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[2016] ZACC 33
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Gbenga-Oluwatoye v Reckitt Benckiser South Africa (Pty) Limited and Another (CCT41/16) [2016] ZACC 33; (2016) 37 ILJ 2723 (CC); 2016 (12) BCLR 1515 (CC); [2017] 1 BLLR 1 (CC) (15 September 2016)
Links to summary
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT 41/16
In the matter
between:
MUYIWA
GBENGA-OLUWATOYE
Applicant
and
RECKITT BENCKISER SOUTH
AFRICA (PTY)
LIMITED
First Respondent
NADEEM BAIG
N.O.
Second Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Gbenga-Oluwatoye
v Reckitt Benckiser South Africa (Pty) Limited and Another
[2016]
ZACC 33
Coram:
Mogoeng CJ, Moseneke DCJ, Bosielo AJ, Cameron J,
Froneman J, Jafta J, Khampepe J, Madlanga J, Mhlantla J,
Nkabinde J and
Zondo J
Judgment:
Moseneke DCJ and Cameron J (unanimous)
Decided
on:
15 September 2016
Summary:
Right to access to courts —
approximate equality of bargaining power —
settlement
agreement — full and final settlement —
waiver
of right to access to courts not against public policy
ORDER
On application for leave to
appeal from the Labour Appeal Court, dismissing an appeal from the
Labour Court:
1.
The application for condonation of the late
filing of the application for leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The application for leave to appeal is
refused with costs.
JUDGMENT
MOSENEKE DCJ and
CAMERON J (Mogoeng CJ, Bosielo AJ, Froneman J, Jafta J, Khampepe J,
Madlanga J, Mhlantla J, Nkabinde J and Zondo
J concurring):
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal
against an order of the Labour Appeal Court.
[1]
The applicant, Mr Muyiwa Gbenga-Oluwatoye, came to South Africa
to work for the first respondent, Reckitt Benckiser
South Africa
(Pty) Limited (Reckitt). Reckitt specialises in manufacturing
and distributing household products like air fresheners,
deodorisers
and atmosphere enhancers. Reckitt opposes the application, as
does the second respondent, Mr Nadeem Baig, whom
the applicant joined
to the proceedings as Reckitt’s regional human resources
director.
[2]
The application raises questions whether:
(a) the applicant’s employment contract provided for a right to
a pre-dismissal
hearing in terms of the common law of contract; (b)
if not, whether the common law tacitly provides for a right to a
pre dismissal
hearing in all employment relationships governed
by contract; and (c) whether, notwithstanding (a) and (b), the
settlement
agreement between the applicant and Reckitt is lawful.
[3]
The applicant concluded a contract of
employment with Reckitt on 16 June 2013. He started
his employment as Reckitt’s
regional human resources director
on 22 July 2013. An investigation for misrepresenting
his qualifications and
employment history began in February 2014.
This resulted in his suspension. The quarrel was that during
his employment
negotiations with Reckitt the applicant untruthfully
identified Unilever as his then current employer, whereas in truth it
was
Standard Chartered Bank. Reckitt found this
misrepresentation material since it was on this basis that it paid
the applicant
a sign-on bonus of US$40 000. Soon after the
investigation, on 3 March 2014, the applicant was dismissed for
misrepresentation.
[4]
The procedural fairness of the dismissal is
in issue. The applicant alleges that there was no disciplinary
hearing and this
infringed his right to be heard. He says that
clause 10.1 of his employment contract expressly or by
implication provides
for a right to a fair hearing before the
termination of his employment.
[2]
The respondents deny that the applicant was not afforded a
pre-dismissal hearing.
[5]
A further, crucial, issue arose. A
mutual separation agreement was entered into by the parties to
determine their future relationship
(separation agreement). The
applicant argued that he was coerced into signing this. He also
took issue with clause 3.4.2
of the separation agreement.
This waived all recourse to the Commission for Conciliation,
Mediation and Arbitration
(CCMA) or the Labour Court.
Litigation history
Labour Court
[6]
The Labour Court
[3]
dismissed the applicant’s urgent application for a declaratory
order with costs.
[4]
It noted that the applicant’s case was not based on the
provisions of the Labour Relations Act
[5]
but rather on the common law of contract.
[6]
It concluded that there was no procedural unfairness even though the
applicant had contended that his contract of employment
expressly or
by implication entitled him to a pre-dismissal hearing.
[7]
The Court concluded that the claim of undue duress in signing the
separation agreement was not supported by the facts.
And there
was no economic duress because the situation was created by the
applicant’s own misrepresentation.
[8]
The Court examined the validity of clause 3.4.2 of the
separation agreement that excluded recourse to the CCMA or the
Labour Court. It expressed its disquiet that this issue was
raised for the first time in the applicant’s replying
affidavit. The Court dismissed this claim anyhow. It
found that the clause was “nothing but the expression of
the
full and final settlement”.
