Case Law[2024] ZASCA 65South Africa
Democratic Alliance v Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs (700/2022) [2024] ZASCA 65; [2024] 3 All SA 1 (SCA); 2024 (9) BCLR 1189 (SCA); 2024 (5) SA 463 (SCA) (30 April 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
30 April 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Constitutional law – section 27 of the Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002 – constitutional challenge – whether delegation of plenary legislative power impermissible – whether declaration of state of disaster in effect a de facto state of emergency – whether parliamentary oversight of the executive during state of disaster constitutionally compliant.
Judgment
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## Democratic Alliance v Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs (700/2022) [2024] ZASCA 65; [2024] 3 All SA 1 (SCA); 2024 (9) BCLR 1189 (SCA); 2024 (5) SA 463 (SCA) (30 April 2024)
Democratic Alliance v Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs (700/2022) [2024] ZASCA 65; [2024] 3 All SA 1 (SCA); 2024 (9) BCLR 1189 (SCA); 2024 (5) SA 463 (SCA) (30 April 2024)
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sino date 30 April 2024
FLYNOTES:
CONSTITUTION – National state of disaster –
Powers
of minister
–
Section
27 of
Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002
– Constitutional
challenge – Whether delegation of plenary legislative power
impermissible – Whether declaration
of state of disaster in
effect de facto state of emergency – Whether parliamentary
oversight of executive during state
of disaster constitutionally
compliant – Minister’s exercise of her
regulation-making powers in Act not violating
constitutional
imperatives of supervision and accountability prescribed in
Constitution.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no:
700/2022
In
the matter between:
DEMOCRATIC
ALLIANCE
APPELLANT
and
MINISTER OF
CO-OPERATIVE
GOVERNANCE AND
TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS
FIRST RESPONDENT
SPEAKER OF THE
NATIONAL
ASSEMBLY
SECOND RESPONDENT
CHAIRPERSON OF THE
NATIONAL
COUNCIL OF
PROVINCES
THIRD RESPONDENT
PRESIDENT OF THE
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH
AFRICA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Democratic Alliance v Minister of Co-operative
Governance and Traditional Affairs
(700/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 65
(30
April 2024)
Coram:
MOLEMELA P, PETSE DP, MAKGOKA, MBATHA AND MOLEFE JJA
Heard:
15 August 2023
Delivered:
30 April 2024
Summary:
Constitutional law –
section 27
of the
Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002
– constitutional challenge –
whether delegation of plenary legislative power impermissible –
whether declaration
of state of disaster in effect a
de facto
state of emergency – whether parliamentary oversight of the
executive during state of disaster constitutionally compliant.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Musi JP, Matojane and Windell JJ sitting as court of first
instance):
The
appeal is dismissed and there is no order as to costs.
JUDGMENT
Molemela P, (Petse DP
and Mbatha and Molefe JJA concurring)
Introduction
[1]
At the core of this appeal is the constitutional validity of s 27 of
the Disaster
Management Act 57 of 2002 (the DMA). The constitutional
challenge occurred in the context of the Coronavirus (Covid-19)
outbreak,
which was declared as a global pandemic by the World Health
Organisation. In one of several judgments in which this Court had
occasion
to pronounce on the Covid-19 pandemic, it said:
‘
The
seriousness and the magnitude of the threat to life brought about by
the pandemic cannot be exaggerated. It is not melodramatic
to say
that it posed, and continues to pose, the biggest threat to this
country since the Spanish influenza pandemic of the immediate
post-World War I years a century ago. It had the potential, and
continues to have the potential, to cause devastation on a scale
that, only a short while ago, people could not have begun to imagine.
Drastic measures were required and an excess of caution was
called
for, especially given the limited knowledge about Covid-19, even
among experts in the field of epidemiology.’
[1]
Background
[2]
The first
outbreak
of Covid-19 was identified in Wuhan, in the Hubei Province in China,
during December 2019. On 30 January 2020 the World
Health
Organization declared the outbreak a public health emergency of
international concern and, on 11 March 2020 declared it
a pandemic.
On
15 March 2020, the Minister of Co-Operative Governance and
Traditional Affairs (the Minister) in this country issued a Notice
declaring a National State of Disaster on account of the Covid-19
pandemic.
[2]
On
18 March 2020, the Minister made regulations embodying a national
public health response to the Covid-19 pandemic (the Covid-19
regulations).
On
23 March 2020, the fourth respondent (the President) announced a
national lockdown in South Africa, commencing on 26 March 2020.
Consequently,
on
25 March 2020, the Minister amended the regulations in order to bring
about a nationwide lockdown.
[3]
The
country moved between five ‘alert levels’ restricting
movement and economic activity, alert level five being the
most
restrictive of the alert levels, and level one the least
restrictive.
[4]
The
lockdown regulations were extensive, and in some respects, they
placed unprecedented restrictions on many constitutionally guaranteed
fundamental rights and freedoms. On 29 April 2020, the Minister
published the disaster management regulations. These regulations
were
subsequently amended in order to ease the lockdown restrictions in
line with the alert levels in the risk-adjusted strategy.
Thereafter,
the Minister promulgated regulations as and when the need arose in
accordance with the alert levels or the easing of
restrictions.
[3]
During alert level four lockdown, the Democratic Alliance (the DA)
filed an application
[5]
seeking
an order declaring s 27 of the DMA to be unconstitutional and
invalid. Although the DA’s application was filed
at the
high court, the DA simultaneously sought direct access to the
Constitutional Court, which application was subsequently dismissed
by
that Court on the basis that it was not in the interests of justice
for that Court to deal with the matter at that stage. The
application
was opposed by all the cited respondents, namely the President, the
Minister, the Speaker of the National Assembly
and the Chairperson of
the National Council of Provinces. In the high court, the DA’s
application came before a specially
constituted court of three judges
(Musi, JP, Matojane J and Windell J) (the full court) sitting as a
court of first instance within
the contemplation of s 14(1)
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2023.
[4]
The majority judgment (Musi JP and Windell J) found that the
delegation of power to the Minister in terms of s 27 of the DMA falls
within constitutional bounds and contains sufficient safeguards to
render it constitutionally valid. It inter alia expounded as
follows
regarding the provisions of the DMA:
‘
It
is clear from the definition of disaster that it may be a sudden or
progressive natural or man-made catastrophe, that causes
great damage
or loss of life. It may be an anticipated or uncertain calamity. It
must however be of such magnitude that it is beyond
the resource
capabilities of those affected by it. In such circumstances
uncertainties and imponderables abound when it comes to
planning and
implementing a prevention or mitigating strategy.
The
applicant correctly accepted that it was impossible for Parliament to
predict in advance what the precise nature of a national
disaster
would be and for it to provide a clear policy framework to deal with
such a disaster.
A
disaster can be sudden, widespread and cause immense damage if it is
not arrested timeously or its potential to cause damage minimized
speedily. Parliamentary law-making processes are not geared towards
making laws speedily. Disasters will always affect provinces.
The
process for Parliament to pass an ordinary Bill affecting provinces
is also a long drawn out process.
[6]
The constitutional public
access and involvement processes of Parliament may also impede an
effective and rapid response to a disaster.
Since it is impossible
for Parliament to legislate, in advance, ways and means to deal with
sudden foreseen or unforeseen calamities,
it is best for it to
delegate some of its functions. There is no other realistic way of
ensuring effective governance during disasters.
The executive
would be better placed to deal rapidly, comprehensively and
effectively with disasters in a way that Parliament cannot
do.
Parliament might conceivably not even be in session when a sudden
disaster strikes.’
[7]
[5]
The majority judgment concluded that the DMA contains sufficient
restraints on the
Minister’s powers because such powers must be
exercised in pursuit of ‘certain stated positive goals’,
as well
as ‘negative constraints’. This conclusion was
predicated on six characteristics of the DMA, which that court
considered
to be sufficient constraints on the Minister’s
exercise of the powers conferred by s 27 of the DMA. These
characteristics
will be discussed later in this judgment.
[6]
In his dissenting judgment, Matojane J (the minority judgment)
pointed out that he
would have upheld the application. Relying on the
maxim
delegare non potent delegare
(a delegate is prohibited
from sub-delegating powers unless authorised to do so), he found that
s 27(2) of the DMA constitutes
an excessive delegation of legislative
power by Parliament to the Minister. The dissenting judgment found
that the scope of the
discretion conferred on the Minister is broad
and open-ended, with insufficient guidance provided as to how to
exercise that power.
It concluded that the process of executive
law-making lacks transparency, public participation and debate of the
parliamentary
process and reduced accountability in the exercise of
delegated legislative power. On those bases, the minority judgment
would
accordingly have held that s 27(2) is unconstitutional.
Aggrieved by the majority decision, the DA applied for leave to
appeal
to this Court against the majority judgment. On 25 March 2022
the full court unanimously granted leave to appeal.
Issues
to be determined
[7]
The DA’s application raised the following issues for
determination by the full
court. First, whether s 27 of the DMA is
unconstitutional because it constitutes an impermissible delegation
of plenary legislative
power by Parliament. Second, whether the
aforesaid provision is unconstitutional because it permits the
creation of a
de facto
state of emergency without following
constitutional requirements for the declaration of a state of
emergency. Third, whether the
same provision is unconstitutional
because it fails to require the National Assembly to exercise its
oversight role required by
ss 42(3) and 55(2) of the Constitution. In
the event of a finding of unconstitutionality on any of the three
issues raised, the
fourth issue arising would be the determination of
a just and equitable remedy. In this Court, the DA persisted with the
same issues.
[8]
The salient submissions of the DA
Broadly
stated, the DA contended that the finding of the majority judgment
was erroneous in a number of respects. T
he DA
contended that the fact that individual exercises of subordinate
legislative power can be challenged under ordinary administrative-law
principles cannot mean that parliament’s delegation of that
power is necessarily permissible. If this were so, every delegation
would be permissible, because every exercise of subordinate
legislation is susceptible to legal challenge.
[9]
The DA contended that it is not only the responsibility of civilians
to ensure that
public acts are lawful – by taking the executive
to court every time it acts unlawfully. Relying on
Dawood
v Minister of Home Affairs; Shalabi v Minister of Home Affairs;
Thomas v Minister of Home Affairs
,
[8]
the
DA contended that Parliament also has a responsibility to ensure that
the powers it delegates are framed so as to minimise the
chances of
the exercise of those powers infringing constitutional rights. On
this score, it contended that the powers conferred
on the Minister in
terms of s 27 of the DMA are untrammelled and therefore constitute a
delegation of plenary legislative powers
to the Minister. The DA
argued that the fact that the
exercise
of a discretionary power may subsequently be successfully challenged
on administrative grounds, does not relieve the legislature
of its
constitutional obligation to promote, protect and fulfil the rights
entrenched in the Bill of Rights.
