Case Law[2022] ZACC 3South Africa
Municipal Manager O.R. Tambo District Municipality and Another v Ndabeni (CCT 45/21) [2022] ZACC 3; [2022] 5 BLLR 393 (CC); (2022) 43 ILJ 1019 (CC); 2022 (10) BCLR 1254 (CC); 2023 (4) SA 421 (CC) (14 February 2022)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
14 February 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Local Government Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 —
Judgment
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## Municipal Manager O.R. Tambo District Municipality and Another v Ndabeni (CCT 45/21) [2022] ZACC 3; [2022] 5 BLLR 393 (CC); (2022) 43 ILJ 1019 (CC); 2022 (10) BCLR 1254 (CC); 2023 (4) SA 421 (CC) (14 February 2022)
Municipal Manager O.R. Tambo District Municipality and Another v Ndabeni (CCT 45/21) [2022] ZACC 3; [2022] 5 BLLR 393 (CC); (2022) 43 ILJ 1019 (CC); 2022 (10) BCLR 1254 (CC); 2023 (4) SA 421 (CC) (14 February 2022)
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sino date 14 February 2022
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT
45/21
In the matter between:
MUNICIPAL
MANAGER O.R. TAMBO
DISTRICT
MUNICIPALITY
First Applicant
O.R.
TAMBO DISTRICT
MUNICIPALITY
Second Applicant
and
NOSIPHO
PORTIA
NDABENI
Respondent
Neutral citation:
Municipal Manager
O.R. Tambo District Municipality and Another v Ndabeni
[2022]
ZACC 3
Coram:
Madlanga
J, Madondo AJ, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J, Pillay AJ,
Rogers AJ, Theron J, Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J
Judgment:
Pillay AJ
(unanimous)
Heard on:
9 November 2021
Decided on:
14 February 2022
Summary:
Local Government Municipal Systems Act
32
of 2000
—
section
66(1)
—
section 66(3)
and (5) — nullity of a court order —
court orders are binding until set aside.
ORDER
On appeal
from the Supreme Court of Appeal (hearing an appeal from the
High Court of South Africa, Eastern Cape Local Division,
Mthatha):
1. Leave to appeal is
granted.
2. The appeal
succeeds to the extent that paragraph 2(b) and (c) of the order of
the Supreme Court of Appeal, which held the first and second
applicants to be in contempt of the order of the High Court issued on
13 December 2016 (Mjali J order) and required them to purge such
contempt, is set aside.
3. For the rest, the
appeal is dismissed.
4. The first and
second applicants are ordered to comply with the Mjali J order
within 30 days of the order of this Court.
5. The second
applicant must pay to the respondent, Ms Nosipho Portia Ndabeni, the
costs of this application on an attorney and client scale.
6. Ms Nosipho Portia
Ndabeni is given leave to apply on the pleadings in this matter,
supplemented as required, to a High Court having jurisdiction, to
enforce this order.
JUDGMENT
PILLAY AJ (Madlanga J,
Madondo AJ, Majiedt J, Mhlantla J, Rogers AJ, Theron J,
Tlaletsi AJ and Tshiqi J concurring):
Introduction
“
If the impression were to be created that court
orders are not binding, or can be flouted with impunity, the future
of the judiciary,
and the rule of law, would indeed be bleak.”
[1]
[1]
Is a party required to comply with a
court order that it believes is a nullity? This question is
before us in relation to the
order of the High Court of the Eastern
Cape Local Division, Mthatha, against the Municipal Manager of the
O.R. Tambo District Municipality
and O.R. Tambo District Municipality
(the Municipality). They are the first and second applicants,
together referred to as
the “Municipal Parties” for convenience.
Ms Nosipho Portia Ndabeni, the respondent, secured that order which
declared her
to be a permanent employee of the Municipality.
[2]
Matters came to a head when the
Supreme Court of Appeal held the Municipal Parties to be in contempt
of the High Court order.
