Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 837South Africa
South African Nursing Council v Khanyisa Nursing School (Pty) Ltd and Another (A205/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 837 (24 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 October 2022
Headnotes
with costs, which costs are to include the costs consequent upon the employment of two counsel. 2. The order of the court granted on 11 August 2022 is set aside and replaced with the following order: 'The section 18(3) application is dismissed with costs.' JUDGEMENT Van der Schyff J (Millar J concurring) Introduction 1. The case concerns an appeal against an
Judgment
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## South African Nursing Council v Khanyisa Nursing School (Pty) Ltd and Another (A205/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 837 (24 October 2022)
South African Nursing Council v Khanyisa Nursing School (Pty) Ltd and Another (A205/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 837 (24 October 2022)
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sino date 24 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
APPEAL
CASE NO: A205/2022
CASE
NUMBER: 28965/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
24
OCTOBER 2022
In
the matter between:
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN NURSING COUNCIL
Appellant
And
KHANYISA
NURSING SCHOOL (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF HEALTH
Second
Respondent
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The
High
Court,
Pretoria (Ndlokovane AJ
sitting as
Court of first instance)
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs, which
costs are to include the costs consequent upon the employment of two
counsel.
2.
The order of the court granted on 11
August 2022 is set aside and replaced
with the following order: 'The section 18(3) application is dismissed
with costs.'
JUDGEMENT
Van
der Schyff J (Millar J concurring)
Introduction
1.
The case concerns an appeal against an
order granted in terms of
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10
of 2013
to put into operation a court order pending an appeal.
An application for leave to appeal has
already been granted as the judge in the court a
quo
was of the view that the appeal
would have a reasonable prospect of success. Despite this, the
section 18(3)
application was granted and the order was set in
operation.
2.
The following issues arise:
i.
Whether
or
not a proper
case
has been made out to set the initial order in operation;
ii.
Whether this court may consider the
merits of the 'main' application; and
iii.
Whether
this
court
may
grant
an
order
that
will
result
in
a
position
that
is
contrary to what is provided for in Regulations.
# Relevant
facts and background
Relevant
facts and background
3.
During November 2021 Khanyisa Nursing
School (Pty) Ltd [Khanyisa] received conditional accreditation from
the South African Nursing
Council [SANC] to offer Nursing Programmes
for the categories of Auxiliary Nurse and General Nurse respectively.
The protracted
history preceding the granting of the conditional
accreditation is only relevant to the extent that is necessary to
know that Khanyisa
applied for accreditation when they received the
conditional accreditation.
4.
In terms of the respective letters of
conditional accreditation, Khanyisa received conditional
accreditation for a period of two
years [1 January 2022 -
31 December 2023]. The date of of this
accreditation was 29-30 September 2021. The letters of conditional
accreditation stated explicitly
that certain 'prior to commencement
conditions' had to be met, and that SANC would provide it with
commencement letters before
teaching could commence. In each of the
letters directed by SANC to Khanyisa regarding the conditional
accreditation, it is noted
in bold:
'NB:
The Nursing Education Institute
is reminded that to enrol the students to the programme, the
above-mentioned conditions must be
fulfilled and the Nursing
Education Institute must have received
a
letter from SANG that informs the NE/
to commence with the programme.'
5.
The conditions set out in the respective
letters were that prior to commencement Khanyisa had to submit:
i.
Evidence of the appointment of Nurse
Educators;
ii.
A
clear
description
of
roles
and
responsibilities
for
the
Quality
Asurer, Principal, and CEO.
In
addition quarterly reports had to be submitted after the programmes
commenced.
6.
Khanyisa
provided
the
required
information
pertaining
to
its
sub-campuses
to SANC on 15 December 2021, and awaited
the respective commencement letters.
7.
For reasons unknown, SANC did not
provide commencement letters to Khanyisa in terms of the conditional
accreditation they received
but granted them full accreditation from
30-31 March 2022. They were informed of this decision during April
2022. In terms of the
full accreditation, they could commence with
the programs at the beginning of the academic year 2023. There is no
indication on
the papers at all, why SANC did not provide the
commencement letters pertaing to the conditional accreditation after
Khanyisa met
the conditions stipulated in the letters for conditional
accreditation. There can be no dispute that the documents Khanyisa
submitted
on 15 December 2021 addressed the remaining issues set out
in the letters of conditional accreditation, because after having
received
that documentation the respective sub-campuses were fully
accredited.
8.
It is necessary to record the
information set out in the respective accreditation letters:
'In
line with
regulation 11(1)
, the Council is expected to issue the
Nursing Education Institution with a certificate of accreditation.
Such certificate will
be sent before the end of the calendar year
2022. The certificate of accreditation will reflect the information
set out ans any
other as the Council may deem fit:
•
Type
of accreditation: Full Accreditation
•
Date
of accreditation: 30-31 March 2022, however, the commencement date of
the approved programme should be
at
the beginning of the academic year
2023
considering
that
the
Nursing
Education
Institution
will
now
commence the process of
marketing the accredited programme
as
well as
recruitment and selection
process.
•
Duration
of accreditation:
Five
(05) years
'
9.
Khanyisa approached the court with a
review application in June 2022. Khanyisa sought an order for
reviewing, and setting aside
of one aspect of SANC's decision to
grant full accreditation to Khanyisa's sub-campuses to offer Nursing
Programmes for the categories
Auxiliary Nurse and General Nurse
respectively, namely the commencement
date of the respective programmes.
Khanyisa's case was that the accreditation should have been valid
from the date on which it was
informed that its programmes were
accredited, namely 28 April 2022. Khanyisa's main ground of review
was that SANC is not empowered
to postpone the commencement date of
accreditation to 1 January 2023 and submitted that the decisions to
do so, were unlawful.
Khanyisa also sought exemption in terms of
s
7(2)
of the promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 [PAJA]
from exhausting the internal remedy provided for in terms of
s 57
of
the
Nursing Act 33 of 2005
.
10.
