Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 82South Africa
Goosen-Joubert v Women4Women NPC (16325/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 82 (16 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
16 May 2022
Judgment
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## Goosen-Joubert v Women4Women NPC (16325/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 82 (16 May 2022)
Goosen-Joubert v Women4Women NPC (16325/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 82 (16 May 2022)
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sino date 16 May 2022
(Western
Cape Division, Cape Town)
Reportable
Case
No: 16325/2021
In
the matter between:
CHANDRE
GOOSEN-JOUBERT
Applicant
vs
WOMEN4WOMEN
NPC
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 16 MAY 2022
MANTAME
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant approached this Court for a relief after the
respondent, who is an affiliate
of Mrs South Africa (“Mrs SA”),
a company running a beauty pageant for married women in South Africa,
refused her access
to information. This application served before
this court in terms of Section 78(2)
(d)
(i) of the Promotion of
Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 (“PAIA”), after the
respondent (“W4W”) refused
the applicant access to the
requested documents. The applicant seeks an order in terms of Section
82 of PAIA in the following terms:
(i) that the decision of the
respondent not to provide the applicant with the information
requested be set aside; and (ii) the
respondent provide the applicant
with the requested documents.
[2]
The respondent opposed this application on the following grounds,
some of which were
raised belatedly in their heads of argument, that:
(i) the applicant has not complied with all the procedural
requirements prior
to launching this application; (ii) the applicant
was provided with access to the documents that she requested in the
prescribed
Form C, that she submitted to W4W in terms of Section 53
of PAIA, after she delivered the Form C, but prior to launching this
application;
(iii) the applicant does not require the requested
documents for the exercise of her rights because,
firstly,
the
requested documents and rights to be exercised, as stated in the Form
C, differs substantially from the requested documents
and rights to
be exercised as alleged in this application, and,
secondly,
the
applicant has failed to provide evidence that the requested documents
are ‘required’ for the exercise of her rights;
and that
(iv) the applicant has brought the application for an ulterior
motive. She has embarked on a social media smear campaign
against W4W
and its director, namely Ms Cindy Nell-Roberts (“Ms
Nell-Roberts). She has abused the procedures set out in PAIA
for the
purpose of obtaining pre-action discovery, and worse yet, to harass
W4W and Ms Nell-Roberts.
Background
Facts
[3]
On 9 June 2021 the applicant submitted to the respondent a formal
request for access
to information in terms of Section 50 of PAIA. In
this request, and under the heading: ‘
description of the
record or relevant part of the record
’, the applicant
requested:
‘
Annual
reports of Women4Women which includes narrative reports, financial
statements as well as the accounting officer’s reports
for the
financial year 2019, 2020 and 2021 as is required in terms of the
Non-Profit Organisation Act. I also request the Constitution
of
Women4Women.’
[4]
On 27 July 2021 the respondent’s attorney addressed a letter to
the applicant
and stated:
‘
2.
. . . our client is only obliged to give access to any record if that
record is required
for the exercise or protection of any right. The
protection or exercise of the rights referred to in your application
for access
to information is independent of your entitlement to the
records requested. Having said that, please be advised that all the
information
which is required to be disclosed to the public law
(sic), is freely available on our client’s website . . .
3.
Furthermore, we advise that PAIA is not applicable if the record is
requested
for the purpose of criminal or civil proceedings. As you
have stated in your request for access that your “request is
also
for possible recourse”, your reliance on the provisions of
PAIA is misconstrued.’
[5]
As stated at the commencement of this judgment, the W4W is a
non-profit organisation
affiliated to Mrs SA, a private company
incorporated in terms of the Company Laws of South Africa, that runs
a pageant for married
South African women.
[6]
Mrs SA concluded a written agreement with the respondent, specifying
the terms of
their affiliation to the respondent. In terms of this
agreement, Mrs SA would raise funds for all the affiliates through
the aforementioned
beauty pageant.
[7]
On 26 February 2020 the applicant entered the Mrs SA beauty pageant
as a contestant.
At the time, it was made known to her that 312 other
contestants had also entered the beauty pageant. The 312 contestants
were
then reduced to 100 contestants (“Top 100”).
Following the Top 100 contestants, there was another elimination
process
to 50 contestants (“Top 50”). Further, another
round of eliminations followed to 25 contestants, which progressed to
the final event of the beauty pageant. The applicant competed through
each round of the elimination process and made it to the
final event
of the beauty pageant.
[8]
After each round of the elimination process, all the contestants,
including the applicant,
were required to conclude written agreements
with Mrs SA. For instance, in respect of the Top 100 contract, all
the contestants
were required, in terms of clauses 4.7.7 and 4.7.9,
to do the following in respect of the respondent:
‘
The
semi-finalist will sell 5 tickets to the Women4Women Breakfast on
Sunday 26
th
April 2020 at R450 each. The total of R2250 must be paid directly
(sic) bank account which will be provided on or before Friday
10
th
April 2020 . . .
The
semi-finalist will in addition to the above, sell ten (10) tickets to
the Charity Gala dinner, at R1250 each. This R12 500
must be
paid to the bank account which will be provided by Friday 19
th
June 2020 . . .’
[9]
In respect of the Top fifty contract, all the contestants were
required, in terms
of clauses 4.7.7 and 4.7.9, to do the following in
respect of the respondent:
‘
The
semi-finalist will sell five (5) tickets to the Women4Women Breakfast
on Sunday 18
th
October 2020 at R450 each. The total of R2250 must be paid directly
(sic) bank account which will be provided on or before Friday
30
th
September 2020 . . .
