Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 935South Africa
Applications for admission as amicii curiae by various UN bodies and Human Rights Watch: In re certification application by various applicants and others v Anglo American SA (Ltd) (2020/32777) [2022] ZAGPJHC 935 (25 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Applications for admission as amicii curiae by various UN bodies and Human Rights Watch: In re certification application by various applicants and others v Anglo American SA (Ltd) (2020/32777) [2022] ZAGPJHC 935 (25 November 2022)
Applications for admission as amicii curiae by various UN bodies and Human Rights Watch: In re certification application by various applicants and others v Anglo American SA (Ltd) (2020/32777) [2022] ZAGPJHC 935 (25 November 2022)
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sino date 25 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2020/32777
Reportable:
No
Of
interest to other Judges: No
Revised:
No
25/11/2022
In
the application for admission as
amicus curiae
of:
HUMAN
RIGHTS WATCH
Applicant for admission as amicus curiae
and
In
the application for admission as
amicus curiae
of:
THE
UNITED NATIONS SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR
Third Applicant for admission
ON
TOXICS AND HUMAN
RIGHTS
as
amicus
curiae
THE
UNITED NATIONS SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR
Fourth Applicant for admission
ON
EXTREME POVERTY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
as
amicus curiae
THE
UNITED NATIONS SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR
Fifth Applicant for admission
ON
THE RIGHTS OF PERSONS WITH
as
amicus curiae
DISABILITIES
THE
UNITIED NATIONS WORKING GROUP
Sixth Applicant for admission
ON
BUSINESS AND HUMAN
RIGHTS
as
amicus curiae
THE
UNITIED NATIONS WORKING GROUP
Seventh Applicant for admission
ON
DISCRIMINATION AGAINST
WOMEN
as
amicus curiae
AND
GIRLS
In
re the matter between:
VARIOUS
PARTIES ON BEHALF OF MINORS
First to twelfth Applicants
Thirteenth applicant
and
ANGLO
AMERICAN SOUTH AFRICA
LIMITED
Respondent
with
AMNESTY
INTERNATIONAL
First
amicus curiae
THE
SOUTHERN AFRICAN LITIGATION CENTRE
Second
amicus curiae
J
U D G M E N T
MAIER-FRAWLEY
J:
1.
This matter concerns two separate
applications for the admission of
amici
curiae
in an application for
certification of a class action that is pending in this court. The
respective applicants are
:
1.1.
Three UN Special Rapporteurs and two UN
working groups (‘
the UN bodies
’)
and
1.2.
Human Rights Watch (‘
HRW’
).
2.
The present applications are opposed by the
respondent, Anglo American South Africa Limited (‘
Anglo’
).
3.
Adv K. Hofmeyer SC (assisted by two junior
counsel) appeared for the UN bodies at the hearing of the matter. Adv
K. Hardy (assisted
by junior counsel) appeared for HRW, whilst Adv S.
Budlender SC (assisted by two junior counsel) appeared for Anglo.
4.
On 11 August 2022, an order by consent
between the parties was granted in this court in terms of which two
other institutions were
admitted as
amici
curiae
in the pending certification
application, being Amnesty International (First
amicus
curiae
applicant) and The Southern
Africa Litigation Centre (second
amicus
curiae
applicant).
5.
Heads of argument exceeding 700 pages have
already been filed by the certification applicants, the respondent
and the admitted
amici curiae
in the pending certification application, which has been set down for
hearing before Windell J for a period of eight days from
20 to 31
January 2023. The current pleadings (including annexures) run in
excess of 10,000 pages.
6.
In terms of a directive issued by the
Deputy Judge President of this court, the present
amici
curiae
applicants, if admitted, are to
file their heads of argument by 24 November 2022. The matter was
argued as a special motion before
me on Thursday the 10th November
2022, on which day I informed counsel that I would be commencing
duties in the urgent court on
Friday the 11th November 2022 until
18th November 2022 and that I would in all probability lack the time
or have the capacity to
pen this judgment during that period.
Cognizant of the looming date for the filing of the heads, I do not
intend to deal exhaustively
in the judgment with all the extensive
submissions of the parties, however, I will refer to salient aspects
which I consider to
be relevant and cogent in arriving at the
decision in this matter.
7.
By
way of brief background, the applicants in the certification
proceedings seek certification of a class action against Anglo.
The
purpose of the class action is to claim damages from Anglo on behalf
of two proposed classes
[1]
who
reside in the Kabwe district, Zambia, and who have suffered injury as
a result of exposure to lead. The applicants’ cause
of action
is grounded in the Zambian law of tort. The applicants allege that
Anglo, through its mining activities conducted at
a mine in Kabwe
during the period 1925 to 1974, both caused and materially
contributed to the ongoing harm suffered by children
and women of
child-bearing age in Kabwe as a result of their exposure to lead
pollution deposited in the vicinity of the mine and
its surrounds.
Anglo avers that it did not cause the present state of uncontrolled
and polluted conditions in Kabwe and that it
is not liable for any
harm caused to the applicants by the current state, nor is it liable
to remedy it. It alleges, amongst others,
that Zambian Consolidated
Copper Mines Limited (’
ZMCC
’)
caused the failed state of the mine and concomitant environmental
contamination in Kabwe and that ZMCC remains liable today
for the
rehabilitation and remediation of lead emissions in Kabwe.
8.
The
parties are in agreement as to the legal principles governing the
admission of an applicant as
amicus
curiae
.
Such an applicant must, in terms of Rule 16 A of the Uniform Rules,
satisfy the court that its submissions are (i) new, i.e.,
different
from the existing submissions before the court; (ii) that they are
relevant; and (iii) that they will be helpful to the
court.
