Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 885South Africa
Sakeliga NPC v Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Others (132918/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 885 (12 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
12 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sakeliga NPC v Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Others (132918/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 885 (12 September 2024)
Sakeliga NPC v Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Others (132918/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 885 (12 September 2024)
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sino date 12 September 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 132918/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 12/9/24
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
SAKELIGA
NPC
APPLICANT
and
THE MINISTER OF COOPERATIVE
GOVERNANCE FIRST RESPONDENT
AND TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS
THE NATIONAL
DEPARTMENT:
SECOND RESPONDENT
COOPERATIVE
GOVERNANCE
THE DIRECTOR GENERAL IN THE
DEPARTMENT THIRD RESPONDENT
OF COOPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
THE INFORMATION OFFICER: THE
NATIONAL FOURTH RESPONDENT
DEPARTMENT OF COOPERATIVE
GORVERNANCE
THEMBI
NKADIMENG
FIFTH RESPONDENT
MBULELO
TSHANGANA
SIXTH RESPONDENT
THINAYHYO
SKHOSANA
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
NKOSAZANA
CLARICE DLAMINI-ZUMA
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC
OF
NINTH RESPONDENT
SOUTH
AFRICA
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
for hand-down is deemed to be
14: 00 pm on 12 September 2024
.
Clause
13.10 of the Practice Manual of the Gauteng Division Pretoria
(effective date: 25 July 2011)
–
Interpretation of Clause 13.10 of the Practice
Manual
The clause is not
intended to bind judicial discretion
–
.
The
directions contemplated in the clause are for the future conduct of
the matter
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
On this day, this Court was sitting as a
Court assigned to deal with unopposed applications. Mundanely, if a
matter becomes opposed,
it loses its place on the unopposed roll. As
the name of the roll suggests, an unopposed Court is designed for
unopposed cases.
This Court was compelled into penning this judgment
because the applicant persisted with some strange application which
was predicated
on its misinterpretation of the provisions of the
Practice Manual of the Gauteng Division Pretoria (effective: 25 July
2011) (Practice
Manual). It availed to this Court to have simply
refused to hear this strange application. However, the applicant was
persistent
and created an impression to this Court that the
provisions of the Practice Manual permitted such an application to be
moved in
the unopposed Court.
[2]
For expediency and in the interest of
justice, this Court exercised its discretion and listened to the
application. Given the novel
issues raised in this strange
application, it would have been inappropriate for this Court to issue
an order without providing
the parties with reasons, more
particularly the applicant, given the view this Court takes at the
end of this judgment.
[3]
This Court chose to label the application
addressed in this judgment as a strange one because it mushroomed, as
it were, at the
back of an enrolled unopposed contempt application.
When the unopposed application was mentioned in the morning both
counsel agreed
to have the matter stand down for discussion. It
became apparent to the Court that the matter became opposed and
expected both
counsel to emerge with an agreed order removing the
matter from the unopposed roll. Sadly, when the matter was
re-mentioned, this
Court was informed that this strange application
has since become necessary to be argued. No amount of ferocious but
robust debate
between the Court and counsel for the applicant would
lead to a relent on this strange application.
Background facts appertaining the
present application
[4]
Owing to the limited nature of the issues
appertaining this judgment, it is obsolete to punctiliously narrate
all the facts in the
dispute. It suffices to mention that the parties
before me had locked horns as far back as 2022. Pertinent to the
presently enrolled
application of contempt, on 9 November 2022, the
Honourable Acting Justice Lukhaimane issued an order reviewing and
setting aside
certain decisions made on 26 June 2021 and 25 February
2021 respectively. Relevant to the present dispute is an order
couched in
the following wide terms:
“
3
The First, Second, Third and Fourth Respondents are ordered to comply
with the
Applicant’s PAIA request
for information within 30 days
of the
date of this order and to provide the
Applicant
with all of the document and/or information requested therein as is
in possession and/or under their control.”
