Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 664South Africa
Royal AM Football Club (Pty) Ltd v National Soccer League and Others (2025/054266) [2025] ZAGPPHC 664 (7 July 2025)
Headnotes
Summary: Whether the termination of the applicant’s membership as a Member Club of the National Soccer League (NSL aka PSL) was unlawful, and should be reviewed and set aside. Whether the NSL Board of Governors had the powers under the NSL Constitution to terminate the applicant’s membership with the NSL.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Royal AM Football Club (Pty) Ltd v National Soccer League and Others (2025/054266) [2025] ZAGPPHC 664 (7 July 2025)
Royal AM Football Club (Pty) Ltd v National Soccer League and Others (2025/054266) [2025] ZAGPPHC 664 (7 July 2025)
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sino date 7 July 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
Number: 2025-054266
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
(3)
REVISED.
DATE
07 July 2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
ROYAL
AM FOOTBALL CLUB (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
THE
NATIONAL SOCCER LEAGUE
First Respondent
THE
BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF NATIONAL
Second Respondent
SOCCER
LEAGUE
WILLEM
JACOBUS VENTER N.O.
Third Respondent
(IN
HIS
CAPACITY AS
CURATOR
BONIS
OF
ROYAL
AM FOOTBALL CLUB (PTY) LTD)
COMMISSIONER
FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
Fourth Respondent
REVENUE
SERVICE
This
judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation to
the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for
handing down is deemed to be 07 July 2025.
JUDGMENT
Summary
:
Whether the termination of the applicant’s membership as a
Member Club of the National Soccer League (NSL aka PSL) was unlawful,
and should be reviewed and set aside. Whether the NSL Board of
Governors had the powers under the NSL Constitution to terminate
the
applicant’s membership with the NSL
.
SELEKA
AJ
Introduction
[1]
The Applicant in this review application is Royal AM Football Club
(Pty) Ltd, a private
company with registration number
2019/412459/07. It seeks in the main, an order to declare as
unlawful and invalid, and to
review and set aside, a decision of the
First and/or Second Respondent terminating the Applicant’s
membership as a football
club with the First Respondent. The
Applicant also seeks ancillary relief to refer the termination
decision back to the First
Respondent for determination by the First
Respondent or the Second Respondent, and that any decision taken to
give effect to the
termination decision also be reviewed and set
aside.
[2]
The Applicant has cited four Respondents, namely the National Soccer
League,
commonly known as the Premier Soccer League (“the
PSL”), the Board of Governors of PSL (“the BoG”),
Jaco
Venter N.O. and the Commissioner for the South African Revenue
(“SARS”), but seeks relief only against the First and
Second Respondents, namely PSL and the BoG. The Third and
Fourth Respondents have been cited only insofar as they may have
an
interest in the matter, but also to keep them up to date with matters
involving the Applicant.
[3]
The reason for this last statement is that on 21 November 2024, SARS
applied for and
obtained a preservation order in terms of
section 163
of the
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011
against the Applicant and
twenty-two other Respondents, in the High Court, Kwazulu-Natal Local
Division. The preservation
order applies in respect of all
realisable assets of the Applicant and the twenty-two others.
The order applies with immediate
effect pending the return date.
The original return date has been extended to 09 July 2025, and the
matter is still pending.
[4]
The preservation order also appointed the Third Respondent herein, Mr
Jaco Venter,
as the
curator bonis
in whom the rights, title
and interest in all the assets of the Applicant and twenty-two others
immediately vested, including,
but not limited to, any shareholding,
loan accounts, movable and immovable assets.
[5]
The preservation order confers fairly wide powers on the curator
which I do not propose
to reproduce in this judgment. Reference
to a few of those powers will suffice. The curator is
authorised to take transfer,
into his name, of the shares held by the
Applicant and twenty-two others, and to have all such powers of a
shareholder and member,
including to hold shareholder’s or
member’s meeting, and to remove and appoint directors.
The curator is authorised
to take control of all bank accounts held
in the name of the Applicant and the twenty-two others in order to
manage the flow of
funds and ensure that the value of the Applicant’s
and twenty-two others' assets are maintained. In the result, no
one, except the curator may deal with the Applicant’s assets or
do so without the curator’s prior written consent.
These
powers continue to apply to secure the collection of tax against the
Applicant and twenty-two others, until their tax debts
to SARS are
settled in full.
[6]
The preservation order also contemplates authority for the curator to
sell, by means
of an auction or out of hand sales, the assets of the
Applicant and twenty-two others to meet their tax debt. This
authority
is subject to the
Tax Administration Act entitling
the
Applicant to instruct the curator to sell the assets.
[7]
On 17 February 2025 and by agreement between the curator and the
Applicant’s
management, the curator applied for and obtained a
Court Order permitting him to sell the Applicant's assets in order to
preserve
the maximum value of those assets. The order to sell
includes disposing of the Applicant’s rights, title and
interest
as owner of the “Royal AM FC”, as well as the
right to participate in particular divisions of PSL or in any
competition
of PSL. The sale will be subject to the prior
approval of PSL in terms of its NSL Handbook.
