Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1797South Africa
Afriforum NPC v Minister of International Relations and Co-operation and Others (21196/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1797 (25 October 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Judicial review – Administrative action – Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 – Test – Executive conduct – Principle of legality – Mandatory prescripts not followed – Decision reviewed and set aside
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Afriforum NPC v Minister of International Relations and Co-operation and Others (21196/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1797 (25 October 2023)
Afriforum NPC v Minister of International Relations and Co-operation and Others (21196/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1797 (25 October 2023)
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sino date 25 October 2023
FLYNOTES:
ADMINISTRATIVE
– Review –
Donation
to Cuba
–
Decision to approve request to retain cash surplus in budget –
Whether executive in nature or administrative
action – No
basis on which to review and set aside approval of retention
request – Donation decision subject
to legality scrutiny –
Advisory Committee not properly constituted when it took donation
decision – Suffered
from illegality because not taken by
quorate committee – Donation decision reviewed and set
aside.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 21196/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
2023/10/25
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
AFRIFORUM
NPC
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS AND
CO-OPERATION
First Respondent
DEPUTY
MINISTER OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
AND
CO-OPERATION
Second Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL,
DEPARTMENT OF
INTERNATIONAL
RELATIONS AND CO-OPERATION
Third
Respondent
AFRICAN
RENAISSANCE AND INTERNATIONAL
CO-OPERATION
FUND
Fourth Respondent
ADVISORY
COMMITTEE, AFRICAN RENAISSANCE
AND
INTERNATIONAL CO-OPERATION FUND
Fifth Respondent
MINISTER
OF
FINANCE
Sixth Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL,
DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE
Seventh Respondent
DEPUTY
DIRECTOR-GENERAL, DEPARTMENT OF
FINANCE
Eight Respondent
NATIONAL
TREASURY
Ninth Respondent
PARLIAMENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Tenth Respondent
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Eleventh Respondent
Summary:
Judicial
review – Administrative action –
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
– Test – Executive
conduct – Principle of legality – Mandatory prescripts
not followed – Decision
reviewed and set aside
Afriforum
sought to have National Treasury’s decision to approve a
surplus retention request reviewed and set aside.
It also
sought to review and set aside a decision made on the recommendation
of the African Renaissance Fund supported by the Ministers
of DIRCO
and Finance, to donate R50 million to Cuba. The court first had
to consider if the decisions were administrative
action and it found
that they were not. The court held that the decision to approve the
surplus retention request was lawful.
The donation decision
was, however, held to be unlawful because the ARF Advisory
Committee, which made the recommendation
to donate, was not quorate.
ORDER
1.
the decision of the First, Third, Fourth and Sixth Respondents to
donate R50
million to the Republic of Cuba is reviewed and set aside.
2.
the First, Third, Fourth and Sixth Respondents are ordered to pay
fifty percent
(50%) of the Applicant’s costs.
JUDGMENT
MLAMBO,
JP (Dlamini J and Cowen J concurring)
Introduction
[1]
On 2 February 2022 South Africa woke to the news that the South
African Government had,
through the Department of International
Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO), taken a decision to donate R50
million to the Republic
of Cuba (Cuba). This was announced by the
Deputy Minister of DIRCO, whilst addressing a parliamentary oversight
committee. Following
on this announcement, the Applicant (AfriForum)
dispatched a letter, through its lawyers, to the Minister of DIRCO,
requesting
clarification about the source of the R50 million donation
to Cuba. AfriForum further asked,
inter alia
, when the
decision to make the donation was made, whether it was being made in
accordance with any bilateral agreement between
the two governments
and how the decision to make the donation was justified by DIRCO
given the “dire socio-economic situation”
that South
Africa faced. AfriForum also sought an undertaking that the donation
would not be made until the questions raised had
been addressed
sufficiently.
[2]
DIRCO responded through
the Acting Director-General, per letter dated 25 February 2022
stating,
inter
alia
,
that the allocation of R50 million would not be made in terms of any
agreement but as a response to a request from the Cuban Government
and that this would be done in line with
section 4(e)
of the African
Renaissance and International Cooperation Fund Act,
[1]
which authorised the African Renaissance and International
Co-operation Fund (African Renaissance Fund) to utilise funds to
enhance
humanitarian assistance.
[3]
This response did not
appease AfriForum who, on 1 March 2022, and on the basis that no
undertaking was made not to go ahead with
the Cuban donation,
launched an urgent application in this Court. It sought an order
that, pending this application, the Respondents
be interdicted from
paying over the R50 million or any part thereof to Cuba. The interim
interdict was granted on 22 March 2022
[2]
and the Respondents unsuccessfully applied for leave to appeal that
order. They were further unsuccessful in an application for
direct
access to the Constitutional Court. They then redirected their
efforts and petitioned the Supreme Court of Appeal for leave
to
appeal. That petition was also unsuccessful.
This
Application
[4]
This is the application foreshadowed in AfriForum’s successful
interdict application.
It seeks to review and set aside the Eighth
Respondent’s decision, taken on behalf of the Seventh
Respondent, to approve
the Fourth Respondent’s request to
retain an accumulated cash surplus, in its allocated budget for the
2021/2022 financial
year, i.e. as at 31 March 2022. Also sought to be
reviewed and set aside is the decision of the First and/or the Second
to the
Sixth Respondents to donate the amount of R50 million to the
Republic of Cuba and/or subsequent supply chain processes related
thereto. AfriForum further seeks certain declaratory relief as well
as an order for costs against any Respondent opposing this
application.
The
Parties
[5]
AfriForum is the Applicant, a non-profit company duly incorporated in
the Republic of South
Africa. It styles itself as actively involved
in the promotion of the rule of law and constitutional rights.
[6]
The First and Second Respondents are the Minister and Deputy Minister
of International Relations
and Co-operation. They are the cabinet
member and deputy, responsible for DIRCO. The Minister and Deputy
Minster referred to in
this matter are Ms Naledi Pandor and Mr Alvin
Botes. The Third Respondent is the Director-General of DIRCO.
