Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 977South Africa
Financial Sector Conduct Authority v Municipal Worker's Retirement Fund (A50/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 977 (15 December 2022)
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## Financial Sector Conduct Authority v Municipal Worker's Retirement Fund (A50/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 977 (15 December 2022)
Financial Sector Conduct Authority v Municipal Worker's Retirement Fund (A50/21) [2022] ZAGPPHC 977 (15 December 2022)
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sino date 15 December 2022
IN
THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA (GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: A50/21
REPORTABLE:
YES/ NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/ NO
REVISED
DATE:
15 December 2022
THE
FINANCIAL
SECTOR
CONDUCT
AUTHORITY
APPELLANT
and
MUNICIPAL
WORKER’S RETIREMENT
FUND
RESPONDENT
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email. The date and time of
hand-down is deemed to be 15 December 2022.
The
Court: Potterill J, Khumalo J and Molefe J
JUDGMENT
N
V KHUMALO J
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
This
is
an
appeal
by
the
Financial
Sector
Conduct
Authority (“Conduct Authority”),
against the judgment of Basson J delivered in this court on 3 March
2020, granting
the Municipal Worker’s Retirement Fund (“the
Fund”) a declaratory order that the Fund’s board of
trustees
as presently constituted complies with the provisions of s 7
A (1) of the Pensions Fund Act 24 of 1956 (“the Act”).
The appeal is with leave of Basson J.
[2]
The Fund, which is established and duly
registered in terms of the Act is responsible for the management of
collective retirement
savings of municipal employees employed by
various Municipalities located in every part of the country.
[3]
The
Conduct Authority was established in terms of s 56 of the Financial
Sector Regulatory Act 9 of 2017 (“the FSRA”)
that came
into effect on March 2017
[1]
and
is in terms of s 30 (3) thereof the regulatory body of the Fund. It
came into existence on 1 April 2018 and took over the regulatory
and
supervisory
functions
previously
performed
by
the
FSB
and
in the previous context, the Registrar of Pension Funds.
[4]
The issue between the parties on appeal
is whether the
court a quo
was
correct in finding that the Fund’s board of trustees is
constituted in compliance with the provisions of s 7A (1) of the
Act.
The Conduct Authority sought a finding that the rules of the Fund in
relation to the election of the members constituting
the Fund’s
board of trustees do not comply with s 7 A (1) of the Act, and
accordingly to be granted an order dismissing the
Fund’s
application with costs.
[5]
The contention in essence turns mainly
on the interpretation of s 7A (1), which is to be read with the rules
of the Fund in relation
to the conformation of the Fund’s board
of trustees.
[6]
In addition, the Fund persisted with its
alternative relief raised in the court
a
quo
for a
declaratory order
in the
event the court
finds that
its board did not meet the requirements
of s 7A (1), that “the Conduct Authority is required to grant
the Fund an exemption
from the requirement to comply with s 7A (1)
for an indefinite period,” plus an order reviewing and setting
aside the decision
of the Registrar granting the Fund an exemption
for a definite period and replacing it with a decision granting an
exemption for
an indefinite period.” The Fund initially sought
an alternative order only declaring that “the Registrar, in
granting
the Fund the required exemption in terms of s 7B (1) (b) for
a definite or determined period, acted
ultra
vires
the provisions of the
section.” The
court
a quo did not decide on the issues raised in the alternative order,
following its finding on the primary relief.
[7]
Notwithstanding the Conduct Authority’s
initial view that the issues are limited to the court a quo’s
findings, it conceded
to the Fund’s alternative relief, the
contention of which is also mainly on the interpretation of s 7B (2).
The issue being
whether the exemption granted under s 7B (1) was to
remain extant unless withdrawn in accordance with s 7B (2) or for a
definite
period as per condition determined by the Registrar. The
powers of the Registrar also scrutinized.
# Legislative
framework
Legislative
framework
[8]
The requirement for the Board of fund’s
compliance are set out in s 7 A of the Act that reads:
(1)
Notwithstanding the rules of a fund,
every fund shall have a board, consisting of at least four board
members, at least 50% of whom
the members of the fund shall have the
right to elect.
(2)
Subject to subsection (1), the
constitution of a board, the election procedure of the members
mentioned in that subsection, the
appointment and terms of office of
the members, the procedures at meetings, the voting rights of
members, the quorum for a meeting,
the breaking of deadlocks and the
powers of the board shall be set out in the rules of the fund:
Provided that if a board consists
of four members or less, all the
members shall constitute a quorum at a meeting. [ S. 7A inserted by
s. 2 of Act No. 22 of 1996]
[9]
Two requirements are therefore imposed
by s 7A (1) which are that: [9.1]
The
board must be composed of at least 4 members;
[9.1]
The board must be composed of at least 4 members.
[9.2]
50% of whom the fund members have a right to elect.
[10]
In casu
,
the contention is with regard to the second requirement, the right of
the Fund members to elect 50% of the board members. A Fund
may
however in terms of s 7B apply for an exemption from compliance with
the requirements as imposed by s 7 A (1).
[11]
Section 7B on exemption from compliance
reads:
(1)
The registrar may on written application
of a fund and subject to such conditions as may be determined by the
Registrar:
(a)
authorise a fund to have a board
consisting of less than four board members if such number is
impractical or unreasonably expensive:
Provided that the members of
the fund shall have the right to elect at least 50% of the board
members;
(b)
exempt a fund from the requirement that
the members of the fund have the right to elect members of the board,
if the fund
(i)
has been established for the benefit of
employees
of
different
employers
referred
to
in
the
definition of “pension fund" and "provident fund”
as defined in section 1 of the Income Tax Act, 1962
(Act No. 58 of
1962);
(ii)
is a retirement annuity fund;
(iii)
is a beneficiary fund; or
(iv)
is a pension preservation fund or a
provident preservation fund as defined in section 1 of the Income Tax
Act, 1962.
[subsection (1)
substituted by section 3 of Act 22 of 2008]
(2)
The
registrar may
withdraw an
exemption granted
under subsection (1)(a) or (1)(b) if a
fund no longer qualifies for such exemption.
[12]
The relevant rules of the Fund which
must give effect to the provision of s 7A (1) of the Act on the
constitution and election of
the trustees to the board, provides as
follows, that:
10.1.3
The TRUSTEES shall be elected as
follows: (a)TRUSTEES shall be elected from amongst member
representatives and TRUSTEE at a Provincial
Annual General Meeting.
Two TRUSTEES shall be elected from each province, namely KwaZulu
Natal, Eastern Cape, Northern Cape, Western
Cape, Gauteng,
Mpumalanga, Limpopo, North West Province and Free State Provinces.
TRUSTEES shall be elected by secret ballot or
by show of hands, as
determined
by
the
MEMBER
representatives and/or presiding officer
present at the meeting.
(b)
The Union shall be entitled to nominate
two representatives of the Union as the Trustee, who shall be members
of the Fund (now amended)
(This clause has since been removed by Rule
Amendment 8)
(c)
If an employer has more than 5 000
employees who are members of the Fund, the Members who are employees
of such an employer, shall
be entitled to nominate an additional
TRUSTEE.
10.1.8
Each PARTICIPATING EMPLOYER shall be entitled to elect two MEMBER
representatives or each unit or division of
PARTICIPATING EMPLOYER
shall be entitled to elect one-MEMBER
representative up to a maximum of four MEMBER representatives,
provided no member representative
shall be elected where there is
less than 20 MEMBERS in a participating EMPLOYER, employer or unit or
division.
# Background
facts
Background
facts
[13]
The Fund, as it is established for the
benefit of employees of different employers envisaged in s 7 B (1)
(b) (i), had previously
applied and was exempted from compliance with
s 7 A (1), that is the requirement that
the members
of the fund have
the right
to elect members
of the board, on the premise that the
constitution of the Fund’s board of trustees was not compliant
with such requirement.
