Case Law[2023] ZAWCHC 245South Africa
Venioscope (Pty) Ltd v Director-General of the Department of Trade and Industry and Others (A196/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 245 (28 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
2 June 2023
Headnotes
on 24 August 2015. At the appeal hearing further information was sought from the appellant. It is not disputed in the papers that the appellant submitted some information in a letter dated 25 August 2015, and by hand on 26 August 2015 to Mr. Truter who worked for the DTI at the time.
Judgment
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## Venioscope (Pty) Ltd v Director-General of the Department of Trade and Industry and Others (A196/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 245 (28 August 2023)
Venioscope (Pty) Ltd v Director-General of the Department of Trade and Industry and Others (A196/2022) [2023] ZAWCHC 245 (28 August 2023)
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sino date 28 August 2023
FLYNOTES:
ADMINISTRATIVE – Review –
Prescribed
time limits
–
To
bring review application – Question of when the prescribed
180 days started to run – DTI agreed with appellant’s
calculation of when 180 days started to run – Thereafter
changed its stance – Had DTI taken issue with 180 days
in
its answering affidavit, appellant would have had an opportunity
to deal with it in reply – Contents of DTI’s
letter
omitted issue that is bone of contention between parties –
Letter did not present finality as court opined –
Decision
that review was brought outside 180 days set aside –
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
,
s 7.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No.:A196/2022
In
the matter between:
VENIOSCOPE
(PTY) LTD
Appellant
and
DIRECTOR-GENERAL
OF THE
DEPARTMENT
OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY
First
Respondent
DEPUTY
DIRECTOR-GENERAL OF THE
DEPARTMENT
OF TRADE AND INDUSTRY
Second
Respondent
MINISTER
OF THE DEPARTMENT
OF
TRADE AND
INDUSTRY
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ELECTRONICALLY ON 28 AUGUST 2023
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD,
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment of
my sister Nziweni AJ (as
she then was) in which she dismissed the appellant’s review
application with costs on the basis
that the review was brought
outside the time limits prescribed in
section 7
, read with
section 9
of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
(“
PAJA”
).
The
court a quo
did not make any findings on the merits
of the review application.
[2]
Although the appeal was instituted in time,
both parties’ heads
of argument were late. In the case of the appellant, the heads
of argument were delivered on 2
June 2023 instead of 1 June 2023, and
were accordingly a day late. An application for condonation was
delivered on 5 June
2023 explaining that senior counsel needed more
time to finalise the heads of argument. Because the delay was
negligible and the
explanation reasonable, the Court condoned the
delay.
[3]
As for the heads of argument of the respondents,
they were delivered
on 11 July 2023 instead of 14 June2023, and were accordingly almost a
month late. The condonation application
explained, in essence
that the respondents’ counsel was engaged in other work. To
this the appellant took exception
and filed a notice of intention to
oppose although no answering affidavit was filed.
[4]
It is regrettable that the reason for lateness
of the respondents’
heads of argument is that senior counsel was otherwise engaged.
No reason was given as to why other
counsel could not be engaged in
the matter, given the extent to which the Uniform Rules of Court and
Directives of this Division
were transgressed. There is also no
reason given for why junior counsel could not be briefed to assist
him and thus expedite the
drafting of the heads of argument. And
alarmingly, it took the registrar of the presiding judge to request
the respondents’
heads of argument, when it was clear that they
had not been delivered in compliance with the Court Directives.
[5]
Nevertheless, heads of argument are
there for the assistance of
the court, and in the circumstances of this case, it was in the
interests of justice to fully consider
the respondents’ case
and to not punish the respondents for the conduct of their legal
representatives. Accordingly, the
lateness of the heads of argument
was condoned.
B.
THE FACTS
[6]
The facts are common cause. The Department
of Trade and
Industry (“
DTI”
) provisionally approved an
application by the appellant in terms of the DTI’s South
African Film and Television Co-Production
Incentive, for production
of a film called
Dias Santana
. When the appellant later
submitted a claim for work done, the DTI rejected the claim and
recalled its provisional approval.
[7]
The rejection decision was issued on 31 July
2015. On 22 August
2015 the appellant lodged an internal appeal, apparently in terms of
annexure E to the guidelines of DTI’s
incentive programme.
From the time that the appellant’s claim was rejected on
31 July 2015, the parties engaged in
correspondence and discussions,
sometimes through legal representatives.
[8]
Amongst the correspondence was a letter from
DTI dated 21 August 2015
requesting specified items of information from the appellant, and it
ended with an assurance that “
submission of the required
proof or documentation will be of material bearing in the
consideration of the appeal”
.
