Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 222South Africa
Public Protector of South Africa v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others (8500/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 222 (3 November 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Public Protector of South Africa v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others (8500/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 222 (3 November 2022)
Public Protector of South Africa v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others (8500/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 222 (3 November 2022)
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sino date 3 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
Before:
The
Hon Mr Justice L G Nuku
The
Hon Mr Justice M Francis
The
Hon Mr Justice J D Lekhuleni
Case
No:
8500/2022
In
the matter between:
THE
PUBLIC PROTECTOR OF SOUTH AFRICA
Applicant
and
THE
SPEAKER OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
First Respondent
THE
CHAIRPERSON OF THE SECTION 194
COMMITTEE
Second Respondent
THE
PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Third Respondent
ALL
POLITICAL PARTIES REPRESENTED
IN
THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
Fourth to Seventeenth Respondents
Date
of hearing :
25 October
2022
Date
of Judgment :
03 November 2022
JUDGMENT
ON APPLICATIONS FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
THE
COURT:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an urgent application for leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court of Appeal (“the
SCA”) in terms of section
17(1)(a)(i) and section 17(1)(a)(ii) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013 (“the
Superior Courts
Act&rdquo
;)
,
against the whole judgment and order of this Court handed down on 11
October 2022 (“the
section 18
Judgment).
In that judgment, this Court dismissed
the applicant’s application in terms of
section 18(1)
and
section 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act to
render the judgment of
this Court delivered on 09 September 2022 (“the Part B
Judgment”) to be operational and executable,
pending any
application for leave to appeal or appeal delivered in respect
thereof. It is that order that the applicant seeks to
challenge
before the SCA. The tenth, eleventh, and the sixteenth respondents
("the supporting respondents") have also
filed their
applications for leave to appeal to the SCA in similar terms against
the
section 18
Judgment. At the hearing of this application, both
applications for the applicant and the supporting respondents were by
agreement
consolidated and were heard together.
The third and
the fifth respondents opposed both applications.
GROUNDS
OF APPEAL
[2]
The grounds of appeal filed on behalf of the applicant and the
supporting respondents
can be summarised briefly as follows: the
applicant contends that this Court erred in holding that the orders
numbered 187.5 and
187.6 of the Part B judgment were made in terms of
section 172(2)(a) of the Constitution as no party, including the
court, ever
raised the issue of confirmation during the hearing of
the application. The applicant also contends that the court erred in
its
finding that these orders were made in terms of section
172(2)(a), as the Registrar was not directed to refer the orders to
the
Constitutional Court until after the expiry of 15 days prescribed
in Rule 16(1) of the Constitutional Court Rules.
[3]
In the alternative, the applicant submitted that this Court erred in
holding that
the order numbered 187.6 of the Part B judgment was
ancillary to or flowed from the order numbered 187.5 when, in fact,
the order
numbered 187.6 flowed independently from the findings
pertaining to common law breaches, which are not sourced from the
Constitution.
The applicant further contends that the mere fact that
the exercise of power was effected under a constitutional duty does
not
automatically mean that the breach falls under section 172(1)
because Section 172(1) does not apply to conduct which is
inconsistent
with the common law or legislation but only to conduct
which is inconsistent with the Constitution.
[4]
The applicant has also filed with the Constitutional Court an urgent
Conditional application
for leave to appeal in terms of Rule 19 of
the Constitutional Court Rules for the consolidation of the present
application with
cases CCT251/22 and CCT252/22. The application for
leave to appeal before the Constitutional Court is conditional upon
the outcome
of this application and the proceedings before the SCA if
leave to appeal is granted in this application. In the Constitutional
Court, the applicant seeks, among other things, an order setting
aside the section 18 Judgment of this Court and for the immediate
execution of the orders granted in the Part B Judgment in terms of
section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act and
or section 172(2)(b) of the
Constitution.
[5]
The applicant also relied on
section 17(1)(a)(ii)
of the
Superior
Courts Act and
noted, among other things, that the lodging of appeals
by the fifth respondent and the President has had the effect of
re-suspending
the applicant. This, so it is argued, is clearly not in
the interests of justice in the circumstances of this case
considering
the obligations of the State to respect the applicant’s
rights enshrined in the Bill of Rights.
