Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 33South Africa
Donson and Others v Valentyn and Others (5028/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 33 (15 March 2022)
Headnotes
office as Mayor of the same Municipality in the previous administration.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Donson and Others v Valentyn and Others (5028/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 33 (15 March 2022)
Donson and Others v Valentyn and Others (5028/22) [2022] ZAWCHC 33 (15 March 2022)
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sino date 15 March 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE
NO: 5028/22
In
the matter between
JEFFREY
DONSON
FIRST APPLICANT
WERNER
MESHOA
SECOND APPLICANT
HYRIAN
RUITERS
THIRD APPLICANT
AND
NICKOLAAS
VALENTYN
FIRST RESPONDENT
LEONIE
STUURMAN
SECOND RESPODENT
KANNALAND
MUNICIPALITY
THIRD RESPONDENT
Heard
: 10 March 2022
JUDGMENT
delivered on 15 March 2022
THULARE
J
[1] This is an opposed
application for an order declaring the first and second respondent’s
continued occupation of the positions
of Mayor and Deputy Mayor of
the third respondent as unlawful, unconstitutional and null and void
and that the first and second
respondents be interdicted from
occupying or purporting to occupy the said offices.
[2] At the hearing of the
matter, as a result of intervening developments, the applicants
sought to amend their prayer, which application
is opposed, to be for
a declaration that the first and second respondent’s continued
occupation of the positions of Executive
Mayor and Deputy Mayor and
as councilors of the third respondent from 30 January 2022 and
consequently any decisions taken by the
first and second respondent
in their capacity as Executive Mayor and Deputy Mayor and councilor
of the third respondent with effect
from 30 January 2022 were
unlawful, unconstitutional and invalid.
[3] The applicants also
sought the striking out of paragraphs in the respondents’
founding affidavit in a counter-application
which affidavit also
served as an answering affidavit to the applicants’
application. The said paragraphs, (26, 27, 28, 29
and 30) relate to
the first and second applicants’ previous convictions, the
publicity thereon after their election as Mayor
and Deputy Mayor of
the third respondent respectively and the reaction thereto. For
purposes of this judgment, these paragraphs
will be dealt with in
contextualizing the application and counterapplication.
[4] As a result of
intervening developments, the respondents only pursued the ejectment
of the applicants from the offices that
they occupied as Mayor,
Deputy Mayor and Councilor respectively and the return of the keys to
the Municipal Manager and to comply
with such orders within 24 hours
of the granting of such order. The offices are situated at Town Hall,
34 Van Riebeeck Street,
Ladismith; Municipal Building, Voortrekker
Road, Calitzdorp and Garden Route District Municipality, 58 main
Street, Zoar respectively.
[5] The issue is whether
Valentyn and Stuurman ceased to be members of the ANC and vacated
office during their term as councilors
elected from a party list, on
30 January 2022.
CONTEXTUALISING THE
APPLICATION
[6] The third respondent
(the Municipality) is a category B established in terms of section 12
and its Council consists of seven
members in terms of the Act. In the
results of the 1 November 2021 local government elections, the
Independent Civic Organisation
of South Africa (ICOSA) received 45%
of the vote, which was the highest number, but did not have a clear
majority to govern the
Municipality. It secured three seats in the
Municipal Council. The ANC received 21.4% of the vote and secured two
seats. The Democratic
Alliance (DA) received 21.4% of the vote and
secured one seat. The Kannaland Independent Party (KIP) received 7%
of the vote and
secured one seat.
[7] The first applicant
(Donson) is the President of ICOSA and the second respondent (Meshoa)
and the third respondent (Ruiters)
are its members. ICOSA entered
into a coalition agreement with the ANC and at the first meeting of
Council on 16 November 2021
office bearers were voted into office
according to that coalition agreement. Donson was elected Mayor,
Meshoa the Deputy Mayor
and Ruiters as the representative of the
Municipality on the Garden Route Municipality. The first respondent
(Valentyn) was elected
Speaker. These five Councilors, which includes
the second respondent (Stuurman) played prominent and central roles
in the nomination
and seconding, one by or in support of the other
during these elections to office bearers within the Council. Valentyn
and Stuurman
were members of the ANC and represented the ANC in the
Municipal Council. They were party list Councilors and not Ward
Councilors.
Steenkamp represented the DA and Albertus represented KIP
in the Council.
