Case Law[2023] ZACC 43South Africa
Saboath General Traders (Pty) Ltd t/a Sausage Saloon and Another v Mthatha Mall (Pty) Ltd (CCT 323/22) [2023] ZACC 43; 2024 (5) BCLR 633 (CC) (12 December 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: Ouster of jurisdiction of Magistrate’s Court in lease agreement — interests of justice and leave to appeal
Judgment
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## Saboath General Traders (Pty) Ltd t/a Sausage Saloon and Another v Mthatha Mall (Pty) Ltd (CCT 323/22) [2023] ZACC 43; 2024 (5) BCLR 633 (CC) (12 December 2023)
Saboath General Traders (Pty) Ltd t/a Sausage Saloon and Another v Mthatha Mall (Pty) Ltd (CCT 323/22) [2023] ZACC 43; 2024 (5) BCLR 633 (CC) (12 December 2023)
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sino date 12 December 2023
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT 323/22
In
the matter between:
SABOATH
GENERAL TRADERS (PTY)
LIMITED
t/a SAUSAGE
SALOON
First Applicant
BANDLA
MNGONYAMA
Second Applicant
and
MTHATHA
MALL (PTY)
LIMITED
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Saboath General Traders
(Pty) Ltd t/a Sausage Saloon and Another v Mthatha Mall (Pty) Ltd
[2023] ZACC 43
Coram:
Zondo CJ,
Maya DCJ, Kollapen J, Madlanga J,
Majiedt J, Mathopo J, Rogers J, Theron J and Van
Zyl AJ
Judgments:
Majiedt J (majority): [1] to [39]
Zondo CJ
(dissenting): [40] to [67]
Decided
on:
12 December 2023
Summary:
Ouster of jurisdiction of Magistrate’s Court in lease
agreement — interests of justice and leave to appeal
ORDER
On
appeal from the High Court of South Africa, Eastern Cape Division,
Mthatha, the following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is refused
with costs.
2.
The matter is remitted to
the Magistrate’s Court for further
hearing.
JUDGMENT
MAJIEDT J
(Maya DCJ, Kollapen J, Madlanga J, Mathopo J,
Rogers J, Theron J, Van Zyl AJ concurring):
Introduction
and background
[1]
The crisp issue in this case is whether a jurisdiction clause
in a lease agreement between the parties had the effect of ousting
the jurisdiction of the Mthatha Magistrate’s Court
(Magistrate’s Court). That Court and the High Court
of
South Africa, Eastern Cape Division, Mthatha (High Court), on appeal
to it, answered the question in the negative. The
Supreme Court
of Appeal refused special leave to appeal on the basis that the
requirements for special leave had not been met.
The applicants
now seek leave to appeal in this Court and an order upholding the
appeal, setting aside the High Court order and
replacing it with an
order upholding the special plea of no jurisdiction. This
matter has been decided without an oral hearing.
[2]
The
first applicant, Saboath General Traders (Pty) Ltd, trading as
Sausage Saloon, is a company duly registered in terms of
the
Companies Act
[1]
with its
principal place of business at Shop 127, B T Ngebs Mall, Errol Spring
Avenue, Mthatha, Eastern Cape (the premises).
It was the
tenant in terms of the lease mentioned below. The second
applicant, Mr Bandla Mngonyama, an adult male businessman,
stood
surety for Saboath and is the co-principal debtor for the obligations
of Saboath under the lease in terms of a deed of suretyship.
[3]
The respondent, Mthatha Mall (Pty) Ltd, is a duly registered
company in terms of the Companies Act, with its chosen
domicilium
citandi et executandi
(nominated address for service of legal
documents) at Billion Property Group (Pty) Ltd, 150 Bryanston
Drive, Bryanston, Johannesburg.
[4]
On 9 February 2017, the parties concluded a lease agreement in
respect of the premises. Clause 31 of the agreement, which
deals with jurisdiction and is at the heart of this matter, records:
“
[T]he
parties and the sureties hereby unconditionally and irrevocably
consent, without limitation, to the jurisdiction of the High
Court of
South Africa, Eastern Cape Division, Mthatha in
relation to all matters arising from this agreement.”
[5]
On
12 November 2018, the respondent instituted an action in the
Magistrate’s Court against the applicants suing for arrear
rental in the sum of R101 173.99. The applicants filed a
special plea, contending that clause 31 ousted the Magistrate’s
Court’s jurisdiction. The Magistrate’s Court
dismissed this special plea with costs. It held that, on a
proper interpretation of clause 31, its jurisdiction was not ousted
by that clause. While the parties, according to the
Magistrate’s Court, are free to consent to a different forum in
terms of section 45 of the Magistrates’ Courts Act,
[2]
the intention to oust the jurisdiction of the original court must be
clear and unambiguous. Aggrieved, the applicants approached
the
High Court on appeal.
[6]
On
22 July 2022, the High Court, in an
ex
tempore
(at the time) judgment, dismissed the appeal with costs. The
High Court agreed with the Magistrate’s Court’s
interpretation of clause 31, that the parties had merely
consented to the High Court’s jurisdiction, but that clause 31
had not ousted the Magistrate’s Court’s jurisdiction.
The High Court, relying on
Foize
,
[3]
held that “parties to a contract cannot exclude the
jurisdiction of a court by their own agreement”. As
stated,
the Supreme Court of Appeal refused special leave.
[7]
By direction of the Chief Justice, the parties were asked to
file the relevant parts of the record and written submissions on
these
issues:
(a)
What aspects should be taken into account when interpreting
jurisdiction clauses in agreements
between private parties?
What are the indicators that parties wanted to agree on the exclusive
jurisdiction of a court (thereby
ousting the jurisdiction of other
courts) and what are indicators that parties wanted to agree on the
concurrent jurisdiction of
a court (without ousting the jurisdiction
of other courts)?
(b)
Does the law allow private parties to agree on the exclusive
jurisdiction of particular
domestic courts within South Africa or is
such an agreement invalid, in light of the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
decision in
Foize
, as well as other applicable legislation and
case law?