[6]
The supporting respondents, for their part, contended that the court
erred in finding
that the orders in 187.5 and 187.6 of the Part B
Judgment are composite, not self-standing, and must be referred to
the Constitutional
Court for confirmation. Had the court correctly
appreciated the structure of
section 172(2)
, so their argument went,
the court would have indeed concluded that its orders in paragraphs
187.5 and 187.6 were self-standing
orders, and separate from each
other. The supporting respondents contend that the order in paragraph
187.6 of the Part B Judgment
was an order under section 172(2)(b) of
the Constitution: a temporary relief granted to the applicant pending
the decision of the
Constitutional Court on the validity of the
President’s conduct in suspending the applicant.
PRINCIPAL
SUBMISSIONS OF THE PARTIES
[7]
At the hearing of this
application, Mr Mpofu contended on behalf of the applicant that
this
matter raises very complex, novel, and constitutionally weighty
issues which merits the attention of all our courts. Applicant’s
counsel submitted that a dismissal of this application, would strip
the matter of its great potential to put to bed important issues
concerning both
section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act and
section 172
of the Constitution. Counsel further contended that granting leave to
appeal in this matter will advance the administration
of justice by
allowing the much-needed objective interpretation of the relevant
court orders in both the Part B and section 18
Judgments of this
court.
[8]
Mr Mpofu further contended that this court refrained from dealing
with the merits
of the section 18 application and that this
per
se,
is a compelling reason to grant leave to appeal. Counsel submitted
that the Constitutional Court has on more than one occasion
pointed
out that it is undesirable for it to sit as a court of first instance
to adjudicate matters which could have been dealt
with by the High
Court. To this end, Counsel relied on the Constitutional Court
decision of
S
v Jordan and Others
[1]
and
Minister
of Justice and Another v SA Restructuring and Insolvency
Practitioners Association and Others,
[2]
where
it was stated that where the constitutionality of a provision is
challenged on several grounds and the court upholds one such
ground,
it is desirable that it should also express its opinion on the other
challenges.
[9]
Mr Mpofu submitted that the mere fact that the matter might be heard
before the Constitutional
Court on 24 November 2022 is not a good
reason to refuse leave to appeal. To this end, it was argued that
this matter affects the
applicant’s section 34 rights, and it
is expected that if leave is granted, the SCA will deal with this
matter as a matter
of extreme urgency as prescribed by
section 18
of
the
Superior Courts Act. It
was Counsel’s submission that this
matter does not need confirmation as the orders made in paragraphs
187.5 and 187.6 were
made in terms of section 172(1)(a) and (b) of
the Constitution. Furthermore, paragraphs 187.5 and 187.6
circumscribe the executive
part of this Court’s judgment as it
defined what the court required of the parties who are bound by it.
[10]
The supporting respondents also submitted that the issues raised in
this matter are of great
public importance such that it is compelling
for leave to appeal to be granted. Mr Ngalwana, who appeared on
behalf of the supporting
respondents, submitted that the question of
law that must be determined by the appeal court is this: in what
circumstances is the
confirmatory jurisdiction of the apex court
triggered when the High Court finds the President to have acted
unlawfully or in breach
of the Constitution. Counsel contended that
there are conflicting judgments on the issue of automatic
confirmation by the apex
court of a declaration of invalidity of the
President’s conduct by the High Courts. Thus, this is a
sufficient ground for
leave to appeal to be granted, regardless of
the prospects of success on the merits of the appeal. It was further
submitted on
behalf of the supporting respondents that the issues
raised in this court turn on the proper interpretation of not only
section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act, but
also on section 172 of the
Constitution that engages the jurisdiction ultimately of the
Constitutional Court. As a result, Mr Ngalwana
submitted that this
Court cannot be the final arbiter of the proper interpretation of the
Constitution. For these compelling reasons,
so the contention
proceeded, leave to appeal should be granted.
