Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 851South Africa
Nkabinde v Eskom and Others (2022/35255) [2022] ZAGPPHC 851 (4 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
4 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nkabinde v Eskom and Others (2022/35255) [2022] ZAGPPHC 851 (4 November 2022)
Nkabinde v Eskom and Others (2022/35255) [2022] ZAGPPHC 851 (4 November 2022)
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sino date 4 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number
: 2022/35255
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
04
November 2022
In
the matter between:
MPHATHIWEZWE
NKABINDE APPLICANT
and
ESKOM 1st
RESPONDENT
HEAD
OF
SIU 2nd
RESPONDENT
SIU 3rd
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI
J
Delivered:
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’ legal
representatives by e-mail. The date and
time for hand-down is deemed
to be 10h00 on 04 November 2022.
[1]
This matter appeared before this Court in the urgent court where the
Applicant sought
interdictory relief in terms of which two orders
should be granted. The first order is in regard to the stay of the
disciplinary
hearing that is underway, instituted by the 1
st
Respondent against the Applicant. The order is sought to be granted
pending the institution by the Applicant of proceedings that
will
inter alia
request this Court to declare the disclosure made
by the Applicant to the 1
st
and/or 2
nd
Respondents and/or persons representing the 1
st
and/or 2
nd
Respondents, as a "protected disclosure", as contemplated
in terms of the provisions of the Protected Disclosures Act,
No. 26
of 2000 (“the Act”).
[2]
The second order sought is for the discovery by the 1
st
and/or 2
nd
and/or 3
rd
Respondents of various
documents and evidence that forms part of the said disciplinary
hearing.
[3]
Only the 1
st
Respondent is opposing the application on the
merits and has in addition raised the issues of urgency and
jurisdiction, as points
in limine
. The 1
st
Respondent contends in the points
in limine
that there is no
case made out for urgency in the applicant’s founding papers
and that this Court has no jurisdiction to
entertain this matter.
[4]
On the reasons set out hereunder, it is this Court’s view that
the matter ought
to be struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
[5]
The starting point for a matter to be heard in Court on an urgent
basis, is Uniform
Rule 6(12)(b) which stipulates that
“
In
every affidavit or petition filed in support of any application under
paragraph
(a)
of this sub-rule, the applicant shall set forth explicitly the
circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent and the reasons
why he claims that he could not be afforded substantial redress at a
hearing in due course.”
[6]
There are two requirements that the Applicant must satisfy in order
to have her/his
matter heard in the Urgent Court. These requirements
are that the applicant shall set forth explicitly (a) the
circumstances which
she/he avers render the matter urgent; and (b)
the reasons why she/he claims that she/he could not be afforded
substantial redress
at a hearing in due course.
[7]
In the papers before this Court, the urgency of this matter is said
to be created
by the 1
st
Respondent's unreasonable refusal
to stay the disciplinary proceedings against the Applicant, despite
request by the Applicant
to do so. This reason is linked to the main
relief which is sought in prayer 2 of the Notice of Motion, that is,
to stay disciplinary
proceedings pending the protected disclosure
relief.
[8]
There is no indication in the papers to show when the Applicant
became aware of his
rights in terms of the Act (what the 1
st
Respondent’s counsel referred to as the ‘trigger event’),
as such it cannot be determined from the papers whether
the matter is
urgent or not. Counsel for the Applicant, conceded as much in his
oral argument that from the papers as they stand
it cannot be
determined when the Applicant came to know of his contended rights,
which in turn impacts on his contention that the
matter is urgent.
[9]
In trying to salvage the Applicant’s case, counsel contended,
in oral argument
that it should be assumed, based on the evidence
proffered by the Applicant viewed as a whole, that as a lay person
and being represented
by a labour/employee representative at the
hearing, he did not know of his rights and/or could not have known of
his rights in
accordance with the Act, until he was informed by his
attorneys.
[10]
Yet, the Applicant does not in his founding affidavit state when he
employed the services of
an attorney. Nonetheless, there is a letter
on record to which this Court was referred to as proof that the
Applicant did request
the list of evidence from the 1
st
Respondent, that is dated 9 May 2022. This letter is written by
Elliot Attorneys who are the attorneys of record for the Applicant.
