Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 20South Africa
Peters v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others (662/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 20 (29 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
29 January 2024
Headnotes
in abeyance until the President’s implementation plan was put in place;
Judgment
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## Peters v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others (662/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 20 (29 January 2024)
Peters v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others (662/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 20 (29 January 2024)
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sino date 29 January 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Urgency –
Interim
interdict
–
Pending
outcome of review proceedings – Sanction of suspension
imposed on deputy minister by National Assembly –
Respondents prejudiced by manifestly unreasonable timetable –
Explanation for failing to timeously institute application
not
withstanding scrutiny – Court being asked to grant order
that would have effect of setting aside sanction imposed
by
National Assembly where court not seized with review – Would
render nugatory sanction imposed by branch of government
exercising constitutionally mandated oversight powers –
Application dismissed.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE HIGH
COURT, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No:
662/2024
In the matter between:
ELIZABETH
DIPUO PETERS
Applicant
versus
THE
SPEAKER OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
First
Respondent
THE
CO-CHAIRPERSONS OF THE NATIONAL COUNCIL OF PROVINCES
Second
Respondent
ACTING
REGISRAR OF MEMBERS INTERESTS ADV A GORDON N.O.
Third
Respondent
The
CHAIRPERSON OF THE JOINT COMMITTEE ON ETHICS AND MEMBERS INTERESTS
Fourth
Respondent
THE
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
Fifth
Respondent
#UNITEBEHIND
NPC
Sixth
Respondent
ABDURRAZACK
“ZACKIE” ACHMAT
Seventh
Respondent
ZUKISWA
“VUKA” FOKAZI
Eighth
Respondent
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
ELECTRONICALLY ON 29 JANUARY 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email.
The date for the
hand-down is deemed to be on 29 January 2024.
ADHIKARI, AJ
[1]
This is an urgent application for an interdict,
pending the outcome of judicial review proceedings instituted under
Part B of the
Notice of Motion (‘Part B’).
[2]
The applicant is a member of parliament and the
Deputy Minister of Small Business Development. In her capacity
as the former
Minister of Transport, the applicant was the executive
authority responsible for Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
(‘PRASA’).
[3]
In these proceedings, the applicant seeks an
interim interdict, restraining the first respondent (‘the Speaker’)
from implementing the sanction imposed on her by a resolution of the
National Assembly which was adopted on 28 November 2023,
in
terms of which the applicant is suspended from her seat in all
Parliamentary debates and sittings and from committee meetings
and
committee related functions, for one term of the 2024 Parliamentary
program, which commences on 30 January 2024
(‘the sanction’).
[4]
The
genesis of this matter is a complaint (‘the complaint’)
lodged against the applicant by #UniteBehind, on 12 September 2022
with the Joint Committee on Ethics and Members’ Interests
(‘the Committee’).
[1]
[5]
The complaint sought to hold the applicant to
account for what #UniteBehind terms “
serious
cases of failing in her Parliamentary duties, maladministration, and
taking [an] active role in inhibiting the work of ensuring
that
corruption and maladministration be arrested at PRASA”
.
[6]
In essence:
[6.1]
The complaint alleges that the applicant was
neglectful in her previous portfolio as Minister of Transport, by
failing to appoint
the Group Chief Executive Officer (‘CEO’)
of PRASA.
[6.2]
The complainant alleges that the applicant stated
in her testimony before the State Capture Commission that she did not
appoint
a permanent CEO because PRASA was not ready for one, and that
her failure to act on the recommendation of the PRASA board to
appoint
a CEO resulted in a loss of R1 767 000 that was
paid by PRASA to a recruitment company.
[6.3]
The complainant alleges that the applicant
dismissed the PRASA board that was chaired by Mr Popo Molefe,
because the PRASA
board had uncovered R14 billion of irregular
expenditure, and it had instituted investigations into corruption at
PRASA.
[6.4]
The
complaint alleges that the High Court in
Molefe
and Others v Minister of Transport and Others (17748/17)[2017]ZAGPPHC
(‘Molefe v Minister of Transport’)
found
that the applicant’s conduct in dismissing the PRASA board was
irrational, unreasonable and unlawful.
