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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 496
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## Koch and Kruger Brokers CC and Another v Financial Sector Conduct Authority and Others (48799/19)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 496 (30 May 2024)
Koch and Kruger Brokers CC and Another v Financial Sector Conduct Authority and Others (48799/19)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 496 (30 May 2024)
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sino date 30 May 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number: 48799/19
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 30/5/24
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
KOCH
AND KRUGER BROKERS
CC
First Applicant
DEON
KRUGER
Second Applicant
and
THE
FINANCIAL SECTOR CONDUCT AUTHORITY
First Respondent
THE
OMBUD FOR FINANCIAL SERVICES PROVIDERS
Second Respondent
HER LADYSHIP MRS
JUSTICE OF APPEAL;
YVONNE
MOKGORO
N.O
Third Respondent
THE
FINANCIAL SERVICES
TRIBUNAL
Fourth Respondent
GEORGE
BABEN
Fourth Respondent
LUCILLE
MIRIAM
BABEN
Fifth Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date
and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10:00 am on 30 May 2024.
Summary: Is a
determination of an ombudsman or a refusal to permit an appeal and or
reconsideration by the Chairperson of the Tribunal
an administrative
action within the contemplation of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act, 2000 (PAJA)? A determination
is regarded as a civil
judgment and is only challengeable by way of an appeal after leave to
do so has been granted. When the Chairperson
of the Tribunal refuses
permission to allow an appeal and or reconsideration, an exercise of
a statutory function of an investigative
nature is involved. Such an
exercise of a statutory function is impugnable through a legality
judicial review pathway. The applicant
having disavowed the legality
judicial review pathway ought to be non-suited. Held: (1) The
application for review is dismissed.
Held: (2) The applicant is to
pay the costs on a party and party scale B.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA J
Introduction
[1]
The present dispute has travelled the wrong
path all the way to the Constitutional Court only for the applicants
to be told that
they left the present application festering in the
High Court. Five years later, the applicants are back at the
departure station.
Not certain whether they are fatigued or
reinvigorated and ready to travel the same route again. It is again
unfortunate to have
observed that the applicants directed the bulk of
their case to a destination they never reached. It remains a promised
land for
them.
[2]
Simply put, the applicants are yearning for
a seat at the Tribunal for a reconsideration application. Yet they
argued a case before
me as if they are already at the Canaan land. At
the Tribunal, should they reach there someday, the applicants will be
able to
argue all the points they ever so fervently argued before me.
The two days of motion Court was consumed by what should be argued
at
the Tribunal should the gates of Canaan land be opened for them. It
remains the statutory function of the Tribunal to determine
issues
like causation and all related accoutrements as and when
reconsidering the determination of the Ombud. The role of this
Court,
based on the application launched by the applicants, is to first
determine whether, it is faced with administrative actions
within the
meaning of the legislation invoked by the applicants.
[3]
The exacting task of declaring an action to
be an administrative action remains that of a Court seized with an
application launched
in terms of section 6(1) of PAJA. Performing
that task, exacting as it is, paves a way for a Court to command
authority to adjudicate
an application launched in terms of section
6(1). Differently put, if the action concerned does not meet the
definitional requirements
of an administrative action, such an action
cannot be impugned using the judicial review powers contemplated in
section 6(1) of
PAJA. The present application agitates the question
whether (a) the process leading to the determination; (b) the
determination
issued by the second respondent, the Ombud for
Financial Service Providers (Ombud); or (c) a refusal to permit leave
to appeal
a determination amount to administrative actions or not.
Should all of these questions be answered in the negative,
cadit
quaesto
for both applicants before me.
[4]
These applicants had pinned their colours
to the mast. Thiers is a PAJA judicial review pathway and nothing
else. They have at the
tail end thrown interdictory reliefs in the
mix. The life of those reliefs is entirely dependent on the success
of the PAJA review.
It suffices to mention at this embryonic stage of
the judgment that in the present constitutional order there exists
two judicial
review pathways. Stemming deep from section 33(1) of the
Constitution arises the PAJA judicial review pathway. Also stemming
from
section 1(c) of the Constitution, arises the legality judicial
review pathway. PAJA judicial review pathway is available only for
administrative actions, whilst a legality judicial review pathway is
available for all exercise of public or statutory powers which
are
not administrative in nature.
Pertinent background
facts to the present application
[5]
It is common cause that the fifth and
sixth respondents (hereafter collectively referred to as the Babens)
entered into a mandate
agreement with Mr. Deon Kruger (Kruger) for
him to source a low to medium risk investment for them to invest in.
Mr Kruger is a
registered Financial Service Provider (FSP). In April
2008 and September 2009 respectively, the Babens invested a total of
R780 000.00
into Sharemax (the Villa) and Sharemax (Zambesi)
property syndication investments. This, they did after an engagement
with Mr Kruger
who had offered to invest their money in a public
property syndication scheme known as Sharemax. It later turned out to
the Babens
that the Sharemax investments were in fact high-risk
investments contrary to the mandate given to Mr Kruger to invest in
low-risk
investment. The Babens considered this to be a breach of
their mandate to Mr Kruger, which breach led to them being unable to
access
their invested funds and ultimately lost them.