[9]
The appeal hearing was held on 24 August
2015. At the appeal hearing
further information was sought from the appellant. It is not
disputed in the papers that the
appellant submitted some information
in a letter dated 25 August 2015, and by hand on 26 August 2015 to
Mr. Truter who worked for
the DTI at the time.
[10]
On 16 September 2015 the appellant, through its legal
representatives,
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr, requested a meeting with Mr.
Truter in order to resolve the appeal. The DTI responded by
letter dated
21 September 2015, as follows:
“
Kindly
be advised that your request for a meeting to discuss the
above-mentioned project cannot be entertained due to the following
reasons:
1.
On 24
th
August 2015 a subsequent meeting was held at the
Department of Trade and Industry…wherein the same project
disapproval status
was discussed and after thoroughly considering all
the facts and merits of the application and having taken into account
the deliberations
of that day; and
2.
In the meeting, Mr. Roland [a director of the appellant] was
requested to furnish certain
information to the DTI to justify his
dispute over the findings by the DTI.
The requested
information has not been received by the DTI
.
It
is therefore not necessary for another meeting as the issues had
already been dealt with. Therefore the application and/or
claim
remains rejected by the DTI”. (my emphasis)
[11]
The appellant responded by letter dated 25 September 2015
authored by
Mr. Roland himself and not Cliffe Dekker, which, in relevant part
stated as follows:
“
2.
We are in receipt of your 9 September 2015 letter to our attorneys of
record, Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Inc., indicating that
[the appellant]
has not sent the documentation and information requested at the
meeting held 24 August 2015.
3.
We advise that we have provided you with 4 e-mails wherein the
documentation and information
requested at the above meeting was
sent. This, in addition to the detailed documentation presented prior
to and at the above meeting.
…
4.
To date we have not received a response from the DTI subsequent to
our appeal and follow
up documentation and requests for
clarification.”
[12]
Although the letter erroneously stated that it was in response
to
DTI’s letter of 9 September 2015, it is not disputed, and it is
clear from its contents that it was in response to DTI’s
letter
dated 21 September 2015. What is immediately apparent is that,
whereas DTI’s letter of 21 September 2015 stated that
the
appellant had not furnished the information requested at the meeting
of 24 August 2015, the appellant’s letter of 25
September 2015
stated that information had been submitted in four emails, although
no date is provided for when the four emails
were provided. This was
in addition to the information that the appellant states it provided
to Truter on 25 and 26 August 2015.
[13]
In addition to the above, the appellant’s letter of
25
September 2015 made a proposal for its claim to be considered in
terms of a foreign qualification rebate, instead of the local
South
African rebate, and suggested timeframes for consideration of the
proposal, claim and payment in terms thereof.
[14]
The DTI responded to the letter of 25 September 2015 by letter
dated
9 November 2015, which was authored by the Director-General of the
DTI. It specifically referenced the letter of 25
September
2015, and stated as follows:
“
Regrettably,
the final claim of the above production cannot be changed and be
classified under the Foreign Production and Post-Production
Incentive
as the approval was granted under the South African Production and
Co-Production Incentive.
The provisional approval letter
given to the above Production is thus recalled.
It is therefore
with regret I inform you that the DTI currently cannot approve your
request”. (my emphasis)
[15]
The letter of 9 November 2015 did not at all address the remainder
of
the letter of 25 September 2015 in which the appellant claimed to
have provided the DTI with four emails worth of documentation
and
information and was awaiting a response from the DTI in respect
thereof. That was the end of the correspondence between
the
parties in 2015.
[16]
On 15
February 2018, the appellant, through new attorneys, demanded an
outcome of its appeal. After some delays, the DTI sent
correspondence dated 2 July 2018 stating that “
the
DTI has already given its decision on this appeal, in writing and the
letters are attached hereto as: annexure “B”
dated 9
November 2015; annexure “C” dated 21 August 2015; and
annexure “D” dated 21 September 2015…
annexure “E”
dated 31 June [2015]
[1]
”
.
[17]
I have already referred to all the letters referred to as
annexures
in the letter of 2 July 2018. It remains to be added that the
letter of 21 August 2015 was a request for information
prior to the
appeal hearing, although, according to the DTI contains the
information that has still not been submitted by the appellant.
C.
THE APPEAL
[18]
At the
heart of this appeal is the question of when the 180 days prescribed
in section 7 of the PAJA started to run
[2]
,
or as the court
a
quo
put
it, when the clock started ticking. According to the court
a
quo
,
that was on 21 September 2015 when the DTI sent the letter declining
an invitation to meet the appellant’s attorneys. The
letter,
according to the
court
a quo,
signalled
finality and that the DTI was not going to change its decision of 31
July 2015. And the court’s view was that the
appellant’s
grounds for review arose on that date because it was in possession of
the reasons for the cancellation of the
approval, and could not have
been awaiting a decision on its appeal thereafter.
