Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 295South Africa
Solidarity v National Commissioner of the South African Police Service and Others (79041/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 295 (26 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Solidarity v National Commissioner of the South African Police Service and Others (79041/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 295 (26 March 2024)
Solidarity v National Commissioner of the South African Police Service and Others (79041/2018) [2024] ZAGPPHC 295 (26 March 2024)
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sino date 26 March 2024
FLYNOTES:
ADMINISTRATIVE – Review –
Reliance
on Equality Act
–
Lawfulness
of implemented project challenged – Grounds of
discrimination and procedural unfairness – Any potential
claim applicant might bring in terms of Equality Act, is a claim
not justiciable under guise of legality review – Failed
to
identify which of its members had been discriminated against and
nature of discrimination – Case does not fall within
exercise of public power – Application dismissed –
Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act
4 of 2000
.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 79041/2018
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
DATE:
26/03/2024
In
the matter between:
SOLIDARITY
APPLICANT
And
NATIONAL
COMMISSIONER OF THE SOUTH AFRICAN
POLICE
SERVICE
N.O.
FIRST
RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF POLICE
N.O.
SECOND
RESPONDENT
SOUTH
AFRICAN POLICE
SERVICE
THIRD
RESPONDENT
PHETSO
ANNA SEBILWANE AND OTHERS
FOURTH
TO SEVENTY
SIXTH
RESPONDENTS
This
judgment is issued by the Judge whose name is reflected herein and is
submitted electronically to the parties/their legal representatives
by email. The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic file of
this matter on CaseLines by the Judge or her Secretary. The
date of
this judgment is deemed to be 26 MARCH 2024.
JUDGMENT
COLLIS
J
1. The
question at the heart of this review application, is firstly whether
the Non-Statutory Force project
(NSF project) implemented by the
first, second and third respondents is a lawful project and secondly
whether the decisions taken
to implement the NSF project stand to be
reviewed and set aside.
2. The
application is opposed. As per its amended notice of motion the
applicant seeks the following relief:
“
1.
Condoning the late filing of this application in terms of section 9
of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act (“PAJA”).
2. An
order in terms of section 8(1)(c)(ii)(aa) of PAJA setting aside the
Respondents’ decision to
implement the NSF project;
alternatively an order setting aside the Respondents’ decision
to implement the NSF project. The
ground of review being the
principle of legality as outline in the rule of law as contained in
section 1(c) of the Constitution;
3. Should
prayer 3 supra not be granted by this Honourable Court, an order in
terms of section 8(1)(d) of
PAJA, alternatively on the principle of
legality as outlined in the rule of law as contained in section 1(c)
of the Constitution,
declaring that the Applicant’s members,
who are employed by the SAPS, to be endowed with the same rights to
apply for and
be recognised for positions within the SAPS as those
specifically earmarked for so-called NSF members.
4. If
an order is not made in terms of paragraphs, 3 or 4 supra; an order
is sought setting aside the Respondents
decision to implement the NSF
project as purportedly outline in: (a) interim constitution of the
Republic of South Africa 20 of
1993-section 214-224 b) promotion of
national unity and reconciliation act 34 of 1995- section 1; c)
cabinet resolution/minute:
integration period; d) government
employees pension law amendments act 35 of 2003 e) special pensions
act 69 of 1996 f) SAPS act
68 of 1995 as amended g) public service
bargaining Council resolution seven of 2001 and h) termination of
integration intake act
44 of 2001) in terms of section 8(1)(c)(i) of
PAJA, alternatively on the principle of legality as outlined in the
rule of law ac
contained in section 1(c) of the Constitution; then an
order is sought compelling or directing the Respondents to afford the
Applicant’s
members equal opportunity to be promoted and/or to
be recognised with the same benefits currently reserved for alleged
NSF members;
5. Ordering
any of the Respondents that oppose this application, jointly and
severally along with any other
Respondent who opposed the relief
sought by the Applicant, the one paying the other to be absolved, to
pay the costs of this application,
including the costs of two (2)
Counsel; 6. Granting the Applicant further and/or alternative
relief.”
BACKGROUND
3. The
change to a constitutional democracy brought with it the need to
restructure the Government. Linked
to this was the need to
restructure elements of the State, including the police service, the
army, the navy and intelligence services
amongst others.
4. NSF
members, are in fact persons who made selfless sacrifices to assist
the nation in its quest for democracy.
They are referred to as
“non-statutory force” members because the security and
armed forces to which they belonged
pre- democracy were not
legislated for or recognised in formal structures of the previous
regime. Once democracy was attained,
it became imperative to
recognise the service of NSF members. Their long service outside
South Africa was recognised as being material
to fashioning the new
Republic.
[1]
5. The
Non-Statutory Forces Project (‘the NSF’) can be defined
as the prioritised and preferential
treatment of former Non-Statutory
Forces (pre- 1994) into the ranks of the SAPS. These individuals are
mostly from what is colloquially
known as "liberation
movements", and then more specifically MK and APLA.
[2]
“The NSF process was initiated to elevate the majority of NSF
members to commanding positions.”
[3]
6. The
NSF members historically did not have the opportunity to contribute
to a pensions fund, or having
an employer contribute to a pension
fund, or who had long tenures of service as guerrilla fighters, but
not as statutory forces.
Attaining equality in respect of the NSF
members entailed, as identified in the multi-disciplinary task team
in June 2013 already,
[4]
an
adjustment to their pension benefits, ranking levels, recognition of
service ad importantly, skills development.
[5]
7. Initially,
in 2014, and whilst the details of the NSF project were still opaque,
the alleged purpose of
the NSF project was to ensure five (5)
deliverables under a “project plan” namely, (1)
Full-service recognition; (2)
Equitable Pension; (3) Allocation of
Leave Days; (4) Re-Ranking; and (5) Skills Development.
[6]
8. Later
and during February 2018, the SAPS delivered to the SSSBC an
information document where the initial
five deliverables morphed into
eight (8) deliverables. These deliverables were set out to be: (1)
Pension Benefits (2) Recognition
of Service (3) Leave benefits –
note the reference to ‘capped leave’ (4) Long Service
Awards (5) Skills Development
(6) Medical Aid Benefits
(7)
Re-Ranking and (8) Re- enlistment.
[7]
PARTIES
9. The
Applicant is SOLIDARITY, a trade union registered in terms of the
provisions of the
Labour Relations Act, No 66 of 1995
. The
applicant’s membership currently consists of approximately 140
000 members in all occupational fields, which has a substantial
number of members that are in the employ of the Third Respondent. It
approaches this Court, firstly in the interest of its members
who are
being discriminated against on the ground that they are classified as
non-NSF members.
10. The
First Respondent is the National Police Commissioner, cited in his
official capacity.
11. The
Second Respondent is the Minister of Police, cited in his official
capacity and as the political
head of the SAPS, appointed in terms of
section 206(1) of the Constitution.
12. The
Third Respondent is the South African Police Service, established in
terms of the relevant provisions
of the
South African Police Service,
Act No 68 of 1995
and as contemplated in Section 205(1) of the
Constitution. The SAPS is the employer headed by the Minister of
Police.
13. The
Fourth to the Six Hundred and Twenty-Nine respondents applied to join
the main application, and in
the end Koovertjie AJ, granted the
joinder only in respect of the first, second and 51(fifty-one) other
intervening parties.
[8]
14. The
respondents oppose the application raising amongst others certain
preliminary points, i.e condonation,
lack of jurisdiction of the
court, non- joinder of certain parties and whether the applicant has
standing to bring the application.