[7]
The Fourth Respondent is
the African Renaissance Fund. It is a schedule 3A public entity in
terms of the Public Finance Management
Act.
[3]
It was established in terms of section 2 of the Act and is located
within DIRCO. In terms of section 2, the African Renaissance
Fund
consists, inter alia, of “money appropriated by Parliament for
the Fund”.
[4]
Its objects
are found in Section 4 and are:
“
4. The money in
the Fund must be utilise to enhance –
(a)
co-operation between the Republic and other countries, in particular
African countries.
(b) the
promotion of democracy and good governance.
(c) the
prevention of conflict.
(d) socio
economic development and integration; and
(e)
humanitarian assistance and human resource development.”
[8]
The Fifth Respondent is
the Advisory Committee of the African Renaissance Fund (the Advisory
Committee) being the Committee envisaged
in section 5 of the Act. In
terms of section 5(1), the Advisory Committee consists of the
Director-General of DIRCO or his delegate,
three officials from DIRCO
appointed by the Minister and two officials of the Department of
Finance appointed by the Minister of
Finance, i.e. six members in
total. Funds accruing to the fund must be “disbursed upon the
recommendation of the Advisory
Committee and approval by the Minister
in consultation with the Minister of Finance”.
[5]
The operations of the Advisory Committee are further carried out in
line with its Terms of Reference which will be considered later
in
this judgment. The First to Fifth Respondents, are sometimes also
collectively referred to as the DIRCO Respondents.
[9]
The Sixth Respondent is the Minister of Finance, the Minister in the
cabinet responsible
for the Department of Finance; the Seventh
Respondent is the Director-General of the Department of Finance; the
Eighth Respondent
is the Deputy Director-General of the Department of
Finance. The Ninth Respondent is the National Treasury, as
contemplated in
section 5 of the PFMA. The Seventh to Ninth
Respondents will sometimes be collectively referred to the Treasury
Respondents.
[10]
The Tenth Respondent is the Parliament of the Republic of South
Africa, as contemplated in section 42 of
the Constitution and the
Eleventh Respondent is the President of the Republic of South Africa,
the head of both the state and national
executive of South Africa, as
contemplated in section 83 of the Constitution. These Respondents
have played no part in these proceedings.
Salient
facts
[11]
On 31 May 2021, the Acting Director-General of DIRCO transmitted a
request to the Ninth Respondent (National
Treasury) to retain a cash
surplus, in the budget of the African Renaissance Fund, as at 31
March 2021. The request was made in
terms of section 53(3) of the
PFMA. This section provides that a Schedule 3 public entity may not
accumulate a surplus unless the
prior written approval of the
National Treasury has been obtained. In the request, the Acting
Director-General documented both
the available and committed funds in
the Fund in (a) displaying that the surplus declared as at 31 March
2021 was R 71 537 000.00
(R71 million) and (b) requesting approval to
retain the said surplus amount, which would be “earmarked for
any urgent humanitarian
assistance to African countries as a result
of national disasters”.
[12]
This request was, according to the DIRCO Respondents, made in terms
of National Treasury Instruction No 12
of 2020/2021 which outlines
the process to be followed by accounting officers who declare
surpluses. The Treasury Instruction specifies
that Schedule 3A
entities are permitted to submit surplus retention requests to
National Treasury as at 31 March (year-end).
[13]
Meanwhile, on 20 July 2021, Cuba’s Ambassador to South Africa
wrote to the Minister of DIRCO requesting
emergency assistance
consisting of food and medical supplies. He motivated the request as
being based on the dire situation that
Cuba found itself in due to
sanctions imposed on it by the United States of America and the
effects of the Covid-19 pandemic.
[14]
On 29 July 2021 and regarding the surplus retention request, there
was email communication between National
Treasury and the Secretariat
of the African International Renaissance Fund regarding the
calculations of how the surplus was determined.
The
communication anticipated that R50 million of the R71 million may be
used to provide assistance to Cuba.
[15]
On that same day, the Deputy Director-General, for the Americas and
Europe Branch of DIRCO, prepared a memorandum
for the consideration
of the Advisory Committee which recommended that an amount of R50
million be approved for “urgent humanitarian
assistance to the
Republic of Cuba for the procurement of South African goods to
alleviate the humanitarian crisis”.
[16]
The Secretariat of the African Renaissance Fund then circulated a
memorandum by e-mail to its Advisory Committee
members, the purpose
of which was “to submit, for the ARF Advisory Committee’s
consideration, the request from the
Republic of Cuba for urgent
assistance.” This is repeated in the conclusion of the
memorandum, under the heading “Recommendation”
it says:
“It is recommended that the ARF Advisory Committee …
considers recommending R50 million for the urgent humanitarian
assistance to Republic of Cuba (
sic)
for the procurement of
South African goods to help alleviate the humanitarian crisis.”
[17]
Furthermore, on the same day, 29 July 2021, having received responses
from some Advisory Committee members,
approving the decision to make
the R50 million donation to Cuba, the Secretariat sent a memorandum
to the Minister and Director-General
of DIRCO, with a recommendation,
to approve the donation. The memorandum requested the Minister to
source the concurrence of the
Minister of Finance, regarding the
Advisory Committee’s recommendation. The memorandum was
endorsed by the Director-General
of DIRCO on 30 July 2021 and by the
Minister of DIRCO on 1 August 2021.
[18]
It is recorded in the
memorandum that the Advisory Committee’s recommendation was in
line with section 5 of the Act, to disburse
funds from the African
Renaissance Fund as contemplated in subsections 2, 3 and 4; that the
financial or legal implications regarding
the Advisory Committee’s
recommendation were based on the request submitted to National
Treasury requesting a retention of
surplus funds to the tune of R71
million; that the Act specified that the funds must be made available
or disbursed upon the recommendation
of the Advisory Committee and
the approval by the Minister in consultation with the Minister of
Finance; and that Cuba’s
formal request for assistance for food
and medical supplies to South Africa could be addressed by extending
facility B of the Expired
Agreement on Economic Assistance with
Cuba.
