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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## MEC responsible for Economic Development, Gauteng v Vilakazi and Others (2023-032601)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 686 (14 August 2023)
MEC responsible for Economic Development, Gauteng v Vilakazi and Others (2023-032601)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 686 (14 August 2023)
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sino date 14 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2023-032601
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date: 14
August 2023
E van der Schyff
In
the matter between:
MEC
RESPONSIBLE FOR ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT,
GAUTENG
APPLICANT
and
SIBONGILE
VILAKAZI
FIRST RESPONDENT
THANDIWE
GODONGWANA
SECOND RESPONDENT
LENTSWE
MOKGATLE
THIRD RESPONDENT
DAVID
MAIMELA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
THEMBISA
FAKUDE
FIFTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant (MEC) approached the urgent
court for a declarator that the order granted by Nyathi J on 18 May
2023 (the May 2023-order)
is final in effect, alternatively, and in
the event that the court finds that the May 2023-order is not final
in effect, that the
execution of the order be suspended pending the
finalisation of the appeal.
Background
[2]
The respondents in this application
initially approached the court on an urgent basis. The application
concerned an administrative
action performed by the MEC, in that she
dissolved the Board of the Gauteng Growth and Development Agency
(Proprietary) Limited
(the board) and terminated the membership of
several board members. The decision is challenged in the review
application.
[3]
It is evident from the founding papers in
the review application that the dispute that arose that led to a
breakdown of trust between
the MEC and the board primarily revolves
around the appointment of a Chief Executive Officer (CEO) for the
Gauteng Growth and Development
Agency (Proprietary) Limited (GGDA).
It is not necessary for the purposes of this application to deal with
this issue and the pending
review in detail. It is important to note,
however, that it is only the board’s stance regarding the
appointment of the CEO
that is questioned and criticised by the MEC
in the review application.
[4]
I pause to note that the dispute arose
after the chairperson of the board approached the newly appointed MEC
to explain the process
that was followed in identifying a suitable
candidate to appoint as CEO of GGDA. The chairperson of the board
explained that a
costly and expensive process was followed in
identifying the most suitable candidate for the post. The erstwhile
MEC was involved
throughout the process. The new MEC, the applicant
in these proceedings, was requested to concur with the board’s
decision
and to appoint the identified candidate as the CEO. However,
in this section 18 application, it is for the first time alleged by
the respondents (the applicants in the review application) that the
CEO’s appointment was already finalised and approved
by the
previous MEC. Whether this position is indeed correct, is objectively
determinable. This situation is, however, not determinative
of the
issues underpinning this application.
[5]
Except for this dispute and the board’s
stance regarding the appointment of the CEO, the MEC did not
explicitly take issue
with any other decision or conduct of the board
or with the manner in which the GGDA was managed at that point in
time. She terminated
the respondents’ board membership after
she invited the board members to make representations and indicated
that she was
of the view that they were usurping her statutory powers
to appoint a CEO, by prescribing which candidate she must appoint.
[6]
Before Nyathi J, the respondents sought
interim relief pending the finalisation of the review of the MEC’s
decision to terminate
their board membership. In the May 2023-order
the MEC’s decision to dissolve the board of the GGDA and to
terminate the respondents’
board membership was suspended
pending the finalisation of the review envisaged in Part B. The
respondents were reinstated as directors
of the GGDA pending the
finalisation of the review. In addition, the appointment of new
directors, if any, in substitution of the
respondents was set aside,
and the MEC was interdicted from appointing any directors to the
board in substitution of the respondents,
pending the finalisation of
the review application.
The GGDA
[7]
The
Gauteng Growth and Development Agency (Proprietary) Limited Act 5 of
2003 (the GDA) was promulgated to provide for the management
of a
company known as Gauteng Growth and Development Agency (Pty) Ltd
(GGDA). The Gauteng Provincial Government is the only stakeholder,
and the MEC exercises the powers and duties of the Gauteng Provincial
Government as shareholder of the Company.
[1]
[8]
The
objects of the GGDA are to: enable economic development that is
focused on creating sustainable jobs; drive growth to provincial
growth domestic products and employment rates; strategically position
the Province into a globally competitive city region; facilitate
partnerships and create linkages across the Province in order to
maximise service delivery outcomes; and support the development
of
the key sectors of the economy in line with established economic and
industrial policies of the Province.