[10]
Furthermore, the DA contended that the majority judgment failed to
consider that s 27 of the
DMA permits the Minister to make
contentious decisions without the democratic input of parliament. The
DA contended that the respondents’
detailed explanation
regarding how parliamentary processes worked did not demonstrate that
the Minister was or is sufficiently
accountable to Parliament in
relation to the passing of any of the Covid-19 regulations. It
asserted that the respondents’
allusion to the consultations
and discussions by the Executive and the relevant Cabinet member with
the leaders of the opposition
parties and various members of the
portfolio committees in parliament could not help them resolve the
fundamental problem that
none of these consultations and engagements
are required by the DMA. The DA further contended that given the
breath of the powers
conferred on the Minister, it was
constitutionally required that the DMA ensure that the National
Assembly has the power, by resolution,
to disapprove and undo the
regulations enacted by the Minister. The DA contended that without
such a power, proper parliamentary
oversight is not assured.
[11]
The DA further asserted that its case never was that, as a matter of
fact, Parliament was completely
supine during the pandemic. Rather
its case was that s 27(2) of the DMA gives the Minister more power
than the Constitution permits
because it amounts to an impermissible
delegation of power and in effect an abdication of Parliament’s
oversight role, and
because it also permitted a simulated state of
emergency.
The
salient submissions of the respondents
[12]
The essence of the respondents’ submissions in respect of the
contention that the state
of disaster is akin to a state of emergency
is set out hereunder. The respondents submitted that states of
emergency and states
of disaster are fundamentally different legal
animals. They asserted that a state of emergency is limited to the
direst of circumstances.
Thus, it may only be declared when the “life
of the nation” is under threat. Additionally, it must be
necessary to
restore “peace and order”. Unless these
requirements are met, the declaration of a state of emergency would
be unlawful.
According to the respondents, states of disaster, on the
other hand, cover a wide range of different circumstances. This, they
argued, is apparent from the definition of a disaster. While a
disaster may take many forms, and may threaten lives and the
well-being
of communities, it does not involve a threat to the life
of the nation, nor does it disrupt security, peace and order.
[13]
The respondents countered the DA's contention that s 27 of the DMA
permits the creation of a
de facto
state of emergency without
following the constitutional requirements for the declaration of a
state of emergency. They contended
that t
he very
purpose of a state of emergency is to permit a suspension of the
normal constitutional order, which is not the case in respect
of the
state of disaster. The suspension or derogation of rights does
not simply mean the limitation of rights. Under
a state of
emergency, the Constitution actually permits all rights to be
suspended, save for the few fundamental rights set out
in the Table
of Non-Derogable Rights, which may not be derogated. In other
words, absent the safeguards in s 37, an individual
could not go to
court to pursue the protection of her fundamental rights. Under
s 37(3), courts still retain the power to
determine the validity of
the declaration of the state of emergency itself, or any legislation
enacted thereunder.
[14]
As regards parliamentary supervision, the respondents
asserted
that the Constitution does not require the National Assembly to
include specific mechanisms into individual pieces of legislation,
for example a parliamentary veto or power to overturn any decision
taken by the executive in the lawful exercise of its powers.
The
applicable legislative framework
[15]
It is settled law that Parliament has the power to delegate the power
to make regulations in
certain circumstances. A number of factors are
taken into account when a court determines whether the legislature
may validly delegate
its powers to a member of the executive. These
include the constitutional provision in question, the power that
provision confers
on the legislature, the nature and degree of the
purported delegation, the subject matter to which it relates and,
perhaps most
importantly, the impact of the delegation on the
fundamental principles on which the Constitution is based.
In
re: Constitutionality of the Mpumalanga Petitions Bill, 2000
,
[9]
the Constitutional Court stated as follows:
‘
A
legislature has the power to delegate the power to make regulations
to functionaries when such regulations are necessary to supplement
the primary legislation. Ordinarily the functionary will be the
President or the Premier or the member of the executive responsible
for the implementation of the law. ... The factors relevant to a
consideration of whether the delegation of a law-making power
is
appropriate are many. They include the nature and ambit of the
delegation, the identity of the person or institution to
whom the
power is delegated, and the subject matter of the delegated
power.’
[10]
[16]
In
Affordable
Medicines Trust v Minister of Health
,
[11]
the Constitutional Court held that, although Parliament was permitted
to confer a discretion on those to whom it had validly delegated
one
of its powers, this discretion may not be so broad or vague that the
executive authority was unable to determine the nature
and scope of
the powers conferred. In those cases in which the legislature has
delegated broad discretionary powers to the executive,
the courts
will take into account, not only the factors set out above, but also
the extent to which the legislature has provided
clear criteria for
the exercise of the discretionary power in question. If the
legislature has provided clear criteria, the courts
are more likely
to find that the delegation is valid and vice versa.
[12]
[17]
In
Justice
Alliance v President
,
[13]
the Constitutional Court acknowledged that the primary reason for
delegation is to ensure that the legislature is not overwhelmed
by
the need to determine minor regulatory details. It reiterated the
distinction made in
Executive
Council of the Western Cape Legislature and Others v President of the
Republic of South Africa and Others
,
[14]
between delegation to make subordinate legislation within the
framework of an empowering statute and assigning plenary legislative
powers to another body. In the latter case, the Constitutional Court
recognised that circumstances short of war or states of emergency
could warrant that Parliament authorise urgent action to be taken out
of necessity.
[15]
The power
and duty of the executive to respond to calamitous events is
therefore manifestly consistent with the principles and
factors
articulated by the Constitutional Court.
[18]
In
Dawood
[16]
the Constitutional Court held that, where the exercise of a broad
discretionary power could infringe the bill of rights, it was
ordinarily not sufficient for the legislature to simply state that
the power must be read in a manner that was consistent with
the
Constitution. This was because such an approach would not promote the
spirit, purport and objects of the bill of rights. Instead,
the
legislature had to provide clear criteria for the exercise of that
discretionary power so that the bill of rights could take
root in the
daily practices of government. That said, the finding of the majority
that
Dawood
is distinguishable from
the facts of this case in that in
Dawood
,
officials were given discretionary powers without any express
constraints cannot be faulted.
[19]
In this matter, there are circumscribed circumstances under which the
Minister may exercise her
discretion to make regulations. In
Smit
v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services
,
[17]
the Constitutional Court explained the term “plenary
legislative power” thus:
‘
Plenary
power is the authority to pass, amend or repeal an Act of Parliament.
Rabie and Erasmus define plenary legislative power
as follows:
“Plenary means of full scope or extent; complete or absolute in
force or effect. Plenary legislative power, in
the full sense of the
phrase would be the power enjoyed by Parliament”.’
The
relevant provisions of the DMA
[20]
It is trite that a provision of a statute should
not be interpreted in isolation but must be considered in the context
of the whole
Act.
The long title of the DMA states that it is
intended to provide for an integrated and co-ordinated disaster
management policy that
focuses on preventing or reducing the risk of
disasters, mitigating the severity of disasters, emergency
preparedness, rapid and
effective response to disasters and
post-disaster recovery and rehabilitation; the establishment and
functioning of national, provincial
and municipal disaster management
centres; disaster management volunteers; and matters incidental
thereto.
[21]
Section 1 of the DMA defines ‘national disaster’ as a
disaster classified as a national
disaster in terms of section
23.
In
terms of s 3, the DMA is administered by a Minister designated by the
President. In terms of s 4, the Minister is the chairperson
of the
Intergovernmental Committee. This Committee ‘must’ give
effect to the principles of co-operative government
as laid down in
chapter 3 of the DMA. This Committee is also accountable and must
report to Cabinet on the co-ordination of disaster
and must advise
and make recommendations to Cabinet on issues relating to disaster
management. It is also tasked with establishing
a national framework
for disaster management aimed at ensuring an integrated and uniform
approach to disaster management in the
Republic by all spheres of
government,
[18]
organs of
state, statutory functionaries, non-governmental institutions
involved in disaster management, the private sector, communities
and
individuals.
[22]
T
he
objective of a
National
Disaster Management Centre (National Centre), as set out in s 9 of
the DMA, is to promote an integrated and co-ordinated
system of
disaster management, with special emphasis on prevention and
mitigation by national, provincial and municipal organs
of state,
statutory functionaries, other role-players involved in disaster
management and communities.
[19]
The
National Centre exercises advisory and consultative powers under ss
15 and 22 of the DMA. It can publish guidelines and recommendations
in the national Government Gazette or a provincial gazette.
In
terms of s 15(1)
(f),
the
National Centre must make recommendations to any relevant organ of
state or statutory function on whether a national state of
disaster
should be declared in terms of s 27.
[23]
Consistent
with the stated purpose of the DMA, s 23(1) vests the National Centre
with the discretion to determine the magnitude
and severity of the
disaster and determine whether it qualifies as a local, provincial or
national disaster. Further, it
empowers
t
he
National Centre to reclassify a disaster at any time after
consultation with the relevant disaster management centres, if the
magnitude and severity or potential magnitude and severity of the
disaster is greater or lesser than the initial assessment
.
As such, the provisions of s 15(1)
(f)
and
s 23(1) serve as a precondition for the Minister’s declaration
of national disaster that expert institutions must determine
whether
a disastrous event (or the threat of such event) should be regarded
as a disaster under the Act.
[20]
In this matter, too, the Minister’s declaration of a state of
disaster was preceded by a government notice
[21]
issued by
the
head of the National Centre in terms of s 23(1)
(b)
of
the DMA, in terms of which he classified the Covid-19 pandemic as a
national disaster.
[24]
Section 26 of the DMA provides as follows:
‘
26.
(1) The national executive is primarily responsible for the
co-ordination and management of national disasters irrespective
of
whether a national state of disaster has been declared in terms of
section 27.
(2)
The national executive must deal with a national disaster-
(a)
in terms of existing legislation and contingency arrangements. if a
national state of disaster has not been declared in terms
of section
27(1); or
(b)
in terms of existing legislation and contingency arrangements as
augmented by regulations or directions made or issued in terms
of
section 27(2), if a national state of disaster has been declared.
(3)
This section does not preclude a provincial or municipal organ of
state from providing assistance to the national executive
to deal
with a national disaster and its consequences, and the national
executive, in exercising its primary responsibility, must
act in
close co-operation with the other spheres of government.’
[25]
Section 27 of the DMA provides as follows:
‘
27.