Condonation
[8]
There is an application for condonation for the late filing of
the application. The delay is attributed to the applicants’
correspondent attorneys in Bloemfontein who only forwarded the
Supreme Court of Appeal’s order on 24 October 2022,
more than a month after the order was made. The applicants say
that they then had to seek legal advice from senior counsel
regarding
the present application.
[9]
The respondent opposes the application for condonation on the
basis that the Supreme Court of Appeal’s order
did not contain any substantive reasons beyond the normal order of
dismissal. According to the respondent, all the substantive
reasons had already been before the applicants when the High Court
judgment was handed down in July 2022. Moreover,
says the
respondent, the applicants had also applied for condonation in the
Supreme Court of Appeal. They do not provide
a confirmatory
affidavit from the attorney in Bloemfontein who had forwarded the
judgment late. The respondent contends that
neglect by the
attorney cannot absolve a litigant in all instances.
[10]
The delay is not excessive and the explanation is adequate.
The respondent’s objections are of no substance, as the
applicants could not proceed without having had sight of that order.
The lodging of a condonation application in the
Supreme Court of Appeal
has no bearing on the present
condonation application before this Court. Condonation
ought to be granted.
Parties’
submissions
Applicants’
submissions
[11]
In seeking leave to appeal in this Court, the applicants
submit that this Court’s constitutional and extended
jurisdiction
is engaged. The alleged constitutional issue is
that the Magistrate’s Court and the High Court, in not applying
clause
31, disregarded the principle of
pacta sunt servanda
(agreements must be kept), which “gives effect to the central
constitutional values of freedom and dignity”.
The
applicants take issue with these two courts’ reasoning that,
had the parties intended exclusive jurisdiction, they would
have
employed words like “alone” or “exclusively”.
This, the applicants submit, amounts to “contract[ing]
on
behalf of the parties”. This would only be permissible
where the agreement is ambiguous or runs counter to public
policy.
[12]
The applicants submit that “the importance of the legal
principle of
pacta sunt servanda
in judicial control
of the contracts entered into by parties freely and consciously”
is an arguable point of law of general
importance.
[13]
With regard to the interests of justice, the applicants claim
good prospects of success. They submit that the High Court
misdirected
itself in not applying clause 31 and that this Court
should settle an alleged conflict between the High Court’s
judgment
and the Supreme Court of Appeal’s ruling in
Foize
.
[14]
On the merits, the applicants contend that the High Court
failed to honour the parties’ agreement in clause 31.
Instead
of interpreting and applying the clause, the High Court
had contracted on behalf of the parties, which is only allowed where
an agreement is ambiguous or violates public policy. Under the
principle
of expressio unius est exclusio alterius
(the
inclusion of one excludes the other), the express reference to the
High Court in clause 31 must be understood to exclude the
Magistrate’s Court. They contend that
Foize
is distinguishable, because that case dealt with a jurisdiction
clause in favour of foreign courts and was, moreover, concerned
with
an interdictory remedy.
[15]
The applicants respond to the first question raised in the
directions, regarding the aspects to be taken into account when
interpreting
jurisdiction agreements between private parties and the
relevant indicators, by pointing to the fact that the parties plainly
wanted
to agree on the exclusive jurisdiction of a court. The
applicants point out that our law permits parties to a contract to
agree to the jurisdiction of a particular court in disputes arising
out of their contract. They may agree to the exclusive
jurisdiction of their chosen court, thereby ousting the jurisdiction
of other courts. They may also agree on the concurrent
jurisdiction of the court without necessarily ousting the
jurisdiction of other courts. In the present instance, the
parties
and the sureties had unconditionally and irrevocably
consented, without limitation, to the jurisdiction of the High Court
in relation
to all matters arising from the agreement.
[16]
The applicants emphasise the use of the words
“unconditionally” and “irrevocably” to argue
that the parties’
consent to the jurisdiction of the High Court
unequivocally ousts the Magistrate’s Court’s
jurisdiction. In
their written submissions the applicants make
this statement, to which I shall presently return:
“
Accordingly,
whilst the parties in this matter may have, as appears from the
wording of the clause, intended to agree to the exclusive
jurisdiction of the High Court in respect of their disputes arising
out of the contract, both courts still, in law, enjoy concurrent
jurisdiction in the matter”.
[17]
Shortly thereafter, though, the applicants reiterate that the
parties, on a proper interpretation of clause 31, intended to clothe
the High Court with exclusive jurisdiction over their disputes
arising out of the contract.
[18]
Regarding
the second question, the applicants draw a distinction between
foreign jurisdiction or arbitration clauses that do not
exclude the
court’s jurisdiction and domestic courts which are by law
vested with the authority to hear matters falling within
their
territorial and monetary jurisdiction. Citing
Standard
Bank
,
[4]
the applicants submit that the law does not prohibit the High Court
from hearing matters that fall within the jurisdiction of the
Magistrate’s Court. It may also not refuse to hear such
matters. A High Court is constitutionally obliged
to hear
such matters once they are brought before it. It follows,
therefore, that there is no legal bar to the High Court
exercising
jurisdiction over matters falling within the jurisdiction of the
Magistrate’s Court.
[19]
In
the absence of a clear proscription in law, argue the applicants,
private individuals may agree to exclude the jurisdiction of
a
Magistrates’ Court in favour of a High Court. This
is so because private persons, unlike public bodies, are
entitled to
do anything they choose which the law does not prohibit.
[5]
They may contract on any terms that are lawful and not
contra
bonos mores
(against public values).
[20]
Lastly, the applicants contend that the sanctity of contracts
must be upheld, and here the parties were entitled to agree to the
exclusive jurisdiction of a domestic court – such agreements
are not inherently invalid. They may only be invalid if
the
parties agree to clothe a court with jurisdiction that it would, in
law, not have or where they are found to be contrary to
public
policy.
