Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1094South Africa
Nene v Auditor-General of South Africa and Others (6136/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1094 (25 October 2024)
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nene v Auditor-General of South Africa and Others (6136/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1094 (25 October 2024)
Nene v Auditor-General of South Africa and Others (6136/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1094 (25 October 2024)
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sino date 25 October 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NUMBER: 6136/2024
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGE:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED:
YES
/NO
DATE: 25 October 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matters between: approach
NOMPUMELELO
NENE
Applicant
and
THE
AUDITOR-GENERAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
1
st
Respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF TRADE, INDUSTRY AND COMPETITION
2
nd
Respondent
THE
NATIONAL LOTTERIES COMMISSION
3
rd
Respondent
TSU
INVESTIGATION SERVICES (PTY) LTD
4
th
Respondent
NATIONAL
TREASURY
5
th
Respondent
THE
COMMISSIONER OF THE NATIONAL LOTTERIES
6
th
Respondent
COMMISSION
N.O.
THE
MINISTER OF TRADE, INDUSTRY AND COMPETITION
7
th
Respondent
Heard:
10 SEPTEMBER 2024
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by
uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. As a
courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal
representatives by email.
The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on 23 OCTOBER 2024.
JUDGEMENT
LE
GRANGE, AJ:
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for interlocutory
relief, that: -
‘
1.
[The] First Respondent
[the AGSA]
be compelled in terms of rule 30A of the Uniform Rules of Court (“the
Rules”) to make available the complete record
of decision in
terms of rule 53 of the Rules, within 10 days of the order of court;
the record to specifically include the following
documents: [then a
list follows]
2.
[The] Seventh- and/or Second Respondent be compelled in terms of rule
30A of the Rules to
make available the complete record of decision in
terms of rule 53 of the Rules, within 10 days of the order of court;
the record
to specifically include the following documents: [then a
list follows]
3.
Third
Respondent
[
NLC
]
,
represented by its designated information officer, Sixth Respondent,
being compelled to make available to Applicant the information
duly
requested on her behalf in terms of the
Promotion
of Access to Information Act
[1]
[
PAIA
]
,
by means of
the
written request submitted to them both and dated 25 October 2023
[i.e. annexure “FA2” to the founding affidavit
containing
a list]’
[Emphasis
added]
[2]
It
is evident from applicant’s notice and consequent
application
[2]
that the first
two prayers, based upon r 30A, compelling compliance with a rule in
this instance r 53, that compliance is not claimed
on the basis that
no record was provided but rather on the basis that the record is
incomplete as it did not contain the ‘listed’
documents,
the latter which the applicant considers of being of relevance as it
may evidence the AGSA’s inconsistent auditing
method(s) and
approach(es) over years, which – it is argued – would
entitle the applicant to an order setting aside
the impugned
decision(s).
[3]
This application follows from a review
application by the applicant for the setting aside of certain
decisions, the relief sought
which is necessary to repeat: -
‘
1.
An order
reviewing and setting aside the
decisions / findings made by the First Respondent
against the Third Respondent that relates to the consolidation of
financial statements which decision / finding was made by the
First
Respondent against the Third Respondent in its National Lotteries
Commission Audit Report for the financial year ended 31
March 2018
audit report.
2.
Reviewing and
setting aside the decisions / findings made by the First Respondent
against the Third Respondent in the First Respondent's National
Lotteries Commission Audit Report for the financial year ended
31
March 2020 that relates to alleged irregular expenditure allegedly
committed by the Third Respondent.
3.
Reviewing and
setting aside the decisions / findings made by the First Respondent
against the Third Respondent in the First Respondent's National
Lotteries Commission Audit Report for the financial year ended 31
March 2021 that relates to alleged irregular expenditure allegedly
committed by the Third Respondent.
4.
An order declaring that every decision / finding made by the
Fifth Respondent based upon the decision / finding of the First
Respondent
against the Third Respondent as envisaged in prayers 1, 2
and 3 constitute administrative action and supersedes the decision /
finding made by the First Respondent as against the Third Respondent.