Declaration of national state of disaster.
(1)
In the event of a national disaster,
the Minister may, by notice in the
Gazette
, declare a national
state of disaster if—
(a)
existing legislation and contingency arrangements do not adequately
provide for the national
executive to deal effectively with the
disaster; or
(b)
other special circumstances warrant the declaration of a national
state of disaster.
(2)
If a national state of disaster has
been declared in terms of subsection (1), the Minister
may, subject
to subsection (3), and after consulting the responsible Cabinet
member, make regulations or issue directions or authorise
the issue
of directions concerning—
(a)
the release of any available resources of the national government,
including stores,
equipment, vehicles and facilities;
(b)
the release of personnel of a national organ of state for the
rendering of emergency
services;
(c)
the implementation of all or any of the provisions of a national
disaster management
plan that are applicable in the circumstances;
(d)
the evacuation to temporary shelters of all or part of the population
from the disaster-stricken
or threatened area if such action is
necessary for the preservation of life;
(e)
the regulation of traffic to, from or within the disaster-stricken or
threatened area;
(f)
the regulation of the movement of persons and goods to, from or
within the disaster-stricken
or threatened area;
(g)
the control and occupancy of premises in the disaster-stricken or
threatened area;
(h)
the provision, control or use of temporary emergency accommodation;
(i)
the suspension or limiting of the sale, dispensing or transportation
of alcoholic
beverages in the disaster-stricken or threatened area;
(j)
the maintenance or installation of temporary lines of communication
to, from or
within the disaster area;
(k)
the dissemination of information required for dealing with the
disaster;
(l)
emergency procurement procedures;
(m)
the facilitation of response and post-disaster recovery and
rehabilitation;
(n)
other steps that may be necessary to prevent an escalation of the
disaster, or to alleviate,
contain and minimise the effects of the
disaster; or
(o)
steps to facilitate international assistance.
(3)
The powers referred to in subsection (2) may be exercised only to the
extent that
this is necessary for the purpose of—
(a)
assisting and protecting the public;
(b)
providing relief to the public;
(c)
protecting property;
(d)
preventing or combating disruption; or
(e)
dealing with the destructive and other effects of the disaster.
(4)
Regulations made in terms of
subsection (2) may include regulations prescribing penalties
for any
contravention of the regulations.
(5)
A national state of disaster that has
been declared in terms of subsection (1)—
(a)
lapses three months after it has been declared;
(b)
may be terminated by the Minister by notice in the Gazette before it
lapses in terms
of paragraph
(a)
; and
(c)
may be extended by the Minister by notice in the Gazette for one
month at a time before
it lapses in terms of paragraph
(a)
or
the existing extension is due to expire.’
[26]
Section 59 provides as follows:
‘
59.
(1) The Minister may make regulations not inconsistent with this Act-
(a)
concerning any matter that- (i) may or must be prescribed in terms of
a provision of this Act; or (ii) is necessary to prescribe
for the
effective carrying out of the objects of this Act; and
(b)
providing for the payment, out of moneys appropriated by Parliament
for this purpose, of compensation to any person, or the
dependants of
any person, whose death, bodily injury or disablement results from
any event occurring in the course of the performance
of any function
entrusted to such person in terms of this Act.
.
. .
(3)
The Minister may, in terms of subsection (1), prescribe a penalty of
imprisonment for a period not exceeding six months or a
fine for any
contravention of, or failure to comply with, a regulation.
(4)
Any regulations made by the Minister in terms of subsection (1) must
be referred to the National Council of Provinces for purposes
of
section 146(6) of the Constitution.’
[27]
It is clear that
the
DMA creates and empowers a range of administrative bodies and
authorises a variety of actions during the currency of a state
of
disaster.
[22]
T
he
Minister, in her capacity as the Chairperson of the Intergovernmental
Committee, plays a key role in those administrative bodies.
Notably,
s 26(3) enjoins the cabinet, in the exercise of its primary
responsibility, to act in close co-operation with the other
spheres
of government.
[23]
It
stipulates that the national executive in the national sphere of
government (ie the President and his cabinet), is ‘primarily
responsible for the co-ordination and management of national
disasters regardless of whether a national state of disaster has been
declared in terms of s 27’.
[24]
At the risk of stating the obvious, this means that even in
circumstances where a state of disaster has not been declared,
cabinet
still carries the primary responsibility for the
co-ordination and management of the state of disaster.
[28]
Section
27(1) empowers the Minister to declare a national state of disaster
by notice in the Gazette if existing legislation and
contingency
arrangements do not ‘adequately’ provide for the national
executive to deal effectively with the disaster.
Section 27(2)
stipulates that
once
the state of disaster has been declared, the
Minister
is
required to consult with the ‘responsible Cabinet member’
before making regulations that bear on that minister’s
portfolio. So, for instance, before making a regulation concerning
emergency procurement procedures, he or she must consult with
the
Minister of Finance.
[25]
In this matter, the Minister averred that she also consulted
frequently with the Minister of Health. This Court, in
Esau
,
aptly said the following:
‘
In
other words, even in times of national crisis, as this undoubtedly
is, the executive has no free hand to act as it pleases, and
all of
the measures it adopts in order to meet the exigencies that the
nation faces must be rooted in law and comply with the
Constitution. The rule of law, a founding value of our
Constitution, applies in times of crisis as much as it does in
more stable times. And the courts, in the words of Van den Heever JA
in
R
v Pretoria Timber Co (Pty) Ltd and Another
should
not, even when the legislature has conferred “vast powers”
to make subordinate legislation on the executive,
“be astute to
divest themselves of their judicial powers and duties, namely to
serve as buttresses between the Executive
and the subjects”.’
[26]
[29]
In
British American Tobacco
this Court had occasion to
interpret the provisions of s 27(2)
(n)
of the DMA. It said:
‘
The
jurisdictional requirements for the exercise of the power under
s 27(2)
(n)
are
these. There must be a national state of disaster. The Minister must
consult the responsible Cabinet member. The steps taken
to prevent an
escalation of a disaster, or to alleviate, contain and minimise its
effects, must be necessary. Whether these steps
are necessary turns
on the objectively ascertained facts, and not on the subjective
beliefs of the Minister. The power in s 27(2)
(n)
,
as in the case of
all
the powers specified in s 27(2
), must
‘be exercised only to the extent that this is necessary’
for the purposes specified in s 27(3). Moreover,
the above
interpretation is sensible.’
[27]
(Own emphasis.).
[30]
It is clear from the passage quoted in the preceding paragraph that
this Court did not consider
that provision in isolation but in the
context of the whole Act. The findings made by that court in its
interpretive exercise in
relation to that provision are therefore
binding on this Court on the basis of the doctrine of
stare
decisis
.
Despite the fact that this Court emphasised that all the powers
specified in s 27(2), must be exercised only to the extent
that
this is necessary for the stated purposes of the Act and not on the
subjective beliefs of the Minister,
[28]
the DA in this matter, without arguing that this finding should not
be followed because it is clearly wrong, submitted that the
impugned
regulations granted ministers ‘nearly unfettered regulatory
powers that the catch-all section 27(2) granted the
CoGTA Minister’.
That submission clearly has no merit.
[31]
The crisp question is whether, given the authorities cited
above and the various provisions of the DMA, s 27 of the DMA amounts
to plenary delegation of powers. It is to that aspect that I now
turn.
[32]
It is clear from the aforesaid provisions that once the state of
disaster has been declared in
terms of s 27(1) of the DMA, the
Minister is, during the subsistence of the state of disaster, obliged
to consult with members
of Cabinet for the relevant portfolio prior
to making regulations, issuing directions, or authorising the issuing
of directions.
[29]
[33]
In
Esau
,
[30]
this
Court dealt with
an
appeal
concerning
the constitutional validity of certain decisions taken by members of
the executive and regulations made by the Minister
in order to deal
with the Covid-19 pandemic. The application brought by the appellants
in the lower court raised several issues,
including whether the
Disaster Regulations of 29 April 2020 were consistent with ss 26 and
27 of the DMA, and whether certain of
the regulations that had been
published by the Minister were unreasonable and unjustifiable
infringements of fundamental rights
and were invalid on that account.
This Court then said:
‘
Section
27(2)
(n)
is
a general empowerment. It allows for regulation-making for purposes
of ‘other steps that may be necessary to prevent an
escalation
of the disaster, or to alleviate, contain and minimise the effects of
the disaster.
Two
further express curbs are placed on the regulation-making powers of
the designated minister. First, in terms of
s
27(2)
,
he or she is required to consult with the “responsible Cabinet
member” before making regulations that bear on that
minister’s
portfolio. So, for instance, before making a regulation concerning
emergency procurement procedures, he or she
must consult with the
Minister of Finance. Secondly, in terms of
s
27(3)
,
his or her regulation-making power may only be exercised to the
extent necessary to achieve certain stated purposes. There are
five
permissible purposes. They are: “
(a)
assisting
and protecting the public;
(b)
providing
relief to the public;
(c)
protecting
property;
(d)
preventing
or combating disruption; or
(e)
dealing
with the destructive and other effects of the disaster.” ’
[31]
[34]
It is of significance that the national executive is primarily
responsible for the co-ordination
and management of national
disasters irrespective of whether a national state of disaster has
been declared in terms of s 27. The
Minister is designated by the
President. In terms of s 4 of the DMA, it is the President who
establishes the intergovernmental
committee on disaster management.
In terms of s 27(2), t
he Minister must consult the
responsible cabinet member before making regulations or issuing
directions that have an impact on that
Minister’s portfolio. In
Esau
, this
Court
summarised the President’s exercise of executive
authority as follows:
‘
In
terms of s 85(1) of the Constitution, executive authority is vested
in the President. Section 85(2) determines how that authority
is
exercised. It provides:
“
The
President exercises the executive authority, together with the other
members of the Cabinet, by-
(a)
implementing
national legislation except where the Constitution or an Act of
Parliament provides otherwise;
(b)
developing
and implementing national policy;
(c)
co-ordinating
the functions of state departments and administrations;
(d)
preparing
and initiating legislation; and
(e)
performing
any other executive function provided for in the Constitution or in
national legislation.”
In
terms of this section, the Constitutional Court held in
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South African Rugby
Football Union and Others
, the
exercise of executive authority ‘is a collaborative venture in
terms of which the President acts together with
the other members of
the Cabinet’. The consequences of this allocation of power in s
85(2) were spelt out in
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development v Chonco and
Others
. Ministers
act collectively with the President and they are all ‘collectively
and individually accountable to Parliament
under s 92(2) of the
Constitution’.
