Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 369South Africa
Vilakazi and Others v MEC responsible for Economic Development, Gauteng and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 369; 2023-032601 (18 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
18 May 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Vilakazi and Others v MEC responsible for Economic Development, Gauteng and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 369; 2023-032601 (18 May 2023)
Vilakazi and Others v MEC responsible for Economic Development, Gauteng and Another [2023] ZAGPPHC 369; 2023-032601 (18 May 2023)
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sino date 18 May 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO:
2023-032601
(1) REPORTABLE:
NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
(3) REVISED:
NO
DATE:
18 May 2023
Signature:
In
the matter between:
SIBONGILE
VILAKAZI
1
st
Applicant
THANDIWE
GODONGWANA
2
nd
Applicant
LENTSWE
MOKGATLE
3
rd
Applicant
DAVID
MAIMELA
4
th
Applicant
THEMBA
FAKUDE
5
th
Applicant
And
MEC
RESPONSIBLE FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT,
GAUTENG
1
st
Respondent
GAUTENG
GROWTH AND DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
2
nd
Respondent
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicants are directors, recently
terminated, of the Gauteng Growth and Development Agency (“GGDA”),
a corporate
entity duly established under the amended Blue IQ
Investment Holdings Act 5 of 2013 (Gauteng Province) and the Company
laws of
the Republic of South Africa. The GGDA is an agency under the
Gauteng Department of Economic Development.
[2]
The applicants were at all material times
members of a board of directors of the second respondent. The board
of directors is made
up of nine (9) non-executive directors. The
first applicant served as the Chairperson of the said Board. Of
the nine board
members, only four (4) board members joined the first
applicant in this application, whist the other four (4) resigned
because
of the first respondent’s decision to dissolve the
Board.
[3]
The first respondent is the Member of the
Executive Council (“MEC”) responsible for the portfolio
of Economic Development
in the Gauteng Province.
[4]
The applicants are before this court on an
urgent basis. They seek an order that is split into part A and part
B.
[5]
I am seized with deciding part A wherein
the applicants seek an order in the following terms:
5.1
That
this application be treated as an urgent application and in so far as
may be necessary the forms prescribed by the Rules of
this Court be
dispensed with;
5.2
That
the first respondent’s decision to dissolve the Board of the
GGDA (the second respondent) and to terminate the Board
membership of
the applicants with the second Respondent be and is hereby suspended
with effect from 24 March 2023, alternatively
from the date of this
order.
5.3
That
the applicants be reinstated as directors of the second respondent
with effect from 24 March 2023, alternatively, the date
of this
order;
5.4
That
the appointment of any directors, if any, in substitution of the
applicants, to the board on or after 24 March 2023, is reviewed,
alternatively declared unlawful, and set aside, alternatively,
suspended;
5.5
Interdicting
and preventing the first respondent from appointing any directors to
the board of the second respondent in substitution
of the applicants;
That the first respondent; and the second respondent only in the
event the latter opposes this application,
be ordered to pay the
costs associated with the relief sought in part A.
B.
APPLICANTS’ CASE
[6]
On 24 March 2023 the first respondent
decided to dissolve the board of the second respondent, an
administrative action which she
communicated to the Applicants the
same day. She was purportedly acting within or exercising her public
powers as the MEC.
[7]
The applicants contend that the action was
irrational and is of such a nature that given the available facts, no
reasonable administrator
would take and as such is liable to
challenge under the principle of legality. Furthermore, insofar as
the shareholder of the second
respondent is the Gauteng Provincial
Government, the first respondent did not have the shareholder’s
resolution to dissolve
the board, she dissolved the board on her own
whim and ulterior motives.
[8]
The
applicants further contend that the decision was taken with an
ulterior motive in that the first respondent wanted to get rid
of the
Board so that she paves a way for herself to start afresh the
recruitment process for the appointment of the Chief Executive
Officer for the Agency.
[1]
Her aim is to open an opportunity for an individual she has
predetermined or has in mind that she wants to appoint. The said
individual was not among those who were shortlisted and interviewed
for the position, for this reason, the first respondent’s
decision was influenced by bias. Her decision is therefore unlawful.
[9]
When the board did not agree with the first
respondent to start the recruitment process afresh as there was no
sound reason to do
so, the first respondent invoked her powers to
dissolve the board. It is the applicants’ submission that in
this regard the
first respondent abused her powers and thus acted
unlawfully.
