Zimbabwean Law - Recent Cases 20152
Zimbabwean Law - Recent Cases 20152
Zimbabwean Law - Recent Cases 20152
Cases added since the last update are indicated by a vertical line in the left margin.
Administrative law audi alteram partem rule embodied in Administrative Justice Act [Chapter 10:28]
effect of rule requirement to give notice of proposed action and to allow affected person to make
representations allegations made against person but not clearly refuted not necessarily admission of
such allegations
A-G v Mudisi & Ors S-48-15 (Patel JA, Malaba DCJ & Garwe JA concurring) (Judgment delivered 28 July
2015)
Agency agent who is distinction between employee, agent and independent contractor
Masango & Ors v Kenneth & Anor S-41-15 (Gwaunza JA, Gowora & Patel JJA concurring) (Judgment
delivered 20 July 2015)
Appeal Constitutional Court appeal to from decision of Supreme Court no right of appeal existing
unless Supreme Court has made decision on a constitutional matter
Nyamande & Anor v Zuva Petroleum (Pvt) Ltd (2) CC-8-15 (Ziyambi JCC) (Judgment delivered 1 August
2015)
See below, under CONSTITUTIONAL LAW (Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Constitutional Court).
Appeal Labour Court appeal to from decision of arbitrator appeal only lying on point of law
appeal relating to facts what must alleged in grounds of appeal not essential to allege that misdirection
on facts is so unreasonable that no sensible person could have reached impugned conclusion necessary
that grounds of appeal are disclosed in clear and concise manner
Zvokusekwa v Bikita RDC S-44-15 (Garwe JA, Ziyambi & Hlatshwayo JJA concurring) (judgment delivered 22
July 2015)
An appeal to the Labour Court from the decision of an arbitrator, like an appeal to the Supreme Court from the
Labour Court, must be based on a point of law. What constitutes a point of law has been stated and restated in a
number of decisions of the Supreme Court. If an appeal is to be related to the facts, there must usually be an
allegation that there has been a misdirection on the facts which is so unreasonable that no sensible person who
had applied his mind to the facts would have arrived at such a decision. And a misdirection of fact is either a
failure to appreciate a fact at all, or a finding of fact that is contrary to the evidence actually presented. However,
to constitute a point of law, in all cases where findings of fact are attacked, it is not essential that there be an
allegation that there was a misdirection on the facts which was so unreasonable that no sensible person properly
applying his mind would have arrived at such a decision. The court should look at the substance of the grounds
of appeal and not the form. Legal practitioners often exhibit different styles in formulating such grounds. What
is important is that the grounds must disclose the basis upon which the decision of the lower court is impugned
in a clear and concise manner. If it is clear that an appellant is criticising a finding by an inferior court on the
basis that such finding was contrary to the evidence led or was not supported by such evidence, such a ground
cannot be said to be improper merely because the words there has been a misdirection on the facts which is so
unreasonable that no sensible person would have arrived at such a decision have not been added thereto. If it is
evident that the gravamen is that an inferior court mistook the facts and consequently reached a wrong
conclusion, such an attack would clearly raise an issue of law and the failure to include the words referred to
above would not render such an appeal defective.
Appeal leave when required interlocutory rulings leave generally required grant or refusal of
interdict leave not required provisional stay of execution whether a form of interdict distinction
between normal interdict and stay of execution requirements for each
Gold Reef Mining (Pvt) Ltd & Anor v Mnjiya Consulting Engineers (Pty) Ltd & Anor HH-631-15 (Mafusire J)
(Judgment delivered 20 July 2015)
The first respondent obtained a default judgment against the applicants. It went on to issue a writ of execution.
The applicants property was attached. The applicants applied for rescission of the default judgment and
simultaneously applied, on an urgent basis, for a stay of execution pending the determination of their application
for rescission. The judge reserved judgment but directed that the status quo ante would subsist until she had
given her ruling. Despite that directive, the respondent sought to execute. The applicants lawyers sought
clarification from the judge, who responded that she had indeed issued a directive during the hearing to the
effect that the respondent would stay execution pending her determination. In due course the judge issued a
provisional stay of execution of the default judgment, pending the determination.
A few weeks later the respondent noted an appeal to the Supreme Court against the provisional order. The notice
of appeal claimed that leave to appeal was not required. Soon after the noting of the appeal, the respondent
instructed the sheriff to proceed with execution. The applicants, within a few days, applied on an urgent basis
for a stay of execution. This was opposed in limine on the grounds that the matter was not urgent and that the
applicants were aware, when the appeal was noted, that the operation of the provisional order was suspended
and that the respondent would proceed to execution. The second ground was that the court was functus officio as
the present application was essentially the same as the earlier one. On the right to appeal without leave, the
respondent argued that this was permissible in terms of s 43(2)(d)(ii) of the High Court Act [Chapter 7:06], as
this was a matter where an interdict had been granted or refused.
The applicants argued that the appeal was a nullity, being in respect of an interlocutory ruling which was not
appealable without leave.
Held: (1) The first point in limine had no merit. The purpose of the appeal was not, and could not have been, to
enable the respondent to proceed with execution. The purpose of the appeal to the higher court must have, or
ought to have been, a genuine desire to correct a perceived wrong by the High Court. An appeal noted solely or
essentially to allow execution to proceed, when the reason for the stay was still there, would have been brazenly
contemptuous and mala fide. The applicants acted as soon as they became aware that the respondent was
proceeding to execution.
(2) On the functus officio argument, the matter dealt with by the first judge was an application for stay pending
resolution, by the High Court, of the application for rescission of judgment. The present matter was an
application for stay pending the determination, by the Supreme Court, of the respondents appeal. It was a new
matter, which had not been the issue before the first judge.
(3) The principle is now settled as to where to draw the line between decisions which are purely interlocutory
and therefore not appealable without leave, and those which are final and having a definitive sentence and
therefore appealable as of right. The term interlocutory refers to all orders pronounced by the court, upon
matters incidental to the main dispute, preparatory to, or during the progress of, the litigation. Orders of this
kind fall in two classes: (i) those which have a final and definitive effect on the main action; and (ii) those that
are simple, purely and properly interlocutory. A simple interlocutory order, i.e. a preparatory or procedural
order, is not appealable without leave. The provisional order was classically interlocutory because it did not
decide the issue or dispute between the parties. The main dispute was the claim by the respondent against the
applicants; in respect of that, the application for rescission of judgment was itself an interlocutory matter. The
application for stay was even more removed from the main dispute. It was an application within another
application. In no way would it decide the application for rescission, let alone the dispute pending in the main
action.
(4) It is every litigants right to appeal to the highest court in the land, but that right in certain situations is
removed or restricted. Section 43 of the High Court Act begins, in subs (1), by granting a blanket right of appeal
to the Supreme Court in all civil cases from any judgment of the High Court, but subject to what the rest of the
section says. The rest of the section, in subs (2)(a) to (c), takes away altogether the right of appeal in the
situations specified therein. For example, no appeal lies from an order of the High Court given by consent of the
parties; or from an order refusing summary judgment. Then in subs (2)(c)(ii) and (d) the right of appeal is
restricted. Leave is required in the situations specified therein. An interlocutory order or judgment given by a
judge is not appealable without leave. In respect of the grant or refusal of an interdict no leave is required to
appeal.
(5) In a broad sense, to grant or refuse a stay of execution is to grant or refuse an interdict, an interdict being a
remedy by a court, either prohibiting somebody from doing something (prohibitory interdict), or ordering him to
do or carry out a certain act (mandatory interdict). But the focus of s 43(2)(d)(ii) is not about applications for
stay of execution as a species of an interdict. Otherwise every order of court, for instance, one directing
someone to pay another a sum of money, would always be an interdict. The distinction between ordinary
interdicts and stays of execution in particular is more apparent when one considers the separate requirements for
each remedy. With an interdict, the applicant must show a clear right in his favour, or, in the case of an interim
interdict, a prima facie right having been infringed, or about to be infringed; an apprehension of an irreparable
harm if the interdict was not granted; a balance of convenience favouring the granting of the interdict, and the
absence of any other satisfactory remedy. On the other hand, in an application for a stay of execution the
requirements are real and substantial justice. Where injustice would otherwise be caused, the court has the
power to, and would, generally speaking, grant relief. The requirements for an application for a stay of
execution, admittedly a species of an interdict, are less onerous than those for an ordinary interdict.
(6) The sole object of the provisional order was to preserve the status quo ante so as to allow for the
determination of the application for rescission of the default judgment. The judge obviously considered that real
and substantial justice would be achieved by granting a stay of execution. To allow that order to be suspended
and execution to take place would render any judgment in favour of the applicants in the application for
rescission a brutum fulmen. In addition, the object of the provisional order would be rendered nugatory. That
would be manifestly intolerable. Execution would be stayed.
Arbitration award labour matter registration procedure to be followed courses open to party
seeking to register award
ANZ Ltd v Nyarota HH-591-15 (Muremba J) (Judgment delivered 1 July 2015)
The applicant was formerly employed by the respondent. Following his dismissal, he obtained an arbitral award
which was subsequently quantified. He applied in terms of s 98(14) of the Labour Act [Chapter 28:01] to
register the award and did so as a chamber application. The respondent objected, pointing out that both s 98(14)
of the Labour Act and art 35 of the Model Law contained in the Second Schedule to the Arbitration Act
[Chapter 7:15] refer to an application for registration being made to the High Court as opposed to a judge in
chambers.
Held: as this award arose from a labour dispute, the Labour Act applied. Section 98(14) does not say that an
application must be made to register an arbitral award; it says that a party may submit for registration the copy
of the award submitted by the arbitrator to the party. To submit something is to present it; and presenting can be
effected in various ways. The word court in s 98(14) refers to the institution. The subsection does not stipulate
the procedure to be used; a party seeking registration of an arbitral award in terms of s 98(14) can simply hand
over the award to the registrar of the High Court for registration, or may make either a chamber application to a
judge or a court application. It is entirely up to the party seeking registration to elect the procedure to adopt. In
any event, in terms of r 229(c) of the High Court Rules (which deals with the adoption of incorrect form of
application) the use of an incorrect form of application shall not in itself be a ground for dismissing the
application unless the judge or court considers that an interested party has been prejudiced by the wrong form of
application and that such prejudice cannot be remedied by directions for the service of the application on that
party, with or without an appropriate order for costs. Here, there was no prejudice because the application was
made on notice.
Arbitration award registration of supply of original or certified copy of award when must be
supplied award partially sounding in money, with part not quantified quantified potions not severable
need for award as a whole to be registered
Matthews v Craster Intl (Pvt) Ltd HH-707-15 (Mafusire J) (Judgment delivered 19 August 2015)|
An application for the registration of an arbitral award is largely an administrative process. Whilst in such an
application the court is not really being called upon to rubber stamp the decision of an arbitrator, nonetheless, it
is largely giving that decision the badge of authority to enable it to be enforceable. If the court is satisfied that
the award is regular on the face of it, and that it is not deficient in any of the ways contemplated by articles 34
and 36 of the First Schedule to the Arbitration Act [Chapter 7:15], then the court will register it.
Article 35 of the First Schedule is clear: a party wishing to register an arbitral award with the High Court does
so through an application. The application procedure is governed by the High Court Rules, which say in Order
32, among other things, that an application must consist of the written document signed by the party; an
affidavit filed together with that application and to which may be attached documents verifying the facts or
averments set out in the affidavit. The Rules say nothing about the nature of the documents to be attached to the
affidavit, i.e. whether or not they should be originals, certified copies or otherwise. Article 35 says an
authenticated original or certified copy of the award is what must be supplied. As to when these may be
supplied is not specified. It would be sufficient compliance with the law for the applicant to have attached to
his application a copy of the arbitration award that had been filed with the registrar, and to have tendered the
original in court.
Section 98(14) of the Labour Act [Chapter 28:01] and art 35 of the First Schedule to the Arbitration Act are in
pari materia. On the face of it, both provisions facilitate the registration of arbitral awards with the conventional
courts for the purpose of enforcement.
If an award is one that must sound in money and it does not, then it is incapable of registration. It is incomplete.
Here, the parties went for arbitration to determine the nature and quantum of the terminal package due to the
applicant, but they came out of that arbitration with only two-thirds of the award having been quantified. The
arbitral award did not specify the period of leave due to the applicant. It did not specify the number of those
leave days. It did not specify the quantum. It did not state what the respondents leave policies were. An order
that an employer must pay his ex-employee cash-in-lieu of the leave due to him and not taken for the period in
question is not complete.
As to whether the quantified portions of the award could be registered, the governing legislation does not
provide for divisibility of awards made elsewhere when they are submitted for registration with the High Court.
To split the award in that manner would amount to transforming the arbitral award of the arbitrator. The
applicant would have to come back to court later for the registration of the rest of the award, if it were
eventually quantified. The arbitration award as a whole was therefore not capable of registration.
Company liquidation creditor secured creditor who is holder of mortgage bond issued as
security for loan bond issued by one company as security for loan to another company both companies
effectively a single economic unit -- intention of parties bond valid holder of bond a secured creditor
CBZ Bank Ltd v Ndlovu NO & Anor HB-137-15 (Makonese J) (Judgment delivered 9 July 2015)
The first respondent was the liquidator for two companies, A and L, which had the same shareholders and the
same executive structure. Before both companies were placed under liquidation, the applicant bank advanced
certain sums of money to company A in terms of a banking facility. Under that facility, the company was
required to register a mortgage bond to secure applicants exposure. The managing director of A forwarded title
deeds to a stand in Bulawayo, and a mortgage bond was registered, but against company L. The respondent
refused to treat the bank as a secured creditor against A, saying that the loan had not been made to the L and that
the bank should have registered a security bond against A.
The applicant argued that the mortgage bond was valid and that the applicant ought to be regarded as a secured
creditor, at least in relation to L. It argued that the manner in which A and L had been operating and the manner
in which they dealt with the question of security in this matter justified a rejection of the faade of separate
personality. The two companies were in essence a single economic entity.
Held: (1) L handed the title deed for the registration of the mortgage bond in the first instance. There was
nothing to show that L did this erroneously. At all materials times, L was well aware that its property was being
used as security and that monies were indeed advanced to A by the applicant on that understanding.
(2) A mortgage bond evidences a debtor and creditor relationship. The principles applicable in the construction
of a contract also apply to a mortgage bond. In the generation of the mortgage bond in this matter, the parties
were involved in a commercial transaction. Where parties intend to conclude a contract, think they have
concluded a contract, and proceed to act as if the contract were binding and complete, the court ought rather to
try to help the parties towards what they both intended rather than obstruct them by legal subtleties and assist
one of the parties to escape the consequences of all that he has done and all that he has intended. There could be
no doubt that, on this approach, the parties intended the validity of the mortgage bond as providing real security
for the debt.
(3) The natural and intended consequences of the events was the provision of real security by A. L provided its
title deed in full knowledge that a bond would be registered in favour of the applicant for the facilities extended
to A. The fact that the intentions of the parties were probably not adequately set out was irrelevant and the
placing of reliance on the perceived defects bordered on dishonesty. If there was a defect, it would be a defect of
the debtors own making.