[6.5]
The complaint further alleges that the applicant
failed to investigate an allegation that R79 billion of PRASA
funds was paid
to Swifambo and to other persons for distribution to
the African National Congress (‘the ANC’) while she
was under
a duty to ensure that corruption was rooted out from public
entities falling under the auspices of the Department of Transport.
[6.6]
The complaint alleges that between 2014 and 2015,
the applicant utilised PRASA buses for ANC events without ensuring
that there
was a payment from the ANC.
[6.7]
The complaint further alleges that the applicant
influenced procurement processes by pressuring the PRASA CEO and the
PRASA board,
based on the nationality of the tender applicant, and
that she demanded a change of the procurement prescripts, despite a
legal
opinion which noted that such changes would be unlawful.
[7]
It is common cause that on receipt of the
complaint, the third respondent (‘the Registrar’) on
15 September 2022,
furnished the applicant with the complaint and
afforded her an opportunity to make representations and to respond
thereto.
[8]
The applicant, through her attorneys, responded to
the complaint on 29 September 2022 as follows:
[8.1]
The applicant contended in her response that the
complaint regurgitated the findings and recommendations of the State
Capture Report;
[8.2]
The applicant stated that she was taking legal
advice on the possible remedies available to her and that she
intended to take the
State Capture Report on review judicial review
to the extent that the report related to her;
[8.3]
The applicant further stated that she was awaiting
the President of the Republic of South Africa (‘the President’)
taking
steps to put in place an implementation plan on how the state
capture matters would be dealt with by Parliament;
[8.4]
The applicant further stated that she would deal
with the complaint in a holistic manner and not in a piecemeal
fashion, and that
she therefore would await the President’s
implementation plan;
[8.5]
The applicant requested that any further processes
by the Committee be held in abeyance until the President’s
implementation
plan was put in place;
[8.6]
The applicant indicated in her response that she
elected not to engage further with the conclusions in the State
Capture Report
at that stage; and
[8.7]
The applicant further stated that she remained
available and willing to engage with the office of the Registrar and
the Committee.
[9]
The
Committee on 17 April 2023 deliberated on the complaint.
The Speaker in her answering affidavit states that
the Committee
considered all relevant documents including the State Capture Report
and the judgment of the High Court in
Molefe
v Minister of Transport.
[10]
The
Committee dealt with three aspects of the complaint. First,
that the applicant had failed to appoint a CEO of PRASA which
resulted in R1 767 000 of fruitless and wasteful
expenditure for PRASA. Second, that the applicant had
irrationally
dismissed the PRASA board. Third, that the
applicant had misused PRASA assets, in the form of bus services to
the ANC, which
services were not paid for by the ANC.
[11]
Firstly,
in respect of the failure to appoint a CEO,
the
Committee found that the applicant had breached clause 10.1.1.3
of the
Code
of Ethical Conduct and Disclosure of Members’ Interests for
Assembly and Permanent Council Members
(‘the
Code’), read with clauses 4.1.3 and 4.1.4 of the Code, in
that:
[11.1]
she had failed to act on all occasions in
accordance with the public trust placed in her; and
[11.2]
she had failed to discharge her obligations, in
terms of the Constitution, to Parliament and the public at large, by
placing the
public interest above her own interests, when she failed
to appoint a CEO, after the PRASA board had commissioned a
recruitment
process, which resulted in a financial loss to PRASA of
R1 767 000.
[12]
Secondly, in respect of the dismissal of the PRASA
board, the Committee found that the applicant had breached
clause 10.1.1.3
of the Code, read with clauses 4.1.3, 4.1.4
and 4.1.5 of the Code, in that:
[12.1]
she had failed to act on all occasions in
accordance with the public trust placed in her;
[12.2]
she had failed to discharge her obligations, in
terms of the Constitution, to Parliament and the public at large, by
placing the
public interest above her own interests; and
[12.3]
she
had failed to maintain public confidence and trust in the integrity
of Parliament and thereby engender the respect and confidence
that
society needs to have in Parliament as a representative institution,
when she dismissed the PRASA board on the same day when
Mr Molefe
wrote to the Portfolio Committee on Transport, which dismissal was
ruled by the High Court in
Molefe
v Minister of Transport
to
be irrational, unreasonable and unlawful.