[6]
Disenchanted by this alleged
breach, during December 2012, the Babens lodged a complaint with the
office of the Ombud. It became
common cause that indeed Sharemax was
a high risk investment. However, Mr Kruger contends that before the
Babens could decide to
invest in Sharemax, he provided them with the
prospectus which demonstrated that Sharemax was such a high risk
investment. Thus,
on Mr Kruger’s version, the Babens invested
with full knowledge of the risks attendant to the investments they
chose. It
was also common cause that the Reserve Bank of South
Africa, intervened and Sharemax ceased to repay all the investors
around September
2010. It further became common cause that before the
Reserve Bank “pulled the plug” as it were, the Babens
were receiving
their returns on investments. I pause to mention that
it was this fact that sent the parties into wonderland, since the
applicants
took a view that the damages ultimately suffered by the
Babens was caused by the pulling of the plug (
actus
novus intervenis
).
[7]
Upon receipt of the
complaint of the Babens, the Ombud was satisfied that the complaint
met the jurisdictional requirements outlined
in the enabling
legislation and proceeded to investigate it. Briefly, the procedure
followed by the Ombud to investigate the complaint
was to amongst
other things communicate in writing with the Babens and Mr Kruger. On
11 January 2013, the Ombud availed the complaint
to Mr Kruger as
required by the applicable Rules. On 8 February 2013, Mr Kruger
furnished his response to the complaint. On 20
February 2013, the
Babens replied to the response of Mr Kruger. It is common cause that
between 22 February 2013 up to and including
3 June 2016, certain
correspondence passed between the Ombud and the Babens to the
exclusion of Mr Kruger. To this a lamentation
of non-compliance with
the
audi
alteram partem
principle germinated. Ultimately, on 28 February 2018, the Ombud made
his recommendation on the solution to the complaint known
to the
parties.
[8]
As required by the
enabling legislation, Mr Kruger rejected the recommendation, which
was to repay the Babens the amount of R780 000,
and he furnished
his reasons why the recommendation was not acceptable to him. Mr
Kruger furnished his response to the recommendation
on 13 April 2018
and 10 May 2018 respectively. On 12 October 2018, as authorised by
the enabling legislation, the Ombud made a
final determination on the
complaint. Aggrieved by the determination, on 9 November 2018, Mr
Kruger exercised his statutory rights
to apply for leave to appeal
the determination. I pause to mention that it later became the same
Mr Kruger who bitterly complained
about what he termed an
institutional bias
.
On 20 November 2018, the Ombud refused to grant the application for
leave to appeal.
[9]
Chagrined thereby, on 19 December
2018, Mr Kruger escalated his anguish and sought permission to appeal
from the Chairperson of
the Financial Services Tribunal (FST). On 12
April 2019, the Chairperson refused to grant permission to appeal. On
or about 10
July 2021, Koch and Kruger CC launched the present
application. Given the view this Court takes in due course; it is
apposite to
regurgitate the prayers in the notice of motion which
remained unamended to the last day of the hearing of this
application. Those
are:
i
That the failure of the second respondent
to adopt a fair process in the investigation of the complaint lodged
by the fifth and
sixth respondent against the applicants be reviewed
and set aside;+
ii
That the failure of the second respondent
to identify each and every issue on which the second respondent
intended to make a finding
against the applicants during the course
of the investigation, leading to the second respondent’s
determination, be reviewed
and the whole process followed by the
second respondent be set aside;
iii
That the failure by the second respondent
to investigate the matter and establish acceptable evidence,
including expert evidence/opinion
as to the requirements of a
reasonable financial service provider (“FSP”), in the
same circumstances as the applicants,
be reviewed and set aside;
iv
To review and set aside the determination
of the second respondent dated 12 October 2018 (
the
determination
), in terms whereof the
complaint lodged by the fifth and sixth respondents against the
applicants was upheld and the applicants
ordered:-+
1.
To pay the fifth respondent the amount of
R330,000.00;
2.
To pay the fifth respondent interest on the
amount of R330,000.00, at the rate of 10% per annum from the date of
the determination
to date of final payment;
3.
To pay the sixth respondent the amount
R550,000.00;
4.
To pay the sixth respondent interest on the
amount of R550,000.00 at the rate of 10% per annum from the date of
determination to
date of final payment.
v
That the fifth and sixth respondents’
complaint against the applicants lodged with the second respondent is
dismissed.
Alternative
to the relief sought in paragraphs 1 to 5 (i to v)
above:
vi
To review and set aside the decision of the
third respondent in her official capacity as Chairperson of the
Financial Services Tribunal
dated 12 April 2019 in terms whereof the
applicants’ Application for Leave to Appeal (reconsideration),
in accordance with
the provisions of section 28(5)(b)(i) and (ii) of
the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act 37 of 2002 (“the
FAIS
Act”) as read with section 230 of the Financial Sector
Regulation Act 9 of 2017 (“the FSR Act”) was
refused
and the applicants be granted Leave to Appeal (permission for
reconsideration) in terms of Section 230 of the FSR Act;
vii
That the second respondent be interdicted
and restrained from taking any step under 28(5) of the FAIS Act, to
cause the execution
of the second respondent’s determination
referred to in prayer 4 above;
viii
That the fifth and sixth respondents, be
interdicted from taking any steps to execute the said determination,
pending the finalisation
of this application;
ix
That the second respondents be ordered to
pay the costs of the applicants;
x
That such respondent as may oppose this
application, be ordered to pay the costs thereof;
xi
That further or alternative relief be
granted to the applicants.
