Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 73South Africa
Public Protector of South Africa v Chairperson: Section 194(1) Committee and Others (18882/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 73; [2023] 2 All SA 818 (WCC) (13 April 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
13 April 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Public Protector of South Africa v Chairperson: Section 194(1) Committee and Others (18882/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 73; [2023] 2 All SA 818 (WCC) (13 April 2023)
Public Protector of South Africa v Chairperson: Section 194(1) Committee and Others (18882/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 73; [2023] 2 All SA 818 (WCC) (13 April 2023)
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sino date 13 April 2023
In
the High Court of South Africa
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
Case
No:18882/2022
In
the matter between:
THE
PUBLIC PROTECTOR OF SOUTH AFRICA
Applicant
and
THE
CHAIRPERSON: SECTION 194(1) COMMITTEE
First Respondent
KEVIN
MILEHAM
Second Respondent
THE
SPEAKER OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
Third Respondent
ALL
POLITICAL PARTIES REPRESENTED IN THE
Fourth to Seventeenth
NATIONAL
ASSEMBLY
Respondents
Coram:
Allie, Cloete and
Savage JJ
Heard:
7 - 8 February 2023 and 13 March 2023
Delivered
electronically: 13 April 2023
JUDGMENT
THE
COURT
:
Introduction
[1]
In this application, the applicant, the Public Protector of South
Africa,
Advocate Busisiwe Mkhwebane, seeks the following relief on an
urgent basis:
‘…
2.
Declaring that first and/or second respondents’ decision(s):
2.1
to dismiss the recusal application(s) of the applicant taken on
17 October 2022;
2.2
taken on 27 October 2022, to dismiss the adjournment application
and/or to continue with
its proceedings as presently constituted, to
be unlawful, invalid and/or unconstitutional; and/or
2.3
taken, and/or confirmed on or before 17 October 2022, to refuse
and/or omit to summon, subpoena
and/or recall relevant witnesses to
testify at the enquiry.
3.
Setting aside the said decision/s referred to in prayer 2 above.
4.
Substituting the said
decision/s with the following:
4.1
that the first respondent is hereby recused and/or removed from his
office as Chairperson
of the section 194(1) Committee; and/or
4.2
that Mr Kevin Mileham is hereby recused and/or removed from his
membership of the section
194(1) Committee; and/or
4.3
relevant witnesses be subpoenaed and/or recalled to testify; and/or
4.4
that the Committee proceedings will only take place after its
composition has been duly
corrected and/or confirmed by this
Honourable Court.
5.
Granting any further, appropriate, just and equitable remedies in
terms of section
8 of PAJA, section 38 or section 172(1)(b) of the
Constitution.
6.
Costs against any opposing respondents on the punitive scale.’
[2]
The first respondent, Mr Qubudile Richard Dyantyi, is cited in the
application
in his official capacity as the Chairperson of a section
194(1) parliamentary Committee (“the Committee”)
established
in terms of the National Assembly Rules (“the
Rules”) ‘
and in his
personal capacity as the decision-maker in respect of his personal
non-recusal decision’
.
[3]
The second respondent, Mr Kevin Mileham, is cited as a member of the
National
Assembly representing the Democratic Alliance (DA) and ‘
in
his personal capacity as an officer or member of the Committee’.
[4]
The third respondent, the Speaker of the National Assembly, is cited
in
her official capacity, with the fourth to seventeenth respondents
cited as all of the political parties represented in the National
Assembly and/or the Committee. No relief is sought against the third
to seventeenth respondents and they are cited insofar as they
have an
interest in the outcome of the application.
Applicant’s
case
[5]
As is apparent from the Notice of Motion, the applicant seeks the
review
of the decisions on 17 October 2022 to dismiss the recusal
applications brought against the Chairperson and Mr Mileham; the
decision
on 27 October 2022 to dismiss the adjournment application
and continue with the proceedings of the Committee; and the
decision
made on or before 17 October 2022 not to summon, subpoena
and/or recall certain relevant witnesses to testify at the enquiry,
including
the President. During argument, the focus of counsel for
the applicant was on the refusal to summon the President.
[6]
It
was contended for the applicant that the review is sought on the
basis of ‘
various
specified breaches of the PAJA
[1]
(read
with section 33 of the Constitution)’
,
the violation of her rights in terms of section 34 of the
Constitution, including the rules of procedural fairness namely
nemo
index in rem sua
,
audi
alteram partem
and/or
the doctrine of legitimate expectation codified in PAJA; and/or
‘
procedural
irrationality which is sourced in the rule of law or section 1(c) of
the Constitution’
.
