Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 91South Africa
Maarman v President of the Republic of South Africa and Another (1279/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 91 (4 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
4 April 2022
Judgment
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## Maarman v President of the Republic of South Africa and Another (1279/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 91 (4 April 2022)
Maarman v President of the Republic of South Africa and Another (1279/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 91 (4 April 2022)
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sino date 4 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
REPORTABLE
Case
number: 1279/2022
In
the matter between:
RICARDO
MAARMAN
Applicant
and
THE
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
First
respondent
THE
MINISTER OF CO-OPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
AND
TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS
Second
respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 4 APRIL 2022
VAN
ZYL AJ:
Introduction
1.
This application came before the Court as an urgent matter set
down
for 31 January 2022. On that day, a draft order was presented to me
(by agreement between the parties, so I was told) regulating
the
delivery of answering and replying affidavits and heads of argument,
and postponing the application to a date in February 2022.
On 1
February 2022 I was informed that the applicant’s legal
representatives had acted without his instructions in agreeing
to the
postponement of the matter, and that he wished for the order to be
rescinded. The respondents did not oppose the application
for
rescission.
2.
The parties agreed to having the issue of rescission and, upon
rescission if granted, certain preliminary aspects relating to the
application heard on 4 February 2022. The respondent did not
raise
any objection to the matter being determined attended on argument
presented on that day. I rescinded the procedural order
of 31 January
2022 on the basis of the Court’s common law power of
rescission, and counsel addressed me on the aspects referred
to below
(the applicant had, in the meantime, procured new counsel who argued
these points).
3.
The present application arises out of litigation instituted
in the
Constitutional Court some months ago. In the application before me,
the applicant seeks an order that a rule
nisi
be issued
calling on the respondents to show cause why the following order
should not be granted:
3.1
“
That this Application is heard as a matter of urgency and
that the Applicant’s failure to comply with the time limits
imposed
by the Rules of Court be condoned in terms of Rule 6(12)
.
3.2
“
The Court suspend the punitive and coercive enforcement of
the DMA regulations and allow only for voluntary compliance of the
public
to all these measures, until such time as the Constitutional
Court case no CCT 229/2021 has been finalised
”.
4.
The DMA regulations mentioned in the notice of motion referred
to the
regulations promulgated under the
Disaster Management Act, 2002
,
published in the
Government Gazette
of 22 April 2021 under No.
376.
5.
I proceed to deal with the background and the preliminary issues
raised.
The
application in the Constitutional Court
6.
On 27 September 2021 an application was instituted in the
Constitutional
Court under case number CCT 229/21 for “
exclusive
jurisdiction and/or direct access
” to that Court.
7.
The parties to that application were, as applicant, Mr Maarman,
and
as “
co-applicants
”, “
more than eight
thousand eight hundred South Africans
”. The first, second
and third respondents were, respectively, the President of the
Republic of South Africa, the Speaker
of Parliament, and the Governor
of the South African Reserve Bank.
8.
The relief sought in that application was wide-ranging, and
I do not
intend repeating the content of the notice of motion here. Where
necessary for the determination of the application currently
before
me, I shall refer to aspects of the relief sought in the
Constitutional Court.
9.
In short, the applicants wanted the Constitutional Court to
hold that
the President’s conduct in declaring a National State of
Disaster as a result of the SARS-COV2 virus (the so-called
Corona
virus) was invalid, and that such conduct and the conduct of the
second and third respondents in various respects relating
to the
National State of Disaster amounted to the violation of a range of
constitutional provisions. The applicants sought the
setting aside of
the National State of Disaster together with ancillary relief.
10.
The respondents opposed the application. Voluminous affidavits were
delivered.
On 26 January 2022 Constitutional Court dismissed the
application.
11.
The applicant did not disclose this information to me prior to the
hearing in
any practice note or correspondence addressed to my
registrar. I read it in the respondents’ answering affidavits
delivered
the afternoon before the hearing. The order reads as
follows:
The Constitutional
Court has considered the application for direct access and has
concluded that
it
does not disclose a cause of action insofar as the relief sought
against the first and second respondents is concerned
.