[8] The election of
Donson and Meshoa to their positions as Mayor and Deputy Mayor
respectively attracted a negative media coverage
for the Municipality
and its Council. On 20 November 2021 news24 ran an article with the
title “
Kannaland Deputy Mayor was fired as teacher after
being found guilty of sexual misconduct with pupil”.
On 21
November 2021 the IOL ran an article titled: “
Child
activists call on sex offender Jeffrey Donson to step down and hand
in his mayoral chain”.
On 22 November 2021 Daily Mail ran
an article titled: “
Child rapist is elected as MAYOR in
South Africa – with convicted fraudster voted in as his
deputy”.
News24 and IOL are local national publications and
Daily Mail is a British international newspaper. The negative media
coverage
was consequently both national and international. The
Commission for Gender Equality announced on 20 November 2021 that it
had
launched an investigation into Donson’s election as it
viewed what happened at the Municipal Council as a slap in the face
against gender-based violence (GBV) as it believed that local
government institutions should be at the forefront of the campaign
against GBV as they were closest to the people.
[9] It was the public
national and international outcry that caused Albertus to move a
motion of no confidence against the three
ICOSA councilors in their
respective positions within Council at a meeting of Council on 19
January 2022. The motion was seconded
by Stuurman and supported by
Valentyn and Steenkamp. Simply put, all four non-ICOSA members of the
seven member Council supported
the motion. The motion was passed. For
the sake of completion, it has to be mentioned that Donson was
alleged to have been convicted
of the statutory rape of a 15 year old
girl child whilst he held office as Mayor of the same Municipality in
the previous administration.
[10] Meshoa was alleged
to have been convicted of fraud and obstruction of justice and
further allegedly fired by the Western Cape
Department of Education
after being found guilty of the sexual assault and statutory rape of
a pupil where he was a teacher and
Head of Department. Mr Ruiters was
alleged to have failed to act in the best interests of the
Municipality or its residents and
had made himself guilty of nepotism
as well as wasteful and irregular expenditure. In these papers, the
response to these serious
allegations was that they were irrelevant
to the issues in dispute and were vexatiously inserted for the
purpose of creating an
atmosphere. This stance by the applicants
informed their application to strike them out.
THE FACTS
[11] At that meeting of
19 January 2022 the Council conducted further relevant business.
After the motion of no confidence in the
ICOSA council members, the
four non-ICOSA members proceeded to elect new office bearers.
Valentyn and Stuurman were elected Mayor
and Deputy Mayor
respectively, and Albertus was elected speaker whilst Steenkamp was
elected the Garden Route representative. Two
days before this
meeting, on 17 January 2022, the Interim Provincial Committee
Co-ordinator (the IPCC) of the ANC had written to
the Municipal
Manager of the Municipality and informed him that the ANC councilors
had no mandate to call for a council meeting
and that ANC councilors
were to go into the opposition as per the mandate from national. This
meant, according to the IPCC, that
Valentyn had to resign as speaker.
The Municipal Manager was informed that the Councilors were aware of
the position of the ANC.
[12] The day after the
elections of office bearers in Council, where Valentyn and Stuurman,
members of the ANC, were elected as
Mayor and Deputy Mayor
respectively, that is 20 January 2022, the IPCC informed them in
writing of their suspension from the ANC
based on their defiance of
the IPC and national decisions to not work with the DA in a
coalition. Reference was made to the provisions
of the Constitution
of the ANC in the letters addressed to them. The last paragraph of
the letters read as follows (I quote only
from Valentyn’s
letter):
“
In
relation to Rule 25.62 ‘In the case of the suspension of a
public representative, the NEC, the NWC, the PEC or the PWC,
as the
case may be, must also provide for any terms and conditions which
will regulate the members participation and conduct as
a public
representative during the period of suspension’ in this regard
the Provincial Working Committee resolved that during
the period of
suspension, Councilor Nickolaas Valentyn may not represent the ANC in
any capacity pending disciplinary outcomes.”
[13] Valentyn and
Stuurman lodged appeals against their suspension with the Office of
the Deputy Secretary General of the ANC. It
is not clear on what date
the electronic letters were sent to Luthuli House in Johannesburg.
Well aware that the position of the
ANC communicated to them was that
they may not represent the ANC in any capacity pending disciplinary
procedures, they continued
to purport to act as Councilors elected
from a party list of the ANC, and arising therefrom, as well as Mayor
and Deputy Mayor.