SANC submitted that the regulations for
the approval of, and the minimum requirements
for
the
two
programmes
are
contained
in
Regulations
R.169
and
R.171 both dated 8 March 2013 [the
curse
Regulations] promulgated in terms of the
Nursing Act. SANC
submitted
that Khanyisa's interpretation of specifically
regulation 5(3)
is
wrong. The council's decisions to accredit the programmes to commence
in the 2023 academic year, were taken according to the
correct
interpretation of the said sub-regulation.
11.
Regulation 5(3)
contained in both course
regulations are identically worded and provides:
'The
duration of the programme is one (i) academic year of full-time
study'
The
phrase 'academic year' is defined in regulation 1 of the Course
Regulations as:
'a
period of at least 44 weeks of learning in any calendar year.'
12.
On Khanyisa's interpretation of the
definition of the phrase 'academic year', the 44 weeks do not need to
fall in the same calendar
year because the regulation determines that
the 44 weeks of learning fall in 'any' calendar year. As a result,
they contend, the
teaching of the programmes can commence in July
2022 and run for 44 weeks. On SANC's interpretation the phrase
'calendar year'
restricts the 44 weeks of learning to one year
reckoned from 1 January to 31 December, therefore the commencement
dates of the
approved programmes were 'at the beginning of the
academic year 2023'.
13.
In the urgent court judgment, the court
a
quo
agreed
that the use of the phrase 'calendar year' in the definition of
'academic year' imposes the 44-week learning to be done within
a
conventional calendar year, being January to December. The court,
however, held that the matter does not end at this point. The
court
then considered averments first made in Khanyisa's replying
affidavit, that SANC has granted other Nursing Education Institutes
[NEls] full accreditation but allowed other NEls to commence with
their programmes in April and June 2022. As a result, the court
found
that SANC created a legitimate expectation that Khanyisa would be
able to commence with the accredited programmes mid-2022.
The court a
quo
held
that 'the imposition of restrictions by SANC is unreasonable and
unlawful and stands to be set aside.'
14.
The court a
quo
further found that SANC conducted
itself in a 'sluggish manner' and that this warranted the court's
intervention without the applicant
exhausting its
internal
remedies as required in accordance with PAJA and
s 57
of the
Nursing
Act.
15.
As
a result, in an order granted on 24
June 2022, the court a
quo:
i.
exempted
Khanyisa
from the obligation
to
exhaust
the
applicable
internal remedies;
ii.
reviewed and set aside the decisions
taken by SANC as far as it relates to the commencement
date of the full accreditation being 1
January 2023;
iii.
declared
that
Khanyisa
is
permitted
to
commence
with
the
accredited programmes on or before 4
July 2022;
iv.
directed
SANC
to
issue
Khanyisa
with
certificates
for
the
accredited programmes
as required in terms of the applicable
Regulations.
16.
SANC filed an application for leave to
appeal. The main grounds of appeal were that the court a
quo:
i.
failed to apply the correct
interpretation of the phrase 'academic year';
ii.
failed to find that the provisions of
Regulation 5(3) of the Course Regulations are peremptory and that
SANC is bound thereby;
iii.
failed to find that the two courses
cannot commence during July 2022 as the required 44-week period of
learning would by necessity
run from the 2022 calendar year into the
2023 calendar year;
iv.
failed to apply the principle of
legality, namely that no organ of state or public official may act
contrary or beyond the scope
of its powers as laid down in the
applicable law;
v.
failed to disregard, but admitted into
evidence, facts set out in Khanyisa's replying affidavit to the
effect that SANC on a previous
occasion allowed another NEI to
commence mid-year with the learning part of a course with a similar
minimum requirement;
vi.
failed to apply the legal principle that
the interpretation of the law to be applied to a decision by an
administrator is the sole
and final responsibility of the Courts, and
not that of the administrator and that previous interpretations of
the regulations
by SANC are irrelevant;
vii.
failed to find that the expectation held
by Khanyisa was not a legitimate expectation;
viii.
erred in finding that SANC unreasonably
delayed its decision to grant accreditation to Khanyisa, and acted
ma/a
fide
by
delaying the accreditation application.
17.
Khanyisa, in turn, submitted that:
i.
any appeal of the order of 24 June 2022
will be academic by the time it is heard;
ii.
the court correctly rejected SANC's
submission that they were permitted in terms of the Regulations to
adopt a different approach
in dealing with other NEl's and correctly
applied the test for legitimate expectation.
18.
Khanyisa filed an application in terms
of s 18(3) for an order to uplift the automatic suspension of the
court order granted by
the court
a
qua,
pending the appeal. Khanyisa
informed the court that it informed the student's on the waiting list
on 25 June 2022, the day after
the order was granted, that it had
successfully obtained a court order, and commenced with the final
enrolment of the students.
It started with the induction and
introductory classes on 4 July 2022. Khanyisa contends that its
conduct was
bona tide
and
an attempt to avoid irreparable prejudice to itself and the enrolled
students. By the time the application for leave to appeal
was filed,
Khanyisa contends
'the
proverbial train has already left the station. The students at
Khanyisa's 4 sub-campuses had already paid their registration
fees
and were expecting to start on Monday 4 July 2022.'
19.
Khanyisa submitted that:
'the
pre'dicament to be left with no relief, regardless of the outcome of
an appeal, constitutes exceptional circumstances which
warrant
a
consideration of putting the order
into operation. The forfeiture of substantial relief because of
procedural delays [by the time
the appeal is considered the 44 weeks
in which the courses are to be presented would have passed and the
2023 academic year would
have commenced) even if not protracted in
bad faith by
a
litigant,
ought to be sufficient to cross the threshold of 'exceptional
circumstances.'
20.
Khanyisa further submitted that it
stands to suffer irreparable harm, that cannot be cured by any
damages claim, if the order is
not granted for the following reasons:
i.
Khanyisa has been unable to earn any
form of income at the 4 sub-campuses since 19 December 2014 due to
the continuous delays caused
by SANG. It will have to close its doors
if deprived of an opportunity to earn an income;
ii.