That is so because the allegations of the first respondent’s
failure to comply with a constitutional obligation proceeds
from the
premise that the power to declare a state of national disaster in
terms of the Disaster Management Act 57 of 2000 (the
Act) vests in
the first respondent. That power does not vest in the first
respondent. It vests in the Minister envisaged in section
1 read with
section 3 of the Act. Thus, the applicants cannot validly seek relief
against the first respondent proceedings from
the premise that the
power vests in him when it does not.
As
the relief against the second respondent concerns the alleged
declaration of a state of disaster by the first respondent, a power
the first respondent does not have, this relief too must fail.
The Court has also concluded that the applicants have not made out a
case for direct access in respect of the relief sought against
the
third respondent. It has decided not to award costs.
”
[1]
12.
It bears mentioning that previously, on 26 February 2021 under case
number CCT
63/21, the applicants had instituted an application in the
Constitutional Court seeking relief compelling the President to
provide
proof of the existence of the Corona virus. That application
was dismissed.
13.
The applicants thereafter instituted urgent proceedings in this Court
under
case number 5852/2021 on 27 May 2021, again asking for an order
compelling proof of the existence of the virus. According to the
applicants, that application was dismissed on the basis that it
lacked urgency.
The
pending application under case number 21064/2021
14.
On 9 December 2021, just over two months after the institution of the
Constitutional
Court application, the applicants instituted an
application in this Court under case number 21064/2021 in which a
rule
nisi
was sought calling upon the respondents to show
cause why an order in the following terms should not be granted:
14.1 “
That
this Application is heard as a matter of urgency and that the
Applicant’s failure to comply with the time limits imposed
by
the Rules of Court be condoned in terms of Rule 6(12)
.
14.2 “
The
Court suspend the DMA regulations, until such time as the
Constitutional Court case no CCT 229/2021 has been finalised
”.
15.
The parties to that application were, as first and second applicants
respectively,
Mr Maarman and “
Applicants of the
Constitutional Court Case No. 299/21
”. Having regard to the
application in the Constitutional Court, this means that the second
applicant was (or were) “
more than eight thousand eight
hundred South Africans
”.
16.
The first and second respondents were, respectively, the President of
the Republic
of South Africa and the Minister of Co-operative
Governance and Traditional Affairs.
17.
In the practice note filed by the applicants prior to the hearing,
the applicants
indicated that the matter entailed the seeking of an
urgent interdict “
on the ground that the DMA regulations be
suspended pending the Constitutional Court Case no. CCT229/2021 which
will only be heard
in approximately 8 months’ time
”.
18.
The application was set down for hearing on the urgent roll on 20
December 2021.
On that day it was postponed to 7 January 2022, with
directions as to the delivery of papers.
19.
On 7 January 2022 (the Honourable Justice Binns-Ward presiding) the
application
was struck from the roll, with costs to stand over for a
later date. From a transcript of the proceedings on that day it
appears
that, apart from some misgivings as to the urgency of the
matter, the court file was not in order and the order setting it down
for that day had been requested and granted in the absence of
agreement from the respondents.
'
The
current application
20.
Instead of continuing with the pending application under case number
21064/2021,
the applicants proceeded to institute the present
application.
21.
The applicants say that the national state of disaster is having the
ongoing
consequence of limiting rights as enshrined in the Bill of
Rights, causing economic harm to the people of South Africa. They
make
wide-ranging allegations (unsupported by expert evidence) as
regards the safety and legitimacy of vaccines, and contend that they
have no other recourse that to approach this Court for an urgent
interim interdict against the punitive and coercive enforcement
of
the lockdown measures, pending the outcome of the Constitutional
Court case. They say that the respondents “
will not be
deprived or interfered with any of their measures, instead, reliance
will be placed on voluntary compliance by the Applicant
and the
people of South Africa as exhibited thus far…
”
22.
I have mentioned already that the Constitutional Court has given an
order, and
that there is no proof before this Court that a rescission
application has been accepted by the Registrar of the Constitutional
Court.
First
preliminary point: the current application is not urgent
23.
The Constitutional Court application was instituted on 27 September
2021. No
interdictory relief was sought at that time. Instead, the
pending application under case number 21064/2021 was instituted in
December
2021, and the current application was instituted four months
after the launch of the Constitutional Court application, on 21
January
2022. The respondents were given until 29 January 2022 to
deliver answering papers, and the application was set down for
hearing
on 31 January 2022. In my view, the applicant does not
satisfactorily explain either in his founding papers or his heads of
argument
why, in these circumstances, the application is urgent.
