Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 1South Africa
Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse v Minister of Transport and Others (32097/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 1; 2022 (2) SA 566 (GP) (13 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
13 January 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse v Minister of Transport and Others (32097/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 1; 2022 (2) SA 566 (GP) (13 January 2022)
Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse v Minister of Transport and Others (32097/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 1; 2022 (2) SA 566 (GP) (13 January 2022)
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sino date 13 January 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS
JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED
Case
No: 32097/2020
In the matter
between:
ORGANISATION
UNDOING TAX ABUSE
APPLICANT
and
MINISTER OF
TRANSPORT
FIRST RESPONDENT
MINISTER OF
CO-OPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
SECOND RESPONDENT
AND TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS
ROAD TRAFFIC
INFRINGEMENT AUTHORITY
THIRD RESPONDENT
APPEALS
TRIBUNAL
FOURTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
BASSON J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is a constitutional
challenge to the Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic Offences
Act
[1]
(the AARTO Act) and the Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic
Offences Amendment Act
[2]
(the Amendment Act). The question before this court is whether
Parliament (national government) had the legislative competence
to
legislate on matters relating to provincial roads or traffic or in
relation to parking and municipal roads at local level and
whether
the two aforementioned Acts are in violation of the exclusive
provincial legislative competence conferred upon provincial
and local
government in terms of section 44(1)(a)(ii) of the Constitution.
[3]
[2]
The primary relief sought in the notice of motion is that the
AARTO
Act and the Amendment Act be declared unconstitutional and invalid.
In the alternative to this relief, the applicant
seeks an order
declaring section 17 of the Amendment Act unconstitutional and
invalid.
[3]
This dispute is not about
the desirability of this legislation which provides for a system
that,
inter alia,
provides for the penalising of drivers and operators of vehicles who
are guilty of an infringement or offences through the imposition
of
demerit points which may lead to the suspension and cancellation of
driving license.
[4]
This dispute is confined to the narrow issue of the
legislative
competence
of national
government to enact these two Acts. In essence it is submitted
that the two Acts are unconstitutional in that they
trespass on the
narrow constitutional areas over which the national government has no
legislative or executive power.
THE PARTIES
[4]
The
applicant, the Organisation Undoing Tax Abuse (OUTA), is a civil
action organisation and a Non-Profit Company (NPC) incorporated
in
terms of the Companies Act.
[5]
OUTA submits that it has a substantial interest in the issues raised
in this application in that OUTA is mandated by its Memorandum
of
Incorporation (MOI) to challenge any policies, laws or conduct that
offend the Constitution. OUTA submitted that it brings
this
application in its own interest and in the public interest in terms
of section 38(a) and 38(d) of the Constitution respectively.
[5]
It is well-known that OUTA has since 2017
engaged in a range of activities and interventions to promote public
accountability which
include commenting on draft legislation that is
relevant to OUTA’s mandate of creating accountability,
transparency, rational policy
and good governance in the areas of
transport, energy, water and sanitation and environmental issues.
OUTA further states in
its papers that it is a strong promoter
of road safety and effective traffic legislation and supports
effective and fair processes
for the adjudication of road traffic
infringements. To this end OUTA was actively involved in the
public participation processes
in relation to the AARTO Amendment
Bill during which it raised a number of concerns about the Bill’s
constitutional validity.
OUTA also made oral submissions on the
Amendment Bill on 13 February 2018 and attended various public
hearings. OUTA has also
addressed two letters to President
Ramaphosa regarding the constitutional invalidity of the Amendment
Act (on 25 March 2019 and 24
July 2019). OUTA further submitted
its written comments on the AARTO Amendment Act’s Regulations Bill
on 10 November 2019
to the Road Traffic Infringement Agency, the
Department of Transport and to Parliament’s Select Committee on
Economic and Business
Development.
[6]
The first respondent is the Minister of
Transport (the Minister). The Minister is cited in his capacity
as the executive member
who is responsible for the administration of
both the AARTO Act and the Amendment Act.
[7]
The
second respondent is the Minister of Co-operative Governance and
Traditional Affairs. The second respondent is the Minister
responsible for the implementation of the Intergovernmental Relations
Framework Act.
[6]
This Act establishes the framework for the national government,
provincial governments, and local governments to promote and
facilitate inter-governmental relations.
[8]
The third respondent is the Road Traffic
Infringement Authority (the Authority). The Authority is a
juristic person established
by section 3 of the AARTO Act. The
Authority is cited by virtue of its interest in the relief claimed by
OUTA. No relief
is sought by OUTA against the Authority and no
order of costs is sought against it unless it opposes this
application.
[9]
The fourth respondent is the Appeals
Tribunal. The Appeals Tribunal is a juristic person established
by section 29A of the Amendment
Act. The Appeals Tribunal is
cited by virtue of its interest in the relief claimed by OUTA.
No relief is sought by OUTA
against the Appeals Tribunal and no order
of costs is sought against it unless it opposes this application.
[10]
This application was opposed by the first
and third respondents.