[10]
To underline the arbitrariness and
procedural unfairness of the first respondent’s conduct, she
only afforded the applicants
a mere 24 hours in which to make their
representations before firing them. That period was unreasonable and
wholly inadequate especially
in view of the drastic nature and
seriousness of the implications of the decision.
[11]
The first respondent, in her letter
terminating the board dated 24 March 2023, also states that she is
registering a concern on
what she terms “material matters”
which were raised by some board matters which she regards as having
led to a breakdown
in relations between her and the board as well as
between the shareholder and the board. Said “material matters”
are
not disclosed, nor are the applicants given any hearing as
regards same.
Factual background
[12]
The first applicant was appointed as member
and Chairman of the Board of the GGDA on 1 October 2021 by the former
MEC for Economic
Development, Mr Parks Tau. The GGDA is now under the
stewardship of the first respondent.
[13]
The second, third and fourth and fifth
applicants were also appointed as members of the board on the same
day. The Board is made
up of 13 individual members and it was
appointed for a three-year term ending on 31 September 2024.
[14]
The Board was functioning effectively and
optimally, delivering on both the mandate of GGDA and the strategy
developed by the board
in May 2022. All indications were that the
organization is on track to turning around to reach high performance
standards.
[15]
The performance of the board had never been
questioned by either by the former MEC, Mr Parks Tau or the first
respondent. For instance,
in a letter addressed to the first
applicant dated 24 March 2023, the first respondent confirmed that
the former’s leadership
skills, style or ability has never been
up for debate including her will to ensure that the performance of
the organisation improves.
[16]
In October 2022, the Gauteng Provincial
Executive Committee went through political changes that saw the
former MEC Parks Tau who
was the MEC responsible for Economic
Development being replaced by the first respondent.
[17]
At the time when the aforesaid changes took
place, the GGDA had already finalized the recruitment process for the
position of Group
Chief Executive Officer (GCEO). The process was
overseen by the then MEC Parks Tau or at least his representative,
who is the Head
of Department of Economic Development in Gauteng.
[18]
The process of recruitment was undertaken
in accordance with the provisions of the Transversal Policy on
Recruitment and Secondment.
It appears that the first respondent
takes a view that the Transversal Policy on Recruitment and
Secondment is
ultra vires
on some or other grounds.
[19]
Upon completion of the recruitment process,
a submission in the form of an interview report was submitted to the
then MEC Parks
Tau for him to seek concurrence of the Provincial
Executive Committee as per the established norms for the appointment
for a GCEO
position.
[20]
In turn, the former MEC Parks Tau prepared
a memorandum or submission for the Provincial Executive. The changes
in the political
office occurred before the former MEC Parks Tau
could present the memorandum to the Provincial Executive Committee
for their concurrence.
[21]
As the successor in title, the first
respondent had to be briefed about the process including how it had
started and the stage where
it was at in order for her to take it
forward to conclusion. The first applicant in her capacity as
Chairman of the Board met the
first respondent on the 10 November
2022. The meeting was an informal meeting at the applicant’s
request for introductions
with a view to get to know the first
respondent and her expectations as the new MEC responsible for GGDA.
[22]
At that meeting the first applicant briefed
the first respondent about the organization, strategy adopted by the
board and performance
against this strategy, including the kind of
GCEO needed to execute the strategy.
[23]
The first respondent indicated to the first
applicant that she had received the briefing documents on the
recommended candidate
by the Board but that she had no intention to
approve the candidate. She indicated that she had another person in
mind whom she
thought she could rely on to assist her in areas where
she felt challenged, such as knowing people in the investment
community,
she preferred that such person be the one who should be
employed as the GCEO. The person she preferred for that position was
not
among those that had been recommended by the board for the
concurrence of the provincial executive.
[24]
The first respondent forwarded the first
applicant on WhatsApp the profile of her preferred candidate. The
first applicant indicated
to the first respondent that this
individual was not suitable for the role of the GCEO based on her
skills and experience. She
did not meet the minimum requirements for
the role based on the strategy adopted for the organization. The
first respondent said
that while she heard first applicant's
argument, she wanted her to meet this individual and determine the
way forward. She undertook
to schedule a meeting between the three of
them. The meeting ended at that point.
