Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1297South Africa
Henn v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (2024/131188) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1297 (22 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
22 November 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Henn v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (2024/131188) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1297 (22 November 2024)
Henn v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (2024/131188) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1297 (22 November 2024)
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sino date 22 November 2024
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2024-131188
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED: YES/NO
SIGNATURE:
DATE:
22/11/2024
In
the matter between:
DR
ELZETTE HENN
Applicant
and
THE
HEALTH PROFESSIONS COUNCIL
First Respondent
OF
SOUTHA FRICA
MR
L D MAMETJA
Second Respondent
MR
PVH MAOKA
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
[1]
The applicant is a female Obstetrician & Gynaecologist who is
facing charges before
the Health Professions Council. The hearing is
scheduled for 3 to 6 December 2024.
[2]
On 14 November 2024 the applicant launched an urgent application
against the HPCSA
as first respondent, the Acting Registrar of the
HPCSA as second respondent and the designated
pro forma
complaint, who is conducting the professional conduct inquiry against
her, as third respondent.
[3]
The application is brought as an urgent application, and she applies
for the following
relief:
“
2. That
the amended charge sheet received by the applicant on 24 October 2024
be set aside as being ultra vires the powers
of the third respondent
in terms of the referred 2020 Regulations as contemplated by section
6(1)(2)(a)(i) and
section 6(2)(c)
of the
Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act, 3 of 2000
.
3.
That it be directed that:
3.1
The de novo enquiry proceedings against the applicant are to continue
based on the charge
sheet dated 14 August 2023;
3.2
The regulations that apply to the de novo enquiry are the regulations
published in Government
Notice R102 in Government Gazette 31859 of 6
February 2009 (amended by GN53, GG42980 published on 31 January 2020
and GN187, GG43035
and published on 21 February 2020) (“the
February 2020 Regulations”);
3.3
The de novo enquiry due to commence on 3 December 2024 and/or on a
date subsequently agreed
between the parties, are to be conducted in
person in Cape Town, until finalised;
3.4
The costs of this application are to be borne by any respondent who
opposes the application,
jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved.”
[4]
This application arises from unusual circumstances. The inquiry
commenced and was
conducted over four days from 14 to 15 November
2023 (the first session) and 11 to 12 December 2023 (the second
session). However,
two of the panel members have since passed away
and the panel is not quorate, with the result that the hearing has to
commence
de novo
. These proceedings relate to the
de novo
hearing scheduled for 3 December 2024.
[5]
The applicant contends that, until 11 November 2024 it was common
cause between the
parties that the February 2020 Regulations applied
and that the original charges were the charges on which the
de
novo
hearing would proceed.
[6]
On 11 November 2024 the applicant was notified in a letter that an
amended charge
sheet that was sent and received on 24 October 2024
would apply and that the 2023 Regulations (i.e. the Regulations as
amended
by amendments published in 2023) would apply. The complaint
predates those amendments in 2023
[7]
The original charges dated 14 August 2023 read as follows:
“
You are guilty
of unprofessional conduct or conduct which, when regard is had to
your profession, is unprofessional in that on or
about 1 August 2022
in respect of M[...] E[…] (hereinafter referred to as “your
patient”), you provided your
patient with substandard care in
that you:
(i)
Did not abandon the removal of the Mirena after the second failed
attempt and
opted for hysteroscopy;
(ii)
Exposed your patient to danger and harm for inserting a second
Mirena, when the first
one had not been removed.”
[8]
Prior to the first hearing in the original enquiry the parties were
at loggerheads
as to whether the 2020 regulations or the 2023
regulations would apply.But by the time the hearing commenced on 14
November 2023,
it was recorded in the proceedings that there was
consensus that the Regulations as they stand before 23 June 2023 are
applicable.
The original charges were put to the applicant, she
pleaded not guilty, and those proceedings commenced on the dates
indicated
above. The evidence of the pro-forma complainant was
presented, and he closed his case. The applicant had completed her
evidence
in chief and the hearing adjourned. Thereafter two panel
members passed away before the hearing could resume.
