IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
HELD AT PORT ELIZABETH
NOT REPORTABLE CASE NO. P437/03
In the matter between:-
KING SABATA DALINDYEBO MUNICIPALITY Applicant
and
COMMISSION FOR CONCILIATION, MEDIATION
AND ARBITRATION First Respond e nt
MXOLISI MDUZULWANA Second Respond e nt
LINDILE THISO AND OTHERS Third and Further
Respond ent s
J U D G M E N T
CORAM FARBER AJ:
On 8 October 2003 the second respondent, under the auspices of the first
respondent, issued an arbitration award in the following terms:-
"6AWARD
The following is my award:
6.1The employees expectation of the renewal of their 12 month fixed term
contracts was reasonable and the employer's refusal to renew was not fair
therefore the non-renewal constituted an unfair dismissal of the employees
(as envisaged in Section 186(1)(b) of the Act);
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6.2The employer, King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality is ordered to reinstate
all the applicant employees whose names appear in annexure "AA" and
"BB" attached to this order retrospectively from the 1st July 2003 on the
same terms and conditions of employment which governed their
employment prior to their dismissal on the 30th June 2003;
6.3King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality is ordered to pay the applicants whose
names appear in annexure "AA" and "BB" a total sum of R124 678,56
cash, to be paid to them as reflected in annexure "AA" and "BB" by no
later than 30th October 2003;
6.4The applicants must report for duty at the offices of King Sabata Dalindyebo
Municipality on the 25th October 2003; and
6.5There is no order as to costs."
The applicant municipality seeks to review and set aside this award.
The facts and circumstances which give rise to the matter may be detailed as
follows:-
During October 1999 and pursuant to the conclusion by them of a series of
independent written agreem ents, the applicant engaged the services of the
third and further respondents (hereinafter referred to as
the employees) 1 to perform what has been described as "cleaning
work" within one of its areas of jurisdiction, namely that of the
Municipality of Umtata. The work entailed the cleaning of gutter drains,
the cutting of grass and the removal of litter. The engagem ents were in
each instance for a fixed period, terminating at the end of June 2000. I may
mention that the employees were required to provide the equipment
necessary for the work.
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Arising from the conclusion of the agreem ents in question, the employees
commenced to perform the services stipulated for thereunder. The funds for
their monthly wages were provided for by the O.R. Tambo District
Municipality.
During June 2000 the applicant renewed the engage m e nt of the employees for the
period, 1 July 2000 to 30 June 2001. Their wages were during this period
funded directly by the applicant. On this score, it appears that the applicant
was not able to secure the requisite funding from an outside source.
1They numbered 44 in all.
On 4 May 2001, and little less than two months before their then current
engagem ents were to expire by effluxion of time, the employees addressed
a letter to the City Engineer of the Municipality of Umtata in the following
terms:-
"We are the contract workers currently doing cleansing work around the city.
We request that when our contract expires at the end of June this year, we
be employed on permanent basis.
Our request is based on the following reasons:
1.When we started work here, these areas were all decayed, dirty and the
tarred roads were closed from the rubble. Vehicles were travelling one
side of the road without any refuse dumping place. We cleaned up the
place under difficult conditions and we tried to beautify those dumping
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areas, such as schools, corner places that are in the public eye.
2.With the R500 we are earning, we have to purchase our own working utensils
e.g. wheel barrows, spades, rakes, protective gloves etc. and yet we
have to look after our families out of the same R500, even when one is
injured at work, we get no help nor Workmen's Compensation.
3.We humbly request you Sir, to have the above quoted items considered so
that we don't lose our jobs as we have already sacrificed and obeyed
our contract rules and regulations. We have watched some of our
colleagues getting employed permanently, thinking and hoping that we
would also be considered as we all started at the same time.
We are very worried and concerned that our contracts are expiring because we
were told that they would be renewed and end up being made manages
ourselves.
Hoping that our requests will receive your favourable consideration.