(4) The clear intention of the parties was that a bond be registered against the title deed. The fact that the
principal obligation had not been properly expressed did not detract from the validity of the bond. The court had
power to order rectification of the bond to indicate its real nature, a security bond. That was what L intended to
achieve. The applicant held real security to the extent that it was a secured creditor.
Zimbabwe Allied Bank Ltd v Dengu & Anor HH-583-13 (Muremba J) (Judgment delivered 1 July 2015)
The plaintiff bank issued summons against the defendants, who had signed as sureties and co-principal debtors
in respect of a loan advanced by the bank to a company. The proceedings had past the pre-trial conference stage,
but before the matter could be set down for trial the bank was placed in liquidation in terms of a court order. The
court order provided that the liquidator would have the powers set out in s 221(2)(a) to (h) of the Companies Act
[Chapter 24:03]. The banks legal practitioners filed a notice of change of status in terms of r 85A of the High
Court Rules, to include the words in liquidation after the banks name. The matter was set down for trial, but
the defendants legal practitioners stated that the matter could not proceed to trial without the liquidator having
obtained the leave of the court. In saying so, they relied on s 213 of the Act. The plaintiffs legal practitioners
argued that that section only applies to an action brought against a company on liquidation, not to one brought
by such a company.
The defendants also argued that since the liquidator did not obtain the courts leave to continue with the
proceedings in terms of s 221(2), the plaintiff, which was a company under liquidation, had no locus standi to
litigate. It was also argued that the notice of change of status was invalid, in that r 85A only relates to natural
persons.
The plaintiff argued that in terms of s 221(2) of the Act the liquidator only requires the leave of the court in a
situation where he intends to commence proceedings on behalf of the company. Where proceedings commenced
before placement in liquidation, as happened here, the liquidator does not require the leave of the court to
continue with the proceedings.
Held: (1) s 213 only applies to actions brought against a company in liquidation, not to those brought by the
company. The purpose of seeking leave to proceed against a company in liquidation is to ensure that when a
company goes into liquidation, the assets of the company are administered in a dignified and orderly fashion for
the benefit of all the creditors. No creditor should be able to obtain an advantage over other creditors by
bringing proceedings against the company.
(2) Rule 85A that states that if a party to the proceedings has a change of status, a notice of change of status may
be filed with the Registrar and served on all other parties to the proceedings. Nothing in the rule says that the
rule is only confined to natural persons. At law the definition of a person includes both natural and juristic
persons.
(3) The effect of a winding up order is to freeze the companys affairs in a number of respects and this includes
legal proceedings, attachments and executions (s 213(a) and (b) of the Act). Dispositions of property and share
transfers of the company may only be made with the leave or permission of the court (s 213(c)). The purpose of
seeking the leave of the court is to preserve the assets of the company for the benefit of the creditors. The
powers of the directors cease (s 253). A liquidator is appointed to run the affairs of the company instead. In
terms of s 221, which sets out the powers of the liquidator, there are powers that the liquidator exercises without
further authority. There are some powers that he exercises with the authority of a joint meeting of creditors and
contributories. There are some powers which require him to exercise with the leave of the court. In every case
where a liquidator intends to initiate legal proceedings which have not commenced at all on behalf of the
company, be they of a civil or criminal nature, he cannot do so without seeking the leave of the court.
(4) As to whether leave is required to continue an action that has already started, if he wants to bring any legal
proceedings to court on behalf of the company, be they fresh legal proceedings or proceedings which
commenced before liquidation, he has to seek the leave of the court. When an application for leave to bring an
action is made by the liquidator, the court will exercise its judicial discretion on whether or not to grant it. It will
consider various factors such as the amount and seriousness of the claim; the degree and complexity of the legal
and factual issues involved; the stage to which the proceedings may have progressed; whether the claim has
arguable merit; and whether the proceedings will result in prejudice to the creditors among other factors.
Editors note: in terms of s 221(1) of the Companies Act, the liquidator has the power, either
with the leave of the court or
with the authority of a resolution of creditors and contributories, duly passed at a joint meeting thereof,
or
when authorised by the Master in terms of s 218(4)(a)
to bring or defend in the name and on behalf of the company any action or other legal proceeding of a civil
nature.
The Master may also, in terms of the proviso to s 221(2)(a), authorise upon such terms as he thinks fit legal
proceedings for the recovery of any outstanding accounts, the collection of which appears to him to be urgent.
The judgment does not disclose whether the liquidator was authorised in either of those ways. It seems implicit
that he was not so authorised.
Constitutional law Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Constitutional Court appeal to from decision of
Supreme Court when party has right of appeal to Constitutional Court against such decision need for
Supreme Court to have made decision on constitutional matter
Nyamande & Anor v Zuva Petroleum (Pvt) Ltd (2) CC-8-15 (Ziyambi JCC) (Judgment delivered 1 August
2015)
The applicants sought leave to set down an appeal from the Supreme Court on an urgent basis. It was argued
that they had such a right of appeal, in view of the wording of s 167(5)(b) as read with s 169(1) of the
Constitution. The applicants submitted that s 167(5)(b) granted a right of appeal in a case where the alleged
violation, by the Supreme Court, of the applicants constitutional right only became apparent after the judgment
was handed down. They argued that it was not necessary to have requested the Supreme Court to refer the
matter to the Constitutional Court in terms of s 175(4).
The respondent argued that an appeal invites a superior court to determine the correctness of the lower courts
decision on issues which were placed before it. There were no constitutional issues placed before the Supreme
Court for determination, or determined by the Supreme Court. There could, therefore, be no right of appeal since
no decision was made by that court on constitutional matters. The proper recourse available to the applicants
was to bring an application in terms of s 85 of the Constitution if it was felt that a breach of their fundamental
rights had occurred.
Held: the applicants had not established any right to approach the Constitutional Court by way of appeal.
Section 167(5) relates to rules of procedure regulating the manner of approach to the Constitutional Court on
appeal from lower courts. It does not confer a right to appeal on a litigant who has no right of appeal. For this
right, the litigant must look elsewhere in the Constitution. Such a right may be read into s 175(3), which applies
where an order of constitutional invalidity of any law has been made by a court. Failing that, a right of appeal
could only arise where the Supreme Court makes a decision on a constitutional matter.
Chihava & Anor v Mapfumo NO & Anor CC-6-15 (Gwaunza JCC, Chidyausiku CJ, Malaba DCJ, Ziyambi,
Garwe, Gowora, Hlatshwayo & Guvava JJCC & Chiweshe AJCC concurring) (Judgment delivered 15 July
2015)
The applicants were the subject of criminal proceedings in the magistrates court. They complained that certain
of their rights under s 70(1) of the Constitution (which sets out the rights of accused persons) had been breached
and sought an order that the proceedings be quashed and a trial de novo ordered. The matter was placed before
the Constitutional Court directly, the applicants taking advantage of a postponement, granted by consent in the
magistrates court, to do so. The respondents took the point in limine that the applicants were not properly before
the court, and that they should have approached the court through a referral of the matter to it by the lower court
in terms of s 175(4) of the Constitution. The applicants argued that under s 85(1) any person acting in his own
interest is entitled to approach a court alleging that a fundamental right enshrined in the Constitution had been
breached. The Constitutional Court being a court, there was no restriction on approaching that court directly.
Under s 24(1) of the old Constitution, a person alleging a breach of his constitutional rights could approach the
Supreme Court directly for redress. However, under s 24(2) and (3), if a constitutional issue arose in a lower
court, it had to be referred to the Supreme Court by the lower court, and not directly. The only grounds on which
the lower court could refuse to refer the matter was if it considered the raising of the constitutional question to
be frivolous and vexatious. While a litigant could approach the Supreme Court directly if the lower court denied
the application on other grounds, initially an application for referral had to be made to the lower court. Section
175(4) of the present Constitution is an exact replica of s 24(2) of the old Constitution, but there is no equivalent
in the present Constitution to s 24(1) or 24(3) of the old Constitution.
Held: (1) it was possible to interpret the new Constitution as evincing an intention by the legislature to remove
any bar that an applicant under s 24(1) might have confronted, arising from the fact that the issue arose in
proceedings in a lower court, and that the options for redress that were open to an applicant envisaged in the old
ss 24(2) (now s 175 (4)) and 24(3) had been widened. Whether this was correct could only answered on a proper
consideration of relevant rules governing the interpretation of statutes generally and of the constitution in
particular. In this respect, it is pertinent to note that a constitution is itself a statute of Parliament. Therefore, any
rules of interpretation that are regarded as having particular relevance in relation to constitutional interpretation,
can only be additional to the general rules governing the interpretation of statutes.
(2) The general rules could be summarized thus: (a) the legislature is presumed not to intend an absurdity,
ambiguity or repugnancy to arise out of the grammatical and ordinary meaning of the words that it uses in an
enactment; (b) therefore, in order to ascertain the true purpose and intent of the legislature, regard is to be had,
not only to the literal meaning of the words, but also to their practical effect. (c) In this respect, (i) the words in
question must be capable of an interpretation that is consistent with the rest of the instrument in which the
words appear; (ii) the state of the law in place before the enactment in question is a useful aid in ascertaining the
legislative purpose and intention, and (iii) where an earlier and a later enactment (or provision) deal with the
same subject matter, then, in the case of uncertainty, the two should be interpreted in such a way that there is
mutual consistency. In addition, in interpreting the rights provisions in a constitution, the interpreter should
follow the submitted triple synthesis of literalism, intentionalism and purposiveness principle, as is done in the
interpretation of any other statute. The court should give a generous and purposive construction to the
constitutions provisions, particularly the entrenched fundamental rights and freedoms. In this process, the
purpose of the provision in question is to be given particular attention.
(3) Applying these principles to the present situation, there was no gainsaying the fact that a literal and
grammatical meaning ascribed to s 85(1) would be inconsistent with s 175(4). Such meaning would give room
to litigants in proceedings under way in a lower court to abandon such proceedings midstream and without any
ceremony, in order to approach the Constitutional Court directly in terms of that section. Such a meaning would
thus introduce an absurdity and possible chaos to a process that, in terms of the more expansive s 24 of the old
Constitution, was free of such anomalies. The purpose of the old s 24 was to inject order and certainty into the
process by which constitutional issues arising during proceedings before the lower courts were referred to the
Supreme Court: order in the sense that the lower court had the opportunity to call and hear evidence on, and
consider, the issue so as to determine whether or not it was frivolous or vexatious. Only if it was not did the
court refer the issue to the Supreme Court. Through this process, the Supreme Court was shielded from a
situation where frivolous and undeserving cases might have been directly brought to it. The effect of the referral
would be a formal deferment of the proceedings in the lower court, pending determination of the constitutional
issues referred to it. More importantly, the risk of parallel proceedings being pursued in the constitutional and
the lower courts, on different aspects of the same case but based on the same facts, was obviated.
(4) The present case was an example of the absurdity that could arise through a literal construction of s 85(1).
There was nothing to show that the lower court was made aware of the approach to the Constitutional Court.
Evidence should have been led in the lower court to enable the magistrate to determine whether to refer the
matter, evidence that might enable the Constitutional Court to properly determine the matter. There could be no
doubt that the certainty and order referred to above would be completely eroded were the courts to operate on
the basis of a literal and grammatical interpretation of s 85(1). This circumstance is not only highly undesirable,
but it would also constitute an affront to the time honoured common law principle that a superior court should
be slow to intervene in ongoing proceedings in an inferior court, except in exceptional circumstances. It was not
the intention of the legislature to oust a procedural regime that ensured order and certainty in the administration
of justice in the courts, and to introduce, in its place, one that would result in absurdity, disorder and ambiguity.
Clearly, the anomalies that would flow from a literal meaning of s 85(1) (a) could not have been intended by the
legislature.
Ngoni v Min of Home Affairs & Ors HH-658-15 (Tsanga J) (Judgment delivered 29 July 2015)
The applicant had been placed on remand on charges of escaping from lawful custody, unlawful entry, theft of a
motor vehicle, rape and murder. He had been in custody, from which he escaped. He gained unlawful entry into
the premises of the deceased. He raped the deceased, and then, it was alleged, murdered her. After murdering
the deceased, the accused stole the deceaseds motor vehicle which he drove from the deceaseds premises.
He was tried before a provincial magistrate on the first two charges; he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to a
term of imprisonment. Two months later he was tried before a regional magistrate on the charges of theft of a
motor vehicle and rape. Again, he pleaded guilty and was sentenced to lengthy periods of imprisonment.
He was then indicted for trial before the High Court on the murder charge. His counsel applied for a permanent
stay of proceedings on the grounds that the manner in which the charges against him were instituted contravened
his rights as enshrined in s 56(1) and s 69(1) of the Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013. These provisions
respectively give the right to equal protection and benefit of the law and the right to a fair and public trial within
a reasonable time before an independent and impartial court. It was argued that that a single transaction
underpinned all the charges, yet the State started by prosecuting him on the least serious of the charges, and had
now indicted him for the most serious of them, murder. That approach was immoral and calculated to, and did,
prejudice the applicant and so rendered the proceedings before the High Court unfair.
Held: (1) a stay of criminal proceedings could be granted where there is an unreasonable delay in the
prosecution of a matter or where, in the circumstances of a case, it is not possible for an accused to be
guaranteed a fair trial by reason of some other factors, such as abuse of criminal procedure, where criminal
proceedings are instituted to achieve a purpose other than that which they are by law designed to achieve. An
abuse of process application should only be granted on an exceptional basis. It is a measure of last resort, to be
adopted where all other possible measures have been exhausted. The abuse of process doctrine is ordinarily
concerned with serious prosecutorial misconduct or with serious breaches of the rights of an accused by state
authorities. It is undesirable to join in the same indictment a murder count and other offences, except where it is
convenient because the facts arise out of one course of conduct. In this instant case the facts did not arise out of
one course of conduct. While the offences were committed by one person, each offence was distinct with its
own elements separate from the others.
(2) The equality provision enshrined in s 56(1) should be given broad, substantive content in order to ensure that
substantive rather than merely formal equality is realised. To that end, equality before the law should entail
entitling everyone to equal treatment by courts of law or equality in the legal process. The section protects
against arbitrary and irrational State action. The impact of the State action must be considered in the assessment
of whether the equality provision was contravened, but if the State has a defensible purpose, together with
reasons for its actions that bear some relationship to the stated purpose, then the action cannot be irrational.
(3) As regards the right to a fair trial protected in s 69(1), the fairness of the trial must be judged by reference to
the specific instances of fairness given in s 70(1) to (5), as well as other notions of fairness and justice which are
not necessarily listed in that section. Those other notions of fairness and justice must reflect the normative value
system upon which our constitutional order is founded. In this case the accused was aware from his initial
remand that he was facing allegations of murder in addition to the other offences which he has been convicted
of. It is not as if he was misled into thinking that the murder allegations would not be proceeded with once the
other charges had been completed. It would be a subversion of justice for him to escape prosecution on the basis
that he had already been convicted of lesser charges. The offences were totally different from each other and did
not arise from one transaction. There was no duplication of charges.
