REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No 168/96
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
In the matter of:
WESTERN CAPE EDUCATION DEPARTMENT First Appellant
MINISTER OF EDUCATION Second Appellant
and
KAREN JEAN GEORGE Respondent
CORAM: Mahomed CJ, Howie, Olivier, Zulman et Streicher JJA DATE OF HEARING: 19 March 1998
DATE OF DELIVERY: 27 March 1998
JUDGMENT
/HOWIE JA:. . .
2 HOWIE JA:
Before October 1995 a legally married woman employed in
the public service whose husband was not permanently medically unfit for
paid employment was not entitled to the public service house owner
allowance. That was laid down by a provision in the Public Service Staff
Code and applied, by way of personnel administrative measures
promulgated by the Minister of Education, to teachers. This piece of
unwarranted discrimination notwithstanding, Karen George (to whom,
although she is no longer a party to the litigation, I shall refer as
"respondent") applied for the allowance. She is, and was at all material
times, a legally married teacher in the employ, in a permanent capacity,
of the two appellants, being the Western Cape Education Department
("the Department") and the Minister. But for her being married she
would have been entitled to the allowance.
The application was submitted in October 1994. The Department refused it on the ground that she was married. In November
3
1994 respondent took the matter to the Education Labour Relations Council ("the Council"), declaring a dispute. The Council was established by the Education Labour Relations Act, 146 of 1993 ("the ELRA").
At a meeting in December 1994 of the Council's dispute committee it was agreed between the Department and respondent that she should approach the Public Service Commission with the request that it recommend a departure from the discriminatory provision in question on the ground that hers was an exceptional case. This the Commission was empowered by the Public Service Staff Code to do. Respondent made the suggested approach but the Commission declined to assist. Its written response reads thus:
"1. The Commission considered the case of Mrs George, but indicated that it does not see its way clear to furnish a recommendation for a deviation from the existing prescripts.
2. Pertaining to married women's participation in the Home
4
Owner Allowance Scheme in general, it has to be pointed out that the relevant scheme is an existing service benefit and as such any amendment(s) to it can only be effected if; after negotiations in this regard, agreement is reached thereon between the employer and employee organisations. During recent negotiations the State as employer declared its willingness to put aside R0,4 billion as part of a salary and service benefit improvement package to address gender disparities with regard to the Home Owner Allowance Scheme with effect from 1 April 1995. Thus far agreement on the package could not be reached.
3. In the circumstances, married women's participation in the Home Owner Allowance Scheme is sub judice being a matter of mutual interest that can only be dealt with by means of negotiations."
The negotiations, I should mention, were between the State and the South African Democratic Teachers' Union, of which respondent was a member.
In March 1995 the Council wrote a letter to respondent recording that as the dispute had not been resolved the Council had, in
5 terms of its constitution, to be deemed to have failed to settle it.
Accordingly it was open to respondent, so she was informed in the letter,
to refer the dispute for determination by the Industrial Court in terms of
s 18 of the E L R A. That she did. The proceedings were opposed by
appellants but the Industrial Court found in her favour. The order it made
was as follows:
"1. The respondents' refusal to accord to the applicant the benefits of the house owner allowance scheme on the grounds that she is a married woman whose husband is not medically unfit to obtain paid employment is held to constitute an unfair labour practice.
2. Subject to paragraph 4(a) hereof the respondents are jointly
and severally directed forthwith to accord to the applicant
the house owner allowance benefits to which she would be
entitled had she been an unmarried female or a married or an
unmarried male.
3. Subject to paragraph 4(b) hereof, the respondents are
furthermore jointly and severally directed to pay to the
applicant a compensatory amount equivalent to the benefit
6
which she would have received, had she been a recipient of the house owner allowance from the date that the Public Service Commission declined to recommend a deviation from existing prescripts, namely 30 January 1995 until the date that routine monthly payment of the benefit commences pursuant to paragraph 2 hereof.
4. (a) Nothing in paragraph 2 hereof shall preclude the
respondents from procuring compliance with that paragraph by way of a reconsideration or renewed consideration of the applicant's request to be treated as an exceptional case in terms of paragraph 8 of Chapter DAX of the Public Service Staff Code.