Hence the parties find themselves
before us.
Background
[3]
The Municipality employed Ms Ndabeni
on 1 July 2005 on a fixed term contract for a year as a Manager at
the Aids Training Information
and Counselling Centre (ATICC).
Her contract was repeatedly renewed until 2014 when her services were
terminated.
[4]
On 30 January 2011, the Municipality
passed Resolution 10/11 to convert all contract employees to
permanent employees. Resolution
10/11 was not applied to
Ms Ndabeni. Aggrieved, Ms Ndabeni approached the High
Court on 19 May 2015 for an order declaring
her employment to be
permanent. On 14 July 2015, the Municipal Parties requested and
obtained an extension from Ms Ndabeni
to deliver their answering
affidavit.
[5]
A few days before their answering
affidavit was due, the Municipal Parties applied in terms of rule 30
of the Uniform Rules of Court,
to declare the proceedings irregular.
On 5 April 2016, Ms Ndabeni applied to amend her notice of motion.
Once Ms Ndabeni
opposed the rule 30 application, the
Municipal Parties abandoned it. Leave to amend her notice was
granted on 25 October 2016
by consent.
[6]
Still the Municipal Parties failed
to deliver their answering affidavit. Notwithstanding the long
delay since July 2015, at
the hearing before the High Court on
13 December 2016, the Municipal Parties formally applied
for an adjournment for two
weeks to file their answering affidavits.
The primary reason advanced for the adjournment was that the
Municipal Parties could
not provide witnesses to their attorneys
while the Municipality was under audit between 25 October and
1 December 2016.
Ms Ndabeni opposed the application
for adjournment. Unsurprisingly, considering that the
application had been launched in May
2015, the High Court refused the
adjournment. The matter then proceeded unopposed. The
High Court granted an order
in favour of Ms Ndabeni.
[7]
That order, henceforth referred to
as the “Mjali J order”, read as follows:
“1. The applicant is
hereby declared the permanent employee of the first respondent in
her
capacity as the Manager at Aids Training Information and Counselling
Centre Manager Section – ATICC by virtue of Resolution
No. 10/11
of 30 January 2011 and any contrary conduct or action taken by
the respondents is hereby declared a nullity;
2. The post referred
to as AIDS Training Information and Counselling Centre Manager
(ATICC) previously occupied by the applicant is hereby declared a
permanent post in line with Resolution No.10/11 of 30 January
2011;
3. The respondents
are directed to pay the costs of this application jointly and
severally one paying the other to be absolved from liability on an
attorney and own client scale;
4. The first
respondent be ordered to pay the applicant’s salary and other
benefits,
retrospectively from the date upon which such payments
ceased; and
5. An order
compelling the Municipality to pay the applicant’s salary and other
benefits, in future, in accordance with benefits and service
conditions applicable to an employee of her status.”
[8]
On 22 March 2018, the High Court
refused leave to appeal. Belatedly and unsuccessfully, the
Municipal Parties petitioned the
Supreme Court of Appeal. After
30 July 2018, when the Supreme Court of Appeal refused the
petition, the Municipal
Parties remained inert. Allegedly, they
received the order of the Supreme Court of Appeal late. After
delays in securing
counsel, further delays were encountered in
getting papers back from counsel to apply for leave to appeal to this
Court. By
January 2019, having missed the opportunity to seek
leave to appeal to this Court, the Municipal Parties decided to
abandon their
application. They allege that it would have been
in the interests of justice to comply with the Mjali J order.
But they
did not.
[9]
On 1 February 2019, Ms Ndabeni
applied to the High Court to hold the Municipal Parties in contempt
of the Mjali J order and have imprisoned
the erstwhile
Municipal Manager, Mr Owen Ngubende Hlazo. She alleged
that her employment had been unlawfully terminated,
and that in terms
of the Mjali J order she was entitled to be treated as a permanent
employee.
