Case Law[2024] ZAKZDHC 19South Africa
Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others v South African Sugar Association and Others (Leave to Appeal) (D4472/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 19 (6 May 2024)
Headnotes
THL will make payment of its full liability to SASA (including any
Judgment
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# South Africa: Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban
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## Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others v South African Sugar Association and Others (Leave to Appeal) (D4472/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 19 (6 May 2024)
Tongaat Hulett Limited (In Business Rescue) and Others v South African Sugar Association and Others (Leave to Appeal) (D4472/2023) [2024] ZAKZDHC 19 (6 May 2024)
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sino date 6 May 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
KWAZULU-NATAL
LOCAL DIVISION, DURBAN
CASE
NO.: D4472/2023
In
the matter between:
TONGAAT
HULETT LIMITED (IN BUSINESS RESCUE)
First Applicant
TONGAAT
HULETT SUGAR SOUTH AFRICA
Second
Applicant
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED (IN BUSINESS RESCUE)
TREVOR
JOHN MURGATROYD N.O.
Third Applicant
PETRUS
FRANCOIS VAN DEN STEEN N.O.
Fourth Applicant
GERHARD
CONRAD ALBERTYN N.O.
Fifth Applicant
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN SUGAR ASSOCIATION
First
Respondent
S.A.
SUGAR EXPORT CORPORATION
Second Respondent
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
MINISTER
OF TRADE, INDUSTRY
Third
Respondent
AND
COMPETITION
SOUTH
AFRICAN SUGAR MILLERS'
Fourth
Respondent
ASSOCIATION
NPC
SOUTH
AFRICAN CANE GROWERS'
Fifth
Respondent
ASSOCIATION
NPC
SOUTH
AFRICAN FARMERS'
Sixth
Respondent
DEVELOPMENT
ASSOCIATION NPC
RCL
FOODS SUGAR & MILLING
Seventh Respondent
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
ILLOVO
SUGAR (SOUTH AFRICA)
Eighth
Respondent
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
UMFOLOZI
SUGAR MILL (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Ninth
Respondent
GLEDHOW
SUGAR COMPANY
Tenth
Respondent
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
HARRY
SIDNEY SPAIN N.O.
Eleventh Respondent
UCL
COMPANY (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Twelfth Respondent
ALL
REGISTERED GROWERS
Thirteenth to Twenty-Three
Thousandth
Respondents
THE
AFFECTED PERSONS IN
Twenty-Three Thousand and First
THL'S
BUSINESS RESCUE
Respondents and Further Respondents
And
in the matter of an
Application
for Leave to Appeal
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and by publication on
SAFLII
.
The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 06 May 2024.
Vahed
J:
[1]
The applicants were unsuccessful in the application ("the main
application")
and my reasons for non-suiting them are set out in
some detail in my judgment delivered on 4 December 2023. It is to be
found at
[2023] ZAKZDHC 93 and
[2024] 1 All SA 509
(KZD). It also
records the facts and background of the matter and it is unnecessary
to recount them here. The applicants seek leave
to appeal, contending
that on the two principal issues I erred. Those two being firstly,
whether, having regard to s 136(2)(a)(i)
of the Companies Act, 2008,
("the Act") the obligations of the first applicant ("THL")
under the Sugar Industry
Agreement, 2000 ("SI Agreement")
are capable of suspension during the period THL remained under
business rescue, and
secondly and alternatively, if that was not to
be, declaring the section unconstitutional and invalid for its
failure to provide
for that suspension. A third issue dealt with in
the judgment relating to the seventh's respondent's application
before the Sugar
Industry Appeals Tribunal is not being challenged.
[2]
It is not in dispute that after delivery of the judgment, and on 11
January 2024,
a majority of THL's creditors present at a meeting
convened in terms of s 151 of the Act voted in favour of the adoption
of a revised
and amended Business Rescue Plan put up by the Vision
Consortium ("the Vision Plan").
[3]
For the purposes of considering the application for leave to appeal
it is assumed
that the Vision Plan has been approved and adopted and
that it is final and binding on THL and all affected persons. The
treatment
of the outstanding payments due to the first respondent
("SASA") is dealt with in the Vision Plan, and appears to
be
contingent on the outcome of the intended appeal process. In its
relevant part the Vision Plan provides as follows:
"6.1.6.
Applicable to the Vision Transactions:
6.1.6.1.
Key Stakeholders:
·
SASA:
-
THL will discharge its future payment obligations towards SASA in
accordance with the Sugar
Industry Agreement, including ongoing
payment of SASA levies and the local market redistributions duly owed
to SASA by THL.