[14] On 28 January 2022
the IPCC wrote to the Municipal Manager and the relevant parts of the
letter read:
“
Notice
of suspension of ANC councilors
This letter serves to
inform you of the Suspension of the two ANC councilors Councilor
Nickolaas Valentyn and Councilor Leonie Stuurman.
These councilors
should under no circumstances represent the ANC in any activities
which include activities of Council, pending
their disciplinary
outcome.”
[15] The papers suggest
that against the clear directive from the ANC, Valentyn and Stuurman
continued to participate in the activities
of Council, including a
meeting of Council on that day, 28 January 2022, purporting to be
members of and representing the ANC.
In response, the ANC summarily
expelled them and informed them and the Municipality accordingly on
30 January 2022. In the expulsion
letters addressed to both Valentyn
and Stuurman individually, the ANC made reference to their
contravention of the conditions set
out in the letters of 20 January
2022, which were the letters of suspension. They were further advised
that they may not represent
the ANC in any capacity pending their
disciplinary outcomes. Their attention were also brought to their
right to appeal the sanction.
In the letter to the Municipality, the
ANC went further than just inform the Municipality about their
expulsion. It requested the
Municipal Manager to declare vacancies in
the Municipality with immediate effect. The next day, 31 January
2022, the Municipal
Manager duly declared the two vacancies in the
Kannaland Council to the Independent Electoral Commission
accordingly. Valentyn
and Stuurman once more lodged an appeal against
the decision to terminate their membership with the Deputy Secretary
General of
the ANC on 31 January 2022.
[16] The papers showed
that there was a Special Council meeting on the 31
st
January 2022 and the minutes of that meeting indicate that the
Municipal Manager advised the Speaker that according to his
understanding
as Municipal Manager, backed by legal advice obtained,
Valentyn and Stuurman were no longer members of Council until their
processes
were finalized. As Accounting Officer, the Municipal
Manager asked to be excused from further participation in the
meeting. After
some deliberations, Valentyn suggested that the
meeting proceed. Valentyn and Stuurman continued to purport to
represent the ANC
as Councilors, and acted as Mayor and Deputy Mayor
of the Municipality. This prompted the applicants to lodge this
application
on 22 February 2022.
[17] Section 27(c) of the
Act reads as follows:
“
27.
Vacation of office. –
A councilor vacates
office during a term of office if that councilor –
(c) was elected from a
party list referred to in Schedule 1 or 2 and ceases to be a member
of the relevant party;”
[18] The relationship
between a member of a political party and that party, including how a
member ceases to be one, is governed
by the Constitution of that
party. In
Ramakatsa and Others v Magashule and Others
(CCT
109/12)
[2012] ZACC 31
(18 December 2012) at para 73 and 74 it was
said:
“
73.
Section 19 of the Constitution does not spell out how members of a
political party should exercise the right to participate
in the
activities of their party. For good reason this is left to political
parties themselves to regulate. These activities are
internal matters
of each political party. Therefore, it is these parties which are
best placed to determine how members would participate
in internal
activities. The constitutions of political parties are the
instruments which facilite and regulate participation by
members in
the activities of a political party.
74. It bears repeating
that political parties may not adopt constitutions which are
inconsistent with section 19. If they do, their
constitutions may be
susceptible to a challenge of constitutional invalidity. We point
out, however, that the present is not such
a case. The validity of
the ANC’s constitution is not under attack. What needs to be
mentioned for present purposes is that
the ANC’s constitution
regulates and facilitates how its members may participate in internal
activities of the party.”
[19] The relationship
between the ANC and its two Councilors in the Municipality, which in
my view was a private law relationship,
was the basis of the power of
the ANC to expel them from the party and to terminate their capacity
to represent the ANC at that
Council. In my understanding of the ANC
Constitution, as regards membership, the relationship entitled a
member to a hearing, albeit
after the fact, especially as regards
acts of misconduct which in the opinion of the ANC called for an
immediate suspension or
expulsion, and when circumstances so
dictated. In my view, there is a considerable difference in the
processes as they relate to
a public representative of the ANC as
opposed to an ordinary member. This is also the position where the
decision as regards a
public representative of the ANC would have an
immediate and direct external legal effect.
[20] This in my view, is
clear from the remedies and procedures that the Constitution of the
ANC provided which were at the disposal
of a member who is also a
public representative of the ANC and who was expelled from the party.