The
semi-finalist will in addition to the above, sell ten (10) tickets to
the Charity Gala dinner, of R1250 each. This R12 500
must be
paid to the bank account which will be provided by Friday 30
th
September 2020 . . .’
[10]
In respect of the Top 25 contract, all the contestants were required,
in terms of clauses 4.7.7
and 4.7.8, to do the following in respect
of the respondent:
‘
The
Finalist will host a fundraising event/campaign in aid of
Women4Women, as stipulated in the Mrs SA Operation Manual, with a
minimum profit of R10 000.
The
R10 000 minimum profit must be paid in full by 31 January 2021
to the Mrs SA Standard FNB (sic) account.’
[11]
Because of the Covid 19 pandemic and the resultant lockdown
restrictions, the April 2020 Breakfast,
referred to in paragraph 8
above, was moved to 18 October 2020 and was held at Emperor’s
Palace, Johannesburg. The contestants
were required to pay the
aforementioned funds for this breakfast between the periods 8 August
– 8 October 2020.
[12]
The Charity Gala dinner that had to follow was held at Casalinga,
Muldersdrift on 13 November
2020. The contestants had to raise the
funds for this gala dinner between the periods 8 August – 23
October 2020.
[13]
According to the applicant she met each of the requirements in terms
of the aforementioned contracts.
In fact, she stated that she went
over and above these requirements, and raised an amount of R136 100
for W4W, in addition
to the aforementioned amounts. The payment was
effected in two payments. First, the applicant paid into Mrs SA’s
First National
Bank (“FNB”) bank account an amount of R9
000, and second, she paid an amount of R136 100 into the
respondent’s
FNB bank account.
[14]
The final event of the Mrs SA beauty pageant was held on 18 March
2021. Regrettably, the applicant
did not win the title of “Mrs
South Africa 2021” on that evening; notwithstanding, she was
awarded the “Mrs Charity”
title. Despite the fact that
she did not win the “Mrs South Africa” title, being
awarded the “Mrs Charity”
title meant that she would be
affiliated to Mrs SA and the respondent.
[15]
On 23 March 2021 the applicant was furnished with a contract in
respect of Mrs Charity title.
In terms of the contract, she was
required to raise more funds for the respondent. Despite having to
raise more funds for the respondent,
she would also be responsible
for any costs incurred by her as Mrs Charity, for example,
transportation and accommodation costs.
[16]
Since the applicant had previously incurred an exorbitant amount of
costs on the Mrs SA beauty
pageant, the terms of the contract did not
sit well with her. On reflection, she became even more uncomfortable
with what she was
getting herself into. She then decided not to sign
the contract, and informed Mrs SA, in an email dated 24 March 2021,
that she
could not accept the title of Mrs Charity.
[17]
On 15 April 2021 the applicant proceeded to publish a statement on
her Instagram account that
she would not be accepting the Mrs Charity
title. In this publication, she did not provide any reasons for her
repudiation of this
title. She somehow reserved her right to reveal
her reasons at a later stage. Following the Instagram post, Mrs SA,
and the persons
closely associated therewith, embarked on what she
called a smearing campaign to invalidate her concerns about the
bona
fides
of the beauty pageant. One ‘Johnson’, the
director of Mrs SA, instituted proceedings against her and two
others, in
respect of which it was alleged that she published
defamatory statements against them. The proceedings were instituted
as follows:
17.1 On 9 June 2021
they instituted proceedings to this Court under Case No.: 9742/2001
(“the first application”);
and
17.2 On 22 June
2021, they instituted proceedings to this Court under Case No:
10524/2021, on an urgent basis, in respect
of which they sought
similar (if not the same) relief as in the first application (“the
second application”).
[18]
In respect of the first application, the Registrar of this Court
issued and authorised the disclosure
of the bank statements of the
respondent’s FNB bank account, in terms of a
subpoena duces
tecum
, on 23 June 2021. The second application was dismissed by
Henney J on 29 June 2021.
[19]
Due to the fact that the applicant contributed to the respondent, she
asserts that she is entitled
to the information requested on 9 June
2021. As W4W is a non-profit organisation that is concerned with the
upliftment of women,
she is entitled to know how its funds are
disbursed.
[20]
On 8 July 2021 FNB provided the applicant with the respondent’s
bank statements for the
period May 2020 – May 2021. Upon
perusal of these bank statements, the applicant noticed that there
had been numerous personal
payments made from the respondent’s
account, as follows, as reflected in annexure “CGJ14.1”:
20.1 On 3 April
2020 R250 000 was inexplicably transferred from the respondent’s
bank account, without any reference
or explanation recorded for this
payment;
20.2 On 3 April
2020 R750 was paid to Figure It, a private gym in Durbanville. This
is seemingly a membership to a gym for
one person which the
respondent paid for monthly. Similar payments are reflected in the
other statements that were made available;
20.3 On 11 April
2020 R282.49 was spent on a Facebook game;
20.4 On 23 April
2020 R5 000 was paid to Jacqueline Ferns, who was crowned Mrs South
Africa 2020;
20.5 On 24 April
2020 R750 was paid to Figure It.
[21]
In respect of annexure “CGJ14.2”:
21.1 On 15 May 2020
R44.99 was paid in respect of an Apple subscription;
21.2 On 25 May 2020
R750 was paid to Figure It;
21.3 On 26 May 2020
R59.99 was paid in respect of an Apple subscription.
