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Two New Leading Constitutional Cases
Chirwa v Transnet Limired CCT78/06

- application of Promotion of Access to Justice Act and concurrent jurisdiction of High Court in labour disputes

IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA

Chirwa v Transnet Limited and Others

Case CCT 78/06

Decided on 28 November 2007

Media Summary

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The following media summary is provided to assist in reporting this case and is not binding on the Constitutional Court or any member of the Court.

Constitutional Court handed down judgment in the matter of Chirwa v Transnet Limited and Others .

This matter deals with issues that had long divided courts and legal opinion concerning the jurisdiction of the Labour Court and the High Court to hear certain disputes involving employment and labour relations. It arose from the dismissal of the applicant, Ms Chirwa, on

22 November 2002. At the time she was employed by Transnet Limited in the capacity of human resources executive manager of the Transnet Pension Fund Business Unit. The dismissal was preceded by an enquiry held by her supervisor, on the grounds of inadequate performance, incompetence and poor employee relations. Ms Chirwa first challenged her dismissal in the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration on the basis that it was procedurally unfair. After conciliation failed, she did not pursue the labour relations mechanisms further, but rather approached the High Court on the basis that the dismissal violated her constitutional right to just administrative action, as given effect to by the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act (PAJA).

The High Court applied the principles of natural justice and found that the dismissal of Ms Chirwa was unfair and granted the order for her reinstatement. Transnet appealed the order to the Supreme Court of Appeal. The majority of the court upheld the appeal on the basis that the dismissal of Ms Chirwa did not fall to be reviewed under the provisions of PAJA.

Ms Chirwa approached the Constitutional Court, seeking leave to appeal against the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal. In this Court she relies on her right to procedurally fair administrative action. The claim is based on the proposition that since Transnet is an organ of state, the dismissal of its employee necessarily amounts to an exercise of public power, which is reviewable under sections 3 and 6 of PAJA. In the alternative Ms Chirwa relies on section 195 of the Constitution, which sets out the principles that must guide public administration in the carrying out of its functions. These include accountability, professional ethics, fairness and objectivity. This case illustrates that a dismissal of a public sector employee has given rise to two causes of action, one under the labour law regime and the other under the administrative justice regime. Therefore, an additional issue before this Court is whether the High Court has concurrent jurisdiction with the Labour Court in matters that arise out of an employment dispute, such as in the present case.

Skweyiya J decided this matter on the basis of jurisdiction alone. He held that Ms Chirwa’s claim is based on an allegation of an unfair dismissal for alleged poor work performance and should therefore have followed to the end the procedures and remedies under the Labour Relations Act (LRA), which specifically regulate this type of labour dispute. He found that the High Court did not have concurrent jurisdiction with the Labour Court in this matter. First, Ms Chirwa had expressly relied on provisions of the LRA in formulating her claim in the lower courts as well as in this Court. Second, an applicant cannot be in a preferential position, having access to multiple forums, simply because of her or his status as a public sector employee. He concluded that if Ms Chirwa were to be allowed to depart from the finely-tuned dispute resolution mechanisms created by the LRA, a dual system of law would be perpetuated, one applicable in the civil courts and the other in the forums established by the LRA. Therefore, to the extent that PAJA and the LRA overlap, Skweyiya J urges the legislature to revisit the applicable provisions.

Skweyiya J found that it was unnecessary to decide the question whether the dismissal amounted to administrative action. If however, this determination needed to be made, he agreed with the conclusion reached by Ngcobo J that the dismissal of Ms Chirwa by Transnet does not amount to administrative action. Finally, Skweyiya J held that Ms Chirwa’s reliance on section 195 of the Constitution was misplaced. He found that although the section provides valuable interpretative assistance it does not found a right to bring an action.

Ngcobo J concurred in the judgment of Skweyiya J, and considered two further issues. The first was whether the Labour Court had concurrent jurisdiction with the High Court in the dispute in question; and the second was whether the conduct of Transnet in dismissing Ms Chirwa constituted administrative action under the Constitution.

He noted that prior to the enactment of the LRA there were different statutes governing labour and employment relations. These multiple pieces of legislation created inconsistency and unnecessary duplication of resources as well as jurisdictional problems. He held that one of the primary objects of the LRA is to create a comprehensive framework of law governing the collective relations between employers and trade unions in all sectors of the economy. Consistently with this objective the LRA brings all employees whether employed in the public sector or private sector under it, except those it specifically excludes.