[6]
[19]
As regards the surplus retention request and on 30 July 2021,
National Treasury called for the audited financial
statements of the
African Renaissance Fund and these were submitted on 2 August 2021.
On 3 August 2021 National Treasury (through
its Acting
Director-General) granted its approval to the African Renaissance
Fund to retain the surplus of R71 million accumulated
for the
2020/2021 financial year. The memorandum placed before the
Acting Director-General anticipates, in express terms,
that the
surplus may be used to assist Cuba.
[20] On
1 August 2021, the request for the Finance Minister’s
concurrence for the donation was formalised
in a letter to him and he
confirmed his concurrence in the Advisory Committee’s
recommendation, on 13 August 2021.
AfriForum’s
case
[21]
AfriForum’s
overarching basis for this application is that South Africa is in
dire straits on a number of fronts economically.
It refers to the
well-known service delivery challenges in South Africa which, it
says, are the consequence of a lack of sufficient
funding for
government to undertake all its constitutional obligations as well as
the after-effects of the Covid-19 pandemic and
the lockdown. The
primary stance based on this country’s reported service
delivery failures and the parlous state of the
economy was echoed in
the National Assembly, on 22 February 2022, when a member of the
Democratic Alliance,
[7]
referring to the Cuban donation, posed the following question to the
Minister - “[w]hether, against the background of record
high
unemployment figures and persistent levels of poverty in the
Republic, she has found that the Government’s R50 million
donation to the government of the Republic of Cuba for special
intervention purposes, could have been put to better use at home?”
Without mentioning the full response of the Minister, it suffices to
say that she stated that the request from Cuba was due to
chronic
shortages in food, fuel, medicine and electricity in that country and
that the Government of South Africa had responded
positively in the
context of reciprocity and its historical friendship and solidarity
with the Republic of Cuba.
[22]
In its founding affidavit, AfriForum makes the point that, in view of
the South African realities discussed
in the preceding paragraph, it
was inconceivable for National Treasury to grant the retention
request as well as for the DIRCO
Respondents, with the concurrence of
the Minister of Finance, to make the decision to donate R50 million
to Cuba.
[23]
Reliant on this background, AfriForum’s case rests on two
primary pillars. In the first place it seeks
the review of the
Treasury respondents’ decision to approve the surplus retention
request made by the African Renaissance
Fund. Foreshadowed in this
part of the case, are all decisions taken from the initiation of the
request up to and including its
approval. Secondly, AfriForum attacks
the decision of the African Renaissance Fund to approve the Cuban
donation, supported by
the two Ministers. Also countenanced in this
part of AfriForum’s case is each and every decision taken
underpinning the African
Renaissance Fund’s initiation of the
internal approval processes up to and including the final decision
adopted when the
concurrence of the Minister of Finance was secured
to make the donation.
Is
the approval of the surplus retention request administrative action?
[24]
AfriForum argues that the
impugned conduct is reviewable under PAJA or alternatively in terms
of the legality principle in the Constitution.
Thus, the starting
point should be to determine whether any of the impugned decisions
are administrative action. If they are, they
are reviewable under
PAJA and if they are not, then they are reviewable under the
principle of legality.
[8]
[25]
Our jurisprudence
fortunately provides the necessary guidance in these matters. It is
necessary, at the outset, to determine whether
National Treasury’s
approval of the request by the African Renaissance Fund, to retain
the accumulated surplus, and the subsequent
decision by the DIRCO
Respondents with the concurrence of the Minister of Finance, to
donate R50 million from that surplus to Cuba,
constitute
administrative action. In
Trustees
for the time being of the Legacy Body Corporate v Bae Estates and
Escapes (Pty) Ltd and another
,
[9]
the SCA said the following in relation to the starting point when
determining if a decision is administrative action:
“
When regard is had
to the structure of the definition of an administrative action, the
requirement that the decision be of an administrative
nature, is a
gateway to determining whether a particular decision constitutes
administrative action. As Wallis J explained in
Sokhela
and others v MEC for Agriculture and Environmental Affairs
,
this requirement demands that a detailed analysis be undertaken of
the nature of the public power or public function in question,
“to
determine its true character”. Thus, the determination of what
constitutes administrative action does not occur
by default, and
“[t]he court is required to make a positive decision in each
case whether a particular exercise of public
power or performance of
a public function is of an administrative character.”
[10]
(Footnotes omitted.)
[26]
In
Minister
of Defence and Military Veterans v Motau and Others,
[11]
the Constitutional Court provided a convenient breakdown of the
elements contained in the definition of administrative action as
found in section 1 of PAJA. At paragraph 33, the Court said
administrative action is:
“
a decision of an
administrative nature; by an organ of state or a natural or juristic
person; exercising a public power or performing
a public function; in
terms of any legislation or an empowering provision; that adversely
affects rights; that has a direct, external
legal effect; and that
does not fall under any of the listed exclusions”. (Footnote
omitted.)
And further at paragraph
34:
“
To determine what
constitutes administrative action by asking whether a particular
decision is of an administrative nature may,
at first blush, appear
to presuppose the outcome of that enquiry. But the requirement has
two important functions. First, it obliges
courts to make a “positive
decision in each case whether a particular exercise of public power
... is of an administrative
character”. Second, it makes clear
that a decision is not administrative action merely because it does
not fall within one
of the listed exclusions in section 1(i) of PAJA.
In other words, the requirement propels a reviewing court to
undertake a close
analysis of the nature of the power under
consideration”. (Footnotes omitted.)
[27]
In
Greys
Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of Public Works and
Others
,
[12]
as to what is meant when saying a decision is of an administrative
nature, the SCA said:
“
Whether particular
conduct constitutes administrative action depends primarily on the
nature of the power that is being exercised
rather than upon the
identity of the person who does so. Features of administrative action
(conduct of ‘an administrative
nature’) that have emerged
from the construction that has been placed on s 33 of the
Constitution are that it does not extend
to the exercise of
legislative powers by deliberative elected legislative bodies, nor to
the ordinary exercise of judicial powers,
nor to the formulation of
policy or the initiation of legislation by the executive, nor to the
exercise of original powers conferred
upon the President as head of
state. Administrative action is rather, in general terms, the conduct
of the bureaucracy (whoever
the bureaucratic functionary might be) in
carrying out the daily functions of the state which necessarily
involves the application
of policy, usually after its translation
into law, with direct and immediate consequences for individuals or
groups of individuals.”
