Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 159South Africa
Action SA v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (070799/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 159 (14 February 2025)
Headnotes
on Wednesday, 12 April 2023 to disallow am urgent motion of no confidence in himself as the Speaker; and adjourn the Special Council Meeting (collectively, “the impugned decisions”) be:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Action SA v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (070799/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 159 (14 February 2025)
Action SA v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (070799/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 159 (14 February 2025)
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###### REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH AFRICA
###### IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
###### GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 070799/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2) OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
14/2/2025
SIGNATURE
ACTION
SA
Applicant
and
THE CITY OF
TSHWANE
METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent
THE SPEAKER OF COUNCIL
OF THE CITY
OF
TSHWANE
Second Respondent
MNCEDI
NDZWANANA
Third Respondent
THE MUNICIPAL MANAGER
OF THE
CITY
OF TSHWANE
Fourth Respondent
COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF TSHWANE
Fifth
Respondent
THE MEMBER OF THE
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL OF
COOPOERATIVE,
GOVERANCE AND
TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS, GAUTENG PROVINCE
Sixth Respondent
THE
AFRICAN NATIONAL CONGRESS
Seventh Respondent
THE
ECONOMIC FREEDOM FIGHTERS
Eight Respondent
CONGRESS
OF THE PEOPLE
Ninth Respondent
AFRICAN
DEMOCRATIC MOVEMENT
Tenth Respondent
AFRICAN
INDEPENDENT CONGRESS
Eleventh Respondent
AFRICAN
TRANSFORMATION MOVEMENT
Twelfth Respondent
DEFENDERS
OF THE PEOPLE
Thirteenth
Respondent
GOOD
Fourteenth Respondent
PATROTIC
ALLIANCE
Fifteenth Respondent
PAN-AFRICAN
CONGRESS
Sixteenth Respondent
THE
REPUBLICAN CONFERENCE
Seventeenth Respondent
DEMOCRATIC
ALLIANCE
Eighteenth
Respondent
FREEDOM
FRONT PLUS
Nineteenth Respondent
INKATHA
FREEDOM PARTY
Twentieth Respondent
AFRICAN
CHRISTIAN DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Twenty-First Respondent
This
Judgment was handed down electronically and by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives’ by way of email
and shall
be uploaded on caselines. The date for hand down is deemed to be on
14 February 2025.
JUDGEMENT
MALI J
1.
This application to review and set aside the third respondent’s
decision
taken in his capacity as the Speaker of the first respondent
originates from the urgent motion court. In the urgent court the
application
to interdict the second respondent to chair the Special
Council Meeting was dismissed. The second respondent is the Speaker,
and
the third respondent is Mr Mncedi Ndzwanana who occupies the
position or office of the Speaker of the first respondent. He is
cited
in his personal capacity because the applicant seeks punitive
cost orders against him. The second and third respondents will be
referred herein as the Speaker.
2.
THE PARTIES
2.1.
The applicant is Action SA, is a duly
registered political party in accordance with section 15 of the
Electoral Act, with 19 representative
Councillors on the Council of
the City of Tshwane.
2.2.
The first respondent is the City of Tshwane
established in terms of section 12 of the Structures Act. The
second respondent
is the Speaker in the City of Tshwane in his
official capacity. The third respondent is Mr. Mncedi Ndzwanana in
his personal capacity
being the person who occupies the position of
the Speaker.
2.3.
The fourth respondent is the City Manager.
The City Manager is accountable for the overall performance of the
City’s administration
and is expected to be an enforcer of the
Constitution in his own right.
2.4.
The fifth respondent is the Council, whose
members are elected in terms of section 157 of the Constitution. The
sixth respondent
is the Member of the Executive Council of
Cooperative, Governance and Traditional Affairs of the Gauteng
Province, cited in light
of any interest they have in this matter.
2.5.
The seventh respondent is the African
National Congress, a registered political party with 75
representative Councilors on the Council.
The eight respondent is the
Economic Freedom Fighters, a registered political party with 23
representative Councilors on the Council.
2.6.
The ninth respondent is the Congress of the
People, a registered political party with 1 representative Councilor
on the Council.
The tenth respondent is the African Democratic
Movement, a registered political party with 1 representative
Councilor on the Council.
2.7.