The Constitution of the ANC provided
for inter-party dispute
resolution mechanisms and clearly the intention of the ANC was that
disputes were to be subjected to the
procedures set out and
substantive remedies provided for in its Constitution. As I enter
into the consideration of the Constitution
of the ANC, it has to be
noted that I do so without the benefit of having heard the ANC itself
on its own Constitution, for the
simple reason that it was not a
party before me and I did not deem it meet to call upon the ANC to
come and interpret to me what
it had recorded in writing. It also
needs to be stated that this court is not dealing with the procedural
fairness, lawfulness
or correctness of the decision of the ANC.
[21] The facts sought to
be struck out were not only relevant for the purposes of indicating
what triggered and informed the disruptions
in what appeared to be a
harmonious and co-operative relationship between ICOSA and the ANC at
the Municipality. They formed the
basis for the motion of no
confidence which caused the removal of ICOSA councilors from being
office bearers and also are the foundation
for the conduct of the
applicants which necessitated the counterclaim for them to make the
office space they still occupied, available.
They are also important
to help understand the distinction between an ordinary member of the
public on one hand, and a member of
the ANC on the other, moreso when
such member is also a public representative of the ANC in a local
council. Ordinary members of
the public have the luxury to be
informed by the narratives as determined by journalists and editorial
teams of newspapers and
to make decisions either informed by what
they perceive to be common sense or the dictates of their moral
watches, their conscience
or even the advise of their families,
friends and acquaintances or what other institutions say about a
matter. This is so simply
because they have not bound themselves to
any procedures through which to process their thoughts and regulate
their conduct.
[22] Members of the ANC,
on the other hand, have taken an oath which reads as follows in Rule
4.16 of the Constitution of the ANC:
“
I,
[…], solemnly declare that I will abide by the aims and
objectives of the African National Congress as set out in the
Constitution, the Freedom Charter and other duly adopted policy
positions, that I am joining the Organisation voluntarily and without
motives of material advantages or personal gain, that I agree to
respect the Constitution and the structures and to work as a loyal
member of the Organisation, that I will place my energies and skills
at the disposal of the Organisation and carry out tasks given
to me,
that I will work towards making the ANC an even more effective
instrument of liberation in the hands of the people, and
that I will
defend the unity and integrity of the Organisation and its
principles, and combat any tendency towards disruptions
and
factionalism.”
[23] Respect for the
Constitution and the structures, especially the upper structures of
the ANC, working as a loyal member of the
ANC, defending its unity
and integrity and its principles and combatting any tendency towards
disruptions and factionalism are
loud and clear calls for members in
this oath. These expectations about members become more important and
necessary to be observed
when the ANC has to weather a political
storm and must survive it. The ANC relied on observance of this oath
to navigate the storm
caused around the ICOSA members in the
Kannaland Municipality, a party which the ANC was in a coalition
government with, when the
obviously unexpected turbulence hit the
political rafters of the Municipality. Observance of the ANC
Constitution, for instance,
protect the ANC from members who work on
the basis of only attention-grabbing information that the newspapers
find odd and unusual,
whilst the correct socio-political construct
may demand consideration of some information which was not included
in a newspaper
article at the instance of decision-makers in
newsrooms on what is newsworthy.
[24] Rule 5.4 expressed
one of the duties of a member who is a public representative of the
ANC as follows:
“
5.4
ANC members who hold elective office in any sphere of government at
national, provincial or local level are required to be members
of the
appropriate caucus, to function within its rules and to abide by its
decisions under the general provisions of the Constitution
and the
constitutional structures of the ANC”.
I understand this clause
to mean that the rules and decisions of an ANC caucus in a local
Municipality, rank at a lower level than
the Constitution of the ANC
and the Constitutional structures of the ANC, for its members. An ANC
caucus of a local Municipality
as a collective, and individual
members of the ANC who represent the ANC on that local Municipality,
are subject to the political
authority of the Constitution of the ANC
and the political guidance and supervision of the Provincial
Structure of the ANC. This
view is fortified by Rule 19.1, 19.9.8 and
19.9.19 which respectively read:
“
Authority
19.1 The PEC is the
highest organ of the ANC in a Province between Provincial Conferences
and has the authority to lead the Organisation
in the province,
subject to the provisions of this Constitution.
