Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 25South Africa
East Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants and Another v Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors and Others (37249/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 25 (31 January 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 January 2022
Headnotes
(see paragraph 4.7 of the judgment). This aspect was, however, not persisted with in their argument for leave to appeal.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## East Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants and Another v Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors and Others (37249/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 25 (31 January 2022)
East Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants and Another v Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors and Others (37249/2018) [2022] ZAGPPHC 25 (31 January 2022)
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sino date 31 January 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
31
JANUARY 2022
CASE
NO: 37249/2018
In
the matter between:
EAST
RAND MEMBER DISTRICT OF
CHARTERED
ACCOUNTANTS
First
Applicant
JAROSLAV
CERNY
Second
Applicant
and
INDEPENDENT
REGULATORY BOARD
FOR
AUDITORS
First
Respondent
CHAIRPERSON
OF THE INDEPENDENT
REGULATORY
BOARD FOR AUDITORS
Second
Respondent
CHIEF
EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF THE
INDEPENDENT
BOARD FOR AUDITORS
Third
Respondent
MINISTER
OF FINANCE
Fourth
Respondent
J
U D G M E N T (Application for leave to appeal)
This matter has been heard on a
virtual platform and disposed of in terms of the Directives of the
Judge President of this Division.
The judgment and order are
accordingly published and distributed electronically.
DAVIS, J
[1]
Introduction
On 2 December 2021 this court found that the applicants
have failed to satisfy the requirements of section 7(1) of PAJA in
that they
had unduly delayed in launching a review application
against the decision(s) of the Independent Regulatory Board for
Auditors (the
IRBA) whereby a mandatory audit firm rotation (MAFR)
regime was implemented in South Africa. The applicants now seek
leave
to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal against this court’s
judgment and order, including the costs order made against the
applicants.
[2]
The grounds for
leave to appeal
2.1
The grounds on which
the applicants seek to rely in their application for leave to appeal
were introduced in their notice of application
by an allegation that
this court has “misunderstood” their case in the main
application. The respondents were quick to
point out that the
applicants’ case had mutated from their founding affidavit to their
replying affidavit and then further to their
initial heads of
argument (comprising 228 pages), ending with the applicants’
belatedly filed “Note for Argument”. The
applicants’
senior counsel had confirmed during oral argument of the main
application, that the “Note for Argument” constituted
the
applicants’ actual case and that the founding affidavit was
premised on errors of law. These changes in stance are
primarily
reflected in paragraphs 4 and 5.7 of the judgment.
2.2
The judgment also
reflected however, that even if the decision sought to be taken on
review did not comprise of three district decisions
(as initially
contended by the applicants in their notice of motion and founding
affidavit) but a composite decision, culminating
in the promulgation
of the MAFR rule, as more forcefully argued in the “Note for
Argument”, even that alternative fell foul of
the requirement to
proceed without undue delay. See, for example paragraphs 5.6,
5.7, 5.10 and 5.10 of the judgment.
2.3
Nothing about the
applicants’ (alternative) case was therefore “misunderstood”
and the applicants were afforded the benefit
of doubt in the
consideration of each version of their case. The only deviation
from the applicants’ argument, was that applicant’s
later
disavowal of the matter being a PAJA review, was not upheld (see
paragraph 4.7 of the judgment). This aspect was, however,
not
persisted with in their argument for leave to appeal.
2.4
After the introduction
relating to the alleged “misunderstanding” of the applicants’
case, the applicants listed 24 further
“grounds” as well as the
invocation of the
Biowatch
-principle
in an attack on the costs order. The respondents, in heads of
argument, dealt with this aspect (after stressing that
the
applicants’ argued case differed from their pleaded case) by
referring to the following quotation from
Hing
v Road Accident Fund
2014 (3) SA 350
(WCC) at paragraph 4, borrowing from Aldisert,
Opinion writing
,
(1990) at 89, commended to Australian counsel by McHugh J in
Tame
v New South Wales
[2002] HCA 35
at paragraph 70: “
the
manifestly indiscriminate formulation of the grounds on which the
applicant for leave to appeal was brought, brings to mind the
observation of a US Appeals court judge that when he sees an
appellant’s brief containing seven to ten points or more, a
presumption arises that there is no merit to any of them
”.
