Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 8South Africa
Walking on Water Television (PTY) Ltd v Independent Communications Authority of South Africa and Others (33963/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 8 (12 January 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative Law – PAJA review launched 5 years after the administrative action – undue delay – condonation for launching review beyond the 180 day period contemplated in section 7(1) of PAJA and extension of time as provided for in section 9 of PAJA refused.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Walking on Water Television (PTY) Ltd v Independent Communications Authority of South Africa and Others (33963/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 8 (12 January 2023)
Walking on Water Television (PTY) Ltd v Independent Communications Authority of South Africa and Others (33963/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 8 (12 January 2023)
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sino date 12 January 2023
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 33963/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
12
JANUARY 2023
In
the matter between:
WALKING
ON WATER TELEVISION (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
INDEPENDENT
COMMUNICATIONS AUTHORITY
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
First Respondent
KEABETSWE
MODIMOENG N.O
Second Respondent
DEUKOM
(PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
Summary
:
Administrative Law – PAJA review launched 5 years after the
administrative action – undue
delay – condonation for
launching review beyond the 180 day period contemplated in section
7(1) of PAJA and extension of
time as provided for in section 9 of
PAJA refused.
ORDER
1.
The application for the extension of the
180 day period contemplated in
section 7
of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
is refused.
2.
As a consequence, it is declared that this
court has no authority to entertain the merits of the review
application.
3.
The application is therefore refused with
costs.
J
U D G M E N T
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
On 18 February
2016 the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa (ICASA)
refused an application by Walk on Water Televison
(Pty) Ltd (WoWtv)
for the authorization of nineteen video and eight radio channels. On
9 July 2021 WoWtv launched an application
for the review of the
refusal decision and sought an order for the extension of the 180 day
period contemplated in section 7(1)
of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) until date of delivery of
the application.
Chronology
[2]
In any
application where condonation is sought for a procedural delay or
where an extension of time is sought in respect of a prescribed
period, the chronological history of the matter is of prime
importance. In this case, it can be summed up as follows:
27
August 2006 - WoWtv applied for a broadcasting licence on the
basis of it being an “uncompromisingly Christian –
based
television station”, airing “a majority of local
content”. It proclaimed itself to be a broadcasting station
that cater for and “is safe for the whole family”. The
contents of its programs would be “packaged” in
South
Africa and it had “no involvement” with any non-RSA
interest.
7
June 2007 - ICASA held
public hearings in respect of WoWtv’s application for
a
broadcasting licence.
15
March 2011 - WoWtv is granted a broadcasting
licence. A condition thereof was that “…
the licensee
is licensed to provide a subscription broadcasting service (and the)
licensee shall provide a God-based service which
targets all people
without exception
”.
16
January 2015 - ICASA received a letter from the attorneys of a
licensed broadcaster, Deukom (Pty) Ltd, alerting it to allegations
that an unauthorized German broadcaster intended using the licence of
an existing authorised broadcaster to offer its channels.
ICASA was
warned that WoWtv would be the targeted broadcaster and that an
application by WoWtv for additional channels was imminent.
Criminal
and civil proceedings had already been instituted against the German
broadcaster, but to date of the answering affidavit,
to no avail.
15
April 2015 - WoWtv applied for
additional channel authorization in terms of Regulation 3
of the
Subscription Broadcasting Services Regulations
[1]
.
The additional channels proposed German content and corresponded to
the channels referred to in the letter from Deukom’s
attorneys.
22
June 2015 - Although not required to
do so, but in view of the letter from Deukom’s attorneys,
ICASA
resolved to publish WoWtv’s application for public comment.
This was done by way of publication in the Government Gazette.
25
June 2015 - Two objections to WoWtv’s
application were received. One from Deukom and one
from
Multichoice/M-Net.
28
July 2015 - WoWtv
responded to the objections but, in the opinion of ICASA inadequately
so. Consequently ICASA required WoWtv to address certain issues at a
public hearing. These included concerns as to how German programmes
would appeal to the South African population given that German is a
minority language in this country, concerns regarding the impact
such
channels on WoWtv’s local content obligations and concerns
expressed by Deukom that some of the proposed channels contain
content which is profane and obscene and which are contrary to the
Christian values previously espoused by WoWtv.
30
October 2015 - The public hearings were conducted. Extracts from the
transcript of the hearings form part of the record in these
review
proceedings.
19
November 2015 - WoWtv was
afforded a further opportunity to submit responses to the
concerns
raised.
18
February 2016 -
ICASA communicated its decision to refuse the application
for
additional channel authorization to WoWtv.
