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[1992] ZASCA 115
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Adminstrator of Natal and Another v Sibiya and Another (100/91) [1992] ZASCA 115; 1992 (4) SA 532 (AD); [1992] 2 All SA 442 (A) (20 August 1992)
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Case No 100/91
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA APPELLATE DIVISION
In the matter between:
ADMINISTRATOR OF NATAL 1st Appellant
DIRECTOR-GENERAL, NATAL PROVINCIAL
ADMINISTRATION 2nd
Appellant
and
SAKHAYEDWA AMBROSE SIBIYA 1st Respondent
FUMANEKILE MTSHIYWA 2nd Respondent
CORAM: HOEXTER, E M GROSSKOPF, NESTADT, GOLDSTONE JJA et HARMS AJA
HEARD: 25 May 1992 DELIVERED: 20 August 1992
JUDGMENT
HOEXTER, JA
2
HQEXTER JA,
The two respondents were employed by the Natal
Provincial Administration ("the NPA"). Their employment was governed by the
Public
Service Act, No 111 of 1984 ("the Act") and the Public Service Staff Code
("the Code") promulgated under the Act. Each respondent
was an employee employed
temporarily in a full-time capacity, his contract of service being terminable on
notice of one month.
The respondents were members of a large workforce engaged upon the building of hostels at Glebe in the . Durban area ("the project"). The project was funded by the National Housing Fund. Due to a shortage of money, and upon instructions from the central government, the project was abandoned in 1990. As a result 29 members of the work-force, including the respondents, became redundant and the NPA decided that they should be retrenched. The
3
respondents were given the requisite one month's notice and their employment ended on 31 December 1990. Neither respondent was given a hearing at any stage by the appellants.
In the Durban and Coast Local Division the respondents obtained a rule nisi calling upon the appellants to show cause why their dismissals should not be declared invalid. On the return day the application was resisted by the appellants. The matter came before Didcott J. The sole issue argued before him, which counsel agreed was decisive of the case, was whether the NPA could lawfully dismiss the respondents without having observed the audi alteram partem rule by giving them a hearing and an opportunity to make representations with regard to their dismissals. In due course Didcott J delivered a judgment in which the rule nisi was confirmed with costs, including the costs of two counsel. The
4
judgment of the court a quo has been reported sv Sibiya and Another v Administrator, Natal, and Another 1991(2) SA 591 (D). With leave of the court below the appellants appeal to this court against the whole of the judgment of Didcott J.
At the time of the application the circumstances of each of the respondents were as follows. The first respondent, aged 54 years, occupied the position of "foreman general", and he had been employed by the NPA for ten years, during which period he had received regular salary increases. His gross monthly salary at the time of the termination of his employment was R1 077,25. He was a married man and his wife and eight children were dependent upon him. The first respondent was a member of the Temporary Employees Pension Fund; the second respondent was not. The second respondent, who had been in the employment of the NPA since March 1989, was 21 years old
5
and unmarried. His monthly salary was R530. Both
respondents were members
of the Natal Provincial
Administration Staff Association ("NPASA").
The second appellant is the Director-General of
the NBA ("the D-G"). On 5 December 1990 NPASA wrote a
letter to the D-G in connection with the termination of the
employment of a number of its members who had lost their
employment at Glebe. NPASA voiced concern thereat and
requested an urgent meeting with the D-G's office "to
discuss the matter". Mr J A Creeke ("Creeke") is a Deputy
Director (Personnel Management) in the NPA. By letter
dated 6 December 1990 Creeke responded to NPASA's request
for a meeting. While recording his appreciation of the
concern shown by NPASA Creeke intimated that the proposed
meeting would serve no purpose. Creeke's letter stated,
inter alia:-
"Before the decision was taken to serve notice of termination
of services, the Community Services
6
Branch made all reasonable attempts to absorb the employees concerned in other posts. Their dismissals were not considered lightly - quite the contrary. However, if alternative employment is not available and if funds are exhausted, one cannot reasonably argue that the Administration has been unfair."
A Durban firm of attorneys, Yunus Mahomed &
Associates ("M & A"), acting on behalf of NPASA, wrote a
letter to the
D-G on 12 December 1990. This letter
expressed concern at "the manner in
which the matter has
been handled by your Administration" including the
fact
that the decision to effect retrenchment had been taken
without consultation with either the employees concerned
or NPASA. In this connection the following was said:-
"In failing to take this essential step your
Administration missed a valuable opportunity to
inform itself of what was fair and reasonable
in
the circumstances."
M & A's letter further invited answers by the NPA to seven
different questions, the last of which was couched thus:-
"(vii) Was the decision maker aware of the
7
provisions relating to the treatment of personnel in case of termination, reduction or alienation of state activities? (We are here referring to the circular dated 21 July 1987 and sent out to all Departments and Administrations by the Secretary: Commissioner for Administration.)"
On the same date the questions posed by M & A were promptly
answered
in writing by Creeke. His response to the
seventh question was recorded thus:-
"(vii) Not relevant."