24.
In light of the fact that the relief sought in this application is at
its core
the same as the relief sought in the Constitutional Court
(albeit that the relief sought in the latter Court is expanded in
various
respects), one would have thought that an application for
interim relief pending the outcome of the Constitutional Court
application
would have been brought at the same time.
25.
Be that as it may, the application to the Constitutional Court was
not instituted
as one of urgency, and the applicants in the pending
application expected the Constitutional Court only to determine the
application
in “
8 months’ time
”. The
applicant accordingly did not regard the primary relief sought in
that application as urgent. Again, there is no explanation
why the
interim interdictory relief, sought some four months later, is urgent
pending the outcome of the Constitutional Court case.
26.
Crucially, the national state of disaster was declared on 15 March
2020. Various
iterations of the DMA regulations have been in
operation from time to time. This has been the prevailing state of
affairs for some
two years. The applicant now seeks far-reaching
relief, even if it is on an interim basis. It is, in my view, not
open to the applicant
to allege urgency at this stage.
27.
The applicant submits that the application is urgent by relying on
the alleged
ongoing effects of the enforcement of the DMA regulations
and the effect of the implementation of vaccines over the many months
since the declaration of the national state of disaster has been
declared.
28.
He alleges that the lockdown measures are causing harm, limiting his
rights.
Whilst the lockdown measures have necessarily resulted in a
limitation of rights, these limitations were sanctioned by section 36
of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996. The
applicant fails to explain why he did not institute proceedings
shortly after the declaration of the state of disaster.
29.
The applicant alleges that the vaccination measures implemented by
the respondents
“
could see the entire nation irreparably
harmed
” and “
the entire nation is brought closer
to the point of no return or further beyond the point
”. No
expert evidence is put up in support of this allegation, and there is
in any event no explanation why this renders the
application urgent
at this late stage.
30.
The applicant alleges further that the respondents instituted
punitive measures
for a breach of the DMS regulations and that “
there
can never be redress in due course
”, thereby potentially
rendering the judgment of the Constitutional Court moot. This is not
correct, because, had the Constitutional
Court application not been
dismissed, the applicant would have been vindicated in his claims and
there would be no question of
mootness. This allegation, in any
event, also does not support the alleged urgency of the matter.
31.
The applicant alleges further that the there is no prejudice to the
respondents
and the interests of justice if the matter is heard on an
urgent basis, because “
all the facts before the Court are
common cause … and no new or complex matters are place before
Court
”. This allegation is patently incorrect. The evidence
before this Court is far from common cause. The parties have widely
divergent stances on a number of material issues. The fact that the
applicant has put up essentially the same information in this
matter
as he had done in the Constitutional Court case and in the pending
application under case number 21064/2021, does not mean
that this
matter can for that reason be dealt with as urgent presumably because
the respondents should also be able to “cut
and paste”
their previous answering affidavits to suit the present application.
32.
In fact, given that the current application is in effect a
duplication of the
pending application, there is no reason why,
despite being brought later than the pending application, on shorter
notice to the
respondent than the pending application, on a factual
basis that mirrors the pending application, and in circumstances
where urgency
is asserted on the same basis as in the pending
application, the current application should be entertained at all on
the basis
of urgency.
33.
I agree in any event with the respondents’ counsel that there
would be
indeed prejudice to the respondent and the people of South
Africa if the order sought is granted. It will mean that, in the
midst
of an unprecedented pandemic, the State is deprived of a key
means of intervention and response to the pandemic through the DMA
regulations and, in particular, the enforcement measures contained
therein.
34.
The fact that interim (as opposed to permanent) relief is sought
takes the question
of urgency no further.
35.
For this reason alone, I would have struck the matter from the roll.
Second
preliminary point: the application is moot
36.
The Constitutional Court determined the application under CCT229/21
on 26 January
2022. The order is quoted above.
37.