[13]
Thirdly, in respect of the misuse of PRASA assets,
the Committee found that the applicant had breached clause 10.1.1.3
of the
Code, read with clause 4.1.4 of the Code, in that she had
failed to discharge her obligations, in terms of the Constitution,
to
Parliament and the public at large, by placing the public interest
above her own interests, when she requested buses from PRASA
to be
used for the ANC 2015, January 8th celebrations, that were not paid
for by the ANC.
[14]
On
18 April 2023, the Committee informed the applicant that it
had finalised its deliberations on the complaint.
It does not
appear to be in dispute that the applicant was invited to make
written representations on the sanction to be imposed.
[15]
On
18 May 2023, the applicant submitted written
representations to the Committee in respect of sanction. In the
applicant’s representations, she requested that she be given
the opportunity to make oral representations to the Committee.
The
Committee granted the applicant that opportunity, and the applicant
duly made oral representations to the Committee on the issue
of
sanction on 28 September 2023.
[16]
On
20 October 2023 the Committee met to finalise its
deliberations on the complaint. On 24 October 2023
the Committee informed the applicant that it had finalised its
deliberations, and that it had made recommendations to the National
Assembly.
[17]
The Committee recommended to the National
Assembly, that in respect of each of the three breaches found, the
applicant be suspended
from her seat in all Parliamentary debates and
sittings, and from committee meetings and committee related functions
and operations
for one term of the Parliamentary program. The
Committee further recommended that the suspension in respect of all
three
breaches run concurrently during a term of the Parliamentary
program as determined by the National Assembly.
[18]
On 26 October 2023, the applicant
received the report of the Committee in respect of the complaint.
[19]
The National Assembly placed the matter on its
agenda for 28
November 2023.
It appears from a letter dated 28 November 2023, from the
applicants’ erstwhile attorneys,
which is annexed to the
Speaker’s answering affidavit, that the applicant was notified
of the 28 November 2023
sitting of the National Assembly
and of the agenda.
[20]
In that letter of the 28 November 2023
the applicant through her erstwhile attorneys, advised
inter
alia
, the Speaker that she was of the
view that the State Capture Commission process as well as the process
of the Committee had “
violated her
rights to a fair quasi judicial process”.
The
applicant’s erstwhile attorneys state in the letter that they
had been instructed to “
take the
matter and in particular the Joint Committee on Ethics matter, to
court to set aside the findings and sanction”
and
that “
the court papers will be
launched next week by 6 December 2023”
.
[21]
On 28
November 2023,
the National Assembly adopted the report of the Committee with its
findings and recommendations. The sanction
recommended by the
Committee was approved and adopted as a decision of the National
Assembly. The National Assembly imposed
the sanction for the
first term of the 2024 Parliamentary session.
[22]
On 6 December 2023, the applicant was
notified in writing of the decision of the National Assembly and, in
particular, the
applicant was notified that the sanction had been
imposed for the first term of the 2024 Parliamentary session.
[23]
Both the Speaker and #UniteBehind contend that the
application is not urgent, alternatively that any urgency that may
exist is self-created
and that the application should be struck from
the roll with costs for this reason alone, and further that the
applicant has failed
to make out a case for interim relief in any
event. Consequently both the Speaker and #UniteBehind contend
that if the application
is not struck from the roll for lack of
urgency, the application for interim relief should be dismissed on
the merits.
[24]
It is
well settled that the question as to whether this application
warrants this Court’s urgent attention is to be determined
on
the facts.
[2]
Where an
application lacks the requisite element or degree of urgency, the
Court can for that reason decline to exercise
its powers under
Rule 6(12). The matter is then not properly on the Court’s
roll, and it declines to hear it.