Respondent’s
submissions
[21]
The
respondent preliminarily appeared to take issue with the fact that
the date of the oath on the founding affidavit
[6]
predates the date of dismissal of the petition for leave to appeal by
the Supreme Court of Appeal,
[7]
which would violate regulation 4 of the Regulations Governing the
Administering of an Oath or Affirmation
[8]
and rule 11 of the Constitutional Court’s Rules. This
aspect, however, was not pressed by the respondent.
[22]
The respondent does not expressly dispute this Court’s
jurisdiction. It contends that there has been no violation of
the freedom to contract, since the two Courts did not disregard or
alter clause 31, but applied it on the basis of their correct
interpretation of the provision. On the contrary, enforcing
clause 31 could infringe the respondent’s right of access
to
courts in section 34 of the Constitution. Allowing parties to
choose a specific court could, moreover, lead to “forum
shopping”. As the case is essentially concerned with the
interpretation of clause 31, it has no general importance
outside of
the parties.
[23]
The respondent argues that the application has no prospects of
success, because the applicants’ case has already been
dismissed
by a total of five judicial officers in three courts.
The application serves only to delay justice and payment by the
applicants.
The respondent has an interest that the matter be
finalised.
[24]
On the merits, the respondent agrees with the previous courts’
interpretation of clause 31 as not ousting the Magistrate’s
Court’s jurisdiction. The respondent argues that
Foize
is indeed applicable to the present case. That judgment
correctly held that parties to a contract cannot exclude the
jurisdiction
of a court by their own agreement. The respondent
also points to the doctrine of prorogation, by which parties may
agree
to vest or extend a court’s jurisdiction by way of
consent. But, the doctrine does not encompass excluding a
court’s
jurisdiction that has been conferred upon it by law.
[25]
The respondent contends further that the words
“unconditionally” and “irrevocably” cannot
convert the ordinary
grammatical meaning of the word “consent”
in clause 31 from being permissive to peremptory. Therefore,
read as
a whole, the clause extends jurisdiction but does not confer
exclusive jurisdiction on any single court. It simply means
that, should action be instituted by either party in the High Court,
the other may not object to the jurisdiction of that Court.
[26]
A further indicator that the parties intended to agree to
concurrent jurisdiction, according to the respondent, is the deed of
suretyship
signed by Mr Mngonyama, the second applicant.
There, the second applicant agreed in clause 4 to the concurrent
jurisdiction
of the High Court and any Magistrates’ Court
having jurisdiction over the person of the second applicant.
Yet another
indicator is that, as held by the High Court, there is an
incongruity between the special plea averring exclusive jurisdiction
and the previous plea of the applicants containing the averment that
the lease had been concluded at Bedfordview in Gauteng.
This
would result in the relevant Magistrate’s Court under
which Bedfordview falls, having had the requisite jurisdiction.
[27]
Lastly,
the respondent points out that, if the special plea is good in law,
the respondent would have to forgo the benefit of the
enforcement of
its tacit hypothec in the event of the first applicant falling in
arrears with its rental payments. In that
event (which has now
materialised), the respondent would not be able to utilise a rent
interdict summons under section 31
of the Magistrates’
Court Act
[9]
or the attachment
of assets under section 32 of that Act.
[10]
Jurisdiction
and interests of justice
[28]
In order for this Court to entertain a matter it must meet two
requirements. First, it must engage this Court’s
jurisdiction.
For a matter to engage this Court’s
jurisdiction it must raise a constitutional issue or an arguable
point of law of general
public importance which ought to be
considered by this Court. The second requirement is that the
interests of justice must
warrant that leave to appeal be granted.
[29]
There are two aspects of the matter that could engage this
Court’s jurisdiction:
(a)
The applicants plead that a violation of
pacta sunt servanda
would entail a violation of constitutional rights and hence be a
constitutional matter.
(b)
The question how jurisdiction agreements should be interpreted –
namely as stipulating
concurrent or exclusive jurisdiction –
and whether exclusive jurisdiction clauses for domestic courts are
generally permissible
– in contrast to exclusive jurisdiction
for foreign courts as in
Foize
– could constitute a
point of law of general public importance.
[30]
While these are strictly speaking two questions, they both
concern jurisdiction agreements and can thus be treated as one for
this
matter.
[31]
The applicants plead that the High Court failed to enforce
clause 31 in violation of
pacta sunt servanda
and that this
amounts to a constitutional matter. A constitutional matter
could potentially arise where a court refuses to
enforce a private
agreement without proper reason and in contravention of
pacta sunt
servanda
.
[32]
In
my view, however, the principle should only apply where a court
determines the will of the parties, but then refuses to enforce
it.
This would happen in cases where the agreement is incompatible with
public policy or the Bill of Rights.
[11]
Freedom of contract is not implicated, on the other hand, where a
court interprets an agreement in a way with which one of
the parties
disagrees and then enforces it. In this case, the court does
not overrule the parties’ freedom of contract,
but, on the
contrary, gives effect to it. Otherwise, every time a court
allegedly misinterpreted a contractual agreement,
a party could claim
that this violated
pacta
sunt servanda
,
thus engaging our constitutional jurisdiction. In effect,
virtually every contractual dispute could amount to a constitutional
issue. This cannot be so. The interpretation of a
contract is not, without more, a constitutional matter. This
is
only the case where “the claim advanced [requires] the
consideration and application of some constitutional rule or
principle
in the process of deciding the matter.”
[12]
This is not the case in matters requiring the simple interpretation
of private agreements.
[33]
The applicants’ allegations fall under this second
category which does not give rise to a constitutional matter.
It
is clear from the applicants’ pleadings that the High Court
did not disregard or substitute clause 31, but instead sought
to
enforce it by finding its true meaning through interpretation.
The applicants have pleaded that the High Court violated
pacta
sunt servanda
through its “failure to enforce the
jurisdictional clause” and that the High Court instead
contracted on behalf of
the parties. However, it becomes clear
from the applicants’ submissions that the High Court did not
disregard or substitute
clause 31, but instead sought to enforce it
by finding its true meaning. The applicants’ papers make
it clear that
the Magistrate’s Court likewise reached its
conclusion “upon the interpretation” of clause 31.
