Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 223South Africa
Chairperson of the Western Cape Gambling and Racing Board and Others v Goldrush Group Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (A660/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 223 (3 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
3 November 2022
Judgment
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## Chairperson of the Western Cape Gambling and Racing Board and Others v Goldrush Group Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (A660/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 223 (3 November 2022)
Chairperson of the Western Cape Gambling and Racing Board and Others v Goldrush Group Management (Pty) Ltd and Another (A660/2022) [2022] ZAWCHC 223 (3 November 2022)
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sino date 3 November 2022
Republic of South
Africa
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case No. A660/2022
Before: The Hon Ms
Justice Goliath (Deputy Judge President)
The Hon. Ms Justice
Baartman
The Hon. Mr Justice
Binns-Ward
Date of hearing:
31 October 2022
Date of
judgment: 3 November 2022
In the matter between:
THE CHAIRPERSON OF THE
WESTERN CAPE GAMBLING
AND
RACING
BOARD
First Appellant
THE
WESTERN CAPE GAMBLING AND RACING BOARD
Second Appellant
VUKANI GAMING WESTERN
CAPE (PTY) PTD
T/A
V-SLOTS
Third Appellant
GRAND GAMING WESTERN
CAPE (RF) (PTY) LTD
t/a
GRAND
SLOTS
Fourth Appellant
and
GOLDRUSH
GROUP MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
MEC
FOR FINANCE (WESTERN
CAPE)
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
BINNS-WARD J (GOLIATH
DJP and BAARTMAN J concurring):
[1]
This matter is an appeal as provided for in
terms of
s 18(4)(ii)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[2]
On 20 April 2021 the court a quo handed
down judgment in an application by the first respondent, Goldrush
Management (Pty) Ltd (‘Goldrush’),
for the review and
setting aside of a decision by the second appellant, the Western Cape
Gambling and Racing Board, made in August
2017, to amend the limited
gambling machine operator licences issued in 2004 to the third and
fourth appellants in terms of s 26
of the Western Cape Gambling and
Racing Act 4 of 1996. Such licences authorised each of those
appellants to operate up to 1000
limited payout machines (‘LPMs’)
on third parties’ premises specially licenced for that purpose
in terms of s 47
of the Act (so-called site licences). (A
‘
limited payout machine
’
is defined in s 1 of the Act to mean ‘
a
gambling machine outside of a casino in respect of the playing of
which the stakes and prizes are limited as prescribed by regulations
made in terms of the National Act
[viz.
the
National Gambling Act 7 of 2004
]’.) The amending decision
increased the number of LPMs that each of the licensees was
authorised to operate on licenced sites
to 1 500.
[3]
The relief sought in Goldrush’s
notice of motion before the court a quo was divided into two parts.
The first, Part A, sought
an order ‘[p]
ending
the final determination of Part B, interdicting the First to Fourth
Respondents from taking any steps, alternatively further
steps, to
implement the First and/or Second Respondent’s decision taken
in November
(sic)
2017,
to allocate the remaining 1000 limited payout machines
proportionally to the Third and Fourth
Respondents, as licensed (sic) route operators in the Western Cape
(“the impugned decision”)
’.
The second part of the notice of motion, Part B, pertained to the
application to review and set aside the impugned decision.
[4]
Goldrush did not proceed for relief in
terms of Part A of its notice of motion, thereby effectively
abandoning its application for
interim interdictory relief
prohibiting the implementation of the impugned decision pending the
final determination of the judicial
review application.
[5]
Goldrush succeeded in its application for
the review and setting aside of the impugned order. The judgment of
the court a quo is
listed on SAFLII, sub nom.
Goldrush
Group Management (Pty) Limited v Chairperson of the Western Cape
Gambling and Racing Board and Others
[2021] ZAWCHC 86
(20 April 2021). Insofar as currently relevant, the
court a quo’s order provided as follows in that regard:
1.
The decision taken by the Western
Cape Gambling Board in November 2017 to allocate the remaining 1000
limited payout machines proportionally
to the Third and Fourth
Respondents as licenced operators is reviewed and set aside.