The other problem associated with the old labour relations regime was of overlapping and competing jurisdictions and the use of different courts to adjudicate labour and employment issues. This invariably led to forum-shopping. A declared purpose of the LRA is to establish the Labour Court and the Labour Appeal Court as specialised superior courts with exclusive jurisdiction to deal with matters arising from the LRA.

He further held that the primary purpose of section 157(2) was not so much to confer jurisdiction on the High Court to deal with labour and employment relations disputes, but rather to empower the Labour Court to deal with disputes founded on the provisions of the Bill of Rights that arise from employment and labour relations. In order to reconcile the relevant provisions of the LRA and the primary objects of the LRA the provisions of section 157(2) must be confined to those instances where a party relies directly on the provisions of the Bill of Rights. In the present case he found that Ms Chirwa relied upon a breach of the provisions of the LRA and that therefore the Labour Court had exclusive jurisdiction.

Ngcobo J held that the conduct of Transnet in dismissing Ms Chirwa did not constitute administrative action. He therefore concluded that the dispute between the applicant and Transnet falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Labour Court, and that the High Court did not have jurisdiction in respect of the applicant’s claim.While previously administrative law was used to protect labour rights of employees who were not covered by the LRA, this was no longer necessary as the LRA now protects all employees including public sector employees and codifies the right to fair labour practices.

Moseneke DCJ, Madala J, Navsa AJ, Nkabinde J, Sachs J and Van der Westhuizen J concur in the judgments of Skweyiya and Ngcobo JJ.

Chief Justice Langa, with whom Justices O’Regan and Mokgoro concur, wrote a separate judgment agreeing with the outcome, but disagreeing with the reasoning. He did not accept the finding of both Skweyiya J and Ngcobo J that the High Court did not have jurisdiction. In his view, the issue had already been decided by the Constitutional Court in an earlier case and there was no way to distinguish Ms Chirwa’s claim from the earlier matter. He also found that the various policy concerns expressed in the majority judgments could not justify departing from the clear wording of the LRA. The Chief Justice also considered whether Ms Chirwa’s dismissal amounted to administrative action. He held that it did not both because there was no legislative source for the decision and because the dismissal was not the exercise of a public power or the performance of a public function. For these reasons he agreed that the appeal should be dismissed.

Read the judgment online


Sidumo v Rustenburg Platinum Mines Ltd and Others

Case CCT 85/06

Decided on 05 October 2007

Media Summary

The following media summary is provided to assist in reporting this case and is not binding on the Constitutional Court or any member of the Court.

Constitutional Court handed down judgment in the matter of Sidumo v Rustenburg platinum mines ltd and others.

On 5 October 2007 the Constitutional Court delivered judgment in this matter. The judgment has been eagerly awaited by employers and employees. It is of special significance to the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (the CCMA) and to the Congress of South African Trade Unions (COSATU), which had applied to intervene.

The case involved the dismissal, more than seven years ago, of Mr Sidumo by Rustenburg Platinum Mines. Mr Sidumo was employed to patrol the Mine’s high security facility where precious metals are separated from lower grade concentrate. He was dismissed for failing to apply established search procedures. He contested his dismissal and referred his dismissal dispute to the CCMA in terms of the compulsory arbitration provisions of the Labour Relations Act (the LRA). The commissioner found that Mr Sidumo was guilty of misconduct but found that no dishonesty was involved and took into account his clean service record of 15 years and consequently reinstated him with three months’ compensation subject to a written warning valid for three months. The Mine applied to the Labour Court to review and set aside the award. The Labour Court dismissed the application. The Mine unsuccessfully appealed against the decision to the Labour Appeal Court. The Mine then appealed against that decision to the Supreme Court of Appeal where it was successful. The Supreme Court of Appeal held that the dismissal was fair. Mr Sidumo, in turn, applied to this Court for leave to appeal against that decision.

A key finding of the Supreme Court of Appeal was that in deciding unfair dismissal disputes commissioners of the CCMA should approach the employer’s sanction in relation to misconduct with a measure of deference because it is the employer’s function in the first place to impose a sanction.

