Case Law[2022] ZACC 1South Africa
Speaker of the National Assembly v Public Protector and Others; Democratic Alliance v Public Protector and Others (CCT 257/21;CCT 259/21) [2022] ZACC 1; 2022 (3) SA 1 (CC); 2022 (6) BCLR 744 (CC) (4 February 2022)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
4 February 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Section 194 of the Constitution — rules of the National Assembly — removal of a Chapter 9 institution office-bearer
Judgment
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## Speaker of the National Assembly v Public Protector and Others; Democratic Alliance v Public Protector and Others (CCT 257/21;CCT 259/21) [2022] ZACC 1; 2022 (3) SA 1 (CC); 2022 (6) BCLR 744 (CC) (4 February 2022)
Speaker of the National Assembly v Public Protector and Others; Democratic Alliance v Public Protector and Others (CCT 257/21;CCT 259/21) [2022] ZACC 1; 2022 (3) SA 1 (CC); 2022 (6) BCLR 744 (CC) (4 February 2022)
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sino date 4 February 2022
CONSTITUTIONAL COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT 257/21 and CCT
259/21
Case CCT 257/21
In
the matter between:
SPEAKER
OF THE NATIONAL
ASSEMBLY
Applicant
and
PUBLIC
PROTECTOR
First Respondent
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Second Respondent
DEMOCRATIC
ALLIANCE
Third Respondent
AFRICAN
TRANSFORMATION MOVEMENT
Fourth Respondent
UNITED
DEMOCRATIC
MOVEMENT
Fifth Respondent
PAN
AFRICANIST CONGRESS OF
AZANIA
Sixth Respondent
COUNCIL
FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN
CONSTITUTION
First Amicus Curiae
CORRUPTION
WATCH
Second Amicus Curiae
Case CCT 259/21
In
the matter between:
DEMOCRATIC
ALLIANCE
Applicant
and
PUBLIC
PROTECTOR
First Respondent
SPEAKER
OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
Second Respondent
AFRICAN
TRANSFORMATION MOVEMENT
Third Respondent
DEMOCRACY
IN
ACTION
Fourth Respondent
and
COUNCIL
FOR THE ADVANCEMENT OF
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN
CONSTITUTION
First Amicus Curiae
CORRUPTION
WATCH
Second Amicus Curiae
Neutral citation:
Speaker of the National Assembly v Public Protector and Others;
Democratic Alliance v Public Protector and Others
[2022] ZACC 1
Coram:
Madlanga
J, Madondo AJ, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J, Pillay AJ,
Rogers AJ, Theron J, Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J
Judgment:
Mhlantla J (unanimous)
Heard
on:
8 November 2021
Decided
on:
4 February 2022
Summary:
Section 194 of the Constitution — rules of the National
Assembly — removal of a Chapter 9 institution
office-bearer
Separation of powers —
appointment of a Judge to an independent panel — procedural
fairness — rationality
ORDER
On direct appeal from the
High Court of South Africa, Western Cape Division, Cape Town:
1.
Leave to appeal directly to this Court on an urgent basis is granted.
2.
Save as set out in paragraph 3 below, the appeal against the order in
paragraph 118(a)(i)
of the High Court is dismissed.
3.
Paragraph 118(a)(i) of the order of the High Court is amended to
read: “(i) the phrase
‘provided that the legal
practitioner or other expert may not participate in the committee’
is irrational, and inconsistent
with the Constitution and is declared
invalid. The proviso is severed from rule 129AD(3).
The amended rule now
provides that the section 194 committee:
‘
must afford the
holder of a public office the right to be heard in his or her defence
and to be assisted by a legal practitioner
or other expert of his or
her choice.’”
4.
The appeal against the order in paragraph 118(a)(ii) of the High
Court is upheld.
5.
Paragraph 118(a)(ii) of that order is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
“
The application
relating to the constitutionality of rule 129V is dismissed”.
6.
Leave to cross-appeal is granted.
7.
The cross-appeal is dismissed.
8.
In CCT 257/21, each party must pay their own costs.
9.
In CCT 259/21, the Public Protector must pay the costs
of the
Democratic Alliance, such costs to include the costs of two
counsel.
JUDGMENT
MHLANTLA J (Madlanga J,
Madondo AJ, Majiedt J, Pillay AJ, Rogers AJ, Theron J,
Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J concurring):
Introduction
[1]
Society has always been concerned about the accountability of persons
or institutions who operate the levers of power. In recognising
this, our Constitution provides for state institutions that
are
mandated with the task of supporting our constitutional democracy.
But all powers have limits, and even the officers
employed to support
accountability must be held accountable in a state that propagates
accountability and governance based on the
will of the people.
[2]
The two applications, which were brought on an urgent basis, concern
the constitutionality of the Rules adopted by the National Assembly
on 3 December 2019 (the Rules). These Rules
were
passed to govern the removal of the guardians and promoters of our
constitutional democracy – these being the heads
and
commissioners of institutions established in terms of Chapter 9
of the Constitution. In the first application, the Speaker
of the
National Assembly (Speaker) is the applicant and in the second
application, the Democratic Alliance (DA) is the applicant.
[1]
Advocate Busisiwe Mkhwebane, the Public Protector, is the
only respondent opposing the applications.
[2]
In both matters, this Court admitted two amici curiae (friends
of the court) – Council for the Advancement
of the South
African Constitution and Corruption Watch. The Public
Protector also filed a conditional application to
cross appeal.
[3]
The applicants seek leave to appeal directly to this Court against
the judgment and order of the High Court of South Africa, Western
Cape Division, Cape Town (High Court).
[3]
The High Court first held that it was not desirable to appoint a
Judge to the independent panel mandated to consider whether
there is
prima facie evidence for the removal of a Chapter 9 institution
office-bearer. That appointment, according to the
High Court,
offends the principle of separation of powers. The High Court
thus severed, from rule 129V of the Rules, the
words “which may
include a judge”.
[4]
Second, it held that the limitation of legal representation in
rule 129AD(3) of the Rules, was irrational and consequently
severed the proviso limiting legal representation.
[4]
For a better understanding of this case, it is necessary to start
by
outlining the constitutional scheme pertaining to it.
Constitutional
scheme
[5]
Chapter 9 of the Constitution provides for the establishment of state
institutions that strengthen constitutional democracy. These
institutions perform a dual role: they play an oversight role
on the
government to enhance accountability and contribute to the
constitutional project of transformation.
[5]
Although these institutions are independent and subject only to the
Constitution, there is a duty on other organs of state
to assist
these institutions to perform their functions without fear, favour or
prejudice.
[6]
Important
for the purposes of the two applications, is section 181(5) of the
Constitution, which confirms that these institutions
are accountable
to the National Assembly.
[7]
[6]
Just as the Constitution provides for the appointment of
office-bearers
to Chapter 9 institutions, the Constitution makes
provision in section 194 for the removal from office of heads and
commissioners
of Chapter 9 institutions. It is important to
cite the section in full:
“
(1)
The Public Protector, the Auditor-General or a member of a Commission
established by this Chapter
may be removed from office only on—
(a)
the ground of misconduct, incapacity or incompetence;
(b)
a finding to that effect by a committee of the National Assembly; and
(c)
the adoption by the Assembly of a resolution calling for that
person’s removal
from office.
(2)
A resolution of the National Assembly concerning the removal from
office of—
(a)
the Public Protector or the Auditor-General must be adopted with a
supporting vote
of at least two thirds of the members of the
Assembly; or
(b)
a member of a Commission must be adopted with a supporting vote of a
majority of the
members of the Assembly.
(3)
The President—
(a)
may suspend a person from office at any time after the start of the
proceedings of
a committee of the National Assembly for the removal
of that person; and
(b)
must remove a person from office upon adoption by the Assembly of the
resolution calling
for that person’s removal.”
[7]
Section 194(1) establishes the grounds for removal, and these are:
misconduct, incapacity, or incompetence. The National Assembly
does not have the powers to remove any Chapter 9 institution
office-bearer but on the grounds of removal established in
section 194(1)(a). For the removal procedure, the
Constitution
mandates that such a process can only take place once
the National Assembly has adopted a resolution calling for the
removal of
that person from office, followed by a vote in the
National Assembly. The Constitution does not prescribe the
process
the National Assembly must follow for the removal, other
than the need for a resolution and a vote.
[8]
The National Assembly may adopt rules that will govern its processes.
Section 57(1) of the Constitution expressly provides:
“
(1)
The National Assembly may—
(a)
determine and control its internal arrangements, proceedings and
procedures; and
(b)
make rules and orders concerning its business, with due regard to
representative and participatory democracy, accountability,
transparency
and public involvement.”
(Emphasis
added.)
[9]
The National Assembly is obliged by section 55(2)(b)(ii) of the
Constitution to provide mechanisms to maintain oversight over organs
of state. The Public Protector, the Auditor-General
and
other Chapter 9 institutions are organs of state. With this in
mind, the National Assembly adopted the Rules to govern
the process
for the removal from office of these office-bearers.
[10]
By way of drawing a parallel analogy, similar processes are followed
in relation to the
removal of the President. In
EFF
II
,
[8]
this Court had to decide whether the National Assembly had
failed to determine whether the President of the Republic of South
Africa had breached section 89(1)(a) of the Constitution.
[9]
Jafta J held that the National Assembly’s failure to make
rules regulating the removal of a President in terms
of section 89(1)
constitutes a violation of this section. He emphasised the
necessity to have rules governing the entire
process for the removal
of the President in terms of section 89 of the Constitution,
stating that “[w]ithout rules defining
the entire process, it
is impossible to implement section 89”.
[10]
The National Assembly was accordingly directed to adopt rules.
Similar to the process for removal of the President,
the removal of a
Chapter 9 institution office-bearer is governed by the Rules of
the National Assembly.
[11]
Against the backdrop of the constitutional scheme, what follows is
the factual background
and the process that led to the adoption of
the Rules and which eventually caused the Public Protector to
challenge their constitutionality.
Factual background
[12]
Advocate Mkhwebane was appointed as the Public Protector on
19 October 2016.
Some of the Public Protector’s
reports were successfully challenged in various courts, and adverse
findings were made against
her. Almost a year after her
appointment, on 13 September 2017, the DA submitted its first request
to the Speaker to have
the Public Protector removed from office,
citing the adverse findings against the Public Protector in
SARB
I.
[11]
The Portfolio Committee
on
Justice and Correctional Services (Portfolio Committee)
,
which was tasked to make the decision, voted against the DA’s
request. This outcome was adopted by the National Assembly.
[13]
On 16 February 2018, the DA launched its second motion to have the
Public Protector
removed from office, this time citing the
adverse finding in
ABSA
.
[12]
In July 2018, the Public Protector responded that appeal proceedings
in that matter were pending at the Supreme Court of
Appeal, as was an
application for direct access to this Court. Thus, she
cautioned the National Assembly not to engage in
parallel
proceedings. On 5 December 2018, the Portfolio Committee
considered: the DA’s second request to remove Advocate
Mkhwebane; Advocate Mkhwebane’s request that the
National Assembly members who appeared biased against her should
recuse
themselves; and her request that the procedure to remove a
Public Protector from office be akin to the process to remove a
Judge.
The Portfolio Committee also discussed what would
constitute misconduct in accordance with the wording of section 194
of the Constitution.
The Portfolio Committee decided that the
second request was premature and need not be entertained. This
recommendation was
communicated to the National Assembly;
however, because that National Assembly was dissolved before the
May 2019 general
elections, the second request lapsed.
[14]
On 22 May 2019, the National Assembly elected its new Speaker
–Ms Thandi Ruth Modise.
The next day the
DA launched its third motion to have Advocate Mkhwebane removed
from office, again relying on pending matters.
On 3 July 2019,
the request was referred to the Portfolio Committee; and the
Public Protector opposed this
motion. On 22 July 2019,
this Court handed down
SARB II
.
[13]
Thereafter, on 15 August 2019, the High Court of South Africa,
Gauteng Division, Pretoria delivered its judgment in
Democratic Alliance
.
[14]
In light of these developments, on 27 August 2019, the
Portfolio Committee submitted a report on the third
request, in
which it indicated that there were no rules in place for the removal
of the heads and commissioners of Chapter 9 institutions.
Relying on the Portfolio Committee’s recommendation, the
Speaker then referred the issue to the Rules Committee.
[15]
On 2 September 2019, the DA submitted draft rules to the Speaker and
these were considered
by the Rules Committee. The
Rules Committee delegated the drafting task to the Subcommittee
on Review of National Assembly
Rules (Subcommittee), which in turn
decided that the secretariat should draft rules for the
Subcommittee’s consideration.