The applicant says that the Constitutional Court only dealt with
their application
for direct access, and therefore the application in
relation to exclusive jurisdiction was still pending. I do not read
the Constitutional
Court’s order so as to reserve any aspect of
the application for later determination. The application was refused
in its
entirety because no cause of action had been disclosed against
the respondents. That goes to the root of the entire application,
and
not simply to the prayer for direct access.
38.
The applicants indicated that they had brought an application for
rescission
of the Constitutional Court’s order and therefore
the interim relief should be granted pending the determination of the
rescission
application. Although I have been furnished with a copy of
a rescission application dated 2 February 2022, there is no
confirmation
or indication of whether it has been accepted by the
Registrar of that Court.
39.
In any event, and assuming that the rescission application has in
fact been
instituted, when the application in this Court was
launched, there was no rescission application pending before the
Constitutional
Court. A pending application for rescission was thus
not the basis upon which the application was instituted, and it
cannot support
the relief sought.
40.
I have mentioned that I read about the Constitutional Court’s
order in
the respondents’ papers. Even if the applicant had
brought a rescission application before the Constitutional Court, he
also
did not disclose the crucial fact to this Court (because he did
not mention the dismissal of his Constitutional Court application).
I
agree with the respondents’ counsel’s submission that,
had it not been for the respondents, it is unlikely that this
Court
would have been apprised of this material information.
41.
In all of these circumstances, I am not inclined to allow the
applicant to rely
on the application for rescission as a basis upon
which to seek the interim relief.
42.
It follows that the current application no longer has any purpose
(the respondents
labelled it “
still-born
”), and
falls to be dismissed on this basis.
Third
preliminary point: this Court’s jurisdiction
43.
Does this Court have the necessary jurisdiction to grant the relief
sought?
44.
In the application to the Constitutional Court the applicants sought
a declaration
“
that this application falls within the
exclusive jurisdiction of this Court in that it alleges the failure
of the respondent to
discharge their constitutional obligations as
per section 167(4)(e) of the Constitution
”.
45.
In the alternative they sought an order granting them direct access
“
as per section 167(6)(a) of the Constitution, due to the
importance of the matter, the interest of justice, it is a
Constitutional
matter, it involves the interpretation of the
Constitution, the exceptional circumstances, due to the nature of the
recourse sought
and the Western Cape High Court found it to be of
public interest
”.
46.
That
application thus primarily proceeded on the basis that the
Constitutional Court had exclusive jurisdiction to determine the
issues raised therein, including, as is set out in the founding
affidavit, relief declaring the DMA regulations unlawful and invalid
(on the authority of
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Speaker of the National Assembly; Democratic
Alliance v Speaker of the National Assembly (EFF 1) and
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Speaker of the National Assembly
[2]
).
47.
I agree with the respondents that the applicant may not
simultaneously assert
that this Court has jurisdiction to determine
the interim relief sought in respect of final relief that is pending
before the Constitutional
Court, given the very specific basis upon
which the Constitutional Court application was brought. The
difference in formulation
in the current application, namely the
setting aside of the enforcement measures contained in the DMA
regulations as opposed to
the regulations as a whole, does not change
the situation. The enforcement measures are an integral part of the
DMA regulations.
48.
It follows that, in light of the applicant having invoked the
exclusive jurisdiction
of the Constitutional Court in respect of the
final relief sought, and as a matter of logic, he may not
simultaneously invoke the
jurisdiction of this Court in respect of
interim relief that is fundamentally premised upon the relief sought
in the Constitutional
Court.
49.
For this reason, too, the application falls to be dismissed.
50.
This does not mean that there may not be instances where, if the
jurisdiction
of the Constitutional Court is invoked in relation to
final relief, interim relief may be granted by a High Court. It
depends of
the particular facts of the matter. The current
application is not one of those cases.
Fourth
preliminary point: the current application does not fall within the
category of exceptional cases for the grant of interim
relief
51.
The applicant says that this case does not involve the separation of
powers
principle because “
the measures the Respondents claim
to rely on will not be affected by the interdict, only the punitive
and coercive aspects of clauses
which imposes (sic) fines,
imprisonment and leads to loss of employment and tuition, will be
interdicted, which will then prompt
the democratically elected
government to rely on voluntary compliance by the public in
consonance with the spirit of the Constitution
”.
52.
He says further that:
52.1 The
relief sought is against the punitive aspects of the DMA regulations
and not against the regulations themselves.
