Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 985South Africa
Heidema v Professional Conduct Committee for Optometry and Dispensing Opticians of the Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (87745/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 985 (15 December 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Disciplinary inquiry by professional body regulating optometry and dispensing opticians – undue delay in finalising matter? Despite admitted “systemic inertia” delay not so undue or prejudicial to practitioner that he would not be able to have a fair hearing – review application of a refusal of a permanent stay dismissed, with costs.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Heidema v Professional Conduct Committee for Optometry and Dispensing Opticians of the Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (87745/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 985 (15 December 2022)
Heidema v Professional Conduct Committee for Optometry and Dispensing Opticians of the Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (87745/2019) [2022] ZAGPPHC 985 (15 December 2022)
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sino date 15 December 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 87745/2019
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
DATE:
15 DECEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
HIELKE
HEIDEMA
Applicant
and
THE
PROFESSIONAL CONDUCT COMMITTEE
FOR
OPTOMETRY AND DISPENSING OPTICIANS
OF
THE HEALTH PROFESSIONS CONCIL
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
First
Respondent
THE
PROFESSIONAL BOARD FOR OPTOMETRY
AND
DISPENSING OPTICIANS OF THE HEALTH
PROFESSIONS
COUNCIL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Second
Respondent
THE
HEALTH PROFESSIONS COUNCIL OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Third Respondent
Summary:
Disciplinary inquiry by
professional body regulating optometry and dispensing opticians –
undue delay in finalising matter?
Despite admitted “systemic
inertia” delay not so undue or prejudicial to practitioner that
he would not be able to
have a fair hearing – review
application of a refusal of a permanent stay dismissed, with costs.
ORDER
The
application is dismissed, with costs.
J
U D G M E N T
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The
applicant is a registered optometrist. On 1 November 2019 he
was charged at a disciplinary inquiry before the Professional
Conduct
Committee for Optometry and Dispensing Opticians (the Committee) of
the Health Professions Council of South Africa (HPCSA)
of having
operated a mobile clinic in July 2011 without the necessary
authorization from the HPCSA to do so. The applicant
sought a
permanent stay of prosecution based on an undue delay, which he
raised as a point
in
limine
at an inquiry held in terms of Regulation 5 of the Regulations.
[1]
The committee refused this point and the applicant now seeks to have
that refusal reviewed and set aside and the disciplinary
inquiry
permanently stayed.
Chronology
[2]
In a matter
where the determination of success centres around an allegation of
undue or inordinate delay to prosecute a disciplinary
inquiry, the
chronology of events is crucial. The details of the chronology
appear form the record and the affidavits of
the parties as
summarized below.
[3]
The chain of
events started with the alleged rendering of optometric services by
the applicant to employees of RKF Assemblies (Pty)
Ltd (RKF) at their
place of employment on 22 July 2011.
[4]
In the
applicant’s affidavits, the applicant does not expressly deny
the rendering of the services and is vague about the
issue, claiming
that records need only be kept for five years and that the event
happened too long ago for him to remember clearly.
He also
complains that the allegation in the charge sheet of the offending
conduct having occurred “during July 2011”
is too vague.
The details of the services that the applicant rendered on 22 July
2011 were however captured in an invoice
rendered by him (or his
practice) to RKF, which invoice he never seriously disputed.
The date of July 2011 is in any event,
according to the applicant
himself, the starting point of the calculation of the “delay
period”.
[5]
It appears
that on 27 July 2011 a senior forensic investigator employed by
Discovery Holdings was tasked to investigate whether
the applicant
had supplied services to members of the Discovery Health Medical
Scheme (Discovery Health) without authorization
the HPCSA.
[6]
A certain Ms
Klavier deposed to an affidavit on 13 February 2013 that RKF received
either a telephone call or an email from the
applicant’s
practice offering free on-site optometric testing of employees.
A male person arrived who tested about
30 employees. Of these,
some were Discovery Health members and some not. The
“optometrist” subsequently
advised that 11 of the
employees tested required prescription spectacles and invoiced RKF
R9 192.00. It was only after
viewing a television
programme regarding mobile optometrist practices on 27 July 2012 that
Ms Klavier forwarded an e-mail to the
applicant, cancelling “the
entire deal”.