The eleventh respondent is the African
Independent Congress, a registered political party with 1
representative Councilor on the
Council. The twelfth respondent is
the African Transformation Movement, a registered political party
with 1 representative Councilor
on the Council.
2.8.
The thirteenth respondent is the Defenders
of the People, a registered political party with 1 representative
Councilor on the Council.
The fourteenth respondent is GOOD, a
registered political party with 1 representative Councillor on the
Council.
2.9.
The fifteenth respondent is the Patriotic
Alliance, a registered political party with 1 representative
Councillor on the Council.
The sixteenth respondent is the Pan-
African Congress, a registered political party with 1 representative
Councillor on the Council.
2.10.
The seventeenth respondent is the
Republican Conference, a registered political party with 1
representative Councillor on the Council.
The eighteenth respondent
is the Democratic Alliance, a registered political party with 69
representative Councillors on the Council
of the City of Tshwane.
2.11.
The nineteenth respondent is Freedom Front
Plus, a registered political party with 17 representative Councilors
on the Council.
The twentieth respondent is the Inkatha Freedom
Party, a registered political party with 1 representative Councilor
on the Council.
The twenty-first respondent is the African Christian
Democratic Party, a registered political party with 2 representative
Councilors
on the Council.
3.
The application is only opposed by the second and third respondents.
The
eight respondents initially opposed the application but later
withdrew the opposition a week prior to the hearing of this
application.
4.
The decisions impugned are (i) the decision of the Speaker to chair
the
Council meeting on 23 April 2023, (ii) to disallow the urgent
motion of no confidence against him as a Speaker and (iii) to adjourn
the Council meeting.
5.
The decision decried by the applicant is that the
Speaker of the first respondent did not place on the agenda the
Special Council
motion of no confidence in himself and to adjourn the
Special Council meeting. The applicant’s case is that he was
supposed
to have recused himself upon being aware of the agenda
because of the perceived impartiality. He continued to act as a
Speaker
on the motion whilst conflicted and proceeded to disallow the
motion of no confidence in himself as the speaker.
6.
The attendant order sought is to review and set aside the impugned
decisions,
as well as an order declaring the impugned decisions
unconstitutional and invalid in their entirety.
7.
The applicant persists with the application in the same terms of the
urgent
court proceedings of 19 July 2023, as follows:
7.1 That the decisions
taken by the third respondent, in his capacity as the Speaker, during
the Special Council Meeting held on
Wednesday, 12 April 2023 to
disallow am urgent motion of no confidence in himself as the Speaker;
and adjourn the Special Council
Meeting (collectively, “the
impugned decisions”) be:
7.1.1 reviewed and set
aside;
7.1.2 be declared as
unconstitutional and invalid in their entirety.
7.2 That the impugned
decisions be substituted with the following order:
7.2.1 the Special Council
Meeting postponed to 10h00 on the day that is two business days from
the date of this Court’s order;
7.2.2 the third
respondent is prohibited from chairing, adjourning and/or
interfering, whether directly or indirectly, with the
functioning of
the Special Council Meeting;
7.2.3 the City Manager,
or, if the City Manager is not available, a person designated by the
MEC, must preside over the election
of an acting Speaker at the
Special Council Meeting; and
7.2.4 the Speaker elected
at the Special Council Meeting must take all reasonable steps to
ensure that the motion of no confidence
in the Speaker is considered
and decided by Council during the meeting.
7.3 That the decision
taken by the third respondent, in his capacity as the Speaker, during
the Special Council Meeting held on
Thursday, 29 June 2023 to
disallow an urgent motion of no confidence in himself as the Speaker;
and adjourn the Special Council
Meeting, be reviewed and set aside,
and declared unconstitutional and invalid in its entirety.
7.4 The costs of this
application, including the costs of two counsel on an attorney and
client scale, are to be paid by the third
respondent in his personal
capacity if he opposes it, and/or jointly and severally by any
further respondents opposing it.
7.5 Further and/or
alternate relief.
THE
MEETING OF 12 APRIL 2023
8.
As at the date of the hearing of this application the applicant was
still
awaiting reasons for the dismissal of the application in the
urgent court.
The applicant’s case is that
on 31 March 2023 the Speaker was requested by a majority of
Councilors in terms of
section 29 (1) of the Structures Act as
he was obligated
to call a Special Council Meeting
“SCM” for Wednesday 12 April 2023.