THE PURPOSE OF
THE AARTO ACT AND THE AMENDMENT ACT
[11]
Minister Fikile Mbalula in
his affidavit neatly summarises what the AARTO Act sets out to
legislate. He confirms that the AARTO
Act creates a single
national system of road traffic regulation and seeks to regulate
“
every aspect of road
traffic
”. The
system is based on demerit points which are incurred for traffic
offences or infringements. The Amendment Act
shifts from the
default system of judicial enforcement of traffic laws through
criminal law to a compulsory system of administrative
enforcement of
traffic laws through administrative tribunals, administrative fines
and demerit points system. Any person affected
by the decision
in that administrative process may apply to the Magistrate Court
designated by the Minister to review such administrative
action in
terms of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act.
[7]
[12]
Apart from the offences determined by the Minister, all
contraventions of road traffic
and transport laws will be treated as
infringements which are subject exclusively to administrative
enforcement under the Amendment
Act by two national organs of state
namely the Road Traffic Infringement Authority (the third respondent)
established by section
3 (responsible to the Minister) and Appeals
Tribunal (the fourth respondent) established by section 29A of the
Amendment Act. The
Minister appoints the chairperson and other
members of the Appeals Tribunal. In terms of section 3(1) of
the AARTO Act, the
Road Traffic Infringement Authority is established
as a juristic person responsible to the Minister. This
effectively means
that this Authority acts as an organ of state at
national level of government in relation to road traffic issues
through an administrative
process.
[13]
The Amendment Act also provides in section 17 for different methods
of service of infringement
notices on the infringer which includes
personal service, postage, or electronic service. The
constitutional invalidity of
section 17 of the Amendment Act is
sought in the alternative to the primary relief sought in the notice
of motion.
CONSTITUTIONAL
CHALLENGE
[14]
The crux of the applicant’s challenge is that these two Acts are
unconstitutional
for the following reasons:
14.1
First, the AARTO and Amendment Acts usurp the
exclusive
legislative
authority of the provincial legislatures by
regulating road traffic and creating a single,
national
system
to do so. The applicants submitted that provincial, and
municipal road and traffic regulation falls within the
exclusive
legislative
competence of the provinces under Schedule 5, Parts A
and B of the Constitution.
14.2
Second, the AARTO and Amendment Acts usurp the
exclusive executive
competence
of local government (under Part B of Schedule 5 of
the Constitution) to enforce traffic and parking laws at municipal
level.
[15]
As already pointed out:
These two Acts create a system whereby traffic laws are, by default,
enforced through a national system of
administrative tribunals,
administrative fines and demerit points. All road traffic
“
infringements
”
[8]
are handled by the Road Traffic Infringement Authority and the
Appeals Tribunal. This proposed new dispensation moves the
enforcement
of all road and traffic laws to national level.
[16]
As its primary relief, the applicant submitted that the AARTO Act and
Amendment Act
are inconsistent with the Constitution and, because
these aspects go to the core of the Acts, they are not capable of
severance.
As such, the applicants submitted that the Acts fall
to be declared unconstitutional.
[17]
Governmental power is
distributed between national, provincial and local spheres of
government.
[9]
To this end, the various legislative and executive competencies
(or functionalities) of each of these three spheres of government
are
identified and listed in Schedule 4 (functional areas of
concurrent
national and provincial legislative competence) and Schedule 5, Parts
A and B (functional areas of
exclusive
provincial legislative competence and the exclusive executive
competence of local government) of the Constitution.
Section 41 and 44
of the Constitution
[18]
Section 41(1)(g) of the
Constitution stipulates that each sphere of government must exercise
its powers in a manner that does not
encroach on the geographical,
functional or institutional integrity of government in another
sphere.
[10]
Section 44(2)
[11]
of the Constitution provides for one exception, but only in respect
of the functional areas listed in Schedule 5 and in accordance
with
section 76 of the Constitution, where such infringement is,
inter
alia
, necessary for
some national interest. The onus to make out such a case rests
on the national government. Apart from
a cursory reference to
section 44(2) of the Constitution, no such case is made out on the
papers. (I will return to the relevance
on this section later in the
judgment.)
Schedules
4 and 5
[19]
Schedules 4 and 5 (Parts A and B) of the Constitution both provide
for the following
in respect of – broadly speaking – road
traffic:
19.1
Part A of Schedule 4 (over which the national and provincial spheres
of
government have
concurrent
legislative
competence)
[12]
lists as a functional area “
road
traffic regulation
”;
19.2
Part A of Schedule 5 (over which the provinces have
exclusive
legislative
competence) lists as a functional area “
provincial
roads and traffic
”;
19.3
Part B of Schedule 5 (over which the municipalities have
exclusive
executive
authority)
[13]
lists as functional areas “
traffic
and parking
”
and “
municipal
roads
”.
In terms of Part B Schedule 5, local government thus have the
exclusive executive authority to enforce traffic and parking laws
at
municipal level. In respect of issues relating to municipal executive
authority, which is exclusive, section 156(1) of the Constitution
stipulates that a municipality has
exclusive
powers to administer matters listed in Part B of Schedule 4 and Part
B of Schedule 5.