They also oppose the merits of the
application and in this regard this court was called upon to
determine whether the applicant
has made out a case for review on the
grounds of:
(i) Unreasonableness;
(ii) Erroneous
interpretation of the law;
(iii) Rationality;
(iv) Procedural
Fairness;
(v) Discrimination
and
(vi) Unfairness.
15. In
respect of the main application the court was also called upon to
make an analysis of the decisions
taken to implement the NSF project
and whether this decision constitutes administrative action.
Secondly, the court had to determine
whether the decision to
implement the NSF project is authorised by any legislation. In
addition, this Court was called upon to
assess as to whether the
attempted implementation of the NSF project was an exercise of power
in the public interest or for the
personal advantage/ulterior purpose
of the officials who wielded the power.
16. In
determining the outcome of this application a convenient point of
departure would be considering the
condonation which the applicant
has applied for and thereafter this court would deal with the
preliminary points raised by the
respondents. The merits of the
application will thereafter be addressed.
17. The
review is primarily a review under the Promotion of Administration
Justice Act
[9]
(“PAJA”).
In the alternative, the review is brought as a legality review under
section 1 (c) of the Constitution.
[10]
Be it an administrative justice review or legality review, the
application should have been brought in time.
CONDONATION
18. As
per the Notice of Motion the applicant seeks condonation from this
Court in terms of section 9 of
PAJA regarding the delay in bringing
this application.
19. The
applicant alleges as per the Founding Affidavit,
[11]
that the basis for condonation can be attributed to the fact that the
relief sought constitutes a review and setting aside of
administrative decisions orbiting the NSF project. In light of the
review not being brought within 180 days of the date on which
the
applicant first became aware of the administrative action, it seeks
condonation in terms of section 9, alternatively that this
review
proceeds on the ground of legality alone in the event of condonation
not being granted.
20. In
its founding affidavit the applicant alleges further that it first
became aware of the respondents’
intention to implement the
so-called NSF-project during the latter part of 2017. In about
November 2017, the applicant’s
PAIA- request was refused and if
it is accepted that this is the day that the applicant obtained
knowledge of the decisions made
to implement the NSF-project then the
present application is made approximately 5 (five) months outside the
statutory 180-day period.
On this basis the deponent asserts that the
delay to bring this application, given the history of the matter
should be condoned
by this Court.
21. Also,
the applicant had around 2017, launched two urgent applications under
PAIA seeking to uncover the
documents relating to the legality,
formation and implementation of the NSF project which proceedings
further resulted in the delay
in launching the present review
application. It is on this basis that it was submitted that the
applicant should be granted condonation
for the delay in launching
this review application.
22. The
first to third respondents oppose the applicant’s request for
condonation.
[12]
In the
Answering Affidavit
[13]
the
respondents set out that the applicant had been made aware of the NSF
project for many years and indeed had one of its members
also apply
as set out in Annexure “FA3” annexed to the Founding
Affidavit.
23. Furthermore,
it is contended that the applicant had failed to explain the delay in
bringing this application
notwithstanding its knowledge of the
rumours, news articles and speeches concerning the NSF project.
24. In
addition, the applicant at all times knew of the invite-only
meetings, the agenda at such meetings
and notwithstanding all of this
it failed to approach the court to challenge the NSF project
timeously.
25. Therefore,
so the contention goes, in the absence of the applicant identifying
the exact decision it
seeks to review and where the applicant has
failed to specify the ‘legislation’ that renders the NSF
project unlawful
and irregular, condonation should not be
granted.
[14]
26. The
remainder of the respondents further assert that the applicant having
been made aware of speeches
and news articles during 2002, pointing
arrows at the NSF project suggest at the very least as of this date
the applicant was made
aware of the project and its intention to
implement same.
[15]
Despite
this however, the applicant nevertheless sat back and failed to
launch the review proceedings timeously.
27. The
NSF-project itself was registered as far back as 26 June 2013 and the
task team established during
the same year. The project was also
announced in Parliament on 21 July 2014. On this basis it was
submitted by the respondents
that the applicant could not have
obtained knowledge of the project only in 2017 and that this court
should find this assertion
to be untenable.
28. The
applicant failed to place any rebuttal evidence before this court to
refute these dates as alluded
to by these respondents. Accordingly,
in its absence, this court must accept that the NSF-project was
registered as far back as
2013.
29. Even
if one accepts the version of the applicant that it only became aware
of the NSF project during
2017, it failed to account for the entire
period from when it first obtained knowledge to the date that the
application was launched.
It’s failure to adequately explain
the delay is simply unreasonable.
30. In
its replying affidavit the applicant conceded that albeit that it
gained knowledge of the intention
of the NSF-project to favour the
NSF members only, it could not approach this court earlier that it
did without having any detailed
knowledge of the degree of such
intended preferential treatment. The further structuring of the NSF,
as a secret project, coupled
with the deliberate withholding by the
respondents of the exact content of the project prevented the
applicant from fully understanding
the project itself.
31. The
applicant asserts further in its reply that such a deliberately
constructed veil prevented it from
approaching this Court with
substantiated evidence of the exact decisions to be reviewed.
Furthermore, the applicant did not rest
on its proverbial laurels,
but actively sought information from the respondents which was only —
partially — provided
on the strength of two (2) Court orders.
As such it was contended that the respondents actively contributed to
the delay in finally
approaching this Honourable Court.
32. Again
in reply,
[16]
the applicant
further asserts that its application is about the statutory force
members in SAPS who are denied the same benefits
as non-statutory
force members. However, its ambit extends much further, i.e.
including the irrational and discriminatory actions
of the
respondents towards the +/- 150 000 other SAPS members as well. This
information was only progressively disclosed, i.e.
annexure ‘FA33’
a letter dated 3 October 2018 received from the State Attorney which
revealed that 600 vacant and funded
promotion posts are reserved for
the NSF members to the exclusion of 150 000 ordinary 'other'
operational members. This practice
of 'progressive' disclosure only
under legal compulsion was maintained until 14 August 2020, when the
Commissioner of Oaths signed
the deponent's Answering Affidavit.
33. In
addition the very fact that the respondents kept Annexures KJS1 to
KJS14 secret and only disclosed
same on 14 August 2020 is testimony
to the fact that the applicant was deliberately deprived of the true
extent and facts relating
to the NSF project, and that this brought
about the delay in approaching this court earlier than it did.
34. It
was further submitted that the applicant only became fully aware of
critical elements of the NSF project
on 3 October 2018 (if the letter
from the State Attorney is accepted) or then on 14 August 2020 (when
the respondents disclosed
another set of documents previously
withheld). On this basis it can then be argued that 'full awareness'
arose only on 14 August
2020.
35. Section
39(2) of the Constitution requires Courts, when interpreting any
legislation, "to promote
the spirit, purport and objects of the
Bill of Rights." It is on the aforementioned basis that the
applicant contended that
the respondents' progressive disclosure of
documentation only under legal compulsion should be considered when
interpreting time
periods and 'full awareness' in the present matter.
36. As
indicated above, the applicant seeks condonation for the late filing
of the review brought under PAJA,
effectively asking for an order
extending the 180-day period for lodging a review application in
terms of section 9 of PAJA,
[17]
.
The SAPS Respondents contend that condonation should be refused.