The applicant contends that the application implicates sections 1, 7,
33 (read with PAJA), 34, 38 and/or 172 of the Constitution.
Although,
given the view we take of the matter, it is not strictly necessary to
make a determination whether PAJA applies, we deal
with this issue
for the sake of completeness in our evaluation hereunder.
[7]
In her founding affidavit, the applicant indicates that the review of
the recusal decisions is founded on 12 distinct grounds for recusal
‘
presented to the Chairperson
and/or the Committee on 21 September 2022, as well as the detailed
written response and reasons…as
supplied by the Chairperson on
18 October 2022…[and] the legal opinion of Advocate
Ismail Jamie SC…’
and
those provided in respect of the recusal of Mr Mileham.
[8]
The applicant contends that the decisions of the Chairperson and Mr
Mileham
not to recuse themselves from the Committee are in breach of
PAJA and/or the principle of legality, are unconstitutional,
unlawful,
irrational and invalid and should be subjected to a
rationality review in being inconsistent with the rule of law and the
principle
of legality; and that the decisions fall to be set aside
for these reasons.
[9]
The applicant stated that prayer 3 of the notice of motion ‘
is
based on the subsequent decision of the Committee, taken on 27
October 2022, to dismiss my application for the postponement or
adjournment of the enquiry proceedings pending the review application
of which the Committee had been duly notified. I will refer
to this
as “the non-adjournment decision”. This leg of the
application is based on my application for postponement
which
was lodged on 27 October 2022’
,
which was dismissed the same day on the basis of ‘
reasons
articulated on the record’
and
with further reasons provided on 28 October 2022; and prayer 3 also
seeks ‘
to set aside the
Committee and/or the Speaker’s decisions in the form of refusal
and/or omissions to summon and/or subpoena
at least one witness and
recall three others who are relevant and required by me to testify
and/or complete their evidence, as
the case may be… the
witness decisions’.
[10]
The application was opposed by the Chairperson of the Committee, Mr
Mileham and the DA.
Relevant
background
[11]
On 21 February 2020, Ms Natasha Mazzone, the Chief Whip of the
Democratic Alliance, submitted
a new motion on behalf of the DA under
the revised Rules of the National Assembly which sought that a
section 194(1) enquiry be
initiated by the National Assembly to
investigate the removal of the applicant from office on grounds of
misconduct and/or incompetence.
She had submitted a previous motion
on 6 December 2019 but it was simultaneously withdrawn.
[12]
On 26 February 2020 the Speaker accepted the new motion and on
25 November 2020 referred
the matter to an independent panel for
a preliminary assessment as contemplated in Rules 129T and 129U of
the Rules of the National
Assembly (the Rules).
[13]
In the interim, on 4 February 2020, the applicant launched an urgent
application in this
Court seeking to suspend the National Assembly
proceedings related to the motion. On 9 October 2020, Part A of that
application
was dismissed by a full bench of this Court. In Part B of
the same application, the applicant challenged the constitutionality
of the Rules.
[14]
On 24 February 2021 the independent panel, headed by retired
Justice Nkabinde, issued
its report in which it recommended that
complaints of incompetence and misconduct be referred to a committee
as provided for in
the Rules. On 16 March 2021, the National
Assembly resolved to adopt the report of the independent panel and
proceed with
a section 194 enquiry. The matter was thereafter
referred to the Committee, comprising of members from each of the 14
political
parties represented in the National Assembly, for a formal
enquiry in terms of Rules 129AA and 129AB of the Rules. The Committee
includes the second respondent, Mr Kevin Mileham, a member of the
National Assembly representing the DA. On 20 July 2021
Mr Dyantyi was elected Chairperson of the Committee.
[15]
On 28 July 2021, a full court of this division dismissed the
applicant’s challenge
to the Rules, save in two respects: the
first, allowing a judge to serve on the independent panel; and the
second, for limiting
participation of the applicant’s legal
practitioner at the Committee’s hearings. The Speaker and the
Democratic Alliance
brought urgent applications for direct access to
the Constitutional Court to appeal the High Court’s order. The
applicant
sought
leave
to cross-appeal the High Court’s dismissal of the other eight
grounds advanced to challenge the constitutionality of
the Rules.
[16]
On
4 February 2022, the Constitutional Court in
Speaker
of the National Assembly v Public Protector and Others
[2]
set aside the finding in relation to the appointment of a judge to
the independent panel. The applicant’s cross-appeals in
relation to the Rules were in the main dismissed, save for the attack
against the Rule concerned with legal representation in respect
of
which certain words were severed from the Rule. The applicant
thereafter sought that the proceedings of the Committee be suspended
pending the finalisation of her application for rescission of the
order in the Constitutional Court.
