Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 643South Africa
Seriti N.O. and Another v Corruption Watch and Others (81368/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 643 (31 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 August 2019
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Seriti N.O. and Another v Corruption Watch and Others (81368/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 643 (31 August 2022)
Seriti N.O. and Another v Corruption Watch and Others (81368/2016) [2022] ZAGPPHC 643 (31 August 2022)
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sino date 31 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No: 81368/2016
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED:
YES
[31
August 2022]
LEGOABE
WILLIE SERITI
N.O.
First Applicant
HENDRIK
MMOLLI THEKISO MUSI N.O.
Second Applicant
and
CORRUPTION
WATCH
First Respondent
RIGHT
2 KNOW
CAMPAIGN
Second Respondent
ARMS
PROCUREMENT COMMISSION
Third Respondent
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CONSTITUTIONAL
DEVELOPMENT
Fourth Respondent
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Fifth Respondent
MINISTER
OF
DEFENCE
Sixth Respondent
MINISTER
OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY
Seventh Respondent
JUDGMENT
Leave
to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal
–
Condonation - Excessive Delay – Appeal
triggered by complaint before Judicial Services Commission –
Section 177 of Constitution
– Link between findings of court in
review proceedings and JSC complaint.
Prospects
of success - No prospects that another court would come to a
different conclusion regarding the assessment of the flaws
and
failures inherent in the Commission of Inquiry report as was set out
in the review judgment - Commission of Inquiry failed
to exercise its
investigative powers in a manner required by law - No legal point
requiring decision of a higher court
The
Court
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal against the whole of the
judgment
and order of this Court which was delivered on 21 August
2019. The Court reviewed and set aside the findings of the Commission
of Inquiry into allegations of fraud, corruption, impropriety or
irregularity in the Strategic Defence Procurement package known
as
the Arms Deal Commission (‘Commission’).
[2]
The first applicant was the chairperson of the Commission and the
second
applicant was a former member thereof. They presided over the
Commission and were cited
nomine
officio
in their
capacity as Commissioners in the review application which was heard
before this Court and in terms of which the Court
set aside the
findings of the Commission. The first respondent is a non-profit
company whilst the second respondent is a voluntary
association
registered as a non-profit organisation. They are the only
respondents who oppose the application, the others having
elected to
abide the decision of the court.
[3]
At the commencement of the hearing, the court considered an
application
by the first and second respondents, to file an
explanatory affidavit, filed by the President, the fifth respondent,
in related
proceedings initiated by the applicants. The application
in this court was essentially unopposed and was granted.
Condonation
[4]
As is apparent from the outline, judgment was delivered on 21
August
2019, following a hearing of the application to review the
findings of the Commission on 11 June 2019. The applicants made a
decision
not to oppose the application and abided the order of the
Court. They stated that they were cited
nomine officio
and
thus believed that they were
functus officio
once they had
handed the report of the Commission to the President. They claim
further that they were not aware of any legal provision
which allowed
or enabled judges and/or Commissioners to defend their decisions or
findings once they were taken on review. They
further contend that,
after the review application had been launched, the State Attorney
served and filed on behalf of the third
to sixth respondents a notice
of intention to oppose the application on 24 November 2017.
[5]
Accordingly, the applicants claim that they relied on the Presidency
and
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development to defend the
report. Albeit, that prior to the hearing, the decision by the
President to oppose the relief was reversed. Significantly, this was
a decision known to the applicants prior to the hearing before
the
Court. Nonetheless they chose to abide.
[6]
The delay in applying for leave to appeal is clearly excessive, i.e.
more
than two years, and thus it behoves the applicants to provide a
plausible and justifiable reason for this Court granting condonation
for the excessive delay.
[7]
The chronology is important. The applicants did not react to the
judgment
of this Court delivered on 19 August 2019. Some 21 months
later, on 10 May 2021 they received a complaint of gross misconduct
from
the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) at which point, although
they claimed that the judgment was wrongly decided, they decided
to
change their minds after receiving the complaint from the JSC. Four
further months elapsed after receiving the complaint before
they
filed an application for leave to appeal.
[8]
They explain the four month delay as follows: they had to consult and
prepare a response to ‘the voluminous complaint’ which in
fact comprised 52 pages and a response which comprised 149
pages.