[18]
37. On
its version the applicant obtained knowledge of the decision to
implement the NSF project in 2017
and took approximately five months
before it launched its review proceedings. Having regard to the
evidence set out by the applicant
in its founding affidavit before
Court, it has failed to adequately explain the entire period of five
months before the review
proceedings were launched.
38. A
more detailed exposition of what brought about the delay, is
contained in its replying affidavit filed
in response to the
answering affidavit of the first to third respondents. The applicant
failed to provide its explanation in its
founding affidavit where
this Court had to assess its reasons for the delay. The said reasons,
in addition, should have explained
adequately the entire period as
from the date of first obtaining knowledge to the date when the
review application was ultimately
launched. This the applicant has
failed to do.
39. In
absence of an adequate explanation a Court can however still also
consider condoning a delay if the
interest of justice so requires.
If, however, it is found that the applicant has failed to demonstrate
that the interest of justice
requires the extension of time, the
delay is per se unreasonable and should then not be condoned by a
Court.
40. Section
7(1) of PAJA prescribes the time frames within which the judicial
review of administrative action
may be instituted.
[19]
It reads as follows:
“
Any
proceedings for judicial review in terms of section 6(1) must be
instituted without unreasonable delay and not later than 180
days
after the date-
(a) subject
to subsection 2(c), on which any proceedings instituted in terms of
internal remedies as contemplated
in subsection (2)(a) have been
concluded; or
(b) where
no such remedies exist, on which the person concerned was informed of
the administrative action,
became aware of the action and the reasons
for it or might reasonable have been expected to have become aware of
the actions and
the reasons.”
41. On
the other hand, section 9 provides:
(1) The
period of-
(a)
…
(b) 90
days or 180 days referred to in sections 5 and 7 may be extended for
a fixed period, by agreement
between the parties or failing such
agreement, by a court or tribunal on application by the person or
administrator concerned.
(2) The
court or tribunal may grant an application in terms of subsection (1)
where the interest of justice
so require.”
42. In
the present application, the applicant failed to seek extension from
the respondents as provided for
in terms of the provisions of Section
9(1)(b).
[20]
The aforesaid
provision provides that the 180 days referred to in sections 5 and 7
of PAJA may be extended for a fixed period,
either by agreement
between the parties or failing such agreement, by a court or tribunal
on application by the person or administrator
concerned.
43. In
this application, the applicant, has not sought an agreement with the
respondents and has not made
any application before this court or any
other court or tribunal for variation of time in accordance with
section 9.
44. In
Aurecon South Africa (Pty)Ltd v City of Cape Town,
[21]
the court stated that:
“
whether
it is in the interest of justice to condone a delay depends entirely
on the facts and circumstances of each case. The respondent
failed to
adequately explain the reasons for its delay. The delay was
inexcusable and the
court
a quo
should
not have granted the application for review.”
45. In
the Aurecon case, the appeal court did not agree with the
interpretation by the court a quo that the
application must be
launched within 180 days after the party seeking review became aware
that the administrative action in issue
was tainted by irregularity.
The matter therefore turned on whether the respondents had made out a
case for extension of the 180-day
time period.
46. Before
this Court, the applicant has not made out a case for the extension
of the delay since there is
no reasonable explanation proffered for
the lengthy delay in bringing the review. It is the respondents’
contention that
the non- statutory project was registered at Cape
Town, on or about 26 June 2013, more than five (5) years before the
review application
was brought,
[22]
which allegation remains uncontested in the absence of a replying
affidavit having been filed to the remaining respondents answering
affidavit.
47. Herein,
the applicant has conceded in the heads of arguments that it knew
about the NSF projects for
many years.
[23]
However the applicant states that: “the applicant, at best
knows about the intention of the NSF project to favour the NSF
members without detailed knowledge of the degree for such intended
preferential treatment.”
48. A
similar reasoning as the above was however rejected in the Aurecon
decision when the court found that
City Council has far exceeded the
time that is stipulated in section 7(1). Herein, the City Council was
criticised because they
always had knowledge of the process though
they alleged that they only recently came to know about the
irregularities. The fact
that they always knew about the process,
that Court found rendered the delay unreasonable. In
casu
a
similar scenario is at play.
49. On
the evidence relied upon with reference to condonation, the applicant
further failed to disclose that
it has exhausted all internal
remedies provided for in any other law, prior to approaching this
court for relief.
50. Section
7(2) of PAJA sets out that subject to paragraph (c), no court or
tribunal shall review an administrative
action in terms of this Act
unless any internal remedy provided for in any other law has first
been exhausted.
[24]
51. Section
9(2) of PAJA further provides:
“
9.
Variation of time […]
[2]
The court or tribunal may grant an application in terms if subsection
(1)
where the interest of justice so requires”
52. It
has been held that the phrase “unless the interest of justice
requires otherwise” means
equitable evaluation of circumstances
of each case”
[25]
53. The
interest of justice are determined through a weighing up and striking
a balance of rights of the
parties embroiled in litigation. On a
weighing up of rights, the applicant it is contended, has no rights
in respect of the implementations
of the NSF project which can be
weighed up against the SAPS Respondents’ rights to run the SAPS
as mandated by legislation
and the Constitution.
54. Here
too, the weighing of rights up does not support granting the
applicant condonation, and to do so
would not be in the interest of
justice.
55. The
SCA has pronounced in respect of the provisions of section 7 of PAJA
that it creates a presumption
that a delay of longer than 180-days is
“per se unreasonable.”
[26]
In the Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance (OUTA) decision it held
as follows:
“
At
common law application of the undue delay rule required a two-stage
enquiry. First, whether there was unreasonable delay and,
second, if
so, whether the delay should in all circumstances be condoned…
Up to a point, I think, section 7(1) of PAJA requires
the same two
stage approach. The difference lies, as I see it in the legislature’s
determination of a delay exceeding 180
days as per se unreasonable.
Before the effluxion of 180 days, the first inquiry in applying
section 7(1) is still whether the
delay (if any) was unreasonable.
But after the 180-day period the issue of unreasonableness is
pre-determined by the legislature
it is unreasonable per se. It
follows that the court is only empowered to entertain the review
application if the interest of justice
dictates an extension in terms
of section 9. Absent such extension the court has no authority to
entertain the review application
at all.”
56. In
the Buffolo City Municipality decision, the Constitutional Court
confirmed the SCA’s interpretation
that the presumption of a
delay in excess of 180 days is unreasonable exists.
[27]
57. In
the same decision, it was held that the standard to be applied in
assessing the delay in both a PAJA
review and a legality review is
the same, namely whether the delay was unreasonable.
[28]
58. As
the present application is brought outside the 180 days’
period, the presumption on the unreasonableness
of the delay applies.
59. The
respondents before court, submitted that the applicant has not
sufficiently addressed this court
as to what factors should be
considered for the court to exercise its discretion under section
9(2) of PAJA and to hold that the
interest of justice warrants the
granting of the extension of time. This I agree with.
60. It
is however established law that condonation does not have to be
explicitly applied for in a legality
review.
[29]
A two-stage approach is followed, which was expressed as follows by
the Constitutional Court in Buffalo City, namely:
“
Firstly,
it must be determined whether the delay is unreasonable or undue”.
This is a factual enquiry upon which a value judgment
is made, having
regard to the circumstances of the matter; Secondly, if the delay is
unreasonable the question becomes whether
the Court’s
discretion should nevertheless be exercised to overlook the delay to
entertain the application.
[30]
61. In
the present application both the PAJA review and the legality review
are delayed.