[7]
The record
also contains an affidavit from a Mr Mpofu, who was employed by RKF
in July 2011. Mr Mpofu was a member of Discovery
Health at the
time. He was tested by an optometrist at RKF’s factory in
July 2011, told that he had “bad eyes”
and asked to
select a spectacle frame from a selection contained in a briefcase,
which he did. He was handed a form containing
“codes”
which the optometrist said “they” would be claiming.
After the event, Mr Mpofu became dissatisfied
and telephoned
the optometrist’s office. He was told by a lady who
answered the telephone that he had already been
“billed at
Discovery” but that his money would be returned. After
having furnished his banking details, this
is what happened a few
days later.
[8]
On 13
September 2013 Discovery Health sent a letter to the Registrar of the
HPCSA. The letter simply read “
We
investigated certain allegations against the following practice: [the
applicant’s details were then furnished]. As
a result of
the outcome of our investigations, we wish to report the following
issues to his regulatory body: 1. Services not rendered.
Please
feel free to contact me directly if you need any further information
or evidence to support the outcome of our findings
”.
[9]
On 15 October
2013 the HPCSA sent a letter by registered mail to the applicant,
enclosing the letter of complaint and a copy of
the Regulations.
In terms of Regulation 4(1)(b), the applicant was requested to
respond to the complaint by 10 December 2013.
[10]
When no
response was forthcoming from the applicant, the HPCSA on 25 February
2014, insisted on a response by 20 March 2014.
When the HPCSA
still had not received a response by 22 July 2014, it advised the
applicant that a failure to respond to correspondences
“by
Council” amounts to unprofessional conduct. A response
was expected by August 2014.
[11]
By this time,
the applicant’s attorneys complained that they had already
“come on record” and bemoaned the fact
that the applicant
was contacted directly by the HPCSA. Apparently, according to
the applicant “some correspondences”
were exchanged
between the parties, the details of which is not clear. The
next important date is, however 30 July 2015 on
which date the HSPCSA
apologized for having contacted the applicant directly and advised
his attorneys that the matter had been
placed on the agenda of a
meeting of the Committee of Preliminary Inquiry scheduled for 6
August 2015 as the HSPCA has not yet
received a response from the
applicant. He was given a last opportunity to furnish a
response by 3 August 2015.
[12]
On 3 August
2015 the applicant’s attorneys referred to previous
correspondence in which it had apparently been stated that
the
complaint was vague and lacked sufficient details to respond
thereto. Extensive “further particulars” were
also
requested, including the identity of Ms Klavier, in what capacity she
was employed at RKF, what the gender was of the person
who offered
the free testing, details of the employees tested how the amount of
R9 192.00 had been made up, an explanation
how Ms Klavier could
“cancel” services rendered in 2011, in 2012 and the
like. This request for particulars indicates
that the applicant
either had sight or knowledge of the affidavits of Ms Klavier and Mr
Mpofu.
[13]
The HPCSA
considered the letter and deferred the matter to a next meeting,
still requesting an explanation from the applicant, this
time by 9
October 2015. The applicant’s attorneys then threatened
that, should the requested particulars not be furnished
by 14 October
2015, an application to compel would be launched (presumably to a
court, but this was not clarified).
[14]
The HPCSA
respondent with concern. It relied on the provisions of the
Regulations (which were again annexed) in their response
dated 13
October 2015. It pointed out that the proceedings were at a
Preliminary Inquiry stage only and that a response from
a
practitioner was needed. It was reiterated that the failure to
provide such a response attracted its own sanction.
A further
date to provide a response was set for 26 October 2015.
[15]
When no
response from the applicant was forthcoming, the relevant committee
of the HPCSA resolved on 4 December 2015 that a formal
inquiry would
be held. It then also provided the applicant’s attorney
with the documents described in paragraph 3 –
6 above as well
as claims processing documents from Discovery Health.
