Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 431South Africa
Surrogacy Advisory Group NPC v Minister of Health (038988/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 431 (7 May 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 May 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Surrogacy Advisory Group NPC v Minister of Health (038988/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 431 (7 May 2024)
Surrogacy Advisory Group NPC v Minister of Health (038988/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 431 (7 May 2024)
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Locus standi – Public interest –
Seeking
to declare regulations relating to artificial fertilisation of
persons unconstitutional – Non-joinder of Minister
of Social
Development as an interested and affected party – Applicant
failed to demonstrate personal and direct interest
as acting in
public’s interest in challenge of impugned rule –
Founding papers are ill equipped to deal with
challenge –
Application dismissed – Uniform Rule 16A –
Constitution, s 38.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No:
038988/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE:
07 MAY 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
SURROGACY
ADVISORY GROUP NPC
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF HEALTH
Respondent
This
judgment is prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected as such, 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 May 2024.
JUDGMENT
RETIEF
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant, the
Surrogacy Advisory Group NPC [Surrogacy Group] raises this
application in the public interest in terms of section
38(d) of the
Constitution of South Africa [Constitution].
[1]
In so doing, the Surrogacy Group seeks to declare regulation 10(2)(a)
of the Regulations relating to artificial fertilisation of
persons
[the regulations]
[2]
of the
National Health Act 61 of 2003
[the Health Act] unconstitutional. In
its relief the Surrogacy Group suggests a remedy of the reading in of
certain words into
regulation 10(2)(a) [the impugned provision].
[2]
The Minister cited, is the Minister responsible for the Health Act
and
who, in terms of section 68 is empowered to make regulations, in
particular in terms of section 68(1)(l) dealing with the artificial
fertilisation of persons. The impugned provision forming part of the
regulations, the subject matter of this application. The Minister
opposes the application.
[3]
To contextualise the
impugned provision is important at this stage. It appears under
regulation 10 which deals with the control
over artificial
fertilisation, embryo transfer, storage and destroying zygotes and
embryos. Regulation 10(2) is specifically aimed
at medical
practitioners specialising in gynaecology with training in
reproductive medicine, medical scientist, medical and clinical
technologists with training in reproductive biology and related
procedures
[3]
[medical
practitioners]. Subsection 2(a) places a prohibition of control over
artificial fertilisation on such medical practitioners
and the
relevant portion states that:
“
10(2)(a)
A
competent person
shall
not
(own
emphasis) effect in vitro fertilisation except for embryo transfer,
to a
specific
recipient
(own
emphasis)and then only by the union of gametes removed or withdrawn
from the bodies of-“
[4]
The Surrogacy Group in its founding papers contends that “
This
application concerns IVF for intended parents who are considering
surrogacy, but before the court has confirmed their surrogate
motherhood agreement.”
This
contention appears to be at odds with the concerns raised in the
papers as a whole in that, the founding papers suggest that
the
concern is unrelated to the process of IVF nor for that matter, the
ability for a pregnancy infertile intended parents to elect
IVF in
surrogacy, as the process and the right to elect remains extant. The
concern is aptly found in paragraph 33 of the founding
papers in
which the Surrogacy Group states that it is: “
A
time co-ordination problem between two scarce resources- a suitable
egg donor and a surrogate mother- can be solved by creating
embryo’s
and cryopreserving them for later use
.”
The concern firstly, is that the impugned provision is not a solution
for the time co-ordination problem.
[5]
The use of the phrase
“-
them
for later use
”
in
paragraph 33 suggests that the time co-ordination concern is not
confined to “-
before
the court has confirmed the surrogate motherhood agreement
“
either, but in
fact, to a time even before a voluntary surrogate mother has been
found, before a surrogate motherhood agreement
[4]
has been concluded and before intended parents become commissioning
parents.
[5]
The concern
secondly, is that the impugned provision confines the time when the
process of IVF can take place, namely when there
is a “specific
recipient”.