That
means that the entire collective is responsible for every decision,
whether or not particular individual members were party
to a
particular decision
.’
[32]
(Own emphasis.).
This passage provides the
broader context in which the Minister’s exercise of the powers
conferred by s 27(2) must be understood.
Given this context and the
structure of the DMA, including its provision for the involvement of
other spheres of government, it
appears that the Minister’s
discretion pertaining to the exercise of the powers envisaged in s 27
is not impermissibly wide,
considering all the constraints bearing on
the exercise of that power.
[35]
Significantly, in
British
American Tobacco
,
this Court held that all the
powers
specified in s 27(2),
must
be exercised only to the extent that this is necessary for the
purposes specified in s 27(3). As
to
whether these steps are necessary turns on the objectively
ascertained facts, and not on the subjective beliefs of the
Minister.
[33]
In the same
judgment, this Court
stated
as follows:
‘
Sections
27(2) and 27(3) do not assign to the Minister plenary legislative
power: it does not grant the Minister the power to pass,
amend or
repeal an Act of Parliament. What is more, ss 27(2) and 27(3) provide
a ‘clear and binding framework for the exercise
of the powers.
.
. .
At
the outset, the approach to a justification analysis under s 36 of
the Constitution in a time of national crisis such the COVID-19
pandemic, as stated in
Esau
, bears
repetition: “[T]he executive has no free hand to act as it
pleases, and all of the measures it adopts in order
to meet the
exigencies that the nation faces must be rooted in law and comply
with the Constitution.”’
[34]
[36]
It is now convenient to explain what bearing the doctrine of
stare
decisis
has
on the analysis and conclusion of this matter. This matter happens to
be one of several court challenges that were brought against
some of
the provisions of the DMA. It is necessary to preface this discussion
with a passage from two judgments dealing with the
doctrine of
stare
decisis
,
which is a doctrine that requires that courts ‘stand or abide
by cases already decided’. The first one is a judgment
of this
Court and the second, a judgment of the Constitutional Court. This
Court in
Patmar
Explorations (Pty) Ltd v Limpopo Development Tribunal
[35]
stated
as follows:
‘
The
basic principle is
stare
decisis
,
that is, the Court stands by its previous decisions, subject to an
exception where the earlier decision is held to be clearly
wrong. A
decision will be held to have been clearly wrong where it has been
arrived at on some fundamental departure from principle,
or a
manifest oversight or misunderstanding, that is, there has been
something in the nature of a palpable mistake. This Court
will only
depart from its previous decision if it is clear that the earlier
court erred or that the reasoning upon which the decision
rested was
clearly erroneous. The cases in support of these propositions are
legion. . . . The doctrine of
stare
decisis
is
one that is fundamental to the rule of law. The object of the
doctrine is to avoid uncertainty and confusion, to protect vested
rights and legitimate expectations as well as to uphold the dignity
of the court. It serves to lend certainty to the law.’
[36]
[37]
In
Ayres
and Another v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and
Another
,
[37]
the Constitutional Court said the following:
‘
As
this Court noted in
Camps
Bay Ratepayers’ and Residents’ Association
,
the doctrine of precedent is “not simply a matter of respect
for courts of higher authority. It is a manifestation of the
rule of
law itself, which in turn is a founding value of our Constitution”.
Similarly, in
Ruta
,
this Court held: “[R]espect for precedent, which requires
courts to follow the decisions of coordinate and higher courts,
lies
at the heart of judicial practice. This is because it is
intrinsically functional to the rule of law, which in turn is
foundational
to the Constitution. Why intrinsic? Because without
precedent, certainty, predictability and coherence would dissipate.
The courts
would operate without map or navigation, vulnerable to
whim and fancy. Law would not rule.”’
[38]
[38]
As
mentioned before, a
n
important context taken into account in both
Esau
and
British
American Tobacco
respectively
is that in terms of s 26 of the DMA, in instances where a state of
disaster has been declared, the National Executive
must
deal with the disaster in
terms of existing legislation and contingency arrangements
as
augmented
by the regulations or
directions made or issued in terms of s 27(2). The Minister’s
regulations remain subject to judicial
review by the courts.
[39]
[39]
The fact that the findings in
Esau
and
British American
Tobacco
, respectively, pertaining to the general architecture of
the DMA were made in the context of applying the s 36 limitation test
does not render these findings less apposite in the current context.
The DA made no submissions urging this Court to
find any of those findings to be clearly wrong. As mentioned earlier,
the full court
identified certain restraints which led it to conclude
that s 27 of the DMA does not delegate plenary legislative powers to
the
Minister because there are sufficient restraints which serve as
guidance regarding how she must exercise her delegated authority.
Esau
and
British American Tobacco
respectively,
made similar findings which are binding on this Court on the basis of
stare decisis
.
[40]
It bears reiterating that none of the parties urged us to
conclude that any of the findings previously made by this Court are
clearly
wrong. Having analysed the reasoning of this Court in
Esau
and
British American Tobacco
respectively, nothing persuades
us to conclude that any of those findings are wrong. Therefore, these
decisions are binding.
[41]
In determining whether s 27 amounts to an impermissible delegation of
powers, it will be helpful
to juxtapose the various provisions of the
DMA with the principles laid down in the Constitutional Court
authorities which have
been alluded to above. At the outset, it bears
reiterating the trite principle that s 27 must not be interpreted in
isolation but
in the context of the whole Act having regard to its
overarching purpose.
[40]
On the
basis of the 10 factors mentioned below, which include the six
factors enumerated by the majority judgment, there can be
no doubt
that s 27 does not confer overly broad delegated powers on the
Minister.
[42]
First, the general scheme of the DMA reveals a requirement for the
Minister to constantly engage
with several role-players in her
decision making. Clearly, the exercise of her powers is part of a
broader collaborative venture.
[41]
This
is one of the ways in which the Minister’s delegated
regulation-making authority is circumscribed. That being the case,
the general scheme of the DMA is such that the extent to which the
Minister’s discretion in relation to the power delegated
to her
may be exercised in terms of s 27(1) is sufficiently guided by other
provisions of the DMA itself.
[42]
In
that sense,
the
whole of the DMA provides a broad framework for the exercise of the
Minister’s powers.
[43]
[43]
Second, the Minister can only exercise her powers once the disaster
has been classified as a
national disaster by the head of the
National Centre. It is evident from s 23 that this
classification
is required for purposes of ensuring that the primary responsibility
for the coordination and management of the disaster
is bestowed on
the relevant sphere of government that would ultimately be
responsible for the coordination and management of the
disaster.
[44]
Third, the Minister may
declare
a national state of disaster by notice in the Gazette if ‘existing
legislation and contingency arrangements do not
adequately provide
for the national executive to deal effectively with the disaster’
or if there are other special circumstances
that warrant such
declaration.
[44]
The
Minister is thus not given carte blanche to whimsically declare a
state of disaster. Fourth, the DMA’s stated purpose
is to
implement urgent measures to address the disaster. The DMA therefore
expressly advocates for rapid and effective interventions.
Parliament’s slow procedures would clearly inhibit the
achievement of this goal.
[45]
[45]
Fifth, the Minister must consult a cabinet colleague before making
regulations or issuing directions
that have an impact on that
colleague’s portfolio.
[46]
Sixth
,
the declaration of a state of disaster permissible under s 27 is for
relatively short periods of time – three months.
[47]
[46]
Seventh, the extension of the declaration of disaster is for one
month at a time. A
sensible
interpretation of s 27(5) is that any extension of the national state
of disaster would be for the attainment of the same
stated purposes
of the DMA. Thus, the extension of the state of disaster would also
have to be ‘necessary’.
[48]
In similar vein, the
necessity to extend would also have to be objectively ascertainable
on facts. I therefore share the majority
of the full court’s
view that the power of extension of the national state of disaster is
by clear implication subject to
the same requirements as the original
declaration of the national state of disaster terms of section
27(1).
[47]
Eighth,
all
the powers specified in s 27(2),
namely
‘
(a)
assisting
and protecting the public;
(b)
providing
relief to the public;
(c)
protecting
property;
(d)
preventing
or combating disruption; or
(e)
dealing
with the destructive and other effects of the disaster,
[49]
must be exercised
only to the extent necessary for
the
stated
purposes
of
the Act and
not
on the subjective beliefs of the Minister.
[50]
Such powers must be
exercised ‘
for
the purposes specified in s 27(3)’. Thus, s 27(3) itself
provides a further limitation and layer of scrutiny and compliance
to
the exercise of her regulatory powers.
[51]
[48]
Ninth, s 59 of the DMA provides
that
the Minister may make regulations if it is necessary to prescribe for
the effective carrying out of the objects of the DMA.
These
include the integrated and coordinated disaster management policies
that are focused on reducing the risk of disasters and
mitigating
their severity. Notably, such regulations must not be inconsistent
with the provisions of the DMA
.
[52]
In
De
Beer v Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional
Affairs
,
[53]
the
court acknowledged this principle by stipulating that since the
lockdown regulations and directions were an exercise of public
power,
they could not go beyond the express provisions of the DMA.
[49]
Tenth,
ss
27(2)
and 27(3) do not assign to the Minister the power to pass, amend or
repeal an Act of Parliament.
[54]
On
the basis of these factors, I conclude that s 27 does not constitute
a delegation of plenary delegated powers.
[55]
[50]
It is necessary to consider next the argument that
s
27 is an impermissible delegation of legislative powers of ‘the
second type’, on the basis that there is no explicit
power
granted to the delegatee to amend or repeal an Act of Parliament
where the power is broad. The DA’s complaint on this
aspect is
that s 27(2) confers on the Minister the power to sub-delegate the
issuance of directives to unspecified persons. T
he
maxim
delegare
non potent delegare
,
on which the DA relies for its argument, does not constitute a
blanket ban on sub-delegation of powers. This is for the simple
reason that not every sub delegation is impacted by that maxim,
but only such delegations that are not, either expressly or
by
necessary implication, authorised by the delegated powers.
[56]
Whether or not
sub-delegation is impermissible turns upon the construction of the
empowering statute.
[57]
[51]
Notably, i
n
AAA
Investments (Propriety) Limited v The Micro Finance Regulatory
Council and Another
,
[58]
the Constitutional Court recognised that Ministers may of necessity
have to delegate their powers, which do not require the exercise
of a
political discretion, to officials in their respective
Departments.
[59]
Ministers may
therefore delegate certain limited functions to officials in their
respective Departments.
The
nature
and ambit of the purported delegation, the subject-matter to which it
relates, the degree of delegation, the control and
supervision
retained or exercisable by the delegator over the delegate are
included among the circumstances to be taken into account
when
considering whether a delegation is permissible.