2.
This order shall not affect existing
LPMs that have already been allocated and installed at licenced site
routes pursuant to the
2017 decision.
(The order also contained
a paragraph 3 the meaning and effect of which is not clear, but which
on any approach is dependent for
its operation on the abovementioned
paragraphs 1 and 2 and therefore stands or falls together with those
paragraphs.)
[6]
The respondents in the review application,
being the chairperson of the Gambling Board, the Gambling Board and
the current holders
of the only route operator licences that have
been granted in the Western Cape (the latter being the third and
fourth respondents
respectively in the court a quo) applied for and
were granted leave to appeal by the court a quo against the whole of
its judgment
and order. The appeal lies to the Supreme Court of
Appeal. Goldrush was granted leave to cross-appeal. Amongst the
issues on which
Goldrush sought leave to cross-appeal were the court
a quo’s findings that it lacked standing to bring the review
and that
it had in any event delayed unduly in instituting the review
proceedings.
[7]
In addition to its application for leave to
cross-appeal, Goldrush also applied, in terms of
s 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, by notice of motion dated 21 May
2021, for the following substantive relief:
‘
2.
The order of Kusevitsky J dated 20 April 2021 under the above
case number is declared to be
operative and executable pending
finalisation of the respondents’ applications for leave to
appeal to this Honourable Court,
and pending any further appeal or
application for leave to appeal to any other Court.
3.
As a consequence thereof, pending
finalisation of the respondents’ applications for leave to
appeal to this Honourable Court,
and pending any further appeal or
application for leave to appeal to any other Court, the first and
second respondents may not
grant or allocate any further site
licences in respect of limited payout machines pursuant to the 2017
decision beyond those allocated
as at 20 April 2020.
’
[8]
For reasons that are not evident on the
record the court a quo’s judgment on the applications for leave
to appeal and cross-appeal
and Goldrush’s application in terms
of
s 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act was
handed down only on
9 June 2022. Insofar as currently relevant, paragraph 3 of the
order made by the court in those applications
acceded to Goldrush’s
s 18(3) application in the following terms:
‘
3.
The Order dated 20 April 2021 is declared operative and enforceable
until the final determination
of all present and future appeals and
cross-appeals in respect of the Order
’.
[9]
It was well established at common law that
the general effect of an appeal or an application for leave to appeal
was to suspend
the operation of the judgment at first instance until
the determination of the appeal. The Court did, however, have the
statutorily
invested power, on application, to exempt its order from
that general effect. The circumstances and manner in which it might
do
so were authoritatively discussed and defined in the judgment of
the late Appellate Division in
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd
1977 (3) SA 534
(A) at 544-5.
The position at common law has been displaced and the matter is now
regulated by
s 18
of the
Superior Courts Act, which
, insofar as
relevant to the current matter, provides as follows:
Suspension of
decision pending appeal
(1)
Subject to subsections (2) and (3),
and unless the court under exceptional circumstances orders
otherwise, the operation and execution
of a decision which is the
subject of an application for leave to appeal or of an appeal, is
suspended pending the decision of
the application or appeal.
(2)
…
.
(3)
A court may only order otherwise as
contemplated in subsection (1) or (2), if the party who applied to
the court to order otherwise,
in addition proves on a balance of
probabilities that he or she will suffer irreparable harm if the
court does not so order and
that the other party will not suffer
irreparable harm if the court so orders.
(4)
…
.
(5)
…
.
’
[10]
The respondents in the court a quo (to whom
I shall hereafter refer as the appellants) have exercised the
automatic right of appeal
afforded to them in terms of
s 18(4)(ii)
of the
Superior Courts Act against
the aforementioned order made by
the court a quo in terms of
s 18(3)
, and it is of those appeals
that this court is now seized. We are enjoined by
s 18(4)(iii)
to deal with them ‘
as a matter of
extreme urgency
’.
