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[1998] ZASCA 5
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Betha and Others v BTR Sarmcol a division of BTR Dunlop Ltd (631/95) [1998] ZASCA 5; 1998 (3) SA 349 (SCA); [1998] 8 BLLR 793 (A); (1998) 19 ILJ 459 (SCA) (6 March 1998)
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
In the matter between:
EMMANUEL BETHA AND OTHERS Appellants
and
BTR SARMCOL a division of BTR Dunlop Ltd Respondent
Court: Smalberger, Olivier, Scott, Zulman and
Streicher JJA
Date of Hearing : 8 and 9 September 1997
Date of Judgment: 6 March 1998
No deadlock existed at the end of April 1985
6 word "legal" and MAWU the word "lawful". This appeared to be a semantic
at all.
15 Sampson recorded his discussion with ALA on 13 March 1985 in these
MAWU and where I quote from the evidence itself. The immediate
provocation arises out of Sampson's attitude towards an agreement relating
to May Day that had been reached in July 1984 and is reflected in a letter
dated 30 July 1984. The relevant part of the letter reads as follows:
Sampson and Schreiner had a telephonic conversation on Monday 29
April 1985 about the May Day arrangements. Sampson, for the first time
interpretation may have been correct, but not so his attitude in the light of all
the circumstances prevailing at the time. The question of the reasonableness
or not of Sampson's attitude is not a question of fact by which this Court is
bound, but a juristic evaluation, ie a matter of law.
Why, then, did Sampson adopt this unreasonable attitude? Why did he
knowingly create a new source of contention and the risk of destroying all
that had been achieved by negotiations?
BTR's desire to get rid of MAWU and its members
perpetuation of the attitude he consistently adopted on behalf of BTR towards
MAWU. A dominant strain in this attitude was that employees could "take
it or leave it"; and underlying that attitude was the intention of ridding the
were MAWU members. The point is amply illustrated by the evidence of
what had already occurred during the strike of March 1985 and also by
subsequent events.
On 12 March 1985 BTR was advised by its industrial consultant,
Andrew Levy Associates ("ALA"), as follows: (I quote verbatim from
Sampson's notes.)
have been held, but conceded it was to be one with a preconceived
determination to dismiss the workers.
terms:
deadlines and he is now moving. He's worried he
He [Levy] says we're not panicking.
The underlying attitude of BTR, as reflected in this note, speaks for itself.
On 15 March 1985, the day the workers went back, the strategy for
selective re-employment after dismissal became manifest. This is reflected
as follows in notes Sampson made before the workers returned:
canteen.
Likely to cause return to work.
2.
3.
4.
Sampson conceded that this strategy meant dismissal of all the workers,
re-hiring certain old employees, hiring certain new applicants for employment
and, because MAWU members would be the last back, there would be no jobs
for them. Sampson also testified that he would have been prepared to use this
21 09h56), that counter-suggestions "will not involve matters of principle or 23 Allied Workers Union and Others 1994(2) SA 204(A) at 214 G-H). 28 17 C(l)(a) of the Act of reaching this conclusion. 33 own proposals. This presupposes a continuation of the employee- employer 34 delivered to shop stewards at 15h00 that if they did not return to work by
A damning piece of evidence, illustrating BTR's true motives, is
contained in a note made by Sampson during the March strike:
Schreiner might get them back (bad luck) before lunch.
25 March 1985 after which it would be withdrawn. It emerged that this
strategy had come from ALA who had advised Sampson not to meet with
Schreiner. It was put to Sampson in cross-examination that this was not a
suitable way of handling a dispute, a statement which Sampson could not
refute. The suggestion that BTR/s refusal to afford MAWU more time on 25
March 1985 was no more than a tactic, is refuted both by the evidence
relating to the advice given by ALA and followed by Sampson (which is not
reconcilable with mere tactics) but also by Sampson's own concession,
mentioned in my previous, underlined sentence.
Furthermore, Giles, on behalf of BTR, sent a telex to MAWU on 26
March 1985, ostensibly keeping its final offer open but "strictly" subject to
certain conditions, inter alia, that "full details" of counter-suggestions be
telexed before 15h00 that same day (the telex reflects that it was sent at
substance," and that the retrenchment procedure, including severance pay "be
treated as an inseparable part of the complete package and not left over."