[2]
The functions of the GGDA are to: undertake or invest in the
identified projects, and enable increased private sector
investment.
[3]
[9]
The
GGDA is managed by a Board of Directors (Board). The MEC must appoint
the Board. The Board must consist of a minimum of 9 and
a maximum of
11 members. The MEC appoints the Chairperson of the Board and the
Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of the Board.
[4]
Urgency
[10]
The aspect that renders this application
sufficiently urgent to be dealt with is the fact that the GDA
provides for the GGDA, a
company, to be managed by its Board of
Directors. The public interest requires the GGDA to be properly
managed by its board. The
order that is sought to be appealed
was granted in the urgent court, and those facts continue to be
relevant and urgent.
Discussion
Declarator
[11]
The respondents contend that the
declaratory relief sought is incompetent. I disagree. A declaratory
order is a ruling that is explanatory
in nature. It is necessary to
clarify the uncertain position as to whether the May 2023-order is an
order having the effect of
a final judgment.
[12]
When
can it be held that a decision or order is ‘final in effect’?
Can it be said that an order that is prejudicial
to a company and can
cause irreparable harm to the company, an order that goes beyond
preserving the
status
quo
,
is final in effect? In the early case of
Pretoria
Garrison Institutes v Danish Variety Products (Pty) Ltd,
[5]
the
court held that in determining whether an order is final in effect,
regard should not be had ‘to whether or not the one
party or
the other has by the order suffered an inconvenience or disadvantage’
but to whether the order bears directly upon,
and in that way
affects, the decision in the main suit. In
African
Wanderers Football Club (Pty) Ltd v Wanderers Football Club,
[6]
the
court reiterated that the fact that an order could well prove to be
prejudicial to a company does not justify a contention that
the order
is a final and definitive order.
[13]
In
Cipla
Agrimed (Pty) Ltd v Merck Sharp Dohme Corporation,
[7]
the
court had to decide whether an interim interdict that prohibited the
infringement of a patent was final in effect, in circumstances
where
the patent would have expired prior to the determination of the final
interdict. In the matter of Cipla, the
applicant,
acknowledged
the general rule that interdicts granted pending final relief were
not appealable. It, however, argued that, although
the interdict was
interim in form, it was final in effect, because the pending
infringement action was unlikely to be determined
before the expiry
of the patent on 3 December 2018. Since the final interdict claimed
in the infringement action could itself not
endure beyond 3 December
2018, Cipla submitted that the interim order in effect finally
disposed of the interdictory relief, and
concluded, that the granting
of the interim interdict was appealable.
[8]
[14]
In
determining the question as to whether the interim interdict was
appealable, Gorven AJA explained that the phrase ‘final
in
effect’ means that an issue in the suit had been affected by
the order to such an extent that the issue could not be revisited
by
the court of first instance. G
orven
AJA explained that the fact that the granting of an interim interdict
gave rise to prejudice on the person against whom it
operated did not
in itself render such an order appealable. The only prejudice that
might make such an order appealable was prejudice
that in some way
affected the final determination of an issue in the suit or stood
in the way of an issue being determined
at a later date. Gorven
AJA held that Cipla's argument that the interim interdict against it
was 'final in effect' because the
patent would have run its course by
the time the main action came to be considered, boiled down to the
argument that Cipla was
prejudiced because 'time could not be
recalled'. This kind of prejudice, he held, did not render the order
of the court
a
quo
appealable. The court
a
quo
had not finally decided the
res
judicata
issue, and it would in future be considered by the court considering
the infringement action. Gorven AJA concluded that the order
was not
final in effect, was in form and effect an interlocutory interdict,
and not appealable.
[9]
[15]
It
is evident from the form and effect
[10]
of the May 2023-order, that interim relief was granted. The court
that will in future decide the review application can come to
a
decision that confirms the decision to dissolve the board and
terminate the respondents’ board membership, thereby
overturning
the May 2023-order, or the reviewing court may set aside
the decision to terminate the respondents’ board membership.
The
May 2023-order is thus a decision that is susceptible to
alteration by the court of first instance.