-
On 29 November 2023, the Declaratory Application was dismissed with
costs by Vahed J. The
judgement of Vahed J in respect of such order
was handed down on 4 December 2023 ("the
Vahed Judgement
").
THL and the BRPs have applied for leave to appeal the decision. THL
will abide by the final outcome of the appeal process
of the
Declaratory Application (i.e. after any and all appeals have been
finally exhausted).
-
SASA asserts that the outstanding amount as at 23 November 2023
(which takes into account
the final 2023 season's local market
redistribution and SASA levies and the set off of export proceeds
payable by SASEXCOR/SASA
to THL and which obligation to pay such
proceeds has been assigned by SASEXCOR to SASA) is R525 956 121,
which is in full and final
settlement of SASA's statutory obligations
("SASA Claim"). THL agrees with the calculation of the SASA
Claim and also
agrees not to dispute the aforegoing assignment or set
off of the obligation to pay export proceeds by SASEXCOR to SASA.
-
THL will, within twenty (20) Business Days after the Closing Date,
but prior to substantial
implementation:
o
pay the SASA Claim into an escrow account ("SASA Escrow");
or
o
should THL be unable to pay the full SASA Claim into the SASA Escrow
within
twenty (20) Business Days after the Closing Date, Vision
shall, on behalf of THL, pay the full SASA Claim into the SASA
Escrow;
-
THL agrees that the SASA Escrow shall be ringfenced in that the
amounts retained in the SASA
Escrow shall be solely payable to SASA,
The SASA Escrow account shall be in the name of an independent
reputable firm of attorneys
("Independent Attorneys") in a
suitable interest bearing account, and for the benefit of such party
as is ultimately
successful in the Declaratory Application;
-
in the event that the outcome of the appeal process is that the Vahed
Judgement is:
o
upheld THL will make payment of its full liability to SASA (including
any
order as to interest and costs of the appeal and costs of the
Declaratory Application), within 10 Business Days after the handing
down of the final appeal judgement by means of SASA calling on the
Independent Attorneys to release funds from the available amount
held
in the SASA Escrow and pay same to SASA;
o
overturned, THL shall be entitled to call on the Independent
Attorneys to
withdraw the SASA Claim from the SASA Escrow and pay
same to THL;"
[4]
The application for leave to appeal was initially set down for
hearing on 13 December
2023, but was postponed to permit voting on a
then proposed business rescue plan. As indicated above the Vision
Plan was subsequently
voted on and approved by THL's accepted
creditors and as such the applicants submit that the intended appeal
accordingly raises
live issues between the parties.
[5]
The application for leave to appeal is opposed by the first, second,
third, fourth,
seventh, eighth, and 12th respondents ("the
respondents").
[6]
The test in an application for leave to appeal is settled.
Section
17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act, 2013
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;"
[7]
There must exist more than just a mere possibility that another court
will find differently
on both the facts and the law. What is required
by the test of reasonable prospects of success has been dealt with in
Ramakatsa and Others v African National Congress and Another
[2021] ZASCA 31
at para 10 (footnotes omitted):
"[10] Turning the focus to
the relevant provisions of the
Superior Courts Act (the
SC Act),
leave to appeal may only be granted where the judges concerned are of
the opinion that the appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of
success or there are compelling reasons which exist why the appeal
should be heard such as the interests of justice.
This Court in
Caratco
, concerning the provisions of s 17(1)
(a)
(ii) of
the SC Act pointed out that if the court is unpersuaded that there
are prospects of success, it must still enquire into
whether there is
a compelling reason to entertain the appeal. Compelling reason would
of course include an important question of
law or a discreet issue of
public importance that will have an effect on future disputes.
However, this Court correctly added that
'but here too the merits
remain vitally important and are often decisive'. I am mindful of the
decisions at high court level debating
whether the use of the word
'would' as opposed to 'could' possibly means that the threshold for
granting the appeal has been raised.
If a reasonable prospect of
success is established, leave to appeal should be granted. Similarly,
if there are some other compelling
reasons why the appeal should be
heard, leave to appeal should be granted. The test of reasonable
prospects of success postulates
a dispassionate decision based on the
facts and the law that a court of appeal could reasonably arrive at a
conclusion different
to that of the trial court. In other words, the
appellants in this matter need to convince this Court on proper
grounds that they
have prospects of success on appeal. Those
prospects of success must not be remote, but there must exist a
reasonable chance of
succeeding. A sound rational basis for the
conclusion that there are prospects of success must be shown to
exist."