On 9 November 2019,
the Subcommittee considered the secretariat’s amended draft
rules as well as input from other
political parties and the public.
The Subcommittee approved the draft rules and these were tabled in
the National Assembly.
On 3 December 2019, the Rules
were adopted.
The Rules
[16]
The Rules are in Part 4 of Chapter 7 of the Rules of the National
Assembly and provide
for a 17 step process for the removal of an
office-bearer. The grounds for removal include misconduct,
[15]
incapacity
[16]
or
incompetence
[17]
and are
defined in the Rules. As this application concerns the
constitutionality of the removal process established by the
Rules, it
is necessary to have regard to the steps prescribed by the Rules.
[17]
The process commences when any member of the National Assembly
gives notice by way
of a motion to initiate removal proceedings of an
office-bearer as contemplated in section 194 of the
Constitution.
[18]
The
Speaker must ensure that the motion is compliant with the criteria
set out in rule 129R.
[19]
If the motion is found to be compliant, the Speaker
must
immediately
refer the motion to an independent panel that she has appointed to
conduct a preliminary assessment of the matter.
[20]
The independent panel is appointed after political parties
represented in the National Assembly are afforded an opportunity
to
nominate persons to the panel.
[21]
In respect of composition, the Rules provide that the independent
panel must consist of three fit and proper South African
citizens,
one of whom may be a Judge.
[22]
If the Speaker decides to appoint a Judge to the panel, the Speaker
must do so in consultation with the Chief Justice.
[23]
[18]
The independent panel does not have the power to remove the
office-bearer. What it
must do, within 30 days of its
appointment, is to conduct and finalise a preliminary assessment to
determine whether there is prima
facie evidence to remove the
office-bearer.
[24]
This
period may, at the discretion of the Speaker, be extended if the
panel so requests. The panel has the discretion
to afford any
member of the National Assembly an opportunity to place relevant
information before it. It must provide
the office-bearer with
copies of all the information before it and also a reasonable
opportunity to respond to all relevant allegations.
[25]
The panel must include in its report any recommendations and reasons
for such recommendations, including minority views.
[26]
[19]
The report of the independent panel must be considered by the
National Assembly. If
the National Assembly resolves that
a section 194 enquiry should be held, the matter must be referred to
a committee, established
in terms of rule 129AA, consisting of
members of the National Assembly, for a formal enquiry.
[27]
The committee must ensure that the enquiry is conducted in a
reasonable and procedurally fair manner.
[28]
During the enquiry, the office-bearer has the right to be heard in
her or his defence and to be assisted by a legal practitioner
or
expert, however, such legal practitioner or expert may not
participate in the proceedings of the committee.
[29]
The committee must provide a report with its findings and
recommendations, including reasons therefor, to the National
Assembly.
[30]
If the
report recommends that the office-bearer must be removed, the removal
must be put to the National Assembly to
vote and if the
requisite majority is achieved, in accordance with section 194(2)
of the Constitution, the office-bearer must
be removed from office.
[20]
Soon after the Rules were adopted, the DA renewed its motion calling
for the removal of
the Public Protector. On 6 December 2019,
the DA withdrew the request dated 23 May 2019; however, it
immediately filed a
new motion, on the same grounds. On
24 January 2020, the Speaker considered this motion and
concluded that it complied
with rule 129R. She announced this
to the National Assembly and invited political parties to nominate
candidates to serve
on the independent panel.
[21]
On 28 January 2020, the Public Protector wrote to the Speaker
alleging that the Speaker
had acted unlawfully when announcing the
commencement of the process for the Public Protector’s removal,
without first informing
the Public Protector that the motion was
compliant with the Rules. The Public Protector further alleged
that the Rules were
unconstitutional on several grounds and that the
Speaker should refrain from taking any further steps until the issues
raised in
the letter had been resolved. The Speaker responded
that Parliament had met its constitutional obligations by adopting
rules
to govern the removal process. She further stated that
the motion received complied with these Rules, the independent panel
had, at that stage, not yet been established, and the Public
Protector would be duly invited to make representations to the
panel.
The Speaker thus refused to suspend the implementation
of the Rules.
[22]
On 2 February 2020, the Public Protector launched an application in
the High Court.
Part A of the notice of motion was an
application for urgent interdictory relief suspending the National
Assembly proceedings.
On 21 February 2020, the DA withdrew its
motion dated 6 December 2019 in the National Assembly and immediately
submitted a new
motion. The Speaker again certified that motion
to be compliant with the Rules and invited nominations for the
independent
panel in accordance with the Rules. The further
processing of the matter was delayed due to the Covid 19
pandemic suspending
the business of the National Assembly. On 8
June 2020, the Speaker resumed the processing of the motion.
Part A of
the application was heard in the High Court during
August 2020, and dismissed in October 2020.
[23]
After the dismissal of Part A of the application, and having followed
the prescribed nomination
process, the Speaker, in November 2020,
appointed the independent panel which was to be chaired by Justice
Nkabinde, a retired
Justice of this Court. On 24 February
2021, the panel submitted its report in which it stated that there
was prima facie
evidence that the Public Protector had committed
misconduct and was incompetent to hold office.
Litigation history
High Court
[24]
As stated above, in the midst of the removal process, in February
2020 the Public Protector
instituted an application in the High
Court. She challenged the validity of the Rules on 12 separate
grounds and sought an
urgent interdict to halt the removal process
pending the finalisation of the constitutionality challenge.
Part A of the urgent
application was dismissed by a Full Court of the
High Court on 9 October 2020. In Part B, the
Public Protector
sought an order declaring the Rules
unconstitutional. The Public Protector alleged that the
Rules were unconstitutional
under one or more of the following
grounds:
[31]
(a)
Audi alteram partem
(hear the other side) rule, procedural
irrationality and the provision of reasons;
(b)
Deviations from established procedure (failure to give prior notice);
(c)
Unlawful and premature referral (prior assessment of prima facie
guilt);
(d)
The right to legal representation;
(e)
Recusal and right to be protected from conflicts of interest;
(f)
The rule against retrospectivity;
(g)
The right to decisional and institutional independence;
(h)
The interpretation of section 194(1) read with the Rules;
(i)
Separation of powers grounds and/or ultra vires;
(j)
Double jeopardy;
(k)
Mala fides, ulterior and/or improper motives; and
(l)
Unreasonableness.
[25]
The High Court considered each of the grounds raised by the
Public Protector and upheld
the challenge relating to the right
to legal representation and separation of powers. The other ten
grounds were dismissed.
The findings of the High Court relating
to the dismissed grounds, which the Public Protector pursues in her
conditional cross appeal,
will be discussed when I consider that
application. What follows is a summary of the findings of the
High Court in respect
of the two grounds that were upheld.
The right to full legal
representation
[26]
The Rules provide that a holder of public office has a right to legal
representation provided
that the legal practitioner may not
participate in the committee.
[32]
The Speaker confirmed in her answering papers that this proviso was
intended to mean that the holder of public office may
be assisted by
a legal practitioner – for example, the holder of public office
could seek adjournments to consult with his
or her legal
representative, but the legal practitioner may not participate in the
committee proceedings in order to lead or cross examine
witnesses or make submissions. The case was argued on the basis
that this was the import of the proviso. The High Court
compared the removal process of a Chapter 9 institution
office-bearer to that of the President as set out in section 89
of the Constitution. As rule 129AD(2) provides that the process
must be reasonable and procedurally fair, the High Court
held that in
this matter, flexibility to allow for full legal representation was
required to achieve procedural fairness.
[33]
The fact that the applicant is legally trained was of no consequence,
because the same rules will apply if the Auditor General,
for
example, is subject to a section 194 process. The
High Court thus upheld the challenge and severed the part
of the
rule which limited the office-bearer’s right to legal
representation.
[34]
Appointment
of a Judge to the panel
[27]
The High Court held that in other section 194 enquiries it might be
appropriate to involve
a Judge; however, in the Public Protector’s
case, at least 10 Judges were involved in litigation that culminated
in personal
costs orders against the Public Protector. And
it must be borne in mind that she will seek relief from the Judiciary
if she were to be removed from office.
[35]
Therefore, the High Court held that it was undesirable for a Judge to
be part of the independent panel due to the process
being inherently
politically charged.
[36]
Regarding the separation of powers argument, the High Court held
that the
NSPCA
test
[37]
had not been met and,
therefore, the Judge’s appointment to the independent panel
offends the doctrine of separation of powers.
[38]
This challenge was upheld and the reference to “Judge” in
the Rules was severed.
[39]
In this Court
[28]
The Speaker seeks leave to appeal against the order relating to the
appointment of a Judge
to the independent panel and the order
declaring the limitation of legal representation as unconstitutional.
The DA is only
challenging the order relating to the
appointment of a Judge to the independent panel. The Public
Protector has filed a conditional
cross-appeal against the High
Court’s decision on eight of the 10 grounds dismissed by
the High Court. The cross-appeal
is conditional upon this Court
granting leave to appeal to the Speaker and/or the DA.
Issues
[29]
The issues for determination are as follows:
(a)
Do these applications engage this Court’s jurisdiction?
(b)
Should leave to appeal directly to this Court on an urgent basis be
granted?
(c)
If the answers to (a) and (b) are in the affirmative, then the
following issues relating
to the merits must be determined:
(i)
Whether rule 129AD(3) of the Rules limits a
Chapter 9 institution office-bearer’s right to legal
representation during
the section 194 enquiry into his or her
removal from office.
(ii)
Whether a Judge may be appointed to the
independent panel established in terms of rule 129V to determine
whether there is prima
facie evidence to show that the Chapter 9
institution office bearer committed the misconduct, is
incapacitated or is incompetent,
in light of the separation of powers
doctrine.
(iii)
Is the Public Protector’s conditional
application for leave to cross appeal properly before this
Court, and if so, should
leave to cross appeal be granted?
(iv)
In the event that leave to cross-appeal is
granted, whether the High Court erred when it dismissed the
other grounds on which
the Rules were challenged and the punitive
costs order sought.
(v)
In the event that an order of invalidity is
granted, should the order be prospective or retrospective?
Jurisdiction
[30]
The jurisdiction of this Court will only be engaged if there is a
constitutional issue
or an arguable point of law of general public
importance.
[40]
It is
trite that whether this Court has jurisdiction is determined on the
pleadings.
[41]
The
nature of the issues raised in this application goes to the heart of
the separation of powers doctrine
[42]
and invokes the constitutional values of accountability
[43]
and rationality as well as the extent of the power of the National
Assembly to regulate its own processes. These are
constitutional
issues and, accordingly, this Court’s
jurisdiction is engaged.
Direct appeal and urgency
[31]
The Speaker argues that it would be in the interests of justice for
this Court to grant
direct leave to appeal as this application
concerns the doctrine of the separation of powers. This is the
golden thread that
the Speaker submits runs through the grounds of
appeal in this matter.
The Speaker sets out
four specific grounds for why this Court should grant direct appeal
on an urgent basis as: (a)
the nature of the constitutional
issues raised cry out for the attention of this Court as they go to
the heart of the separation
of powers doctrine; (b) the issues are
purely legal in nature; (c) there remains a live dispute which
requires urgent resolution
because of the public importance of the
impeachment process of Chapter 9 institution office-bearers in the
National Assembly;
and (d) should the matter go to the
Supreme Court of Appeal, there is a high probability that the matter
will come back before
this Court; thus, the Speaker submits,
leave to appeal directly to this Court should be granted because the
issues are of
significant constitutional importance and in the public
interest, the exigencies of time require the by-passing of the
Supreme
Court of Appeal.
[32]
On urgency, the Public Protector denies that the applicants have
established any basis
for urgency. She submits that the
applicants have failed to set out the grounds of urgency as no
explanation is proffered
for why substantial redress cannot be sought
and obtained at a hearing in due course. This is “queue
jumping”,
she asserts. Further, there are no exceptional
circumstances that justify the matter being heard. The
impeachment process
has been suspended, pending finalisation of legal
proceedings; therefore, there is no longer the danger of having their
outcome
invalidated belatedly. The Public Protector
accordingly submits that the application should be dismissed for lack
of
urgency.
[33]
The Public Protector submits that leave to appeal directly to this
Court should not be
granted, because no basis has been laid
therefor. Furthermore, the application does not enjoy good
prospects of success,
as it is unlikely that this Court, or any other
court, would find that Chapter 9 institution office-bearers are not
entitled to
legal representation. Advocate Mkhwebane also avers
that the inclusion of a Judge to the panel offends the doctrine of
separation
of powers. This, she submits, is exacerbated by the
serious consequence that looms over the office-bearer – that is
impeachment. Ergo, the Public Protector submits that leave
to appeal directly to this Court ought not to be granted.