Thank You"
This letter was, so it appears, not responded to and despite the call for permanent
employment embodied therein the applicant seemingly, without demur or
protest, engaged the services of the employees for a further year from 1 July
2001 to 30 June 2002.
During the period, May to June 2002, the employees were advised by the
applicant that their engagem e nts would not be renewed. This was
apparently because the employees had again called for the retention of their
services on a permanent basis.
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As had been advised, the engage m e nts were not renewed, and in the result the
employees declared a dispute which was referred to the first respondent for
conciliation, and failing that, for resolution through the mechanisms
available to it.
The employees abandoned their demand for permanent engagem ent and the
dispute was resolved by the parties on 21 November 2002 in terms of a
written agreement of settlement in the following terms:-
"Settlement Agreement
1.
New contracts will be entered into with the applicants for the period 1/12/2002
to 30/6/2003.
2.
The applicants will receive a 8% increase in their monthly amount (as per their
2002 contracts).
3.
The budgetary monthly amount for the period 1/7/2002 until 30/11/2002, in
respect of the applicants, will be referred to Council (at their next sitting)
for consideration as additional remuneration for the applicants.
4.
The above amount, if approved by Council, will be paid in monthly instalments
(for the duration of the contract) with the first instalment paid within 2
working days of the Council's resolution. The remainder of the instalments
will be paid together with the applicants monthly remuneration.
5.
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The above is in full & final settlement of the dispute."
The contracts referred to in paragraph 1 of the deed of settlement were negotiated
and concluded. They eschew all reference to any intention on the part of
the applicant not to renew them.
On 3 December 2002 the applicant's Council ratified the settlement. According
to Mr Mzamo Alexander Gumbi, the applicant's municipal manager and the
deponent to its founding affidavit, the Council on that occasion resolved
that the employees were to be reminded that their engage m ents would not
be renewed after 30 June 2003, and that with effect from 1 July 2003 the
employment base for the cleaning of Umtata would be broadened by the
employment, for example, of "fifty (50) persons for three (3) months, and
thereafter fifty (50) different persons for another three (3) months, etc. ...". 2
3
During May 2003 the applicant advised the employees that their engagem ents
were due to expire on 30 June 2003, and on 3 June 2003 the applicant's
Acting Director of Engineering Services addressed a letter to them in the
following terms:-
2It merits mention that the applicant contends that, during negotiations leading up to the
conclusion of the fresh contracts referred to in paragraph 9 hereof, the employees were
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
advised of the Council's resolve that there would be no further renewals after 30 June
2003. This fact was not placed before the second respondent during the course of the
hearing before him. There was moreover not a hint of it during the cross- examination of
Mr Ntondini, the employees' sole witness in the arbitration.
3I pause to interpose that the relevant resolutions were not produced by the applicant as part of
its papers in the application. It, however, appears that they were produced during the
course of the hearing before the second respondent. The employees state that they were
not advised of the resolution at the time of the adoption thereof or at any time prior to the
subsequent failure of the applicant to renew the engagem e nts which were then in force.
"You are kindly reminded that in terms of the settlement agreement with CCMA
on the 21st November 2002 the new contracts you entered into with KSD
Municipality will expire on the 30th June 2003. The minute of the Council
held on the 03rd December 2003 also backed the CCMA agreement as far
as the period of the contract is concerned.
Therefore the 30th June 2003 will mark the last day of your contract with KSD
Municipality.
You are thanked for the good service you rendered for the community of KSD."
On 30 May 2003 the employees addressed a letter to the applicant's manager in
the following terms:-
"We are a group of 44 workers on contract that is expiring on the 30th of June
2003. We want to point out that we do not have jobs at this stage.
In the circumstances we are requesting for the extension of contract with the
Municipality to enable us to continue. It will be recalled that we have been
loyal to the Municipality in abiding by all the rules and regulations of the
Municipality, as such we have been loyal throughout our period. Please
Municipality, as such we have been loyal throughout our period. Please
note the list of all the workers referred to as per the annexure revolving
around this request."
On 26 June 2003 the applicant declined to accede thereto, despite the fact that the
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
services in question were still required and that the applicant had the funds
necessary to pay therefor.
