Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 667South Africa
Hosmed Medical Scheme and Others v Registrar of Medical Schemes and Another (36027/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 667 (7 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
7 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Hosmed Medical Scheme and Others v Registrar of Medical Schemes and Another (36027/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 667 (7 August 2023)
Hosmed Medical Scheme and Others v Registrar of Medical Schemes and Another (36027/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 667 (7 August 2023)
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sino date 7 August 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISON,
PRETORIA)
Case
No.:
36027/2020
(1) REPORTABLE:
NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3) REVISED.
DATE:
07/08/2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
HOSMED
MEDICAL SCHEME
First Applicant
SIZWE
MEDICAL FUND
Second Applicant
HARRIET
MASHA
Third Applicant
and
THE
REGISTRAR OF MEDICAL SCHEMES
First Respondent
THE
COUNCIL FOR MEDICAL SCHEMES
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
SARDIWALLA
J:
[1]
This is an urgent appeal
application
in terms of the provisions of Rule 6(12)(a) of the
Uniform Rules of Court
and
in terms of section 63(12) of the Medical Schemes Act 131 of 1998
(the “MSA”) for an appeal against the first respondent’s
decision in terms of section 63(6)(c) and of on 21 July 2020, to
decline to confirm the exposition of the proposed amalgamation
between the first and second applicants.
[2]
The applicants sought the
following relief:
“
1.
Dispensing with the forms and service provided for in the uniform
rules of the above honourable Court and allowing that the service
of
these application papers be affected by way of email and/or
hand-delivery, dispensing with the time provided for in the uniform
rules and directing that this matter be dealt with as one of urgency
in terms of uniform rule 6(12)(b);
2.
Upholding the applicant’s appeal the first respondent’s
decision in terms of section 63(6)9c) of the Medical Schemes
Act 131
of 1998 (the MSA”), to decline to confirm the exposition of the
proposed amalgamation between the first and second
applicants, which
decision was communicated to the applicants on the 31 July 202;
3.
Setting aside the first respondent’s aforesaid decision in
terms of section 63(12) of the MSA;
4.
Confirming the exposition of the proposed amalgamation between the
first and second applicant’s in terms of 63(12) of the
MSA
and/or making such order as the Honourable Court may deem necessary;
5.
Ordering the first respondent to pay the costs of this application,
including the costs occasioned by the employment of two counsel;
6.
Should any other party/person oppose the present application,
ordering such party/person to pay the costs of this application,
including the costs occasioned by the employment of two counsel,
jointly and severally with the first respondent;
7.
Granting the applicants further and/or alternative relief.”
Background
to the Application:
[3]
The sequence of events of the proposed amalgamation which had been
conceived during
2019 is as follows:
3.1 A comprehensive and
detailed process was embarked upon to reach an agreement in
principle, prepare the necessary documents,
including the
amalgamation agreement and the exposition, regular engagement with
the office of the first respondent, arranging
for members to vote on
the proposed amalgamation, due diligence investigations etc.
3.2 The process
culminated in the exposition, which complies with the requirements of
the Guideline and which was approved for publication
by the first
respondent.
3.3 Circular 40 of 2020
was published by the CMS on 26 May 2020 giving notice of the proposed
amalgamation between the first and
second applicants, including that
the exposition and the supporting documents of the proposed merger
would remain open for inspection
for 21 days from 27 may 2020 to 24
July 2020 for the submission of comments or objections.
3.4 On 5 June 2020 the
first respondent directed a letter to the first and second applicant
stating that the amalgamation process
was to be indefinitely
suspended pending the investigation into certain persons whose
identities were unknown and not disclosed
in the letter.
3.5 In a letter dated 11
June 2020 the second applicant requested information pursuant to the
letter of 5 June 2020 in order to
understand the basis of the
suspension.
3.6 on 17 June 2020.
Werksmans attorneys, acting on behalf of the second applicant
directed a letter to the first respondent.
3.7 On 18 June 2020 the
first respondent replied recording that he had not taken a decision
to suspend the amalgamation between
the first and second applicant
and referred to alleged “irregularities which have come to
light as a result of the section
43 enquiry and your client’s
draft management report for financial year ended 31 December 2019”.