2.5
This observation
appeared to be particularly apposite in this application as, in the
end, argument centered primarily (if not exclusively),
around the
following four points:
-
The judgment is wrong
insofar as it imposed on an applicant in a PAJA review an obligation
to make out a case in its founding affidavit
that there was no undue
delay;
-
The issue of an undue
delay was not sufficiently raised by the respondents in their
answering papers and the applicants did not have
sufficient
opportunity to deal with this aspect;
-
Even if there was an
undue delay, the court has not found that it was a “manifestly
inordinate” delay and therefore wrongly concluded
that the
requirements of section 7(1) of PAJA had not been satisfied;
-
Costs should not have
been awarded against the applicant, as “all review applications”
involve Constitutional issues, resulting
in the
Biowatch
principle being applicable, which principle had been ignored by this
court.
[3]
Chronology
The relevant chronology has been dealt with in paragraph
2 of the judgment but, as chronology is crucial to the notion of
delay, undue
or otherwise, it is useful to remind the parties of the
following crucial aspects thereof:
28 July 2016 – the decision is taken to approve
the MAFR as the IRBA’s preferred measure to enhance auditor
independence
(the so-called first decision, referred to in paragraph
24 of the founding affidavit as “a final decision to introduce
MAFR”).
29 August 2016 - the IRBA issues a press
statement announcing the commencement of a process to implement the
MAFR regime.
1 November 2016 – Notice is given of the proposed MAFR
rule and public participation is invited.
6 December 2016 – the applicants meet with the CEO of
the IRBA in order to prevent the introduction of the MAFR which the
applicants
claim would cause “disruption”.
31 January 2017 – the consultation process involving
the public and stakeholders is completed after having received 185
comments,
seventy of which were from the applicants.
23 March 2017 – the IRBA resolves to implement
the MAFR in terms of a certain timeframe and to include public
interest entities
in its scope (the so-called second decision).
5 June 2017 – the
“final” MAFR rule is published in the Government Gazette (the
so-called
third decision).
22 September 2017 – the applicants request reasons in
terms of section 5(1) of PAJA for the implementation of the MAFR.
1 December 2017 – the requested reasons are furnished.
29 May 2018 – the review
application is launched.
[4]
Ad the founding
affidavit issue
Counsel for the applicants argued that this court has
found that an applicant in a review application must in its founding
affidavit
address the issue of an undue delay. It was further
argued that, if this finding is left unchallenged, it would have
wide-ranging
implications for numerous review applications “in
South Africa”. A simple reading of the judgment confirms that
there was
no such finding made. In fact, in considering the
issue of whether the review application was launched without
unreasonable
delay, it was stated in paragraph 5.5 of the judgment
that “
it is necessary to have regard to the applicants’
response to this issue which has squarely been raised by the IRBA
”.
This point is therefore without foundation.
[5]
The raising of the
issue of delay
5.1
The applicants allege
that the issue of undue delay was not sufficiently (or “squarely”)
raised by the respondents and that the
applicants had no obligation
to deal therewith.
5.2
This submission is also
not borne out by the papers. The respondents have in numerous
instances raised the issue (see, for example
paragraphs 7.2, 122 and
132 – 135 of the answering affidavit).
5.3
The applicants argued
that the above complaints of delay were based on an erroneous
calculation of the time periods, i.e just short
of two years after
the first decision, 14 months after the second decision and 11 months
after the third decision (as mentioned in
paragraph 5.2 of the
judgment) and without taking into account that reasons had only been
furnished on 1 December 2017. This
argument is only partially
correct: the time-periods referred to by the respondents were based
on the applicants’ “pleaded”
case in the founding affidavit
based on three distinct decisions, but, even if it was a composite
decision, or a legality review
(and even with knowledge of the date
of the furnished reasons), the respondents had answered that the
review application was “in
any event” unduly delayed. The
respondents labelled the applicant’s dilatory conduct “egregious”.
5.4
Where section 7(1) of
PAJA imposes a duty on an applicant in a review application to launch
such an application “without undue delay”,
I find it difficult to
contemplate how another court may find that the “spectre of undue
delay” (as it was called in the judgment)
had not been sufficiently
raised by the respondents.
5.5
The opportunity
to deal with this spectre was in the replying affidavit. The
issue of undue delay was also dealt with in the
applicant’s’
initial heads of argument. The difficulty that the applicants
faced at the hearing of the matter, as evinced
by their “Note for
Argument” was not in actual fact that the issue had not been
raised, but the attitude the applicants had displayed
towards the 180
day period mentioned in section 7(1). It was almost treated as
a target or deadline and any application launched
before that day was
“safe”. As explained in paragraph 5.4 of the judgment, this
approach is incorrect. The 180 day
period merely invokes the
statutory predetermination of the unreasonableness of a delay beyond
that period. This is what the
Supreme Court of Appeal has found
in
Outa v SANRAL
(also referred to in paragraph 5.4 of the judgment) and this court is
bound by that decision. The finding of this court need
not be
revisited by the Supreme Court of Appeal.