Mbenenge JP
issued a
rule
nisi
, calling on—
(a) The Municipal Manager to show
cause why his conduct in failing to comply with the Mjali J
order
should not be declared unlawful and in contempt of that judgment;
(b) The Municipal Parties to show
cause why they should not be directed to purge their contempt;
and
(c) The
Municipal Manager to show cause why he should not be committed to
jail for contempt and
directed to pay costs on an attorney and client
scale
.
[10]
On the return day, the Municipal
Parties and their attorney alleged that they became aware of the
order of the Supreme Court of Appeal
only on 19 November 2018 due to
their change of email address. Ms Ndabeni successfully refuted
this allegation by proving that
the order had been served physically
by the sheriff on the Municipal Manager on 13 September 2018 and
on the Municipality on
11 October 2018.
[11]
Almost four years had passed since
the litigation started. Only then did it dawn on the erstwhile
Municipal Manager that implementing
the order when there was no post
on the staff establishment would result in him being held personally
liable for irregular and wasteful
expenditure, in terms of section
66(5) of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act
[2]
(Systems Act). Seemingly, the erstwhile Municipal Manager
awakened to his responsibilities only when he was at risk of being
held personally liable. To defend themselves, the Municipal
Parties contended in their answering papers that the Mjali J order
was a nullity that could be disregarded with impunity.
[12]
In reply, Ms Ndabeni indicated that
she was no longer pursuing an order for committal or other penal
sanction. But, she persisted,
the paragraphs of the Municipal
Parties’ answering affidavit setting out their nullity defence,
should be struck out on the basis
that the issue was
res
judicata
(already adjudicated).
The High Court rejected Ms Ndabeni’s objection by reasoning
that the issue of nullity was being
raised in a different cause of
action.
[3]
Her striking out application failed. Because Ms Ndabeni had
omitted to plead over, the alleged nullity of the Mjali J
order stood
as the Municipal Parties’ defence against contempt of that
court order.
[13]
As stated, the nullity defence
rested on the prohibition in section 66 of the Systems Act against
employment in posts not on the staff
establishment which, if
transgressed, would result in personal liability for the Municipal
Manager. Griffiths J upheld
the nullity defence. He
reasoned that even if he was wrong on that score, the Municipal
Parties’ failure to comply with the
Mjali J order was neither
wilful nor
mala fide
(in
bad faith).
[4]
[14]
Although an order holding the
Municipal Parties in criminal contempt was no longer in issue once
Ms Ndabeni abandoned any criminal
sanction against the Municipal
Manager, civil penalties remained an option.
[5]
After all, any disregard for court orders and the judicial process
requires the courts to intervene.
[6]
However, once Griffiths J found that the failure to comply with
the Mjali J order was neither wilful nor
mala
fide
, civil contempt and sanctions also
fell away. After finding that the High Court was not empowered
to grant the Mjali J order
and consequently that that judgment was a
nullity, Griffiths J discharged the
rule
nisi
. On 17 September 2019,
Griffiths J granted leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
[15]
The Supreme Court of Appeal split
three-two. The majority held as follows:
“1. The appeal is upheld
with costs on an attorney and client scale.
2. The order of the
high court is set aside and replaced by the following:
‘(a) The respondents’ conduct
in failing to comply with the order of Mjali J (save for
para 2
thereof) issued on 13 December 2016 is declared unlawful.
(b) The respondents are
declared to be in contempt of the aforesaid order.
(c) The respondents are
ordered to purge the aforesaid contempt within 30 days of the date
of
this order.
(d) The respondents are
ordered to pay the applicant’s costs on an attorney and client
scale.’”
[16]
The first point of departure was
whether the Mjali J order was a nullity. The second point
turned on whether Griffiths J’s
reliance on
Motala
[7]
was appropriate. The majority answered both questions in the
negative.