[20]
Section 104(1)(b)(ii)
[14]
of the Constitution (which provides for the legislative authority of
provinces) confirms that the
provincial
sphere of government has
exclusive
legislative
competence
in respect of those functional areas listed in Part A of Schedule 5
of the Constitution. The national government
has no legislative
power in respect of these areas,
[15]
save that national government may in respect of the exclusive
legislative competencies provided for in Schedule 5, in
exceptional
circumstances of compelling national interest as provided for in
section 44(2) of the Constitution, encroach upon the exclusive
competencies
listed in Schedule 5.
[21]
The applicant submitted that the two Acts usurp the exclusive
authority of provincial
legislatures in that the Acts regulate road
traffic and create a single national system to do so. This is
so because provincial
and municipal roads and traffic regulation
falls within the
exclusive legislative competence
of provinces
and local government under Schedule 5, Parts A and B of the
Constitution respectively. Moreover, the Acts usurp the
exclusive
executive authority
of local government (under Schedule 5, Part
B) to enforce traffic and parking laws at municipal level because the
Acts create a system
whereby traffic laws are enforced through a
national system of administrative tribunals, administrative fines and
demerit points.
[22]
The Constitutional Court
has, in a number of judgments, made clear that the executive power
conferred
exclusively
on municipalities and provincial government may not be encroached
upon by national legislation.
[16]
For example, in
Minister
of Local Government, Environmental Affairs and Development Planning,
Western Cape v Habitat Council and others
the Constitutional Court stated:
[17]
“
[12]
That constitutional vision of robust municipal powers has been
expanded in the jurisprudence of this court, and succinctly
summarised
by Mhlantla AJ in
Lagoonbay
:
‘
This
court's jurisprudence quite clearly establishes
that: (a) barring exceptional circumstances, national
and provincial
spheres are not entitled to usurp the functions of
local government; (b) the constitutional vision of
autonomous spheres
of government must be preserved; (c) while
the Constitution confers planning responsibilities on each of the
spheres of
government, those are different planning
responsibilities, based on what is appropriate to each
sphere; (d) 'planning'
in the context of municipal affairs
is a term which has assumed a particular, well-established
meaning which includes the zoning
of land and the establishment
of townships'' (emphasis added); and (e) the provincial
competence for urban and rural development
is not wide enough to
include powers that form part of municipal planning.'”
Similarly
in
Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality v Gauteng Development Tribunal
and
Others
[18]
the Constitutional Court held as follows:
“
[43]
Section 40 of the Constitution defines the model of government
contemplated in the Constitution. In terms of this section the
government consists of three spheres: the national, provincial and
local spheres of government. These spheres are distinct from one
another and yet interdependent and interrelated. Each sphere is
granted the autonomy to exercise its powers and perform its functions
within the parameters of its defined space. Furthermore, each sphere
must respect the status, powers and functions of government
in
the other spheres and 'not assume any power or function except those
conferred on [it] in terms of the Constitution'.
[44] The
scope of intervention by one sphere in the affairs of another is
highly circumscribed…”
And
in
Tronox KZN Sands
(Pty) Ltd v Kwazulu-Natal Planning and Development Appeal Tribunal
and Others
[19]
the Constitutional Court held:
“
[23] The
court considered whether there are circumstances in which a province
may permissibly veto a municipality's land-use
decision through
procedures or approvals operating in parallel to municipalities'
powers. The provincial minister argued that there
must be some
provincial surveillance over municipal planning decisions because big
decisions could have extra-municipal impact. Cameron
J rejected this
reasoning:
'This
bogey must be slain. All municipal planning decisions that encompass
zoning and subdivision, no matter how big, lie within the
competence
of municipalities. This follows from this court's analysis of
municipal planning in Gauteng Development Tribunal.
Provincial
and national government undoubtedly also have power over decisions so
big, but their powers do not lie in vetoing zoning
and
subdivision decisions, or subjecting them to appeal. Instead,
the provinces have co-ordinate powers to withhold or grant
approvals
of their own.'
[24] The
reason behind this strict allocation is that municipalities are best
suited to make planning decisions as they are localised
decisions
which should be based on information which is readily available to
them.
[25]
In
Lagoonbay
Mhlantla AJ summarised this court's
approach to autonomous municipal power as follows:
(a) (B)arring
exceptional circumstances, national and provincial spheres are not
entitled to usurp the functions of local government;
(b) the
constitutional vision of autonomous spheres of government must be
preserved;”
OVERLAPPING
FUNCTIONAL AREAS
[23]
At first glance it does, however, appear that the functional areas
provided for in
Schedules 4 and 5 overlap and are seemingly in
conflict with each other in that they all refer to functions that
(broadly) relate
to traffic and roads.
[24]
Schedule 4 makes provision
for conflicts between national and provincial legislation in that it
provides for
concurrent
legislative
competence
in respect of the functional areas listed in this schedule. No
similar provision is made in respect of Schedule
5. In respect
of Schedule 5, the national legislature may, in the event of a
possible conflict between the competencies, only
encroach upon the
exclusive legislative competencies listed in Schedule 5 under section
44(2) of the Constitution.
[20]
In this regard the Constitutional Court in
Ex
Parte President of the Republic of South Africa: In re
Constitutionality of the Liquor Bill
remarked that “
if
regard is had to the nature of the exclusive competences in Schedule
5 and the requirements of s 44(2) ‘the occasion for intervention
by
Parliament is likely to be limited’
”.