[14]
The exemption was granted for stipulated
or definite periods. The first exemption was granted on 6 July 2016
for a period of one
year (“first exemption”) and on
expiry thereof, a further exemption was granted on 6 July 2017 on the
same basis. On
its application for a second exemption, the Fund was
informed that not only was its application out of time, its board was
not
properly constituted in accordance with the provisions of s 7A
(1) which requires each member to elect members of the board and
consequently required to appoint a new board.
[15]
The Fund lodged an appeal and an urgent
application in the above honourable court for the review and the
setting aside of the decision
by the Registrar to grant the Fund an
exemption for a period of one year. On 31 July 2017 before the
application was heard, the
Fund was granted a second exemption (“the
current exemption”) for an extended period of three (3) years,
which was
to expire on 30 June 2020 and consequently withdrew its
urgent application.
[16]
However the Fund subsequently obtained a
legal opinion that it actually did not require an exemption granted
in terms of s 7B (1)
(b) (i), as its board of trustees was
constituted in compliance with the provisions of s 7 A (1) of the
Act. Based on that opinion
it proceeded with the application in the
court a quo for the declaratory order that it does comply, alleging
that:
[16.1]
The Fund’s board of trustees took a decision on 26 July 2017,
to amend the Fund’s rules
and get the proposal to Rule
Amendment 8 approved, which proposed to delete Clause 10.1.3 (b) of
the Fund’s rules that allows
the South African Municipal
Workers Union to nominate two (2) representatives to the Board of
Trustees. The approval of the amendment
meant clause 10.1.3 (b) was
to be deleted, then the exemption no longer required, in other words
the Fund automatically became
compliant in that the majority of the
Board is therefore elected directly and indirectly by the members of
the Fund. Also suggesting
the amendment to mean all board members
will be elected directly or indirectly by the members of the Fund.
Although at the time
their Application was launched, Rule Amendment 8
had not been approved and there was no response from the Registrar.
That is borne
out by the current composition of the board whose list
demonstrates that there are two trustees representing each of the
nine (9)
Provinces and two trustees representing the South African
Municipal Workers Union, giving a total of 20 trustees. There are no
trustees directly elected by the members of the Fund, where there are
more than 5 000 members who are employees of a single employer.
[16.2]
The Fund’s Rules do make provision
for its members to elect the Board members. The majority of the
members of the Fund’s
Board are directly or indirectly elected
by members of the Fund and notably none of the Trustees is elected by
any of the Municipal
employers, in that Rule 10.1.9 deals with the
election of member representatives and according to the Fund the way
the clause is
applied is that ‘within each participating
employer (that is every
municipality
throughout
South
Africa)
around
which
has
at least 20 members of the Fund “two
provincial member representatives are elected at a provincial
meeting. They are elected
by members of the Fund itself and not by
the employers. These member representatives then attend the
Provincial Annual General
meetings, at which each Province elect two
trustees to the Board in terms of clause 10.1.3 (a). The elected
Provincial representatives,
therefore acting collectively appoint two
Board members to make up a Board of trustees that constitutes 18
Board members.
[16.3]
The trustees are elected from a list of nominees nominated by members
of the Fund from each Province.
This means that after electing the
member representatives, all of the members of the Fund may nominate a
short list of nominee
drawn from the member representatives, to be
elected onto the Board of Trustees. The member representatives will
then vote on the
short list to elect the two Provincial Trustees. The
board of trustees as a result consists of at least 18 trustees who
are directly
elected by the member representative at the various
Provincial Annual General Meetings, who are themselves elected
directly by
members. The members themselves therefore elect the
Trustees indirectly.
[16.4]
Two trustees are elected by the South African Union Municipal Workers
Union members (where the Union
itself is representative of employees
not employers and if Rule Amendment 8 is approved, then this clause
will be deleted and there
will be no Union representative); and
Trustees directly elected by the members of the Fund, where there are
more than 5 000 members
who are employees of a single employer.
[17]
The Conduct Authority on the other hand
contended that the right contemplated is one that allows members a
direct say in the election
of the Trustees of the Fund. An indirect
right which provides for members to elect some other representative
who may appoint or
elect a Trustee does not afford the members an
opportunity or a right to elect the Trustees of the Fund, where the
vast majority
of the members of the Fund have no say either directly
or indirectly in the composition of “the majority of the
members of
the Board” of the Fund.
[18]
Fundamentally
it argued that Section s 7A (1) affords a right to the members of the
Fund to elect at least 50% of the Trustees of
that Fund’s
board, which confers on each and every member a direct say in the
election of 50% of the Trustees. Such an interpretation
accordingly
reinforces the right of the members to elect their quota of trustees,
when regard is had to the purpose of s 7 A (1)
as described by Harmse
in
Gumede
& Others vs Pep Provident Fund,
[2]
which
is to give the Fund members equal say in the affairs of the Fund not
others on their behalf which is to have a direct right
to elect the
trustees. It found the Fund’s contentment of indirect election
untenable.
[19]
The mentioned position is, according to
the Conduct Authority reinforced by the fact that the Fund has not
cited the rules of the
Fund it relies upon properly, especially the
provisions of 10.1.3. (a) which was amended by Rule Amendment 2 that
was registered
on 27 January 2014 and further amendment on its first
sentence by Rule Amendment 5 with effect from 1 March 2018 and at
present
reads:
“
Trustees
shall be elected amongst member representatives and Trustees at the
Provincial Annual General Meetings. Two trustees shall
be elected
from each Province, namely KwaZulu Natal, Eastern Cape, Northern
Cape, Western Cape, Gauteng, Mpumalanga, Limpopo, North
West Province
and Free State Provinces. Trustees shall be elected by secret or show
of hands as determined by the member representatives
and or presiding
officer present at that meeting.”
[20]
Accordingly Rule 10.1.3 (b) has been
deleted by Rule Amendment 8 which was registered on 13 November 2017
but had an effective date
of 1 September 2017. Whilst Rule 10.1.9,
10.1.12, 10.1.13 were amended by Rule Amendment 5 which was
registered on 22 July
2016 and had an effective date of 1 March 2016.
They now read as follows:
10.1.9
Each participating employer shall be entitled to elect two member
representatives or each unit or division of participating
employer
shall be entitled to elect one-member representative up to a maximum
of four member representatives, provided no member
representative
shall be elected where there is less than 20 members in a
participating employer or unit or division.
10.1.12
The Fund shall organise Provincial Annual General meetings for member
representatives and Trustees at any time between August
and October.
10.1.13
The provisions of 10.1.3 to 10.1.7 shall apply mutatis mutandis to
member representatives.
[21]
In respect of those changes the Conduct
Authority argued that the Fund’s Rules are not a model of
clarity as far as the process
of election of Trustees
by members
is concerned,
which compelled
the Fund
to
interpret Rule 10.1.9 by referring to the manner in which the rule is
both understood and applied. However, still pertinently
clear from
the rules and the manner in which they are implemented as explained
by the Fund that they do not comply with s 7 A (1)
because the
members do not have a right to elect at least 50% of the Board of
management of the Fund.
What
the Fund’s rules contemplate is a tier process where the
members in any given participating employer comprising more
than 20
members have the right to elect one- member representative to be sent
as a delegate to the Provincial Annual General Meeting
of the Fund
where the elected delegates then elect two trustees amongst their
ranks, to the Board of the Fund. In that process
members of the Fund
have no opportunity, let alone a right to elect trustees to the Board
but at best have a right to elect a delegate
which is not the same as
a right to elect a Trustee. When making a choice to elect a delegate
to the provincial meeting the members
of the Fund would not know
whether or not the delegates for who they vote may be nominated for
election to the Board.
[22]
The contention by the Conduct Authority
is therefore that the Fund’s rules only provide for Provincial
Annual General Meetings
from which two trustees are appointed from
each of the nine provinces of South Africa by provincial
representatives of each Province
and the Fund’s trustees. There
is no reason given for the presence of the incumbent trustees of the
Fund at this meeting
nor which Fund members they represent. Whilst s
7 A (1) does not allow for members’ provincial representatives
and incumbent
trustees to exercise an election vicariously on the
members’ behalf.
