not to take the test. In my view, using the principles enunciated in the Plascon Evans case and
weighing the probabilities, it is more probable than not that Mr Swart’s version is correct and that Messrs
Mayisela and Moholola initially agreed to the polygraph testing but on advice retracted such agreement.
This is not surprising if one takes into account the legal difficulties surrounding polygraph testing.
3.5The applicants, with respect, then seem to have thrown the baby out with the bathwater and did not
pursue the proposal of an independent enquiry by an independent person. They also appear to have
ignored the first respondent’s request to refer the matter to arbitration and nothing occurs until the referral
to conciliation in September 2003.
3.6On or about 19 September 2003, the respondents referred a dispute to the CCMA. The nature of the
dispute is described as “Victimisation”. The respondents did not tick the box labelled “Mutual Interest” in the
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referral form. In the section of the referral form headed “Summarise the facts of the dispute you are
referring:” the respondents stated: “The company site manager have unfairly call our members with names
as poeskaffirs (sic).” The outcome the respondents required was “We demand the dismissal of the racist
manager.” The referral also states that “the shop steward launch grievance and the company failed to take
the corrective major (sic)…”. I understand “major” to be “measure”.
3.7A conciliation meeting took place on 28 October 2003. The applicants did not attend as the notice of set
down was only received after the meeting. On the same date a certificate of outcome was issued. The
certificate states that the dispute concerns a matter of mutual interest.
3.8On 30 October 2003 management wrote to NUMSA to inform the union that they had had heard
rumours of planned strike action. Management asked the union whether these rumours were founded or
not.
3.9On 31 October 2003 the union gave notice that its members would embark on a strike on 4 November
2003. The notice stated that there would be a total withdrawal of labour at TS Insulation and Sunblasting
(Pty) Limited on 4 November 2003 and that employees at TSI Scaffolding (Pty) Ltd and TSI Projects (Pty)
Ltd would thereafter embark on a secondary strike. The demand is described as follows: “We demand that
the manager Attie Van Zyl be total dismissed from the company for calling our members with ‘POES,
KAFFERS’. The dismissal be with immediately effect.” (sic)
3.10The applicants then on 3 November 2003 applied to the CCMA to rescind the “award/ruling”, meaning
the certificate of outcome. As pointed out by the CCMA in a letter to Mr Nhlapo, the CCMA cannot vary or
rescind a certificate of outcome once it has been issued and the only avenue open to the applicants was to
apply to the Labour Court to set the certificate aside. This they did not do.
3.11The strike commenced on 4 November 2003.
4.THE APPLICANTS’ CONTENTIONS
The applicants contend that the strike is unlawful and unprotected for the following reasons:
4.1The demand throughout was stated to be the immediate dismissal of Mr Van Zyl, i.e. the dismissal of
Mr Van Zyl without proper grounds or even a hearing. This is a patently unlawful, unreasonable and
irrational demand, for it requires management to act unfairly in violation of the Labour Relations Act No 66
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of 1995 (“the Act”). This is not an issue or demand which is capable of legalizing, justifying or affording
protection to a strike.
4.2The employees’ complaint that management had not attended satisfactorily to their grievance is a
dispute of right, not one of interest. The dispute is capable of being referred for arbitration by the bargaining
council. It accordingly does not constitute an issue which can form the subject matter of a protected strike
as defined and is prohibited in terms of section 65(1)(c) of the Act.
4.3To the extent that the underlying complaint is harassment in the form of racism, this would constitute
unfair discrimination against the employees on racial grounds, prohibited under section 6 (3) of the
Employment Equity Act. That dispute can be referred to the Labour Court for adjudication. It would be
appropriate to add the words “or in terms of the Employment Equity Act” at the end of section 65(1)(c) of
the Act and thus the strike is unlawful.
4.4To the extent that the employees have alleged that the dispute relates to victimization that complaint
can be referred for resolution to the Labour Court in terms of section 9(4) of the Act and is therefore
unlawful in terms of section 65(1)(c) of the Act.