Since the order was granted on 24 June
2022, 210 students were admitted for the respective programmes, the
majority from previously
disadvantaged communities. The students will
be deprived of the opportunity to further their education and advance
their careers
if the order is not put into operation;
iii.
Thirteen staff members are employed and
if Khanyisa is not permitted to proceed with the academic programmes
they will have to be
retrenched.
21.
SANC, on the other hand, contended that
the applicant is in the same position as any other business trying to
operate without a
valid licence. It submitted that the students that
were enrolled stand to suffer irreparable harm if they are allowed to
proceed
with their training, and an appeal eventually is successful.
This is because the training they received before January 2023 would
not be in compliance with Regulations 2(1)(a) to (c) and 5(3) as it
was provided by an institution not accredited to provide such
training. In short, the result of a successful appeal is that the
training provided to the student before the commencement
date linked to the full accreditation
will be invalid. SANC avered that there is nothing extraordinary in
the fact that the education
of 210 students is being delayed by six
months in an effort by SANC to ensure that the students receive
quality education and training.
In addition, the contracts of the
staff members provided to SANC stipulate that the employees will not
be paid as long as there
are no students. SANC denied that an appeal
will be academic as a final decision by the Supreme Court of Appeal
will provide clarity
about the practical effect and interpretation of
Regulation 5(3).
22.
SANC also submitted that:
i.
There is no evidence on record showing
that Khanyisa complied with the requirements for accreditation
when it applied for accreditation during
2014;
ii.
The founding papers in the main
application show that Khanyisa is primarily to be blamed for the fact
that accreditation could not
be completed shortly after the audit
visits of the sub-campuses
during
2021;
iii.
Contrary to what it alleged, Khanyisa
did earn an income on the campuses because it trained students in
the 'so-called legacy
courses under regulations R. 2175, R.
2176 and R.683;
iv.
Since training can commence in 2023, the
alleged harm cannot be irreparable. Khanyisa did not provide
sufficient information in
its founding affidavit to substantiate the
averment of financial prejudice;
v.
Khanyisa has not shown that it will be
able to provide 44 weeks of quality learning before the assumed
examinations in May 2023.
It failed to indicate how the 44 weeks will
be fit into the limited time left without compelling tutors and
students to work non-stop
without vacation or breaks for more than 10
months.
23.
SANG stands to suffer irreparable harm
if the order is put into operation because it will be prevented from
performing its duties
as the regulator of nursing education.
24.
It is apposite to indicate that Khanyisa
reiterated in the s 18(3) application that SANC allowed other NEls to
commence with their
accredited programmes during June 2022. SANC's
reply hereto was that:
i.
A decision by SANG regarding the
commencement date of the accreditation of another accredited NEI does
not have a binding effect
on the Council when considering and
determining the commencement date for accreditation of any other NEI;
ii.
The circumstances of the different
applications may differ, and the decision regarding the commencement
date of training may have
been made in
error;
iii.
The courts are the final arbiters on the
question of
what
the law requires, and therefore the fact that other NEls were allowed
to commence with their training during mid-years as alleged
by
Khanyisa is therefore irrelevant and should be disregarded.
25.
As stated above, the court a
quo
granted the s 18(3) application
despite granting leave to appeal. The presiding judge held that
Khanyisa indeed stands to suffer
irreparable harm if the order
remains suspended for the following reasons:
i.
The 210 students enrolled by Khanyisa
after the order was granted in June 2022 would be prejudiced, as
would Khanyisa and the staff
members.
ii.
The educators' economic livelihood and
that of their families will be compromised.
iii.
SANC, would however, not suffer
irreparable harm if the nursing programmes commence mid-year. There
is insufficient evidence of
any financial loss to be suffered by
SANC.
# Section
18(4) appeal
Section
18(4) appeal
26.
SANC appeals the s 18(3) judgment and
order granted by the court a
quo.
SANC submits that the judge failed
to differentiate between prejudice and irreparable harm. It is also
submitted that by weighing
up the harm to be suffered by SANC to the
harm suffered by Khanyisa, s 18(3) was incorrectly applied. The
section does not require
a balancing exercise. The requirement of
irreparable harm to an applicant and no harm to a respondent must
both be established
on a balance of probabilities. If Khanyisa cannot
show that SANC will not suffer irreparable
harm by the grant of the operation and
execution order, it would be fatal to the application.
27.
SANC submits that the court
a
quo
failed to recognise that the
training of the students will only be delayed for six months, and
will not be permanently lost. It
was not taken into account by the
court that neither the students nor the employees were parties to the
application and it is incorrect
to consider any prejudice they would
suffer because of the granting of the order.
28.
SANC repeats the submissions made in the
s 18(3) application. It reiterates that Khanyisa failed to
substantiate the averment that
exceptional circumstances exist that
justify the deviation from the norm, with hard facts. The allegations
made to this effect,
SANC contends, are vague and superficial.
Despite being challenged to do so in SANC's answering affidavit in
the s 18(3) application,
Khanyisa failed to file a replying affidavit
wherein it provided detail regarding the actual dates on which the
students were enrolled,
dates on which tuition fees were paid and the
dates on which the actual tuition commenced. Khanyisa should have
provided more specific
facts regarding its alleged financial
prejudice, retrenchment of staff members and the plight of students.
29.
SANC emphasises that students will be
set up for failure if forced to undergo 44 weeks of non-stop studying
and attending practical
sessions to ensure that the 44 weeks of
training is finalised by May 2023, the date of the alleged exam.
There is nothing extraordinary
in the fact that the education of 210
students is being delayed with six months in an effort by SANC to
ensure that the students
receive quality education and training.
30.
In opposing the s 18(4) appeal, Khanyisa
submits that the merits of the main application
and main judgment are not pertinent to
this appeal. The purpose of the appeal,
it
is
submitted,
is
not
to
second-guess
the
correctness
of
the
main judgment but only to consider the
portions of the record dealing with the s 18(3) application.
# Applicable
legal principles
Applicable
legal principles
31.