[60]
The
Minister’s power to sub-delegate must therefore be seen in that
context.
[52]
Having
considered all the factors stated in the afore-stated authority and
the broader construct of the DMA, I am of the view that
the
Minister
may lawfully delegate powers which do not require the exercise of a
political discretion to officials. Furthermore, the
majority
judgment's conclusion that the construct of the DMA permits a
sub-delegation to Ministers who have knowledge about their
respective
portfolios and are therefore best suited to formulate policies and
strategies for their respective Departments in order
to mitigate the
risk and effects of a disaster’, cannot be faulted. This
is because the national executive remains
primarily responsible for
the co-ordination and management of national disasters even during a
national state of disaster.
[61]
[53]
Moreover, t
he
view that s 27 does not constitute a delegation of plenary powers is
fortified by the findings of the majority judgment of the
Constitutional Court in
Nu
Africa Duty Free Shops (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Finance and Others
;
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Ambassador Duty Free (Pty)
Ltd and Others
;
Minister
of Finance v Ambassador Duty Free (Pty) Ltd and Others
.
[62]
This
matter concerned amendments effected by the Minister of Finance to
Schedules 4 and 6 of the Customs Act and to Schedule 1 of
the VAT
Act. The amendments introduced a quota system to operate on a
six-monthly cycle which sought to address the unauthorized
resale of
duty-free alcohol and tobacco products by diplomats and imposed VAT
liability on importers, including duty-free retailers,
in certain
situations. The Minister published these amendments to Schedules 4
and 6 of the Customs Act and to Schedule 1 of the
VAT Act relying on
the powers conferred on him in terms of ss 75(15)
(a)
(i)(bb)
of the Customs Act and 74(3)(a) of the VAT Act ( the impugned
amendments). These amendments were set to take effect on August
1,
2021.
[54]
In terms of s 120, the Commissioner of the South African Revenue
Service (SARS) was authorized
to make rules regarding the payment of
duties and other charges. To provide guidance, SARS had published
rules promulgated in terms
of section 120 of the Customs Act.
Aggrieved by the impugned amendments to the Schedules as well as the
rules, the retailers approached
the high court seeking to review and
set aside the impugned amendments.
Nu
Africa
then filed an application to
intervene, contending that certain provisions in the Customs Act and
the VAT Act were constitutionally
invalid to the extent that they
conferred on the Minister plenary legislative powers. A further
complaint was that
the
delegation by the Minister to the Department of International
Relations and Cooperation (DIRCO) authorising the amendment of
the
quotas was an unlawful delegation of authority because the delegation
was to an unspecified functionary at DIRCO.
The
high court held that the Act did not empower the Minister to create
the Schedules. Consequently, it declared certain sections
of the
Customs Act and VAT Act unconstitutional and invalid.
[55]
The Commissioner of SARS countered Nu Africa's contentions,
emphasizing the substance of delegated
powers rather than their
formal structure.
The
Nu
Africa
judgment,
being the most recent Constitutional Court judgment on the issue of
delegation of legislative powers, puts to bed any
doubts that may
have been harboured in relation to the scope of the delegation of the
powers conferred by s 27 to the Minister.
In endorsing parliament’s
delegation of powers to the Minister of Finance, the majority
judgment of the Constitutional Court
held that when determining
whether
a delegation constitutes an affront to the Constitution, ‘the
enquiry should be context-specific, and consideration
should be given
to the scope of the delegation, the subject matter to which it
relates, the degree of delegation and the sufficiency
of the
constraints on the exercise of the discretionary powers conferred by
the section’.
[63]
It
distinguished
Executive
Council,
pointing
out that in that matter, it was the plenary nature of the delegated
power that pointed to unconstitutionality. It held
that the answer
turned on what the relevant factors yielded based on the
circumstances of each delegation. Furthermore, the majority
found the
Minister’s
delegation
of the authority, to increase or decrease the quota of alcohol, to
the Department of International Relations and Cooperation
to be
justifiable.
[56]
Nu
Africa
’
s
injunctions
about the consideration of the context, the nature and scope of the
delegation, the subject matter to which it relates
and the
sufficiency of the constraints are aspects that were traversed and
determined in favour of the Minister by this Court in
Esau
and
British
American Tobacco
,
respectively, which have already been discussed earlier in this
judgment. As was the case in
British
American Tobacco
.
In
Nu
Africa
too,
the court took into account that the
Minister
did not have carte blanche to amend the legislation.
[64]
[57]
It
has already been found that the general architecture of the DMA
encourages co operative governance in that s 26(3) of the
DMA
enjoins the Minister to act in collaboration with other spheres of
government in devising and implementing a rapid and effective
response to disasters. Moreover, in
British
American Tobacco
,
this Court found that ss 27(2) and 27(3) provide
a
‘clear and binding framework for the exercise of the Minister’s
powers’.
[65]
In
Nu
Africa
,
the majority not only found the promotion of co-operative governance
to be a relevant factor, but also found that such delegation
‘actually enhances efficient governance, both of which are
constitutional imperatives’.
[66]
Furthermore, it observed as follows:
‘
The
Executive is in a much better position than Parliament to appreciate
the day- to-day needs and demands of administering
the matters
contained within the Schedules to the Customs and the VAT Act.
Parliament’s delegation promotes co- operative
governance and actually enhances efficient governance, both of which
are constitutional imperatives. Parliament made the
conscious
choice that the prevailing circumstances dictated that the law-making
work in the form of amending the Schedules be best
left to the
expertise and proximity of the Executive. In the circumstances,
I see nothing constitutionally impermissible
with that. This is
especially so since Parliament retains sufficient oversight.’
[67]
[58]
For all the reasons set out above, the DA’s contention that
s 27 amounts to an impermissible
delegation of plenary powers
falls to be rejected.
Once the findings of this
Court in
Esau
and
in
British American Tobacco
as discussed above, are accepted to be correct, as
they must, it becomes incongruous to simultaneously hold that s 27 is
akin to
a state of emergency, an aspect to be considered next.
Does
s 27 of the DMA bring about a
de facto
state of emergency?
[59]
It is imperative to understand the distinction between a state of
disaster and a state of emergency.
The DA asserted that the DMA
permits the creation of a
situation akin to a state of emergency insofar as it fails to provide
for the parliamentary oversight
role that s 37 of the Constitution
has ordained for Parliament in an actual state of emergency.
The
DA emphasised that its complaint is not that a national state of
disaster is the same concept in law as a state of emergency
under the
Constitution; it acknowledged that the two have different threshold
requirements. It however contended that s 27 of the
DMA permits a
similar outcome to a state of emergency without the constitutional
safeguards attendant on a state of emergency.
[60]
The DA further asserted that s 27 of the DMA circumvents the
strictures of s 37 of the Constitution
because it permits the
Minister to place the country under a state of emergency without
being subjected to procedures and safeguards
embodied in s 37. It is
apposite to deal first with a misconception: t
he
DA’s contention that s 27 of the DMA permits a
de
facto
state of emergency because that
provision was used by the National Executive to ‘suspend the
South African constitutional
order’ is plainly misconceived.
This is because the state of emergency itself does not permit a
blanket suspension of the
constitutional order. On the contrary, s
37(3) of the Constitution empowers the court to decide on the
validity of any legislation
enacted or action taken in consequence of
a state of emergency.
[61]
Moreover, it is clear from the provisions of ss 37(4)
[68]
and 37(5)
[69]
that only a
limited derogation from the fundamental rights guaranteed by the
Constitution is permissible, non derogable rights
mentioned in
that provision remain protected.
Once
this fundamental distinction between a state of emergency and a state
of disaster is understood, the complaint that the state
of disaster
is akin to a state of emergency but without the constitutional
safeguards of s 37 loses its force.
[70]
Nothing
in the DMA suggests that it permits a deviation from the normal
constitutional order. The safeguards enunciated in
s 37
therefore had to be seen against the backdrop of an appreciation that
the provision in question
legitimises
a
drastic reduction in constitutional protections in the first
place.
[71]
The same simply
cannot be said for states of disaster as regulated under the DMA.
[62]
It was held in
Esau
that
t
he
DMA applies when a disaster is not serious enough to justify the
declaration of a state of emergency, but serious enough that
the
ordinary law cannot deal with it.
[72]
Sight
must not be lost of the fact that a limitation of rights is permitted
in the ordinary course, even in the absence of a declaration
of a
state of disaster, provided the limitation complies with s 36 of the
Constitution. Therefore, the limitation of certain
fundamental
rights during a state of disaster cannot, without more, be equated
with the creation of a state of emergency. In the
ordinary course,
(ie
where neither the state of emergency nor the state of disaster has
been declared), any and all limitations on fundamental rights
are
capable of constitutional challenge. During a state of disaster, that
competence of the courts to rule on the validity of regulations
remains intact. Any limitation of fundamental rights arising from the
regulations that have been passed may be challenged in court
(and in
some cases were so challenged).
[73]
In other words, the state of disaster does not upset the status quo
insofar as the normal constitutional order is concerned. Where
no
such deviation is permitted, it is not necessary for the DMA to
include
a specific provision preserving the competence of courts to rule on
the validity of regulations.
[74]
[63]
However, the Constitution permits all rights under a state of
emergency, to be suspended, save
for the prescripts in the Table of
Non-Derogable Rights. In other words, absent the safeguards in
s 37(3), during a state
of emergency an individual would not be
entitled to approach the court
for purposes of testing whether
the limitation of their rights is justifiable in terms of s 36 of the
Constitution.
[64]
The
high-water mark of the DA’s contention on this aspect is that
the safeguard of extending the state of emergency only with
the
approval of Parliament, as set out in s 37(2) of the
Constitution is absent in the DMA. Section 27(5)
(c)
of the
DMA deals with extensions of a state of disaster. It provides that a
national disaster may be extended by the Minister for
one month at a
time
before
it lapses or before the existing extension expires. A proper
interpretive exercise demands that this provision be interpreted
within the broader context of the DMA. That being the case, a
sensible interpretation of
s 27(5)
(c)
is that any extension of
the national state of disaster must be for the attainment of the same
stated purposes of the DMA. In
Esau
,
[75]
this Court concluded that the Minister may declare a state of
disaster under s 27(1) ‘only if’ one of two preconditions
is present, namely
if
‘existing legislation and contingency arrangements do not
adequately provide for the national executive to deal effectively
with the disaster’; or if ‘other special circumstances
warrant the declaration of a national state of disaster’.