[8]
The curator has put the Applicant up for sale, but has to date not
been able to find
a suitable buyer. The Court Order to sell
still applies, and the Applicant and twenty-two others remain
precluded from entering
into any agreement for the dissipation or
encumbrance of their assets without the curator’s prior written
consent.
Facts
giving rise to this application
[9]
The facts giving rise to this application are largely common cause,
and culminated
into the impugned decision of the BoG on 10 April
2025, terminating the Applicant’s membership with PSL.
[10]
The Applicant became a member club of PSL in 2021, thereby subjecting
itself to PSL’s regulatory
and governing instruments, such as
the NSL Constitution, comprising the NSL Handbook and NSL
Rules, the NSL Compliance Manual
and the NSL Induction Manual.
For present purposes, the NSL Handbook and the NSL Rules are the more
relevant documents.
[11]
Upon its establishment and registration in 2019, the Applicant had
two directors, namely Andile
Mpisane and Shauwn Mabongy Flora-Junior
Mkhize. They both resigned as directors on 22 June 2023, and
one Mr Shamish Sadab
was appointed the sole director of the
Applicant.
[12]
The said change in directorship coincided with the change in
shareholding in the Applicant, from
100% by the Shandi Trust to 38%
shareholding by Shamish Sadab, 20% each by Flora Junior Kanye Mpisane
and Mizandy Aliya Mpisane,
10% each by Coco Mpisane and Messiah
Shauwn Mpisane, and only 2% by the Shandi Trust.
[13]
It is common cause that these changes were made without notification
to PSL and without its prior
written approval, as required by Article
14.2 of the NSL Handbook, to which I shall refer later in this
judgment.
[14]
Mr Sadab would later resign as the sole shareholder of the Applicant
on 01 April 2025 and Dr
Mkhize appointed as director on the same
day. Dr Mkhize is the deponent to the Applicant’s
affidavits in this application,
and describes herself as a
businesswoman and the President and sole director of the Applicant.
When the change in directorship
again took place in April 2025,
neither the curator nor PSL was informed. By this time, only
the curator could, in terms
of the preservation order, remove and
appoint directors for the Applicant.
FIFA
registration bans
[15]
On two different occasions and in the space of 6 months, the
Applicant received two FIFA registration
bans, one in July 2023 and
the other in January 2024. Each ban was in respect of a
registered international player, one Samir
Nurkovic, whose salary the
Applicant had failed to pay and, the other, Ricardo dos Santos
Nascimento, whose employment contract
the Applicant had prematurely
terminated without just cause and had also failed to pay him
remuneration for two months as the Applicant
had undertaken.
FIFA upheld the claims of these two players in two separate awards
pursuant to which the registration bans
were imposed on 03 July 2023
and 15 January 2024 respectively.
[16]
The two bans precluded the Applicant from registering new
international players, as well as new players
at national level,
until the Applicant had paid the amounts due to the players in full.
[17]
On 01 July 2024, the Applicant submitted its application for renewal
of its membership with PSL.
It stated in that application that
Dr Mkhize and Mr Andile Mpisane were the directors of the Applicant.
This information
was incorrect because, as already mentioned, the two
had resigned as directors, more than a year before (on 22 June 2023),
and
Mr Sadab was the Applicant’s sole director since then and
at the time of the renewal application.
[18]
On 01 October 2024, the Applicant informed PSL that the Applicant was
unable to meet its obligations
in respect of the MultiChoice Diski
Challenge Competition.
[19]
On 21 November 2024, the Applicant was placed under curatorship in
terms of the preservation
order already mentioned.
[20]
On 16 December 2024, PSL was notified of the preservation order by
the curator.
[21]
On 03 January 2025, the Applicant’s management informed PSL
that it would be extremely
impossible for the Applicant to honour its
fixture against Chippa United FC that had been scheduled for 11
January 2025.
It is appropriate to quote relevant portions of
the email communication from the Applicant to PSL:
“
Having
considered the present situation wherein we find ourselves as a team,
it would be extremely impossible to honour the match
against Chippa
United on the 11
th
in Port Elizabeth.
As we speak, the players and staff have not been paid their salaries
by the curator and travelling arrangements
have not been paid for.
The players and staff have not returned to work because of the
non-payment of their salaries.
We have engaged the curator
several times trying to reason with him to make payments without any
success.
It
is becoming clear that even if the players were to be paid by Tuesday
or whatever time, they will not be physically and mentally
ready to
play. This is beyond our control and we have done everything to
ask the curator to perform his duties as per the
preservation order
to no success. Even Mr Murphy tried to make him to understand
but the man just did not want to do anything.
Based on the
aforesaid reasons, we are requesting the League to postpone our match
whilst we find a solution to this situation.”
[22]
Whilst Dr Mkhize concedes that the Applicant could not meet its
commitments in respect of the
match against Chippa United FC due to,
what she alleges in the Applicant’s founding affidavit, were
difficulties arising
from the appointment of the curator, she
nonetheless seeks to paint a different picture from the one apparent
from the contemporaneous
email above. Dr Mkhize alleges,
inter
alia
, that–
“
the
Applicant’s team was at all material times ready and in a
position to play the game against Chippa United FC. Flights
for
the players were already booked and paid for. These costs were
paid before the curator became involved.”