[9]
The new charges pertaining to the
de novo
hearing were
received on 24 October 2024 and were amended to read as follows:
“
Count 1:
That you are guilty of
unprofessional conduct or conduct which when regard is had to your
profession, is unprofessional in that
on or about 1 August 2022 in
respect of Ms M[...] E[...] (“your patient”), you
provided your patient with substantive
care in the management of the
patient, in that you did not abandon the removal of the Mirena
(hormonal intrauterine device (IUD))
after the second failed attempt,
and failed to establish the cause of the failure for the removal of
the said Mirena, or conduct
further investigations to address the
problem.”
[10]
The applicant contends that the amendments in the last three lines to
the charge sheet are not
cosmetic but introduce new substantive
issues on which expert evidence would need to be presented. The
applicant contends that,
prior to the amendment, the issues were
factual and did not require expert opinion on the issue now
introduced. It is therefore
an amendment that has added a substantive
component to the charges on which further expert evidence is
required.
[11]
The respondents contends that the application’s urgency is not
such that they should have
been placed under the truncated time
period imposed upon the respondents. This is particularly so as the
amended charge sheet was
received on 24 October 2024. The adherence
to the 2023 regulations was conveyed on 11 November 2024. The
respondents contend that
this application could be heard next week as
there is enough time before the hearing date. The respondents’
postulate envisages
an urgent application in the week of 26 November
and does not avoid an urgent application. As the test for urgency is
whether the
applicant will obtain substantial redress in due course,
and as it is apparent that the applicant would not get such
substantial
redress on the facts of this matter, the matter is
urgent. The degree of urgency was informed by the change of heart of
the third
respondent as far as the application of the Regulations are
concerned. As the fact that the proceedings would commence
de novo
on new charges and with application of the amended Regulations (the
February 2023 Regulations) only became apparent on 11 November
2024,
the truncated time periods are condoned.
[12]
The applicant points out two changes in the 2023 Regulations which
the applicant contends prejudice
her. The first is that under the
2023 Regulations, there is no provision for a request for further
particulars to the charges.
She is therefore precluded from
requesting such particulars on the amended charge sheet. Secondly,
whereas hearings under the 2020
Regulations were primarily in person
hearings, that default position was changed. In terms of the February
2023 Regulations the
default position is that virtual hearings would
take place.
[13]
In the original hearing, when a witness had to testify virtually (at
the applicant’s request)
connectivity problems derailed such
evidence being presented. It was an era in which loadshedding also
had an impact on connectivity.
The virtual hearing was therefore
unsatisfactory.
[14]
The applicant contends that she is entitled to a hearing with
witnesses testifying in person
as that was the default position under
the 2020 Regulations. She has expressed a need for such proceedings
to be conducted in person.
DEFERENCE
[15]
The following considerations arise from the facts of this matter.
Firstly, the issue of deference.
The HPCS is by statute empowered to
investigate professional misconduct of medical practitioners. As a
specialist body, the court
should not indulge in judicial overreach
by directing the HPCSA how to conduct its inquiries (
Bato Star
Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environment Affairs and Tourism and
Others
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC) at paras [47] to [48]).
[16]
The issue of deference is however not a matter of courtesy but
applying the law to the limits
of judicial power.
[17]
The applicant is not approaching the court in
res medias
. She
is approaching the court in advance of a
de novo
hearing in
the face of disputes which she contends affect her fundamental right
to fair administrative action.
[18]
The HPCSA contends that all the concerns that the applicant has may
be raised at the inquiry.
This include the applicability of the 2020
or the 2023 Regulations and whether the new charges can be proffered
or not. In support
of the aforesaid the HPCSA relies on an unreported
judgment of Millar J in
MEC Health, Limpopo v HPCSA
[2023]
ZAGPPHC 2179 (2 June 2023). In that matter the MEC, who was a
registered medical practitioner as well, was facing disciplinary
proceedings which she sought to avert. The court held that all the
concerns that the MEC had could be raised at the hearing of
the
HPCSA.