[16]
The formal
inquiry was subsequently set down for 26 and 27 May 2016. In
terms of the Regulations, this had to be preceded
by a mandatory
Pre-Hearing Conference. For purposes hereof, the applicant’s
attorneys submitted a formal request for
particulars on 7 April 2016.
Neither the furnishing of the particulars nor the scheduling of
the Pre-Hearing Conference could
timeously take place, resulting in
the rescheduling of the inquiry.
[17]
A Pre-Hearing
Conference thereafter took place at the applicants attorneys’
offices on 27 June 2016, whereafter such further
particulars as in
the possession of the HPCSA had been furnished.
[18]
The inquiry
was subsequently scheduled to take place on 1 November 2019. At
this time the applicant’s attorneys took
the point (amongst
others) that there was an undue delay in the prosecution of the
inquiry.
[19]
The Committee
dismissed this point. This is the decision which the applicant
has now taken on review.
The
decision
[20]
The decision
of the Committee was subsequently reduced to writing. The
decision followed, as is apparent from the transcribed
record, after
the hearing of extensive oral argument, supported by written
submissions on behalf of the applicant and reference
to a vast array
of case law. The decision, in the form of a ruling, spanning 20
pages, referred to all of this as well as
the chronology of the
matter. The decision, very correctly, summed up that factors
which the committee, not unlike courts
of law, would have regard to,
would be (i) the length of the delay; (ii) the reasons furnished to
justify the delay; (iii) the
right to a speedy trial; (iv) prejudice
of the medical practitioner; (v) the nature of the charge; (vi) the
interests of society
and (vii) the fact that the process is one of a
peer review and not solely punitive but also aiming at correcting the
conduct of
those registered with the HPCSA.
[21]
In evaluating
the facts relating to the applicant and the possibility of prejudice,
the Committee proceeded as follows “…
the
Committee considered the fact that the Respondent [the applicant in
this matter] has all along been in possession of the letter
of
complaint and invoices relating to the charge. He has also been
in possession of witness statements. It is worth
noting that
the said invoices were issued by his practice, the logical conclusion
is therefore that records are available to him.
The argument
that he will not and cannot remember some facts to be in a position
to properly present his case, cannot hold water
especially if regard
is had to the numerous communications [with] the HPCSA (which both
parties have mentioned in their submissions)
in respect of the
matter. Both parties have put on record that a pre-trial has
been held and that there has been an exchange
of documentation
”.
[22]
After
considering case law and considering the delay in the furnishing of
further particulars, the Committee opined that it “…
finds it
mindboggling that [the applicant] would destroy practice records of a
matter which he knew was the subject matter of an
ongoing complaint.
This Committee would have expected [the applicant] to maintain his
practice records or to at least establish
the status of the matter
before destroying these records. The Committee is unable to
accept that a reasonable health practitioner
in the position of [the
applicant] would destroy the records in the normal course of 5
years
”.
[23]
The
conclusions of the Committee were: “
After
considering all of the above factors (including prejudice to the
[applicant] and the interests of justice and the society)
and
balancing these factors, this Committee is not persuaded that the
application should succeed. The HPCSA’s conduct
in
investigating and setting down the matter, while there are
shortcomings, is not such to outweigh the absence of significant
prejudice to [the applicant], both trial related and otherwise …
This Committee therefore after meticulous consideration
of the
submissions and legal position, dismisses the application. The
interests of justice and public interest dictate that
this matter
should be proceeded with
”.
[24]
In
his supplementary affidavit, delivered after receipt of the record
and wherein extensive references to the record was made, the
applicant submitted that the Committee’s decision was
“arbitrary, irrational and unreasonable”. This is
the basis of the applicant’s review application. This
attack was made without reference to PAJA
[2]
or specific sections thereof.
Evaluation
[25]
The applicant
appears to confuse and conflate the principles applicable to a review
application and an appeal. I say this
because in the concluding
paragraph of the heads of argument delivered on behalf of the
applicant after extensive references to
the chronology of the matter
and the complaints about the “further particulars-issue”,
the following submission is
made: “
It
is submitted that the [Committee] … erred in having come to
its decision, on the facts before it, to dismiss the applicant’s
point in limine. The applicant prays for the orders as per the
notice of motion
”.