Constitutional law Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Declaration of Rights right to fair trial (s 69(1))
criminal trial trial judge descending into arena extent to which he did so violating accuseds right to
fair trial
S v Konson CC-7-15 (Gowora JCC, Chidyausiku CJ, Malaba DCJ, Gwaunza JCC, Garwe JCC, Hlatswayo JCC,
Patel JCC, Guvava JCC & Mavangira AJCC concurring) (Judgment delivered 22 July 2015)
The applicant was convicted of murder in the High court and sentenced to death. In his appeal before the
Supreme Court, the applicant alleged that the High Court had violated his right to a fair trial, as guaranteed
under s 69(1) of the Constitution, by the extent to which the trial judge had descended into the arena. It was
alleged that the record of proceedings showed that the court was not impartial. It is argued the questioning of
the applicant by the trial judge was such that, because of its frequency, length, timing, form, tone, content, it
was apparent that the trial judge was hostile to the applicant. The trial judge asked more questions of the
applicant during cross-examination and re-examination than did the prosecutor.
Held: The object of a criminal trial is for the truth surrounding the commission of the offence to be established.
The role of the judge is therefore an onerous one, as his task is to see that justice is not only done, but that it is
seen to be done. In this exercise he should conduct himself in such a manner that he is not viewed or perceived
to have aligned himself with either the prosecution or the defence. He is not precluded from questioning the
witnesses or the accused person but such questioning must not be framed in such a manner as to convey an
impression that he is conducting a case on behalf of one of the parties. The judge must avoid questions that are
clearly biased and show a predisposition on the part of the judge. The judge should neither lead nor cross-
examine a witness. He should so conduct the trial that his open-mindedness, his impartiality and his fairness are
manifest to all those who are concerned in the trial and its outcome, especially the accused.
In this case, the inescapable conclusion that emerged from the record is that the judge descended into the arena
and as a consequence he deprived himself of the detached impartiality required of a judicial officer. The fairness
of the trial was clearly undermined. He had prejudged the issues of the trial that was before him. In view of the
stance assumed by the trial judge, the defence proffered on behalf of the applicant was not properly evaluated
thus further undermining the trial. His right to a fair hearing was clearly violated. The proceedings would be set
aside and a trial de novo before another judge would be ordered.
Editors note: at the re-trial, the applicant was convicted and sentenced to 25 years imprisonment. See S v
Konson HB-18-16.
Constitutional law Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Declaration of rights rights of accused persons
right of appeal against conviction (s 70(5)) allows police officer to appeal from ruling of Commissioner-
General to the High Court
Sadengu v Board President & Anor HH-712-15 (Dube J) (judgment delivered 26 August 2015)
Constitutional law Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Declaration of rights rights of accused persons
right of appeal against conviction (s 70(5)) does not confer right of appeal where an Act of Parliament
does not provide for it
Tamanikwa v Board President & Anor HH-676-15 (Mathonsi J) (Judgment delivered August 5 2015)
Chihava & Anor v Mapfumo NO & Anor CC-6-15 (Gwaunza JCC, Chidyausiku CJ, Malaba DCJ, Ziyambi,
Garwe, Gowora, Hlatshwayo & Guvava JJCC & Chiweshe AJCC concurring) (Judgment delivered 15 July
2015)
See above, under CONSTITUTIONAL LAW (Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Constitutional Court).
Contract breach remedies specific performance discretion vesting in court compliance with
order for specific performance not possible such order should not be issued
Contract validity agreement to contract in the future not enforceable cannot be treated as
substantive contract contract in breach of statutory provision such contract void
Hativagone & Anor v CAG Farms (Pvt) Ltd & Anor S-42-15 (Gowora JA, Garwe & Patel JJA concurring)
(Judgment delivered 16 July 2015)
The appellants were owners of a farm. The first respondent had made a written final offer to the appellants for
the acquisition of the farm. The appellants accepted the offer and the parties then drew up an irrevocable
memorandum of understanding (MOU) in relation to the farm. The MOU specifically provided that its purpose
was to set out the basis upon which the transaction should be concluded and to set out the rights and obligations
upon each party leading to the signing of a sale agreement between the parties.
In view of the statutory legal requirement attendant upon the sale of rural land, the appellants immediately made
an application to the Ministry of Lands for the issuance of a certificate of no present interest. The application
was acknowledged and the certificate was issued some time in the same month. In the meantime, in anticipation
of the issuance of the certificate, the respondent had prepared a written agreement of sale. However, the
agreement was not signed due to alleged unwillingness to co-operate on the part of the appellants. A few months
later, the respondent became aware that the farm was being advertised for sale as subdivided plots. Being of the
view that a valid sale agreement had been concluded between itself and the appellants, it approached the High
Court seeking an order declaring that a valid agreement of sale of the farm had been concluded between the
parties and, consequent thereto, an order for specific performance of the sale agreement in its favour. The court
a quo found that an agreement of sale had been entered into and it ordered specific performance in favour of the
respondent.
The appellant argued that (a) the respondent was not entitled to an order for specific performance because the
property had already been subdivided by the time the matter came to court and because there was no valid and
binding agreement between the parties; (b) the MOU did not constitute a valid and binding agreement; (c) the
offer and acceptance and the MOU were both void ab initio having been entered into before the issue of a
certificate of no interest by the Ministry; and (d) the dies induciae of the offer and acceptance and the MOU had
lapsed before the parties could sign, so there was no valid and binding agreement between them.
Held: (1) there were two contracts envisaged after the offer for the purchase of the farm was accepted. The first
was the MOU itself, which would lay the basis for the conclusion of the agreement of sale of the land, the
second was the contract of sale itself. The MOU was a vehicle through which the agreement of sale would be
concluded. The MOU specifically provided that a contract would be concluded upon the obtaining of a
certificate of no present interest. The sale agreement was to be effected at a later date, subject to the terms and
conditions set out in the MOU and, subject also to further negotiations by the parties. The wording of the MOU
itself lent support to an interpretation which was only consonant with a finding that the MOU was not the
agreement of sale in itself. The sale of the farm had not been concluded by the signing of the MOU.
(2) Agreements akin to the one in casu are not enforceable primarily due to the uncertainty which accompanies
such contracts. In agreements to agree in the future, the parties thereto retain a discretion as to whether or not to
agree or disagree in the future. The court a quo prematurely found that an agreement of sale had been entered
into when both parties agreed that the agreement of sale had not yet been concluded and would only be executed
at a later stage.
(3) By the time the application was brought to the High Court, the MOU had expired and there were no rights
arising from the MOU which could be enforced by any of the parties. The respondent had no cause of action.
(4) In terms of s 3 of the Land Acquisition (Disposal of Rural Land) Regulations (SI 287 of 1999) a holder of
rural land cannot sell such land to any other person without having approached the State to exercise its statutory
right of first refusal. If the State is not interested in the land, the relevant Minister will issue a certificate of no
present interest and only then may a party proceed to enter into an agreement of sale with any other party. A
seller has no discretion and must comply with the statutory condition. Where a contract is proscribed by statute,
it is invalid and non-compliance with the condition invalidates the whole contract. The agreement which the
court a quo found to exist between the parties was illegal. A sale of rural land before the relevant Minister has
expressed his disinclination to buy the same is prohibited. It is, in addition, an established principle of the law of
contract that an agreement of sale that is subject to the fulfilment of a condition precedent that has not been
fulfilled is not a valid sale.
(4) A whole piece of land is a different entity to subdivided portions of the same. The subdivision of land is not
a matter of form, it is one of substance. Once the appellants obtained a subdivision permit in respect of the farm,
the merx as it originally stood and offered to the respondent had ceased to exist. The grant of an order of specific
performance is discretionary. The principle lex non cogit ad impossibilia states that specific performance should
never be ordered if compliance with the order would be impossible, as it would be here.
Editors note: decision of DUBE J in CAG Farms (Pvt) Ltd v Hativagone & Ors HH-157-14 (delivered 2 April 2014)
reversed. See the summaries for 2014(1) for a summary of that judgment.
Costs de bonis propriis against legal practitioner making application knowing it was inappropriate
and obtaining judgment by misrepresentation
Mashingaidze v Chipunza & Ors HH-688-15 (Chitakunye J) (Judgment delivered 6 August 2015)
Court Constitutional Court appeal to from decision of Supreme Court no right of appeal existing
unless Supreme Court has made decision on a constitutional matter
Nyamande & Anor v Zuva Petroleum (Pvt) Ltd (2) CC-8-15 (Ziyambi JCC) (Judgment delivered 1 August
2015)
See above, under CONSTITUTIONAL LAW (Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Constitutional Court).
Court High Court jurisdiction appellate jurisdiction from inferior tribunals decision of
Commissioner-General of Police dismissing appeal of member of police force convicted by a single officer
appeal lying to High Court against such decision
Sadengu v Board President & Anor HH-712-15 (Dube J) (judgment delivered 26 August 2015)
Court High Court jurisdiction appellate jurisdiction from inferior tribunals decision of
Commissioner-General of Police dismissing appeal of member of police force convicted by a single officer
no appeal lying to High Court against such decision
Tamanikwa v OIC ZRP Beatrice & Ors HH-616-15 (Tagu J) (Judgment delivered 15 July 2015)
Court High Court jurisdiction extraterritorial rape committed outside Zimbabwe has harmful
effects in Zimbabwe court has jurisdiction
An application for bail pending appeal was instituted by a man who had been convicted of rape and sentenced to
18 years by the regional court. The rape had taken place in South Africa, but had only been reported to the
police in Zimbabwe, where the perpetrator was arrested, tried and convicted. His application for bail pending
appeal did not raise the issue of lack of jurisdiction by the Zimbabwean court. The court stated that it was not an
issue to be determined by the appeal court, but then proceeded to address it in assessing whether the bail
application was likely to succeed.
The court cited s 5 of the Criminal Law (Codification and Reform) Act [Chapter 9:23] and concluded that a
Zimbabwean court can have jurisdiction over a crime committed wholly outside the country which has produced
harmful effect in Zimbabwe; a rape can have harmful effect even if it is committed outside Zimbabwe. There is
no justification for rigid adherence to the principles of basing jurisdiction upon the place of impact or intended
impact in a global village. The appeal court would not conclude there was lack of jurisdiction. (MN)
Editors note: On where the harmful effects of a crime are felt, see S v Nkomo 2007 (1) ZLR 357 (S) and the
cases there cited. Whether harmful effects would include, for example, ongoing psychological trauma arising
out a rape is yet to be decided by the Supreme Court.
Court judicial officer conduct of trial manner in which judicial officer should conduct trial extent
to which may question accused person in criminal trial
S v Konson CC-7-15 (Gowora JCC, Chidyausiku CJ, Malaba DCJ, Gwaunza JCC, Garwe JCC, Hlatswayo JCC,
Patel JCC, Guvava JCC & Mavangira AJCC concurring) (Judgment delivered 22 July 2015)
See above, under CONSTITUTIONAL LAW (Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Declaration of Rights right
to a fair trial).
Court jurisdiction peregrinus need for defendant to be present or have property within the
jurisdiction not necessary to arrest such person or attach property jurisdiction may be founded by
issuance of process
Gwisai v Shamuyedova & Ors HH-623-15 (Uchena J) (Judgment delivered 15 July 2015)
Under s 15 of the High Court Act [Chapter 7:06], the court may exercise jurisdiction over a peregrinus (a)
founded on or confirmed by the arrest of any person or attachment of any property; (b) who is or which is in
Zimbabwe, and (c) can permit or direct the issue of process, for service in or outside Zimbabwe (d) without
ordering such arrest or attachment. This means that if the property or person is outside the country it or he
cannot be attached or arrested. The absence of a person who can be arrested or property which can be attached
to found or confirm jurisdiction is a critical consideration in deciding whether or not the court has jurisdiction
and can issue process. The absence of a person who can be arrested or property that can be attached has the
effect of defeating the principle of effectiveness, which is central to the issue of whether or not a court has
jurisdiction. However, if the court believes that there is a person to be arrested or property to be attached to
found or confirm jurisdiction within Zimbabwe, it can grant an application for edictal citation. The issuance of
that process will, because of the presence of a person or property to be arrested or attached to found or confirm
jurisdiction, itself found or confirm the courts jurisdiction.
Editors note: see also Fairdrop (Pvt) Ltd v Capital Bank Corp Ltd & Ors HH-305-14 (a judgment of Mathonsi J,
delivered 18 June 2014, contained in the summaries for 2014(1)).
Court recusal grounds for recusal bias reasonable grounds for apprehension of bias sufficient
need for a real likelihood of bias to appear onus on person alleging bias
The trial magistrate requested a judicial review of a part-heard trial, after the complainant in the matter alleged
that the accused person was a friend of or related to the magistrate and that magistrate should recuse himself.
Although the magistrate denied the allegation, he nonetheless considered that at the heart of the test for recusal
lies the principle that justice should not only be done but be seen to be done; on this basis, justice would not be
seen by the complainant to be done if the trial magistrate were not to recuse himself.
Held: All too often judicial officers are faced with allegations of bias, some justified, but most not borne out by
the facts. It is important that judicial officers handle this criticism with utmost sensitivity as the perception of
bias might, unfortunately, crystalize into fact. Various tests have been proposed, which are to the effect that in
considering whether there is a real likelihood of bias, the court does not look at the mind of the judicial officer
himself. It does not look to see if there was a real likelihood that he would, or did, in fact favour one side at the
expense of the other. The court looks at the impression which would be given to other people. Even if he was as
impartial as could be, nevertheless, if right-minded persons would think that, in the circumstances, there was a
real likelihood of bias on his part, then he should not sit, and if he does sit, his decision cannot stand.
Nevertheless, there must appear to be a real likelihood of bias. Surmise or conjecture is not enough; there must
be circumstances from which a reasonable man would think it likely or probable that the judicial officer would,
or did, favour one side unfairly at the expense of the other. The court will not enquire whether he did, in fact,
favour one side unfairly. The principle enshrined in the authorities is that no reasonable man should, by reason
of the situation or action of a judicial officer, have grounds for suspecting that justice will not be administered in
an impartial and unbiased manner. A judicial officer should therefore so conduct the trial that his open-
mindedness, his impartiality and his fairness are manifest to all those who are concerned in the trial and its
outcome, especially the accused.
Two considerations are built in. The first is that in considering the application for recusal, the court as a starting
point presumes that judicial officers are impartial in adjudicating disputes. This in-built aspect entails two
further consequences. On the one hand, it is the applicant for recusal who bears the onus of rebutting the
presumption of judicial impartiality. On the other, the presumption is not easily dislodged. It requires cogent
or convincing evidence to be rebutted. The second in-built aspect of the test is that absolute neutrality is
something of a chimera in the judicial context. This is because judges are human. They are unavoidably the
product of their own life experiences, and the perspective thus derived inevitably and distinctively informs each
judges performance of his or her judicial duties. But colourless neutrality stands in contrast to judicial
impartiality. Impartiality is that quality of open-minded readiness to persuasion without unfitting adherence to
either party, or to the judges own predilections, preconceptions and personal views that is the keystone of a
civilised system of adjudication. Impartiality requires, in short, a mind open to persuasion by the evidence and
the submissions of counsel; and, in contrast to neutrality, this is an absolute requirement in every judicial
proceeding.