They devoted considerable time preparing for the JSC hearing of the
complaint on 2 July 2021 and thus could not work on
the application
for leave to appeal before that hearing commenced. They also needed
time to consult with counsel and obtain advise
concerning the
prospects of success of the application which they then brought four
months after the lodgement of the complaint
to the JSC had been
brought to their attention.
[9]
The application for condonation must be decided in the context of
applicants
who made a choice not to appeal against the judgment of
this Court and the further knowledge that the Court could, if the
review
application was successful, make an adverse finding against
them.
[10]
An
application for condonation, in respect of the late application for
leave to appeal which, in terms of Rule 49 (1) of the Uniform
Rules
of Court should have been filed within 15 days after the delivery of
the impugned judgment, needs to be assessed in terms
of clear
jurisprudence which has been laid down by our courts. This
jurisprudence is captured in the judgment in
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another
[1]
:
‘
There is an
important principle involved here. An inordinate delay induces a
reasonable belief that the order had become unassailable.
This is a
belief that the hospital entertained and it was reasonable for it to
do so. It waited for some time before it took steps
to recover its
costs. A litigant is entitled to have closure on litigation. The
principle of finality and litigation is intended
to allow parties to
get on with their lives. After an inordinate delay a litigant is
entitled to assume that the losing party has
accepted the finality of
the order and does not intend to pursue the matter any further. To
grant condonation after such an inordinate
delay and in the absence
of a reasonable explanation would undermine the principle of finality
and cannot be in the interest of
justice.’
[11]
It is difficult to gainsay the argument that the respondents who had
brought the application
and had been successful had not been induced
into a reasonable belief that this judgment had become unassailable
and that the matter
had reached finality. After all nothing was heard
from the applicants for some two years.
[12]
The central reason offered by the applicants for this delay is their
averment that they
were prepared to accept a ‘wrongly decided’
outcome until organisations called Shadow World Investigations and
Open
Secrets sought to employ the judgment of this Court to lodge a
complaint of judicial misconduct, against the applicants. It was
contended by the applicants that the complaint brought in terms of
s
14
of the
Judicial Service Commission Act, 9 of 1994
, was
unprecedented and could not possibly have been foreseen or
anticipated by the applicants until such time as it was brought
some
two years after judgment was delivered.
[13]
As it was contended that the reason why this application for leave to
appeal was so belatedly
lodged triggered by a complaint lodged before
the JSC, it follows that, notwithstanding the submissions about being
in the interests
of justice to grant condonation, it is clear that
this application for leave to appeal would never have been lodged had
it not
been for the complaint lodged before the JSC. There lies the
rub. In the first place, it is not the respondents who lodged the
complaint against the applicants. In the second place, for a
complaint against the applicants to succeed, particularly a complaint
directed to the impeachment of a judge, a different test is to be
applied from that which confronted this Court in a review
application.
A judge can only be removed by way of impeachment in
terms of s 177 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa
1996, if
the JSC finds that the judge suffers from incapacity, is
grossly incompetent or is guilty of gross misconduct, and the
National
Assembly calls for that judge to be removed by way of a
resolution adopted with the supporting vote of at least two thirds of
its
members.
[14]
The inquiry which the Constitution mandates the JSC to initiate is
entirely different from
the reasons for upholding the review
application by this Court. It must be a relevant consideration that,
in its judgement in the
review application, this court made no
findings of incapacity, gross incompetence and misconduct against the
applicants.
[15]
Even counsel for the applicants was constrained to describe the
reasons for granting the
review application as being that the Court
had found that the Commission had failed to gather relevant material
to properly consider
and investigate matters so arising, to admit
evidence which was highly material to the inquiry and which was in
its possession,
to seek and thus gain information or material
evidence from key witnesses, to test the evidence of witnesses who
appeared before
it by putting questions to them with the required
open mind and to carry out the tasks assigned to it under the
Constitution and
within the principles of legality.
[16]
None of these findings said anything nor could they possibly
have about misconduct
as envisaged in s177 of the Constitution. It
was not part of the review application to consider judicial
misconduct nor the kind
of gross incompetence which would justify an
impeachment of a judge as envisaged in s 177 of the Constitution.
Were this submission
to be correct, judges who have their judgments
robustly criticised and overturned by higher courts would fall within
the scope
of s 177 of the Constitution. The JSC is required to apply
a totally different test to assess whether on the facts which are
placed
before it, the conduct of the applicants falls within the
scope of s 177. In short, if this judgment were employed by the JSC
as
a basis for impeachment without the articulation of a different
test and an application thereof to the facts of this case, the JSC
would have failed in its constitutional duty.