[11]
Whereas under the dispensation that
obtained prior to
s 18
the court enjoyed what Corbett JA, in
South Cape
supra,
described as ‘
a wide general
discretion
’ as ‘
part
and parcel of the inherent jurisdiction which the Court has to
control its judgments
’, under the
currently applicable statutory regime a court may order that its
decision not be suspended pending the decision
of an application for
leave to appeal or an appeal only if each and every one of the
requirements specified in
s 18
has been satisfied. Those
requirements are proof by the applicant (in this case, Goldrush) (i)
of the existence of exceptional
circumstances, (ii) that it will
suffer irreparable harm if the court does not grant the order and
(iii) that the other parties
will not suffer irreparable harm if the
court so orders.
[12]
But even if all the requirements of
s 18(1)
and (3) are satisfied, and the absolute threshold established thereby
consequently met, the decision whether or not to grant an
exceptional
order in terms of
s 18
remains within the discretion of the
court. As this court stated in
Minister
of Social Development, Western Cape and Others v Justice Alliance of
South Africa and Another
[2016] ZAWCHC
34
(1 April 2016) at para 26 (footnotes omitted):
‘
It
is important to emphasise, as counsel on both sides acknowledged,
that notwithstanding their introduction of an absolute threshold
in
the sense just discussed, the provisions of
s 18
do not result in the
exercise of judicial discretion in the wide sense being excluded in
the determination of applications for
leave to execute or for orders
ad factum praestandum to operate pending an appeal. Even if what I
call the double-edged requirements
on irreparable harm and that of
exceptionality are satisfied, the court retains ‘a wide general
discretion to grant or refuse
leave and, if leave be granted, to
determine the conditions upon which the right to execute shall be
exercised’. Considerations
of what is just and equitable in the
peculiar circumstances remain relevant in that context.
’
[13]
It
is in the exercise of that discretion that the court will have
regard, as best it is able in the given case,
[1]
to the applicant’s prospects of success in the pending or
prospective appeal because those bear on the issue of exceptionality.
Insofar as a different view was expressed in
Incubeta
(at
para 26), the matter has been settled by the Supreme Court of
Appeal’s endorsement of the position stated in
Minister
of Social Development
;
see
University
of the Free State v
Afriforum
and Another
[2016]
ZASCA 165
(17 November 2016) at para 15,
[2017] 1 All SA 79
(SCA),
2018 (1) SA 428
(SCA) at para 15.
[14]
In
Minister of
Social Development
, it was also held
(in para 2) that the determination of an application in terms of
s 18(3)
involved the exercise of judicial discretion in the wide
sense. It follows that the scope for interference with it on appeal
if
the appellate court is of a different view is greater than in a
case in which a true or strict discretion by the court of first
instance is entailed; cf.
Knox D’Arcy
Ltd and Others v Jamieson and Others
1996 ZASCA 58
(29 May 1996)
[1996] ZASCA 58
; ,
[1996] 3 All SA 669
(A),
1996 (4) SA 348
(A) and
Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd v
Industrial Development Corporation of SA Ltd and Another
[2015] ZACC 22
(26 June
2015); 2015 (5) SA 245
(CC);
2015 (10) BCLR
1199
at para 83-90.
[15]
The requirements that need to be satisfied
to obtain an order in terms of
s 18(3)
work to some extent in an
interlinking way; it is exceptional when an appeal is pending that a
litigant will suffer irreparable
harm if it is unable to enforce a
judgment in its favour from a lower court before the issue is finally
determined. Were it otherwise,
it seems unlikely the common law rule
concerning the suspension of the effect of such judgments would
exist. The delay in being
able to enforce a judgment in one’s
favour will frequently be inconvenient and even prejudicial, but that
is not the same
as ‘
irreparable
harm
’ (or ‘
onherstelbare
skade
’ which is term used in the
Afrikaans text). Contextually, ‘
irreparable
harm
’ denotes that an
irremediable injury will be sustained if the exceptional remedy is
not afforded. The interrelationship between
the double-sided
‘irreparable harm’ requirements in
s 18(3)
and the
exceptionality requirement in
s 18(1)
is illustrated by
Sutherland J’s statement in
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another v Ellis and Another
[2013]
ZAGPJHC 274 (16 October
2013; 2014 (3) SA 189
(GSJ), at para 22,
that ‘
[t]he circumstances which
are or may be “exceptional” must be derived from the
actual predicaments in which the given
litigants find themselves
’.