Courts considering recusal applications asserting a reasonable apprehension of bias must accordingly give
consideration to two contending factors. On the one hand, it is vital to the integrity of our courts and the
independence of judges and magistrates that ill-founded and misdirected challenges to the composition of a
bench be discouraged. On the other, the courts very vulnerability serves to underscore the pre-eminent value to
be placed on public confidence in impartial adjudication. In striking the correct balance, it is as wrong to yield to
a tenuous or frivolous objection as it is to ignore an objection of substance.
Criminal law offences under Criminal Law Code theft of trust property what constitutes trust
property money paid is deposit on purchase price not trust property debtor-creditor relationship
only established
S v Mugandani HH-635-15 (Hungwe J) (Judgment delivered 29 July 2015)
Only property held under a deed of trust; or by agreement; or under any enactment; or on terms requiring the
holder to hold the property on behalf of another or account for it to another; or hand over the property to a
specific person; or deal with it in a particular way, constitutes trust property for the purposes of s 112 of the
Criminal Law Code [Chapter 9:23]. Money handed over as a deposit for the purchase of goods is not trust
property. In that situation, a debtor-creditor relationship is created. The money paid is a fungible which may be
used by the recipient as his own, as long as he acknowledges his debt to the depositor.
Criminal procedure prosecution stay of grounds abuse of process accused person charged with
multiple offences, including murder State proceeding against accused on lesser charges before indicting
him on murder charge State having valid reasons for proceedings as it did accused always aware that
he faced murder charge constitutional rights not breached no entitlement to stay of prosecution on
grounds of abuse of process
See above, under CONSTITUTIONAL LAW (Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Declaration of Rights right
to equal protection of the law).
Criminal procedure trial conduct of role of judicial officer extent to which judicial officer may
question accused person if fairness of trial undermined, accuseds constitutional right to fair trial may
be violated
S v Konson CC-7-15 (Gowora JCC, Chidyausiku CJ, Malaba DCJ, Gwaunza JCC, Garwe JCC, Hlatswayo JCC,
Patel JCC, Guvava JCC & Mavangira AJCC concurring) (Judgment delivered 22 July 2015)
See above, under CONSTITUTIONAL LAW (Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Declaration of Rights right
to a fair trial).
Criminal procedure (sentence) suspended sentence failure by accused to comply with conditions of
suspension actions which court may take once court has acted, may not revisit decision, even of
circumstances have changed
Employment arbitration award registration in magistrates court notice to other party not required
Josam Enterprises (Pvt) Ltd v Svenhe & Anor HH-714-15 (Dube J) (Judgment delivered 26 August 2015)
The respondent was the former employee of the applicant. Following arbitration of a labour dispute, the
respondent registered the award made with the magistrates court in 2014. In 2015 the applicants property was
attached. In June 2015 the applicant secured a rule nisi for a stay of execution, but confirmation was refused in
July. The applicant then filed this application with the High Court for a stay of execution and simultaneously
filed an application for review. Its argument was based on the fact that the award should not have been
registered without an application for notice to the other party, thus giving an opportunity for a challenge to be
made. The issuing of the writ of execution was irregular since the registration was irregular. The respondent
argued that the award was registered under the Labour Act [Chapter 28:01], not the Arbitration Act [Chapter
7:15], and hence notice to the other party was not required for registration.
Held: s 98(14) of the Labour Act makes it clear that an arbitral award can be registered in the magistrates court
without giving notice to the other party; no procedure is outlined as registration is a purely administrative
process. Article 35 of the First Schedule to the Arbitration Act, which provides for a notice to the other party on
registration, covers registration in the High Court only and Articles 34 and 36 of the Act do not apply to labour
disputes. Hence no review would find any irregularity. The balance of convenience favoured the respondent and
the application to stay execution was denied. (MN)
Banking Employers Assn of Zimbabwe v Zimbabwe Bank & Allied Workers Union S-34-15 (Guvava JA,
Ziyambi & Garwe JJA concurring) (Judgment delivered 9 July 2015)
The appellant was the employers association for the banking industry, while the respondent was the union
which represented the workers for that industry. Following protracted negotiations, they signed an agreement
which was later reduced into a Collective Bargaining Agreement (published as SI 150 of 2013). It was agreed
that the CBA resolved the dispute over salaries then pending in the Labour Court and that the parties withdrew
all pending disputes relating to salary reviews. The clause dealing with salary reviews stated that the parties had
agreed to base salary reviews on year-on-year inflation figures prevailing at the relevant time, and stipulated
the source of such figures. A later clause (clause 9) provided that the issue of actual(s) will be dealt with by
individual institutions.
A disagreement about how to interpret the Agreement led to the matter being referred to arbitration. The
appellants stand was that any salary increment which would be in line with the inflation figures for that year
(4.9%) in order to stop any further disputes, while the respondent was of the view that the inflation figure would
form the starting point of any future negotiations that they would have with the employer. The unions demand
was for 23.5%. The arbitrator awarded a 10% increase, and this was upheld by the Labour Court, which held
that the inflation figure was a starting point, not the end point and that the arbitrator was not bound by it.
Held: In order to give a proper interpretation to the intention of the parties, it was incumbent upon the lower
court to examine the whole agreement and not just to rely on a single word. The decision to award a 10% salary
increase completely defeated the intention of the parties in coming up with a formula to implement future salary
increments. If the parties had intended to introduce other factors in determining future salary reviews, they
would have said so in no uncertain terms. The fact that they agreed on a unitary yardstick to determine future
salary reviews meant that they had no intention of introducing other factors, which would introduce uncertainty
in the determination of their salary reviews. Having regard to the wording of the CBA, an interpretation which
would include other factors, such as cost of living, the prevailing wage and the take home pay, would be doing
violence to the ordinary grammatical meaning of the word base and would be clearly out of context with the
other provisions of the agreement. There was no basis for the figure of 10%, which was a thumb suck. A
proper reading of clause 9 was that individual institutions which were performing better than the others
financially and were in a position to pay a salary increment higher than the one agreed to by the appellant and
the respondent could do so. Workers who had evidence that their institution were performing better than the
others could then negotiate with their employers for a salary increment which was higher than the basic inflation
rate.
Employment collective bargaining agreements who may be parties thereto what may be included in
such agreements benefits not included in agreement cannot be imposed by arbitrator or court dispute
relating to interest only arbitrators role merely conciliatory
NRZ v Zimbabwe Rlys Artisans Union & Ors S-46-15 (Ziyambi JA, Gwaunza & Guvava JJA concurring)
(Judgment delivered 27 July 2015)
Collective bargaining agreements are governed by Part X of the Labour Act [Chapter 28:01. They are to be
negotiated by the parties mentioned therein: registered trade unions, employers and employers organizations or
federations thereof. They may relate to any conditions of employment which are of mutual interest to the parties
thereto, including any or all of the items listed in s 74(3) of the Act. Among these items are benefits for
employees and housing and transport facilities or, in their absence, an allowance for the same. The statute does
not confer a right on any of the parties, without agreement of the others, to have included in their collective
bargaining agreement any of the subjects on the list, because a collective bargaining agreement is a contract
between the parties to it and only they can set the terms by which they will be bound. It follows that any benefits
to be included in the collective bargaining agreement must be agreed by the parties. They cannot be imposed by
an arbitrator, or indeed any court, in the same way that a court cannot write a contract for the parties.
Allowances, not having been negotiated by the parties and therefore not forming part of their collective
bargaining agreement, are not a right or entitlement available for appropriation by the employees. This would be
a matter for the parties to bargain and reach agreement on. It is not a matter where a court could intervene. A
court can only intervene to enforce any agreement the parties have concluded.
Under s 93(1) of the Act, a labour officer to whom a dispute or unfair labour practice has been referred, or to
whose attention it has come, is required to attempt to settle it through conciliation or, if agreed by the parties, by
reference to arbitration. However, where there is no legal right which is being sought to be enforced, the dispute
being one of interest only, the arbitrators role in such circumstances would merely be a conciliatory one.
Employment dismissal constructive what must be shown requirement for employee to act
promptly failure to do so indicating election to continue in employment employee transfer of to
another town employers right to transfer employees need for employee to show good cause why
should not be transferred
Rainbow Tourism Group v Nkomo S-47-15 (Ziyambi JA, Garwe & Hlatshwayo JJA concurring) (Judgment
delivered 27 July 2015)
The respondent was head hunted by the appellant and appointed as general manager of the appellants leading
hotel in Harare. He was initially appointed, at the beginning of 2011, for a three month probationary period; the
letter of appointment stated that he would then be on a 5 year executive employment contract, which was to
be negotiated. In the event, this contract was never negotiated and the respondent became an employee on a
contract without limit of time. Within the first year of his employment, an audit team reported violations of the
respondents motor vehicle loan scheme and other irregularities. When tasked with these, the respondent did not
reply directly, but complained about his conditions of services. Nonetheless, he continued in service, but in
August 2012 the appellant expressed its dissatisfaction with the respondents performance, as the hotel was
running at a loss instead of the expected profit.
Despite the concerns expressed, the situation did not change, and the appellant told the respondent in late
November 2012 that it proposed to transfer him to a hotel at Victoria Falls, at the same salary and remuneration,
to expose him to the operation of a resort hotel. The following day, the respondents legal practitioners wrote to
the appellant, saying that the respondent had been specifically appointed as general manager of the hotel in
Harare and that no provision was made therein for transfer within the group. In addition the appellant, it was
alleged, was aware that the respondents wife required specialist medical care and facilities which were not
available in Victoria Falls. Accordingly, the respondent could not accept the transfer. The appellant replied that
its assessment of the business was such that there was need for the transfer and that the respondent would be
required to transfer on 1 January 2013. Reference was made to the respondents conditions of employment
which it was said were contained in a booklet referred to the respondents letter of appointment.
The respondent lodged a claim of constructive dismissal with a labour officer and the matter was referred to
arbitration. He did not report for duty on 1 January 2013 and the appellant notified the respondent of a
disciplinary hearing for being absent without leave for 5 days or more. His legal practitioners said that he had
ceased to be an employee because he was constructively dismissed, and the respondent did not attend the
hearing. At the hearing, the respondent was found guilty of misconduct and invited to tender submissions in
mitigation. The arbitration hearing took place subsequently, and the arbitrator ordered the respondents
reinstatement. The Labour Court upheld the arbitrators award.
The main issue on appeal to the Supreme Court was whether the respondent was constructively dismissed in
terms of s 12B(3) of the Labour Act [Chapter28:01], on the basis that the appellant deliberately made continued
employment intolerable for the respondent. The appellant took the stance that the respondent had remained in
employment and had drawn a salary up to the end of January 2013, and that like all other executive employees,
was bound by the transferability clause in the code of conduct governing the appellant and its employees. The
respondent contended that because he was not given the booklet referred to in the letter of appointment, he was
not bound by its terms and was not transferable.
Held: (1) the letter of transfer stated in clear terms why the respondent was being transferred. In view of the
respondents failings, the appellant might have been justified in terminating the employment contract on notice,
but chose transfer instead. There being no reduction of benefits, there was nothing to make the respondents
continued employment intolerable. Since the respondents employment contract had become one without limit
of time, he was bound by the general rules of transferability in the organization. Since no further contract was
negotiated, there could not be read into that contract an appointment to a specific post, for a specific period and
at a specific place only.
(2) The right to transfer an employee from one place to another is the prerogative of the employer. It is the
employer who knows better where the services of an employee are required. The employers discretion in
determining which employee should be transferred and to which point of the employers operations is not to be
readily interfered with except for good cause shown.
(3) The respondent was the general manager of the Harare hotel and it was childish to submit that he was
ignorant of the code because it was not given to him. In his position, he would have been responsible for
drawing the attention of subordinate employees to the code of conduct. It would be an affront to intelligence to
say that he remained, and was content to remain, blissfully unaware of its contents throughout the period of his
employment with the appellant which spanned two years. The same would apply to any code applicable to
executives if that were applicable to the respondent.
(4) There was nothing in the record, either of the respondents recruitment or in his employment with the
appellant, to suggest that the respondents wife was an invalid and, still less, that the appellant was aware of it.
In any event, unless his contract specifically provided (which it did not) for his employment in Harare and
nowhere else, because of his wifes medical condition, that condition could not restrict the appellant in the
exercise of its right to transfer the respondent as it deemed fit. The respondent, as an employee, was bound by
the transferability clause in the appellants code of conduct. Any difficulties which he had with the transfer
should have been discussed with the appellant when he was given an opportunity to do so. Instead, when asked
for his views, he chose to correspond through legal practitioners. The respondent had not discharged the onus of
showing that the appellants conduct was such that it made his employment with the appellant intolerable.
(5) Where an employer commits a breach which goes to the root of the employment contract the employee is
entitled to treat himself as discharged from further performance. He is constructively dismissed. However, he
must act promptly. If he continues for any length of time without leaving, he will lose his right to treat himself
as discharged. He will be regarded as having elected to affirm the contract. The respondent did not leave at the
instant nor did he give notice and say he would be leaving at the end of the notice. He continued to attend at
work and to do as he was instructed in the letter of transfer. He continued to receive his salary and benefits right
up to the end of January 2013. His was not the conduct of one constructively dismissed. He was properly
dismissed for absenteeism. The appeal would be allowed.
Employment dismissal grounds for breach of conduct of conduct disclosure by employee of
confidential company information without authority employee a member of workers committee and
disclosing such information during reconciliation proceedings employees first duty is to employer
status as member of workers committee not exempting him from duty to comply with code of conduct
Chidembo v Bindura Nickel Corp Ltd S-35-15 (Gwaunza JA, Hlatshwayo JA & Mavangira AJA concurring)
(Judgment delivered 2 July 2015)
The appellant was employed by the respondent and was chairman of a workers committee. He was dismissed
from employment for disclosing confidential information during conciliation proceedings. The code of conduct
provided that Information with respect to any confidential product, plan or business transaction of the group, or
personal information regarding employees, including their salaries, or any business information must not be
disclosed by any employee unless and until proper authorisation for such disclosure has been obtained. In the
course of the conciliation proceedings, which were attended by both employer and employee representatives, a
request was made to the appellant who was present as the workers committee chairman, for a list, if he had it,
of employees affected by alleged salary anomalies. The appellant duly submitted the list, except that it showed
employees salaries, in addition to their names. His defence was that the information was disclosed during a
lawful conciliation hearing and in the appellants capacity as a worker representative, not as an employee. This
was done as a bona fide step to prove the workers case. It was not an act done in the normal course and scope
of the contract of employment of the appellant. Since the disclosure of the list was clearly done in the pursuit of
the employees interest, it was lawful.
Held: The distinction between confidential information required by an individual worker and that required by a
workers representative is a useful and indeed critical one, but it was questionable whether divulging of such
information would nevertheless be lawful, even if it is done in blatant violation of an express provision of the
code of conduct. In spite of his position as chairman of the workers committee, the appellant was an employee
of the respondent, to whom at all times he bore the duty of trust and loyalty. His conduct in relation to the
respondent was regulated and governed by the code of conduct. An act of misconduct committed by a worker
outside the workplace and in his (also work related) capacity as a workers committee member would be
unlawful as long as it impacted directly on the employers private interests and, in addition, constituted a
violation of the employers code of conduct. A workers status as a workers committee member would not
clothe him with a cloak of immunity against misconduct charges. The appellants status as a workers committee
chairman did not turn what was unlawful into a lawful act. His conduct became unlawful the moment he
disclosed the information without the authority of the respondent.