[34]
I now proceed to consider whether these applications are urgent and
whether direct leave
to appeal should be granted.
[35]
The
granting of leave to appeal directly to this Court entails the
exercise of a discretionary power.
[44]
Such
leave may only be granted if it is in the interests of justice.
[45]
This
provision must be read together with rule 19 of this Court’s
Rules.
[46]
Importantly,
the rule requires that the applicant sets out fully the grounds upon
which she requests that this Court entertains
a direct appeal.
[36]
I agree with the Speaker that this matter is
urgent, purely legal in nature, concerns matters of public
importance, and that direct
appeal should be granted.
[37]
Of course, it may be argued, as the Public Protector does, that the
matter concerns only
clandestine agendas to remove her from office
and, in any event, the impeachment process has been suspended pending
finalisation
of this matter. As I see it, the first point is
misguided as it does not go to the fact of urgency. On the
second point,
impeachment processes are the means through which
accountability and fidelity to the rule of law can be attained.
To leave
such processes suspended in mid-air, as it were, for as long
as it would take for the matter to be heard in the ordinary course
does not accord with the public interest in the finalisation of the
important issues raised in this matter.
[47]
After all, Chapter 9 institution office-bearers perform an important
role in upholding a constitutional democracy, and the
determination
of the validity of the rules that hold these office-bearers to
account cannot be thwarted or subjected to delays.
It is
manifestly clear that there would be a saving in time and costs if
leave to appeal directly to this Court is granted.
[48]
This is of some importance where the term of office of the
office-bearer is of limited duration. In the present case,
the
Public Protector’s term of office will come to an end in
October 2023, less than two years from now. The administration
of justice runs the risk of being brought into disrepute if a matter
of this kind is dragged out.
[38]
During the hearing of this matter, counsel for the Public Protector
argued that as leave
to appeal directly to this Court was refused in
SARS
,
[49]
this application should suffer the same fate due to lack of urgency.
Notwithstanding the fact that in this matter there is
a clear public
interest element requiring the finalisation of this matter without
delay, the Public Protector is misguided in comparing
this matter to
SARS
.
In
SARS
,
the Public Protector sought leave to appeal directly to this Court
against the declarator issued by the High Court, Gauteng Division,
Pretoria. Instead of limiting the appeal to the issues before
the High Court, the Public Protector argued in this Court –
in
an indirect manner – that section 69(1) of the Taxation
Administration Act
[50]
is
constitutionally invalid.
[51]
Madlanga J considered the Public Protector’s prospects of
success in the determination of the question whether
to grant
direct leave to appeal and held that “absent a direct frontal
challenge to the validity of section 69(1), there
are no reasonable
prospects of success”.
[52]
Unlike in
SARS,
this
application has reasonable prospects of success and cannot be
classified as a backdoor challenge to the constitutionality of
legislation.
[39]
Further, although it would be desirable to have the views of the
Supreme Court of Appeal,
the issues in this matter are crisp and do
not require the development of the common law. Instead, they
require the direct
application of the Constitution and its
foundational values, specifically, accountability and the separation
of powers doctrine.
[53]
We also have the benefit of the judgment of the Full Court.
Lastly, as I will demonstrate below, the applications have
reasonable
prospects of success. For those reasons, I conclude that the
matter is urgent, and it is in the interests of justice
to grant
leave to appeal directly to this Court. I now proceed to
consider the merits of the appeal.
Legal representation –
rule 129AD(3)
[40]
The Speaker is appealing against the High Court’s finding where
it severed the proviso
in rule 129AD(3) that provides that an
office-bearer is entitled to legal representation, provided that the
legal practitioner
does not participate in the enquiry. The
Speaker argues that the limitation on legal representation is
rational because,
“when section 181(5) of the Constitution
provides that Chapter 9 office bearers are accountable to the
National
Assembly, it means that they are accountable personally”.
Further, the differentiation between the removal of the President
and
a Chapter 9 institution office bearer is rational, because
section 89(2) of the Constitution prescribes very serious
consequences for the removal of the President, namely the loss of
financial benefits after leaving office.
[41]
The Public Protector in turn argues that the denial of full legal
representation is a denial
of the right to legal representation and,
thus, of the guaranteed right to procedural fairness. The
denial of full legal
representation is irrational as the means
selected are not rationally related to the objective sought to be
achieved, namely, a
fair and transparent process. Moreover, not
all Chapter 9 institution office-bearers are legally trained, and
being legally
trained has no relevance to the office-bearer’s
accountability to the National Assembly; therefore, the limitation is
inherently
irrational. Thus, she avers, that ground of appeal
must fail.
[42]
At the heart of this enquiry is rationality. Is the limitation
rationally connected
to the objective – being personal
accountability – sought to be achieved?
[54]
I do not think so. The limitation would be rationally connected
if accountability can be achieved by this proviso.
The Speaker
argues that if instances arise where “reasonableness or
procedural fairness required that the office-bearer be
afforded time
to consult their legal representatives . . . a reasonable or fair
period must be afforded to them for that purpose”.
In my
view, this can lead to a situation where reasonableness and fairness
require the section 194 enquiry to be repeatedly
interrupted to
provide the office-bearer with an opportunity to consult with their
legal representative. Furthermore, one
must not lose sight of
the possibility that section 194 enquiries can be grounded on factual
disputes and complex legal issues.
Fairness would demand that
the office-bearer be fully assisted by a legal practitioner in such
instances.
[43]
The High Court relied on
Hamata
[55]
to support the notion that, in the circumstances of this case,
flexibility to allow for full legal representation is required in
order to achieve procedural fairness.
[56]
The Speaker argues that the High Court’s reliance on
Hamata
is misplaced because it pertains to legal representation before
administrative bodies. Indeed,
Hamata
did concern procedurally fair administrative proceedings; however,
the Supreme Court of Appeal said that it was using the words
“administrative proceedings” in the “most general
sense i.e. to include,
inter alia
,
quasi judicial proceedings”.
[57]
It is also true that our courts have recognised that there is no
free-standing or absolute right to legal representation
in
fora
other than courts of law.
[58]
However, the Rules already provide for legal representation, and what
the High Court merely did was to make an order
which will
entitle the incumbent to
full
legal representation during the section 194 enquiry.
[44]
I agree with the High Court that the reasons for the differentiation
between the removal
of the President in section 89 and that of a
Chapter 9 institution office-bearer in section 194, offered by the
Speaker are, unfortunately,
formalistic. The consequences –
although not prescribed by the Constitution – for the removal
of a Chapter
9 institution office-bearer, especially a head of a
Chapter 9 institution, are grave. The loss of financial
benefits is not
a sufficient reason for there to be a differentiation
between the rules for the removal of the President and the removal of
a Chapter
9 institution office-bearer.
[45]
I pause to repeat that section 194 does not only apply to the
Public Protector, who,
as we know, must be someone with a legal
background, but also to the Auditor General and any member of a
Commission established
under Chapter 9. The Commissions include
the South African Human Rights Commission, the Commission for the
Promotion and
Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious and
Linguistic Communities, the Commission for Gender Equality, and the
Electoral
Commission – some of these members do not have any
legal background. The accountability of the Chapter 9
institution
office-bearer is sufficiently secured by the fact that a
legal representative cannot give evidence on behalf of the
office-bearer.
If there are factual disputes concerning the
office-bearer’s conduct, she will need to give evidence and can
be cross-examined
by the committee. Furthermore, the fact that
the office-bearer is entitled to legal representation does not imply
that the
committee cannot ask the office-bearer directly to respond
to certain questions, even if she is not at that time giving evidence
under oath.
[46]
Due to the nature of the work undertaken by the Auditor General
and some of the Commissions,
legal training is not a prerequisite and
these office-bearers should not be prejudiced because they do not
have such training.
To deny them the opportunity to be fully
legally represented may compromise their ability to understand some
of the complex legal
issues that arise during the process. In
fact, even Judges are entitled to full legal representation during a
hearing held
by the Judicial Conduct Tribunal to determine whether a
Judge should be removed due to allegations of incapacity, gross
incompetence
or gross misconduct.
[59]
Therefore, I see no reason why Chapter 9 institution
office-bearers should be treated differently. I agree with
the
High Court that the legal training of the Public Protector is
irrelevant; the Rules apply equally and should not be rationalised
based on the experience of one Chapter 9 institution
office bearer. In any event, even trained legal minds may
falter when dealing with personal or subjective issues.
[47]
Rule 129AD(2) states that the committee must ensure that the enquiry
is conducted in a
reasonable and procedurally fair manner. A
reasonable and fair procedure requires full legal representation.
It does
not rationally follow that full legal representation detracts
from accountability. I repeat, the committee is at liberty to
cross examine the office-bearer, and to request the
office-bearer to directly respond to the questions posed. It
must
be borne in mind that this is an impeachment process that will
by its nature place any incumbent under stress, regardless of whether
the office bearer is legally trained. Rather than ensuring
personal accountability, by placing a limit on legal representation,
the National Assembly runs the risk that the Chapter 9
institution office-bearer may be removed because they did not,
perhaps
due to anxiety or stress resulting from the pressure of the
proceedings, do a sufficiently good job in cross-examining witnesses
or advancing oral submissions. This cannot be so. As the
prolonged 17-step removal process envisages adequate safeguards,
full
legal representation must be included in this process.
[48]
In the result, I agree with the High Court that full legal
representation should be allowed
as the aim sought to be achieved is
not rationally connected to the means employed.
[60]
It follows that the appeal against the order of the High Court on
this aspect must fail.
[49]
The Speaker submitted that in the event that this Court decides to
uphold the order of
the High Court, that order should be amended
by issuing a declaration of invalidity before confirming the order of
the High
Court. This will, according to the Speaker, be the
“proper order” as an order of severance should follow an
order
of invalidity. I agree with the Speaker and this will be
reflected in the order to be made by this Court. That is the
proper order, as required by section 172(1)(a) of the
Constitution.
[61]
Accordingly, the proviso to rule 129AD(3) is unconstitutional and
invalid, and the proviso will be severed from the rule.
Appointment of a Judge to
the independent panel – rule 129V
[50]
The DA submits that the High Court misdirected itself when it held
that it was not desirable
to have a Judge on the independent panel.
It submits that rule 129V is constitutionally valid, does
not breach the separation
of powers doctrine, and does not threaten
judicial independence. As such, the High Court misdirected
itself in reaching
a different conclusion. If this is not so,
the DA argues for a prospective declaration so that the parliamentary
process
may continue despite the flaw in the independent panel’s
composition. The Speaker argues that rule 129V does not breach
the separation of powers doctrine and is aligned with the correct
position in law. That is, members of the Judiciary are
not
precluded from performing non-judicial functions, particularly if
they are closely connected to judicial functions. Again,
because of the advisory nature of the function performed by the Judge
on the panel, there is no disruption to the performance of
her
judicial function. The Speaker further submits that there is an
adequate mechanism for the protection of the Judiciary’s
independence, in that the Chief Justice is required to assent to
the particular Judge’s appointment onto the panel or
veto the
appointment. Lastly, the period during which the Judge will sit
on the panel is limited and is not an indefinite
term.
[51]
Returning to the question of constitutional invalidity, the DA begins
its submissions by stating
that in this Court’s decisions of
Heath
[62]
and
NSPCA,
[63]
this Court recognised that various non-judicial functions can be
performed by members of the Judiciary. In its view, they
are
given these roles, not arbitrarily, but due to their knowledge,
skills set and independence. Consequently, judicial officers
are often called upon to chair commissions of inquiry, and these
appointments cannot be seen as breaching the separation of powers
doctrine. On the contrary, it upholds the doctrine by ensuring
adequate support for each arm of the state.
[52]
The Public Protector submits that the complaint that instigated
impeachment proceedings
against her is based on judicial views of her
reports, and this infringes on her office’s independence.
This is because,
in effect, the Judiciary, if allowed to be part of
the panel, is then given an opportunity to determine her fate and
play a role
in her removal. She further submits that the
appointment of a Judge to participate in the panel gives further
weight to the
possible breach of the separation of powers doctrine.
In her view, mere consent by the Chief Justice does not negate the
concerns regarding judicial independence. This, instead of
mitigating such risks, simply aggravates them. Neither the
Chief Justice nor the Speaker is empowered to appoint a Judge.
That Judges can perform non-judicial functions does not give
the
Legislature license to vest any function in them. This causes a
breach of the separation of powers and the principle
of the rule of
law.