In the result, the engage m ents in question were not renewed. Aggrieved thereby,
the employees declared a dispute and referred the matter to the first
respondent for resolution. It was unable to resolve it - hence the arbitration
before the second respondent.
I have already referred to the terms of the second respondent's award. The
reasoning which underpins it is to be found in the following extract therefrom:-
"ANALYSIS OF EVIDENCE AND ARGUMENT
Section 186(1)(b) of the Act provides that a dismissal takes place in
circumstances where an employee reasonably expected the employer to renew
a fixed term contract of employment on the same or similar terms and the
employer offers to renew it on less favourable terms or did not renew it.
The employer admitted that it renewed the employees contracts automatically
on the 1st July 2000, at the employees' request on the 1st July 2001 and at the
CCMA on 1st July 2002. The employer's refusal to renew their contracts on 1st
July 2002 at first was caused by the employees' demand that they be employed
on a permanent basis and when they dropped that demand at the CCMA
conciliation the employer agreed to renew their fixed term contracts. The
employer confirmed that work and funds for the Community Cleaning Project
are available. The reason the employer did not renew the employees' fixed
term contracts on the 1st July 2003 is that the employer has decided on the 3rd
December 2002 to review the system of employing workers so that in the place
of the employees, the employer will take unemployed people from the
community to work in the employer's Community Cleaning Project on three
months rotational basis. The employer has not denied that the rolling renewal
months rotational basis. The employer has not denied that the rolling renewal
of the employees' fixed term contracts on 1st July 2000, 1st July 2001, 1st July
2002; the availability of funds and work for the Community Cleaning Project has
created reasonable expectation on the employees of renewal of their fixed term
contracts. When I asked the employer's main witness Mr. Gladstone Lutho
Mkaba, a manager if the employer has money to renew the employee's fixed
term contracts his reply was:
`Yes, there is money to renew their contracts on fixed term contracts, but not on
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
permanent employment.'
I am convinced that the employer's conduct of rolling renewal of the employee's
fixed term contracts every year since 1999 and the fact that work and money to
renew the employees' contracts is available, has created a reasonable
expectation to the employees of renewal of their contracts.
I therefore find that the employees have discharged the onus to establish the
existence of their dismissal as envisaged by Section 192(1) of the Act as the
employees have proved:
(a)The existence of their fixed term contracts of employment (annexure "G" and
"H");
(b)The employer's conduct of rolling renewal for three years of their contracts,
the fact that money and work are available to renew their contracts led to the
employees reasonable expectation of renewal of their fixed term contracts; and
(c)The employer agreed that it did not renew the employees contracts despite
the fact that it (the employer) created the reasonable expectation because
the employer had decided on the 3rd December 2002 to change the 12
month contracts to 3 month contracts with the proviso that the employees
will give opportunity other unemployed people to be employed for 3
months in their positions.
As the employees have established the existence of their dismissal, the onus, to
prove that the dismissal (non-renewal) has been effected in accordance with a
fair procedure and for a fair reason shifts to the employer as provided by
Section 192(2) of the Act.
It is common cause that the employees were not consulted before taking the
decision on the 3 December 2002 to change the fixed term contracts to 3
months and that employees should now give other people a chance to be
employed in their positions, therefore the decision was not effected in
accordance with a fair procedure.
The employer's decision that the employees must give a chance other
The employer's decision that the employees must give a chance other
unemployed people to be employed in their positions while the employees will
be unemployed is unfair. Therefore there is no fair reason for the employees'
dismissal on the 30th June 2003.
The employer has therefore failed to prove that it complied with a fair procedure
in taking the decision that employees should give a chance to other
unemployed people to be employed in their positions while the employees will
take a turn to stay unemployed and that it (the employer) had a fair reason in
refusing to renew the employees' 12 months fixed term contracts of
employment.
The employees have asked me to reinstate them and order the employer to
compensate them for the lost wages, if I find in their favour.