5.THE LAW
5.1Section 65 (1) of the Act states as follows:
“(1) No person may take part in a strike or lockout or in any conduct in contemplation or furtherance of
a strike or lockout if
α) that person is bound by a collective agreement that prohibits a
strike or lockout in respect of the issue in dispute;
β) that person is bound by an agreement that requires the issue
in dispute to be referred to arbitration;
χ) the issue in dispute is one that a party has the right to refer to
arbitration or to the Labour Court in terms of this Act;
δ) …….”
5.2It is self evident that a determination of the “issue in dispute” is critical for a proper application of section
65 (1)(c) of the Act. Section 213 of the Act provides that the “issue in dispute in relation to a strike or lock
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out, means the demand, the grievance or the dispute that forms the subjectmatter of the strike or lock
out.”
5.3This definition is not without difficulty as, as is the case in this matter, the grievance that forms the
subjectmatter of the strike differs from the demand thereof. Moreover, as Brassey points out in his
Commentary on the Labour Relations Act a dispute can only exist when one person says ‘yea’ and the
other ‘nay’; it requires in other words a clash in the stances adopted by contending parties. In this matter
the employer said neither ‘yea’ nor ‘nay’ to the alleged victimisation but it did adopt the stance of ‘nay’ to
the demand to dismiss Mr Van Zyl. Consequently, if one adopts a strict interpretation of the definition one
must determine where the clash in stances lies. Brassey (supra) explains that the apparent reason for the
strangely worded definition is historical i.e. under the previous Labour Relations Act it was possible to
frustrate a strike by showing that, at the time when it commenced, the employer was still considering its
response to the demand.
5.4In Ceramic Industries Ltd t/a Betta Sanitary Ware v NCBAWU (2) (1997) 18 ILJ 671 (LAC) the
Labour Appeal Court’s approach in determining the issue in dispute was to look at the underlying
complaint. However, Zondo J, as he then was, in Adams & Others v Coin Security Group (Pty) Limited
(1999) 20 ILJ 1192 (LC) at 1208 DF held that the correct approach to the definition is to ask “What was it
that the employer was required to do in order for the strike to be called off or ended?” In reaching this
conclusion Zondo J relied on the Labour Appeal Court decision in Fidelity Guards Holdings (Pty) Limited
v Professional Transport Workers Union & Others (1) (1998) 19 ILJ 260 (LAC).
5.5The most recent Labour Appeal Court case on this issue is Coin Security Group (Pty) Ltd v Adams &
Others (2000) ILJ 925 (LAC). There the court referred to the two Labour Appeal Court cases cited above
and held as follows:
“It is the court’s duty to ascertain the true or real issue in dispute. In conducting that enquiry a court looks
at the substance of the dispute and not at the form in which it is presented. The characterization of a
dispute by a party is not necessarily conclusive. There is in my view no difference of approach in these
decisions. In each case the court was concerned to establish the substance of the dispute.”
5.6With respect, it seems to me that the Labour Appeal Court’s approach in the Ceramic Industries case
(supra) was influenced by the facts of that matter (which, though different, are not dissimilar to the facts in
this one). The demand in that matter was to dismiss, severely discipline or attend seriously to grievances
about three managers. The Labour Appeal Court held that the issue in dispute was the underlying
complaint, i.e. the harassment of shop stewards and union members which the court held to amount to
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victimization in contravention of section 4 of the Act and justiciable by the Labour Court in terms of section
9(4) of the Act. A demand that a manager be dismissed is neither arbitrable nor justiciable in terms of the
Act and therein lies the rub. If the issue in dispute was found to have been the strike demand the strike
would have been a protected one. The anomalous result of the Ceramic Industries case is that the
employees were left without a remedy for their demand because the Act does not provide for the
adjudication of a dispute to dismiss or discipline a manager and the employees were not entitled to strike
on such a demand. However, as the issue in dispute was held to be victimization in terms of section 4 of
the Act the employees were held to have had a remedy in terms of section 9 (4) of the Act.
5.7The court in Ceramic Industries refers frequently to section 4 of the Act. In my view the reference
should in fact be to section 5(2)(c)(i) of the Act. This section states that no person may prejudice an
employee because of trade union membership. Section 9(4) of the Act provides that any dispute about the
interpretation or application of section 5 of the Act may be referred to the Labour Court for adjudication.