Employment dismissal grounds for conduct inconsistent with the fulfilment of the express or implied
conditions of his employment penalty employers general discretion as to whether to dismiss employee
guilty of such conduct when appeal court may interfere conduct causing no real prejudice dismissal
unreasonable appeal court entitled to interfere
Celsys Ltd v Ndeleziwa S-49-15 (Gwaunza JA, Hlatshwayo & Patel JJA concurring) (Judgment delivered 29
July 2015)
The respondent was employed by the appellant as a stores foreman. He ordered some sheet board for the
appellant, but the supplier sent board of a smaller size. The respondent altered the copy of the receipt voucher to
reflect the size actually received. This was contrary to the appellants standard operating procedures, which
required that defective goods be returned to the supplier. The respondent did not tell the relevant machine
operator about the incorrect size of board; the operator reported the matter to the respondents superiors, who
took the view that the respondent had, by altering the voucher, been trying to conceal his defective work or
inefficiency. He was charged with an act or omission inconsistent with the fulfilment of the express or implied
conditions of his employment, found guilty and dismissed. A domestic appeal failed, but the national
employment council for the industry ruled that dismissal was too harsh and ordered his reinstatement, coupled
with a monetary penalty. The Labour Court upheld the NECs finding.
The respondent did not deny the charge but argued that the penalty was too harsh. He said that the reason for
acting as he did was to clarify the real position for accounting purposes, so that the appellant would not pay
more than it needed to.
The issues on appeal were whether the appellant exercised its discretion reasonably in dismissing the
respondent, and whether the Labour Court was correct in interfering with that discretion.
Held: (1) it is well established that the court will not interfere with the discretion of an employer to dismiss an
employee found guilty of misconduct, provided that the alleged misconduct goes to the root of the employment
contract, unless there has been misdirection or unreasonableness on the part of the employer. In the absence of a
misdirection or unreasonableness on the part of the employer in arriving at the decision to dismiss an employee,
an appeal court will generally not interfere with the exercise of the employers discretion.
(2) The standard operating procedures required the respondent to act in a certain way when a wrong order was
delivered. To that extent and notwithstanding what the respondent considered, on his own, to be the best way to
rectify the error, he clearly acted contrary to the express or implied conditions of his contract of employment.
Such conduct is generally regarded as going to the root of the employment contract. Where an employer takes a
serious view of an employees misconduct, it has a clear discretion as to what penalty to impose after finding
such employee guilty of the misconduct in question.
(3) Here, though, the misconduct in question, having been committed for the reasons given by the respondent,
and not having caused the appellant any real prejudice, financial or otherwise, was so trivial, so inadvertent, so
aberrant or otherwise so excusable, that the remedy of summary dismissal was not warranted. The appellant
acted unreasonably in dismissing the respondent from employment, and therefore misdirected itself, so entitling
the NEC and the Labour Court to interfere.
Delta Beverages (Pvt) Ltd v Murandu S-38-15 (Gwaunza JA, Hlatshwayo JA & Chiweshe JJA concurring)
(Judgment delivered 2 July 2015)
The respondent was employed by the appellant company and had been suspended from work in 2000 for alleged
misconduct. A labour officer found that there were no grounds for the respondents dismissal and ordered his
reinstatement, alternatively that he be paid an agreed exit package is cash in lieu of reinstatement. A dispute
arose over the payment and quantification of the damages. The matter was heard by an arbitrator, who died
before it was resolved. In 2011 it was placed before another arbitrator who, in 2012, ordered back pay from the
date of suspension until the date of reinstatement. He also ordered 36 months salary as damages in lieu of
reinstatement. The total amount was denominated in local currency, which was in use at the time of the
respondents dismissal. The arbitrator then converted the amount to US dollars, at the official rate that prevailed
at the time. The Labour Court upheld the arbitrators award. On appeal to the Supreme Court, the appellant
argued that (1) there was no evidence in the record to support the arbitrators award of 36 months salary; and
(2) the respondent was not entitled to damages and back pay in US dollars, when the lawful currency at the date
the order of reinstatement or payment of damages was made (July 2002) was Zimbabwe dollars, and, when the
cause of action arose, and the alleged damages were suffered, the Zimbabwe dollar was the currency in use. The
appellant did not take issue with the award, per se, of back pay and damages to the respondent. Its main concern
was with on the period of 36 months awarded in terms of damages and the conversion of both amounts from
Zimbabwe to United States dollars. The arbitrator had held that considering his age, health and qualifications,
the respondent could have obtained reasonable alternative employment within 36 months. No evidence was led
before the arbitrator was to the respondents age, health and qualifications, though the Labour Court assumed
that the arbitrator would have received evidence.
Held: (1) the arbitrator erred by awarding the respondent 36 months salary as damages in lieu of reinstatement
without hearing any evidence as to his age, health and qualifications. The Labour Court, being none the wiser
concerning whether or not the arbitrator had direct knowledge of these issues, resorted to speculation. There was
no basis for the court to make, much less rely on, this particular speculation. Even assuming that the courts
speculation was correct that the arbitrator must have had before him the details in question this did not
absolve the court from its obligation to assess the evidence in question and satisfy itself that the decision of the
arbitrator was justified on such evidence. The Labour Court, as an appellate court, abdicated its responsibility in
this respect.
(2) The arbitrator compounded his error by not, additionally, considering other factors normally taken into
account in making assessments of this nature. Specifically, he did not consider whether or not the respondent
made any effort to mitigate his loss, nor the economic environment prevailing in 2002 and the prospects, if any,
that such environment offered in terms of alternative employment. He should have heard evidence as to how
long it would reasonably take a person in the position of the dismissed employee to find alternative
employment.
(3) The respondent took no effort to secure alternative employment, but simply decided to settle into a life of
subsistence farming. He therefore neglected to discharge the duty, as was incumbent upon him, to mitigate his
loss.
(4) The court could take judicial notice of the fact that in 2002 the prospects of obtaining alternative
employment were much better than four years later, when the economic meltdown of the country began. The
respondent could, if he had wanted, found alternative employment in a much shorter period than the 36 months
assessed by the arbitrator. Six months salary would have adequately compensated him.
(5) The Labour Court, as a court of equity, is the only court vested with jurisdiction to compute and convert of
various Zimbabwe dollar amounts into US dollars. Not being vested with such jurisdiction, the arbitrator fell
into an error of law by seeking to convert the back pay, benefits and damages awarded to the respondent from
Zimbabwe dollars into US dollars. The arbitrator compounded his error by settling on a conversion rate whose
validity was in doubt. Equity would demand that a formula be found to give effect to the employees entitlement
to payment of, and the employers obligation to pay, the debt in question. Failure to award him the damages in a
currency that would realistically compensate him for the harm suffered would undermine the Labour Acts
purpose of advancing equity, social justice and democracy at the workplace.
Editors note: Madhatter Mining Co v Tapfuma S-51-14 is summarised in the summaries for 2014 (2), and will
appear in the Law Reports for that period.
Employment employee who is distinction between employee, agent and independent contractor
tests control and supervision liability of employer for delicts of servant but not for those of agent or
contractor contractor not able to bind employer in contract
Masango & Ors v Kenneth & Anor S-41-15 (Gwaunza JA, Gowora & Patel JJA concurring) (Judgment
delivered 20 July 2015)
The difference between an agent and an independent contractor is that an agent is bound to act in the matter of
the agency subject to the directions and control of the principal, whereas an independent contractor merely
undertakes to perform certain specified work, or produce a certain specified result, the manner and means of
performance of production being left to his discretion, except as far as they are specified by the contract. This
distinction cannot be ignored, because the contract between master and servant is one of letting and hiring of
services (locatio conductio operarum), whereas the contract between the principal and a contractor is the letting
and hiring of some definite piece of work (locatio conductio operis). In the former case the relation between the
two contracting parties is much more intimate than in the latter, the servant becoming subordinate to the master,
whereas in the latter case the contractor remains on a footing of equality with the employer. The crucial
difference between these two cases lies in the fact that where a master engages a servant to work for him the
master is entitled under the contract to supervise and control the work of the servant. He is entitled at any time
to order the servant to desist, and if the matter is sufficiently serious may even dismiss him for disobedience.
Control in this context includes the right of an employer to decide what work is to be done by the employee,
the manner in which it is to be done by him, the means to be employed by him in doing it, the time when and the
place where it is to be done by him. Supervision implies the right of the employer to inspect and direct the work
being done by the employee.
An independent contractor is his own master, free of his employers control and representing no one else, when
performing the obligations he is called to perform under the contract which he has entered into with his
employer, such obligations not being those of contracting legal relations with third parties on behalf of his
employees.
A principal is liable for the delict of his agent where such agent is a servant, but not where he is a contractor or
sub-contractor or their servant. Similarly, an agent has authority to bind his principal in contract whereas the
independent contractor has no such power.
Remuneration by commission, although not by itself decisive, is a strong indication against a relationship of
master and servant.
The fact that the principal provides a motor vehicle is not in itself proof that the agent is a servant.
Judgment of MAFUSIRE J in Masango v Farmers Commodity Stock Exchange (Pvt) Ltd & Related Cases 2013 (2)
ZLR 163 (H) upheld.
Employment Labour Court appeal to cannot be changed to review by court without hearing
submissions by parties
Triangle Ltd v Sigauke S-52-15 (Ziyambi JA, Hlatshwayo JA & Mavangira JA concurring) (Judgment delivered
18 August 2015)
The respondent had been found guilty of theft and dismissed by his employer, the appellant, after a disciplinary
hearing in terms of the companys code of conduct. His appeal to the Labour Court was successful and it
ordered a new trial within 30 days, failing which he must be reinstated by the employer. The appeal had been
grounded on the fact that the disciplinary committee which heard his case was chaired by the departmental
manager who had carried out the investigation, constituting an irregularity as he was an interested party. The
appellant appealed against the Labour Courts ruling.
The appellant argued that there had been no irregularity since the hearing by the same person who carried out
the investigation was provided for in the code of conduct. Nevertheless the Labour Court found that there was
an irregularity and allowed the appeal, ordering the retrial. However, where there is an irregularity the correct
procedure is to follow a review process, not an appeal. The Labour Court in effect converted the appeal into a
review process, but did so not before or during the hearing, but afterwards, when making its judgment. This did
not allow for the parties to make submissions on the change of process. The appellant also raised further
objections to the improper content of the Labour Courts order, and claimed that it erred in not bringing the
matter to finality when it had in fact found that on a balance of probabilities the theft had been committed. The
respondent claimed that r 12 of the Labour Court Rules in effect allows for informality and setting aside of the
rules, hence the Labour Courts approach was acceptable.
Held: the Labour Court is bound by rr 15 and 16 which provide for appeals and reviews respectively. It has no
general power to dispense with its own rules. Rule 26 allows it to dispense with rules before or during a hearing,
not after the hearing is concluded. The Labour Courts conduct in proceeding to convert the appeal into a
review, and doing so after the hearing, was not supported by and was therefore ultra vires its powers as set out
in the Act and Rules. The failure to allow submissions from the parties before its decision to convert the appeal
to a review was an infringement of natural justice. (MN)
Employment Labour Court appeal to from decision of arbitrator appeal only lying on point of law
appeal relating to facts what must alleged in grounds of appeal not essential to allege that
misdirection on facts is so unreasonable that no sensible person could have reached impugned conclusion
necessary that grounds of appeal are disclosed in clear and concise manner
Zvokusekwa v Bikita RDC S-44-15 (Garwe JA, Ziyambi & Hlatshwayo JJA concurring) (judgment delivered 22
July 2015)
See above, under APPEAL (Labour Court appeal to from decision of arbitrator).
Employment Labour Court application of equitable principles courts duty to secure equity and
social justice debt owed in currency no longer in use court having jurisdiction to find formula to give
effect to employees entitlement
Delta Beverages (Pvt) Ltd v Murandu S-38-15 (Gwaunza JA, Hlatshwayo JA & Chiweshe JJA concurring)
(Judgment delivered 2 July 2015)
Employment termination on notice not a breach of Labour Act common law right to terminate
employment on notice not limited or abolished
Nyamande & Anor v Zuva Petroleum (Pvt) Ltd (1) S-43-15 (Chidyausiku CJ, Gwaunza, Garwe, Hlatshwayo &
Guvava JJA concurring) (Judgment delivered 17 July 2015)
The appellants employment was terminated on notice, as provided in their contracts of employment, and were
paid cash in lieu of notice. An arbitrator considered that the termination was unlawful because it had not been in
terms of a code of conduct, but the Labour Court allowed an appeal by the respondent, the employer. It held that
neither s 12(4) nor s 12B of the Labour Act [Chapter 28:01] abolished the employers right to terminate
employment on notice. On appeal to the Supreme Court, it was agreed that at one time both the employer and
the employee had a common law right to terminate an employment relationship on notice.
Held: (1) That common law right in respect of both the employer and the employee could only be limited,
abolished or regulated by an Act of Parliament or a statutory instrument that is clearly intra vires an Act of
Parliament. It is also a well-established principle of statutory interpretation that a statute cannot effect an
alteration of the common law without saying so explicitly. Applying the golden rule of statutory interpretation
that words be given their primary meaning there were no words in s 12B of the Act that either expressly or by
necessary implication abolished the employers common law right to terminate an employment relationship by
way of notice. Section 12B, as the main heading of that section reveals, deals with dismissal and the procedures
to be followed in those instances where an employment relationship is to be terminated by way of dismissal
following misconduct proceedings. The section also sets out in some detail what constitutes unfair labour
practice, which it outlaws. Termination of employment on notice is not among the conduct that s 12B of the Act
outlaws as unfair labour practice.
(2) Section 8 of the Act sets out in some detail conduct that is outlawed as unfair labour practice. Termination of
employment on notice is not among the conduct outlawed by s 8.
(3) Section 12B deals with the method of termination of employment known as dismissal. While dismissal is
one method of termination of employment, it is not the only method; it is one of several methods of terminating
employment. Another is retrenchment. Where the relationship between the employer and the employee has
deteriorated to untenable levels through no fault of either party the relationship can be terminated. Section 12B
of the Act does not deal with the general concept of termination of employment. It concerns itself with
termination of employment by way of dismissal in terms of a code of conduct. It sets out that which must be
followed or done in terms of either an employment code of conduct or a national code of conduct. It does not
concern itself with termination of employment by ways other than dismissal.
(4) Section 12(4) deals with the concept of termination of employment on notice in terms of a contract of
employment. It regulates the period of notice, setting out the time periods that apply when employment is being
terminated on notice. The notice periods do not apply when an employee is dismissed, as in such event no notice
is required. Section 12(4) explicitly applies to both the employer and the employee. There was no possible
reason why, despite the explicit language of the section, it should apply to the employee only and not to the
employer; or why the section should exist to regulate a non-existent right. The subsection could only have
meaning if there was a substantive right, in this case the common law right to terminate employment on notice,
to which it pertained. This is especially so when one considers that all that s 12(4) does is to facilitate the
exercise of an existent common law right.
