Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 501South Africa
Sakeliga NPC v Auditor-General South Africa [2023] ZAGPPHC 501; 36297/2022 (30 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
30 June 2023
Headnotes
the view that the request was "excessive and therefore vexatious", and that compliance therewith would substantially and unreasonably divert the resources of the AG. [10] The AG's view was that the publicly available audit reports provided sufficient information for Sakeliga's purposes. [11] It is common cause that the AG does not have an internal appeal procedure as provided for in section 74 of PAIA. Consequently, Sakeliga launched this application in which it sought the following relief:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sakeliga NPC v Auditor-General South Africa [2023] ZAGPPHC 501; 36297/2022 (30 June 2023)
Sakeliga NPC v Auditor-General South Africa [2023] ZAGPPHC 501; 36297/2022 (30 June 2023)
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sino date 30 June 2023
FLYNOTE:
PAIA
– Municipal finances –
Disclosure
of management reports
–
AG
contended that publicly available audit reports provided sufficient
information for Sakeliga's purposes – AG argued that
a
requester may only approach a court once it has exhausted its
administrative remedies – Peremptory terms of PAIA –
AG
was not constitutionally obliged to publish management reports –
Application in terms of PAIA is premature – Application
dismissed –
Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000
,
s
78.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
number: 36297/2022
Date
of hearing: 13 April 2023
Date
of judgment: 30 June 2023
1.
REPORTABLE: YES /
NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES /
NO
3.
REVISED.
DATE:
30/06/2023
In
the application of:
SAKELIGA
NPC Applicant
and
THE
AUDITOR-GENERAL SOUTH AFRICA Respondent
JUDGMENT
SWANEPOEL
J:
BACKGROUND
[1]
Applicant ("Sakeliga") is a non-profit organization with a
membership comprised of some 11 000 business
persons, companies and
business organizations. It aims to promote constitutional rights,
constitutional order, the rule of law
and a just and sustainable
business environment.
[2]
Respondent is the Auditor General South Africa (the "AG"),
a Chapter 9 institution established in
terms of section 181 of the
Constitution. It is tasked to fulfil the functions prescribed in
section 188 of the Constitution.
[3]
This application has its origin in the chaotic state in which much of
our local government structures find
themselves. In the words of the
AG herself, "The lack of improvement in municipal structures is
an indictment on the entire
local government accountability ecosystem
which failed to act and arrest the decline that continued to be
characterized by service
delivery challenges in municipalities."
According to the AG, some 28% of municipalities are in such a dire
financial position
that there is significant doubt whether they would
be able to continue operating in future. Many of these municipalities
are factually
insolvent. Approximately 10% of municipalities received
'disclaimed' audit opinions, which means that they were unable to
provide
the AG with evidence for most of the disclosures in their
audit reports.
[4]
This application extensively outlines the financial mismanagement
which has ocurred in a significant number
of municipalities, some of
whom are at a point of total collapse. I daresay that disfunction in
local government has a particularly
severe and direct impact on the
public, and more specifically on the poor who do not have resources
to fend for themselves. The
importance of a properly functioning
local government cannot be over-emphasized. It is therefore laudable
that Sakeliga has taken
it upon itself to attempt to get to the
bottom of the disfunction in local government structures.
[5]
The AG is obliged, in terms of section 188 (1) (b) of the
Constitution to "audit and report on the accounts,
financial
statements and financial management of ........ all municipalities".
Section 4 (1) (d) of the Public Audit Act,
25 of 2004 ("PAA")
gives effect to this obligation.
[6]
Section 121 (1) of the Municipal Finance Management Act, 56 of 2003
(the "MMFA") requires each municipality
to prepare an
annual report which includes the annual financial statements of the
municipality, and where applicable, consolidated
annual financial
statements, the AG's report on those statements, the annual
performance report, and various other reports which
are cumulatively
intended to provide a comprehensive overview of the municipality's
performance.
[7]
Section 126 (3) of the MMFA requires the AG to audit the financial
statements, and to submit an audit report
to the municipal accounting
officer. The section 126 (3) reports are publicly available on the
AG's website. Sakeliga submits that
these reports are "largely
sterilized" and abridged, and that a typical report does not
disclose the underlying causes
for the underperformance of the
particular municipality to which it relates. Sakeliga says that in
the absence of information on
the reasons for the underperformance of
municipalities, it and its members are unable to protect their
interests.