[16]
The
order is not definitive of the rights of the parties, nor does it
have the effect of disposing of a substantial portion of the
relief
claimed
[11]
– the order
only provides for the respondents’ reinstatement pending the
final review. The MEC’s counsel stressed
that the respondents'
term as board members may expire before the appeal, or the review is
heard and that the reinstated directors
will be able to convene
meetings and exercise the ordinary powers of directors and make
binding decisions in their capacity as
directors. This, she
submitted, renders the decision to reinstate them, albeit pending the
determination of the review, a final
decision. Based on the case law
referred to in paragraphs [11][13]
and[13]
above,
none of these factors render the order a final order or an order
having the effect of a final order.
[17]
I
do not agree with the MEC’s counsel’s submission that the
granting of leave to appeal by Nyathi J, as a matter of
course,
renders the May 2023-order an order of final effect. It has been held
in, amongst others,
Westinghouse
Brake & Equipment (Pty) Ltd v Bilger Engineering (Pty)
Ltd
[12]
that the fact that leave to appeal has been granted on a question of
appealability does not mean that the decision in respect of
which
leave is given is indeed appealable.
Section 18(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
was crafted specifically to provide
that where interlocutory orders, not having the effect of a final
judgment, are appealed, such
orders are not suspended pending the
appeal. The May 2023-order falls in this category.
[18]
In the result, it needs to be determined
whether the MEC makes out a case in terms of
s 18(2)
of the
Superior
Courts Act to
have the operation and execution of the May 2023-order
suspended.
Section 18(2)
and (3)
of the
Superior Courts Act
[19
]
Section 18(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act
provides
that unless the court, under exceptional circumstances,
orders otherwise, the operation and execution of an interlocutory
decision
that is the subject of an appeal is not suspended pending
the appeal.
Section 18(3)
prescribes that a court may only order
‘otherwise’, that is, order the suspension of the
operation and execution of
the interlocutory order, if the party who
applies for the operation and execution of the interlocutory order to
be suspended, in
addition, proves on a balance of probabilities that
he or she will suffer irreparable harm if the court does not grant
the order,
and that the other party will not suffer irreparable harm
if the court orders that the operation and execution of the
interlocutory
order are suspended.
[20]
Three
jurisdictional requirements must be met for a court to exercise its
discretion to grant or refuse the application:
[13]
i.
The existence of exceptional circumstances;
ii.
Proof on a balance of probabilities that the applicant will suffer
irreparable harm
if the interlocutory order is put into operation
(the presence of irreparable harm if the order is put into operation
and executed
pending the appeal);
iii.
Proof on a balance of probabilities that the respondent will
not suffer irreparable harm if the interlocutory order is not put
into
operation and executed (the absence of irreparable harm if the
order is not put into operation and executed pending the appeal).
Exceptional
circumstances
[21]
The
question as to whether exceptional circumstances exist is a question
of fact,
[14]
and it must be
derived from the actual predicament in which the litigants find
themselves. It refers to circumstances that are
out of the ordinary,
unusual, uncommon, atypical, or rare.
[15]
[22]
In casu,
the
MEC contends exceptional circumstances are found therein that the May
2023-order compels the shareholder, the MEC, to forge
a relationship
with a board in whom she has lost all trust, and which board has made
unfounded allegations of illegality and imputations
of corruption
when she seeks to exercise a power vested in her by law. This
situation will endure until September 2024 or the finalisation
of the
review application, whichever occurs first. The MEC further contends
that if she appoints a CEO, as she is statutorily mandated
to do, the
board will not cooperate with the CEO.
[23]
The MEC informs the court that since the
respondents' reinstatement, they have acted prejudicially to the
affairs of the GGDA. The
reinstated chairperson of the GGDA, for
instance, sought to replace a chairperson of one of the GGDA’s
various subsidiaries
on the day of his reinstatement without being
authorised by the board. The reinstated board members took issue with
the MEC’s
decision to fill the vacancies on the board to ensure
that the minimum number of directors is appointed. The chairperson
informed
the MEC that she would not convene a shareholder’s
meeting until she had obtained advice. The reinstated board members
held
meetings excluding the board members appointed by the MEC. The
respondents deny the Minister’s allegations, and in turn, claim
that the GGDA was mismanaged in their absence. The MEC denies this
allegation.
[24]
The existing dispute is indicative of the
tension created between a legislative framework that gives
Government, in this instance,
Provincial Government, through the
relevant MEC, the power to make senior appointments in a state-owned
entity, the GGDA, on the
one hand, and the principles of good
governance as outlined in the King IV report which recommends that
the board appoints the
Chief Executive Officer, on the other.