[17]
On 11 March 2022, the applicant launched
an
application to rescind the order of the Constitutional Court
and sought that the Committee’s proceedings
be
suspended pending the finalisation of such application. On 29 March
2022, the Committee resolved to continue with its work.
[18]
On 31 March 2022 the applicant launched a further application in this
Court,
seeking an
urgent order interdicting the Committee from continuing with its
work. On 10 June 2022, the High Court refused the interim
relief
sought. I
n Part B of the
application, the applicant sought an order declaring the decision of
the Committee to commence or proceed with the
enquiry to be
irrational, unconstitutional, and invalid; and an order declaring the
President’s decision to suspend her on
9 June 2022 invalid.
[19]
In the interim, on 6 May 2022, the Constitutional Court dismissed the
applicant’s
first application for rescission, in response to
which the applicant launched a further application for the rescission
of the order.
[20]
The Committee began hearings on 11 July 2022. On 12 July 2022 the
applicant indicated that
she was participating in the proceedings
‘
under protest’
,
including because the Chairperson could not be impartial as he was a
member of the African National Congress (ANC) which had unanimously
voted for the establishment of the enquiry and he ‘
was
not suitably qualified’
.
However, she indicated that she had decided not to ask for his
recusal on the basis that this would have been viewed as ‘
frustrating
the enquiry’
.
[21]
O
n 15 July 2022, a
Committee member informed the Committee of the contents of the
National Assembly’s Register of Interests,
which recorded that
Mr Mileham was married to Ms Mazzone. On
20
July 2022, Parliament’s Chief Legal Advisor issued a legal
opinion to the Secretary of the National Assembly which concluded
that Mr Mileham was not automatically disqualified from serving on
the Committee by virtue of his marriage to Ms Mazzone. This
opinion
was also provided to the Chairperson of the Committee and Mr Mileham
continued to participate in the Committee hearings.
[22]
On 9 September 2022,
the High Court dismissed the applicant’s challenges related to
the work of the Committee (Part B) but
set aside the President’s
decision to suspend the applicant on the basis of bias. While the
suspension decision is the subject
of further proceedings, the
applicant has appealed against the High Court’s dismissal of
her challenges to the work of the
Committee.
[23]
On 20 September 2022,
after approximately 30 days of hearing, the applicant delivered an
application in which the recusal of Mr
Mileham on 3 grounds and the
recusal of the Chairperson on 12 distinct grounds were sought. The
matter was argued before the Committee
on 21 September 2022. T
he
Committee then met to consider the applications and resolved to seek
an external legal opinion on their merits. On 10 October
2022,
the opinion obtained concluded that there existed no basis for
recusal. The Committee met on 17 October 2022 to consider
the recusal
applications, the refusal of the Chairperson and Mr Mileham to
recuse themselves and the external legal opinion.
On 18 October
2022 the Chairperson issued his report in which he refused to recuse
himself. The majority of members of the
Committee supported the
decisions of the Chairperson and Mr Mileham not to recuse themselves
and the recusal application in respect
of both was dismissed.
[24]
The same day, on 18 October 2022 the applicant lodged an application
seeking that the proceedings
of the Committee be adjourned pending
the finalisation of the current application to review the recusal
decisions taken. It was
indicated that the applicant’s mandate
to her legal representatives was limited to arguing the adjournment
application.
[25]
On 27 October 2022 the adjournment application was refused, following
which the applicant’s
legal team left the enquiry on the basis
that their mandate did not extend beyond that point. Proceedings
initially continued but
were then adjourned until the following day.
That evening, following her query, the applicant was informed that
her presence was
required at proceedings the following day. On Friday
28 October 2022 the applicant’s request that she be granted one
week
until 7 November 2022 to consult her legal representatives was
refused, with it being decided that proceedings would be adjourned
until Tuesday 1 November 2022. On 1 November 2022 the applicant again
requested that the matter be adjourned for a week to accommodate
the
non-availability of her counsel. The application was rejected, as was
the applicant’s attorney’s request to be
excused. A
witness was then called with the applicant’s counsel absent and
the applicant indicated that she would not participate
in the
proceedings.
[26]
The current application was launched on 7 November 2022.
Recusal
of Chairperson
[27]
The recusal of the Chairperson was sought on twelve grounds:
27.1
The first recusal ground related to the decision to
proceed with the enquiry on the basis of the motion, including
in
respect of allegations in respect of which the independent panel had
found there to exist no prima facie evidence, when the
applicant had
prepared her case on the basis that it was only the recommendations
of the independent panel that would be
dealt with.