[8]
This perhaps harkens back to what was said in
S v Smith
2012
(1) SACR 567
(SCA) at para 7 (footnotes omitted):
''[7] What the test of reasonable
prospects of success postulates is a dispassionate decision, based on
the facts and the law, that
a court of appeal could reasonably arrive
at a conclusion different to that of the trial court. In order to
succeed, therefore,
the appellant must convince this court on proper
grounds that he has prospects of success on appeal and that those
prospects are
not remote, but have a realistic chance of succeeding.
More is required to be established than that there is a mere
possibility
of success, that the case is arguable on appeal or that
the case cannot be categorised as hopeless. There must, in other
words,
be a sound, rational basis for the conclusion that there are
prospects of success on appeal."
[9]
It must follow that the success of an application for leave to appeal
depends on the
prospects of eventual success of the appeal itself.
See Zuma v Democratic Alliance and Another
2021 (5) SA 189
(SCA) at para 2 (footnotes omitted):
"[2] The two judges who
considered the application referred it for oral argument in terms of
the provisions of
s 17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
. Different considerations come into play when considering an
application for leave to appeal as compared to adjudicating the
appeal
itself. As to the former, it is for an applicant to convince
the court that he or she has a reasonable prospect of success on
appeal.
Success in an application for leave to appeal does not
necessarily lead to success in the appeal. Because the success of the
application
for leave to appeal depends, inter alia, on the prospects
of eventual success of the appeal itself, the argument on the
application,
to a large extent, had to address the merits of the
appeal."
[10]
It is necessary to test the grounds on which leave to appeal is
sought against the facts of the
case and the applicable legal
principles to ascertain whether an appeal court would interfere in
the decision against which leave
to appeal is sought. In
Four
Wheel Drive Accessory Distributors CC v Rattan NO
2019 (3) SA 451
(SCA) at para [34] it was put thus (footnotes omitted):
"[34] There is a further
principle that the court a quo seems to have overlooked - leave to
appeal should be granted only when
there is 'a sound, rational basis
for the conclusion that there are prospects of success on appeal'. In
the light of its findings
that the plaintiff failed to prove locus
standi or the conclusion of the agreement, I do not think that there
was a reasonable
prospect of an appeal to this court succeeding, or
that there was a compelling reason to hear an appeal. In the result,
the parties
were put through the inconvenience and expense of an
appeal without any merit."
[11]
The crucial question is whether on appeal the applicants would have
strong prospects on the merits.
In
MEC Health, Eastern Cape v
Mkhitha
[2016] ZASCA 176
the question was described in these
terms (footnote omitted):
"[16] Once again it is necessary
to say that leave to appeal, especially to this court, must not be
granted unless there truly
is a reasonable prospect of success.
Section 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
makes it clear
that leave to appeal may only be given where the judge concerned is
of the opinion that the appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of
success; or there is some other compelling reason why it should be
heard.
[17] An applicant for leave to appeal
must convince the court on proper grounds that there is a reasonable
prospect or realistic
chance of success on appeal. A mere possibility
of success, an arguable case or one that is not hopeless, is not
enough. There
must be a sound, rational basis to conclude that there
is a reasonable prospect of success on appeal."
To
my mind the use of the word
"would”
in the test
"... would have a reasonable prospect of success..."
as applied in determining whether to grant leave to appeal means that
I must be satisfied that the applicants have a realistic
chance of
success on appeal. A mere possibility of success, an arguable case or
one that is not hopeless, is not enough.
[12]
Enquiring thereafter whether there is some other compelling reason
for the appeal to be heard
it is to be noted that in
Minister of
Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Southern Africa
Litigation Centre and Others
2016 (3) SA 317
(SCA) it was
observed as follows (footnotes omitted):
"[22] Apart from its finding that
the appeal had become moot the High Court also referred to
s
17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act and
held that an appeal had no
reasonable prospect of success. But in reaching that conclusion it
did not consider the new basis upon
which the government sought to
justify its opposition to SALC's claim. So we do not have the benefit
of the High Court's view in
regard to those contentions.
[23] After expressing its conclusion
on prospects of success the High Court also said that it had no
discretion once it reached
that conclusion to grant leave to appeal.
But it failed to consider the provisions of
s 17(1)(a)(ii)
of the
Superior Courts Act which
provide that leave to. appeal may be
granted, notwithstanding the court's view of the prospects of
success, where there are nonetheless
compelling reasons why an appeal
should be heard. This is linked to the question of mootness. In that
regard there is established
jurisprudence in this court that holds
that, even where an appeal has become moot, the court has a
discretion to hear and dispose
of it on its merits. The usual ground
for exercising that discretion in favour of dealing with it on the
merits is that the case
raises a discrete issue of public importance
that will have an effect on future matters. That jurisprudence should
have been considered
as a guide to whether, notwithstanding the High
Court's view of an appeal's prospects of success, leave to appeal
should have been
granted. In my view it clearly pointed in favour of
leave to appeal being granted.