62. In
relation to assessing the delay in bringing the PAJA review, as
mentioned the SAPS Respondents contend
that the Applicant has not
placed material facts before the Court to adequately assess whether
the delay is unreasonable.
63. The
Applicant has been aware of the NSF project for many years,
[31]
confirming that it gained knowledge of the implementation project
back in 2016.
[32]
64. Having
obtained knowledge of the NSF-project as far back as 2016, it however
contends that it could not
launch the review earlier as it lodged a
PAJA application and also lodged other court applications.
[33]
The failure by the respondents to furnish the documents as set out in
the two court orders contributed to this delay.
65. The
above explanation, however, I find is without justification as it was
always open to the applicant
to launch its review and to seek leave
to amend its papers upon the record ultimately having been furnished
in terms of Rule 53.
66. The
applicant as mentioned, has not only failed to provide an explanation
for the full period of the
delay but it has not acted expeditiously
to launch this review.
67. The
SAPS respondents contend that the delay is unreasonable. I share
these sentiments. Therefore, on
the factual enquiry upon which a
value judgment is to be made, I conclude that the delay has been
unreasonable.
68. In
relation to the second stage, the SAPS respondents contend that the
applicant has not established
material factors to show that the Court
should exercise its discretion and overlook the delay. Here too this
Court agrees with
the SAPS respondents for reasons already set out
above.
69. Consequently,
the Applicant is refused condonation for the late launching of its
review application.
LACK
OF LOCUS STANDI
70. As
per its founding affidavit, the applicant alleges that it has
standing on three bases namely: on its
own behalf, in the interest of
its members who are SAPS members;
[34]
and in the public interest.
[35]
It is the SAPS respondents’ contention that none of these bases
are available to the Applicant.
[36]
71. In
support for its locus standi, the applicant annexed to its founding
affidavit, a resolution dated
29 October 2018, together with its
constitution as the enabling instruments. The resolution at best
authorises the applicant together
with the deponent to the founding
affidavit, to initiate these review proceedings on behalf of the
applicant. The constitution
so annexed however, does not expressly
authorise the applicant to bring this application.
[37]
This averment has also not been answered by the applicant in its
replying affidavit.
72. In
addition the applicant further pleads that it acts in the public
interest with reference to the constitutional
provisions of the rule
of law, transparency and accountability in the public
administration.
[38]
In this
regard the constitutional provisions of sections 195(1)(d) and
195(1)(e) are relied upon as grounds for locus standi and
acting in
the public interest.
[39]
73. The
applicant’s founding affidavit makes it pertinently clear that
the application is pursued in
terms of both the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (hereinafter referred to as
‘PAJA’) and the Constitution
of the Republic of South
Africa Act 108 of 1996 (hereinafter referred to as the
“Constitution”).
[40]
74. Section
33 in Chapter 2 of the Bill of Rights in the Constitution states
emphatically that “everyone”
is entitled to “just
administrative action.” The applicant’s application makes
it clear that not only is the
application brought on behalf of its
members but the public at large (thus in the public interest.) Thus,
the categories of persons
identified in the applicant’s
application fall withing the ambit of “everyone” as
defined in Section 33 of the
Constitution. Furthermore, PAJA gives
expression to the constitutional right to just administrative action
enshrined in s 33 of
the Bill of Rights, makes clear that
administrative action may be reviewed if it is (ultra vires s
6(2)(a)(i) and 6(2)(f)), if
it is irrational (s 6(2)(f)(ii) or
unreasonable (s 6(2)(h)) or if it is unlawful and unconstitutional (s
6(2)(i)).
[41]
75. Section
38 of the Constitution is framed extremely wide in that Section 38
permits “anyone”
acting in their own interest, “anyone”
acting on behalf of another person who cannot act in their own name,
“anyone”
acting as a member of, or in the interest of, a
group or class of persons; “anyone” acting in the public
interest;
or and an association acting in the interest of its members
to approach a competent court to allege that a right in the Bill of
Rights has been infringed or threatened.
76. As
per the founding affidavit and with specific reference to paragraph
10, the applicant states that:
“
The
Applicant also approaches this Court in the public interest. All
South Africans have an interest in the rule of law, the requirements
of a proper functioning constitutional democracy and, in particular,
the urgent steps necessary to root out unfair discrimination
and
unlawfulness in our hard- earned democracy.
77. Section
195(1)(d) of the Constitution entails that services provided by
public administration (and particular
instance the South African
Police Service) must be impartial, fair, equitable and without bias.
In terms of Section 195(1)(e) the
people’s need must be
responded to, and the public must be encouraged to participate in
policy making. It is thus clear that
the public has a vested interest
in the setting of values and principles in public administration,
which include the South African
Police service. Section 195(1)(f)
entails specifically that public administration must be accountable
and in Section 195(1)(g)
it is clearly stated that transparency must
be fostered by providing the public with timely, accessible and
accurate information.
This stands in direct contradiction of the
secrecy in which the NSF project has been dealt with to date.”
78. The
respondents have expressly replied to the above allegation in the
answering affidavit.
[42]
79. Now,
the duty to allege and prove
locus
standi
rests
on the party instituting proceedings.
[43]
80. The
general requirement to establish
locus
standi
is
sufficient interest in the subject matter, the interest must not be
too removed, the interest must be actual, not abstract or
academic,
the interest must be current and not hypothetical.
[44]
81. Whether
a litigant has direct interest in the proceedings must be determined
in light of the facts and
circumstances of the case. A key factor in
this enquiry is the terms of the relief sought.
82.
“
Ordinarily
a person whose rights are directly affected by an invalid law in a
manner adverse to such person has standing to challenge
the validity
of that law in our courts.”
[45]
83. Having
regard to the authorities relied upon in support of the allegation in
respect of locus standi,
in view of its own constitution not
expressly permitting the applicant authority to launch these
proceedings, I am not persuaded
that the applicant is clothed with
the necessary locus standi to act in either its own name or on behalf
of its members.
84. Furthermore,
the Applicant further has not established that it has a direct
interest in the outcome of
the application. It has not identified how
the implementation of the NSF project is invalid in a manner that is
prejudicial to
it, as a registered trade union, or its members which
will enable it to bring the application on behalf of its members or
in the
public interest. In this regard the SAPS respondents requested
the applicant to specify the names and details of the members on
whose behalf it brings this application.
[46]
This request, the applicant has failed to adhere to. As such the
members are not identified and they themselves have not provided
any
powers of attorney or similar authorisations to the applicant to
prosecute this application. Also, no confirmatory affidavits
have
been annexed to the founding affidavit to substantiate the ground for
locus standi.
85. As
a result of the applicant’s failure to take up the opportunity
to present the details of its
members to the respondents, this Court
is unable to ascertain as to whether it also has established its
locus standi to act on
behalf of its members or then the public
interest.
86. In
addition, to find standing in the public interest one has to look at
the provisions in section 38
of the Constitution
[47]
dealing with violation of rights in chapter 2 of our Constitution.
Albeit that the applicant has not expressly pleaded reliance
on
section 38 of the Constitution, by way of inference it placed
reliance on these provisions where it alleges in paragraph 8 to
the
founding affidavit that it approaches this court in the interest of
its members.
87. In
the present application the rights alleged to have been violated
however, are not any rights as set
out in chapter 2 of our
Constitution. For this reason, therefore, placing reliance on the
provision of section 38 is further misplaced.