3.8 The first respondent
was aware of the irregularities and having applied his mind thereto
and being satisfied that they had been
and/or were being addressed
and materially, did not constitute a lawful basis to halt the
amalgamation, the first respondent was
satisfied to publish the
circular 40 of 2020 on 26 May 2020 in relation to the exposition that
had been prepared in respect of
the amalgamation, as he was
statutorily enjoined to do.
3.9 The first respondent
had launched an application for curatorship under case number
28986/2020 to place the second respondent
under curatorship without
affording the second applicant an opportunity to prepare its
answering affidavits. The application was
before Avvakoumides AJ on
14 July 2020 and was struck from the roll due to a lack of urgency.
3.10 On 22 July 2020, the
applicant’s attorneys of record Malatji & Co addressed a
letter to the attorneys acting for
the first respondent in the
curatorship application stating that the answering affidavit should
now address the matters raised
in the curatorship application and
could now consider the proposed amalgamation and provide a write
undertaking that he would do
so and provide the parties with his
decision in terms of section 63(6) and (7) of the MSA by 31 July
2020.
3.11 On 23 July 2020 the
attorneys of record for the first respondent, Ndobela Lamola replied
to the letter of 22 July 2020 that
the first respondent declined to
give a written undertaking and that it was recorded that the first
respondent would abide and
conduct himself within the confines of the
MSA, specifically section 63 and would endeavour to make a decision
by 31 July 2020”
to the extent that the integrity of the
transaction process under section 63 is not compromised or
undermined”.
3.12 On 24 July 2020
Malatji & Co directed a further letter to Ndobela Lamola that the
first respondent has undertaken in his
letter of 18 June 2020 to
Werksmans attorneys that he would inform the second applicant of any
action taken or intended to be taken
against the second applicant
before such action is taken and when there is a legal obligation to
do so.
3.13 Although, the first
respondent signed the letter on 18 June 2020, he had already sought
the concurrence of the CMS on 17 June
2020 to place the second
applicant under curatorship.
3.14 on 27 July 2020,
Ndobela Lamola replied on behalf of the first respondent as follows:
“
1. We refer to the
abovementioned matter as well as your letter dated 24 July 2020.
2. we have read your
letter and wish to respond as follows:
2.1
we would like to place it on record that at no point did we suggest
or insinuate that the process of the amalgamation is compromised
or
undermined;
2.2
We reiterate that our client is. Statutory body who will act in
accordance with section 63 of the Act in the consideration of
the
merger;
2.3
Lastly we would like to confirm that there is(sic) no facts or
information that may impugn the integrity of the amalgamation
transaction.
3. We hope you find the
above in order.”
3.15
On 28 July 2020 Ndobela Lamola directed a further letter to Malatji &
Co recording that they had instructions to enrol
the curatorship
application on the opposed roll and requested the second applicant
file its supplemented answering affidavit by
4 August 2020.
3.16
Despite the lapse of 14 days from 14 July 2020 when the matter was
scheduled to take place the first respondent did not deliver
its
replying affidavit.
3.17
In the meantime, on 23 July 2020 the South African Local Government
Bargaining Council (“SALGBC”) addressed a letter
to the
first respondent which stated that the first applicant’s
accreditation with the SALBGC would not transfer to the second
respondent upon approval of the intended amalgamation. This letter
was sent to the first applicant on 25 July 2020 by the first
respondent.
3.18
On 30 July 2020, the first applicant provided a detailed response to
the SALGBC that the first and second applicants would
file an
addendum to their amalgamation agreement with a suspensive condition
that the accreditation of the first and second applicants
by the
SALGBC would be a requirement for the consummation of the
amalgamation. A supplementary application was submitted to grant
the
first applicant accreditation for 2022 and to approve the transfer of
the accreditation to Hosmed-Sizwe Medical Scheme upon
amalgamation of
both the first and second applicants from the effective date.