The applicants
thus do not plead a case where an agreement was set
aside or substituted, but rather take issue with the interpretational
findings
of the lower courts.
[34]
As
was made plain in
Fredericks
,
whether an applicant’s case has merit has no bearing on whether
the claim raises a constitutional matter. Thus, the
strength of
the merits does not determine jurisdiction.
[13]
Plainly, on the applicants’ pleadings, the High Court did
not ignore clause 31, but instead interpreted it.
Even though
the applicants claim that
pacta
sunt servanda
was infringed, their pleadings do not support this claim. In
the end, this amounts to the couching of a non-constitutional
matter
in constitutional terms.
[14]
[35]
I
will assume for present purposes that there is a point of law here.
That point of law must be arguable, that is, there must
be “some
degree of merit in the argument”.
[15]
It is a requirement that there must be some prospects of
success.
[16]
In the
present instance, even assuming that ouster clauses are permissible,
the Magistrate’s Court and the High Court
were correct, in my
view, in finding that, on a proper interpretation of clause 31, there
was merely a consent to the High Court’s
jurisdiction, not a
purported ouster of the Magistrate’s Court’s
jurisdiction. On the plain meaning of the wording
of the clause
and on a purposive reading of clause 31, in the context of the deed
of lease as a whole and clause 4 of the related
deed of suretyship,
the parties intended to consent to the jurisdiction of the High
Court. That does not equate, on any reading
of that clause, to
the exclusivity of the High Court’s jurisdiction and the
exclusion of the jurisdiction of the Magistrate’s
Court.
There are thus no prospects of success at all and the point of law
cannot be said to be arguable.
[36]
Furthermore, this matter also does not raise an issue of
general public importance. As stated, not every question of
contractual
interpretation raises an arguable point of law, or one of
general public importance. The interpretation of this
particular
jurisdiction clause does not appear to me to extend beyond
the parties’ interest. While jurisdiction clauses in
contracts
are not uncommon, there is nothing in the present instance
that demonstrates widespread use of the wording of this particular
jurisdiction
clause. What is relevant for the adjudication of
the dispute are matters which are unique to these parties – the
context
of the deed of lease as a whole and the related deed of
suretyship.
[37]
It
is well-established that this Court “will consider a law point,
however interesting, arguable or important, only if the
interests of
justice require it to do so”.
[17]
As was the case in
Tiekiedraai
,
the contractual interpretation before the Magistrate’s Court
and the High Court does not raise an arguable point of
law of general
public importance. That is because the sole issue in respect of
the relevant clause 31 is the interpretation
of its specific
wording. No issues of general or wider importance flows from
that particular wording. There is no evidence
at all that this
lease had been a standard form document in widespread use, affecting
a large number of consumers.
[18]
[38]
For these reasons, I conclude that this matter does not engage
our constitutional or extended general jurisdiction. Leave to
appeal must therefore be refused. This is a purely commercial
dispute and costs must follow the outcome. The Magistrate’s
Court’s dismissal of the special plea remains extant. The
matter must be remitted to that Court for the further hearing
of the
action.
Order
[39]
I make the following order:
1.
Leave to appeal is refused
with costs.
2.
The matter is remitted to
the Magistrate’s Court for further
hearing.
ZONDO CJ
Introduction
[40]
I have had the opportunity of reading the judgment (first
judgment) prepared by my Colleague, Majiedt J, in this matter.
He concludes that this Court does not have jurisdiction to entertain
this matter and dismisses the application with costs.
I am
unable to agree with this conclusion and outcome. In my view,
this Court has jurisdiction in this matter.
The
parties
[41]
The applicants in this matter are Saboath General Traders
(Pty) Ltd (Saboath) trading as Sausage Saloon and Mr Bandla Mngonyama
(Mr Mngonyama). The respondent is Mthatha Mall (Pty) Limited
(Mthatha Mall). Mthatha Mall is a private company
which is
the owner of a shopping centre known as BT Ngebs Mall, situated in
Mthatha in the Eastern Cape.
The
facts
[42]
On or about 8 February 2017 Saboath entered into a
written lease with Mthatha Mall for the letting of business
premises
for the purpose of running a Sausage Saloon out of a
portion of the Mthatha Mall. The leased premises were Shop 127,
BT Ngebs Mall, Errol Spring Avenue, Mthatha, Eastern Cape. The
lease was for a period of three years. On the same day
Mr Mngonyama concluded a suretyship agreement with Mthatha Mall
in which he bound himself as surety and co-principal debtor
for the
obligations incurred by Saboath to Mthatha Mall under the lease.
[43]
For purposes of this matter only clause 31 of the lease is
material. Clause 31 reads as follows:
“
[T]he
parties and the sureties hereby unconditionally and irrevocably
consent, without limitation, to the jurisdiction of the High
Court of
South Africa, Eastern Cape Division, Mthatha in relation to all
matters arising from this agreement.”
As
far as the suretyship agreement is concerned, clause 4 may have
relevance. Clause 4 reads:
“
The
Lessor shall be entitled, without limitation and at its option to
institute any legal proceedings which may arise out of or
in
connection with this suretyship in the High Court of South
Africa, Eastern Cape Division, Mthatha
or in any
Magistrate’s Court
having jurisdiction in respect of
the surety’s person, notwithstanding the fact that the claim or
value of the matter in
dispute might exceed the jurisdiction of the
Magistrate’s Court in respect to the cause of action.”
(Emphasis added.)
Litigation
History
[44]
It would seem that at some stage Saboath failed to pay the
required rental. Mthatha Mall then instituted an action against
Saboath in the Magistrate’s Court, Mthatha, Eastern Cape, for
the recovery of arrear rental. Saboath filed a special
plea to
the effect that through clause 31 of the lease the parties had
stripped the Magistrate’s Court of its jurisdiction
to
adjudicate any matter arising out of the lease. Mthatha Mall
insisted that clause 31 did not deprive the Magistrate’s
Court
of its jurisdiction.