[25]
The first respondent never scheduled the
meeting as undertaken. Instead, the acting GCEO reported to the first
applicant that the
first respondent wanted to meet him. They met at
the first respondent’s home where she indicated to him that the
board had
recommended him for the position of GCEO, but he was not
her preferred candidate. The first respondent further indicated to
him
that she had two other preferred candidates and that she wanted
the recruitment process to start afresh and the Acting GCEO was
welcomed to apply if he wanted to.
[26]
As chairperson of the board, first
applicant was alarmed by this report because it was a governance
protocol violation. The recruitment
and appointment of the GCEO is
between the Board and the first respondent and the latter was not
supposed to have such a conversation
with the acting GCEO.
[27]
This triggered the board to write to
first respondent on 18 January 2023 to inquire about how far the
concurrence process was. The
first respondent in response contended
that the board’s submission was incomplete as it did not
include information about
the risk presented by the fact that the
previous GCEO, who was dismissed, was challenging the dismissal at
the CCMA.
[28]
On 05 February 2023, the board responded to
first respondent's query and highlighted that there was no risk to
the organization
because the position was vacant, and it needed to be
filled for stability of the organization.
[29]
The first respondent responded per letter
dated 22 February 2023, accusing the board of acting outside of its
mandate by undertaking
the recruitment process because the BLUE IQ
Act 05 of 2003 that governs the GGDA states that the MEC appoints the
GCEO. She informed
the board that she was starting the recruitment
process from the beginning, and she would manage it herself. She
called upon the
board to nominate a board member to represent it in
the interview panel that she would be setting up unless the board
could prove
that the former MEC Parks Tau had instructed the board to
follow the recruitment process followed.
[30]
On 25 February 2023, the board, in response
to the accusation by the first respondent aforesaid, requested a
meeting with her. The
idea was to meet with the first respondent in
order to understand from her what informed her approach and also an
opportunity for
the board to explain the decision-making processes
followed up to the final stage, including the fact that the former
MEC Parks
Tau was at all times part of the recruitment process.
[31]
In response to the request for the meeting,
the first respondent stated that she found the request for a meeting
to be an act of
defiance as her instruction was simple. She requested
the board to write and explain to her why the board was failing to
execute
her lawful instruction.
[32]
It appeared strange to the applicants that
the first respondent would view the request for a meeting as an act
of defiance. There
could be no conceivable basis for the first
respondent to take this view except if she was already having
prejudice towards them
as a board.
[33]
The applicants contend that they were not
defying the first respondent. All they were insisting on was that the
recruitment process
had already been initiated and it would amount to
wasteful and fruitless expenditure to start a process afresh when
everything
had been done. The first respondent decided to dissolve
the board so that she may appoint the individual whom she has
preselected
outside the recruitment process.
[34]
On 25 February 2023, the board responded to
the first respondent and explained that it was not in defiance, but
it was requesting
an audience with the first respondent to avoid any
misunderstandings that may have arisen from the correspondences.
[35]
The applicants made overtures to the first
respondent to invoke the dispute resolution mechanism in the
shareholder compact. Whilst
the first respondent initially showed
interest in this approach, she later pulled out citing a legal
opinion that she had received
regarding this matter. She
required the respondents as individual board members to respond
within 24 hours giving her reasons
why they should remain as board
members.
[36]
By 06:30 on 24 March 2023, the first to
fourth applicants had received individual letters from the first
respondent in which she
communicated her decision to dissolve the
board and termination of their membership.
[37]
The first respondent did not give the fifth
applicant a letter of termination of his membership of the board. On
25 March 2023,
the fifth applicant sent an e-mail to the office of
the first respondent informing them that he had not received the
letter confirming
the dissolution of the board. To date the fifth
applicant has not been furnished with the said letter. The first
respondent simply
did not respond thereto.
The case for urgency
[38]
Submissions for and against urgency were
made by counsel for both the applicants and the respondent.
[39]
On behalf of the applicants, it was
submitted that the process for the appointment of the GCEO was far
advanced by the time the
first respondent came into the fray. A
presentation had already been made and submitted to her predecessor.
[40]
As at the time this application was heard,
the second respondent did not have a board. It also did not have a
CEO, notwithstanding
the fact that the process to appoint the CEO was
finalized as early as July 2022. An advertisement was published over
the past
weekend for the appointment of the CEO.