[9]
Labour Appeal Court
[7]
This Court previously, in an order dated 7
August 2014, after the Labour Court judgment, dismissed an
application for leave to appeal
as it was not “in the interests
of justice to hear the matter at [that] stage”. The
applicant then appealed to
the Labour Appeal Court. That
Court
[10]
also dismissed the appeal.
[11]
The Court endorsed the Labour Court’s findings regarding the
separation agreement.
[12]
It was thus unnecessary to pronounce on the contractual right to a
pre-dismissal hearing under the employment contract –
the
separation agreement superseded that employment contract.
[13]
[8]
On duress, the Labour Appeal Court noted
that there were genuine disputes of fact. The applicant elected
to proceed by way
of notice of motion. He sought no referral to
oral evidence or trial. Hence all claims had been settled and
the applicant
had waived his right to approach the CCMA or the Labour
Court.
[14]
[9]
The Labour Appeal Court rejected the
argument that the separation agreement violated public policy in
limiting the applicant’s
right to access to court.
[15]
Barkhuizen
[16]
set out the test to determine whether terms of a contract were
contrary to public policy (
contra bonos
mores
). Having regard to the
parties’ relative positions, including their bargaining power
and their level of knowledge of
the contract, there was no inequity
here. The applicant was employed in a senior management
position. He had ample
previous experience at senior level.
There was no indication that he did not understand that the
separation agreement limited
judicial redress. The clause was
meant to bring the relationship between the parties to finality.
It was not unlawful.
It should be upheld.
In this Court
[10]
The applicant asks for condonation for a
minimal delay of one day. The explanation is adequate.
Condonation should be
granted.
[11]
The applicant stands or falls on two
grounds of appeal: (a) that he has a right to a pre-dismissal hearing
under the common law;
and (b) that the separation agreement is
contrary to constitutional principles. He appears to have
abandoned his claim of
duress.
[12]
The applicant maintains that his contract
of employment expressly or tacitly implied the right to a
pre-dismissal hearing.
More so, South African law, he says,
recognises an implied term in all contracts of employment to the
effect that employees are
entitled to a pre-dismissal hearing.
The applicant submits that, if this Court finds that no right to a
pre-dismissal hearing
vests in him, it ought to develop the common
law to include it. This he says raises an arguable point of
law, as the Supreme
Court of Appeal has given conflicting decisions
on the right to a pre dismissal hearing under the common
law.
[17]
[13]
The applicant submits that the separation
agreement limits or contradicts his rights under sections 4 and 5 of
the Labour Relations
Act. These mean that any clause
restricting an employee from recourse to the CCMA or the Labour Court
is contrary to fair
labour practices under section 23 of the
Constitution. The separation agreement is also against public
policy as it deprives
him of the right to challenge his dismissal.
He says that the Labour Appeal Court misapplied
Barkhuizen
.
[14]
The respondents urge that the application
for leave to appeal be dismissed with costs. They support the
reasoning of the Labour
Appeal Court. This Court has decided
the application without written submissions or oral argument.
Leave to appeal
[15]
This application engages the jurisdiction
of the Court. It raises the right to access courts and also the
development of the
common law in accordance with the Bill of
Rights.
Merits
[16]
None of the grounds of appeal bar one bear
any prospect of success. Given the conclusion we reach on the
separation agreement,
the applicant’s complaint in regard to a
pre-dismissal hearing does not arise.
[17]
The remaining issue is whether clause 3.4.2
of the separation agreement is against public policy for excluding
judicial redress.
That agreement, significantly, is titled
“Settlement Agreement”. Clause 3.4.2 provides:
“
3.4
The [applicant] hereby and herewith voluntarily and unconditionally
waives—
.
. .
3.4.2
his right to approach any Relevant Authority including the CCMA
and/or the Labour Court or any other Court
for any relief against
[Reckitt] emanating from his Employment and/or his resignation and/or
this Agreement.”
[18]
Clause 4 is headed “FULL AND FINAL
SETTLEMENT”. It provides, in relevant part:
“
4.1
This Agreement and in particular the terms contained in clause 3
above, is in full and final settlement
of all claims of whatsoever
nature and howsoever arising between the Parties.”
[19]
Clause 4.2 contains an exception –
Reckitt is allowed to sue if the applicant fails to make repayments
of his sign-on bonus.
[20]
The Labour Court held that the bar to
judicial redress in clause 3.4.2 amounted to nothing more than a
means of giving effect to
a final settlement agreement. The
Labour Appeal Court, with reference to
Barkhuizen
,
found that the bar to judicial redress was permissible, considering
the relationship between the contracting parties. It
is
arguable that the manner in which the Labour Court dealt with the
judicial redress extols
laissez-faire
notions of freedom of contract at the expense of public notions of
reasonableness and fairness in the face of section 34 of the
Constitution that guarantees the right to seek the assistance of
courts. We therefore prefer to express no view on whether
Barkhuizen
is
on point here.