[8]
[17]
The third point was whether the
Municipal Parties had acted
mala fide
in failing to comply with the Mjali J
order. While the minority agreed with Griffiths J’s
interpretation of section 66
of the Systems Act, the majority
described the Municipal Parties’ reliance on that section as a
“ruse”.
[9]
The majority proceeded to hold the Municipal Parties to be in
contempt of the Mjali J order and ordered them to purge their
contempt.
[18]
Fourth, the majority decided to
confirm all but paragraph 2 of the Mjali J order. The majority
found the terms of paragraph
2 of the order to be overbroad to the
extent that they in effect created a permanent post in the
Municipality’s staff establishment,
when the power to do so was the
exclusive preserve of the Municipal Council.
[10]
The minority agreed with the majority on this aspect but went on to
add that there was “no valid basis to distinguish between
paragraphs 1 and 2 of [the Mjali J] order”.
[11]
The minority would have dismissed the appeal with costs. The
three-two split decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal
is now before
us in this application for leave to appeal.
Jurisdiction and leave to appeal
[19]
The jurisdiction of this Court is
engaged. Compliance with court orders by public officials is a
constitutional matter.
[12]
The split decision in the Supreme Court of Appeal heralds questions
about the legality of the impugned Mjali J order.
That raises
arguable points of law. Disagreement about whether the
Municipal Parties were in contempt and whether the Mjali
J order was
a nullity are reasons enough to grant leave to appeal.
Additionally, whether the Mjali J order was open to
amendment
when there was no appeal against that order is disputed. Leave
to appeal must be granted.
Issues
[20]
The primary issue is whether the
Municipal Parties should be compelled to comply with the Mjali J
order. That would depend on
whether the Mjali J order is a
nullity and therefore unenforceable. Then, would a special
order for costs against the Municipality
be justified?
[21]
The secondary issue is whether the
Municipal Parties are
in contempt of the Mjali J order
and whether they should be required to purge such contempt.
This issue can be determined
without much ado.
Although
Ms Ndabeni abandoned any criminal sanction against the Municipal
Manager, civil penalties remained an option. But
Griffiths J’s
finding that the Municipal Parties’ non-compliance was neither
wilful nor
mala fide
,
dispensed with this factual requirement to prove contempt. In
addition to the Municipal Parties’ claim that they were acting
on
legal advice, Griffiths J and two judges of the Supreme Court of
Appeal agreed with them. Hence the Municipal Parties’
version
was not so far-fetched or untenable that it could be rejected on the
papers. As the Supreme Court of Appeal could not
refute
Griffiths J’s factual finding, it could not declare the Municipal
Parties to be in contempt.
[22]
Consequently, the appeal against the
order of the Supreme Court of Appeal holding the Municipal Parties in
contempt of the Mjali J order and directing them to purge such
contempt, must succeed and be set aside.
Additionally,
by the time the matter reached this Court, the erstwhile Municipal
Manager and the person primarily responsible for
implementing the
Mjali J order, Mr Hlazo, had passed away. But it will soon
become clear that this victory is pyrrhic.
Complying with court orders
[23]
Trite, but necessary it is to
emphasise this Court’s repeated exhortation that constitutional
rights and court orders must be respected.
[13]
An appeal or review — the latter being an option in the case of an
order from the Magistrates’ Court – would be the proper
process
to contest an order. A court would not compel compliance with
an order if that would be “
patently
at odds with the rule of law”.
[14]
Notwithstanding, no one should be left with the impression that court
orders – including flawed court orders – are
not binding, or
that they can be flouted with impunity.
[24]
This Court in
State
Capture
reaffirmed that irrespective of
their validity, under section 165(5) of the Constitution, court
orders are binding until set aside.
[15]
Similarly,
Tasima
held that wrongly issued judicial orders are not nullities.
[16]
They are not void or nothingness, but exist in fact with possible
legal consequences.
[17]
If the Judges had the authority to make the decisions at the time
that they made them, then those orders would be enforceable.