[41]
It was submitted on behalf of the
applicants that there is a risk that by the time the review is heard,
the outcome thereof may
be academic.
[42]
The application is in the public interest
and this, therefore, buttresses the issue of urgency. The applicants
may not get substantial
relief should this matter only be heard in
due course.
[43]
Counsel for the respondents was of the view
that this application is not urgent. The respondents decry the
shortness of the timeframes
that they were given to respond to this
matter and to prepare for court.
[44]
The court exercised its discretion and
heard this matter as one of urgency in terms of rule 6 (12) of the
uniform rules of court.
The application for an
interdict
[45]
The
requirements for an interim interdict are well established in our
law. They can be summarised as follows: a
prima
facie
right even though open to some doubt; a well-grounded apprehension of
irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted; and
there is
no other satisfactory or adequate remedy available to the applicant,
and, that the balance of convenience favours the
granting of an
interim interdict.
[2]
[46]
The central issue to be decided in this
application is whether the MEC has the powers to appoint directors
and the CEO. Further,
whether the board of directors usurped the
MEC’s powers by leading the process of recruiting the CEO.
Consequently, was the
MEC justified in dissolving the board, more
particularly the applicants.
[47]
Section 8(3) of the Gauteng Growth and
Development Agency (Proprietary) Limited Act 5 of 2003 (“the
Act”) provides that
“The MEC must appoint the Board of
Directors and the Chief Executive Officer of the Company.”
Whether this complies
with corporate governance norms is doubtful.
One would expect the enabling Act to empower the MEC to appoint the
board, and provide
for the latter, in concurrence with the MEC, to
appoint the GCEO. This is not a matter for consideration here.
[48]
It is apparent from a perusal of the Act
that the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
is applicable to the second
respondent.
Section 71
(1) Regulates the removal of directors. It
reads as follows:
“
despite
anything to the contrary in the company's memorandum of incorporation
or rules, or any agreement between a company and a
director, or
between any shareholders and a director,
may
be removed by an ordinary resolution adopted at a shareholders
meeting
by the persons entitled to
exercise voting rights in an election of that director, subject to
subsection (2).” (Own emphasis).
[49]
Section 71
(2) provides as follows: “Before
the shareholders office company may consider a resolution
contemplated in subsection (1)
– (a) The director concerned
must be given notice of the meeting and the resolution, at least
equivalent to that which a
shareholder is entitled to receive,
irrespective of whether or not the director is a shareholder of the
company; and (b) The director
must be afforded the reasonable
opportunity to make a presentation in person or through a
representative, to the meeting, before
the resolution is put to a
vote.”
[50]
In
Minister of
Defence and Military Veterans v Motau & Another
2014 (5) SA 69
(CC) the court found that the Minister had the
necessary good cause to terminate the services of General Motau and
Ms Mokoena as
board chairman and deputy-chairman respectively, and
that her decision was rational. Under their leadership, Armscor and
its Board
had failed to effectively fulfil its statutory mandate.
However, the majority held that in making her decision, the Minister
was
required to comply with the process for the dismissal of
directors as set out in the
Companies Act. Her
failure to do so
rendered her decision unlawful.
[51]
There is nothing before me that suggests
that prior to the MEC dissolving the board, that resolutions were
taken which entitled
the MEC, to dissolve the board. In the absence
of a resolution, I must accept the applicants’ version that no
resolution,
at least insofar as it related to dissolution of the
board, was obtained.
[52]
There are further reasons what features
that distinguish the decision in
Motau
from the current matter. They are:
52.1
In
Motau
,
the Minister had on several occasions expressed her dissatisfaction
with the applicants’ conduct. They did not attend at
least
three meetings that she had convened, General Motau responded rather
insouciantly to her registering her disapproval for
such conduct,
reminding the Minister that board members have other business to
attend to.
52.2
The
applicants’ terms had expired by the time the appeal was heard,
and the court could not reinstate them. Despite the procedural
defects of her decision, the Minister had substantively good and
indeed compelling reasons for terminating the board membership
of the
applicants.
[53]
In the matter under consideration, the
reasons for the termination of board membership are hard to fathom.