[53]
The amici curiae filed written submissions and made oral submissions,
which were helpful.
In this regard, the Court expresses its
gratitude. The amici curiae submitted that there were instances
where Judges
have been appointed to, for example, commissions of
inquiry. They further submitted that it is more desirable to
appoint
a retired Judge than a sitting Judge as this position is
consistent with section 181(3) of the Constitution. Lastly, on
the
issue of the Speaker appointing a Judge, the amici curiae
argue that the Speaker’s role is to act as a neutral arbiter
and the Speaker has a duty to ensure that the Public Protector
is accountable to the National Assembly. The separation
of
powers doctrine is protected, according to the amici curiae, by the
requirement that the Speaker must consult the Chief Justice
before an
appointment is made.
[54]
Before considering whether the appointment of a Judge to the
independent panel is appropriate,
the content of rule 129V should be
recalled. It reads:
“
(1)
The panel must consist of three fit and proper South African
citizens, which may include a judge,
and who collectively possess the
necessary legal and other competencies and experience to conduct such
an assessment.
(2)
The Speaker must appoint the panel after giving political parties
represented in the
Assembly a reasonable opportunity to put forward
nominees for consideration for the panel, and after the Speaker has
given due
consideration to all persons so nominated.
(3)
If a judge is appointed to the panel, the Speaker must do so in
consultation with
the Chief Justice.”
[55]
The dispute relates to the permissibility of an appointment of a
Judge to the independent
panel. It is important to consider
this question within the correct context. In other words, as
the DA submitted, it
is not a question of whether it is
desirable
to appoint a Judge to the panel; rather, the question is whether it
is
permissible
to appoint a Judge.
[56]
The High Court erroneously asked the question whether it is
desirable
to appoint a Judge to an independent panel as contemplated in
rule 129V.
[64]
The
result of this fallacious point of departure is that it may very well
never be appropriate to appoint a Judge to such
panels, under any
circumstances. To the extent that the conclusion of the
High Court was based on this case only and
on any heightened
political controversy that may be associated with the case, it was
decided subjectively. This matter cannot
be decided
subjectively as, not only will there be other Public Protectors
after Advocate Mkhwebane, but there are also
other Chapter 9
institutions’ office-bearers who will be affected by the
decision reached in this matter. Therefore,
the High Court
misdirected itself. Should there be a need to apply this rule
in their cases, which may arise for several
similar or different
reasons, the rule will have to be applied fairly and objectively.
This Court should ask, objectively,
whether it is permissible for a
Judge to play a role on the independent panel involved in the removal
of any Chapter 9 institution
office-bearer. The Rules will
apply to all Chapter 9 institution office-bearers alike; and this is
the context in which the
decision should be made. Accordingly,
it must be read with this in mind.
[57]
The Public Protector argued that the Judicial Service Commission and
the President are
“the only authorities with the power to
appoint judges”. While this may be true in respect of the
President,
it is irrelevant. The impugned Rules do not deal
with the appointment of a person to the office of a Judge, but
concern the
non-judicial roles an
appointed
Judge may fulfil. This Court’s decision in
Heath
is instructive in this regard. In
Heath
,
the Court had to consider the constitutional validity of provisions
that related to the functioning of the Special Investigating
Unit
(SIU) that was headed, at the time, by Heath J – a sitting
judge of the High Court.
[65]
The SIU had as its mandate and so, by extension, did Heath J,
the powers to investigate malpractice and maladministration
of public
funds in state institutions. The applicant in that matter
challenged, inter alia, the constitutional permissibility
of
appointing a Judge to serve in the SIU, as in its view this
undermined judicial independence. Chaskalson P held that
it is permissible for a Judge to fulfil a non-judicial role with the
caveat “that the performance of functions incompatible
with
judicial office would not be permissible”.
[66]
The jurisprudence of this Court tells us, then, that a Judge may
perform a non judicial function, unless it is incompatible
with
her judicial office. The Constitution also allows, recognises,
and calls for the fulfilment of non-judicial roles by
Judges.
[67]
The question then becomes: is this role, of being appointed to the
independent panel, and providing advice or recommendations
in the
case of the removal of Chapter 9 institutions’
office bearers, incompatible with judicial office?
The
answer to this question is a resounding no.
[58]
Beyond being permissible, it should also be borne in mind that it may
even be desirable
for Judges to be placed on those panels. This
is so because Judges are well placed to carry out matters
impartially
and in accordance with constitutional requirements.
To this end, in
Heath
it was held that “[a] Judge is appointed to perform these
functions to ensure that they are carried out impartially and
strictly in accordance with constitutional requirements and this is
not inconsistent with the role of the Judiciary in a democratic
society.”
[68]
The
fulfilment of this role is not a danger to the removal process, but
an appropriate precondition for ensuring the fairness
of the
process. Therefore, the appointment of a Judge to the
independent panel is permissible.
[59]
The Public Protector argued that the appointment of a Judge to the
panel would amount to
a violation of the separation of powers
doctrine in that the Judiciary should play no direct or indirect role
in her removal. This
view is erroneously premised on the
assumption that the separation of powers doctrine is absolute.
In
NSPCA
,
this Court had to decide whether a statutory provision that required
a magistrate to decide applications for, and issue, animal
training
and exhibition licences – an administrative task – was
consistent with the doctrine of the separation of powers.
[69]
Zondo J recognised that the separation of powers doctrine
is neither fixed nor rigid, but can be expressed in many different
ways, subject to checks and balances, and that our Constitution does
not provide for a total separation of powers between the Legislature,
the Executive and the Judiciary.
[70]
This Court went on to develop a four-step test known as the
NSPCA
test
and held that—
“
an
appropriate approach to the determination of whether the performance
of a function by a member of the Judiciary offends the separation
of
powers would involve the following questions:
(a)
Whether the function complained of is a non-judicial function. If
it is a judicial
function, that is the end of the inquiry as there
can be no concern. If it is a non-judicial function, the
inquiry proceeds
to (b) below.
(b)
Whether the performance of the non-judicial function by a member of
the Judiciary
is expressly provided for in the Constitution. If
it is, that is the end of the inquiry as there can be no infringement
of
the separation of powers. If it is not, the inquiry proceeds
to (c) below.
(c)
Whether the non-judicial function is closely connected with the core
function of the
Judiciary. If it is, then the doctrine of the
separation of powers is not offended. If it is not, the inquiry
proceeds
to (d) below.
(d)
Whether there is any compelling reason why a non-judicial function
which is not closely
connected with the core function of the
Judiciary should be performed by a member of the Judiciary and not by
the Executive or
a person appointed by the Executive for that
purpose. If there is, the separation of powers is not
offended. If there
is not, the separation of powers is offended
and the relevant statutory provision, or, the performance of such a
function by a
member of the Judiciary, is inconsistent with the
Constitution and must be declared unconstitutional.”
[71]
[60]
An application of the test to the facts of the present case reveals
the following: the
first step is not fulfilled, as the function
complained of here is non-judicial in nature. The second step
is also not fulfilled,
as the non-judicial function to be performed
is not provided for by the Constitution. The third step, which
asks “[w]hether
the non judicial function is closely
connected with the core function of the Judiciary”,
[72]
is fulfilled. It is, precisely, the core function of the
Judiciary to carry out matters in a manner that is impartial and
in
compliance with constitutional requirements. As noted in
Heath
,
this function may, positively, be transposed from the courtroom to
other platforms – from judicial settings to non-judicial
settings.
[73]
In the
alternative, it may be said that, if the third step is not fulfilled,
then, for the same reasons mentioned above,
the fourth step is
fulfilled. Indeed, if it is said that the concerned
non-judicial function is not closely connected to
the core function
of the Judiciary, it can, at the very least, be said that there is a
compelling reason why it should be performed
by a member of the
Judiciary. Simply put, it is the impartiality, independence and
lack of bias of a Judge that places the
Judge in the perfect position
to perform this function.
[61]
At this juncture, the question should be asked: what is the role
played by the Judge who
sits on this independent panel? The
answer is that the Judge considers whether there is a prima facie
case against the office-bearer;
she does not play any decision making
role in the removal of the incumbent. Moreover, the Judge does
this as an impartial
and independent person. This is
permissible, as this Court has already held in
Heath
where it
stated that—
“
[t]he giving of
advice on the administration of justice is also related to the
subject matter of the judicial office. Government
is not
bound by the advice given and, if the subject on which advice is
sought is contentious, the Judges concerned can decline
to
participate in the giving of such advice.”
[74]
[62]
Importantly, in this instance too, the Judge is appointed to the
independent panel, not
to make a binding decision, but to give advice
on the subject of the removal of a Chapter 9 institution
office-bearer.
Therefore, the envisioned role of the Judge on
this independent panel is not contentious or binding; rather, it is
in line with
the role contemplated and approved of in
Heath
.
Moreover, it bears emphasis that the Judge is but one of a
three-person panel. She may thus well find herself in the
minority in decisions on the recommendations to be made by the
independent panel.
[63]
The Public Protector argues that “the facts [of
AmaBhungane
[75]
]
are different but the legal principles are identical”.
Legal principles from one matter cannot blindly be applied
to another
without consideration whether it is appropriate, given the particular
facts of the matter.
AmaBhungane
dealt with the right to privacy, and the limitation thereof through
the implementation of the Regulation of Interception of
Communications
and Provision of Communication-Related Information Act
(RICA).
[76]
The High
Court, in that matter, had held that the selection of a designated
Judge, as referred to in RICA,
[77]
“by the Minister of Justice alone, through a secretive process
and for a potentially indefinite term (through renewals of
terms)
compromises the perceived and actual independence of a designated
Judge.”
[78]
In
this Court, the applicants submitted that RICA did not provide limits
to the designated Judge’s term of office,
which meant that the
Minister could, at a whim, extend this term indefinitely.
[79]
Furthermore, this meant that the appointment of the designated Judge
is made exclusively by a member of the Executive (without
the
involvement of the Judicial Service Commission, Parliament, or the
Chief Justice) in a non-transparent manner.
[80]
Madlanga J, after setting out the process of appointment of
Judges in terms of section 174(3) of the Constitution,
held
that, while “the requirement of independence is a
constitutional imperative”,
[81]
there were “no protective processes or structures in place for
the designated Judge in RICA”.
[82]
[64]
It becomes clear, then, that the matter at hand is distinguishable
from
AmaBhungane
.
While that matter dealt with judicial independence in the context of
considering whether “the mooted lack of independence
detracted
from the sufficiency of safeguards for purposes of the section 36(1)
justification exercise”,
[83]
that is not so in this matter. Here, the question to consider
is whether serving on the panel will so denude a Judge’s
actual
or perceived independence that such a role is incompatible with
judicial office. And this question must be answered
in the
negative.
[65]
These two matters can, therefore, be distinguished in three
respects. First, the
appointment process: while in
AmaBhungane
,
it was the Minister alone who had the power to appoint the designated
Judge,
[84]
in the present case
it is the Speaker, in consultation with the Chief Justice, who
appoints a Judge to the panel.
[85]
This process is also transparent, as Parliament is aware of the
Speaker’s choice. Second, the appointers: it
is important
to emphasise that,
if
the Speaker appoints a Judge to the panel, she
must
do so
in consultation with the Chief Justice.
[86]
That was not the case in
AmaBhungane
where
the Minister was the sole appointer. Finally, the appointment
period: while in
AmaBhungane
it was
revealed that the designated Judge’s term could be extended
indefinitely by the Minister,
[87]
on a reading of the Rules, the panel’s term, including the
Judge’s term if there is one serving, expires 30 days after
appointment.
[88]
Thus,
the independence of appointed Judge in this context is
protected by and in the Rules.
[66]
It also behoves me to mention that I am not blind to the fact that if
political parties
are allowed to elect or appoint a Judge to the
panel, there may, at the very least, be a perceived lack of
independence.
However, the relevant process here does not
include such a scenario. Instead, it is the Speaker who
appoints the panel, the
political parties merely nominate panel
candidates. As regards the appointment of a Judge to that
panel, the Speaker is obliged
to consult with the Chief Justice
before making this appointment. In my view, this role played by
the Chief Justice is an
important one and is sufficient to guard
against the concerns that a Judge will be perceived as acting at the
behest of a particular
political party, or that the Judge is a
particular political party’s Judge.
[67]
The impugned rule places an explicit time limit on the duration of
the Judge’s appointment,
being a 30-day period. In this
case, the independent panel requested an extension to 90 days, which
was considered and granted
by the Speaker. However, the
extension of the time period upon request does not render the time
period unlimited. Further,
Parliament and the Chief Justice
have an undisputed role in the appointment of the Judge – the
Speaker appoints the Judge
in
consultation with the Chief Justice.