Ponnan
JA comprehensively captured the requirements for a s 18(3) order
disturbing the ordinary course of the appeal process in
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation:
[1]
'[28]
The primary purpose of s 18(1) is to reiterate the common-law
position in relation to the ordinary effect of appeal
processes
-
the suspension of the order being
appealed
-
not to nullify it.
It was
designed to protect the rights of
litigants who find themselves in the position of General Ntlemeza, by
ensuring that, in the ordinary
course, the orders granted against
them are suspended while they are in the process of attempting, by
way of the appeal process,
to have them overturned. The suspension
contemplated in s 18(1) would thus continue to operate in the event
of a further application
for leave to appeal to this court and, in
the event of that being successful, in relation to the outcome of a
decision by this
court in respect of the principal order. Section
18(1) also sets the basis for when the power to depart from the
default position
comes into play, namely, exceptional circumstances
which must be read in conjunction with the further requirements set
bys
18(3).
As already stated and as will become clear later, the legislature has
set the bar fairly high.'
32.
In
lncubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ellis and Another
[2]
the
court said the following about s 18:
'It
seems to me that there is indeed a new dimension introduced to the
test by the provisions of s 18. The test is twofold. The
requirements
are:
•
First,
whether or not exceptional circumstances exist; and
•
Second,
proof on a balance of probabilities by the applicant of the presence
of irreparable harm to the applicant/victor, who wants
to put into
operation and execute the order; and the absence of irreparable harm
to the respondent/loser, who seeks leave to appeal.'
33.
Sutherland
DJP concluded in
Jai
Hind EMCC t/a Emmerentia Convenience
Centre
v
Engen
Petroleum
Limited
South
Africa:
In re: Engen
Petroleum
Limited
South
Africa v Jai Hind EMCC tla Emmerentia Convenience Centre
[3]
that
the court, in deciding a s 18(3) application, must:
'locate
the exceptionality and thereafter determine, whether as
a
fact, irreparable harm shall be
suffered by [the applicant], and therafter determine, as
a
fact, whether irrepearable harm shall
be suffered by [the respondent] if the order is implemented at one'.
Sutherland
DJP highlighted that exceptionality' is a value judgment. The 'finite
period within which the order can be effective'
can, in appropriate
circumstances, trigger exceptionality.
34.
In
as
18(4)
appeal the court is concerned with the question as to whether the
court
a
qua
in
granting the order to execute had due regard to the relevant
provisions of s 18 and applied them correctly.
[4]
While
s 18(1) entitles a court to order the operation and execution of an
order contrary to the norm, s 18(3) provides a further
controlling
measure in that a party seeking an order in terms of s 18(1) is
required 'in addition to' prove on a balance of
probabilities
that he or she will suffer irreparable harm if the court does not so
order, and that the other party will suffer irreparable
harm if the
court so orders. If these statutory requirements
are
met, the court
has
a
wide
discretion
to
grant
the
application,
[5]
if
the
requirements
are
not
met, the court does not have a discretion to exercise and the
application must be dismissed.
[6]
35.
In
Multisure
Corporation (Pty) Ltd v KGA Life Limited and Others
[7]
Govindjee
J explained that for harm to be irreparable, the effects or the
consequences
must
be irreversible or permanent.
36.
In the s 18(3) application, Khanyisa
relied on the following to substantiate its claim that it will suffer
irreparable harm
if
the
order
is not
put
into operation and executed:
i.
The students on the waiting list were
informed that a court order was obtained. Khanyisa commenced with the
enrolment of 210 students.
This process included the placements,
signing of agreements and inductions during the week of 24 to 30 June
2022. By 30 June 2022
the students had already paid their
registration fees and were expecting to start with classes on Monday
4 July 2022;
ii.
Classes started on 4 July 2022;
iii.
The suspension of the order resulted
therein that 210 students are deprived of the opportunity to further
their educaton and advance
their careers; this will have a
detrimental effect on hospitals as they will receive 210 fewer
nursing staff;
iv.
Khanyisa's staff members will have to be
retrenched as Khaniysa will not be able to afford their salaries, and
this will result
in financial hardship and detriment to the employees
and their families;
v.
Khanyisa have been unable to earn any
form of income at the 4 sub campuses since 2014 due to SANC's
delay, should it be deprived
of the opportunity to earn an income it
would be forced to close its doors.
37.
ln the first instance, it is necessary
to highlight that the effect of the suspension of the operation of
the order will not result
in Khanyisa being unable to earn an income
in perpetuity. The commencement of the programmes in terms of the
full accreditation
is only suspended pending the date on which the
appeal is finalised in their favour, or 1 January 2023, whichever
date occurs first.
In addition, SANG stated in their answering
affidavit that it is not correct that Khaniysa did not earn an income
since 2014 because
they trained students in other courses. This
averment was not refuted in a replying affidavit.
38.
In addition, the papers reflect that the
litigation at hand only affects Khanyisa's 4 sub-campuses and not its
main campus. Khanyisa
has, on their version, been operating in
similar circumstances since 2014. No reasons were provided why they
would now be forced
to close their doors if they were able to survive
financially the preceding eight years.
39.
Khanyisa was granted conditional
accreditation in November 2021, and they met the requirements to
commence with teaching early in
2022, when there were
44
weeks in the calendar year available
for teaching. However, they did not approach the court on an urgent
basis during January or
February 2022 for an order to direct SANC to
issue the commencement letters as per the letters of conditional
accreditation. If
Khanyisa stood to be financially crippled if they
did not present the programmes in 2022,
it would have been expected that they
acted proactively as early in the year as possible. Khanyisa did not
prove on a balance of
probabilities that the suspension of the order
granted by the court a
quo
will
cause it irreparable financial harm.
40.
SANC claimed in its answering affidavit
that they were provided with copies of the contracts of 'provisional
staff wherein it is
stipulated that when there are no students at
school or practical areas, the particular tutors will be requested to
stay home with
no salary expected until they return when students are
available in class or practical areas. This allegation was not
refuted in
reply. However, in the papers Khanyisa presented evidence
that some staff members, at least, were appointed full time. No
evidence
was, however provided for the court to deduce that the
educators and their families will suffer undue financial hardship if
the
order is not implemented, except for a general averment.
