Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 112South Africa
Els v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (965/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 112; [2024] 3 All SA 228 (WCC) (25 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
25 April 2024
Headnotes
in George but, given the composition of the committee, this presented logistical challenges. The applicant was represented by a local attorney having earlier terminated the brief of her erstwhile counsel from Cape Town.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Els v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (965/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 112; [2024] 3 All SA 228 (WCC) (25 April 2024)
Els v Health Professions Council of South Africa and Others (965/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 112; [2024] 3 All SA 228 (WCC) (25 April 2024)
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sino date 25 April 2024
FLYNOTES:
ADMINISTRATIVE – Disciplinary enquiry –
Alleged
procedural misstep
–
Ruling
on inadmissibility of evidence – Procedure adopted by
applicant is Stalingrad tactic during part-heard disciplinary
enquiry – Refusal by superior court to permits its
jurisdiction to be engaged
in
medias res
–
Not establishing that she has right to internal appeal against the
interlocutory ruling – Applicant has at least
two other
remedies in event that she is ultimately found guilty of
professional misconduct – Internal appeal and an
appeal to
High Court – Application dismissed with costs on scale as
between attorney and client.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN CIRCUIT LOCAL
DIVISION, THEMBALETHU)
REPORTABLE
CASE
NO: 965/2023
In the matter between:
CHRISTINA
FRANSINA JOHANNA ELS
Applicant
and
HEALTH
PROFESSIONS COUNCIL OF SOUTH AFRICA
First
Respondent
THE REGISTRAR: HEALTH
PROFESSIONS COUNCIL
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Second Respondent
THE PROFESSIONAL
CONDUCT COMMITTEE
(PROFESSIONAL
BOARD OF PSYCHOLOGY)
Third Respondent
PULE VICEROY HILLARY
MAOKA N.O.
(In his capacity as Pro
Forma Complainant)
Fourth Respondent
Bench: P.A.L. Gamble
Heard: 5 March 2024
Delivered: 25 April 2024
This judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives
via email and release to SAFLII. The
date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on Thursday 25 April 2024.
JUDGMENT
GAMBLE, J:
INTRODUCTION
1.
The applicant is a counselling psychologist in
private practice in George who is in the process of being disciplined
by the first
respondent (HPCSA), the statutory professional body with
which she is registered to practice. It is alleged that the applicant
engaged in what is termed, in the language of the profession of
psychologists, “multiple relationships”. The substance
of
the complaint is that while the applicant was acting as a court
appointed facilitator in a Childrens’ Court enquiry in
Cape
Town, she offered professional therapeutic services to certain of the
parties involved in that matter. Such conduct is regarded
by the
HPCSA as unprofessional in that is alleged to be a breach of the
so-called Professional Board for Psychology Rules of Conduct
Pertaining to the Profession of Psychology (the Psychology Rules).
2.
A complaint was lodged relating to the applicant’s
alleged breach of the Psychology Rules as aforesaid in December 2013.
On
9 December 2015 the HSPCA’s “Committee of Preliminary
Enquiry” found that the applicant had acted unprofessionally
as
alleged and imposed certain admission of guilt fines which she
declined to pay.
3.
In the result, the applicant was formally charged
with unprofessional conduct on 30 March 2016 and was required to
appear before
the third respondent (the Conduct Committee) where oral
evidence would be adduced. The enquiry was set to begin on 3 October
2016
but did not proceed as planned for reasons which are not clear
but are in any event not relevant at this stage.
4.
I pause to point out that the powers and duties of
such a conduct committee are governed by s42 of the Health
Professions Act, 56
of 1974 (HPA) and any regulations in relation
thereto issued under s61(h) of the HPA. Further, a finding of guilty
before the Conduct
Committee might have serious consequences and
could, in terms of s42(1)(c) of the HPA, result in the applicant’s
name being
removed from the register of practitioners.
PRIOR LEGAL
PROCEEDINGS
5.
In May
2022 the applicant approached this Division urgently for an order for
a permanent stay of the inquiry. In a detailed judgment
Binns-Ward J
dismissed the application with costs
[1]
.
The history of the matter is set out in detail by His Lordship and
will not be repeated herein.
6.
For present purposes it suffices to say that,
after expert evidence had been led before the Conduct Committee from
26 – 28
October 2021, the applicant had approached the Conduct
Committee on 14 April 2022 (and shortly before the postponed date for
resumption
of the enquiry on 9 May 2022) for a permanent stay of the
proceedings. When this application was refused, the applicant sought
urgent relief before Binns-Ward J.
7.
When that application failed, the enquiry was set
down to continue from 21 – 25 November 2022. I should mention
that the Conduct
Committee comprises 5 members and a pro forma
prosecutor who hail from the length and breadth of the land. For
convenience, and
essentially to accommodate the applicant, the
inquiry was held in George but, given the composition of the
committee, this presented
logistical challenges. The applicant was
represented by a local attorney having earlier terminated the brief
of her erstwhile counsel
from Cape Town.
8.
The November 2022 hearing did not get off the
ground due to the alleged illness of the applicant’s attorney.
It also did not
continue as planned from 30 January – 3
February 2023, once again due to the alleged sudden illness of the
attorney. But
the application did run as planned on 8 – 12 May
2023 and 31 July – 4 August 2023. The next sitting of the
Conduct
Committee was scheduled (by agreement) for 3 – 7
September 2023. However, it was once again brought to a grinding halt
mid-way
through the sitting on 5 September 2023 when the applicant
approached the erstwhile duty judge on Circuit (Wille J) on only a
couple
of hours’ notice to the Conduct Committee for urgent
relief interdicting the continuation of the inquiry while the
applicant
sought to pursue an internal appeal against the Conduct
Committee’s ruling on the admissibility of documentary
evidence.
9.
Wille J granted the applicant temporary relief
(styled an “interim-interim order”) while the respondents
were afforded
an opportunity to file opposing papers. To that end the
urgent application was postponed to 20 November 2023 for argument
before
Erasmus J, who was to be the duty judge presiding over the
Circuit at that time. In the interim the HSPCA launched an urgent
application
for reconsideration of the order of Wille J which was
heard by Dolamo J (the erstwhile duty judge on Circuit) on 29
September 2023.
His Lordship refused the reconsideration application
on 6 October 2023.
10.
When the matter came before Erasmus J on 20
November 2023 it was crowded out and on 1 December 2023 it was
further postponed until
5 March 2023 when the matter was heard by
this Court sitting on Circuit. All the while the “interim-
interim order”
granted by Wille J remained in place and the
inquiry was stalled, as was the applicant’s design.