[18]
[25]
To distinguish the role of the
litigants from the courts, the majority in
Tasima
said:
“
The
act of proving something irresistibly implies the presence of a
court. It is the
court
that,
once invalidity is proven, can overturn the decision. The party
does the proving, not the disregarding. Parties
cannot usurp
the court’s role in making legal determinations.”
[19]
[26]
Court orders are effective only when
their enforcement is assured.
[20]
Once court orders are disobeyed without consequence, and enforcement
is compromised, the impotence of the courts and the judicial
authority must surely follow.
[21]
Effective enforcement to protect the Constitution earns trust and
respect for the courts.
[22]
This reciprocity between the courts and the public is needed to
encourage compliance, and progressively, common constitutional
purpose.
[27]
Griffiths J relied on
Motala
in which the Supreme Court of Appeal held that an order of the High
Court was a nullity, because the High Court had no jurisdiction
to
exercise the power to appoint persons as judicial managers; that
power was specifically assigned to the Master of the High Court
by
legislation. The majority in
Tasima
regarded that finding in
Motala
to be “a far cry from the inference that any court order that is
subsequently found to be based on an invalid exercise of public
power
can be ignored”.
[23]
Whether any tension between
Motala
and
Tasima
should be resolved in this judgment will depend on the answer to the
question that follows.
Is the Mjali J order a nullity?
[28]
Scrutiny of Mjali J’s judgment
reveals that the reasons cohere with the legal material before the
Judge. Included in that
material was Resolution 10/11, in terms
of which the Municipality resolved to convert all contract employees
to permanent employees.
The validity of Resolution 10/11 had
not been impugned. In accordance with that resolution, all
contract employees, except
for Ms Ndabeni, were converted to
permanent employees. Ms Ndabeni’s attorneys enquired about
her status, but no information
was forthcoming from the Municipal
Parties.
[29]
It is not self-evident from a
reading of Resolution 10/11 that it is inconsistent with section
66(1) of the Systems Act. Section
66(1) obliges a Municipal
Manager to “develop a staff establishment for the municipality”,
“within a policy framework determined
by the municipal council and
subject to any applicable legislation”, “and submit the staff
establishment to the municipal council
for approval”. Absent
any evidence in the proceedings before Mjali J, Resolution 10/11
appears in both form and substance
to provide the requisite policy
framework.
[30]
Furthermore, section 66(3) of the
Systems Act provides: “[n]
o person may be employed in a
municipality unless the post to which he or she is appointed, is
provided for in the staff establishment
of that municipality.”
Section 66(3) permits the applicant to be
appointed, subject to the fulfilment of a condition. It is not
self-evident from the
legal material before Mjali J that the staff
establishment did not provide for the employment of Ms Ndabeni.
Proving this
precondition fell upon the Municipal Parties.
This they failed to do.
[31]
Furthermore, the Municipal Parties
failed to explain why they did not apply Resolution 10/11 to Ms
Ndabeni. If the plan was
to transfer her to the Provincial
Department of Health, that did not happen. She was left
unemployed.
[24]
Disclosure of the plan to transfer Ms Ndabeni to the Provincial
Department was made for the first time in the Municipal Parties’
affidavit claiming nullity of the Mjali J order.
[25]
Hence this plan was also not before Mjali J.
[32]
The Municipal Parties delivered no
answering affidavit, despite Ms Ndabeni granting them extensions
of time to comply with the
rules. Hence the application before
Mjali J proceeded unopposed. Accordingly, in the absence
of any jurisdictional
or other impediment, Mjali J granted the order
in the amended notice of motion. The effect of the order was to
declare Ms Ndabeni
to be employed permanently as an ATICC Manager by
virtue of Resolution 10/11. The Municipal Parties’ subsequent
explanation
about the absence of a post for Ms Ndabeni and funding
for the post are irrelevant for determining the lawfulness of the
Mjali J
order. Consequently, it is not apparent from the
judgment of Mjali J that the declaration of Ms Ndabeni as a
permanent
employee is null and void under section 66(3).