[10]
In addition to the above prayers, the
applicants called upon the respondents to show cause why the impugned
decisions should not
be reviewed and set aside. The applicants also
called upon the relevant respondents to comply with Rule 53(1)(b) of
the Uniform
Rules. It suffices to mention that the applicants
attacked the investigation process as well as the decisions born out
of that
process. In short, the impugn is against the; (a) whole
investigative process; (b) determination; (c) and refusal to permit
them
leave to appeal the determination. The interdictory reliefs are
a
sequelae
of the successful impugn.
[11]
The
present application served as a special allocation before the
honourable Mr Justice Mabuse. Before Mabuse J, counsel for both
parties advised the Court that an agreement was reached that the
issue of causation ought to be determined separately
[1]
.
Indeed, the present application proceeded on that basis. The
separated question was whether the loss suffered by the Babens was
caused by the breach of agreement occasioned by the applicants or by
the intervention of the South African Reserve Bank. On 03
November
2021 and in a written judgment, Mabuse J answered the separated
question by finding that the loss is attributed to the
breach of
contract by the applicants.
[12]
The applicants were aggrieved and applied
for leave to appeal the unfavourable judgment. Mabuse J, on 22
February 2022, in a written
judgment refused leave to appeal. The
applicants were refused leave to appeal by the Supreme Court of
Appeal and the Constitutional
Court. The Constitutional Court took a
view, correctly, so I add, that the case before this Court was not an
action for damages
but a PAJA review. The Constitutional Court
remarked that the parties will proceed with the review without any
delay and Mabuse
J was not suited to hear the review. Ultimately, the
review application was allocated to me as a special motion which was
heard
over a period of two days.
Analysis
[13]
In
an instance where a Court deals with a matter involving the Ombud’s
actions, the entry point is the legislation that begets
the Ombud. On
15 November 2002, the Parliament of the Republic of South Africa,
enacted into law, the
Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services
Act (FAISA
)
[2]
. In its preamble,
it is stated that the FAISA exists to regulate the rendering of
certain financial advisory and intermediary services
to clients; to
repeal or amend certain laws; and to provide for matters incidental
thereto. The present motion involves the rendering
of financial
advisory services. In terms of
section 1
of FAISA, a financial
service by a financial service provider means, amongst others,
furnishing of advice. In order to place into
proper context, the
nature of the functions performed by the Ombud and ultimately
consider how those functions may be impugned
by a judicial review, it
is of great assistance to first consider the technical meaning
afforded to the word ‘complaint’.
[14]
In terms of
section 1
of FAISA, a
“
Complaint
means, subject to
section 26(1)(a)(iii)
, a specific
complaint
relating to a financial service rendered by financial services
provider
or representative
to
the complainant
…, and in which
complaint it is alleged that the provider or representative-
(a)
(b)
Has
contravened
or failed to comply with a provision of this Act
and that as a result thereof the complainant has suffered or is
likely to suffer financial prejudice;
(c)
Has
wilfully
or negligently rendered a financial service to the complainant
which has caused prejudice or damage to the complainant or which is
likely to result in such prejudice or damage; or
(d)
Has
treated
the complainant
unfairly.” (Own
emphasis.)
[15]
In simple terms, the Babens complained that
the applicants, in breach of their mandate, furnished them with a
wrong advice in relation
to the Sharemax investments. Their gripe,
without any hesitation, meets the definitional requirements of a
complaint set out in
section 1 above. Before considering the
pertinent question as to what does the FAISA dictates should happen
to the complaint, it
is apposite to consider the important provisions
of section 20 of FAISA. The provisions of section 20 of FAISA clearly
states that:
“
(1)
there is an office to be known as the Office of the Ombud for
Financial Services Providers.
(2)
. . .
(3)
The
objective
of the Ombud is
to consider and dispose of
complaints
in a
procedurally fair
, informal, economical
and expeditious manner and by reference to what is equitable in all
the circumstances, with due regard to
–
(a)
the contractual arrangement or other legal
relationship between the complainant and any other party to the
complaint; and
(b)
the provisions of this Act
(4)
When dealing with complaints in terms of section 27 and 28 the Ombud
is independent and must be impartial.”
(Own emphasis.)
[16]
To have an objective means to have
something towards which an effort is directed. In terms of section
21(1)(a) and (b), an Ombud
and a deputy ombud means a person(s)
qualified in law and who possesses adequate knowledge of rendering of
financial services.
Therefore, an Ombud directs his or her efforts,
applying his or her qualities and adequate knowledge, towards
considering and disposing
of complaints. The Act prescribes how
the Ombud should carefully think about and disposing of a complaint.