[6]
The use of the term by the Surrogacy Group of “
commissioning
parents
”
in its papers in fact is reference to intended parents and not
“
commissioning
parents”
as defined in the
Children’s
Act
38 of 2005 [the Children’s Act]. Counsel for the Surrogacy
Group conceded the error pointed out to him and asked this
Court to
make the correct distinction. This was considered and done without
opposition from the Minister.
[7]
The actual concern of the timing co-ordination issue and what
presently
happens in practice was confirmed by the evidence of
Ms
Els-Smit, a medical biological scientist, medical practitioner in the
fertility field, [Ms Els-Smit]
when
she stated that: “
To
solve the timing issue, embryo freezing would be a preferred route of
treatment
”.
She further states at paragraph 60: “
It
is actually not uncommon for commissioning parents in a surrogate
motherhood agreement confirmation application to already
cryopreserved
embryos stored at their fertility clinic”.
This
is before a gestational surrogate has been identified.
[8]
This would explain why
the Surrogacy Group confirmed that the trigger for the challenge was
the interpretation given to the impugned
provision in
Ex
Parte
MCM
[6]
[MCM matter] by Van Der Schyff J [the perceived narrow
interpretation]. The applicants in the MCM matter sought declaratory
relief
in respect of section 303(1) of the Children’s Act. The
interplay between section 303(1) of the Children’s Act and the
Health Act regards the prohibition of certain acts by any person
including a medical practitioner. For present purposes what Van
Der
Schyff J stated about the legislative interplay regarding the
surrogacy journey is of importance:
“
[30]
The interaction between the
National Health Act and
the Children’s
Act, as far as assisted reproduction by way of gestational surrogacy
is concerned where no embryos were created
in the period before it
became apparent that the woman
concerned
would not be able to carry a foetus to full term pregnancy, is that a
surrogate motherhood agreement
needs
first be confirmed by the court, before in vitro fertilisation
can commence
.
Once the surrogate motherhood agreement is confirmed, the surrogate
mother is identified and she will be included within the definition
of recipient and more importantly, within the phrase ‘specific
recipient’ as it appears in
regulation 10(2)(a).
”
(own emphasis)
[9]
And further at paragraph 33:
“
[33]
…
The
Regulations Relating to the Artificial Fertilisation of Persons, as
it currently stands, prohibit in vitro fertilisation except
for
embryo transfer to a specific recipient.
In
the absence of a constitutional challenge to the Regulations
with
interested and affected parties joined
to
the proceedings, the application stands to be dismissed
.”
(own emphasis)
[10]
The Surrogacy Group contends that as a result of the
Ex
Parte
MCM
,
judgment the present constitutional challenge to the impugned
provision “
is
the only way for the applicants in
Ex
Parte MCM
and all
persons similarly situated to obtain relief
”.
The Surrogacy Group contending that the interpretation of the
impugned provision infringes on 5(five) rights in the Bill
of Rights,
equality, section 9(1), non-discrimination which is (section 9(4)),
dignity (section 10), privacy (section 14) and access
to healthcare
services (section 27(1)(a)) of the Constitution [infringed rights].
The Surrogacy Group contends further that the
infringed rights as
identified cannot be justified by a section 36 limitation analysis.
[11]
The Surrogacy Group persists with this contention even though, the
applicants in the MCM
matter do not form part of these papers nor is
it apparent from the papers that they have instructed the Surrogacy
Group to challenge
the impugned provision on their behalf to obtain
relief.
[12]
Furthermore, the apparent lack joining of all persons in a similar
situation as the MCM
applicants as interested parties or who support
this challenge in the public interest, is one of the in
limine
points raised by the Minister. It is therefore opportune to deal with
the in
limine
points
first. Although the Minister raised 5 (five) in
limine
points, this Court is only now enjoined to consider 2 (two) as
required in terms of the joint minutes and confirmed in argument.
The
Counsel for the Minister pointing out that in the event the Court
finds in favour of the Minister it will be dispositive of
the
application without necessitating traversing the merits. This Court
then deals with such points on that basis.
POINTS
IN
LIMINE
Should
the Surrogacy Group have joined the Minister of Social Development as
an interested and affected party
?