[16]
The irreparable negation of an established
right if the judgment were not immediately enforceable would be a
clear example of irreparable
harm, so it is appropriate to consider
what right or interest it was that Goldrush sought to protect by the
review application.
In argument before this court, Mr
Roux
SC
for Goldrush submitted that the implicated right was the right to
involvement in a process of public participation that
Goldrush
contended had to precede any amendment to the route operator licences
that had been awarded to the third and fourth appellants.
He argued
that the right in question arose from s 4 of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (‘PAJA’).
If that is
indeed so, it cannot, in my view, cogently be suggested that a delay
pending the final determination of the review on
appeal would impinge
on the right. On the contrary, were the appeal against the judgment
in the principal case to be dismissed,
the continued roll out of
additional LPMs in terms of the amended licences could not proceed
under the impugned decision until
a lawful amendment of the licences
had been effected in terms of a fresh decision by the Gambling Board
preceded by a public participation
process.
[17]
It is evident on the facts that the roll
out of additional LPMs is a drawn-out process. Suitable sites and
site operators have to
be identified and a licencing process in
respect of each new site has to be gone through, in every case with
its own process of
public consultation. The gradualness with which
the roll-out of additional LPMs is likely to proceed is borne out by
the evidence
that, 17 years after the granting of their respective
licences, one of the current route operators has yet to realise its
allotted
initial allocation of 1000 LPMs and the other has only
recently achieved full realisation of its quota. It is also evident
that
as new sites are contracted for the roll out of LPMs, some
established sites fall by the way for one or other reason. The
incidental
attrition of previously established sites further slows
down any progress that the route operator licensees can make towards
fully
utilising their allocated quotas.
[18]
I refer to this because, in its s 18
application, the irreparable harm contended for Goldrush was not any
infringement of its
right to participation in a process of public
consultation but rather the financial loss it would suffer were it
deprived of the
opportunity to become a third licenced route operator
in the Western Cape. Its case was that a process of public
consultation would
allow it to motivate for the additional 1000 LPM
allocation determined upon by the Gambling Board to be allocated to a
third licensee
instead of being divided equally between the third and
fourth appellants, being the two existing licensees. The financial
loss
posited for the purposes of its allegation of irreparable harm
was predicated on it obtaining the additional licence and thereupon
being confronted with the fact that some of the additional LPM
opportunities allocated in terms of the impugned decision would
by
that stage already have taken up by the third and fourth appellants.
[19]
The case thus made out in Goldrush’s
s 18(3) application does not bear scrutiny. It is entirely
speculative and hypothetical
(as the court a quo itself held at para
34 of the principal judgment) and does not come near to satisfying
the requirement that
it be proven as a matter of probability that
Goldrush
will
suffer irreparable harm if the court a quo’s order is not put
into effect immediately notwithstanding the appeals against
it that
are pending.
[20]
Even were it to be held on appeal in the
principal case that a process of public consultation should have
preceded the decision
to amend the third and fourth respondents’
licences and that the impugned decision falls to be set aside because
there had
not been such a process, it does not follow that a third
route operator would be licenced. Or even if one were, that Goldrush
would
be the successful applicant for the third route operator
licence.
[21]
There is in fact nothing in the evidence to
indicate on the probabilities one way or the other that the Gambling
Board’s proposal
to amend the third and fourth appellants’
licences by increasing each of their respective current allocations
by 500 LPMs
could not be confirmed after a process of public
consultation. It is telling in that regard that the original
invitation to apply
for route operator licences issued by the
Gambling Board in 2003 contemplated the grant of three licences for a
total of 3000 LPMs,
but reserved the right of the Board to appoint
only two with the LPM allocation of 3000 to be divided equally
between them. The
amendment effected to the third and fourth
appellants’ licences in terms of the impugned decision
essentially gives effect
to that original idea.