[8]
Sakeliga says that in the process of performance review by the AG, a
management report is produced for each
municipality, which delves
into the performance of the municipality. If the municipality has
underperformed, the management report
provides information on the
reasons for the underperformance. These reports contain findings on
each municipality's performance,
its compliance with legislation, its
internal controls and of any emerging risks. The report outlines
specific problems which have
been identified during the audit,
including problems with tenders and infrastructure projects. These
reports are not made public.
[9]
It is against this background that Sakeliga filed an application in
terms of the
Promotion of Access to Information Act, Act
2 of 2000
("PAIA") on 8 December 2021, seeking a vast range of
documents relating to th municipal finances of 154 municipalities,
spanning seven financial years. It was later clarified in a meeting
between the parties that Sakeliga was in fact seeking disclosure
of
the management reports to which I have referred above. On 10 February
2022 the AG refused access to the management reports on
a number of
grounds:
[9.1] Firstly, the AG was
of the view that
section 44
(1) (a) (i) of PAIA entitled it to refuse
access to the management reports on the basis that the reports
contained an opinion,
advice, report or recommendation obtained or
prepared in the performance of a duty conferred by law.
[9.2] Secondly, the AG
believed that the disclosure of the reports might frustrate the
deliberative process between it and the municipality
by inhibiting
candid discussions of the issues identified in the report.
[9.3] Thirdly, the AG
held the view that the request was "excessive and therefore
vexatious", and that compliance therewith
would substantially
and unreasonably divert the resources of the AG.
[10]
The AG's view was that the publicly available audit reports provided
sufficient information for Sakeliga's purposes.
[11]
It is common cause that the AG does not have an internal appeal
procedure as provided for in
section 74
of PAIA. Consequently,
Sakeliga launched this application in which it sought the following
relief:
[11.1] That the
AG's refusal of Sakeliga's request be set aside;
[11.2] That the AG
be ordered to provide all the documents and information requested by
Sakeliga in its PAIA application dated
8 December 2021;
[11.3] That the
AG's failure to make all her reports public be declared to be
inconsistent with the Constitution, and that
the AG be ordered to
make all reports on the accounts, financial statements and financial
management of all municipalities public;
[11.4] In the
alternative to 11.3 above, that an appropriate order be granted in
terms of section 172 of the Constitution,
"alleviating the
Constitutional infringements, concerns and/or invalidities underlying
this application;"
[11.5] Costs.
JURISDICTION
[12]
The AG has taken the point that this Court does not have jurisdiction
to entertain this matter in light of the provisions
of section 78 (1)
of PAIA which reads:
"(1) A
requester or third party may only apply to a court for appropriate
relief in terms of section 82 in the
following circumstances:
(a) After that
requester or third party has exhausted the internal procedure
referred to in section 74; or
(b) After that
requester or third party has exhausted the complaints procedure
referred to in section 77 A"
[13]
Section 74 (1) of PAIA reads:
"(1) A
requester may lodge an internal appeal against a decision of the
information officer of a public body referred
to in paragraph (a) of
the definition of 'public body' in section 1-
(a) to refuse a
request for access; or
(b) taken in terms
of section 22, 26 (1) or 29 (3),
in relation to that
requester with the relevant authority."
[14]
It is evident that section 74 (1) of PAIA only refers to a public
body within the meaning of paragraph (a) in section
1 of PAIA. The
definition of a 'public body' in section 1 reads as follows:
"'public body'
means-
(a) any department
of state or administration in the national or provincial government
or any municipality in the local sphere
of government; or
(b) any other
functionary or institution when-
(i)
exercising a power or performing a duty in terms of the Constitution
or a provincial constitution; or
(ii) exercising a
public power or performing a public function in terms of any
legislation;"
[15]
The AG is therefore not a public body within the meaning of paragraph
(a), and section 74 (1) is not applicable to it.
The AG is a public
body as defined in paragraph (b) of section 1.
[16]
PAIA was recently amended by the introduction of Chapter 1A (Sections
77 A to K) of PAIA, which took effect on 30 June
2021. In terms of
subsection 77 A (2) (c) a requester who has a complaint against a
public body referred to in paragraph (b) of
section 1 may submit a
complaint to the Information Regulator. The latter subsection reads
as follows:
"(2) A
requester-
(a)
.....