[13]
(Footnotes omitted.)
[28]
The decision to approve
the surplus retention request as well as the decision to approve the
Cuban donation are pre-eminently the
exercise of public powers. This
much is borne out by the jurisprudence examined. The African
Renaissance Fund as a schedule 3A
entity, is a public entity and,
similarly, National Treasury, without doubt is also a public body.
These organs of state took the
decisions at issue when performing
public functions, and while exercising public power. This was
described by the Constitutional
Court in
Chirwa
v Transnet Limited and Others
,
[14]
as follows:
“
In my view, what
makes the power in question a public power is the fact that it has
been vested in a public functionary, who is
required to exercise the
power in the public interest. When a public official performs a
function in relation to his or her duties,
the public official
exercises public power.… Transnet is a creature of statute. It
is a public entity created by the statute
and it operates under
statutory authority.
[15]
[29]
I hold the view that the exercise of the power to approve the surplus
retention request is executive in nature.
What we are dealing with
here is conduct concerning budget and fiscal management undertaken by
the executive in furtherance, in
this instance, of policy laden
processes to support its foreign policy endeavours. For this
reason alone, the approval of
the surplus retention request, must be
subjected to the legality standard of review.
[30]
The remaining material requirements are whether the decision to
approve the request, adversely affects the
rights of any person and
had a direct, external legal effect. In
Greys Marine
, the SCA
considered the impact of these requirements and said:
“
The qualification,
particularly when seen in conjunction with the requirement that it
must have a ‘direct and external legal
effect’, was
probably intended rather to convey that administrative action is
action that has the capacity to affect legal
rights, the two
qualifications in tandem serving to emphasise that administrative
action impacts directly and immediately on individuals.”
[16]
[31]
The Constitutional Court
endorsed this view in
Joseph
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
,
[17]
when it held that:
“
The qualifying
phrase “direct, external legal effect” appears in the
definition of administrative action under section
1 of PAJA. I need
do no more on the facts of this case than endorse the broad
interpretation accorded to this phrase by the Supreme
Court of Appeal
in
Grey’s
Marine
,
where it stated that the phrase “serv[es] to emphasise that
administrative action impacts directly and immediately on
individuals.”
Indeed, a finding that the rights of the
applicants were materially and adversely affected for the purposes of
section 3 of PAJA
would necessarily imply that the decision had a
“direct, external legal effect” on the applicants.
Conversely, a finding
that the rights of the applicants were not
materially and adversely affected would have the result that section
3 of PAJA would
not apply.”
[18]
[32]
In my view, AfriForum has not shown that the decision to approve the
retention request had a “direct
and external legal effect”
on it and its members or adversely affected their rights. For
this reason too, that decision
is not administrative action. I
return below to the characterisation of the donation decision.
The
lawfulness of the decision to approve the surplus retention request
[33]
AfriForum has argued that the decision to approve the request was
unlawful and/or irrational and/or unconstitutional
and that mandatory
and material procedures which were prescribed by the empowering
legislation were not complied with. Based on
these broad arguments
AfriForum submitted that the decision to approve the surplus
retention request was unlawful.
[34]
The building blocks of AfriForum’s attack of the approval of
the surplus retention request, commences
with the initiation of the
request. It says that applying for the surplus retention two
months earlier than the time when
such requests could be made i.e., 1
August, was unlawful in light of the objectives of the Fund –
being to provide humanitarian
assistance. It argues that there is
good reason for not requesting a retention before 1 August as new
events like natural disasters
that would necessitate a need for
humanitarian assistance, could occur after the surplus retention is
approved. A request before
1 August would result in the African
Renaissance Fund not being able to assist as funds would already be
earmarked for other causes.
[35]
It also argues that early requests would lead to the inability of the
African Renaissance Fund to fully disclose
contingent liabilities
that could arise before 1 August. It further argues that because
National Treasury was not informed that
the money would be used for
the Cuba donation, it would have formed part of contingent
liabilities. Additionally, it argues that
there was no detailed
information, accompanying the request, regarding contingent
liabilities. Its final argument on this point,
is that the surplus
retention request was premised on rendering humanitarian assistance
to African countries and the donation to
Cuba was unlawful as Cuba is
obviously not an African country
.
[36]
I’m not persuaded that these submissions hold water. The fact
of the matter is that the surplus retention
request was made at the
end of the relevant financial year when it had become clear how much
the accumulated surplus was. I’m
aware of no bar to the
submission of the retention request after the end of the financial
year and before August. AfriForum has
pointed to none. In any event
the legislative scheme evinces no bar to such early requests. In this
regard, Regulation 6.4 of the
Treasury Regulations contemplates
submission of roll over requests by the end of May and this
regulation is readily reconciled
with the Treasury Instruction which
contemplates that the applications are only subsequently presented to
the decision maker.
[37]
Admittedly, no audited financial statements accompanied the request
as these had been submitted to the Auditor-General
for auditing. I
can however find no basis on which to find that the surplus retention
request must be reviewed and set aside on
the basis that no audited
financial statements accompanied it. That fact does not render the
request unlawful. It is self-evident
why no audited financial
statements accompanied the request – these were submitted to
the Auditor-General for purposes of
the annual audit. It has also
correctly been pointed out by the Treasury Respondents that
submitting on 31 May was appropriate
because in terms of section
55(1)(c) of the PFMA, public entities must submit their financial
statements to both National Treasury
and the Auditor-General for
audit within two months after the end of the financial year.
Moreover, the Treasury Instruction makes
provision for the request to
be presented to the decision-maker after August.
[38]
AfriForum’s argument that a correct statement of contingent
liabilities would have become clear around
August is misconceived. It
overlooks the fact that when the African Renaissance Fund submitted
its financial statements for auditing
purposes, contingent
liabilities would already have been determined. No contingent
liabilities were declared as there were none.