The Rules, therefore, contain exactly the type of safeguards that
this Court in
AmaBhungane
held were missing from RICA.
[89]
[68]
Lastly, the amici curiae’s submissions on the practices of
other jurisdictions and
the distinction between appointing retired
and sitting Judges were helpful. It is not necessary, though,
for the purposes
of this case, to make any finding whether it would
have been permissible to appoint a sitting Judge.
[69]
In the result, the High Court erred when it severed part of rule 129V
which relates to
the appointment of a Judge to the independent panel.
The appeal on this ground must be upheld and the order set
aside.
Conditional cross-appeal
[70]
The Public Protector, in her answering affidavit, included a
conditional application to
cross-appeal against eight
[90]
of the 10 grounds dismissed by the High Court. The
cross-appeal is conditional upon leave to appeal being granted in
the
main applications. As leave to appeal in these applications has
been granted, and one of the orders of the High Court
order will be
set aside, it becomes necessary to consider whether leave to
cross-appeal should be granted, and if so, whether any
of the grounds
of appeal has any merit.
[71]
The Speaker and the DA argue that it is not in the interests of
justice to grant the Public Protector
leave to cross-appeal
directly to this Court. The Speaker offers three reasons in
support of this submission: first, the
cross-appeal is pleaded
laconically and without any reference to the particular passages in
the judgment of the High Court that
are impugned. Second, the
Public Protector is effectively challenging the Rules again, and if
the Public Protector desired
to challenge the High Court’s
findings, she should have sought leave to appeal from the High Court.
The Speaker makes
the point that the conditional nature of the
Public Protector’s proposed cross-appeal means that she is
willing to accept
defeat on all the grounds rejected by the High
Court, provided only that this Court does not entertain the
applicants’ appeals
on the two grounds in respect of which the
Public Protector succeeded in the High Court. Last, the appeal,
in any event,
does not have reasonable prospects of success.
Alternatively, if this Court does uphold any of the challenges
to the Rules,
the Speaker submits that such a declaration of
invalidity must be suspended for six months pending the curing of the
defect by
the National Assembly. The DA likewise complains
that the Public Protector has failed to identify precisely where
the High Court supposedly erred, and submits that it is impermissible
for her “merely to piggy-back on the main application
for leave
to appeal”.
[72]
Before considering the grounds of the cross-appeal, it should be
mentioned that the Public
Protector elected not to bring a formal
application to cross-appeal in terms of rule 19(5)(a) of this
Court’s Rules.
[91]
She merely notified this Court and the applicants of her intention to
conditionally cross-appeal in her answering affidavit.
This
non compliance with the Rules, especially from the head of a
Chapter 9 institution, is regrettable. Litigants in
this Court
are bound by the Rules of this Court and should not deem the Rules to
be mere guidelines on how to conduct litigation.
[73]
Beyond the procedural non-compliance, there are no reasonable
prospects of success in the
cross appeal.
Nonetheless, I am inclined to entertain the cross appeal for
four reasons. First, to
dismiss the conditional application to
cross appeal for pure procedural non compliance would lead
to unnecessary litigation
and a waste of judicial resources, as the
Public Protector may decide to pursue the appeal in the Supreme
Court of Appeal.
[92]
Second, there is a need to bring this matter to finality without
further delays. The section 194 enquiry has been suspended
pending the finalisation of litigation, and without certainty on the
Rules, the Speaker is unable to perform part of her constitutional
duties, which is to ensure the transparency and accountability of
office bearers of Chapter 9 institutions. Third,
we
have the benefit of the Full Court judgment which fully
ventilated the issues raised in the cross-appeal. Lastly,
compliance with the Rules of this Court aims to prevent, amongst
others, prejudice to one party in litigation and seeks to ensure
all
parties have an opportunity to be heard. Fortunately, the
Speaker and the DA responded to the merits of the conditional
cross appeal in their written submissions and during oral
argument. Therefore, I do not think that the applicants are
prejudiced by the non-compliance. Accordingly, leave to
cross appeal should be granted. I now turn to consider
the
grounds of the cross-appeal.
Irrationality in the form
of ultra vires
[74]
The High Court held that the National Assembly is obliged to
determine whether to remove
the Public Protector and it cannot
delegate that function to another entity. However, nothing
prevents it from taking advice
from a panel.
[93]
The independent panel makes preliminary assessments and submits a
report to the National Assembly, but the panel has no powers
other
than to submit a report. The National Assembly is at liberty to
follow or ignore the independent panel’s recommendations.
[94]
The High Court held that the facts would indicate whether the
National Assembly merely rubber stamped the panel’s
recommendations, in which case the incumbent would have
remedies.
[95]
It,
therefore, held that the appointment of the panel was rational.
[75]
The Public Protector submits that the High Court failed to consider
her argument on the
irrationality of the Rules. The argument
goes like this: neither the Chief Justice nor the Speaker is
empowered to appoint
a Judge and, as a result, the appointment of a
Judge to the independent panel is not a lawful exercise of public
power, rendering
the Rules ultra vires.
[76]
The DA points out that the Public Protector now seeks to raise the
rationality and ultra vires
argument for the first time before
this Court. This is different to the case pleaded before,
wherein, relying on
Heath
, she argued that the separation of
powers doctrine had been breached. Notwithstanding, it submits
that the National Assembly
lawfully appointed Justice Nkabinde,
as the appointment does not seek to make her a Judge; she already is
a Judge and now assumes
an advisory role to assist the
National Assembly. Nothing in this is irrational or
unlawful. The Speaker submits
that in
EFF II
this
Court directed the National Assembly to adopt Rules defining the
grounds for removal from office for the President, and regulating
the
removal process. This is exactly what the National Assembly did
for the removal of Chapter 9 institution office bearers.
Therefore, the Rules are not irrational.
[77]
As held above, I do not agree that the appointment of a Judge to the
independent panel
is irrational. During the hearing of this
matter, counsel for the Public Protector shifted this ground of
appeal into
a much broader ground by arguing that the Speaker has no
power to appoint
anyone
to an independent panel, irrespective
of whether that person is a Judge. It is necessary to emphasise
that this was not the
pleaded case in this Court. The pleadings
were limited to the argument that no provision or law empowers the
Speaker and/or
the Chief Justice to appoint a Judge to any position.
[78]
I will first dispose of the argument that neither the Chief Justice
nor the Speaker has
the power to appoint a Judge. Indeed, this
is correct. But it cannot be disputed that the allocation of a
Judge to
a panel is not equivalent to the appointment of a person as
a Judge. In terms of section 174 of the Constitution, the
President
appoints a Judge on the advice of the Judicial Service
Commission. After the appointment, the person will be
designated as
a Judge. Rule 129V(3) states that “[i]f a
Judge is appointed to the panel, the Speaker must do so in
consultation with
the Chief Justice”. Therefore, the
Rules make provision for a person already designated as a Judge to be
appointed
to serve on the independent panel. The Rules do not,
by some dubious manner, bypass section 174 of the Constitution,
in that a person not designated as a Judge and appointed to serve on
the independent panel miraculously becomes a Judge.
This
argument is without a doubt unmeritorious.
[79]
Turning to the novel argument introduced during the hearing, that is,
the Speaker does
not have the power to appoint
anyone
; it is
necessary to consider the Rules and the Constitution. The
Speaker’s power to appoint an independent panel comes
from the
Rules. During the hearing, counsel for the Public Protector
argued that this is insufficient, as it is necessary
to ask where the
power comes from to make these Rules. I agree with the Public
Protector that the “exercise of public
power must comply with
the Constitution which is the supreme law and the doctrine of
legality which is part of that law”.
Unsurprisingly, in
this instance the power to make such rules can be found in the
Constitution, more particularly in section
57. Section 57,
governing the internal arrangements, proceedings and procedures of
the National Assembly, provides that the
National Assembly “may
make rules and orders concerning its business with due regard to
representative and participatory
democracy, accountability,
transparency and public involvement”.
[80]
The enquiry into the removal of Chapter 9 institution office-bearers
is inherently a National Assembly
proceeding, and therefore the
power of the National Assembly to make the Rules governing the
process is located within section
57 of the Constitution. Since
the Rules must inevitably contain provisions for the composition and
appointment of committees,
it follows that the Rules may permissibly
confer powers of appointment on the Speaker and on other
parliamentary functionaries.
Further, the Rules of the
National Assembly confer the powers of appointment on the
Speaker, on political parties and on parent
committees of
subcommittees in several Rules catering for different circumstances
concerning the business of the National Assembly.
[96]
Therefore, this is not an irregular power that only applies in the
context of the removal of Chapter 9 institution office-bearers.
[81]
The Speaker, before appointing the independent panel, invited the
political parties represented
in the National Assembly to nominate
persons to serve on the panel. This step in the removal process
further promoted section
57(1)(b) of the Constitution, as it made
provision for representative and participatory democracy.
[82]
In addition to the clear power, it is disingenuous to ignore that
this Court’s own
jurisprudence directed the National Assembly
to adopt rules regulating the process to remove the President in
terms of section
89(1) of the Constitution.
[97]
Similar to what this Court directed the National Assembly to do in
EFF II
,
the National Assembly adopted rules to define the grounds for
removal and to regulate the process of removal.
[83]
This Court also expressly stated in
EFF
II
that
the removal process of the President, a process similar to the
current process, must be preceded by a preliminary enquiry.
[98]
The Speaker, by appointing the independent panel to determine whether
there is prima facie evidence for the removal of the
office-bearer,
fulfilled the preliminary enquiry requirement set by this Court.
Further, during the preliminary enquiry,
the office-bearer is
provided with an opportunity to be heard. If the preliminary
stage is bypassed, so will the office-bearer
lose a valuable
opportunity to be heard. The Public Protector is arguing
for more opportunities to be heard, but ironically
the bypassing of
the preliminary stage will only be prejudicial to the incumbent.
This provides further support for the rationality
of the construction
of the Rules and the appointment of the panel.
[84]
On the last point, the appointment of the independent panel
conducting the preliminary
enquiry protects the Chapter 9 institution
office-bearer against vexatious and persistent enquiries in terms of
section 194.
The purpose of the preliminary enquiry is to
determine whether the motion for removal has any merit. If, on
the advice of
the panel, the National Assembly decides not to proceed
with a section 194 enquiry, the office bearer is protected
against
unmeritorious removal motions. The appointment of the
independent panel, sifting through the removal motion, therefore,
supports
the principle that Chapter 9 institution office-bearers
should not be subjected to repeated, unmeritorious enquiries in terms
of
section 194 of the Constitution. This sifting mechanism is
an important component in the jurisdictional requirements of
section 194.
[85]
For all these reasons, the Public Protector’s argument that the
appointment of an
independent panel “offends the principle of
legality” is without merit and rejected.
Procedural irrationality
and audi alteram partem
[86]
Grounds two and three, which are procedural irrationality and
audi alteram partem
, cannot be separated and were argued
jointly by the Public Protector. Therefore, I will
consider them simultaneously.
[87]
In terms of the Rules, the Speaker does not afford the Chapter 9
institution office bearer
an opportunity to be heard before the
motion is filed and the Speaker determines whether the motion is
compliant with the Rules.
The Speaker
may
,
however, consult the complainant before making a determination.
The High Court held that the issue was whether the Public
Protector
is entitled to a hearing at every stage of the multi stage
process. The absence of an opportunity to be heard
must be
procedurally connected to a purpose.
[99]
The High Court considered
Kubukeli
[100]
and held that similar to it, the Speaker’s decision involves a
prima facie finding, and even the finding by the independent
panel
has no binding force and can be challenged at the committee
enquiry.
[101]
In this
matter, the Speaker does no more than assess whether the motion
complies with the form in terms of the Rules.
[102]
In concluding this analysis, the High Court held that this does
not mean that input at this stage is not preferred,
but a court’s
preference is not the test.
[103]
The High Court, thus, dismissed the challenge.
[88]
The Public Protector contends that the Rules fail to afford an
office-bearer the opportunity
to give his or her side of the story
before deciding whether the motion is in order. The Speaker
argues that the High Court
was correct in finding that a hearing at
such an early stage is not a prerequisite for legality. The DA
submits that there
is no right in law to be given a “hearing
before a hearing”. Consequently, there was no breach of
the principle
of legality.