The Ombud must
do so in a (a) procedurally fair manner; (b)
informally; (c) economically; and (d) expeditiously. The Ombud when
considering and
disposing of the complaint would have as beacons (i)
the contractual or legal relationship; and (ii) the provisions of the
Act.
Accordingly, if any of the actions of the Ombud during that
exercise of considering and disposing of, contravenes the contractual
or legal relationship arrangements or the provisions of the Act such
actions are invalid in law.
[17]
The requirements of procedural fairness
contemplated in section 20(3) are outlined in section 27 read with
section 28. Section 27
makes it perspicuous that the Ombud performs
functions that are investigative in nature. Once an Ombud receives a
complaint, the
Ombud must first establish the existence of the
jurisdictional requirements and if the complaint meets those
jurisdictional requirements,
then the Ombud must investigate it. Much
was made during argument that given the disputes of facts and
application of causation
principles, the Ombud was not suitable to
investigate the complaint by the Babens and ought to have invoked
section 27(3)(c) powers.
Although given the view I take at the end,
nothing much turns on this.
[18]
However, since this was argued before me,
it is helpful to briefly state that primarily, the duty to
investigate complaints statutorily
lie with the Ombud. The Babens
could have opted to institute a damages claim in the High Court or
Magistrates Court. Since they
opted to invoke the investigative
powers of the Ombud, section 27(1) obligates the Ombud to otherwise
officially receive the complaint
if it qualifies as a complaint. The
Ombud must decline to investigate a complaint if it has become
prescribed and unenforceable
in law; and where the complaint is
already in the hands of a Court. The Ombud’s discretion to
refer a complaint to a Court
or any other available dispute
resolution process and decline to entertain it is not an unfettered
one. The Ombud may only do so
by determining on reasonable grounds
that it is more appropriate that the complaint be dealt with by a
Court.
[19]
Absent reasonable grounds, the Ombud may
not simply avoid his or her statutory duty to investigate. As to what
reasonable grounds
mean, such shall be determined on a case by case
basis. There cannot be a one size fits all. Additionally,
appropriateness is a
factor, which again will depend on a case by
case. For the legislature, as decreed in section 21, an Ombud must be
a person qualified
in law and who possesses adequate knowledge of
rendering of financial services. With such qualification and
specialised knowledge,
the Ombud cannot pass its statutory
responsibilities to a Court without any reasonable grounds and
appropriateness. The legislature
deemed it appropriate to insert an
adjective before appropriate, which implies that ordinary appropriate
does not apply. It must
be a greater appropriate. In my view, the
discretion to decline and pass the buck as it were to a Court, does
not lie with a Court
but it lies with the Ombud.
[20]
Where
the Ombud chooses not to exercise a discretion to pass the buck as it
were, I do not believe that it is appropriate for a
Court to make
such a choice for the Ombud and or compel by way of an order the
Ombud to exercise that discretion
[3]
.
As it shall be demonstrated later in this judgment Innes ACJ had
already set a tone as to what a Court should do where a functionary
has to exercise a statutory discretion. For these reasons, I remain
doubtful that the order made by Fabricius J in
CS
Brokers and another v The Ombud for Financial Services and others (CS
Brokers)
[4]
to the effect that the Ombud be obliged to exercise a statutory
discretion by way of a Court order is correct in law. This Court
is
acutely aware that the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Ombud
for Financial Services Providers v CS Brokers CC and Others (CS
Brokers SCA)
[5]
did not upset the order of Fabricius J. However, what arrested the
attention of the SCA was the question whether the Ombud properly
exercised her discretion when she refused the application in terms of
section 27(3).
[21]
I
pause to comment that in
CS
Brokers SCA
there was gratuitous reference to an application in terms of section
27(3). In my view, the section does not contemplate an application
of
any form. The discretion resides only with the Ombud and he or she
requires no application to prompt him or her to exercise
the
discretion
[6]
. On the facts of
CS
Brokers
as recorded in the written judgment of Fabricius J, it is apparent
that Attorney Bieldermans is the one who on 19 July 2011 addressed
“an application to the Ombud in terms of section 27(3)(c)”.
It is unclear as to whether a formal application was made
or was it
only a letter addressed. However, it is clear from the facts as
narrated that as at 17 March 2011, the Ombud was already
dealing with
the complaint. As such when the application came on 19 July 2011, the
Ombud had already made a decision to investigate.
In other words, the
Ombud did not find reasonable grounds or greater appropriateness to
refer the matter to Court. It would then
appear that that which was
dubbed an application was more of a request for the Ombud to revert
back to the initial stages when
at that stage she had commenced the
investigation and had passed the section 27(3)(c) stage. Such a
request is, in my view, inappropriate.
[22]
That said, it seems from the SCA’s
point of view that, the application placed under the rubric of
section 27(3)(c) was one
made on 9 May 2011 which requested the
holding of a hearing or defer to Court. The Ombud simply responded on
11 May 2011 that the
Ombud does not hold hearings. Therefore, it is
not surprising that the SCA took a view that there was no exercise of
discretion
involved and on that singular basis, the appeal failed.