[23]
The Conduct Authority further argued
that the Fund’s own interpretation and illustration of its
election process for the members
in any given province, or their
representatives in terms of the Rules at best participate indirectly
in the appointment of two
trustees to the full Board complement of 18
trustees. The members in one province therefore have no opportunity
to determine who
the remaining 6 trustees will be and not afforded
any opportunity to do so which is again contrary to s 7 A (1) of the
PFA Act
which requires that the members elect at least 50% of the
Trustees.
In
that
case
the
situation
is
compounded
by
the
Fund’s
Rule 10.1.9 that provides that if there
are less than 20 members in a participating
employer
unit
or
divisions
those
members
cannot
elect
a
representative to the Provincial Annual General Meeting and are
effectively disfranchised, such members will have no representative
at the Provincial Annual General Meeting which on the Fund’s
own argument these members do not have the right to elect any
Trustees whether directly or indirectly which is once again clearly
contrary to s 7A (1).
[24]
The situation was further pointed by the
Conduct Authority to be compounded by the fact that Rule Amendment 3,
amended the schedule
of benefits to the Rule and extended the
membership requirement for eligibility to allow membership of all
local Government, Municipality,
and or State Owned Enterprise
employees. However, the Fund in its Founding Affidavit stated that in
practice the employees participating
in the Fund are various South
African Municipalities and Municipalities entities but silent about
the position and fate of employees
in state owned enterprises who
would generally not have access to processes and structures available
within the local Government
spheres.
[25]
The Conduct Authority regarded the
Fund’s argument on the indirect election to be a contention
that members have waived their
right to elect trustees to the board,
receding this right to representatives at a Provincial level, who
amongst themselves appoint
two trustees from the Provincial
representatives and the Fund trustees present at the Annual General
Meeting, which is not permissible
in terms of section 7A (1), because
the member’s right to elect is a direct right which is not
capable of being waived or
exercised in an indirect manner as the
Fund contends. The Conduct Authority made reference to
Gumede
supra
at [41], where it is stated
that:
“
Not
every right can be waived. The leading case remain Richt and Bhyat vs
Union of Justice vs
1912 AD 719
734-735 where the following
principles were stated. The maxim everyone is able to renounce a
right conferred by the law for his
own benefit is subject to certain
exceptions of which one was that no one can renounce a right contrary
to law, or a right introduced
not only for his own benefit but in the
interest of the Public as well. No one can renounce a right which is
duty to the public
which the claims of society forbid the
renunciation of. An individual cannot waive a matter in which the
public have an interest.
Waiver is not possible, the result of a
renunciation by an individual would be to abrogate the terms of a
statute which in their
nature are mandatory and not merely directory.
Because otherwise the result would be not merely to destroy private
rights, but
to defeat the provisions of an enactment intended on
public or general grounds to be peremptory and binding on all
concerned.”
[26]
The submission being that if the
Legislature intended to permit the delegation of the member’s
right to elect trustees or
to allow members to elect provincial
representatives or to provide that members had a right to elect only
a minor component of
a Fund’s board of management, it would
have said so expressly.
[27]
The
Fund’s
Rule
10.1.3
(c)
that is
now numbered
10.1.3 (b) following the registration of
Amendment 8 was also pointed out by the Conduct Authority as not
providing for the direct
election by members of an employer of an
additional trustee, where such an employer has more than 5 000
employees who are members
of the Fund. The Rule allows members of
such an employer to nominate an additional trustee, however the
Conduct Authority argues
that even if such nomination was to be
regarded as an election of that trustee, not all of the members of
the Fund had this right
to elect such additional trustees, only some
and no such trustees have ever been elected as in accordance with the
Fund’s
founding affidavit. In that instance it argued that the
registration of Amendment 8 had not assisted the Fund in terms of its
compliance
with s 7A (1), it remained non-compliant.
[28]
Based on the stated grounds, the Conduct
Authority submitted that the Fund’s Rules do not comply with s
7A (1) stipulation
that the Fund members shall have a right to elect
at least 50% of the trustees to the Fund’s board. It therefore
noted that
the Fund as the multi- employer may therefore make an
application for exemption from s 7A (1) in terms of s 7B (1) (b)
which is
what the Fund had done in the past and currently operates
and may now, in terms of the Conduct Authority’s newly adopted
regulatory strategy, be granted for an indefinite period.
[29]
In addressing the Conduct Authority’
contentions, the Fund refuted that the proper interpretation of s 7A
(1) provisions that
“the members of the Fund shall have the
right to elect at least 50% of the Board of the Fund” is that
every member
must elect each of the member elected board members or
that the member elected board members be elected directly, but
alleged the
provision instead to be silent on the means through which
members can exercise their right, whether direct or indirect election
of member trustees permissible and that to confirm that the answer is
a matter of statutory interpretation which according to the
Fund, s
7A (1) does allow for the indirect election of trustees.
[30]
The Fund admitted that the rules of the
Fund do not override the Pension Fund Act but in terms of s 13 of the
Act, to be subject
to the Act. However, still disputed that the
section confers on every member of a Fund a right to directly elect
each Trustee,
and argued that the Conduct Authority’s
interpretation of s 7A (1) is not workable but contrary to a proper
interpretation
of the PFA, denying that the matter of
Gumede
supra
supports the contentions of
the Conduct Authority submitting that at best it is neutral.
[31]
Furthermore the Fund admitted that the
only limitation occurring is where there are less than 20 member
employees in a participating
employer, unit or division. The purpose
of the limitation being to ensure that a small number of members
within a participating
employer, unit or division are not given a
disproportionate voice in the election of a member representative, in
circumstances
where another participating employer or unit
or
division
has
thousands
of
members.
Being
apparent
that
clause
10.1.9 of the Fund’s Rules provides that members within each
participating employer are able to elect two member representatives,
alternatively the members within each unit or division, as long as
there are not more than four-member representative altogether
for
each participating employer.
[32]
The Fund further pointed out that the
Appellant
failed
to mention that the election of trustees by a member representative
takes place from a short list of nominees who are elected
directly by
the members within the various participating employers within each
province. Agrees that every member will not know
whether the person
they nominated to the shortlist will be elected as trustee arguing
that which is always the case with elections.
A member does however
know that the member representative who was directly elected will
vote for a trustee from a shortlist of
nominee who were directly
elected.
[33]
Accordingly, the Fund argued that s 7A
(1) should be read purposively not mechanically, its purpose being to
ensure that the board
is not dominated by employer nominated
representatives but is balanced by the inclusion of member elected
representatives. The
individual profile of a Fund may dictate that an
election of a member elected Trustee is done on a Regional basis or
indirectly
via an Electoral College system. Either of these will
still serve the purpose for which s 7A (1) is intended to achieve and
may
do so more effectively than a system in which every member has a
right to elect all member elected trustees
.
Also where the membership is
geographically fragmented, it is difficult to know which of the
candidates from the other regions to
support. In such a case a
constituency based election process would be more effective in
achieving the objects of the section.
[34]
The Fund also pointed out that only
provincial delegates vote for trustees. Sitting trustees do not take
part in the election in
their capacities as trustees, however may be
nominated for a further term in which case they may be re-elected by
the delegates
at the Provincial Annual General Meeting. The Fund
members only vote to elect the two trustees from their Province which
it argued
is not inconsistent with s 7A (1), as there is no right in
s 7 A (1) for every member to vote for every trustee. It refuted any
suggestion that any members have waived their rights to elect
trustees, accepting that members cannot waive their statutory right
set out in s 7A. Also that there is also no delegation of rights, but
the Fund rules provide for a form of indirect election. However,
emphasised that in its view the process of indirect election of
trustees meets the requirements of s 7A.
# Analysis
Analysis
Compliance
with s 7A (1)
[35]
It is correct that the answer to the
contention whether or not the Fund complies with s 7A (1) lies in the
interpretation of the
provisions of the subsection and mainly the
purpose for which it was created. The subsection specifically
provides that “Notwithstanding
the rules of a Fund, every Fund
shall have a Board, consisting of at least of 4 Board members, at
least 50% of whom the members
of the Fund shall have the right to
elect.”