27.2
The second recusal ground was that the directives were
amended unilaterally by the Committee, without consultation,
in
relation to the treatment of witnesses, allowing Committee members to
question witnesses before cross examination had been concluded
and
excusing witnesses who had not been cross examined, on the basis that
an application could be brought to recall a witness.
27.3
The third recusal ground concerned the Chairperson’s
refusal to subpoena President Cyril Ramaphosa on the
basis of
relevance.
27.4
The fourth ground was that the Chairperson had unduly
favoured and colluded with evidence leaders while he had
adopted an
impatient and oppositional stance towards the applicant and her legal
representatives, which, the applicant contended,
individually and
cumulatively gave her the impression that the Chairperson was biased.
It was contended that this was evident in
the approach to objections
raised by the applicant’s legal representatives, the unequal
time given to evidence leaders to
examine witnesses, hostility
directed at the applicant’s team, conferring with the evidence
leaders to the exclusion of the
applicant and failing to censure the
conduct of the evidence leaders.
27.5
The fifth ground was that there had been undue
interference in the High Court litigation in an attempt to influence
the outcome of a reserved judgment when the Chairperson delivered a
Notice to the High Court advising of the dismissal by the
Constitutional Court of an application brought by the applicant
regarding the leaking of a previous judgment.
27.6
The sixth ground concerned rulings made by the
Chairperson regarding cross examination and/or re-examination,
in
breach of the Directives, when objections related to the questioning
of the applicant by Committee members before cross examination
of a
witness had been concluded. Further, that on three occasions the
Chairperson has permitted Committee members to question witnesses
prior to the commencement or conclusion of cross examination.
27.7
The seventh ground concerned the relevance of evidence
allowed by the Chairperson, in circumstances in which the
applicant
contended such evidence was irrelevant.
27.8
The eighth ground concerned previous utterances made by
the Chairperson which the applicant contended illustrated
that he has
prejudged the issues.
27.9
The ninth ground was that the Chairperson acted in a
biased and unreasonable manner when he refused to postpone
the
enquiry on 13 September 2022 due to the non-availability of the
applicant’s legal representatives.
27.10
The tenth ground related to the Chairperson’s refusal to
postpone the enquiry on 13 September 2022 due to the applicant’s
temporary medical unfitness, which was evident from a medical
certificate provided.
27.11
The eleventh ground concerned the Chairperson’s rejection of
requests that Committee members be consulted, which led
to the
applicant’s legal representatives being muted. This alleged
‘
dictatorial’
conduct led the applicant to
consider that the Chairperson exhibited bias and a lack of
partiality.
27.12
The twelfth ground concerned the allegation that the Chairperson had
presented ‘
false facts in the public domain’
during media interviews, calling for the Legal Practice Council to
investigate the applicant’s legal representative.
Recusal
of Mr Mileham
[28]
The applicant sought the recusal of Mr Mileham on the basis that he
is married to Ms Mazzone;
who is the ‘
complainant’
in the matter insofar as she submitted the motion which led to the
institution of the enquiry in her personal capacity as a Member
of
Parliament (despite the motion itself stating that she moved it on
behalf of the DA); that Mr Mileham has displayed a ‘
distinctively
hostile attitude’
and has
posted tweets critical of the applicant’s senior counsel.
[29]
As with the decision of the Chairperson, the applicant contends that
such decision is in
breach of PAJA and/or the principle of legality,
is unconstitutional, unlawful irrational and invalid and should be
subjected to
a rationality review in being inconsistent with the rule
of law and the principle of legality and the decision set aside.
Refusal
to adjourn proceedings
[30]
The
applicant submitted that the refusal to adjourn the proceedings of
the Committee on 27 October 2022 and thereafter on 28 October
2022
and 1 November 2022 constituted unlawful conduct and was in
contempt of the decision of the Constitutional Court in
Speaker
of the National Assembly v Public Protector and Others
[3]
in which it found that she must be afforded assistance by a legal
practitioner or other expert of her choice.
Evaluation
[31]
In opposing the application, the first – and seemingly the main
– of the preliminary
issues raised by the respondents who
oppose the relief sought is that this Court is precluded from
determining the application
in medias
res
.
[32]
Section 194(1) of the Constitution provides that:
‘
(1)
The Public Protector, the Auditor-General or a member of a Commission
established by this Chapter
may be removed from office only on –
(a)
the
ground of misconduct, incapacity or incompetence;
(b)
a finding to that effect by a
committee of the National Assembly; and
(c)
the adoption by the Assembly of a
resolution calling for that person’s removal from office.’