Editors note: s 12 of the Act was amended by Act 5 of 2015 (which came into effect on 26 August 2015, but with
retrospective effect to 17 July 2015, the date of this judgment) to state that no employer shall terminate a contract
of employment on notice except where (a) the termination is in terms of an employment code; or (b) both parties
mutually agree; or (c) the contract is for a fixed duration or for the performance of some specific service; or (d)
pursuant to retrenchment. An urgent application by the employees to appeal to the Constitutional Court was
dismissed on 1 August on the grounds of lack of urgency and because there was no right to appeal from a
decision of the Supreme Court, no constitutional issues having been placed before that court.
Other litigation as to the effect and constitutionality of the amendment is pending.
Evidence judicial notice matters of which judicial notice may be taken economic state of country
Delta Beverages (Pvt) Ltd v Murandu S-38-15 (Gwaunza JA, Hlatshwayo JA & Chiweshe JJA concurring)
(Judgment delivered 2 July 2015)
Chihava & Anor v Mapfumo NO & Anor CC-6-15 (Gwaunza JCC, Chidyausiku CJ, Malaba DCJ, Ziyambi,
Garwe, Gowora, Hlatshwayo & Guvava JJCC & Chiweshe AJCC concurring) (Judgment delivered 15 July
2015)
See above, under CONSTITUTIONAL LAW (Constitution of Zimbabwe 2013 Constitutional Court).
Legal practitioner Prosecutor-General control over prosecutors authority to prosecute when may
withdraw such authority need to observe principles of natural justice and provisions of Administrative
Justice Act [Chapter 10:28]
Legal practitioner public prosecutor status of delegate of Prosecutor-General authority to
prosecute when may be withdrawn requirement for Prosecutor-General to observe principles of
natural justice and provisions of Administrative Justice Act [Chapter 10:28]
A-G v Mudisi & Ors S-48-15 (Patel JA, Malaba DCJ & Garwe JA concurring) (Judgment delivered 28 July
2015)
The respondents were public prosecutors employed as such by the Public Service Commission (now the Civil
Service Commission). They were assigned by the Commission to the Attorney-Generals Office (now the
Prosecutor-Generals Office). They were all members of the Zimbabwe Law Officers Association (the
Association) and were elected as office-bearers of its executive committee in July 2011. In September 2011,
acting under the auspices of the Association, the respondents, together with a majority of their colleagues,
resolved to embark on a work stoppage in order to redress their salary related grievances. The appellant wrote to
the respondents asking them to respond within 7 days to various allegations of unbecoming conduct not befitting
a law officer. The respondents, in a letter from the Association, purported to reply to some of the allegations, but
subsequently, through a letter from their current lawyers, challenged the legal basis for the appellants letter. His
reaction was to withdraw their authority to prosecute and, through his deputies, to direct them not to carry out
their duties as prosecutors, not to deal with any dockets in their offices, to vacate their respective offices and to
hand over their office keys. They complied, under protest, and brought an urgent application in the High Court
alleging that the appellant had breached their rights to administrative justice. The High Court held that the
Attorney-General had committed a material error of law by withdrawing his authority to prosecute and referring
the respondents to the Commission for further processing according to law. The proper procedure was to
suspend them pending a full inquiry, leading either to their discharge from the Commission or their full
reinstatement. Accordingly, the letter from the appellant to the respondents, as well as all the consequential
instructions issued by his deputies, were declared to be null and void and were set aside. The court ordered that
the respondents should be restored to their positions without any loss of rights.
On appeal, the appellant argued that the court a quo erred at law in nullifying the appellants letter withdrawing
the delegated prosecutorial authority given to the respondents. He also argued that the court erred at law in
nullifying the decision of his deputies to stop the respondents from carrying out their prosecutorial duties and
using their offices.
Held: (1) By virtue of s 11(1) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act [Chapter 9:07], all public
prosecutors are charged with the duty of prosecuting in the magistrates courts to which they are attached. Proof
of such delegation is ordinarily evidenced by a certificate to prosecute signed and issued by the Attorney-
General. This is clearly recognised in s 180(1)(g) of the Act which enables every accused person to challenge
the authority of any prosecutor appearing at his trial, by pleading that he has no title to prosecute. It follows that
a certificate to prosecute is a legal requirement that extends to all public prosecutors. It constitutes formal
evidence of the Attorney-Generals delegated authority to prosecute and its withdrawal or expiry carries the
legal effect of terminating that authority. Section 76(5) of the Constitution empowers the Attorney-General to
exercise his prosecutorial functions under s 76(4) through other persons acting in accordance with his general
or specific instructions. This position is replicated in s 11(1) of the Criminal Procedure and Evidence Act
which designates public prosecutors as representatives of the Attorney-General and subject to his instructions.
Public prosecutors thus carry out their prosecutorial duties as delegates of the Attorney-General and in that
capacity are subject to his general or specific instructions. To put it differently, the Attorney-General, as the
principal repository of prosecutorial authority, is empowered to supervise, direct and instruct every public
prosecutor in the performance of his functions and, conversely, the latter is required to obey and comply with
every lawful order or instruction given by the former. In the event that a prosecutor fails to carry out his
mandate in accordance with any such order or instruction, the Attorney-General is entitled, subject to the
dictates of due process, to withdraw the prosecutorial authority delegated to that prosecutor.
(2) This must be so not only as a matter of administrative efficacy but also as a matter of legal principle. In
terms of s 114(1a) of the Constitution, every power conferred by the Constitution includes any other powers that
are reasonably necessary or incidental to its exercise. Section 24(1) of the Interpretation Act [Chapter 1:01]
provides to the same effect in relation to every power to do any act or thing conferred upon any person or
authority under any enactment. In addition, there is the time honoured common law principle that the power to
do or create a particular thing ipso jure encompasses and carries with it the power to undo or abolish that thing.
(3) A prosecutor who is divested of his prosecutorial functions can no longer be deployed as a prosecutor. While
this may be inevitable, it is a matter that falls outside the Attorney-Generals remit and squarely within the
purview of the Commission. The latter may opt either to institute disciplinary measures against its officer or
redeploy him to such other duties as he may be deemed suitable for and qualified to perform.
(4) One of the fundamental precepts of natural justice, encapsulated in the maxim audi alteram partem, is the
right of every person to be heard or afforded an opportunity to make representations before any decision is taken
that might impinge upon his rights, interests or legitimate expectations. This precept of the common law forms
part of the larger duty imposed upon every administrative authority to act legally, rationally and procedurally
and is now codified in s 3(1)(a) of the Administrative Justice Act [Chapter 10:28] as the duty to act lawfully,
reasonably and in a fair manner. The obligation to act in a fair manner is further expanded in s 3(2) to require
the giving of adequate notice of the nature and purpose of the proposed action and a reasonable opportunity
to make adequate representations as well as adequate notice of any right of review or appeal where
applicable. The Attorney-General was an administrative authority as defined in s 2 of Act and was subject to
the requirements of s 3(1)(a) as read with s 3(2). An employer, whether under a contract of employment or
under a secondment arrangement, has the common law right to summarily dismiss an employee who is
insubordinate or wilfully disobedient to the extent of undermining or destroying the very core and substratum of
their relationship. However, the appellant reacted with undue haste by immediately withdrawing the
respondents prosecutorial mandate. He took a massive leap from the inchoate letters penned by the respondents
and their lawyers to the conclusion that they had admitted all the allegations against them. He made no attempt
to substantiate the allegations against them or have these allegations investigated by means of disciplinary
inquiry, as he could have done by instructing the Director of Public Prosecutions, qua head of department, to
institute disciplinary proceedings in terms of the applicable Public Service Regulations.
(5) As for the unquestionably insubordinate conduct of the respondents, the appellant was perfectly entitled to
withdraw their prosecuting authority as an appropriate and necessary disciplinary measure. However, he could
only do so in accordance with the governing tenets of natural justice embodied in s 3 of the Administrative
Justice Act. The respondents were professionals engaged in the business of prosecuting criminal cases on behalf
of the State. They had a legitimate expectation of continuing to prosecute in that capacity and could not be
deprived of the right to do so without just cause. What the appellant should have done, at the very least, was to
write to each of the respondents, identifying with greater particularity the specific allegations levelled against
them individually, indicating that their open defiance of his authority justified the withdrawal of their
prosecutorial mandate, and warning that he intended to withdraw that mandate unless they were able to persuade
him otherwise. The unavoidable conclusion was that the appellant acted precipitately and in breach of the
requirements of s 3 of the Administrative Justice Act. A strict standard of compliance with those requirements
was expected of him in his dealings with the respondents, particularly in his capacity as the legal supremo of the
Government at the relevant time.
Editors note: the judgment appealed against was Mudisi & Ors v Tomana NO & Ors 2012 (1) ZLR 305 (H), a
judgment of HLATSHWAYO J (as he then was).
Police actions against time limitations applicable reasons for such limitations time limitations not
necessarily unconstitutional action against police officer for delict committed while on duty action in
personal capacity time limitation still may be applicable
Ngoni v Min of Home Affairs & Ors HH-658-15 (Tsanga J) (Judgment delivered 29 July 2015)
The plaintiff issued summons claiming damages arising out of an assault upon him by the third defendant, a
police officer, and his unlawful detention. The third defendant had gratuitously assaulted him and detained him
for 30 minutes after he went to the police station in question to investigate the alleged arrest of members of the
party to which he belonged. The assault took place on 24 May 2014. Summons was issued on 17 February 2015
and served on 24 February 2015. It was not clear why there was such a delay in bringing the claim.
Section 70 of the Police Act [Chapter 11:10] requires that any civil proceedings instituted against the State or a
member in respect of anything in relation to the Police Act must be commenced within eight months after the
cause of action arose. In view of this provision, the plaintiff withdrew his claim against the Minister of Home
Affairs and the Commissioner-General of Police, the first and second defendants, but continued with his action
against the third defendant, in his personal capacity. He argued that the third defendant was not acting in terms
of the Police Act and that the provisions of the State Liabilities Act [Chapter 8:14] and the Police Act should
not remove liability from police officers who act outside the ambit of their professional duties. He argued that
the third defendant was acting over zealously and abusing his powers and functions as a police officer and had
forfeited the protection of the law in that he did not act reasonably or in good faith and without culpable
ignorance or negligence. As such, he did not enjoy the protection granted by the Police Act in terms of the
necessity for the action to be brought within a specified time period.
The third defendant argued that civil suits arising out of action by public officials acting in their official
capacities and within the scope of their employment are claims against the State. He argued that he was acting
within the scope of his employment and his action was carried out in terms of the Police Act. He argued the
proceeding against him in his personal capacity were equally out of time, as there was a nexus between acts
done by members of the police force and the State, even if these acts were contrary to the performance of their
duties.
Held: (1) rights guaranteed by the Constitution are not necessarily immune from being time barred, even though
the right itself remains otherwise unaffected. Constitutional rights can be subject to time barring in terms of the
time frame during which proceedings are to be brought. Thus, the time limit placed by the Police Act was not of
necessity in violation of the constitutional right to seek compensation for unlawful arrest and detention effected
by another person. The underlying reasons for limiting the time frame within which a remedy is to be sought
may still be pertinent where an officer is sued in his personal capacity, given the link to his work in general.
(2) There are three reasons for limiting the time within which to bring an action against the police: (1) to afford
the State the opportunity of investigating the incident and considering whether it should meet the claim instead
of incurring costs; (2) to allow the State, which can incur vicarious liability on behalf of its employees, to
identify the individual responsible for the delict; and (3) the public interest served by the notice and shortened
prescription period in that the State is enabled thereby to take prompt action against an employee who might be
abusing his authority or wide discretionary powers.
(3) The first and second reasons were not applicable, but the plaintiffs efforts to pursue the same action against
the third defendant in his personal capacity would nonetheless still embroil his employers in the matter outside
the time limits. Granted, not all situations where one is a police officer automatically result in vicarious
responsibility or the risk of unlawful harm to others. Much depends on the facts. Here, however, when the
plaintiff instituted his legal proceedings, his action was against the police officer in question in his official
capacity. He regarded the police officers employers as vicariously liable for his actions. What changed the
plaintiffs mind about his original standpoint was that he was out of time with his claim. It was solely on this
basis that he now purported to proceed against the officer in his personal capacity on the understanding that the
time limit would be in terms of the Prescription Act. The third defendants plea in bar on the grounds of
prescription would be upheld.
Police discipline trial of member by single officer for disciplinary offence in terms of s 34 of Police Act
[Chapter 11:10] appeal to Commissioner-General in terms of s 34(7) of Act Commissioner-General
dismissing such appeal constitutional right of appeal to High Court against Commissioner-Generals
decision
Sadengu v Board President & Anor HH-712-15 (Dube J) (judgment delivered 26 August 2015)
The applicant, a police constable, was charged under para 35 of the schedule to the Police Act [Chapter 11:10],
tried by a single officer and sentenced to 14 days in detention. On appeal to the Commissioner General, the
conviction and sentence were confirmed. He then lodged an appeal with the High Court. While the appeal was
pending, the ZRP called a suitability board to determine the officers fitness to remain in the police service. He
then sought a provisional order to stay procedures of the Board until his appeal was heard by the High Court.
The court had to determine whether the applicant had a right of appeal to the High Court, and whether he
satisfied the requirements for an interdict. The court noted that s 171(1)(d) of the Constitution provides that the
High Court enjoys appellate jurisdiction only when it is provided by an Act of Parliament, and the Police Act
does not so provide. However, the appeal had been brought in terms of s 70(5) of the Constitution which
confers a general right of appeal to a higher court. The Commissioner-General was not a higher court, thus the
applicants right of appeal had not yet been exercised. By not providing for an appeal to the High Court, the
Police Act was out of alignment with the Constitution and the applicant should not be deprived of his
constitutional right simply because the laws have not yet been aligned.
The court also relied on the concept of inherent jurisdiction developed from the common law. The judge
adhered to the maxim that it is the duty of a good judge to interpret his jurisdiction liberally (est boni judicis
ampliare jurisdictionem) and reached the conclusion that jurisdiction is only ousted when an Act of Parliament
specifically provides that it is ousted. Hence the High Court does have jurisdiction to hear appeals arising from
trials by a single officer, when they are confirmed by the Commissioner-General.
However, in casu, the applicant was unable to establish the requirements for an interdict, and the interdict was
not granted. (MN)
Editors note: see Tamanikwa v Board President & Anor HH-676-14 (summarised below), where MATHONSI J
concluded that s 70(5) does not give a right of appeal unless one is provided by elsewhere.
Police discipline trial of member by single officer for disciplinary offence in terms of s 34 of Police Act
[Chapter 11:10] appeal to Commissioner-General in terms of s 34(7) of Act Commissioner-General
dismissing such appeal constitutional right of appeal to High Court against Commissioner-Generals
decision
Tamanikwa v Board President & Anor HH-676-15 (Mathonsi J) (Judgment delivered August 5 2015)
The applicant, a police constable, had been convicted and sentenced to 10 days under para 34 of the Schedule to
the Police Act [Chapter 11:10]. Both conviction and sentence were confirmed by the Commissioner-General of
Police. The constable then lodged an appeal to the High Court under s 70(5) of the Constitution. When the
Police called for a suitability board to assess his suitability for continued employment in the ZRP, the applicant
then applied to the High Court for an interdict preventing the board from being held until after the appeal could
be heard.