5.
An order declaring that the Third Respondent did not commit
"irregular expenditure" as was found by the First
Respondent
as envisaged in prayers 2 and 3 above.
6.
An order reviewing and setting aside the Fourth
Respondent's report
- the TSU Investigation Report - in as far as
it is based upon the same decisions / findings made by the First
Respondent as envisaged
in prayers 1, 2 and 3 above, alternatively an
order directing the Third and Fourth Respondents to take this
judgment into account
in the disciplinary enquiry as between the
Applicant and the Third Respondent.
7.
An order
directing the Third Respondent
to take all
such steps that are
necessary and to comply with the
Applicant's request for information as envisaged in the
Promotion of
Access to Information Act, Act 2 of 2000; which request was served on
25 October 2023, within 10 (ten) days from date
of this order.’
[Emphasis added]
[4]
Considering the relief sought above I may
start off by indicating that I cannot phantom on what basis the
applicant could have
locus standi
to bring the review application in her person, and for consequential
interlocutory relief. However, as correctly pointed
out by the
AGSA’s counsel,
locus standi
should not be considered at this early
stage of the review and before the applicant has had the opportunity
to file a supplementary
affidavit. See the authority on this point at
par [19]
below.
[5]
All respondents, save for the fifth
respondent (who was cited but no relief is sought against), have
filed answering affidavits,
and save for the latter and the fourth
respondent, opposed the relief claimed.
[6]
The applicant chose not to file a reply to
answer to the respondents’ allegations but instead amended her
notice of motion
(without making further allegations) by adding a
prayer for alternative relief, i.e. to compel discovery of the listed
documents
in terms of r 35.
Rule 30A:
Non-compliances with rule 53
[7]
The main objection to the r 30A application
is that: (i) as the AGSA has (admittingly) filed a comprehensive
record of proceedings
in terms of r 53 and thus complied, therefore
the rule cannot be invoked; (ii) the application is nothing but a
fishing expedition,
which is clear from the fact that it is
voluminous in nature and that various of the documents are totally
irrelevant to the matter
(or rather period at hand), and the fact
that the applicant failed to provide any nexus, alleged or apparent,
between the documents
sought and the decisions taken to be reviewed,
leaving the court to guess what is relevant.
[8]
To
consider whether there was compliance, it needs to be considered what
constitutes ‘the record of proceedings’. The
following
was found in
Johannesburg
City Council v The Administrator Transvaal
[3]
at 91G to 92B:
‘
The
words ‘record of proceedings’ cannot be otherwise
construed, in my way, than as a loose description of
the
documents, evidence, arguments and other information before the
tribunal relating to the matter under review, at the time of
the
making of the decision in question
….…
It does, however, include all the
documents before the Executive Committee as well as all documents
which are by reference incorporated
in the file before it
.’
[Emphasis added]
[9]
More
recently this has been dealt with in
Helen
Suzman Foundation v Judicial Service Commission (Police and Prisons
Civil Rights Union and others as amici curiae)
[4]
where
it was held that:
‘
[13]
The primary purpose of the rule is to facilitate and regulate
applications for review by granting the aggrieved
party seeking to
review a decision of an inferior court, administrative functionary or
state organ, access to the record of the
proceedings in which the
decision was made, to place the relevant evidential material before
court. It is established in our law
that the rule, which is intended
to operate to the benefit of the applicant, is an important tool in
determining objectively
what
considerations were probably operative in the mind of the
decision-maker
when he or she made the
decision sought to be reviewed. The applicant must be given access to
the available information sufficient
for it to make its case and to
place the parties on equal footing in the assessment of the
lawfulness and rationality of such decision.’
[Emphasis added]
[10]
Considering the above and the papers filed,
it is safe for me to conclude, that the applicant herself (after
considering the AGSA’s
answering affidavit) realized that she
is not entitled to the documents listed or let me rather say the
wide-ranging
plethora
of documents ranging from specific documents to categories of
documents, reports, records, correspondence, transcripts,
etc.