[89]
In terms of the 17-step process, a Chapter 9 institution
office-bearer facing a removal
motion is granted two opportunities to
be heard. The first opportunity, as provided for in rule
129X(1)(c)(iii), is during
the preliminary stage when the
office bearer can make written submissions to the independent
panel. Rule 129X, governing
the proceedings of the independent
panel, is couched in mandatory language – the independent
panel must provide the
office-bearer with a reasonable opportunity to
respond to the allegations levelled against him or her. If the
National Assembly
decides to proceed with the enquiry after the
preliminary stage, the office bearer is afforded a second
opportunity to respond
to allegations insofar as he or she has a
right to be heard during the formal removal enquiry in terms of rule
129AD(3).
The Public Protector argues that these two
opportunities are insufficient, and as a result the procedure is
irrational.
[90]
The argument by the Public Protector is without merit. In terms
of rule 129S
read with rule 129T, after a motion is received,
the Speaker has an obligation to certify the motion as being
compliant with the
Rules. This is a procedural step that does
not touch on the merits of the motion. The Chapter 9
institution office-bearer’s
submissions will have no bearing on
this step as the Speaker does not engage with the merits of the
motion. The first stage
where the merits of the motion are
considered is during the preliminary enquiry by the independent
panel. As stated above,
the office-bearer does indeed have an
opportunity to respond to allegations at this stage. In
EFF II
,
this Court held that “[i]t is also up to the Assembly to decide
whether the President must be afforded a hearing at the
preliminary
stage”.
[104]
In
this instance, the National Assembly exercised its discretion to
afford the office-bearer an opportunity to be heard
during the
preliminary stage.
[91]
I agree with the High Court that the Speaker’s decision
involves a prima facie finding
that the motion is compliant, and the
section 194 enquiry has not yet commenced at that stage. Our
courts have on several
occasions confirmed that a “hearing
before a hearing” is not a prerequisite for legality.
[105]
It should again be reiterated that, although a hearing before a
hearing is not necessary, the office-bearer is effectively
given a
hearing before a hearing as the office-bearer is afforded two
opportunities to respond to the allegations levelled against
him or
her. The process is therefore not irrational.
Retrospectivity
[92]
The issue here is whether the Rules, which it will be recalled were
adopted by the National
Assembly on 3 December 2019, apply to alleged
misconduct committed before that date. The High Court
considered the rule against
retrospectivity and held that it is
rebuttable in that: (a) the grounds for removal already existed when
the Rules were adopted
– such grounds were specified in section
194 of the Constitution; (b) the Rules were adopted to give effect to
section 194
of the Constitution; (c) the absence of a reference to
retrospectivity in the Rules does not render the Rules
non-retrospective;
(d) the drafters intended to adopt rules to render
section 194 of the Constitution operational; and (e) the National
Assembly’s
oversight function would otherwise be rendered
inoperable in respect of misconduct perpetrated at any time from the
inception of
the Constitution until 3 December 2019,
[106]
which would lead to absurdity.
[107]
Having considered the above, the High Court concluded that by
necessity the Rules operate retrospectively.
[108]
[93]
The Public Protector argues that the High Court erred because the
Rules are presumed to
operate prospectively and to only apply to
facts that came into existence after their passing. In her
view, had the National
Assembly intended for the Rules to apply
retrospectively it would have indicated this, but it did not.
Further, the Rules
are not purely procedural; they affect the Public
Protector’s substantive rights. Thus, the Rules cannot be
applied
retrospectively.
[94]
I disagree with the Public Protector. The effect of this
argument, if upheld, will
be that any conduct of the Public
Protector, and other Chapter 9 institution office bearers,
before 3 December 2019 cannot
be the subject of a motion for removal
from office. The Public Protector failed to distinguish between
the Rules, which provide
for the process for removal, and the grounds
for removal contained in section 194 of the Constitution.
The grounds for
removal have existed since 1996 in the Constitution.
The question of retrospectivity would have been relevant if the
grounds
for removal were introduced by the Rules, which is not the
case. It is recognised that there is no hard line between
legislation
affecting rights and procedural legislation, as
legislation that seems to be procedural can impact on substantive
rights.
[109]
This,
however, also does not assist the Public Protector. The
presumption against retrospectivity is exactly that –
a
presumption. In
Mhlope
,
[110]
Madlanga J held that the presumption “is not a magic wand
that must trump a discernible purpose of a legislative
instrument”.
[111]
If the presumption against retrospectivity does kick in, it is
rebutted by the clear intention to hold Chapter 9 institution
office-bearers accountable. This is the purpose of the Rules.
A contrary interpretation would eviscerate this purpose.
[112]
[95]
In
EFF
I
,
[113]
Mogoeng CJ held that “constitutionalism, accountability and the
rule of law constitute the sharp and mighty sword that stands
ready
to chop the ugly head of impunity off its stiffened neck”.
[114]
The Rules were drafted in this spirit of accountability. It is
unimaginable that the drafters of the Rules intended
for the Rules
not to apply to the very removal process that was before the National
Assembly. The prospective order the Public
Protector seeks
stands juxtaposed against the constitutional principles of
accountability.
[115]
Any order that will prevent Chapter 9 institution office bearers
from being held accountable for conduct committed before
the Rules
were drafted, which merely govern the process for removal, will lead
to impunity. This cannot be so.
Interpretation of section
194 of the Constitution
[96]
The High Court considered the definitions of misconduct, incapacity
and incompetence. It
held that, in terms of incapacity, any
condition permanent or temporary, must relate to the time in office,
being seven years,
and a temporary condition may render the incumbent
incapacitated for this period.
[116]
It mattered not, according to the High Court, whether the
office-bearer will, years after their appointment has come to an
end,
be able to perform their duties; what is relevant is whether they can
perform their duties in relation to the time in office.
For the
definition of misconduct, the High Court held that the Rules set the
operational standards, accordingly, the definitions
of the grounds of
removal do not alter the constitutional grounds.
[117]
[97]
For this ground of appeal, the Public Protector argues that the High
Court erred by not
finding that the Rules altered the grounds of
removal found in section 194 of the Constitution. According to
the Public Protector,
the grounds are altered in the following
manner: (a) the definition of “incapacity” in the Rules
now includes “temporary
incapacity”; and (b) the
definition of “misconduct” now refers to “gross
negligence” and “intent”.
[98]
On the first point, section 194 only mentions “incapacity”.
It is important
to note that section 194 does not contain the
definitions for the removal grounds, being misconduct, incapacity,
and incompetence.
It merely lists the grounds. Therefore,
the Rules are unable to “amend the constitutional definitions”,
as argued
by the Public Protector, because the Constitution
contains no definitions. The definition contained in the Rules
does
not stop at stating that incapacity can include a temporary
condition. It goes on to explain that incapacity is a temporary
condition “that impairs a holder of a public office’s
ability to perform his or her work”. I caution against
a
selective reading of a definition, as the link to the office-bearer’s
ability to perform her work is undoubtedly an essential
element of
the definition. I, therefore, agree with the High Court
that even if a Chapter 9 institution office-bearer
is temporarily
incapacitated, it can be a proper ground for removal in terms of
section 194.
[118]
[99]
The Public Protector further argues that the Rules extend the
definition of misconduct
as it includes “gross negligence”
and “intention”. It is difficult to imagine a
definition of “misconduct”
without a reference to
negligence and intention. The Rules cannot be said to “extend”
the definition of misconduct
because the Rules require not mere
negligence, but “gross negligence”. The onus was on
the Public Protector to
show that the definitions in the Rules are
impermissibly broad or narrow. The Public Protector did
not succeed in this
regard.
[100] I
can do no better than to quote from what this Court held in
EFF
II
:
“
It is evident that
the drafters left the details relating to these grounds to the
Assembly to spell out. But the drafters
could not have
contemplated that members of the Assembly would individually have to
determine what constitutes a serious violation
of the law or the
Constitution, and conduct on the part of the President which, in the
first place, amounts to misconduct and whether,
in the second place,
such conduct may be characterised as serious misconduct. If
this were to be the position, then we would
end up with divergent
views on what is a serious violation of the Constitution or the law
and what amounts to serious misconduct
envisaged in the section.
And since the
determination of these matters falls within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the Assembly, it and it alone is entitled
to
determine them. This means that there must be an institutional
pre-determination of what a serious violation of the Constitution
or
the law is. The same must apply to serious misconduct and
inability to perform the functions of the office. The
Acting
Speaker describes the first two grounds as exhibiting wrongdoing on
the part of the President. I could not agree more.
This
is evident from the language of section 89(2), which stipulates that
a President removed from office on any of these two grounds
may lose
benefits. Once more, it is left to the Assembly to determine
circumstances under which the President removed from
office on one of
those grounds may forfeit benefits.”
[119]
[101]
Similar to the removal of the President, when it comes to section
194, the National Assembly is tasked
with determining the
definitions of “misconduct”, “incapacity” and
“incompetence”. The
Rules are intended to provide
greater detail to guide members of the National Assembly.
Guidance from the Rules is not only
beneficial, but imperative to
ensure fairness and consistency in section 194 proceedings.
Therefore, I do not agree
with the Public Protector’s argument
that the definitions are ultra vires
.
Severance
[102]
The Public Protector argues that the High Court, when severing
portions of rules 129AD(3) and 129V,
“exceeded the
boundaries of judicial interference” and “purport[ed] to
rewrite the Rules for the Legislature”.
According to her,
the severance encroached on the doctrine of separation of powers.
In support of this contention, the Public
Protector relies on
Coetzee
[120]
to argue that this is not a case where the “good can be
separated from the bad”.
[121]
[103]
Section 172(1)(a) of the Constitution confirms that when deciding
constitutional matters, a court “must
declare that any law or
conduct that is inconsistent with the Constitution is invalid to the
extent of its inconsistency”.
In applying the test for
severability articulated in
Coetzee,
one
should ask two questions: first, is it possible to sever the invalid
provision; and, second, if so, does the remainder give
effect
to the purpose of the legislative scheme?
[122]
As I am setting aside the order of the High Court which removes
the provision for a Judge to be appointed to the independent
panel,
the test for severability only needs to be applied to rule 129AD(3)
and how the High Court severed the unconstitutional
section.
The High Court merely excised the proviso that said: “provided
that the legal practitioner or other expert
may not participate in
the committee”. It is, therefore, possible, without
difficulty, to sever the invalid provision.
The next step is to
compare the remains of the provision to the purpose of the
legislation. The purpose of rule 129AD(3)
is to provide legal
assistance and expert support to the Chapter 9 institution
office-bearer and in the greater scheme of
things, this rule is to
ensure fairness during the section 194 proceedings. The good is
clearly separated from the bad and
severance was correctly applied by
the High Court.
[104]
The proper relief, according to the Public Protector, would have been
for the High Court to remit the
Rules to the National Assembly
for redrafting. I disagree. This can only be interpreted
as a tactic to delay the proceedings
as, in the Public Protector’s
own written submissions before this Court, she argues for the Rules
to be “severable
to the extent of the alleged excess”
concerning the definitions of the grounds of removal. The
Public Protector, therefore,
recognises that severance is suitable
when it counts in her favour.
Reviewability
[105]
The final ground of appeal, aside from the costs order, is that of
“reviewability”; in other
words, that the High Court
supposedly failed to consider that grounds such as
audi
alteram partem
,
retrospectivity and the inclusion of a Judge on the panel were
attacked not only on the grounds of being unconstitutional but
on the
alternative basis that they were subject to judicial review.
The High Court held that there was no merit in the unreasonableness
ground. It found that not giving the Public Protector an
opportunity to be heard at every stage of the enquiry was not
arbitrary or irrational. Further, the functions of the National
Assembly and the Speaker in respect of the adoption and
implementation of the Rules were fulfilled in terms of section 57(1)
of the Constitution, and they are expressly excluded from
the
definition of administrative action in the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act.
[123]
Therefore, these actions are not reviewable.
[124]
[106] I
agree with the Speaker that the Public Protector’s argument is
difficult to understand in substance.
The High Court considered
the merits of all the grounds raised by the Public Protector
and, therefore, it is unnecessary to
say more on whether the conduct
of the Speaker should be reviewed.
Costs order and/or mala
fides
[107]
The final ground of appeal is based on the allegation that the
Speaker acted in bad faith. The High
Court rejected the
argument of mala fides and ulterior motive against the Speaker.
It held that the Speaker had to implement
and follow the Rules as the
High Court rejected the interdictory relief in Part A of that
application; therefore, the Speaker was
not interdicted from
proceeding with the enquiry. Accordingly, a finding that the
Speaker acted with mala fides in those
circumstances was
unwarranted.