[21]
In
Barkhuizen
,
this Court held that constitutional challenges to contractual terms
give rise to the question whether the disputed provision is
contrary
to public policy.
[18]
The question is thus whether clause 3.4.2 is against public policy.
Barkhuizen
grappled with a limitation clause that restricted access to courts if
a certain period of time had passed. This Court signalled
a red
light against limitation clauses that are so unreasonable that they
make it impractical to seek judicial redress at all.
Ngcobo J
warned:
“
I
accept that there may well be time limitation clauses that are so
unreasonable that their unfairness is manifest. A clause
I have
in mind is one that requires a claimant to give notice of a claim and
to sue within 24 hours of the occurrence of the risk
insured
against.”
[19]
[22]
As against this, we must consider the
importance of giving effect to agreements, solemnly concluded, by
parties operating from the
necessary position of approximate equality
of bargaining power. Here, the power of the
Labour Appeal Court’s
approach is obvious. What
is at issue here is a powerful consideration of public policy –
the need for parties to settle
their disputes on terms agreeable to
them. That need arises in their own interests, and the
interests of the public.
[23]
Here, the applicant had engaged in outright
material deceit and misrepresentation. He himself, confronted
with the misrepresentation
in his curriculum vitae, confessed he had
no defence.
[20]
It was then that he entered into a final agreement to put a
present
dispute to bed. He did so full knowingly, with his eyes open to
his own future interests. It may have been different
if he had
agreed to abjure recourse to the courts in
future
disputes. But here the dispute was hot and fresh, and present.
He agreed to part ways with Reckitt on terms that were
final, and
that protected him from further action by his employer –
including the possibility of a disciplinary process that
could wound
his career irremediably. That finality included an agreement
that the courts would not be involved. The
parties would go
their ways without more.
[24]
The public, and indeed our courts, have a
powerful interest in enforcing agreements of this sort. The
applicant must be held
bound. When parties settle an existing
dispute in full and final settlement, none should be lightly released
from an undertaking
seriously and willingly embraced. This is
particularly so if the agreement was, as here, for the benefit of the
party seeking
to escape the consequences of his own conduct.
Even if the clause excluding access to courts were on its own invalid
and
unenforceable, the applicant must still fail. This is
because he concluded an enforceable agreement that finally settled
his dispute with his employer.
[25]
The application must be dismissed with
costs for lack of prospects of success.
Order
[26]
The following order is made:
1.
The application for condonation of the late
filing of the application for leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The application for leave to appeal is
refused with costs.
[1]
The applicant also asks this Court to condone the
late filing of this application.
[2]
Clause 10.1, in relevant part, provides:
“
10.1
The Company may terminate your employment under this agreement with
immediate effect if at
any time you—
.
. .
10.1.3
are guilty of gross misconduct, mismanagement or neglect in the
performance of any duty owed by
you to the Company.”
[3]
Molahlehi J.
[4]
Gbenga-Oluwatoye v Reckitt Benckiser South
Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another
unreported
judgment of the Labour Court, Case No. J580/14 (12 March 2014)
(Labour Court judgment).
[5]
66 of 1995.
[6]
Labour Court judgment above n 4 at para 20.
[7]
Id at paras 20-1.
[8]
Id at para 35.
[9]
Id at para 39.
[10]
Savage AJA (Waglay JP and Coppin JA concurring).
[11]
Gbenga-Oluwatoye v Reckitt Benckiser South
Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2016]
ZALAC 4
; (2016) 37 ILJ 902 (LAC).
[12]
Id at paras 24-5.
[13]
Id at para 27.
[14]
Id at para 20.
[15]
Id at para 24. Section 34 of the
Constitution provides:
“
Everyone
has the right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the
application of law decided in a fair public hearing before
a court
or, where appropriate, another independent and impartial tribunal or
forum.”
[16]
Barkhuizen v Napier
[2007]
ZACC 5; 2007 (5) SA 323 (CC); 2007 (7) BCLR 691 (CC).
[17]
See
Boxer
Superstores Mthatha v Mbenya
[2007]
ZASCA 79
;
[2007] 8 BLLR 693
(SCA); and
Old
Mutual Life Assurance Co SA Ltd v Gumbi
[2007] ZASCA 52
;
[2007] 4 All SA 866
(SCA), which held that there is
a common law right to a pre-dismissal hearing; but see
South
African Maritime Safety Authority v McKenzie
[2010] ZASCA 2
;
[2010] 3 All SA 1
(SCA); and
Transman
(Pty) Ltd v Dick and Another
[2009]
ZASCA 38
;
[2009] 3 All SA 183
(SCA), which held that there is no
common law right to a pre dismissal hearing.
[18]
Barkhuizen
above
n 16 at para 28.
[19]
Id at para 60.
[20]
He said “there is really nothing that I am
going to say to justify my actions”.