The appropriate order is
generally to strike the application from the roll.
[3]
An
applicant may not create its own urgency
[4]
and must bring an application at the first available opportunity,
since the longer it takes to do so may have the effect of diminishing
urgency.
[5]
A
n
application for an interdict
pendente
lite
,
from its very nature, requires the maximum expedition on the part of
an applicant,
[6]
and an
unexplained delay has as its consequence a forfeiture of any right to
temporary relief.
[7]
[25]
Both the Speaker and #UniteBehind in essence
contend that if this Court were to grant the applicant the interim
relief that she
seeks, it would effectively render the sanction
imposed on her nugatory because the sanction is time-bound, having
been imposed
only for the first term of 2024 Parliamentary session,
which terminates on 28 March 2024, and that by the time the
review
is heard, the first term of 2024 Parliamentary session would
have come and gone.
[26]
The applicant contends that while the
sanction was imposed on 28 November 2023, she only became
aware, on 6 December 2023
of the fact that the sanction
would commence on 30 January 2024.
[27]
The applicant states in her founding affidavit
that this application was ready to be launched on 17 December 2023
but
that she was advised by the Registrar of this Court (‘the
Court Registrar’) “
that if
this application was launched during the December break…, the
application would have had to be heard within a two
weeks (sic) thus
first week of January 2024”.
[28]
The applicant further states in her founding
affidavit that the exigencies of the matter “
did
not call for such super-urgency given that [she seeks] to suspend the
sanction which effectively kicks in on 30 January 2024”
and that the applicant had “
sought
to comply with the directive advised by the [Court] Registrar.”
In her replying affidavit, the
applicant states that because the sanction would only commence on
30
January 2024, and in light of
the “
directive”
of the Court Registrar that urgent matters must be
heard within two weeks of being instituted, she was compelled to
launch this
application in the second week of January 2024.
[29]
I am not aware of any Practice Directive of this
Court that required or requires urgent applications to be instituted
and disposed
of within two weeks. Counsel for the Speaker and
#UniteBehind, both of whom practice in this Division, confirmed that
they
too are unaware of any such Practice Directive.
[30]
In any event, the applicant makes it clear in her
replying affidavit that she was not prevented from launching this
application
in December 2023, but that she chose not to do so
because if she had launched the application on 17 December 2023,
“
that would have meant that the
matter would be heard in the first week of January 2024
”
.
[31]
#UniteBehind
quite fairly asks why, despite the fact that the application was
“
ready”
(in
the applicant’s words) on 17 December 2023, the
application was not brought to the attention of the respondents
until
it was served (on or about 10 January).
[8]
In response, the applicant states in her replying affidavit that
“
[t]here
was no obligation on me or my legal team to advise the respondents
that I had papers ready but could not launch them.
It sufficed
that I launched them at the correct time”
.
[32]
The applicant’s stance in this regard is
quite unfortunate. The applicant would have suffered no
prejudice at all (and
alleges none) if a copy of the unissued, yet
finalised application had been provided to the respondents on
17 December 2023.
The informal exchange of papers at
the earliest possible opportunity in urgent proceedings of this
nature, where the papers are
voluminous and where issues of some
degree of complexity are raised, is not uncommon in practice, and is
to be encouraged.
[33]
It is
well settled that while the procedure set out in Rule 6(12) is
not there for the taking, the question of whether a matter
is
sufficiently urgent to be enrolled and heard as an urgent application
is underpinned by the issue of absence of substantial
redress in the
application in due course, which is something less than the
irreparable harm that is required before the granting
of an interim
relief.
[9]
Rule 6(12)
confers a general discretion on a Court to hear a matter urgently -
when urgency is an issue the primary
investigation should be to
determine whether the applicant will be afforded substantial redress
at a hearing in due course.
[34]
If the applicant cannot establish prejudice
in this sense, the application cannot be urgent but once such
prejudice is established,
other factors come into consideration,
including,
inter alia
,
whether the respondents can adequately present their cases in the
time available between notice of the application to them and
the
actual hearing, other prejudice to the respondents and the
administration of justice, the strength of the case made by the
applicant and any delay by the applicant in asserting its rights
(that is, self-created urgency).