(b)
.....
(c)
aggrieved by a decision of the information officer of a public body
referred to in paragraph (b) of the definition
of 'public body' in
section 1-
(i) to refuse
a request for access; or
(ii) taken in terms
of section 22, 26 (1) or 29 (3); or
(d)
........
may within 180 days of
the decision, submit a complaint, alleging that the decision was not
in compliance with this Act, to the
Information Regulator in the
prescribed manner and form for appropriate relief."
[17]
In my view the legislature has envisaged two different scenarios in
the amended PAIA. In the case of a public body referred
to in
paragraph (a) of section 1 (national, provincial and local
government), section 74 applies and it requires a requester to
file
an internal appeal if the request is unsuccessful, before a court is
approached for relief. It may then, if the appeal is
unsuccessful,
complain to the Information Regulator in terms of section 77 A (2)
(a), or it may elect to approach a court. In the
case of a public
body in terms of paragraph (b) of section 1, where there is no
internal appeal mechanism, the requester may approach
the Information
Regulator in terms of section 77 A (2) (c), once the initial request
is refused by the Information Officer of the
public body.
[18]
The AG has argued that section 78 (1) is peremptory, and that a
requester may only approach a court once . it has exhausted
its
administrative remedies. This argument is, in my view, correct. In
Huijink Maritz v Municipal Manager, Matjabeng Municipality
and
Another
[1]
Musi AJP said the
following regarding section 78 (as it was pre-amendment):
"[29] When a
statute expressly states that the exhaustion of internal remedies is
an indispensable condition precedent
to launching an application to a
court then that condition must first be fulfilled. Section 78 makes
it compulsory for an aggrieved
requester to first exhaust the
internal remedies against a decision of the information officer
before approaching a court. It is
one of the compulsory mechanisms in
the Act which enables persons to obtain information swiftly,
inexpensively and effortlessly."
[19]
Musi AJP referred to a passage in Koyabe and Others v Minister for
Home Affairs and Others (Lawyers for Human Rights
as Amicus
Curiae)
[2]
in which Mokgoro J
explained the reason why internal remedies should be exhausted before
a court was approached:
"Internal remedies
are designed to provide immediate and cost-effective relief, giving
the executive the opportunity to utilize
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 remedies cannot
be gainsaid."
[20]
Before PAIA was amended, only decisions of public bodies as defined
in paragraph (a) of section 1 could be challenged
administratively.
It seems to me to have been an anomaly that the decision of one
public body could be challenged administratively,
and not that of
another, where the latter happened to fall within a different
subsection of PAIA. The purpose with the inclusion
of Chapter 1 A
was, in my view, to rectify the anomaly and to provide a path by
which the refusal of a public body as defined in
paragraph (b) could
be challenged administratively, before expensive litigation was
commenced.
[21]
The wording of section 78 remains peremptory, and the words "[A]
requester or third party may only apply to a court
for appropriate
relief' (my emphasis) make it clear that until the administrative
remedies provided by PAIA have been exhausted,
a requester is
precluded from approaching a court.
[22]
Sakeli'ga contended that section 77 A (2) provides that a requester
"may" submit a complaint to the Information
Regulator. It
argues that the use of the word "may" means that the
requester does not have an obligation to approach
the Information
Regulator before it approaches a court, but may, at its discretion,
directly seek relief from a court. I disagree.
The word "may"
only means that if the requester is aggrieved by a refusal of a
request it has a choice to make. It may
approach the Information
Regulator, or it can choose not to pursue the matter. However,
section 78 is clear, if a requester chooses
not to approach the
Information Regulator, it may not approach a court for relief.
[23]
Sakeliga also contended that both the AG's and the Information
Regulator's respective PAIA Guides, state that a requester
may choose
to refer the complaint to the Information Regulator, or, at its
discretion, to approach a court, without exhausting
the remedies
created by Chapter 1 A of PAIA. Even if I were to accept Sakeliga's
understanding of the respective PAIA guides (on
which I express no
view), it still does not assist its case.
[24]
Section 10 of PAIA obliges the Information Regulator to provide a
guide to the manner in which a person's rights in terms
of PAIA must
be exercised. In particular, section 10 (2) (e) requires the guide to
advise persons of the remedies available to
them, including the
manner in which an internal appeal or a complaint to the Information
Regulator must be lodged, and the manner
in which an application to
court must be brought if a requester is aggrieved by a decision.