24
May 2016 - ICASA furnished
reasons for its decision.
9
July 2021 -
The review application was lodged.
The
law regarding the timing of review applications
[3]
Section 7 of
PAJA provides that “
proceedings
for a judicial review
”
of an administrative act must be instituted “…
without
reasonable delay and not later than 180 days
”
after the date of the reasons furnished for the decision.
[4]
Should a party not be able to comply
with the 180 day requirement, such a party may apply to a court for
an extension thereof as
provided for in section 9 of PAJA, which
extension may be granted “
where
the interests of justice so require
”.
[5]
At
the outset, the importance of the 180 day cut-off period needs to be
emphasised. It is a statutory codification of the “delay
rule”
which has been in existence prior to the promulgation of PAJA
[2]
.
[6]
In
Gqwetha
v Transkei Development Corporation & Others
[3]
the court found as follows in its majority decision at [22] –
[23]:
“
It
is important for the efficient functioning of public bodies that a
challenge to the validity of their decisions by proceedings
for
judicial review should be initiated without undue delay. The
rationale of the longstanding rule – reiterated most recently
by Brand JA in Associated Institutions Pension Fund and Others v Van
Zyl and Others
2005 (2) SA 302
(SCA) at 321 – is twofold:
First, the failure to bring a review within a reasonable time may
cause prejudice to the respondent.
Secondly, and in my view more
importantly, there is a public interest element in the finality of
administrative decisions and the
exercise of administrative functions
…. Underlying the latter aspect of the rationale is the
inherent potential for prejudice,
both to the effective functioning
of the public body and to those who rely on its decisions, if the
validity of its decision remains
uncertain …
”.
[7]
The
above decision was quoted with approval in
Opposition
to Urban Tolling Alliance v South African National Roads Agency
Limited
(OUTA)
[4]
.
The court of appeal then went further (at [26]): “
At
common law, application of the undue delay rule required a two-stage
enquiry. First, whether there was an undue delay and, second,
if so,
whether the delay should in all the circumstances be condoned …
Up to a point, I think, section 7(1) of PAJA requires
the same
two-stage approach. The difference lies, as I see it, in the
Legislature’s determination of a delay exceeding 180
days as
per se unreasonable. Before the effluxion of 180 days, the first
enquiry in applying section 7(1) is still whether the
delay (if any)
was unreasonable. But after the 180-day period the issue of
unreasonableness is predetermined by the Legislature:
it is
unreasonable per se
”.
[8]
What then is the remedy for an applicant if
it exceeded the 180 day period? The answer, already given in para 4
above, lies in an
application for the extension of time. In
OUTA
(above) the Supreme Court of Appeal has
dealt with what the position would be in a case where no extension is
granted (also at [26]):
“
It
follows that the court is only empowered to entertain the review
application if the interests of justice dictates an extension
in
terms of section 9. Absent such an extension the court has no
authority to entertain the review application at all. Whether
or not
the decision was unlawful no longer matters
”.
[9]
This
jurisdictional aspect was the subject matter in
Passenger
Rail Agency of South Africa v Siyangena Technologies (Pty) Ltd
(PRASA)
[5]
.
[10]
In
PRASA
the
court found that, for purposes of adjudicating the considerations
referred to in section 9 of PAJA, a “
focused
application is required
”.
[11]
In
PRASA
,
reference was also made to
Asla
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality
[6]
and
City
of Cape Town v Aurecon SA (Pty) Ltd
[7]
wherein it has been confirmed that knowledge of improprieties (if
any) is irrelevant for purposes of calculating the starting date
for
the section 7(1)(b) 180-day period. The starting date is when
knowledge of the decision and the reasons for it is acquired
or
“
ought
reasonably to have become known
”
to the applicant.
[12]
In
making an application for extension of time, a party doing so, in
similar fashion as a party applying for condonation for a delay
in
taking steps within a prescribed period, must furnish full and
reasonable explanations for the delay, covering the entire period
of
delay, deal with the effect of the delay on administrative justice
and the rights of other parties, the importance of the issues
raised
in the review proceedings and the prospects of success
[8]
.
The
grounds for extension of time
[13]
WoWtv’s
sole reason for not having launched the review application in time,
is simply that it did not have money to do so.
It further blames
ICASA for the delay occasioned between the lodging of the application
for authorization of the proposed channels
and the final
determination thereof.
[14]
WoWtv
formulated its grounds as follows:
“
The
reasons for the delay
62.
