Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 38South Africa
Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse NPC v South African National Roads Agency Ltd and Others (32095/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 38 (25 January 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse NPC v South African National Roads Agency Ltd and Others (32095/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 38 (25 January 2024)
Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse NPC v South African National Roads Agency Ltd and Others (32095/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 38 (25 January 2024)
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sino date 25 January 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
Case No. 32095/2020
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3) REVISED: NO
DATE: 25 JANUARY
2024
SIGNATURE:
In the matter
between:
ORGANISATION UNDOING
TAX ABUSE NPC
APPLICANT
And
SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL
ROADS AGENCY LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE MINISTER OF
TRANSPORT
SECOND RESPONDENT
ALLI,
NAZIR
THIRD RESPONDENT
MOTAUNG,
DANIEL
FOURTH RESPONDENT
MACOZOMA, SKHUMBUZO
N.O
FIFTH RESPONDENT
N3 TOLL CONCESSION
(RF) (PTY) LTD
SIXTH RESPONDENT
Coram:
Millar
J
Heard
on:
19 January 2024
Delivered:
25 January 2024 - This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by being
uploaded to the
CaseLines
system of the GD and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10H00 on 25
January 2024.
JUDGMENT
MILLAR J
[1]
This
is an application for leave to appeal against a judgment and order
handed down on 14 November 2023
[1]
in which the applicant’s application was dismissed with costs.
The present application is brought in terms of s 17(1)(a)(i)
and (ii)
of The Superior Courts Act
[2]
(The Act).
[2]
The
application sets out a number of grounds upon which it was said the
court erred and in consequence of which the test set out
in s
17(1)(a)(i)
[3]
of the Act for
the granting of leave to appeal would be met. Most of these were a
re-traversal of what was argued in the main case
and have already
been dealt with in the judgment and I do not intend to revisit them
specifically.
[3]
I
refer to the parties in this judgment as in the main judgment –
the applicant as “OUTA”, the first respondent
as “SANRAL”
and the sixth respondent as “N3TC”.
[4]
When
the application was called, counsel for the applicant confined his
argument to two of the grounds – firstly that the
test set out
in
Ericsson
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Johannesburg Metro and Others
[4]
had not been correctly applied and following from this that the court
had not “
attach[ed]
sufficient weight to SANRAL’s statutory duties and the public
interest therein and in finding that the public interest
override
finds no application in respect of the disputed documents.”
[5]
This argument was addressed in respect of s 17(1)(a)(ii)
[6]
of the Act.
[5]
It
was argued that the test for the application of s 46
[7]
of The Promotion of Access to Information Act
[8]
(PAIA) set out in
Ericsson
was
that there was an onus upon SANRAL to demonstrate that,
notwithstanding N3TC’s objection to the production of the
requested
documents, the documents nevertheless did meet the
requirements for the application of the public interest override.
[6]
Put
differently, SANRAL was required to objectively consider the
requested documents themselves and to then, either say on oath
that
the documents did not meet the requirements for disclosure set out in
s 46(a)(i) of PAIA or, if they did, in the opinion of
SANRAL, to make
those documents available.
[7]
This argument
was supported by reference to the following paragraphs from
Ericsson
-
“
[79]
Finally, I consider the reliance on s 46,
which permits an exemption from disclosure in the public
interest.
The respondents must show that granting access of the record to
Ericsson would reveal evidence of a substantial contravention
or
non-compliance with the law or an imminent and serious public-safety
risk. I refer to this as the 'harm' requirement. It is
found in s
46(a). In addition, they must show that the public interest in
disclosing the record 'clearly outweighs the harm contemplated'.
I
refer to this as the 'balance' requirement. It is found in s 46(b).
[80]
These two requirements are linked. A
public body relying on s 46 must not only show that there
is a
public-interest element in refusing disclosure. It must show also
that the harm contemplated from disclosure outweighs the
public
interest in disclosure. This means that unless the harm requirement
is satisfied, no assessment can be made under the balance
requirement.
[81]
The respondents' case is that 'the
public interest is better served by not disclosing forensic
reports
which contain confidential information related to sensitive
proceedings'. It is noteworthy that this statement is not even
directed at the Nexus report per se, but at all forensic reports of a
similar nature. Once again, the statement is so generalised
as to be
of no assistance to the court.
[82]
More critically, however, the
respondents' defence is ill-founded for the simple reason that
they
fail to address the harm requirement. They do not indicate what
substantial contravention of the law would be revealed by
providing
access to the report, or what serious and imminent risk to public
safety would arise as a result of disclosure. Their
failure to do so
precludes them from being permitted to rely on this ground of
exemption.”
[8]
Notwithstanding
the objection of N3TC to the furnishing of its information to OUTA
and the mandatory refusal to furnish the documents
that s 36 enjoins
in those circumstances, it was argued that s 46 expressly provides
that this may nevertheless be overridden.
From a plain reading of the
two sections this is apparent.
[9]
However, the
argument of OUTA went further and was that the onus was on SANRAL to
scrutinize the documents and to nonetheless consider
whether or not
the provisions of s 46 would compel disclosure. Having regard to the
provisions of s 46, an evaluation is required
as to whether the
record “
would
reveal
”,
in terms of s 46(a)(i) “
a
substantial contravention of, or failure to comply with, the law”
and if it was found to be so, that in terms of s 46(b) if “
the
public interest in the disclosure of the record clearly outweighs the
harm contemplated in the provision in question.”
