Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 205South Africa
My Vote Counts NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others (10607/24) [2024] ZAWCHC 205 (16 August 2024)
Headnotes
to determine constitutional validity.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAWCHC 205
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## My Vote Counts NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others (10607/24) [2024] ZAWCHC 205 (16 August 2024)
My Vote Counts NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others (10607/24) [2024] ZAWCHC 205 (16 August 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAWCHC/Data/2024_205.html
sino date 16 August 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No: 10607/24
In the matter between
MY
VOTE COUNT NPC
APPLICANT
AND
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
1
st
RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
2
nd
RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
3
rd
RESPONDENT
ACTING
SPEAKER OF THE NATIONAL
ASSEMBLY
4
th
RESPONDENT
And
In
the application for intervention of
THE
DEMOCRATIC ALLIANCE
INTERVENING
APPLICANT
In
re the matter between
MY
VOTE COUNTS NPC
APPLICANT
AND
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
1
st
RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND
CORRECTIONAL
SERVICES
2
nd
RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
3
rd
RESPONDENT
ACTING
SPEAKER OF
THE
NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
4
th
RESPONDENT
Date
of Hearing: 12 August 2024
Date of Judgment:
16 August 2024 (to be delivered via email to the respective counsel)
JUDGMENT
THULARE J
[1] This is judgment on
the return date of a
rule nisi
. The Democratic Alliance (the
DA) considered itself an ‘interested person’ called upon
to show cause why an order in
the terms prayed for by the applicant
(MVC) should not be made final on the return date, and filed papers
to oppose the application.
The applicant (MVC) disputed that the DA
was an ‘interested person’. The President, the Minister
of Justice and Correctional
Services, the Minister of Home Affairs
and the Acting Speaker of the National Assembly, all abided the
decision of the court on
the return date. The Speaker filed an
explanatory affidavit which explained the measures that the National
Assembly (NA) took and
intended taking in relation to a resolution
for the President’s consideration which will include upper
limit and disclosure
thresholds.
[2] The issues were
whether the DA was an interested person, and whether the
rule nisi
stood to be confirmed.
THE DA’S INTEREST
[3] The DA’s case
on its interest is in substance couched in the following terms at
para 15 of its founding affidavit:
“
The
DA plainly has a direct and substantial interest in the main
application. As a registered political party, it is required to
comply with the donation limit in section 8(2) of the Funding Act
(“the donation limit”) and the disclosure threshold
in
section 9(1)(a) thereof (“the disclosure threshold”). The
relief sought in the main application relates to the donation
limit
and disclosure threshold.”
MVC’s position was
that the mere fact that a person or entity was required to comply
with legislation did not automatically
confer upon them a direct and
substantial interest in litigation concerning the validity of that
legislation. It was contended
that compliance with a statutory
provision did not inherently grant an interest in legal proceedings
challenging that law’s
validity. It was also contended that the
relief that the applicant sought was what applied as a matter of
statute. MVC contended
furthermore, that even in circumstances where
the relief sought aimed to temporarily address a gap in legislation,
it did not grant
the DA a direct and substantial interest, as such
relief did not affect any of its legal rights. In particular, the DA
could not
claim any prejudice to its rights, to the extent that it
had any, because, by its own interpretation, it accepted that it was
subject
to the financial thresholds. If the relief was granted, the
DA would continue to act in accordance with the financial thresholds.
MVC’s case was that the DA did not meet the higher threshold
that was required of a party to establish any interest in a
matter
where the validity of the law was in issue.
[4] MVC’s view was
that even if it was shown that the DA had a direct and substantial
interest in this matter, it would not
be in the interests of justice
to allow their intervention. MVC provides five reasons for this view.