[26]
The
differences between appeal proceedings and review proceedings are
trite. An appeal is directed at the result of a trial,
while a
review is aimed at “
the
method whereby that result was obtained
”.
[3]
In the present matter, there is no appeal before this court and the
applicant, having launched review proceedings in terms
of Rule 53, is
restricted to the principles applicable to a judicial review of an
administrative act. These principles are
those codified in
PAJA. The grounds relied on are those set out in paragraph 24
above.
[27]
Was the
Committee’s decision arbitrary? Section 6(2)(e)(iv) of
PAJA provides that a court has the power to review “…
administrative
action if … the action was taken … (iv) arbitrarily or
capriciously …
”.
[28]
Action
is arbitrary if there was “no reason or justifiable reason”
for it.
[4]
Clearly there
were “reasons” for the decision. It was not taken
on a whim or without regard to the facts.
It was a decision
taken after deliberation and consideration of numerous facts,
interests, submissions and case law. The
reliance on
arbitrariness must fail.
[29]
Whether
there were “justifiable reasons” for the decision, does
not entail an evaluation of whether the decision was
right or
wrong,
[5]
it simply means an
evaluation of whether there existed reasons at the time which could
justify a decision maker’s conclusion
or not. It is, in
this sense related to the issues of rationality and reasonableness
itself.
[30]
Counsel for
the Committee, appropriately in my view, referred to the following
dictum in this regard: “
In
requiring reasonable administrative action, the Constitution does
not, in my view, intend that such action must in review proceedings
be tested against the reasonableness of the merits of the action in
the same way as in an appeal. In other words, it is not
required that the action must be substantively reasonable, in that
sense, in order to withstand review …
”.
[31]
The applicant
made much of the fact that 8 years have elapsed since the alleged
offending conduct and the eventual hearing in November
2019.
Based on this, not only was the time difference labelled a delay, but
it was characterized as being an “undue”
or “inordinate”
delay, rendering any finding to the opposite to be “irrational”
or “unreasonable”
(or without reasonable justification).
The time that has elapsed should however not be viewed in an
oversimplified manner.
There are three principal time periods:
firstly, the two-year period from July 2011 to Ms Klavier’s
complaint in 2013, secondly,
the three year period since Discovery
Health’s consequential complaint in 2013 to the first hearing
date in 2016 and, thirdly,
the time period of three years between the
second and third hearing dates.
[32]
The first
period was clearly not of the making of the HPCSA and cannot
constitute any delay on its part. The second period
was
characterized by communication between the parties and the
applicant’s insistence on the furnishing of further particulars
which, in terms of the Regulations, need not have been furnished at a
preliminary investigating stage and his refusal to furnish
a response
in the absence of these particulars. Even a response of a bare
denial from the applicant (if that was his case)
would have
sufficed. The HPCSA accused the applicant of being recalcitrant
in this regard but, either way, this period cannot
constitute either
a delay or one which is “undue”. The third period
is the one in respect of which the most criticism
can be directed at
the HPCSA. In response, both before the Committee and before
this court, the HPCSA referred to a huge
backlog of thousands of
matters which it seeks to contend with. Numerous logistical
hurdles contribute to what the HPCSA
apologetically referred to as
“systemic inertia”. Its deponent put it as follows:
“
At
the hearing of this matter on the 1
st
of November 2019, when asked by the legal assessor why there was a
three-year delay, the pro forma complainant explained as follows:
79.1
That the legal department … was faced with internal capacity
issues;
79.2
There was a backlog of cases and cases which must still be dealt with
which needed attending to;
79.3
The pro-forma complainant at that time struggled to get experts to
assist as the fees to be paid to these experts were
not in line with
market related fees
”
.
[33]
The
applicant, in contending that these explanations were insufficient to
dispel the notion of undue delay, relied heavily on the
decision in
Stokwe
v MEC: Department of Education, Eastern Case and Others
(
Stokwe
)
[6]
where the institution of disciplinary proceedings had been held to
have been unduly delayed. The applicant argued that the
standard applied in respect of the delay in the
Stokwe
case
(of slightly more than a year), being a “civil” standard,
is more appropriate than the standard applied in respect
of criminal
matters, being the subject matter of the cases relied on by the
HPCSA.