[33]
Coupled
with the evidence
about Ms Ndabeni’s employment with the Municipality, Mjali J had
jurisdiction to decide that the effect of Resolution
10/11 was to
convert Ms Ndabeni’s status to that of permanent employment.
Once Mjali J had jurisdiction, her order could
not be impugned as a
nullity. Whether that decision was right or wrong on the merits
did not affect the binding force of the
order, unless it was set
aside on appeal. However, the Supreme Court of Appeal
vindicated the Mjali J order by refusing the
petition against her judgment. Six months after the Supreme
Court of Appeal’s
refusal, the Municipal Parties abandoned any
application for leave to appeal to this Court to set aside that
order. Accordingly,
the Mjali J order remained extant.
[34]
Manifestly, the Mjali J order is not
a nullity; it is indeed a lawful order, issued by a properly
constituted Court having jurisdiction.
On the facts, this case
falls squarely within the ambit of the ruling in
Tasima
.
Motala
is
distinguishable. Unlike
Motala
,
the Mjali J order does not exceed the powers of the Court.
Hence the Mjali J order is competent.
Remedy
[35]
All that Ms Ndabeni seeks is
compliance by the Municipal Parties with the Mjali J order.
That order was not on appeal before
the Supreme Court of Appeal when
it considered the appeal in the present proceedings.
Consequently, it was not open to the
majority to exclude paragraph 2
of the High Court order. Having found that the majority also
erred in declaring the Municipal
Parties to be in contempt of the
Mjali J order, it will be necessary to uphold the appeal against
the Supreme Court of Appeal
in these respects. As indicated
above, this is not a victory for the Municipal Parties to celebrate.
[36]
In other respects, the attack on the
Mjali J order is unsustainable primarily because the
Municipal Parties allowed the matter
to proceed unopposed.
They ought to have properly raised and ventilated their defence in an
answering affidavit in the proceedings
before Mjali J. If
complying with section 66 of the Systems Act was the obstacle, the
Municipal Parties offer no explanation
why that reason could not have
been advanced timeously and not as an apparent afterthought.
Crucially, that obstacle turned
on facts.
[26]
Those facts should have been placed before Mjali J. And they
were not. Instead, the Municipal Parties delayed for
more than
a year and a half and eventually failed to put up any defence at all.
In these circumstances, this Court cannot accept
without more
that the preconditions for complying with section 66 do not
exist or cannot be facilitated.
[37]
Having found that the Mjali J order
is lawful, it must be complied with. If there are collateral
consequences, they arise not
from the implementation of this order,
but rather from the Municipal Parties’ failure to defend themselves
against the granting
of the Mjali J order. To give effect to
the Mjali J order, the remaining grounds of appeal against the order
of the Supreme
Court of Appeal must be dismissed.
Costs
[38]
Although the Municipal Parties
escape being held in contempt, their dilatoriness, inertia and
unaccountability must be viewed through
the lens of the
Municipality’s heightened duty to comply with court orders.
Organs of state, of which the Municipality is
one, are expressly
enjoined to “assist and protect the courts to ensure the
independence, impartiality, dignity, accessibility
and effectiveness
of the courts”.
[27]
They have obligations under the Constitution to respect the rule of
law and the courts as guardians of the Constitution.
[39]
Tasima
,
which was handed down on 9 November 2016, was already published by
2018 when the Municipal Parties elected to abandon their application
for leave to appeal to this Court. The Municipal Parties ought
to have known that
Tasima
had already affirmed that irrespective of their flaws, under section
165(5) of the Constitution, court orders are binding until set
aside.
[28]
Pertinently,
Tasima
held
that this Court would exercise its discretion to overlook an
unreasonable delay, and nevertheless consider a reactive challenge
to
the validity of an administrative decision or court order.