[45]
After hearing argument, the Magistrate’s Court dismissed
the special plea with costs. It held that clause 31 did not
oust its jurisdiction. Saboath appealed to the High Court
against the judgment and order of the Magistrate’s Court.
The High Court held that clause 31 did not oust the Magistrate’s
Court’s jurisdiction and dismissed the appeal with
costs.
In
this Court
Jurisdiction
[46]
The
issue in this matter is whether the Magistrate’s Court,
Mthatha, has jurisdiction to adjudicate Mthatha Mall’s claim
against Saboath. Whenever the issue is whether a court or
tribunal has jurisdiction in respect of a certain matter or has
the
power to do a certain thing or to perform a certain function, that is
a constitutional issue. In
Senwes
[19]
the issue concerned the nature and scope of the public power
conferred on the Competition Tribunal by the Competition Act.
[20]
This Court had this to say about whether this Court had jurisdiction:
“
[16]
As stated earlier, the Commission seeks leave to appeal against the
judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal.
There can be no
doubt that this matter raises a constitutional issue. As is
apparent from the above, the Supreme Court of
Appeal’s order is
based on the finding that the Tribunal, in adjudicating the margin
squeeze abuse, had exceeded its statutory
powers and thereby violated
the principle of legality which forms part of the rule of law.
[17]
The
question whether the Tribunal had exceeded its statutory power in
entertaining the margin squeeze abuse concerns one of the
most
important principles in the control of public power in our
constitutional order, the principle of legality
.”
[21]
(Emphasis added.)
[47]
In
Yara
[22]
I wrote one of the three judgments produced by this Court.
Mogoeng CJ, Jafta J and Nkabinde J concurred in
my
judgment. Froneman J wrote the second judgment.
Skweyiya J and van der Westhuizen J
concurred in
Froneman J’s judgment. The third judgment was that
of Cameron J and Yacoob J in which Moseneke DCJ
concurred. I had the following to say in my judgment:
“
If
the Commission is granted leave to appeal the issues that will arise
for determination relate to the extent of the power of the
Tribunal,
if it has such power, to grant leave for the amendment of a referral
of complaints to it. In
Senwes
this Court held that a dispute on whether the Tribunal went beyond
its powers raises a constitutional issue. I am of the
opinion
that an issue concerning the power of the Tribunal to grant or refuse
an amendment in regard to complaints referred to
it in terms of the
Act is a constitutional issue. Accordingly, this Court has
jurisdiction.”
[23]
[48]
In
his judgment Froneman J agreed with my judgment that leave to appeal
should not be granted.
[24]
This meant that he also agreed with my judgment on jurisdiction.
If there was any doubt about this, he dispelled such
doubt later in
his judgment when he said:
“
The
dissenting judgment [by Cameron J and Yacoob J] finds overriding
justification for jumping this hurdle on the basis that the
issue at
stake concerns the public powers of the [Competition] Commission and
not its expert function of promoting competition.
It
is true that the constitutional issue at stake is the public powers
of the Commission,
but I disagree that this issue does not also ‘lie at the
complex intersection of law and economics’, where the views
of
the [Competition Appeal Court] are admittedly important.”
[25]
(Emphasis added.)
[49]
In their judgment, Cameron J and Yacoob J had this
to say:
“
[46]
This is an application by the Competition Commission for leave to
appeal against a decision of the Competition
Appeal Court, which
overturned an order of the Competition Tribunal (Tribunal).
Both the Competition Appeal Court and the Tribunal had to consider
whether the Tribunal had the power to grant an amendment to a
complaint referral to include two entities that were not identified
as respondents in the initiating complaint, even though the
affidavit
which formed part of the initiating complaint expressly mentioned
them both. The Tribunal held that it did have
that power while
the Competition Appeal Court held that it did not.
[47]
We have had the benefit of reading the judgments prepared by Zondo AJ
(the main judgment)
and by Froneman J.
We
agree that this Court has jurisdiction to entertain the appeal, since
the scope and exercise of the Commission’s powers
of
investigation and referral of complaints of anti-competitive conduct
under the Competition Act (Act) plainly raise constitutional
issues
.
But we differ from the main judgment in that we conclude that leave
to appeal should be granted.”
[26]
(Emphasis added.)
[50]
In
Tasima
[27]
Jafta J said:
“
This
matter concerns constitutional issues of considerable importance.
These include the scope of judicial authority exercised
by courts.
In
particular whether a court may decline to decide a
counter-application for the review of administrative action where
there is
a court order directing that the administrative action be
implemented.”
[28]
(Emphasis added.)
Although
Jafta J’s judgment was a minority judgment, Khampepe J’s
judgment, which was the majority judgment,
agreed with Jafta J’s
judgment that leave to appeal should be granted without giving
reasons different from those that
were given by Jafta J for
granting leave. This Court cannot grant leave unless it has
jurisdiction in a matter.
The majority had no issue with
Jafta J’s judgment on jurisdiction.
[51]
It is clear from the excerpt from Jafta J’s
judgment above that a question whether or not a matter falls within
the scope
of the judicial authority exercised by a particular court
is a constitutional issue. In the present case the question is
whether or not the Magistrate’s Court has jurisdiction to
decide the claim instituted by the applicant in that court.
That is the same question as the question whether that matter fell
within the judicial authority exercised by the Magistrate’s
Court. It is a constitutional issue.
[52]
Another
basis for this Court’s jurisdiction is that in terms of section
34 of the Constitution the respondent has a right
to take the
dispute between itself and the applicant to the Magistrate’s
Court for that court to decide it. The applicant
contends that
the respondent may not take the dispute to the Magistrate’s
Court because of clause 31 of the lease.
The respondent
contends that clause 31 has not taken away its right to take the
matter to the Magistrate’s Court. In
Crompton
[29]
this Court said:
“
We
are called upon to consider the scope of the High Court's
jurisdiction to refuse a stay when section 12B is implicated.