[22]
In respect of “CGJ14.3”:
22.1 On 2 June 2020
R575 was spent on a Facebook game (Strike War Gaming);
22.2 On 11June 2020
R154.55 was spent on a Facebook game;
22.3 On 18 June
2020 R44.99 was paid in respect of an Apple subscription;
22.4 On 25 June
2020 R55.99 was paid in respect of an Apple subscription;
22.5 On 26 June
2020 R750 was paid to Figure It.
[23]
In respect of “CGJ14.4”:
23.1 On 1 July 2020
R500 was paid to Nolene Trainer, a personal trainer. The reference
used for this payment was “Cindy
Nell-Roberts”.
[24]
In respect of “CGJ14.5”:
24.1 Two payments
of R750 were made to Figure It, on 20 and 27 August 2020.
[25]
In respect of “CGJ14.6”:
25.1 On 5 September
2020 R690 was paid in respect of Facebook purchase;
25.2 On 19
September 2020 R750 was paid to Figure It.
[26]
In respect of “CGJ14.7”:
26.1 On 21 October
2020 R690 was paid in respect of a Facebook purchase;
26.2 On 23 October
2020 R11 200 was paid in respect of school fees;
26.3 On 23 October
2020 R750 was paid to Figure It;
26.4 On 27 October
2020 two payments were made to Ace Models, a modelling agency. The
first payment was in the amount of R2
100, and the second payment was
in the amount of R600. Ms Nell-Roberts is a director and co-owner of
Ace Models.
26.5 Between the
periods 23 – 30 October 2020, numerous Uber trips were paid for
from this bank account.
[27]
In respect of “CGJ14.8”:
27.1 On 13 November
2020 R6 000 was paid to Ace Models;
27.2 On 13 November
2020 R690 was paid in respect of a Facebook purchase;
27.3 On 27 November
2020 R750 was paid to Figure It;
27.4 On 27 November
2020 R4 500 was paid to Ace Models;
27.5 Between the
periods 16 – 30 November 2020, numerous Uber trips were paid
for from this bank account.
[28]
In respect of “CGJ14.9”:
28.1 On 11 December
2020 two payments were made to Ace Models. The first payment was in
the amount of R4 800, and the second
payment was for the amount of R4
620;
28.2 On 30 December
2020 R750 was paid to Figure It;
28.3 Between the
periods of 9 – 26 December 2020 numerous Uber trips were paid
for from this bank account.
[29]
In respect of “CGJ14.10”:
29.1 On 19 January
2021 R10 126 was paid to Mrs SA;
29.2 On 29 January
2021 R750 was paid to Figure It;
29.3 On 29 January
2021 an Uber trip was paid for from this bank account.
[30]
In respect of “CGJ14.11”:
30.1 On 9 February
2021 R350 was paid in respect of a Bishops’ cat class. The
reference used was Ms Nell-Roberts’
minor son;
30.2 On 26 February
2021 R750 was paid to Figure It;
[31]
In respect of “CGJ14.12”:
31.1 On 11 March
2021 R8 000 was paid for Ms Nell-Roberts’ minor daughter’s
8
th
birthday party;
31.2 On 13 March
2021 R690 was paid in respect of a Facebook purchase;
31.3 On 2 March
2021 R750 was paid to Figure It.
[32]
In respect of “CGJ14.13”:
32.1 On 30 April
2021 R750 was paid to Figure It.
[33]
Ms Nell-Roberts, it was said, has admitted making numerous payments
for personal expenses, which
she alleges were made ‘erroneously’
from the respondent’s bank account. The applicant contended
that the truth
was rather that charity funds that were intended for
women’s empowerment, community upliftment and youth education,
were
used to pay for personal expenses. It was the applicant’s
contention that Ms Nell-Roberts tried to silence her by instituting
legal proceedings against her.
[34]
On 9 July 2021 Ms Brigitte Willers, on behalf of the respondent,
emailed her and stated the following:
34.1 an invitation
was extended to her to meet the respondent’s auditors and life
skills development teachers, to show
her the documents relating to
what they do and how they distribute charity funds; and
34.2 an offer to
donate the funds she had raised for them to a different non-profit
organisation was made.
[35]
Since the applicant had not received the requested access to
accounting records, on 11 July 2021
she sent a letter to the
respondent again requesting to be furnished with the accounting
records. This letter was not responded
to by the respondent.
[36]
On 26 July 2021 a further letter was forwarded to the respondent,
requesting the accounting records.
In an email dated 26 July 2021,
the respondent informed her that they sent the documents requested to
Mrs SA, to share with the
past and the present contestants, and that
the respondent added these documents to their website. In addition,
on 27 July 2021
they addressed a letter to the applicant informing
her that the respondent is only obliged to provide documents they are
required
to disclose; the requested documents were available on their
website; and that PAIA did not apply to any other documentation
requested
for the institution of criminal or civil proceedings.
[37]
The applicant stated that the respondent’s interpretation of
PAIA is incorrect. She has
not commenced with any criminal or civil
proceedings against the respondent, and was not precluded by Section
7 of PAIA from making
the aforementioned request. On 28 July 2021 she
forwarded a letter to the respondent, in which she informed the
respondent that
the financial statements published on the website
were not all the documents requested by her and that her rights in
respect of
their failure to provide her access thereto remained
reserved.