[33]
Rule 129AD(2) of the Rules of the Committee provides that:
‘
The
Committee must ensure that the enquiry is conducted in a reasonable
and procedurally fair manner, within a reasonable time”.
[34]
As
organs of state, Chapter 9 institutions are accountable to the
National Assembly.
[4]
The
principle
of separation of powers requires that other branches of government
remain ‘
conscious
of the vital limits on judicial authority and the Constitution’s
design to leave certain matters to other branches
of government
’
.
[5]
The separation of powers doctrine is not to be trammelled lightly and
for flimsy reasons. It exists to ensure that each arm of
government
concerns itself with its legislative and constitutional mandate
without undue interference and without being prescriptive
to others.
[35]
In
a different context, the Constitutional Court in
Tshwane
City v Afriforum & Another
[6]
stated:
‘
An
interim interdict should in these circumstances be granted in the
rarest of cases. Intrusions into the sphere of operation reserved
only for the other arms of state is an exercise not to be
unreflectingly or overzealously carried out by a court of law. It
calls
for deeper reflection and caution. The state operates better
when due deference is shown by one branch to another, obviously
without
approaching its obligations so timidly as to incorrectly
suggest that there is an undue measure of self-restraint. That said,
an
attitude that is dismissive of the constitutional firewall around
the powers of other arms of state is not conducive to the proper
observance of separation of powers and exhibits disregard of comity
among branches of government.’
[36]
Section
237 of the Constitution expressly requires that all constitutional
obligations must be performed diligently and without
delay. The
National Assembly is required to hold the applicant accountable by
scrutinising a motion for her removal and to do so
diligently and
without delay, and thereafter make a finding whether or not the
applicant should be removed from office on the ground
of misconduct,
incapacity or incompetence
.
The
National
Assembly and its committees hold the power to determine and control
their own internal arrangements, proceedings and procedures,
[7]
which include those in relation to the section 194(1) Committee
established. In
Doctors
for Life
the
Constitutional Court stated that Parliament, in relation to its
legislative function, must be permitted to carry out such function
without interference, warning that otherwise –
‘
the
parliamentary process would be paralysed if Parliament were to spend
its time defending its legislative process in the courts.
This would
undermine one of the essential features of our democracy: the
separation of powers’.
[8]
[37]
In
Glenister
v President of the Republic of South Africa
and
Others
[9]
the Constitutional
Court refused to consider a challenge to a decision to introduce a
bill to Parliament on the basis that the
bill was unconstitutional,
finding that Parliament must first be allowed to consider such bill.
The Court stated that whether a
court should intervene must
be
‘guided by the principle of separation of powers
’
which
is designed to ‘
prevent
the branches of government from usurping power from one another’
and
‘
to
ensure that each branch of government performs its constitutionally
allocated function’.
[10]
It made clear that ‘
the
reasons advanced to justify intervention by the Court must, at the
very least, demonstrate material and irreversible harm that
could not
be remedied
’
.
[11]
The Court stated that whether such “exceptional circumstances”
exist to justify intervention would be fact dependent:
[12]
‘
Intervention
would only be appropriate if an applicant can show that there would
be no effective remedy available to him or her
once the legislative
process is complete, as the unlawful conduct will have achieved its
object in the course of the process. The
applicant must show that the
resultant harm will be material and irreversible. Such an approach
takes account of the proper role
of the courts in our constitutional
order: While duty-bound to safeguard the Constitution, they are also
required not to encroach
on the powers of the executive and
legislature. This is a formidable burden facing the applicant.’
[13]
[38]
At the same time, courts are hesitant to entertain a review of
ongoing proceedings, including
of recusal decisions, which are
brought
in medias res
because:
‘
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 and effort on issues
which may not have arisen had the process been left to run
its
ordinary course’
.
[14]
[39]
In
SACCAWU
v Irvin & Johnson Ltd
[15]
it was held by the Constitutional Court that the dismissal of a
recusal application, does not, as of right, entitle an unsuccessful
party to appeal the dismissal immediately while proceedings are
continuing. In considering whether to permit such a challenge
in
medias res
,
relevant considerations include the nature of the matter, the nature
of the objection to the composition of the court, the prospects
of
success in the recusal and the length of the record in the
proceedings.
[40]
It
is only ‘
in
rare cases where grave injustice might otherwise result or where
justice might not by other means be attained’
[16]
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
[17]
in the
proceedings and in a rare case
[18]
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’.