The case hinged on the question whether or not the applicant had a clear right of appeal from the Commissioner-
Generals ruling. The court examined two recent conflicting judgments on the matter where a similar issue of
its appellate jurisdiction was raised: Chatukuta v Nleya NO & Ors HH-705-14, where the court held that a right
of appeal existed where no Act specifically excluded it: and Jani v OIC ZRP Mamina & Ors HH-550-15, where
the court reached the opposite conclusion, ruling that since there was no provision for an appeal in the Police
Act, there was no right to an appeal. In casu, the court preferred to follow the Jani precedent and held that it had
no appellate jurisdiction in the matter. Section 70(5) did not confer such jurisdiction. Both the High Court Act
[Chapter 7:06] and the Constitution s 171(1)(d) made it clear that the courts appellate jurisdiction exists only
where an Act provides for it. The appellate jurisdiction could not be imposed merely because it is not excluded.
(MN)
Police discipline trial of member by single officer for disciplinary offence in terms of s 34 of Police Act
[Chapter 11:10] appeal to Commissioner-General in terms of s 34(7) of Act Commissioner-General
dismissing such appeal no appeal lying to High Court against Commissioner-Generals decision
Tamanikwa v OIC ZRP Beatrice & Ors HH-616-15 (Tagu J) (Judgment delivered 15 Juy 2015)
The applicant was a police constable who had been tried on a disciplinary charge before a single officer and
sentenced to a short period of imprisonment in the police detention barracks. He appealed to the Commissioner-
General of Police in terms of s 34(7) of the Police Act [Chapter 11:10]. His appeal was dismissed and he was
ordered to undergo the period of detention. He filed an appeal to the High Court, relying on s 70(5) of the
Constitution, which gives the right to [a]ny person who has been tried and convicted of an offence subject to
reasonable restrictions that may be prescribed by law, to appeal to a higher court against the conviction and
sentence. He also sought an interdict restraining the respondents from detaining him. The respondents argued
that the application was not properly before the court, as the Police Act does not provide for a further appeal to
the High Court against the decision of the Commissioner-General. They also argued that the appellate powers of
High Court are conferred to it in terms of s 34(1) of the High Court Act [Chapter 7:06].
Held: (1) other than what is provided for in terms of s 34(7) of the Police Act, there is no provision for an appeal
to the High Court from a decision of a single officer. A right of appeal to the High Court is given under s 33,
which allows a person convicted by a board of officers to appeal to the High Court and sets out the procedure to
be followed. If the legislature wanted to allow the decision of the Commissioner General to be appealed to the
High Court it would have expressly said so. It followed that once the Commissioner General has dismissed the
appeal from the single officer that would be the end of the matter.
(2) Section 171(1)(d) of the Constitution gives the High Court has such appellate jurisdiction as may be
conferred on it by an Act of Parliament. The applicable Act here was the Police Act, which did not give such
jurisdiction. It only conferred jurisdiction where a member has been tried, convicted and sentenced by a board of
officers. In respect of a single officer, the High Court could only be involved where the Commissioner-General
has referred the case to it through the Prosecutor-General because of the perceived inadequacy of the sentence.
Editors note: in Chatukuta v Nleya NO & Ors HH-705-14 (judgment delivered 19 December 2014), MAWADZE J
reached the opposite conclusion. See also Sadengu v Board President & Anor HH-712-15, above.
Practice and procedure application chamber application procedure when application is opposed
must be treated like court application need for applicant to file heads of argument and to apply for set
down failure to do so may result in opposing party applying to dismiss matter for want of prosecution
Permanent Secretary, Ministry of Higher & Tertiary Education v College Lecturers Assn & Ors HH-628-15
(Mathonsi J) (Judgment delivered 22 July 2015)
A chamber application that is opposed is treated like a court application and must be allocated to a judge for set
down on the opposed roll. Such an application cannot be disposed of without the parties filing heads of
argument and seeking a set down of the matter on the opposed roll. That would infringe the audi alteram
partem rule. An applicant must prosecute his application in terms of the rules relating to court applications
because it is, for all intents and purposes, a court application. Where the applicant does not file heads of
argument when represented by a legal practitioner or bother setting down the matter for hearing, the opposing
party can apply to have the matter dismissed for want of prosecution.
Practice and procedure application form in which application must be made need for application to
be in format provided by rules of court failure to use such format need for application for
condonation application otherwise a nullity
Marick Trading (Pvt) Ltd v Old Mutual Life Assurance Co (Pvt) Ltd & Anor HH-667-15 (Mafusire J) (Judgment
delivered 31 July 2015)
In terms of r 341(1) of the High Court Rules, a chamber application must, if served on an interested party, be in
Form 29, with appropriate modifications. In other circumstances, it must be in Form 29B. Legal practitioners are
frequently using a completely different format. All that is required of litigants is simply to copy and paste either
Form 29B or Form 29, the latter with appropriate modifications. Form 29 is for use in ordinary court
applications, or those chamber applications that require to be served. One of its most important features is that it
sets out a plethora of procedural rights. It alerts the respondent to those rights. For example, in notifying the
respondent of the court application, the form also notifies the respondent of his right to oppose the application
and warns him of the consequences of failure to file opposing papers timeously. Form 29B, for simple chamber
applications, requires that the substantive grounds for the application be stated, in summary fashion, on the face
of that form. Nothing can be more elementary.
The courts, both in this jurisdiction and elsewhere, have repeatedly drawn attention to the need to follow the
rules on this matter. An application, like a summons commencing action, is the founding process by which a
matter is brought to court for determination. Where there is a non-compliance with the Rules, the applicant must
apply for condonation and give reasons for its failure to comply. There must be a plausible reason why there has
been a failure to comply. If the application is incurably defective, then there cannot be anything before the court
to sit over in judgment.
Practice and procedure court order execution out-of-court agreement subsequent to the order
cannot be executed on the basis of the original order a new order required
Goldsearch Technical Services (Pvt) Ltd v Mukonoweshuro & Anor HH-711-15 (Tsanga J) (Judgment delivered
26 August 2015)
The applicant owed the respondent a sum of money which had been made the subject of a court order providing
for payment of the capital amount plus interest. Subsequently, the applicant approached the respondent and they
reached an agreement privately on altered terms of payment at a higher interest rate and including collection
costs. The applicant then paid off the amounts included in the original order, and neglected to pay the extra
amounts agreed on. The respondent then used the order to execute against the applicants property. The
applicant obtained a provisional order preventing the sheriff from proceeding.
This case was a hearing to confirm the provisional order. The applicant claimed that the original order could not
be used by the respondent to execute on the basis of the agreement, which was not enforceable, and to execute
the respondent would have to obtain a new court order.
Held, that the original court order could not be used to execute since the amounts it provided for had already
been paid. A new order would be required. (MN)
Practice and procedure default judgment rescission when can be applied for by a person not party
to the action
Mashingaidze v Chipunza & Ors HH-688-15 (Chitakunye J) (Judgment delivered 6 August 2015)
A person not a party to a default judgment, but affected by the order given, applied for rescission of that
judgment. The applicant had purchased a property which had been transferred several times from the original
owner, the respondent in this case, who was residing in the property. Title had been transferred to the applicant,
after which he charged the respondent rent. When the respondent stopped paying rent after some time, the
applicant issued summons for eviction. A pre-trial conference was held, at which there was an attempt to
determine whether the respondent had any defence. However, before the trial took place, the respondent
initiated process to cancel the transfer of the property from him to the second respondent, and all subsequent
transfers, including that to the applicant. There were five defendants, including the applicant. The applicant
entered a plea, but none of the other defendants entered appearance to defend.
The first respondent then applied for a default judgment against the other four defendants, but did not notify the
applicant, nor was the applicant notified when a default judgment was issued nullifying his title to the property.
The first respondents legal practitioner did not respond to the applicants lawyers request for a reply regarding
the eviction process, and when she did, failed to mention that a default judgment had been obtained. Only two
days before the trial for the eviction, six months later, did the applicant become aware of the default judgment
and the respondents legal practitioner refused to disclose the order until the trial was in progress. Due to the
ambush nature of the disclosure, that trial was adjourned.
The applicant then applied for rescission of the default judgment. The respondent argued that since the
applicant was not a party to the application for default judgment, he had no locus standi to apply for rescission.
The applicant claimed that under r 449 (1) (a) of the High Court Rules 1971 he was entitled to apply for
rescission as the order affected his interests even though he was not a party to the case. He was also applying
for rescission on the basis of fraud.
Held: (1) under r 449(1)(a) a court can grant rescission of an order erroneously sought or erroneously granted in
the absence of any party affected, and in order to correct an injustice. (2) The court erred in making the default
order as it proceeded in spite of the absence of the applicant, resulting in his title being surreptitiously being
taken away from him without his participation in the process. (3) The default judgment was obtained by
misrepresentation because the respondents legal practitioner made an application which she knew was not
appropriate as the relief sought affected a party who had entered appearance to defend. (4) The default
judgment was rescinded. (5) Costs de bonis propriis were awarded against the respondents legal practitioner
personally as she was guilty of dishonest and unethical behaviour. (MN)
Practice and procedure exception to summons failure to file exception within time limits effect
need for party to seek condonation upholding of exception effect unsuccessful party entitled to apply
for leave to amend pleadings if court does not grant leave mero motu dismissal of action rarely
granted
Sammys Group (Pvt) Ltd v Meyburgh NO & Ors S-45-15 (Ziyambi JA, Hlatshwayo JA & Mavangira AJA
concurring) (Judgment delivered 23 July 2015)
While the rules of court do not provide for an automatic bar against a defendant who files an exception outside
the prescribed time limits, documents filed in contravention thereof cannot, in the absence of condonation of the
non-compliance with the rules, have any legal validity. The sanction must be that the pleading is invalid by
virtue of its non-compliance with the rules. There would be no basis on which a court could entertain such
pleadings.
For the purposes of an exception no facts (except agreed facts) may be adduced by either party and an exception
may thus only be taken when the defect objected against appears ex facie the pleading itself, nor can the court
rely on any facts or evidence not contained within the pleading excepted to.
The upholding of an exception to a declaration or a combined summons does not carry with it the dismissal of
the action. The unsuccessful party may then apply for leave to amend his pleading. It is the invariable practice of
the courts, in cases where an exception has been taken to an initial pleading that it discloses no cause of action,
to order that the pleading be set aside and the plaintiff be given leave, if so advised, to file an amended pleading
within a certain period of time. This practice a fortiori applies where an exception is granted on the ground that
the pleading is vague and embarrassing, a ground which strikes at the formulation of the cause of action and not
its legal validity.
In the rare case in which a departure from this practice may be permissible, the court should give reasons for the
departure. An order dismissing the plaintiffs claim is a drastic remedy and the courts have inclined towards the
grant, where an exception is upheld, of leave to the plaintiff to amend the offending pleadings.
Leave to amend is often granted irrespective as to whether or not, at the hearing of the argument on the
exception, the plaintiff applied for such leave. Where the court does not grant leave to amend when making an
order setting aside the pleading, the plaintiff is entitled to make such application when judgment setting aside
the pleading has been delivered.
Practice and procedure execution attachment of immoveable property property registered in name
of judgment debtor judgment creditor having prima facie right to attach such property claimant
entitled to show special circumstances exist for setting aside of order of attachment property sold to
claimant before issue of summons against judgment debtor transfer not effected through no fault of
claimant all other necessary steps taken by claimant to effect purchase special circumstances
established
Deputy Sheriff, Harare v Moyo & Anor HH-640-15 (Muremba J) (Judgment delivered 22 July 2015)
The claimant in these interpleader proceedings sought an order setting aside the attachment of the property he
lived in. He had bought the house from the judgment debtor, a former employee of the judgment creditor, a
bank. The bank had subsequently obtained judgment against its former employee following losses caused by the
employees fraudulent activities. The claimant had paid the purchase price for the property. Tax and rate
clearance certificates had been obtained and the necessary papers had been lodged with the deeds office for
transfer to be effected. The claimant had been given vacant possession of the house and had sold the house he
previously lived in. However, transfer could not be effected because another company had previously obtained
judgment against the seller. That company had then obtained a provisional order from the High Court which
enabled it to register a caveat against the property, prohibiting transfer of the property from the seller to the
claimant or to any third party pending confirmation of discharge of the provisional order. At the time of the
hearing of the interpleader proceedings the provisional order in question was still in force. It had neither been
confirmed nor discharged.
The judgment creditor argued that the attachment of the house was lawful because the house was registered in
the name of the judgment debtor and not in the name of the claimant. It argued that the agreement of sale was
not proof of ownership of the house and that the agreement of sale only gave the claimant personal rights as
against the seller and not real rights, which remained vested in the seller who still had the property registered in
her name.
Held: Whilst it is correct that a judgment creditor has the right to have attached and sold in execution property
registered in the name of the judgment debtor, that right is merely a prima facie one. The claimant may show
that there are special circumstances why such an order should not be granted. Here, there were such
circumstances. Equity (fairness and justice) demanded that judgment be entered in favour of the claimant. The
claimant had set out facts and allegations which showed that, save for the registration of the property into his
name from the judgment debtor and her husband, he did everything else which a purchaser of an immovable
property is expected to do. He had the agreement of sale. He paid the purchase price. He was given vacant
possession of the property. He paid transfer fees. The judgment debtor was willing to effect transfer of the
property to him. Had it not been for the caveat registration would have been effected.
When the judgment creditor issued summons, the claimant had long before bought the property from the
judgment debtor. The papers for transfer or registration of the property had already been submitted to the Deeds
Office and registration had failed because of the caveat. When the judgment creditor served the summons at the
property in question the claimant was already in occupation thereof. The claimants legal practitioners even
advised the judgment creditor not to serve process to do with the judgment debtor on this property but the
judgment creditors lawyers did not take heed, arguing that the property was registered in the judgment debtors
name. So the judgment creditor was well aware that the claimant was saying he had bought the property from
the time it served the summons. In these circumstances, to allow execution to proceed simply because the
property was still in the judgment debtors name would be a gross injustice. This was not a case where the
judgment creditor obtained judgment before the claimant purchased the property from the judgment debtor.
Practice and procedure judgment judgment sounding in foreign currency losses suffered in local
currency how damages to be calculated labour matter Labour Court having equitable jurisdiction to
find formula to give effect to employees entitlement
Delta Beverages (Pvt) Ltd v Murandu S-38-15 (Gwaunza JA, Hlatshwayo JA & Chiweshe AJA concurring)
(Judgment delivered 2 July 2015)
Practice and procedure judgment validity court making decision on matters not before it court
granting relief that was not sought or prayed for irregularity of such decision
Practice and procedure parties citation of parties having interest in matter before court effect of
failure to cite parties such parties not bound by courts decision
Indium Invstms (Pvt) Ltd v Kingshaven (Pvt) Ltd & Ors S-40-15 (Gowora JA, Chidyausiku CJ, Gwaunza &
Hlatshwayo JJA & Mavangira JA concurring) (Judgment delivered 16 July 2015)
The appellant company was the owner of a property which was leased by the first respondent, a company
effectively owned by the second and third respondents, who were husband and wife. The lease agreement was
for a period of one year. The second and third respondents were shareholders in a close corporation in South
Africa. This entity owned a property in Johannesburg, which was the subject of a mortgage. When the bank in
whose favour the mortgage was registered called up the mortgage, the second and third respondents and the
close corporation obtained a loan from one S. A second agreement was for the sale by the second and third
respondents of the entire shareholding in the appellant company to S and another person. This agreement gave
the second and third respondents the option to re-purchase the shares in the appellant, an option that was not
exercised. The third agreement was the lease agreement between the appellant and the first respondent. The
appellant sued for cancellation of the contract due to failure to pay rent and later, after the lease expired, sued
for the eviction of the respondents. The High Court dismissed the claims, holding that the agreement to take
over the appellant company was a pactum commissorium and the transactions were in fraudem legis and invalid.
