Thembekile Mankayi worked underground as a
mineworker for
AngloGold Ashanti between January 1979 and September 1995. He contracted
tuberculosis and
chronic obstructive airway disease, rendering him unable to work, and he contended that he contracted these illnesses because of his exposure to harmful respirable dust and gases at his AngloGold workplace. In 2004, he received
compensation of
R16,320 from the public Compensation Commissioner, awarded in terms of the Occupational Diseases in Mines and Works Act, 1973 (ODIMWA). However, Mankayi also sought compensation from AngloGold. He sued for damages in the
High Court of South Africa, claiming about R2.6 million in past and future lost earnings, future medical expenses, and
general damages. His claim arose at the
common law of
delict and consisted in the contention that AngloGold had been
negligent in its legal duty to provide a safe and healthy work environment. However, entering an
exception to the claim, AngloGold contended that section 35(1) of the Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act, 1993 (COIDA) presented a statutory bar to such a claim. Section 35(1) provided that: No action shall lie by an employee or any dependant of an employee for the recovery of damages in respect of any
occupational injury or
disease resulting in the disablement or death of such employee against such employee's employer, and no liability for compensation on the part of such employer shall arise save under the provisions of this Act in respect of such disablement or death. In response, Mankayi argued that section 35(1) of COIDA did not apply to him or other mineworkers, because occupational disease in mineworkers was compensated under the industry-specific statute, ODIMWA. Section 100(2) of ODIMWA explicitly provided that workers who had a claim to compensation under ODIMWA were not entitled to claim compensation under any other law, and Mankayi took this to exclude the application of COIDA. ODIMWA, unlike COIDA, did not contain any prohibition against common-law claims against employers. Handing down judgment on 26 June 2008, the
Johannesburg High Court ruled in favour of AngloGold, upholding its exception. The High Court agreed with AngloGold that section 35(1) of COIDA extinguished the common-law right of mineworkers to recover damages from negligent mine owners. On appeal, in a judgment written by Judge of Appeal
Fritz Brand and delivered on 31 March 2010, the
Supreme Court of Appeal found the same. Mankayi lodged a final appeal in the
Constitutional Court of South Africa, where he was represented by Richard Spoor during a hearing on 17 August 2010. == Judgments ==