[17]
Yet this represents the high water mark of the applicants’
justification for condonation
in respect of the delay in lodging an
application for leave to appeal. As first applicant stated in his
affidavit:
‘
We have since been
advised to look into the possibility of appealing and challenging the
findings of the High Court because those
findings are being used to
underpin their complaints of judicial misconduct against us.’
[18]
Far from underpinning any complaint, the complainants before
the JSC will have to
make a showing of a totally different kind than
that which was required of this court which carefully eschewed
straying into any
other territory other than to find for the reasons
which are conceded by applicants’ counsel as to why it upheld
the review
application.
Prospects
of success
[19]
The applicants have also submitted that they have good prospects of
success which should
thus tip the scales in favour of this Court
granting condonation. Initially the complaint raised by the
applicants was that the
court had not read the 32 000 pages of
evidence which had been presented to the Commission. The record put
before the Court
comprised of the Commission’s report of 737
pages together with parts of record of evidence led before the
Commission which
the respondents (applicants in the review
application) considered to be relevant to their case.
[20]
What was thus required of applicants was to show in what way the
findings of this Court
based as it was on the record of evidence
placed before it was subject to reversal on appeal. The difficulty
encountered by the
applicants is that in the argument presented to
the Court in support of this application, counsel for the applicants
struggled
to show why any of the findings made by this Court fell in
that category. Counsel failed to point to any aspect of the reasoning
of this Court where the judgement had ignored, misquoted or
misrepresented the evidence which formed part of the record.
[21]
The only argument presented was that somehow had the Court
trawled through the additional
32 000 pages some other picture
might have become apparent. However, at the very least, on an
application for leave to appeal
in support of an argument of
prospects of success clear pointers should have been provided as to
how this Court had misquoted or
misrepresented the evidence which it
relied upon to arrive at its conclusion. For example, there was no
plausible argument raised
that the Court had been incorrect in its
assessment of the De Bevoise and Plimpton Report, its analysis of the
evidence of Dr Richard
Young, the clear failure to question key
witnesses such as Mr Chippy Shaik and Advocate Fana Hlongwane or the
rejection of applicants
claim that they had no power or authority to
utilise the provisions of the Mutual Legal Assistance Act, all of
which was gainsaid
by paragraphs 105 to 115 of the Commissions own
report.
[22]
In short, on the record made available to this Court there was
nothing which was submitted
by applicants which indicated that there
were any prospects of success that another court would come to a
different conclusion
with regard to the assessment of the flaws and
failures inherent in the Commission’s report as was set out in
the judgment
of this Court.
[23]
The alternative argument which was pressed by counsel for the
applicants turned on
s 17
(1) of the
Superior Courts Act 2013
and in
particular that there was some other compelling reason why the appeal
should be heard including conflicting judgments on
the matter under
consideration. The submission was made that the decision to review a
Commission’s report had not confronted
a South African court
nor a court on the African continent dealing with this particular
question. Accordingly, the dearth of authority
in South Africa was,
in counsel’s view, a convincing and persuasive indicator that
another court may come to a different
conclusion on the applicable
law and hence the outcome of the review court.
[24]
In this
connection, counsel relied heavily on a full court judgment of this
Court in
Hlophe
v Judicial Service Commission and others
[2]
(a decision of the Gauteng High Court of 21 June 2022) where the
Court held in granting Judge President Hlophe leave to appeal
to the
Supreme Court of Appeal notwithstanding the lack of merits in his
case, because he “raised matters of significant
public
importance” due to the fact that Judge President Hlophe may
become the first judge in South African history to be
impeached.
[25]
The question is whether a similar level of legal importance can be
attached to the present
case. Hence the question arises as to what
point of law would require the attention of a higher court in the
disposition of this
case.
[26]
To recapitulate this Court found that the approach adopted by the
Commission to the testimony
of key witnesses lacked rigor,
particularly where key witnesses testified in support of the version
provided by the State. It further
found that the Commission had
failed to undertake a proper inquiry as would be required by a
Judicial Commission acting reasonably
within its terms and mandate.
In short, the Commission had failed to exercise its investigative
powers in a manner required by
law.