[24] That is not to say that merely
because the High Court determines an issue of public importance it
must grant leave to appeal.
The merits of the appeal remain vitally
important and will often be decisive. Furthermore, where the purpose
of the appeal is to
raise fresh arguments that have not been
canvassed before the High Court, consideration must be given to
whether the interests
of justice favour the grant of leave to appeal.
It has frequently been said by the Constitutional Court that it is
undesirable
for it as the highest court of appeal in South Africa to
be asked to decide legal issues as a court of both first and last
instance.
That is equally true of this court. But there is another
consideration. It is that if a point of law emerges from the
undisputed
facts before the court it is undesirable that the case be
determined without considering that point of law. The reason is that
it may lead to the case being decided on the basis of a legal error
on the part of one of the parties in failing to identify and
raise
the point at an appropriate earlier stage. But the court must be
satisfied that the point truly emerges on the papers, that
the facts
relevant to the legal point have been fully canvassed and that no
prejudice will be occasioned to the other parties by
permitting the
point to be raised and argued."
[13]
It is also worth noting that
Dexgroup (Pty) Ltd v Trustco Group
International (Pty) Ltd and Others
2013 6 SA 520
(SCA) stressed
that (footnotes omitted):
"[24] For those reasons the court
below was correct to dismiss the challenge to the arbitrator's award
and the appeal must
fail. I should however mention that the learned
acting judge did not give any reasons for granting leave to appeal.
This is unfortunate
as it left us in the dark as to her reasons for
thinking that Dexgroup enjoyed reasonable prospects of success.
Clearly it did
not. Although points of some interest in arbitration
law have been canvassed in this judgment, they would have arisen on
some other
occasion and, as has been demonstrated, the appeal was
bound to fail on the facts. The need to obtain leave to appeal is a
valuable
tool in ensuring that scarce judicial resources are not
spent on appeals that lack merit. It should in this case have been
deployed
by refusing leave to appeal."
[14]
A consideration of test for leave to appeal is perhaps appropriately
concluded with a comment
that the interesting interplay between the
requirements for prospects of success on the one hand and the
requirements when considering
the question of compelling
circumstances on the other. This is brought into focus in what was
said in
JK Structures CC v City of Cape Town and Others (leave to
appeal)
[2023] ZAWCHC 93
(footnotes omitted):
"[15] The implication in the
sentence in the learned judge's observation in
Caratco
that I
have underlined is that appeals are primarily meant to be about
obtaining different results, not second opinions. Even if
there is an
important point of law or an issue of public importance in point, no
purpose is served by it being reconsidered on
that basis alone by
another court on appeal if the prospect of interference with the
judgment at first instance is remote. The
filtering object of
s 1
7(1)
would be subverted were meritless questions sent on appeal when there
was no compelling reason for the matter in question to
deserve the
attention of a higher court."
[15]
The applicants argue that present application for leave to appeal
satisfies those tests at every
level.
[16]
They argue firstly that the matter it is of substantial importance to
the parties, and to the
sugar industry at large. In this regard they
contend that under the Vision Plan an amount of slightly in excess of
R525 million
- being the value of the suspended payments, after
set-off, has been paid (or will be paid) into escrow pending the
final determination
of these (or the appeal) proceedings. If my
judgment and order were to stand, that amount will be paid over, in
full, to SASA.
If the judgment and order are overturned on appeal,
THL will be entitled to procure that such amount is instead paid to
it and
thus it is contended that these proceedings have substantial
financial ramifications for SASA, and for all the millers and
refiners
involved. It is also argued that because of the revenue
sharing arrangement, the fates of the millers and refiners are
interconnected
with those of the other sugar industry participants
and thus the case is also important for the industry at large. On
this aspect
I am reminded that in my judgment I noted that the sugar
industry is critical to the South African economy.
[17]
Next they argue that the case is important to the administration of
justice in that it concerns
the proper interpretation and application
of s 136(2)(a)(ii) of the Act which they assert is an issue of
considerable significance
in the business rescue context. The third
to fifth applicants, being professional business rescue
practitioners, argue that they
require clarity on the proper
interpretation of that provision for the proper discharge of their
professional functions and obligations.