[23]
Dr Mkhize’s allegation is clearly at odds with the message
conveyed in the contemporaneous
email above. Save for the
alleged non-payment of salaries for the players, the email did not
mention that the Applicant’s
team was at all material times
ready and in a position to play. According to the email, the
players and staff had not returned
to work because of non-payment of
their salaries.
[24]
For his part, the curator says he was not aware of the said email and
had in fact made payment
of salaries for the players and employees on
09 December 2024. He denies all adverse allegations made
against him and points
to,
inter alia
, a severe cashflow
deficit in the Applicant’s finances, making it impossible to
meet Applicant’s monthly operational
expenses.
[25]
PSL responded on the same day to the email above, explaining that
fixture postponements could
only be considered in exceptional
circumstances and that, under normal circumstances, the failure to
pay salaries and/or make travel
arrangements would not be a basis for
an application to postpone. However, in order not to
inconvenience other parties, PSL
reluctantly agreed to postpone the
fixture with Chippa United FC, but called upon the Applicant and the
curator to provide assurances
that the Applicant would meet its
playing commitments as fixtured for the rest of the season.
Letter
of Comfort
[26]
Various urgent meetings ensued between parties, called by the PSL
Executive Committee (“Exco”)
and attended by the curator
and the Applicant’s management, with the view to resolving the
issues between the curator and
the Applicant’s management,
specifically causing the Applicant not to meet its obligations to
PSL. These meetings culminated
into an undertaking made by the
Applicant’s management to provide PSL with firm and unequivocal
assurances that the Applicant
would be able to meet its playing
commitments for the rest of the season. It was agreed that the
assurances would be given
in the form of a letter of comfort, to be
provided by 17 January 2025, prior to another Applicant’s
fixture against Orlando
Pirates FC on 23 January 2025.
[27]
The said undertaking was, therefore, made on the back of the
Applicant’s failure to meet
its commitment to play against
Chippa United FC and its alleged inability to meet its obligations to
PSL due to the curator.
According to the Applicant, only the
curator could issue a letter of comfort.
[28]
From the facts, it is apparent that the curator was prepared to issue
such letter only if satisfied
that the Applicant’s financial
position would be improved to permit for the assurances to be made
that the Applicant would
honour its fixtures obligations to PSL.
The issuance of the letter was therefore contingent upon cooperation
and agreement
between the curator and the Applicant’s
management regarding the Applicant’s financial position and
availability of
funds.
[29]
The parties could not find each other, and the curator refused to
provide a letter of comfort
due to the lack of reliable and accurate
information regarding,
inter alia
, the Applicant’s
financials and operations, and the lack of cooperation by the
Applicant’s management regarding funding.
[30]
Having not received a letter of comfort, PSL resolved on 22 January
2025 to cancelled the Applicant’s
fixture against Orlando
Pirates FC, that had been scheduled for 23 January 2025, and to
suspend the rest of the Applicant’s
fixtures for the season
[31]
Quite belatedly in the replying affidavit, Dr Mkhize seeks to contend
that the letter of comfort
is not a requirement under the NSL
Handbook. This may well be so, however the parties had agreed,
as already mentioned, that
there was a need for the Applicant to
provide firm and unequivocal assurances that it would meet its
playing commitments for the
rest of the season. Those
assurances were to be provided in a letter of comfort, to which the
Applicant had agreed.
[32]
Further engagements between PSL, the Applicant’s management and
the curator did not bear
fruit. The impasse between the
Applicant’s management and the curator simply deepened.
[33]
Consequently, on 30 January 2025, the Applicant brought an urgent
application seeking mandatory
relief against the curator to issue a
letter of comfort, alternatively, against PSL to permit the Applicant
to play the rest of
its fixtures (“mandamus application”).
[34]
The urgent application was struck off the roll for lack of urgency,
with costs in favour of the
curator and SARS. PSL did not seek
costs. It was in this application that PSL learned of the
change in directorship
and shareholding in the Applicant, dating back
to 22 June 2023. The information was contained in SARS’s
court papers.
[35]
The Applicant subsequently withdrew the “mandamus”
application, on 03 March 2025,
and never pursued it.
Accordingly, its impasse with the curator remains to this day.
[36]
With that application aborted, so was the alternative relief sought
against PSL to permit the
Applicant to play the rest of its suspended
fixtures for the season. More importantly, however, is that the
impasse between
the Applicant’s management and the curator has
inevitably prolonged the Applicant’s inability to meet its
obligations
to PSL. After all, the Applicant’s management
blames this inability on the curator. It alleges that the
Applicant
was able to and did fulfil its obligations to PSL prior to
being placed under curatorship, and that the curator is the sole
reason
for the Applicant’s troubles with PSL.
[37]
The curator has denied these allegations and presented evidence to
show that the inability stems from
the deficiencies he found within
the Applicants environment, which are partly the reasons why the
Applicant was placed under curatorship
in the first place. He
blames the Applicant’s management for failing to cooperate with
him and to provide reliable
financial and other information. He
points out that he had requested several meetings with the
Applicant’s sole director
at the time, Mr Sadab, all to no
avail.