[11]
Ms Pillay who appeared for the President submitted that this
application is a manifest abuse
of process as the applicant and her
legal representatives were aware before this application was launched
that the Constitutional
Court will, on 24 November 2022, hear various
appeals against the judgment of the full court declaring the decision
of the President
invalid. Ms Pillay submitted further that the
pending applications before the Constitutional Court will be
dispositive of the lawfulness
or otherwise of the applicant’s
suspension. If this court was to grant leave to appeal, so the
argument went, an appeal to
the SCA against the refusal of the
section 18 application could not, as a matter of practicality, be
dealt with by the SCA prior
to the hearing of the pending application
before the Constitutional Court for consolidation and an execution
order. Having regard
to the facts of this matter, counsel submitted
that an appeal against the section 18 order is not in the interests
of justice and
thus not appealable. Counsel also contended that the
fact that this court did not deal with the merits of the section 18
application,
is not a compelling reason for leave to appeal to be
granted because this matter does not involve a constitutional
challenge to
a statutory provision.
[12]
The DA ‘s submissions were in substance aligned with the
arguments advanced by the third
respondent. In addition, Mr Bishop,
on behalf of the DA, contended that there are no merits in the
applicant’s application.
Counsel contended that at the hearing
of Part B, none of the parties sought interim relief and, further,
that issue was not argued
in this court. Mr Bishop contended that the
submission that the order in terms of paragraph 187.5 is predicated
on the common law
and does not require confirmation is misplaced.
Counsel relied on
Pharmaceutical
Manufactures of SA: In Re Ex Parte President of RSA,
[3]
where the Constitutional Court held that the common law principles
that previously provided the grounds for judicial review of
public
power have been subsumed under the constitution and, insofar as they
might continue to be relevant to judicial review, they
gain their
force from the Constitution. Counsel also contended that there are no
prospects that another court would come to a different
conclusion.
APPLICABLE
LEGAL PRINCIPLES AND DISCUSSION
[13]
The applicant’s application for leave to appeal is based
squarely on
section 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act.
>
Section
17
of the
Superior Courts Act regulates
applications for leave to
appeal from a decision of a High Court. It provides as follows:
‘
(1) Leave to
appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned are of
the opinion that—
(
a
) (i) the appeal
would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii) there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
(
b
) the decision
sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of
section 16
(2)
(
a
); and
(
c
) Where the
decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the issues in
the case, the appeal would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of
the real issues between the parties.'
[14]
The test that was applied previously in applications of this nature,
was whether there were reasonable
prospects that another court may
come to a different conclusion. With the enactment of
section 17
of
the
Superior Courts Act, the
threshold for granting leave to appeal a
judgment of the High Court has been significantly raised. The use of
the word ‘would’
in subsection 17(1)(a)(i) of the
Superior Courts Act imposes
a more stringent threshold in terms of
the Act, compared to the provisions of the repealed Supreme Court Act
59 of 1959.
[4]
In
Mount
Chevaux Trust [IT 2012/28 v Tina Goosen and 18 Others
,
[5]
Bertelsmann J stated as follows:
“
It
is clear that the threshold for granting leave to appeal against a
judgment of a High Court has been raised in the new Act. The
former
test whether leave to appeal should be granted was a reasonable
prospect that another court may come to a different conclusion,
See
Van Heerden v Cronwright and Others
1985 (2) SA 342
(T) at
343H. The use of the word ‘would’ in the new statute
indicates a measure of certainty that another court will
differ from
the court whose judgment is sought to be appealed against”.
[15]
What is required of this court is to consider, objectively and
dispassionately, whether there
are reasonable prospects that another
court will find merit in the arguments advanced by the losing
party.
[6]
[16]
Reverting to this case, it is undeniable that the issues raised by
the applicant and the supporting
respondents in their notices of
appeal are weighty and of great public importance. This case involves
a proper interpretation of
section 172 of the Constitution and
section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act in
determining the rights of
the parties, particularly those of the applicant and the supporting
respondents. In the Part B Judgment,
this Court found that the
President as a servant of the Constitution, is under an obligation to
obey its commands. Further, this
Court observed that the President
had a duty to exercise his public power within the parameters of the
law and to comply with the
principle of legality and the
Constitution. In addition, this Court also found that the applicant’s
suspension was certainly
tainted by bias of a disqualifying kind and
perhaps an improper motive. As a result, the court declared the
suspension invalid
in paragraph 187.5 of the Part B Judgment and
directed the suspension to be effective from the date of judgment in
paragraph 187.6.