A challenge to the High Court's jurisdiction based on the
principle of legality, paired with the purported limitation of the
section 34 right to access an appropriate or ‘specialist’
tribunal or forum, raises constitutional issues.
”
[30]
(Emphasis added.)
[53]
In the present case we are called upon to consider the scope
of the Magistrate’s Court’s jurisdiction to agree to
determine a matter when the parties have a clause such as clause 31
in their agreement. A challenge to the Magistrate’s
Court’s jurisdiction implicates the principle of legality.
In this case the applicant seeks to prevent the respondent
from
having the dispute decided by the Magistrate’s Court as part of
its exercise of its right entrenched in section 34 of
the
Constitution. The matter raises a constitutional issue.
[54]
In
Fedsure
[31]
this Court said through Chaskalson P:
“
[58]
It seems central to the conception of our constitutional order that
the legislature and executive in every
sphere are constrained by the
principle that they may exercise no power and perform no function
beyond that conferred upon them
by law. At least in this sense,
then, the principle of legality is implied within the terms of the
interim Constitution.
Whether the principle of the rule of law
has greater content than the principle of legality is not necessary
for us to decide here.
We need merely hold that fundamental to
the interim Constitution is a principle of legality.
[59]
There is
of course no doubt that the common law principles of ultra vires
remain under the new constitutional order. However,
they are
underpinned (and supplemented where necessary) by the constitutional
principle of legality.
In relation to ‘administrative action’ the principle of
legality is enshrined in section 24(a). In relation
to
legislation and to executive acts that do not constitute
‘administrative action’, the principle of legality is
necessarily implicit in the Constitution.
Therefore,
the question whether the various local governments acted intra vires
in this case remains a constitutional question.
”
[32]
(Emphasis added.)
Obviously
a court that decides a matter that falls outside its jurisdiction
acts ultra vires.
[55]
In
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers
[33]
Chaskalson P had this to say on behalf of this Court in regard to the
principle of legality:
“
[18]
In effect the finding of the Full Bench was that the President had
acted unlawfully in bringing the [
South African Medicines and
Medical Devices Regulatory Authority]
Act [132 of
1998] into force and that his decision to do so should accordingly be
set aside. The first question, which the
Full Bench was not
called upon to decide, is whether this is a finding on a
constitutional matter. There can be no doubt
that it is.
[19]
Section 2 of the Constitution lays the foundation for the control of
public power. It provides:
‘
This
Constitution is the supreme law of the Republic; law or conduct
inconsistent with it is invalid, and the obligations imposed
by it
must be fulfilled.’
Consistent with this,
section 44(4) of the Constitution provides that in the exercise of
its legislative authority Parliament ‘must
act in accordance
with, and within the limits of, the Constitution.’ The
same applies to members of the Cabinet who
are accountable
collectively and individually to Parliament for the exercise of their
powers and the performance of their functions.
They too are
required to act in accordance with the Constitution.
[20]
The
exercise of all public power must comply with the Constitution which
is the supreme law, and the doctrine of legality which
is part of
that law. The question whether the President acted intra vires
or ultra vires in bringing the Act into force when
he did, is
accordingly a constitutional matter. The finding that he acted
ultra vires is a finding that he acted in a manner
that was
inconsistent with the Constitution
.”
[34]
(Emphasis
added.)
[56]
The rule of law – from which
we get the principle of legality – is binding not only on the
Legislature and
the
Executive but also on
the Judiciary. In terms of the principle of legality no court
may perform functions falling outside
of its jurisdiction. If
it did so, it would be acting in breach of the principle of
legality. Accordingly, in so far
as the issue before this Court
is whether the Magistrate’s Court has jurisdiction to entertain
this matter, that is a question
that raises the principle of legality
and is a constitutional matter and this Court has jurisdiction.
[57]
In
Former
Way Trade
[35]
there were two parties to a lease relating to a petrol filling
station. The Petroleum Products Act
[36]
was applicable to the relationship between the parties. Section
12B of that Act conferred power on the Controller of
Petroleum Products
to refer a dispute concerning an unfair and
unreasonable contractual practice to an arbitration in terms of
section 12B.
It would appear that the section 12B arbitrator
had extensive powers to correct or remedy any unfair or unreasonable
contractual
practice. The lessor notified the lessee that it
would not be renewing or extending the franchise agreement between
the parties.
The lessee referred a dispute to the Controller.
The lessor then instituted eviction proceedings against the lessee in
the
High Court.
[58]
The
lessee contended that the provisions of section 34 of the
Constitution read with the decision of this Court in the
Business
Zone
case,
[37]
create the principle that, when a licensed retailer has initiated the
procedure in terms of section 12B of the Petroleum Products Act,
the jurisdiction of the High Court to hear the eviction application
is ousted. The lessee argued that, since it had
already
initiated the referral to the Controller by the time the lessor
instituted eviction proceedings, the High Court had
no authority
to entertain the eviction application.
[59]
The lessee had an alternative argument. The alternative
argument was that, if the position was that the jurisdiction of the
High Court to entertain the lessor’s eviction application had
not been ousted, then the position was that the High Court’s
discretion to stay the proceedings was very narrow when a section 12B
referral had been made. The lessee contended that in
fact a
court in such a situation was compelled to grant a stay of the
eviction proceedings and a refusal to do so was unconstitutional
to
the extent that it undermined the section 34 right of the lessee to
access a specialist forum or tribunal.
[60]
With regard to this Court’s jurisdiction on the basis of
a constitutional matter, this Court said:
“
Of
course, these issues have now been dealt with by this Court in
Crompton
.
However, at the time that this matter was set down, and when the High
Court and Supreme Court of Appeal in the present instance
made their
decisions, the issues raised had not yet been determined.