[36]
Wallis
JA in
Natal
Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[3]
summarised
the principles of statutory interpretation as follows:-
[36.1]
The process of interpretation is objective, not subjective.
[36.2]
A sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible
or unbusinesslike results or
that undermines the apparent
purpose of the document
.
[36.3]
Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation to
substitute what they regard as reasonable, sensible or business
like
for the words actually used. To do so in regard to a statute or
statutory instrument is to cross the divide between interpretation
and legislation.
[36.4]
From the outset it is necessary to consider the context and the
language together, with neither predominating over the other.
This is the approach that courts in South Africa should now follow,
without the need to cite authorities from an earlier era that
are not
necessarily consistent and which frequently reflect an approach to
interpretation that is no longer appropriate.
[36.5]
Accordingly, to characterise the task of interpretation as a search
for such an ephemeral and possibly chimerical meaning
is unrealistic
and misleading.
[36.6]
In resolving these problems,
the apparent purpose of the
provision and the context in which it occurs will be important
guides to
the correct interpretation
. An interpretation
will not be given that leads to impractical, un-businesslike or
oppressive consequences
, or
that will
stultify the
broader operation of the legislation or contract under
consideration.
(my emphasis)
[37]
The
interpretation is
therefore with
an understanding
that every
word within a statute is, as a result,
there for a purpose and should be given its due significance. If the
precise words used are
plain and unambiguous, in our judgment, we are
bound to construe them in their ordinary grammatical sense, even
though it does
lead, in our view of the case, to an absurdity or
manifest injustice.
[38]
The
Constitutional
Court
had
in
Bato
Star
Fishing
(Pty)
Ltd
v Minister of Environmental Affairs
[4]
previous
to
Endumeni
affirmed
these principles stating, albeit in
dictum
that:
“
the
emerging trend in statutory construction is to have regard to the
context in which the words occur, even where the words to
be
construed are clear and unambiguous”.
[39]
A
clearly outlined Constitutional perspective consistent with the
principles for statutory interpretation were laid down by the
Constitutional Court in
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard
[5]
as
follows:
“
A
fundamental tenet of statutory interpretation is that
the words in
a
statute must be given their ordinary grammatical meaning,
unless to do so would result in an absurdity. There are three
important interrelated riders to this general principle, namely:
(a)
that
statutory
provisions
should
always
be
interpreted
purposively;
(b)
the relevant statutory provision must be
properly contextualised; and
(c)
all
statutes
must
be
construed
consistently
with the
Constitution, that is, where
reasonably possible,
legislative
provisions ought to be interpreted to
preserve their
constitutional
validity.
This
proviso to the general principle is closely related to the purposive
approach referred to in (a).” (my emphasis)
[40]
The golden rule being that the words of
a statute must
prima facie
be
given their ordinary (plain) meaning wherever possible and when they
are clear, plain and unambiguous, then the courts are bound
to give
effect to that meaning, irrespective of the consequences. The yet
important, and interrelated to the general principle
of statutory
construction that cannot be compromised are the requirement that all
statutory provisions are to be purposively interpreted,
in the right
context and construed consistently with the Constitution and where
reasonably possible to preserve their Constitutional
validity.
[41]
In finding that the constitution of the
Board of Trustees was compliant with the requirements of s 7A (1) and
the purpose for which
s 7A (1) was enacted, the
court
a quo
referred to the statement by
Harmse in the matter of
Gumede supra
(referenced by both parties), at
para 31, explaining and emphasising the purpose of the provision,
that:
“
The
purpose of the provision is to give members of the Fund (at least)
equal say in the affairs of the Fund. It democratises the
management
of Funds by creating minimum of requirements relating to the
representation of members. They, and not others on their
behalf have
a right to elect the quota of trustees.”
[42]
The clear purpose being that members of
the Fund shall have the right to elect, the quota of the trustees,
giving each member a
right not an opportunity, to equally participate
in the election of the trustees. That is a straight forward analysis
by Harmse
on the significance of the purpose of s 7A (1). The Fund
members are bestowed with an equal right to express their personal
choice,
which is a public interest right that carries a special and
important significance in the context of enforcing a democratic
management
of Funds as a Constitutional imperative.
[43]
The election procedures as prescribed by
the rules of the Fund do not enable the members to exercise their
right as it was intended,
but lets them elect provincial
representative who will exercise that right on their behalf,
resulting in a deference of their right
to these representatives or
delegates. The prescribed deference being not an individual choice
therefore undemocratic. The parties
have agreed that the process
rather creates an indirect participation of the members in the
election of the trustees, unfortunately
involuntarily and contrary to
democratic management intended by the provision. Again for the reason
that it is not a
choice
exercised
voluntarily
but enforced
through prescripts of the Fund, it
cannot be regarded to be “a waiver of a right” as argued
by the Conduct Authority
with reference to
Richt
and Bhyat v Union Government
(Minister
of Justice,) as quoted in
Gumede
supra
. I would therefore not even
consider the issue on the basis of a waiver.
[44]
The Fund in arguing its point put
further emphasis on the number of the trustees elected through the
structures that has also increased
as a result of the Rule Amendments
effected to Rules 10.1.3 and 10.1.4 meeting the quota or increasing
the number of member elected
trustees on the board. That is
compliance with only one aspect of the requirements of s 7A (1) which
however becomes nugatory if
there is non- compliance with the second
requirement of the subsection, due to members not fully participating
in the election
of these trustees as prescribed by the law. It would
not matter that the number elected by the structures is more than the
quota,
which is what Rule Amendment 5 and 8 would have achieved. The
process of their election is still inconsistent with the
Constitutionally
protected value of equal participation by all
members in the election of the trustees.
[45]
The third point that has been raised by
the Conduct Authority that the requirements of Rule 10.1.9 render the
Fund non-compliant
has merit. The Rule provides that:-
“
Each
participating employer shall be entitled to elect two representatives
or each unit or division of participating employer shall
be entitled
to elect one member representative up to a maximum of four member
representatives provided no member representative
shall be elected
where there is less than 20 members in a participating employer or
unit or division.”
[46]
The members that fall under a
participating employer with less than 20 member employees are
disenfranchised as they are totally
excluded from the process when
the purpose of the provision is to democratise the way the Funds are
managed which would be through
giving the Fund members an equal say,
in exercising the right to participate in the election of the board
of trustees as bestowed
by s 7A (1) (a). The procedural exclusion is
a perfect example also of a Fund rule that is directly contradictory
to the purpose
of s 7A (1) (a).
The
argument by the Fund that the purpose of excluding these Fund members
is to ensure that a small number of members within a participating
employer, unit or division is not given a disproportionate voice is
astounding, as the effect thereof is actually
the
denial
of
a
voice,
discriminatory
and
inconsistent
with
the
constitutional values propounded in
Gumede
and clearly intended by the section.
[47]
The Appeal will have to be upheld on
that contention, that as long as the Rules do not provide for the
direct participation of the
Fund members in the election of the
trustees, and continue to exclude the Fund members whose employer
does not employ more than
20 of their members, its Board’s
constitution will not comply with the requirements of s 7A (1) (a).
The costs order is also
to be set aside.
[48]
Having come to that conclusion the issue
that arises is whether a case has been made by the Fund for the
alternative relief it seeks
to be adjudicated for the first time on
appeal, notwithstanding that the issue was not considered by the
court a quo
and
there being no cross appeal.
[49]
The
Fund argued for such adjudication reliant on the matter of
Cole
v Government of the Union of SA
[6]
wherein
Sheil J stated that:
“
The
duty of an appellate tribunal is to ascertain whether the Court below
came to a correct conclusion on the case submitted to
it. And the
mere fact that a point of law brought to its notice was not taken at
an earlier stage is not in itself a sufficient
reason for refusing to
give effect to it. If the point is covered by the pleadings, and if
its consideration on appeal involves
no unfairness to the party
against whom it is directed, the Court is bound to deal with it. And
no such unfairness can exist if
the facts upon which the legal point
depends are common cause, or if they are clear beyond doubt upon the
record, and there is
no ground for thinking that further or other
evidence would have been produced had the point been raised at the
outset.”