[29]
And indeed, if the Municipal Parties sincerely believed that
Ms Ndabeni was seeking to coerce it to perform a
constitutionally
invalid act, then
Tasima
could have given it the succour it sought. The majority in
Tasima
was
willing to allow state organs to challenge the lawfulness of
exercises of public power in appropriate circumstances.
[40]
The Municipal Parties elected to
abandon their application for leave to appeal to this Court because
it was out of time. One
of the reasons they advanced for being
out of time was that they had received late notice of the outcome of
their petition to the
Supreme Court of Appeal. Griffiths J
found this to be untrue.
[30]
[41]
If the Municipal Parties genuinely
believed that the Mjali J order was a nullity, then they had a public
duty to pursue the appeal
to correct the illegality. By
abandoning their appeal, they also forsook their obligation iterated
in
Kirland
[31]
to “do right, and . . . do it properly”.
[32]
Self-interest, rather than any altruism, accompanied their
decision to abide by the Mjali J order after the refusal of the
petition
.
[42]
In
Kirland
this Court emphasised that—
“
there is a higher duty on the state to respect
the law, to fulfil procedural requirements and to tread respectfully
when dealing with
rights. Government is not an indigent or
bewildered litigant, adrift on a sea of litigious uncertainty, to
whom the courts
must extend a procedure-circumventing lifeline.”
[33]
Neither a
procedural nor a substantive lifeline would be justified in this
instance.
[43]
The Municipal Parties dragged Ms
Ndabeni, an unemployed woman, through five courts over six years.
While their litigation was
at the expense of the public purse,
Ms Ndabeni had to foot her own bills. The Municipality as
“the Constitution’s
primary agent”
[34]
and employer of Ms Ndabeni had to do better. A punitive costs
order will assuage some of the harm perpetrated against Ms Ndabeni.
Including an order to give Ms Ndabeni leave to approach the High
Court will facilitate her access to justice if the Municipal
Parties
fail to comply with this order.
Order
[44]
The following order is issued:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2. The appeal
succeeds to the extent that paragraph 2(b) and (c) of the order of
the Supreme Court of Appeal, which held the first and second
applicants to be in contempt of the order of the High Court issued on
13 December 2016 (Mjali J order) and required them to purge such
contempt, is set aside.
3. For the rest, the
appeal is dismissed.
4.
The first and second applicants are ordered to comply with the
Mjali J order
within 30 days of the order of this Court.
5.
The second applicant must pay to the respondent, Ms Nosipho Portia
Ndabeni, the
costs of this application on an attorney and client
scale.
6.
Ms Nosipho Portia Ndabeni is given leave to apply on the pleadings in
this matter,
supplemented as required, to a High Court having
jurisdiction, to enforce this order.
For the Applicants:
A
Dodson SC and A Bodlani
instructed
by Sakhela Incorporated Attorneys
For the Respondent:
V
Maleka SC and V Kunju
instructed
by Keightley Sigadla Incorporated
[1]
Secretary of the Judicial Commission of Inquiry into Allegations
of State Capture Corruption and Fraud in the Public Sector including
Organs of State v Zuma
[2021] ZACC 18
;
2021 (5) SA 327
(CC);
2021 (9) BCLR 992
(CC) (
State Capture
) at para 87.
[2]
32 of 2000.
[3]
Nosipho Portia Ndabeni v the Municipal Manager
, unreported
judgment of the High Court of South Africa, Eastern Cape Division,
Mthatha, Case No 344/2019 (6 June 2019) (High Court
judgment) at
para 16.
[4]
High Court judgment above n 3 at
para 35.
[5]
Pheko v Ekurhuleni City
[2015]
ZACC 10
;
2015 (5) SA 600
(CC);
2015 (6) BCLR 711
(CC) (
Pheko
II
) at para 30:
“The term civil
contempt is a form of contempt outside of the court, and is used to
refer to contempt by disobeying a court order.