[17]
In dismissing the application to render the Part B
judgment to be
operational and executable,
pending any application for leave to appeal or appeal, the Court
emphasised that the Part B judgment
was inchoate and of no force
until the Constitutional Court confirmed the judgment. In addition,
it was held that
the orders granted by this Court were
composite in nature and both orders required confirmation.
[18]
We have carefully considered the submissions of the applicant and the
supporting respondents
but can find no redeeming features to persuade
us that there is a reasonable possibility that another Court would
come to a different
conclusion. Our reasons have been extensively
catalogued in both the Part B and section 18 judgments and it is
unnecessary to repeat
them here.
[19]
There is another reason why the applications for leave to appeal must
fail.
Section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act is
intended, under
exceptional circumstances, to bring into operation a decision which
is the subject of appeal. A court is empowered
in exceptional
circumstances to order that a decision which is the subject of an
application for leave to appeal or appeal to be
put into operation or
executed pending the final determination of the appeal. The
Constitutional Court in
Department
of Transport v Tasima (Pty) Ltd; Tasima (Pty) Ltd v Road Traffic
Management Corporation,
[7]
held that an order made under
section 18(3)
serves to regulate the
interim position between the litigants from the time when such an
order is made until the final judgment
on appeal is handed down.
[20]
Having regard to the dictum of the Constitutional Court in
Tasima
,
we are of the view that an order granted in terms of
section 18(1)
and read with
section 18(3)
is interim in nature, regulating as it
does the interim position between the litigants from the time when
such an order is made
until the final judgment on appeal is handed
down. Consequently, the appealability for the refusal of an order
sought in terms
of
section 18(1)
read with
section 18(3)
is to be
determined with reference to the settled legal principles governing
the appealability of interim orders generally.
[21]
The Constitutional Court in
UDM
and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd and Others,
[8]
held that the
test
of appealability for interim orders is now the interests of justice.
The Constitutional Court also held in
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Afriforum and Another,
[9]
that the common law test for appealability has since been denuded of
its somewhat inflexible nature. Unlike before, the court noted,
appealability no longer depends largely on whether the interim order
appealed against has final effect or is dispositive of a substantial
portion of the relief claimed in the main application. The court
further observed that all of this is now subsumed under the
constitutional
“interests of justice” standard.
[22]
Pursuant to the authorities cited above, we are of the view that the
refusal of the
section 18(1)
read with
section 18(3)
application
falls to be considered with reference to the interests of justice
standard. We share the views expressed by the President’s
legal
Counsel that an appeal against the
section 18
order in this case,
does not meet the interests of justice standard and is thus not
appealable. This is borne out by the fact that
section 18
does not
find application when the orders relate to the conduct of the
President. This view is buttressed by section 172(2)(a)
of the
Constitution which makes it clear that orders relating to the conduct
of the President have no effect unless confirmed by
the
Constitutional Court. Section 167(5) also reinforces this provision
and provides that the Constitutional Court makes the final
decision
whether the conduct of the President is constitutional, and must
confirm any order of invalidity made by a High Court
before that
order has any force.
[23]
Finally, there is a further compelling reason why the applications
for leave to appeal must fail.
If leave is granted to appeal to the
SCA, it would have no practical result. We are aware that according
to the revised directives
issued by the Chief Justice on 12 October
2022, the appeal by the third and the fifth respondents and the
cross-appeal against
the Part B Judgment, are scheduled to be heard
by the Constitutional Court on 24 November 2022. In terms of these
directives, any
appeals, and cross-appeals (conditional or otherwise)
will be heard simultaneously with the consolidated applications set
down
for hearing on 24 November 2022, at 10h00. Thus, the
Constitutional Court is seized with the pending applications and
appeals which
will finally determine the lawfulness of the
applicant’s suspension. This is due to be heard in less than a
month from now.
[24]
As explained above, the applicant has since filed a conditional
application with the Constitutional
Court to have the issues raised
in this application consolidated with the appeals lodged by the third
and fifth respondents in
the Constitutional Court. That application
is conditional upon the outcome of this application. In the
conditional application,
the applicant seeks to set aside the
decision of this Court in the section 18 Judgment and to substitute
it with an order for execution
of the Part B Judgment. In a month,
that application and the issues raised in this application will be
before the Constitutional
Court. Clearly, the SCA will not be able to
determine the appeal against the refusal of the section 18 order
before the Constitutional
Court hears and possibly decides on the
pending appeal and applications. In any event, even if the SCA was to
hear and determine
the appeal, its decision in all probability is
likely to be challenged in the Constitutional Court. The expedited
appeals proceedings
in the Constitutional Court will finally resolve
the issues raised in this matter.