Subject to these pre-conditions, BTR was prepared to meet on 27 March at
10h00, with the additional proviso, however, that "such meeting will only
last for a maximum period of 4 hours .. . whereupon (BTR's) final offer
will lapse without further notice to that effect. . ."
illusory (Protea Assurance Co Ltd v Casey 1970(2) SA 643(A) at 648 E).
Fortunately, our law does not require such an approach by any court. On the
contrary, it was said in National Union of Metalworkers of Sa v Vetsak Co-
operative Ltd and Others 1996(4) SA 577(A) at 593 F-G.
Press Corporation of South Africa Ltd(Perskor) 1992(4) SA 791(A) at 802
B -1; Performing Arts Council of the Transvaal v Paper Printing Wood and
did the LAC hold on this point and how did it justify its decision?
The relevant full passage from the judgment of the LAC reads as
follows at 93 D-J:
of the events from 1979 leading up to the strike in April 1985. Ex confesso
the LAC did not base its finding that"... the respondent (BTR) was anxious
to reach finality on the agreement and was prepared to negotiate to that end"
on an analysis and evaluation of the evidence. Consequently this Court is
not bound by such finding - see Strathmore Holdings(Pty) Ltd v
Commisioner for Inland Revenue 1959(1) SA 460(A) at 467 H - 468 C - and
is free to scrutinise the record and make its own findings (ibid at 468 C-D).
In this respect, this Court is, in any event, in as good a position as the LAC,
the latter also being only a court of appeal - see National Union of
Mineworkers v East Rand Gold Ufanuim Co Ltd 1992(1) SA 700(A) at
723 C-D.
For the reasons set out above, I am of the view that BTR's true desire
was to get rid of MAWU and its members, and that I am not precluded by s
One can now understand and properly evaluate, in line with the judgment in Vetsak, quoted above, why BTR acted as it did when the strike of 30 April 1985 occurred. Snatching at the opportunity to dismiss the employees
went to the canteen where the workers were sitting, spoke to the shop
stewards, and was told quite emphatically that the strike had been caused by
BTR's failure to sign the recognition agreement. This was also confirmed in
a telex received from MAWU at approximately 13h30 that same day. The
telex once again requested signature by BTR of MAWU's draft of the
recognition agreement. In the event, there could have been no doubt that the
strike, although precipitated by Sampson's attitude as regards the May Day
arrangements, was now aimed at reaching agreement in respect of the
recognition agreement.
But BTR had no intention of signing the MAWU draft. On the
morning of 30 April, after the strike had commenced, Sampson had a
telephone conversation with Mr Brown of ALA. I quote portions of
Sampson's note reflecting ALA's advice:
BTR considered its options for dealing with the strike. These are recorded by
Sampson as follows:
Options on Strike/Agreement
1.
Sign the agreement as presented by the Union (MAWU).
2.
Meet with the Union and try to settle the five fundamental differences.
3.
Meet us in (2) above under a mediator.
4.
Stand fast on our ground, ie. the agreement as presented by us to the Union last month.
1.
2.
discussing the various options, that the only option was to "stand fast" on its
16h00 that day (or if the nightshift workers who received a copy of the notice
when they came on shift did not start within an hour of the shift commencing)
BTR reserved the right to terminate their services without further notice.
That evening, it decided to implement the previous decision to terminate the
services of the strikers the next morning.
On the morning of 3 May 1985 BTR dismissed the employees.
MAWU immediately telexed BTR in the following terms:
which we understood the Company was actually
trying to prevent;
employees, and also in the light of its unconvincing efforts to give reasons for
37 an acceptable reason for the hasty dismissal of the workers. Moreover this
explanation fails to stand up to scrutiny in view of the fact that BTR and
MAWU had previously agreed that in the event of a lawful strike, no action
would be taken against the workers before the expiry of five days. It has not
been explained why BTR could not have waited for a few more days before
dismissing the strikers if the strike continued, even if it was an unlawful
strike. The fact that the strike was an unlawful one, is of course no excuse
for BTR acting unfairly towards its employees. (Performing Arts Council of
the Transvaal v Paper Printing Wood and Allied Workers Union and Others,
supra, at 215 E et seq.)