In this Court four judgments have been written. All agreed that the Supreme Court of Appeal decision must be overturned. They are unanimous that, in deciding a dismissal dispute, a commissioner is not required to defer to the decision of the employer. The commissioner is, however, not given the power to consider afresh what he or she would do but to decide whether what the employer did was fair. In reaching a decision the commissioner must have regard to all relevant circumstances. The judgments differ, however, in respect of certain aspects of how the functioning of the commissioner is to be characterised.

Navsa AJ, with whom Moseneke DCJ, Madala J, O’Regan J and Van der Westhuizen J concurred, agreed with the Supreme Court of Appeal that compulsory arbitration proceedings undertaken by the CCMA constituted administrative action, but held that it was not subject to the provisions of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act. The majority held that in accordance with the requirements of section 33 of the Constitution, which provides that everyone has the right to administrative action that is lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair, and considering the purpose of the review provisions of the LRA, the standard to be applied when a decision by a commissioner on a dismissal dispute is sought to be reviewed is the following: Is the decision reached by the commissioner one that a reasonable decision-maker could not reach?

In applying this standard to the facts of the case the majority accepted that there had been no evidence that loss had been suffered by the Mine as a result of Mr Sidumo’s misconduct. It considered that the commissioner erred in describing the misconduct as a mistake or as unintentional. It held, however, that the commissioner was correct to find that the absence of dishonesty was significant. It took the view that Mr Sidumo’s failure to own up to his misconduct should count against him. It balanced this against his clean and lengthy service record and concluded that having regard to the reasoning of the commissioner, based on the material before him, it could be said that his conclusion was one that a reasonable decision-maker could reach. The facts were such that decision-makers acting reasonably may reach different conclusions.

Mr Sidumo’s application for leave to appeal and COSATU’s application to intervene were granted. The appeals against the decisions of the Supreme Court of Appeal were upheld. All the costs orders in the courts before the present appeal were set aside and substituted with an order that no costs were to be paid by any of the parties. In respect of the present appeal no order was made as to costs.

In a minority judgment in which Mokgoro J, Nkabinde J and Skweyiya J concurred, Ngcobo J held that this case did not require the Court to decide whether the conduct of arbitration proceedings by a CCMA constitutes administrative action. He held in any event that the conduct of arbitration by a CCMA commissioner essentially involves the same functions that are performed by a court of law and is therefore adjudicative and not administrative in nature.

According to Ngcobo J this case required the Court to give meaning to the grounds upon which arbitration awards by CCMA commissioners may be reviewed by the Labour Court. He emphasised that in answering this question, courts must be guided by the principle that where legislation which was enacted to give effect to a constitutional right specifies the grounds upon which decisions of tribunals giving effect to that legislation may be reviewed, a court reviewing the decision of that tribunal should start with the interpretation of the specific grounds contained in the statute in question. The grounds must be construed in the light of the primary objectives of the LRA and the provisions of the Constitution, in particular, those entrenching the right to fair labour practices. He cautioned against developing a standard of review based directly on the Constitution and thereby ignoring the specific provisions of the LRA which set out the specific grounds of review.

Against this background, he held that parties to CCMA arbitrations had a right to have their cases fully and fairly determined. This required commissioners to apply their mind to the issues that are material to the determination of the disputes before them. He held that where a commissioner failed to have regard to a matter which was material to the dispute, the arbitration proceedings could not in principle be said to be fair. He held that this constituted a gross irregularity in the conduct of the proceedings as contemplated in section 145(2)(a)(ii) of the LRA. He further held that the ensuing award ought to be set aside not because the result is wrong but because the commissioner has committed a gross irregularity in the conduct of the proceedings. He further held that similarly, where a commissioner rendered an award which was manifestly unfair, he or she exceeded his or her powers under the LRA and the resultant award must be set aside on the grounds that the commissioner has exceeded his or her powers as contemplated in section 145(2)(a)(iii)of the LRA.

On the facts of the case he concluded that none of the grounds of review contained in the LRA had been established. He accordingly concurred in the order of Navsa J.