AfriForum’s
argument, that the R71 million could have become a contingent
liability had the Cuba aid not been mentioned,
is a red herring. That
amount was an accumulated surplus and was committed to no causes. As
such it could never have been regarded
as a contingent liability.
Contingent liabilities are determinable at the end of the financial
year and if there were none when
the financial year ended, none could
materialise thereafter, as appears to be suggested by AfriForum.
[39]
What is important is that the request is presented and considered
between 1 August and 30 September and that
all supporting
documentation was before Treasury. The supporting documentation
envisaged in the Treasury Instruction and section
53(3) of the PFMA
accompanied the retention request, including the audited financial
statements, which were submitted subsequently
and after the annual
audit. This documentation included: a calculation of how the surplus
was arrived at; a motivation detailing
how the surplus arose; that
there were no contingent liabilities; and a schedule of new
commitments for the 2021/22 financial year.
It is therefore
incontrovertible, that when the Treasury Respondents considered and
approved the request, all the required documentation
had been
submitted by the DIRCO respondents.
[40]
Additionally, AfriForum’s contention that the African
Renaissance Fund was only able to afford the
donation after the
surplus, is not supported by the uncontested evidence before us. It
is apparent from the calculations accompanying
the request that the
surplus was R557 060 000 (five hundred and fifty-seven million and
sixty thousand rand), of which R485 523
000 (four hundred and
eighty-five million five hundred and twenty three thousand rand) were
committed funds and R71 537 000 (seventy
one million five hundred and
thirty seven thousand rand) were uncommitted funds. This was the
surplus amount and the subject of
the retention request. This amount
was mentioned in the retention request to National Treasury as the
funds that would be earmarked
for urgent humanitarian assistance to
African countries that might arise, hence the assertion that these
funds were uncommitted.
The R71 million was within the African
Renaissance Fund’s budget but could not be used as it was a
surplus and required approval
by National Treasury to be retained and
used to further the objectives of the African Renaissance Fund. Under
no circumstances
could this amount be regarded as a contingent
liability.
[41]
As to AfriForum’s submission that the request was unlawful and
unconstitutional as it mentioned Cuba
which is not an African
country, I can only refer to the wider objectives of the African
Renaissance Fund. This is a fund that
not only has a continental
outlook but a global one. Granted, the request to retain the surplus
mentioned that the funds would
be used to assist African countries,
but this does not delegitimise the request
per se
and its
approval. We have also not been shown any evidence that there were
requests from African countries that were overlooked
in favour of
Cuba. Moreover, by the time the request was presented to National
Treasury in August, DIRCO had informed National
Treasury that the
donation to Cuba was at that stage under consideration and that the
assistance to Cuba would be from that surplus,
on being approved.
[42]
AfriForum further attacks National Treasury’s approval of the
surplus retention request predominantly
based on its overarching
criticism that South Africa’s economy was in the doldrums, with
high levels of unemployment and
that the Government had failed
spectacularly on the service delivery front. This challenge to the
approval of the request ignores
the regulatory framework applicable
to National Treasury and the treatment of funds appropriated through
Parliament to entities
such as the African Renaissance Fund.
AfriForum’s submission suggests that National Treasury should
have refused the request
and redirected the surplus funds to other
purposes and presumably to other entities and departments so to
speak. This is a misconceived
submission. It ignores the fact that
the approval of the retention of the surplus was for a broader
purpose of enabling many potential
projects that accord with the
purpose of the African Renaissance Fund, which differs from the
approval of any specific project.
As pointed out by the Treasury
Respondents, had the surplus not been approved then various support
projects to other deserving
countries including Mozambique (for
example, due to effects of cyclone Idai), Zimbabwe, Guinea,
Madagascar, South Sudan, and others,
for which commitment had been
declared would not have been possible.
[43]
Regarding Parliament’s role in such matters, Chapter 4 of the
PFMA governs the appropriation of funds
by Parliament for the state
and its entities. The Act specifically reiterates that this function
is the preserve of Parliament,
not National Treasury. In carrying out
its functions, Parliament makes policy choices that are available to
it, to meet the broad
and diverse needs and imperatives of the South
African government and society. The Treasury Respondents have also
pointed out that,
in appropriating any funds for the African
Renaissance Fund to be donated to foreign governments, Parliament
does so fully mindful
of the prevailing circumstances and makes
appropriate appropriations having regard to such circumstances. These
Respondents have
demonstrated, without counter from AfriForum, that
the appropriation of funds from the fiscus happens within, and is
informed by,
a strictly determined legislative scheme.
[44]
AfriForum contends that
because it brought this application in the public interest and that
public funds are involved, the rights
of the public are affected.
AfriForum’s stance is based on its assertion that had National
Treasury not approved the retention
request, the funds would have
reverted to National Treasury, where the funds would then be
appropriated to other areas to address
the service delivery
challenges faced by the country. This is nothing more than mere
speculation. The SCA’s warning on hastily
relying on
inferential reasoning is helpful to consider. In
Home
Talk Developments (Pty) Ltd and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality
,
[19]
at paragraph 40, it described the process of inferential reasoning as
“call[ing] for an evaluation of all the evidence and
not merely
selected parts”. It continued by stating the importance of
distinguishing the making of inferences from conjecture
or
speculation in the following terms:
“
The inference that
is sought to be drawn must be ‘consistent with all the proved
facts: If it is not, then the inference cannot
be drawn’ and it
must be the ‘more natural, or plausible, conclusion from
amongst several conceivable ones’ when
measured against the
probabilities.”
[20]
(Footnotes omitted.)
[45]
It is clear to me having traversed AfriForum’s arguments, that
there is no basis on which to review
and set aside the approval of
the retention request. AfriForum has simply not put up any case
showing that the decision was unlawfully
and/or irrationally made. I
must also reiterate that AfriForum has not shown that the decision to
approve the retention had a “direct
and external legal effect”
on it and its members. Unless the PFMA is challenged, there can be
nothing wrong in approving
a request to retain a surplus where it
complies with all the prescribed requirements as well as satisfies
the requirements of the
principle of legality.