First, the DA’s case
was based on the incorrect reading of
section 11 of the Interpretation Act, a submission which was already
made by the third respondent
in the urgent application. MVC’s
view was that the interpretation was manifestly wrong, misleading and
an unhelpful submission
to the court. Second, the DA belatedly sought
to intervene. Third, the intervention application essentially sought
to introduce
a counter-application at a late stage in the
proceedings, and this would delay the hearing. Fourth, the DA would
not suffer any
prejudice if the relief was granted as the DA believed
it was currently as a matter of law already subject to the threshold
limits
and caps, which the applicant sought by way of interim relief
in these proceedings. Fifthly, the intervention application was not
bona fide,
and was a misguided attempt to safeguard its
interests in the 2023 application which dealt with a different
subject and was yet
to be heard. The
non-bona fides
of the DA
was clear when regard was had to the fact that the DA’s member
of Parliament and its Shadow Minister of Home Affairs
then Mr Adriaan
Roos argued, during a Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs
deliberations on the law under consideration, that with
the removal
of the R15 million limit, political parties could receive unlimited
donations with no regulatory oversight. The DA
was on record in the
National Assembly stating that there was a lacuna in the law and that
it was a major problem that should avoided.
It was inexplicable that
the DA now tried to depart from its previous position, in this
litigation.
[5] The DA was well
within its rights, if it believed that it was an interested person as
envisaged in the
rule nisi,
to answer to the call on the
return date. The delay occasioned by such answer is a necessary
consequence of the applicant’s
approach to court, the right to
be heard and to fully prepare for litigation and the interests of
justice. Moreover, such delay
did not occasion in this matter. This
disposes of the second and third ground upon which MVC relied on why
it was not in the interests
of justice to allow the DA’s
intervention. There is a vast difference between a political argument
and a legal argument.
Politicians, including in the National
Assembly, do and say things which if they had legal advice, would not
have done or said.
Courts should be too slow to hold politicians and
political parties to their word in political debates, as this may
have the tendency
to stifle democratic debate. It is courts that
should assist that there is no judicialisation of politics. The
Speaker’s
explanatory note drives the point home. It is once
the judgment in the
rule nisi
was delivered, in the midst of
uncertainty and political debates, that the NA through its lawyers
read and considered the judgment,
advised of its correctness and
agreed with it, that the view was that any resolution proposed by the
NA in terms of section 24
of the Act must set amounts on the upper
limit and disclosure thresholds in order to enable the President to
apply his mind to
the figures and numbers resolved. In my view, it is
proper to reject the invitation to go into political debates in the
Committees
of the NA, which may or may not have been informed by
prior legal advice, and use it against the DA. In legal matters, it
is not
unheard of that one may get conflicting legal advice one after
the other on the same matter. I am not persuaded by the fifth ground,
in that a change of front on a matter was necessarily a demonstration
of the DA not being
bona fide
. I am not persuaded that a
political party, without more, owes a court an explanation when its
political rhetoric outside the courtroom
differs from its legal
argument in litigation. Such duty may be owed to its members,
supporters, voters and others interested in
consistency in its
conversations. It is the first and fourth grounds that require some
closer scrutiny. I will deal with the first
last as it is the same
ground that the third respondent argued in the
rule nisi.
[6] In
Gory v Kolver
NO and Others (Starke and Others Intervening)
2007 (4) SA 97
(CC)
at para 12 and 13 it was said:
“
[12]
As was pointed out on behalf of Mr Bell, the considerations
applicable to Uniform Rule 12 are not necessarily wholly appropriate
to a case involving an order of constitutional invalidity of a
statute in terms of s 172 of the Constitution. The common-law
principles
relating to intervention of parties applied by the courts
in respect of Uniform Rule 12 deal primarily with disputes
in
personam
, whereas
an order under s 172 is an order
in
rem
. In disputes
concerning the constitutional validity of a statute, it would - so it
was submitted - be impractical if 'the test
of a direct and
substantial interest in the subject-matter of the action is again
regarded as being the decisive criterion' (emphasis
added). This
Court would not be able to function properly if every party with a
direct and substantial interest in a dispute over
the constitutional
validity of a statute was entitled, as of right as it were, to
intervene in a hearing held to determine constitutional
validity.