Sakeliga says that the Information
Regulator does not regard it as
necessary for a requester to exhaust the section 77 A procedure
before an application is brought.
[25]
In Minister of Finance v Afribusiness NPC and Others
[3]
the Constitutional Court was concerned with Procurement Regulations
that had been promulgated in terms of the
Preferential Procurement
Policy Framework Act, 2000
. The respondent had sought to review and
set aside the regulations. The Court explained that regulations are
intended to give effect
to an Act of Parliament. The Act sets the
framework on the specific subject legislated upon, and the
regulations provide the detail
on how to achieve the objects of the
Act. The Court reiterated the approach of Bennion
[4]
which was quoted with approval in Engelbrecht v Road Accident Fund
[5]
and Road Accident Fund v Makwetlane
[6]
:
"Underlying the
concept of delegated legislation is the basic principle that the
Legislature delegates because it cannot directly
exert its will in
every detail. All it can do is lay down the outline. This means that
the intention of the Legislature, as indicated
in the outline (that
is the enabling Act), must be the prima guide to the meaning of
delegated legislation and the extent of the
power to make it. ....
The true extent of the power governs the legal meaning of the
delegated legislation. The delegate is not
intended to travel wider
than the object of the Legislature."
[26]
The Regulator's guide is simply that: a guide. If regulations cannot
go beyond the confines of the enabling Act (as one
sees in
Afribusiness above), then certainly, a guide to the provisions of an
Act cannot nullify the express provisions of the Act.
[27]
The same is applicable to Sakeliga's contention that the AG is
estopped from relying on the provisions of PAIA, on the
grounds that
her PAIA guide is misleading. This contention was dealt with in Fuls
v Leslie Chrome (Pty) Ltd and Another
[7]
.
The court said:
"In the case of In
re a Bankruptcy Notice
1942 CH. 76
(C.A.) at 97, Atkin LJ says:
'Whatever the principle
may be, it appears to me that it does not apply to this case, for it
seems to me well established that it
is impossible in law for a
person to allege any kind of principle that precluded him from
alleging the invalidity of that which
the Statute has, on the grounds
of public policy enacted shall be invalid'
This passage was quoted
with approval in Maritime Electric Co v General Davies.,
1937 A.C.
610
at 622. As stated by Lord Maugham (at 620) estoppels cannot
prevail if such would result in the nullification of a statute."
[28]
Therefore, even if both the Information Regulator's guide and the
AG's guide were to create the impression that it is
not necessary to
exhaust the remedies in section 77 A (on which I express no opinion),
it is of no consequence given the express
peremptory terms of PAIA.
[29]
In the premises, the application for access in terms of PAIA is
premature and must fail.
THE
CONSTITUTIONAL ATTACK
[30]
The initial PAIA application required the AG to produce a whole host
of documents, including:
[30.1] All entity
specific management reports and/or management letters that deal with
and report on all findings, adverse and material
findings, root
causes and recommendations to senior management and municipal
managers, including executive summaries and detail
finding reports;
[30.2] All entity
specific annual performance reports, annual compliance reports and
assessments relating to each 'target' municipality;
[30.3] All specific
non-compliance reports, advisories, communications, memoranda,
findings and/or reports relating to material
or adverse
irregularities.
[31]
The AG has stated that her office prepares two types of reports on
each municipality. Firstly, there is the audit report
prepared in
terms of section 188 of the Constitution, and which is published for
public consumption. Secondly, the AG prepares
management reports on
each municipality. The management reports are not made public.
Sakeliga conceded during argument that it
no longer seeks all the
documents listed in its PAIA application. Its application is now
limited to the disclosure of the management
reports relating to the
'target' municipalities.
[32]
Sakeliga seeks an order that the AG's failure to make all of her
reports public, including the management reports, is
unlawful and
inconsistent with the Constitution. Sakeliga also seeks an order that
all of the AG's reports, including management
reports, must in future
be made public. In the alternative, Sakeliga seeks an order in terms
of section 172 of the Constitution
that is just and equitable, and
which alleviates the alleged Constitutional infringement.