5.8I have little doubt that the intention behind section 65 (1) of the Act is to deny strikers protection in
certain disputes of right. Logically in my view strike action should be prohibited in relation to all disputes of
right or, at the very least, employees should have to make an election either to strike or to pursue their right
to have a dispute adjudicated. Where employees have a right to have a dispute adjudicated it does not
make sense that employees should also have the right to strike on that dispute. Be that as it may, for
whatever reason the legislature decided to expressly permit strike action on some disputes of right, for
example, retrenchment disputes and disputes about a refusal to bargain, and to deny strikers protection
only in respect of the disputes of right listed in section 65 of the Act. Perhaps this was an oversight and an
amendment to section 65 is required. I, however, cannot make a decision on speculation and my duty is to
interpret the section as it stands.
5.9I am also mindful that the right to strike is constitutionally protected [section 23 (2) of the Constitution]
and that that right should not be restricted unless in accordance with section 36 of the Constitution. I
consequently believe that section 65 and the definition in section 213 of “issue in dispute” ought to be
interpreted in the light of the constitutional protection of the right to strike.
5.10Mr Kennedy who appeared on behalf of the applicants in this matter argued that a strike should not be
protected when the demand which is the subject matter of the strike is unlawful, unreasonable and
irrational. Mr Kennedy relied on the case of Union Government v Schierhout 1925 AD 322 at 339 and
Steyn Uitleg van Wette 5 ed p127 in making this submission. He also referred me to Rand Tyres &
Accessories (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Council for the Motor Industry Tvl 1941 TPD 108 . In this case, at
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115, the court held that whatever can be “fairly and reasonably regarded as calculated to promote the well
being of the trade concerned must be of mutual interest to them.” The case, however, dealt with a clause in
an industrial agreement in the motor industry in the then Transvaal and in my view is distinguishable on the
facts.
5.11Furthermore, I have difficulty accepting the proposition that a strike should not be protected when the
demand is unreasonable or irrational. There is an element of subjectivity in the terms “unreasonable” and
“irrational” that would open the door to abuse. It is not uncommon for employers to contend that a wage
demand is unreasonable and irrational and I cannot agree that the right to strike should be limited in these
circumstances. Similar views were expressed by Revelas J in Greater Johannesburg Metropolitan
Council v IMATU & Others [2001] 9 BLLR (LC). However, I agree with Mr Kennedy’s proposition that a
strike should not be protected where the strike demand is unlawful. To give an extreme example, say the
strike demand is that the regulations of the Occupational Health and Safety Act be ignored. Should the
strikers be afforded protection in these circumstances? I think not. In my view employees cannot hide
behind the protection granted to them by the Act to enforce a demand which the employer is not capable of
enforcing or would act unlawfully in enforcing. It could not have been the intention of the legislature that the
weapon of a strike could be used to enforce an unlawful demand and I believe that such a limitation on the
right to strike falls within the ambit of a limitation envisaged in section 36 of the Constitution.
6.THE ISSUE IN DISPUTE
6.1What is the issue in dispute in this matter? If I were to use the test formulated by the court a quo in the
Coin Security case I must ask the question: what was it that the employer was required to do in order for
the strike to be called off or ended? The outcome required by the employees in the referral to conciliation
was the dismissal of the racist manager. The strike notice demands that “the manager Attie Van Zyl be
total dismissed from the company …………. The dismissal be with immediately effect (sic).” In a letter from
the union to the employer on 4 November 2003 the union submits that the union demand is clear – “We
have demanded the immediately dismissal of Attie Van Zyl for his racist remarks he continuously made
against our members (sic).” Thus, on this formulation the issue in dispute was the dismissal of Mr Van Zyl.
6.2However, if I were to use the test as formulated by the Labour Appeal Court on appeal in the Coin
Security case, i.e. what is the real or true issue in dispute, I believe that I would arrive at a different
conclusion. In my view the real or true issue in dispute was Mr Van Zyl’s alleged use of racially derogative
language when speaking to Messrs Mayisela and Moholola. To use the words of Conradie JA in the Coin
Security case, that was the “true source of the labour turmoil”.