[21]
[25]
On behalf of the applicant
it was contended that the
Schedule
4 functional competences should be interpreted as being distinct from
and as excluding those competences listed in Schedule
5. In argument
this approach was referred to as the “
bottom-up
approach
”
requiring carving out those listed competencies starting from the
bottom of the hierarchy –namely the municipal sphere –and
working
up to the provincial sphere and lastly the national sphere of
competencies. The approach was more eloquently explained
by the
Constitutional Court in the
Liquor
Bill case
:
[22]
“
[50] It
follows that, in order to give effect to the constitutional scheme,
which allows for exclusivity subject to the intervention
justifiable
under s 44(2), and possibly to incidental intrusion only under s
44(3), the Schedule 4 functional competences should
be interpreted as
being distinct from, and as excluding, Schedule 5 competences. That
the division could never have been contemplated
as being absolute is
a point to which I return in due course.”
[26]
Where
there seemingly is an overlap between the functional areas provided
for in Schedule 4 and Schedule 5, meaning should be given
to the
functional areas in Schedule 5 by “
defining
its ambit [Schedule 5] in a way that leaves it ordinarily distinct
and separate from the potential overlapping concurrent
competences
set out in Schedule 4
”.
[23]
In doing so regard must be had to “
what
is appropriate to each sphere
”.
[24]
A responsibility conferred in respect of the same issue will
therefore be interpreted to mean different responsibilities based
on
“
what
is appropriate in each sphere
”.
In
the
Liquor
Bill case
[25]
the Constitutional Court emphasised that the functional areas in
question must be interpreted in such a way that they are given
meaningful
content:
“
[53] It
is in the light of this vision of the allocation of provincial
and national legislative powers that the inclusion of
the functional
area 'liquor licences' in Schedule 5 Part A must, in my view, be
given meaning. That backdrop includes the express
concurrency of
national and provincial legislative power in respect of the
functional area of 'trade' and 'industrial promotion'
created by
Schedule 4.”
[27]
Where there appears to be
an overlap between a functional area in Schedule 5 and another in
Schedule 4, as in this matter, meaning
should be given to the
competence provided for in Schedule 5 “
by
defining its ambit in a way that it leaves it ordinarily distinct and
separate from the potential overlapping concurrent competences
set
out in Schedule 4
”.
[26]
As stated by the Constitutional Court in the
Liquor
Bill case
[27]
the “
Constitution-makers'
allocation of powers to the national and provincial spheres
appears to have proceeded from a functional
vision of what was
appropriate to each sphere and, accordingly, the competences itemised
in Schedules 4 and 5 are referred to as
being in respect of
'functional areas'
”.
[28]
To restate: Where the Constitution thus confers functional areas
regarding the same
issue to different spheres of government, the
functional areas should be interpreted based on what is appropriate
in the different
spheres. In unravelling the allocation of
power to the different spheres and to determine what is appropriate,
regard should
also be had to the historical allocation of power. The
power to enforce traffic laws on municipal roads has historically
been
conferred on municipalities. The submission on behalf of
the applicant is that it speaks for itself that traffic law
enforcement
on municipal roads must be handled on municipal level.
Because this power was traditionally conferred upon municipalities,
it must,
so it was submitted, be accepted that the Constitution
regarded this function as an appropriate function to retain at local
government
level.
[29]
The prefixes used in respect of certain functionalities are also
instructive: National
government has
concurren
t legislative
and executive jurisdiction with provinces over an item referred to as
“
road traffic regulation
” (Schedule 4 Part A). This
power of national government must be interpreted in light of the
exclusive
legislative power that is granted to provinces in
terms of Schedule 5 Part A in respect of “
provincial roads and
traffic
” and the
exclusive
legislative jurisdiction
granted to local government in respect of “
traffic and parking
”
and “
municipal roads
”.
[30]
A similar interpretative
exercise was conducted by the Constitutional Court in
Gauteng
Development Tribunal
.
[28]
In that matter concurrent legislative jurisdiction was granted
in terms of Schedule 4, Part A to national government and province
in
respect of “
regional
planning and development
”
and “
urban and rural
development
”. This
concurrent jurisdiction had to be interpreted in light of the
exclusive legislative power granted to provinces in
respect of
“
provincial planning
”
in Schedule 5 Part A and the exclusive executive competence granted
to municipalities in respect of municipal planning in terms
of
Schedule 5, Part B. The Constitutional Court held as follows:
“
[55] It
is, however, true that the functional areas allocated to the
various spheres of government are not contained in hermetically
sealed compartments. But that notwithstanding, they remain distinct
from one another. This is the position, even in respect of functional
areas that share the same wording, like roads, planning, sport and
others. The distinctiveness lies in the level at which a particular
power is exercised. For example, the provinces exercise powers
relating to 'provincial roads', whereas municipalities have
authority
over 'municipal roads'. The prefix attached to each
functional area identifies the sphere to which it belongs and
distinguishes it
from the functional areas allocated to the other
spheres. In the example just given, the functional area of
'provincial roads' does
not include 'municipal roads'. In the same
vein, 'provincial planning' and 'regional planning and
development' do not include
'municipal planning'.