[5]
It is the applicant’s allegation that
the named respondents failed to comply with the terms of the order
set out above. Ostensibly,
this compelled the applicant to, on 13
December 2023, launch an application seeking in essence, an order
declaring seven respondents
to be in contempt of the order set out
above and to direct compliance by the named respondents within 20
days of the anticipated
order. The applicant informed the respondents
that if no notice of intention to oppose and an answering affidavit
is received,
it intends to proceed unopposed on 6 September 2024. On
6 February 2024, the cited respondents filed an intention to oppose
the
relief sought by the applicant. Around July 2024, the respondents
filed an answering affidavit. In the answering affidavit it was
pertinently alleged that the requested information was furnished on
three occasions.
[6]
On or about 8 April 2024, the applicant
opted to set the contempt application down, according to it, in terms
of the provisions
of clause 13.10.2 of the Practice Manual, owing to
the fact that the time to file an answering affidavit had expired on
29 February
2024. In the answering affidavit the respondents
testified as follows, which testimony ignited the strange
application:
“
37
It is perhaps appropriate to record at this stage that the former
Minister Dlamini-Zuma was also faced
with a similar request for
access to information from Member of Parliament, Advocate Glynnis
Breytenbach. That PAIA request is
attached hereto and marked as
“
MT2
”.
As is apparent therefrom, the request mirrors the applicant’s
request. The index to that record is attached as “
MT3
”
hereto, and the sufficiency of that record was never called into
question. Since the record is voluminous to avoid prolixity,
it will
be uploaded onto Caselines as an independent section. For the sake of
completion, I also attach as “
MT4
”
the index to the record furnished in implementing the 9 November 2022
order, and that record too will be loaded onto Caselines.”
[7]
Owing to its interpretation of clause
13.10.2 of the Practice Manual, the applicant persisted that this
Court must issue a directive
ordering the respondents to upload the
documents as undertaken. On its contention this Court is empowered to
issue such an order
under the clause. As indicated above, this quest
to compel uploading was met with resistance.
Analysis
[8]
This strange application calls for the
interpretation of the implicated clause. For the sake of convenience,
it is necessary to
extrapolate the provisions of the implicated
clause of the Practice Manual.
“
13.10
ENROLMENT OF APPLICATIONS AFTER NOTICE OF INTENTION TO OPPOSE
1
Where the respondent has failed to deliver
an answering affidavit and has not given notice of intention only to
raise a question
of law (rule 6(5)(d)(iii)) or a point in
limine
,
the application must not be enrolled for hearing on the opposed roll.
2
Such an application must be enrolled on the
unopposed roll. In the event of such an application thereafter
becoming opposed (for
whatever reason),
the
application will not be postponed as a matter of cours
e.
The judge hearing the matter will give the
necessary
directions for the future conduct of the matter
.
3
The notice of set down of such an application must be served on the
respondent’s
attorney of record.”
[9]
Before this Court can interpret this clause
for the parties, it is necessary to refer to chapter 1 of the
Practice Manual. Clause
2 of chapter 1 provides amongst others that
it must be emphasised that no judge is bound by practice directives.
Accordingly, the
Practice Manual is not intended to bind judicial
discretion. Contrary to the applicant’s counsel’s
submissions, this
Court is not bound to issue a directive sought by
the applicant.
[10]
On proper interpretation of the clause, the
necessary directions referred to in the clause does not mean some
application to compel
a party to produce a document. The directions
contemplated in the clause are for the future conduct of the matter.
In this particular
instance, the matter that has been enrolled is the
contempt application. Therefore, any necessary direction must pertain
to the
future and not the present conduct of the contempt
application.
[11]
What the applicant sought to do in this
strange application is not provided for in the clause relied on. The
directions sought are
not for the future conduct of the contempt
application. What the applicant seeks to do is an equivalent of what
rule 35(12) of
the Uniform Rules of Court provides. The rule states
the following:
“
(12)
(a) Any party to any proceedings may at any time before the hearing
thereof deliver a notice … to any party
in whose pleading or
affidavits reference is made to any
document
or tape recording to-
(i)
Produce such document
or
tape recording for inspection and to permit the party requiring
production to make a copy or transcription thereof; or…”
(b) Any
party failing to comply with the notice referred to in paragraph (a),
shall not, save with
the leave of the court, use such document or
tape recording in such proceeding provided that any other party may
use such document
or tape recording.