Powers and duties
19.9 The PEC shall:
19.9.8 Supervise and
direct the work of the ANC and all its organs in the Province,
including the ANC provincial and local government
caucuses;
19.9.19 Take all steps
necessary or warranted for the due fulfilment of the aims and
objectives of the ANC in the Province and the
due performance of its
duties”.
[25]
My reading of the Constitution of the ANC reveals that supporting a
political organization or party, other than an organization
in
alliance with the ANC, in a manner contrary to the aims, objectives
and policy of the ANC makes a member ineligible to be or
remain a
member of the ANC and such member shall be expelled from the ANC
[Rule 25.17.13 read with Rule 25.18]. The facts revealed
that the ANC
was in a coalition government with ICOSA in the Municipality and that
Valentyn and Stuurman worked with the DA and
KIP to unseat the Mayor
and Deputy Mayor and representative for the Garden Route from ICOSA,
office bearers who were elected to
those offices as a result of the
coalition agreement with the ANC. I do not understand the
Constitution of the ANC to prevent the
ANC from expelling a member
without first eliciting the comment or response of such member when
justifiable circumstances warrant
such a decision.
[26] The Provincial
Structure of the ANC communicated the resolution of the ANC to expel
Valentyn and Stuurman from the ANC on 30
January 2022, to both the
members and to the Municipality. The Constitution of the ANC deals
with the status of members in the
position of the two in Rules 25.43
to 25.47. The Rules read:
“
Status
of guilty member, office bearer or public representative
25.43 If a member has
appealed against or applied to review a decision of a PDC or the NDC,
the sanction imposed by such Disciplinary
Committee shall only come
into operation after finalization of the appeal or review, as the
case may be.
25.44 Where the BDC, RDC,
PDC or NDC has found a member guilty and imposed a sanction of
suspension or expulsion the Secretary General
or Provincial
Secretary, acting on the authority of the NEC, NWC, PEC or PWC, as
the case may be, may suspend the membership of
such member and
provide reasons therefor, until the finalization of any appeal or
review application instituted by such member.
25.45 During the period
of suspension, such member shall be precluded from exercising any
right in terms of this Constitution, save
to prosecute his or her
appeal or review application and be present at any necessary
attendance in connection therewith.
25.46 A member affected
by such suspension may, within 14 (fourteen days) of being notified
of such suspension, apply to the NDCA
to set aside such suspension.
25.47 The NDCA may set
aside such suspension on good cause shown.”
[27] A simple reading of
these Rules indicate, in my view, is that Rule 25.43, standing on its
own, is intended for minor acts of
misconduct which, according to the
ANC, do not warrant harsh sanctions of suspension or expulsion from
the ANC. It is in my view
serious acts of misconduct, which pose an
existential threat to the organization, thwart or undermine the
achievement of its aims
and objectives or adversely affect the
sanctity of its character which would call for a suspension or
expulsion from the party.
Rules 25.44 to 25.47 are specific
provisions to deal with such serious matters. The ANC informed both
Valentyn and Stuurman, in
their letters of expulsion, that the
Provincial Working Committee resolved that they may not represent the
ANC in any capacity
pending the DC outcomes, whilst the ANC
acknowledged their right to appeal the decision. The two were also
provided with the reasons
for the ANC decision. This was clearly
intended to comply with the provisions of Rules 25.44 and 25.45. In
my view, the ANC, by
framing the Constitution as it did, intended
that for serious acts of misconduct the procedure envisaged in Rule
25.43 must be
read with and yield to the one envisaged in Rule 25.44
to 25.47.
[28] The internal remedy
in the Constitution of the ANC to meet the expulsion and its
consequences, which included that the two
were removed from the list
which entitled them to represent the ANC at the local government, was
to file an appeal and then subject
themselves to the discipline and
authority of the ANC. It seems to me, on a careful reading of Rule
25.44 to 25.47 that once the
Provincial Structure advised Valentyn
and Stuurman that the ANC suspended them until finalization of their
appeal, the two could
have applied directly to the National
Disciplinary Committee of Appeal (NDCA) which, on good cause shown,
may set aside such a
suspension. I understand Rule 25.45 to have the
effect that once an expelled member of the ANC filed an appeal or
review against
that decision, such member is treated like a suspended
member only to the extent of allowing such member to prosecute their
appeal
or review and to be present at any necessary attendance in
connection with such an appeal or review. The appeal does not undo
the
expulsion decision.