[33]
The central question is what is the AG's constitutional obligation in
respect of the publication of reports. The answer
to this question
commences in section 188 of the Constitution which reads:
"188 Functions of
the Auditor-General
(1) The
Auditor-General must audit and report on the accounts, financial
statements and financial management of-
(a) all national
and provincial state departments and administrations;
(b) all
municipalities; and
(c) any other
institution or accounting entity required by national or provincial
legislation to be audited by the Auditor-general.
(2)
.......
(3) The
Auditor-General must submit audit reports to any legislature that has
a direct interest in the audit,
and to any other authority prescribed
by national legislation. All reports must be made public.
(4) The
Auditor-General has the additional powers and functions prescribed by
national legislation." (emphasis
added)
(34) The AG's
constitutional function, to audit and report on the audit is affirmed
in section 4 of the PAA. Section 20 states
exactly what the scope of
an audit report should be, and reads as follows:
"20
Audit reports
(1) The
Auditor-General must, in respect of each audit referred to in section
11 prepare a report on the audit.
(2) An
audit must reflect such opinions and statements as may be required by
any legislation applicable to the
auditee which is the subject of the
audit, and must reflect an opinion, conclusion or findings on-
(a) the financial
statements of the auditee in accordance with the applicable reporting
framework and legislation;
(b) compliance with
any applicable legislation relating to financial matters, financial
management and other related matters;
and
(c) reported
performance of the auditee against its predetermined objectives.
(3) In
addition, the Auditor-General may report on whether the auditee's
resources were procured economically
and utilized efficiently and
effectively
(4) An
audit report may contain recommendations to address any matter raised
in subsection (2)"
[35]
The central question is, as I have stated above, to what reports does
section 188 (3) refer? Does it refer to audit reports
only, or does
it refer to all reports prepared by the AG, as Sakeliga argues?
[36]
In considering the interpretation of section 188, I am guided by the
dictum in Natal Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni
Municipality
[8]
"Interpretation is
the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a document,
be it legislation, some other statutory
instrument, or contract,
having regard to the context provided by reading the particular
provision or provisions in the light of
the document as a whole and
the circumstances attendant upon its coming into existence. Whatever
the nature of the document, consideration
must be given to the
language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision
appears; the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and the material known to those
responsible for its production."
[37]
The Constitutional Court restated the above in Road Traffic
Management Corporation v Waymark lnfotech (Pty) Ltd
[9]
in the following terms:
"[29] The principles
of statutory interpretation are by now well-settled. In Endumeni the
Supreme Court of Appeal authoritatively
restated the proper approach
to statutory interpretation. The Supreme Court of Appeal explained
that statutory interpretation is
the objective process of attributing
meaning to the words used in legislation. This process, it
emphasized, entails a simultaneous
consideration of-
(a) the
language used in the light of the ordinary rules of grammar and
syntax;
(b) the
context in which the provision appears; and
(c) the
apparent purpose to which it is directed.
[30] What this
Court said in
Cool Ideas
in the context of statutory
interpretation is particularly apposite. It said:
'A fundamental tenet of
statutory interpretation is that the words in a statute must be given
their ordinary grammatical meaning,
unless to do so would result in
an absurdity. There are three important interrelated riders to this
general principle, namely:
(a) that the
statutory provisions should always be interpreted purposively;
(b) the relevant
statutory provision must be properly contextualized; and
(c) all statutes
must be construed consistently with the Constitution, that is, where
reasonably possible, legislative provisions
must be interpreted to
preserve their constitutional validity. This proviso to the general
principle is closely related to the
purposive approach referred to in
(a).
[31] Where a
provision is ambiguous, its possible meanings must be weighed against
each other given these factors. For example,
a meaning that
frustrates the apparent purpose of the statute or leads to
unbusinesslike results is not to be preferred. Neither
is one that
strains the ordinary, clear meaning of words. That text, context and
purpose must always be considered at the same
time when interpreting
legislation has been affirmed on various occasions by this Court.'
[38]
Section 188 (3) provides that "all reports must be made public"
On a simple reading of the words alone, it
may be argued that every
report that the AG prepares must be made public. However, if one were
to read the text of section 188
(3) within the context of the rest of
section 188, and within the context of section 20 (2) of the PAA, it
becomes clear that not
every report of the AG is an audit report
within the meaning of section 188, and that the Legislature did not
intend for every
report of any nature to be made public.