Appended to the first respondent's founding affidavit there is a copy of the circular by the Commission for Administration ("the circular") to which reference was made in M & A's letter to the D-G. The circular sets forth guidelines for the treatment of personnel involved in activities about to be "terminated, reduced or alienated." Under the heading "General Policy" it says that in all such situations "the point of view is that .... the dismissal of personnel should be avoided where possible." The circular
8
goes on to state that where dismissal appears to be
unavoidable it should
be handled in the manner calculated
to achieve "the greatest degree of
acceptability"; and
that "The State as employer undertakes to treat
all
personnel in a fair and reasonable manner." In the
concluding paragraph of the circular the Commission for
Administration
calls upon departments to -
"(a) bring the content of this circular to the attention of all members of management, as well as the staff who stand to be affected by the termination, reduction or alienation of activities; and (b) to assure those concerned that every situation will be handled with circumspection and that all actions will be aimed at fairness and reasonableness."
In opposition to the application a number of
answering affidavits were filed on behalf of the
appellants. The deponent to the main answering affidavit
was Creeke. In the course of his affidavit Creeke
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explained that the list of staff to be retrenched had been drawn up by the site clerk at Glebe and the artisan
superintendent in consultation with the regional engineer
in the Directorate of Community Services. In compiling
the list of 29 names:-
"....the so-called LIFO principle (last in first out) was strictly applied with one exception, namely, certain qualified employees with less years of service were retained in preference to unqualified employees with longer service."
Creeke went on to say that every effort had been made to
act fairly in the matter by attempting to place the
respondents in employment elsewhere; and, when this proved
impossible, by terminating their services with due regard
to qualifications and periods of service.
Creeke denied that there was any obligation upon
the appellants to afford the respondents a hearing. To
this he added:-
"All the information relevant as to whose services were to be terminated was to be found in
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the respective staff files."
The application of the audi alteram partem rule in relation to the dismissal of workers in the public service who are employed temporarily in a full-time capacity was considered recently by this court in Administrator, Transvaal, and Others v Zenzile and Others 1991(1) SA 21 (A) ("the Zenzile case"). The service contracts of the workers in that case were terminable on 24 hours notice on either side. Without having been afforded any hearing the workers concerned were summarily dismissed on the grounds of alleged misconduct. In dismissing the appeal in the Zenzile case this court held that the decision of the appellants summarily to dismiss the respondent workers had prejudicially affected the rights of the latter; and that therefore the failure of the appellants to apply- the audi principle constituted a procedural impropriety vitiating the decision to dismiss.
11
On the facts there are the two points of distinction between the Zenzile case and the present appeal: (a) the workers in the Zenzile case were summarily dismissed while here the workers were given due notice of termination of their employment; (b) the workers in the Zenzile case were dismissed for alleged misconduct whereas here the workers were retrenched. As to what was actually held in the Zenzile case it is further to be borne in mind, first, that the court refrained from making any finding in regard to the position of a worker whose contract of service had been ended by the giving of notice, and, second, that (at 30 E-F) stress was laid on the disciplinary and punitive character of the power exercised in summary dismissal for alleged misconduct, it being stated (at 361) that "when .... the exercise of the right to dismiss is disciplinary, the requirements of natural justice are clamant."
12
In the instant case argument in the court below
was
largely devoted to the question of the applicability or
otherwise of the
decision in the Zenzile case to the facts
in the application before Didcott J. The learned judge
concluded (at 594A) that in principle the matter before him
was
indistinguishable from the Zenzile case. He reasoned
thus (at 593 E-J):-
"The contemplated invasion of an existing right is, by and large, sufficient in the field of employment to bring the [audi alteram partem] rule into operation. And that right is surely threatened once a dismissal by notice is on the cards, no less than when a summary dismissal happens to be. That the action proposed is punitive or disciplinary may no doubt serve sometimes to emphasise or illustrate the threat it presents to an existing right, or to the liberty or property of the individual which the rule likewise protects. It may also have a bearing on the nature, scope and content of the hearing that must be given. Otherwise, however, the significance of the characterisation is not obvious. In itself, at any rate, such is not the test.
The respondents' counsel argued that the rule had not come into operation because the applicants
13
had lacked existing rights. Their rights, he maintained, had necessarily to be rights to continued employment. And an employee whose employment was terminable on a month's notice had no right to continue employment, or none, at all events, to an employment continuing beyond the period of notice, during which it was not in any event invaded. By the same token, however, an employee guilty of misconduct sufficient to justify his dismissal has no right to employment continuing beyond the commission of the misconduct. Yet the rule operates in his favour. The Zenzile judgment said so. The argument lost sight of the distinction between the Administration's right under the contract and the Code to terminate the employment of the applicants on the one hand, and its exercise of that right, on the other. The lawful exercise of the right depended on the way in which it was exercised, on the procedure that was then followed. In the meantime the existing rights of the applicants remained intact."