3.19
On 30 July 2020 the first applicant directed a letter to the first
respondent informing the first respondent of the response
to the
SALGBC including that the first and second applicants adopted an
alternative and uncontroversial approach to achieve the
underlying
purpose of the amalgamation whilst at the same time addressing the
SALGBC’s concerns. That the schemes were of
the view that the
concerns raised by the SALGBC presented no impediment for the first
respondent to confirm the exposition in terms
of section 63 of the
MSA.
3.20
On 31 July 2020 the first respondent directed a letter to the first
and second applicants of his decision to decline to confirm
the
exposition and that the amalgamation could not be proceeded with.
[4]
It is this decision by the first
respondent that the applicants are appealing against.
The parties
agreed and requested that the appeal and the curatorship application
be heard together on 24 August 2020 when the curatorship
application
was set down on the motion court roll and not the 18 August 2020 when
the urgent application was set down. However,
the Deputy Judge’s
President’s office confirmed that although the parties could
have both applications heard together
they would need to do so on 18
August 2020 on the urgent roll as there were no other special
allocations that could be provided
as there was no spare judges. For
this reason only the urgent application proceeded before me.
Grounds of Appeal
[5]
The applicants grounds of appeal
are as follows:
5.1
The first respondent failed to apply the correct test in arriving at
the decision;
5.2
The first respondent has considered matters which are immaterial and
irrelevant for the purposes of arriving at the decision
as
contemplated in terms of section 63(7);
5.3
The grounds relied on by the first respondent do not support the
conclusion that the transaction is not in the best interests
of the
members of the first and second applicants;
5.4
The exposition documents indicates in detail how the amalgamation
will benefit the members of the first and second applicants,
but the
first respondent altogether failed to dela with the content of the
exposition document and he has not advanced any grounds
that would
negate any of the aspects thereof;
5.5
The amalgamation meets the requirements of section 63(7)(a) of the
MSA in that it will not be detrimental to the interests of
the
majority of the beneficiaries of the first and second applicants. It
is in their interests that the beneficiaries stand to
gain:
5.5.1
Differentiated product suite that does not impact members, and tiered
levels of cover across multiple price points;
5.5.2
Greater variety of options to choose from in the amalgamated scheme;
5.5.3
greater membership retention and growth;
5.5.4
Reduced scheme expenses per member;
5.5.5
Larger and more stable risk pool to reduce volatility and reduction
of net deficits; and
5.5.6
Economies of scale and bargaining power to support the medium to
long-term strategy of the amalgamated scheme.
5.6
The proposed amalgamation meets the requirements of section 63(7)(b)
of the MSA in that it would not render the amalgamated
scheme unable
to meet the requirements of the MSA or to remain in sound financial
condition;
5.7
This is evidently so because in accordance with the projections in
the exposition, the accumulated funds of the amalgamated
scheme will
amount to R 1 370 021 000.00; with a solvency rate of
33.0% which is in excess of the ratio of 25% as
prescribed in
Regulation 29 of the Regulations promulgated under the MSA.
Applicant’s
Argument
[6]
The applicants submitted that the appeal was urgent and
if not determined as a matter of
urgency it would result in the
failure of the proposed amalgamation and seriously prejudice the
members of the first and second
applicants as well as result in
significant loss of costs for the proposed amalgamation. They
submitted that whilst section 63(8)
and 63(12) permit the parties
that are aggrieved by the decision can appeal the decision to the
Appeal Board or the High Court
or where the first respondent has
declined to confirm to apply to the CMS to have the exposition
confirmed that these provisions
were peremptory. That there was no
purpose in applying to the CMS for confirmation as the decision of
the first respondent was
taken in concurrence of the CMS, hence the
decision to appeal the decision directly to this Court in terms of
section 63(12).
[7]
Medical Schemes are required by the first respondent to submit their
benefit options
for the year 2021 for approval by 31 August 2020 or 1
September 2020. These approvals are done by the first respondent on
30 September
2020 and the medical schemes have the opportunity to
market their 2021 offering from 1 October 2020 to 30 November 2020.