Therefore, it can never be so that that
CS
Brokers SCA
is an authority for the proposition that a party can compel the Ombud
to defer to Court even if no reasonable grounds and greater
appropriateness exists. In my judgment, I do not consider myself
bound by the judgment of Fabricius J because, in my respectful
view,
the order compelling the Ombud to exercise a discretion to defer to
Court is wrong in law. The SCA decidedly declined to
address the
manner in which the discretion of the Ombud should be exercised and
the test for interference with it on review.
[23]
Section
27(5) outlines the available options to the Ombud when investigating
a complaint
[7]
. The Ombud has a
wide choice to make, which may include, mediation, conciliation and
making of recommendations. Of significance
and pertinence in the
present motion is the determinative powers that may arise from the
investigative process. The relevant parts
of section 28 provides as
follows:
“
(1)
The Ombud must in any case where a matter has not been settled or a
recommendation referred to
in section 27(5)(c) has not been accepted
by all parties concerned, make
a final
determination
, which may include –
(a)
…
(b)
the upholding of the complaint, wholly or
partially, in which case –
(i)
the complainant may be awarded an amount as
fair compensation
for any financial prejudice or
damage
suffered
;
(ii) …
(iii) the Ombud may make
any other order which a Court may make.”
[24]
In
terms of section 28(5) a determination is regarded as a civil
judgment of a Court and is only appealable to the board of appeal
with the leave of the Ombud. Should the Ombud refuse leave, leave
must be sought from the Chairperson of the board of appeal. The
appeal board was a board established in terms of section 26 (1) of
the repealed Financial Services Board Act (FSBA)
[8]
.
In terms of section 290 of the FSRA read with schedule 4 thereof, the
FSBA was repealed in its entirety. In terms of section 299
of the
FSRA, an appeal contemplated in section 28(5) of FAISA now lies with
the Chairperson of the Financial Services Tribunal
(FST). In terms of
section 220(4) and (5) of the FSRA, the Minister must appoint the
Chairperson of the FST whose functions are
spelled out in subsection
(5)(a) and (b). The only function inherited from the FAISA is the one
contemplated in section 28(5)(b)(ii)
which is to grant permission to
appeal. Sections 230 - 234 of the FSRA regulates reconsideration
proceedings. It is apparent from
there that there must be proceedings
which are not bound by the rules of evidence and the orders that may
be made by the FST are
to (a) set the decision aside and remit; or
(b) some other kind of decisions contemplated in section
234(1)(b)(i)-(iii); or (c)
dismiss the application for
reconsideration. Once the orders contemplated in section 234 are made
and a party to those proceedings
is dissatisfied the available remedy
for such a party is to institute proceedings of judicial review in
terms of PAJA or any applicable
law.
Is a determination
reviewable under PAJA?
[25]
In
terms of section 28(1) of FAISA, the determination by the Ombud is
final in nature, and is regarded as a civil judgment of a
Court,
which is only appealable with the leave of the Ombud or if refused of
the Chairperson of the FST. PAJA only applies to decisions
of an
administrative nature. Certainly a determination remains final if not
set aside on appeal. Section 1(
ee
)
of PAJA excludes the judicial functions from the purview of an
administrative action. In other words, a civil judgment does not
constitute an administrative action and therefore, it is not
reviewable under section 6(1) of PAJA. As defined in section 1 of
PAJA, the administrative action must be one that has external legal
effect. The applicants seek to attack the whole process leading
to
the determination. In other words, the process undertaken under
section 27 of the FAISA. There can be no doubt that the process
itself is investigative in nature. Even in an instance where the
Ombud emerges with a recommendation, such a recommendation is
not to
be imposed onto the disputants. A party not accepting the
recommendation is only required to give reasons why. Clearly no
adverse or external effect is capable of arising in that regard. The
Constitutional Court in
Viking
Pony Africa Pumps (Pty) Ltd t/a Tricom Africa v Hidro-Tech Systems
(Pty) Ltd
(
Viking
)
[9]
aptly stated the following:
“
[38]
… It is unlikely that
a decision
to investigate and the process of investigation, which excludes a
determination of culpability could itself adversely
affect the rights
of any person, in a manner that has a direct and external legal
effect. (Own emphasis.)
[26]
The above finding was made by the
Constitutional Court when seeking to establish whether PAJA was
applicable in that case. Similarly,
in this case, fortified by
Viking
,
this Court takes a view that the process leading to the determination
is incapable of affecting rights in the manner contemplated
in
section 1 of PAJA in defining what an administrative action is. Given
that the process does not qualify to be an administrative
action, it
follows that in the circumstances section 6(1) of PAJA judicial
review pathway, is unavailable.
[27]
However,
this Court is prepared to accept that in reaching the final
determination, the process under section 27 certainly amount
to an
exercise of statutory powers and may be reviewable under the
principle of legality
[10]
. A
legality review concerns itself with two issues; namely lawfulness
and rationality. In
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of South Africa and Another: In re Ex Parte
President of the Republic of South Africa and
Others
(Pharmaceutical)
[11]
the following was said:
“
It
is a requirement of the rule of law that the exercise of public power
by the Executive and other functionaries should not be
arbitrary.