[19]
The applicant, however, responds to this proposition by
distinguishing between purely procedural
matters and matters where
substantive rights are affected. In
Roux v Health Professions
Council of South Africa and Another
[2012] 1 All SA 49
(SCA) the
pro forma
complainant had added a charge to a charge sheet
which the applicant contended had not served before the preliminary
committee.
Although it was also based on an expert opinion, that
opinion did not serve before the preliminary committee. The SCA
confirmed
the principle that the formulation of charges by the
pro
forma
complainant in proceedings before the HPCSA constitutes
administrative action (par [29]). The SCA set aside the additional
charges
as lacking legality and stated the following at par [33]:
“
[33] It
is necessary briefly to consider the respondents’ submission
that the matter was not ripe for review as the
inquiry had not been
held. This contention cannot be sustained. A person is not prevented
from applying to court for relief where
his very complaint is the
illegality or fundamental irregularity in respect of the decision he
seeks to challenge or impugn. There
is no reason why a person such as
the appellant should first subject herself to an unauthorised inquiry
which would entail costs
and wasted time before challenging its
legality. This is not the kind of case where the question of ripeness
arises as the challenge
relates to the source of power and the
principle of legality. The appellant was entitled to a declaratory
order in that regard.”
[20]
In this instance the HPCSA contends that the addition to the charge
is covered by the same points
of inquiry that served before the
preliminary committee. If this were the position, in the absence of a
de novo
hearing, then the addition to the charge would fall
within the powers of the
pro forma
complainant. However, in
this instance the applicant is facing disciplinary proceedings before
the HPCSA for the second time, for
reasons beyond her control. The
nature of the proceedings that she is facing is akin to a criminal
prosecution.
[21]
In
Holden v Assmang Limited
2021 (6) SA 345
(SCA) it was held
that there is no discernible distinction between pending criminal
proceedings and proceedings before statutorily
created professional
tribunals such as the HPCSA. The cause of action applies to both
civil and criminal proceedings, not only
the latter. The decision of
an important tribunal like the HPCSA could have far-reaching
consequences for someone like the applicant
who could lose her
license to practice. At paras [10] to [11] the SCA stress the fact
that the tribunals of such as those of the
HPCSA “
employ
procedures that bore all the hallmarks of a criminal prosecution and
imposed sanctions that were punitive in nature. These
proceedings
distinguished such proceedings from disciplinary proceedings before a
voluntary association or even a City Council
such as in Gregory’s
case
.”
[22]
The 2020 Regulations govern all substantive and procedural rights of
the medical practitioner
concerned. While the default position in
terms of the 2020 Regulations is that hearings are conducted in
person, the February 2020
Regulations do not provide the applicant in
this matter with the right to a hearing in person. Those rights were
subject to whichever
processes the committee decides would apply. In
this instance, the committee has expressed its preference for a
virtual hearing.
To my mind, the utilisation of a virtual hearing in
the first round for an expert witness was an instance of pragmatism,
which
demonstrates that the default position is not fixed. If
pragmatism requires a virtual hearing in this matter, then that is a
matter
for the committee to determine. The applicant can however
raise her objections to the virtual hearing at the hearing on 3
December
2024.
[23]
Where the HPCSA receives a complaint and, upon consideration of the
complaint by the preliminary
committee, charges are formulated by the
pro forma
complaint, then the
pro forma
complainant is
bound by the charges as formulated, particularly where the respondent
has pleaded to those charges.
[24]
In
Law Society of the Cape of Good Hope v Nel
2012 (4) SA 274
(SCA) the following is stated at par [8]:
“
[8] It is
self-evident that a charge against a legal practitioner in a
disciplinary enquiry must be formulated with adequate
particularity
to enable that legal practitioner to answer the charge, and the
enquiry must be restricted thereto. It also follows
that a council
which initiates a disciplinary enquiry is bound by the charge/s which
it prefers against a legal practitioner.”