[25]
The MEC’s statutory powers and best
practice good governance principles should, however, not be regarded
as opposing or irreconcilable.
The
Handbook
for the appointment of persons to boards of state and state
controlled institutions
, published by
the Department of Public Service and Administration, provides best
practice guidelines to promote uniformity in the
appointment, of
persons to boards of state and state controlled institutions, and the
respective role-player’s duties and
functions. Although the
Handbook represents a stand-alone practical document that is not a
governance instrument, it promotes the
primary pillars of fairness,
accountability, responsibility, and transparency. It supports
the basic values and principles
governing public administration set
out in Chapter 10 of the Constitution.
[26]
More importantly, section 195 of the
Constitution provides that public administration in all organs of
state and public enterprises
must be governed by the democratic
values and principles enshrined in the Constitution.
[27]
In this context, it is unfathomable that
the parties in question were not able to resolve their dispute
through mediation or another
alternative dispute resolution
mechanism. Due to the break in trust, and the communication breakdown
that ensued, it became impossible
to merge the two opposing
viewpoints. On the one hand, the MEC opined that she is under no
legal obligation to consider the board’s
recommendation. On the
other hand, the respondents, in a converse view based on the
principles of good governance best practice,
regarded the appointment
of the CEO to follow the recommendation of the board, specifically
after an expensive and comprehensive
process was followed to identify
a preferred candidate. (Although it is now averred by the respondents
that the CEO’s appointment
was finalised and concluded by the
time the current MEC was appointed, the papers indicate that this was
not regarded to be the
position prior to the MEC’s decision to
dissolve the board.)
[28]
Both parties are equally to blame for
the current situation. Whilst the MEC’s incomprehensible
refusal to mediate the dispute
fueled the discord, the insinuations
of corruption, dishonesty, and state capture, contained in the
respondents’ papers,
widened the rift between the parties. The
question is, however, whether the mistrust between the parties
constitutes an exceptional
circumstance.
[29]
It does not. The first reason for coming to
this conclusion is the MEC’s acquiescence to the May
2023-order, as evinced by
FAA8 to the founding affidavit, an aspect
dealt with below. The MEC does not explain what subsequently caused
the change of heart
that led to this application, but it is
significant that the MEC reinstated the respondents as board members,
or at least the second
respondent, pursuant to the order being handed
down.
[30]
In addition, I must consider that the GDA
determines that the GGDA is managed through its board. The MEC is not
part of the day-to-day
management of the GGDA. The GDA does not
provide for a situation where no board exists. Although the MEC
informs the court that
she invoked the provisions of the Memorandum
of Incorporation to fill vacancies on the board, she does not inform
the court when
she filled the vacancies and how many appointments she
made. She does not inform the court whether the reinstatement of the
respondents
caused the maximum number of directors to be exceeded. It
is not in the public interest for the GGDA to be rudderless, or for
individuals
to perform functions that should be performed by the
board of directors.
[31]
It remains open to the parties to
refer the dispute regarding the appointment of the CEO to mediation
or another alternative dispute
resolution mechanism or even approach
the court on the basis of a stated case. The existence of the dispute
per se
,
need not impact on the GGDA’s functionality. If the averment
contained in the respondents’ answering affidavit that
the
appointment of the CEO was already finalised and concluded before the
applicant’s appointment as MEC, and that a CEO
was already
lawfully appointed under the auspice of the erstwhile MEC turns out
to be correct, the dispute that arose regarding
the CEO’s
appointment can no longer be a point of contention. Dysfunctionality
will only be a consequence of the parties,
or one party, not adhering
to the Constitutional prescript captured in s 195 of the
Constitution.
[32]
In the result, the MEC did not make out a
case that exceptional circumstances exist that necessitate the
suspension of the May 2023-order.
It is consequently not necessary
for this court to continue with the s 18(2) enquiry.
Miscellaneous
[33]
Due to the conclusion I came to, it is not
necessary to deal with the issue of non-joinder raised by the
respondents.
[34]
An aspect not pertinently raised by any
party, but that is relevant to these proceedings, is the effect and
consequence of annexure
FAA8 to the MEC’s founding papers.