[7]
[34]
Stokwe’s
matter
is to be distinguished from the present matter. It is a labour
matter wherein the prescriptions regarding prompt disciplinary
action
contained in the Labour Relations Act
[8]
were largely decisive. The issue of what was a fair labour
practice also played a role. There was also no explanation
tendered for the delay. When the matter was eventually
concluded, no reasons were given for Mrs Stokwe’s dismissal.
[35]
Even in
Stokwe
,
the Constitutional Court held that what constituted an unfair delay
had to be decided on a case by case basis, dealing with all
the
factors of a specific matter.
[36]
The
nature and role of the HPCSA is also different from that of an
employer (as was the case in
Stokwe
).
The HPCSA’s objects and functions are defined in the Health
Professions Act as being “
to
serve and protect the public in matters involving the rendering of
health services by persons practicing a health profession
… to
uphold and maintain professional and ethical standards within the
health professions … to ensure the investigation
of complaints
concerning any person registered in terms of this Act and to ensure
that appropriate disciplinary action is taken
against such persons in
accordance with this Act in order to protect the interests of the
public …
”.
[9]
[37]
The
objects of the professional boards established under the Health
Professions Act are “
to
maintain and enhance dignity of the relevant health profession and
the integrity of the persons practicing such profession and
to
protect the public
”.
[10]
The second respondent is such a board. The HPCSA’s
deponent also explained that, irrespective of
the contents of
Discovery Health’s complaint, what the applicant was ultimately
charged with, was having operated a mobile
practice. The
deponent stated that this was no a “trivial matter” and
that guidelines had been published “to
protect the public and
to guide the profession”.
[38]
It is clear
from the decision and the reasons furnished for it, that the
Committee had legitimately taken these aspects regarding
public
interest into account when coming to a conclusion that these
considerations outweigh what little (if any) prejudice the
applicant
might suffer. It accordingly determined that the inquiry should
proceed.
[39]
On the facts
of this case, as set out above, I find that the Committee had acted
reasonably in having taken all relevant considerations
into account,
having weighed and balanced them and in thereafter coming to its
conclusion in a reasoned manner. It therefore
acted neither
irrationally nor unreasonably.
[40]
It must follow
that the review must fail. Having reached this conclusion, I
need not deal with all the peripheral issues raised
by the parties
regarding the so-called “enrollment decision” to proceed
with the inquiry, the timing of the review
application or other
technical points. Once the review application is unsuccessful,
it must follow that the applicant is
not entitled to a stay of
proceedings, as claimed by him.
[41]
I find no
reason why the customary rule relating to costs should not apply and
why costs should not follow the event.
Order
[42]
The following
order is made:
The
application is dismissed, with costs.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 8
November 2022
Judgment
delivered: 15
December 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Adv J Schoeman
Attorney
for the Applicant:
Schoeman
Borman Inc,
Pretoria
For
the Respondents: Adv
W Lusenga
Attorney
for the Respondents: Modukwa
Attorneys,
Pretoria
[1]
The
Regulations Relating to the Conduct of Enquiries into Alleged
Unprofessional Conduct under the Health Professions Act, 1974
published as GN R102 of 2009, in Government Gazette No31859 on 6
February 2009.
[2]
Promotion
of Administration Justice Act
3
of 2000.
[3]
Joubert
(ed), LAWSA, vol4, Third Edition, para 456 with reference to
Pretoria
Portland Cement Co Ltd v Competition Commission
2003 (2) SA 385 (SCA).
[4]
Minister
of Constitutional Development v SARIPA
2018 (5) SA 349 (CC).
[5]
Baxter,
Administrative Law, 1984 at 486.
[6]
2019
(4) BCLR 506 (CC).
[7]
Such
as
Sanderson
v Attorney-General, Eastern Cape
1998 (2) SA 38 (CC).
[8]
66
of 1995.
[9]
Sections
3(j); (m) and (n).
[10]
Section
15A.
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