[50]
The parties have indeed in the
court
a quo
dealt with the issue
extensively, even though the court a quo decided, understandably so,
against making any decision in relation
thereto. As an alternative
relief, it was to be adjudicated upon only in the instance of the
primary issue decided against the
Fund.
[51]
According to the alternative relief as
amended the Fund seeks:
[51.1]a
declaratory order that “the Conduct Authority is required to
grant the Fund an exemption from the requirement to comply
with
Section 7A (1) for an indefinite period”, and
[51.2]
an order reviewing and setting aside the decision of the Registrar to
grant the exemption for a definite period and replacing
it with a
decision granting an exemption for an indefinite period.”
[52]
The Conduct Authority’s argument
against the Court’s adjudication of the alternative relief for
the declaration sought
by the Fund is that the issue
has become
moot since the Conduct
Authority’s in principle
decision to extend the exemptions of the
one contemplated in s 7B (1) to an indefinite period which is in
terms of its newly adopted
regulatory strategy and whilst awaiting
finalisation had to that end issued a Draft Guidance Notice for
comment.
[53]
Certainly as pointed out by the Fund
there is no certainty or a decision that can be regarded as binding
as the matter is still
being explored for future consideration and
finalisation. The issue has therefore not become moot and its
adjudication justified.
[54]
The Conduct Authority has also in any
case admitted that Pension Fund circulars or guidance notices are not
law but there for information
purposes therefore not binding and the
previously issued circulars did no more than indicate the Registrar’s
opinion at the
time of issue, therefore nothing preventing the
incumbent Conduct Authority from changing his or her own opinion on
the subject
matter which is what has happened with regard to the
granting of exemptions in terms of s 7B (1).
[55]
As a result, not making a decision on
the issue the court will be leaving it to the whims of the Conduct
Authority with no certainty
of the outcome of the investigation.
[56]
For the sake of clarity it is important
to revisit the provisions of Section 7 B (1) of the Act which read:
(1)
The registrar may on written application
of a fund and subject
to
such
conditions
as
may
be
determined
by the registrar—
(a)
authorise a fund to have a board
consisting of less than four board members if such number is
impractical or unreasonably expensive:
Provided that the members of
the fund shall have the right to elect at least 50% of the board
members;
(b)
exempt a fund from the requirement that
the members of the fund have the right to elect members of the board,
if the fund
(i)
has been established for the benefit of
employees
of
different
employers
referred
to
in
the
definition of “pension fund" and "provident fund”
as defined in section 1 of the Income Tax Act, 1962
(Act No. 58 of
1962);
(2)
The registrar may
withdraw an exemption
granted under subsection (1)(a) or
(1)(b) if a fund no longer qualifies for such exemption.
[57]
It is therefore on a written application
by the Fund that the Conduct Authority would, subject to such
conditions as he may determine,
grant the Fund an exemption from a
requirement that members have a right to elect members of the board
on condition the Fund qualifies
for the exemption (The issue
therefore being whether the granting of an exemption by the Conduct
Authority for a definite period
is in accordance with the terms of s
7B (1) (b) (i), the definite period being the condition envisaged by
the section as argued
by the Conduct Authority.
# Contentions
on the Conduct Authority’s power to limit duration of exemption
Contentions
on the Conduct Authority’s power to limit duration of exemption
[58]
On the alternative declaratory order
that ‘the granting of an exemption for a limited period by the
Registrar is
ultra vires
the
Act
”
therefore should be reviewed and set aside and the Fund be granted an
exemption for an indefinite period, the Fund contended that:
[58.1]
Section 7B (1)(b) does not provide for an exemption that may be
subject to a time limitation, as nowhere in the provisions
of s 7B
does it indicate that the exemption must be granted subject to a time
period. However, recognise that the section does
provide that the
exemption may be subject to such conditions as may be determined by
the Registrar. Still properly interpreted,
it is not open to the
Registrar to impose a time limitation by way of a condition.
[58.2]The
1 year and 3 year periods time limitations imposed by the Registrar
for the exemptions were not framed as a condition
in circumstances
where conditions were expressly imposed, and that being clear from
the wording of the exemption which reads: “
Accordingly the
Fund’s application for exemption is extended
for
a
further
period
of
three
years
ending
on
30 June 2020 was granted subject to the same conditions to which
its exemption from compliance with s 17 was granted.”
[58.3]
Accordingly, it is not open to the Conduct Authority to impose a time
limitation by way of a condition on the granting of
the exemption
because s 7B (2) already allows the Conduct Authority to withdraw an
exemption in circumstances where a Fund no longer
qualifies for an
exemption. In these circumstances any decision to do so would amount
to an administrative decision as defined
in the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA). The Conduct Authority
would be required to comply with the requirements
of procedural
fairness set out in PAJA by seeking representation from the Fund on
the proposed decision and required to take into
consideration those
representations.
[58.4]
Given that s 7B (2) of the Act envisages a procedure where the
Registrar may withdraw an exemption affording procedural protection
to the Fund under such circumstances, properly interpreted, the Act
does not permit the Registrar to render these rights nugatory
through
a process of granting an exemption for a limited period and allowing
that period to expire.
[58.5]
It is clear that the Registrar adopted the practice of imposing a
three (3) year period on all exemptions articulated on
PF96 therefore
arbitrary, because such a blanket policy pays no heed to the
necessity for a time limitation in the case of any
specific Fund and
pays no heed to the appropriate period if any. The practice by the
Registrar amount to a fettering of a discretion,
itself a basis for
the review of the Registrar’s conduct.
[58.6]
If in principle the Registrar could validly impose a time period as a
condition, s 7B (1) cannot in light of the above considerations
be
interpreted to empower the Registrar to impose an arbitrary condition
in the form of an automatic expiry of an exemption which
is
unconnected to the specific circumstances in which any particular
application is made. It is plain that the Registrar pays no
heed to
the specific applications for exemption but simply applies a set time
period for all exemptions.
[59]
For all the aforementioned reasons the
Fund alleged to have been advised that the Registrar’s
imposition of a time limitations
on the granting of exemptions is
ultra vires
the
PFA as a result sought a declaratory order that it is so or that the
decision be reviewed and set aside.
[60]
Besides the Conduct Authority’s
standpoint at the outset that the issue was moot since it is the
principle decision that the
exemptions of the kind contemplated in s
7B (1) would in terms of the newly adopted regulatory strategy be of
an indefinite duration
for which it had issued a Draft Guidance
Notice for comment and awaiting finalisation, it further contended
that the granting of
an exemption in terms of s 7B (1) of the Act is
at its discretion as the Conduct Authority and the exemption
provision must with
effect from 1 April 2018, be read together with
the provisions in s 281 of the FSR Act which provides as follows:
(1)
The
responsible authority
for a
financial sector
law may, in writing or with the
concurrence of the other financial sector regulator exempt any person
or class of persons from a
specified provision of the financial
sector law, unless it considers that granting the exemption:
(i)
will be contrary to the public interest;
(ii)
may prejudice the achievement of the
project;
(2)
Subsection (1) applies to the granting
of exemptions if a final sector law does not provide the power to
grant exemptions;
(3)
If a financial sector law provides a
power to grant exemptions, the responsible authority must:
(a)
grant
the
exemption
in
terms
of
the
relevant provisions of the financial
sector law; and
(b)
when deciding whether to grant an
exemption, comply
with
the
requirement
of
subsection
(1)
in
addition to any requirements specified in the financial sector law.
(4)
The granting of exemptions by the
Conduct Authority must not be contrary to public policy or prejudice,
the achievement of the objects
of the relevant financial sectoral law
as public interest lies at the heart of all regulation.
[61]
Pointing to the plain reading of the
provisions of s 7B (1) (b), the Conduct Authority indicated that it
is clear that, it:
[61.1]
will consider a Fund’s written application for an exemption
from a requirement in s 7A (1) of the Act that the Fund
must afford
its members the right to elect at least 50% of the Fund’s
Trustees and may determine the conditions to be attached
to any
exemption granted in terms of s 7B (1) of the Act.