88. As
regards the relief sought in the application, i.e. the setting aside
of the implementation of the
NSF project so as to protect the right
to apply for promotion and “the right to promotion” of
the applicant’s
members who are members of the SAPS, the
argument advanced by the SAPS respondents, is that the right to apply
for promotion and
the right to be promoted are both personal rights
which vest in the applicant’s members personally. The right to
apply for
promotion and the right to be promoted, do not arise by
virtue of membership in the applicant. Given that this part of the
relief
sought in the notice of motion affects ‘members’
personally and in the absence of the members of the applicant having
been identified, it also validly attacks the applicants’ locus
standi to act on behalf of its members.
89. The
Applicant further places reliance on sections 195(1)(d) and 195(1)(e)
of the Constitution. The reliance
on these two sections is misplaced
as these sections reflect constitutional values and are not
self-standing rights.
90. Support
for the above view is to be found in the Chirwa-decision where the
Constitutional Court held
that:
“
Therefore
although s 195 of the Constitution provides valuable interpretive
assistance it does not found a right to bring an action.”
[48]
91. On
this further basis, I conclude, that the applicant cannot
successfully rely on the provisions of section
195(1)(d) and
195(1)(e) of the Constitution to allege locus stindi. The applicant
lacks the necessary locus standi to bring this
application.
92. Albeit,
that I conclude that the applicants’ lack of locus standi is
dispositive of the application,
I still deem it prudent to deal with
the additional preliminary points raised and the merits of the
application.
93. Before
I do so, a convenient point of departure would be to determine
whether the decision taken being
complained of fall within the
definition of administrative action under PAJA. It is the SAPS
respondents’ argument that the
implementation of the NSF
project is not administrative action,
[49]
and they have expressly denied that the implementation of the NSF
project constitutes administrative action.
[50]
94. Section
1 of PAJA defines the relevant parts of “administrative action”
as “any decision
taken, or any failure to take a decision, by-
(a)
an organ of state, when
(i) exercising
a power in terms of the Constitution or a provincial constitution; or
(ii) exercising
a public power or performing a public function in terms of any
legislation; or
(iii)
…
95. The
starting point in determining whether an action is “administrative
action” is to consider
whether the task itself is
administrative or not, by analysing the nature of the power being
exercised.
[51]
Due regard must
be had to the source of the power exercised, the nature of the power,
its subject matter, whether it involves the
exercise of a public duty
and how closely it is related on the one hand to policy matters
(which are not administrative) and on
the other hand to the
implementation of legislation (which is administrative).
[52]
96. In
this regard counsel for the respondents had argued that the
re-ranking of police officials and pension
fund benefits attributed
to them as a means of implementing the NSF project, while exercised
by a public functionary is not administrative
action. I tend to agree
with this.
97. Support
for this view is further found in Chirwa,
[53]
where the Constitutional Court had to consider whether the
termination of employment amounted to administrative action under
section
36 of the Constitution. The employer in this case was
Transnet an organ of state. The Constitutional Court had regard to
the SARFU
[54]
case. The court
held that the source of power, although an important factor is not
decisive. The crucial question is whether the
task performed is
administrative action or not.
[55]
98. It
is no different from a public functionary changing the working hours
of police officers.
[56]
In this
review it is not the decision of the NSF project which is being
challenged on review by the applicant, but the implementation
of the
decision itself. The respondents had argued that the implementation
of the NSF project remains a labour issue.
99. In
applying the SARFU test, to the facts in Chirwa the Constitutional
Court reasoned as follows:
“
The
subject matter if the power involved here is the termination of a
contract of employment for poor work performance. The source
of power
is the employment contract between the applicant and Transnet. The
nature of the power involved here is therefore contractual.
The fact
that Transnet is a creature of statute does not detract from the fact
that in terminating the applicant’s contract
of employment, it
was exercising its contractual power. It does not involve the
implementation of legislation which constitutes
administrative
action. The conduct of Transnet in terminating the employment
contract does not in my view constitute administration.
It is more
concerned with labour and employment relations. The mere fact that
Transnet is an organ of State which exercises public
power does not
transform its conduct in terminating the applicant’s employment
contract into administrative action. Section
33 is not concerned with
every act of administration performed by an organ of State. It
follows therefore that the conduct of Transnet
did not constitute
administrative action under s 33.
100. Support
of the view that the termination of the employment of a public sector
employee does not fall
under administrative action under section 33
can also be found in the structure of our Constitution.
101. The
Constitution draws a clear distinction between administrative action
on the one hand and employment
and labour relations on the other. It
recognises that employment and labour relations and administrative
action are two different
areas of law.
102. The
decision Gcaba v Minister of Safety and Security
[57]
is instructive in the present dispute. At the heart of the matter in
Gcaba was the interplay between administrative and labour
law
principles within the context of public sector employment.
[58]
In finding that the failure to promote and appoint Mr Gcaba was
quintessentially a labour related issue, based on the right to
fair
labour practices,
[59]
and
therefore the failure to promote and appoint him was not
administrative action. Herein the Constitution Court held:
“
Generally
employment and labour relationship issues do not amount to
administrative action within the meaning of PAJA. This is recognised
by the Constitution. Section 23 regulates the employment between
employer and employee and guarantees the right to fair labour
practices. The ordinary thrust of s 33 is to deal with the
relationship between the state as bureaucracy and citizens and
guarantees
the right to lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair
administrative action. Section 33 does not regulate the relationship
between
the state as employer and its workers. When a grievance is
raised by an employee relating to the conduct of the state as
employer
it has few or no direct implications or consequences for
other citizens, it does not constitute administrative action.
[60]
103. In
the present matter, the Applicant’s case is rooted in setting
aside of the “en-masse
promotions of a selected group”.
Although the source of power exercised by the SAPS respondents amount
to public power, the
subject matter of this application is rooted in
the issue of alleged mass promotion.
104. It
is on this basis that the SAPS respondents contend that there is no
administrative action that is
cognisable before this court. I support
this view.
NON-JOINDER
105. In
turning then to the preliminary point of non-joinder the respondents
allege that the NSF project
throughout has been implemented with the
participation of both the National Treasury and or the Minister of
Finance. As the National
Treasury has budgeted funds, and in the
event of the applicant being successful, the allocated funds in all
likelihood will be
extinguished and it is for this reason that it is
allege that the National Treasury has an interest in the
application.
[61]
106. In
addition the respondents assert that the Government Pensions
Administration Agency together with
the Department of Public Works
should have been joined as these institutions similarly have an
interest in this application.
[62]
107. In
its replying affidavit, the applicant had denied that these
functionaries or institutions have an
interest in the outcome of
these proceedings, and if they were to have, they will only become
involved once the re- ranking/promotions
have been finalised.
108. In
respect of the alleged issue of non-joinder the first to third
respondents rely on quotations from
two judgments in relation to the
preliminary point of non-joinder: Firstly,
“
The
test whether there has been non-joinder is whether a party has a
direct and substantial interest in the subject matter of the
litigation which may prejudice the party that has not been joined…
“
109. Secondly,
the respondent relies on a further decision:
“
It
has not become settled law that the joinder is only required as a
matter of necessity – as opposed to a matter of convenience
if
the party has a direct and substantial interest.”
110. On
the evidence placed before this court, I cannot find that there is
merit on the point of non-joinder.
As I see it, albeit that the
functionaries of institutions might have an interest in the matter,
it cannot be said that they should
be heard at the time when the
merits of this application is to be determined.