Issues
[38]
This court is called upon to determine whether the applicant is
entitled to the information requested
in terms of Section 78(2)
(d)
(i)
of PAIA, and whether the respondent furnished the requested
information.
Discussion
[39]
Prior to the amendment of 30 June 2021, the section read:
‘
Section
78. Applications regarding decisions of information officers or
relevant authorities of public bodies or heads of private
bodies -
(1)
. . .
(2)
A requester –
. . .
(d)
aggrieved by a decision of the head of a private body –
(i)
to refuse a request for access; or
(ii)
. . .
may,
be way of an application, within 180 days apply to a court for
appropriate relief in terms of Section 82.’
The
applicant submitted that since the request for information ensued on
09 June 2021, the provisions of PAIA pre-amendment apply
to these
proceedings. It was the applicant’s contention that in a
situation where the respondent has failed to furnish her
with the
requested information, she has the right to access to that
information within the confines of Section 32 of the Constitution
[1]
.
PAIA was enacted to move away from a past characterised by ‘a
secretive and unresponsive culture in public and private bodies
which
often led to an abuse of power and human rights violation’ and
seeks to ‘foster a culture of transparency and
accountability
in public and private bodies by giving effect to the right of access
to information’
[2]
.
[40]
In response to this application, W4W raised some points in
limine
.
First, that the applicant had failed to comply with procedural
requirements. However, at the hearing of this application, the
respondent’s counsel conceded that the applicant was not
required to proceed with an internal appeal against the respondent’s
decision not to furnish her with the requested information. Section
74 of PAIA relates to an internal appeal against the decision
of a
public body, whereas the respondent is a private body. This point was
not persisted with.
[41]
Second, the respondent stated that the applicant had been required to
exhaust the complaints
procedure set out in Section 77A of PAIA prior
to launching this application. Section 78 of PAIA, which the
applicant relied on,
was substituted by section 110, read with
paragraph 19 of the schedule to the Protection of Personal
Information Act
[3]
(“POPI”).
The amendment to the aforesaid provision of PAIA was effective from
30 June 2021 – so, the applicant
relied on this section as it
was prior to the amendment. It was the respondent’s contention
that Section 78(1) of PAIA, as
amended, provides for the
jurisdictional requirements that must be present for this court to
hear the application. This section,
as amended, states that:
‘
A
requester or third party may only apply to a court for appropriate
relief in terms of section 82 in the following circumstances:
(a)
after that requester or third party has
exhausted the internal appeal procedure referred to in section 74; or
(b)
after that requester or third party has
exhausted the complaints procedure referred to in section 77A.’
[42]
Section 77A(2) of PAIA states that:
‘
A
requester –
(a)
. . .
(d)
aggrieved by a decision of the head of a private body –
(i)
to refuse a request for access; or
(ii)
taken in terms of section 54, 57(1) or 60;
may
within 180 days of the decision, submit a complaint, alleging that
the decision was not in compliance with this Act, to the
Information
Regulator in the prescribed manner and form for appropriate relief.’
It
was the respondent’s submission that the applicant launched
this application on 22 September 2021, after the amendment
of PAIA
had taken place. In the respondent’s opinion, the applicant was
required to submit a complaint to the Information
Regulator after the
respondent denied her access to the requested information. No
complaint to that effect was submitted by the
applicant. An
application to this court for appropriate relief was premature, as
the jurisdictional requirements have not been
met. The respondent
therefore requested that this application be dismissed on this ground
alone.
[43]
On the merits, it was stated that the applicant has been given access
to the documents she requested,
by such documents having been placed
on their website. The said documents were annexed by the applicant in
her founding affidavit.
The respondent went a step further and
requested the applicant to attend a meeting with the respondent’s
auditors to discuss
the issues related to the respondent.
[44]
The respondent stated that the requested information is not necessary
for the exercise of applicant’s
rights. Notably, the request in
the Form C differs from the request in the application. In the Form
C, she requested: ‘Annual
reports for Women4Women, which
includes narrative reports, financial statements, as well as the
Accounting Officer’s reports
for the financial year 2019, 2020
and 2021 as required in terms of the Non Profit Organisations Act. I
also request the Constitution
of Women4Women.’ In this
application, the applicant requested: ‘The general ledgers,
other documents and books used
in preparation of the Respondent’s
financial statements in respect of 2018, 2019, 2020 and 2021.’
As stated by the
respondent, the applicant needed to be clear and
unequivocal in her request. In other words, she needed to comply with
the peremptory
provisions of PAIA, and failure to do so renders this
application fatally defective. In
Fortuin
v Cobra Promotions CC
[4]
it
was stated:
‘
The
Information Act [ie PAIA] affords subjects an extraordinary remedy,
which could be open to abuse. This is why the Legislature
states in
clear terms that persons to whom requests are addressed should be
appraised, not only of why the requester seeks the
information, but
should also be given an explanation for the request. Without this
information, the person to whom the request
is addressed cannot
evaluate whether the requirements of section 50(1), which obliges
disclosure, have been met. Like that provision,
both subsections of
section 53 are cast in peremptory terms. Failure to specify the right
the requester seeks to exercise or protect
and to provide an
explanation for why the information is required will generally be
fatal to a request.’