[2]
9.
Useful
guidelines as to the approach to be adopted in adjudicating
applications for admission as
amici
are provided, amongst others, in cases such as
SALC
[3]
and
Treatment
Action Campaign,
[4]
Children’s Institute,
[5]
and
Outa
.
[6]
10.
Anglo
does not take issue with the fact that both the UN bodies and HRW
have indeed motivated their legitimate interest in the certification
proceedings.
[7]
It opposed both
applications in its papers and written argument on grounds that the
submissions of the respective applicants are
not new, and, in any
event, are not helpful or relevant. However, during presentation of
oral argument, Mr Budlender fairly and
properly conceded that the UN
bodies’ submissions, as expounded upon during oral argument,
are new in the sense that that
they have not hitherto been raised or
canvassed by any of the parties in the certification proceedings.
Anglo however persisted
in its opposition to the admission of the UN
bodies as
amici
curiae
on the basis that their submissions were neither relevant nor
helpful.
11.
I turn now to address the respective
applications brought by the UN bodies and HRW in the light of the
relevant legal principles
alluded to above.
Application by the UN
bodies
12.
If admitted, the UN bodies intend to make
submissions regarding the impact that Anglo’s own stated
commitment to a particular
set of international standards for
corporate conduct - the Guiding Principles on Business and Human
Rights - has for the court’s
assessment of whether it is in the
interests of justice for the class action to be certified.
13.
The
UN bodies submit that the Guiding Principles incorporate various
international human rights principles, including the rights
of
victims of human rights violations to have access to justice and the
right to a remedy.
[8]
They
further submit that the Guiding Principles commit Anglo, amongst
others, to respect the rule of law and to address adverse
human
rights impacts which it may have caused or contributed to through its
business endeavours. They seek to present argument
to the
certification court as to the effect that Anglo’s election to
assent to the Guiding Principles that commit Anglo to
respect the
rule of law and to promote the provision of remedies for adverse
human rights impacts, is fundamentally incompatible
with its election
to resist certification of a class action that is designed to provide
access to courts in order to pursue a remedy
for the class members.
14.
Thus,
If admitted as
amici
curiae
,
the UN bodies will argue that the conflicted position in which Anglo
has put itself in, should weigh in the court’s analysis
of
where the interests of justice lie. This is an important and relevant
consideration, so say the UN bodies, because, whilst Anglo
does not
dispute that in the absence of certification of a class action, which
is to be pursued in South Africa, prospective class
members will be
denied any access to justice at all, because (i) they cannot pursue
their claims in Zambia in any meaningful way
and (ii) in the absence
of a class action procedure, individual claimants will be unable to
pursue their claims in South Africa,
it nonetheless elected to oppose
certification,
[9]
knowing and
accepting that if it succeeds in its opposition, the result will be
that prospective class members will have no prospect
of advancing
their case for a remedy before a court of law.
15.
During
oral argument presented on behalf of the UN bodies at the hearing of
this application, reliance was place on the case of
Njongi.
[10]
The UN bodies seek to argue that the principle to be extracted from
that case, which the Constitutional Court recognised, is that
in
certain circumstances,
[11]
litigants attract heightened obligations or responsibilities when
litigating because of the position they hold and the obligations
they
are duty bound to fulfil, more specifically, in certain situations
there will be a particular election that a party has to
make about
how it approaches the litigation that it faces. In
Njongi
,
the court stated that the provincial government, as state respondent,
was obligated to respect, protect, promote and fulfil the
rights and
values of the Constitution.
16.
In essence, in
Njongi,
the Constitutional Court recognised
that state respondents (or defendants), because of certain
constitutional duties that attach
to them, have a heightened
obligation to think carefully, exercise a moral choice when deciding
to make one or another election
in the course of litigation in which
they are involved. In
Njongi
,
the election was whether or not to pursue a defence of prescription.
The court found that the respondent was under not only a
moral duty
but a legal duty to make an election to plead prescription, which it
had failed to do, instead seeking to raise the
issue belatedly (and
irregularly) by way of a notice. The UN bodies seek to persuade the
certification court that the
Njongi
principle should be extended to the private sphere and applied, by
analogy, to the facts of this matter, in circumstances where
Anglo
elected to oppose the certification of the class action - aimed at
addressing human rights impacts - ostensibly in an effort
to cut the
litigation off before it begins, in juxtaposition to its publically
professed commitment to respect and protect human
rights, to be
accountable for and to redress adverse impacts in which it may be
found to have been involved.
17.
The
UN bodies’ argument, as I understand it, entails consideration
of a narrow point by the certifying court. At the risk
of being
repetitive, the argument boils down to this: private parties such as
Anglo can also attract heightened duties in litigation.
They do so
when they elect to commit themselves to certain values and
principles, which require certain conduct from them when
they become
defendants in litigation designed to vindicate those very principles.
Anglo’s election to commit itself to the
Guiding Principles
includes a commitment to support access to justice where human rights
impacts have occurred. It also includes
the commitment to co-operate
in processes designed to establish whether there is culpability for
those human rights impacts. Having
elected to commit itself to these
principles, Anglo must then bear a heightened duty when it considers
whether to oppose certification.
Its decision to oppose certification
put it in an intractably conflicted position and this is a factor
that should weigh in the
interests of justice debate which the
certification court will undertake. Stated differently, Anglo’s
approach in opposing
certification, which is incompatible with its
professed commitment to the Guiding Principles and is tantamount to
unconscionable
conduct, is therefore a relevant consideration which
the certification court ought to take into account when it considers
the interests
of justice test for certification.