[13]
The legal framework which regulates and encapsulates the entire
regularity journey for
intended parents is the Health Act and the
Children’s Act. The legal framework appears to be drafted in
such a way as to
ensure that there is harmony between the rights and
obligations of the healthcare providers, the healthcare users and the
unborn
children born as a result of this journey.
[14]
The connective statutory
provision between the Health and Children’s Act is section
296(2) of the Children’s Act. This
section states “
Any
artificial fertilization of a surrogate mother in the execution of an
agreement contemplated in this Act must be done in accordance
with
the provisions of the National Health Act, 2003 (Act 61 of 2003)”.
Applying
the meaning attributed to artificial fertilisation of a surrogate
mother referred to in section 296(2) by the Children’s
Act is
to refer to the means by which a male gamete can be introduced into
the surrogate’s reproductive organs other than
by natural
means, copulation. Such means, an inclusive definition, is not
limited to the introduction of a male gamete but includes
the
introduction of a product into the surrogate’s reproductive
organs. Such products created by the bringing
together of
gametes
outside
the human body,
with
the view of placing
the
product, in this case an embryo into the internal reproductive organ
of a surrogate
[7]
or by
placing
the embryo into the
internal reproductive organ of a surrogate. In consequence, the
definition envisages the proses of IVF with
a view of placing or the
actual placing of the embryo into the womb of a surrogate. Such
entire process to be conducted in accordance
with the Health Act.
[15]
The inescapable consequence is that no matter how one
interprets the definition of
‘artificial fertilisation’
in the Children’s Act, it makes provision for the process of
IVF and in terms of section
296(2), it must be done in accordance
with the Health Act. Furthermore, the intended parents referred to in
this application who
will elect IVF to create embryos have no option
but to choose surrogacy as a means to fulfil their fertility journey.
The connectivity
inevitable.
[16]
Not only are the two pieces of legislation connected by the statutory
provision of section
296(2) but by the inevitable consequence of the
intended parents’ choice then too. The outcome of the impugned
provision
challenge will have a direct and substantial effect on the
harmony between the Health and Children’s Acts. To prevent a
piecemeal
approach is to promote harmony in the entire process for
all healthcare users and healthcare providers.
[17]
The Surrogacy Group’s argument is that because the Children’s
Act does not
contain any provision that mirrors the impugned
provision in particular, that the term ‘specific recipient’
referred
to in the impugned provision is not mentioned in the
Children’s Act there exists no need to consider the connect or
disconnect
between the two pieces of legislation. This argument is
illogical. Logically, reference to a surrogate in the Children’s
Act refers to a person who has already volunteered to be the
recipient of the IVF process, such is the ‘specific recipient’
by any other name and, illogical because the definition of a
surrogate in the Health Act is a voluntary recipient. This, on the
face of it, appears to be specific enough by reference although not
by the same term.
[18]
The
Surrogacy Group conversely and notwithstanding the warning in the
judgment of the MCM matter
[8]
failed to join all let alone any other interested and affected
parties other than the Minister. The Minister argues that the
Minister
of Social Development who is responsible for Social
Development referred to in the Children’s Act must be joined
for comment
having a substantial interest in the outcome. The
Minister correctly raises the non-joinder of such Minister. The
consequence is
that the Minister of Social Development must be joined
and such failure should be the end of the matter however, there
is
a need to address the remaining point
raised
and
relied on.
[19]
The necessity therein lies to demonstrate and reinforce the
importance of statutory harmony
of the entire legislative framework
concerning surrogacy, if not, the devastating effects of confusion
and disturbance remains
unillustrated. This Court will do so by
considering the Minister’s last point in
limine
,
being that the Surrogacy Group lacks standing to bring this
application.
Who
is the Surrogacy Group and did they bring this application in the
public interest
?
[20]
To appreciate the manner in which the Surrogacy Group brought this
application, the manner
in which their founding papers were drafted
and their complacency to comply with rule 16A is to appreciate the
history that existed
between the Surrogacy Group and the Minister
regarding the regulations
per
se
.
[21]
In short, the Minister on
25
March 2021
published
a proposed amendment to the regulations [draft
regulations].