[56] The
constitutional scheme propels one ineluctably to the conclusion that,
barring functional areas of concurrent competence,
each sphere of
government is allocated separate and distinct powers which it alone
is entitled to exercise. Of course, the constitutionally
mandated
interventions in terms of ss 100 (national interventions in the
provincial sphere) and 139 (provincial interventions in
the municipal
sphere) constitute an exception to the principle of relative and
limited autonomy of the spheres of government.”
[31]
The following important
points emerge from this decision: Firstly, it is acknowledged that,
although the different functional areas
allocated to the different
spheres are not “
contained
in hermetically sealed compartments
”,
they are nonetheless distinct
.
Secondly, the
distinctiveness of the different powers lies in the level at which a
particular power is exercised
.
The
Constitutional Court emphasised that
a
responsibility conferred in respect of the same issue but to differ
spheres will have to be interpreted with due regard to “
what
is appropriate to each sphere
”.
[29]
Thirdly,
barring
functional areas of concurrent competence, each sphere of government
is allocated separate and distinct powers which it alone
is
entitled to exercise. Fourthly, the functional area of “provincial
roads” does not include “
municipal
roads
”.
[32]
Returning to the present matter. From a reading of Schedule 5
Parts A and B,
it appears that provinces exercise exclusive powers
relating to “
provincial roads and traffic
”, and
municipalities in respect of “
municipal roads
”. This
is evident from the prefix attached to each function identified in
respect of the sphere to which it is allocated.
This in itself
distinguishes the functional area from the functional areas allocated
to the other spheres. The functional
area of provincial roads
does not include municipal roads and
vice versa
.
[33]
Returning to the “
bottom-up
” approach referred to earlier
in the judgment. Those competencies which resort under the
exclusive legislative and executive
competence of municipalities must
first be carved out. The next step would be to carve out in
this hierarchy those competencies
which resort under the exclusive
legislative and executive competence of provinces, which, by virtue
of the carving out process,
will exclude those competencies already
carved out in respect of municipalities.
[34]
This bottom-up carving out
process was endorsed by the Constitutional Court in
Gauteng
Development Tribunal
.
[30]
In that matter it was submitted that the Development Tribunal
zoning power should not be regarded as an intrusion on the exclusive
local government power in respect of municipal planning in view of
the fact that “
urban
and rural development
”
was a competency that fell within the functional area of concurrent
national and provincial legislative competence. The
Constitutional Court rejected this argument.
[31]
[35]
I am in agreement with Mr. Chaskalson’s submission that this means
that what is given
to local government, cannot be taken away by the
higher levels in the hierarchy namely provincial and thereafter
national government.
The court was referred to the matter in
the
Liquor Bill
matter where a similar approach was followed.
That matter concerned the exclusive power of provincial government in
terms of Schedule
5, Part A to grant liquor licences. The Court
had to interpret that functional power against the background that
Schedule 4,
Part A grants concurrent legislative competence to
national government in respect of “trade” and “industrial
promotion”.
The Constitutional Court held that:
“
[55]
But the exclusive provincial competence to legislate in respect of
'liquor licences' must also be given meaningful content and,
as
suggested earlier, the constitutional scheme requires that this
be done by defining its ambit in a way that leaves it ordinarily
distinct and separate from the potentially overlapping concurrent
competences set out in Schedule 4.
…
.
[58] The
structure of the Constitution, in my view, suggests that the national
government enjoys the power to regulate the liquor
trade in all
respects other than liquor licensing. For the reasons given earlier,
this, in my view, includes matters pertaining to
the determination of
national economic policies, the promotion of inter-provincial
commerce and the protection of the common market
in respect of goods,
services, capital and labour mobility.”
[36]
Schedule 5 Part A must therefore be read to afford provinces
exclusive legislative
competence in respect of “
provincial roads
and traffic”
and affording municipalities exclusive legislative
competence in respect of “
municipal roads
” and “
traffic
and parking
”. Schedule 4, Part A therefore grants, in my
view, concurrent legislative competence to national and provincial
government
only in respect of national roads and traffic regulation,
but only to extent that they do not deal with those competencies
which
were carved out following the bottom-up approach – which are
matters dealing with provincial roads and traffic or municipal roads,
traffic and parking. This approach limits the ambit of functional
competence to the extent that it is distinct and separate and confers
powers on each sphere of government based on what is appropriate to
each sphere duly taking into account which powers have been granted
exclusively to a particular sphere in terms of the provisions of the
Constitution.
[37]
Where inter-provincial
regulation is required as opposed to functionalities that fall within
the boundaries of a province, national
government is provided with
the necessary powers in terms of section 44(2)
[32]
of the Constitution to deal with such situations.
[38]
The respondents adopt a different
interpretation to the one proposed by the applicant. They
contend that the Acts do not regulate
matters falling under Schedule
5 of the Constitution. Rather, these Acts regulate issues
falling under Part A of Schedule 4
of the Constitution over which the
national and provincial legislatures share
concurrent
legislative
competence.