41.
The averment that the students will be
deprived of the opportunity to further their education and advance
their careers is not substantiated.
The students' studies are only
postponed until the appeal is decided in Khanyisa's favour or 1
January 2023, whichever date occurs
first. I agree with SANG that the
prejudice that the students will suffer if the appeal is upheld, is
far greater than any prejudice
they will suffer by postponing the
commencement
of
their studies. Sight should also not be lost of the fact that
Khanyisa commenced with teaching and continued therewith,
despite the appeal to the main
application,
and
the s 18(4) appeal being launched. In this respect, Khanyisa stands
with dirty hands before the court.
42.
Khanyisa is mistaken in its view that
the proverbial 'train has left the station', and that the court must
countenance their actions.
In commencing with teaching on 4 July 2022
after the application for leave to appeal was filed, Khanyisa took
the law into its
own hands. Any prejudice suffered as a result
thereof, lies at their feet. Although this court empathises with the
plight of the
students who will be affected by this order, the fact
that their teaching commenced in circumstances which were in
contravention
of
sections
18(1)
and
18
(4)(iv)
of the
Superior
Courts
Act
10 of 2013
, cannot be ignored.
43.
The alleged exceptional circumstances
that necessitate the operation of the order must be considered
against the background of the
information provided by Khanyisa in the
founding affidavit of the main application relating to the
conditional accreditation granted
to the respective sub-campuses. It
is reflected in the letter confirming the conditional accreditation
that:
'Date
of accreditation: 29
-
30 September 2021,
however
the commencement date of the approved programme should be at the
beginning of the academic year 2022
provided
that the Nursing Education Institution has met the short-term prior
commencement conditions.' (My emphasis).
44.
The letter confirming the full
accreditation contains a similar paragraph and reads as follows:
'Date
of accreditation: 30-31 March 2022,
however
the commencement date of the approved programme should be at the
beginning of the academic year 2023
considering
that the nursing education Institution will now commence the process
of marketing the accredited programme as well as
the recruitments and
selection process.
'
45.
Khanyisa
took issue with the terms of the letter
of full accreditation, however I am of the view that the Khanyisa's
dilemma is not seated
in SANC's decision to grant it full
accreditation but directed that the programmes may only commence at
the beginning of the academic
year 2023, but in SANC's failure to
provide commencement letters in terms of the conditional
accreditation after Khanyisa met the
conditions set out in the
letters of conditional accreditation.
46.
Conditional accreditation and full
accreditation are two distinct accreditations. Although the time
periods for which the respective
accreditations were granted overlap
with a year, it is not stated anywhere in the papers that the
conditional accreditation for
2022 lapsed when the full accreditation
was granted. The fact that Khanyisa chose to commence with their
teaching during July 2022
on its interpretation of the regulation
that it is entitled to start mid-year, instead of requesting SANC to
timeously
grant
a letter of commencement as it undertook to do in the conditional
accreditation letter, refutes the contention of exceptional
circumstances existing for the order to be put into operation.
47.
Against this background and based on the
regulatory prescripts dealt with below, it cannot be that any
'exceptionality' that might
exist, justifies an order in terms of
s
18(1)
to be granted. Exceptionality, even if it exists, cannot render
an illegality justifiable.
48.
Khanyisa's
contention that this court is not to have regard to the merits of the
appeal, is not borne out by the existing case law.
The Supreme Court
of Appeal held in
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd
[8]
that
one of the factors that a court to which application was made for
leave to execute the judgment pending appeal, is:
'the
prospects of success on appeal, including more particularly the
question as to whether the appeal is frivolous or vexatious
or has
been noted not with the bona fide intention of seeking to reverse the
Judgment but for some indirect purpose...'
49.
This
approach was favourably referred to by the same court in at least
Ntlemeza
[9]
.
In
Knoop
and Another NNO v Gupta (No 1)
[10]
where
Wallis JA referred to
Minister
of Social Development and Others v Justice Alliance of South Africa
and Another
[11]
and
stated that:
'it
was held that the court has
a
wide
discretion to grant or refuse an execution order once the statutory
requirements are satisfied, and that prospects of success
in the
appeal have
a
role
to play in considering the exercise of that discretion. There is
a
dictum in UFS v Afriforum that
supports this approach, but in both that case and Ntlemeza the record
in the main appeal was not
before this court and the appeals had
perforce to be decided without the full record or any consideration
of the merits of the
main appeals.
We
had the full record in the main appeal before us and had read it in
anticipation of dealing with the main appeal, but the argument
on the
urgent appeal did not include any debate over prospects of success in
the main appeal. Our finding that the three requirements
for making
an execution order were not established means that we did not have to
consider whether there is a discretion once they
are present and, if
so, whether the prospects of success should affect its exercise.
There may be difficulties if the high court
takes the prospects of
success into account
in
granting
an
execution
order,
because
it
is
not
clear
that
the
court hearing an urgent appeal
under
s 18(4)
will always be in a position to assess the weight of
this factor.'
(Footnotes omitted)
50.
In
casu,
SANC
did
debate
the
issue
regarding
the
prospects
of
success
in
the
appeal. The cumulative effect of:
i.
the
nature
of the relief sought,
ii.
the consequences that both the granting
as the dismissing of the appeal will have,
iii.
the fact that as far as the offering of
the courses by Kanyisa
from
July 2022 for
44
weeks
are concerned
an
appeal will be moot or merely academic, and
iv.
the fact that SANC admitted to granting
other NEl's permission to start mid year with teaching, renders
it necessary that this
court considers
Khanyisa's prospects of success on
appeal.
51.