The employees were dismissed on the 30th June 2003 and have now finished 3
months unemployed and without an income, I therefore find that it is just and
equitable that the employer must be ordered to reinstate the employees and to
compensate the employees by paying them an equivalent of 3 months
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
remuneration calculated at R1015,48 per month for the 4 team leaders and
R933,44 per month for the 40 general workers whose names appear in the
annexure "BB" and "AA" respectively attached to this award."
Section 186(1)(b) of the Labour Relations Act of 1995 reads as follows:-
"186. Meaning of dismissal and unfair labour practice.- (1) `Dismissal'
means that -
(a)........
(b)an employee reasonably expected the employer to renew a fixed term
contract of employment on the same or similar terms but the
employer offered to renew it on less favourable terms, or did not
renew it;
(c)........
(d)........
(e)........
(f)........"
The scope and operation of Section 186(1)(b) was closely analysed by
OOSTHUIZEN AJ in Dierks v University of South Africa 1999 ILJ 20 1227 (LC) at
1243I- 1246H.4 Given that analysis and the application of it to the facts in casu,
it seems to me that the approach which the second respondent adopted was
4See also SACTWU v Mediterranean Woollen Mills (Pty) Ltd (1995) 16 ILJ 366 (LAC);
Malandoh v S A Broadcasting Corporation (1997) 18 ILJ 544 (LC).
perfectly justified. On this score, it must be borne in mind that the applicant
renewed the employees' engagem e nts in June 2000 and June 2001, seemingly
without demur or protest. It only failed to effect a renewal thereof in June 2002
by virtue of the employees' demand for permanent employment. Once that
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
demand had been withdrawn the renewal was effected, again seemingly without
demur or protest. It must also be borne in mind that at the relevant time it was
known that the services which the employees had been engaged to perform were
still required on a regular and ongoing basis. The applicant was moreover
sufficiently in funds to sustain the renewal for a further year, albeit not on a
permanent basis. Additionally, sight must not be lost of the fact that the
employees had served the applicant well over a period of several years and, to
boot, with equipment which they themselves had purchased.
In short, the second respondent's decision was justifiable in relation to the
evidence which had been placed before him and there is no basis for impeaching
it.
One practical difficulty does arise. The reasonable expectation of the employees
must be confined to the renewal of their engagem ents for a further fixed term of
one year, reckoned from 1 July 2003. Given the dispute, and the delay which has
been occasioned thereby, paragraphs 6.2 and 6.4 of the award are no longer
capable of implementation. To this end, the dates, 1 July 2003 and 25 October
2003, referred to respectively therein, fall to be appropriately extended. I propose
to do precisely that, and on this score it seems to me that an extension to 1 May
2005 will afford the employees sufficient time to tender their services to the
applicant. 5
The employees have enjoyed substantial success and costs ought in my judgment
to follow the event.
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
In the result, the following orders will issue:-
5The employees number 44. Although they are represented by an attorney, he will have to
locate them to advise them of the terms of this judgment, more especially in respect of
the requirement relating to the need for them to tender their services to the applicant by a
particular date.
Save that the dates, 1 July 2003 and 25 October 2003, referred to in
paragraphs 6.2 and 6.4 respectively of the award are to be deleted and substituted
with the date, 1 May 2005, the application is dismissed.
The costs of the application are to be paid by the applicant.
G FARBER
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
LABOUR COURT
DATE OF HEARING:
16 NOVEMBER 2004
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
01 FEBRUARY 2005
ADV G H BLOEM MR D B MADOKWE
Applicant's Counsel Third Respondent's Attorney
Instructed by: c/o DEV B MADOKWE & ASS
KWEZI NODADA & CO1st Floor, Pakama Building
1 Imizi Courtcnr Mabija & Marwanqa Sts
12 Craister StreetNe w Brighton
UMTATAPORT ELIZABETH
IN THE LABOUR COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Tel: (047)53 2 2458Tel: (041)454 8717
Fax: (047)531 0972Fax: (041)454 8717
(Refer Mr Hermans)(Refer DEVMB/nk/U148/03)