[12]
18.
On
behalf of Anglo, Mr Budlender submits that the submissions that the
UN bodies intend to make, whilst new, will not be helpful
to the
certification court and are not relevant to the questions the
certification court will be tasked to decide. In this regard,
he
stressed that the debate about whether Anglo has misconducted itself
in the certification proceedings (or, for that matter,
in its conduct
at the Kabwe mine) or whether it breached certain heightened
obligations it may have attracted by committing to
the Guidelines, is
not relevant to certification because certification does not depend
on the stance that Anglo adopts. Certification,
so it was submitted,
is not about the interests of the respondent but concerns the
interests of justice. The certification applicants
accept that they
require certification from a court before they can proceed with a
class action, and even had Anglo filed a notice
to abide, the
certification court would still have to satisfy itself that
certification is consistent with the interests of justice.
[13]
The 7 requirements set out in
Children’s
Resource Centre
[14]
that
the certification court will have to consider, do not concern the
conduct of a respondent and will remain unaffected by a debate
about
whether Anglo has acted in an inappropriate matter by opposing
certification.
19.
It
was further submitted that the remarks in par 85 of
Njongi
[15]
were made in relation to the court’s consideration of the issue
of costs and not in relation to the merits of the appeal,
and
Njongi
is therefore not authority for the proposition that where the
respondent
[16]
behaves
unconscionably by exercising a moral choice in taking a decision to
oppose certification, that is somehow something to
weigh in the
balance on the merits.
20.
It is correct that Anglo has opposed the
certification application, as was its right to do, however, Ms
Hofmeyer’s argument
appears to me to be more nuanced. Anglo
made two elections: one, to commit itself to the Guiding Principles,
amongst others, to
promote access to justice in respect of human
rights impacts and two, to oppose certification, which, if
successful, would deny
victims of human rights infringements access
to justice. It concerns Anglo’s election to oppose in
circumstances where it
had committed itself to certain values and
principles but then acted in opposition thereto when exercising an
election to oppose
certification. It is this type of inconsistent
conduct on the part of Anglo which the UN bodies submit should be
taken into account
as an additional factor that weighs in favour of
certification in the interests of justice debate to be had before the
certification
court. If the argument is found to be persuasive and
the additional factor considered weighty enough by the certification
court,
it may add to counter balance other factors suggested by Anglo
in its papers that weigh against certification. To sum up: What the
UN bodies seek to do before the certification court is to distil the
legal significance of Anglo’s commitments to the Guiding
Principles as a factor to be weighed in the balance when determining
where the interests of justice lie. They seek to persuade
the
certification court to extend the
Njongi
principle so that it can apply to private parties (such as Anglo) in
this litigation, based on the heightened duty that the UN
bodies
submit Anglo attracted in committing to the guiding principles and
which the UN bodies consequently submit, enjoined Anglo
not to oppose
certification.
21.
Seen from this perspective, the
requirement, namely, that an amicus’s submissions must be new
and that ‘
new
contentions are those that may materially affect the outcome of the
case’
has in my view been met
by the UN bodies because it is an argument which, if found to be
persuasive, may tilt the scale in favour
of certification.
22.
Whether or not the UN bodies’
argument in respect of the
Njongi
principle is correct or not is for the certification court to
determine. I agree with Ms Hofmeyer that Anglo’s contentions
about the import of the
Njongi
principle and its application to the facts of this matter is really
an argument about the correctness thereof, dressed up as one
concerning relevancy.
23.
As
observed by the Constitutional court in
Koyabe
,
[17]
‘
insofar
as amici introduce additional, new and relevant perspectives, leading
to more nuanced judicial decisions, their participation
in litigation
is to be welcomed and encouraged.
’
24.
Although
the list of criteria provided by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Children’s
Resource Centre
case
does not necessarily focus on the interests of a respondent or a
respondent’s conduct, it is not a closed list of factors
that
the certification court is bound to take into account. Unterhalter J
conveniently summarised the legal position in
De
Bruyn
[18]
as follows:
“
In
Children’s Resources,
the Supreme Court of Appeal set
out the factors that should be weighed in deciding whether to certify
a class action. These factors
are as follows: the existence of a
class identifiable by reference to objective criteria; the proposed
class representative is
suitable to conduct the action and represent
the class; a cause of action raising a triable issue; the right to
relief requires
the determination of issues of fact or law, or both,
common to all members of the class; the relief sought or damages
claimed flow
from the cause of action and are ascertainable and
capable of determination; where damages are claimed, there is a
procedure by
which to allocate the damages to members of the class
given the composition of the class and the nature of the proposed
action;
and that a class action is the most appropriate means by
which the claims of the class may be determined.
Children’s
Resources
recognized
that these factors may not be exhaustive, but required that a court
should be satisfied that the factors are present
before granting
certification. In
Mukaddam,
the
Constitutional Court clarified the position.
The
factors referenced by the Supreme Court of Appeal are not
prerequisites for the grant of certification. Rather, they are
considerations
to be weighed under the overarching principle of what
is required by the interests of justice
.”
(footnotes omitted) (emphasis added).
25.
Whilst
the UN bodies’ submissions may support the contentions of the
applicants in the certification proceedings, in my view
they
contribute a different perspective on the applicants’
argument.
[19]
That is because,
in Ms Hofmeyer’s words, the submissions of the UN bodies ‘seek
to take the law where the law has not
yet gone’ concerning
Anglo’s elections and its conflicted position. The UN bodies
seek ultimately to explain why Anglo’s
election to abide human
rights principles has a necessary implication for the stance it took
in the certification application.