[25]
In our view, granting leave to appeal in this case would lead to
piecemeal adjudication and delay
the determination of the dispute. In
addition, leave to appeal to the SCA under these circumstances would
be impractical and a
waste of public funds, time, and judicial
resources. As the Constitutional Court noted in
International
Trade Administration Commission v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd,
[10]
courts are loathe to encourage the wasteful use of judicial resources
and of legal costs by allowing appeals against interim orders
that
have no final effect, and that are susceptible to reconsideration by
another court when final relief is determined.
[26]
We are alive to the constitutional rights implicated in this matter,
particularly those of the
applicant and the office of the Public
Protector. However, we are of the view that the Constitutional Court
will deal with these
issues in due course. Furthermore, any prejudice
that the applicant may suffer, if at all, would be minimal if leave
to appeal
is refused. In addition, any potential prejudice that the
applicant may suffer is ameliorated by the fact that in a month’s
time, these issues will be debated before the apex court.
Importantly, if the Constitutional Court finds that there is indeed
substance in the section 18 application, it will, with respect, no
doubt grant appropriate relief.
[27]
In the circumstances, it is our firm view that an application for
leave to appeal to the SCA
in these circumstances, will be an
exercise in futility and a waste of public funds and judicial
resources.
[28]
Lastly, it has been stated as a fact in the applicant’s
application for leave to appeal
as well as in her heads of argument
that the Registrar of this court was not directed to refer the orders
to the Constitutional
Court until after the expiry of the 15-day
period prescribed in Rule 16(1) of the Constitutional Court Rules. In
the section 18
Judgment, we said
section 15(1)(a)
of the
Superior
Courts Act, which
deals with the referral of an order of
constitutional invalidity to the Constitutional Court for
confirmation, must be read in
tandem with
Rule 16(1)
of the
Constitutional Court’s Rules.
Rule 16(1)
of the Constitutional
Court places an obligation on the Registrar of a court which has made
an order of constitutional invalidity
as contemplated in section 172
of the Constitution, within 15 days of such order, to lodge with the
Registrar of the Constitutional
Court a copy of such order. Thus, it
was the duty of the Registrar of this Court to ensure
that
the abovementioned rules were observed. This conclusion is fortified
by the Constitutional Court decision in
S
v Manyonyo,
[11]
where Chaskalson P, as he then was, stated:
“
The
1996 Constitution makes provision for any order declaring provisions
of an Act of Parliament to be inconsistent with the Constitution,
to
be referred to the Constitutional Court for confirmation. The
Constitutional Court rules require the registrar of a court
which has
made an order of constitutional invalidity to lodge a copy of the
order with the registrar of the Constitutional Court
within 15
days. It is essential that this rule be complied with and that
orders that require to be confirmed are brought to
the attention of
this Court timeously. This is of particular importance in cases where
litigants are not represented. Delays may
be highly prejudicial to
such persons.”
[9]
High Court
registrars are under a duty to ensure that the rule is
observed.
The obligation is to lodge the order of referral with
the registrar of this Court. Lodgement takes place when the order is
received
by the registrar. It is therefore the responsibility of the
registrar of the referring court to satisfy herself or himself that
this has happened, and to secure confirmation of the receipt of the
order from the registrar of this Court.” (Footnote omitted
and
emphasis added)
[29]
In compliance with this statutory injunction, the Registrar of this
Court referred the part B
Judgment to the Constitutional Court for
confirmation on 22 September 2022. On 23 September 2022, the
Registrar of the Constitutional
Court acknowledged receipt of the
order and further confirmed that his office had already received the
request for confirmation
of the order of invalidity from the
attorneys acting on behalf of the respondents. Consequently, the
suggestion that this Court
has not referred its order to the
Constitutional Court for confirmation within the relevant time frame
is erroneous and mistaken.