[19]
This
is so because in the absence of exceptional circumstances r
eviews
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’.
[20]
To find differently not only risks wasting judicial resources and
increasing legal costs but ‘
would
result in the piecemeal review’
of
proceedings
[21]
and a
fragmentation and delay in proceedings which may not have arisen had
the process been left to run to completion.
[22]
[42]
As
was made clear in
Take
& Save Trading CC and Others v The Standard Bank of SA Ltd:
[23]
‘…
an
appeal
in
medias
res
in
the event of a refusal to recuse, although legally permissible, is
not available as a matter of right and it is usually not the
route to
follow because the balance of convenience
[24]
more
often than not requires that the case be brought to a conclusion at
the first level and the whole case then be appealed.’
[25]
[43]
Counsel
for the applicant sought to advance her case by placing reliance on
Bhugwan
v JSE Limited
[26]
in
which it was noted:
‘
…
that
the appropriate criterion by which the ripeness of the action in
question is to be measured is whether prejudice has already
resulted
or is inevitable, irrespective of whether the action is complete or
not. Once unlawfulness is manifest in a form which
cannot be
corrected no matter how the public authority continues to act, there
is no point in insisting that the complainant should
continue to go
through the motions before bringing the matter to court.’
[44]
Reliance
was also placed by counsel for the applicant on the decision in
Bernert
v ABSA Bank
[27]
in which it was held that it is not in the interests of justice for a
litigant to wait until an adverse judgment before seeking
recusal
when the facts relied on were known to the applicant during the
proceedings. However not only is that matter distinguishable
from the
present in that the litigant in
Bernert
failed
to apply for the recusal of judges when the facts that he raised
later on appeal, after the finalisation of the case, were
known to
him during the proceedings, but the test is rather whether the
applicant suffered resultant material and irreversible
harm
at
the stage complained of during the proceedings.
It
is in this crucial respect that she bears a formidable burden. Put
differently, the applicant must show that it is not the nature
of the
irregularities complained of
per
se
that
entitles her to relief in this application, but rather that the
proceedings themselves have been irremediably tainted thereby,
resulting in grave injustice which cannot be corrected by a court in
due course.
[45]
The
applicant also placed reliance on
Dyantyi v
Rhodes University and Others,
[28]
in which a decision was made on the merits of the matter after the
tribunal had proceeded with its work in the absence of the
appellant’s legal representatives. However,
Dyantyi
is
distinguishable from the current matter in that t
he
review application was not brought
in
medias res
,
but after a finding on the merits.
[46]
In undertaking its constitutionally mandated task, the Committee is
required to reach a finding,
in accordance with the applicable Rules,
in a ‘
reasonable and
procedurally fair manner, within a reasonable time’
,
and to do so within the parameters conferred upon it by Parliament.
The foundational basis for the establishment of the enquiry
and the
role of the s194 Committee is thus, in our view , the prism through
which the
in medias res
issue should be considered. Upon careful consideration it seems
to us that the applicant has approached the issue of
in
medias res
as if it is akin to a
review. The result is that, on this specific issue and as her papers
show, she has failed to properly engage
with what is required to pass
the test. Instead she has made broad and sweeping averments and also
seemingly hedged her bets.
[47]
The applicant contends that ‘
gross
irregularities’
have occurred in the
course of the Committee’s work that are of such a nature that
it is ‘
indisputable
that grave injustice would result’
were the relief
sought not be granted. Yet she has pertinently not engaged with how
her temporary lack of legal representation placed
her at an
irremediable disadvantage in circumstances where an adjournment in
fact eventuated after her medical certificate was
considered; or how
alleged misrepresentations made by the Chairperson and Mr Mileham in
the public domain grossly impeded her ability
to continue presenting
her case before the Committee. In addition considerations of time
wasted and expense incurred do not warrant
a different conclusion,
including that we were informed by her counsel on the last day of
argument that the transcript of the Committee
proceedings exceeded
60 000 pages at that stage alone.
[48]
The applicant’s contention that she is aware of many more
irregularities that occurred
during the proceedings but has elected
to raise only some of them in this application, reserving her right
to raise others later,
underscores that this may not be the last
application brought before finalisation of the enquiry and that the
real risk exists
that the applicant intends to engage in piecemeal
litigation which would only serve to delay the finalisation of the
matter.
[49]
The applicant retains
effective remedies which remain available to her once the Committee
has completed its work.
She has
not shown the existence of grave injustice or that any harm which may
have been suffered by her will be material and irreversible
if the
Committee is permitted to proceed with its task
.