If the argument is accepted and
Anglo’s stance is taken into account as an additional factor to
weigh in the balance of what
the interests of justice require, it is
axiomatic that the argument will assist the certification court in
its reasoning when deciding
whether or not to allow certification. It
is thus relevant to the interests of justice debate.
26.
For these reasons, I am inclined to
exercise my discretion in favour of granting the UN bodies leave to
be admitted as the third
to seventh
amici
curiae
for purposes of presenting oral
and written argument in the certification proceedings.
27.
The UN bodies also seek leave to place
before the certification court more evidence about Anglo’s
commitment to the guiding
principles as well as its public invocation
of them. They also seek leave to adduce evidence of Anglo’s own
internal documents
evincing its commitment to those principles. I am
not inclined to grant this request. I do not think that it will be in
the interests
of justice to do so. As pointed out on behalf of Anglo,
the record of the certification proceedings is already unduly
burdened
by evidence presented on this very topic by the admitted
amici
as
well as the applicants. That Anglo committed itself to the guiding
principles both publically internally is common cause between
the
parties in the certification proceedings. No useful purpose would
therefore be served by burdening the record with more evidence
on a
point that is not in dispute in the certification proceedings.
Application by Human
Rights Watch (‘HRW’)
28.
HRW
seeks leave to be admitted as
amicus
curiae
in
order to advance essentially two submissions. First, it wishes to
address the purpose and context of its report
[20]
in order to correct what it contends is a misunderstanding or
misreading by Anglo of its report and its submissions to the UN
Committee on the Rights of the Child (‘the CRC’). The
Human Rights Watch report was put up and relied on by the
certification
applicants in their founding papers in support of
certification. In response, Anglo explained why the report supported
its contentions.
Second, it wishes to make submissions on Guiding
Principle 11 and the due diligence obligations imposed on
corporations by vitue
thereof.
29.
As regards the first submission, HRW
submits in its heads of argument that “…The Respondent
uses the Human Rights Watch
Report and the CRC submissions to
substantiate its defence against the applicants’ claim. Human
Rights Watch will address
the relevant facts and law omitted by the
respondent in its presentation of the Human Rights Watch report and
the CRC submissions.
’ HRW further submits that ‘when the
Human Rights Watch report and the CRC submissions are considered in
their proper
context and against their intended purpose, it is clear
that they do not exculpate the respondent – or any other
business
enterprise – for any conduct that may have caused or
contributed to ‘the failed state of the Mine and its surrounds’
”
30.
In heads of argument filed on behalf of
Anglo, reference is made to the issues in dispute between the
certification applicants and
the respondent in the certification
proceedings, as evidenced in paragraphs 748.1 and 753.1 of the
replying affidavit, where the
certification applicants address
Anglo’s reliance on the HRW report in its answering affidavit.
I do not intend to repeat
the content of the pleadings, as quoted in
para 14.1 of Anglo’s heads. It is however clear from the
pleadings that the very
issue that HRW seeks to canvass is already in
dispute between the parties.
31.
Anglo submits that any debate about the
meaning of the HRW report will not be helpful to the certification
court. It is trite that
the interpretation of the HRW report is a
matter for the court. I agree with Anglo’s submission that the
HRW report is before
court, which the certification court can read
for itself and hear legal submissions from the certification
applicants and Anglo
on its effect.
32.
HRW made two important concessions in this
application. First, that it does not intend to place any evidence
before the certification
court in order to contextualise the
circumstances under which its report was prepared or for purposes of
elucidating the purpose
of the report. This conveys to me that HRW
accepts that both context and purpose are discernible from the report
itself. It follows
that if the relevant context and purpose of the
report is discernible from the report itself, then HRW’s input
thereon will
not be needed. If it is not discernible from the report
itself, then HRW’s submissions are in any event unlikely to be
able
to assist the court as HRW has not sought to adduce additional
evidence on the subject. Whilst it is correct that the certification
applicants have not made written submissions in relation to the
context, purpose or meaning of the HRW report, indicating instead
that they will await HRW’s submissions in this regard, it
remains open for them to do so in oral argument, given that they
have
disputed that the report corroborates Anglo’s case. The fact
remains that HRW is in no better position to argue the
meaning or
effect of the report than the certification applicants or Anglo would
be. The court will read the report and form its
own view as to what
it says.
33.
Mr
Budlender submits that HRW really seeks to make submissions on the
contents of its report in order to set the record straight,
given
that Anglo is accused of quoting selectively from the report and of
misrepresenting what the report says. In
NDPP
v Zuma
[21]
former President Mbeki sought leave to intervene as a party or to
join the proceedings as an
amicus
in
order to set the record straight in the appeal proceedings, as the
High Court had made adverse findings against him, which he
contended
lacked an evidentiary basis. The Supreme Court of Appeal did not
consider it apposite for the former President to join
either as an
intervening party (for reasons given in the judgment) or as an
amicus
,
finding in regard to the latter, that the former President’s
intervention as
amicus
was not required ‘since it did not add anything new.’ Mr
Budlender submitted that HRW is in the same position in that,
it, in
effect, wants to ‘set the record straight’ regarding its
report. But that does not give it a right to intervene
as an
amicus
or
make its submissions helpful to the court. I am inclined to agree.
The certification court will not need to hear from HRW about
the
contents of its report as the report is before court, and the issue
of whether or not Anglo misrepresented or misread its contents
would
be apparent to the court from the report itself.
[22]
34.
HRW
submits in its heads of argument that Guiding Principle 11 enjoins
business enterprises to respect human rights by avoiding
infringing
on the human rights of others. It further enjoins businesses to
address adverse human rights impacts with which they
are
involved.