At the time the Surrogacy Group had been embroiled in litigation with
the Minister in a constitutional challenge it
brought against other
provision of the regulations in this Court, the
Surrogacy
Advisory Group v Minister of Health
[2020
matter].
[9]
[22]
The
proposed draft regulations did not contain the impugned provision. To
date, the regulations have not been amended and the impugned
provision in its unamended form stands to be applied. From the
Surrogacy Groups’ papers and in particular from the evidence
provided by both Ms Albertyn, an entrepreneur and co-founder of
Nurture Egg Donors CC, and Ms Els-Smit, the IVF process for
intended
parents in the surrogacy process is being performed by medical
practitioners without a known gestational surrogate. This
is contrary
to the impugned provision and in consequence unlawful. The
unlawfulness not apparent to the medical practitioners according
to
the Surrogacy Group until this Court’s narrow interpretation of
the impugned provision in the judgment of the MCM matter.
[23]
The
background history explains the cavalier approach to this
constitutional challenge, the Surrogacy Group hoping that the
Minister
would not oppose this application. This speaks to why they
felt it necessary to highlight what they termed “
the
Minister’s about-face
”
and why the Surrogacy Group, as a voluntary association approached
this Court in 2020 challenging the regulations.
[24]
Initially the Surrogacy
Group brought this application in the name of the Surrogacy Advisory
Group, a voluntary association of medical-legal
lawyers and
individuals experienced in the field of infertility and surrogacy. As
a voluntary association its chief advisor and
duly appointed attorney
Robynne Friedman of Robynne Friedman Attorneys [Friedman] stated that
the Surrogacy Group, as a voluntary
association had previously
litigated in the public interest pursuant to section 38(d) of the
Constitution. The matters cited were
AB
and another v Minister of Social Development
[AB
matter]
[10]
and the 2020
matter.
[25]
Questioning who the Surrogacy Group factually was before this Court,
absent its constitution
and a list of members, the Minister,
inter
alia
,
challenged
the
Surrogacy Group’s standing to,
inter
alia
,
bring this application in terms of section 38(d) of the Constitution
in the public interest. Without privy to its constitution,
the
associations common objective unclear and an inability to assess
whether Ms Albertyn, as its founder, possessed the requisite
authority to bind all the members of the association by resolution as
she did on the papers, was not possible. A constitution of
a
voluntary association, absent the necessary allegations in its
founding papers, is the only way to establish whether the association
itself possesses legal personality of its own as a
universitas
,
cloaked with the necessary legal capacity. An important enquiry.
[26]
This
‘call’ by the Minister in its answering affidavit stirred
up a hornet’s nest. No constitution was forthcoming
but rather
a notice of amendment in terms of rule 28(2) followed by the filing
of a supplementary founding affidavit by Friedman
as an attorney and
the chief advisor of the Surrogacy Group.
[27]
The
nub of the supplementary founding affidavit was to confirm the
factual position. The position was, as at the date of launching
this
application in the public interest, the Surrogacy Group, as a
voluntary association did not exist. In fact, it did not exist
when
it launched the 2020 matter either. This fact was not brought to the
Minister’s nor Court’s attention in the 2020
at that
relevant time. Friedman in her supplementary founding affidavit
failed to deal with the glaring consequences. She merely
explains how
it came about that the incorrect citation of the Surrogacy Group
occurred by stating that:
“
6.
In subsequent litigation,
my
legal representatives
(own emphasis)
used
the citation of the Surrogacy Advisory Group in the founding papers
filed in the AB and Another v Minister of Social Development
as a
template, not knowing that the Surrogacy Advisory Group had since
been registered as a non-profit company.”
[28]
However,
from the papers and in this application she is the legal
representative and her own firm the duly appointed attorneys of
record. The filing notices indicates that Friedman’s firm is
the Surrogacy Group’s attorneys and that Gouse Van Aarde
attorneys are the correspondent attorneys. In the premise, to which
legal representatives of her own does she refer? The answer
is
unclear and remains a mystery. No confirmatory affidavit by any other
attorney is attached to clear this glaring factual inaccuracy
up.