Then SANRAL was obligated to make the documents available. This
evaluation is something which was to be undertaken once the
objection
of N3TC to the furnishing of the records was received.
[10]
In the present
matter, no reasons for the refusal were communicated to OUTA prior to
the institution of the proceedings. The present
proceedings were
brought on the basis of a deemed refusal in terms of s 27 of PAIA. It
was only thereafter that reasons
were furnished.
[11]
The case for
OUTA, both initially and even after SANRAL furnished its reasons, was
never that SANRAL ought notwithstanding the objection
of N3TC, to
have considered separately the information sought through the lens of
s 46 and to have then furnished its reasons specifically
in
this regard. It was argued in effect that SANRAL should have
committed itself on oath that it had considered the information
on
this basis and found that s 46 did not apply. This argument was
raised for the first time in this application and is consonant
with
what occurred in
Ericsson
.
[12]
In
Ericsson
,
the respondents raised the s 46 public interest override as a defence
against the disclosure of the requested documents. In the
present
matter the case before me was somewhat different. The public interest
override was asserted not as the proverbial shield
by SANRAL as was
done by the respondent in
Ericsson
,
but rather as a sword by OUTA.
[13]
Inasmuch as
the respondent in
Ericsson
was unable to show that the disclosure of the information would not
have revealed a substantial contravention of the law or that
the
public interest in the disclosure outweighed any harm, in the present
matter, OUTA has failed to establish any contravention
or failure to
comply with the law on the part of either SANRAL or N3TC for that
matter. This was dealt with in paragraphs [49]
to [60] in the main
judgment.
[14]
It was argued
for OUTA that in consequence of the fact that OUTA need not have
furnished any reasons for why it requested the documents
that it did,
that there was no onus upon it to lay any basis for its claim for the
application of s 46. Again, this approach is
consonant with the
findings in
Ericsson
,
but this was not the case that was before me.
[15]
The
consequence of the deemed refusal was that it also encompassed any
consideration on the part of SANRAL of the documents (if
they had
them, something which was in dispute in respect of certain documents)
in terms of s 46 and on that basis, it must be deemed
that SANRAL’s
consideration of the information did not trigger either s 46(a)(i) of
s 46(b). Once that had occurred it was
incumbent on OUTA to make out
its case.
[9]
In the present
instance the case which was to be made out was what the right was
that OUTA sought to protect.
[16]
OUTA
did set this out and it was dealt with by me in paragraph [60]
[10]
of the main judgment and found to be meritless.
[17]
I have
carefully considered the order granted and the reasons set out in the
main judgment together with the arguments presented
at the hearing of
this application for leave to appeal.
[18]
For the
reasons above, I am not persuaded that another court would come to a
different conclusion or that there are any other compelling
reasons
why leave to appeal ought to be granted.
[19]
In the
circumstances it is ordered:
[19.1]
The application for leave to appeal is refused with
costs which costs are to include the costs consequent upon
the
employment of 2 counsel, where so employed.
A MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD ON:
19
JANUARY 2024
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON:
25 JANUARY 2024
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPLICANT:
ADV. A SUBEL SC
ADV.
E PROPHY
INSTRUCTED
BY:
JENNINGS
INCORPORATED
REFERENCE:
MR.
A JENNINGS
COUNSEL
FOR THE
1
ST
,4
TH
& 5
TH
RESPONDENTS:
ADV. A
MILOVANOVIC-BITTER
INSTRUCTED BY:
ENS AFRICA ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR. T MODUBU
COUNSEL FOR THE 6
TH
RESPONDENT:
ADV. B LEECH SC
ADV.
T MPHALWA
INSTRUCTED BY:
WERKSMANS ATTORNEYS
REFERENCE:
MR. B MOTI
[1]
(32095/2020)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1903 (14 November 2023).
[2]
10
of 2013.
[3]
That
the appeal “
would
have a reasonable prospect of success.”
[4]
2023
(5) SA 219 (GJ).
[5]
The
14
th
ground in the application for leave to appeal.
[6]
That
“
there
is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.”
[7]
“
Mandatory
disclosure in the public interest – Despite any other
provision of this Chapter, the information officer of a
public body
must grant a request for access to a record of the body contemplated
in section 34(1), 36(1), 37(1)(a) or (b), 38(a)
or (b), 39(1)(a) or
(b), 40, 41(1)(a) or (b), 42(1) or (3), 43(1) or (2), 44(1) or (2)
or 45, if –
(a)
The disclosure of the record would
reveal evidence of –
(i)
a substantial contravention of, or
failure to comply with, the law; or
(ii)
an imminent and serious public
safety or environmental risk; and the public interest in the
disclosure of the record clearly outweighs
the harm in the provision
in question.
(b)
The
public interest in the disclosure of the record clearly outweighs
the harm contemplated in the provision in question.”
[8]
20
of 2000.
[9]
C
e
ntre
for Social Accountability v Secretary for Parliament
2011
(5) SA 279
(ECG) at paras [92] and [94]. I referred to this in the
main judgment.
[10]
“
The
present case concerns the implementation of the contract. It was
neither argued nor was any case made out that N3TC had failed
to
comply with its obligations in terms of the main agreement and to
deliver that for which it had been contracted. The making
of profit,
in a private company, is an everyday commercial consequence and is
not in and of itself a matter which requires disclosure
in the
public interest.”
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