I am likewise not impressed by the further argument that BTR would
have lost heavily or even been broken financially by a prolonged strike. Had
it reconsidered the matter maturely, it would have been clear to BTR that
there was no impasse as regards the recognition agreement, that the parties
38 were in fact very close to an agreement and that with a little give and take and
suffered in coming to a compromise with MAWU and its trained work force
was preferable to the huge expense of hiring and training new recruits.
Procedural unfairness
Even if one considers the dismissal of the employees in isolation,
divorced from any covert motive to get rid of the employees and consequently
also of MAWU, the procedure employed by BTR and the manner in which
the employees were dismissed appears to be harsh and unreasonable. BTR
knew that the dismissal of a work force of nearly 1 000 employees would
cause unemployment in the area on a large scale. It knew that such dismissal
would cause great misery and disappointment to the dismissed employees,
their dependants and families. Many, if not most of them would be forced to
vacate the homes which they were occupying. They would have to move to
unfamiliar surroundings and relocate under difficult circumstances. Many of
are reminiscent of those in the present matter, ia that most of the dismissed
employees had given many years (between 4 and 20 years) of service to
PACT; the cause of the unhappiness related to a matter which was of
legitimate concern to the employees in relation to the employment; the trade
union was not associated with the strike; PACT should have realized that
something had gone wrong in the communication between the trade union
and the employees; the employees were in an emotional state; and they had
been on strike for a relatively short time.
In the PACT case, it was said by Goldstone JA, delivering the majority
judgment at 216 8-D:
(a)
(b)
especially the number of workers involved, the socio-economic consequences
of a dismissal to them and their dependants, and the distinct probability that
had BTR changed its intransigent stance and had it given a fair ultimatum to
the employees, the strike would have come to a speedy conclusion, I am of
45 the view that BTR should have approached the strike in a calm and mature
manner, so as to apply its mind properly to the steps to be taken.
Union and Other 1995(1) SA 742(A) at 755 H and of Van Rensburg J in
Plaschem(Pty) Ltd v Chemical Workers Industrial Union, supra, at 1006
HI).
47 court a quo, with respect, is marred by a misdirection. One cannot ignore the
terms of the ultimatum of 2 May 1985 and rely on a warning given in March
1985. BTR, by giving notice in the ultimatum of 2 May 1985 that it was
reserving its rights, far from unambiguously threatening with dismissal, gave
the impression that it had still to choose from among the range of options
available to it. In fact, the court a quo should rather have taken into account
that the decision to dismiss had already been taken when the ultimatum had
been drafted and issued. The court a quo should have considered that BTR
withheld this crucial fact from MAWU and the employees, and it should have
considered the interesting question why this was done. In my view, the
correct conclusion speaks for itself.
As far as (b) is concerned, I also consider this to be a factual
misdirection in the sense that, although, of course, it is true that the
employees had until their dismissal an opportunity to return to work, they
his conversation with Brown of ALA on 8 May 1985, which reads as follows:
re-open negotiations. This is also reflected in a telex from Giles to MAWU
on 17 May 1985 viz. that BTR "was not seeking to initiate negotiations." On
30 May 1985 BTR even denied that a dispute existed; on 7 June it refused to
in this regard is also remarkable. I quote from his cross-examination:
MR BRASSEY: So can we accept that as at the
56 v Commissioner for Inland Revenue 1959(3) SA 523(A) at 528 E-G). 60 take back. 65 sanction is compelling. It is, in other words, not a reciprocal right, but an 66 his judgment, and was binding on the latter court. In not applying the 67
the equation between misdirections and the test that no reasonable court could
have made a particular factual finding, the approach taken by Smalberger JA
in Atlantis Diesel Engines (Pty) Ltd v National Union of Metalworkers of
South Africa 1995(3) SA 22(A) is instructive. At 31 I he stated:
bound by misdirections on questions of fact by the LAC. In this respect it
should be remembered that the LAC is also a court of appeal, basing its
judgment on the same record of the evidence that is before this Court. We are
in as good a position as the LAC to decide questions of fact. (See National
Union of Mineworkers v East Rand Gold and Uranium Co Ltd, supra, at 723
C-D; see further in respect of misdirections as reason for setting aside a
judgment on the basis that no reasonable court could have come to the same
conclusion as the one committing the misdirection, and for the practical
application of the test, Performing Arts Council of the Tranvaal v Paper
Printing Wood and Allied Workers Union and Others,supra. at 218 D et seq.;
Commissioner for Inland Revenue v Stratmore Consolidated Investments Ltd
1959(1) SA 469(A) at 476 E-F; 477 C; 479 D-G; 480 E-F. Cohen v
Commissioner for Inland Revenue 1962(2) SA 367(A) at 377 A. Goodrick
BTR's persistent policy of selective re-employment
those who misbehaved' (emphasis supplied). According to Sampson, a list
was made, but only of those who misbehaved. Whether the list was in fact as
circumscribed as this could not be verified because the document was not
produced.