[61.2]
may in terms of s 7B (2) further withdraw an exemption if a Fund no
longer qualifies for an exemption. Inherent in that provision
is the
fact that where an exemption is granted subject to conditions, the
failure to comply with a condition would be a trigger
for the
withdrawal of that exemption by the Conduct Authority, that being so
because the exemption does not stand in isolation
from any condition
attached to it. So If the exemption was to be withdrawn the Fund will
revert to the default position, namely
that it has to comply with s
7A (1) of the Act and the Fund’s members shall have the right
to elect at least 50% of the Trustees
to the Board of Management.
[62]
According to the Conduct Authority the
quoted section from the Pension Fund Circular 96 is irrelevant to
this matter because the
Registrar granted an exemption to the Fund
subject only to the conditions relating to the time period. It also
has in addition,
in principle adopted a new regulatory strategy that
provides for exemptions in terms of s 7B (1) (b) to be of indefinite
duration.
It agreed that the Pension Fund circulars are indeed not
law as pointed out by the Fund, now spelled out in s 141 of the FSR
Act
that stipulates that, guidance notices are for information
purposes and are not binding. The previously issued circulars did no
more than indicate the Registrar’s opinion at the time of
issue, nothing preventing the incumbent Registrar from changing
his
or her own opinion on the subject matter which is what has happened
with regard to the granting of exemptions in terms of s
7B (1).
[63]
Persisting on its reliance on the
mootness of the issue on the indefinite exemption the Conduct
Authority insisted that the Fund
was aware of and informed of the
Draft Guidance Notice on s 7B exemptions issued for comment on 24
April 2018. The Draft conveyed
the Conduct Authority’s in
principle position that s 7B (1) exemptions will in future be granted
for indefinite period when
the Fund applies for exemption.
It however pointed out that where it is
contended that the Conduct Authority had no authority to impose a
time period as a condition
to an exemption, that is not borne out by
the wording of s 7B(1) which permits the Conduct Authority
to
impose
conditions
as
it
deems
appropriate
and
there
is
no
restriction in this section to the effect that the Conduct Authority
cannot impose a condition as to the duration of an exemption.
[64]
The Conduct Authority further pointed
out that it had been advised that the Fund’s current exemption,
having been issued as
an administrative action on the part of the
Registrar, will stand until set aside by a Court Order, which is not
what is sort by
the Fund, to set aside the current exemption but a
declaratory order on a future dispensation that has become academic.
[65]
The
Conduct
Authority
reiterated
that the Fund does not
comply
with the requirements of s 7 A (1) and agree that it will be
necessary for the Fund to apply for a further exemption upon
the
expiry of its current exemption.
[66]
According to the Fund, the Draft
Guidance Notice espousing the Conduct Authority’s regulative
strategy is an implied admission
that the Conduct Authority may not
grant an exemption for the limited period of time and the exemption
granted u
ltra vires
.
Only if the Conduct Authority had admitted that to be its legal
position than it may be contended that the declaratory relief
sought
is moot. The strategic policy Draft Notice that has been circulated
for the purposes of comments is not indicative of any
final position
of the Conduct Authority, seeing that the Conduct Authority does
acknowledge that guidance notices only reflect
the opinion of the
incumbent and may be changed at will at any time. Furthermore, the
Draft Guidance Notes may not be used to interpret
the Act and are
irrelevant to the declaratory order it is seeking in the alternative,
that involves the interpretation of s 7 B
(1) (b) of the Act.
The Conduct Authority had also said that
the decision that exemptions should be of indefinite period is a
decision in principle
and not a decision in law.
[67]
The Fund finally contended that if the
issue on the alternative relief is to be regarded as moot then the
Conduct Authority’s
answering affidavit should be interpreted
as a tacit concession to the relief sought in Prayer 2 that the
granting of an exemption
for a limited period of time is
ultra
vires
the Act. If there is no such
admission, then the order sought on prayer 2 is not moot, moreover
the Conduct Authority made it clear
that there is no express or
implied admission that it has no power in law to grant a time bound
exemption.
[68]
The Fund pointed out that an ambiguity
arises from the Conduct Authority’s position that the relief
sought on Prayer 2 is
moot and its consistent refusal to concede that
it is
ultra vires
s
7B for the Conduct Authority to grant an exemption to the Fund for a
limited duration. On the fact that it is the Fund that requested
an
exemption “for such period as the Registrar may deem
appropriate in terms of s 7B,” it argued that if it is
ultra
vires
s 7B for the Conduct Authority
to grant an exemption for any limited period, then it would not be
appropriate for the Conduct Authority
to do so. The Fund’s
request is not determinative of the question of law regarding the
competence of an exemption limited
by the authority to predetermined
period. The exemption granted is either in its terms
ultra
vires
or it is not. The three- year
term is not found in a legislative context.
[69]
With regard to the reading of s 7 B (1)
as proposed by the Conduct Authority that it enables the Conduct
Authority to determine
the criteria for the granting of an exemption,
the Fund argued that if that was so, it would mean that the Conduct
Authority could
arrogate to itself powers which are not conferred to
it by the Act, which interpretation is contrary to the rule of law.
It would
in essence mean that the Conduct Authority could legislate
additional or different criteria to those stipulated in s 7 B (1) (b)
(i) to (iv).
[70]
On the Conduct Authority’s
discretion to grant the exemption, the Fund admitted to such, but
argued that it is not an open
ended discretion therefore has got to
be exercised judiciously and consistently with the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
. Further that the additional
obligations imposed on the Conduct Authority in terms of
s 281
(3)
(b) read with s 281 (3) (a) of the FSR Act are applicable to the
declaratory relief sought in prayers 1 and 2, however denied
that
they are applicable
to
the
order
for
review
and setting aside of administrative action sought in prayer 3.
[71]
It according to the Fund follows that
where a Fund no longer qualifies for an exemption in terms of s 7B
(1) (b) (i) to (iv), the
Conduct Authority may withdraw an exemption
in terms of s 7B (2). She or he may not do so for lack of compliance
with the Conduct
Authority’s condition, which it argues to be
clear from the wording of s 7B (2) that reads:
“
The
conduct authority may withdraw an exemption granted under subsection
(1) (a) and (b) if a Fund no longer qualifies for such
exemption
”
[72]
The Fund denies that PF96 dealing with
Board Management is irrelevant and argue that it is relevant to the
relief sought in Prayers
2 and 3 of the Notice of Motion and as far
as it is concerned PF 96 has not been withdrawn.
[73]
The Fund therefore argued that there is
no prejudice to the additional consequential relief and that the
Conduct Authority’s
attempt to rely on a time bar serves none
of the parties’ interest.
# Analysis
Analysis
[74]
Following the simple reading of s 7B (1)
text of the section, it clearly stipulates what the requirement is,
for a Fund to qualify
for an exemption, also to remain exempted and
the condition for the withdrawal of the exemption, which is when the
Fund no longer
qualifies in terms of the purpose of its formation and
or definition as highlighted in s 7B (1) (b). There is no mention of
a withdrawal
of exemption that would be due to a Fund’s failure
to adhere to a condition imposed by the Conduct Authority or as a
result
of a coming to an end of a period decided by the Conduct
Authority, more so arbitrarily.
[75]
The duration or endurance of the
exemption has already been predetermined by s 7B (2) in providing
that such exemption would be
withdrawn when the Fund no longer
qualifies for the exemption. As a result, a condition imposed by the
Conduct Authority purporting
to determine the period or condition of
endurance of the exemption would be contrary to the Act, and the
Conduct Authority would
be acting outside his powers and in
contradiction of the provisions of s 7B (1) (b) (i) if he is to
restrict the exemption to any
period of time.