[18]
Then too it is suggested that the proposed appeal raises a number of
legal issues of public importance
which include:
a.
the proper interpretation of s 136(2)(a)(i), read with the definition
of "agreement"
in the Act;
b.
the proper interpretation of s 133, read with the definition of
"regulatory
authority" in the Act;
c.
the legal status of the SI Agreement and of SASA and what the
implications of
the application of s 136(2)(a)(i) and s 133 of the
Act are for them;
d.
the constitutionality of s 136(2)(a)(i) of the Act if, as I have
determined,
it permits the suspension of obligations that arise under
contract, but not of what is contended to be the self-same kind of
obligations
because they arise under subordinate legislation.
[19]
The applicants argue that those issues have constitutional
implications and are
res nova
and thus warrant the attention
of a higher court.
[20]
And finally, the appellants argue further that the intended appeal
also raises at least two discreet
issues of public importance:
a.
It is suggested that the first is the question whether the SI
Agreement qualifies
as an agreement for the purposes of s
136(2)(a)(i) of the Act, and whether the payment obligations (or at
least the local market
redistribution payment obligations) are
capable of suspension by the BRPs in business rescue. They say that
that has important
ramifications for THL and SASA in the current
business rescue and also for the sugar industry generally.
b.
The second, it is suggested too, is the status of the SI Agreement,
in particular,
whether it is a contract made by the Minister between
the parties or subordinate legislation imposed on the industry. That
issue,
so the submission develops, has implications for the nature of
the rights and obligations the sugar industry participants (including
SASA) owe one another, and the basis on which their decisions and
actions can be challenged. While this is an issue that has been
considered by a full bench in
Even Grand Trading 51 CC v Tongaat
Hulett Ltd
(South African Sugar Association intervening)
(Unreported Judgment, KwaZulu Natal High Court, Pietermaritzburg, 2
November 2012,
Case No: AR517/11), but not by the Supreme Court of
Appeal ("SCA") and the applicants submit that it warrants
consideration
by that Court.
[21]
The applicants contend that in those circumstances it cannot
seriously be disputed that there
are compelling reasons for granting
leave to appeal, but that in any event the intended appeal enjoyed
prospects of success because:
a.
There are no appeal judgments on the proper interpretation of either
s 133(f)
or s 136(2)(a)(i) of the Act and there is no precedent at
all on the meaning to be attributed to a
"regulatory
authority"
or an
"agreement”
in those
provisions;
b.
The same is true of the constitutional challenge and the main
interpretive and
constitutional questions at issue in the case are
thus entirely
res nova
.
c.
In addition, the central principle in dispute is whether payments
made among
industry participants under the SI Agreement amount to the
discharge of private law obligations, or public law functions and it
is emphasised that distinguishing the discharge of public law
functions from private law ones is an inherently complex issue.
legislation.
[22]
The applicants also rely on the fact that six parties participated in
the proceedings, represented
by some 14 counsel, and that the matter
was argued over two full days. The judgment was prepared urgently,
was handed down some
2½ months after the hearing and runs to
74 pages. The applicants suggest that these factors indicate
self-evidently that
the matter raises arguable legal issues of public
importance.
[23]
The applicants submit that I ought to have found that on a textual
interpretation of sections
136 and 133 of the Act the business rescue
practitioners are entitled to suspend THL's payment obligation under
the SI Agreement.
They submit further that I ought to have found that
the obligations of the nature sought to be enforced by SASA qualify
as obligations
of the company arising under an agreement to which the
company was party at the commencement of the business rescue
proceedings
within the meaning of s 136(2)(a)(i) of the Act.
[24]
The respondents persist in the view that the applicants' argument
ignores the fact that the SI
Agreement lacks the essential feature of
an agreement which is that an agreement imposes obligations on the
contracting parties
to the agreement by virtue of the consensus
manifested in the agreement. The respondents also persist in the view
that applicants'
argument ignores the fact that the SIA has been held
to be subordinate legislation by a full bench of this division in
Even Grand
Trading and that I was bound by such finding (See para
19(b) above).
[25]
It seems to me that it is no answer for the applicants to suggest
that in fact when the Minister
imposes the SI Agreement on the
industry, it is generally as a result of consultation with the
industry and with consensus having
been reached. Whether consensus is
reached within the industry, the source of the obligation under the
SI Agreement is not such
consensus but it is the Minister's power in
terms of section 4(1)(c) of the Sugar Act to impose the regime on the
industry and
the resultant effect that the industry is bound by the
Minister's determination.
[26]
Irrespective of the nature of the SI Agreement, the applicants'
interpretation would lead to
the conclusion that the business rescue
practitioners have the power to suspend the Minister's power under
section 4(1)(c) of the
Sugar Act, thus rendering the SI Agreement not
binding. This to my mind would be wholly untenable.