O’Regan J wrote a brief judgment concurring in the judgment of Navsa AJ. She differed with the approach of Ngcobo J on the question of whether the decisions made by CCMA commissioners were administrative action or not. She reasoned that there was no reason why sections 33 and 34 of the Constitution needed to operate in a mutually exclusive manner. She held that the CCMA decisions were clearly governed by section 34, and to answer the question whether they were also governed by section 33, she considered the constitutional purpose of that section. She held that its purpose was to ensure that administrative action was compliant with the constitutional standards of lawfulness, reasonableness and procedural fairness. As the CCMA is an administrative tribunal making adjudicative decisions, she reasoned that it would be consonant with our constitutional framework for those decisions to be reviewed on the grounds provided for in section 33. She agreed therefore with Navsa AJ that the decisions of CCMA commissioners were administrative action.

In a separate judgment supporting the outcome, Sachs J held that pigeonholing the conduct of a commissioner as either “judicial function” or “administrative action” displayed undue subordination to formal classification of rights, and insufficient regard for the manner in which rights overlap and basic values animate and bind discrete rights together. In his view the function of the commissioner is a hybrid one, composed of an amalgam of the separate but intermingling right to fair labour practices, the right to just administrative action and the right of access to court. He accordingly agreed with both judgments as far as they went in their separate legal frames. Though different in form they concurred on the context, interests and values involved. Formal trappings aside, he had difficulty in seeing how a reasonable commissioner could act unfairly, or a fair commissioner could function unreasonably.

The Full judgment is available here: J-CCT85-06A.txt

THE RUSTENBURG TEST
HIGH NOON AT THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT

Z Sidumo & Congress of South African Trade Unions v Rustenburg Platinum Mines & Others

We arranged for one of our professional staff to attend at the Constitutional Court earlier today, when the Highest Court in the land gave judgment in the Rustenburg Platinum Mines matter.

Readers will recall that the Supreme Court of Appeal, in a carefully reasoned (and fully supported) decision, had determined two issues of immense import to those engaged in the labour law field.

In the first instance, the SCA determined that commissioners must exercise caution in determining whether a disciplinary sanction imposed by an employer is fair. Arbitrators must apply "….a measure of deference …." to the employer's sanction because it is primarily the function of the employer to determine the proper sanction. This was widely interpreted as cementing a "reasonable employer" test into our law. In terms of which, it was only those decisions that fell beyond a broad range (or "band") of possible reasonable decisions that could be interfered with.

In the second instance, the SCA found that the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, No 3 of 2000 (PAJA), applied to a review of decisions of CCMA commissioners. The importance of this element was that the PAJA provides far more extended grounds of review.

In its outcome delivered this morning, the Constitutional Court has rejected the "fair employer test" determined in the Rustenburg case, and reverted back to the test that the plain wording of the LRA itself seems to imply – the commissioner decides.

The Constitutional Court has determined that in approaching a dismissal dispute, a commissioner must do so impartially. The commissioner must take account of "….the totality of circumstances". But, in terms of the LRA, it is the commissioner who must determine whether a dismissal is fair or not. A commissioner is "….not given the power to consider afresh what he or she would do, but simply to decide whether what the employer did was fair or not. In arriving at a decision a commissioner is not required to defer to the decision of the employer. What is required is that he or she must consider all relevant circumstances." (our emphasis)

The Constitutional Court also determined that the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act did not apply to the review of arbitration awards made in terms of the Labour Relations Act.

The Constitutional Court outcome does have implications for employers. In terms of the earlier Supreme Court of Appeal decision, which was rapidly interpreted as a restatement of the reasonable employer test within South African labour law, employers were comforted by a broad test that contemplated a range (or "band") within which their decisions might fall, before a CCMA commissioner could interfere. By the same token, the Constitutional Court outcome does not signal a reversion to administrative terror for employers. Whilst the CCMA commissioner will now be required to determine whether employers decision was fair, he or she must do so against a proper consideration of relevant circumstances and as an "impartial adjudicator". The Constitutional Court judgment will provide some guidance in this regard, as will a more focused consideration of both the terms (and stated purpose) of the Labour Relations Act and the Code of Good Practice on Dismissal.

So ultimately, it is the commissioner's sense of fairness that will now prevail, not the employers view. We are back to the third umpire, in keeping with the quick and easy process that forms the cornerstone of dispute resolution under the "new" Labour Relations Act.