[23]
HRW submits that
in order to meet the responsibility to respect human rights, business
enterprises must,
inter
alia,
exercise due diligence. Due diligence in international human rights
law refers, so it submits, to the processes and activities
by which
businesses identify, prevent, mitigate and account for how they
address their adverse human rights impacts. HRW further
submits that
the due diligence standard is relevant to the standard of care owed
by a corporation such as Anglo. The standard imposes
on business
enterprises a duty of care, which includes,
inter
alia
,
the avoidance of complicity in, and profiting from, human rights
violations and the responsibility to ameliorate human rights
violations which may already exist when the enterprise begins its
operations. Ultimately, the core submission by HRW is that ‘
due
diligence provides a useful framework to assist in the evaluation of
the respondent’s duty of care… The international
law
principles also inform the nature and content of the applicable
standard of care, and whether the respondent has met the relevant
duty. This will assist this court in its determination of whether the
class action raises triable issues
.’
35.
HRW accepts that the certification
applicants’ proposed claim is to be determined in accordance
with the Zambian law of tort.
In other words, the nature and content
of the duty of care is a matter of Zambian law, to be found in
Zambian sources of law. Zambian
tort law has its own test for the
duty of care. This brings me to the second important concession made
on behalf of HRW at the
hearing of the matter, namely, that HRW does
not submit that that test of duty of care in Zambian law is
inadequate and needs to
be expanded upon or adapted with reference to
the Guiding Principles. It follows, as a necessary corollary, that
one does not prove
the test for duty of care in Zambian tort law by
reference to the Guiding Principles, unless those are part of Zambian
law, which
HRW does not assert.
36.
HRW
has been unable to say
how
the
Guiding Principles will help the court apropos its application of the
duty of care test under Zambian law. Instead, HRW has
resorted to
making generalised statements without specifying why a breach of the
requirements of due diligence international standards
can or will
impact the duty of care test under Zambian law and if so, how.
[24]
I therefore agree with MR Budlender’s submission on behalf of
Anglo that there is no suggestion by HRW that the principles
of due
diligence in international law add anything to the test for duty of
care in Zambian tort law. If that is so, then HRW’s
intervention is unnecessary. If the proposition is that they add
something, HRW has not said what that is. As no explanation was
provided by HRW in its papers or in its written or oral argument as
to the effect of international law on Zambian law or the test
for the
duty of care under Zambian tort law,
t
he
result is that it is unclear how the certification court will be
assisted by HRW’s intervention on this score.
37.
It follows that the HRW application does
not meet the requirements for admission as an
amicus
curiae
and therefore falls to be
dismissed.
Costs
38.
The UN bodies and HRW both seek costs in
the event that their applications are successful. Anglo, on the other
hand, does not seek
costs in the event that its opposition is
successful (and the applications are dismissed), in which event, it
submits that no order
as to costs be made.
39.
The application of the UN bodies has been
substantially successful in that they are to be joined as the third
to seventh
amici curiae
in the certification application for purposes of presenting written
and oral argument without, however, adducing further factual
evidence.
40.
On
behalf of the UN bodies, reliance was placed on cases such as
Jheebai
[25]
and
Dladla
[26]
in
support of the contention that costs may be awarded against a
litigant whose opposition is considered to have been unreasonable.
41.
Ms
Hofmeyer submits that Anglo’s opposition to the application for
admission as
amici
was
unreasonable for two reasons. The first is that the premise of the
opposition, namely, that the UN bodies have nothing new or
useful to
contribute to the certification court, was unfounded, a point aptly
(albeit partly) illustrated by the abandonment of
Anglo’s
opposition, on grounds that the UN bodies’ submissions are not
new, at the hearing of the matter. The second
is that Anglo did not
miss the opportunity in its answering affidavit (filed in these
proceedings) to make a serious allegation
of bias by the UN bodies
against Anglo, which entirely lacked factual foundation.
[27]
42.
As to the first, it remains unrefuted that
the UN bodies’ argument is novel and if found to be persuasive,
it will develop
the law on existing heightened duties beyond where it
currently is. The argument seeks to explain how the acquisition of a
heightened
duty, because of Anglo’s prior conduct, is a factor
that should weigh in the interests of justice balance for purposes of
certification. In my view, the contribution to be made by the UN
bodies in this regard goes beyond the existing submissions in
the
certification proceedings, and will be of value to the court apropos
the interests of justice enquiry, which renders it relevant.
Although
Anglo’s opposition to the UN bodies’ application was
unsuccessful, that does not imply that it was therefore
unreasonable.
Njongi
was
not mentioned in the UN bodies’ heads of argument and argument
based on the
Njongi
principle was only elucidated at the hearing of the matter. I do
however accept that the argument premised upon
Njongi
was foreshadowed in the UN bodies’
papers, however, the fact remains that it became illuminated during
oral argument.
43.
As
to the second, allegations of bias are by their nature serious. In
Knoop
,
[28]
Wallis JA cautioned that:
“…
It
should not be necessary to remind legal professionals who draft
affidavits for their clients that they bear a responsibility
for the
contents of those documents and may not use them for the purpose of
abusing their client's opponents. Such allegations
should only be
made after due consideration of their relevance and whether there is
a tenable factual basis for them…”
44.
In my view, no proper foundation was laid
in the answering affidavit for maligning the integrity of five UN
bodies. It was a gratuitous
averment, which was irrelevant to whether
or not the requirements for certification were met by the UN bodies
in their application.
45.