(listed documents)
, in terms of r
30A.
[11]
My conclusion is based upon the following:
[12]
The AGSA has provided an extensive initial-
and supplementary record of the proceedings, prior to the r 30A
application being served.
[13]
Further hereto, the AGSA confirmed under
oath that as far as she is concerned, she has provided all the
documents that she believes
she had to provide as part of the record,
and further states:
‘
The
documents that I have provided is the documents that served before me
at the time my relevant decisions were made and which
I am of the
view I am obliged to provide.’
[14]
Important is the fact
that the applicant has not challenged this statement
.
[15]
In my view, the
applicant appreciated that her ‘wish list’ simply did
did
not form part of ‘the record of proceedings’ as it would
not have served before the decision-maker at the specific
time of the
impugned decision(s)
,
but rather
documents which are
extraneous to and go beyond the record, to what she considers to be
relevant to identify and prove the AGSA’s
inconsistencies
spanning over the years. For this reason, the applicant
skilfully
moved away from r 30A onto r 35.
Rule 35: Discovery
[16]
The question then,
whether the applicant is entitled to the listed documents under r 35.
[17]
Rule 35(1) provides:
‘
(1)
Any party to any action may require any other party thereto, by
notice in writing, to make discovery on oath within 20 days
of all
documents and tape recordings relating to any matter in question in
such action (whether such matter is one arising between
the party
requiring discovery and the party required to make discovery or not)
which are or have at any time been in the possession
or control of
such other party.
Such notice shall not,
save with the leave of a judge, be given before the close of
pleadings
.’ [Emphasis added]
[18]
The difference
between r 35 and r 53 was dealt with by the court in the
Helen
Suzman matter
which held at para [26]:
‘
It
is helpful to point out that the Rule 53 process differs from normal
discovery under rule 35 of the Uniform rules of court. Under
rule 35
documents are discoverable if relevant, and relevance is determined
with reference to the pleadings.
So,
under the rule 35 discovery process, asking for information not
relevant to the pleaded case would be a fishing expedition
.
Rule 53 reviews are different. The rule envisages the grounds of
review changing later.
So, relevance is
assessed as it relates to the decision sought to be reviewed
,
not the case pleaded in the founding
affidavit
.’ [Emphasis added]
[19]
The
Court in
Cape
Town City Council Cape Town City Council v South African National
Roads Authority and
Others
[5]
also
considered the difference and stated:
‘
While
there is a similarity between trial discovery and review proceedings,
inasmuch as in both a party is compelled to make disclosure
for the
purposes of litigation, there are fundamental differences between the
two. Unlike rule 53,
discovery is only
undertaken after the pleadings have closed
.
The object of mutual discovery is to give each party, before trial,
all the documentary material of the other party so that each,
after
the contours have already been drawn
,
can consider its effect on his own case and his opponent's case and
decide whether to carry on at all and, if so, how to carry
on the
proceedings.
Discovered documents do not
form part of the record, and are not before the court unless a party
decides at the trial to make use
of them
.
It is therefore quite possible, even likely, that many of the
documents which were discovered will never see the light of day
in
court… Review, on the other hand, usually arises from the
exercise of a statutory or public power. When an applicant
in review
proceedings files its supplementary affidavit, after having had sight
of the record
,
it
is, in effect fully stating its case for the first time
.’
[Emphasis added]
[20]
In the premises,
discovery should only be considered once the contours of the dispute
have been drawn and relevance can be assessed
through knowledge of
what is in dispute, what needs to be proven, and what not.
[21]
For example,
considering the facts herein. The applicant argues (at paras 26 and
27 of the heads of argument) that:
‘
[t]he
dispute thus encompass the simple question as to whether the AGSA
consistently applied and interpreted the audit standards
or whether
she adopted a materially different approach in previous audit
reports,
for
which reason she acted in breach of the auditing body’s
statutory and constitutional duty to maintain a predictable and
consistent approach when auditing accounting practices.