[76]
The
argument therefore that the Fund’s allegation that the
Registrar’s granting of an exemption for a definite period
is
ultra
vires
s
7B (1) is not borne out by the wording of s 7B (1) and that the
section actually permits the Conduct Authority to impose conditions
as it deems appropriate is not sustainable. As it would be unlawful
to withdraw an exemption of a qualifying Fund on the basis
that the
condition imposed by the Conduct Authority has lapsed which was never
intended by the provisions of the section. The power
for the Conduct
Authority to impose a time limit is not to be found in subsection (1)
(a) or (b). On express statutory provisions
of power, the court in
Private
Security Industry Regulatory Authority vs Anglo Platinum Management
Services Ltd and others
[7]
significantly stated the following:
[28]
I agree with the respondents that the power contended for by the
Authority should have been expressly conferred and cannot
be implied.
As stated in
Principal Immigration Officer v Medh
1928 AD 451
at 458.:
22
‘
The
powers of the Minister must be found within the section creating
them, and according to that section the Minister only has power
either to exempt or not: there is no third course. In the absence of
specific provisions to that effect, such power cannot be construed
as
embracing the wider power of attaching conditions. If it had been the
intention of the Legislature to confer upon the Minister
the
additional power of attaching conditions to the exemption, it should
have said so, as it has done in the case of temporary
permits …’
[77]
Furthermore, the argument that the
definite time period is imposed as a condition by the Conduct
Authority is devoid of any sense
when there is a blanket application
of that condition irrespective of the different circumstances of each
Applicant. In that case
it is correct that due to the decision’s
arbitrary nature it would potentially be prejudicial to some of the
Applicants as
it amounts to an administrative action, which requires
to be exercised judicially and consistently in line with the
Promotion of
Justice Act 3 of 2000.
[78]
There is also no contention regarding
the application of the additional obligations imposed on the Conduct
Authority in terms of
s 281 (3) (a) read with s 281 (3) (b) to the
declaratory relief sought in prayers 1 and 2.
However, it is apparent that the reading
of s 7 B (1) as suggested by
the
Conduct
Authority
would actually
result
in a
conundrum
considering what is stipulated in s 7B (1) and (2) and the Conduct
Authority’s powers in terms thereof in relation
to the granting
of the exemption.
[79]
As it is clearly stated in s 7B (2) that
the Conduct Authority may withdraw an exemption granted if a Fund no
longer qualifies for
such exemption as per provisions of s 7 B (1)
(a) and (b), a Conduct Authority has no power to decide contrary to
the stipulation
in the Act by putting time frames on when the
exemption will effectively be withdrawn. As a result, the declaration
sought by the
Fund is legally defensible and the review
and
the
setting aside
of
the Conduct Authority’s decision justifiable.
[80]
Furthermore there is no dispute that the
Fund duly qualifies for the exemption properly granted in terms of s
7B (1(a). The Conduct
Authority therefore obliged to grant the
infinite exemption. Considering the delays, the incontrovertible
decision and the fact
that it is just a matter of procedure that the
matter should be referred back to the Conduct Authority for
reconsideration, an
order by the court substituting the incorrect
decision by
granting
the Fund
an
infinite exemption would be just and equitable; see s 8 (1) (c) of
PAJA. The costs should follow the event, in this instance
both
parties having partially succeeded, each party is to pay its own
costs.
[81]
Under the circumstances, it is therefore
ordered that:
1.
The Appeal is upheld with the costs
order also set aside;
2.
The order and the Judgment of the
court
a quo
delivered on 3 March 2020 is
set aside and replaced with the following order:
2.1
The Application for a declaratory order
that the Respondent’s board of trustees as presently
constituted complies with the
provisions of s 7 A (1) of the Pensions
Fund Act 24 of 1956 (“the Act”), is dismissed.
2.2
The decision of the Conduct Authority to
grant the Respondent an exemption for a period of three (3) years is
reviewed and set aside.
2.3
The Respondent is granted
an exemption from
the requirement to comply with s 7A (1)
for an indefinite period;
3.
Each party to pay its own costs.
N
V KHUMALO
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
# Potterill
J (Molefe J concurring)
Potterill
J (Molefe J concurring)
I
have read the judgment of my sister Khumalo J and I agree with the
result. I feel constrained to add to the judgment. I do so
without
repeating the background facts and only concentrate on the reasons
for the order.
Does
the procedure employed by the Fund comply with Section 7A
of the PFA?
[1]
Section 7A has two requirements, but it
is only the requirement that Fund members have the right to elect 50
% of the Board members
that is in issue. It is in issue because the
Fund, due to practical reasons,
utilise
a
procedure
provided
for
in
Rules
10.13(a)
and 10.17. This entails that each
municipality that has more than 20 employees,
elects two
Fund members
as provincial
representatives. At a provincial meeting
the provincial representatives from each province then appoint two
Board members to make
up the Board of Trustees of 18 members. The
Fund contended, and the court
a quo
found, that s7A(1) catered for this
indirect election of Board members by Fund members. On the other
hand, the Conduct Authority
argued that this procedure does not give
Fund members the right to elect trustees; only provincial
representatives.
[2]
The Conduct Authority is correct; the
Fund members can only elect representatives and do not have the right
to elect the trustees.
As practical as the Fund’s Rules in
regulating election of the trustees to the Board are, it does not
adhere to s7A(1).
[3]
The argument on behalf of the Fund went
that a common sense meaning or business-like interpretation would
allow for such workable,
practical method of indirectly electing
Trustees. Reliance was placed on
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) para [18] in support of this submission. Such
interpretation of s7A (1) was required because the Fund represents
hundreds
of municipalities geographically and organisationally
disparate. The process to use a provincial basis is practically
necessary
and allows for closer scrutiny and a better understanding
of the candidates in that province. The Fund rubbished the Conduct
Authority’s
contention that the practical solution is to
conduct an election process which gives members the right to vote
from a nominated
list of Fund members. It did so on the basis that
such procedure is impossible and by no means a fairer process.
[4]
I heed the warning of Wallis JA in the
Endumeni
-matter:
“
A
sensible meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible
or unbusinesslike results or undermines the apparent purpose
of the
document. Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation
to substitute what they regard as reasonable, sensible
or
businesslike for the words actually used. To do so in regard to a
statute or statutory instrument is to cross the divide between
interpretation and legislation.”
Although the practical difficulties
with direct voting speaks for itself, the words of s7A are clear and
interpreting it otherwise
would result in the court acting as the
Legislature; not mere interpretation. But, more importantly, the PFA
provides the Fund
with an alternative; special provision in s7B(1)
for exemption from the requirement that the members of the Fund have
the right
to elect members of the Board.
[5]
It was also argued that s7A (2) of the
PFA provides that the Fund’s Rules must include the election
procedures and the voting
rights of members; by doing so the
subsection draws a distinction between the conferral of a voting
right and the process by which
such voting right is exercised; thus
as long as more than 50 % of Board members are elected by Fund
members and one can track how
the election took place there was
compliance with s7A (1)’s “
right
to elect.”
This argument is
contrived; the
election process
as exercised by the members does not
grant the members a right to elect the trustees; they elect
provincial representatives that
elect the members of the Board.
Tracking the process does not provide the members with a right to
elect.
[6]
The Conduct Authority relied for support
that no indirect voting may take place on the decision of
New
Nation Movement NPC and Others v President of the Republic of South
Africa and Others
2020 (6) SA 257
(CC).
It
argued that the court
a quo
erred
in drawing an analogy with “
the
manner in which South African parliamentarians are voted in, where
the ordinary voter does not always vote for the candidate
that then
assumes a seat in Parliament: voters vote for participants which
parties then nominate parliamentarians.”
The
argument went that the analogy was inapposite because in the
New
Nation Movement
-matter the
Constitutional Court declared that adult
citizens
may
not
be
elected
to
the
National
Assembly
and
Provincial
legislatures only through their membership of political parties.
[7]
Counsel for the Conduct Authority relied
on s19(3) of the Constitution which reads as follows:
“
Every
adult citizen has the right-
(a)
to vote in elections for any
legislative body established in terms of the Constitution, and to do
so in secret;
and
(b)to stand for public office and, if elected, to hold public
office.”