(b) Once it is ascertained, the amount payable in terms of paragraph 3 hereof is to be deposited to the credit of the applicant's home loan account with the financial institution which holds as security for such account, the first mortgage bond registered over the immovable property, being Erf 7918, Brackenfell, and situate at 44 Palm Close, Northpine, Cape.
5. The respondents are jointly and severally directed to pay the
applicant's costs of the determination proceedings, on the
Supreme Court scale, and for the purpose of functions
performed by Mr Dodson which would in that context have
been the province of counsel, costs shall be taxed as if junior
counsel of middle standing had been briefed.
6. Should any obstacle in the implementation of the terms of
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this determination be encountered, which either party considers would have the effect of frustrating its purport or intent, then such party shall be entitled to set the matter down for further hearing on reasonable notice to the other/s, with a view to such variation of the terms of the determination as may be reasonable."
That order was made on 13 October 1995. Appellants then appealed to the Labour Appeal Court. Subject to a presently irrelevant alteration to the Industrial Court's order, the Labour Appeal Court dismissed the appeal but granted appellants leave to appeal to this Court.
Subsequent to the grant of leave appellants and respondent concluded a settlement agreement reading as follows (references to the "abovementioned Court" being references to this Court):
"The parties hereto have agreed to settle their dispute on the following basis, as they hereby do:
1. Respondent will, on signature of this agreement, instruct her attorneys to file an appropriate notice withdrawing her opposition to the Appellants' appeal and advising the
8
abovementioned Court that she will abide its decision.
2. The Appellants will, on signature of this agreement, instruct
their attorneys to withdraw their appeal in respect of the
costs orders handed down in Respondent's favour in both
the Industrial Court and the Labour Appeal Court.
3. In the event that the abovementioned Court upholds the
decision of the Labour Appeal Court, the Respondent
waives her claim to the compensatory amount which the
Appellants were ordered to pay her.
4. The Appellants will pay the Respondent's party-and-party
costs, as taxed or agreed, in respect of the proceedings in the
Industrial Court, the Labour Appeal Court and the
abovementioned Court. In respect of the abovementioned
Court, the costs to which the Respondent will be entitled
shall not exceed R10 000.00 (exclusive of Value Added
Tax)/'
The respective withdrawal notices in compliance with the terms of paragraphs 1 and 2 of the settlement agreement were duly filed and appellants pursued their intention to appeal on such issue or issues as remained.
9 Two days before the hearing of this matter counsel for
appellant was requested to prepare argument on the question in limine
whether the appeal was not liable to dismissal in terms of s 21A of the
Supreme Court Act, 59 of 1959.
The relevant subsections of that section provide as follows:
"(1) When at the hearing of any civil appeal to the Appellate Division or any Provincial or Local Division of the Supreme Court the issues are of such a nature that the judgment or order sought will have no practical effect or result, the appeal may be dismissed on this ground alone.
(3) Save under exceptional circumstances, the question whether the judgment or order would have no practical effect or result, is to be determined without reference to consideration of costs."
In supplementary written argument in support of the
contention that the appeal should proceed in the ordinary course,
appellants' counsel drew attention to the salient contents of an agreement
10 reached by the parties to the Council. The agreement was published in
Government Notice R1635 contained in Government Gazette 16778 on
27 October 1995, that is to say, shortly after the Industrial Court's order.
Pertinent to the present matter was the provision in the agreement of a
resolution that with effect from 1 October 1995 the personnel
administrative measures embodying the discriminatory provision in
question were to be amended and the provision removed. We were not
informed that the amendment had in fact been effected but the argument
in limin.e proceeded on the clear understanding that this was indeed so.
Accordingly, the upshot of the Council resolution and the
pre-appeal agreement reached by appellants and the respondent was, with
one exception, to resolve any possible dispute arising from the orders
made by the two courts below. More particularly, as from 1 October
1995 respondent became entitled to the housing allowance, thereby
achieving the sole purpose with which she declared a dispute and
11
launched the litigation in the Erst place. The outstanding issue which remained for possible adjudication by this Court was therefore the finding in para 1 of the Industrial Court's order, namely, that, in effect, refusal of the allowance on the ground of the discriminatory provision was an unfair labour practice.