[125]
[108]
The Public Protector submits that the High Court erred when it
refused to award punitive and/or personal
costs against the Speaker.
The finding of bad faith is a prerequisite in upholding this ground
of appeal. I agree with
the High Court that the Speaker was
obliged to implement and follow the Rules. The Public Protector
attempted to stop
the proceedings pending the legality challenge in
the High Court, and the High Court dismissed the interdict. The
Speaker,
therefore, had no legal obligation, or any other obligation,
towards the Public Protector to pause the proceedings pending the
finalisation of the litigation. Rather, the Speaker has an
obligation towards the Constitution. I am unable to find
any
malice in the actions of the Speaker warranting a punitive costs
order.
[109]
It follows, then, that the cross-appeal must fail.
Conclusion
[110]
This brings me to the final issue, the retrospectivity of the order
in relation to the right to legal representation.
The
office-bearer is entitled to full legal representation at the stage
of the section 194 enquiry, that is, during the enquiry
before the
committee established in terms of rule 129AA. The current
processes before the National Assembly to remove the
Public Protector
from office have been suspended pending the outcome of this
litigation, and the process has not yet reached the
stage of the
section 194 enquiry before the rule 129AA committee. As a
result, the retrospectivity of the order of constitutional
invalidity
will have no bearing on the lawfulness of the current process and
will not disrupt the steps already undertaken.
When the section
194 enquiry formally proceeds, the Public Protector will be entitled
to full legal representation in the committee
proceedings.
Costs in the main
application
[111]
The Speaker is partially successful in her application; however, the
Speaker does not seek a costs order
against the Public Protector as
both are organs of state. Therefore, each party will bear their
own costs in the application
by the Speaker.
[112]
The DA has been successful against the Public Protector. I see
no reason to deviate from the general
principle that costs should
follow the result. The DA is, therefore, entitled to its costs
in this Court.
Order
[113]
The following order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal directly to this Court on an urgent basis is granted.
2.
Save as set out in paragraph 3 below, the appeal against the order in
paragraph 118(a)(i)
of the High Court is dismissed.
3.
Paragraph 118(a)(i) of the order of the High Court is amended to
read: “(i) the
phrase ‘provided that the legal
practitioner or other expert may not participate in the committee’
is irrational, and
inconsistent with the Constitution and is declared
invalid. The proviso is severed from rule 129AD(3).
The amended
rule now provides that the section 194 committee:
‘
must afford the
holder of a public office the right to be heard in his or her defence
and to be assisted by a legal practitioner
or other expert of his or
her choice.’”
4.
The appeal against the order in paragraph 118(a)(ii) of the High
Court is upheld.
5.
Paragraph 118(a)(ii) of that order is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
“
The application
relating to the constitutionality of rule 129V is dismissed”.
6.
Leave to cross-appeal is granted.
7.
The cross-appeal is dismissed.
8.
In CCT 257/21, each party must pay their own costs.
9.
In CCT 259/21, the Public Protector must pay the costs of the
Democratic Alliance, such costs
to include the costs of two
counsel.
For
the Applicant in CCT 257/21:
A
Breitenbach SC, U K Naidoo and A Toefy
instructed
by State Attorney, Cape Town
For
the Applicant in CCT 259/21:
S
Budlender SC and M Mbikiwa
instructed
by Minde Schapiro & Smith
For
the First Respondent in CCT 257/21 and CCT 259/21:
D
Mpofu SC, B Shabalala and H Matlape
instructed
by Seanego Attorneys Incorporated
For
the Amici Curiae:
M
Le Roux SC and M Vassen
instructed
by Webber Wentzel
[1]
As the two applications concerned the same judgment, they were
consolidated and heard together.
[2]
The
other respondents in the first application are: the President of the
Republic of South Africa (second respondent), the
Democratic
Alliance (third respondent), the African Transformation Movement
(fourth respondent), the United Democratic Movement
(fifth
respondent) and the Pan Africanist Congress of Azania (sixth
respondent). The respondents in the second application,
not
opposing the application, are: the Speaker of the National Assembly
(second respondent), the African Transformation Movement
(third respondent) and Democracy in Action (fourth respondent).
[3]
Public
Protector v Speaker of the National Assembly
unreported judgment of the High Court of South Africa, Western Cape
Division, Cape Town, Case No 2107/21 (28 July 2021) (High
Court
judgment) per Baartman J, (Dolamo J and Nuku J
concurring).
[4]
While
the High Court was referring to the contents of rule 129V, it
erroneously referenced rule 129E. See: High Court
judgment id at para 118.
[5]
Murray
“Human Rights Commission et al: What is the role of South
Africa’s Chapter 9 Institutions?” (2006) 9
Potchefstroom
Electronic Law Journal
121
at 129.
[6]
Section
181(2) and (3) of the Constitution.
[7]
Section 181(5) of the Constitution provides:
“
(5)
These institutions are accountable to the National Assembly, and
must report on their
activities and the performance of their
functions to the Assembly at least once a year.”
[8]
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Speaker of the National Assembly
[2017]
ZACC 47
;
2018 (2) SA 571
(CC);
2018 (3) BCLR 259
(CC) (
EFF
II
).
[9]
Section 89 provides:
“
(1)
The National Assembly, by a resolution adopted with a supporting
vote of at least two
thirds of its members, may remove the President
from office only on the grounds of—
(a)
a serious violation of the Constitution or the law;
(b)
serious misconduct; or
(c)
inability to perform the functions of office.
(2)
Anyone who has been removed from the office of President in terms of
subsection
(1)(a) or (b) may not receive any benefits of that
office, and may not serve in any public office.”
[10]
EFF II
above n 8
at
para 182.
[11]
South
African Reserve Bank v Public Protector
2017 (6) SA 198
(GP) (
SARB
I
).
[12]
Absa
Bank Limited v Public Protector
[2018]
2 All SA 1
(GP) (
ABSA
).
[13]
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
[2019] ZACC 29
;
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC);
2019 (9) BCLR 1113
(CC) (
SARB
II
).
[14]
Democratic
Alliance v Public Protector; Council for the Advancement of the
South African Constitution v Public Protector
[2019] 4 All SA 79 (GP).
[15]
Misconduct
is defined as: “the intentional or gross negligent failure to
meet the standard of behaviour or conduct expected
of a holder of a
public office”.
[16]
Incapacity,
as defined, includes—
“
(a)
a permanent or temporary condition that impairs a holder of a public
office’s ability
to perform his or her work; and
(b)
any legal impediment to employment”.
[17]
Incompetence—
“
includes
a demonstrated and sustained lack of—
(a)
knowledge to carry out; and
(b)
ability of skill to perform,
his or her duties
effectively and efficiently”.
[18]
Rule
129R.
[19]
Rule
129S.
[20]
Rule
129T.
[21]
Rule
129U and rule 129V(2).
[22]
Rule
129V(1).
[23]
Rule
129V(3).
[24]
Rule
129X.
[25]
Rule
129X(c).
[26]
Rule
129X(c)(v).
[27]
Rule
129Z and rule 129AB.
[28]
Rule
129AD(2).
[29]
Rule
129AD(3).
[30]
Rule
129AF.
[31]
High
Court judgment above n 3
at
para 22.
[32]
Rule
129AD(3).
[33]
High Court judgment above
n
3
at
para 64.
[34]
Id
at para 66.
[35]
Id
at para 53.
[36]
Id.
[37]
NSPCA
v Minister of Agricultural, Forestry and Fisheries
[2013]
ZACC 26
;
2013 (5) SA 571
(CC);
2013 (10) BCLR 1159
(CC) at para 38.
[38]
High
Court judgment above n 3
at
para 57.
[39]
Id
at para 58.
[40]
Section 167(3) of the Constitution provides:
“
(3)
The Constitutional Court—
(a)
is the highest court of the Republic; and
(b)
may decide—
(i)
constitutional matters; and
(ii)
any other matter, if the Constitutional Court grants leave to appeal
on the grounds
that the matter raises an arguable point of law of
general public importance which ought to be considered by that
Court.”
[41]
In
Gcaba
v Minister for Safety and Security
[2009] ZACC 26
;
2010 (1) SA 238
(CC);
2010 (1) BCLR 35
(CC) at para
75, the principle was set out as follows:
“
Jurisdiction is
determined on the basis of the pleadings . . . and not the
substantive merits. . . . In the event of the
court’s
jurisdiction being challenged at the outset (
in limine
), the
applicant’s pleadings are the determining factor. They
contain the legal basis of the claim under which the
applicant has
chosen to invoke the court’s competence.”
[42]
The role of the separation of powers doctrine in our constitutional
dispensation was emphasised in
Glenister
v President of the Republic of South Africa
[2008]
ZACC 19
;
2009 (1) SA 287
(CC);
2009 (2) BCLR 136
(CC) at para 29.
In that matter, the Court recognised that the separation of powers
not only implicitly forms part of our
Constitution, but is part of
its foundational values:
“
It is by now
axiomatic that the doctrine of separation of powers is part of our
constitutional design. Its inception in
our constitutional
jurisprudence can be traced back to Constitutional Principle VI,
which is one of the principles which governed
the drafting of our
Constitution. It proclaimed that—
‘
[t]here shall be
a separation of powers between the Legislature, Executive and
Judiciary, with appropriate checks and balances
to ensure
accountability, responsiveness and openness.’”
[43]
Section 181 of the Constitution provides for the establishment and
principles governing Chapter 9 institutions. It provides:
“
(1)
The following state institutions strengthen constitutional democracy
in the Republic:
(a)
The Public Protector.
(b)
The South African Human Rights Commission.
(c)
The Commission for the Promotion and Protection of the Rights of
Cultural, Religious
and Linguistic Communities.
(d)
The Commission for Gender Equality.
(e)
The Auditor-General.
(f)
The Electoral Commission.
(2)
These institutions are independent, and subject only to the
Constitution and the
law, and they must be impartial and must
exercise their powers and perform their functions without fear,
favour or prejudice.
. . .
(5)
These institutions are accountable to the National Assembly, and
must report on
their activities and the performance of their
functions to the Assembly at least once a year.”
[44]
Phillips
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2005] ZACC 15
;
2006 (1) SA 505
(CC);
2006 (2) BCLR 274
(CC) at para
30.
[45]
Jacobs
v S
[2019]
ZACC 4
;
2019 (1) SACR 623
(CC);
2019 (5) BCLR 562
(CC) at para 57.
[46]
Rule 19 of this Court’s Rules provides for appeals generally
and direct appeals. It provides, in relevant part:
“
(1)
The procedure set out in this rule shall be followed in an
application for leave to appeal
to the Court where a decision on a
constitutional matter, other than an order of constitutional
invalidity under section 172(2)(a)
of the Constitution, has been
given by any court including the Supreme Court of Appeal, and
irrespective of whether the President
has refused leave or special
leave to appeal.
(2)
A litigant who is aggrieved by the decision of a court and who
wishes to appeal
against it directly to the Court on a
constitutional matter shall, within 15 days of the order against
which the appeal is sought
to be brought and after giving notice to
the other party or parties concerned, lodge with the Registrar an
application for leave
to appeal: Provided that where the President
has refused leave to appeal the period prescribed in this rule shall
run from the
date of the order refusing leave.
(3)
An application referred to in subrule (2) shall be signed by the
applicant or his
or her legal representative and shall contain—
(a)
the decision against which the appeal is brought and the grounds
upon which such
decision is disputed;
(b)
a statement setting out clearly and succinctly the constitutional
matter raised
in the decision; and any other issues including issues
that are alleged to be connected with a decision on the
constitutional
matter.”
[47]
As held in
Islamic
Unity Convention v Independent Broadcasting Authority
[2002] ZACC 3
;
2002 (4) SA 294
(CC);
2002 (5) BCLR 433
(CC) at para
13, the public interest is a consideration in what may form part of
the interests of justice analysis for the purposes
of determining
whether to grant leave to appeal. Albeit in the context of the
regulation of the broadcasting sector, the
remarks of the Court are
still instructive. The Court stated:
“
The dispute is a
burning issue and one that is necessary in the public interest to
resolve, involving as it does a provision that
is fundamental to the
regulation of broadcasting and more particularly what may be
broadcast and what may not.”
Quite clearly, the
interest of the public in the expeditious and final determination of
issues which are not only born of curious
interest but genuine
public concern, merit consideration in the interests of justice
analysis.
[48]
Dudley
v City of Cape Town
[2004] ZACC 4
;
2005 (5) SA 429
(CC);
2004 (8) BCLR 805
(CC) at para
7.