Before turning to the argument advanced on behalf
of
the appellants in the present appeal it is necessary to
make a few general
remarks concerning the compass of this
court's decision in the Zenzile
case:-
(A) Although the finding in the Zenzile case was
confined, on the facts of
that matter, to the applicability
14
of the audi rule to the summary dismissal on the grounds of
alleged
misconduct of a public sector employee, the
conclusion at which this court arrived nevertheless
involved the affirmation of certain legal principles of
general application to the dismissal of an employee by a
public authority. See what was said at 34B - 36A; 35H -
36A; and the following statement (at 36H):-
"The fact that by the law of contract an
indisputable right may have accrued to an
employer to dismiss his employee does not, for
the purposes of administrative law, mean that the
requirements of natural justice can have no
application in relation to the
exercise of such
right."
(B) The Zenzile judgment contains a lengthy quotation (at
31E - 32D) from the remarks made by Van Coller J in
Mokopanele en Andere v Administrateur, Oranje Vrystaat, en
Andere 1989(1) SA 344(0) at 440G - 441H. This court (at
32D - E) proceeded to-signify its agreement with the view
expressed by Van Coller J that the decision in Le Roux v
15
Minister van Bantoe-Administrasie en -Ontwikkeling 1966(1) SA 481(A) did not support the argument advanced on behalf of the employer in the Mokopanele case. This court, however, neither considered nor approved the suggestion made by Van Coller J (in the passage quoted at 31F - G of the Zenzile judgment) that where the services of a public sector employee had been terminated by notice - leaving aside the matter of such employee's pension rights - there could not be "'n aantasting van regte ... in die sin van 'n aanspraak om in diens te bly nie."
(C) The conclusion of this court in the Zenzile case (1) in no way depended upon the fact that the workers concerned were members of the pension fund (see 39D - E) ; and (2) involved no reliance upon the doctrine of legitimate expectation (see 39G).
I turn to the ground upon which it was sought to attack the judgment of Didcott J. The heads of argument
16
filed on behalf of the appellant included a submission that in the case of the respondents the provisions of the Act excluded, by necessary implication, the operation of the audi rule. At the hearing of the appeal the abovementioned submission was - in my opinion wisely - jettisoned. Counsel limited his argument to the contention advanced by him in the court below. As I understand the argument it amounts to the following. It is said that a public sector employee whose contract of service is terminable on notice has no legal right, after such notice has been duly given, to remain in his employment beyond the expiration of the period; and that from this it follows that here no existing right of such employee has been affected. In my opinion this argument is untenable, and it was rightly rejected (at 593 I-J) by Didcott J. The argument misconceives the requirements of the audi rule. The rule does not require that the decision of the public body
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should, when viewed from the angle of the law of contract, involve actual legal infraction of the individual's existing rights. It requires simply that the decision should adversely affect such a right. No more has to be demonstrated than that an existing right is, as a matter of fact, impaired or injuriously influenced.' Here the contract of service created reciprocal personal rights for the respective parties. Of immediate significance for the respondents was their right to receive regular remuneration in exchange for their services. The existence of that right was linked to and depended upon the duration of the contract. The appellants' right under the contract to give notice terminating it cannot alter the fact that the decision to give notice palpably and prejudicially affected the existing rights of the respondents. In approaching the court below the respondents in no way challenged the appellants' contractual right to give them notice. They
18
did no more than to assert their claim to be treated in a
procedurally fair manner before the appellants exercised !
such right.
For the sake of completeness the following
further considerations may be mentioned. The classic
formulation of the audi rule encompasses not only "existing
rights" but also "the property" of an individual when it is
prejudicially affected by the decision of a public
official. The word "property" would ordinarily tend to
connote something which is the subject of ownership. In
my view, however, the concept of "property" to which the
audi rule relates is wide enough to comprehend economic
loss consequent upon the dismissal of a public sector
employee. To workers in the position of the respondents
(and more particularly the first respondent, an elderly
individual with eight dependants) the immediate financial
consequences of dismissal are likely to be very
19
distressing.
As in the Zenzile case, here too the employer was a public
authority whose decision to dismiss involved the exercise of a public power.
Such a power has to be exercised regularly and in accordance with the principles
of natural justice.
In South African Roads Board v Johannesburg City
Council 1991(4) SA 1 (A) Milne JA in delivering the
judgment of this court observed (at 13B - C) that the audi
principle -
"....applies where the authority exercising the power is obliged to consider the particular circumstances of the individual affected. Its application has a two-fold effect. It satisfies the individual's desire to be heard before he is adversely affected; and it provides an opportunity for the repository of the power to acquire information which may be pertinent to the just and proper exercise of the power."
In the instant case a just and proper exercise of
the power to dismiss involved an inquiry into the
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individual circumstances of each of the workers whose retrenchment was being considered. The necessity for such a careful appraisal seems to have been present to the minds of the appellants, but mistakenly they conceived the inquiry to be a one-sided affair. Creeke expressed the belief that all the information relevant to the inquiry was to be found in his staff files. But, given the opportunity of a hearing, the respondents might have been able to call attention to relevant facts and circumstances of which the appellants were unaware; or to make suggestions as to a solution of the problem of the redundant workers which had not occurred to the appellants. In my view this was a case in which elementary fairness required that the respondents should have been accorded a hearing before the appellants took their decision to dismiss the respondents.
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The appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
GG HOEXTER, JA
E M GROSSKOPF JA )
HARMS AJA )