RELIEF SOUGHT
11.
The initial notice of motion which served before
Wille J sought an order interdicting the enquiry from proceeding
further pending
the outcome of an internal appeal which the applicant
wished to lodge against the finding of the Conduct Committee in
relation
to the inadmissibility of certain documentary evidence to
which I shall refer shortly. I shall refer to the wording of the
original
application more fully hereunder. After the proceedings were
halted by Wille J, the applicant sought to appeal the Conduct
Committee’s
ruling on the inadmissibility of the evidence by
lodging an internal appeal with the second respondent (the Registrar)
on 25 September
2023.
12.
The
right to such an internal appeal is founded in regulations which
govern the conduct of inquiries into alleged unprofessional
conduct,
to which further reference will be made hereunder. It is necessary to
point out that a practitioner who is aggrieved by
a decision of,
inter alia, a disciplinary appeal committee, has an automatic right
of appeal to the High Court in terms of s20
of the HPA
[2]
which appeal is dealt with by this court as if it were a civil appeal
from a magistrates’ court. The HPA thus contemplates
that the
prosecution of an internal appeal is a pre-requisite to a s20 appeal.
This case, however, does not involve such an appeal
and is only
concerned with the applicant’s demand to exercise her alleged
right to an internal appeal at this stage.
13.
The relevant document filed by the applicant in
purporting to exercise her alleged right to an internal appeal (the
Notice of Appeal)
is entitled -
“
Notice
of Appeal in terms of Regulation 11 of the Regulations Relating to
the Conduct of Inquiries into Alleged Unprofessional Conduct
under
the Health Professions Act, 1974 dated 6 February 2009.”
It proclaims the
applicant’s intention to appeal to the Appeal Committee
“
against
the findings and interlocutory rulings of the Third Respondent made
on 1 August 2023 and 4 September 2023 respectively.”
14.
I shall recite the grounds of appeal set out in
the Notice of Appeal in full as they provide the necessary background
to this application.
“
TAKE
FURTHER NOTICE THAT
the
findings and interlocutory rulings appeal against as well as the
grounds for appeal are the following:
1. The Third Respondent
erred in finding on 1 August 2023 that the transcript of the
proceedings of the Children’s Court of
Cape Town, case number
14/1/4-252/2011 and 6 December 2013 to 8 of December 2014 is
irrelevant to the complaints lodged against
the Applicant.
2. The Third Respondent
erred in making an interlocutory ruling on 4 September 2023 that the
Applicant may not refer to the transcript
of the proceedings of the
Children’s Court of Cape Town, case number 14/1/4-252/2011 of 6
December 2023 (sic) to 8 December
2014 during the examination of
witnesses.
3. The Third Respondent
erred in making an interlocutory ruling on 4 September 2023 that
photographs received into evidence by the
Children’s Court of
Cape Town, case number 14/1/4-252/2011 on 8 December 2013 and to
which a witness called by the Fourth
Respondent testified, should not
be admitted into evidence in the proceedings before the Third
Respondent.
4. The Third Respondent
ought to have found that:
4.1 The transcript of the
proceedings of the Children’s Court of Cape Town, case number
14/1/4-252/2011 of 6 December 2013
to 8 December 2014 is relevant and
material to the complaints lodged against the Applicant, can prove or
disprove points of fact
in issue and establish the reliability of
certain witnesses called by the Fourth Respondent.
4.2 The transcript of the
proceedings in the Children’s Court of Cape Town, case number
14/1/4-252/2011 of 6 December 2013
to 8 December 2014 should be
admitted into evidence in terms of Regulation 9(19)(a) of the 2009
Regulations Relating to the Conduct
of Inquiries into Alleged
Unprofessional Conduct under the Health Professions Act, 1974 because
it is rationally related to the
complaints lodged against the
Applicant.
4.3 The Applicant may
refer to the transcript of the proceedings of the Children’s
Court of Cape Town, case number 14/1/4-252/2011
of 6 December 2023
(sic) to 8 December 2014 during the examination of witnesses.
4.4 Photographs received
into evidence by the Children’s Court of Cape Town, case number
14/1/4-252/2011 on 8 December 2013
and to which a witness called by
the Fourth Respondent testified, are relevant insofar as the witness
testified to the relevant
photographs and should be admitted into
evidence.”
15.
After receipt of the Notice of Appeal, the
Registrar wrote to the Applicant’s attorney on 26 September
2023.
“
1….
2. It is trite law that a
statutory body such as the HPCSA may not act other than in accordance
with the powers accorded to (sic)
by a statute or regulation.
3. The Regulations
Relating to the Conduct of Inquiries into Alleged Unprofessional
Conduct (‘
the Professional Regulations
’) under the
Health Professions Act were promulgated by the Minister of Health on
6 February 2009. The Minister subsequently
amended the Professional
Regulations on 31 January 2020 and again on 23 June 2023. The latest
amendment to the Professional Regulations
entered into force on 23
June 2023. On 25 September 2023, you attempted to appeal a decision
taken by the Professional Conduct
Committee on 1 August 2023 and 4
September 2023, that is, after regulation 11 of the Professional
Regulations had been amended.
This is notwithstanding that as from 23
June 2023, regulation 11(1) of the Procedural Regulations provides
that:
‘
The
respondent
or
the pro forma complainant
may,
after imposition of a
penalty
on the respondent
after
the discharge of the respondent,
appeal
to the appeal
committee
against
the findings or penalty of the professional conduct committee or both
such finding and such penalty. (Emphasis added)’
5. Given that an appeal
is not ripe at this stage of the process, I am unable (sic) entertain
your internal appeal application nor
refer it to the HPCSA internal
appeals committee.
6. Your client will have
the opportunity to bring an internal appeal application once the
inquiry is completed and after a penalty
has been imposed
and
the matter has been concluded in the event that she is found guilty
by Professional Conduct Committee.”
16.
The applicant did not act immediately: it was only
some 6 weeks after receipt of this letter that she gave notice on 6
November
2024 of her intention to amend her notice of motion to read
as follows.
“
1.