Decisions must be rationally related to the purpose for which the
power was given, otherwise they are in effect arbitrary
and
inconsistent with this requirement. It follows that in order to pass
constitutional scrutiny the exercise of public power by
the executive
and other functionaries must, at least, comply with this requirement.
If it does not, it falls short of the standards
demanded by our
Constitution for such action.”
[28]
Mercifully before me is a PAJA review as
opposed to a legality review. I am thus constrained by the principles
developed in the
cases outlined below.
[29]
In
Director
of Hospital Services v Mistry
[12]
,
the Appellate Division, then the apex Court, stated the law as
follows:
“
When,
as in this case, the proceedings are launched by way of notice of
motion,
it is to the founding affidavit
which a Judge will look to determine what the complaint is
…
and as been said in many other cases … an applicant must stand
or fall by his petition and the facts alleged therein
and that
although sometimes it is permissible to supplement allegations
contained in the petition, still
the
main foundation
of the application is
the allegation of facts stated therein, because those are the facts
which the respondent is called upon either
to affirm or deny.”
(Own emphasis)
[30]
In
Minister
of Safety and Security v Slabbert
[13]
,
the learned Mhlantha JA, as she then was, aptly stated the following:
“
The
purpose of pleadings is to define the issues for the other party
and
the court
. A party has a duty to allege
in the pleadings the material facts upon which it relies. It is
impermissible for a plaintiff to
plead a particular case and seek to
establish a different case at trial.
It
is equally not permissible for a trial court to have recourse to
issues falling outside the pleadings when deciding the case
.”
(Own emphasis.)
[31]
More
recently, the Supreme Court of Appeal reverberated similar sentiments
in
De
Nysschen v Government Employees’ Pension Fund and others
[14]
.
The learned Dambuza JA, writing for the majority, competently stated
the law thus:
“
[16]
…
Once the interdictory relief
was granted, that should have been the end of the matter.
[17]
The court erred in granting the further, unsolicited order for
payment against the appellant.
Apart from the fact that no such
order had been sought by the Department, the issue of the (re)payment
of the benefit was not necessary
for determination of the mandatory
interdict. Both this Court and the Constitutional Court have
repeatedly expressed the principle
that the dispute between parties
is defined in the pleadings before court. Courts may, on their own
accord raise issues of law
that emerge fully from the record where
consideration of those issues is necessary for the decision of the
case
. In this case, the foundation for the relief sought by the
appellant was the Department’s refusal to submit her exit
documents
to the GEPF. The Department’s defence was that, its
refusal to submit the documents were justified given the appellant’s
obligation to pay to it the pension benefit paid to her. The issue
fell to be determined solely on the pleadings and evidence rather
than on the interests of justice basis advanced by the high court.
[18]
As it was submitted on behalf of the appellant, if the Department
intended to claim, in these
proceedings, repayment of a debt due to
it, it was incumbent upon it to set out a properly pleaded claim, and
the relief sought.
It failed to do so despite a number of invitations
extended to it by the appellant. It merely contended that the
appellant was
indebted to it.
It
was improper for the high court to grant relief that had not been
sought
.
The appeal must therefore succeed.”
[15]
(Own emphasis)
[32]
Paragraph 14 of the founding affidavit of
the applicants pin their colours to the mast. Mr Kruger testified as
follows:
“
14
This is an application to judicially review and set aside the
determination and/or decisions of
the second and third respondents in
accordance with the provisions of section 6 of the PAJA as read with
Section 235 of the FSR
Act.”
[33]
For completeness sake section 6(1) of PAJA
provides that any person may institute proceedings in a Court or a
tribunal for the judicial
review of an administrative action. The
applicants are not launching a legality review. In fact, Mr Geyer,
who ably appeared on
behalf of the applicants, firstly disagreed with
a proposition that there are two judicial review pathways. After
consideration
of the authorities the bench directed his attention to
he made a
volte face
and specifically disavowed any legality review being launched and or
contemplated by the applicants. Accordingly, this court takes
a view
that a determination does not amount to an administrative action. It
is so that a determination is a product of an investigative
process
as opposed to an administrative process. It has been held that the
Ombud performs quasi-judicial process and not administrative
process.
As already indicated, section 6(1) only applies to administrative
actions.
Is the refusal to
permit leave to appeal an administrative action?
[34]
On
22 August 2017, Parliament enacted the Financial Sector Regulation
Act (FSRA)
[16]
. In the
preamble of FSRA, one of the purpose of its existence was to
establish the Financial Services Tribunal (FST) as an independent
tribunal and to confer on it powers to reconsider decisions by
amongst others the Ombud Council. Section 219 of the FSRA establishes
the FST with the purpose to reconsider decisions as defined in
section 218. In terms of section 218(d), a decision of a statutory
Ombud in terms of a financial sector law in relation to a specific
complaint by a person constitutes a decision to be reconsidered
by
the FST. In terms of section 28(5)(b)(i) (
aa
)
and (
bb
)
of FAISA, in determining whether leave to appeal must be granted the
Ombud must consider (a) the complexity of the matter; or
(b) the
reasonable likelihood that the board of appeal (now the FST) may
reach a different conclusion. It is clear that in the
absence of the
complexity and the reasonable likelihood, the Chairperson of the FST
is endowed with a statutory discretion to refuse
permission for leave
to appeal. Some 112 years ago the erudite Innes ACJ in
Shidiack
v Union Government (Minister of Interior)
[17]
had the following to say, which was accepted in the
Pharmaceutical
case:
“
Now
is settled law that where a matter is left to the discretion or
determination of a public officer, and where his discretion
has been
bona fide
exercised
or his judgment
bona fide
expressed, the Court will not interfere with the result. Not being a
judicial functionary, no appeal or review in the ordinary
sense would
lie; and if he has duly and honestly applied himself to the question
which has been left to his discretion, it is impossible
for a Court
of Law either to make him change his mind or to substitute its
conclusion for his own.”