[25]
See also
Incorporated Law Society of the Orange Free State v H
1953 (2) SA 263
(O) at 264 H – 265 A. This approach, applied to
the HPCSA, was approved in
Govender v Health Professions Council
of South Africa
2016 JDR 1583 (WCC) at par [39].
[26]
I agree with counsel for the applicant that the amended charge sheet
does introduce the need
for expert opinion on a new issue which was
not required in respect of the previous charge.
[27]
In
Nkabinde and Another v Judicial Service Commission and Others
2015 (1) SA 279
(GJ) a full court had to hear an application by
constitutional court judges. They brought an application to review
and set aside
a decision of the JSC to establish a judicial conduct
committee, appointing a prosecutor of the National Prosecuting
Authority
in terms of section 24(1) as evidence leader for the
tribunal. The applicants argued that the JSC had impermissibly
applied new
procedures envisaged by an amended JSC Act
retrospectively, which were not applicable when the complaint was
lodged. It was contended
that this breached the principle of
legality. At par [121] the full court (Majat J, Claassen J and Kgomo
J concurring), found as
follows:
“
[121] In these
circumstances, the implementation or enforcement of new procedural
provisions of the Amended JSC Act does not affect
any substantive
rights of the applicants or any other party. Similarly, the decisions
of the Commission taken in April 2012 and
October 2012 in terms of
the Amended JSC Act do not impair the substantive rights of any
party, which may have accrued prior to
1 June 2010. As such, the
application to set aside any averred impermissible retrospective
application of the Amended JSC Act,
on the basis of these decisions,
must fail.”
[28]
From the aforesaid it is apparent that, when applied to the facts of
this matter, the applicability
of the 2023 Amended Regulations or the
Regulations as they stood prior to the amendment in 2023 was informed
by the question whether
substantive rights were affected by the 2023
Regulations or not.
[29]
I cannot find that the 2023 Regulations have adversely affected
substantive rights of the applicant
which had accrued prior to the
amendment. The right to further particulars is a procedural matter,
as is the form of the proceedings.
However, those procedural matters
can trigger substantive issues and affect substantive rights. This is
a matter to be determined
on a case by case basis.
[30]
The applicant is entitled to fair administrative action and a fair
hearing in respect of the
de novo hearing. At a minimum, this implies
that she cannot be prejudiced by virtue of having to undergo a
hearing
de novo
. As she had already pleaded to charges in the
first round, and as the parties had agreed that the Regulations as
they stood before
the 2023 amendments would be applicable, these
fundamental components of a fair trial had become entrenched.
[31]
Having pleaded to the original charges, the
de novo
hearing
cannot be
de novo
if the charges are not the same. If the
applicant had been facing criminal charges, she would be entitled to
a verdict of the charges
on which she had pleaded (section 106(4) of
the Criminal Procedure Act).Adding to the charges would be
impermissible.
[32]
The applicant’s rights under sec 34 of the Constitution entitle
her to a fair hearing before
the HPCSA. There is substance to the
applicant’s complaint that the change of heart communicated to
her on 11 November 2024
affects the fairness of the de novo hearing.
As the applicant and the third respondent had agreed on the
applicability of the February
2020 Regulations, those Regulations
would govern the proceedings of the
de novo
hearing as well.
In a civil context, agreements reached at a pretrial conference are
binding on the parties.
[33]
Fairness of a de novo hearing after pleading to specific charges, as
envisaged from a Constitutional
perspective, dictates that the
de
novo
hearing cannot be a hearing on terms which are more
prejudicial to the applicant than the previous proceedings. This is
so regardless
of whether the amended charges covered the same points
of inquiry as those that served before the preliminary committee.
That is
a competence issue which the applicant raises in the notice
of motion and the pro-forma complainant answers. The fundamental
issue
is however the fairness of the de novo hearing.
[34]
In
SA Breweries (Pty) Ltd v Louw
(2018) 39 ILJ 189 (LAC) the
principle was enunciated as follows at par [8] :
“
[8] The
relationship between the pleadings that the pre-trail conference
minute has been the subject of several judicial pronouncements.