[39]
Section 188 (1) requires the AG to "audit and report" on
the accounts of municipalities (inter alia). Section
188 (3) obliges
the AG to submit "audit reports" to a legislature which has
a direct interest in the audit. The scope
of an audit report is
specifically dealt with in section 20 of the PAA. When section 188
(3) then requires all "reports"
to be made public, it must
be seen within the context of the preceding words in the same
subsection, which refer to audit reports.
[40]
An audit report is one that meets the requirements of section 20 (2)
of the PAA. It is those reports that the AG is obliged
to make
public. In contrast, a management report is, on the AG's version, a
communication tool between the AG's office and a particular
municipality. Once the AG has completed a preliminary investigation
of the affairs of the municipality, it communicates its initial
findings to the municipality. Those findings, and the responses by
the municipality, are then contained in a draft management report,
which is provided to the municipality. The issues dealt with in a
typical management report are threefold: firstly, matters to
be dealt
with in the audit report, secondly, matters that ought to be
addressed in order to prevent misstatements in the annual
financial
statements, and, thirdly, administrative matters that would not be
reported in an audit report.
[41]
The AG says that audit reports and management reports have different
purposes. An audit report is intended to fulfil
the Constitutional
imperatives in section 188 of the Constitution, in accordance with
the provisions of section 20 of the PAA.
A management report does not
have that function.
[42]
I am bound, in motion proceedings to determine the matter on the
facts put forward by the applicant where they are not
contested,
together with the facts put forward by the respondent. I must accept
respondent's version where it conflicts with the
applicant's version,
unless it is so clearly untenable that it can be rejected. That is
not the case in this instance. I accept
the AG's version regarding
the difference in between management and audit reports in both
content and purpose.
[43]
Consequently, I find that the management reports prepared by the AG
are not "reports" within the meaning of
section 188 of the
Constitution and section 20 of the PAA. It follows then that the AG
was not under a Constitutional obligation
to make the management
reports public. It may be that once Sakeliga has exhausted its
remedies in terms of section 77 A, that it
is found to be entitled to
the management reports in terms of PAIA, but that is not for me to
decide.
[44]
Given the fact that I have found that the application in terms of
PAIA is premature, and that the AG was not constitutionally
obliged
to publish the management reports the application must fail.
COSTS
[45]
As I said at the outset, Sakeliga's motivation with this application,
to cast a light on the disfunction which besets
our municipalities,
is laudable. I accept that Sakeliga is acting in the public good, and
not for its own purposes. It may well
be that once it has brought a
further application, after having exhausted its administrative
remedies, that it is found to be entitled
to access to the management
reports. I accept that Sakeliga was led by its legal representatives
in the interpretation of the provisions
of PAIA with regard to the
new Chapter 1 A, and that it acted on that advice in bringing the
application without first approaching
the Information Regulator.
[46]
In Affordable Medicines Trost and Others v Minister of Health and
Others
[10]
the principle was
established that in litigation in which a party is seeking to assert
a constitutional right, ordinarily, if the
government loses, it
should pay the costs, and if the government wins, each party should
pay its own costs. That principle was
reasserted in Biowatch Trost v
Registrar, Genetic Resources and Others
[11]
I do not find anything in Sakeliga's conduct of the matter to warrant
a deviation from this principle.
[47]
Consequently, I make the following order:
[47.1] The
application Is dismissed.
[47.2] Each
party shall pay its own costs.
SWANEPOEL
J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
COUNSEL
FOR APPLICANT: Adv.
G Egan
ATTORNEY
FOR APPLICANT: Kriek
Wassenaar &
Venterlnc
COUNSEL
FOR RESPONDENT: Adv.
J Bambamia SC
Adv. G Singh
ATTORNEY
FOR RESPONDENT: Macroberts
Attorneys
DATE
OF HEARING:
13 April 2023
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
30 June 2023
[1]
2018 (5) SA 614 (FB)
[2]
2010 (4) SA 327 (CC)
[3]
2022 ZACC 4
[4]
Bennion, Statutory Interpretation 3rd Ed (Butterworths, London 1977)
at 189
[5]
2007 (6) SA 96 (CC)
[6]
2005 (4) SA 51
(SCA) (In a minority judgment of Ponnan AJA).
[7]
71962 (4) SA 784 (W)
[8]
2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA)
[9]
2019 (5) SA 29 (CC)
[10]
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3) SA 247
(CC)
[11]
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC)
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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