The first
and second applicants have submitted their applications for
accreditation to SALGBC for the year 2021. Without the accreditation,
a scheme cannot market itself amd its product to employees and the
local government sector. Therefore, if this application is not
disposed of on an urgent basis the accreditation applications of both
the first and second respondents are at risk and would have
a serious
impact on the members being deprived of significant benefits
offered by the proposed amalgamation. They would then
be compelled to
apply to other medical schemes.
[8]
They averred that the decision of the 31 July 2020 was the third
attempt by the first
respondent to derail the amalgamation and taken
without the first respondent applying the correct test as he
considered irrelevant,
incorrect and immaterial reasons and not the
real criteria set out in section 63(7) and therefore failed to act in
the interest
of the beneficiaries of the first and second applicants.
That whilst the first respondent contends that there are adverse
consequences
that cannot be ignored that there is simply no alleged
adverse consequences that could have justified the decision.
[9]
There is no finding that the proposed amalgamation would be
detrimental to the interests
of the majority of the beneficiaries of
the medical schemes concerned as contemplated in section 63(7)(a), in
fact that the first
respondent confirms in his answering affidavit
that the two schemes would be better off merged. The benefits of the
proposed amalgamation
have been demonstrated to be in the best
interests of the members.
[10]
The curatorship application was an abuse of process and has no merit.
First Respondent’s
Argument
[11]
The first respondent opposes this
application on the basis that the application lacks urgency and
is
without merit. It argues that it the only reason that the application
has been lodged on an urgent basis is to circumvent the
curatorship
application. If the applicants wanted the curatorship application to
be heard expeditiously then they should have applied
for a
consolidation of the matters. Whilst the approval process takes time
all schemes are advised to inform members that all proposed
changes
are subject to the first respondent’s approval. Further that
the applicants are misleading this Court that the accreditation
date
with the SALGBC is 15 August 2020 when in fact it has already passed
and was 20 May 2020 and was extended to 29 May 2020.
Further that
when the second applicant signed the addendum it has not applied for
accreditation with the SALGBC. Therefore the
assertion that of this
matter is not heard on an urgent basis that the SALGBC will not be
able to make the determination is incorrect
as the period has already
lapsed. Nor is there any indication that the application will be
successful. The first respondent’s
decision to decline the
amalgamation does not suspend the business operations of the medical
schemes and therefore still able to
submit their benefit schemes for
2021. The fact that its members may choose other medical schemes that
are accredited with the
SALGBC is a consequence of the applicants own
making. The assertion that the proposed amalgamation will fail if not
heard on an
urgent basis in incorrect as it will fail due to the lack
of the SALGBC accreditation.
[12]
The matter is not of national importance and the fact that the
applicants requested that the
matter be moved from 18 August 2020 to
24 August 2020 in itself concedes the lack of urgency and therefore
should be dismissed
with costs.
[13]
In respect of the merits of the appeal the
respondents aver that the decision of the first respondent was
based
on a number of anomalies in the process of amalgamation. It is their
version that the court order would not assist the applicants
as there
are still a number of hurdles it needs to overcome which would make
the order effectively unenforceable. The issue of
the SALGBC
accreditation and the lapse of the application dates means that
the applicants have to wait until next year to
apply for
accreditation and this leaves the new entity in a state of limbo
which is not in the interests of the beneficiaries.
The council from
its experience has learnt that trade unions rivalry cannot be ignored
and their opinions should not be alienated.
The first respondent has
concerns that the new entity will constitute persons whose integrity
is questionable. The fact that shared
services were utilised instead
of independent service providers to conduct due diligence casts doubt
on whether, professional scepticism
was employed.
Urgency
[14]
The general principles applicable in establishing
urgency are dealt with in Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules
of this
Court.
The
importance of these provisions is that the procedure set out in Rule
6(12) is not there for the mere taking. Notshe AJ
said in
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
and
Others
[1]
in paras 6 and 7 as follows:
‘
[6]
The import thereof is that the procedure set out in rule 6(12) is not
there for taking. An applicant has to set forth explicitly
the
circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent. More
importantly, the Applicant must state the reasons why he claims
that
he cannot be afforded substantial redress at a hearing in due course.