[65]
In
British
American Tobacco
,
this Court stated that s 27(2)
(n)
of
the DMA specifically authorises the Minister to make regulations or
issue directions concerning ‘other steps that may be
necessary
to prevent an escalation of the disaster, or to alleviate, contain
and minimise the effects of the disaster’.
[76]
[66]
This Court went on to conclude that the power in s 27(2)
(n)
,
as in the case of all the powers specified in s 27(2),
must
‘be exercised only to the extent that this is necessary’
for the purposes specified in s 27(3). Thus, it follows
logically
that
the
extension of the state of national disaster must also be subjected to
the same rigours, ie the extension must be ‘necessary’.
[77]
In similar vein, the necessity to extend would also have to be
objectively ascertainable on facts.
[78]
It therefore goes without saying that the majority judgment’s
view that the power of extension of the national state of disaster
is
by clear implication subject to the same requirements as the original
declaration of the national state of disaster terms of
s 27(1).
Consequently,
the
fact that the DMA does not have a provision matching s 37(3) of the
Constitution, which expressly preserves the competence of
the courts
to decide on the validity of a declaration of a state of emergency or
its extension, does not render it unconstitutional.
For all the
reasons mentioned above, the full court in
Freedom
Front Plus
[79]
correctly
rejected the argument that s 27 of the DMA
is
unconstitutional
to the extent that it permits the imposition of a state of disaster
without the safeguards imposed for a declaration
of a state of
emergency
.
Does
s 27 of the DMA permit the executive branch of the state to exercise
powers without parliamentary oversight?
[67]
It is apposite to commence a discussion of this leg of the DA’s
argument by quoting a passage
from a decision of the Constitutional
Court as to how it perceived the constitutional imperative of
parliamentary supervision.
In
United
Democratic Movement v Speaker of the National Assembly and
Others
,
[80]
the Constitutional Court stated as follows:
‘
Members
of Parliament have to ensure that the will or interests of the people
find expression through what the State and its organs
do. This
is so because Parliament “is elected to represent the people
and to ensure government by the people under
the Constitution”.
This it seeks to achieve by, among other things, passing legislation
to facilitate quality service delivery
to the people, appropriating
budgets for discharging constitutional obligations
and
holding the Executive and organs of State accountable for the
execution of their constitutional responsibilities.
’
[81]
[68]
The DA contends that the DMA does not make provision for effective
oversight thereby violating
the doctrine of the separation of powers.
The DA asserted that the DMA fails to require the National Assembly
to exercise the oversight
role required by s 42(3) and 55(2) of the
Constitution. It argued that holding the Executive accountable should
not be at the benevolence
of a particular parliament. Rather that
parliament, as an institution, must be legislatively enjoined to do
so by the DMA. First
of all, it must be borne in mind that there is
nothing in the DMA precluding parliament from executing its oversight
function.
As will be demonstrated, the DA’s contentions pay
little or no regard to the role played by parliamentary committees in
which
the DA is represented.
[69]
In countering the DA’s contentions, Parliament averred that it
had, during the Covid-19
pandemic, exercised parliamentary oversight
through the National Assembly’s various Committees, as well as
various select
Committees of the National Council of Provinces. Part
10 of Chapter 12 of the National Assembly Rules deals with Portfolio
Committees.
These may be established by the Speaker of Parliament
acting with the concurrence of the Rules Committee. Each Portfolio
Committee
consists of a prescribed number of members of Parliament
and performs several functions. Parliament also asserted that it
adopted
specific rules to facilitate virtual sittings of the National
Assembly as well as the National Council of Provinces. It set out
in
detail how members of the National Executive were called to account
to parliament. The National Executive asserted that the
Constitution,
parliament’s Oversight and Accountability Model and the rules
of parliament enabled parliament to exercise
its constitutional
mandate to the full extent required by the Constitution. That
evidence was not controverted. It is clear that
all the different
mechanisms of parliamentary oversight were not employed out of
benevolence but out of compliance with parliament’s
own rules
and Oversight and Accountability Model.
[70]
During the exchange with the bench counsel for the DA was asked
whether the role played by the
Portfolio Committee during the state
of disaster, alluded to in the respondents’ papers, did not
suffice as scrutiny of executive
action. Counsel, correctly, in my
view, submitted that this case is not about what the executive
authority did or did not do during
the state of disaster pertaining
to Covid-19 pandemic. It is rather about what the DMA obliges
Parliament to hold the National
Executive regarding the proclamation
of a state of disaster, and stipulating how it is to be managed, once
proclaimed. This, the
DA submitted, is where the DMA falls short
because it does not oblige Parliament to put adequate measures in
place for its supervision
of the National Executive. In the context
of the facts of this case, this proposition is plainly unsustainable.
[71]
T
he mere fact that
the DMA does not, unlike the State of Emergency Act 64 of 1997
(SOEA), expressly provide for parliamentary supervision,
does not
mean that Parliament’s supervision is ousted. This is because
parliamentary oversight is constitutionally ordained
in ss 42(3) and
55(2)
(b)
of
the Constitution, both of which expressly provide for Parliament’s
supervisory role. Section 42(3) provides:
‘
The
National Assembly is elected to represent the people and to ensure
government by the people under the Constitution
.
It does this by choosing the President, by providing a national forum
for public consideration of issues, by passing legislation
and by
scrutinizing and overseeing executive action.’
[72]
The requirement for the National Assembly to scrutinise and oversee
executive action is self-evident.
Section
55(2)
(b)
provides:
‘
The
National Assembly must provide for mechanisms –
(a)
to ensure that all executive organs of state in the national sphere
of government are accountable to it; and
(b)
to
maintain oversight of –
(i)
the exercise of national executive authority, including the
implementation of legislation;
...’
The
question is whether these mechanisms exist. More about this later.
[73]
In
addition to the above, there are several provisions of the
Constitution which serve to ensure that the executive is held
accountable.
Section 56
provides:
‘
The
National Assembly or any of its Committees may –
(a)
summon
any person to appear before it to give evidence on oath or
affirmation, or to produce documents;
(b)
require any person or
institution to report to it;
(c)
compel, in terms of
national legislation or the rules and orders, any person or
institution to comply with a summons or requirement
in terms of
paragraph (a) or (b); and
(d)
receive petitions,
representations or submissions from any interested persons or
institutions.’
[74]
In terms of s 57(1) of the Constitution, 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.’
[75]
In
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Speaker of the National Assembly
,
[82]
the
Constitutional Court observed that ‘both sections 42(3) and
55(2)
(b)
of
the Constitution do not define the strictures within which the
National Assembly is to operate in its endeavour to fulfil its
obligations’. The court held that the National Assembly had the
latitude to determine how best it should carry out its constitutional
mandate. It said:
‘
It
falls outside the parameters of judicial authority to prescribe to
the National Assembly how to scrutinise executive action,
what
mechanisms to establish and which mandate to give them, for the
purpose of holding the Executive accountable and fulfilling
its
oversight role of the Executive or organs of State in general.
The mechanics of how to go about fulfilling these constitutional
obligations is a discretionary matter best left to the National
Assembly. Ours is a much broader and less intrusive role.
And that is to determine whether what the National Assembly did does
in substance and in reality amount to fulfilment of its
constitutional
obligations. That is the sum-total of the
constitutionally permissible judicial enquiry to be embarked upon. .
. . It is therefore
not for this Court to prescribe to Parliament
what structures or measures to establish or employ respectively in
order to fulfil
responsibilities primarily entrusted to it.’
[83]
The
clear provisions of s 42(3) and 55(2)
(b)
and the dictum in the
preceding paragraph put it beyond question that the National Assembly
indeed has the latitude to determine
how it will exercise its
oversight of the executive.
[76]
The DA baldly alleged, but did not put forth evidence to support its
case, that the mechanics
adopted by Parliament during the state of
disaster to hold the Executive accountable, were inadequate. It
failed to pay due regard
to the provisions of Parliament’s
Oversight and Accountability Model, which documents parliament’s
own view of how
the obligation of oversight ought to be executed.
[84]
In
UDM
,
the Constitutional Court remarked that
Parliament’s
scrutiny and oversight role blends well with the obligations imposed
on the Executive by section 92 of the Constitution.
[85]
Section
92 of the Constitution
renders
the national executive accountable, collectively and individually,
and stipulates that members of cabinet are
accountable
collectively and individually to Parliament for the exercise of their
powers and the performance of their functions,
and that they must
provide Parliament with full and regular reports concerning matters
under their control.
[77]
In clause 3.1.2 under the heading ‘plenary processes for
effecting oversight and accountability,
the Oversight and
Accountability’ provides as follows:
‘
The
procedure of putting questions to the Executive is one of the ways in
which Parliament holds the Executive to account. Questions
can be put
for oral or written reply to the President, Deputy President and the
Cabinet Ministers on matters for which they are
responsible. Question
time affords members of Parliament the opportunity to question
members of the Executive on service delivery,
policy and other
executive action on behalf of both their political parties and the
electorate.’
[78]
It is necessary to discuss the measures that are in place to hold
Parliament accountable. In
UDM
,
the Constitutional Court explained the constitutional imperative of
accountability as follows:
‘
The
National Assembly indeed has the obligation to hold Members of the
Executive accountable, put effective mechanisms in place
to achieve
that objective and maintain oversight of their exercise of executive
authority. There are parliamentary oversight and
accountability
mechanisms that are sufficiently notorious to be taken judicial
notice of. Some of them are calling on Ministers
to: regularly
account to Portfolio Committees and
ad
hoc
Committees;
and avail themselves to respond to parliamentary questions as well as
other question and answer sessions during a National
Assembly
sitting. It is also through the State of the Nation Address, Budget
Speeches and question and answer sessions that the
President and the
rest of the Executive are held to account.
These
accountability and oversight mechanisms, are the regular or normal
ones. There may come a time when these measures are not
or appear not
to be effective. That would be when the President and his or her team
have, in the eyes of the elected representatives
of the people to
whom they are constitutionally obliged to account, disturbingly
failed to fulfil their obligations. In other words,
that stage would
be reached where their apparent under-performance or disregard for
their constitutional obligations is viewed,
by elected public
representatives, as so concerning that serious or terminal
consequences are thought to be most appropriate. And
that takes the
form of removal from office.’
[86]
[79]
The above dictum not only spells out how the executive is held
accountable in the normal course
but also canvass how that
accountability could pan out in the event of its under-performance.
The
UDM
judgment therefore
makes it plain that
in a
constitutional democracy such as ours the responsibility to protect
constitutional rights in practice is imposed both on the
legislature
and on the executive and its officials.