[27]
The essential difference between obligations arising under a
statutorily binding regime and obligations
arising under an agreement
is that, in the case of a statutorily binding regime what makes the
obligations binding on the parties
bound is the statutory imposition,
while under an agreement what makes the obligations binding on the
contracting parties is the
consensus of those parties. The essential
feature of a statutorily binding regime is that it is imposed on the
industry, whether
or not individual members have agreed.
[28]
The third respondent's illustration that the difference found in the
binding compromise under
the old s 311 of the Companies Act, 61 of
1973 is appealing. Section 311 provided a statutory mechanism
whereby, provided more
than 75% of parties entitled to vote on a
scheme supported the scheme, all creditors were bound, regardless of
whether or not they
agreed. The statutory compromise under s 311 is
contrasted to the individual agreements which would need to be
reached with all
of the creditors in order to achieve a binding
obligation on such creditors by means of an agreement, as opposed to
the statutorily
imposed regime. The compromise under s 311
qualitatively cannot be said to be an agreement. It lacks the
necessary attribute of
consensus and is imposed by a statutory
mechanism. To call the source of the obligation under a statutory
compromise under s 311
an agreement is to negate the very essence of
an agreement which is consensus and to ignore the coercive element of
the compulsory
binding of each creditor, whether or not such creditor
has agreed.
[29]
In addition to that it has been argued that in an analogous context
the SCA has endorsed the
approach that an instrument such as the SI
Agreement is subordinate legislation. In
Retail Motor Industry
Organisation and Another v Minister of Water and Environmental
Affairs and Another
2014 (3) SA 251
(SCA), an industry body
(contended by the respondents to be on all fours with the
characteristics of SASA), namely, the Recycling
and Economic
Development Initiative of South Africa NPC ("REDISA") which
was a non-profit company charged with recycling
waste tyres and
empowered in terms of national legislation and the so-called "REDISA
plan" (promulgated in the Government
Gazette) to raise
compulsory levies from all tyre manufacturers, was found to be doing
so in terms of subordinate legislation.
[30]
In other words, in
Retail Motor Industry
the SCA had to decide
on the nature of the REDISA plan, and specifically whether it was
subordinate legislation and thus excluded
from the
functus officio
principle. The SCA held that it was subordinate legislation. It was
reasoned thus (footnotes omitted):
"[28] I turn now to consider the
nature of the approved plan, it having been argued on behalf of
REDISA that it is subordinate
legislation and thus excluded from the
functus officio principle by s 10(3) of the Interpretation Act. It
needs to be emphasised
that the purpose of this exercise is to
determine whether the plan is an instrument of subordinate
legislation, rather than the
minister's
withdrawal of approval of
the plan.
[29]
Hoexter has set out a number of characteristics of subordinate
legislation that distinguish it
from other species of administrative
action. These are:
(a)
legislative action is general in its
application, applying impersonally to society as a whole or groups
within it, rather than
to individuals;
(b)
legislation is
concerned with the implementation of policies, rather than the
resolution of individual disputes;
(c)
legislation tends to
operate prospectively and creates legal consequences for the period
after it comes into force;
(d)
legislation is usually intended
to remain in force indefinitely (but may be designed to lapse after a
prescribed period);
(e)
legislation requires promulgation -
usually publication in the
Government Gazette
- before it
acquires the force of law; and (f) often legislation will require
further administrative action in order to make it
effective, such as
the enforcement of a sanction.
[30] The
plan contains many of these features. It is general in its
application, imposing obligations
on all who subscribe to it and all
those who will, once it is given effect to, enter into contractual
relationships with REDISA.
It creates a system by which waste tyres
will be managed over a period of time. It is concerned with the
implementation of that
system rather than aspiration. It operates
prospectively. It has an indefinite life span, but, according to reg
12(1), it must
be revised and resubmitted to the minister every five
years (or sooner if needs be). In terms of reg 11(4), an approved
plan must
be published in the Government Gazette. It contains the
framework within which action will be taken to deal with waste tyres
in
an environmentally acceptable way. In my view, therefore, the plan
is an instrument of subordinate legislation.
[31] The
way in which the plan has been made requires brief comment. Usually
legislative instruments
are drafted by drafters who work for the
legislative functionary concerned. That, as this case shows, is not
the only way in which
subordinate legislation can come into being. In
this case the drafting of plans has, in effect, been outsourced to
private individuals.
Once the efforts of the drafter of a plan meet
with the approval of the minister, she gives legal effect to the plan
by approving
it and publishing it in the
Government Gazette
.
This is an example of what Hoexter calls negotiated rule-making.
