Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 556South Africa
Educor Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Director-General of Higher Education and Another (043233/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 556 (20 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Educor Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Director-General of Higher Education and Another (043233/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 556 (20 May 2024)
Educor Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Director-General of Higher Education and Another (043233/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 556 (20 May 2024)
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sino date 20 May 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
043233/2024
DOH:
08 MAY 2024
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES /
NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE:
20/5/2024
In
the matter between:
EDUCOR
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
FIRST APPLICANT
CITY
VARSITY (PTY)
LTD
SECOND APPLICANT
DAMELIN
(PTY)
LTD
THIRD APPLICANT
ICESA
CITY CAMPUS (PTY) LTD
FOURTH APPLICANT
LYCEUM
COLLEGE (PTY) LTD
FIFTH APPLICANT
and
DIRECTOR-GENERAL
OF HIGHER EDUCATION
FIRST
RESPONDENT
(DR N SISHI)
MINISTER OF HIGHER
EDUCATION AND
SECOND RESPONDENT
TRAINING SCIENCE AND
INNOVATION
(DR B E NZIMANDE)
This
Judgment was handed down electronically and by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by way of email and
shall be
uploaded on caselines. The date for hand down is deemed to be on 20
May 2024.
JUDGMENT
Mali J
[1]
On 8 May 2024 the applicants, the
first applicant being the sole shareholder of second to fifth
applicants who are Private Higher
Education Institutions
(Institutions) approached this court by way of urgency. The
applicants sought orders against the first respondent,
Director
General responsible for the Department of Higher Education (the
Department). There is no order sought against the second
respondent,
the Minister for the Department.
[2]
In Part A, they first seek an order that
the decision of the first respondent to remove the second to fifth
applicants from the
Register of Registered Private Higher Education
Institutions (the register), taken on about 17 March 2024, be
suspended with immediate
effect. Secondly, that the decision of the
first respondent to cancel registration of the second to fifth
Applicant published in
the Government Gazette Number 50311 on 22
March 2024 (in Notice No. 4528) and ostensibly signed on 26
July 2023
be
suspended with immediate effect
.
[3]
The third prayer is that the first
respondent should be interdicted from implementing the decisions
referred to above, pending the
outcome of the judicial review
application sought in Part B. Fourthly, that the first respondent
must be directed, within 24 hours
of the Order in Part A;
(a) Restore the names
of the Second to Fifth Applicants to the Register of Private Higher
Education Institutions as registered Institutions,
and to confirm to
the Applicants’ attorneys of record that he has done so;
(b) Publish a notice
in the Government Gazette to the effect that he has done so in
accordance with this Order; and
(c) To release an
official Press Statement in the daily and weekly print Media and on
social media, that he has done so in accordance
with this Order.
[4]
The applicants also seek cost order on Part
A against the first respondent
de bonis
propriis
with ancillary orders and
seeks further and/or other alternative relief as may be deemed by the
court. In paragraph B, the applicants
seek an order declaring the
first respondent’s notice in the Government Gazette on March
2024 (Notice Number 4528) in terms
of which he removed the second to
fifth applicants from the register, as registered Private Higher
Education Institutions, and
his decision to remove these applicants
from the Register of Private Higher Education Institutions, are
unlawful and unconstitutional.
[5]
The applicants state that the application
is based on the principle of legality because the first respondent’s
decision has
not been taken lawfully. In essence the applicants
seek to suspend and interdict the implementation of the
above-mentioned
decision.
BACKGROUND
[6]
It is common cause that the institutions
failed to submit their 2021 Annual Report Forms on 30 April 2022
despite being granted
extension by the Department to 30 June 2022.
Again, on 23 November 2022 the Department issued an A-Guide to the
Annual Report requiring
the institutions to submit the 2021 Annual
Report by 30 April 2023. They were granted further extension to 30
May 2023.
[7]
On 23 May 2023 the Department requested
further outstanding information,
inter
alia
Original Tax Clearance
Certificate; Record of Academic Achievement; Auditor’s Report
on student data and reporting student
data; Audit Programmes and
Occupation Health and Safety Audit Report. On 27 June 2023 the
first respondent issued the institutions
with a Notice of Intent to
Cancel Registration in terms of Section 57(2) (b) of the
Higher
Education Act, No. 101 of 1997
as amended (the Act) and
Regulation 27
(1) (i) (ii) of the Regulations for the Registration of Private
Higher Institutions 2016 (the Regulations).