[80]
As stated in
UDM
,
Parliament has to ensure that the will or interests of the people are
considered, and this it does by, among others, holding the
executive
accountable for the execution of their constitutional
responsibilities. Parliament’s Oversight and Accountability
Model, a document that came about following the recommendations of
parliament’s task team comprising members of both Houses
of
Parliament, was attached to the second respondent’s answering
affidavit as proof of how Parliament executed its oversight
role. The
authenticity of that document was not placed in dispute. Nor did the
DA identify any shortcomings that could be said
to have hampered
parliament’s oversight role in relation to the DMA.
[81]
It must be borne in mind that none of the provisions of the DMA
purport to bar parliamentary
supervision. As such,
the
powers exercised by the Minister under the DMA remain subject to all
the provisions of the Constitution and existing law. That
being the
case, the ordinary parliamentary oversight mechanisms remain intact
and the exercises of powers by the Executive in terms
of the DMA
remain subject to this. An important consideration is that
s
26(1) categorically states that the primary responsibility for the
co-ordination and management of the state of disaster resides
with
the national executive regardless of whether a state of national
disaster has been declared or not. The manner in which the
National
Assembly is enjoined to execute its functions is expressly provided
for in the Constitution.
[87]
[82]
The
Executive is accountable to Parliament under the normal
constitutional order. Thus, because s 27 of the DMA relates to
a
national state of disaster and not a state of emergency, Parliament
continues to exercise its oversight role over the Executive
during
the state of disaster.
It
is a right that is enshrined in the Constitution and is thus
available to be invoked by any member of Parliament.
It
is the purview of Parliament to determine what oversight mechanisms
to employ in fulfilling its oversight role. The DA alleged
that
meetings and questions were not the same as ‘genuine oversight’
because some of the questions were simply not
answered by members of
the executive. Parliament’s Oversight and Accountability Model
sets out an array of remedies designed
to ensure full accountability,
including summoning of members before the portfolio committees and
disciplinary steps that may be
taken against errant members. It is
also open to aggrieved parties to review the conduct of those who
fail to adhere to their constitutional
obligations.
[88]
Aggrieved parties
who
choose not to invoke the available remedies cannot blame the DMA for
their failure to do so.
[83]
The Oversight and Accountability Model inter alia emphasises the
value of public participation
and alludes to available interventions
at the instance of the members of the public. It states inter alia as
follows:
‘
The
motivation for political delegations to undertake the management of
the legislative and oversight programme of Parliament demands
capacity, competence and collective action. . . . Against this
backdrop, and in the context of sections 42(3) and 55(2)(b) of the
Constitution, as well as various provisions which imply oversight
functions of the National Council of Provinces, Parliament through
the Joint Rules Committee established a Task Team on Oversight and
Accountability comprising members of both Houses of Parliament,
which
studied the mandates relating to oversight emanating from the
Constitution.
…
The
conventional Westminster view on oversight, as inherited by many
former British colonies, is often rather adversarial and in
some
instances oversight is professed to be the purview opposition
politicians and not the legislature as an institution. …
“In
the South African context, oversight is a constitutionally mandated
function of legislative organs of state to scrutinize
and oversee
executive action and any organ of state.”
It follows that
oversight entails the informal and formal watchful, strategic and
structured scrutiny exercised by legislatures.
…
In
addition, and most importantly, it entails
overseeing
the effective management of government departments by individual
members of Cabinet in pursuit of improved service delivery
for the achievement
of a better quality of life for all citizens. In terms of the
provisions of the Constitution and the Joint Rules,
Parliament has
power to conduct oversight of all organs of state.
The
appropriate mechanism for Parliament to conduct oversight of these
organs of state would be through parliamentary committees
.
In conducting oversight, the committee would either request a
briefing from the organ of state or visit the organ of state for
fact-finding, depending on the purpose of the oversight. The
committees would have to consider the appropriate means for
conducting
oversight to cover all organs of state.
Parliamentary
committees are established as instruments of the Houses [of
Parliament] in terms of the Constitution, legislation,
the Joint
Rules, Rules of the NCOP, Rules of the NA, and resolutions of the
Houses to facilitate oversight and the monitoring of
the Executive,
and for this purpose
they
are provided with procedural, administrative and logistical support-
they are regarded as the engine rooms of Parliament
.
…
When
a committee reports its recommendations to the House for formal
consideration and the House adopts the Committee report, it
gives the
recommendations the force of a formal House resolution pursuant to
its constitutional function of conducting oversight
.’
(Own emphasis.).
[84]
It is evident from the above that parliamentary committees are
designed for effective parliamentary,
hence the Speaker of the
National Assembly echoed the Oversight and Accountability’s
description of parliamentary committees
as parliament’s ‘engine
rooms’.
Pierre
de Vos et al in their work,
South
African Constitutional Law in Context
[89]
also consider the parliamentary committees to be engine rooms. They
posit as follows:
‘
T
he
various committees of parliament - especially the various portfolio
committees that focus on the work associated with a specific
government department – are seen as the engine room of
parliament. Although members of the NA and the NCOP can ask questions
of members of the executive and have a right to have their questions
answered, either orally in each of the houses or in written
form,
portfolio committees
can
call members of the executive and departmental officials to testify
before them to oversee the work of the individual departments
and to
hold the members of the executive accountable
.’
[90]
It
cannot be gainsaid that these views are consonant with the provisions
of the Oversight and Accountability Model.
[85]
The evidence of the second and fourth respondents regarding the
breadth of the Oversight and
Accountability Model and various
committees and their roles, and joint rules and orders and committees
created within the contemplation
of ss 45 and 57 of the Constitution,
has not been gainsaid. All that the DA stated in response was that
such evidence is irrelevant.
That evidence and the self-explanatory
contents of the Oversight and Accountability Model disproves the DA’s
bald assertion
that the fact that the Executive engaged with
Parliament does not mean that Parliament has in place effective
mechanisms to maintain
oversight and accountability. The DA seeks to
evade any engagement with these mechanisms by asserting that ‘the
constitutional
validity of s 27(2) is an objective question’.
This line of argument simply fails to take into account that context
is an
important part of the unitary interpretive exercise. The role
of the Oversight and Accountability Model as well the powers wielded
by various portfolio are valid considerations in assessing the extent
of parliamentary supervision created because of constitutional
imperatives cannot be wished away.
[86]
In my opinion, the Minister’s exercise of her regulation-making
powers envisaged in the
DMA in no way violates or erodes the
constitutional imperatives of supervision and accountability
prescribed in s 42(3) and 55(2)(
b
)
(i)
of the Constitution,
as the executive remains accountable to parliament even during a
state of disaster; the Oversight and Accountability
Model does not
state otherwise.
[87]
It follows that the respondents’ assertion that parliamentary
oversight through the activities
of the Portfolio Committee,
parliamentary committees and the rules of parliament all enable
parliament to fulfill its constitutional
mandate during a state of
disaster, is unassailable. Against the background of the authorities
discussed in the foregoing paragraphs,
the DA’s contention that
s 27 of the DMA enables a situation in which ‘government can
grant itself dictatorial powers’
lacks merit and, as a result,
falls to be rejected.
[88]
It bears mentioning that some of the DA’s contentions were
contradictory. By way of an
example, the DA prefaced its arguments by
emphasising
that it ‘does not seek to undo or imperil the Executive’s
ability to respond quickly and creatively to disasters’.
It
pointed out that it ‘seeks to preserve that ability – but
simultaneously ensure that Parliament be given the ability
to readily
influence and, if necessary, invalidate this response
after
the fact
’
.
It then asserted that ‘often, public participation did not
occur at all’. However, the uncontroverted evidence of
the
first respondent completely blunts the sting of this contention. As
stated before, the DA did not in any way discredit the
evidence
pertaining to the steps taken by the parliamentary committees and the
assertions regarding how the participation of members
of the public
was facilitated.
[91]
Against
that background, and the express provisions of the DMA considered as
a whole, the assertion that the DMA fails to facilitate
public
involvement is devoid of merit.
[89]
There remains the DA’s contention that parliamentary committees
‘have no teeth’.
Without any elaboration, the DA argues
that ‘even if an entire parliamentary committee were to
disagree with the steps the
Minister had taken, this would have no
legal effect unless the minister of his or her own accord decided to
change tack’.
The DA does not engage with various provisions of
the Constitution which are designed to ensure the accountability of
the members
of Parliament. Instead, the DA merely asserts on
insubstantial grounds that ‘the constitutional difficulty is
that the DMA
does not require such engagements or put in place
mandatory mechanisms for them to occur’.
[90]
The DA further contended that when the next state of national
disaster is declared, the question
of what engagements will occur
will depend on the enthusiasm (or lack thereof) of the relevant
Parliament and COGTA Minister’.
This contention, as already
indicated, fails to take into account various provisions of the
Constitution that serve to ensure that
parliament’s oversight
role is maintained. It must also be borne in mind that in terms of s
56 of the Constitution, any interested
persons or institutions may
submit petitions and make representations or submissions to
Parliament or its committees. In terms
of s 59(1) of the Constitution
the National Assembly must facilitate public involvement. In terms of
s 59(2), the National Assembly
may not exclude the public, including
the media, from a sitting of a committee unless it is reasonable and
justifiable to do so.
Public participation is therefore a
constitutional imperative.
[91]
Against the backdrop of all the oversight mechanisms alluded to under
the heading of parliamentary
supervision, as well as the safeguards
that are built-in as constitutional imperatives, where the public is
granted the space to
engage with parliament, as well as the
safeguards that are built in as constitutional imperatives, to insist
that the same mechanisms
will only be effective if they are expressly
included in the DMA seems to be a classic example of putting
substance over form.
[92]
Moreover, as observed in
One
Movement South Africa
NPC
v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others,
[92]
when
any member of Parliament allows himself or herself to be party to a
decision that they consider not to be in the interests
of the people
of South Africa, they betray the people of South Africa. In
the same vein, however, that court, citing
UDM
with
approval, acknowledged that s 102 of the Constitution makes provision
for members of parliament to address the executive members’
remissness in their execution of their constitutional mandate. The
following observation in
UDM
answers
the DA’s concerns regarding the alleged inadequacy of
parliamentary oversight that is effected via parliamentary
committees:
‘
The
National Assembly indeed has the obligation to hold Members of the
Executive accountable, put effective mechanisms in place
to achieve
that objective and maintain oversight of their exercise of executive
authority. There are parliamentary oversight and
accountability
mechanisms that are sufficiently notorious to be taken judicial
notice of. Some of them are calling on Ministers
to regularly account
to Portfolio Committees and
ad
hoc
Committees;
and avail themselves to respond to parliamentary questions as well as
other question and answer sessions during a National
Assembly
sitting.