If the submission by counsel that the Applicant was informed by his
attorneys of the rights that are being infringed in the disciplinary
hearing, is to be accepted, then it would mean that as far back as
May 2022 the Applicant was aware of his rights. That, to this
Court
would be the date of the ‘trigger event’, which means
that, without any explanation provided why the matter is
only brought
to court now, the urgency, in such circumstances, is self-created.
[11]
Furthermore, in an attempt to save the Applicant’s case,
counsel, in turn relied on the
evidence contained in the 1
st
Respondent’s answering affidavit that the matter should be
regarded as urgent because the disciplinary hearing is nearing
finalisation. The 1
st
Respondent’s counsel objected
to the use of such evidence by the Applicant, contending that it is
completely wrong for the
Applicant to rely on what the 1
st
Respondent say in its answering affidavit, to justify urgency.
[12]
Even if this Court were to accept that indeed the disciplinary
proceedings are coming to an end
and the application before this
Court is as a result thereof urgent, the difficulty, as it would be
shown later in this judgment,
is that the Applicant has not been able
to get passed the second hurdle of the Uniform Rule 6(12)
requirements, that is, he will
not be afforded substantial redress in
a hearing in due course.
[13]
As far as prayer 2 sought by the Applicant in the Notice of Motion,
is concerned, that is the
stay of the disciplinary hearing, the
evidence show that only one letter was written to the 1
st
Respondent requesting the stay of proceedings which it appears was
never answered. The letter is dated 4 October 2022 and was send
per
email on the same date. The disciplinary hearing that was
sought to be stayed, was scheduled to be heard on 24 and 25 October
2022.
[14]
Save to say that the 1
st
Respondent is proceeding with the
hearing and refuses to stay the proceedings, despite his request to
stay same, and that he is
waiting for the next hearing date, the
Applicant says nothing about what transpired on the date of hearing
and why if there was
a hearing did the Applicant not inform the
presiding officer of the predicament he found himself in. Of great
concern is that he
fails, as conceded by his counsel, to inform this
Court when he came to the knowledge that his rights are being
infringed and that
he requires to approach the Court for a
determination of those rights.
[15]
As regards prayer 3 sought in the Notice of Motion, that is, the
discovery of evidence, the evidence
on record establishes that the
Applicant requested the 1
st
Respondent to provide him only
with the Bowman Report, bank statements and the recording of the
hearings that occurred during 2021,
for transcription (“the
Recording”). The Bowman Report was requested as far back as 20
April 2022, in an email the
Applicant sent to the 1
st
Respondent on that day, which email appears not to have been
answered. Since that day, the Applicant has done nothing about that
request.
[16]
In his founding papers, the Applicant states that he has not been
provided with a list of the
evidence which he requested the 1
st
Respondent to provide him with. In this regard, he referred this
Court to a letter written by his attorneys of record to the 1
st
Respondent dated 9 May 2022 and sent
per
email on the same
date (“Annexure D”). There is no list of evidence
requested in that letter except bank statements
and the Recording.
Included in Annexure D, are copies of internal email correspondence
of the 1
st
Respondent, dated 2 June 2022, that shows that
the 1
st
Respondent did not possess any other documents
except the charge sheet and all the evidence that have already been
provided to
the Applicant. Even in this regard, no other request has
been made.
[17]
The Applicant further mentions in his founding affidavit that he
seeks an order disclosing all
evidence exchanged between the 1
st
Respondent and the 2
nd
Respondent, pertaining to himself,
and a confirmation filed under oath, of how his bank statements were
obtained by the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents, within
14 days of date of this order. There is no evidence on record
indicating that the Applicant has ever requested
such evidence from
the 1
st
Respondent and that if ever he required this
information, when did he become aware of such exchange of evidence.
[18]
The ‘trigger event’ in respect of both prayers, is not
visible from the papers, to
provide sustenance to the Applicant’s
claim that this matter is urgent. In the first place, there is no
evidence, on the
papers filed of record, indicating when the
Applicant became aware of his rights contemplated in the Act or when
he became aware
that he should institute action for the determination
of those rights. Secondly, there is no evidence that indicates why he
did
not follow up on the requests for evidence and/or documents that
he made and to which the 1
st
Respondent did not respond
to. Except for the evidence that is alluded to in the above
paragraphs of this judgment, there is no
evidence that establishes
that the Applicant ever requested the 1
st
Respondent to
provide him with any other documents and/or information and/or
evidence. The fact is, it cannot be ascertained from
the papers why
it is now urgent that these documents and/or information and/or
evidence should be provided on an urgent basis.