I am of the view that SANC has
considerable prospects of success in the appeal instituted against
the judgment and order handed
down on 24 June 2022. Like the court a
quo,
I
agree with the interpretation that
regulation 5(3)
, read with the
definition of 'academic year' stated in
regulation 1
, as it currently
stands, prescribes that the 44 weeks of training have to fall in a
specific calendar year. This is consonant with
the finding of the
court a quo. SANC provides
full
accreditation for a maximum of 5 years or conditional accreditation
for a maximum of two years.
52.
In
this context, the term 'any' calendar year' is to be interpreted as
44 weeks of training in any of the calendar years that the
NEI is
accredited to offer the course. The term 'calendar year' informs the
interpretation of the term 'academic year'. I have
extensively
researched the ordinary meaning of the term 'calendar year' and all
the dictionaries define the term as 12 consecutive
months from 1
January to 31 December.
[12]
A
distinction is, for example, made between a calendar year and a
fiscal year, and while a calendar year starts on 1 January and
ends
on 31 December, a fiscal year can start and end at any time during
the year, so long
as
it lasts 12 months.
53.
The requirement that the 44 weeks of
learning must occur in 'any calendar year' is not an obligation
imposed by SANC, but a regulatory
prescript enforced by them. Had
Khanyisa approached the court for an order to direct SANC to issue
commencement letters in terms
of their conditional accreditation in
January 2022, the outcome might have been different. At this time,
however, it is impossible
to adhere to the prescripts of the
regulation since there are not 44 weeks remaining for training in
2022, as was the position
in June 2022.
54.
I
cannot
agree
with
the
court
a
quo's
finding
that
a
legitimate
expectation
ever existed
that
Khanyisa
could
commence
with
the
programmes
mid-year.
The doctrine of legitimate expectation
entails that a reasonable expectation based on a well-established
practice
or
an
express
promise
by
an
administrator
acting lawfully
gives
rise
to
legal
protection
when
the
practice
or
promise
is
clear, unambiguous and unqualified.
If SANC
allowed other NEl's to commence mid-year
with
teaching
programmes
that
are
subject
to
the
same
prescribed
minimum conditions as the programmes
that Khanyisa commenced with, SANC createda dilemma, they
acted
in
contravention
of
the
regulations
and
will
surely
face
the consequences in due course, but they
did not create a precedent.
55.
This
court cannot grant an order that contravenes the applicable
regulation on this court's interpretation of the regulation. Wallis
JA stated in
Knoop
[13]
that:
'a
Court can no more grant an
order
contrary to a statute, than it can
ordera
party to perform an illegal act.
'
Unless
the regulation in question is subject to a constitutional challenge,
it must be applied.
56.
As a result the
s 18(4)
appeal stands to
be upheld and the courta
quo's
order stands to be replaced by an
order that the
section 18(3)
application isdismissed.
# ORDER
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The appeal is upheld with costs, which
costs are to include the costs consequent upon the employment of two
counsel.
2.
The order of the court granted on 11
August 2022 is set aside and replaced with the following order:
'The
section 18(3)
application is dismissed with costs.'
E
VAN DER SCHYFF
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
DISSENT
MPN
MBONGWE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
AGREE
A
MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
# Introduction
Introduction
1.
This is an appeal against the judgment
and orders of the court a quo, per Ndlokovane AJ dated 11 August
2022. Prior to that judgment,
the court a quo had granted orders
sought by the first respondent to commence with the programme of
training student nurses, following
the granting to it of full
accreditation by the appellant. The issue before the court was
whether the present appellant, an organ
of State, was entitled in
terms of the provisions of the enabling statute, the South African
Nursing Council Act 33 of 2005 ("the
Act), to
suspend
the
commencement
of
the
training
of
aspirant
nurses
to
a
future
date from the date of accreditation. The court a quo found that in
favour of the first respondent, declaring that it was
well within its
rights to commence with the training of nurses upon the receipt of
full accreditation, and that the provisions
of the Act do not provide
the appellant with the authority to suspend the commencement date.
2.
The issues before this court emanate
from the above findings and orders of the court a quo. Following the
hearing of the three subsequent
applications and counter-application
by the appellant and the first respondent being, the appellant's
application for leave to
appeal the decision of the court a quo dated
24 June 2022, the first respondent's opposition thereto and on
application in terms
of section 18(3) of the Superior Court Act, 2013
as well as the appellant's counter- application in terms of section
18(4) of the
same Superior Court Act, the court granted the first
respondent section 18(3) application. The orders of the court gave
rise to
the present appeal.
3.
I have read the majority judgment in
this appeal and I fully agree with the detailed facts of the case as
set out succinctly in
therein. I consequently
will not repeat them in this judgment,
save to the extent necessary. I, however, do not agree with the
decision, order made and
the reasons therefor. While I fully agree
with the authority of the precedent decisions cited in the majority
judgment, I hold
the view that the principles in those decisions do
not support the
appellant
and
were
cited
without
the
necessary
consideration
of
the
peculiarity of the facts in the case, particularly the impugned
conduct of the appellant.
# Common
cause facts
Common
cause facts
4.
For convenience, I list,
chronologically, the common cause facts between the parties:
4.1.
The first respondent submitted its
application to the appellant for accreditation for the training of
students in Auxiliary Nursing
and Diploma in Nursing Programmes in
December 2014.
4.2.
The appellant delayed the processing of
the application for a number of years until the first respondent
lodged a complaint to the
Nursing Council. Matter was dealt with and
finalised on 11 June 2021, when the appellant was ordered to conduct
site inspections
of the first respondent's campuses and provide the
full council with the report on its next meeting on 29 June 2021.
4.3.
Temporary accreditation was granted and
communicated to the first respondent in a letter dated 13 December
2021.
4.4.
The first respondent met all the
outstanding requirements set out in the temporary accreditation by
the 19 December 2021 and was
issued with full accreditation only on
26 April 2022. The appellant's letter granting full accreditation
contained a caveat that
accreditation becomes operative on 01 January
2023, that is, eight months later. The first respondent raised issue
with the suspension
of the commencement date in that, in line with
its fulfilment of the requirements in the temporary accreditation, it
had inter
alia, employed staff to carry out the training of its
registered students.
5.
