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When do they apply? : s197(1)

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SECTION 197 AND S197A OF THE LRA When do they apply? : s197(1) = When there is the transfer of a business as a going concern Business = includes the whole ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: When do they apply? : s197(1)


1
Section 197 and s197A of the LRA
  • When do they apply? s197(1)
  • When there is the transfer of a business as a
    going concern
  • Business includes the whole or a part of any
    business, trade, undertaking or service

2
Section 197 and s197A of the LRA
  • As a going concern?
  • NEHAWU v University of Cape Town (CC) the
    business remains the same but in different hands
  • An objective test having regard to substance and
    not form taking into account what has transferred
    i.e. activity, employees, customers, tangible and
    intangible assets etc.

3
What is a s197 transfer? (cont.)
  • What kind of transferring transaction?
  • Transfer the conveyance of property esp. of
    stock or shares, from one person to another or
    the act of transferring or being transferred
    conveyance from one place , person etc. to
    another - New Shorter Oxford English Dictionary
  • a merger, takeover or part of a broader process
    of restructuring within a company or group of
    companies. Transfer can take place by virtue of
    an exchange of assets or a donation.- Schutte v
    Powerplus Performance (Pty) Ltd

4
Second generation contracting-out
UWC
Xtra Clean
5
Second generation contracting out
UWC
Xtra Clean
Super Clean
6
Second generation contracting-out
  • An initial word of warning do not get caught up
    in the terminology
  • The fact that something is first or second or
    other generation outsourcing or contracting-out
    is irrelevant.
  • The test in each case must be whether there has
    been the transfer of a business as a going
    concern

7
Second generation contracting-out the battle
between Ausa and saa
  • Aviation union of SA others v SA Airways (Pty)
    Ltd others (2008) 29 ILJ 331 (LC)
  • The facts infrastructure and support services
    transferred (outsourced) to LGM. All employees in
    those services transferred by virtue of s197. SAA
    cancelled the arrangement in terms of its
    contract with LGM.
  • Importantly, the contract provided that on
    termination of the agreement SAA retained the
    right to transfer certain services and/or
    functions back to itself or to a third party
    (clause 27.1.1) and to obtain transfer or
    assignment from LGM to SAA of all third-party
    contracts

8
Second generation contracting-out the battle
between Ausa and saa
  • AUSA approached the LC for, inter alia, a
    declarator to the effect that
  • the termination of the outsourcing agreement
    between SAA and LGM constituted a transfer of the
    whole or part of the undertaking or services
    provided to SAA by LGM under s197 of the LRA.
  • And in the alternative, that the award of any of
    the tenders of SAA to a third party will
    constitute a transfer of a whole or a part of the
    undertaking or services provided to SAA by LGM
    under the provisions of s 197 of the LRA.

9
Second generation contracting-out the battle
between Ausa and saa
  • AUSA argued that s197 should also apply to
    transfers 'from' one employer to another as
    opposed to only those facilitated 'by' the 'old'
    employer to the 'new' employer.
  • Court held Although I am in agreement with the
    sentiment expressed that s197 should be read so
    as to protect the work security of employees
    affected by a business transfer, I am of the view
    that it is clear from s197 of the LRA that the
    legislature had only contemplated a transfer from
    the old employer to the new employer and nothing
    else (the so-called first generation transfer).

10
Second generation contracting-out the battle
between Ausa and saa
  • Aviation Union of SA obo Barnes others v SA
    Airways (Pty) Ltd others (2009) 30 ILJ 2849
    (LAC)
  • Zondo JP It is difficult for me to see what
    purpose s 197 can be said to aim to achieve if
    the protection which it gives to workers against
    job losses is as limited as it has to be conceded
    would be the case if the word 'by' in the section
    was read to mean what it normally means. In such
    a case the protection of workers would be limited
    to the first outsourcing and nothing more . . .
    In these circumstances I am of the view that s
    197 is capable of application in a situation such
    as the one under consideration.

11
Second generation contracting-out the battle
between Ausa and saa
  • Davis JA
  • An examination of the multiple meanings of the
    word 'by' indicates that the confident assertion
    that the literal interpretation of this section
    precludes any possible extension to second
    generation transfers is not justified
    linguistically. The wording of the section does
    not necessarily and inevitably support the
    exclusive connotation that the transferor has to
    play an immediate, positive role in bringing
    about the transfer.

12
Second generation contracting-out the battle
between Ausa and saa
  • Davis JA
  • Assume however, that the word 'by' must be
    interpreted to connote a positive action on the
    part of the old employer (in this context LGM) as
    contended for by respondent. On the particular
    facts of this case, the requisite positive action
    was taken when the initial agreement was
    concluded between SAA and LGM which afforded SAA
    rights to compel LGM to act by means of a
    transfer of the business back to SAA or to a
    third party . . .
  • In my view, the approach to s 197 adopted by the
    court a quo is neither inexorably congruent with
    the literal wording of the section nor with the
    facts of the present dispute. Hence, the
    conclusion it reached cannot be supported.