5.6
In order to bolster
their argument that the issue of undue delay had not squarely enough
been raised by the respondents in this case,
the applicants accused
this court of having ignored the judgment of the SCA in
Mostert
v Registrar of Pension Funds
,
save for the reference thereto contained in paragraph 4.7 of the
judgment. In particular, counsel for the applicants placed
reliance on paragraph 38 of that judgment, which reads as follows: “
I
do not consider that in those circumstances the learned judge erred
in allowing argument on the section 7 point. It does not
follow
that every applicant for judicial review in terms of PAJA has to
demonstrate in the founding papers that there has been no
unreasonable delay. If there is no indication in the papers
that there may have been such a delay, the position may well be
that
it is up to the respondent to raise the point in the answering
affidavit. This does not arise in this case and we need
not
decide that point
”.
5.7
In the present matter,
the time periods mentioned in paragraph 5.3 above cried out for them
to have been dealt with, if not in the
founding affidavit (the
absence of which had not been held against the applicants), then
certainly in the replying affidavit once
they have been pointed out
by the respondents. Having regard to the facts of this matter,
it is almost facetious of the applicants
to argue that the issue of
unreasonable delay, although raised, has not “sufficiently” been
raised.
5.8
In argument, counsel
for the applicants correctly conceded that a court may
mero
motu
raise the
point of unreasonable delay itself, but then the applicant should be
afforded the opportunity to deal with it. Reference
was in this
regard made to
Camps
Bay Ratepayers and Residents Association v Harrison and Another
2011 (4) SA 42(CC).
This judgment was also referred to in
Mostert’s
case where, as in this matter, the respondents have raised the
“defence” of non-compliance with section 7 of PAJA. It was
dealt with by the SCA as follows: “
This
is not raising a defence – it is a submission that, on the
applicant’s own papers, the court has no power to entertain the
review. If the court is entitled to raise the point mero motu,
then there can be no reason why the respondent should not be
allowed
to raise it. It was in any event deal with by both parties in
their heads of argument and the appellant elected not
to seek leave
to file a further affidavit
”
(the fact that
Mostert
dealt with a period beyond 180 days does not detract from the
approach to disputes regarding undue delays in general).
5.9
In the present matter,
the applicants had already filed an amended notice of motion and a
supplementary founding affidavit and had
not, neither at the hearing
of the matter, nor during the application for leave to appeal, sought
leave to file any further affidavit.
The matter was accordingly
dealt with in line with the SCA judgments on the papers before
the court and not, as the applicants
contend, contrary thereto.
There is, yet again, no reason for those judgments nor the present
matter to be revisited on appeal.
The point is simply
that the facts of this case brought the question of undue delay to
the fore and the applicants have
failed to deal with it, despite
their dilatory conduct having been labelled “egregious” by the
respondents in answering papers.
[6]
“
Manifestly
inordinate
”
6.1
In a last-ditch
attempt, the applicants argued that, because this court has not
expressly found that the delay had been “manifestly
inordinate”,
another court would come to a different conclusion.
6.2
The judgment has
clearly set out the long periods that have elapsed since the taking
of the three decisions which the applicants have
attacked in their
Notice of Motion and in their application. It also set out
that, even assuming that the decisions comprised
composite
administrative action or only had direct external legal effect from
the last date of promulgation, then it was unduly unreasonable
for a
limited number of auditors, who had been clamouring against the
implementation of the MAFR to wait more than 100 days to request
reasons and, once the reasons had been furnished, to tarry until the
second last day of another 180 day period before launching their
review application. This, while the rest of the industry and
the IBRA had begun adjusting their audit lives in anticipation
of the
commencement date of the MAFR. All the considerations mentioned
in the judgment, particularly in paragraphs 5.14 and
5.20 thereof and
in the judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Gqwetha
mentioned in
paragraph 5.13 of the judgment had come into play. Excuses such
as that the matter was “complex” and required
“considerable
research and reflection”, as mentioned in the applicants’ initial
heads of argument under the heading “
There
was in any event no unreasonable delay
”
simply do not pass muster, irrespective of whether the words
“inordinate delay” had been used in the judgment or not.
[7]
The costs issue
7.1
The court has found
that there were no cogent reasons why the customary rule that costs
should follow the event, should not apply.
7.2
The applicants argued
that this was not so and that the
Biowatch-
principle
should apply. In fact, they argued that every review
application constituted a Constitutional matter and that unsuccessful
applicants should always be afforded the benefit of being spared the
liability of costs under the
Biowatch-
principle.