[38]
However, the dispute between the curator and the Applicant’s
management is not before me, and
so is the Applicant’s
unhappiness with the suspension of its remaining fixtures by PSL.
The Applicant had the opportunity
to pursue these issues in the
“mandamus” application it abandoned in March 2025, but
failed to do so.
PSL’s
steps towards termination of Applicant’s membership
[39]
The events above caused the PSL Exco to address a letter, dated 10
February 2025, to both the
Applicant and the curator, calling upon
the Applicant to submit written representations, by close of business
on 14 February 2025,
why Exco should not make a recommendation to the
PSL BoG to cancel the Applicant’s membership with PSL on the
grounds of
contravention of the provisions of Articles 10.14, 10.16
and 14.6 of the NSL Constitution.
[40]
On 14 February 2025, both the curator and the Applicant’s
management submitted separate
written representations. The
Applicant’s management submitted further representations on 21
February 2025, following
a meeting with PSL and the curator on 19
February 2025.
[41]
It is significant that in both the curator’s representations
and the Applicant’s
representations there was commonality in
regard to the Applicant’s prevailing precarious financial
position, on account of
which the two parties agreed that the most
viable option to resolving that financial position was to urgently
identify a prospective
purchaser for the Applicant. It was
pursuant to this agreement that the curator applied for and obtained,
on 17 February
2025, the court order to sell the Applicant.
[42]
On 24 February 2025, the Applicant’s management informed the
PSL Exco, in a meeting, that
the Applicant would no longer
participate in the Nedbank Cup. In the same meeting, the
curator advised that he had not been
able to sell the Applicant and
asked for more time until 26 February 2025. In his report dated
01 April 2025, the curator
reported on this and other matters to PSL,
and stated that the Applicant’s financial position has not
changed since 09 January
2025.
[43]
The Applicant had requested Exco to postpone making a termination
recommendation to the BoG,
pending the outcome of its “mandamus”
application, struck off the roll for lack of urgency on 05 February
2025.
Whereas Exco had agreed to postpone making the
recommendation, the Applicant subsequently withdrew the application
on 03 March
2025, as already mentioned.
[44]
In the meantime, the deteriorating relationship between the
Applicant’s management and
the curator seemed to reach a
pinnacle point when, on 10 March 2025, the Applicant’s
management brought another urgent application
against the curator and
SARS, this time, to set aside the preservation order, alternatively,
to take away the curator’s powers.
The order was not
given. Instead, the preservation order was extended to 09 July
2025, with the parties allowed to file further
papers.
[45]
Exco ultimately decided, on 02 April 2025, to make a recommendation
to the BoG for cancellation
of the Applicant’s membership with
PSL on the grounds that the Applicant–
[45.1]
was unable to fulfil its obligations to PSL (Article 10.16);
[45.2]
had misrepresented material information regarding directorship in the
Applicant in its renewal application
on 01 July 2024 (Article 10.14),
and
[45.3]
had transferred shares in contravention of Article 14.6 of the NSL
Handbook.
[46]
Exco provided both the Applicant’s management and the curator
with a notice of the recommendation
and issued a notice calling for
an urgent special meeting of the BoG on 10 April 2025.
[47]
The notice for the urgent special meeting of the BoG recorded
essentially one agenda item, “to
consider Exco’s
recommendation that the Applicant’s membership be cancelled
pursuant to Articles 10.16 and/or 10.14
and/or 14.6”, and
thereafter to make a decision. That was the business for the
BoG special meeting, at which the Applicant’s
representative,
Dr Mkhize, was permitted to make oral representations and address the
BoG on the issue. She was also permitted
to submit further
documents at the meeting. Both her and the curator fielded
questions from the BoG members, before they
were asked to recuse
themselves for the BoG to deliberate and decide on the matter.
[48]
The decision took place by way of voting, on a ballot paper, making a
cross against “Yes”
in favour of termination or against
“No”, as indication of being against termination.
Members of the BoG voted
149 against 37 in favour of
termination/cancellation of the Applicant’s membership with
PSL.
[49]
The Applicant was formally notified of this decision on 15 April
2025. It is this decision
which the Applicant seeks to have
reviewed and set aside, and declared unlawful, in the present
application.
Contravention
of Article 14.6
[50]
It is appropriate to begin my consideration of this issue by
reference to the provisions of Article
14.1 and 14.2 of the NSL
Handbook, which read:
“
14
Acquisition and Ownership of a Club
14.1
The Controlling interest or shareholding in a Member Club or entity
that controls a Member Club, or the right
to participate in a
particular division of the League, or its membership of the League
can only be sold, transferred or disposed
of, directly or indirectly,
in compliance with this Article, and in compliance with Article 18
bis of the FIFA Regulations on the
Status and Transfer of Players.
14.2
Any proposed sale, transfer or disposition contemplated in this
Article, or any transaction directly or indirectly
having any of the
effects referred to, must be submitted to the Executive Committee for
prior written approval.”
[51]
The Applicant does not dispute that it has, in contravention of
Article 14.2, failed to notify
PSL of the change in directorship and
shareholding, and to obtain Exco’s prior written approval for
that change, back in
June 2023. It contends that,
notwithstanding the change in the controlling interest and
shareholding, such a change is not
a ground on which its membership
with PSL could be cancelled under Article 14.6.