In
short, a minute of this sort is an agreement from which one cannot
unilaterally resile. Also, a pleading binds the pleader,
subject only
to the allowing of an amendment, either by agreement with the
adversary, or with leave of the court. The case pleaded
cannot be
changed or expanded by the terms of the minute; if it does, it is
necessary that that change go hand in hand with a necessary
amendment. … Properly applied, a typical minute – cum –
agreement will shrink the scope of the issues to be
advanced by the
litigants. This means, axiomatically, that a litigant cannot fall
back on the broader terms of the pleadings to
evade the narrowing
effect of the terms of the minute.”
[35]
I am fully aware that the aforesaid relates to civil trials, whereas
the proceedings before the
HPCSA are more akin to criminal
proceedings. However, where the parties have agreed on the terms on
which the disciplinary proceedings
would commence, that agreement is
binding. In this instance, the
de novo
hearing has to be on
the same charges as those faced previously and on the application of
the February 2020 Regulations.
[36]
Returning to the relief sought in the notice of motion, Prayer 2 is
aimed at setting aside the
amended charge sheet as being
ultra
vires
the powers of the third respondent in terms of the February
2020 Regulations. The applicant is entitled to the relief for a
different
reason. The
pro forma
complainant proffered the
charges to which the applicant had pleaded, and he confirmed the
application of the 2020 Regulations.
The
pro forma
complainant
is not permitted to unilaterally resile from the charges already put
in such circumstances. A
de novo
hearing cannot be fair if it
is conducted on different or more onerous terms than those that
prevailed during the first hearing.
The amended charge sheet
represents charges that are more onerous to face, than those to which
she had already pleaded. That makes
the de novo hearing unfair. It
infringes rights under sec 33 and 34 of the constitution. It is
consequently based on the principles
of fair administrative action
and fair hearing rights as applied to disciplinary proceedings that
the amended charges lack legality.
To unilaterally resile from the
position that applied during the first hearing is irrational. The
third respondent had, in my opinion,
failed to take into account that
the ground rules for the hearing had been established by the time the
applicant pleaded. He may
not unilaterally resile from such ground
rules by imposing a more onerous charge upon the applicant on new
procedural rules.
[37]
As far as the accrual of substantive rights under the 2020
Regulations are concerned, those rights
remain unaffected. The ambit
of the enquiry and the charges faced by the applicant had been fixed
and her right to be tried under
those circumstances cannot be
disturbed without breaching the applicant’s right to a fair
hearing.
[38]
Having stated the above, this does not mean that the applicant has
acquired a right to a hearing
in person, conducted in terms of the
default position (a hearing conducted in person) by virtue of the
aforesaid. Even under the
2020 Regulations, considerations of
practicality and pragmatism determine whether the hearing was in
person or virtual. The decision
in this regard is that of the
committee. I therefore decline to grant the relief sought in
paragraph 3.3 of the notice of motion.
[39]
As far as the issue of costs is concerned, the change in tack by the
third respondent as expressed
in the letter of 11 November 2024 was
the cause of these proceedings. The third respondent did not discern
that he may not unilaterally
resile from the ground rules that had
already been set for the hearing and which form the bedrock of the
de
novo
hearing. The applicant was entitled to approach the court in
this regard, as it affected the legality of the proceedings.
[40]
In the premises I make the following order:
1.
The matter is heard as one of urgency in terms of Rule 6(12) and the
forms, service
and time periods prescribed by the Uniform Rules of
Court are dispensed with.
2.
The amended charge sheet received by the applicant on 24 October 2024
is set
aside.
3.
It is directed that:
3.1
The de novo enquiry proceedings against the applicant are continued
based on the charge
sheet dated 14 August 2023;
3.2
The regulations that apply to the de novo hearing are the 2020
Regulations, i.e. Regulations
published in Government Notice R102 in
Government Gazette 31859 of 6 February 2009 (amended by GN53, GG42980
published on 31 January
2020 and GN187, GG43035 and published on 21
February 2020);
3.3
The costs of this application are payable by the respondents jointly
and severally, the
one paying the other to be absolved on a party and
party scale, Scale C.
LABUSCHAGNE
AJ
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