As the dispute progressed, active selective re-employment became a
more prominent feature of BTR's strategy and as July 1985 drew to a close
it had become a central feature of it. In response to an offer by MAWU to
abandon the strike and return to work unconditionally, BTR's managing
director formulated a strategy by which it would pick and choose from among
the strikers and replace a third of its new work force with them. By the
middle of August, the idea of laying off a third of the new work force had
been dropped, and BTR was now willing to offer the remaining vacancies
(numbering fewer than seventy) to such of the strikers as it was willing to
forsworn any notion of further negotiation (and arbitration, for that matter)
over the recognition agreement or the dismissal of the strikers.
The truth of the aforegoing is apparent from the following note made
by Sampson on 14 May 1985 after advice from Brown of ALA:
he conceded that the purpose of the dismissal - and its effect - was to 'smash
the Union as an influence in the factory'. Under re-examination, Sampson
made it clear that he knew what the expression denoted: BTR wanted to
'break the dreadful hold and the fired-up striking work force ethic that had
destroyed all operations in the factory.' In his testimony he made it clear that
BTR viewed MAWU as responsible for this and that, since MAWU was
intransigent and militant, destroying its influence in the factory was the only
solution open to BTR.
My view, that BTR's true motive was not to protect its commercial
interests but to get rid of MAWU, is also borne out by the fact that subsequent
to the dismissals, BTR allowed a new Union, UWUSA, to represent the
workers. This Union, more sympathetic to BTR, was allowed on BTR's
premises without having to overcome the obstacles placed by BTR in
based on the premise that recourse to the one automatically legitimizes
recourse to the other.
It was argued by counsel for the appellants, correctly in my view, that
this is neither our law, nor could it be. It is settled law, thus ran the argument,
that to strike is a legitimate instrument in the process of collective bargaining
that the Act so emphatically endorses: the threat of it makes collective
bargaining realistic and its occurrence serves, by the attrition it entails, to
break deadlocks in the process for which there would otherwise be no
resolution. Dismissal, in contrast, destroys the relationships of employment
upon which collective bargaining is premised and so damages and often
wholly destroys the relationship. There is no equivalence between the two
and the one that the court a quo set up is illusory. Dismissal is not one of the
"weapons" that an employer might use unless the need to resort to this
extraordinary one. The court a quo, in my view, reached its decision that the
workers were fairly dismissed because they did not capitulate completely and
were consequently not entitled to reinstatement, on a faulty perspective of the
true legal position.
If authority is needed for the view I take of the matter, reference may
be had to the decision of this Court in National Automobile Allied Worker's
Union now known as National Union of Metal Workers of South Africa v
Borg-Warner (SA) Pty Ltd 1994(3) SA 15(A) at 25 H-J. The judge a quo
referred to this case, but remarked that it was decided some nine years after
the events giving rise to the present case had taken place. If the intention was
to say that the decision in that case was not binding on the court a quo when
it gave its judgment, I must disagree. The case quoted was based on the
provisions of the Act, which existed in 1985 and when the judge a quo gave
principle mentioned in the quoted case, the judge a quo misdirected himself.
The attitude of the court a quo is also not consistent with the perspective
taken by the Constitutional Court in Ex parte Chairperson of the
Constitutional Assembly: In re Certification of the Constitution of the
Republic of South Africa[1996] ZACC 26; , 1996 (1996(4) SA 744 (CC) at paras. 63 - 69, esp
para. 66).