Is
the donation decision administrative action?
[46]
AfriForum argues that the
decision to donate R50 Million to Cuba is administrative action and
that it was irrational for the African
Renaissance Fund supported by
the two Ministers to approve the donation. The submission is that
this was clearly the application
of legislation and amounted to the
exercise of a discretion in light of the relationship that South
Africa had with Cuba for a
long time. It argued that the donation
decision appears to be a narrower exercise of statutory power which
might also give effect
to formulated policy. In this regard they
relied on the
Motau
judgment of the
Constitutional Court.
[21]
They
argued that South Africans in general are adversely affected when
their government simply gives away large sums of money which
could be
used to address prevailing service delivery shortfalls.
[47]
AfriForum has argued that it brought this application in the public
interest, and that the decision to donate
money to Cuba was
administrative action as the public is affected adversely when its
Government ignores domestic needs and gives
away monies such as we
have here. It is on this basis that AfriForum submitted that the
decision to donate R50 million to Cuba
is reviewable under PAJA
because section 4 thereof caters for administrative action that
affects the public. Furthermore, they
submit that some form of public
participation as provided for in section 4 of PAJA should have been
followed before the decision
was taken.
[48]
The DIRCO Respondents maintain that the donation decision is
executive action and is not subject to PAJA.
They maintain that the
request to provide humanitarian assistance to the Republic of Cuba
and the subsequent decision to allocate
funds for that purpose is a
policy decision which the Minister and the Minister of Finance took.
They also argue that the decision
does not have direct and immediate
consequences for individuals or groups of individuals, as the Act is
clear about the funds appropriated
for the African Renaissance Fund
and further that the Act does not prescribe how African Renaissance
Fund beneficiary countries
ought to be selected which remains the
broad prerogative of the African Renaissance Fund.
[49]
Section 1(aa) of PAJA provides that executive powers and functions of
the executive are excluded from the
list of administrative acts. The
section further provides
inter alia
that sections 85(2)(a)-(e)
and 92(3) are executive actions. The executive authority is
essentially involved with the preparation,
initiation and
implementation of legislation, the development and implementation of
national policies, and co-ordination of the
functions of State
departments.
[50]
The Constitutional Court
in
Glenister
v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
,
[22]
held that “under our constitutional scheme it is the
responsibility of the executive to develop and implement policy”.
[23]
The Court also stated that it is “not for the Court to disturb
political judgments, much less to substitute the opinions
of
experts”
[24]
[51]
The function of the executive is therefore the formulation of
policies which may lead to the making of laws,
and to oversee the
implementation of laws and policies by government departments. In
this way the executive is meant to promote
effective and efficient
governance. In
Motau
, the Constitutional Court defined
executive powers as:
“
Executive powers
are, in essence, high-policy or broad direction-giving powers. The
formulation of policy is a paradigm case of
a function that is
executive in nature. The initiation of legislation is another. By
contrast, “[a]administrative action
is . . . the conduct of the
bureaucracy (whoever the bureaucratic functionary might be) in
carrying out the daily functions of
the state, which necessarily
involves the application of policy, usually after its translation
into law, with direct and immediate
consequences for individuals or
groups of individuals.”
[25]
[52]
Our Courts show
particular respect for Government’s prerogative in making
decisions in the conduct of its foreign affairs.
In
Kaunda
and Others v President of the Republic of South Africa
,
[26]
the Constitutional Court held that the Executive’s conduct of
South Africa’s international affairs is subject to legality
review and in the same breath, also stressed that the Government has
a broad discretion in matters such as these which must be
respected
by our Courts. The Court summarised the principle as follows:
“
Decisions made by
the Government in these matters are subject to constitutional
control. Courts required to deal with such matters
will, however,
give particular weight to the Government’s special
responsibility for and particular expertise in foreign
affairs, and
the wide discretion that it must have in determining how best to deal
with such matters”.
[27]
[53]
In
Geuking
v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
,
[28]
the Constitutional Court described the President's granting or
refusal of consent to an extradition request as a policy decision
based on considerations of comity and reciprocity and having more to
do with the relationship between South Africa and the state
requesting the extradition than with the merits of the application
itself.
[54]
These decisions confirm that executive action also involves the
exercise of public power but relating to
the formulation of
legislation and policy. This covers action that is polycentric and is
removed from bureaucratic action that
is subject to legislative
prescripts.
[55]
The decision to provide assistance to Cuba including the decision of
the Minister of Finance’s decision
to concur in that decision,
are decisions embedded in the foreign policy of South Africa towards
Cuba and are based on historic
relationships between the two
countries. The Act was promulgated with the objective of establishing
the African Renaissance Fund
whose objects include,
inter alia
,
to enhance humanitarian assistance to other countries with a view to
strengthen cooperation between the Republic and such countries.
Such
humanitarian assistance is funded from funds appropriated by
Parliament in terms of the
Appropriation Act. Furthermore
, the
exercise of powers under
section 5(3)
and
5
(4) of the Act is clearly
executive in nature.
[56]
In this context
therefore, the decision was more concerned with foreign policy than
with the implementation and the application
of policy more
specifically.
[29]
Based on
this, there can be no argument that the decision of the DIRCO
Respondents to make a donation to Cuba must be scrutinised
through
the administrative action prism. It is the principle of legality that
applies in view of the polycentric and executive
nature of the
decision. It’s a decision taken to grant humanitarian
assistance to Cuba and amounts to an exercise of a policy
prerogative, exercised in the Minister’s official capacity as a
member of the national executive and authorised to do so
by the Act
in consultation with and concurrence of the Minister of Finance. The
Act gives relevant members of the executive the
power to make these
kinds of decisions, because they are quintessentially foreign policy
decisions.
[57]
The donation decision was taken in accordance with policy,
specifically foreign policy prerogatives, and
it was taken for the
benefit of the people of Cuba, in support of the international
relations between the two countries. The funds
at the disposal of the
African Renaissance Fund are specifically allocated to it for the
purposes found in the Act.
Does
the donation decision comply with the prescripts of the legality
principle?