That the matter may be heard as one of urgency and that the usual
time periods, notice and service in terms of the Rules of Court
be
dispensed with;
2. That the respondents
be interdicted from proceeding with the inquiry into the alleged
unprofessional conduct of Ms.CFJ Els (set
down to continue on Tuesday
5 September 2023 (sic) at 10h00) under their reference/case number PS
003-1550/754301/523-8510 pending:
2.1 the outcome of a
review application to be instituted by the applicant against the
second respondent’s decision on 26 September
2023 “
Given
that an appeal is not ripe at this stage of the process, I am unable
(sic) entertain your internal appeal application nor
refer it to the
HPCSA internal appeals committee’
; and
2.2 the outcome of
an appeal to an Appeal Committee of the First Respondent –
2.2.1 against the finding
of the Third Respondent that the transcript of the proceedings of
Children’s Court for Cape Town
under case number
14/1/4/252/2011 from 6 December 2013 to 8 December 2014 not be
allowed into evidence in the inquiry into the
alleged unprofessional
conduct of Ms CFJ Els under the respondent’s case number
14/1/4/252/2011.
2.2.2 against the finding
of the Third Respondent that the witness currently testifying before
the Third Respondent in the inquiry
into the alleged unprofessional
conduct of Ms. CFJ Els under the respondents’ case number PS
0031550/754301/5238510 may not
be cross-examined with reference to
the transcript of the proceedings of the Children’s Court for
Cape Town under case number
14/1/4/252/2011 from 6 December 2013 to 8
December 2014.
3. That the applicant
(Ms. Els) be granted a period of 21 (twenty-one) days to institute a
review application against the second
respondent’s decision as
set out in paragraph 2.1 above.
4. That the interdict in
terms of paragraph 2 above shall continue to operate until the
institution and final determination of the
review application and by
the Appeal Committee of the appeal.
5. Should the applicant
failed to institute the review within the period of 21 days, the
interdict in terms of paragraph 2 shall
lapse.
6. Such further and/or
alternative relief as the Court may grant the Applicant.
7. That such respondents
as may oppose this application be ordered to pay the costs of the
application.”
It appears that there was
no opposition to the intended amendment.
17.
The Notice of Motion as amended differs from the
original to the extent that it introduces an additional procedural
step in the
litigation process by the addition of the relief now
sought in prayer 2.1. This was presumably added to the notice of
motion after
consideration of the contents of the aforementioned
letter of the Registrar informing the applicant that “
an
appeal is not ripe at this stage of the process.”
18.
Shorn of the repetitive verbiage in the amended
Notice of Motion, what the applicant seeks to do at this stage in the
middle of
her part-heard disciplinary enquiry is to –
18.1. Firstly, launch a
review within 21 days of this Court’s interim order to procure
the setting aside of the alleged “decision”
of the
Registrar of 26 September 2024 as noted above;
18.2. Then, if the review
is successful, the applicant hopes to persuade the reviewing court to
remit the matter back to the Registrar
with directions that a duly
constituted Appeal Committee consider the applicant’s appeal
against the Conduct Committee’s
refusal to permit the
Children’s Court record to be admitted into evidence and for
witnesses to be cross-examined thereon
(the admissibility point);
18.3. The applicant will
then seek to argue the admissibility point before the Appeal
Committee and, if successful, to return to
the disciplinary enquiry
and request that it proceed on the basis of the admissibility point
having been resolved in her favour.
STALINGRAD?
19.
The obvious questions that spring to mind are,
firstly, how long will these proposed steps take, secondly to what
end they are sought
to be taken and thirdly, at what cost? The answer
to the third question is self-evident – at great cost to both
parties,
in circumstances where the HPSCA’s costs are likely to
be paid out of public coffers, if not in whole, then certainly in
part.
20.
The first and second points are more complicated
and require a gaze into the proverbial judicial crystal ball. If
things run according
to the applicant’s plan, it is
conceivable, given the current state of the Circuit Court’s
roll that the review contemplated
under prayer 2.1 of the amended
notice of motion may take anything between 12 and 18 months, if not
longer to conclude.
21.
If things do not go according to the applicant’s
intended design in that review, is it unreasonable to presume that
she will
attempt to appeal the refusal to review the Registrar’s
“decision” further up the litigation line, perhaps first
to a Full Bench and then later to the Supreme Court of Appeal and
possibly even the Constitutional Court? I believe that is not
beyond
the realms of speculation.
22.
But there are other scenario’s too. Say, for
instance, the applicant is able to persuade the reviewing court to
send the matter
back to the Appeal Committee and she is unable to
persuade that body to overrule the admissibility point, is it too
remote to speculate
that such a decision of the Appeal Committee will
then be reviewed all the way up the litigation line too? I believe
not either.
23.
My conclusions in relation to these potential
steps are based on the fact that the applicant has already
demonstrated unequivocally
in the litigation before Binns-Ward J,
that she harbours a firm belief that the disciplinary proceedings
against her should be
brought to an immediate halt, and permanently
so. I bear in mind also that that earlier urgent application was only
launched after
the proceedings had commenced before the Conduct
Committee –
in medias res
as it has been termed.
24.
Lastly, although the Conduct Committee declined to
permit the admission of the record in the Children’s Court as
early as
1 August 2023, the applicant waited another month before
launching the application before Wille J, effectively with no
meaningful
notice to the respondents. She thus waited until the very
last minute, abused the requirements of urgency and has now held up
the
enquiry for more than 6 months.
25.
Having failed to stop the inquiry before
Binns-Ward J, the applicant has now seized upon a further alleged
procedural misstep to
stall the disciplinary proceedings. In my view,
the procedure adopted by the applicant is yet another page in what
has become known
as “The Stalingrad Playbook”, where
litigants in criminal matters, all the while proclaiming their
earnest wish to
bring the matter to a speedy conclusion so as to
procure their acquittal, put up one procedural hurdle after another
to kibosh
that very intention.
26.
The
Stalingrad approach was given detailed consideration, yet again, in
the more recent decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
Zuma
[3]
,
where Ponnan JA had the following to say.
“
[6]
As long ago as May 2007, Mr. Zuma’s then counsel intimated, in
response to a query from Hugo J, that he was following
a ‘Stalingrad’
strategy’ in the conduct of Mr. Zuma’s defence to the
criminal charges that the latter faced.
As explained by Wallis JA in
Moyo
v Minister of
Justice
and Constitutional Development and Others
:
‘
The
term “Stalingrad defence” has become a term of art in the
armoury of criminal defence lawyers. By allowing criminal
trials to
be postponed pending approaches to the civil courts, justice is
delayed and the speedy trials for which the Constitution
provides do
not take place. I need hardly add that this is of particular benefit
to those who are well-resourced and able to secure
the services of
the best lawyers
.’
The high court recorded
in the main judgment that ‘
[t]he application [by the
respondents to set aside the private prosecution] is directed at
ensuring that there is an end to the
abuse of an unlawful private
prosecution and an end hopefully to the “Stalingrad”
strategy’
.