Conclusion
In conclusion, and referring to the criteria laid down in the Act, I am
satisfied that the dismissal by BTR of the appellants on 3 May 1985 coupled
with its consistent refusal or failure to re-employ them thereafter, constituted
an unfair labour practice. It unfairly affected the appellants' employment
opportunities. There were in Howick and vicinity no other employment
opportunities of a similar nature. It obviously affected, and unfairly so, the
appellants' work security, in that they lost their jobs so to speak overnight after having served BTR for very long periods, giving their best years to it.
This brings me then to the matter of compensation.
of the names of the employees, their salaries and other employment benefits
and other relevant information, e.g. the date of death of those who have in the
meantime passed away, etc.
relating to the calculation of contingencies applicable to each appellant. In
these circumstances this Court is simply not in a position to give judgment in
respect of any of the appellants as regards the compensation payable.
1.
The appeal succeeds with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2.
Paragraph (a) of the order of the court a quo is replaced with the
1.
order:
'The dismissal of the appellants from the employ of the respondent constituted an unfair labour practice'. 3. The matter is remitted to the Industrial Court for the determination of the compensation payable to each of the appellants.
I concur:
RH Zulman JA
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
EMMANUEL BETHA AND OTHERS
APPELLANTS
and
RTR SARMCOL a division of
BTR DUNLOP LTD
RESPONDENT
BEFORE: SMALBERGER, OLIVIER, SCOTT, ZULMAN
and STREICHER JJA
HEARD: 8,9 SEPTEMBER 1997 DELIVERED: 6 March 1998
9
In my view it is not necessary to attempt, what may well be an impossible task, to apportion blame for the failure of BTR and MAWU to reach agreement on the terms of the recognition agreement before April 1985. It is clear that by April 1985 the parties were very
proposals, but because it was annoyed at having been put on terms by
MAWU.
1.
2.
1.
the factory would be closed on 1 May 1985 from 1 lh45 to 22h00 so as to
enable the workers to attend the May Day celebrations. BTR
responded that there was no agreement in respect of the night shift
workers. Technically it may have been correct. The agreement concluded
by the parties on 30 July 1984 reads as follows:
"8
subject further to suitable prior arrangements being made in
respect of the arrangements for 1 May 1985:
with Sampson during which he pleaded with Sampson to allow the night
shift workers to start their shift at 19h30 so as to allow them to attend the
May Day celebrations together with the other workers. Schreiner could not
persuade Sampson, got cross with him and stated that there would be trouble.
This statement has been interpreted as a threat. It could also have been a
prediction.
adopted the attitude that the strike was lawful and stated that the latest
draft submitted to BTR reflected its final position. It stated in a telex to
BTR:
"You are in possession of a recognition agreement which has been
approved by our national executive committee which constitutes
Mawu's final position and our members wish this negotiated
document to be signed by your company prior to their returning to
work.
Any minor semantic changes which the company may wish to
suggest would accordingly be appropriately handled immediately
prior to a meeting between our parties to sign the recognition
agreement.
The union is open to your suggestion of a suitable date for the
above and believes that conclusion of this long overdue document
will facilitate an end to the strike."
The LAC correctly found that the attitude adopted by
MAWU from the outbreak of the strike to the time of dismissal was that
2.
3.
4.
2.
5.
6.
7.
8.
5.
P E STREICHER
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA /mb
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
In the matter of:
CORAM: SMALBERGER, OLIVIER, SCOTT, ZULMAN
HEARD: 8, 9 SEPTEMBER 1997 DELIVERED, 5 MARCH 1998
findings of fact are limited. The approach to be adopted was recently restated
is free to substitute its own findings of fact for these findings necessarily
involves, in my view, the conclusion that the findings of not only the LAC but
also of Smalberger JA are findings which no court could reasonably have made.
As I am in full agreement with the conclusion of Smalberger JA I can perhaps
be forgiven for baulking at such a result.
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
EMMANUEL BETHA AND OTHERS
APPELLANTS
and
BTR SARMCOL A Division of BTR
DUNLOP LTD
RESPONDENT
CORAM: SMALBERGER, OLIVIER, SCOTT, ZULMAN et STREICHER JJA
HEARD: 8, 9 SEPTEMBER 1997
DELIVERED: 6 March 1998
43 55
80A. For the convenience of the reader I repeat the summary (with certain
minor alterations):
see no point in further discussions concerning the draft agreement.