[49]
Public
Protector v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
[2020] ZACC 28
; 2020 JDR 2735 (CC);
2021 (5) BCLR 522
(CC) (
SARS
)
at para 28.
[50]
28
of 2011.
[51]
SARS
above
n 49
at
para 26.
[52]
Id
at para 27.
[53]
In
Mazibuko
v Sisulu
[2013] ZACC 28
;
2013 (6) SA 249
(CC);
2013 (11) BCLR 1297
(CC) at
para 36 this Court emphasised that:
“
We have already
determined that the dispute raises a constitutional issue that has a
grave bearing on the soundness of our constitutional
democracy. The
constitutional validity of the Rules is interwoven with the matters
that arise in the appeal. Both
invoke constitutional
construction of section 102(2) and the Rules that regulate the
ordering and scheduling of the business
of the Assembly. Hearing
the direct access application together with the appeal would avoid
prolonged and piecemeal litigation
and bring certainty over the
constitutional validity of the affected Rules. Furthermore,
the issues before us are crisp
and well-defined, and do not raise
disputes of fact or require factual resolution. Moreover, we
are here not confronted
with a dispute related to customary law or
the common law, but one that requires an interpretation of the Rules
in light of the
Constitution.”
In so saying, these
considerations are equally applicable in the present.
[54]
As
held in
Albutt
v Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation
[2010]
ZACC 4
;
2010 (3) SA 293
(CC);
2010 (5) BCLR 391
(CC) at para 51, the
question is not whether there are other means that could have been
used, but whether the means selected
are rationally related to the
objective sought to be achieved.
[55]
Hamata
v Chairperson, Peninsula Technikon Internal Disciplinary Committee
[2002]
ZASCA 44
;
2002 (5) SA 449
(SCA). In
Hamata
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal considered a rule which provided that a
student appearing before a disciplinary committee at the
Peninsula
Technikon may be assisted by another student or member of staff of
the establishment. That Court held that in
the absence of a
formal exclusion of legal representation before a disciplinary
committee, procedural fairness should allow for
legal
representation. At para 23, the Supreme Court of Appeal held:
“
If,
in order to achieve such fairness in a particular case legal
representation may be necessary, a disciplinary body must be
taken
to have been intended to have the power to allow it in the exercise
of its discretion unless, of course, it has plainly
and
unambiguously been deprived of any such discretion.”
[56]
High
Court judgment above n 3
at
para 64.
[57]
Hamata
above
n 55
at
para 11.
[58]
Fransman
v Speaker of the Western Cape Provincial Legislature
[2016] 4 All SA 424
(WCC) at para 57.
[59]
Section
28(2)
of the
Judicial
Service Commission Act 9 of 1994
.
[60]
Electronic
Media Network Limited v e.tv (Pty) Limited
[2017] ZACC 17
;
2017 (9) BCLR 1108
(CC) at paras 84 5.
In this matter, this Court emphasised that:
“
The enquiry is
whether there is a rational connection between the means and the
purpose. Since the answer is yes, and e.tv
together with nine
other television licencees were consulted, judicial intrusion is
constitutionally impermissible. It
is not for interested
persons or courts to determine the means but for the Executive. And
it is for the Executive to chop
and change the means as many times
as they wish to achieve the same objective, provided they do so
within the bounds of the Constitution
and the law. They may
even change it in a way that accommodates e.tv’s proposals at
any time before or after the
delivery of this judgment. That
is their judgement call, not the courts’.
What courts must always
caution themselves against is the temptation to impose their
preferences or what they consider to be the
best means available, on
the other arms of the State. Separation of powers forbids
that. Again we say, that rationality
is not a master key that
opens all doors, anytime, anyhow and judicial encroachment is
permissible only where it is necessary
and unavoidable to do so.”
[61]
Section
172(1) reads:
“
(1)
When deciding a constitutional matter within its power, a court—
(a)
must declare that any law or conduct that is inconsistent with the
Constitution
is invalid to the extent of its inconsistency; and
(b)
may make any order that is just and equitable, including—
(i)
an order limiting the retrospective effect of the declaration of
invalidity;
and
(ii)
an order suspending the declaration of invalidity for any period and
on any conditions,
to allow the competent authority to correct the
defect.”
[62]
South
African Association of Personal Injury Lawyers v Heath
[2000] ZACC 22
;
2001 (1) SA 883
(CC); 2001 (1) BCLR 77 (CC)
(
Heath
).
[63]
NSPCA
above n 37.
[64]
High
Court judgment above
n
3
at
paras 53-5.
[65]
Heath
above
n 62
at
paras 2 and 5.
[66]
Id
at para 27.
[67]
See
for example sections 48, 51(1), 52(2), 62(6), 86(2) and (3), 87, 95,
107, 128(2) and (3), 129 and 135 of the Constitution.
In
Heath
above
n 62
at
para 32, the Court held that Judges’ roles in the Judicial
Service Commission is also counted as the performance of a
non-curial function.
[68]
Heath
above
n 62
at
para 32.
[69]
NSPCA
above
n 37
para
2.
[70]
Id
at para 13.
[71]
Id
at para 38.
[72]
Id.
[73]
Heath
above
n 62
at
para 32.
[74]
Id.
[75]
AmaBhungane
Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC v Minister of Justice and
Correctional Services
[2021] ZACC 3
;
2021 (3) SA 246
(CC);
2021 (4) BCLR 349
(CC)
(
AmaBhungane
).
[76]
70
of 2002.
[77]
RICA
section 1.
[78]
AmaBhungane
above
n 75
at
para 17.
[79]
Id
at para
81.
[80]
Id.
[81]
Id
at para 92.
[82]
Id.
[83]
Id
at para 55.
[84]
Id
at
para 76.
[85]
Rule
129(V)(3).
[86]
Id.
[87]
AmaBhungane
above
n 75
at
para 81.
[88]
Rule
129(X)(1)(b). In the current removal process before the
National Assembly, the independent panel requested an extension
of
the 30-day period. It should be noted that the extension is
within the discretion of the Speaker and that due to the
nature of
the panel, being that it is appointed for one specific purpose, it
cannot be foreseen that a situation will arise which
would lead to
prolonged extensions.
[89]
AmaBhungane
above
n 75
at
para 92.
[90]
Being:
(a) irrationality in the form of ultra vires, (b) procedural
irrationality, (c)
audi
alteram partem
,
(d) retrospectivity, (e) interpretation of section 194, (f)
severance, (g) reviewability and (h) costs order and/or mala fides
.
[91]
Rule 19(5)(a) provides:
“
A respondent or
respondents wishing to lodge a cross-appeal to the Court on a
constitutional matter shall, within 10 days from
the date upon which
an application in subrule (2) is lodged,
lodge with the Registrar
an application for leave to cross-appeal
.” (Emphasis
added.)
[92]
In
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services
[2020] ZACC 25
; 2021 (2) SA 1 (CC);
2021 (2) BCLR 118
(CC) at
para 23 this Court recognised that delays in the finalisation of
cases bear testimony to the scarcity of judicial resources.
[93]
High
Court judgment above n 3
at
para 45.
[94]
Id.
[95]
Id
at para 48.
[96]
See
for example: in terms of rule 194(2) the Speaker may appoint task
teams to assist the Speaker in the implementation of policy
determined by the Rules Committee; in terms of rule 216(c) the
Speaker may designate any members to serve on the Disciplinary
Committee; in terms of rule 253(1) the Speaker may establish an
ad hoc committee; in terms of rule 155(1) the political
parties
appoint members of a committee; and in terms of rule 172(2)(a)
a parent committee of a subcommittee must appoint
members of the
subcommittee.
[97]
EFF II
above
n 8.
[98]
Id
at para 180.
[99]
High Court judgment above
n
3
at
para 34.
[100]
National
Treasury v Kubukeli
[2015]
ZASCA 141
;
2016 (2) SA 507
(SCA) (
Kubukeli
).
In
Kubukeli
the
Supreme Court of Appeal was tasked with deciding whether Mr Pumlani
Kubukeli was denied a right to make representations to
a team
appointed by the National Treasury to conduct an in-depth
investigation into alleged financial irregularities in respect
of
hiring of motor vehicles by the executive mayor of the OR Tambo
District Municipality. Mr Kubukeli argued that he never
received notice from the Treasury team to avail himself for an
interview. The Supreme Court of Appeal, at para 24, held
that—
“
the
National Treasury exercised the public power to investigate any
system of financial management and internal control of the
Municipality, and to recommend improvements, with the object of
securing sound and sustainable management of the fiscal and
financial affairs of the Municipality. The purpose for which
the power was given was not to investigate the conduct of any
particular person and to make final findings in respect thereof.
What a particular person did or did not do was incidental
to
the object of the power. It follows that the request, that
Mr Kubukeli and others attend interviews, did not constitute
recognition of a right to be heard, but was intended to assist the
National Treasury to achieve its purpose. The Treasury
team
was in no way to blame for the absence of that assistance.”
The Court held that in
the context of the report, it is clear that what was said regarding
Mr Kubukeli’s involvement were
only prima facie findings.
As a result, the Court held that the investigations, report and
recommendations of Treasury
without the involvement of Mr Kubukeli,
were founded on reason and not arbitrary or irrational.
[101]
High
Court judgment above n 3
at
para 39.
[102]
Id
at para 41.
[103]
Id
at para 43 referencing
Minister
of Justice v SA Restructuring and Insolvency Practitioners
Association
[2018]
ZACC 20
;
2018 (5) SA 349
(CC);
2018 (9) BCLR 1099
(CC) at para 55.
[104]
EFF
II
above
n 8
at
para 180.
[105]
See
for example:
Viking
Pony Africa Pumps (Pty) Ltd t/a Tricom Africa v Hidro-Tech Systems
(Pty) Ltd
[2010]
ZACC 21
;
2011 (1) SA 327
(CC);
2011 (2) BCLR 207
(CC) at paras 37-9;
Langa
v Hlophe
[2009]
ZASCA 36
;
2009 (8) BCLR 823
(CC) at para 40;
Chairman,
Board on Tariffs and Trade v Brenco Inc
[2001]
ZASCA 67
;
2001 (4) SA 511
(SCA) at para 71; and
Park-Ross
v Director: Office for Serious Economic Offences
1998
(1) SA 108
(C) at para 18.
[106]
Being
the date the new Rules were adopted.
[107]
High
Court judgment above n 3
at
para 68.
[108]
Id
at para 69.
[109]
Unitrans
Passenger (Pty) Ltd t/a Greyhound Coach Lines v Chairman, National
Transport Commission; Transnet Ltd (Autonet Division)
v Chairman,
National Transport Commission
1999
(4) SA 1
(SCA) at para 15.
[110]
Electoral
Commission v Mhlope
[2016] ZACC 15
;
2016 (5) SA 1
(CC);
2016 (8) BCLR 987
(CC) (
Mhlope
).
[111]
Id at para 29.
[112]
In
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism
[2004]
ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC);
2004 (7) BCLR 687
(CC) at para 90,
this Court held that “[t]he emerging trend in statutory
construction is to have regard to the context
in which the words
occur, even where the words to be construed are clear and
unambiguous”. In this matter before
this Court, the
context in which the Rules were adopted clearly delineate an
intention to hold office-bearers accountable in
terms of section 194
of the Constitution.
[113]
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Speaker, National Assembly
[2016] ZACC 11
;
2016 (3) SA 580
(CC);
2016 (5) BCLR 618
(CC) (
EFF
I
).
[114]
Id
at para 1.
[115]
The
Public Protector argues that:
“
One
cannot imagine a situation where overnight all Chapter 9 heads are
faced with complaints of misconduct, for things that happened
prior
to the adoption of the Rules, that would result in chaos and
absurdity, unless of course the Rules are aimed at targeting
the
Public Protector alone.”
Much rather, one should
imagine a situation where all Chapter 9 institution office-bearers
are held accountable for alleged misconduct.
This is evident
from section 194 of the Constitution and would not lead to “chaos
and absurdity” but rather constitutional
accountability.
[116]
High
Court judgment above n 3
at
para 83.
[117]
Id
at para 84.
[118]
Id
at para 83.
[119]
EFF
II
above
n 8
at
paras 177-8.
[120]
Coetzee
v Government of the Republic of South Africa; Matiso v Commanding
Officer, Port Elizabeth Prison
[1995] ZACC 7; 1995 (4) SA 631 (CC); 1995 (10) BCLR 1382 (CC).
[121]
Id at para 75.
[122]
Id
at para 16.
[123]
3
of 2000.
[124]
High Court judgment above
n
3
at
paras 77 and 79.
[125]
Id at para 73.
sino noindex
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