COSTS
[30]
The fifth respondent and the President sought costs against the
applicant on a punitive scale
and in her personal capacity. I
t
is a trite principle of our law that a court considering an order of
costs exercises a discretion which must be exercised judicially.
[12]
Having considered the parties’ submissions on the issue of
costs, we are of the view that a punitive costs order against
the
applicant is not warranted. The scale of attorney and client sought
by the respondents against the applicant is an extraordinary
one
which should be reserved for cases where it can be found that a
litigant conducted itself in a clear and indubitably vexatious
and
reprehensible manner.
[13]
Although her application for leave to appeal was ill-conceived and
brought with improper haste, it cannot be said that her application
is fraudulent, dishonest, or vexatious and that she engaged in
conduct that amounts to an abuse of court process that would warrant
an award of costs on an attorney-client scale against her.
[14]
The same can be said with regard to the application for leave to
appeal by the supporting respondents.
[31]
Nonetheless, we find it concerning that notwithstanding that an
expedited date has been determined
by the Constitutional Court to
dispose of all the issues raised in this application, the applicant
and the supporting respondents
nonetheless soldiered on with their
applications for leave to appeal to the SCA. In our view, this placed
an unnecessary burden
on the court and the opposing parties,
especially given the extremely truncated time-periods within which
these parties were required
to craft their responses. In the
circumstances, the court is of the view that there is no basis for
deviating from the general
rule that the applicant and the supporting
respondents, as the unsuccessful parties, should bear the costs of
this application.
In addition, the applicant’s application for
leave to appeal was of no direct consequence to anyone else, save for
her in
her personal capacity; hence, the cost order that follows.
ORDER
In
the result, the following order is granted:
32.1
The applications for leave to appeal are dismissed.
32.2
The applicant personally, and the tenth, eleventh, and the sixteenth
respondents, jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be
absolved, are ordered to pay the costs of the third and fifth
respondents, which costs shall include
the costs of two counsel where
so employed.
L
G NUKU
Judge
of the High Court
M
FRANCIS
Judge
of the High Court
J
D LEKHULENI
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant
Advocate D Mpofu, SC
Advocate B Shabalala
Advocate H Mathlape
Instructed
by:
Seanego Attorneys Incorported
(ref: Mr T Seanego)
For
the 3
rd
Respondent:
Advocate G Budlender, SC
Advocate K Pillay, SC
Advocate M Adhikari
Advocate N Luthuli
Instructed
by:
Office of the State Attorney, Cape Town
(ref: Mr M Owen)
For
the 5
th
Respondent:
Advocate S Budlender, SC
Advocate M Bishop
Instructed
by:
Minde Shapiro & Smith Attorneys
(ref: Ms E Jonker)
For
the 10
th
, 11
th
& 16
th
Respondents: Advocate V Ngalwana, SC
Advocate T Masuku, SC
Advocate M Simelane
Instructed
by:
Ntanga Nkuhlu Incorporated
(ref: Mr M Ntanga)
[1]
[2002] ZACC 22
;
2002 (6) SA 642
(CC) at para 21.
[2]
2017
(3) SA 95
(SCA) at para 38.
[3]
2000
(2) SA 674.
[4]
See
S
v Notshokovu
[2016]
ZASCA 112
at para 2.
[5]
2014
JDR 2325 (LCC)
at
para 6.
[6]
Valley
of the Kings Thaba Motswere (Pty) Ltd and Another v Al Maya
International
[2016]
137 (ZAECGHC) 137 (10 November 2016) at para 4.
[7]
2018
(9) BCLR 1067
(CC) at paras 45 – 56.
[8]
(CCT
39/21)
[2022] ZACC 34
(22 September 2022).
[9]
2016(6)
SA 279 (CC) at para 40.
[10]
2012
(4) SA 618
(CC) at para 50
[11]
1999
(12) BCLR 1438
(CC) at paras 8 and 9.
[12]
F
erreira
v Levin NO and Others; Vreyenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others
[1996] ZACC 27
;
1996
(2) SA 621
(CC);
Motaung
v Makubela and Another, NNO; Motaung v Mothiba NO
1975
(1) SA 618
(O) at 631A.
[13]
Plastic
Converters Association of South Africa on behalf of members v
National Union of Metalworkers of SA
[2016] 37 2815 (LAC) at para 46.
[14]
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC) at para 8.
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