[13] This submission is a
convincing one. In every case this Court must ultimately decide
whether or not to allow intervention by
considering whether it is in
the interests of justice to grant leave to intervene. Thus, in cases
involving the constitutionality
of a statute, while a direct and
substantial interest in the validity or invalidity of the statute in
question will ordinarily
be a necessary requirement to be met by an
applicant for intervention, it will not always be sufficient for the
granting of leave
to intervene. Even if the applicant is able to show
a direct and substantial interest, the Court has an overriding power
to grant
or to refuse intervention in the interests of justice. Other
considerations that could weigh with the Court in this regard include
the stage of the proceedings at which the application for leave to
intervene is brought, the attitude to such application of the
parties
to the main proceedings, and the question whether the submissions
which the applicant for intervention seeks to advance
raise
substantially new contentions that may assist the Court.”
An indirect interest in
the litigation is not sufficient. The person must have a direct and
substantial interest in the results
of the decision [
Standard Bank
v Swartland Municipality
2011 (5) SA 257
at para 9;
Collin v
Toffie
1944 AD 456
at 464]. In
SA Riding for the Disabled
Association v Regional Land Clamis Commissioner and Others
2017
(5) SA 1
(CC) this was expressed in the following terms in para 9 and
10:
“
Intervention
[9] It is now settled
that an applicant for intervention must meet the direct and
substantial interest test in order to succeed.
What constitutes a
direct and substantial interest is the legal interest in the
subject-matter of the case which could be prejudicially
affected by
the order of the court. This means that the applicant must show that
it has a right adversely affected or likely to
be affected by the
order sought. But the applicant does not have to satisfy the court at
the stage of intervention that it will
succeed. It is sufficient for
such applicant to make allegations which, if proved, would entitle it
to relief.
[10] If the applicant
shows that it has some right which is affected by the order issued,
permission to intervene must be granted.
For it is a basic principle
of our law that no order should be granted against a party without
affording such party a predecision
hearing. This is so fundamental
that an order is generally taken to be binding only on parties to the
litigation.”
The DA may have shown
that it has an interest in that it was required to comply with the
donation limit in section 8(2) of the Funding
Act (“the
donation limit”) and the disclosure threshold in section
9(1)(a) thereof (“the disclosure threshold”)
and that the
relief sought in the main application related to the donation limit
and disclosure threshold. The DA failed to address,
and thereby
failed to show that this one interest it relied on, would be
adversely affected by the order sought. The DA accepted
that it was
subject to the donation limits and disclosure thresholds as a matter
of law, which the applicant sought through an
interim relief in this
matter to ensure continued transparency by ensuring compliance with
existing transparency requirements.
The absence of any prejudice of
the order sought, is fortified by the DA itself in what it sought as
an alternative to its prayer
for dismissal of MVC’s
application. The DA sought the retention of the donation limit and
the disclosure threshold retrospective
to the date the amendments
came into operation.
[7] I am not persuaded by
the DA’s case for intervention. Following
Gory’
s
factors included to be considered, I have already dealt with the
stage of the proceedings at which the application for leave to
intervene was brought, and on the return date as regards the stage,
it favours the DA. The President, the two Ministers in Cabinet
and
the Speaker of the National Assembly abide the decision of the court.
MVC is opposed to the intervention. The DA’s submissions
sought
to be advanced do not raise substantially new contentions that may
assist the court. They are the same contentions raised
by the
Minister of Home Affairs, the third respondent, in the
rule nisi,
which for all intents and purposes have been abandoned, if regard
is had to the Minister’s decision to abide on the return
date.
It is reliance on section 11 of the Interpretation Act, 1957 (Act No.
33 of 1957) (the IA). My analysis of section 11 appears
in paragraphs
7 to 13 of my judgment on the
rule nisi.
It is sufficient to
refer thereto. The DA brought no new contentions that may assist the
court. Its proposition that they were
the first to file papers
raising section 11 of the IA, and therefore must be afforded an
opportunity to be heard on it, is simply
flimsy and insubstantial.