111. Accordingly
the point in limine of non-joinder is dismissed with costs.
GROUNDS
FOR REVIEW
112. As
a point of departure in considering the grounds of review it is
important to note that the applicant
carries the onus to identify the
decisions it seeks to review and set out the nature of such
decisions. In addition, the applicant
carries the onus, to identify
when the decisions referred to were made and who made the decisions
referred to.
[63]
113. As
previously mentioned the applicant primarily rely on four grounds on
which it premises its review
application.
[64]
114. Given
the exposition of the facts of this application, the applicant
contends that its members (and
the remaining 99.06% of the SAPS’
employees) have been shut out from the secretive NSF project and have
been prohibited from
making representations and/or applying for the
same benefits which are being awarded to and are in the process of
being awarded
to NSF (now temporarily interdicted) members in the
absence of legislative provisions which cater for such
promotions/awards.
115. Furthermore,
the applicant asserts that it is clear that the NSF project/agenda
was not brought to the
attention of the applicant's members, the
remaining SAPS workforce or the general public at large.
Unreasonableness
116. On
the ground of unreasonableness, it is the applicants’ case that
the Minister's approval of
the NSF project was so unreasonable that
no reasonable decision maker could have approved the NSF project.
Apart from the respondents'
failure to comply with the provisions
governing promotions and benefits (an example of which is
demonstrated in paragraph 47 of
the Founding Affidavit), the
respondents were and remain totally blind to the illegality and
inherent unconstitutionality of the
NSF project as it stands. It is
on this basis that the applicant had argued that the respondents’
minds were accordingly
closed to alternative means of inclusive
promotion and reward mechanisms.
[65]
117. The
respondents deny that the object of the NSF project is unreasonable.
In their answering affidavit
they set out that the applicant has
failed to point out any promotions and benefits that were available
to the general body of
members to the SAPS and which promotions and
benefits were denied to the members of the applicant.
[66]
They further assert that the NSF project is a fundamental expression
of acknowledgment by the State of sacrifices made by NSF members
and
on this basis had argued that the NSF project was eminently
reasonable.
118. In
reply, the applicant had asserted that the issuing of a new National
Instruction 11 of 2017, had
as its aim the effect to catapult
NSF-members to the top echelons of the SAPS without any proper
process being followed. This benefit
will exclusively benefit only
NSF members to the detriment of duly qualified and long-standing
non-NSF members, such as their members.
119. On
the conspectus of the evidence placed before this Court, I could not
find any evidence presented
before this Court by the applicant, where
a member(s) of the applicant was overlooked as non-NSF members to the
exclusive benefit
of NSF-members.
120. It
might very well be that the applicant on the face of it can argue
that the decision so taken with
the introduction of the NSF project
could inherently be seen as unreasonable, but in the absence of
concrete evidence presented
before this Court, the applicant is
asking of this Court to venture into the realm of speculation. To
this, the object of the NSF-project
should also not be discarded,
i.e. at its heart the project was established to assist NSF members
to address and redress the sacrifices
made by their members, when
they were prevented from joining the SAPS given our unsavoury
history.
121. For
the above reasons, I cannot therefore conclude that the applicant has
established a ground of review
premised on unreasonableness of the
decision.
Erroneous
interpretation of the law
122. In
respect of the erroneous interpretations of the Law, the applicant in
the founding affidavit asserts
that circumstances not required in the
Military Veterans Act, National Instruction 4/2010 and the Police
Service Employment Regulations,
2008 to afford promotions,
re-rankings and benefits were taken into consideration and those
circumstances that were supposed to
be considered in terms of the
aforementioned were not taken into consideration. As such, the
decision to implement the NSF project
was unlawfully made.
[67]
123. Section
1 of the Military Veterans Act i.e. the definitions section of the
aforementioned Act defines
a Military Veteran as any South African
Citizen who:
123.1 Rendered
military service to any of the military organisations statutory and
non-statutory, which were
involved on all sides of South Africa's
Liberation War from 1960 to 1994;
123.2 Served
in the Union Defence Force before 1961; or
123.3 Became
a member of the new South African National Defence Force after 1994.
124. Section
3 of the Act clearly states that aid to and benefits for Military
Veterans is to be provided
by and is the obligation of State
Departments (Organs of State). No differentiation is made between
benefits which are to be afforded
to Statutory Forces and
Non-Statutory Forces ("NSF"). According to the Act, both
are to be treated equally.
125. The
applicant does not dispute that NSF members could be entitled to the
workplace-related benefits
listed in the MVA's Section 5, i.e. skills
development, facilitation of employment placement, pensions and
health care (as set
out in par 42, of the Founding Affidavit). The
Applicant, however, disputes that the NSF members are entitled to the
benefits for
which no statutory provision is made, for instance
promotions and/or re-ranking. The statutory benefits mentioned in
Section 5
can't be afforded to the NSF military veterans only and to
the exclusion of Military Veterans in the broader sense (statutory
forces
and employees of the SAPS) who are members of the applicant,
especially in light of the fact that the respondents refuse to make
available to the applicant and its members information concerning the
NSF project which is only benefiting NSF members. NSF members
are as
of law (Section 5 of the Military Veterans Act) only entitled to the
benefit of facilitation of employment placement and
there is no right
to permanent placement or employment, neither any right to
preferential promotion or re- ranking.
126. All
promotions/re-ranking and pension benefits received by NSF members
without non-NSF members having
the opportunity to apply or make
representations is accordingly unlawful, unconstitutional,
irrational, unreasonable and invalid.
127. It
is on this basis that the applicant contends that the aforementioned
constitutes a blatant disregard
for the constitutional right to
equality and not to be discriminated against at the hands of state
officials who seek to overlook
the applicant's members and other
career-progressing employees of the SAPS.
128. The
respondents in reply denied that the NSF project was premised on its
misinterpretation of the law,
but that in fact it is based on a broad
suite of instruments and policy enactments.
[68]
Furthermore, the policy was presented before Parliament by the
Minister of Police and accepted and that Parliament had voted for
funding for the NSF project. The respondents further denied that the
NSF project beneficiaries are ‘military veterans’
within
the meaning of the Military Veterans Act.
129. On
behalf of the applicants it was argued that the respondents' reasons
proffered for the NSF project
are inadequate and as such, the
respondents' decision was materially based on erroneous
interpretations and/or application of the
law. As such counsel had
argued that their decision(s) to implement the NSF project is subject
to review for being unfairly, unlawfully
and unreasonably taken or
made.
130. In
addition it was submitted that public functionaries are required to
act within the powers granted
to them by law (i.e. intra vires). They
must also not misconstrue their powers and the implementation of the
NSF project as it
falls outside of the ambit of any empowering
provision. On this basis it was argued that their decisions are
accordingly reviewable
in terms of Section 6(2)(a)(i) of PAJA.
[69]
It is manifestly apparent that the respondents have misconstrued
their powers in the roll-out and implementation of the NSF project.
131. In
respect of this ground of review, the argument advanced by the
respondents is to the effect that
Parliament has appropriated funds
for the NSF project within the SAPS and that such an allocation
cannot take place absent a lawful
basis.
[70]
132. In
addition counsel had argued that the applicant does not have the
legal competence to decide how public
funds, lawfully appropriated by
Parliament, for the specific purpose of funding the NSF project
within the SAPS is spent.
[71]
The applicant simply cannot seek to set aside an executive/policy
decision taken by Parliament.