The first respondent brought an urgent
application in June 2022, following unsuccessful engagements with the
appellant, for the
review of the authority and decision of the
appellant to impose the suspension. It contended that neither the
enabling provisions
of the South African Nursing Council Act 33 of
2005 nor the regulations made thereunder, lend such authority to the
appellant.
The court ruled in favour of the first respondent and set
aside the suspension. The granted the appellant's subsequent
application
for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
6.
Subsequent to handing down its judgment
dated 24 June 2022, the appellant brought
an
application
court
for
leave
to
appeal
against
the
decision
of
the
court
a
quo.
Leave to appeal to the Supreme Court was
granted.
7.
The first respondent brought an
application in terms of the provIsIons of sections
18(3)
of
the
Superior
Court
Act
of
2013.
In
its
application,
the first respondent seeking an order
for it to continue with the programme as per the order of 24 June
2022, notwithstanding the
appeal by the appellant. The appellant
brought a counter -application in terms of section 18(4) seeking an
order for the suspension
of the execution of the order appealed
against pending the determination of its appeal against by the
Supreme Court of Appeal.
8.
The court a quo granted the first
respondent's section 18(3) application. This outcome is the subject
in the appeal before us.
# Extant
position in the matter
Extant
position in the matter
9.
The first respondent's commencement with
the training of student nurses on 04 July 2022 was with the
ostensible view to having its
students complete the prescribed 44
weeks of training, prior to the scheduled first examination in May
2023. With provision made
in the regulations for an additional three
weeks, commencement of the training on 04 July 2022 would have
provided sufficient time
to meet the prescribed period of forty-four
weeks of training and, consequently, eligibility to sit for the May
2023 examination.
10.
That the first respondent did commence
with the training of students and continues to do so is not in
dispute. Counsel for the appellant
has in fact confirmed it, albeit
with an untenable added qualification that the first respondent is
doing so unlawfully. It is
untenable in that the appellant has
admittedly allowed at least one institution, also serving the same
purpose as the first respondent,
to commence with the training
programme mid- year 2022. This aspect is considered further in
perspective later in this judgment
and is at the heart of the dispute
between the parties.
# Detour
Detour
11.
Prior to the consideration of the merits
of the issues between the parties, I deem it prudent to traverse the
nature and purpose
of the South African Nursing Council Act 33 of
2005 ("the Act"). Like similar legislative instruments akin
to its purpose,
the Act is a piece of legislative measure enacted to
ensure health security. It is in my view befitting that it, like the
Compensation
for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act of 130 of
1993 ("COIDA") and the Road Accident Fund Act of 1996 ("the
RAF Act"), is aptly described in the same terms as a legislative
social security instrument.
12.
In my view, the services the Act
provides for cover a much more wider spectrum and include the medical
treatment of the beneficiaries
and families of persons who sustain
permanent disablement or contract terminal diseases in the work place
under COIDA and the victims
of motor vehicle accident under the RAF
Act. The core purpose of the Act is to ensure the availability of
health care and medical
treatment to the citizens of and all persons
within the borders of the Republic of South Africa. Considering the
world-wide shortage
of health care givers, the ever increasing
financial burden and constraints occasioned by the inescapable
provision of health
and medical care, it would be amiss to
underestimate the onerous duties of the often underpaid health-care
givers, the nurses in
particular.
13.
It is in this light that the purpose of
the Act be constantly borne in mind in decision making on matters
affecting the students
aspiring to serve in the health care
discipline. Thus, abuse of administrative authority is at odds with
the purpose of the Act
where it discourages or disadvantages students
who conscientiously aspire to serve as medical caregivers,
notwithstanding the objective
challenges entailed.
# The
appellant's case
The
appellant's case
14.
The core grounding of appellant's appeal
before this court appears to be against the declaratory by the court
a quo granting the
first respondent the right to commence with the
training programme in July 2022. The reason proffered by the
appellant is that
the calendar year for the programme commences on 01
January 2023. The appellant contended that the commencement on 04
July 2022
and current continuation of the first respondent with the
training programme is, therefore, unlawful.
15.
The first respondent disputed the
appellant's averments, contending that it is standard practice to
commence the programme prior
to the beginning of the year. It further
alleged, in support of contention, that the appellant has allowed
eight other institutions
serving the same programme to commence
mid-2022. This was not disputed by the appellant and was in fact
confirmed by counsel for
the appellant, albeit with an untenable
qualification that he knows of only one institution that the
appellant has allowed to and
did commence with the programme mid -
2022.
# Dispute
Dispute
16.
For brevity and concise identification
of the crisp issue between the parties it is apposite to commence by
stating that, with the
common cause facts stated in para 4.1 to 4.4
above and the admission by the appellant that it has allowed at least
one institution
to commence with the programme mid - 2022, the crisp
issue in the dispute between the parties is whether the court a quo
was correct
in setting aside the decision of the appellant to suspend
the operation of the accreditation granted to the first respondent to
01 January 2022.
# Analysis
Analysis
17.
The appellant is the custodian of the
regulations and is therefore clothed with discretionary authority in
its application of the
regulations by virtue of the regulations being
made under the Act and, as such, the exercise of the discretionary
powers is subject
to the provisions of PAJA. Section 33 of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act of 1996 explicitly
provides that
a decision taken in the exercise of statutory
discretionary authority should be just, fair and impartial. To ensure
the protection
of the rights of persons affected by an administrative
decision, section 33 of the Constitution provides for the enactment
of a
legislative instrument that would provide the means to challenge
the decision concerned.
18.
The enactment of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 ("PAJA") is the
legislative instrument envisioned
in the provisions of section 33 of
the Constitution.
19.
With these provisions in mind, I now
consider the administrative powers the Nursing Council Act 33 of 2005
and the regulations made
thereunder afford to the appellant. In terms
of regulation A, upon consideration of an application for
accreditation by a qualifying
institute of higher education, such as
the first respondent, the appellant may;
19.1.
Grant full accreditation;
19.2.
Grant temporary accreditation; or
19.3.