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6.3As I am bound by the decision of the Labour Appeal Court in the Coin Security case I am obliged to
use the test as formulated therein and therefore I find the issue in dispute in this matter to be Mr Van Zyl’s
alleged use of racially derogative language when speaking to Messrs Mayisela and Moholola. However, as
will be seen from what is set out below on either finding on the issue of dispute the applicants’ case fails.
7.THE LAWFULNESS OF THE STRIKE
7.1In view of my finding on the issue in dispute I intend dealing with Mr Kennedy’s third argument first. The
applicants’ third argument was that as the underlying complaint was harassment in the form of racism, this
constitutes unfair discrimination against the employees on racial grounds which is prohibited under section
6(3) of the Employment Equity Act. That being the case, the applicants argue, the dispute can be referred
to the Labour Court for adjudication in terms of the Employment Equity Act and a strike is outlawed in
terms of section 65(1)(c) of the Act. Mr Kennedy contended that it would be appropriate to imply “read with
the Employment Equity Act” at the end of section 65(1)(c) and if I did not do so the result would be
anomalous as section 65(1)(c) seeks to prohibit the right to strike on disputes of right. If the legislature had
intended this consequence then why does section 65(1)(c) of the Act not also refer to the Employment
Equity Act? To the extent that the issue in dispute is harassment in the form of racism it is not an issue in
dispute that a party has the right to refer to arbitration or to the Labour Court in terms of the Act . I have
emphasized these words as it may well be that the respondents could have had their underlying complaint
adjudicated in terms of the Employment Equity Act, but the Act itself creates no remedy for such a dispute.
7.2However, even if I am wrong in my finding on the issue in dispute and accept, as was contended for by
Mr Kennedy, that the issue in dispute was the dismissal of Mr Van Zyl, I do not believe the outcome would
be any different. Consequently in dealing with Mr Kennedy’s first and second arguments I accept for the
purpose of the arguments that the issue in dispute is the dismissal of Mr Van Zyl.
7.3Mr Kennedy’s first argument was that the strike should not be lawful and protected as the strike
demand was unlawful. For this argument to succeed I must find that the demand to dismiss Mr Van Zyl was
a demand to dismiss Mr Van Zyl without proper grounds and not, as was contended by Mr Ngako for the
respondents, a demand to dismiss Mr Van Zyl summarily.
7.4On the one hand there is the actual language used by the respondents, particularly the words
“immediate dismissal”, which tends to support Mr Kennedy’s argument. I ask myself, however, whether it
can be said without further ado that the words “immediate dismissal” mean “unfair dismissal” and I do not
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believe that to be the case. Also favouring the applicants’ contention is the fact that the respondents do not
demand that a disciplinary hearing be held for Mr Van Zyl. The applicants also refer me to a discussion that
the applicants’ attorney had with Mr Nhlapo on 3 November 2003 to support their contention that the
demand was unlawful. The applicants’ attorney of record, Mr Herman Van Rensburg contacted Mr Nhlapo
on Monday 3 November 2003 and during that conversation Mr Van Rensburg explained to Mr Nhlapo that
to dismiss an employee without proper grounds would result in the applicant contravening the Act and that
the employer would be acting contrary to the spirit and purpose of the Act. Mr Nhlapo is alleged to have
refused to change his stance on the intended strike and so Mr Van Rensburg made certain suggestions to
suspend the strike. The respondents do not dispute these allegations.