[32] My
conclusion is that the July plan is legislative in nature. While it
cannot be described as
a set of regulations or a bylaw, it can be
described as rules for purposes of s 10(3) of the Interpretation Act.
The minister was
empowered by the Waste Act and the Waste Tyre
Regulations to approve the July plan. A power to make rules was
therefore conferred
on her. She exercised that power when she
approved and published the July plan. She was also empowered by s
10(3) to rescind the
plan. That being so, the functus officio
principle has no application and did not prevent her from withdrawing
the July plan."
[31]
It was submitted that the similarities with and the identical nature
of the SI Agreement to the
REDISA plan are obvious. Paragraph 31 of
the SCA decision regarding individuals assisting in the crafting of
the legislation is
suggested to be exactly why the SI Agreement is
not an agreement, but legislation, despite the input of private
industry. I dealt
with this aspect in paras 132 to 136 of my judgment
and will not repeat same here.
[32]
The facts in a later matter (
Recycling and Economic Development
Initiative of South Africa NPC v Minister of Environmental Affairs
2019 (3) SA 251
(SCA)) reveal that the REDISA plan was amended from
time to time (before being withdrawn in October 2017). In or about
early 2017
legislation was passed such that from February 2017 the
levies would no longer be collected in terms of the plan and that
thereafter
the tyre producers had to pay a so-called "tyre tax"
directly to government (rather than paying their levies directly
to
REDISA). It was argued that to refer to a "tyre tax", as
the SCA did in this later case, was to make an accurate analogy
of
what these compulsory industry-wide levies imposed in term of
legislation are - they are like a tax and ought to be treated
like
the payment of a tax.
[33]
In paragraphs 108 and 109 of my judgment I observed that the various
taxes a business is subject
to cannot be suspended during business
rescue. They are a cost of doing business - as are the levies and
redistributions owed to
SASA.
[34]
It was accordingly submitted that my finding that the SI Agreement
was subordinate legislation
was essentially the same finding made by
the SCA in
Retail Motor Industry
in relation to the REDISA
plan and that my finding was not one that was going to be overturned
on appeal.
[35]
I find that the comparison to
Retail Motor Industry
was one
well drawn and compelling.
[36]
It was suggested by the applicants that if my judgment were to stand
it would in effect be holding
that there could never be a business
rescue in the context of the sugar industry. The suggestion appears
to overlap the purposive
argument and the constitutional argument
advanced by the applicants but, however, it seems to me that the
suggestion made would
be an oversimplification of the effect of what
I have found. The simple effect of my findings are that obligations
that are imposed
by statute cannot be suspended. Wrapped up in that
suggestion was also the suggestion that the effect of my finding is
subversive
of business rescue and that inevitably it would have led
to liquidation. I have found that the payment of the obligations due
to
SASA is simply the cost of doing business and without more that
must be considered to be a fact of life within the sugar industry.
However, if the spectre of continued payment of those dues had led to
liquidation then the charges we are concerned with in this
matter
would not have arisen because THL would not have continued in
business as it has for the period of business rescue. That
is not
subversive of business rescue but, instead, subversive of a "business
rescue" where the costs of doing business
are not paid.
[37]
If the overall goal was to rescue THL it cannot be that that rescue
occurs to the potential prejudice
and expense of the industry. The
levies that the applicants wish suspended have a cascading effect.
Those levies that are not paid
by THL are reassigned so that others
pay those charges.
[38]
In relation to the constitutional challenge the applicants describe
my findings as follows:
a.
the impugned differentiation was between payment obligations that
arise under
contract, on the one hand, and payment obligations that
arise under subordinate legislation, on the other. The
differentiation
was underpinned by the legitimate government purpose
of preferring regulatory authorities for payment, so as to enable
them to
perform their statutory regulated functions;
b.
because statutory levies become due in business rescue, to withhold
payment qualifies
them as post-commencement finance, and thus their
ranking is catered for in s 135. Excluding regulatory fees and levies
from suspension
under s 136(2)(a)(i) does not interfere with the
legislatively prescribed ranking of claims, or render the scheme
internally inconsistent
and irrational;
c.
the proposed reading in was impermissibly broad and entailed an
intrusion into
the legislative realm.
and submit that there are at least
reasonable prospects that an appeal court would find differently on
one, or more, or all of these
findings, and would consequently
overturn my order.