9.
Section
29 [1] of the Municipal Systems Act…
provides as follows:
“
Meetings of
municipal councils (1) The speaker of a municipal council decides
when and where the council meets subject to section
18(2), but if a
majority of the councillors
requests the speaker
in writing to convene a council meeting, the speaker must convene a
meeting at a time set out in the request.
(1A) If the speaker or
acting speaker refuses to call a meeting of the council as requested
in terms of subsection (1), the municipal
manager, or in the absence
or refusal by the municipal manager, a person designated by the MEC
for local government in the province,
may call and chair the meeting.
(2) The
municipal manager of a municipality or, in the absence of the
municipal manager, a person designated by the MEC for local
government in the province, must call the first meeting of the
council of that municipality within 14 days after the council has
been declared elected or, if it is a district council, after all the
members to be appointed by local councils, have been appointed.
“
[ own emphasis]
10.
The Speaker does not dispute that on 31 March 2023 he was served with
a notice calling for
a motion of no confidence against the Speaker,
the motion to be heard on 12 April 2023. It is the Speaker’s
case that
the notice did not comply with the
provisions of section 29(1) because the number forming majority was
not met, as the purported
signatures for other members were
falsified. According to the Speaker the “signatures were
doctored.” The court
is invited to examine Annexures SPK 2 and
SPK 3 in order to determine that the signatures appearing thereto are
“doctored
signatures”.
11.
The court’s attention is drawn to the respective signatures of
Francois Smith and
GE Breytenbach both of the Democratic Alliance
(DA). The issue is that their signatures do not look the same when
compared from
other documents annexed in this application. This
submission is not supported by expert evidence to determine the
authenticity
of signatures and why the signatures are different in
comparison.
12.
This court has no jurisdiction to make decisions questioning
technical issues, without the
assistance of the experts. The
court
cannot by simply looking at the signatures
conclude that the signatures are authentic or not. The annexures are
of no assistance
to the court; therefore, the submission cannot
stand.
13.
A further
argument advanced on behalf the
applicant is that the Speaker acted unlawfully by chairing the
meeting on 12 April 2023, whilst
there was a pending urgent interdict
application on 11 April 2023. According to the applicant the
application was dismissed without
any reasons proffered.
The
importance of the application of 11 April 2023 is that the Speaker
under oath stated that he would not act unlawfully, thereby
committing not to chair the meeting on 12 April 2023. So, by taking a
decision to chair the meeting on 12 April 2023 he reneged
on his oath
to the Court.
14.
On the applicant’s version the
application was dismissed, it is not known why the court considered
dismissing the application.
The applicant’s case is that
the Speaker stated under oath, that “
I
undertake to the above Honorable Court to act lawfully in the
upcoming special council meeting.”…
15.
From the above the applicant’s case
is that the Speaker was in contempt of what he stated under oath.
There is no legal basis
to single out what the second respondent said
under oath in a dismissed application and use it for future purposes.
What the second
respondent said under oath was/ is part of the entire
dismissed case. Contempt applies to the Court Order, not to the
averments,
in particular here, averments were made on a dismissed
application.
16.
What is considered to be unlawful by the
applicant is that the Speaker should have recused himself because he
was conflicted. The
Speaker had material interest and amongst other
reasons, that it was impossible for the Speaker to be impartial and
be seen as
impartial.
17.
To
the above, the Speaker’s Counsel refers the court to
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others
v
South
African Rugby Football Union and Others
[1]
.
The case dealt with recusal of Judges. In paragraph 40 of the
judgment the following is stated:
“
The nature of
the judicial office
[40] In applying the
test for recusal, courts have recognised a presumption that judicial
officers are impartial in adjudicating
disputes. This is based on the
recognition that legal training and experience prepare judges for the
often-difficult task of fairly
determining where the truth may lie in
a welter of contradictory evidence. This consideration was put as
follows by Cory J in R.
v. S. (R.D.):
“
Courts have
rightly recognized that there is a presumption that judges will carry
out their oath of office. . . This is one of the
reasons why the
threshold for a successful allegation of perceived judicial bias is
high. However, despite this high threshold,
the presumption can be
displaced with 'cogent evidence' that demonstrates that something the
judge has done gives rise to a reasonable
apprehension of bias.”
18.
In this application the Speaker is not a
Judge and his position is far from being akin to that of a Judge.