[29]
Be
that as it may, Friedman now states that the factual position is that
the
Surrogacy Group was subsequently registered as Surrogacy Advisory
Group NPC (registration number 2014/163958/08) as far back
as 21
August 2014, almost a decade ago. Of significance is that a voluntary
association is recognised in common law and is not
regulated by the
provisions of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
[Companies Act]. Therefore
one simply does not convert and association into a non-profit company
nor can it simply undergo a name
change. A new legal entity must be
registered in terms of the
Companies Act with
its own Memorandum of
Incorporation [MOI] as a non-profit company. One then accepts,
although not demonstrated on the papers, that
the members of the
voluntary association elected not to continue with the association,
it then ceased to exist. The registration
of a new legal entity,
albeit with the same name with its own objectives it elects ,is
formed. The new entity now possesses
legal personality by
virtue of its registration in terms of the
Companies Act.
[30
]
The citation error of the voluntary association instead of a
non-profit company was referred
to as a misnomer occasioned by a
bona
fide
error by Friedman’s legal representatives which she as the
chief advisor only picked up when the Minister raised the Surrogacy
Group’s standing and required a copy of its constitution. In an
attempt to correct the error, and amend the founding papers,
Friedman
stated:
“
10.
The
correct citation of the applicant is accordingly as follows: the
applicant is the
SURROGACY
ADVISORY GROUP NPC
,
an entity initially established as a voluntary association as set out
in paragraph 5 of the founding affidavit, and registered
as a
non-profit company on the 21
st
of
August 2014 with registration number 2014/163958/08 with offices
situated at 2[...] B[...] Road, Belvedere Estate, Durbanville,
7550.”
[31]
The
error simply being as a misnomer
[11]
as described is not supported in law as previously dealt with, albeit
as a result of a
bona
fide
error.
The veracity and accuracy of Friedman’s explanation for the
oversight is rejected. However, the factual situation that
the
Surrogacy Group is a non-profit company is accepted. The Minister did
not object to the proposed amendment when filed
but
argued that Friedman’s actions as a legal practitioner and with
insight into the Surrogacy Group and as a director and
its chief
advisor could never have made an
bona
fide
error
of this magnitude for a decade, since 2014. This is having regard to
the 2020 matter too.
[32]
Now
applying the amendment to the evidence as advanced by Friedman in
paragraph 10 of the supplementary founding papers is to correct
the
citation of the Surrogacy Group. The citation of the Surrogacy Group
is found in paragraph 5 of the founding papers. If that
is applied
and replaced, the Surrogacy Group as cited is no longer a group of
medical-legal lawyers and individuals experienced
in the field of
fertility and surrogacy protecting and promoting the interests of
women considering surrogacy and persons considering
becoming parents
through surrogacy. The unamended citation is one sentence duly
replaced by another. Although amended pages to
the affidavit appear
to have been filed, blank amended pages were filed onto caselines and
blank amended pages were also inserted
in the Court’s bundle.
This Court then accepts and comments on what has been filed.
[33]
Therefore,
on the papers filed, the facts relied on in the next paragraph,
paragraph 6, which the Surrogacy Group relies on to bolster
its
interest in public interest litigation by referring to other matters
does not apply to the duly amended Surrogacy Group. This
is because
factually the non-profit company has never been cited in any of the
matters relied on. That being the AB matter nor
the 2020 matter.
[34]
The
consequence of an amendment sought and brought in a piecemeal fashion
results in a disconnect between the perceived objectives
of the
Surrogacy Group and what is accepted as the evidence as a whole. The
entire ‘evidence framework’ is disjointed
and causes an
unsatisfactory outcome. A point this Court wishes to make having
regard to the consequences of a constitutional challenge
effecting
the entire legal framework concerning surrogacy.
[35]
To
assist the Surrogacy Group, and again, absent its Memorandum of
Incorporation [MOI] which the Minister contends it called for
on
5 June 2023,
the
Court considers the content of the only document filed, the
registration certificate. Unfortunately, under its main business/main
objective no objectives are listed, it merely inserts a: “
NO
RESTRICTION ON BUSINESS ACTIVITIES
”.