[52]
Dr Mkhize alleges that Mr Sadab held shares only as a nominee for the
purpose of funding and
to increase the Applicant’s revenue, as
he has relationships with international clubs and international
organisations.
She avers that the Applicant had intentions to
expand internationally, to sell and acquire players, and Mr Sadab
was vested
with the shares as nominee to allow him to conduct
business internationally on behalf of the Applicant without the need
for constant
authorisation.
[53]
It is inconceivable how this objective could be achieved when the
first FIFA registration ban,
imposed on 03 July 2023, had been made
pursuant to a FIFA award already passed on 27 April 2023 and
communicated to both the Applicant
and the claimant player on 09 May
2023. Mr Sadab became the sole director and a 38% shareholder
in the Applicant not long
thereafter, on 22 June 2023. The
registration ban was finally imposed on 03 July 2023, precluding the
Applicant from registering
new international and national players.
[54]
In any event, the proffered reasons, for Mr Sadab’s
involvement, are irrelevant to the
issue under consideration.
The question is not whether the Applicant had good reasons for making
the change, but whether
the change in the Applicant’s
controlling interest and shareholding was made without the prior
written approval of the PSL
Exco. The answer is in the
affirmative, and the Applicant does not contend otherwise.
[55]
As already mentioned, the Applicant’s contention is that,
notwithstanding its failure to
comply, Article 14.6 only contemplates
termination of the sale, or transfer or disposition concerned, but
not of the membership.
[56]
I do not agree. Article 14.6 of the NSL Handbook reads:
“
Should
any sale, transfer or disposition take place in contravention of this
Article, the Executive Committee will immediately upon
the matter
coming to its attention recommend to the Board of Governors that the
Membership concerned or the registration of any
person or entity
directly or indirectly involved in the transaction be cancelled or
terminated, and that appropriate disciplinary
action be taken where
necessary.”
[57]
It is trite that whatever the nature of the document, consideration
must be given to the language
used in the light of the ordinary rules
of grammar and syntax. Judges must be alert to, and guard
against, the temptation
to substitute what they regard as reasonable,
sensible or businesslike for the words actually used. The inevitable
point of departure
is the language of the provision itself.
[1]
[58]
Article 14.6 is, in my view, clear that a recommendation may be made
for cancellation or termination
of,
inter alia
, “
the
Membership concerned”
, and that appropriate disciplinary
action be taken where necessary. If Article 14.6 was intended
to cancel or reverse, as
was argued for the Applicant, only the
underlying sale or transfer or disposition, it would have stated so.
The wording could
easily have been formulated differently to read:
“to recommend that such sale, transfer or disposition be
cancelled or terminated”,
instead of “that the Membership
concerned be cancelled or terminated”. The interpretation
contended for on behalf
of the Applicant is therefore rejected as
inconsistent with the plain wording of Article 14.6.
[59]
It is significant that it is not a requirement that disciplinary
action first be taken before
Exco makes a recommendation as envisaged
in Article 14.6. In fact, it is the other way round.
Exco’s recommendation
may include that disciplinary action be
taken where necessary. This may well be in instances where only
the registration
of a person or entity, directly or indirectly
involved in the transaction is recommended for cancellation or
termination.
Contravention
of Article 10.14
[60]
When the Applicant applied for renewal of its membership with PSL on
01 July 2024, it failed
to disclose the change in directorship and
shareholding, despite these changes having taken place more than a
year before the renewal
application. The explanation by Dr
Mkhize, that she relied on the CIPC document from which the change
had not yet been effected,
is untenable and rejected.
[61]
Firstly, the date on which the Companies and Intellectual Property
Commission (“CIPC”)
updated its records is not the date
on which the concerned change in directorship took place. The
change took place on 22
June 2023 and the registration on CIPC was
only made more than a year later, on 26 July 2024. The
Companies Act
71 of 2008
is clear a person becomes a director upon appointment and
acceptance of that person’s written consent,
[2]
and that the appointment or resignation of a director is effective on
acceptance, and notification thereof should be provided to
the CIPC
within 10 days thereafter.
[3]
As businesswoman, a director and the President of the Applicant, Dr
Mkhize would have known of this position. In any
event, her
claim of ignorance is no excuse. For it is trite that:
“
Strong
demands are placed, by comparison, on all those engaged in trades,
occupations or activities which are legally regulated
and known by
them to be. They are expected to learn the rules and obliged to make
the effort.”
[4]
[62]
Secondly, I have noted that the change in directorship was made
simultaneously with the change
in the controlling interest and
shareholding in the Applicant, which could not have been made without
Exco’s prior written
approval, as required by Article 14.2.
This was the starting point of disclosure to PSL. In my
assessment, therefore,
the submission of incorrect information in the
renewal application was made in furtherance of the act to conceal the
true facts
from PSL, which the Applicant’s management had
failed to disclose back in June 2023.
[63]
The purported reasons for international expansion fail to explain why
Exco’s prior written
approval was not sought. Therefore,
I find that the incorrect information in the renewal application
constituted a calculated
misrepresentation of material information,
as envisaged in Article 10.14 of the NSL Handbook.