[50]
We thus find, on the
basis of
in
medias res
,
that it would not be appropriate for this Court to permit a piecemeal
review of proceedings. With no exceptional circumstances
demonstrated, the balance of convenience favours a decision to
dismiss the application brought by the applicant.
[51]
However as previously
indicated we nonetheless deal with the applicability of PAJA
for sake of completeness, given that we
are a court of first
instance. T
he applicant submitted
that the relief sought is governed by PAJA, and only in the
alternative, the principle of legality. This
is so, the applicant
contends, since the Committee is an organ of state exercising a power
in terms of the Constitution, and thus
falls squarely into the
definition of ‘
administrative
action’
in s 1(a)(i) of
PAJA.
[52]
The second basis relied upon to support the applicant’s
contention that PAJA would
apply is that to the extent that the
Chairperson and Mr Mileham may be viewed as “natural
persons”, the same applies
to them given that they are
functionaries of the Committee. A related reason appears to be that
PAJA applies since the primary
bases for the application are bias and
procedural unfairness which are specific grounds in s 6 of PAJA,
but to us this seems
to be a circular argument which takes the matter
no further. It is an argument in which the grounds for review are
meant to create
jurisdictional facts, but as we see it, PAJA cannot
apply to non-administrative action and to a parliamentary committee
exercising
a Constitutionally ordained legislative function.
[53]
The
applicant relies on
Calibre
Clinical Consultants
[29]
where the Supreme Court of Appeal comprehensively considered the
question of what constitutes a power or function of a public nature
as opposed to a domestic one. It held that characteristics of a
public function include those ‘
woven
into a system of governmental control’
or
‘
integrated
into a system of statutory regulation’.
[30]
It is about ‘
accountability
to those with whom the functionary or body has no special
relationship other than that they are adversely affected
by its
conduct, and the question in each case will be whether it can
properly be said to be accountable, notwithstanding the absence
of
any such special relationship’
.
[31]
[54]
In our view the applicant’s reliance on
Calibre
Consultants
is misguided since it
rather serves to assist the respondents who maintain that PAJA does
not apply. We say this for the primary
reason that the Committee is
accountable only to Parliament, not the public at large. The
Committee was constituted in terms of
the Rules of Parliament and
must, upon conclusion of the enquiry, report to Parliament and no
more. In this sense, properly construed,
the Committee (as well as
the Chairperson and Mr Mileham as “natural persons”)
perform a “domestic” and
not a public function in terms
of the Constitution. Neither the Committee nor the individuals
concerned are “organs of state”.
[55]
As
submitted by the Chairperson, Parliament, in appointing the
Committee, exercises the legislative power conferred by
s 55(2)(b)(ii)
of the Constitution.
[32]
In terms of paragraph (dd) of the definition of ‘
administrative
action’
in
s 1 of PAJA the legislative functions of Parliament are excluded
from that statute’s purview. The Chairperson, in
chairing the
enquiry, implements NA Rule 129AD which spells out the powers of the
Committee. The Chairperson’s rulings during
the enquiry are,
consequently, excluded from the definition of ‘
administrative
action’
in
PAJA.
[56]
Moreover,
as pointed out by the DA, the applicant appears to overlook the
requirement that an administrative decision must be of
an
“administrative nature”. The decision of the Committee
whether to recommend removal of the applicant in due course
will be
taken in its capacity as a committee of Parliament, and it is the
latter which is duty bound in the performance of its
constitutional
obligation to maintain oversight over organs of state. As described
in
Speaker
of the National Assembly v Public Protector and Others
:
[33]
‘
[9]
The National Assembly is obliged by s 55(2)(b)(ii) of the
Constitution to provide mechanisms to maintain oversight over
organs
of state. The Public Protector, the Auditor-General and other Chapter
9 institutions are organs of state. With this in mind,
the National
Assembly adopted the Rules to govern the process for the removal from
office of these office-bearers.’
[57]
We thus would have found, had the application not been determined on
the basis that relief
has been sought
in
medias res
and accordingly that any
review of the matter is premature, that any such review would be
undertaken against the principle of legality
and not under PAJA.
[58]
It is also not
necessary, given our finding that the applicant has sought relief
in
medias res
,
to
determine the test for bias in
proceedings before the Committee established under section 194(1) or
whether a case for bias has
been made out against either the
Chairperson or Mr Mileham; or whether the issues complained of by the
applicant concerning
inter alia
the widening of the scope of the enquiry and the violation of her
right to
audi alteram partem
have merit.