This Court accepts that the directors, Friedman, Ms Albertyn and Ms
KL Lazarus are fully aware of the non-descriptive and
non-restrictive
business activities of the Surrogacy Group.
[36]
In reply, the objectives are not pertinently verified but, Friedman
in paragraph 11, when
addressing the Minister’s turnabout after
the 2020 matter, not to “-
make
the 2021 draft regulations into law-
”
states: “
Accordingly,
the applicant could simply not wait.
We
had to act
(own
emphasis) - aligned with the objective of the applicant to protect
and promote the interests and rights of surrogacy commissioning
parents - to challenge the impugned provision in court.”
[37]
With reference to “
We
had to act”,
the
Minister persists that it is unable to verify whether the public
interest application is properly authorised now by the ‘We-“
Surrogacy Group as a non-profit organisation with reference to
annexure “RF1”, the resolution. The Ministers further
contends that it therefore cannot authenticate whether the Surrogacy
Group is properly before the Court and whether the objectives
of the
now cited Surrogacy Group is to launch this application acting in the
public interest, as claimed.
[38]
“RF1” is a resolution signed on 14 October 2022 by Ms
Albertyn in her capacity
as the founder of the Surrogacy Group as a
voluntary association. Subsequent to the effected amendment and,
absent any further
resolution by the directors that such an
application is to be brought and in the manner it has been brought,
the Ministers persistence
is well-founded. Both Friedman and Ms
Albertyn are silent about the factual inaccuracies and consequences
of “RF1”.
The meeting of the Surrogacy Group as a
voluntary association could not have taken place in October 2022 on
the facts as asserted
and relied on.”RF1” still on the
papers.
[39]
Again, an illustration of the consequences of amendments causing
disjoint and disconnect
with any of the perceived objectives of the
Surrogacy Group, as no decision or document expressing a direct
interest is pursuing
a public interest challenge is before this
Court. There are more questions than answers about how the Surrogacy
Group conducts
litigation.
[40]
Furthermore, no direct interest either is voiced through the
Surrogacy Group as the
applicant by members of the public in whose
interest this application is brought to support their allegations.
Neither is this
application supported by affidavits from any intended
parent/s who subjectively express the untenable predicament they face
or
untenable position they are in as a direct result of the impugned
provision nor for that matter, a supporting affidavit from any
one of
the applicants in the MCM matter. Their own disgruntlement did not
appear to trigger this application. The only affidavits
relied on by
the Surrogacy Group is opinion evidence. Opinion evidence which this
Court is entitled to reject or to rely on depending
on the content
and its usefulness in the deliberation of the matter.
[41]
Section 38 of the Constitution states that anyone who is listed in
the section has a 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. Section 38(d) permits anyone acting in the public interest to
approach
the Court.
[42]
Section 38(d)(d) which
refers to public interest standing is in addition to those provisions
that allow for actions to be instituted
on behalf of other persons or
on behalf of a class. Yacoob J, in the
Lawyers
for Human Rights v The Minister of Home Affairs
[12]
expanded by stating
that: “
Subsection
(d) therefore connotes an action on behalf of people on the basis
wider than the class actions contemplated in the section.
The meaning
and reaching of the standing conferred by this paragraph must be
determined against this backdrop
.”
For this reason, Yacoob J referred to the judgment of O’Regan J
in
Ferreira
v Levin
[13]
in which the learned Judge advocated a particular approach to
determine the reach of the provisions in the interim Constitution
which were equivalent to section 38(d) of the Constitution as well as
whether a person or organization could be said to have been
acting in
the public interest in a particular case. In that regard Yacoob J
stated:
“
This court will
be circumspect in affording applicants standing by way of section
7(4)(b)(v) and will require an applicant to show
that
he
or she is genuinely acting in the public interest
(own
emphasis). Factors relevant to determining whether a person is
genuinely acting in the public interest will include considerations
such as: whether there is another reasonable and effective manner in
which the challenge can be brought; the nature of the relief
sought,
and the extent to which it is of general and prospective application;
and the range of persons or groups who may be directly
or indirectly
affected by any order made by the Court and the opportunity that
those persons or groups have had to present evidence
and argument to
the Court. These factors will need to be considered in the light of
the facts and circumstances of each case
.”