In my view, fairness and justice dictates
that Anglo should pay the costs of the application brought by the UN
bodies. All parties
involved in this matter employed the services of
more than one counsel, which in my view, was warranted, given the
seriousness
of the matter to all parties concerned and the complexity
of the issues involved. Costs payable by Anglo in respect of the UN
bodies’
application should therefore include the costs of both
senior and junior counsel.
46.
Accordingly, the following order is
granted:
ORDER
1.
The third to seventh applicants for
admission as
amici curiae
are admitted as the third to seventh
amici
curiae.
2.
The third to seventh
amici
curiae
are granted the right to file
written submissions and present oral argument at the hearing of the
certification application.
3.
The respondent is to pay the costs of the
application brought by the third to seventh applicants, which will
include the costs of
one senior and two junior counsel.
4.
The application by Human Rights Watch for
admission as
amicus curiae
is dismissed.
AVRILLE
MAIER-FRAWLEY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Date
of hearing:
10
November 2022
Judgment
delivered
25 November 2022
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by email, publication on
Caselines and release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be have been at 10h00 on 25 November 2022.
APPEARANCES:
Counsel
for 3
rd
to 7
th
applicants:
Adv K. Hofmeyer SC together
with
(UN
bodies)
Adv M Mbikiwa & Adv I. Cloete
Instructed
by:
Legal Resources Centre
Counsel
for Human Rights Watch:
Adv K Hardy together
with Adv BC Meyersfeld
Instructed
by:
Lawyers for Human Rights
Counsel
for the respondent:
Adv S. Budlender SC together with
Adv L. Sisilana & Adv
D. Smit
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel Attorneys
[1]
Being
t
he
class of children and the class of women of child-bearing age.
[2]
In
terms of Rule 16A of the Uniform Rules of Court, an applicant for
admission as an
amicus
must:
“
(a)
briefly describe the interest of the amicus curiae in the
proceedings;
(b)
clearly and succinctly set out the submissions which will be
advanced by the amicus curiae, the relevance thereof to the
proceedings and his or her reasons for believing that the
submissions will assist the court and are different from those of
the other parties.”
[3]
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development and others v Southern
African Litigation Centre (Helen Suzman Foundation an
others as
amici curiae)
2016 (3) SA 317
(SCA) (‘
SALC
’)
at paras 29-30, where the following was said:
“
[29]
An amicus is not entitled to submit further evidence to the Court
but is confined to the record. That is expressly provided
in
rule
16(8).
It
is unnecessary to consider whether there are exceptional
circumstances in which the Court hearing the appeal may relax that
rule
.
In making submissions the amicus is not permitted to traverse ground
already covered by other parties, but is confined to making
submissions on the new contentions that it wishes to place before
the Court. In that regard it is apposite to point out that
adding
additional references, whether to case law or to academic writings,
on the matters canvassed in the heads of argument
of the litigants,
does not amount to advancing new contentions
.
That obviously does not exclude placing material before the Court to
demonstrate that a point of controversy between the parties
has been
settled by way of an authoritative judgment. It would only be if
there had, for example, been an authoritative decision
placing a
legal issue thought to be controversial beyond dispute that an
amicus may include that in its argument. Otherwise it
is confined to
its new and different contentions and these must be clearly stated.
[30]
Finally,
new
contentions are those that may materially affect the outcome of the
case
. It
is not feasible to be prescriptive in this regard but
prospective
amici and their advisers must start by considering the nature and
scope of the dispute between the parties and, on
that basis,
determine whether they have distinct submissions to make that may
alter the outcome or persuade the Court to adopt
a different line of
reasoning in determining the outcome
of
the appeal. Obvious examples would be urging the Court to adopt
reasoning based on provisions of the Constitution in construing
a
statute, where the parties have not taken that course, or a
submission that the fundamental legal principles to be applied
in
determining the dispute are other than those submitted by the
parties where their adoption would materially affect the outcome
of
the case. No doubt others can be imagined.”
[4]
In
Re Certain Amicus Curiae Applications: Minister of Helath and others
v Treatment Action Campaign and others
2002
(5) SA 713
(CC) (‘
Treatment
Action Campaign
’
)
at par 5, where the following was said:
“
[5]
The role of an amicus is to draw the attention of the court to
relevant matters of law and fact to which attention would not
otherwise be drawn. In return for the privilege of participating in
the proceedings without having to qualify as a party,
an
amicus has a special duty to the court. That duty is to provide
cogent and helpful submissions that assist the court. The amicus
must not repeat arguments already made but must raise new
contentions; and generally these new contentions must be raised on
the data already before the court.
Ordinarily it is inappropriate for an amicus to try to introduce new
contentions based on fresh evidence.”
[5]
Children’s
Institute v Presiding Officer, Children’s Court, Krugersdorp
2013
(2) SA 620
(CC) (‘
Children’s
Institute
’
)
at
626A-C and 631 H-632B, where the constitutional court clarified that
although
amici
curiae
must ordinarily raise arguments on the evidence already before
court, they are permitted, where it is in the interests of justice,
and in the court’s discretion, to introduce evidence in
support of their submissions.
[6]
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and
Others
2012
(6) SA 223
(CC) (‘
Outa
’
)
at par 16, where the court explained that it is insufficient for a
prospective amicus merely to ‘
echo
the position of [a party] with slight variations.’.
In
rejecting the amicus application, the court in Outa explained that
‘
its
contentions are not new and will not add anything meaningfyul to a
case that is already burdened by several procedural and
substantive
issues.’