Annexure FAA8 is a letter dated 22 May 2023. This letter was
directed to Ms. T.
Godongwana, the second respondent, by the MEC. It
is necessary to have regard to the content of this letter.
‘
RE:
MATTER BETWEEN MS SIBONGILE VILIKAZI AND OTHERS VD MEC ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT AND ANOTHER (CASE NO:032601/23)
1.
The above subject refers.
2.
In a judgment on 18 May 2023, it provided
for, amongst others, but pending the application of the finalization
of the review application,
the decision taken to “dissolve the
board of the GGDA and to terminate the board membership of the
applicants with the GGDA
is hereby suspended with effect from 24
March 2023.”
3.
In accordance with the judgment, I hereby
wish to confirm that you are reinstated as a Director of the GGDA SOC
Ltd.
4.
In reinstating your membership, I wish to
request that the Shareholder will be given an opportunity to convene
a Shareholders meeting
as per the Companies Memorandum of
Incorporation (MOI) Within 10 days of this notice.
5.
Your cooperation in this regard will be
appreciated.’
[35]
This letter is indicative of the fact that
the MEC acquiesced in the interim order granted by Nyathi J on 18 May
2023.
[36]
Trollip
J said in
Gentiruco
AG v Firestone SA (Pty) Ltd:
[16]
‘
The
right of an unsuccessful litigant to appeal against an adverse
judgment or order is said to be perempted if he, by unequivocal
conduct inconsistent with the intention to appeal, shows that he
acquiesces in the judgment or order.’
[37]
Innes
CJ held in
Standard
Bank v Estate Van Rhyn
:
[17]
‘
If
a man asked clearly and unconditionally acquiesced in and decided to
abide by the judgment it cannot thereafter challenge it.’
[38]
The consequence that FAA8 might have for
the success of the appeal cannot be ignored.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The application is dealt with as an urgent application in terms
of Rule 6(12), and non-compliance with the forms and service provided
for in the Rules of Court are condoned;
2.
The order handed down by Nyathi J on 18 May 2023 is an interim
order that does not have the effect of a final judgment;
3. The
section 18(2) application is dismissed, and costs are costs in the
appeal.
E van der Schyff
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be emailed to the parties/their legal representatives.
For the applicant:
Adv. M. Sello SC
With:
Adv. N.P. Manala
Instructed by:
Mncedisi Ndlovu &
Sedumedi Attorneys
For the
respondents:
Adv. M. Majozi
Instructed by:
Ngeno Mteto Inc.
Date of the
hearing:
10 August 2023
Date of judgment:
14 August 2023
[1]
S
5 of the GDA.
[2]
S
3 of the GDA.
[3]
S
3A of the GDA.
[4]
S
8 of the GDA.
[5]
1948 (1) SA 839 (A).
[6]
1977
(2) SA 38 (A).
[7]
2018
(6) SA 440 (SCA).
[8]
Supra
at
441A-B.
[9]
Supra
441C-F.
[10]
Metlika
Trading Ltd and Others v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service
2005 (3) SA 1 (SCA).
[11]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
1993
(1) SA 523 (A).
[12]
1986
(2) SA 555
(A) at 561D-E. See also
FirstRand
Bank Ltd t/a First National Bank v Makaleng
[2016] ZASCA 169
para 15, and Cronshaw and another v Fidelity Guards
Holdings (Pty) Ltd
[1996] ZASCA 38
;
1996 (3) SA 686
(A) at 689B-D.
[13]
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ellis and Another
2014 (3) SA 189 (GJ).
[14]
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ellis and Another
2014 (3) SA 189
(GJ);
Dlamini
v Ncube and Others
(01355/2023)
[2023] ZAGPHJC 379 (18 April 2023).
[15]
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation and Another
2017
(5) SA 402
(SCA) at par [37];
FourieFismer
Inc and Others v Road Accident Fund; Mabunda Inc and Others v Road
Accident Fund; Diale Mogashoa Inc v Road Accident
Fund
(17518/2020;
15876/2020; 18239/2020)
[2020] ZAGPPHC 293 (8 July 2020);
MV
Ais
Mamas: Seatrans Maritime v Owners, MV Ais Mamas, and Another
2002
(6) SA 150
(C) at 156H-157C.
[16]
1972 (1) SA 589
(A) at 600A
[17]
1925 AD 246
at 274.
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