52.2 The
meting out of punishment is essentially and fundamentally a judicial
function, for which the executive, which
the respondents represent,
is “
ill-equipped and not constitutionally mandated to
exercise power over
”.
52.3 These
punitive measures include the imposition of fines and even
imprisonment, which are well within the judicial
sphere.
52.4 The
executive must make policy: “
theirs is to decide what
measures should be adopted
”. Their decision to adopt any
measure or approach will not be proscribed or prescribed by the
relief sought. They will continue
to adopt any measure to manage the
national state of disaster, but adherence will be voluntary through
public participation consonant
with a democratic society.
52.5 The
continued imposition of punishments by the executive without any
checks and balances from the judiciary constitutes
an abuse of power
and a grave injustice, because punitive measures without “
due
judicial capacity is inherently unjust and tyrannical
”.
53.
These arguments ignore the fact that there is a high threshold for
the grant
of relief such as that sought in the current application,
namely an interdict against a state entity and the restraining of the
use of public power.
54.
In
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Gordhan and others
[3]
the Constitutional Court held as follows:
[37] … when
granting an interim interdict against a state entity — and, in
effect, restraining the use of public power
— courts should
adroitly '
consider the probable impact of the restraining order on
the constitutional and statutory powers and duties of the state
functionary
or organ of state against which the interim order is
sought
'…
[40] … The
interim interdict test … enjoins a court before granting an
interdict against an organ of state to ensure
that the
order
'promotes the objects, spirit and purport of the Constitution'. This
invariably attracts various constitutional issues into
adjudication,
including possible issues regarding separation of powers, the
constitutional duties of the parties that may be frustrated
by the
order and any constitutional rights implicated
in the matter.
[42] In addition,
before a court may grant an interim interdict, it must be
satisfied that the applicant for an interdict has good prospects of
success
in the main review. The claim for review must be based on
strong grounds which are likely to succeed.
This requires the
court adjudicating the interdict application to peek into the grounds
of review raised in the main review application
and assess their
strength. It is only if a court is convinced that the review is
likely to succeed that it may appropriately grant
the interdict.
The
rationale is that an interdict which prevents a functionary from
exercising public power conferred on it impacts on the separation
of
powers and should therefore only be granted in exceptional
circumstances
.
[48] …
where
legislative or executive power will be transgressed and thwarted by
an interim interdict, an interim interdict should only
be granted in
the clearest of cases and after careful consideration of the possible
harm to the separation of powers principle
. Essentially, a court
must carefully scrutinise whether granting an interdict will disrupt
executive or legislative functions,
thus implicating the separation
and distribution of power as envisaged by law. In that instance,
an
interim interdict would only be granted in exceptional cases in which
a strong case for that relief has been made out
.
55.
In
National
Treasury and others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and
others
[4]
the Constitutional Court held
[5]
that “…
courts
grant temporary restraining orders against the exercise of statutory
power only in exceptional cases and when a strong case
for that
relief has been made out.
Beyond
the common law, separation of powers is an even more vital tenet of
our constitutional democracy. This means that the Constitution
requires courts to ensure that all branches of government act within
the law. However, courts in turn must refrain from entering
the
exclusive terrain of the executive and the legislative branches of
government unless the intrusion is mandated by the Constitution
itself
.
56.
Citing its
earlier jurisprudence on the separation of powers, the Constitutional
Court further held
[6]
that
“
(w)here
the Constitution or valid legislation has entrusted specific powers
and functions to a particular branch of government,
courts
may not usurp that power or function by making a decision of their
preference. That would frustrate the balance of power
implied in the
principle of separation of powers. The primary responsibility of a
court is not to make decisions reserved for or
within the domain of
other branches of government, but rather to ensure that the concerned
branches of government exercise their
authority within the bounds of
the Constitution.
This would especially be so where the decision in issue is
policy-laden as well as polycentric.”
57.
This
does not mean that an organ of state is immunised from judicial
review only on account of separation of powers. The exercise
of all
public power is subject to constitutional control. In an appropriate
case an interdict may be granted against it.
[7]
58.
The current application clearly does not meet the threshold set by
the Constitutional
Court. It makes out no case for the interdict
sought, as it does not make out a case as to the underlying validity
of the regulatory
or statutory framework upon the which the DMA
regulations are based.