[39]
I am in agreement with the applicant that this approach cannot be
correct and is an
approach that was rejected by the Constitutional
Court in
Gauteng Development Tribunal
. First, this
approach inverts the bottom-up approach. Second, this approach
interprets the functionalities conferred
by Schedule 4 in isolation.
Third, this approach ignores the exclusive functionalities
conferred upon provinces and local government.
Fourth, this approach
effectively deprives provincial and local government of legislative
competence over a functional area which
was reserved exclusively to
those two government spheres. Five, because municipalities are
deprived of its exclusive traffic
law enforcement powers in respect
of traffic on municipal level and in respect of municipal roads,
those exclusive legislative and
executive competencies are
effectively rendered meaningless. Returning to the bottom-up
approach: the functional areas granted
exclusively to provinces and
local government can only be given meaningful content if they are
carved out first. Only that
which remains will fall within the
functional area granted (concurrently) to national government.
[40]
Although not addressed in their papers, the respondents now rely in
their heads of
argument on section 44(2) of the Constitution. I
have already briefly referred to this section. To recap: This
section
grants national government a limited power to legislate on a
functional area which falls within the exclusive legislative
competence
of provinces in terms of Schedule 5. In essence
national government may do so in exceptional circumstances of
compelling public
interest but only in as far as it is “
necessary
”
to do so to maintain national security; to maintain economic unity;
to maintain essential national standard; to establish minimum
standards required for the rendering of services; or to prevent
unreasonable action taken by a province which is prejudicial to the
interests of another province or to the country as a whole.
[41]
The respondents submitted
that the legislative competence of national government is rooted in
Part A of Schedule 4 and
not
in Schedule 5. No case is made out in the respondents’ papers
that, should this court disagree with this view and hold that
the
legislative competence is rooted in Schedule 5 (and not in Schedule
4), that national government nonetheless has, in terms of
section
44(2)
[33]
of the Constitution, the legislative power to intervene by passing
legislation in respect of a matter that falls within a functional
area listed in Schedule 5 where it is “
necessary”
to, for example, maintain essential national standards. Although Mr.
Mokhari for the third respondent argued that the court may still
consider this “exception”, the papers do not establish any
factual basis for this court to consider this argument. But,
moreover, there is no concession, even in the alternative, on the
part of the respondents that Schedule 5 may well determine the
legislative competency in this matter. In the
Liquor
Bill case,
[34]
the issue of “
necessity
”
was pertinently raised by the President who justified the passing of
the Liquor Bill (although the legislative competency fell
with a
functional area listed in Schedule 5) on the basis that it was
“
necessary
”.
[42]
Apart from the fact that the respondents do not make out such a case
in their papers,
the exception provided for in section 44(2) of the
Constitution to pass legislation with regard to any matter, including
a matter
within a functional area listed in Schedule 4, excludes a
matter within a functional area listed in Schedule 5. It is
only
when there is a necessity to do so as contemplated in that
section, that government has the power to pass legislation to
legislate
on a functional area which falls under Schedule 5.
[43]
In light of the
respondents’ insistence that the AARTO Act was enacted in respect
of a functional area falling under Schedule 4
and not Schedule 5, the
question of whether it was necessary to do so does not even arise on
the respondents’ version (apart from
the fact that such a case is
not made out on the papers). The onus to proof necessity falls
squarely on the respondents. Such
case further has to be made
out on the papers. The Constitutional Court in the
Liquor
Bill case
[35]
dealt with this issue as follows:
“
[80]
While the Minister's evidence, in my view, shows that the national
interest necessitated legislating a unified and comprehensive
national system of registration for the manufacture and distribution
of liquor, it failed to do so in respect of its retail sale.
There he
averred only that 'consistency of approach' is 'important'. This may
be true. But importance does not amount to necessity
and the
desirability from the national government's point of view of
consistency in this field cannot warrant national legislative
intrusion into the exclusive provincial competence and no other
sufficient grounds for such an intrusion were advanced.”
[44]
Lastly, the respondents pointed out that the National Council of
Provinces (the NCOP)
has supported the amendment (except for one
province) in terms of section 76 of the Constitution. This is,
correctly pointed
out by Mr. Chaskalson, irrelevant simply because
national government did not have the power to pass the AARTO Act in
the first place.
The fact that the NCOP supported the
legislation cannot cure the shortcomings alluded to in this judgment.
CONCLUSION
[45]
The AARTO and Amendment Acts unlawfully intrude upon the exclusive
executive and legislative
competence of the local and provincial
governments, respectively and as such the two Acts are
unconstitutional. In light of
my finding it is thus not
necessary to consider the alternative arguments mainly relating to
the constitutional challenge of sections
17 and 30 of the Amendment
Act.
REMEDY
[46]
Section 172(1) of the
Constitution provides that a court
must
declare that any law
that is inconsistent with the Constitution is invalid to the extent
of its inconsistency and may make any order
that is just and
equitable in the circumstances.
[36]
[47]
As pointed out, the primary remedy sought by the applicant is an
order that the AARTO
Act and Amendment Act are inconsistent with the
Constitution. On behalf of the applicants it was submitted that
the constitutionally
offensive provisions of the two Acts are not
severable with the result that the AARTO Act and the Amendment Act,
as a whole, must
be declared unconstitutional and set aside with
immediate effect.