[35]
The applicants seek to rely on section 235
of the FSR in order to utilise PAJA. The section does not only avail
PAJA it also avails
a legality judicial review pathway. However as
pointed out the applicants chose PAJA they must be saddled with all
the hurdles
PAJA places on its pathway. Before I specifically
consider the question whether the refusal by the Chairperson of the
FST constitutes
an administrative action, it is apposite to consider
whether section 235 has in mind the function performed by the
Chairperson
of the FST in this regard. It is clear from section
28(5)(b)(ii) of FAISA that the designated function is to give
permission to
appeal. That function is not a function contemplated in
section 235. Section 235 reads as follows:
“
Any
party to proceedings
on application for reconsideration of a decision who
is
dissatisfied with an order of the Tribunal
may institute proceedings for a judicial review
of
the order
in terms the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act or
any applicable law.”(Own
emphasis.)
[36]
First of all, this right of review is
available to a party to the proceedings. In terms of
section 230
, a
person aggrieved by a decision has to apply for reconsideration
within 60 days of being notified of a decision. The decision
must be
one contemplated in
section 218.
Section 232
outlines the procedure
in the proceedings for a reconsideration of a decision. Of
significance,
section 234
defines the Tribunal orders. Conspicuously
absent is a decision to refuse permission to appeal. In terms of
section 220
, a Tribunal is constituted by at least two persons who
are retired judges, or are persons with suitable expertise and
experience
in law and at least two other persons with experience or
expert knowledge of financial products, financial services, financial
instruments, market infrastructure or the financial system.
Section
224
contemplates that when a Tribunal consider an application for
reconsideration, a panel of three, being the presiding member and
two
other panellists on the list must be constituted.
[37]
The applicants failed to reach a stage
where an impugn of the Ombud’s decision would be reconsidered
by the Tribunal. Therefore,
they were never at any stage parties to
proceedings on application for reconsideration of a decision.
Axiomatically, there was
no order of the Tribunal made against them
to enable institution of judicial review in terms of PAJA. The
decision of the Chairperson
of the FST is not a panel decision, thus
not a Tribunal order. It is indeed the case that when the late
retired Madam Justice of
the Constitutional Court, Yvonne Mokgoro
considered the permission to appeal, she exercised statutory powers
emanating from
section 28(5)
of FAISA. Therefore, that exercise of
what is clearly a public power is constrained by the rule of law and
the rule against arbitrariness.
Unfortunately for the applicants they
chose a PAJA judicial review pathway, when it does not avail to them.
[38]
In
refusing permission to appeal, the late Madam Justice was not
performing functions of an administrative nature. The function
is
quasi-judicial
in nature. The function is similar in nature to the powers
contemplated in section 17(2)(f) of the Superior Courts Act where the
President of the Supreme Court of Appeal may in exceptional
circumstances whether of his or her own accord or on application
refer
the decision to refuse leave to appeal to the Court for
reconsideration and if necessary variation. The Supreme Court of
Appeal
under the hand of Van der Merwe JA writing for the majority in
Auditor-General
of SA v MEC for Economic Opportunities, Western Cape and Another
[18]
, dealing with the question whether PAJA was applicable, stated that
where the function does not involve actions of an administrative
nature, such functions do not constitute administrative action in
terms of PAJA. Such non-administrative actions are subject to
review
under the principles that stem from the rule of law.
[39]
Even
if this Court is tempted to consider a legality review under the
rubric of “further and alternative relief” in
refusing
permission, the late Madam Justice was beaconed by (a) the complexity
of the matter and (b) the reasonable likelihood
of reaching a
different conclusion requirement. Thus, having been beaconed by those
requirements, it can never be said that her
decision is tainted by
any irrationality. Her decision is related to the purpose of the
power she exercised. Nevertheless, Coetzee
J in
Johannesburg
City Council v Bruma Thirty Two (Pty) Ltd
[19]
aptly stated the law with regard to the “further and
alternative relief” prayer, as follows:
“
The
prayer for alternative relief is to my mind, in modern practice,
redundant and mere verbiage. Whatever the Court can validly
be asked
to order on papers as framed, can still be asked without its
presence. It does not enlarge in any way “terms of
the express
claim”.
[40]
In
Mgoqi
v City of Cape Town
[20]
,
Van
Zyl J cautioned against allowing the relief to be pushed through the
heads of argument while the same is not in the notice of
motion or
the founding affidavit. The case pleaded by the applicants do not
justify any order contemplated in a legality review.