The DA’s answer to the call upon all interested parties to show
cause on the return date why the
order sought by MVC should not be
final stood to be dismissed. The DA is a party with an interest. The
DA has however failed to
show that it had a right adversely affected
or likely to be affected by the order sought. The DA also failed to
show that the submissions
it sought to advance raised substantially
new contentions that may assist the court.
THE MERITS
[8] Absent the DA, all
the other respondents elected to abide the decision of the court. The
matter stands unopposed. Upon the Electoral
Matters Amendment Act,
2024 (Act No. 14 of 2024) (the EMAA) taking effect on 8 May
2024 there was no upper limit to donations
in Regulation 7(1), and
there was no disclosure threshold for donations in Regulation 9. The
old regulations were repealed and
had been substituted by the new
regulations. The President required a resolution of the NA to
determine the new upper limits and
the disclosure thresholds. There
was no resolution of the NA that authorized the President to
determine the upper limit and the
disclosure threshold. When the EMAA
took effect on 8 May 2024, it created an unfilled space, or a gap, or
lacuna in the law as
regards the amounts in the upper limit and
disclosure threshold for donations. Section 11 of the IA, upon
which the Minister
of Home Affairs relied in the
rule nisi,
is
applicable to old law which was repealed, in circumstances where the
intended new law has not yet come into operation. It is
a
transitional mechanism to ensure that between the date of repeal of
the old law and the date of effect of the new law, there
was legal
certainty. I remain unpersuaded that
S v Koopman
1991 (1) SA
474
(NC) was authority for section 11 of the IA to cover mistakes
like the present, made by the NA, Cabinet and the President.
Koopman
would save the day for the NA, Cabinet and the President, if the
NA had debated and resolved figures and numbers in relation to the
upper limit and disclosure threshold and passed resolutions thereon,
and the President had made a determination, but the mistake
related
to that part of the law not being put into effect on 8 May 2024. The
mistake where such new law does not exist at all,
and is obviously
pending, is simply beyond the reach of
Koopman
or section 11
of the IA.
Koopman
is no authority for the courts to usurp the
function of Parliament and the Executive through some fictitious
reasoning and create
non-existing laws. Where the courts identify a
mistake, our democratic structure is that the courts should so
pronounce, and allow
the legislature and the Executive an opportunity
to attend to such identified mistake. It is Parliament’s
responsibility
to resolve the upper limits and disclosure thresholds,
and the President’s responsibility to make the determination.
This
court can only go as far as making an order that is just and
equitable to provide temporary relief. The Speaker is thanked for her
explanatory affidavit, and this court is satisfied that Parliament
would attend to the matter, on behalf of the people of the Republic,
in the robust and urgent manner such a matter deserves.
ORDER
For these reasons I make
the following order:
(a) The application to
intervene, by the Democratic Alliance, is dismissed with costs on the
basis of scale B.
(b) The
rule nisi
is confirmed, subject to the corrections in (c) hereunder.
(c) The words “per
annum” in paragraphs 1.1.1 and 1.1.2 of the
rule nisi
are
substituted with the words “per financial year”.
(d) The first and third
respondent are to pay the costs jointly and severally, the one to pay
the other to be absolved, on the basis
of scale B.
DM THULARE
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
My Vote Counts NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others (7630/2023) [2025] ZAWCHC 383 (21 August 2025)
[2025] ZAWCHC 383High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)100% similar
My Vote Count NPC v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others (10607/24) [2024] ZAWCHC 137 (27 May 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 137High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)99% similar
Democratic Alliance v Speaker of the Knysna Municipal Council and Others (4247/2023; 4441/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 141 (28 May 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 141High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)96% similar
Democratic Alliance v Speaker of the Knysna Municipal Council and Others (4247/2023) [2024] ZAWCHC 130 (10 May 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 130High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)96% similar
Member of the Executive Council for Local Government, Environmental Affairs and Development Planning, Western Cape Province v Knysna Municipality and Others (1345/2021 ; 1330/2021) [2024] ZAWCHC 167; [2024] 3 All SA 529 (WCC) (18 June 2024)
[2024] ZAWCHC 167High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)96% similar