[58]
Having determined that the donation decision was executive in nature
and subject to legality scrutiny, I
must now determine if the
decision survives that scrutiny. AfriForum made a series of
submissions as to why the donation decision
was unlawful. One
argument raised which may well have had merit was not adequately
foreshadowed in the notice of motion or pleaded,
specifically that
the Advisory Committee was not fully constituted in that one
requisite DIRCO representative has not been appointed.
For the
most part, and to the extent that the issues raised by AfriForum were
pleaded, they are meritless and only one requires
attention.
[59]
AfriForum argued that the Advisory Committee was not properly
constituted when it took the decision that
the donation be made. It
argued that the voting threshold was not met as only three of the six
members voted in support of the
decision. Simply put, AfriForum has
argued that the decision was not supported by a majority of Advisory
Committee members eligible
to vote.
[60]
In response, the DIRCO Respondents say that the terms of reference do
not require all members of the Committee
to be present, but rather a
quorum of 50% of the members plus 1. As to the vote, they say that
four members voted thus meeting
the required threshold.
[61]
I have already mentioned
that the Advisory Committee consists of four DIRCO and two
Finance officials. The terms of reference
provide for the appointment
of alternates to the main members,
[30]
also appointed by the respective Ministers. Alternate members attend
meetings in the main member’s stead in their absence.
[31]
The terms of reference also provide for when and how Advisory
Committee business is to be conducted to the following effect:
61.1
Four committee members constitute a quorum, without which the
committee
business cannot proceed.
61.2
There are no fixed rules concerning the composition of a quorum
except to say that it should include the Committee Chair, Vice-Chair
or another member designated to act as the interim Chair or
Vice-Chair should either not be able to attend the meeting.
61.3
At least one member from the National Treasury must be present at
the
Advisory Committee meeting to comprise a quorum.
61.4
A decision of the majority of the members of the committee present
at
any formally constituted meeting of the committee shall constitute a
decision of the committee.
[62]
The uncontested evidence tells us that the Secretariat of the
Advisory Committee sent an email to four Advisory
Committee members,
and three alternate Advisory Committee members, to consider the Cuban
request for humanitarian assistance. The
members mentioned in the
memo are Ambassador Losi (DIRCO), Mr Robin Toli (Finance), Ambassador
Tsengiwe (DIRCO), Mr Themba Zulu
(Finance). Additionally the
alternate members also mentioned in the email are Ms Bhengu (DIRCO),
Ms Nkuna-Shilubane (Finance) and
Ms Naran (Finance). The evidence is
further to the effect that only two members responded, approving the
recommendation to make
the donation to Cuba. They are Mr Robin Toli
and Ambassador Ganga Tsengiwe. One Alternate member also voted in
favour and that
is Ms Hlengiwe Bhengu. No other email response is
recorded especially from Ambassador Losi who, the DIRCO Respondents
state, also
voted. There is however no evidence from the record that
she voted. The allegation that she voted is made by the deponent of
the
DIRCO Respondents’ answering affidavit, Mr Zane Dangor, the
current Director-General of DIRCO, who was not involved in that
process. As to that allegation however, Ambassador Losi has not filed
a confirmatory affidavit to confirm that she voted.
We are
mindful that there is a document on the record which appears to
reflect her signature in her capacity as Acting Director-General
and
which seeks the Minister’s support as well as the Finance
Minister’s concurrence. To the extent that I can
make
out, that was a step subsequent to the voting process which was
designed to establish if there was support for the decision
to make
the donation. These aspects are, however, not adequately traversed in
the evidence to justify a conclusion that Ambassador
Losi duly
participated and voted.
[63]
The Constitutional Court
in
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Another
[32]
held that:
“
The exercise of
public power must therefore comply with the Constitution, which is
the supreme law, and the doctrine of legality,
which is part of that
law. The doctrine of legality, which is an incident of the rule of
law, is one of the constitutional controls
through which the exercise
of public power is regulated by the Constitution. It entails that
both the Legislature and the Executive
‘are constrained by the
principle that they may exercise no power and perform no function
beyond that conferred upon them
by law’. In this sense the
Constitution entrenches the principle of legality and provides the
foundation for the control
of public power.”
[33]
(Footnotes omitted.)
[64]
The executive cannot
exercise its power or perform a function beyond that which is
conferred on it by law, further that power must
not be misconstrued.
The decision must be rationally related to the purpose for which the
power was conferred, otherwise the exercise
of the power would be
arbitrary and at odds with the Constitution. Our courts have
established that rationality applies not only
to the decision, but
also to the process in terms of which that decision was arrived at.
In
Democratic
Alliance v President of South Africa and Others
,
[34]
the Constitutional Court held that:
“
We must look at
the process as a whole and determine whether the steps in the process
were rationally related to the end sought
to be achieved and, if not,
whether the absence of a connection between a particular step (part
of the means) is so unrelated to
the end as to taint the whole
process with irrationality.”
[35]
[65]
Clearly, AfriForum’s contentions regarding the record of
Ambassador Losi’s vote are correct.
She was the Acting
Director-General of DIRCO at the time and indeed, there is no
indication that she voted. It must be accepted
that three of the six
Advisory Members voted and this is less than the required majority
threshold, prescribed in the terms of
reference. Therefore, there is
merit to the claim that there was no majority vote when the African
Renaissance Fund made the recommendation
to the Minister of DIRCO.
[66]
To comply with the principle of legality the recommendation by the
Advisory Committee had to be in line with
or comply with the
prescripts of how that committee took decisions. This is mandatory.
The terms of reference require a threshold
majority of four
participating members of the Advisory Committee. The Advisory
Committee recommendation therefore fell short of
the required
threshold for the decision to meet constitutional imprimatur. The
ineluctable conclusion is that the donation decision
suffered from
illegality in that it was not taken by a quorate Advisory Committee.
This means that the donation decision is liable
to be reviewed and
set aside.
[67]
AfriForum had also sought to review and set aside the procurement
processes incidental to the donation decision.