[35]
Both the Speaker and #UniteBehind raised
legitimate concerns about the short period of time that that they
have been afforded to
respond to this application.
[36]
#UniteBehind was served with the application on
10 January 2024. There is a dispute about when the
first to fourth
respondents (‘the Parliamentary respondents’)
were served with the application. The Sheriff’s
returns
of service on which the applicant seeks to rely are not a model of
clarity. On the one hand the returns of service
state that the
application was served on the Parliamentary respondents on
10 January 2024, but at the same time
states that service
was done electronically due to restricted access to the Parliament
precinct and that confirmation of receipt
of service was only
received on 17 January 2024. The Speaker in her
answering affidavit states that the application
papers were only
served in Parliament on 15 January 2024.
[37]
In terms of the timetable set by the applicant,
the respondents were expected to deliver notices of intention to
oppose on 10 January 2024,
the same date on which the
applicant contends that #UniteBehind and the
Parliamentary respondents were served, and to deliver
their
answering affidavits four court days later. There is no
justification on the papers for such extremely truncated time
periods. Bearing in mind the voluminous nature of the papers
and the complexity of the issues involved, the unreasonableness
of
the timetable imposed by the applicant is made more stark, in
particular if regard is had to the fact that the application papers
were ready to be issued by 17 December 2023 and the
applicant elected to hold off on providing the papers to the
respondents
until, on her version, almost a month later on
10 January 2024. There is no justification for the
applicant’s
conduct in this regard.
[38]
The
respondents have not been able to engage in detail with the grounds
on which the interim relief has been sought. In this
regard it
must be recalled that the well-established requisites for interim
interdict, (being a
prima
facie
right;
a
well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief
is not granted, and the ultimate relief is eventually granted;
that
the balance of convenience favours the granting of an interim
interdict; and
that
the applicant has no other satisfactory remedy) must not be
considered in isolation, but in conjunction with one another in
order
to determine whether the Court should exercise its discretion in
favour of granting interim relief.
[10]
[39]
Prospects
of success in the main application is a key factor in determining
whether interim relief
pendente
lite
should
be granted, in that the stronger the prospects of success, the less
the need for the balance of convenience to favour the
applicant, and
vice
versa
.
Further
where a Court is asked to grant a temporary restraining order against
the exercise of statutory power (or as in this case
a constitutional
oversight function), it may only do so in exceptional cases and when
a strong case for that relief has been made
out.
[11]
It must be satisfied that the applicant for an interdict has good
prospects of success in the main review, based on strong
grounds
which are likely to succeed.
[12]
[40]
It is
thus imperative in matters where interdictory relief of the nature
sought in this matter are at issue, that opposing parties
are given a
fair and reasonable opportunity to engage with the issues arising in
the
main
review so that the Court has before it sufficiently comprehensive
submissions on the relief sought for the purposes of determining
whether interim relief falls to be granted, having
regard
to whether the interim interdict sought will impermissibly trench
upon the constitutional tenet of separation of powers -
what has been
called the “
separation
of powers harm”
.
[13]
[41]
In the circumstances, the respondents’
complaint that they have been prejudiced by the applicant’s
failure to set a
reasonable timetable is well made.
The
manifestly unreasonable timetable imposed on the parties by the
applicant has prejudiced the respondents by depriving them of
a
proper opportunity to respond fully to the applicant’s case, in
circumstances where there is no justification on the papers
for any
such prejudice.
[42]
Further, it is apparent from the common cause
facts that the applicant was aware of the Committee’s findings
and the sanction
recommended by the Committee on 26 October 2023
when she says that she received the report of the Committee.
Further,
the applicant had by 28 November 2023 decided that
she would seek to challenge the Committee’s findings as well
as
the sanction recommended by the Committee, and she informed the
Speaker that she would do so by 6 December 2023.