Accordingly, a challenge of the High Court’s discretion
to stay
proceedings, based on the principle of legality, paired with the
purported limitation of the section 34 right to access
an appropriate
or “specialist” tribunal or forum, raise constitutional
issues. Therefore, this Court’s
jurisdiction is
engaged.
[38]
[61]
This Court said this at the level of deciding whether there
was a constitutional issue in the matter in which case it would have
jurisdiction. It was not deciding whether or not the lessee’s
contention about the limitation of the section 34 right
was good.
It considered the merits or demerits of that contention later when it
considered whether the High Court and the
Supreme Court of Appeal had
wrongly refused to stay the proceedings. At that stage this
Court concluded that the lessee’s
contention was without
merit. It effectively held that the discretion of the High
Court to stay proceedings when a referral
to the Controller had been
initiated was a discretion in the true sense that the High Court was
required to exercise judicially.
[62]
In fact this Court had this to say:
“
[51]
Having concluded that the High Court is not obliged to stay
proceedings where there is a referral in terms
of section 12B, but
has a discretion to refuse the stay of proceedings, and that in this
matter it exercised that discretion judicially,
an incidental issue
arises. As mentioned earlier, the applicant takes issue with section
6(2) of the Arbitration Act. The discretion
to refuse to grant a stay
of proceedings, so the argument goes, conflicts with the right to
access specialist tribunals as provided
for in section 34 of the
Constitution.
[52]
It cannot be overstated that the right of access to courts and
specialist tribunals is the cornerstone
of ensuring fairness and
justice in the resolution of disputes. The section 12B
process is one such process and any
curtailment to accessing it
cannot be done capriciously. Can it then be said that the
refusal to exercise a discretion in
favour of granting a stay to
enable a party to pursue proceedings in terms of section 12B is
unconstitutional?
[53]
In my view, the applicant has failed to make out a case for the
unconstitutionality of section
6(2) of the Arbitration Act. The
right to access the High Court under section 34 of the
Constitution remains intact.
Each application for a stay must
be determined on its own merits. That is what happened in this
case. Therefore, a
refusal for a stay cannot be said to be in
conflict with section 34.”
[39]
[63]
In
Crompton
this Court had made the same decision on
jurisdiction. It said:
“
[17]
The applicant submits that this matter raises a constitutional
issue in that the High Court did not apply the law as set out by this
Court in
Business Zone
. Further, in its
submissions, the applicant argues that its section 34
constitutional right to access a specialist tribunal
or forum (in the
form of the section 12B arbitration) is limited when the
High Court hears a matter notwithstanding a
referral to the
Controller having been instituted. It adds that it would be in
the interests of justice to hear this matter,
as it affects not only
its interests but those of the entire petroleum retail and wholesale
industry.
.
. .
[19]
This Court is empowered to decide matters of a constitutional nature,
and any other matter that
raises an arguable point of law of general
public importance that ought to be considered by it. In
addition, it must also
be in the interests of justice to grant leave.
[20]
This Court must determine the effect of a statutory provision,
section 12B of the Petroleum Products
Act, on an application to stay
High Court proceedings pursuant to a request for a referral in terms
of section 12B. We are
called upon to consider the scope of the
High Court’s jurisdiction to refuse a stay when section 12B is
implicated.
A challenge to the High Court’s jurisdiction
based on the principle of legality, paired with the purported
limitation of
the section 34 right to access an appropriate or
‘specialist’ tribunal or forum, raises constitutional
issues.”
[40]
[64]
If one takes what was said both in
Crompton
and in
Former Way Trade
and fits it into the present case it would
amount to the lessee in this case and defendant in the Magistrate’s
Court action
saying to the Magistrate’s Court:
“
If
you refuse to stay these proceedings to allow the parties to proceed
with the matter in the High Court, Mthatha, you will have
undermined
my section 34 right to have this dispute adjudicated by the High
Court with all the benefits that come with the adjudication
of a
matter by the High Court.”
[65]
In the present case, it is, of course, the lessee who objected
to the Magistrate’s Court’s jurisdiction and it is
that lessee who argues that the lessor was precluded from instituting
proceedings in the Magistrate’s Court as it was required
by
clause 31 of the lease to institute proceedings in the High Court,
Mthatha. The lessee is saying that, if the Magistrate’s
Court entertained the matter and decided it, that would have
undermined its section 34 right to have the dispute decided by the
High Court. Given the approach that this Court took when a
similar argument was raised in the context of jurisdiction in
both
Crompton
and
Former Way Trade
, this Court would have to
hold that that contention raises a constitutional issue and,
therefore, engages this Court’s jurisdiction.
I say we
should so hold.
Leave to appeal
[66]
If
leave
to
appeal is granted, the issue that this Court will be required to
determine is
whether
clause
31 of the lease ousted the jurisdiction of the Magistrate’s
Court with the result that the Magistrate’s Court
cannot decide
the Mthatha Mall’s claim. Clause 31 has been quoted
above.
[41]
It is not
necessary to quote it again.
There
can simply be no doubt that this clause does not say that the
Magistrate’s Court will not have jurisdiction in matters
arising out of the lease nor does the clause say that the High Court
is the only court that would have jurisdiction in matters
arising out
of the lease. The effect of clause 31 is nothing more than
that, if either party instituted proceedings in the
High Court
against the other arising out of the lease, the latter could not
object on the basis that the High Court had no jurisdiction.
[67]
There are no reasonable prospects that the appeal will be
successful if we were to
grant
leave to
appeal. In my view it is in the interests of justice that leave
to appeal be refused with costs.
For
the Applicants:
Z
Z Matebese SC
Caps
Pangwa and Associates
For
the Respondents:
T
Kotze
Ben
Groot Attorneys Incorporated
[1]
71 of 2008.
[2]
32 of 1944.
[3]
Foize
Africa (Pty) Ltd v Foize Beheer BV
[2012] ZASCA 123
;
2013 (3) SA 91
(SCA) at para 21.
[4]
South
African Human Rights Commission v Standard Bank of South Africa
[2022]
ZACC 43; 2023 (3) SA 36 (CC); 2023 (3) BCLR 296 (CC).