In
order for the Applicant to show the abrupt change
in the AGSA’s
practices, criteria and standards,
she
needs to show the trend prior to the qualified reports, then the
change, then the course of the change approach and lastly whether
the
AGSA persisted with the changed approach.
In order
for the Applicant to do this she needs to get access to the
information stretching over a few years
,
especially before 2018 and thereafter; this information the extended
periods for which information is sought. Absent this information
Applicant
might
not be able to show the AGSA’s changes stance
,
which will serve to prejudice her in the pursuance of the review
application.’ (Emphasis added)
[22]
For this reason, the
applicant casted her net overreaching wide and over many financial
periods in an effort to prove inconsistency
– which would
according to the applicant entitle her to the relief claimed in the
review.
[23]
Leaving for the
moment the argument that rationality is the test in a review and not
inconsistency, the AGSA may in answer to the
review application admit
having been inconsistent, which will leave the bulk of (if not all)
the listed documents now sought on
that basis, totally irrelevant for
purposes of the review.
[24]
For this reason,
discovery is best left for after the close of pleadings when the
contours of the dispute have been drawn.
[25]
Applicant’s
counsel has referred me to the matter of
Makate
v Joosub NO and Another
[6]
in her argument to justify an order in terms of r 35. The court
therein held as follows:
‘
[57]
Many of those factors present themselves in the main review –
this is a claim for a substantial amount, the
only
issue in dispute is the manner and method by which the compensation
was determined
and generally speaking
even in the absence of answering affidavits, it is clear if regard is
had to the proceedings before the
first respondent as well as the
papers in this interlocutory application that
the
method of determining the compensation and the revenue base to be
used are central to the dispute
between
the parties.’ [Emphasis added]
[26]
This matter is
however clearly distinguishable from the
Makate
matter
in
that the documents requested therein were central to an already clear
and single issue which was the product of years of litigation,
whereas the contours of the dispute has not nearly been drawn in this
matter – currently leaving the request to either constitute
fishing or a futile exercise.
[27]
I may add, that there
is an exception to the rule that discovery is only undertaken after
the pleadings have closed as provided
for in r 35, this was however
not the approach which the applicant sought to take herein.
[28]
In the premises, I find that the applicant
is not entitled to the relief sought neither in terms of r 30A nor in
terms of
r 35.
PAIA
[29]
It is common cause that the applicant in
terms of PAIA delivered a request for information to the NLC on 25
October 2023 and that
NLC has failed to answer thereto within the
time provided, i.e. on or before 25 November 2023, or at all.
[30]
Such failure constituted a deemed refusal
under s 27 of PAIA; and the respondents are of the view that the
applicant (as dissatisfied
requester) was obliged to follow the
internal remedies provided for in PAIA and more specifically Part 4
thereof before she would
have a right of audience in this Court.
[31]
S 78(1)(b) of PAIA
provides as follows:
‘
A
requester or third party
may only apply
to a court
for appropriate relief in
terms of section 8
2
in the following circumstances:
(a
)
After that requester or third party has exhausted the internal appeal
procedure referred to in section
74; or
(b)
after that requester or third party has exhausted the complaints
procedure referred to in section
77A.’ [Emphasis added]
[32]
In
Elite
Plumbing and Industrial Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Casper Le Roux Inc
Attorneys and Another
[7]
the Court held that:
‘
The
wording of section 78(1) is clear. A requester may only apply to
court after it has first exhausted the internal appeal procedure
referred to in section 74 or after it has exhausted the complaints
procedure referred to in section 77A. Stated differently, an
aggrieved requester who has not exhausted the internal appeal
procedure referred to in section 74 or the complaints procedure
referred to in section 77A may not approach a court for relief in
terms of section 82. There is thus an internal appeal procedure
and a
complaints procedure. These, if they apply, must be exhausted before
the requester can approach a court.’