[19]
In reaching that conclusion, the
court a quo
deemed it
essential to fully quote the contents of the DTI’s letter of 21
September 2015. However, the full contents
of the letter were
not set out in the quote, and omitted the very issue that has become
the bone of contention between the parties,
namely the statement by
the DTI that it had not received the information requested from the
appellant.
[20]
As a result of this omission, it is difficult to accept that
the
court a quo
considered this aspect because a reading of the
letter of 21 September 2015 when it includes the omitted portion, is
that, had
the requested information been received by the DTI, it may
have acquiesced to the meeting requested by the appellant’s
lawyers
or at least supplied a decision based on such information.
Seen in this way, the letter did not present finality as the court
opined.
[21]
Put differently, a question that may be posed is of what significance
was the DTI’s statement - that it had not received the
information requested from the appellant - in its letter of 21
September
2015. The answer appears from the letter, namely that it
was a reason for declining the requested meeting with the appellant’s
legal representatives, the purpose of which, it must be remembered,
was to resolve the appellant’s lodged appeal which was
under
consideration.
[22]
Such was the significance of the alleged failure to submit
the
required information that the appellant responded by letter of 25
September 2015, denying that it had failed to submit the
requested
information and requesting a response to that specific issue at
paragraph 4 of its letter. The court
a quo
held that paragraph
4 was “
clearly incorrect”
because the applicant
did receive a response from DTI subsequent to its appeal. However,
paragraph 4, also dealt with what the
appellant referred to as
“
follow-up
documentation”
, in respect of which it was awaiting
a response. That is the only conclusion that may be reached if one
reads paragraphs 2, 3 and
4 of that letter conjunctively. The court
a
quo
did not deal with the issue of the alleged failure to submit
information, and I am of the view that on this aspect the court
a
quo
misdirected itself.
[23]
At paragraphs 52 to 54 of the founding affidavit, the appellant
stated as follows:
“
52.
The DTI responded in a letter dated 21 September 2015, sent by Mr
Truter, a copy of which is annexed
hereto as “
CR11”.
In the letter the DTI incorrectly stated that it had not received
certain information from the applicant to justify its dispute over
the DIT’s findings. This information had been furnished
in the applicant’s letter dated 25 August 2015, annexure
“
CR9”
hereto. The DTI also stated that it was not necessary for
another meeting “
as the issues had already been dealt
with”.
The letter ended with the statement that “
the
application and/or claim remains rejected…”.
53.
I responded to Mr Truter’s letter in a letter from Zen HQ on 25
September 2015 wherein
inter alia
I refuted Mr Truter’s
contention that the DTI had not received certain information from the
applicant to justify its dispute
over the DTI’s findings.
A copy of my letter is annexed hereto as “
CR12”
.
54.
Significantly, in paragraph 4 of the letter I placed on record that
the applicant had not
received a response from the DTI subsequent to
its appeal, follow up documentation and requests for clarification.
[24]
The DTI responded as follows to these paragraphs in its answering
affidavit:
“
94.1
The contents of these paragraphs are denied. The applicant has
been unable to furnish proof or information
that demonstrates the
following, namely that:
94.1.1
the majority of the intellectual property is owned by South African
citizens;
94.1.2
the directors are South African citizens;
94.1.3
the top writer and producer credits include South African citizens;
and
94.1.4
the majority of highest paid performers are South African citizens;
94.2
The applicant merely furnished explanations on the information it
had already submitted in its application and claim
. Such
explanations were not in accordance with the interpretations of the
Guidelines. The applicant attempts to circumvent
the provisions
of the Guidelines by proffering explanations to suit itself and its
circumstances.” (my emphasis)
[25]
The highlighted portion at paragraph 94.2 of the answering
affidavit,
is not supported by the correspondence between the parties. Nowhere
in the correspondence did the DTI acknowledge receipt
of information
from the appellant and issue a decision rejecting the information as
being inadequate or a repetition of what had
already been submitted
to it. Instead, the letter of 21 September 2015 stated that the
appellant had not furnished information
requested of it.
[26]
The court
a quo
held that by 21 September 2015 the appellant
was in possession of information regarding the reasons for
cancellation of the approval.
Although that is true, it is also
correct that
an internal appeal had been lodged
in terms of the guidelines of the DTI’s programme. And, as part
of that appeal, the DTI
had requested further information from the
appellant. That being so, the relevant inquiry, for purposes of
determining the calculation
of the 180 days, was whether the appeal
had been concluded by 21 September 2015.