[43]
The standing provision of the interim Constitution is for all
practical purposes according
to Yacoob J the same as section 38 of
the Constitution and the approach applied by O’Regan J,
although in the minority decision,
was not rejected as factors and/or
criteria by the majority. What is however clear is that a court must
consider whether a party
is genuinely acting in the public interest,
that the factors are not exhaustive and to be applied case by case ,
be case specific.
[44]
This case, specifically for all the reasons dealt with above,
including applying the factors
referred to in argument, written and
otherwise (the relief and paragraphs 48-49 of the founding papers)
lacks sufficient evidence
to justify the outcome that the Surrogacy
Group as a NPC is bringing this application genuinely acting in the
public interest.
[45]
It is on this procedural precondition, that the Minister contends the
Surrogacy Group has
failed to demonstrate a personal and a direct
interest as acting in the public’s interest in the challenge of
the impugned
rule, which is correct. The lack of standing argument
for all the reasons alluded to must succeed.
[46]
As
stated, in the context of the multicentric legislation which forms an
interrelated and independent legislative framework regulating
surrogacy, t
he
non-joinder point too, must succeed. The Surrogacy Group’s
founding papers are ill equipped to deal with the challenge,
such
position cannot nor should not be remedied by their replying
affidavit. Simply, for the lack of the Minister’s ability
to
deal with further allegations. Notwithstanding the Surrogacy Group’s
replying affidavit, does not take the veracity of
the points
in
limine
raised
any further. The application fails on the points raised
in
limine
.
[47]
There is therefore no need to deal with the merits of the
constitutional challenge itself.
Costs
[48]
The Minister argued that
the Biowatch principle
[14]
should not apply in this matter even though the subject matter of the
application is clearly centred around a constitutional challenge
of
the impugned provision. Its Counsel argued that if one had regard to
the chronology of the matter, in other words what had transpired
in
the matter after the founding papers had been filed. In this regard
he referred to the warning the Minister gave to the Surrogacy
Group
to file its rule 16A notice [the notice].
[49]
The application was filed on the time 27 October 2022. According to
an affidavit deposed
to by Ms M Van Aarde, [Van Aarde] an attorney in
the employ of the Surrogacy Group’s correspondent attorney. Van
Aarde was
not prepared to state under oath when the notice was handed
to the registrar in compliance of rule 16A(1)(a) however, in terms of
rule 16A(1)(c) the registrar shall on receipt and forthwith place the
notice on the board designated for that purpose. Van Aarde
under oath
states that such notice was placed on the notice board by the
registrar on 3 April 2023 and stamped on the same date.
No
allegations or complaint of the registrar’s non-compliance of
rule 16A(1)(c) was evident. In consequence non-compliance
of the rule
16A notice persisted for 5 (five) months without any proper
explanation from Van Aarde nor Friedman.
[50]
The Minister’s Counsel highlighted the conduct of the Surrogacy
Group by not bringing
this application by an entity which legally
existed at the time and the fact that its conduct in the 2020 remains
unexplained,
all such conduct unbecoming deserving of sanction. The
Minister he contended, acted in good faith by raising the points i
n
limine
on the papers as they stood. Counsel for the Surrogacy Group argued
that Friedman apologised and that the mistake was
bona
fide
.
Even so, the legal consequences and disjoint that flowed cannot be
eradicated by an apology and remains a factor.
[51]
In contrast argued Counsel for the Surrogacy Group that it was the
Minister who in July
indicated to Van Aarde that it anticipated that
the draft regulations process, the internal analysis of comments
received and consultations
with civil societies, would be completed
by December 2021. By November 2022 the process had not been completed
and Van Aarde in
a letter to the Minister, after instituting these
proceedings, stated that there was no reason why the impugned
provision should
be kept in the final draft regulations and that
these proceedings had been instituted due to the unfulfilled promises
made. She
furthermore suggested that, in line with the draft
regulations, the Minister should not oppose this application and
abide by the
judgment of this Court.