[7] A key plank of this
appeal is that no other court had been as ready to accept the
characterisation ‘Stalingrad’,
as was the high court in
this matter. That is not entirely accurate. In
Democratic Alliance
v President of the Republic of South Africa
, three judges of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria found that Mr. Zuma had
adopted a ‘
Stalingrad defence strategy’
, which had
‘
cost the state, and hence the
taxpayer,
thus far a
total amount
of between R16 788 781.14 and R32 million’
.
Meyer J (Ledwaba DJP and Kubushi J concurring) observed that the law
reports are indeed replete with judgments dealing with Mr.
Zuma’s
criminal prosecution. The court noted that Mr. Zuma had ultimately
been unsuccessful in every one of the challenges,
almost always with
an adverse costs order.
[8] In 2017, Navsa ADP
commenced a judgment of this Court with a reference to TS Eliot’s
‘
recurrent end of the unending’
. He proceeded to
refer to what Harms JA said some eight years earlier in
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
:
‘
The
litigation between the NDPP and Mr. Zuma has a long and troubled
history and the law reports are replete with judgments dealing
with
the matter. It is accordingly unnecessary to say much by way of
introduction and a brief summary will suffice.
This abbreviated history
illustrates that on any reckoning, the scale of litigation, which is
likely unprecedented in the South
African courts, justifiably
attracts the epithet ‘Stalingrad’.” (Internal
references otherwise omitted)
27.
While the disciplinary inquiry which the applicant
faces is not a criminal trial, it bears a strong resemblance thereto,
both in
form and substance. The rules applicable thereto track our
criminal procedures in the lower courts quite closely and the
ultimate
end is to procure the applicant’s guilt on charges of
unprofessional conduct with a concomitant sanction in the event of a
finding of guilt. In the circumstances, I believe that it is fair to
apply the Stalingrad epithet in this matter too.
28.
In my view, and for the reasons which follow, the
applicant is not bona fide in her desire to lodge an internal appeal
and in accordance
with the legal principles set forth hereunder, a
civil court would thus be reluctant to permit such a delaying tactic
to be advanced.
I might add that the time might not be far off that
the courts visit legal practitioners who facilitate such stratagems
with personal
costs orders.
JUDICIAL INTERVENTION
IN MEDIAS RES
29.
During
argument counsel for the applicant was asked whether he was familiar
with the approach advocated by the Appellate Division
in
Wahlhaus
[4]
and the many cases which have followed it. He confirmed that he was,
but sought to distinguish the instant case from the principle
that
flows from
Wahlhaus
for
reasons which I will set out below.
30.
In
Wahlhaus
Ogilvie Thompson JA summarized the approach in
which superior courts have expressed reluctance to become embroiled
in unconcluded
proceedings in lower courts as follows.
“
If,
as the appellants contend, the magistrate erred in dismissing their
exception and objection to the charge, his error was that,
in the
performance of his statutory functions, he gave a wrong decision. The
normal remedy against a wrong decision of that kind
is to appeal
after conviction. The practical effect of entertaining appellants’
petition would be to bring the magistrate’s
decision under
appeal at the present, unconcluded, stage of the criminal proceedings
against them in the magistrate’s court.
No statutory provision
exists directly sanctioning such a course. Sec 103(1) of the
Magistrates’ Courts Act (32 of 1944)
– in contrast with
secs. 103(2) and 104 conferring rights of appeal upon the
Attorney-General - only confers a right of appeal
on accused who is
‘
convicted
of any offence by the judgment of any magistrate’s court
.’
Nor, even if the preliminary point decided against the accused by a
magistrate be fundamental to the accused’s guilt,
will a
Superior Court ordinarily interfere -whether by way of appeal or by
way of review - before a conviction has taken place
in the inferior
court. (See
Lawrence
v A.R.M. of Johannesburg,
1908
T.S. 525
, and
Ginsberg
v Additional Magistrate of Cape Town, 1933 C.P.D.357
)
.
In
the former of these two cases Innes, C.J. said at p. 526:
‘
This
is really an appeal from the magistrate’s decision upon the
objection, and we are not prepared to entertain appeals piecemeal.
If
the magistrate finds the appellant guilty, then let him appeal, and
we shall decide the whole matter.’
It is true that, by
virtue of its inherent power to restrain illegalities in inferior
courts, the Supreme Court may, in a proper
case, grant relief - by
way of review, interdict or
mandamus -
against the decision of
a magistrate’s court given before conviction. (See
Ellis v
Visser and another,
1956 (2) SA 117
(W) and
R v Marais,
1959
(1) SA 98
(T), where most of the decisions are collated). This,
however, is a power which is to be sparingly exercised; for each case
must
depend on its own circumstances. The learning authors of
Gardiner and Lansdowne
(6
th
ed. vol 1 p750) state:
‘
While
a Superior Court having jurisdiction in review or appeal will be slow
to exercise any power, whether by
mandamus
or
otherwise, upon the unterminated course of proceedings in a court
below, it certainly has the power to do so, and will do so
in the
rare
cases where grave injustice might otherwise result or where justice
might not by other means be attained… In general,
however, it
will hesitate to intervene, especially having regard to the effect of
such a procedure on the continuity of proceedings
in the court below
and the fact that redress by means of review or appeal will
ordinarily be available
.’
In my judgment, that
statement correctly reflects the position in relation to unconcluded
criminal proceedings in the magistrates’
courts.”
31.
Recently,
in
Jiyana
[5]
,
I had occasion to remark (Fortuin J, concurring) as follows.
“
[15]
The principle thus enunciated in
Wahlhaus
is
still good law and has not been supplanted by our constitutional
jurisprudence. On the contrary, it has been endorsed by our
highest
courts. In
Moyo
the
Supreme Court of Appeal deprecated what has since been dubbed “
the
Stalingrad
”
defence
designed to unnecessarily delay criminal prosecutions, and referred
expressly to the judgment of the late then Acting Chief
Justice in
Thint
.
“
[161]
Under the present Constitution similar preliminary litigation in a
criminal case was considered by Langa ACJ… [in Thint]
and he
said the courts –
‘
should
discourage preliminary litigation that appears to have no purpose
other than to circumvent the application of s35 (5) [of
the
Constitution]. Allowing such litigation will often place prosecutors
between a rock and a hard place. They must, on the one
hand, resist
preliminary challenges to their investigations and to the institution
of proceedings against accused persons; on the
other hand, they are
simultaneously obliged to ensure the prompt commencement of trials.
Generally disallowing such litigation
would ensure that the trial
court decides the pertinent issues, which it is best placed to do,
and would ensure that trials start
sooner rather than later. There
can be no absolute rule in this regard, however. The court’s
doors should never be completely
closed to litigants… If, for
instance, a warrant is clearly unlawful, the victim should be able to
have it set aside promptly.