13
Second generation contracting-out
  • SA Airways(Pty) Ltd v Aviation Union of SA
    others (2011) 32 ILJ 87 (SCA)
  • There was no challenge to the constitutionality
    of s 197 in this matter. A collateral challenge
    in the guise of reading a word to mean something
    different is simply not legitimate. (par 28)

14
Second generation contracting-out
  • The purposive interpretation adopted by the
    Labour Appeal Court was aimed, it said, at
    preventing abuse. This concern on the part of the
    court is misconceived because there is, as SAA
    argued, no suggestion of any abuse in the present
    case. And even if we accepted that such abuse is
    possible, that is no reason to distort the plain
    meaning of the section. We accordingly conclude
    that the Labour Appeal Court erred in adopting an
    approach to the interpretation of s 197 which is
    at odds with the ordinary meaning of the words
    chosen by the legislature. By interpreting the
    word by to mean from the court impermissibly
    distorted the meaning of the word. (par 32)

15
Second generation contracting-out
  • AND In the absence of a factual basis for the
    Labour Court to have concluded that there was a
    transfer of a business as a going concern by LGM
    either to SAA or to another entity, its decision
    to dismiss the application was correct.
    Accordingly the Labour Appeal Court erred in
    upholding the appeal to it.

16
Second generation contracting-out
  • Aviation Union of SA another v SA Airways (Pty)
    Ltd others (2011) 32 ILJ 2861 (CC)
  • Jafta J
  • For the section to apply the business must have
    changed hands, whether through a sale or other
    transaction that places the business in question
    in different hands. Thus the business must have
    moved from one person to the other. The breadth
    of the transfer contemplated in the section is
    consistent with the wide scope it is intended to
    cover. Therefore, confining transfers to those
    effected by the old employer is at odds with the
    clear scheme of the section. (at para 46)

17
Second generation contracting-out
  • Aviation Union of SA another v SA Airways (Pty)
    Ltd others (2011) 32 ILJ 2861 (CC)
  • Jafta J
  • Determining the operation of the section with
    reference to a single word is not the correct
    approach to its interpretation. The whole section
    must be read in its proper context. Reading
    section 197 as a whole in the context of where it
    is located in the LRA and paying sufficient
    attention to its purpose and the objects of the
    LRA, reveal that it applies to any transaction
    that transfers a business as a going concern. It
    follows that the majority in the Supreme Court of
    Appeal erred in holding that the section does not
    apply to second generation outsourcing
    agreements. (at para 55)

18
Second generation contracting-out
  • Yacoob J
  • it cannot be doubted that the word ? by must
    be given its ordinary meaning. We must ask these
    questions in the inquiry whether a transaction in
    issue contemplates a transfer of business by the
    old employer to the new employer. Does the
    transaction concerned create rights and
    obligations that require one entity to transfer
    something in favour or for the benefit of another
    or to another? If so, does the obligation imposed
    within a transaction, fairly read, contemplate a
    transferor who has the obligation to effect a
    transfer or allow a transfer to happen, and a
    transferee who receives the transfer? If the
    answer to both these questions is in the
    affirmative, then the transaction contemplates
    transfer by the transferor to the transferee.
    (at para 113)

19
Second generation contracting-out
  • Is there a difference in the approaches?
  • Could the approach advanced by Yacoob J be a
    barrier to s197 applying to second generation
    transfers?
  • What would happen if, for example, the outgoing
    contractor only transferred some employees and
    equipment, but the client was responsible for
    transferring the premises and opportunity to do
    the work?
  • I.e. must the old employer be responsible for
    transferring the whole going concern in order for
    it to be effecting a transfer within the
    meaning of s197?

20
Second generation contracting-out
  • Harsco Metals South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another
    v Arcelormittal South Africa Ltd and Others
    2012 4 BLLR 385 (LC)
  • Facts Harsco provided services to AMSA related
    to the management and processing of slag at
    various sites. The contract was put out to tender
    and Harsco secured one site, but the others were
    given to two other service providers who got two
    sites each.
  • The new contractors were to perform substantially
    the same services at the sites
  • AMSA was to buy certain assets from Harsco some
    of which would be sold on to the new contractors
  • The new contractors would employ 300 of Hs 445
    employees

21
Second generation contracting-out
  • SAA resolves the debate on whether second (and
    further) generation outsourcing may in principle
    trigger the provisions of s 197. . . Section 197
    is triggered when on the facts there is a
    transfer by one employer to another, in
    circumstances where the transferred entity is the
    whole or part of a business, and where the
    business (or part of it) is transferred as a
    going concern. If the transfer meets these
    criteria (a matter for objective determination),
    the transferee is substituted automatically and
    by operation of law for the transferor as the
    employer of those of the transferors employees
    engaged in the business on the date of the
    transfer.

22
Second generation contracting-out
  • In the present instance, none of the parties
    contends that the absence of any contractual
    nexus between Harsco on the one hand and Phoenix
    and Tube City on the other hand is decisive, or
    even significant. It is not disputed that there
    are components of Harscos business that are to
    be passed on to Phoenix and Tube City. As I have
    mentioned, at least some of the Harscos assets
    will transfer, as will the majority of Harscos
    employees. There is therefore a transfer for
    the purposes of s 197.

23
Second generation contracting-out
  • the factual circumstances particularly to be
    taken into account in determining whether the
    conditions for a transfer of whole or part of a
    business as a going concern for the purposes of s
    197 are met are primarily the degree of
    similarity of the activity carried on before and
    after the transfer and the type of undertaking
    concerned, and the question whether or not the
    majority of the employees are to be taken over by
    the new employers. In the present case, the
    service contracts concluded between AMSA on the
    one hand and Phoenix and Tube City on the other
    hand require the new service providers to perform
    substantially similar services to those performed
    by Harsco, at the same locations, broadly using
    the same operational methods. Viewed from an
    employment perspective, the majority of Harscos
    employees will work for Phoenix or Tube City.
  • Thus a transfer as a going concern

24
Second generation contracting-out
  • Practical problems
  • How will potential tenderers know how to price
    and pitch their bids? i.e. how will they access
    the information they need from a potential
    competitor?
  • Is the client to stuck with the same poor
    employees ad infinitum?
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