Ultimately, the applicant was in a position to institute this
application by 17 December 2023.
[43]
Her explanation for failing to do so does not
withstand scrutiny. The applicant states that she did not
institute these proceedings
in December 2023 because if she had
done so the matter would have had to be heard within two weeks and
the matter “
did not call for such
super-urgency”
, because the
sanction will only commence on 30 January 2024. However,
given that the applicant instituted these
proceedings on
10 January 2024 to be heard on 26 January 2024,
she effectively set the matter down to be down
to heard within two
weeks from when the application was instituted in any event, and
chose to do so some four days before the sanction
is due to
commence. There is simply no reasonable explanation for the
applicant’s conduct in this regard.
[44]
For these reasons I am not satisfied that the
application warrants an urgent hearing. However, a further
issue arises from
the applicant’s delay in instituting these
proceedings.
[45]
Having regard to the Notice of Motion, in Part B
the applicant seeks to review and set aside:
[45.1]
The decision of the National Assembly taken on
28 November 2023 to adopt the report and accept the
recommendations of
the Committee and to impose the sanction that
applicant be suspended for the first term of 2024 Parliamentary
session (‘the NA decision’);
and
[45.2]
To the extent necessary the decisions of the
Committee:
[45.2.1]
To consider the complaint;
[45.2.2]
Not to conduct a further investigation into the
complaint in terms of clause 10.4.3 of the Code;
[45.2.3]
That the applicant had breached the Code in the
three respects described above; and
[45.3]
To the extent necessary, the report,
recommendations and sanction of the Committee.
[46]
It bears emphasis that the NA decision that the
applicant seeks to review, is in effect a decision that she is
suspended for first
term of the 2024 Parliamentary session.
[47]
The applicant is at pains to point out that if she
does not get an order suspending the implementation of the sanction
imposed by
the National Assembly, before it commences on
30 January 2024, she will not be able to obtain substantial
redress if
the review application were to be heard in the ordinary
course.
[48]
What the applicant fails to appreciate, however,
is that the NA decision that she seeks to review, is time-bound as Mr
Solik for
#UniteBehind correctly submitted. Consequently, if
the applicant does not urgently obtain an order reviewing and setting
aside the NA decision (that she is suspended for first term of the
2024 Parliamentary session), the review relief sought in respect
of
that decision will be rendered moot, as the first term of the 2024
Parliamentary session will have run its course by the time
the review
is heard in the ordinary course.
[49]
In this matter, the sanction was imposed by the
National Assembly as contemplated by clause 10.7.7.2 of the
Code, which provides
that in the event of the Committee finding that
a member is guilty of contravening,
inter
alia
, clause 10.1.1.3 of the Code,
the Committee shall not impose any of the sanctions in
clause 10.7.7.1, but shall recommend
any greater sanction it
deems appropriate to the National Assembly, and the National Assembly
shall decide on the appropriate sanction
to be imposed, after
consideration of the recommendation of the Committee.
Consequently, the findings and recommendations
of the Committee are
not the operative decisions for the purposes of the review relief
sought by the applicant in Part B.
The operative decision
in this case is the decision of the National Assembly to impose a
particular sanction on the applicant (that
is the NA decision).
[50]
The applicant does not, in the application before
me, seek an urgent review of the NA decision. Instead, the
applicant seeks,
at this stage, only to interdict the sanction from
coming into operation.
[51]
However,
if I were to grant an interim interdict as sought by the applicant,
by the time that the review is heard in the ordinary
course, the time
period within which the NA decision was to have run (30 January 2024
to 28 March 2024), would
have expired, rendering the review
moot. As High Courts are not vested with similar powers to
those of the Supreme Court
of Appeal or the Constitutional Court to
decide a case notwithstanding that it has become moot,
[14]
the review court would not be empowered to hear the Part B
review relief in due course.
Further,
where the operative decision has been rendered moot, it is unclear on
what basis a review court could nonetheless entertain
a challenge to
the underlying decisions of the Committee.