[8]
On 3 July 2023 the Department disseminated
the notices of intent to cancel registrations to the institutions. On
10 July 2023 the
institutions submitted extensive representations to
the Department but without the requested information in the notice of
intent
to cancel registration. On 15 July 2023 the Deputy Director
General responsible for Universities in the Department issued the
institutions
with recommendations for cancellation of the
registration due to their failure to submit the requested
information. On 28 July
2023 the first respondent issued notice to
intention to cancel the registration of the institutions.
[9]
On 31 July 2023 the first respondent
informed the applicants that their registrations were cancelled from
the register and informed
the institutions that their registration
have been cancelled for failure to submit the following documents:
9.1. Auditor’s
report on student data and reporting of student data;
9.2.
Audit programmes;
9.3
SAQA report on programmes;
9.4.
Occupational health and safety audit report;
9.5.
Proof if maintenance of financial surety or guarantee;
9.6.
Annual Financial Statements for the financial years ending 2021 and
2022;
9.7.
Record of academic achievement;
9.8.
Sample copy of any enrolment and application form;
9.9.
Institutional prospectus, calendar, or brochure; and
9.10. Original tax
clearance certificate.
[10]
It is common cause that on 22 September
2023 the institutions requested extension to file appeals against the
decision to cancel
the registration of institutions to the second
respondent. They were granted two (2) extensions until February 2024
and a further
extension until 30 May 2024. Of significance is that on
17 March 2024 their names were removed from the register.
[11]
The
decisions were taken in terms of the Higher Education Act
[1]
(the Act) and Regulations for the Registrations of Private Higher
Education Institutions
[2]
(the
Regulations). The Act and the Regulations empower the first
respondent to register the higher education institutions
(the
institutions) and require the Department to keep a register of such
institutions. Section 62 of the Act provides that subject
to section
63, the first respondent may cancel an institution’s
registration. Section 63 provides that the first respondent
may not
cancel registration unless the notice of intention to cancel and the
reasons to do so are provided to an institution, and
any interested
persons an opportunity to make representations on the proposed
cancellation and consider such representations.
[12]
It is common cause that on 22 September
2023 the institutions requested extension to file appeals against the
decision to cancel
the registration of institutions to the second
respondent. They were granted two (2) extensions until February 2024
and a further
extension until 30 May 2024.
URGENCY
[13]
According to the applicants the matter is
urgent because it concerns the right of the institutions to maintain
their registrations
which are sanctioned by the Constitution. The
institutions will suffer irreparable harm were the matter to be heard
in the ordinary
course. The position of learners who have already
enrolled at the institutions is a factor that reinforces the need for
the matter
to be heard urgently. The applicants submit that the first
respondent kept on engaging them giving the applicant false hope.
[14]
The first respondent acted unlawful in
implementing the cancellation while the decision is under appeal. In
paragraph 4 of the founding
affidavit dealing with the removal of the
names the applicant’s averment is as follows:
“
However,
the First Respondent appears to have taken the third decision,
notwithstanding that the first two decisions are a subject
matter of
an appeal to the Second Respondent who is considering the appeal.”
[15]
The argument pertaining
to this averment is that the first respondent could have waited for
the prosecution of appeals. Accordingly,
the first respondent’s
removal of the names whilst the decision to cancel is under appeal is
unlawful and violated the institution’s
right to just
administrative action. Thus, the institutions are entitled to the
interim relief they seek in Part A.
[16]
Further, that the removal of the institutions from the Register is a
separate administrative
action, it could only be taken legitimately
after the issuing of notice to be heard to the institutions. Thus,
the first respondent’s
failure to give the institutions notice
before removing the names from the register, has trampled the
constitutional right of the
institutions, prescribed in section 29
(3) of the Constitution.
[17]
Section 29 (3) provides that:
“
Everyone
has the right to establish and maintain, at their own expense,
independent educational institutions that—
(a) do not
discriminate on the basis of race;
(b) are registered
with the state; and
(c) maintain standards
that are not inferior to standards at comparable public educational
institutions.”
[18]
The first issue on urgency is whether, based on the
attack founded on legality, the
matter must be considered as urgent.
In Apleni v The President of the Republic of South Africa and
another
[3]
it
is held:
“…
Where
allegations are made relating to abuse of power by a Minister or
other public officials, which may impact upon the Rule of
Law, and
may have a detrimental impact upon the public purse, the relevant
relief sought ought normally to be urgently considered.”