If the trial is only likely to commence
far in the future, the victim should be able to engage in preliminary
litigation to enforce
his or her fundamental rights. But in the
ordinary course of events, and where the purpose of the litigation
appears merely to
be the avoidance of the application of s35 (5) or
the delay of criminal proceedings, all courts should not entertain
it. The trial
court would then step in and consider together the
pertinent interests of all concerned.’
“
16. The issue was further
discussed as follows in
Motata.
“
12.
It has been stressed that underlying the reluctance of the courts to
interfere in unterminated proceedings in the lower court
is the
undesirability of hearing appeals or reviews piecemeal. See
S
v The Attorney-General of the Western Cape; S v The Regional
Magistrate,
Wynberg and another
1999
(2) SACR 13
(C) at 22e-f;
Nourse
v Van Heerden NO and others
1999
(2) SACR 198
(W) at 207d-e; and
S
v Western Areas Ltd and others
[2005
(1) SACR 441
(SCA)] where, in para 25, Howie P stated:
‘
Long
experience has taught that in general it is in the interests of
justice that an appeal await the completion of the case
whether
civil or criminal
.
Resort to a higher Court during proceedings can result in delay,
fragmentation of the process, determination of issues based on
an
inadequate record and the expenditure of time on issues which may not
have arisen had the process of been left to run its ordinary
course.
’”
(Emphasis
added; all internal references otherwise omitted)
32.
In the
circumstances, a superior court will only intervene in uncompleted
proceedings in a lower court (or other similar tribunal)
in
exceptional cases. What such circumstances are will be determined
from case to case. That approach was endorsed by the Labour
Appeal
Court (LAC), a court which in my respectful view would ordinarily be
concerned with the consideration of the lawfulness
and fairness of a
disciplinary matter such as that
in
casu
.
It said the following in
Booysen
[6]
.
“
[54]
To answer the question that was before the court a quo, the Labour
Court has jurisdiction to interdict any unfair conduct including
disciplinary action. However such an intervention should be exercised
in exceptional cases. It is not appropriate to set out the
test. It
should be left to the discretion of the Labour Court to exercise such
powers having regard to the facts of each case.
Among the factors to
be considered would in my view be whether failure to intervene would
lead to grave injustice or whether justice
might be attained by other
means. [25] The list is not exhaustive.”
The case cited in
footnote 25 in para [54] of this judgment is
Wahlhaus.
33.
The
Labour Court came to a similar conclusion in
Magoda
[7]
,
relying on earlier authority from the old LAC established under the
1956 Labour Relations Act.
“
[12]
In the further alternative, even if a legality review is available to
the applicant under section 158(1)(h) despite the existence
of an
alternative remedy under the LRA, in order to succeed with an
application for interim relief at this stage, she would have
to
establish exceptional circumstances for a review
in
medias res
.
This was explained as follows by the old LAC in
Zondi
:
[8]
“
There
is no universal or absolute test governing the question when a court
will interfere in uncompleted proceedings, but one thing
is clear
from the cases and that is that a court will only interfere
in
medias res
in
exceptional circumstances, or when there is very good reason to do
so. In ordinary circumstances the time to take any proceedings
on
appeal or review is at the termination thereof. The reasons for this
attitude are equally clear. To permit interference in unterminated
proceedings delays the continuation and completion of such
proceedings. If such termination were to be readily permitted the
proceedings
might be interrupted at various times, and to deal with
reviews or appeals piecemeal is clearly not practicable. In any
event,
the irregularity, even if it is allowed to stand, will not
necessarily affect the result which might otherwise have followed.
The
tribunal concerned might for example in any event come to a
conclusion favourable to the party otherwise affected by the
irregularity.
Even if the irregularity does in the end lead to a
conclusion adverse to the person affected thereby, the time to put it
right,
as I have already said, is at the termination of proceedings.”
34.
Lastly,
there is the recent Full Bench decision in this Division in
Public
Protector
[9]
.
In that matter Parliament was in the process of conducting an inquiry
under s194 of the Constitution, 1996 into the fitness of
the Public
Protector to hold office. Having unsuccessfully applied for the
recusal of the chair of the inquiry and after failing
to persuade the
chair to subpoena certain witnesses, the Public Protector turned to
the court for intervention. The court refused
to come to her
assistance and endorsed the
Wahlhaus
approach.
‘
[40]
It is only ‘in rare cases where grave injustice might otherwise
result or where justice might not by other means be attained’
that a court will entertain a review before the conclusion of
proceedings. Such judicial intervention in medias res has been said
to be warranted only where there is a gross irregularity in the
proceedings and in a rare case because the perpetrators perpetuating
the irregularities are those that have been entrusted with
safeguarding constitutional rights.
[41] Courts will
‘hesitate to intervene, especially having regard to the effect
of such a procedure upon the continuity of
proceedings in the court
below, and to the fact that redress by means of review or appeal will
ordinarily be available’.
This is so because in the absence of
exceptional circumstances reviews should ordinarily be brought at the
end of proceedings in
order not to threaten the effectiveness of all
tribunals and courts by opening ‘sluice-gates that could render
the functioning
of the courts and the innumerable administrative
tribunals throughout the land untenable’. To find differently
not only risks
wasting judicial resources and increasing legal costs
but ‘would result in the piecemeal review’ of proceedings
and
a fragmentation and delay in proceedings which may not have
arisen had the process been left to run to completion.”
(Internal
references omitted)
EXCEPTIONAL
CIRCUMSTANCES?
35.
Counsel
for the applicant did not rely on any exceptional circumstances which
warranted the intervention of this Court because he
steadfastly
maintained that the case falls outside the ambit of
Wahlhaus
and
the cases which have followed it. The contention advanced on behalf
of the applicant is that she has an internal right to appeal
the
interlocutory ruling by the Conduct Committee on the inadmissibility
of the evidence, a right which she claims is sourced in
Regulation 11
of the regulations governing such a disciplinary enquiry.
[10]
36.
It is accepted that, if the applicant does not
enjoy the right to an internal appeal at this stage, the application
falls foul of
the
Wahlhaus
approach and that she cannot succeed in the
present application. This then requires the Court to examine the
import of the regulations
to see whether they say what the applicant
claims.
THE RIGHT TO AN
INTERNAL APPEAL UNDER THE REGULATIONS
37.
Under Reg 11 of the 2009 Regs, a party’s
right to an appeal was described as follows.