[48]
On behalf of the Minister it was contended that, should the court
grant the relief,
the court should suspend the declaration of
invalidity for 24 months to allow Parliament to rectify the
invalidity.
[49]
The test for severability in constitutional matters is well
established:
“
[16]
Although severability in the context of constitutional law may often
require special treatment, in the present case the trite
test can
properly be applied: if the good is not dependent on the bad and can
be separated from it, one gives effect to the good
that remains after
the separation if it still gives effect to the main objective of the
statute. The test has two parts: first, is
it possible to sever the
invalid provisions and, second, if so, is what remains giving effect
to the purpose of the legislative scheme?
”
[37]
[50]
I am not persuaded that the offending provisions of the AARTO Act and
the Amendment
Act can be severed. Once the provisions relating
to provincial roads or provincial traffic law infringements or any
provisions
relating to municipal road, traffic or parking by-law
infringements are removed, what would remain would not be able to
give effect
to the main objective of the statute which is to create a
single, national system for administrative enforcement of road
traffic
laws. There would also be no purpose in setting up the
administrative machinery of the Agency and the Appeal Board if the
vast
majority of road traffic infringements do not fall within their
jurisdiction. It therefore follows in my view that the AARTO
Act and the Amendment Act must be declared to be inconsistent with
the Constitution in their entirety.
ORDER
[51]
In the event the following order is made:
1.
It is declared that the
Administrative
Adjudication of Road Traffic Offences Act, 46 of 1998
and the
Administrative Adjudication of Road Traffic Offences Amendment Act, 4
of 2019 are unconstitutional and invalid.
2.
The first and third respondents are ordered to
pay the applicant’s costs jointly and severally the one paying the
other to be absolved.
Such costs to include the costs of two
counsel.
AC BASSON
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by
circulation to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
The date for
hand-down is deemed to b
e 13 January
2022
.
APPEARANCES
For the
Applicant:
ADV MATTHEW CHASKALSON SC
ADV EMMA WEBBER
For the First
Respondent:
ADV MAKHOSI GWALA SC
ADV NOVUYO
SIDZUMO
For the Third
Respondent
ADV WILLIAM MOKHARE SC
ADV ELIAS
PHIYGA
ADV NEO
NTINGANE
Date
of hearing:
18 October 2021
Date of
judgment:
13 January 2022
[1]
46 of 1998.
[2]
4 of 2019.
[3]
108 of 1996.
[4]
See section 2 of the AARTO Act in in respect of the objects of this
Act.
[5]
71 of
2008.
[6]
13 of 2005.
[7]
3 of
2000.
[8]
Other than conduct that is labelled as an “
offence
”
by the Minister, all contraventions of road and traffic laws are now
classified as “
infringements
”.
[9]
See
Ex Parte President
of the Republic of South Africa: In re Constitutionality of the
Liquor Bill
[1999] ZACC 15
;
2000 (1)
SA 732
(
Liquor Bill
case
) ad para 41.
[10]
Section
41(1)(g) of the Constitution:
“
Principles
of co-operative government and intergovernmental relations
(1)
All
spheres of government and all organs of state within each sphere
must
–
(g)
exercise
their powers and perform their functions in a manner that does not
encroach on the
geographical, functional or institutional integrity of government in
another sphere;”
[11]
Section
44(2) reads as follows:
“
Parliament
may intervene, by passing legislation in accordance with section 76
(1), with regard to a matter falling within a functional
area listed
in Schedule 5, when it is necessary-
(a) to
maintain national security;
(b) to
maintain economic unity;
(c) to
maintain essential national standards;
(d) to
establish minimum standards required for the rendering of services;
or
(e) to
prevent unreasonable action taken by a province which is prejudicial
to the
interests
of another province or to the country as a whole.”
[12]
In terms of ss 44(1)(a)(ii) and 104(1)(b)(i) of the Constitution,
both the national and provincial spheres of government have
concurrent legislative competence in respect of those functions in
Part A of Schedule 4 to the Constitution.
[13]
Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality v Gauteng Development Tribunal
and
Others
2010 (6) SA
182 (CC).
[14]
“
104
Legislative authority of provinces
(1)
The
legislative authority of a province is vested in its provincial
legislature, and confers on
the
provincial legislature the power-
(a)
to
pass a constitution for its province or to amend any constitution
passed by it
in
terms of sections 142 and 143;
(b) to
pass legislation for its province with regard to-
(i) any matter
within a functional area listed in Schedule 4;
(ii) any
matter within a functional area listed in Schedule 5;
(iii)
any
matter outside those functional areas, and that is expressly
assigned
to
the province by national legislation; and
(iv) any
matter for which a provision of the Constitution envisages the
enactment
of provincial legislation; and
(c) to
assign any of its legislative powers to a Municipal Council in that
province.
(2) The legislature
of a province, by a resolution adopted with a supporting vote of at
least two
thirds
of its members, may request Parliament to change the name of that
province.
(3) A provincial
legislature is bound only by the Constitution and, if it has passed
a constitution
for
its province, also by that constitution, and must act in accordance
with, and within the
limits
of, the Constitution and that provincial constitution.