[19]
The mere allegation pertaining to the detrimental impact on the Rule
of Law does not render the application
urgent. Factual enquiry
is required in order to establish the abuse/unlawfulness and its
attendant impact on the Rule of
Law. In the present the decision that
triggered the alleged urgency was taken on 17 March 2024 (removal
decision). It has been
preceded by the implemented decision which was
taken on 31 July 2023. The applicants did not challenge the said
decision neither
on urgency nor in the ordinary course. The effect of
the said decisions was the cancellation of names registration of the
institutions,
what followed on 17 March 2024 can simply be viewed as
a further procedural step perfecting the decision of 31 July 2023. On
its
own it has no practical effect, and the court would be inclined
to agree with the first respondent that the only effect is for the
institutions to hold out to the public, they are operating normally
as if duly compliant with the Act.
[20]
The court’s
prima facie
view is that what is being
sought based on legality is intertwined with the decisions taken on
31 July 2023. In the light of no
challenge being made prior to the 31
July 2023 on the same principle of legality the court is not inclined
to agree that there
can be an issue of legality on the latter
decision unless that would be shown to exist during the proceedings
in PART B. Furthermore,
having regard to what the court has said
about the practical effect, the current challenge is found to be
wanting on the aspects
of urgency for the same reason that the
decision of 31 July 2023 was never challenged, not timeously and not
at all.
[21]
Flowing from the above, urgency in pronouncing whether lodging
of appeals against the decision to
cancel registration has the effect
of staying the decision of 31 July 2023 (decision to cancel) will not
be competent for determination
in this court. The issue of appeals is
directly linked with the second prayer and will have the effect of
granting the order in
the second prayer when this court has already
found that the applicant did not challenge the decisions of 31 July
2023 and only
lodged appeals on 11 and 12 April 2024 after the second
decision has been taken.
[22]
Having said that I do not discount the fact that the institutions
were granted extensions to
lodge appeals on cancellation by the first
respondent. The first respondent’s submission is that the
extensions granted resulting
in keeping the names in the register was
done in good faith same has not been returned by the applicants.
The Act places responsibility on the first
respondent to do what is right and reasonable.
[23]
Furthermore, the question is whether the application meets the
requirement of Rule 6 (12) of
the Uniform Rules which provides as
follows:
“
(12)
(a) In urgent applications the court or a judge may dispense with the
forms and service provided for in these Rules and may
dispose of such
matter at such time and place and in such manner and in accordance
with such procedure (which shall as far as practicable
be in terms of
these Rules) as to it seems meet.
(b) In every affidavit
or petition filed in support of any application under paragraph (a)
of this subrule, the applicant shall
set forth explicitly the
circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent and the reasons
why he claims that he could not
be afforded substantial redress at a
hearing in due course.
(c) A person against
whom an order was granted in his absence in an urgent application may
by notice set down the matter for reconsideration
of the order.”
[24]
In East Rock Trading 7 (PTY) LTD and another v
Eagle Valley Granite (PTY) LTD and others
[4]
the
court held:
‘“
The
correct and the crucial test is whether, if the matter were to follow
its normal course as laid down by the rules, an Applicant
will be
afforded substantial redress. If he cannot be afforded substantial
redress at the hearing in due course, then the matter
qualifies to be
enrolled and heard as an urgent application.”
[25]
Regarding the substantial redress the applicants did not submit why
they cannot be afforded substantial
redress in the ordinary course.
They simply say, “institutions will suffer irreparable harm”.
The case of the applicants
is also made on the suffering of the
learners who are currently enrolled for the 2024 academic year. It is
common cause that the
affected learners have been given time until
the end of the academic year. They are not affected by the decisions
challenged. In
conclusion the application is not urgent, in the
result I grant the following order;
ORDER
1.
The application is struck from the roll
with costs because of lack of urgency.
2.
Costs include costs of two counsel.
N P MALI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
For
the applicant:
Adv.
Soni SC
Instructed
by:
RW,
Pretoria
nepaul@anand-nepaul.co.za
faathimaa@rwattorneys.co.za
For
the respondents:
Adv.
H Rajah (Ms) with Adv. L Brighton (Ms)
Instructed
by:
The
State Attorney
NkaMabasa@justice.gov.za
[1]
Act
101 of 1997.
[2]
Above
(1)
[3]
(65757/2017)
[2017] ZAGPPHC 656; [2018] 1 All SA 728 (GP).
[4]
Case
Number 11/33767 South Gauteng High Court Johannesburg para 9
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