[52]
The Minister opposed the application in February 2023 and the
Surrogacy Group’s Counsel
argued that it is the Minister who
escalated the costs. Opposition does escalate the costs but in
hindsight had it not been for
the Minister this Court, like in 2020,
may have still have considered the Surrogacy Group was as a voluntary
association. Furthermore,
a delay in the process of the Minster to
finalise the draft regulations, does not translate into a
capitulation on the merits of
this application. To expand, all the
Minister stated in the letter of 2021 was that the process may be
completed by December 2021.
A completed process and the outcome from
comments and consultations unknown. It is presumptuous to accept that
the draft regulations
would be promulgated in the same form as
published. This is simply because what would the purpose be for
comment and consultation
if not for the possibility of changing the
published draft regulations in public interest, or for that matter,
an entire
turnabout face, to coin the phrase used in these papers
[53]
Considering all the relevant factors as too, the outcome of this
application, this Court
exercises its discretion not to apply the
Biowatch principle.
In
consequence, the following order follows:
1.
The Respondent is granted condonation for the late filing of
its
answering affidavit.
2.
The application is dismissed with the costs of two Counsel,
one a
Senior Counsel. Senior Counsel’s costs to be recovered and
taxed on scale C and junior Counsel’s costs to be
recovered and
taxed on scale B.
L.A.
RETIEF
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
Appearances
:
For
the Applicant:
Adv C
Woodrow SC
Cell:
082 921 9191
Email:
woodrow@advchambers.co.za
Adv D
Thaldar
Cell:
083 306 9099
Email:
donrich@thaldar.com
Instructed
by attorneys:
Roynne
Friedman Attorneys
c/o
Mareli van Aarde Incorporated
Tel:
012 430 6737
Email:
mareli@gvainc.co.za
For
the Respondent:
Adv A
Bhoopchand SC
Cell:
082 577 468
Email:
ajayb@africa.com
Adv M
Matlapeng
Cell:
060 775 8671
Email:
matlapengmichaelz@gmail.com
Instructed
by attorneys:
The
State Attorney, Pretoria
Nangamso
Qongqo
Tel:
072 277 1908
Email:
NaQongqo@justice.gov.za
Matter
heard:
11
March 2024
Date
of judgment
:
07
May
2024
[1]
Act 108 of 1996.
[2]
GNR 175 of 2 March 2012,
Government Gazette No.35099.
[3]
Definition of competent person
in terms of the Regulations Relating to Artificial Fertilisation
of
Persons in terms of the
National Health Act 61 of 2003
.
[4]
A term used and defined in the
Childrens Act 38 of 2005
to mean an agreement between a surrogate mother and a commissioning
parent.
[5]
A term used and defined in the
Childrens Act 38 of 2005
to mean a person who has entered into a
surrogate motherhood agreement with a surrogate. Implying already
entered.
[6]
Ex
parte
MCM
and Another
(28084/2022)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 712 (26 September 2022) at para 30-32.
[7]
The definition of artificial fertilisation
in the Children’s Act defining “artificial
fertilisation” means the introduction, by means other than
natural means, of a male gamete into the internal reproductive
organs of a female person for the purpose of human reproduction,
including –
(a)
the bringing together of a male and female gamete outside the human
body
with the view
to placing the product of a union of such
gametes into the womb of a female; or
(b)
the placing of the product of a union of a male and female gametes
which have been brought together outside
the human body in the womb
of a female person.
[8]
Footnote 6 at para 33.
[9]
[2022] ZAGPPHC 558 (19 July 2022).
[10]
[2016] ZACC 43
[11]
“Misnomer” as a noun
according to the Oxford dictionary means: “a name that
does
not suit what it refers to, or the use of such a name.”
[12]
[2004] ZACC 12.
[13]
[1995] ZACC 13
at par 234.
[14]
Biowatch Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others (CCT 80/08)
[2009] ZACC 14
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