[45]
In the respondent’s view, no evidence was provided that the
applicant requested the ‘required’
documents or
information to exercise her rights. In the respondent’s
opinion, the applicant indicated in Form C that she
required the
documents to exercise her right to ‘[j]ust administrative
action and promotion of public interest’ and
‘[t]he right
of equality before the law
.
’ The respondent viewed the
rights mentioned by the applicant as vague. In this application, she
indicated that she required
the documents to exercise her right to
lodge a complaint in respect of Ms Nell-Roberts’ ‘alleged
transgressions of
provisions of the Companies Act’, and to lay
a criminal charge of theft against Ms Nell-Roberts and other
signatories of
Women4Women with the South African Police Service
(“the SAPS”). In the respondent’s further opinion,
the rights
stated by the applicant are primarily targeted at Ms
Nell-Roberts, and not W4W.
[46]
The respondent relied on numerous authorities in its illustration for
the word ‘required’,
as stated in Section 53 of the PAIA.
For instance, it was stated that in
Cape
Metropolitan Council v Metro Inspection Services Western Cape CC and
Others
[5]
,
Streicher JA held that;
‘
Information
can only be required for the exercise or protection of a right if it
will be of assistance in the exercise or protection
of the right. It
follows that, in order to make out a case for access to information
in terms of s 32, an applicant has to state
what the right is that he
wishes to exercise or protect, what the information is which is
required and how that information would
assist him in exercising or
protecting that right.’
[47]
In addressing the remarks made by Streicher JA above, Comrie AJA in
Clutchco
(Pty) Ltd v Davis
[6]
stated:
‘
.
. . the words “assistance” and “assist” . . .
indicates that “required” does not mean necessity,
let
alone dire necessity. I think that reasonably required in the
circumstances is about as precise a formulation as can be achieved,
provided that it is understood to connote a substantial advantage or
an element of need. . . .’
[48]
In delivering the majority judgment, it was argued that Brand JA
approved Streicher JA’s
remarks in
Unitas
Hospital v Van Wyk and Another
[7]
,
and held that:
‘
.
. . it is said that it does not mean the subjective attitude of
“want” or “desire” on the part of the
requester; that, at the one end of the scale, “useful” or
“relevant” for the exercise or protection of
a right is
not enough, but that, at the other end of the scale, the requester
does not have to establish that the information is
“essential”
or “necessary” for the stated purpose. . .’
[49]
Navsa ADP in
Company
Secretary of Arcelormittal SA
[8]
reiterated that the question of whether a record is ‘required’
is inextricably linked to the facts of the matter. The
court went on
to state that:
‘
Thus,
the word “required” in s 50(1)
(a)
of PAIA should be construed as “reasonably required” in
the prevailing circumstances (see
Clutchco
para 12). A scrutinising court should determine whether an applicant
for information did “lay a proper foundation for why
that
document is reasonably required for the exercise or protection of his
or her rights”. . . .’
[50]
In a more recent judgment,
My
Vote Counts NPC v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
[9]
Cameron J held that:
‘
.
. . The person seeking access to the information must establish a
substantial advantage or element of need. The standard is
accommodating,
flexible and in its application fact-bound. . . .’
(Internal footnote omitted.)
In
essence, it was the respondent’s submission that the applicant
must show an element of need to access the requested documents,
and
that such access would be substantially advantageous.
[51]
The respondent stated that the bank statements in the applicant’s
possession, are sufficient
evidence for the applicant to make an
election of whether to pursue recourse against W4W (and/or Ms
Nell-Roberts) for transgressions
of the Companies Act. The extent of
the alleged transgressions is an issue that will become relevant if
the applicant pursues such
recourse. In
Unitas Hospital
the
SCA held that the spouse of a man that passed away during or after a
medical procedure, was not entitled to the doctor’s
report that
would show the full extent and details of the alleged medical
negligence on the part of the hospital staff. The SCA
held that the
spouse had sufficient facts at her disposal to make an election of
whether to pursue a claim for medical negligence
against the
hospital. The doctor’s report would do no more than possibly
expound on the extent of such claim. It was said
that the same
principle applies in this application.
[52]
It is the respondent’s belief that the applicant has an
ulterior motive in launching and
persisting with this application. In
respondent’s understanding, it is evident from this application
that the applicant has
a long-standing feud with Ms Nell-Roberts and
W4W. The applicant persistently posted information relating to the
issues that she
has with Ms Nell-Roberts, and W4W, on social media
platforms, and made antagonistic and personal remarks about Ms
Nell-Roberts.
The applicant launched this application against the
respondent, but relies exclusively on misconduct allegedly committed
by Ms
Nell-Roberts in asserting that she ‘requires’ the
requested documents so that she can pursue legal recourse against
Ms
Nell-Roberts. It was submitted that the applicant has not made out a
case against W4W, has failed to comply with the procedural
requirements set out in PAIA and, further, she has failed to show
that she ‘requires’ the requested documents to exercise
her rights. The application should therefore be dismissed with
attorney-client costs.
[53]
The applicant took issue with additional point in
limine
that
was raised in the respondent’s heads of argument, and not
mentioned in their answering affidavit so as to be able to
deal with
the point properly. It was submitted by the applicant that the
respondent’s actions smack of opportunism.
[54]
In her response to this point, the applicant acknowledged the
amendment of certain provisions
of PAIA with effect from 30 June
2021. Notwithstanding this, the applicant asserted that she applied
for access to the information
on 9 June 2021, prior to the amendment
taking place. It is trite that, in our common law, there is a
presumption that statutes
do not apply retrospectively. This
presumption against retrospectivity has found wide recognition in
case law for purposes of both
statutory
[10]
and constitutional interpretation.