Had ICASA not delayed its processing of the channel authorisation
application, WoWtv may well have had the financial resources
needed
to take the impugned decision on review. But by the time the written
reasons were published, more than 14 months after the
application had
been submitted, WoWtv was simply unable to proceed, by that stage
(sic), the serious financial sacrifices that
WoWtv’s founders
had made had come to naught
”
.
[15]
The reasoning
contained in this paragraph somewhat defies logic. It is premised on
a lack of funds, which situation could presumably
have been remedied,
had the authorization been granted. But, if the authorisation had
been granted, there would have been no review.
No other particulars
have been furnished as to what occurred between the time of lodging
of the application and the determination
thereof. WoWtv’s claim
that the delay has left WoWtv too destitute to pursue a review
application, must then presuppose that
it had no funds to begin with
and was optimistically dependent on future revenue from the proposed
German channels. It has not
been disclosed what “financial
sacrifices” WoWtv’s funders had made (or could no longer
make) which could give
any substance to this contention. No
evidentiary material backing this rather illogical claim had
therefore been produced.
[16]
The lack of
particularity is exacerbated by the failure to provide any concrete
figures or details of WoWtv’s alleged lack
of funding. In the
reasons provided by ICASA for its decision, it referred (in para
5.2.3 thereof) to WoWtv’s assertion in
response to the concerns
raised by ICASA, to the effect that “…
with
a single channel in operation, WoWtv has approved a monthly budget of
R10 m for WoWtv studios to produce local content for
WoWtv
”.
It was not explained how a broadcaster with such a substantial
monthly production budget cannot afford a simple review
application.
[17]
Apparently
further, so WoWtv’s response to ICASA went, WoWtv studios “…
had
negotiated strict content acquisition measures which allows us to
spread the cost of the content acquisition. This means that
WoWtv
will not be incurring any upfront costs in relation to the channels
but has purchased these channels so that content costs
obligations
match subscriptions. In other words, in order to manage the costs of
acquisition WoWtv pays for content on an ‘on
demand basis’
”.
This statement seemingly contradicts the subsequent founding
affidavit in the review application wherein it is claimed
that the
refusal of the additional channel authorisation caused poverty.
[18]
WoWtv
also relied on complaint proceedings lodged against it in January
2018 for not having commenced its operations within the
initial
prescribed 12 months of the granting of its authorization in 2011
[9]
.
This period had later been extended to 24 months but the complaint
(referred to as a “charge”) had been dismissed
by the
Complaints and Compliance Committee
[10]
(the CCC). During those proceedings, WoWtv sought to have the refusal
of its application for additional channels overturned. The
CCC had no
jurisdiction to do so and refused this relief. While WoWtv has since
(correctly) conceded that the CCC had no such jurisdiction,
it relied
on those proceedings and the judgment given therein as follows: “
It
was only on 6 August 2018, when the CCC released its judgment, that
WoWtv realized that it had a strong case, on the merits,
to have the
impugned decision reviewed and set aside
”.
[19]
Having come to
the above realization, albeit already two years after the application
for authority had been refused, WoWtv again
relied on an alleged lack
of funding as a reason why this realization had not been acted upon.
WoWtv claimed: “
But
again, it was no in a financial position to embark on what would
undoubtedly have been opposed proceedings. It is only now,
almost
three years later, that we are finally in a position that allows us
to initiate these legal proceedings
”.
[20]
What is clear
from the above, is that WoWtv’s claims of poverty have been
pleaded in the vaguest possible and generalized
terms. This
generality was also intended to cover the whole period of delay,
without any specificity. For a corporate entity with,
on its own
version, a monthly production budge of R10 million, this is simply
not good enough.
The
effect of the delay on the administrative of justice and other
parties
[21]
WoWtv conceded
that this factor “ordinarily” plays an important role in
review proceedings but contended that there
“is no potential”
for a decision in its favour having an effect on ICASA or any other
party. This mere say so, ignores
the rights of Deukom, an authorised
broadcaster with German content. Conceivably it positioned itself in
the market and has done
so in the past six years based on the
position of its competitors who had been licensed. A timeous review,
if successful, would
equally conceivably have impacted on its
projections of revenue streams. The issue of competition between
channels was conceded
by WoWtv before the CCC. Delays in prosecuting
a review resulted in a status quo having been maintained for a
substantial period
of time for its competitors. Time lapse and
entrenchment of circumstances therefore impact on parties other than
the applicant
in the review application. It is for reasons like these
that our courts have found that undue delays should not easily be
tolerated.
The lapse of time in this case is similar to that in
OUTA
where the court has found (at para 41) as follows: “
After
all is said and done, the stark reality remains that because of the
delay in bringing the review application, five years had
elapsed
since the impugned decisions were taken and that during those five
years things have happened that cannot be undone. The
delay rule
gives expression to the fact that there are circumstances in which it
is contrary to the public interest to undo history
”.