133. On
the allegation made in the Answering Affidavit, that the funding for
the NSF project was approved
by Parliament, the applicant has placed
no rebuttal evidence before this Court, that no such approval during
a Parliamentary sitting
had taken place. At best what the applicant
had placed reliance upon, were letters from the National Commissioner
of the South
African Police to the Director-General and a further
letter written by the State Attorneys to support its contention that
no prior
funding had been approved for the NSF-project.
[72]
134. In
the absence of any such evidence in rebuttal, I must accept that
Parliament (representing the broader
public representatives) has
appropriated funds for the NSF project within the SAPS and that such
an allocation cannot take place
without a lawful basis. Consequently,
this ground of review cannot be sustained.
Rationality
135. In
respect of this ground the argument advanced by the applicant was
that when dealing with a review
on legality the exercise of all
public power must be rational, i.e. rationally related to the purpose
for which the power was given
(otherwise it is arbitrary)
[73]
.
It is the applicants’ case that the decision to exercise power
in relation to the NSF project was arbitrary.
136. In
respect of rationality the Courts have developed the concept
requiring the executive and public functionaries
to exercise their
power for the specific purpose for which it was granted, so that they
cannot act arbitrarily, for no other purpose
or an ulterior motive.
It is the applicants’ argument that the NSF project is
tarnished with more than one ulterior motive
i.e. political and for
financial gain.
137. In
response to this argument advance in relation to rationality, the
respondents have denied that this
ground has been pleaded with
specificity. It was contended by the respondents that the applicant
has failed to identify the particular
power so exercised which they
aver was arbitrarily exercised.
[74]
138. In
respect of this ground of review, the applicant had failed to plead
before this court that the decision
to implement the NSF project
indeed falls within the definition of administrative action. Absent
such allegation, thus the Court
cannot conclude that there could be
merit on this ground of review.
Grounds
of Discrimination and Procedural Unfairness
139. In
respect of these grounds counsel for the applicant had argued that it
is common cause that the principle
of legality has been expanded by
treating procedural fairness as a requirement of rationality. It is
the applicants’ contention
that the NSF project has been
completely devoid of any procedural fairness. In 2010 the
Constitutional Court in Albut v Centre
for the Study of Violence and
Reconciliation
[75]
further
expanded the principle of legality by treating procedural fairness as
a requirement of rationality. In this case it was
held that:
“rationality review is really concerned with the evaluation of
a relationship between means and ends: the relationship,
connection
or link (as it is variously referred to) between the means employed
to achieve a particular purpose on the one hand
and the purpose or
end itself. The aim of the evaluation of the relationship is not to
determine whether some means will achieve
the purpose better than
others but only whether the means employed are rationally related to
the purpose for which the power was
conferred.
140. In
respect of discrimination, it is the applicants’ contention
that it is clear that the respondents'
failure to support an equal
playing field for all employees of the third Respondent results in
the respondents having discriminated
against the applicant's members
and all other career SAPS- employees (not designated as NSF-members).
The Promotion of Equality
and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act
4 of 2000 (-the Equality Act") opposes such conduct.
141. In
addition, the third respondent's policy(s) and decisions to withhold
benefits, opportunities and
advantages based on prohibited grounds as
envisaged in the Equality Act amounts to "discrimination"
as envisaged in section
1 of the Act.
142. Support
for this ground is found in section 13(2)(b)(i) of the Act, which
provides that discrimination
is unfair if such discrimination took
place on the grounds in paragraph (b) of the definitions of
“prohibited grounds"
and if one or more of the conditions
set out paragraph (b) of the definition of “prohibited grounds”
are established.
143. It
was argued by counsel for the applicant that the respondents'
discrimination falls under paragraph
(b) of the definitions of
"prohibited grounds" in section 1 of the Equality Act. The
discrimination is unfair as it caused
and perpetuates systematic
disadvantages to non-NSF members.
144. Moreover,
it was contended that if the respondents' NSF project continues to be
implemented, the applicant's
members and other career employees of
the third respondent will be adversely affected by the NSF project
and accordingly causes
perpetual disadvantages and is therefore
unfair as envisaged in section 13(2)(b) of the Equality Act. 106.
Section 34(1)(a) of
the Equality Act provides that:
"In
view of the overwhelming evidence of the importance, impact on
society and link to systematic disadvantage and discrimination
on the
grounds of HIV/AIDS status, socio-economic status, nationality,
family responsibility and family status- special consideration
must
be given to the inclusion of these grounds in paragraph (a) of the
definitions of 'prohibited grounds' by the Minister.”
145. The
above provision attests to the severity of discrimination on the
mentioned grounds as well as the
systematic nature of discrimination
on those grounds, thus emphasising the unfairness thereof.
146. The
above constitutes a forthright disregard for the constitutional right
to equality and not to be
discriminated against at the hands of state
officials who seek to overlook the applicant's members and other
career SAPS members.
The applicant's members remain, to a substantial
degree, in the dark and to date the applicant's members are denied
the opportunity
of making any informed representations to the SAPS
and other respondents as to the NSF-project, the reason for its
existence, the
lawfulness of the project, the process followed thus
far and the members' qualification to be part of the project (should
it be
conducted in a regular and lawful fashion), coupled with the
discriminatory fashion in which the project and the subsequent
re-grading
is conducted, etc.
147. On
behalf of the respondents it was argued with reference to the ground
on discrimination and unfairness
that upon a careful analysis of the
applicant’s case on discrimination and unfairness, as grounds
for review, it shows that
the applicant relies solely on the Equality
Act.
[76]
148. Any
potential claim which the applicant might bring in terms of the
Equality Act, is a claim not justiciable
under the guise of a PAJA
review alternatively a legality review, more so in circumstances
where the applicant has failed to identify
which of its members had
been discriminated against and what the nature of the discrimination
has been. This stance adopted by
the respondent I am in agreement
with. The applicant or any of its members are not without recourse if
they believe that they have
been discriminated again in terms of the
Equality Act.
149. It
is on this basis that I conclude that this alleged ground of review
cannot be sustained and must
also be dismissed.
150. In
respect of the review premised on the principle of legality, I also
cannot conclude that the applicant
can succeed as the applicant’s
case does not fall within the exercise of a public power. It is on
this basis that a legality
review in terms of section 1(c) of the
Constitution must also fail.
COSTS
# 151. This
court in the exercise of its discretion deems it prudent to award
costs against the unsuccessful
party, such costs to include the costs
of two counsel where so employed.
151. This
court in the exercise of its discretion deems it prudent to award
costs against the unsuccessful
party, such costs to include the costs
of two counsel where so employed.
ORDER
# 152. In
the result the following order is made:
152. In
the result the following order is made:
152.1 The
application is dismissed with costs, such costs to include costs
consequent upon the employment
of two counsel.
C
COLLIS J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv. W P BEKKER SC Adv. C J JOOSTER
Instructed
by:
Serfontein Viljoen & Swart Attorneys
Counsel
for the 1st to 3rd
Respondents:
Adv. O MOOKI SC
Adv.
A LOUW
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Pretoria
Counsel
for the 4th to 56th
Respondents
Adv. L MAUNATLALA
Adv.
J CHANZA
Instructed
by
Sekati Monyane Inc
Date
of
Hearing:
02 March 2023
Date
of
Judgment:
26 March 2024
[1]
AA,
para 21, p 14-7.
[2]
Record,
Founding Affidavit, paragraph 31 & Annexure FA8 (Contents of a
speech by Deputy- Minister of Police, Maggie Sotyu,
on 21 July 2014,
during the SAPS budget vote in Parliament), Caselines 02-11.