After all, in terms
of section 7 of PAJA,
proceedings for judicial
review in terms of section 6(1) may only be instituted after
conclusion of proceedings instituted in terms
of internal remedies.
[27]
On that score, it is clear from the DTI’s
later correspondence and pleadings in the court
a
quo
, that it too was not convinced
that an appeal decision had been rendered by that date.
One
such indication is DTI’s letter of 2 July 2018, which annexed 3
letters - annexures B to D - referring to them as its
decision on the
appeal. Thus, even in the DTI’s mind, there is no single
document that may be referred to as the appeal outcome
in this
matter. Apart from that observation, the annexures referred to
as the appeal decision included the letter of 9 November
2015, which
immediately dispels the idea that a decision had been taken prior to
that date. And the contents of that letter support
that view because,
similar to the previous letters, it stated that “
[t]he
provisional approval letter given to the above [p]roduction is thus
recalled”
. It did not speak of a decision that had
previously been taken.
[28]
It is also relevant that, when the appellant demanded an appeal
outcome in early 2018, it was not immediately apparent to the DTI
staff member allocated to the matter that an appeal decision
had
already been issued three years previously. This is also the reason
it took three annexed letters to explain that an appeal
outcome had
already been rendered - precisely because it was not immediately
apparent.
[29]
If there was still any doubt, the DTI’s state of mind
is made
compellingly clear when regard is had to its response in the papers
on the issue of when the 180 days started to run. At
paragraphs 69 to
71 of the founding affidavit the appellant stated as follows:
“
69.
…the stance now adopted by the DTI in contending that the
decision was made on appeal can only
be described as absurd.
70.
For the purposes of this review application, the applicant has
treated the date of 2 July
2018 as the date upon which it was
informed by the DTI that its appeal was unsuccessful. The 180 days
within which the applicant
is entitled to apply to this Honourable
Court to review the decision in terms of PAJA therefore runs from 2
July 2018. The applicant
has accordingly brought this application
within the prescribed time limits.
71.
The applicant maintains, however, that the DTI has not made a
decision on appeal and that
its stance is contrived, disingenuous and
mala fide.”
[30]
The response to paragraphs 69 to 71 in the answering affidavit
was as
follows:
“
The
contents of these paragraphs are denied. The applicant was advised of
the DTI's decision on appeal in the letter dated 2 July
2018.”
[31]
Thus, it was common cause on the papers that the appellant
had not
been advised of a decision regarding its appeal prior to 2 July 2018.
[32]
Given the DTI’s own ambivalence regarding when exactly
the
appeal outcome was conveyed to the appellant, and the fact that it
was common cause on the papers that an appeal decision had
not been
conveyed prior to 2 July 2018, it is difficult to support the view
that the 180 days prescribed by the PAJA started to
run on 21
September 2015.
[33]
In this
respect the facts of this case are distinguishable from those that
confronted the court in
Mostert
NO v The Registrar of Pension Funds
[3]
.
There, the issue of
whether
the review proceedings were instituted within the 180-day period
mentioned in s 7(1) of PAJA was not raised at all in the
papers –
whether by the applicant or respondent, and only arose for the first
time in the heads of argument.
[4]
Here,
the issue was raised by the appellant in its papers, and the DTI
agreed with the appellant’s calculation of when the
180 days
started to run, namely on 2 July 2018, but thereafter changed its
stance in the heads of argument. Had the DTI taken issue
with the 180
days in its answering affidavit, the appellant would at least have
had an opportunity to deal with it in reply.
[34]
There is no
doubt, as was stated in
Camps
Bay Ratepayers’ and Residents’ Association & another
v Harrison & Another,
[5]
that even if the DTI had not raised the issue in their heads of
argument, the court
a
quo
would have been entitled to raise the issue
mero
motu
.
[6]
But, as the SCA and Constitutional Court have held
[7]
,
in those circumstances,
the
appellant should have been given an opportunity to deliver a further
affidavit to explain the apparent delay.
[35]
This issue was brought home during our
proceedings when the DTI’s counsel sought to criticise and rely
upon the appellant’s
alleged delay between 2015 and 2018,
despite the fact that this issue is not at all ventilated in the
papers. There was no evidence
in the papers regarding why the
appellant waited until February 2018 before demanding an appeal
outcome.
The
mere fact of the delay cannot, without more, be equated with an
acceptance that an appeal decision had already previously been
rendered.