They vary from the MEC
alleging “material matters” to her
having another candidate for the CEO position in mind and to the
allegation that
the board’s presentation on the recruitment of
the GCEO was incomplete.
[54]
In the matter under consideration, the
following issues render the conduct or actions of the first
respondent to be left wanting:
54.1
To
the extent that the shareholder of the second respondent is the
Gauteng Provincial Government, the first respondent did not have
the
shareholder's resolution to dissolve the board, in keeping with the
requirements of
section 71
of the
Companies Act.
[3
]
This lends credence to the applicants’ apprehension of ulterior
motives on the part of the first respondent.
54.2
Upon
realizing that the matter between the first respondent and the board
had gotten serious and it was clearly a dispute, the board
invoked
the dispute resolution mechanism in the Shareholder Compact. This was
in correspondence dated 13 March 2023, on 16 March
2023, the first
respondent acknowledged the dispute and started the process of
dispute resolution mechanism.
She
scheduled a meeting for 24 March 2023, but recanted and withdrew the
letter agreeing to the dispute resolution meeting, effectively
canceling the dispute resolution process.
[4]
54.3
On
24 March 2023 the first respondent sent out the letters of
termination to the first to fourth respondents bar the fifth
respondent.
Enquiries by the latter as to his status had been met
with silence to date.
[5]
It is
thus unclear whether the fifth respondent remains a member of the
board or not. This appears to be a rather awkward manner
of
conducting business.
54.4
The
first respondent ignored evidence of the involvement of her
predecessor in the recruitment process for the new GCEO. This,
despite having called for proof thereof.
[6]
54.5
The
first respondent refused to meet with the board on more than 3
occasions, thus failing to comply with
the
shareholder compact.
[55]
All these ‘reasons’ leaves one
to reasonably infer the existence of ulterior motives on the part of
the first respondent.
[56]
One would further expect the political
office bearer (MEC) to apply herself more productively in policy
formulation and development,
rather than being involved in
recruitment processes.
[57]
The inescapable conclusion in this
application, is that the board has unbeknownst to it, through
asserting its independence and
by being diligent invited the wrath of
the first respondent, resulting in its demise.
[58]
The
issue of costs is next up for consideration. The normal rule
applicable is that costs follow the event. In this case, I consider
that it would be unjust for the applicants to be rendered out of
pocket in their quest for justice. The first respondent’s
approach resulting in this impasse was inordinately harsh and
heavy-handed. The court will thus reluctantly
[7]
,
express its displeasure by way of a punitive cost order.
[59]
In the result, I make the following order:
[60]
Pending the finalization of the review
envisaged in part B of the notice of motion:
60.1
The
first respondent’s decision to dissolve the board of the GGDA
(the second respondent) and to terminate the board membership
of the
applicants with the second respondent is hereby suspended with effect
from 24 March 2023.
60.2
The
applicants be and are hereby reinstated as directors of the second
respondent with effect from 24 March 2023.
60.3
The
appointment of any directors, if any, in substitution of the
applicants, to the board on or after 24 March 2023, is hereby set
aside.
60.4
The
first respondent is hereby interdicted from appointing any directors
to the board of the second respondent in substitution of
the
applicants.
[61]
The first respondent and the second
respondent are jointly and severally ordered to pay the costs of this
application on a scale
as between attorney and client. The one
paying, the other to be absolved.
J.S. NYATHI
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
19
April 2023
Date
of Judgment:
18
May 2023
On
behalf of the Applicants:
Ngeno
Mteto Inc
Counsel:
Adv.
M. Majozi
On
behalf of the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondent:
Mncedisi
Ndlovu & Sedumedi Attorneys
Counsel:
Adv.
M. Sello SC
With
Adv. Manala
Delivery: This judgment
was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties' legal
representatives by email, and uploaded
on the CaseLines electronic
platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 18 May 2023.
[1]
Sibongile Vilakazi’s founding affidavit Para 12.
[2]
Webster
v Mitchell
1948 (1) SA 1186
(W) as qualified in Gool v Minister of
Justice 1955 (2) SA 682 (C).
[3]
Vilakazi’s
founding affidavit para 11.
[4]
Vilakazi
founding affidavit para 45.
[5]
Ibid
para 50.
[6]
Vilakazi
founding affidavit para 48.
[7]
Public funds are constantly exposed through acts of state
functionaries.
sino noindex
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