[3]
Record,
Founding Affidavit, paragraph 82 & annexure FA34, Caselines
02-36.
[4]
AA,
para 30, p 14-10.
[5]
AA,para
34, p 14-10.
[6]
See
footnote 1 supra, Caselines 02-13 and paragraph 33.1, Caselines
02-14.
[7]
Record,
Founding Affidavit, paragraph 41 & Annexure FA12, caselines
02-17 to 02-18.
[8]
Supplementary
affidavit para 8 See 09-6.
[9]
Act 3
of 200.
[10]
Nom,
prayers 2,3 and 4, at pp 01-1 and 01-2, read with FA para 89, at p
-02-40.
[11]
Founding
Affidavit para 110-119
[12]
AA
First to Third Respondents para 136 to 139 p10-43.
[13]
AA
First to Third Respondents
[14]
First
to Third Respondent’s AA para 138 p10-44
[15]
Fourth
to Fifty-Six Respondents AA par 17-24 p12-10
[16]
Replying
Affidavit para 380 p 11-111.
[17]
FA,
para 110, p 02-47.
[18]
AA,
para 136.1, p 14-43.
[19]
Promotion
of Administration Act, 3 of 2000.
[20]
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000
.
[21]
[2016]
1 ALL SA 313 (SCA).
[22]
4th
to 56 respondents’ answering affidavit at paragraph 168 at
paginated page 12-39.
[23]
Paragraph
4.3 of the heads.
[24]
Ibid.
[25]
Sanderson
v Attorney-General, Eastern Cape [
1997] ZACC 18
;
1997 (12) BCLR
1675;
1998 (2) SA 38
CC.
[26]
Opposition
to Urban Tolling Alliance v South African National Roads Agency Ltd
[
2013] ZASCA 148
;
[2013] 4 ALL SA 639
(SCA) at para
[26]
,
[27]
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asia Construction (Pty) Limited
2019 (4) SA 331
(CC)) (‘Buffalo City”) at para [49].
[28]
Buffalo City at para [49].
within
which the MEC had to bring the review, there is no requirement for a
formal condonation application to be brought. The
Constitutional
Court subsequently applied this finding to a legality review in
Buffalo City, at para [51].
[29]
Khumalo
v Member of the Executive Council for Education, KwaZulu Natal2014
(5) SA 579 9CC) at paras [44]. Although the case dealt
with the
Labour Relations Act, the
Constitutional Court held that as there
were no expresses legislated time period
[30]
Buffalo
City at para [48].
[31]
AA,
para 136.1, p 14-43.
[32]
FA,
para 21, p 02-8.
[33]
RA,
paras 56.1-56.2, p 15-23.
[34]
FA,
para 8, p 02-3.
[35]
FA,
para 10, p 02-4.
[36]
AA,
paras 9-13, pp 14-5 to 14-6.
[37]
AA
para 71 to 71.2, p 14-17.
[38]
FA
para 10, p 02-5.
[39]
FA
para 10, p 02-5.
[40]
Inter
alia, Paragraph 9 of the Applicants Founding Affidavit, Caselines
01-9.
[41]
The
co-existence of the common law grounds for review and the regime
under PAJA is dealt with in Metcash Trading Limited v Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service 2001 (1) BCLR 1 (CC) at paras
40 – 41.
[42]
AA
para 74 p.10-18
[43]
Mars
Incorporated v Candy World (Pty)Ltd 1991 (1) 567 (A) at 575H-I.
[44]
Four
Wheel Drive Accessory Distributors CC V Rataan No
2019 (3) SA 451
(SCA) at para 7.
[45]
Ferreira
v Levin and Vryanhoek [199] ZACC 13,
1996 (1) SA 984
(CC); 1996 (1)
BCLR (CC) at [162[.
[46]
AA,
para 12, pp 14-5 to 14-6.
[47]
Section
38
provides: ‘Anyone listed I this section has the right to
approach a competent court, alleging that a right in the Bill of
Rights has been infringed or threatened, and the court may grant
appropriate relief, including a declaration of rights. The persons
who may approach a court are –
(a)
anyone acting in their own interest;
(b)
anyone acting on behalf of another person who cannot in their own
name;
(c ) anyone acting
as a members of, or in the interest of, a group or class of persons;
(d)
anyone acting in the public interest;
(e ) an
association acting in the interest of its members.”
[48]
Chirwa,
above n38 at para [76]. Ncgobo J in his separate concurrence, at
para
[195] held that “I
agree with Skweyiya J that’s s 195 of the Constitution does
not give rise to directly enforceable
rights.”
[49]
RA,
para 18, p 15-8 read with FA, para 18, p 02-7.
[50]
AA,
para 6 to 8, p14-4 to 14-5; paras 99.4 and 99.5, p 14-29.
[51]
Transnet
Ltd v Grootman Brothers (Pty)Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 151
;
2001 (1) SA 853
(SCA) (“Trans
[52]
Transnet
para 34. See also President of the Republic of South Africa v South
African Rugby Football Union and Others
2000 (1) SA 1
(CC) at para
143.
[53]
Chirwa
v Transnet and Others 2008(4) SA 367 (CC).
[54]
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South African Rugby
Football Unions and Others 2000 (1) SA 1 (CC).
[55]
Chirwa
at para (140) as per Ngcobo J. Skweyiya j at para [74] occurs with
Ngcobo J on the reasoning ad decision on this issue.
[56]
SA
Police Union and Another v National Commissioner of the SA Police
Service and Another (2005) 26 ILJ 2403 (LC);(J1584/05)
[2005] ZALC
91
;
[2006] BLLR 42(LC)
[5 October 2005) at para
51.
[57]
Gcaba
v Minister of Safety and Security and Others 2010 (1) SA 238 (CC).
[58]
Gcaba,
at para [17].
[59]
Gcaba, at para [66].
[60]
Gcaba, at para[64]
[61]
AA
para 13-15 p 10-6.
[62]
AA
para 16-17 p 10-6.
[63]
AA, para 79, p 14-20
[64]
FA
para 21-109
[65]
FA
para 91 p 01-46.
[66]
AA
para 125 p10-39.
[67]
FA
para 92 p 01-46.
[68]
AA
para 126 p 10-39.
[69]
That
section provides:
“
A
court or tribunal has the power to judicially review an
administrative action if-
(a) the administrator
who took it-
(i) was not authorised
to do so by the empowering provision”
[70]
AA,
para 128.2-, p 14-40.
[71]
AA,
para 128.3, p 14-40.
[72]
RA
para 353 p 11-105.
[73]
In
Democratic Alliance v President of South Africa and Others
2013 (1)
SA 248
(CC) Yacoob A.D.C.J.
held: “rationality
review is really concerned with the evaluation of a relationship
between means and ends: the relationship,
connection or link (as it
is variously referred to) between the means employed to achieve a
particular purpose on the one hand
and the purpose or end itself.
The aim of the evaluation of the relationship is not to determine
whether some means will achieve
the purpose better than others but
only whether the means employed are rationally related to the
purpose for which the power
was conferred. Once there is a rational
relationship, an executive decision of the kind with which we are
here concerned is constitutional.”
[74]
AA
para 132 p 10-
[75]
Albutt
v Centre fbr the Study of Violence and Reconciliation 2010 (3) SA
293 (CC),
[76]
FA,
para 103, p 02-45.
sino noindex
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