(13) The provisions
of this rule relating to discovery shall
mutatis mutandis
apply, in so far as
the court may direct
, to
applications
.”
[12]
In this strange application, the applicant
is effectively asking this Court to compel the respondents to produce
the documents mentioned
in paragraph 37 of the answering affidavit.
If the applicant, as it is apparent that it is its wish, wishes to
have the documents
mentioned produced, since the contempt proceedings
are launched by way of motion, it must first seek directions from a
Court to
apply the provisions of rule 35, whereafter, if permitted to
use rule 35, deliver a notice in terms of rule 35(12). The applicant
cannot simply bypass the rules and seek to use the Practice Manual in
the manner it seeks to use it now. The Practice Manual in
its
introductory part specifically provides that:
“
This is
still the status of this practice manual. The provisions set out in
the practice manual are not rules of court.
It
does not displace or amend rules of court
…”
[13]
Nevertheless, the interpretation of clause
13.10.2 of the Practice Manual by the applicant is a wrong one. The
necessary directions
do not mean every conceivable direction desired
by a litigant. It is necessary directions for future conduct of the
matter. The
“matter” referred to in the clause for the
present purposes is the contempt application and no other. Seeking
production
of the documents mentioned in paragraph 37 is not related
to the future conduct of the matter but a present compel for the
respondent
to produce those documents by way of uploading as
undertaken.
[14]
This which the respondents alleged, is akin
to a party stating in a discovery affidavit that it is in possession
of mentioned documents.
If the other party desires to have access to
those documents, the available route or vehicle is rule 35(12). There
is no other
known route or vehicle other than rule 35(12). Using the
implicated clause in the face of the rule 35(12) route is
inappropriate.
On the contrary, what the applicant now seek, equates
a substantial relief similar to the one sought in the pending
contempt application.
Before Lukhaimane AJ, the applicant sought an
order for the respondents to comply with its PAIA request. The
learned Acting Justice
granted the applicant such an order. In the
contempt application, the applicant contends that there was no
compliance with such
an order. The documents mentioned in paragraph
37 are the same documents the applicant sought access to before
Lukhaimane AJ. Accordingly,
if this Court were to direct production
before the contempt application is fully heard, this Court would
effectively render the
contempt application moot, particularly in an
instance where the respondents allege that the documents were
furnished three times
already.
Conclusions
[15]
For all the above reasons, clause 13.10
finds no application to the strange application persisted with by the
applicant. The necessary
directions contemplated in the clause does
not refer to substantive reliefs equivalent to the one contemplated
in rule 35(12) which
can only be achieved after a rule 35(13)
application has been launched and granted. With regard to costs,
although the strange
application was somewhat launched at the back of
the contempt application, it has no relation to the future conduct of
the contempt
application, and the applicant did not achieve success.
As correctly argued by Mr Moerane SC appearing with Ms Tulk for the
respondents,
the costs must follow the results. It shall be
inappropriate to make the wasted costs of the strange application to
be costs in
the cause. By so doing, this Court would be burdening the
Court hearing the pending contempt application unnecessarily.
Order
1
The contempt application is removed from
the unopposed roll
2
The application for directions is refused
3
The applicant is ordered to pay the wasted
costs of the respondents in resisting the application for directions
on a party and party
scale B, which costs must include the costs of
employing two counsel.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
:
For
the Applicant:
Mr B
Bester instructed by
Kriek Wassenaar
and Venter, Pretoria
For
the Respondents:
Mr M
Moerane SC and Ms R Tulk instructed by State Attorney Pretoria
Date
of the hearing:
6
September 2024
Date
of judgment:
12
September 2024
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