The circumstances sketched above could not but move counsel for appellant to the realistic, and ready, concession at the outset of his argument at the hearing that the setting aside of para 1 of the Industrial Court's order would have no practical effect or result as between appellants and respondent. He therefore settled on the following submission as the be-all and end-all of his argument. Even if no practical effect or result was to be achieved as between the parties, a practical result could be achieved in other respects. He suggested two. The first was that appellants would be freed from the stigma of having been found to have perpetrated an unfair labour practice. The second was the
12 opportunity open to this Court to lay down the principle - if I understood
counsel's formulation correctly - that where the subject matter of an
alleged unfair labour practice (not involved in or related to an alleged
unfair dismissal) is the focus of negotiations between an employer and the
union to which the complainant employee belongs (here, the negotiations
referred to in the Public Service Commission's letter quoted above), it is
legally incompetent, during the currency of such negotiations, for the
employee to take the unfair labour practice allegation to the Industrial
Court or for that Court to pronounce upon it.
I shall assume, without deciding, that the practical effect or result referred to in s 21A is not restricted to the position inter partes and that the expression is wide enough to include a practical effect or result in some other respect.
As regards the first suggested practical result - that appellants would be found not to have committed an unfair labour practice
13 - nothing on the record or said in argument tends to show that the mere
existence of the Industrial Court's finding per se has or has had a
deleterious effect on the State's or the Department's ability to attract or
retain staff. If appellants have indeed harboured any unexpressed fears
in that regard, and if indeed that finding engendered employee resentment,
the State's readiness to eradicate discrimination and the eventual
agreement removing the discriminatory provision concerned must surely
have altered the situation entirely. In fact, events since the Industrial
Court's order have completely overtaken and overshadowed the impact
of that order. Any employee in respondent's position would nowadays
no doubt say "What if an unfair labour practice was found? The position
is quite different now - equality has been achieved". To litigate with the
motive to clear one's name is understandable. However, nothing
demonstrates in this case that a finding that there was no unfair labour
practice, whilst it might constitute subjective solatium for appellants,
14 would bring about any objectively discernible practical advantages for
them or anyone else whether in the labour relations sphere or at all.
As to the submission that a judgment could be given
providing a practical guideline for the solution of similar legal questions
in future, the following considerations point the other way. The
legislation applicable to this case, the E L R A, was repealed by the
Labour Relations Act, 66 of 1995, which came into force in November
1996. This statute has vastly restructured labour relations law. It is not
necessary for the purposes of this judgment to summarise the innovations
and changes introduced. Suffice it to say, by way of example, that,
unlike the E L R A, the new statute contains no definition of unfair labour
practices (except in transitional provisions contained in Schedule 7) and
no express right of any employee, like that conferred by s 5(1)(f) of the
E L R A, to be protected against such defined unfair labour practices.
That alleged right was the cornerstone of respondent's case in the courts
15 below. Quite apart from whether those courts decided the case correctly,
her resort to litigation was rights-based and independent of what her union
was seeking to achieve in negotiations with appellants. The position
would not be comparable under the new statute. Ostensibly similar future
problems would have to be decided under that statute. And on their own
facts, what is more.
On the further assumption that despite the absence of any issue between the parties circumstances might conceivably create a practical need for this Court to express its view on a particular point of law - perhaps on a matter of wide public interest or urgency or to resolve conflicting High Court decisions - no such need exists here.
Finally, it is desirable that any judgment of this Court be die product of thorough consideration of i a forensically tested argument from both sides on questions that are necessary for the decision of the case. Any judgment on the issue formulated by appellants' counsel
16 would be obiter and based on argument heard from only one side.
The cumulative consequence of all these factors is that no practical effect or result can be achieved in this case. No other reasons were suggested why the appeal should not be dismissed in terms of s 21 A. This is therefore a proper case in which to order such dismissal.
As to costs, all questions on that subject were resolved by what I have called the pre-appeal settlement agreement.
It remains to reiterate the warning expressed in the matter of Premier van die Province Mpumalanga en 'n Ander v Stadsraad van Groblersdal (case 103/96 in this Court, judgment delivered on 25 March 1998) that practitioners keep the provisions of s 21A in mind not only at the stage of an application for leave to appeal but also thereafter.
The appeal is dismissed.
C T HOWIE MAHOMED CJ) OLIVIER JA) ZULMAN JA) concur STREICHER JA)
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