R R PERROTT
5 OCTOBER 2007

The Full judgment is available here: J-CCT85-06A.txt


IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA

KZN MEC of Education v Pillay

Case CCT 51/06

Decided on 05 October 2007

Media Summary

The following media summary is provided to assist in reporting this case and is not binding on the Constitutional Court or any member of the Court.

Constitutional Court handed down judgment in the matter of KZN MEC of Education v Pillay .

On 20 and 21 February the Constitutional Court heard an appeal from the KwaZulu-Natal High Court concerning the right of a learner to wear a nose stud to school. In 2004 Sunali Pillay returned to Durban Girls’ High School from the spring holiday with a small nose stud. After a period of correspondence between the school and Sunali Pillay’s mother, Ms Pillay, the school decided that Sunali Pillay should not be allowed to wear the stud. Ms Pillay took the school and the KwaZulu-Natal MEC for Education to the Equality Court alleging that they had unfairly discriminated against Sunali Pillay and had violated her religious and cultural rights.

The Equality Court found that the school had not unfairly discriminated against Sunali Pillay. On appeal, the High Court overturned the decision, finding that the school had discriminated against Sunali Pillay and that the discrimination was unfair. The High Court declared the decision prohibiting the wearing of a nose stud, in school, by Hindu/Indian learners to be null and void. Both the school and the Department appealed directly to this Court. After the appeal was lodged, Sunali Pillay completed her matric and left the school.

Chief Justice Langa wrote the majority judgment, concurred in by Moseneke DCJ, Madala J, Mokgoro J, Navsa AJ, Ngcobo J, Nkabinde J, Sachs J, Skweyiya J and Van der Westhuizen J, which dismissed the appeal. He found that it was in the interests of justice for the Court to consider the matter because of the impact the decision would have on schools across the country.

He held that the rule prohibiting the wearing of jewellery had the potential for indirect discrimination because it allowed certain groups of learners to express their religious and cultural identity freely, while denying that right to others. The evidence before the Court showed that the wearing of a nose stud was a voluntary practice that formed part of Sunali Pillay’s South Indian Tamil Hindu culture, which itself was inseparably intertwined with Hindu religion. He emphasised that both obligatory and voluntary practices qualified for protection under the Equality Act. The school had therefore interfered with Sunali Pillay’s religion and culture. As that burden was not imposed on others, the school’s interference amounted to discrimination against Sunali Pillay. What was relevant was not whether the practice was characterised as religious or cultural, but the importance it held for the individual in question. Nor was it sufficient to state that Sunali Pillay could attend another school. Our Constitution requires the community to affirm and reasonably accommodate difference, not merely to tolerate it as a last resort.

Langa CJ observed that the school had taken meaningful steps to accommodate diversity in its community, and that uniforms and school rules served an important purpose in education. However, this case was not about uniforms in general, but about a specific exemption to a uniform. There was no evidence that permitting this particular exemption would imperil uniformity or school discipline in general. The fact that granting an exemption to Sunali Pillay might encourage more learners to express their religion or culture was to be celebrated, not feared.

Accordingly, the Chief Justice concluded that the school’s discrimination against Sunali Pillay was unfair. He granted an order declaring that the refusal by the school to grant her an exemption from the Code unfairly discriminated against her. In addition, he ordered that the school, in consultation with learners, parents and staff, amend the Code to provide for a procedure to reasonably accommodate religious and cultural practices. The Department was ordered to pay Ms Pillay’s costs, while the other parties had to bear their own costs.

O’Regan J wrote a separate judgment in which she dissented in part from the order made by the Court. She agreed with the majority that the Code was unfairly discriminatory because it did not contain a clear exemption procedure to ensure that the uniform rules of the Code did not result in unfair discrimination. She therefore concurred in the order made by the Court which requires the school to amend the Code on this basis. She concluded that had Ms Sunali Pillay not left the school it would have been appropriate for the matter to be referred back to it for a proper exemption procedure to be followed. As Ms Sunali Pillay had left the school, such an order was no longer appropriate. O’Regan J considered in some detail the relationship between religion and culture in our constitutional scheme and emphasised that our Constitution required public educational institutions to foster environments in which learners from different cultural and religious backgrounds would feel that they are equally respected and valued.

The Full judgment is available here: J-CCT51-06A.txt

 

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