[64]
Article 10.14 reads:
“
The
membership of a Member Club may, upon recommendation by the Executive
Committee, be cancelled by the Board of Governors if it
is found that
the Member Club has misrepresented material information either in its
initial application or any subsequent application
for renewal.”
[65]
It was contended on behalf of the Applicant that the word “found”
in this Article
means “found” or “a finding”
by a Disciplinary Committee (“DC”) contemplated in the
NSL Handbook.
The contention is that even if there was a
misrepresentation, neither Exco nor the BoG has the powers under the
NSL Handbook to
make any finding in relation to misconduct.
Only the DC, the argument went, has the powers to make such a
finding, whereafter
Exco would be entitled to recommend to the BoG
cancellation of membership.
[66]
This contention can at best be described as clutching at straws.
There is no requirement
in Article 10.14 that a DC should first make
a finding before Exco can make a recommendation to the BoG for
cancellation of membership.
A disciplinary process as envisaged
in the NSL Handbook is not a prerequisite to an Exco recommendation
for cancellation of membership
based on contravention of Article
10.14.
[67]
Provisions dealing with disciplinary matters before the DC are quite
extensive and prescriptive
in terms of the procedure before, during
and after a disciplinary process. The DC is, in terms of the
NSL Handbook, an independent
Judicial Tribunal (Article 22.1) whose
sanctions are, unless otherwise stated, immediately effective upon
pronouncement, and not
dependent on written confirmation by the
prosecutor
(Rule 57.16).
[68]
Decisions of the DC are appealable to SAFA and follow a process as
prescribed in the SAFA Disciplinary
Code (Article 24). The
recommendations that Exco is empowered to make in Article 10 are not
contemplated in the disciplinary
provisions of the NSL Constitution.
The provisions of Article 10 are also not made to apply subject to
the outcome of a disciplinary
action.
[69]
The BoG is, in terms of the NSL Constitution, the supreme
decision-making organ of PSL, comprised
by chairpersons of the Member
Clubs or duly appointed Member Club Officials (Article 16.1).
The BoG has the power and authority
to do any act or thing as may be
required to give effect to the objects the PSL Constitution, and to
exercise the powers of the
League (PSL) as set out in the NSL
Handbook (Article 16.2).
[70]
The chairperson of PSL is empowered to chair meetings of the BoG and
to prescribe the procedure
to be adopted at any BoG meeting (Articles
32.5 and 32.7).
[71]
I have considered the provisions of the NSL Handbook and, save for a
recommendation by Exco in
the Articles already mentioned, there is no
other prescribed requirement to be met before the BoG makes a
decision on Exco’s
recommendation for termination of membership
of a Member Club.
Procedural
Unfairness
[72]
The Applicant seeks to impugn the procedure followed at the BoG
meeting on 10 April 2025, on
several grounds. One is that the
Applicant’s representative was precluded from participating in
the deliberations and
voting at the meeting. It is common cause
that the deliberation and voting stages of the meeting followed after
the Applicant
had been afforded the opportunity to make
representations both in writing and orally, and to respond to
questions raised by the
BoG members.
[73]
The Applicant says it should have been allowed to participate in the
deliberations and the vote,
otherwise the process is irregular.
It relies for this submission on Article 28.1 of the NSL Handbook in
terms of which,
“Duly authorised representatives of Member
Clubs will be entitled to attend and vote at all meetings of the
BoG”.
[74]
The Applicant also contends that documents were exchanged during the
BoG deliberations to which
the Applicant was not privy and that
members of the BoG and Exco were conflicted and should not have
participated in the BoG meeting,
as they stood to benefit by
acquiring the Applicant’s players without a payment, and that
those whose Members Clubs were
facing relegation, would have been
motivated to vote in favour of termination of the Applicant’s
membership in order to save
their clubs from relegation.
[75]
I find no merits in these contentions. Procedural fairness
required no more than that the
Applicant be given a fair opportunity
to make representations, firstly to Exco, as to why Exco should not
make a recommendation
to the BoG for termination of the Applicant’s
membership and, secondly, to the BoG as to why the BoG should not
accept such
a recommendation. There is no basis in law for the
Applicant to seek participation in the BoG deliberations and
decision-making
on a matter involving the Applicant’s breach of
the Handbook. There is no such entitlement in law, nor in the
NSL Constitution.
[76]
As already mentioned, the NSL Handbook empowers the chairperson of
the BoG meeting to prescribe
the process to be adopted at any BoG
meeting (Article 32.7). The Applicant has not challenged this
provision, and the process
to excuse the Applicant from the
deliberations and voting would find justification in this provision.
None of the authorities cited
by the Applicant support the
proposition that the Applicant was entitled to participate in the BoG
deliberations and to vote on
whether or not its membership with PSL
should be terminated.
[77]
The Applicant has voluntarily associated with PSL and subscribed to
its governance documents.
As a Member Club, the Applicant would
no doubt have had a representative on the BoG, as envisaged in
Article 16.1 of the NSL Handbook.
The Applicant knows that the
BoG functions by way of Member Clubs or their duly appointed
officials. The NSL Handbook does
not provide otherwise.
[78]
PSL is a voluntary association of football clubs that have agreed to
come together under a specific
regulatory regime and structure.