“
Appeal
11. (1) The respondent or
the
pro forma
complainant may appeal to the appeal committee
against the findings or penalty of the professional conduct committee
or both such
finding and such penalty.”
This means that both the
practitioner and the
pro forma
prosecutor have a right of
appeal in respect of both the finding of the conduct committee and
any sanction imposed.
38.
On 23 June 2023 various aspects of the 2009 Regs
were revised in terms of GN 53 of the Government Gazette of 23 June
2023. These
will be referred to as “the 2023 Regs” in
which the revised internal appeal procedure is set forth as follows.
“
11.
Appeal
(1) The respondent or the
pro forma
complainant may, after the imposition of a penalty
on the respondent or after the discharge of the respondent, appeal to
the appeal
committee against the findings or penalty of the
professional conduct committee or both such finding and such
penalty.”
39.
While preserving the right of internal appeal to
both parties, the essential difference between the appeal provision
in the 2009
Regs and the 2023 Regs appears to address a practical
problem which had arisen. It appears from the papers filed herein
that, whereas,
previously under the 2009 Regs, a practitioner found
guilty of misconduct might have sought to lodge an appeal after
“conviction”
and before “sentence” (to
conveniently use the language of the criminal courts), since June
2023 the entire process
must have been brought to finality, with a
finding of unprofessional conduct on the part of the practitioner
having been made and
the appropriate sanction having been imposed by
the Conduct Committee, before she is entitled to invoke her right to
an internal
appeal.
40.
This change in the regulations, which fortuitously
came about in the midst of the Conduct Committee’s proceedings
herein,
engendered some debate between the parties as to which set of
regulations in relation to the applicant’s right of internal
appeal was applicable. In the view that I take of the matter, it is
unnecessary to resolve that debate at this stage. I shall assume,
without deciding, that the contention by the applicant’s
counsel is correct: that her right of internal appeal is sourced
in
the 2009 Regs and that she might be entitled to exercise that right
before the sanction is imposed. On that interpretation,
the applicant
would be entitled to a further internal appeal in the event of a
sanction being imposed and thereafter to an appeal
to the High Court
under s20. I should mention that the applicant’s counsel
accepted that if the 2023 Regs applied his client
was not entitled to
relief.
41.
Counsel for the applicant submitted that, upon a
proper interpretation of the Reg 11(1) of the 2009 Regs, the
applicant was entitled
to exercise her right to an internal appeal
against the Conduct Committee’s interlocutory ruling on the
admissibility of
the Children’s Court evidence at this stage. I
consider that submission to be erroneous and wrong in law for the
reasons
that follow.
42.
Firstly, if the 2009 Reg 11(1) is considered
purely in its contextual setting, it is apparent that the drafter of
the regulations
intended to afford a practitioner an internal right
of appeal against a finding of either professional misconduct or the
sanction
imposed in consequence of such finding, or both, after the
conclusion of the entire proceedings against her and before she
exercised
her right to appeal to the High Court under s20.
43.
However, it appears that over the years a practice
had arisen which the HPCSA wanted to stop. That practice was a
tendency for some
practitioners to seek to appeal their “convictions”
(i.e. a finding of unprofessional conduct) before the relevant
conduct committee imposed a sanction on them. And then, once they had
been “sentenced” (or sanctioned as the Regs say)
to
appeal that determination in a further proceeding.
44.
During argument counsel for the respondents picked
up on this point and referred the Court to Annexure PM 12 to the
answering affidavit,
being a memorandum which provides the rationale
for certain of the amendments contained in the 2023 Regs. The
document is introduced
as follows in the answering affidavit.
“
67.
Whereas the Conduct Regulations previously allowed appeals to be
lodged prior to the imposition of a sentence, given that this
resulted in inordinate delays, after extensive discussions with in
the HPCSA, on 26 June 2020, the HPCSA recommended to the Minister
of
Health that Regulation 11 be amended to only allow for a single
appeal, namely after both finding and sanction has been imposed.
In
the explanatory memorandum which accompanied the proposed amendment
of the Conduct Regulations, the HPCSA advised the Minister
that the
amendment of Regulation 11 was required.”
45.
The relevant passage in the annexed explanatory
memorandum is to the following effect.
“
The
regulations are further amended in order to provide for appeal
against the decision of the professional conduct committee only
after
the imposition of a penalty provided for in the Act. There has (sic)
been instances where respondents have demanded to appeal
the decision
of the professional conduct committee immediately after conviction
and prior to sentencing and thus bring about piece
meal (sic)
prosecution and consideration of complaints with inordinate delays in
the finalization of complaints.”
46.
It seems to be that what the Minister had in mind,
when amending Reg 11, was the streamlining of proceedings before a
conduct committee
to ensure that there were no unnecessary delays.
For this reason, the possibility of exercising the right of an
internal appeal
after conviction and before sentence was expressly
precluded to make way for one single internal appeal process only to
be pursued
after the sanction had been imposed.
NATURE OF INTERNAL
APPEAL
47.
In my view it is significant to note that both the
2009 and 2023 versions of Reg 11 deal with an internal appeal against
a “finding”,
as opposed to an interlocutory ruling made
by a conduct committee. Over the years the courts have considered
what decisions of
lower courts were capable of appeal. To that end, a
clear distinction was drawn between an interlocutory ruling, for
example, on
the admissibility of evidence (which was not appealable)
and a final determination of the
lis
between the parties (which is perforce
appealable).
48.
A
useful starting point is
Dickinson
[11]
,
a case in which a party to an application in the erstwhile Natal
Provincial Division to have an arbitration award made an order
of
court sought to appeal a ruling by the judge on an interlocutory
matter relating to the admissibility of certain documentary
evidence
during the course an opposed motion. Innes CJ opined as follows.