It
argued that although in the
New Nation Movement
decision no
reliance was placed on s19(3)(a) it was a useful way of testing the
viability of the Fund’s argument. Because
the Court found that
the right to stand for public office in section 19(3)(b) of the
Constitution was infringed through a requirement
that a person must
do so a political party, it followed that section 19(3) of the
Constitution would also be violated by legislation
that prohibits a
person from voting directly.
[8]
The reliance on s19(3) and the New
Nation Movement matter is novel, but not helpful. The interpretation
of s19(3)(b) to include
that an individual can stand without the
backing of a political party is a far cry from a right to elect or
vote for a person;
two completely different self-standing rights.
But, in any event, the right in s19(3)(a) is exercised with citizens
voting for
a political party and not for the candidate of the voter’s
choice. This voting process does not support the Conduct Authority’s
argument for direct voting.
[9]
I
do not find the analogy apposite; two different acts that regulate
different processes, different context and purpose. In
Gumede
and Others v Pep Provident Fund and Others
[8]
(Footnote
(2017) JOL 37949
(PSAB) ] the purpose of s7A was formulated as
follows:
“
The
purpose of the provision is to give members of a fund (at least)
equal say in the affairs of a fund. It democratises the management
of
the fund by creating minimum requirements relating to the
representation of members. They and not the other on their behalf,
have the right to elect their quota of trustees.”
Voting
for a party to represent one in parliament does not give one equal
say in the running of the country.
The
alternative relief sought in prayer 2 of the amended notice of
motion
[10]
If the court found that the Fund did not
comply with s7(A) then a declaration was sought that the Conduct
Authority was required
to grant an exemption from the requirement to
comply with s7(A)(1) for an indefinite period and to review and set
aside the current
exemption for a period of three years that expired
on 30 June 2020 and substituting it with a decision to grant an
exemption of
indefinite duration.
[11]
The court
a
quo
did not decide this alternative
relief due to its finding that there was compliance with s7A. This
court can decide this issue as
it was pleaded and argued before the
court
a quo
.
It can also do so in the interests of justice.
[12]
Section 7B(1)(b) provides that the
Conduct Authority may on written application grant an exemption from
the requirement that members
of the Fund have the right to elect
members of the Board. The Conduct Authority can in terms of the
subsection impose conditions
as may be determined by the Authority.
This exemption section was inserted by the Amendment Act purposefully
to extend the powers
of the Conduct Authority to exempt, for
practical reasons, types of funds from certain provisions, s7A being
one. This amendment
thus supports the argument of the Fund that s7A
is not practical for their type of Fund and exemption is required.
[13]
The Fund has been granted exemptions
when applying for same. However, exemptions have been granted always
with a time limit. The
Fund argued that s7B(1)(b) does not expressly
or impliedly confer a power on the Conduct Authority to impose a time
limit. Furthermore,
a
time
limit
is not a
condition
as argued
by
the Conduct Authority.
[14]
I find the opposition to the fact that
the Conduct Authority has no authority to impose a time limit
perplexing. Especially so in
light of their argument that this point
is moot because this issue is academic. It is academic because in the
answering affidavit
the Authority explained that in principle it had
decided that exemptions in terms of s7(B)(1)(b) would, in line with a
newly adopted
regulatory strategy, be of indefinite duration.
[15]
Such regulatory strategy is sensible and
fits the purpose of s7(B); to accommodate Funds for who it is not
practical to comply with
s7(A). If they cannot comply with s7(A),
then they should simply be exempted in terms of s7(B) and it should
not be attached to
a time limit.
Granting an exemption without a time
limit does not prevent the Conduct Authority from still imposing
other conditions that may
be needed for regulatory control. It also
does not prevent the Authority from withdrawing the exemption in
terms of s7B.
[16]
There is no express provision in s7B
that the exemption is to be for a limited duration. There is no
reason to read in such implied
provision. The Authority had no right
to impose a time limit and should not do so. A policy, as correctly
argued by the Fund, can
be amended, and a Court is required to
pronounce on this issue. A time-limit is not a condition, it is
limiting the life of the
exemption. The Conduct Authority it is not
imposing a time limit by way of condition.
Can
the court review and set aside the exemption granted on 31
July
2017 and
replace it
with the
exemption being
granted with effect
from 1 July 2017 remaining extant
until and unless withdrawn in
terms
of s7B (2)?
[17]
On
behalf of the Conduct Authority it was argued the court cannot review
and set aside that exemption. The reasons are the Fund
was outside
the 180-day period provided in PAJA
[9]
for the launching of a review. The Fund did not exhaust the internal
remedy and there are no exceptional circumstances to excuse
them from
exhausting this remedy. The Fund would acquire a windfall; from an
exemption for three years to an indefinite one.
[18]
Extension
of the
180-day period
in terms
of
s9(2)
of
PAJA is
granted.
It is in the interests of justice to grant the extension. The
three-year period attached to the exemption has been in issue
since
the inception of the proceedings; it is not a second bite at the
cherry. The nature of the relief claimed on this issue was
amended
from a declaratory order to a review and setting aside in terms of
PAJA. The Fund explained that this became necessary
after the Conduct
Authority submitted the argument that the declaratory order sought
was moot due to the principle decision that
it took to in future
grant exemptions for an indefinite duration. This decision was taken
after this application was launched.
The Fund required a Court to put
this issue to bed and had to ensure that an argument of mootness
would not do so.
[19]
In view of the finding above that no
time limit is to be attached to an exemption the review and setting
aside should follow. The
exemption that is under review must be set
aside, because the Conduct Authority did not impose the time limit by
way of condition
and it is not by stature expressly or impliedly
authorised to do so. I also agree with the submission that the
three-year period
is arbitrary; no explanation for this period is
provided, let alone sufficient reason for such decision. There is
accordingly no
reasonable explanation or rational for this time
limit.
[20]
The Fund is excused from exhausting its
internal remedies on the basis that exceptional circumstances do
exist. There is no dispute
between the Conduct Authority and the Fund
that the Fund qualifies for an exemption. The Court is thus not
usurping the powers
of the Conduct Authority and taking a decision
that only the Conduct Authority is authorised to take. With the
finding that the
time limit is unauthorised the granting of the
exemption, subject to the same conditions as imposed by the Authority
is not usurping
the powers of the Conduct Authority.
[21]
It must be remembered that the relief
sought is in terms of s8(1)(c) of PAJA to vary the order granted by
the Conduct Authority.
The variation lies only therein that the
three-year period is varied to an indefinite period. The granting of
the exemption and
the conditions attached thereto remains the
decisions taken by the Conduct Authority. The court is not replacing
its decision with
the decision of the Conduct Authority. Under these
exceptional circumstances the court can vary the exception granted.
It would
be just and equitable to do so. The Conduct Authority is not
without a remedy, if the exemption needs new conditions it can
withdraw
the exemption in terms of the Act.
S.
POTTERILL JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
I
agree
D
S MOLEFE JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
On
behalf of Appellant:
Cockrell SC and Luyanda S Mbatha
Instructed
by:
MOTHLE JOOMA SABDIA INC ATTORNEYS
Tel:
012 771 6836
Ref:
E Jooma/FIN4.0061/ Email: ebrahimj@mjs-inc.co.za
On
behalf of Respondent:
C
E Watt- Pringle SC and K Mclean
Instructed
by:
SHEPSTONE AND WYLIE ATTORNEYS
Email:
Jesterhuizen@wylie.co.za
REF: J Esterhuizen
[1]
See GN 169 in GG 41549 of 29-03-2018; and the Regulations published
in GN R405 in GG 41550 of 29-03-2018
[2]
Case
no A7/2016, 29 August
2016 (2017) JOL 37949
FSAB.
[3]
2012
(4) SA 593 (SCA)
[4]
2004
(4) SA 490 (CC)
[5]
[2014]
ZACC 16; 2014 (4) SA 474 (CC); 2014 (8) BCLR 869 (CC)
[6]
1910
AD 263
at 272
[7]
[2007]
1 All SA 154 (SCA)
[8]
(2017)
JOL 37949 (PSAB)
[9]
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
sino noindex
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