[7]
In
brief, the UN bodies explain in their papers that they comprise
independent experts appointed by the UN Human Rights Council,
with
the mandate to monitor, advise and publically report on human rights
from a thematic or country-specific perspective. Each
of the
rapporteurs and working groups have a mandate that is directly
relevant to those proceedings and their submissions are
brought from
a unique perspective: that of independent experts specifically
tasked to monitor, advise and report on human rights
issues, such as
those the applicants for certification have experienced. Their
specific interest is summarized in the heads of
argument in paras 17
to 20 at pp. 086-296 to 086-300 of the papers. HRW explains that it
is an international organization devoted
to defending the rights of
human beings worldwide and has expertise in international human
rights law. It has a unique
repository of knowledge about the
Kabwe district, Zambia, where the applicants who seek certification
of their class action reside
and who have suffered injury as a
result of exposure to lead. It has first-hand knowledge and
experience of the lead-contaminated
environment in the Kabwe
district and its impact on the community. Furthermore, it has been
brought directly into this matter
by the respondent’s reliance
on its report: ‘
We
have to be worried-the impact of lead contamination on children’s
rights in Kabwe Zambia’
and
its submissions to the UN committee on the Rights of the Child, on
the impact of lead pollution on children’s rights.
[8]
In
expounding upon their central argument, t
he
UN bodies reference Guiding principle 11, which requires businesses
to respect human rights. The UN bodies propose highlighting
that
‘respect’ in this context denotes a responsibility to
avoid infringing on the human rights of others and to
address
adverse human rights impacts with which they are involved, and to
highlight that this principle serves to broaden the
responsibility
of businesses to be responsive to human rights impacts where they
have been involved in them. They also reference
Guiding principle
22, which states that if businesses have caused or contributed to
adverse [human rights] impacts, they should
provide for or
co-operate for their remediation through legitimate processes.
Legitimate processes would include court processes
that can be used
by victims of human rights impacts to access remedies.
[9]
i.e.,
rather than to defend the class action on its merits so that it can
be determined, amongst others, whether Anglo bears responsibility
for the adverse human rights impacts suffered and continuing to be
suffered by the certification applicants in Kabwe.
[10]
Njongi
v Member of the Executive Council, Eastern Cape
[2008] ZACC 4
;
2008
(4) SA 237
(CC) (‘
Njongi
’)
at paras 3, 78 & 79, where the following was said:
“
[3]
A second perhaps more important dimension of the case emerged during
the hearing. It concerns whether and the circumstances
in which the
State can legitimately decide to avail itself of the defence of
prescription. This question is significant because
courts cannot
invoke prescription of their own accord. They may decide whether a
claim is prescribed only if the debtor (the
State in this case)
expressly and properly raises it. If it is competent for the State
to raise prescription as a defence the
more specific question
concerns the factors that the State must consider when deciding
whether to deprive the disability pensioner
of her right to receive
disability grant arrears owed to her by pleading prescription.
[78]
I have already said that the Prescription Act requires the debtor to
make a decision as to whether it should avail itself
of the defence
of prescription. It follows from this that the Provincial Government
had to make a decision whether to plead prescription
or not. There
are important reasons why courts cannot by themselves take up the
issue of prescription.
There is an inevitable and, in my view,
moral choice to be made in relation to whether a debtor should plead
prescription particularly
when the debt is due and owing. The
Legislature has wisely left that choice to the debtor. For it is the
debtor who would face
the commercial, community and other
consequences of that choice
.
[79]
A decision by the State whether or not
to invoke prescription in a particular case must be informed by the
values of our Constitution.
It follows that the Provincial
Government too, must take a decision whether to plead prescription
to defeat a claim for arrear
disability grant payments
.
This is not a decision for the State Attorney to make.
It
is an important decision and must not be made lightly
.
It must be made after appropriate processes have been followed and
by a sufficiently responsible person in the Provincial Government
who must take into account all the relevant circumstances.
It
is the duty of the State to facilitate rather than obstruct access
to social security. This will be a fundamental consideration
in making the assessment
.”
(underlining own emphasis)
[11]
In
Njongi,
the State had belatedly sought to raise prescription as a defence,
which if successful, would have deprived the applicant, a
disability
pensioner, of her right to receive disability grant arrears owed to
her.
[12]
Anglo
does not dispute that South African courts would have
jurisdiction over a claim brought by an individual victim of
lead
poisoning in Kabwe against it by virtue of its domicile in South
Africa. On behalf of the UN bodies, it was submitted that
the
only
question for determination by the certifying court is whether there
are interests of justice reasons, nonetheless, to refuse
to permit
the applicants to use the class action procedure to prosecute their
claims.
As
recognized by the Constitutional Court in
Mukkaddam
v Pioneer Foods
2013 (5) SA 89
(CC)
(‘
Mukkadam’
)
at paras 34-37, the overriding consideration for certification is
the interests of justice.
[13]
In
Mukkadam
at
par 38, the Constitutional Court endorsed the critical role of
certification proceedings. It explained that “
Courts
must embrace class actions as one of the tools available to
litigants for placing disputes before them. However, it is
appropriate that the courts should retain control over class
actions. Permitting a class action in some cases may, as the Supreme
Court of Appeal has observed in this case, be oppressive and as a
result inconsistent with the interests of justice. It is therefore
necessary for courts to be able to keep out of the justice system
class actions which hinder, instead of advancing, the interests
of
justice. In this way prior certification will serve as an instrument
of justice rather than a barrier to i
t.”