59.
Most importantly, though, is the fact that the Constitutional Court
has already
determined that no cause of action has been made out in
the application before it. There is thus, for reasons already set out
earlier,
no pending challenge to the validity of the DMA legislation
or the regulations adopted under it.
60.
There is accordingly no basis upon which this Court can grant the
relief sought
without impermissibly intruding upon the domain of the
respondents. This is another reason for the dismissal foo the
application.
The
effect of the pending application under case number 21064/2021
61.
Some argument was presented as regards the effect of the pending
application
on this Court’s jurisdiction, and whether the
defence of
lis alibi pendens
could be raised in the context of
the current application. In light of the fate of the application as
is apparent from what has
been set out above, there is no need to
determine this issue.
Costs
62.
The
applicant argues that the Court should follow the so-called
Biowatch
principle
[8]
in relation to
costs, which states that in constitutional matters against the state
or organs of state the litigant, subject to
exception, should not be
made to pay the costs of the state. This is to avoid adverse costs
orders against litigants seeking to
assert constitutional rights.
63.
The applicant states that “
we
have not and we contend that under no circumstances have we abused
the processes of the court, as we were granted the Rescission
under
this case number and their costs should be awarded to the applicant
”.
64.
The
respondents, on the other hand, contend that the
Biowatch
principle does not find application in the present situation. In
Biowatch
,
the following was stated as regards the approach to costs in
constitutional cases:
[9]
[24] … the
general approach of this court to costs in litigation between private
parties and the State,
is not unqualified. If an application is
frivolous or vexatious, or in any other way manifestly inappropriate,
the applicant should
not expect that the worthiness of its cause will
immunise it against an adverse costs award
. Nevertheless, for the
reasons given above, courts should not lightly turn their backs on
the general approach of not awarding
costs against an unsuccessful
litigant in proceedings against the State, where matters of genuine
constitutional import arise.
…
[25] Merely labelling
the litigation as constitutional and dragging in specious references
to sections of the Constitution would,
of course, not be enough in
itself to invoke the general rule …. T
he issues must be
genuine and substantive, and truly raise constitutional
considerations relevant to the adjudication.
…
65.
The respondents describe the current
application as an abuse of process. I am inclined to agree that it
was inappropriate and ill-considered.
65.1
The application was instituted whilst there
was another application pending, seeking effectively the same relief
on the same grounds
(the respective founding affidavits are virtually
identical).
65.2
It was manifestly not urgent, and yet
brought on exceedingly tight timelines.
65.3
It ignores important issues as regards this
Court’s jurisdiction and the separation of powers and does not
make out any case
for the grant of relief in the face of these
issues.
65.4
It makes allegations of a wide-ranging and
general nature, unelaborated and unsupported by appropriate expert
evidence.
65.5
Crucially, it was proceeded with in the
face of the refusal of the Constitutional Court application, which
the applicant failed
to disclose to this Court prior to the hearing
of the application.
66.
For all of these reasons, I am of the view
that this is a case where the
Biowatch
principle should not apply, and the applicant should pay the
respondents’ costs on the scale as between party and party.
Order
67.
The application is dismissed, with costs,
including the costs consequent upon the employment of two counsel.
68.
The applicant shall bear the costs of the
rescission application instituted on 3 February 2022.
P.
S. VAN ZYL
Acting
judge of the High Court
HEARING
DATE:
31 January 2022 & 4 February 2022
Appearances
:
For the
applicant
:
Counsel unknown, instructed by T. Victor and Associates
Inc.
For the
respondents
:
K.
Pillay SC (with N. Mayosi), instructed by the State Attorney
[1]
Emphasis
supplied.
[2]
2018 (2) SA 571 (CC).
[3]
2020
(6) SA 325
(CC). Emphasis supplied.
[4]
2012
(6) SA 233 (CC).
[5]
At
para [44]. Emphasis supplied.
[6]
At
para [63].
[7]
At
para [64].
[8]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources and others
2009
(6) SA 232 (CC).
[9]
See
also
Lawyers
for Human Right v Minister of Home Affairs and others
2017 (5) SA 480
(CC) at paras [17]-[21].
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