It is common cause
that after the interdict was granted, the donation decision was never
implemented. What that means is that no
actual procurement decisions
were taken to implement the donation decision. For that reason, no
declaratory relief can follow where
no conduct followed the impugned
decision that has just been found to be unlawful.
Costs
[68]
The
Biowatch
principle applies in this case because this is
constitutional litigation. Afriforum was successful in its
review of the donation
decision and should recover its costs to the
extent of its success. There is no basis however to mulct the Second
Respondent with
the Applicant’s costs. He didn’t take
part in this litigation. The Advisory Council was cited as the Fifth
Respondent
but within the context of the Act, it has no separate
existence outside of the African Renaissance Fund. It is a
legislatively
created structure established within the African
Renaissance Fund for the specific purpose of complementing the
activities of the
African Renaissance Fund in the treatment of
assistance to other countries in line with the objectives of the
African Renaissance
Fund. The decision to make a donation to Cuba
even though recommended by it, was in the final analysis a decision
of the two Ministers
and the African Renaissance Fund. Therefore, for
all intents and purposes, the Advisory Council is part and parcel of
the African
Renaissance Fund and as such cannot attract liability for
costs in its name.
[69]
In the circumstances an order is granted that –
1.
the decision of the First, Third, Fourth and Sixth Respondents to
donate R50 million to the Republic
of Cuba is reviewed and set aside.
2.
the First, Third, Fourth and Sixth Respondents are ordered to pay
fifty percent (50%) of the Applicant’s
costs.
D MLAMBO
JUDGE PRESIDENT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I
agree.
J DLAMINI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I
agree.
SJ COWEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Appearances:
For the Applicant:
J G C Hamman and H
Scholtz instructed
by Hurter Spies
Incorporated
For the First to
Fifth Respondents:
W Trengrove SC and
H Rajah
instructed
by
State Attorney, Pretoria
For the Sixth to
Ninth Respondents:
M Sello SC and B
Lekokotla instructed
by State Attorney,
Pretoria
Date heard:
15 May 2023
Date delivered:
25 October 2023
[1]
51 of
2000 (the Act).
[2]
AfriForum NPC v
Minister of International Relations and Co-operation and Others
[2022] ZAGPPHC 185.
[3]
1 of
1999 (the PFMA).
[4]
Section
2(2) of the Act.
[5]
Section
5(3) of the Act.
[6]
This
was a bilateral agreement entered into between the governments of
South Africa and Cuba in December 2010. It had three facilities.
Facility A was a conditional grant of money to purchase goods in
South Africa and elsewhere. Facility B was a solidarity grant
to
purchase goods in South Africa. Facility C was a credit line from
South Africa to Cuba.
[7]
A political party and
the official opposition in Parliament.
[8]
If a
decision cannot be reviewed under PAJA, it does not mean it cannot
be reviewed at all, rather that it can be reviewed under
the
principle of legality. See
Prudential
Authority of the South African Reserve Bank v Msiza and Another
[2023]
ZAGPPHC 313 at para 16;
National
Energy Regulator of South Africa and Another v PG Group (Pty)
Limited and Others
[2019]
ZACC 28
;
2019 (10) BCLR 1185
(CC);
2020 (1) SA 450
(CC) at paras
112-113;
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Limited v Gijima Holdings (Pty)
Limited
[2017]
ZACC 40
;
2018 (2) BCLR 240
(CC);
2018 (2) SA 23
(CC) at para 38.
[9]
[2021]
ZASCA 157; [2022] 1 All SA 138 (SCA); 2022 (1) SA 424 (SCA).
[10]
Ibid
at
para 14.
[11]
[2014]
ZACC 18
;
2014 (8) BCLR 930
(CC);
2014 (5) SA 69
(CC) (“
Motau”
).
[12]
[2005]
ZASCA 43
;
[2005] 3 All SA 33
(SCA);
2005 (6) SA 313
(SCA) (“
Greys
Marine
”
).
[13]
Ibid
at para 24.
[14]
[2007]
ZACC 23
;
2008 (4) SA 367
(CC);
2008 (3) BCLR 251
(CC);
[2008] 2 BLLR
97
(CC); (2008) 29 ILJ 73 (CC).
[15]
Ibid
at
para 138.
[16]
Greys
Marine
above
n 12 at para 23.
[17]
[2009]
ZACC 30; 2010 (3) BCLR 212 (CC); 2010 (4) SA 55 (CC).
[18]
Ibid
at
para 27.
[19]
[2017]
ZASCA 77; [2017] 3 All SA 382 (SCA); 2018 (1) SA 391 (SCA).
[20]
Ibid
at
para 42.
[21]
Motau
above
n 11.
[22]
[2011] ZACC 6; 2011 (3)
SA 347 (CC); 2011 (7) BCLR 651 (CC).
[23]
Ibid
at
para 67.
[24]
Ibid
.
[25]
Motau
above n 11 at para 37.
[26]
[2004] ZACC 5; 2005 (4)
SA 235 (CC); 2004 (10) BCLR 1009 (CC); 2005 (1) SACR 111 (CC).
[27]
Ibid
at para 144.
[28]
[2002] ZACC 29
;
2003 (3)
SA 34
(CC);
2004 (9) BCLR 895
(CC) at para 26.
[29]
Permanent
Secretary of the Department of Education of the Government of the
Eastern Cape Province and Another v Ed-U-College (PE)
(Section 21)
[2000]
ZACC 23
; 2001(2) SA 1 (CC)
[2000] ZACC 23
; ;
2001 (2) BCLR 118
(CC) at para 18, with
reference to
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South African Rugby
Football Union and Others
2000
(1) SA 1
(CC);
1999 (10) BCLR 1059
(CC) at paras 142 and 143.
[30]
Paragraph
4.2.
[31]
Paragraph
9.2.
[32]
[2005]
ZACC 3; 2006 (3) SA 247 (CC); 2005 (6) BCLR 529 (CC).
[33]
Ibid
at para 49.
[34]
[2012]
ZACC 24; 2012 (12) BCLR 1297 (CC); 2013 (1) SA 248 (CC).
[35]
Ibid
at
para 37.
sino noindex
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