Decline the application.
In
respect of 19.2 and 19.3, the provisions of section 5 of PAJA require
that the shortcomings and detailed reasons, respectively,
be provided
to the applicant.
20.
It stems from powers of the appellant
stated above that, the suspension of the operation of the full
accreditation granted to the
first respondent to 1st January 2023,
falls outside the statutory authority of the appellant. Not only
that, the impugned decision
of the appellant was proven, and admitted
by the appellant's counsel to be discriminatory against the first
respondent. In this
regard, the first respondent alleged and named
seven other institutions serving the purpose it serves, who have been
allowed by
the appellant to commence with the training programme mid
- 2022. Counsel for the appellant admitted to know of only one such
institution.
21.
The appellant's asserted reasoning that
it is due to the academic year commencing only on 1 January 2023,
that the suspension was
imposed is an unambiguous shameful
fabrication in the circumstances. The appellant has committed a
transgression of the provisions
of its enabling statute and the
explicit provisions of the constitution by its unjust, unfair and
discriminatory decision.
22.
This forms the foundation for the
dissent from the majority judgment. At line 5 of para [51) of the
majority judgment it is stated,
with regard to the flagrant and
unlawful discrimination against the first respondent:
".........
If SANC allowed other NEl's to commence mid - year with teaching
programmes that are subject to the same minimum
conditions as the
programmes that Khanyisa commenced with, SANC created a dilemma, they
acted in contravention of the regulations
and will surely face the
consequences in due course, but they did not create a precedent."
23.
The majority judgment ignores the
transgression
of
the fundamental principle encapsulated in the provisions of the
Constitution requiring justice, fairness and impartiality in
the
exercise of statutory powers. Discrimination in the exercise of
statutory authority is gross and not merely "a dilemma
and a
contravention of the regulations by the appellant for which the
appellant will suffer the consequences in due course".
The
conduct of the appellant should not be countenanced, least of all by
the court.
24.
The latter paragraphs of the majority
judgment tend more to turn a blind eye to the unconstitutionality and
wrongfulness of the
decision of the appellant, thereby adding salt to
a wound. The established unconstitutionality and unlawfulness of the
actions
of the appellant to the detriment of the first respondent and
its students is prejudicial. It deprives the students of their
constitutional
rights to education. That, befittingly, in my view,
emboldened
the
dissent from the majority judgment.
25.
The repulsive conduct of the appellant
alone was justification for the granting of the first respondent's
application in terms of
section 18(3) of the Superior Court Act. I
can think of no judicious reason warranting the grant of the relief
sought by the appellant
herein.
26.
There is obvious prejudice to the
students and the first respondent as stated above. The same cannot
justifiably be said in respect
of the appellant. Even if the
appellant was prejudiced, that will be of its own making and self -
inflicted. Must the court come
to the appellant's rescue in such that
circumstance?
# Justice
and the balance of convenience
Justice
and the balance of convenience
27.
I agree with majority judgment that the
appellant should suffer the consequences of its wrongdoing. However,
it is necessary to
abate the consequences where doing so will accord
with justice. In the circumstances of this case, by simply allowing
the first
respondent to continue, just like the other similar
institutions, the appellant has granted permission to, prejudice will
be abated
if not averted. This is given effect to by orders of the
court a quo which I embrace.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
28.
Stemming from the findings in this
judgment, I conclude that the appeal ought to fail.
# Costs
Costs
29.
The general principle that costs follow
the outcome of the litigation applies in this case.
# Order
Order
30.
Resulting from the findings in this
judgment, I would have made the following order:
1.
The appeal is dismissed
2.
The orders of the court a quo are
confirmed.
3.
The appellant is ordered to pay the
costs which costs shall include
the
costs
M.P.N.
MBONGWE J
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
DISAGREE
E
VAN DER SCHYFF
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
I
DISAGREE
A
MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
FOR
THE APPELLANT: ADV.
JAL PRETORIUS
WITH: ADV.
RC NETSIANDA
INSTRUCTED
BY: MAPONYA
INC.
FOR
THE FIRST RESPONDENT: ADV.
EVAN AS
WITH: ADV.
AA BASSON
INSTRUCTED
BY: JJ
JACOBS ATTORNEYS INC
DATE
OF THE HEARING: 10
OCTOBER 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 24
OCTOBER 2022
[1]
2017 (5) SA 402
(SCA) paras [28] and [35]-[37].
[2]
2014 (3) SA 189
(GJ) para [16).
[3]
(A503/2022; 11752/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 551 (4 August 2022) para [8].
[4]
Ntlemeza, supra, par (34).
[5]
Swart and Another v Cash Crusaders Franchising (Pty) Ltd (A98/2018
85149/2017)
2018 (6) SA 287
(GP) at para [4].
[6]
University of the Free State v Afriforum and Another
2018 (3) SA 428
(SCA) par [10].
[7]
(2780/2021) [2022] ZAECQBHC 24 (30 August 2022) at par [30]
[8]
1977 (3) SA 534
(A) in 545D-G
[9]
Supra, par [44].
[10]
[2020] ZASCA 149
;
2021 (3) SA 135
(SCA) at par
[
(19 November 2020)
[11]
[2016] ZAWCHC 34.
[12]
See, amongst others:
https://www.lawinsider.com/dictionary/calendar-year
[accessed on 9-10-2022):
https://dictionary.cambridge.org/dictionary/english/calendar-year
(accessed on 9-10-2022];
https://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/calendar-year
[accessed on 9-10-2022];
https://www.duhaime.org/Legal-Dictionary/Term/CalendarYear (accessed
on 9-10-2022]; https://www.betekenis-definitie.nl/kalenderjaar
[accessed on 9-10-2022];
https://www.vertalen.nu/betekenis/nl/kalenderjaar [accessed on
9-10-2022].
[13]
Knoop,supra, at par (29]. See also in this regard De Faria v
Sheriff, High Court, Witbank 2005(3) SA 372 at 397 and Schierhout
v
Minister of Justice
1962 AD 99
at page 109.
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