The calling of
the SCM directly impacts his personal position
in the office of the first respondent. It is understood that the
possibility of
being removed from the position of a Speaker is
attached to his personal employment status, with attendant
power and benefits.
19.
In
Minister
of Safety and Security
v
Jongwa
[2]
the court held “
An
application for recusal should not prevail unless it is based on
substantial grounds for contending a reasonable apprehension
of
bias.”
From the grounds submitted by the applicant as above, the court is
satisfied that there are substantial grounds for the applicant’s
apprehension of bias.
20.
Although the SCM of 12 April 2023 was not
interdicted by any court of law, nevertheless the chairing of same
should not have occurred
because of apprehension of bias. What
remains is whether his decision to not table the notice of motion of
no confidence
against himself as the Speaker is reviewable and needs
to be set side.
21.
The applicant advanced six grounds for the
review of the impugned decisions. Amongst them are (i) Bias (ii)
irrelevant considerations
(iii) irrationality. A single ground will
suffice to have the impugned decision/s reviewed and set aside.
22.
The reasons advanced by the Speaker behind disallowing the motion of
no confidence is that
he applied Rule 19 (1) (b) of the Council
Rules. Rule 19 (1) (b) provides:
“
19. Disallowed
motions and proposals during Council meetings
The Speaker must
disallow a motion or proposal if-
(1)
In his or her opinion, the
motion or proposal-
…
..
(b) advances
arguments, expresses opinion, or contains unnecessary factual,
incriminating, disparaging or improper suggestions;”
23.
The submission made on behalf of the Speaker is that because
the notice for the meeting was flawed on the basis of the “doctored
signatures” resulting in lack of majority his ability to assess
the appropriateness of the request for purposes of Rule 19
(1) was
impeded. There was no need to for the Speaker to table the
motion at all since the notice did not meet the requirements
(section
29 above). I have already pronounced on the issue of allegedly flawed
notice because of suspect signatures.
24.
The Speaker also decried that the notice of the Coalition
carried an instruction that the motion of no confidence vote be done
by
the show of hands.
Section 19(1)(b) does not at
all engage the issue of Notice and neither engages the procedure. The
speaker does not aver how the
motion advances/advanced arguments,
expresses opinion or contains unnecessary factual, incriminating,
disparaging or improper suggestions.
From the above the reasons for
disallowing the motion of no confidence invoking the provisions of
Section 19(1)(b) are indiscernible.
The meeting of 29 June
2023
25.
The averment made pertaining to the date of 29 June 2023 is found in
paragraph 157 of the
founding affidavit, and it is as follows:
“
Ndzwanana
has either retracted nor apologized for his previous unlawful conduct
and, without this Court’s intervention, is
likely to again
attempt to continue to block any attempts to remove him as the
Speaker unlawfully. He has again recently done so,
on the 29
th
of June 2023, as will be dealt with below.”
26.
The Speaker’s submission is that he
disallowed the motion as well in terms of Rule 19(4) because its
subject-matter and the
non-resolved signatures issue was dealt with
in 3 previous Council meetings. Rule 19(4) provides that “
the
Speaker must disallow a motion or proposal if the motion or proposal
is one which the Council has “already dealt with”
within
the three previous Council Meetings: provided that, if the motion or
proposal in the opinion of Council justifies further
investigation it
is referred to the Executive Manager.”
27.
One of the three council meetings referred
to by the Speaker is the SCM of 12 April 2023. As a similar
order is sought for
12 April and 29 June 2023, the Speaker was not
supposed to preside over the meeting of 29 June 2023, in the similar
fashion of
12 April 2023. I have already found against the submission
of the Speaker pertaining the meeting of 12 April 2003.
28.
Section
6(2)(f)(i)-(ii) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
[3]
(PAJA) provides that “
the
court or tribunal has the power to judicially review an
administrative action if the action itself contravenes a law or is
not authorized by the empowering provision; or is not rationally
connected to the purpose for which it was taken; the purpose of
the
empowering provision; the information before the administrator; or
the reasons given for it by the administrator
”.
29.
The decisions taken by the Speaker were
taken in terms of Rules 19(1)(b) and 19(4) of the Council Rules. The
provision of
these Rules are stated above, reading and simply
understanding of the provisions does not at all accord
with the decisions
taken. Therefore, the decisions not to table
a notice of motion is found not be rationally connected to the
purpose which
it was taken. In the result it is susceptible to
review.