Although the circumstances of this case are different from those
where a successful tenderer had proceeded for five years
in terms of
an administrative act which is sought to be reviewed, WoWtv’s
assertion that its application operates in a vacuum
devoid of
consequences for other licensees cannot be accepted at face value and
the consequences of a delay in prosecuting a process
which may impact
on others, even if only indirectly, is weighted against WoWtv.
[22]
The length of
the delay also encroaches on the public interest element residing in
the need for finality of administrative actions
referred to in
paragraphs 6 and 7 above.
Important
questions of law
[23]
WoWtv
contended that its review application raised important questions of
law. I agree, however with the respondent’s counsel
that the
present application is not much different from an “ordinary”
review application with little legal complexities.
The only issue of
some substance may have been whether it was competent for ICASA to
call for public participation and whether
a delay resulting from that
should be tolerated or not. Insofar as WoWtv relied on an alleged
need for clarity from this court
in this regard, there were no
indications from any of the papers that this was a vexed procedural
aspect which required determination.
In the five years since the
decision in question, this issue has not caused any procedural
uncertainty for any number of other
parties. I find that the
application raised no “important questions of law” which
would outweigh the delay rule considerations.
The
prospects of success
[24]
The simple
fact of the matter is that WoWtv had applied for a broadcasting
licence based on the offering of wholesome “God-based”
content with high local content. Such a licence was granted,
incorporating as its conditions, the basis on which WoWtv had applied
for it. The application for an additional 27 broadcasting channels
primarily in German and with German “packaged” content,
fundamentally changed the picture even though WoWtv was not a
religious channel. When WoWtv failed to address ICASA’s
concerns
regarding this, the application was refused. Arguments
raised by WoWtv that, in effect, all content is “God-based”
and ICASA’s disagreement therewith, are not grounds for review,
but stray into the realm of an appeal, which falls outside
a PAJA
review.
[25]
Had WoWtv
applied for the amendment of the conditions of its original license,
the matter might have had a different outcome. In
furnishing its
reasons, ICASA had as long ago as 24 May 2016 alerted WoWtv of this
aspect, which had, to date not been pursued.
[26]
The prospects
of success therefore appears to be too scant to tilt the scales in
favour of WoWtv to such a degree that it would
compensate for a five
year delay in launching the review application.
Conclusion
[27]
WoWtv had
failed to convince this court that this is a matter where a delay in
excess of five years to launch a PAJA review should
be condoned and
that an extension of a time period as contemplated in section 9 of
PAJA to cover the period of delay beyond the
180 days contemplated in
section 7 of PAJA should be granted. The consequence is that this
court is therefore precluded from adjudicating
the review
application. Having reached this conclusion, I find no cogent reasons
why the customary consequence that costs should
follow the event,
should not apply.
Order
[28]
In the
premises the following is made:
1.
The
application for the extension of the 180 day period contemplated in
section 7
of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
is
refused.
2.
As a
consequence, it is declared that this court has no authority to
entertain the merits of the review application.
3.
The
application is therefore refused with costs.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 9 November 2022
Judgment
delivered: 12 January 2023
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants:
Adv J Berger
Attorney
for the Applicants:
Cowan Harper Madikizela
Attorneys, Johannesburg
For
the 1
st
& 2
nd
Respondent:
Adv A M Mtembu
Attorney
for the 1
st
& 2
nd
Respondent:
Mashiane Moodley Monama
Attorneys, Johannesburg
[1]
Notice 152 of 2006 published in Government Gazette No 28452 of 31
January 2006.
[2]
See inter alia
Harnaker
v Minister of the Interior
1965 (1) SA 3
72 (C).
[3]
2006 (2) SA 603 (SCA).
[4]
[2013] 4 All SA 639 (SCA).
[5]
Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa (PRASA) v Siyangena
Technologies (Pty) Ltd (7839/2016) ZAGPPHC (3 May 2017
[6]
2017 (6) SA 360 (SCA).
[7]
2017 (4) SA 223
(CC).
[8]
Deltatex
Holding Ltd v Exxaro Coal (Pty) Ltd
(166/2012)
[2019] ZAGPPHC (6 June 2019) at para 37.
[9]
Regulation
5(c)
read with Schedule 2 of the Regulations Regarding Standard
Terms and Conditions for Individual Licences as published in
Government
Gazette No 33294 on 14 June 2010 imposed this obligation.
[10]
An
independent administrative tribunal of ICASA.
sino noindex
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