[22]
It should also have weighed with the court
a quo that Goldrush’s abandonment of its application for
interim interdictory relief
pending the final determination of the
review application was inconsonant with Goldrush’s contention
that it would suffer
irreparable harm if relief were not granted in
terms of s 18(3). As the appellants’ counsel were at pains
to emphasise,
Goldrush sought by way of s 18(3) to achieve, in
effect, the same relief as that which it had earlier abandoned when
it decided
not to move for the relief it had originally sought in
terms of Part A of its notice of motion. Its conduct in abandoning
the interim
interdictory relief sought in terms of Part A was
irreconcilable with any genuine apprehension of irreparable harm
pending the
final determination of its review application.
[23]
For these reasons it is clear, in my view,
that Goldrush did not satisfy the requirement of proving that it
would suffer irreparable
harm if the court a quo’s order were
not made of immediate effect notwithstanding the pending appeals.
Owing to the intrinsic
link between satisfying that requirement and
the criterion of exceptional circumstances, its application
consequently fell short
on that requirement too.
[24]
In the context of those fatal flaws little
practical purpose would be served by examining the other grounds on
which the appellants
contended that the court a quo had been wrong to
grant Goldrush’s application in terms of s 18(3). It does
bear mention,
however, that the judgment of the court a quo gives no
indication that any consideration was given, for the purpose of
exercising
the court’s discretion in the determination of the
s 18(3) application, to Goldrush’s prospects of success in
the pending appeal and cross-appeal review application. In my view,
the omission was a stark one in the peculiar circumstances of
the
case.
[25]
Firstly, the court a quo had found that
Goldrush had acted with undue delay in instituting the review
proceedings. The court held
that, as a matter of probability,
Goldrush had knowledge of the impugned decision by December 2017, yet
it instituted judicial
review proceedings only 15 months later, in
March 2019. As the review was one brought under the PAJA, the review
proceedings had,
at the very latest, to be instituted within 180 days
after Goldrush came to know of the impugned decision. The application
was,
however, instituted outside that 180-day outer limit. Absent
condonation for the late institution of the proceedings, which, in
terms of s 9 of PAJA, could be obtained only by agreement
between the parties or from a court on application, the court a
quo
had no jurisdiction to entertain the review; see
Opposition
to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others v The South African National
Roads Agency and Others
[2013] ZASCA
148
(9 October 2013),
[2013] 4 All SA 639
(SCA) at para 26. In the
current case the parties had not agreed to an extension, no
application was made for one and, unsurprisingly
in the
circumstances, the court did not make an order in terms of s 9.
It follows that unless the appellate court in the principal
case is
persuaded that the court a quo was misdirected in its finding that
the application was unreasonably delayed, the appeal
by the
respondents in the court a quo is very likely to succeed on the point
that the court a quo lacked jurisdiction to entertain
the review.
[26]
Secondly, the court a quo found that
Goldrush lacked standing to bring the review application. Very
exceptionally, the court nevertheless
proceeded to determine the
application on the stated basis that the matter was one in which the
public interest cried out for relief.
In this regard the court a quo,
in essence, followed para. 34 of the Constitutional Court’s
judgment in
Giant Concerts CC v Rinaldo
Investments (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2012]
ZACC 28
(29 November
2012); 2013 (3) BCLR 251
(CC), in which Cameron
J wrote (footnote omitted):
‘
...
an own-interest litigant may be denied standing even though the
result could be that an unlawful decision stands. This is not
illogical. As the Supreme Court of Appeal pointed out, standing
determines solely whether this particular litigant is entitled
to
mount the challenge: a successful challenge to a public decision can
be brought only if “the right remedy is sought by
the right
person in the right proceedings”. To this observation one must
add that the interests of justice under the Constitution
may require
courts to be hesitant to dispose of cases on standing alone where
broader concerns of accountability and responsiveness
may require
investigation and determination of the merits. By corollary, there
may be cases where the interests of justice or the
public interest
might compel a court to scrutinise action even if the applicant’s
standing is questionable. When the public
interest cries out for
relief, an applicant should not fail merely for acting in his or her
own interest.