[11]
The presumption is based on legal certainty and fairness, ie that
persons should know what the law is to ‘conform their conduct
accordingly’
[12]
.
Meaning that any acts completed before the commencement of a statute
belong, as far as that statute is concerned, to the past.
[13]
There are no provisions in PAIA or POPI that express or imply that
any of the amendments of PAIA apply retrospectively. Therefore,
the
presumption against retrospectivity applies to this application. It
was stressed that the provisions of PAIA applicable before
the
amendments are applicable in this application.
[55]
Further, after the respondent’s refusal of the applicant’s
request to access to information,
Section 56 of PAIA governs the
manner in which the respondent should respond to the requester, and
it reads as follows:
‘
(1)
. . . the head of the private body to whom the request is made must,
as soon as reasonably possible,
but in any event within 30 days,
after the request has been received or after the particulars required
in terms of section 53 (2)
have been received –
(a)
decide in accordance with this Act whether
to grant the request; and
(b)
notify the requester of the decision and,
if the requester stated, as contemplated in Section 53 (2)
(e)
,
that he or she wishes to be informed of the decision in any other
manner, inform him or her in that manner if it is reasonably
possible.
.
. .
(3)
If the request for access is refused, the notice in terms of
subsection (1)
(b)
must –
(a)
state adequate reasons for the refusal, including the provisions of
this Act relied on;
(b)
exclude, from any such reasons, any reference to the content of the
record; and
(c)
state that the requester may lodge a complaint to the Information
Regulator (sic) an application with
a court against the refusal of
the request, and the procedure (including the period) for lodging a
complaint to the Information
Regulator or the application.’
[56]
The applicant submitted that if the respondent relied on the amended
provisions of PAIA, it similarly
failed to comply with the new
provisions as stated in Section 56. The respondent was supposed to
furnish the applicant with its
decision to refuse the applicant’s
requested information within 30 days, but failed to do so. In
addition, she was not obliged
to first exhaust the internal appeal
procedures as referred to in Section 78(1)
(a)
. The
respondent’s interpretation herein is at odds with Sections
56(3)
(c)
, 54(3)
(b)
and
(c)
, 56(2)
(c)
and
57. According to the applicant, if regard is had to these sections, a
requester who is aggrieved in the relevant scenarios
under these
provisions may lodge a complaint with the Information Regulator
or
(which is missing/omitted from Section 56(3)
(c)
) bring an
application to the court. The applicant’s stance is that the
requester is given a choice between the two processes.
In any event,
it was the applicant’s contention that the respondent had
failed to comply with Section 56(3)
(c)
– such a notice
was not given, if their reference to the new provisions of PAIA was
to be a consideration in this matter.
Analysis
[57]
The applicant in this application is not farther from the respondent.
Gathering from the allegations
in the founding affidavit, she spent
some time with the respondent, as each time she succeeded to the next
level of the Mrs SA
contest, she and other contestants were required
to raise funds for the respondent. It has not been disputed that the
respondent
is an affiliate of Mrs SA. Mrs SA draws married women from
the entire country to compete in this prestigious event. This beauty
pageant is said to be an empowerment and support programme for
married women in South Africa, and it is a life-changing journey
for
the women who enter this renowned empowerment programme.
[58]
There is no doubt that, as an affiliate of Mrs SA, the respondent’s
objectives and purpose
mirrored that of Mrs SA. As indicated, W4W is
a non-profit organisation and that its main focus is on women’s
empowerment,
community upliftment and youth education. Considering
the value and/or the amount raised by the applicant for the
respondent, she
was motivated to be part of this esteemed event.
[59]
It would be prudent to first deal with the point in
limine
raised by the respondent. To the extent that the remaining point in
limine
was raised in respondent’s heads of argument, and not in the
answering affidavit, the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Louw
and Others v Nel
remarked, with reference to motion proceedings, that the parties’
affidavits constitute both their pleadings and their evidence.
[14]
Pleadings must be lucid, logical and intelligible. A litigant must
plead his or her cause of action or defence with at least such
clarity and precision as is reasonably necessary to alert his or her
opponent to the case that must be met.
A
litigant who fails to do so may not afterwards advance a contention
of law or fact where its determination may depend on evidence
which
his or her opponent has failed to place before the court because he
or she was not sufficiently alerted to its relevance
.
[15]
(Emphasis added)
[60]
The respondent’s view in this regard was that the point raised
in
limine
constitutes a legal point. It was at liberty
to raise a point of law in their heads of arguments.
[61]
The argument put forward by the respondent in this instance is
misplaced, in the sense that if
this court were to find that the
applicant has failed to comply with the jurisdictional requirements
before approaching this court,
that would be the end of this
application. This point on its own is dispositive of the matter.
However, it is not open to the respondent
to raise an important point
in
limine
in their arguments. The applicant is entitled
to deal with the respondent’s defences properly and
procedurally. Litigation
by ambush is not palatable.
[62]
It is my considered opinion that the respondent should have raised
the second point
in
limine
, and further points on
merits, in its answering affidavit, so as to be dealt with by the
applicant in her replying affidavit. For
this reason, the applicant
was compelled to file supplementary heads of argument in order to
deal with the belatedly raised point
in
limine
, and
further points on merits, that appeared for the first time in
argument. Even if it were to be argued that the point raised
by the
respondent is a point of law, regard is to be had to the fact that
its determination depends on evidence which the respondent
did not
place before court, but which could be gleaned only in their heads of
argument. Be that as it may, the procedure adopted
by the respondent
is not desirable and has to be discouraged at all times.