The question of whether a matter is sufficiently urgent
to be
enrolled and heard as an urgent application is underpinned by the
issue of absence of substantial redress in an application
in due
course. The rules allow the court to come to the assistance of a
litigant because if the latter were to wait for the normal
course
laid down by the rules it will not obtain substantial redress.
[7]
It is important to note that the rules require absence of substantial
redress. This is not equivalent to the irreparable harm
that is
required before the granting of an interim relief. It is something
less. He may still obtain redress in an application
in due course but
it may not be substantial. Whether an applicant will not be able
obtain substantial redress in an application
in due course will be
determined by the facts of each case. An applicant must make out his
case in that regard.”
[15]
Urgent applications must be brought in accordance with the provisions
of rule 6(12) of the Uniform
Rules of Court, with due regard to the
guidelines set out in cases such as
Die
Republikeinse Publikasies (Edms) Bpk vs Afrikaanse Pers Publikasies
(Edms) Bpk
[2]
as
well as a well-known case of
Luna
Meubelvervaardigers (Edms) Bpk v Makin and Another
[3]
.
[16]
This leaves the requirement of the applicant’s ability to
obtain proper substantive redress
in due course, for consideration.
Obviously, and where a matter is struck from the roll for want of
urgency, then the merits of
the application remains undetermined. It
follows that the application can still be considered and granted by a
Court in the ordinary
course. However even if the application failed
on urgency, it is possible, in appropriate circumstances, to even
dispose of the
matter on the merits, where a matter is regarded as
not being urgent, instead of striking the matter from the roll. The
Court in
February
v Envirochem CC and Another
[4]
dealt with this kind of consideration, and even though the Court
accepted that urgency was not established, the Court nonetheless
proceeded to dismiss the matter in the interest of finality and so
the matter should be dealt with once and for all.
[17]
In the judgment of
In
re: Several Matters On Urgent Roll 18 September 2012
[5]
t
he
Court
held that:-
“
Further, if a
matter becomes opposed in the urgent motion court and the papers
become voluminous there must be exceptional reasons
why the matter is
not to be removed to the ordinary motion roll. ‘The
urgent court is not geared to dealing with a
matter which is not only
voluminous but clearly includes some complexity and even some novel
points of law.’
See Digital Printers vs Riso Africa
(Pty) Limited case number 17318/02, an unreported judgment of
Cachalia J delivered in this
division.”
[18]
The Court further held that:
“
Urgency is a
matter of degree. … Some applicants who abuse the
court process should be penalised and the matters
should simply be
struck off the roll with costs for lack of urgency. Those
matters that justify a postponement to allow the
respondent to file
affidavits should in my view summarily be removed from the roll so
that the parties can set them down on the
ordinary opposed roll when
they are ripe for hearing, with costs reserved.
[6]
”
[19]
The abovementioned principle was further considered in the case
of
Mogalakwena
Local Municipality v The Provincial Executive Council, Limpopo and
others
[7]
in
which this Honourable Court confirmed:
“
I proceed to
evaluate the respondent’s submission that the matter is not
urgent. The evaluation must be undertaken by
an analysis of the
applicant’s case taken together with allegations by the
respondent which the applicant does not dispute.
Rule 6(12)
confers a general judicial discretion on a court to hear a matter
urgently … It seems to me that
when urgency is an
issue the primary investigation should be to determine whether
the applicant will be afforded substantial
redress at a hearing in
due course. If the applicant cannot establish prejudice
in this sense, the application cannot
be urgent.
Once such prejudice is
established, other factors come into consideration. These
factors include (but are not limited to):
Whether the
respondents can adequately present their cases in the time available
between notice of the application to them and
the actual hearing,
other prejudice to the respondent’s and the administration of
justice, the strength of the case made
by the applicant and any delay
by the applicant in asserting its rights. This last factor is
often called, usually by counsel
acting for respondents, self-created
urgency.”
[20]
The abovementioned decisions were also confirmed in
Export
Development Canada v West Dawn Investment
s
[8]
.
An applicant must show the absence of substantial redress
eventually. It is not equivalent to irreparable harm that
is
required before the granting of interim relief. If the matter is
enrolled to be heard in the normal course the applicants
will still
be able to prove their case and obtain the necessary redress, should
a court find in their favour. There will still
be the possibility of
substantial redress in future.