[5]
The applicants invoke
Minister
of Water and Sanitation v Lotter N.O.; Minister of Water and
Sanitation v Wiid; Minister of Water and Sanitation v South
African
Association for Water Users Associations
[2023] ZACC 9
;
2023 (4) SA 434
(CC);
2023 (6) BCLR 763
(CC) at para
36.
[6]
17 August 2022.
[7]
7 October 2022.
[8]
Regulations Governing the Administering of an Oath or Affirmation,
GN R774
GG
8169, 23 April 1982. The respondent erroneously refers to
“rule 4 of the Justices of the Peace and Commissioners
of
Oaths Act”.
[9]
Section 31 reads:
“
(1)
When a summons is issued in which is claimed the rent of any
premises, the
plaintiff may include in such summons a notice
prohibiting any person from removing any of the furniture or other
effects thereon
which are subject to the plaintiff's hypothec for
rent until an order relative thereto has been made by the court.
(2)
The messenger shall, if required by the plaintiff and at such
plaintiff's expense, make an inventory of such furniture or effects.
(3)
Such notice shall operate to interdict any person having knowledge
thereof from removing any such furniture or effects.
(4)
Any person affected by such notice may apply to the court to have
the same set aside.”
[10]
Section 32 provides:
“
(1)
Upon an affidavit by or on behalf of the landlord of any premises
situate
within the district, that an amount of any rent not
exceeding the jurisdiction of the court is due and in arrear in
regard to
the said premises, and that the said rent has been
demanded in writing for the space of seven days and upwards, or, if
not so
demanded, that the deponent believes that the tenant is about
to remove the movable property upon the said premises, in order to
avoid the payment of such rent, and upon security being given to the
satisfaction of the clerk to the court to pay all damages,
costs and
charges which the tenant of such premises, or any other person, may
sustain or incur by reason of the attachment hereinafter
mentioned,
if the said attachment be thereafter set aside, the court may, upon
application, issue an order to the messenger requiring
him to attach
so much of the movable property upon the premises in question and
subject to the landlord's hypothec for rent as
may be sufficient to
satisfy the amount of such rent, together with the costs of such
application and of any action for the said
rent.
(2)
Any person affected by such order may apply to have it set aside.
(3)
A respondent whose property has been so attached may by notice in
writing to the clerk of the court admit that such property is
subject to the landlord's hypothec for an amount to be specified
in
such notice and may consent that such property (other than property
protected from seizure by the provisions of section sixty-seven)
be
sold in satisfaction of such amount and costs; and such notice shall
have the same effect as a consent to judgment for the
amount
specified.”
[11]
Barkhuizen
v
Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC);
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC) at para
30.
[12]
General
Council of the Bar of South Africa v Jiba
[2019]
ZACC 23
; 2019 JDR 1194 (CC);
2019 (8) BCLR 919
(CC) at para 38.
[13]
Fredericks
v MEC for Education and Training Eastern Cape
[2001] ZACC 6
;
2002 (2) SA 693
;
2002 (2) BCLR 113
at para 11.
[14]
Fraser
v ABSA Bank Limited
[2006]
ZACC 24
;
2007 (3) SA 484
(CC);
2007 (3) BCLR 219
(CC) at para 40.
[15]
Paulsen
v Slip Knot Investments 777 (Pty) Limited
[2015] ZACC 5
;
2015 (3) SA 479
(CC);
2015 (5) BCLR 509
(CC) at para
21.
[16]
Id at para 22.
[17]
Tiekiedraai
Eiendomme (Pty) Ltd v Shell South Africa Marketing (Pty) Limited
[2019] ZACC 14
;
2019 (7) BCLR 850
(CC) at para 12.
[18]
Id at para 13.
[19]
Competition
Commission of South Africa v Senwes Limited
[2012] ZACC 6
;
2012 (7) BCLR 667
(CC) (
Senwes
).
[20]
89 of 1998. See also
Senwes
above
n 19 at para 11.
[21]
Id
at paras 16-7.
[22]
Competition
Commission v Yara South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2012] ZACC 14; 2012 (9) BCLR 923 (CC).
[23]
Id
at para 13.
[24]
Id
at para 74.
[25]
Id
at para 79.
[26]
Id
at paras 46-7.
[27]
Department
of Transport v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
[2016]
ZACC 39
;
2017 (2) SA 622
(CC);
2017 (1) BCLR 1
(CC).
[28]
Id
at para 2.
[29]
Crompton
Street Motors CC t/a Wallers Garage Service Station v Bright Idea
Projects 66 (Pty) Ltd t/a All Fuels
[2021] ZACC 24
;
2021
BCLR 1203
(CC);
2022 (1) SA 317
(CC) (
Crompton
).
[30]
Id
at para 20.
[31]
Fedsure
Life Assurance Ltd v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan
Council
[1998]
ZACC 17
; 1999 (1) SA 374 (CC); 1998 (12) BCLR 1458 (CC).
[32]
Id
at para 58-9.
[33]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of South Africa: In re Ex Parte President
of the Republic of South Africa
[2000] ZACC 1
;
2000 (2) SA 674
(CC);
2000 (3) BCLR 241
(CC).
[34]
Id at paras 18-20.
[35]
Former
Way Trade and Invest (Pty) Limited v Bright Idea Projects (Pty)
Limited
[2021] ZACC 33
; 2021 JDR 2223 (CC);
2021 (12) BCLR 1388
(CC) (
Former
Way Trade
).
[36]
120 of 1977.
[37]
Business
Zone 1010 CC t/a Emmarentia Convenience Centre v Engen Petroleum
Limited
[2017]
ZACC 2
; 2017 JDR 0259 (CC);
2017 (6) BCLR 773
(CC) (
Business
Zone
).
[38]
Former
Way Trade
above
n 35 at para 35.
[39]
Id
at paras 51-3.
[40]
Crompton
above
n 29
at
paras 17-20.
[41]
See
para 43 above.
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