[33]
The
Constitutional Court confirmed this approach in
Koyabe
and Others v Minister for Home Affairs and Others
[8]
but warned that it is not absolute. It held as follows:
‘
[35]
Internal remedies are designed to provide immediate and
cost-effective relief, giving the executive the opportunity to
utilise
its own mechanisms, rectifying irregularities first, before
aggrieved parties resort to litigation. Although courts play a vital
role in providing litigants with access to justice, the importance of
more readily available and cost-effective internal remedies
cannot be
gainsaid.
[36]
First, approaching a court before the higher administrative body is
given the opportunity to exhaust its own existing mechanisms
undermines the autonomy of the administrative process. It renders the
judicial process premature, effectively usurping the executive
role
and function. The scope of administrative action extends over a wide
range of circumstances, and the crafting of specialist
administrative
procedures suited to the particular administrative action in question
enhances procedural fairness as enshrined
in our Constitution.
…
[38]
The duty to exhaust internal remedies is therefore a valuable and
necessary requirement in our law. However, that requirement
should
not be rigidly imposed. Nor should it be used by administrators to
frustrate the efforts of an aggrieved person or to shield
the
administrative process from judicial scrutiny.
PAJA recognises
this need for flexibility, acknowledging in s 7(2)(c) that
exceptional circumstances may require that a court condone
non-exhaustion of the internal process and proceed with judicial
review nonetheless
.
Under s 7(2) of PAJA, the requirement that
an individual exhaust internal remedies is therefore not absolute
.’
[Emphasis added]
[34]
The question then before this Court is
whether there are any exceptional circumstances to alter the default
position.
[35]
Dealing with this
aspect, the only statement tendered by the applicant was the
following:
‘
I
can add in this regard that no internal appeal process is at my avail
for which reason I was entitled to approach the Court for
its
intervention.’
[9]
[36]
This is a bold unsubstantiated statement,
and must I agree with counsel for the second, third, sixth and
seventh respondents, that
the applicant has failed to allege any
fact(s) or made out any case to
condone
non-exhaustion of the internal process as contained in Part 4
–
I may add, for this court to even consider
deviating from the default position.
[37]
For the reasons above, the application must
fail with costs.
[38]
I have been requested by all the respondents to
grant costs on a punitive scale and some even suggested a
de
bonis propriis
order. I cannot say that
I have not been tempted due to the applicant’s unreasonable
persistence with the application, which
may also have as basis an
ulterior purpose. I am however of the view that I should not
grant such order at this early stage
of litigation, especially due to
the fact that the applicant is an individual who does not have access
to state funds as the majority
of the respondents and who seems
genuinely affronted by the decisions taken, which seems to implicate
her in person and may (or
may not) have led to her suspension.
[39]
I however hope that ‘passion does not
persist gaineth the mastery over reason’.
Order
[40]
In the result the following order is made:-
1.
The application is dismissed with costs.
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs
of the first, second, third, fourth, sixth and seventh respondents,
to include costs of
two counsel where so employed on scale B.
A J LE GRANGE
ACTING JUDGE
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT:
CA
Kriel instructed by Buthelezi Vilakazi Inc.
COUNSEL
FOR FIRST
RESPONDENT:
P
Pretorius SC and A Govender instructed by Fairbridges Wertheim
Becker
COUNSEL
FOR SECOND, THIRD,
SIXTH
AND SEVENTH RESPONDENT:
MS
Baloyi SC and Leon Peter instructed by Cheadle Thompson &
Haysom Inc.
COUNSEL
FOR FOURTH
RESPONDENT:
A
Milovanovic-Bitter instructed by Lapin Attorneys
[1]
20
of 2000.
[2]
Caselines
008-3 to 008-23; 010-3; 010-4; 010-7 etc.
[3]
1970
(2) SA 89 (T).
[4]
2017
(1) SA 367 (SCA).
[5]
2015
(3) SA 386 (SCA).
[6]
(57882/19)
[2020] ZAGPPHC 248 (30 June 2020)
[7]
2023
JDR 0756 (GJ) at par 11
[8]
2010
(4) SA 327
(CC) at paras 35 – 36.
[9]
Caselines
010-5 par 3.4.
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