Costs
[59]
The respondents who oppose seek costs against the applicant in her
personal capacity (whether in full
or in part). Personal costs orders
against state functionaries are used to prevent the abuse of court
processes, such as where
there has been ‘
a
flagrant disregard of constitutional norms’
and
evidence of factors such as bad faith and gross negligence.
[34]
Given the findings of this court, there is no reason why costs should
not follow the result, but in our view the punitive costs
award
sought is not warranted, since we cannot find that the applicant
deliberately embarked on vexatious litigation, particularly
given the
decision of the Constitutional Court that she was entitled to legal
representation. It may well be that in due course,
if there is a
review once proceedings have concluded, another court may come to a
different conclusion on the costs of the review,
but we emphasise
that, for all of the reasons given, we decline to deal with the
merits of the review at this stage.
Order
[60]
The following order is made:
The
application is dismissed with costs, including the costs of three
counsel for the first respondent where so employed, as well
as the
costs of counsel for the second respondent and Democratic Alliance as
one of the fifth respondents.
R
ALLIE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
J
I CLOETE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
K
M SAVAGE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
Applicant:
D
Mpofu SC with H Matlhape and B Shabalala
Instructed
by Seanego Attorneys
First
Respondent:
I
Jamie SC with A Nacerodien and U Naidoo
Instructed
by the State Attorney
Second
and Fifth Respondents:
S
Budlender SC with M Bishop
Instructed
by Minde Schapiro & Smith Inc.
[1]
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
[2]
2022
(3) SA 1 (CC).
[3]
fn
2 above.
[4]
Sections
55(2)(b)(ii)
and
181(5)
of the Constitution.
[5]
Doctors
for Life International v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
2006
(6) SA 416 (CC).
[6]
2016(6)
SA 279 (CC) at [70]
[7]
Section
57(1)(a).
[8]
Doctors
for Life
at
para 36.
[9]
[2008]
ZACC 19; 2009 (1) SA 287 (CC); 2009 (2) BCLR 136 (CC).
[10]
Id
at para 35.
[11]
At
para 48.
[12]
At
para 46.
[13]
At
para 43.
[14]
S
v Western Areas Ltd and Others
2005
(5) SA 214
(SCA) at para [25], cited with approval in
Maswanganyi
v Road Accident Fund (
Maswanganyi)
2019
(5) SA 407
(SCA) at para [21].
[15]
SACCAWU
v Irvin & Johnson Ltd
2000(3)
SA 705(CC) at para [4].
[16]
Wahlhaus
v Additional Magistrate,
Johannesburg
(
Wahlhaus
)
1959 (3) SA 113
(A) at 120B.
[17]
Relied
on
Wahlhaus
1959(3)
SA 113 (A).
[18]
Maswanganyi
(supra
)
at para [21].
[19]
Ibid.
[20]
Hlophe
v Judicial Service Commission and Others
[2009]
ZAGPJHC 19;
[2009] 4 All SA 67
(GSJ) at para [12].
[21]
Phahlane
v National Commissioner of the South African Police Services and
Others
[2020]
ZAGPPHC 159 at para [35].
[22]
S
v
Western
Areas Ltd & Others
2005(50
SA214 (SCA) at para 26, cited with approval in Maswanganyi
infra.
[23]
[2004]
ZASCA 1
;
2004 (4) SA 1
(SCA);
[2004] 1 All SA 597
(SCA) at para
[4]
.
[24]
With
reference to
Smith
v Kwanonqubela Town Council
1999
(4) SA 947
(SCA)
para [16].
[25]
R
v Silber
1952
(2) SA 475
(A)
481E;
SA
Commercial Catering & Allied Workers Union v Irvin & Johnson
Ltd (Seafoods Division Fish Processing)
[2000]
ZACC 10
;
2000
(3) SA 705
(CC)
paras [4]-[5].
[26]
Bhugwan
v JSE Limited
2010
(3) SA 335
(GSJ) at para [11].
[27]
Bernert
v ABSA Bank
2011
(3) SA 92
(CC) at para [75].
[28]
[2022] ZASCA 32; 2023 (1) SA 32 (SCA).
[29]
Calibre
Clinical Consultants v National Bargaining Council for the Road
Freight Industry
2010
(5) SA 457
(SCA) at paras [33], [35] and [38].
[30]
At
para [42].
[31]
At
para [40].
[32]
Speaker
of the National Assembly v Public Protector and Others
2022
(3) SA 1
(CC) at para [9].
[33]
See
footnote 6 above.
[34]
Black
Sash Trust v Minister of Social Development
2017
(9) BCLR 1089
(CC).
sino noindex
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