On 21 December 1984 MAWU applied for the establishment of a
conciliation board:
to endeavour to resolve the dispute which has prevented the
conclusion of a written procedural recognition agreement'.
On the same day it applied for the establishment of a conciliation
board:
'to endeavour to resolve the dispute concerning severance pay on
retrenchment'.
(b)
did not oppose the establishment of a conciliation board;
1985;
that it was willing to continue discussion and negotiation and
was preparing new proposals to be forwarded to MAWU;
(a)
(b)
1985;
(a)
(b)
the mediation continued on 8 March 1985;
(a)
environment, business was slack, orders were down and there is
evidence that bankruptcy was a threat.
(a)
(b)
(c)
that the critical events occurred.
(1)
(2)
denying that the strike was illegal;
(3)
(1)
The definition of "unfair labour practice" in sec 1 of the Act which
was applicable at the time was:
(b) any other labour practice or any other change in any labour
Scott JA stated:
pursued in telephone calls and a meeting." Adopting a "hard line" does not
per se amount to unreasonable or improper conduct within the context of
management-union negotiations. In this regard it is apposite, at this point,
to draw attention to, and to emphasize, what was stated in Black Mountain
at 61 J - 62 A, viz:
"Save in extreme cases it is not for the court to adjudicate upon the reasonableness or otherwise of the offer and the demands of the
respective parties; nor would it be qualified to do so."
being the draft recognition agreement BTR was prepared to sign highlighting
been discussed by BTR and its advisers. On the morning of 10 April Mr
The failure to reach agreement on 10 April did not bring about an end
to negotiations. On 17 April MAWU submitted what it termed its final draft
agreement to BTR calling upon it to sign and return the agreement. At that
stage there were two agreements up for signature, the other being the
agreement which BTR had submitted on 10 April. BTR intimated that it
would respond in due course. At a meeting of workers held on the night of
17 April it was decided to give BTR a "reasonable period" to go through
MAWU's agreement and thereafter sign it. Earlier that day MAWU had
issued a notice to its members at BTR advising them, inter alia:
"The changes that MAWU proposed are not difficult for the Company to accept - they do not involve any big matters of principle. These are some examples:
i) MAWU said the senior Shop Steward should have 5 hours a week to do Union business (the Company had already agreed
for our members who are on staff, iii) MAWU said the shop stewards should be able to report back
appeal against unfair warnings and unfair dismissals. v) MAWU said the Company must agree to meet with the Union
Negotiating Committee before retrenching any employees."
(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
officers that he had received information that the strike was over the
recognition agreement. In a telex sent by MAWU to BTR at 13:21 it was
stated that: "We confirm our members are on strike. The strike is not illegal
agreement with MAWU." This notwithstanding, after a review of the
relevant facts and circumstances the LAC concluded (at 89 J - 90 A):
It was contended on appeal that this Court was not bound by such
finding, notwithstanding the provisions of sec 17C (1) (a) of the Act, as (1)
the LAC was precluded from making such a finding as it was not an issue
before the IC, on either what may loosely be referred to as the pleadings, or
the evidence, mat the cause of the strike was anything other than the dispute
over the recognition agreement, and (2) that in any event the finding was one
As to (1). In broad terms the appellants' case, as set out in their
Statement of Claim in the IC proceedings, was that the strike arose from the
failure to conclude a recognition agreement. In its carefully worded reply
BTR stated that the strike action was
"characterised by both the employees and MAWU as arising from a refusal by the respondent to recognise MAWU."
BTR did not, either expressly or by necessary implication, concede that the
strike had commenced over the recognition agreement. Its attitude was that
it did not know what had precipitated the strike. This was the position taken
up by its senior counsel during his opening address before the IC. The
question of whether the disagreement over May Day played a role in the
strike was raised, although not strenuously pursued, in evidence. The cause
legitimate or justified.