It is inevitable that these clubs will have an interest in each
other’s players.
Clearly, the Member Clubs, who continue
to associate with PSL, do not seem to view this as a conflict of
interest. That this is
the environment in which the Applicant and
other Member Clubs operate, admits of no controversy. However,
the purchasing
of players or relegation of clubs was not the issue at
the BoG meeting herein concerned.
[79]
As regards the documents allegedly exchanged during the BoG
deliberations, PSL’s answer
is that the documents were already
provided to the Applicant throughout the extensive process followed
by Exco in the period before
the BoG meeting on 10 April 2025.
In reply, Dr Mkhize, alleges that her point in this regard was the
failure by the BoG to
allow the Applicant to respond to the questions
and concerns raised after the Applicant was ejected from the
meeting. She
alleges that this is what makes the vote
procedurally unfair.
[80]
Therefore, the issue is not that documents unknown to the Applicant
were shared with the BoG,
but that the Applicant was not permitted to
participate in the BoG deliberations. I have already dealt with
this issue above
and the contention is rejected for the reasons
already stated.
Failure
to give reasons
[81]
Further, Dr Mkhize complains that, despite the request for reasons,
the Applicant was not given
reasons for the BoG decision terminating
the Applicant’s membership with PSL. Reliance was placed
on the Promotion
of Administrative Justice 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”)
for this point.
[82]
Assuming that the BoG decision is reviewable under PAJA, section 5 of
PAJA entitles a person
whose rights have been affected by an
administrative action to ask for reasons from the administrator.
The administrator
is then enjoined to provide reasons in writing for
the administrative action within 90 days of receipt of the request.
[83]
If the administrator fails to provide reasons, section 5(3) provides
an answer to what should
happen. This section states:
“
(3)
If an administrator fails to furnish adequate reasons for an
administrative action it must, subject to subsection (4) and in
the
absence of proof to the contrary, be presumed in any proceedings for
judicial review that the administrative action was taken
without good
reason.”
[84]
The consequence for failing to provide reasons or adequate reasons,
is the presumption that the
decision was taken without good reasons.
This is a presumption to be made in judicial review proceedings, such
as the present,
unless proof to the contrary is provided.
[85]
For the reasons above, I could not make such a presumption in this
case, as PSL has, in my judgment,
presented evidence of valid and
adequate reasons for the BoG’s decision terminating the
Applicant’s membership with
PSL. I find that even under
common law, I would arrive at the same conclusion.
Inability
to meet obligations
[86]
PSL Member Clubs are bound by the NSL Handbook and required to meet
their obligations to PSL
(Article 10.2). It is common cause
that the Handbook is not only a governance document, but also an
agreement and a set of
commitments that Member Clubs give to each
other and to PSL. Those obligations include participating in
fixtures scheduled
by PSL (Rule 9.3), and only in exceptional
circumstances may PSL postpone a match at any time prior to the start
of the match (Rule
9.4).
[87]
Should a Member Club not be able to fulfil its obligations to the
League (PSL), Exco may recommend
cancellation of its membership to
the BoG (Article 10.16).
[88]
Dr Mkhize states, in the founding affidavit, that the facts regarding
the Applicant’s inability
to fulfil its obligations to the
League (PSL) are well within PSL’s knowledge and have been so
for some time. This
statement, in my view, embodies a
concession that the Applicant is unable to meet its obligations with
PSL and that this has been
position for some time.
[89]
Dr Mkhize seems to rely, for the said statement, on what she
immediately sets out thereafter
as a litany of allegations against
the curator since his appointment in terms of the preservation order
obtained by SARS on 21
November 2024. I have already referred
to those allegations, which are strenuously denied by the curator.
That conflict
is, already mentioned, not an issue before me, nor is
the validity or otherwise of the curator’s appointment.
[90]
However, the ongoing dispute between the Applicant’s management
and the curator has significant
relevance to the Applicant’s
ability to fulfil its obligations to PSL. For as long as that
dispute remains, there seems
to be no prospects of the Applicant
meeting its obligations to PSL; a factor that triggered Exco’s
invocation of Article
10.16.
[91]
I note that the Applicant’s inability to meet its obligations
did not in fact begin in
November 2024, following the appointment of
the curator. As already mentioned, on 01 October 2024, the
Applicant notified
PSL that the Applicant was unable to meet its
obligations in respect of the MultiChoice Diski Challenge
Competition.
[92]
In the result, Article 10.16 was correctly invoked by the PSL Exco.
Exco’s recommendation
under this Article is also not
conditional upon an outcome of a disciplinary action.
[93]
Reliance on Rule 15.2 of the PSL Rules, for a lenient sanction, does
not avail the Applicant.
The Rule applies where a match is not
played due to the late or non-arrival of a team or both teams, in
which event the offending
Member Club would be charged with
misconduct. If found guilty of misconduct in terms of Rule
15.2, the Member Club receives
the sanction of a “walk-over”,
which is a score of 3 – 0 (three-nil) in favour of the innocent
team, unless the
DC considers a different sanction to be more
appropriate.
[94]
The circumstances envisaged in Rule 15.2 do not arise in the present
case and, therefore, the
Rule finds no application in this case.