[63]
However, to the extent that the point raised suggests that the
applicant was required to exhaust
the complaints procedure set out in
Section 77A of PAIA prior to the launch of this application, this
point has to be dealt with.
In the respondent’s view, Section
78 of PAIA was substituted by Section 110, read with paragraph 19 of
the Schedule to POPI.
The applicant was required to submit a
complaint to the Information Regulator after the respondent denied
the applicant the information
requested. So the jurisdictional
requirements, so said the argument, have not been met.
[64]
In a situation where the process of a request for information was
initiated before the commencement
of the enacted provisions, it was
not competent for the applicant to escalate the process using the
enacted provisions. Otherwise,
if that would be allowed, it would
create confusion and contribute to the lack of clarity if both old
and new provisions of PAIA/POPI
would be utilised in this process
simultaneously. The Constitutional Court in
Veldman
[16]
stated:
‘
26.
Generally, legislation is not to be interpreted to extinguish
existing rights and obligations. This is so unless the statute
provides otherwise or its language clearly shows such a meaning. That
legislation will affect only future matters and not take
away
existing rights is basic to notions of fairness and justice which are
integral to the rule of law, a foundational principle
of our
Constitution. Also central to the rule of law is the principle of
legality which requires that
law must be
certain, clear and stable.
Legislative
enactments are intended to “give fair warning of their effect
and permit individuals to rely on their meaning
until explicitly
changed”.
27.
As Innes CJ reasoned in
Curtis
:
“
The
general rule is that, in the absence of express provision to the
contrary, statues should be considered as affecting future
matters
only; and more especially that they should if possible be so
interpreted as not to take away rights actually vested at
the time of
their promulgation.’ (Internal footnotes omitted, own emphasis
supplied.)
[65]
In the circumstances the respondent’s submission on the
applicant’s failure to comply
with jurisdictional requirements
is not assailable. However, since the process of the request for
information started before the
commencement of the new provisions, it
follows therefore that the process would continue and be concluded as
such in terms of the
old provisions for purposes of clarity,
stability and certainty. The launch of this application on 22
September 2021 does not automatically
mean that the applicant should
assume the new provisions of PAIA. I tend to agree with the
applicant’s submission that the
presumption of retrospectivity
is applicable in matters such as the present. The applicant, in the
circumstances, cannot be faulted
for approaching this court for
appropriate relief.
[66]
Now, with regards to the merits, first the respondent stated that the
applicant was provided
with access to the documents that she
requested, in their website, and the said documents were annexed by
the applicant in her
founding affidavit, and that the applicant was
invited to a roundtable discussion to meet with the respondent’s
auditors
to thrash out issues that were of applicant’s concern.
It appears that the respondent did not appreciate the fact that the
applicant embarked on a formal process in terms of PAIA. A formal
request having been made to the respondent, it was not open to
the
respondent to treat the applicant in a cavalier manner by sending her
to their website and/or assuming that the information
requested was
received, simply because some of the information was annexed in the
applicant’s founding affidavit. Common
sense dictates that, the
fact that the applicant proceeded with an application, gives credence
to her remonstration that the information
requested was not received
and that remained the applicant’s stance throughout these
proceedings. Further, the formal process
having been embarked upon,
it was not clear from the respondent what a roundtable discussion
with the auditor would have achieved.
It was not clear whether this
invitation to a meeting was with or without prejudice. In light
thereof, it is my interpretation
that the respondent in this regard
attempted to sway the applicant off track by making these
suggestions. In the evidence before
this court, there is no
intimation that the parties attempted to settle the matter.
[67]
The applicant is correct in her submission that the respondent has
not complied with Section
56 of PAIA, as their response failed to
comply with the 30-day period as stipulated. The request was made on
9 June 2021, and the
response was received on 27 July 2021. However,
the assertion by the respondent that the information was made
available through
its website, seems to be in stark contrast with the
respondent’s contention that the applicant does not ‘require’
the requested documents for the exercise of her rights and/or that
the applicant has failed to provide evidence that the requested
documents are ‘required’ for the exercise of her rights.
If such was the respondent’s view, why was it necessary
for it
to make the documents it said it furnished available through its
website?
[68]
In any event, the applicant stated in Form C, amongst others, that
the information is required
for the exercise or protection of the
aforementioned right – ‘. . . my request is also for
possible legal recourse
.
’ Whether the applicant stated
in this application that she wanted to institute civil or criminal
proceedings is neither here
nor there, as all types of proceedings
can be referred to as legal recourse in layman’s terms. A Form
C (prepared by a layman)
and an application (prepared by a legally
qualified person) to the high court would not, in my view, adopt the
same terminology
and the same style of articulating issues. There is
no requirement that the one procedure must be the carbon copy of
another. In
my opinion, the documents requested and the reasons
therefore remain the same. There is nothing untoward, in my view, in
the description
of the right that is required to be protected and/or
exercised. Whether the said proceedings would be meant for Ms
Nell-Roberts
and/or the respondent, is irrelevant at this point, as
the applicant still awaits the documents to be furnished by the
respondent.