[36]
For all these reasons, I am of the view that the decision
of the
court
a quo
that the review was brought outside the 180 days
prescribed in section 7(1) of the PAJA should be set aside. The next
question
is what remedy should be granted. In the heads of argument,
the appellant sought substituted relief as a primary remedy.
Presumably,
this was because it had belatedly sought, though later
withdrew, an appeal on the merits of the review. The belated
appeal
was correctly withdrawn because, at the very least, no leave
to appeal was granted on the merits of the matter.
[37]
Although
the normal relief would be to remit the matter for the court
a
quo
to
determine the merits of the review
[8]
,
the real problem is that there remains no decision in which the DTI
rendered an outcome regarding the appeal lodged by the appellant.
The
matter should accordingly be remitted to the DTI to render such a
decision, including a decision regarding the further information
that
the appellant claims to have submitted to it.
D.
ORDER
[38]
In the premises, I would grant the following order:
a.
The appeal is upheld with costs, including costs of two counsel where
so employed.
b.
The judgment of the court
a quo
is set aside and replaced with
the following:
“
The
respondents are ordered to deliver a decision regarding the
appellant’s appeal which was lodged on 22 August 2015 and
supplemented with further information, within 30 days of this order”
.
_________________________
N.
MANGCU-LOCKWOOD
Judge
of the High Court
I
agree and it is so ordered.
_________________________
R.
ALLIE
Judge of the High
Court
I
agree.
_______________________
G.
SALIE
Judge of the High
Court
APPEARANCES
For
the appellant :
Adv G. Elliott SC
Instructed
by
:
D.
Williams-Ashman
Ashman Attorneys Inc.
For
the respondents:
Adv E. De Villiers-Jansen SC
Instructed
by
:
A.
Marsh-Scott
State Attorney
[1]
Annexure
“E” was erroneously referred to as a letter dated 31
June 2015 instead of 31 July 2015.
[2]
The relevant parts of section 7 of PAJA provide as follows:
“
(1)
Any proceedings for judicial review in terms of section 6(1) must be
instituted without unreasonable delay and not later than
180 days
after the date –
(a)
subject to
subsection (2)(c), on which any proceedings instituted in
terms of
internal remedies as contemplated in subsection (2)(a) have been
concluded; or
(b)
where no such
remedies exist, on which the person concerned was informed
of the
administrative action, became aware of the action and the reasons
for it or might reasonably have been expected to have
become aware
of the action and the reasons.
(2)(a)
Subject to paragraph (c), no court or tribunal shall review an
administrative action in terms of this Act unless any internal
remedy provided for in any other law has first been exhausted.”
## [3]Mostert
NO v Registrar of Pension Funds and Others(986/2016) [2017] ZASCA 108; 2018 (2) SA 53 (SCA) (15 September
2017).
[3]
Mostert
NO v Registrar of Pension Funds and Others
(986/2016) [2017] ZASCA 108; 2018 (2) SA 53 (SCA) (15 September
2017).
[4]
See
Mostert
v
Registrar
of Pension Funds and Others
para
[25].
[5]
Camps
Bay Ratepayers’ and Residents’ Association & another
v Harrison & Another
2011
(4) SA 42
(CC)
para 53. See also
Mostert
at paras [33] and [35].
[6]
Mostert
NO
v Registrar of Pension Funds and Others.
[7]
Mostert
para 35,
Camps
Bay Ratepayers’ and Residents’ Association & another
v Harrison & Another para 54; Mamabolo
v
Rustenburg Regional Local Council
[2000]
ZASCA 133
;
2001
(1) SA 135
(SCA)
para 10.
## [8]SeeA
Penglides (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry
and Fisheries and Another(298/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 74; 2022 (5) SA 401 (SCA) (26 May 2022) paras 18 and
34;Premier,
Gauteng and Others v Democratic Alliance and Others; All Tshwane
Councillors who are Members of the Economic Freedom
Fighters and
Another v Democratic Alliance and Others; African National Congress
v Democratic Alliance and Others[2021] ZACC 34; 2021 (12) BCLR 1406 (CC) ; 2022 (1) SA 16 (CC) paras
217 -219.
[8]
See
A
Penglides (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry
and Fisheries and Another
(298/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 74; 2022 (5) SA 401 (SCA) (26 May 2022) paras 18 and
34;
Premier,
Gauteng and Others v Democratic Alliance and Others; All Tshwane
Councillors who are Members of the Economic Freedom
Fighters and
Another v Democratic Alliance and Others; African National Congress
v Democratic Alliance and Others
[2021] ZACC 34; 2021 (12) BCLR 1406 (CC) ; 2022 (1) SA 16 (CC) paras
217 -219.
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