Interdict
30.
The applicant seeks a final interdict.
The requirements of final interdict are (i) clear right (ii) injury
committed or reasonably
apprehended and (iii) absence of similar
protection by any other remedy.
31.
Section
151(3) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,1996
[4]
confers upon the first respondent the right to govern, on its own
initiative, the local government affairs of its community within
the
legal parameters.
32.
The
applicant as a member of the Council relies on the right established
by section 160(8)(b) of the Constitution.
[5]
The right pertains that the members of the council (the first
respondent) are entitled to participate in its proceedings in a
manner that is consistent with democracy amongst others.
33.
As
determined above, the decision of the Speaker is irrational, due to
the proceedings that were not consistent with democracy.
Irrationality alone renders the process undemocratic. Furthermore,
the applicant acted within the parameters of section 40 of the
Local
Government Municipal Structures Act
[6]
authorizing the removal of the Speaker by resolution. The applicant
has successfully established that as a member of the first
respondent
it is entitled to participate in a democratic process.
34.
The Speaker’s refusal to recuse
himself and further taking irrational decisions is a definite harm
and injury to the successful
running of the first respondent. The
applicant’s apprehension of harm is successfully founded.
35.
The
applicant has no other remedy, except to invoke the provisions of
section 40 of the Act
[7]
; “
A
municipal council by resolution may remove its speaker from office.
Prior notice of an intention to move a motion for the removal
of the
speaker must be given.”
The
entire matter is about the unsuccessful efforts of the applicant to
invoke the provisions of section 40.
36.
As seen above, the efforts came to naught
on the instance of the Speaker. It is concluded that the applicant
has no other similar
remedy in the circumstances. Having regard to
the above, the application is successful.
SUBSTITUTION
37.
The applicant seeks a substitution order.
Amongst other grounds it advances is that it may be unfair to ask the
applicant to resubmit
itself to the Speaker’s jurisdiction as
remittal will lead to a foregone conclusion.
38.
PAJA seeks to give effect to the constitutional right of just
administrative action and empowers courts in judicial review
proceedings
to make a just and equitable order, substituting or
varying the administrative action or correcting a defect resulting
from
the administrative action only in exceptional circumstances.
39.
In
the case of
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Limited
v
Industrial
Development Corporation of South Africa Limited and Another
[8]
, the following is stated:
“
[54]
If the administrator is found to have been biased or grossly
incompetent, it may be unfair to ask a party to resubmit itself
to
the administrator’s jurisdiction. In those instances, bias or
incompetence would weigh heavily in favour of a substitution
order.
However, having regard to the notion of fairness, a court may still
substitute even where there is no instance of bias or
incompetence.”
–
“
[42]
The administrative review context of section 8(1) of PAJA and the
wording under subsection (1)(c)(ii)(aa) make it perspicuous
that
substitution remains an extraordinary remedy. Remittal is still
almost always the prudent and proper course.
[43] In our
constitutional framework, a court considering what constitutes
exceptional circumstances must be guided by an approach
that is
consonant with the Constitution. This approach should entail
affording appropriate deference to the administrator. Indeed,
the
idea that courts ought to recognise their own limitations still rings
true. It is informed not only by the deference courts
have to afford
an administrator but also by the appreciation that courts are
ordinarily not vested with the skills and expertise
required of an
administrator.” –
“
[47]
To my mind, given the doctrine of separation of powers, in conducting
this enquiry there are certain factors that should inevitably
hold
greater weight. The first is whether a court is in as good a position
as the administrator to make the decision. The second
is whether the
decision of an administrator is a foregone conclusion. These two
factors must be considered cumulatively. Thereafter,
a court should
still consider other relevant factors. These may include delay, bias
or the incompetence of an administrator. The
ultimate consideration
is whether a substitution order is just and equitable. This will
involve a consideration of fairness to
all implicated parties. It is
prudent to emphasise that the exceptional circumstances enquiry
requires an examination of each matter
on a case-by-case basis that
accounts for all relevant facts and circumstances.” –
“
[49]
Once a court has established that it is in as good a position as the
administrator, it is competent to enquire into whether
the decision
of the administrator is a foregone conclusion. A foregone conclusion
exists where there is only one proper outcome
of the exercise of an
administrator’s discretion and “it would merely be a
waste of time to order the [administrator]
to reconsider the
matter”.”