“
But
every decision or ruling of the court during the progress of a suit
does not amount to an order. That term implies that there
must be a
distinct application by one of the parties for definite relief. The
relief prayed for may be small, as in an application
for a discovery
order, or it may be of great importance, but the Court must be duly
asked to grant some definite and distinct relief,
before its decision
upon the matter can properly be called an order. A trial Court is
sometimes called upon to decide questions
which come up during the
progress of the case, but in regard to which its decisions would
clearly not be orders. A dispute may
arise, for instance, as to the
right to begin: the Court decides it, and the hearing proceeds. But
that decision, though it may
be of considerable practical importance,
is not an order from which an appeal could under any circumstance
lie, apart from the
final decision on the merits. So also in a case
like the present. The parties differed as to what portion of the
evidence (which
was all in Court) could properly be referred to in
support of the applicant’s contention that the [arbitration]
award was
bad. The Court gave its ruling on the point. But that was
not an order in the legal sense; it decided no definite application
for
relief, for none had been made; it was a mere direction to the
parties with regard to the lines upon which their contention upon
the
merits should proceed. To treat such a ruling as an order against
which, with the leave of the Court an appeal would lie, would
lead to
remarkable results. It would be open to a dissatisfied party to apply
during the progress of an action for leave to appeal
against any
decision as to the admissibility of evidence which happens to be
given against him. And there might be more than one
such decision in
the course of a single hearing. If every such ruling were an
independent order, subject to appeal upon leave being
obtained, the
party concerned would, as of course, apply for such leave, in order
to retain unquestioned his right to challenge
the ruling, so as to
support his final appeal against a possible adverse decision on the
merits. The Court would on the above assumption
have the discretion
to refuse leave, but there would be doubtless many cases in which
permission would not be withheld. And these
subsidiary appeals,
besides being expensive and inconvenient, might prove to be useless
because the Court might in the result find
upon the merits of a party
who is challenging its interim ruling. If, however, the word order be
taken in the legal sense already
suggested, none of these
difficulties and inconveniences present themselves.”
49.
This
dictum
in
Dickinson
has
been followed in numerous cases over the past century. More recently,
in
Mkize
[12]
,
Ponnan JA dealt extensively with the distinction between orders which
are capable of appeal and mere interlocutory rulings in
the course of
a matter, which are not.
50.
While it is correct that
Dickinson
related to a case involving an order of court
rather than a finding by a disciplinary tribunal, I believe that the
only sensible
contextual meaning to be given to the word “finding”
in Reg 11 is in relation to the ultimate finding that the Conduct
Committee is required to make viz. whether Ms. Els is guilty of
professional misconduct or not. In the
Concise
Oxford English Dictionary
(10
th
ed. revised) “
finding
”
is defined as “
a
conclusion reached as a result of an inquiry, investigation, or
trial.
”
And, in my view, it is
only when that final conclusion has been reached either way, that Ms.
Els (or the fourth respondent as the
case may be) will enjoy the
right to an internal appeal.
51.
Against this background, I am of the considered
view that it was not contemplated, through the proclamation of Reg
11, that a practitioner
facing a disciplinary hearing would be
entitled to appeal an interlocutory ruling relating to, for instance,
the inadmissibility
of evidence, the granting of a postponement, or a
refusal to permit her to call a particular witness
in
medias res
. Such an interpretation
ignores the procedural distinction between an interlocutory ruling on
a disputed point during a hearing
and a definitive finding of
unprofessional conduct (or acquittal) at the end of the enquiry after
consideration of all the evidence.
52.
Additionally, it flies in the face of the
established approach in
Wahlhaus
and the other cases referred to earlier. To permit
a practitioner to challenge each and every ruling made by a conduct
committee
along the way through the mechanism of an internal appeal
remedy would lead to a chaotic and disintegrated disciplinary
process,
thereby precluding a speedy determination of the complaint,
which is the ultimate goal of such a process. It is for this reason
that the courts have repeatedly cautioned against a piecemeal
approach to appeals in matters such as this. In my view, the passage
cited above from the LAC decision in
Zondi
is directly on point.
53.
Notwithstanding the clear wording of the 2009 Regs
that it is only a finding of unprofessional conduct which was capable
of internal
appeal, counsel for the applicant persisted with the
argument that the use of the word “finding” in the
erstwhile Reg
11(1) included an interlocutory ruling on the
admissibility of evidence. This submission seeks to advance the
relief originally
sought by Ms. Els’ in her original notice of
appeal
“
against
the findings and interlocutory rulings of the Third Respondent made
on 1 August 2023 and 4 September 2023 respectively”
54.
The
submission flies in the face of the plethora of decided cases which
do not sanction such an approach. Those cases have been
set out above
and in conclusion I refer to
Savoi
[13]
where the Full Court observed as follows in regard to an attempt to
pre-empt the admissibility of documentary evidence in a criminal
trial.
“
[58]
Lastly, the applicants submit that they intend to prevent the
criminal trial from being heard, hence the application to have
their
trial permanently stayed. What is evident from this interlocutory
application is that they want the court hearing the application
for
the permanent stay to decide on the admissibility of documents not
yet presented to the trial court. In my view, it will lead
to a
piecemeal trial process. I echo the sound advice of the
Constitutional Court in
Savoi
v NDPP
where
the court emphasised that it is pre-eminently the duty of the trial
court to decide on the admissibility of evidence, including
deciding
on whether the admission of evidence of a particular type would
render the trial unfair. The applicants will indeed be
able to
challenge evidence illegally obtained during the criminal trial. If
there had been any abuse of obtaining evidence then
the trial court
would be the best forum to decide on allegations of abuse.”
Once again the crux of
the decision was the avoidance of piecemeal litigation.
55.
At the conclusion of argument, the Court inquired
of counsel for the applicant whether there were any decided cases
which supported
his argument that Reg 11(1) of the 2009 Regs
sanctioned an appeal
in medias res
against an interlocutory ruling such as
that made by the Conduct Committee. Counsel was unaware of any such
decisions but requested
an opportunity to file a supplementary note
in that regard in the event that his research proved fruitful. The
Court afforded counsel
the right to file such a note by 22 March
2024, the last day of the Circuit sitting.
56.
Counsel did not adhere to that direction but chose
rather to file a set of supplementary heads of argument on 25 March
2024. Those
heads did not refer to any authority in support of his
interpretation of the ambit of the 2009 Regs, but sought to introduce
further
arguments and referred to additional evidence. Counsel for
the respondent objected to this tactic. In my view, it was improper
of counsel to submit such submissions without the consent of his
opponent or the sanction of the Court. The supplementary heads
of
argument were therefore not considered in the finalisation of this
judgment. In conclusion, the absence of any authorities tending
to
support counsel’s interpretation of the 2009 Regs confirms this
Court’s interpretation thereof.
REQUISITES FOR INTERIM
INTERDICTORY RELIEF
57.
As I understand it, the
Wahlhaus
approach is not founded on a party’s failure
to satisfy the test for an interim interdict. Rather, it is based on
a superior
court’s refusal to engage with a matter until the
proceedings below have terminated: it is essentially a refusal by the
superior
court to permits its jurisdiction to be engaged
in
medias res.
To the extent that
submissions were made by counsel on the basis of the requisites for
an interim interdict being met or not, I
shall briefly deal
therewith.
58.
