Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 202South Africa
Forest Deep (Pty) Ltd and Another v Media Development and Diversity Agency and Others (20641/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 202 (19 October 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Forest Deep (Pty) Ltd and Another v Media Development and Diversity Agency and Others (20641/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 202 (19 October 2022)
Forest Deep (Pty) Ltd and Another v Media Development and Diversity Agency and Others (20641/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 202 (19 October 2022)
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sino date 19 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
no: 20641/21
In
the matter between:
Forest
Deep (Pty)
LTD
First Applicant
Bongivangeli
Buthelezi
Second Applicant
And
Media
Development and Diversity Agency
First Respondent
Mzuvukile
Kashe
Second Respondent
(MDDA
Executive Manager: Projects)
Jimmy
Ngwenya
Third Respondent
Judgment:
19 October 2022
LE
GRANGE, J
[1]
This is a review application in terms of which the Applicants seek to
have a purported
decision in respect of an application for funding
taken by the Respondents in terms of the Media Development and
Diversity Agency
Act 14 of 2002 (“Media Agency Act”) to
be reviewed and set aside.
[2]
The Applicants in paragraph 2 of its “Corrections of Notice of
Motion”
records the decision they seek to have reviewed as
follows –
‘
2.
The Applicants requests the court to review the decision by the
respondents in relation
to the application for funding made by the
applicants for an online radio station
’.
[3]
The applicants in paragraphs 3, 4 and 5 of the said Notice of Motion
listed three
further grounds upon which they rely to have the
purported decision be reviewed. In paragraph 6 of the Notice of
Motion the following
is recorded:
‘
6.
Relief sought: The court is requested to set aside the
decision- remitting the matter for
reconsideration with directions.
’
[4]
The factual matrix underpinning the application as set out in the
founding affidavit
of the Applicants can be summarised as follows:
the First Applicant (“Forest Deep”) is registered as a
media company,
for profit, operating as an online radio. The Second
Applicant, is the director and shareholder of Forest Deep.
[5]
In email correspondence dated 27 August 2021 the Second Applicant
contacted
the First Applicant (‘MDDA”)
by email on behalf of the First Applicant. The purpose of the email
was to enquire about
available funding from the MDDA and the process
that needs to be followed in applying for funding. On 14 September
2021, the Third
Respondent replied that the MDDA does not provide
funding to online radio stations.
[6]
The Second Applicant was unhappy with the response and the funding
policy of the MDDA
which resulted in several email correspondence
between the Second Applicant and Second and Third respondents.
[7]
As a result of the different views that were expressed in the
correspondence, the issues between
the parties could not be resolved
and litigation ensured.
[8]
In the current proceeding there were a number of interlocutory
applications which
I need not to deal with.
[9]
In the present instance, the Respondents have raised two points
in
limine
. The first is that
the
applicants’ founding ‘affidavit’ is defective and
does not constitute an affidavit for the purposes of Rule
6(1) of the
Uniform Rules of this Court. The second point is that the Applicants
seek to challenge a non-existent decision. According
to the Applicant
they have applied for funding from the MDDA.
[10]
I will only deal with the second point
in limine
because if
the Respondents are correct, then it will be dispositive of the
matter.
[11]
The statutory framework of the MDDA can be summarised as follows: The
MDDA is a statutory body
established in terms of the Media Agency
Act
[1]
.
Section
2 of the Media Agency Act provides that the MDDA ‘
acts
only through
’
its Board
[2]
. Section 3 makes
provision for the 'Objective of the Agency' and provides that –
"
The objective of
the Agency is to promote development and diversity in the South
African media throughout the country, consistent
with the right to
freedom of expression as entrenched in section 16(1) of the
Constitution, in particular –
...
(iii)
encourage the channelling of resources to the community media and
small commercial media sectors...
"
The
Media Act defines ‘
community
media
’
as ‘
any
media project that is owned and controlled by a community where any
financial surplus generated is reinvested in the media project
‘
[3]
. Section 1 also
defines ‘
small
commercial media’
as
‘
independent
media enterprises or initiatives that are run for personal gain as
micro, very small or small businesses as classified
in the
National
Small Business Act, 102 of 1996
’.
Section 14(1)(b) of the
Media Act states that the board of the Media Agency ‘
must...select
projects in accordance with the criteria prescribed in terms of
section 19(3) to receive support.’
Section 19(3)(a) states
that the board of the Media Agency ‘
must prescribe detailed
criteria for selecting
–
(i)
Community media projects;
(ii)
Small commercial media projects; and
(iii)
Research projects.’
[12]
The Media Agency Act, empowers the board to determine the selection
criteria for the projects
that will receive support. The
Regulations
[4]
in terms of
section 22 of the Media Agency Act stipulate that the general
criteria for selecting community media and small
commercial projects
include ‘
compliance
with media laws and codes of conduct applicable to the media
industry.
’
[5]
[13]
Regulation 9 provides in no uncertain terms the procedure that needs
to be followed to apply
for funding from the MDDA
[6]
.