7.5On the other hand, there are several facts that make the respondents’ contention more probable. As I
have already explained, it seems to me that the respondents agreed to Mr Swart’s proposal that the matter
be referred to a hearing by an independent person, but that arrangement fell away when Messrs Mayisela
and Moholola refused to submit to polygraph testing. Then there is Mr Maseko’s appeal in his letter to the
applicants on 21 August 2003 to refer the matter to arbitration. This tends to show that what the
respondents had in mind was a procedural step where findings would be made by an arbitrator. And then
there is the statement in the CCMA referral that the applicants failed to take any corrective measure
against Mr Van Zyl. Moreover, although it is the first respondent’s version that it did not agree to suspend
the strike on 4 November 2003 on the basis of Mr Herman Van Rensburg’s suggestion that Mr Van Zyl be
suspended and a second investigation be conducted into the grievance against Mr Van Zyl, in my view it is
more probable than not that this was indeed the case. The union’s version is that on 3 November 2003 Mr
Nhlapo during his conversation with Mr Van Rensburg agreed to address employees the following day on
the suspension of the strike as the applicants had agreed to meet with the union at 13h00 on 4 November
2003. Even if the union’s version is correct, I do not believe that the respondents would have agreed to
suspend the strike on this basis alone. It is far more probable that the applicants’ offer to suspend Mr Van
Zyl and to conduct a second investigation played a critical role in the respondents agreeing to suspend the
strike. That being the case I do not think it can be said that the respondents’ demand was that Mr Van Zyl
be dismissed without proper grounds or without even a hearing being held and in the event that Mr
Kennedy is right that the issue in dispute is the demand to dismiss Mr Van Zyl then I do not agree that the
demand was to dismiss Mr Van Zyl unfairly. I consequently find that if the issue in dispute was the demand
to dismiss Mr Van Zyl then on the facts of this matter that was not an unlawful demand.
7.6The applicants’ second argument is that as the dispute is capable of being referred to arbitration by the
bargaining council it cannot constitute an issue which can form the subject of a protected strike as defined.
In this regard the applicants in their replying affidavit provided me with a copy of their grievance procedure.
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In terms of the document provided the last step in the grievance procedure is the right to refer a grievance
to the bargaining council for processing in terms of the council’s dispute resolution procedures. In essence,
Mr Kennedy argued that as the Act provides for the creation and existence of bargaining councils and
bargaining councils acquire their statutory power to arbitrate disputes in terms of the Act I must interpret
section 65(1)(c) so as to include those disputes that must be referred to arbitration before a bargaining
council. I agree subject to the proviso that the issue in dispute is one that the respondents would be able to
refer to refer to arbitration in terms of a bargaining council agreement. It may well be that the issue in
dispute may be referred to arbitration or to the Labour Court on some other basis but that is not what is
prohibited in terms of section 65(1)(c) of the Act. Had the applicants referred me to a specific provision in a
bargaining council agreement which provided for arbitration of the issue in dispute in this matter then I
would have accepted their argument. But this they did not do. In my view a provision in an employer’s
grievance procedure to refer a grievance to the bargaining council for processing in terms of the council’s
dispute resolution procedures does not qualify as a dispute which is arbitrable or justiciable in terms of the
Act. I appreciate that I am interpreting section 65 of the Act literally but to my mind a literal interpretation of
section 65 is entirely consistent with the constitutional right to strike and I am therefore constrained to
interpret the section in this way.
7.7The applicants’ final argument was that to the extent that the employees have alleged that the issue in
dispute relates to victimization that complaint can be referred for resolution to the Labour Court. However,
unlike the facts in the Ceramic Industries case, there was no suggestion in this matter that Messrs
Mayisela and Moholola were being harassed or victimized because they were union members.
Consequently, even though the respondents describe the dispute as “victimisation” in their referral to
conciliation the victimisation alleged is not of the kind contemplated in section 5 of the Act and therefore not
justiciable in terms of section 9(4) of the Act. I therefore reject this argument.
8.COSTS
8.1In terms of the rule nisi the costs of the application were reserved for determination on the return day.
8.2Neither party addressed me on the issue of costs at the hearing of this matter. The general rule is that
costs follow the result and I see no reason to deviate from that principle in this case.
9.ORDER
I accordingly make the following order:
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9.1The rule nisi issued on 4 November 2003 is discharged.
9.2The applicants are ordered to pay the respondents’ costs jointly and severally, the one paying the other
to be absolved.
______________________________
KA FULTON
Acting Judge of the Labour Court
Appearances:
For the applicants: Adv P Kennedy SC instructed by Van Rensburg Malhou Inc
For the respondents: Mr Ngako of Ruth Edmonds Attorneys
Date of hearing: 21 November 2003
Date of Judgement: __ April 2004
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