’
[27]
There was, however, little to nothing in
the papers to support a conclusion that the public interest cried out
for relief in this
matter and the judgment of the court a quo did not
identify what about the case was considered sufficiently exceptional
to call
for the review to be entertained notwithstanding the
applicant’s identified lack of standing. The only relevant
interest
disclosed on the papers was the own interest of Goldrush.
Insofar as Goldrush did argue that a failure by the Board to allocate
any additional LPMs to a third route operator rather than
proportionately to the two existing route operators went against the
enjoinders in
ss 53
and
54
of the
National Gambling Act that
socio-economic and competition issues be considered when considering
an application for a licence, I agree with the submission
by Mr
Jamie
SC for the third respondent that in the given case there is nothing
to suggest that the increase in the LPM quotas allocated to
the
existing route operator licensees was likely to substantially affect
competition in the gambling industry generally or in respect
of the
particular activity concerned and that the relavant socio-economic
considerations bearing on the provision of business opportunities
to
small and medium enterprises related to the potential afforded by the
increase in permitted LPMs to site operators, not to route
operators.
(Site operators are businesses such as bars and similar enterprises
who contract with route operators to allow up to
a maximum of five
LPMs to be operated at their respective premises. Such contracts can
be concluded only if the business proprietor
concerned obtains a site
licence authorising the installation and operation of the LPMs at its
premises.)
[28]
The forementioned delay and standing issues
pose material challenges to the ability of the court a quo’s
decision on the review
application to withstand appellate scrutiny,
irrespective of the merits of the case. In my judgment, they should
have made the
court a quo all the more hesitant to grant exceptional
relief under
s 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act even
if Goldrush
otherwise appeared to have satisfied all the requirements for such
relief (which for the reasons discussed earlier
it did not).
[29]
For all the foregoing reasons I have
concluded that the appeal in terms of
s 18(4)
has to succeed. An
order will therefore issue in the following terms:
1.
The appeal in terms of s 18(4)(ii) of
the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (‘the Act’) against
the decision of the
court a quo directing that its decision in case
no. 4793/2019 not be suspended pending the decision of any appeal
from it is upheld
with costs, including the fees of two counsel where
such were engaged by each of the appellants.
2.
The order of the court a quo in the
application in terms of s 18(3) of the Act is set aside and
replaced with an order in the
following terms:
‘
The
application in terms of
s 18(3)
of the
Superior Courts Act is
dismissed with costs, including the fees of two counsel where such
were engaged by each of the respondents’.
A.G. BINNS-WARD
Judge of the High
Court
P.L. GOLIATH
Deputy Judge President
E.D. BAARTMAN
Judge of the High
Court
APPEARANCES
First and second
appellants’ counsel:
R.T. Williams
SC
First and second
appellants’ attorneys:
Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
Attorneys, Cape Town
Third appellant’s
counsel:
I. Jamie SC
M. Adhikari
Third appellant’s
attorneys
Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs
Cape Town
Fourth appellant’s
counsel:
K. Pillay SC
G. Solik
Fourth appellant’s
attorneys:
Bernadt Vukic Potash & Getz Attorneys, Cape Town
First respondent’s
counsel:
Barry Roux SC
Iain Currie (heads
only)
First respondent’s
attorneys:
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr Inc
Sandton & Cape
Town
[1]
In
Knoop
NO and another v Gupta (Tayob Intervening)
[2020] ZASCA 163
(9 December 2020);
[2021] 1 All SA 726
(SCA);
2021
(3) SA 88
(SCA), at para 50, Wallis JA remarked that because of
considerations of urgency a court seized of an appeal in terms of
s 18(4)(ii)
will possibly not have before it the full record of
proceedings at first instance, and consequently be unable to assess
prospects
of success other than from the judgment of the court a
quo. That has never been my experience sitting in such appeals, but
if
the problem does present in a given case the appellate court’s
ability to consider the prospects of success will necessarily
be
limited. In my view, that consideration does not detract from the
long established principle that, generally, prospects of
success are
a relevant consideration.
sino noindex
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