[14]
It is common cause the board of the MDDA adopted a Funding
Policy.
[7]
In clause 7 thereof,
the Board determined eligibility criteria for projects. Clause
7.11 requires ‘
compliance
with the media laws and codes of conduct applicable to the media
industry.
’
Clause 8.2 requires that qualifying applications must submit
compliant and requisite documents to be considered for
assessment
which essentially encapsulates the requirements as set out in
Regulation 9.
[15]
In view of the MDDA Funding Policy, clause 8.2.9 stipulates that a
broadcaster must include ‘compliant
and requisite documents to
be considered for assessment’ which include a ‘broadcast
license (Class License and Spectrum)
and print media applicants must
according to clause 8.2.13 include ‘compliant and requisite
documents to be considered for
assessment’ which include the
‘editorial policy (affidavit on adhering to Press Code)’.
[16]
In addition to the abovementioned requirements, clause 12.1.2
stipulates that a project is required
to have ‘
a valid
Broadcast license, for broadcast projects. The licence is valid
for the duration of the MDDA contract with the project.
’
[17]
It is evident having regard to the legislative framework, section 18
of the Media Agency Act
[8]
prioritizes direct funding to community media projects as opposed to
small commercial projects and the MDDA has the legislative
authority
to determine the selection criteria which it has done as reflected in
the Regulations and its Funding Policy
[18]
Given the definitions of a small commercial media project, on the
facts before me the first applicant’s
operations is a small
commercial media project that it is privately-owned and operates for
private gain. It is therefore not in
the true sense of the word a
community media project which is controlled by ‘
a community
’
and where financial surplus is ploughed back into the project.
[19]
There can be no doubt that the nature of the activities of the first
applicant, in running an
online radio station, it is that of a
broadcaster.
[20]
Against this backdrop the question to be answered is whether the
Applicants applied for funding
from the MDDA. The short answer is no.
[21]
On the Applicants’ own version, they did not apply to the MDDA
for funding.
In
paragraph 4 of the ‘corrected’ founding affidavit, the
Second Applicant recorded that he sent an email on 27 August
2021 to
the MDDA ‘
to
enquire about available funding from the
’
Media Agency and the process to be followed ‘
in
relation to application for funding
’.
In the said affidavit it was further recorded that ‘
we
would like to explore funding options and opportunities with the
Media Development & Diversity Agency.’
[9]
[22]
In response to the latter email, Third Respondent addressed an email
to the Second Applicant
on 4 September 2021 in which he was informed
that the MDDA only funds electronic media projects ‘
which
are compliant with ICASA
regulations
’, and that
‘
unfortunately MDDA doesn’t fund unlicensed electronic
media.
’
[23]
On 13 September 2021 the Third respondent explained further that the
MDDA ‘
funds licensed Electronic media (Community TV and
Radio stations). MDDA also funds Community and Small Commercial
Newspapers. When
it comes to Small Commercial, we only fund Print not
Electronic Media.
’
[24]
The Second Applicant was clearly not impressed with the information
provided by the MDDA and
its funding model and was adamant that he
did not ‘
see any category by which [the applicants] are
disqualified according to both the MDDA act and the
’
applicable regulations. He further recorded that: –
‘
I do not
believe that my application or even the enquiry about an application
has been treated with fairness, so it is at this stage
where I will
like to request is the anyone else that I can speak to in regards to
this in the organisation, I ask this as I have
to exhaust the due
process within the agency first before I seek a judicial review on
this matter. I suppose if I don't receive
a response I will be left
with no choice but to take this matter up for judicial review as
envisioned by the Promotion of
administrative justice act of 2000.
I’m actually
saddened by how …your treatment has been of my
enquiry
..’
[25]
The Second Applicant during argument persisted with the view that the
Respondents took a decision
via its Policy Funding which is capable
of being reviewed. It is apparent from the Second Applicant’s
argument that by enquiring
about ‘
exploring the funding
options and opportunities
’, this enquiry converted into an
application for funding capable of being rejected or accepted by the
MDDA.
[26]
The argument advanced by the Second Applicant is misguided and
untenable. The MDDA is governed
by the Media Agency Act.
Furthermore, regulations were promulgated in terms of that Act. In
fact, Regulation 9(1) obliges any person
who wishes to apply for
support from the Board to complete the relevant application form
provided by the MDDA. Regulation 9(2)
lists eleven items of
information and documents that must be provided with the application
ranging from the project’s founding
documents, the objectives
of the project, details of the ownership of the enterprise when it is
a commercial project, (as in the
present instance with the first
applicant), the proposed budget and the qualifications and experience
of the key personnel.
It is only after such an application is
lodged that the MDDA is faced with having to make a decision in
respect of an application.
[27]
The existence of a decision as a pre-requisite for any judicial
review thereof is trite
.
In Grey’s Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of
Public Works and Others
[10]
the court held that “
At
the core of the definition of administrative action is the idea of
action (a decision) “of any administrative nature”
taken
by a public body or functionary”.