(4) Provincial
legislation with regard to a matter that is reasonably necessary
for, or incidental to, the effective exercise of
a power concerning
any matter listed in Schedule 4, is for all purposes legislation
with regard to a matter listed in Schedule
4.
(5) A provincial
legislature may recommend to the National Assembly legislation
concerning any matter outside the authority of that
legislature, or
in respect of which an Act of Parliament prevails over a provincial
law.”
[15]
See the
Liquor Bill
case supra
. See also
Ex parte Chairperson
of the Constitutional Assembly: In re Certification of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa
,
1996
1996 (4) SA 744
(CC) at para 257.
Section 44 confers on the
National Assembly the power, inter alia, to—
“
(ii)
to pass legislation with regard to any matter, including a matter
within a functional area listed in Schedule 4, but excluding,
subject to subsection (2), a matter within a functional area listed
in Schedule 5”.
[16]
See
Johannesburg
Metropolitan Municipality v Gauteng Development Tribunal
and
Others
2010 (6) SA
182
(CC)
(
Gauteng
Development Tribunal
)
and
Maccsand (Pty) Ltd
v City of Cape Town
2012
(4) SA 181 (CC).
[17]
2014 (4) SA 437
(CC) (
Habitat
Council
).
[18]
Supra
.
[19]
2016
(3) SA 160
(CC)
.
[20]
Liquor Bill
case
supra
ad
paras 48 and 49.
[21]
Ibid
ad para 49.
[22]
Ibid
.
In
Gauteng
Development Tribunal
ad para 50, the Constitutional Court observed that “… our
Constitution contemplates some degree of autonomy for each sphere
[of government]. This autonomy cannot be achieved if the
functional areas itemised in the schedules are construed in a manner
that fails to give effect to the constitutional vision of distinct
spheres of government.”
[23]
Liquor
Bill case supra
ad
para 55.
[24]
Gauteng Development
Tribunal supra
ad
para 53.
[25]
Supra
.
[26]
Liquor Bill
case
ad
para 55 quoted
supra
in para 29.
[27]
Ibid
at
para 51.
[28]
Supra
.
[29]
Gauteng
Development Tribunal
supra
ad
para 53.
And
in the
Liquor
Bill case supra
ad para 51 the Constitutional Court emphasised that: “The
Constitution-makers' allocation of powers to the national and
provincial
spheres appears to have proceeded from a functional
vision of what was appropriate to each sphere and, accordingly, the
competences
itemised in Schedule 4 and 5 are referred to as being in
respect of functional areas. The ambit of the provinces' exclusive
powers must,
in my view, be determined in the light of that
vision.”
[30]
[30]
Supra
.
[31]
Gauteng Development
Tribunal
supra
ad para 63.
[32]
“
44
National
legislative authority
(1)
The
national legislative authority as vested in Parliament –
(a)
confers
on the National Assembly the power–
(i)
to
amend the Constitution;
(ii)
o
pass legislation with regard to any matter, including a matter
within a functional area listed in Schedule 4, but excluding,
subject to subsection (2), a matter within a functional area listed
in Schedule 5; and
…
(b)
confers
on the National Council of Provinces the power–
…
(ii) to pass,
in accordance with section 76, legislation with regard to any matter
within a functional area listed in Schedule
4 and any other matter
required by the Constitution to be passed in accordance with section
76; and
…
(2)
Parliament
may intervene, by passing legislation in accordance with section 76
(1), with
regard
to a matter falling within a functional area listed in Schedule 5,
when it is necessary–
(a)
to
maintain national security;
(b)
to
maintain economic unity;
(c)
to
maintain essential national standards;
(d)
to
establish minimum standards required for the rendering of services;
or
(e)
to
prevent unreasonable action taken by a province which is prejudicial
to the
interests
of another province or to the country as a whole.
(3) Legislation
with regard to a matter that is reasonably necessary for, or to, the
effective
exercise of a power
concerning any matter listed in Schedule 4 is, for all purposes,
legislation with regard to a matter
listed in Schedule
4.
(4) When exercising
its legislative authority; Parliament is bound only by the
Constitution, and
must
act in accordance with, and within the limits of, the Constitution.”
[33]
“
44
National
legislative authority
(2)
Parliament
may intervene, by passing legislation in accordance with section 76
(1), with regard to a matter falling within
a functional area listed
in Schedule 5, when it is necessary–
(a) to
maintain national security;
(b) to
maintain economic unity;
(c) to
maintain essential national standards;
(d) to
establish minimum standards required for the rendering of services;
or
(e) to
prevent unreasonable action taken by a province which is prejudicial
to the interests of another province or to the
country as a whole.”
[34]
Supra
.
[35]
Supra
.
[36]
Head
of Department, Mpumalanga Department of Education and Another v
Hoërskool Ermelo and Another
2010 (2) SA 415
(CC) at para 96.
[37]
Coetzee v Government
of the Republic of South Africa; Matiso and Others v Commanding
Officer, Port Elizabeth Prison, and Others
[1995] ZACC 7
;
1995
(4) SA 631
(CC).
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