It follows therefore that the resultant legal proceedings
(civil of criminal) would commence once the applicant examined the
documents
requested. The ultimate transgressor, if any, would be
borne out by what is contained in the documents to be furnished.
[69]
The applicant, as stated above, raised a considerable amount of money
for the respondent. Even
if she was a general member of the public,
and had a reason to believe that the respondent’s funds were
not being used in
a manner that it was intended, she was entitled to
invoke the provisions of PAIA. The right to access to information
fosters a
culture of transparency and accountability in public and
private bodies. The applicant clearly requires the documents
requested.
[70]
A suggestion that the applicant abused the procedures set out in PAIA
for the purpose of obtaining
pre-action discovery, is groundless and
unsubstantiated. These allegations, in my view, are premature, as the
applicant has not
yet elected to institute proceedings, whether civil
or criminal. The issues she identified were the personal payments
that were
made from the respondent’s non-profit organisation
bank account, which was said to have been erroneously made and
corrected.
Whether all the erroneous personal payments made were
reversed, that was not clarified.
[71]
Perhaps the documents requested would give more clarity. The
respondent suggested that the documents
requested in this application
differ substantially from the documents that were initially requested
in Form C. As pointed out above,
the exercise of completion of a Form
C by a layperson cannot be equated to a substantial court
application. On reading the prayers
in this application, the
documents requested in this instance have to include the supporting
documents that were used in preparation
thereof, in the form of
general ledgers and so on.
[72]
The contention that the information is required and/or requested for
ulterior motives, as the
applicant initially embarked on a smear
campaign and/or posted unsavoury information on social media against
Ms Nell-Roberts, is
irrelevant to the information requested in my
view. The alleged standing feud between the applicant and Ms
Nell-Roberts should
have been dealt with in a different forum, if
any, and not be a defence in these proceedings. On considering the
evidence presented,
there is no suggestion that such posts are linked
to the financial statements requested. In any event, even if there
was any connection
between the information requested and the social
media posts, the respondent has a legal remedy at its disposal to
prohibit the
applicant’s alleged behaviour on social media
platforms. However, there is no evidence that such was done.
[73]
In my view, the applicant has made out a proper case that entitles
her to the documents requested,
save for the financial statements of
2018, as they did not form part of the initial request. In the
result, the following order
shall issue:
73.1 The decision
by the respondent and/or head of the respondent not to provide the
applicant with the information requested,
is set aside;
73.2 The respondent
and/or head of the respondent is ordered to provide the applicant
access to the following information,
in terms of Section 78(2) of
PAIA:
73.2.1
The general ledgers, other documents and books used in preparation
of
the respondent’s financial statements in respect of 2019, 2020
and 2021;
73.3 The respondent
and/or head of the respondent is ordered to deliver the original
documents, referred to in paragraph 73.2.1
herein, within fourteen
(14) days of the order at the applicant’s attorneys of record,
Liddell, Weeber and Van der Merwe
Incorporated, situated at 52 Broad
Road, Wynberg;
73.4 The attorneys
Liddell, Weeber and Van der Merwe Incorporated are authorised to take
possession of the aforementioned
documents and make copies thereof;
73.5 The attorneys
Liddell, Weeber and Van der Merwe Incorporated are ordered to return
the aforementioned documents to the
respondent at the respondent’s
attorneys’ place of business within fourteen (14) days after
taking possession thereof;
73.6 The respondent
is ordered to pay the costs of this application.
MANTAME
J
WESTERN
CAPE HIGH COURT
Coram
: B P MANTAME, J
Judgment
by
: B P MANTAME, J
FOR
APPLICANT
:
ADV R LIDDEL
0214262683/0733238855
reubenliddell@capebar.co.za
ADV
S WEBB
084 407
0000
staceywebb@capebar.co.za
FOR
RESPONDENT :
ADV K FELIX
0214243393/0747421992
jkfelix@capebar.co.za
Date
(s) of Hearing
: 21 April
2022
Judgment
delivered on :
16 May 2022
[1]
The
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 108 of 1996.
[2]
Preamble
of PAIA.
[3]
Act
4 of 2013.
[4]
(1658/09)
[2010]
ZAECPEHC 40 (17 June 2010) para 15. See also:
Company
Secretary of Arcelormittal South Africa and Another v Vaal
Environmental Justice Alliance
(69/2014)
[2014] ZASCA 184
(26 November 2014).
[5]
(10/99)
[2001]
ZASCA 56
(30 March 2001) para 28.
[6]
(035/04)
[2005]
ZASCA 16
(24 March 2005) para 13.
[7]
(231/05)
[2006]
ZASCA 34
(27 March 2006) para 16.
[8]
Fn
4 above paras 49-50.
[9]
(CCT 121/14)
[2015]
ZACC 31
(30 September 2015) para 31.
[10]
Veldman
v Director of Public Prosecutions, Witwatersrand Local Division
2007
(3) SA 210
(CC) paras 27 and 68.
[11]
S
v Mhlungu
[1995] ZACC 4
;
1995
(3) SA 867
(CC) paras 37 - 38.
[12]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Carolus and Others
2000
(1) SA 1127
(SCA) para 36.
[13]
Du
Plessis v Raubenheimer NO
1917
OPD 104
at 111.
[14]
2011 (2) SA 172
(SCA)
para
17.
[15]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Phillips and Others
2002
(1) BCLR 41
para 36.
[16]
Fn 10 above
.
sino noindex
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