Civil contempt
is a crime, and if all of the elements of criminal contempt are
satisfied, civil contempt can be prosecuted in criminal
proceedings,
which characteristically lead to committal. Committal for civil
contempt can, however, also be ordered in civil proceedings
for
punitive or coercive reasons. Civil contempt proceedings are
typically brought by a disgruntled litigant aiming to compel
another
litigant to comply with the previous order granted in its favour.
However, under the discretion of the presiding
officer, when
contempt occurs a court may initiate contempt proceedings
mero
motu
.”
And
at
para 37:
“However, where a
court finds a recalcitrant litigant to be possessed of malice on
balance, civil contempt remedies other than
committal may still be
employed. These include any remedy that would ensure
compliance, such as declaratory relief, a mandamus
demanding the
contemnor behave in a particular manner, a fine and any further
order that would have the effect of coercing compliance.”
[6]
St
ate Capture
above
n 1
at para 27.
[7]
Id at paras 20-8 citing
Master of the High Court (North Gauteng
High Court, Pretoria) v Motala N.O.
[2011] ZASCA 238;
2012 (3)
SA 325
(SCA) (
Motala
).
[8]
Ndabeni v Municipal Manager: OR Tambo District Municipality
[2021] ZASCA 8
at paras 14-9.
[9]
Id at paras 22 and 32-6.
[10]
Id at para 24.
[11]
Id at para 30.
[12]
Section 165 of the Constitution. See also
State Capture
above
n 1
at para 87.
[13]
State Capture
above
n 1
at para 85;
Department of
Transport v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
[2016] ZACC 39
;
2017 (2) SA 622
(CC);
2017 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) (
Tasima
) at paras 147-9
;
and
Pheko II
above n 5
at paras 1 and 26.
[14]
State Capture
above
n 1
at para 85.
[15]
Id at para 59.
[16]
Tasima
above n 13 at para 182. In
Tasima
, the
court order at issue enforced a fixed term agreement, extending it
beyond its five years, allegedly in breach of section 217
of the
Constitution and procurement law.
[17]
Id.
[18]
Id at para 198.
[19]
Id at para 1
91.
[20]
State Capture
above n 1 at pa
ra 26 citing
Pheko II
above n 5.
[21]
Id at para 87.
[22]
Id
at paras 26-7. See also
Victoria
Park Ratepayers’
Association v Greyvenouw
2004 (3) All SA 623 (SE).
[23]
Tasima
above n 13
at
para 197.
[24]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 8 at para 19.
[25]
High Court judgment above n 3 at para 16.
[26]
As I said earlier,
the nullity defence rested on
the prohibition in section 66 of the Systems Act against employment
in posts not on the staff establishment
which, if transgressed,
would result in personal liability for the Municipal Manager.
Whether a post exists on the staff
establishment is a factual
question.
[27]
Section 165(4) of the Constitution.
[28]
Tasima
above n 13 at paras 179-182.
[29]
Id at para 140:
“
Drawing
on this line of reasoning, the majority judgment in
Merafong
held that the Municipality was not disqualified from raising an
active challenge merely because it is an organ of state. The
same must apply here. It is both a logical and pragmatic
consequence of the aforementioned developments in our jurisprudence
to allow state organs to challenge the lawfulness of exercises of
public power by way of reactive challenges in appropriate
circumstances.
I therefore agree with the first judgment’s
sentiment that the Supreme Court of Appeal was incorrect to find
that the Department
was barred from bringing a reactive challenge to
the extension of the contract solely because it is a state
functionary.”
[30]
High Court judgment above n 3 at para 5.
[31]
MEC for Health, Eastern Cape v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2014] ZACC 6
;
2014 (3) SA 481
(CC);
2014 (5) BCLR 547
(CC)
(
Kirland
).
[32]
Id at para 82.
[33]
Id.
[34]
Id.
sino noindex
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