In
Children’s Resource Centre
v Pioneer Food (Pty) Ltd & Others
2013
(2) SA 213
(SCA) (‘
Children’s
Resource Centre
’).
at
par 24, the Supreme Court of Appeal discussed the
rationale
for certification
proceedings, and explained as follows:
“
Most
jurisdictions around the world require certification either before
institution of the class action or at an early stage of
the
proceedings… The justifications are various. First, in the
absence of certification, the representative has no right
to
proceed, unlike litigation brought in a person’s own
interests. Second, in view of the potential impact of the litigation
on the rights of others it is necessary for the court to ensure at
the outset that those interests are properly protected and
represented. Third, certification enables the defendant to show at
an early stage why the action should not proceed. This is
important
in circumstances where the mere threat of lengthy and costly
litigation may be used to induce a settlement even though
the case
lacks merit. Fourth, certification enables the court to oversee the
procedural aspects of the litigation, such as notice
and discovery,
from the outset. Fifth, the literature on class actions suggests
that, if the issues surrounding class actions,
such as the
definition of the class, the existence of a prima facie case, the
commonality of issues and the appropriateness of
the representative
are dealt with and disposed of at the certification stage, it
facilitates the conduct of the litigation, eliminates
the need for
interlocutory procedures and may hasten settlement
…”
(footnotes omitted)
In
De
Bruyn v Steinhoff International Holdings NV and others
2022
(1) SA 442
(GJ) at par 300, Unterhalter J identified a further
reason for certification when he stated that “
Why
would a court trigger the machinery of a class of action to
determine soething that does not exist in law? To do so would
be to
place a ghost in the machinery of justice.
”,
namely,
[14]
In
par 26 of
Children’s
Resource Centre
(cited
in fn 13 above), Wallis JA provided
a
list of the criteria a court will take into account when determining
certification.
They are: (i)
the
existence of a class identifiable by objective criteria; (ii)a cause
of action raising a triable issue; (iii) that the right
to relief
depends upon the determination of issues of fact, or law, or both,
common to all members of the class; (iv) that the
relief sought, or
damages claimed, flow from the cause of action and are ascertainable
and capable of determination; (v) that
where the claim is for
damages there is an appropriate procedure for allocating the damages
to the members of the class; (vi)
that the proposed representative
is suitable to be permitted to conduct the action and represent the
class; (vii) whether given
the composition of the class and the
nature of the proposed action a class action is the most appropriate
means of determining
the claims of class members.
[15]
There
the following was said: “[85]
It
is not necessary in this case to decide whether the decision of the
Provincial Government to invoke prescription was of such
a nature
that it can or ought to be set aside. That is because the defence of
prescription has in any event failed. I am however
of the view that,
as appears from what I have said earlier, both the decision to
oppose as well as the way in which the case
was conducted represent
unconscionable conduct on the part of the Provincial Government. I
do not need to decide whether the
fault lay with the legal advisor,
an official in the Department, a political office bearer or with all
of them.
[16]
The
respondent - whether it be it the provincial Government, as in
Njongi
or Anglo in
casu
[17]
Koyabe
and Others v Minister for Home Affairs and Others
(CCT
53/08
)
[2009]
ZACC 23
;
2010
(4) SA 327
(CC)
para 80 (“
Koyabe
’).
[18]
De
Bruyn v Steinhoff International Holdings NV and others
2022
(1) SA 442
(GJ) at paras 11-12. (
De
Bruyn
’)
[19]
See:
Minister
of Defence v Potsani
2002
(1) SA 1
(CC) at par 9 and
State
v Molimi
[2008] ZACC 2
;
2008
(3) SA 608
(CC) at par 22. In these cases the Constitutional Court
recognized that the particular contributions of the amici in those
cases,
was to offer a different perspective to existing submissions
made by the applicants.
[20]
Anglo
is said to have relied on selected parts of the report in support of
its case in the certification proceedings.
[21]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions c Zuma (Mbeki and another
intervening)
[2009] ZASCA 1
;
2009
(2) SA 277
(SCA) (“
NDPP
v Zuma’)
[22]
See:
SALC
(quoted in fn 3 above) at par 36, where the court, in refusing an
application for admission as
amici
curiae,
stated
that ‘
Not
only were the matters that these parties sought to raise apparent to
the Court from the terms of the Rome statue itself, no
indication
was given of how knowledge of them would affect the determination of
the issues in the case.’
[23]
Ultimately,
certification of the intended
e
class action is sought by the certification applicants to access
justice in order to hold Anglo liable for the adverse
human
rights impacts on women and children it was involved in through its
mining operations at Kabwe, Zambia.
[24]
For
example, i
n
its founding affidavit, HRW states that “
Human
Rights Watch’s submissions further will illustrate how the
concept and requirements of due diligence provide useful
guidance in
an analysis of the nature and content of the applicable standard of
care and whether the relevant duty of care has
been met by a
business enterprise
.’
As pointed out on behalf of Anglo, these allegations are ‘so
underspecified as to be completely unhelpful’,
a point with
which I agree.
[25]
Jeebhai
v Minister of Home Affairs
2009
(5) SA 54
(SCA) at par 52.
[26]
Dladla
v The City of Johannesburg
2004
(6) 516 (GJ) at paras 44-46.
[27]
See
par 57 of the answering affidavit where the following was said:
‘
I
point out that the UN Special Procedures demonstrate their bias
against Anglo in claiming that "Anglo should not be permitted
to obtain the commercial and public relations benefits for its brand
of espousing commitment to the Guiding Principles, while
in the same
breath opposing the certification of this class action." Amici
curiae are not permitted to seek to bolster a
sectarian or partisan
interest against any of the parties.’
[28]
Knoop
and Another NNO v Gupta (Tayob intervening)
2021
(3) SA 88
(SCA) at par 145
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