[19]
The Applicant failed to pass the first hurdle for the requirement of
urgency as set out in Uniform
Rule 6(12), and on this requirement
alone the application falls to be dismissed.
[20]
It is this Court’s view that the Applicant has, also, failed in
the second requirement.
As argued by the 1
st
Respondent,
correctly so, the Applicant has not made out a case to demonstrate as
to what would happen to him, which in law should
not happen to him,
if the application is not heard on an urgent basis.
[21]
It is trite that the question of whether a matter is sufficiently
urgent to be enrolled and heard
as an urgent application is
underpinned by the issue of absence of substantial redress in due
course. As such, the rule allows
the court to come to the
assistance of a litigant because if the latter were to wait for the
normal course she/he will not obtain
substantial redress.
[22]
The Applicant has not made out a case in the founding papers why he
cannot get substantial redress
at a hearing in due course. In one
line in his founding affidavit, the Applicant states that
‘Unfortunately, it will take
many months to be heard in the
normal course and it will take many months for the aforesaid
proceedings to be finalised.’
The allegations he makes are
unsubstantiated. He leaves it to the Court to figure out why it will
take months for the aforesaid
proceedings to be heard and to be
finalised. Thus, on this requirement, the Applicant’s case of
urgency, falls flat.
[23]
It is a trite principle of our law that urgency is not there for the
taking. An applicant who
wants her/his case to be heard on the basis
of urgency must make out a good case in her/his founding affidavit as
required in terms
of Uniform Rule 6(12). The Court should not be
swayed to grant a hearing in the urgent court by sympathy where the
Applicant has
failed to make out her/his case.
[24]
It is on all this reasons as afore stated that this Court makes a
ruling that the application
should be struck from the roll for lack
of urgency.
[25]
The Applicant’s counsel requested this Court to apply the
Biowatch
principle
[1]
in the event that
this Court does not rule in favour of the Applicant. The Court in
Biowatch
held that the general rule in constitutional litigation is that an
unsuccessful litigant in proceedings against the State ought
not to
be ordered to pay costs, unless the application is frivolous or
vexatious or in any other way manifestly inappropriate.
[26]
Counsel submits that the principle is applicable because the
Applicant is contending, in these
proceedings, for his rights as
contemplated in the Act and was litigating on a
bona fide
basis. The order contended for by counsel is that even if the
Applicant is not successful the order for costs should be made
against
the 1
st
Respondent, as an organ of State.
[27]
Save to request that the application be dismissed with costs of two
counsel on a punitive scale,
the 1
st
Respondent has not
made out an argument, either in its papers or in oral argument,
specifically pertaining to the
Biowatch
principle, nor argued
whether the matter involved the constitutional rights of the
Applicant.
[28]
Whether
Biowatch
is applicable or not depends on the facts of
each case. In the circumstances of this matter, this Court holds a
view that the case
presented constitutional rights of the Applicant,
in that he alleges that his rights in accordance with the Act are
being trampled
on in the disciplinary hearing. There is, also, no
evidence on record that the application is frivolous or vexatious or
manifestly
inappropriate. The complaint by the 1
st
Respondent’s counsel is only that the matter is clearly not
urgent and that the Applicant did not approach the correct forum.
This does not amount to the application being frivolous or vexatious
or manifestly inappropriate, thus, the
Biowatch
principle is
found to be applicable.
[29]
Consequently, the 1
st
Respondent should be ordered to pay
the Applicant’s costs on a party and party scale.
[30]
The following order is made –
1.
The application is struck from the roll.
2.
The 1
st
Respondent is order to pay the Applicant’s
costs on a party and party scale.
E.M
KUBUSHI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
:
APPLICANTS’
COUNSEL:
ADV. G
LOUW
APPLICANTS’
ATTORNEYS:
ELLIOT
ATTORNEYS
FIRST
RESPONDENT’S COUNSEL:
ADV.
K TSATSAWANE, SC
ADV.
HUMBULANI SALANI
FIRST
RESPONDENT’S ATTORNEYS:
RAMATSHILA — MUGERI
INC.
[1]
Biowatch Trust v Genetic Resources and Others
2009 (6) BA 232
(CC).
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