This
matter is no different.
[28]
The Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, no 3 of 2000 (‘PAJA’)
defines an administrative
action as meaning ‘
any
decision
’
taken by the relevant entity that ‘
adversely
affects the rights of any person and which has a direct, external
legal effect
’.
[11]
[29]
In turn, a ‘decision’ is defined in section 1 of PAJA as
‘
any decision of an administrative nature made, proposed to
be made, or required to be made, as the case may be, under an
empowering
provision…
’
[30]
It follows that the MDDA as an organ of state in terms of an
empowering provision has not made
a decision. The Applicants other
than the email enquiry of 27 August 2022 failed to submit an
application at any stage prior to,
on or after 13 September 2021 as
required by the Regulations. This is not a case where s 6(2)(g) of
PAJA refers to the failure
to take a decision. The latter refers to a
decision that the administrator in question is under some obligation
to take and is
directed at dilatoriness in taking decisions that the
administrator is supposed to take and aims at protecting the citizen
against
bureaucratic stonewalling.
[12]
[31]
The suggestion by the Second Applicant that the Respondents have
already decided that in the
event the Applicants lodge an application
for funding, such application will be rejected on the basis of the
position intimated
by the officials at the MDDA, is also
unsustainable. In
Offit
Enterprises
[13]
the court was called upon to intervene in a potential expropriation
process yet to be embarked upon, but in respect of which the
authorities did not make a decision. In refusing to intervene, the
Supreme Court of Appeal held at paragraph 44 the following:
“…
the
administrative action sought to be condemned is action that can only
occur in the future. In other words, we are asked to condemn
as
unfair something that has not yet happened and may not ever happen,
and, if it does happen, may take place in a different legislative
and
economic environment. For all we know, if expropriation is
decided upon in the future, the process will be a model of
administrative fairness, with the appellants being given every
opportunity to make representations, to claim adequate compensation
and the like. We simply do not know.”
[32]
In the present instance, the latter is apposite because if the
applicants wish to apply in future,
the outcome is not a foregone
conclusion.
[33]
The second point
in limine
raised by the Respondents is
therefore not without merit. It follows that the Applicants
application is fundamentally flawed and
falls to be dismissed.
[34]
Costs ordinarily follows the result. The Respondents although a
statutory body did not persist
to ask for costs and in view of the
background of this case, it was a salutary decision to make.
[35]
In the result the following order is made.
1.
The Application is dismissed. There is no order as to costs.
Le
Grange, J
[1]
Act 14 of 2002
[2]
Establishment
of Agency
.
2
.
(I) A juristic person known as the Media Development and
Diversity Agency is
hereby
established:
(2) The Agency acts only
through the Board;
[3]
Section
1.
[4]
See:
GN1460 of 10 October 2003 made in terms of section 22 of the Media
Agency Act.
[5]
Regulation
2(i).
[6]
Regulation
9
.
Procedure for applying for support
(1) Any person who
wishes to apply for support from the Board as contemplated in
section 17 of the Act
must:
(a) complete the
relevant application form provided by the Agency; and
(b)
provide the Agency with the in
f
ormation
required in sub-regulation (2).
(2) The applicant must
submit the following information together with, the application ~ ,-
form- ,,
(a)
the project's founding documents;
(b)
the objectives and goals of the project;
(c)
in respect of a community media project, the composition of its
governing
body;
(d)
in respect of small commercial media projects, details of the
ownership of the
enterprise or
initiative;
(e)
a business plan for the project, including measures for future
sustainability;
(f)
an effective plan to evaluate the outcomes of the project;
(g)
the project’s proposed budget;
(h)
the project’s tax clearance certificate;
(i)
where applicable, any licence ‘or other authorisation required
under any law
regulating the media
industry;
(j)
the qualifications and experience of key personnel of the project;
and
(k)
where possible, the project’s financial statements for the
previous financial
year,
certified by an accountant or auditor who ii independent of the
project.
(3)
The applicant must submit the form together with the required
information at the
offices
of the Agency.
(4)
Any document required in terms of sub-regulation (2) must be an
original or a
certified
copy of the original.
[7]
MDDA
Projects Funding Policy 2019/2020 to be reviewed annually.
[8]
Allocation
of support
18. (1) Direct subsidies referred to in section 17(a)(i) may be
granted to community
media projects.
(2) Community media
projects may also receive any other support contemplated in the Act.
(3) Small commercial
media projects primarily receive low interest rate loans referred to
in section14( l)(d)(ii) and may receive,
subject to subsection (l),
any other support contemplated in this Act.
[9]
MK2
attached to AA p192
[10]
[2005] ZASCA 43
;
2005
(6) SA 313
(SCA) at para 22
[11]
PAJA,
Section 1
[12]
Offit
Enterprises (Pty) Ltd v Coega Development Corporation
2010 (4) SA
242
at para 43
[13]
Ibid
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