The bulwark of
the applicants’ case against the decision of the Madam Justice
occur in paragraphs 88-90 of the founding affidavit.
Therein the
applicants allege that the Madam Justice (i) failed to furnish
reasons for the ruling; (ii) she took into account irrelevant
considerations when making the ruling; (iii) she unduly placed
reliance on previous applications and appeals; and; (iv) failure
to
consider the facts. These unsubstantiated allegations do not justify
any finding of irrationality on the part of the Madam Justice.
In her
impugned ruling, the Madam Justice took a view that the application
for the reconsideration of the determination is not
a complex matter
and that there are no reasonable prospects that the Tribunal would
decide the matter differently from the Ombud’s
determination.
By so doing, the Madam Justice exercised the statutory powers
approbated to her.
Conclusion
[41]
In summary, the applicants sought to impugn
the process leading to the determination. That process has no direct
external legal
effect as such not reviewable under the provisions of
PAJA. Additionally, the applicants sought to impugn the
determination. The
determination is regarded as a civil judgment and
not an administrative action reviewable under PAJA. The applicants
also impugned
the ruling of refusing permission to appeal. That
function is not administrative in nature and is not challengeable
under PAJA.
It does constitute an exercise of public power reviewable
under the legality judicial review pathway. The applicants
unwaveringly
disavowed a claim for a legality review. With regard to
the interdictory reliefs, these were not pressed on with any vigour
before
me. Nevertheless, they could only avail to the applicants if
they successfully challenged the determination. In the circumstances,
the applicants stand to fail in their quest for review. The PAJA
review application falls to be dismissed. What then remains is
the
issue of costs.
Costs
[42]
Undoubtedly, the normal rule of costs
following the results find application in this instance. This is not
a case where the
Biowatch
principle may be invoked. Mr Swart who appeared for the Babens
submitted that the Babens are not seeking a punitive cost order
but a
party and party costs. Regard been had to the fact that this motion
was argued over a two-day period, it is appropriate to
award costs at
scale B.
Order
[42]
For all the above reasons, I make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicants are to jointly and severally
pay the costs of this application on a party and party scale to be
taxed or settled
on scale B, the one paying absolving the other.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicants:
Mr
H F Geyer
Instructed by:
Bieldermans Inc,
Parkwood
For Respondent:
Mr D D Swart
Instructed by:
Cronje, De
Waal-Skhosana Inc
Date
of the hearing:
15-16
May 2024
Date
of judgment:
30
May 2024
[1]
It was mentioned to Mabuse J that this will truncate the
proceedings. Probably this was mentioned tongue in cheek because the
truncation is yet to be witnessed.
[2]
Act No 37 of 2002 as amended.
[3]
See para 12 of
CS
Brokers and another v The Ombud for Financial Services and others
,
unreported judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal,
Case
number 781/2020 (17 September 2021);
Risk
and Another v Ombud for Financial Services and Others
,
unreported
judgment of the Gauteng Division of High Court, Pretoria, Case No
38791/2011(September
2012) para 13 and 38.
[4]
CS
Brokers and another v The Ombud for Financial Services and others
,
unreported judgment of the Gauteng Division of High Court, Pretoria,
Case
number 53770/2017 (28 February 2020).
[5]
CS
Brokers and another v The Ombud for Financial Services and others
,
unreported judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal,
Case
number 781/2020 (17 September 2021).
[6]
See paras 31-33 of
Risk
.
[7]
The SCA in the
CS
Brokers SCA
matter confirmed at paragraph 12 that extensive substantive powers
availed to the Ombud are akin to quasi-judicial powers rather
than
purely administrative ones.
[8]
Act 97 of 1990.
[9]
Viking
Pony Africa Pumps (Pty) Ltd t/a Tricom Africa v Hidro-Tech Systems
(Pty) Ltd
2011 (1) SA 327 (CC).
[10]
See
Auditor-General
of SA v MEC for Economic Opportunities, Western Cape and another
2022 (5) SA 44
(SCA) and
Smith
v Alberta (Ombudsman)
2003 ABQB 488 (CanLII).
[11]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of South Africa and Another: In re Ex
Parte President of the Republic of South Africa
and Others
2000(3) BCLR 241 para 85.
[12]
Director
of Hospital Services v Mistry
1979 (1) SA 626
(A) at 635H-636B.
[13]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Slabbert
2010
(2) All SA 474
(SCA).
[14]
De
Nysschen v Government Employees’ Pension Fund and others
2024 (4) BLLR 349 (SCA).
[15]
See also
Bliss
Brands (Pty) Ltd v Advertising Regulatory Board NPC and others
2023 (10) BCLR 1153 (CC).
[16]
Act no 9 of 2017 as amended.
[17]
1912 AD 642
at 651
[18]
Auditor-General
of SA v MEC for Economic Opportunities, Western Cape and Another
2022 (5) SA 44 (SCA).
[19]
Johannesburg
City Council v Bruma Thirty Two (Pty) Ltd
1984 (4) SA 87
(T) at 93E-F.
[20]
Mgoqi
v City of Cape Town
2006 (4) SA 355
(C).
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