[27]
The
law on which these conclusions rest has already been settled in
Public
Protector v Mail and Guardian Ltd and others
[3]
where
Nugent JA on behalf of the unanimous court said:
‘
A proper
investigation might take as many forms as there are proper
investigators. It is for the Public Protector to decide what
is
appropriate to each case and not for this Court to supplant that
function…but I think there is nonetheless at least one
feature
of an investigation that must always exist – because it is one
that is universal and indispensable to an investigation
of any kind
which is that the investigation must have been conducted with an open
and inquiring mind. An investigation that has
not conducting with an
open and inquiring mind is no investigation at all. That is the
benchmark against which I have assessed
the investigation in case.’
[28]
It is also the benchmark against which this Court assessed the
investigation conducted
by the Commission but Judge Nugent went
further at para 22:
‘
I think it is
necessary to say something about what I mean by open and inquiring
mind. That state of mind is one that is open to
all possibilities and
reflects upon whether the truth has been told. It is not one that is
unduly suspicious but is also not one
that is unduly believing. It
asks whether the pieces that have been presented fit into place. If
at first they do not, then it
asks questions and seeks out
information until they do.’ (para 22)
[29]
This test
was confirmed by the Constitutional Court in
The
Public Protector v The President of the Republic of South Africa and
Others
[4]
.
It is the same test that was applied by this Court. There is in our
view no possibility that another court would adopt a different
test
to an investigation whether it be by the Public Protector or by a
Judicial Commission of Inquiry such as in this case. In
short, there
is no legal point which requires the decision of a higher court.
[30]
That then circles back to the manner in which the evidence presented
to this Court was
assessed. As indicated above, there was no basis
laid by the applicants that, on the probabilities, another Court
could arrive
at a different application on the basis of the
established legal test for an investigation to the facts of this
case. In this context
therefore the recourse to the judgment in the
Hlophe
case is of no assistance to applicants within the
context of this case.
[31]
To summarise, the application for leave to appeal was more than two
years late. The only
excuse proffered by the applicants was that
their anxiety about the consequences of the judgment was triggered by
a complaint lodged
before the Judicial Service Commission. For the
reasons advanced there is not but a veneer of a justification for
applying for
leave to appeal in a case in which two senior judges
decided to abide the decision of this Court and did nothing to change
their
mind until the complaint was lodged. On the basis of these
conclusions, there is no need to assess the further arguments raised
by counsel.
[32]
To the extent that prospects of success may tilt the balance in
favour of the applicants,
the evidence placed before this Court and
which would be the record on appeal provides no basis by which there
are reasonable prospects
that another court might differ from the
order granted by this Court.
[33]
Having conceded correctly that any exercise of a public power
including the conduct of
a Judicial Commission must be subject to the
principle of legality, the applicants face the insurmountable hurdle
that the principle
of law upon which the entire judgment rests, that
is the failure to conduct a proper investigation as set out in the
Mail and Guardian
case, is dispositive of this case when this
principle is applied to the facts as presented to this Court. It must
therefore follow
that no basis has been laid for this Court to grant
condonation of a filing of an application of leave to appeal which is
more
than two years late. Even if this Court was inclined to be
excessively generous, there is no basis by which there are prospects
of success nor is there a point of law upon which the disposition of
this case rests and which requires the attention of a higher
court.
[34]
Accordingly, the application for leave to appeal is dismissed with
costs including the
costs of two counsel.
D
MLAMBO JP
JUDGE
PRESIDENT OF THE
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT
D
DAVIS JP
JUDGE
PRESIDENT OF THE
COMPETITION
APPEAL COURT
LEEUW
JP
JUDGE
PRESIDENT OF THE
NORTH
WEST DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT
Date
of Hearing: 03 August 2022
Date
of Judgment: 31 August 2022
APPEARANCES:
FIRST
& SECOND APPLICANTS’ COUNSEL:
Adv. F J Nalane SC
Adv. N Mayet
FIRST & SECOND
APPLICANTS’ ATTORNEYS:
Maluleke Seriti
Makume Matlala Inc-.
FIRST
& SECOND RESPONDENTS’ COUNSEL:
Adv. G M Budlender SC
Adv. G S S Khoza
FIRST & SECOND
RESPONDENTS’ COUNSEL:
Harris Nupen Molebatsi
Attorneys
[1]
2008 (8) SA 472
(CC) at para 31
[2]
[
2022]
3 All SA 87 (GJ)
[3]
2011 (4) SA 420
(SCA) at para 20
[4]
2021
(9) BCLR 929(CC)
at para 139
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