[21]
The applicants explained that it applies in terms of section 63(12)
of the MSA to this Court.
It further submits that an application to
the Appeal Board in terms of section 63(12) and to the CMS in terms
of section 63(8)
was in its opinion pointless as the CMS was
concurrent on the application for curatorship of the second
applicant. Therefore it
sought to appeal directly to this Court for
intervention. Whilst, I can agree with the reasoning of approaching
this Court directly
in terms of section 63(12) as it is the
applicants right to do so, the determining factor in this present
appeal is whether the
enrolment of the matter as urgent instead of on
the ordinary roll was correct and that they would not gain
substantial redress
eventually.
[22]
Possible financial prejudice does not entitle a party to any
preference before other parties.
The loss that the applicants
may allegedly suffer in this matter is not sufficient to allow the
applicant to be afforded an immediate
hearing and it is not the kind
of loss that justifies the disruption of the roll and prejudice to
other parties, who are awaiting
their turn to be heard.
[9]
The fact that irreparable loss may be sustained is in any event in
itself not sufficient to establish urgency,
especially
where an applicant took no action against the respondents for some
time
[10]
.
[23]
There is a tendency by applicants in urgent applications to lay the
blame for their own lack
of timeous conduct against the other
parties. Although, there are appropriate circumstances that lead to
matters being dispensed
with as was decided in
February
v Envirochem CC and Another
[11]
for the interests of finality, I am reluctant to deal with the merits
and grant the relief for the following reasons:
23.1
The applicant who is not yet accredited by the SALGBC will have the
proposed amalgamation confirmed without
such accreditation,
circumventing the established statutory requirements in terms of
section 63 of which the first respondent is
tasked to supervise
compliance in accordance of this provision.
23.2 The
majority of members of the two schemes will have lost the benefit of
the protection of a scheme that is SALGBC
accredited;
23.3 If
the respondents succeed in the impending curatorship application but
in the meantime the current relief
is granted, this would not be in
the interests of the majority of the beneficiaries as the new entity
would not be in or attain
a sound financial condition; and
23.4 The financial loss
would on a balance of probabilities affect the applicants more than
it would affect the interests of the
majority of its members who
would still have the option of electing SALGBC accredited schemes
which are available.
[24]
I accordingly make the following order:
1. The application is
struck off, and the applicants are ordered to pay the costs of this
application including the costs of the
employment of two counsel.
SASRDIWALLA
J
Judge
of the High Court
Appearances:
For the applicants:
Terry Motau SC
E. Kromhout
R. Tshetlo
Instructed by:
Malatji & Co
attorneys
For the
Respondents:
S. Poswa-Lerotholi
SC
N.Mgcima
Instructed by:
Ndobela and Lamola
Incorporated
[1]
(11/33767)
[2011] ZAGPJHC 196 (23 September 2011)
[2]
1972(1)
SA 773 (A) at para 782A - G
[3]
1977(4)
SA 135 (W), see further also Sikwe vs SA Mutual Fire and
General Insurance
1977
(3) SA 438
(W)
at 440G - 441A.
[4]
(2013) 34 ILJ 135 (LC) at para 17. See also Bumatech (supra) at para
33; Bethape v Public Servants Association and Others [2016]
ZALCJHB
573 (9 September 2016) at para 53.
[5]
(2012)
4 All SA 570
(GSJ) 8 para 15.
[6]
At
para 18
[7]
(2014)
JOL 32103
(GP) at para63 – 64.
[8]
(2018)
2 All SA 783 (GJ)
[9]
[8]
L
& B Marcow Caterers (Pty) Ltd v Greatermans SA Lt and
another
1981
(4) SA 108
(C)
[10]
Trustees
BKA Besigheidstrust v Enco Produkte en Dienste 1990 (2) SA 102
(T)
[11]
(2013) 34 ILJ 135 (LC) at para 17. See also Bumatech (supra) at para
33; Bethape v Public Servants Association and Others [2016]
ZALCJHB
573 (9 September 2016) at para 53.
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