7.3
The gross
generalisation of the applicants’ argument is untenable.
While it is so that the
Biowatch
-principle
militates against the “chilling effect” the issue of costs might
have on litigants who wish to vindicate their constitutional
rights
(as mentioned in numerous cases, such as
South
Durban Community and Environmental Alliance v MEC for Economic
Development and Tourism, Kwa-Zulu Natal
2020
(4) SA 453
(SCA) at para [58]) costs have, depending on the
circumstances, been awarded against unsuccessful review applicants,
even in the
Constitutional Court. See for example
Electronic
Media Network Ltd and Others v e.tv (Pty) Ltd and others
2017 (9) BCLR 1108
(CC).
7.4
In the present matter,
whatever Constitutional rights may have been involved, they could not
have been dealt with on their merits
as a result of the review being
precluded due to an undue or unreasonable delay in the launching
thereof by the applicants.
The costs order, and the court’s
exercise of its discretion, was based on that finding and not on the
merits of an unsuccessful
pursuit of the vindication of a
constitutional right.
[8]
The test for leave
to appeal
8.1
The applicants
disavowed any reliance on
section 17(1)(a)(ii)
of the
Superior Courts
Act 10 of 2013
and limited their application to the contention that
an appeal “… would have a reasonable prospect of success” as
contemplated
in
section 17(1)(a)(i)
of the Act.
8.2
In opposition, the
respondents relied on
Mount
Cheveaux Trust v Tina Goosen & 18 Others
2014 JDR 2325 (LCC),
S
v Smith
2012 (1)
SACR 567
(SCA) and
MEC
Health, Eastern Cape v Mkhitha
(1221/15)
[2016] ZASCA 176
(25 November 2016), all of which confirm
that there must be a “
sound
rational basis for the conclusion that there are prospects of success
on appeal
” and
that leave to appeal, especially to the Supreme Court of Appeal
(which is what the applicants apply for ), “…
must
not be granted unless there truly is a reasonable prospect of
success
” and that
a “
mere
possibility of success, an arguable case or one that is not hopeless,
is not enough
”.
8.3
Having regard to the
applicants’ arguments as to why leave to appeal should be granted,
as dealt with in paragraphs 2, 4, 5 and
6 above, I find that there
are insufficient prospects of success on appeal to warrant the
granting of leave.
8.4
In respect of the issue
of costs, it is trite that the award of costs is ultimately in the
discretion of the trial court and, unless
exercised in a biased or
capricious manner or without any grounds “…
on
which a reasonable person could come to the conclusion arrival at
”,
it will not be interfered with on appeal. See inter alia
Logistic
Technologies (Pty) Ltd v Coetzee and others
1998 (3) SA 1071
(WLD) and the cases referred to at 1074 A – F.
Even in respect of the issue of the
Biowatch
-principle,
which argument I have dealt with in paragraph 7 above, I find that
there is no prospect of success in respect of the costs
order.
8.5
Again, in exercise of
my discretion, I find that the application for leave to appeal is
primarily, if not exclusively, concerned about
the issue of the
applicants’ undue delay in launching their review application.
For the consequences brought about by this,
the applicants have only
themselves to blame and I find it inimical to the interests of
justice that the IRBA should be out of pocket
in respect of an
unsuccessful application for leave to appeal, dealing with the same
issue. Reliant on the cases referred to
in paragraph 7.3 above,
I further find that the
Biowatch
-principle
should not be applied to this unsuccessful application.
Consequences brought about by litigant’s own dilatory conduct
do
not have the same “chilling effect” as the possibility of an
adverse costs order in timeously launched, but unsuccessful,
applications for the vindication of constitutional rights. The
latter should be afforded the benefits of the
Biowatch
-principle,
while the former would not automatically be entitled thereto.
Unsuccessful litigation as a result of own dilatoriness
should fall
in the “normal” considerations regarding costs. Costs
should follow the event.
[9]
Order
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with
costs, including costs of two counsel.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 25 January 2022
Judgment
delivered: 31 January 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicants:
Adv H F Oosthuizen SC together with
Adv D Smit
Attorney for the
Applicants:
Warrener De
Agrela & Associates Inc,
c/o Prinsloo – Van
der Linde Attorney, Pretoria
For
the 1
st
to 3
rd
Respondent:
Adv L T Sibeko SC together
with
Adv S Tshikila and
Adv R V Mudau
Attorney
for the Respondent:
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyer Inc,
c/o Friedland Hart
Solomon & Nicolson,
Pretoria
No
appearance for the 4
th
Respondent.
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