It was argued on appeal that the court a quo had not dealt with the case that was placed before it. The matter
before the court was principally the cancellation of the lease agreement between and consequential relief. It was
essentially an actio rei vindicatio. What the court a quo did was to turn its focus on a completely different issue
which it could not competently determine and to make findings which could not be supported.
Held: (1) neither the close corporation, nor S, nor the other person who bought the shares in the appellant, were
cited as parties and the court could not have properly considered the legality of the agreements in their absence.
To do so was irregular. The only parties before the court were the appellant and the respondents, and the lease
agreement was the only document properly before the court. The only dispute for determination was that arising
from the lease agreement in respect of which the court had to determine the respective rights and obligations of
the parties before it. In the absence of a counter-claim for declarations of invalidity in respect of the agreements
discussed above, the court could not grant relief to the effect that the agreements were invalid. At best the court
ought to have granted absolution from the instance. Instead, it gave the respondents far reaching relief which
they had neither sought nor prayed for. If the respondents were under the impression that the underlying
agreements which gave rise to the lease agreement were invalid, it behoved them to bring proceedings as a pre-
emptive attack on the agreements. This they chose not to do, even though in their plea they had indicated that
they would. The court accordingly misdirected itself in resolving a dispute that was not before it. Some of the
parties to the dispute in question were not before it and they were denied the right to be heard in their own
cause. For a party who has a real interest in the matter in dispute before a court to be bound by a judgment of the
court such party should be cited.
(2) The respondents having admitted that the appellant was the owner of the property, all that the court a quo
had to determine was whether the first respondent had any legal right to remain in possession of the same.
Therefore, the simple task before the court a quo was to decide whether or not a lease agreement existed
between the parties as alleged, and, thereafter to determine whether or not the claim for eviction on the lease
was well founded. This the court failed to do. It went on to make wider pronouncements on relationships that
were not before it. It thereby misdirected itself. Once an owner proves that the property is his and that the
defendant originally obtained possession of the res pursuant to a contract, the owner is obliged to prove that
such a contract has expired or that he was entitled to cancel it and has indeed terminated it. The only defences
available to a defendant in the position of the respondent are that he had a right to possess, that he was not in
possession, or that the plaintiff is not the owner. None of these defences were pleaded and indeed could not have
been. The lease agreement was valid and had expired. The eviction of the respondents would follow.
(3) The appellants claims for consequential relief, including arrear rentals and holding over damages, had not
been properly dealt with by the court a quo and would have to be properly ventilated and determined before that
court. Those aspects of the matter would be remitted to the court a quo.
Judgment of HUNGWE J in Indium Invstms (Pvt) Ltd v Kingshaven (Pvt) Ltd & Ors HH-157-13 (delivered on 22
May 2013) reversed.
Practice and procedure parties company company in liquidation action commenced before
company placed in liquidation liquidator must obtain leave of court to continue action
Zimbabwe Allied Bank Ltd v Dengu & Anor HH-583-13 (Muremba J) (Judgment delivered 1 July 2015)
Prescription interruption occurs when process instituted and pursued to final successful conclusion
does not apply to other defendants joined to the process after the initial prescription period has expired
Gwiriri v Star Africa Corp Ltd & Anor HH-674-15 (Dube J) (Judgment delivered August 5 2015)
The plaintiff suffered a workplace accident in 2006 for which he claimed compensation from NSSA and
received compensation from the NSSA Workers Compensation Insurance Fund in 2007 as well as a monthly
pension. In 2008 he issued summons against his former employer, the defendant, claiming damages for loss of
income, pain and suffering, permanent disfigurement, loss of future earnings and future medical expenses; he
claimed that the compensation paid by NSSA was inadequate. The High Court awarded damages, but the
defendant appealed to the Supreme Court, which, in 2011, set the High Courts judgment aside, apparently on a
technicality, without hearing the merits. The plaintiff issued new summons in 2011, claiming compensation on
the same basis, but this time joining NSSA as the second defendant.
The defendants raised the issue of prescription, maintaining that the matter had prescribed, this summons having
been issued more than five years from the date of the cause of action.
Held, (1) according to s 19(3) of the Prescription Act [Chapter 8:11], prescription is interrupted when judicial
process is instituted, and remains interrupted until the case is pursued to a successful conclusion by the plaintiff
i.e. until he obtains a judgment in his favour. The plaintiff may continue to pursue his case until successful and
prescription remains interrupted. Since the plaintiff did not succeed with his claim, he was entitled to continue
with judicial process until he does
(2) Where a suit has been timely filed against one defendant the filing of that suit does not interrupt prescription
as against other defendants not served with the process. Since the first summons was issued only against the first
defendant and not the second, prescription of any claim against the second defendant was not interrupted.
Hence the claim against the second defendant had prescribed and the case fell away. (MN)
Revenue and public finance Commissioner-General of Revenue Authority advance tax ruling by
procedure required for such ruling to be obtained opinion issued before 2007 non-binding private
opinion unless Commissioner-General otherwise directs use which may be made of non-binding opinion
duty of Commissioner-General to collect tax due not entitled to give unlawful tax break entitled to
rectify errors and collect tax which is due cannot be estopped from acting lawfully
Revenue and public finance income tax taxable income bonus shares what are issue of dividends
by company with option given to shareholder either to accept cash or shares in lieu such shares not
bonus shares and liable to withholding tax
Delta Corp Ltd v ZRA HH-621-15 (Hlatshwayo J) (Judgment delivered 14 July 2015)
In 1996 a firm of accountants wrote to the Commissioner of Taxes, asking whether, where a company, in
declaring a dividend, allows its shareholders the option of accepting cash or shares, those who opt for shares
receive bonus shares, which are not taxable. The Commissioner wrote back to say that in that situation no
dividend is paid and the shares are bonus shares. What the company was doing was capitalising a portion of its
profits. The appellant company, acting on the strength of that letter, did not pay withholding tax on scrip
dividends issued after the letter was written.
Ten years later, the Commissioner-General of the respondent (the successor to the Commissioner of Taxes)
wrote to the appellant, requesting it to deduct and account for withholding tax for the previous three years on
scrip dividends issued, as these were dividends and not bonus shares. The appellant objected, averring that in
1996 the Commissioner of Taxes had given a ruling upon the strength of which the appellant had acted. Such
ruling was binding on the respondent. On appeal, the respondent argued that the letter to the accountants did not
amount to a tax ruling, and in any event if any benefit did accrue from the letter, it accrued to the accountants.
Held: (1) an advance tax ruling is defined at length in the 4th Schedule to the Revenue Authority Act [Chapter
23:11], which sets out in detail the steps that must be taken to get such a ruling. All those requirements must be
present for any enquiry to be classified as an application for a tax ruling. Once the enquiry made is lacking in
one or more material respects, it cannot be said to be an application for a tax ruling and in the absence of such
application, any correspondence from the taxing authority cannot be construed as a tax ruling. One cannot
obtain one without the other. The letter by the accountants fell woefully short of the requirements set out in the
Schedule.
(2) Even if the letter to the accountants could qualify as an advance tax ruling, under s 5(3) of the 4th Schedule
any written statement by the Commissioner-General issued before January 2007 was by operation of law a non-
binding private opinion unless the Commissioner-General had directed otherwise, which he had not done. Such
an opinion may not be cited in court in proceedings that do not involve the person to whom it was issued: in this
case, the accountants.
(3) In terms of ss 26 and 28 of the Income Tax Act [Chapter 23:06], shareholders are liable to pay tax on their
dividends. The company distributing such dividends is at law required to withhold such tax when it distributes
the dividends and remit the tax to the respondent. The very act of declaring a dividend is distribution of an
amount to the shareholders. At this stage, before any further considerations are made, the amount so declared is
a dividend and subject to withholding tax. The fact that the shareholders are then allowed an election after the
declaration of the dividend matters not. By then, taxes would already have accrued by operation of law. The act
of declaring a dividend is not linked to the choice the shareholders are given in whether to accept cash or take a
scrip dividend.
(4) For the shares to be considered bonus shares, it must have been a capitalisation of the undistributed profits at
the instance of the company. Bonus shares are shares which are given out by the company to its shareholders
on a pro-rated basis and they are paid for from the companys undistributed reserve profits. The declaration of a
dividend is in its own a distribution of profit. Once a dividend is paid out and the shareholder is given the option
to use such cash dividend to buy more shares, such shares so bought are not bonus shares. This was no more
than the shareholder electing to use his dividend to purchase more equity in the company. The election to
receive shares in lieu of a cash dividend in itself is a purchase of shares. The choice given to the shareholder is
that which shows that the profits have been distributed and the shareholder has elected to use his dues to buy
more equity. Since a shareholder who accepts the dividend in cash is liable to pay tax, the fact that another has
elected to deal with his dividend in a different manner does not make the dividend so received and utilised any
less a dividend.
(5) Regarding the retrospective effect of the respondents measures, the revenue authority is not entitled at law
to give anyone unlawful tax breaks and prejudice the fiscus. Where the revenue authority has made an error, it is
allowed to rectify it, even retrospectively. The authority is not precluded from assessing a tax legally due only
because the taxpayer has relied upon the authoritys prior mistaken view of the law. The appellant could not
require the respondent to continue acting unlawfully in order that its actions be fair. The main duty on the
respondent is to act lawfully and, in demanding the withholding tax, it acted lawfully. There can be no question
of the respondent acting unfairly when it acts in accordance with the law, in other words lawfully. Implicit in
lawfulness is fairness. Tax law is strict liability law. The fact that the respondents predecessor made a mistake
upon which it relied could not save the appellant. It would be still required to remit all taxes as is required at
law.
Review grounds for bias magistrate filing opposing affidavit such affidavit giving impression of
supporting one side to dispute proper approach to be taken by magistrate error in law failure by
administrative authority to address its mind to question before it authority misunderstanding issue and
considering wrong question
Makandi Tea & Coffee Estate (Pvt) Ltd v A-G & Anor HH-595-15 (Makoni J) (Judgment delivered 1 July 2015)
The applicant was a company engaged in farming. The farm had been expropriated. The farm being included in
a bilateral agreement between Zimbabwe and Germany, the applicant registered a request for arbitration with
the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSZD), against the Government of Zimbabwe
(the State) in relation to the land. The State subsequently defended those proceedings, which were still pending.
In terms of s 7 of the Arbitration (International Investment Disputes) Act [Chapter 7:03], if there are
proceedings pending under the Act a party may apply to have proceedings stayed in any other court in relation
to the same matter. The applicant was summoned on charges of occupying gazetted land without lawful
authority. In relation to these charges, the applicant had previously applied for referral to the Supreme Court of
certain questions relating to the violation of the Declaration of Rights, the issue being whether or not the
applicant had been denied the right to the protection of law as guaranteed under s 18(1) of the Constitution. The
magistrate (the second respondent) had dismissed the application. In the present proceedings, the applicant
sought a stay under s 7 of the Act, arguing that the criminal proceedings were proceedings within the
contemplation of section 7 of the Act. The magistrate dismissed the application on the grounds that there was no
difference between the two applications.
The applicant sought a review of the magistrates decision, arguing inter alia that the magistrates decision was
one that no reasonable court could have come to. The magistrate chose to file an answering affidavit, in which
he took offence at the use of the Wednesbury formulation, stating that it was contemptuous of his office and of
the entire judicial system. The applicant argued that the magistrate should not have deposed to an answering
affidavit, in which clearly supported one side.
Held: (1) the proper approach to be taken by the magistrate would have been to set out facts which he
considered would be of assistance to the court and end there. In the alternative, he could have asked a
representative of the first respondent to file the opposing affidavit on behalf of the respondents. The use of the
Wednesbury phraseology was not uncommon and was not meant to be an attack on the person of the second
respondent or his office.
(2) The magistrate failed completely to apply his mind to the question raised by the second application, which
was whether s 7 of the Act was applicable. This issue was clearly different from the application under the
Declaration of Rights to refer to matter to the Supreme Court. In so doing, he reached a decision that was so
unreasonable that no reasonable authority could ever have come to it. The decision would, accordingly, be set
aside.
Succession intestate heirs ab intestato widow widows entitlement to matrimonial home need for
widow to have been living in house immediately before husbands death widow having left home
decades earlier and not having contributed towards purchase thereof not entitled to more than a childs
share of the estate
Chinzou v Masomera NO & Ors HH-593-15 (Chitakunye J) (Judgment delivered 9 July 2015)
The applicant and her late husband were married in 1965. In 1972 he was offered tenancy of a house in a suburb
of Harare. In about 1977, the couple separated and the applicant left the matrimonial home. In 1981 the house
was offered to the applicants husband for purchase, which offer he duly accepted. Subsequently he purported to
marry another woman, with whom he lived at the house and by whom he had children. He died intestate in
2012. The first respondent, the executor dative, accepted the applicant as the surviving spouse, the second
marriage not being valid. In considering all the potential beneficiaries, he allocated equal shares to each of the
beneficiaries, resulting in the applicant receiving a childs share of the estate. The house was the only major
asset for distribution. The applicant sought to have the distribution account changed to make her the sole
beneficiary of the house. The executor had considered this issue and concluded that it could not be said that the
applicant was living in the house immediately before the deceased died and so was not entitled to receive the
house in terms of s 3A of the Deceased Estates Succession Act [Chapter 6:02]. The applicant argued that the
interpretation of the term immediately before the persons death in s 3A be construed to include her situation
since she was the only surviving spouse. A purposive approach would meet the justice of the case.
Held: In considering the matter of the statute, its scope and purpose and the background of the legislation in
question, it was appropriate to identify the mischief that was intended to be addressed by the section. The
intention of the legislature was that a surviving spouse in an intestate estate should not be uprooted from the
house or domestic premises he or she lived in immediately before the death of the deceased person, and
provided such property formed part of the deceased persons estate. The applicant had last lived in the premises
37 years before the death of the deceased. That could not by any stretch of imagination be termed immediately
before deceaseds death. It could not have been the intention of the legislature that either of the spouses, who
had lived separately for such a long period as 37 years, in a situation which was a de facto divorce, would be
entitled to come back at the demise of the other spouse and be awarded the house as his or her exclusive
property to the exclusion of children of the marriage and subsequent unions who had been born and lived at the
house. There should have been links of living as husband and wife prior to the deceased persons death. In casu,
such links were no longer there but for the marriage certificate. Further, the purchase of the house having been
made after the applicant and her husband separated, she could not argued that she had contributed towards the
acquisition of the house. She was not entitled to any more than a childs share.