[39]
The applicants accept, and accepted in the main case, that the
government purpose proffered in
support of the differentiation at
issue is legitimate, but submit that rationality is concerned not
only with the legitimacy of
the purpose to be achieved, but also with
whether there is a close enough link between that purpose and the
means chosen to achieve
it. The applicants submit that another court
may find that there was a mismatch between the purpose sought to be
achieved, and
the means used to achieve it because differentiating
between monies and other obligations owed under statute, and those
owed under
contract or consensus, does not serve to safeguard public
funds and public functions. The source of a payment obligation is not
determinative of whether that obligation amounts to the discharge of
a public or a regulatory function, or not. The contend that
there are
a number of rights and duties imposed by statute that have nothing at
all to do with the discharge or the funding of
public functions.
[40]
I was reminded that in the main application the applicants put up
several examples of powers
entrenched in statute that are
unequivocally not public in nature. They include:
a.
the rights and duties imposed on a company and its officers by the
Companies
Act;
b.
a municipality's right to charge and collect fees for services that
it provides;
c.
the rights and duties imposed under an extended collective bargaining
agreement;
and
d.
the debts owed to body corporates created by section 36(2) of the
Sectional Title
Scheme Act 95 of 1986 and section 2 of Sectional
Title Schemes Management Act 8 of 2011;
and
it was suggested that these examples all illustrate that an
obligation may be imposed by statutory instrument, but nevertheless
remain a private, parochial power. They have no impact on the state's
ability to fund itself or to provide a service. There is
no
legitimate reason for affording these kinds of obligations protection
above, and in preference to, obligations that arise by
purely private
fiat.
[41]
It was argued that this is a nuance that I did not engage with at all
I was urged to find that
it may well be that an appeal court will
find that the differentiation enacted is not a rational measure for
achieving the legitimate
government purpose at issue.
[42]
If I was correct in dismissing the applicants' interpretation of s
136(2) bf the Act the constitutional
challenge would not arise at all
for consideration by an appeal court, since it was raised by the
applicants only in the alternative
to their main argument on the
interpretation of s 136(2). But, in any event, it was resisted here
too by the respondents, because
their grounds for appeal are weak.
The 3rd respondent's evidence was determinative of this issue.
[43]
I have dealt with some of the more important arguments for and
against the application for leave
to appeal. Many more were advanced
at the hearing but those need not detain me further.
[44]
Finally, although not solely determinative on the question of
compelling circumstances it is
noteworthy that in this case I have
had, one guise or another, every single member of the sugar industry,
up and down the value
chain, before me. I have had every grower,
every miller, every association (millers and growers), the regulator
and the regulator's
"sister" company formed under the
agreement. They were all before me in this case. There is one entity
that claims that
the matter is of importance to the industry, ie. the
applicants, and it is worthy of observation that the applicants'
contentions
as to public importance are co-extensive with their
personal interests in maintaining that the main judgment was wrong on
the merits.
That cannot be a matter of compelling public importance
for the sugar industry. The sugar industry, being every "player"
other than THL, appears entirely satisfied with the outcome. The
interest of the BRPs is confined to that capacity (ie. the entity
sought to be rescued) and is not in any way connected to world of
business rescue generally. issue.
[45]
I am not satisfied on any score that the application for leave to
appeal ought to be granted
and it is accordingly dismissed with
costs, such costs to include the costs of two counsel where so
employed.
Vahed
J
Case
Information:
Date of Argument:
20 March 2024
Date of Judgment:
06 May 2024
Applicants' Counsel:
A Subel SC (with I Goodman SC)
Instructed by:
Werksmans Attorneys
Johannesburg
Ref: Mr T Boswell
Locally represented by:
EVH Inc Attorneys
Umhlanga
Ref: W2409/0005
1st & 2nd Respondents'
Counsel:
P J Wallis SC (with L K Olsen)
Instructed by:
Garlicke & Bousfield Inc
La Lucia Ridge
Ref: Mr H Stephenson
3rd Respondent's Counsel:
L Harris SC (with M Mtshali)
Instructed by:
The State Attorney
Durban
Ref: 417/0021795/23/T/P9/ncm
4th & 12th Respondents'
Counsel:
N Beket
Instructed by:
Garlicke & Bousfield Inc
La Lucia Ridge
Ref: Mr A Liebenberg
7th Respondent's Counsel
B Manca SC (with M Du Plessis
SC,
D Robertson & C Kruyer)
Instructed by:
Webber Wentzel
Johannesburg
Ref Ms L Kahn
Locally represented by:
Stowell Incorporated
Pietermaritzburg
Ref: Ms S Myhill
8th Respondent's Counsel:
F A S Snyckers SC (with A J
D'Oliveira)
(Heads of Argument prepared by
G Woodland SC with C Morgan)
Instructed by:
Cox Yeats
Umhlanga Ridge
Ref: Mr T Scheepers
sino noindex
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