The requisites for interim interdictory relief are
trite. These are -
(i) a prima facie right
(which may be open to some doubt);
(ii) a well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted
and the ultimate relief is eventually
granted;
(iii) a balance of
convenience in favour of the granting of the interim relief; and
(iv)
the absence of any other satisfactory remedy.
[14]
59.
In my considered view, the applicant fails at each
of these hurdles. She has not established that she has a right to an
internal
appeal against the Conduct Committee’s interlocutory
ruling. Secondly, she has not established an apprehension of
irreparable
harm if the application is dismissed. Thirdly, the
balance of convenience is manifestly in favour of the proceedings
being brought
to finality as soon as possible. Fourthly, the
applicant has at least two other remedies in the event that she is
ultimately found
guilty of professional misconduct – (i) an
internal appeal under the Regs (whether 2009 or 2023) and (ii) an
appeal to the
High Court under s20 of the HPA.
60.
Finally,
if I am wrong as to the existence of a prima facie right of internal
appeal at this stage, I consider that this is a matter
where the
well-known
dictum
of
Holmes JA in
Olympic
Passenger
[15]
is in point. After citing the
ratio
in
Setlegolo
the
Learned Judge said the following.
“
It
thus appears that where the applicant’s right is clear, and the
other requisites are present, no difficulty presents itself
about
granting an interdict. At the other end of the scale, where his
prospects of ultimate success are nil, obviously the Court
will
refuse an interdict. Between those two extremes fall the intermediate
cases in which, on the papers as a whole, the applicant’s
prospects of ultimate success may range all the way from strong to
weak. The expression ‘prima facie established though open
to
some doubt’ seems to me a brilliantly apt classification of
these cases. In such cases, upon proof of a well-grounded
apprehension of irreparable harm, and there being no adequate
ordinary remedy, the Court may grant an interdict - it has a
discretion,
to be exercised judicially upon consideration of all the
facts. Usually, this will resolve itself into a nice consideration of
the prospects of success and the balance of convenience - the
stronger the prospects of success, the less the need for such balance
to favour the applicant; the weaker the prospects of success, the
greater the need for the balance of convenience to favour him.
I need
hardly add that by balance of convenience is meant the prejudice to
the applicant if the interdict be refused, weighed against
the
prejudice to the respondent if it be granted.”
61.
I have found that the applicant’s prima
facie right has not been established. But if I am wrong on that
score, I consider
that her prospects of success on review are so weak
that they are substantially outweighed by the balance of convenience
and prejudice
to the respondents.
CONCLUSION
62.
For all of these reasons, I am of the view that
the applicant has failed to make out a case for intervention by this
Court in the
disciplinary inquiry and the application must thus be
dismissed.
COSTS
53.
The respondents asked
that costs follow the result and that if the
application was unsuccessful, the applicant should be ordered to pay
punitive costs.
Counsel for the applicant accepted that costs should
follow the result. I have expressed my concerns about the applicant’s
bona fides in pursuing this application. However, while that may
afford a basis for a punitive costs order, in my view, the
applicant’s
conduct in this matter can be described as
vexatious in the sense in which that term was described in
Alluvial
Creek
[16]
“
An
order is asked for that he pay the costs as between attorney and
client. Now sometimes such an order is given because of something
in
the conduct of a party which the Court considers should be punished,
malice, misleading the Court and things like that, but
I think the
order may also be granted without any reflection upon the party where
the proceedings are vexatious, and by vexatious
I mean where they
have the effect of being vexatious, although the intent may not have
been that they should be vexatious. There
are people who enter into
litigation with the most upright purpose and the most firm belief in
the justice of their cause, and
yet whose proceedings may be regarded
as vexatious when they put the other side to unnecessary trouble and
expense which the other
side ought not to bear. That I think is the
position in the present case.”
ORDER OF COURT
Accordingly, it is
ordered that the application be dismissed with costs on the scale as
between attorney and client, such costs
to include the costs of the
appearances before Wille J on 5 September 2023 and Erasmus J on 20
November and 1 December 2023.
__________________
GAMBLE,
J
APPEARANCES
For
the applicant:
Adv. A.F. Schmidt
Instructed by Marais Law
Inc.
George
For
the first to fourth respondents;
Adv. M.
Vassen
Instructed by Nair &
Associates
Cape Town
[1]
Els v Health
Professionals Council of SA and others
[2022]
ZAWCHC 106
(30 May 2022)
[2]
20. Right to appeal
(1)
any person who is aggrieved by any decision of the Council, a
professional body or a disciplinary appeal committee, may appeal
to
the appropriate High Court against such decision.
[3]
Zuma
v Downer and another
2024
(2) SA 356 (SCA)
[4]
Wahlhaus
and others v Additional Magistrate, Johannesburg and another
1959(3)
SA 113 (A) at 119D -120A
[5]
Jiyana
v Regional Court Magistrate (Commercial Crimes Court 7, Bellville)
and another
[2023]
ZAWCHC 236
(6 September 2023)
[6]
Booysen v Minister of
Safety and Security
(2011)
32 ILJ 112 (LAC)
[7]
Magoda
v Director-General of Rural Development and Land Reform and another
[2017]
BLLR 1267
(LC) at [12]
[8]
Zondi and others v
President, Industrial Court and others
(1991)
12 ILJ 1295 (LAC) at 1300
[9]
Public Protector of
South Africa v Chairperson: Section 194 (1) Committee and others
[2023] 2 All SA 818
(WCC)
[10]
Regulations Relating
to the Conduct of Inquiries into Alleged Unprofessional Conduct
under the Health Professions Act, 1974
,
No R.102 published in the Government Gazette of 6 February 2009 (the
2009 Regs)
[11]
Dickinson and another
v Fisher’s Executors
1914
AD 424
at 427-8
[12]
ABSA Bank Ltd v Mkize
2014 (5) SA 16
(SCA) at
[59]
et
seq
[13]
Savoi and others v
National Prosecuting Authority and another
2021
(2) SACR 278
(KZP) at [58]
[14]
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
at 227;
Erasmus
Superior Court Practice,
2
nd
ed. Vol 2 at D6-16C
et
seq
[15]
Olympic Passenger
Service (Pty) Ltd v Ramlagan
1957
(2) SA 382
(D&CLD) at 383C
[16]
In
re
Alluvial
Creek Ltd
1929
CPD 532
at 535, followed in, inter alia,
Camps
Bay Ratepayers’ and Residents’ Association and another v
Harrison and another
2011
(4) SA 42
(CC) at 76 and
Boost
Sports Africa (Pty) Ltd v South African Breweries (Pty) Ltd
2015 (5) SA 38
(SCA) at
[27]
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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