[15]
[52]
Thus, the effect of granting an interim interdict
suspending the implementation of the sanction would be to render the
sanction
nugatory for all intents and purposes. I am in effect being
asked to grant an order that would have the effect of setting aside
the sanction imposed by the National Assembly, in circumstances where
I am not seized with the review. There is no basis
in law for
me to grant such relief. Further, the effect of the interim
relief sought by the applicant has serious implications
for the
separation of powers. A Court is effectively being asked to
grant an order that would undermine and render nugatory
a sanction
imposed by another branch of government exercising its
constitutionally mandated oversight powers, in the absence of
any
legal basis for such interference, given that the Court is not seized
with the review application.
[53]
As pointed out by #UniteBehind, the appropriate
course of action would have been for the applicant to have approached
this Court
on an urgent basis to review and set aside the decisions
which she seeks to review in Part B. She chose not to do
so
and must live with the consequences of her election.
[54]
Where
matters are not urgent, the appropriate order is generally to strike
the application from the roll as this enables the applicant
to set
the matter down again, on proper notice and compliance.
[16]
However, for the reasons already addressed, the effect of the
applicant’s delay in instituting these proceedings is
that by
time the review is heard in due course, the review relief will have
been rendered moot. Given that the review court
would not be
empowered to decide the Part B review relief notwithstanding
that it has become moot, no purpose would be served
in striking the
matter from the roll and, in the circumstances of this matter the
appropriate order is to dismiss the application
in its entirety.
[55]
As to costs, there is no reason why costs ought
not to follow the result. Ms Samkange for the Speaker
submitted that
this is a matter which warrants the attention of two
counsel. She further submitted that senior counsel had been
briefed
and had been involved in the preparation of the Speaker’s
papers, but due to the urgency of the matter was unable to appear
at
the hearing.
In
view of the complexity of the matter and the importance of the
issues, I am satisfied that the costs of two counsel is warranted.
In the result I make
the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is to pay the costs of the first to
fourth and sixth to eighth respondents, such costs to include the
costs of two
counsel where so employed, on a party and party scale.
[1]
For
convenience I refer to the sixth to eighth respondents collectively
as ‘
#UniteBehind’
.
[2]
Commissioner
for South African Revenue Service v Hawker Air Services (Pty) Ltd;
Commissioner for South African Revenue Service
v Hawker Aviation
Services Partnership and Others
[2006] ZASCA 51
;
2006
(4) SA 292
(SCA) at para
[9]
.
[3]
Id
.
[4]
East
Rock Trading 7 (Pty) Ltd v Eagle Valley Granite (Pty) Ltd
[2012]
JOL 28244
(GSJ) at para [7].
[5]
Collins
t/a Waterkloof Farm v Bernickow NO and Another
[2001]
ZALC 223
at para
[8]
and [9].
[6]
Juta
& Co. Limited v Legal & Financial Publishing Co, Limited
1969 (4) SA 443
(C) at
445E-F.
[7]
Id
at 445D-E.
[8]
There
is a dispute as to when the application was served on the first to
fourth respondents. I deal with the dispute in
this regard
later in the judgment.
[9]
East
Rock Trading
at
para [6] and [7].
[10]
Olympic
Passenger Services (Pty) Ltd v Ramlaga
1957
(2) SA 382
(D) at 383E-F.
[11]
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban
Tolling
Alliance and Others
2012
(6) SA 223
(CC) at paras [41] – [45].
[12]
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Gordhan and Others; Public Protector and Another
v Gordhan and
2020
(6) SA 325
(CC) (29 May 2020)
at
para
[42].
[13]
OUTA
at
para [47].
[14]
Minister
of Justice and Others v Estate Stransham-Ford
2017
(3) SA 152
(SCA) at para [24] – [25].
[15]
In
the remainder of the relief sought by the applicant in Part B,
she challenges the jurisdiction of the Committee to consider
the
complaint, the procedure followed by the Committee in reaching its
decisions, the substance of the Committee’s findings
against
her, as well as the Committee’s recommendations on sanction.
[16]
Hawker
Air Services
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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