[95]
The mere fact that the BoG did not vote on each ground of violation
separately is, in my judgment,
of no consequence. The Applicant
was, on the facts, liable for termination on each and all of the
three grounds put before
the BoG. This was not a disciplinary
hearing.
[96]
Before I conclude, I need to say something about at least two aspects
of concern in this matter,
relating to the change in directorship and
the failure to provide unredacted documents.
Change
in Directorship
[97]
As apparent from the preservation order above, from 21 November 2024
only the curator had the
powers to remove and appoint directors for
the Applicant. No one else could do so.
.
[98]
However, unbeknown to the curator, Mr Sadab resigned as the
Applicant’s director on 01
April 2025 and Dr Mkhize was
purportedly appointed as a director. Without the curator’s
involvement, this was clearly
in violation of the preservation order,
which is binding on Dr Mkhize, as the first respondent in that
matter.
[99]
Dr Mkhize carries on regardless of this violation, as if she has done
nothing wrong. She
attacks and finds fault with every
respondent, but herself and the Applicant’s Management.
In the meantime, she approaches
the Court, in the name of the
Applicant, with dirty hands. I take a dim view of this conduct.
Failure
to provide unredacted documents
[100]
Dr Mkhize’s conduct is exacerbated by her failure to provide
unredacted documents pertaining to an averment
she made in the
Applicant’s founding affidavit, that the Applicant (whilst
under curatorship) continued to pay salaries of
its players, despite
PSL stopping to pay the discretionary grant. This averment
triggered a Rule 35(12) notice calling for
unredacted copies of the
annexures attached to the Applicant’s founding affidavit as
proof of the alleged payment.
[101]
The documents were not produced, and Counsel for the Applicant was
content to disclose from the Bar, only at the
end of argument before
the Court, that it was a third party that had paid salaries for the
Applicant’s players and not the
Applicant itself.
Therefore, Dr Mkhize’s allegation that it was the Applicant
itself that continued to pay salaries
for its players was clearly
false.
[102]
In addition, such payments were made in violation of the preservation
order, as they were made without the curator’s
knowledge and/or
involvement, and without the funds first being deposited into the
Applicant’s bank account that is under
the management of the
curator in terms of the preservation court order.
[103]
This is certainly not the way in which to approach the Court for
assistance.
Conclusion
[104]
Consequently, I find no reason to overturn the BoG’s decision
terminating the Applicant’s membership
with PSL.
[105]
I agree that costs should follow the course, as was argued before
me. It was also argued, on behalf of the
Applicant, that even
if the Applicant is not successful, the costs to be awarded in favour
of the First and Second Respondents
should be reduced, as they have
delivered an unnecessarily lengthy answering affidavit. The
answering affidavit is over 160
pages long, excluding the annexures.
The Applicant’s founding affidavit is only 39 pages long.
[106]
The Applicant’s heads of argument do not cite any authority for
me to exercise the discretion contended
for against the First and
Second Respondents. I am aware of authorities criticising
lengthy replying affidavits,
[5]
but not answering affidavits. In any event, the quantum of
costs to be recovered will finally be determined at taxation.
However, I do not think that this matter was so complicated as to
warrant costs on Scale C, as contended for in PSL’s heads
of
argument.
[107]
I find that the curator was justified in delivering an answering
affidavit to defend himself against adverse allegations
made against
him in the founding affidavit and to assist the Court in its
assessment of the issues in this application, even though
no relief
was sought against him. Had the curator asked for costs against
the Applicant, I would have been prepared to grant
such order.
SARS did not participate in the proceedings.
[108]
In the result, I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed with costs in favour of the First and
Second Respondents,
including costs associated with the Rule 35(12)
notice.
2.
The costs are to include costs of two Counsel.
P.G.
SELEKA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
CASE
NO: 2025-054266
HEARD
ON: 26 June 2025
FOR
THE APPLICANT:
ADV.
C. ERASMUS SC
ADV.
K. NAIDOO
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Nefuri
Attorneys
FOR
THE 1
ST
AND 2
ND
RESPONDENTS:
ADV.
A. FRANKLIN SC
ADV.
M. DE BEER
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Webber
Wentzel
FOR
THE 3
RD
RESPONDENT:
ADV.
E.M. COETZEE SC
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Vuyo
Mabuntana VZLR Inc
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
07
July 2025
[1]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18.
[2]
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
,
s66(7):
“
A
person becomes entitled to serve as a director of a company when
that person-
(a)
has been appointed or elected in accordance with this Part, or
holds an office, title, designation or similar status entitling that
person to be an ex officio director of the company, subject to
subsection (5)(a); and
(b)
has delivered to the company a written consent to serve as its
director.”
[3]
Companies
Act 71 of 2008
,
s70(6):
“
Every
company must file a notice within 10 business days after a person
becomes or ceases to be a director of the company”
.
[4]
S
v Waglines (Pty) Ltd & Another
1986
(4) SA 1135
(N) at 1146B.
[5]
Minister
of Police v Kati
2024
JDR 2081 (ECM) (15 May 2024) paras 14 & 15 (
as
yet unreported
),
as well as the authorities cited therein.
sino noindex
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