The relevant portion of sec 65 (2) (b) of the Act provides:
strike action. In order to satisfy the provisions of sec 65 (2) (b) (as read
with sec 65 (1) (d) (i) ) the ballot must be held "over the matter giving
occasion for the strike". As, contrary to the provisions of sec 8(6)(b) of the
Act, the ballot papers were not retained by Schreiner (as secretary of
MAWU) in safe custody for the required period of three years, it is not
known on what precise issue or issues the ballot was held. At the IC hearing
certain ballot papers were produced which (falsely, as it transpired)
ballot, he explained to the workers that BTR refused to sign a recognition
agreement. This would have been in keeping with what appears to have
been MAWU's propaganda at the time, that BTR was refusing to sign a
recognition agreement and to afford the workers basic union rights. This
was of course misleading, for at no time had BTR refused to do so. There
was never a dispute as to the signing of a recognition agreement; the dispute
related to its precise terms. No effort appears to have been made at that
stage to advise the workers (even in the most general terms, which may have
sufficed) as to the extent or ambit of such dispute. Bearing in mind the
(a)
(b)
control to ensure that only those who were entitled to vote did so;
(a)
(c)
(d)
clarity or certainty with regard to whether the ballot boxes were sealed;
(e)
control over unused ballot papers; and
(f)
retention of the ballot papers either at all or for the prescribed
period of three years.
1)
2)
3)
1)
4) The fact that the workers did not initially strike over the recognition
agreement is indicative of the fact that they too did not consider that the time
was ripe to strike on that ground. They were obliged to shift their stance
because they must have appreciated that they were on wholly unsafe ground
in striking over the May Day arrangements.
From what I have said above it is apparent that the strike was not
precipitated by a stage of final deadlock having been reached. It was the
strike itself that converted the delicate negotiations into impasse and brought
about an end to the prospect of further negotiations and ultimate consensus
between the parties, neither thereafter being prepared to move from their
respective positions. In his telex to BTR on 30 April Schreiner had stated:
ultimately decided upon the dismissal of its entire weekly work-force. The
fact that there may conceivably have been other options available to BTR
does not per se mean that the route that it took was unfair. The fairness of
its conduct must be judged in the light of all the relevant circumstances then
prevailing. It is unhelpful to speculate on what might have happened had
BTR followed a different course.
The dismissals
At 15:00 on 2 May BTR issued an ultimatum to the striking workers
in the following terms:
EMPLOYEES
MAWU states that you will continue striking until the Company signs
the document handed to the Company by MAWU and your Shop
Stewards have confirmed this. The Company will only sign a
document agreed by both parties.
Your striking and refusal to work is a material breach of your contract
of employment with the Company. If you do not return to work by
4.00 p.m. today 2 May 1985 (or if you are on night shift within one
hour of the commencement of your shift) the Company reserves the
right to terminate your employment without further notice to you."
Notices containing the ultimatum were handed to the shop stewards
were anxious to secure a recognition agreement which would best protect
their interests. According to Sampson, the decision to dismiss was taken
reluctantly. Asked why that was so he responded as follows:
negotiations before resorting to dismissal? And did not its good relationship
discussion MAWU simply adopted a "take it or leave it" attitude. It is
apparent that MAWU was not interested in further negotiations at that stage.
The purpose of the continued strike was not to drive the parties back to the
negotiating table. There was no need for that - negotiations were, after all,
still in prospect when the strike commenced. The obvious purpose was to
put economic pressure on BTR to sign MAWU's recognition agreement.
The content and tone of the telex did not provide scope for further
negotiations. It signalled a clear intention on MAWU's part to force BTR
to capitulate. The battle lines had been finally drawn, and power play had
reached its zenith.
failed to do so was no fault of BTR. The power struggle intensified, with
each party intent an compelling capitulation by the other. This was a
legitimate exercise of their respective rights. Ultimately MAWU lost the
battle and the appellants their employment.
In this regard the LAC said of MAWU (at 104 E - F):
predicament in which they found themselves and the suffering they and their
families have probably had to endure, their loss of employment was in my
view essentially of MAWUs and their own making and not due to an unfair
There remains the question of whether the appellants' dismissal was
procedurally unfair as it was not preceded by any form of enquiry. In my
view it was not. In this regard I would associate myself with what was said
by the LAC (at 100 F-H):
compensation does not arise.
In the result I would dismiss the appeal and make no order as to costs,