[29] What Valentyn and
Stuurman were not entitled to do, was to disregard the guidance and
authority of the Provincial structure
of the ANC, ignore their
expulsion and bar from representing the ANC, create their own rules
and become loose, rebellious and loaded
cannons in Kannaland randomly
shooting in the name of the ANC. It is clear to me that the ANC did
not want to carry the risk of
allowing an opportunity for instance
for a politically hired gun freely shooting within the Kannaland
Municipality in its name,
whilst working outside its discipline. It
was the ANC that stood to elect to follow its ordinary appeal
procedures in processing
the appeal or to start it at the highest
level of the NDCA.
[30] Valentyn and
Stuurman were expelled as members of the ANC and stood to be removed
from the list which entitled them to represent
the ANC at the
Kannaland Municipality on 30 January 2022. They had an option to
approach the court to challenge the lawfulness
of their expulsion as
members of the ANC. That decision of the ANC had valid legal
consequences until it was set aside [
Cathcart Residents
Association v Municipal Manager Amahtlathi Municipality and Others,
Case No. 3667/2013, Eastern Cape Division, Grahamstown a judgment
delivered on 3 April 2014]. The expulsion stands until set aside
[
Shunmugam & Others v The Newcastle Local Municipality &
Others; The National Democratic Convention v Matthew Shunmugam &
Others
[2008] 2 All SA 106
(N) at para 42].
[31] The views of
Valentyn, Stuurman and Ian Avontuur (Avontuur) who was appointed the
Municipal Manager of Kannaland Municipality
in that meeting of 31
January 2022, on the validity of the ANC decision and their resolve
to ignore it are of no consequence [
Oudekraal Estates (Pty) Ltd v
City of Cape Town
2004 (6) SA 222
(SCA) at para 26]. Avontuur was
the Municipal Manager who did not hesitate, without more, to
participate in proceedings where his
predecessor earlier on the same
day informed Council about legal advice which raised concerns about
the legitimacy of proceedings
with the full participation of Valentyn
and Stuurman as Councilors representing the ANC. It is a Municipal
Manager who did not
find anything wrong with usurping the functions
of the leadership of the ANC and personally reviewed the decision and
status of
Councilors expelled by an ANC Provincial Structure.
Avontuur has no understanding of our Constitutional democracy. He is
a democratic
mess. He seems to believe that a Municipal Manager was a
power broker in an ANC with two centers contesting for authority and
power.
[32] The amendment sought
is granted but limited only to the extent that it deals with the
status of the two Councilors. The status
of the decisions of the
Municipal Council which included persons who by law were not
Councilors is a new case which cannot be introduced
through the
window of an amendment. Valentyn and Stuurman, as councilors elected
from a party list, vacated the office of councilor
during a term of
office in the Kannaland Municipality on 30 January 2022 when they
ceased to be members of the ANC, in terms of
section 27(c) of the
Act, read with Rule 25.43 to 25.47 of the ANC Constitution.
[33] This morning the
judgment of Mangcu-Lockwood J delivered yesterday, 14 March 2022, in
Valentyn and Another v The Electoral Commission of South Africa
and Others,
case no. 6709/2022 was brought to my attention. I
have considered it and, with respect, for the reasons set out in this
judgment,
I am unable to agree with her.
[34] For these reasons I
make the following order:
(a) The first and second
respondent’s continued occupation of the positions of
Councilor, and also Mayor or Deputy Mayor of
the third respondent
from 30 January 2022 was unconstitutional, unlawful and invalid.
(b) The application to
strike out the paragraphs related to the previous convictions and
improper conduct of the applicants, the
publicity thereof and the
public outrage thereon is dismissed and the applicants are to pay the
costs thereof.
(c) The ejectment of the
applicants from the offices that they respectively occupied as Mayor,
Deputy Mayor and Councillor respectively
and the return of the office
keys to the Municipal Manager, which offices are situated at Town
Hall, 34 Van Riebeeck Street, Ladismith;
Municipal Building,
Voortrekker Road, Calitzdorp and Garden Route District Municipality,
58 Main Street, Zoar respectively.
(d) The applicants are to
comply with the order in (c) within 24 hours of the delivery of this
judgment.
(e) The first and second
respondents to pay the costs of the main application, jointly and
severally, the one to pay, the other
to be absolved.
(f)
The first, second and third applicants to pay the costs of the
counter-application, jointly and severally, the one to pay, the
other
to be absolved.
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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