40.
This application has all the hallmarks of
the foregone conclusion. As evidenced above, at least in two turns
the Speaker has easily
employed irrelevant Rules. There will be
nothing to stop him from applying the same tactics if the matter is
remitted to the Speaker.
41.
From the Speaker’s flawed reasons for
not entertaining the motions it seems that remitting the decisions to
the Speaker will
be a waste of time. It is pressing that the first
respondent is properly governed for the benefit of innocent
communities.
I have not found that the Speaker is the cause for
improper governance, but blocking the meetings meant to engage in his
manner
of governance has been more than enough delay.
42.
In considering the substitution, sections
36(3) and 41 of the Structures Act are instructive provides as
follows:
“
36(3) The
municipal manager of the municipality or if the municipal manager is
not available. a person designated by the MEC for
local government in
the province, presides over the election of a speaker.”
“
41. If the
speaker of a municipal council is absent or not available to perform
the functions of speaker, or during a vacancy. the
council must elect
another councillor to act as speaker.”
43.
In conclusion the applicant has made a
successful case for decisions of the Speaker to be reviewable, set
aside and found to be
unconstitutional. Furthermore, the applicant
has magnificently persuaded this court for the order of substitution.
COSTS
44.
The applicant’s argument is that the
third respondent is cited in his personal capacity for the sole
purpose of mulcting him
with punitive costs at personal level. The
third respondent was at all times acting in his official capacity as
the Speaker. There
is nothing suggesting that the Speaker acted
outside the strictures of his office. For the above reasons the
decision to
visit the Speaker with punitive costs at a personal level
is refused.
ORDER
1. The decision taken by
Third Respondent, in his capacity as the Speaker, during the Special
Council Meeting held on Wednesday,
12 April 2023 to disallow an
urgent motion of no confidence in himself as the Speaker, and adjourn
the Special Council Meeting
(collectively, “the impugned
decisions”) is hereby set aside and declared unconstitutional
and invalid in its entirety.
2. The impugned decisions
be substituted with the following order:
2.1. the Third Respondent
is prohibited from chairing, adjourning and/or interfering, whether
directly or indirectly, with the functioning
of the Special Council
Meeting;
2.2. the City Manager,
or, if the City Manager is not available, a person designated by the
Member of the Executive Council, must
preside over the election of an
acting Speaker at the Special Council Meeting; and
2.3. the acting Speaker
elected at the Special Council Meeting must take all reasonable steps
to ensure that the motion of no confidence
in the Speaker is
considered and decided by Council during the meeting.
3. The decision by the
Third Respondent, in his capacity as the Speaker, during the Special
Council Meeting held on Thursday, 29
July 2023 to disallow an urgent
motion of no confidence in himself as the Speaker; and adjourn the
Special Council Meeting is hereby
set aside and declared
unconstitutional and invalid in its entirety.
4. The costs of this
application, including the costs of two counsel on an attorney and
client scale, are to be paid by the Second
Respondent.
N.P. MALI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Adv.
G Y Benson
Attorneys:
MVMT
Attorneys
hein@mvmtinc.co.za
For
2
nd
and 3
rd
Respondents:
Adv.
M Ka-Siboto
Attorneys:
Mothle
Jooma Sabdia Inc.
thipem@mjs-inc.co.za
nadinevs@mjs-inc.co.za
[1]
(CCT16/98)
[1999] ZACC 9
;
1999 (4) SA 147
;
1999 (7) BCLR 725
(4 June 1999)
[2]
(73/2011)
[2013] ZAECGHC 23; 2013 (3) SA 455 (ECG); 2013 (2) SACR 197 (ECG)
(14 March 2013)
[3]
Act 3 of 2000.
[4]
(3) A municipality has the right to govern, on its own initiative,
the local government affairs of its community, subject to
national
and provincial legislation, as provided for in the Constitution.
[5]
(8) Members of a Municipal Council are entitled to participate in
its proceedings and those of its committees in a manner that—
…(b) is consistent with democracy…
[6]
117 of 1998
[7]
Above
(6)
[8]
(
CCT198/14)
[2015] ZACC 22
;
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC);
2015 (10) BCLR 1199
(CC) (26
June 2015)
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