.
. .
These
accountability and oversight mechanisms are the regular or normal
ones. There may come a time when these measures are not
or appear not
to be effective. That would be when the President and his or her team
have, in the eyes of the elected representatives
of the people to
whom they are constitutionally obliged to account, disturbingly
failed to fulfil their obligations. In other words,
that stage would
be reached where their apparent under-performance or disregard for
their constitutional obligations is viewed,
by elected public
representatives, as so concerning that serious or terminal
consequences are thought to be most appropriate. And
that takes the
form of removal from office. The Constitution provides for two
processes in terms of which the President may be
removed from office.
First, impeachment, which applies where there is a serious violation
of the Constitution or the law, serious
misconduct or an inability to
perform the functions of the office. Another related terminal
consequence or supreme accountability
tool, in-between general
elections, is a motion of no confidence,’ which is
envisaged in s 102 of the Constitution.’
[93]
[93]
F
or
all the reasons set out above, s 27 of the DMA passes constitutional
muster. It follows that the appeal has to fail. Under such
circumstances, there is no need to address the issue of an
appropriate remedy. All the parties are agreed that the
Biowatch
principle is
applicable on account of the issues raised in this matter.
Accordingly, there is no reason to deviate from that principle
and no
order as to costs will be made.
[94]
In the result, the following order is made:
The
appeal is dismissed and there is no order as to costs.
________________________
M B Molemela
President
Supreme
Court of Appeal
Makgoka
JA:
[95]
I have had the benefit of reading the first judgment. I agree
with its conclusion that s 27 of the DMA does not impermissibly
delegate
plenary powers to the Executive.
[96]
There is a preliminary point to be disposed of before this aspect is
considered. The Executive
(the President and the Minister) objected
to this ground of attack by the DA. It contended that the latter had
accepted in its
founding affidavit that the wide scope of the
regulation-making powers conferred on the Minister by s 27 was
justified. According
to the Executive, the DA did not contend that
the scope of delegation to the Minister, was in itself,
unconstitutional. It contended
merely that, given the wide scope of
the delegation to the Minister, the section did not render the
Minister’s exercise of
her powers subject to parliamentary
supervision and control.
[97]
The Executive asserted that the debate before the court below focused
on the adequacy of
parliamentary supervision of, and control over,
the Minister’s exercise of her regulation-making powers. By
seeking to argue
the delegation of power issue, the DA was ‘shifting
ground’, which according to the National Executive, was
impermissible
and unfair because the Executive were not called upon
to justify the scope of the delegation.
[98]
Three
points need to be made in this regard. The first is that the DA
pleaded the issue of impermissible delegation of power. It
could well
be that the debate before the court below focused on the adequacy of
parliamentary supervision of and control over the
Minister’s
exercise of her regulation-making powers. But the fact remains that
the DA never formally abandoned the issue.
In any event, where a
point of law is apparent on the papers, a court is in entitled to
mero
motu
raise
it and require the parties to deal with it.
[94]
Secondly, both the majority and minority judgments in the court below
dealt with the issue. Lastly, despite its protestations,
the
Executive’s heads of argument in this Court addressed the
issue.
[99]
In matters such as this, the overriding consideration is always that
of prejudice. The
Executive does not assert any prejudice, and I am
unable to discern any. On these bases, the issue is squarely before
this Court
and we are therefore entitled to consider it.
[100]
Subject to the remarks, I agree with the conclusion in the first
judgment that s 27 of the DMA does not
impermissibly delegate plenary
powers to the Executive. However, I do part ways with the first
judgment in its conclusion that
s 27 passes constitutional muster
even though there is no express provision in it for Parliament’s
role in s 27 when a state
of disaster is declared or extended.
[101]
I make two observations in this regard. First, the finding that s 27
does not impermissibly delegate plenary
powers to the Executive, has
no bearing on whether the absence of an express parliamentary role in
the DMA renders the provision
unconstitutional or not. This is a
discrete constitutional challenge.
[102]
Secondly, the first judgment concludes that the findings of this
Court in
Esau
and in
British American Tobacco
render it ‘incongruous to simultaneously hold that s 27 is akin
to a state of emergency’. I disagree. An attack on
the
constitutional validity of s 27 of the DMA on the basis that it
creates a situation akin to a state of emergency, was never
before
this Court in either of those cases. Similarly, the constitutional
challenge to the section based on lack of parliamentary
supervision
was not before this Court in any of the cases.
[103]
In each of them, this Court considered challenges to specific
regulations promulgated in terms of s 27 of
the DMA in response to
the Covid-19 pandemic. No argument was advanced in any of them that
the state of disaster is akin to a state
of emergency, nor did this
Court pronounce on that question.
[104]
Esau
concerned, among other things, an attack on regulations which limited
among others,
freedom of movement,
freedom of trade, occupation and profession.
It
was argued that these were not reasonable and justifiable limitations
for purposes of s 36 of the Constitution. This Court took
into
account the nature of the pandemic and the reasons proffered by the
Executive for those regulations. It found that, although
the impugned
regulations limited fundamental rights when considered against the
proportionality test in terms of s 36, they were
justifiable
limitations.
[105]
A contrary finding was reached in
British
American Tobacco.
There, a challenge
was made to a regulation which prohibited the sale of tobacco
products. This Court concluded that the regulation
infringed on
rights to dignity, bodily and psychological integrity, freedom of
trade and deprivation of property, and was not justified
in terms of
s 36 of the Constitution. This Court also held that the regulation
was not strictly necessary or essential to protect
the public or to
deal with the destructive and other effects of the disaster, as
contemplated in s 27(3) of the DMA. Consequently,
it dismissed the
appeal by the Minister.
[106]
It is therefore clear that both cases were decided in the specific
context of the Covid-19 pandemic. In
contrast, in this matter, the
constitutional attack mounted by the DA is on s 27 of the DMA itself.
It is contended that the absence
of parliamentary control is
unconstitutional as it, among other outcomes, brings about the same
result as that of a state of emergency.
Without a doubt, this is
entirely different to the challenges in both
Esau
and
British
Tobacco Association
. Although the
Covid-19 pandemic was the catalyst to the application in the court
below, a constitutional challenge to s 27 must
be considered
objectively, irrespective of how the Executive exercised its power in
response to the pandemic.
[107]
With these observations out of the way, I turn to the substantive
issues. I understand the DA’s contention
to be this: s 27 of
the DMA is unconstitutional because it does not make express
provision for Parliament’s role in the declaration
or extension
of a state of disaster. One of the consequences of such a lack of
parliamentary control is that the section permits
the creation of a
de facto
state of emergency without following the Constitution’s
requirements for the declaration of an actual state of emergency.
In
other words, a situation akin to a state of emergency is a
result
of a lack of parliamentary control
in the DMA when a state of disaster is declared. Lack of
parliamentary control is the cause,
and a simulated state of
emergency is the cause. Thus, the two are inextricably linked. Viewed
in this light, I will not consider
the two as separate and distinct
grounds of attack, but in unison.
[108]
Parliament’s supervisory and oversight role over the Executive
is provided for in ss 42(3) and 55(2)
of the Constitution. The former
enjoins the National Assembly to scrutinise and oversee Executive
action. The latter provides:
‘
The
National Assembly must provide for mechanisms –
(a)
to ensure that all executive organs of state in
the national sphere of government are accountable to it; and
(b)
to maintain oversight of –
(i)
the exercise of national executive authority,
including the implementation of legislation; and
(ii)
any organ of state.’
[109]
In the context of the issues in this case, Parliament’s
supervisory role over the Executive must be
considered against the
powers given to the Minister in the DMA to declare a state of
disaster. Section 1 of the DMA defines a ‘disaster’ as:
‘
a
progressive or sudden, widespread or localised, natural or
human-caused occurrence which—
(a)
causes or threatens to cause—
(i)
death, injury or disease;
(ii)
damage to property, infrastructure or the environment; or
(iii)
significant disruption of the life of a community; and
(b)
is of a magnitude that exceeds the ability of those affected by the
disaster to cope
with its effects using only their own resources.’
[110]
Section 27(1) empowers the Minister to decide that any of the things
mentioned above, are present. In other
words, she decides what
constitutes a state of disaster. In terms of s 27(1)(
a
)
and (
b
),
she decides that: (a) a national disaster has occurred; and (b)
existing legislation and contingency arrangements do not adequately
provide for the effective response to such a national disaster, and
that ‘other special circumstances warrant the declaration
of a
national disaster’. The phrase ‘special circumstances’
is not defined in the DMA.
[111]
Once she decides on all the above, the Minister may declare a state
of disaster. In terms of s 27(5),
she is empowered to extend
the state of disaster for a month at a time. There is no limit to the
times she can extend the state
of disaster. Of course, the Minister’s
exercise of her power in s 27(2), and conceivably in terms of
s 27(5), is subject
to s 27(3), which requires her to do so only
to the extent that is necessary for the factors mentioned in the
latter subsection,
namely: (a) assisting and protecting the public;
(b) providing relief to the public; (c) protecting property; (d)
preventing or
combating disruption; or (e) dealing with the
destructive and other effects of the disaster. But in truth, as to
whether those
factors in s 27(3)(
a
)
to (
e
)
are present, is entirely up to the Minister. These are undoubtedly
wide and extra-ordinary powers, which give the Minister the
latitude
to make far-reaching decisions.
[112]
However, the DMA does not require the Minister to obtain Parliament’s
approval. She is not required
to obtain such approval when she
decides to either: (a) declare a state of disaster; (b) enact state
of disaster regulations; or
(c) extend the state of disaster. She is
not obliged to inform Parliament about any of these, until after a
year, as provided in
s 24(2). This section obliges her to, once a
year, submit a report to Parliament on the activities of the National
Disaster Management
Centre (NDMC). This is merely a reporting
exercise, since there is no provision for Parliament to either ratify
or reject any of
the activities undertaken by the Management
Committee. It is simply for Parliament to note the Minister’s
report. Given the
breadth of the powers endowed to the Minister by s
27, this is not sufficient.
[113]
This is where the DA’s contention about a simulated state of
emergency needs to be considered. I do
this by contrasting the powers
conferred on the Minister, and their effect, against those in respect
of a state of emergency. This
brings me to the constitutional and
legislative framework relevant to a state of emergency, namely, s 37
of the Constitution and
the SOEA (the
State of Emergency Act).
>
[114]
Section 37(1) of the Constitution sets out the jurisdictional factors
to be met for the declaration of a
state of emergency. It empowers
the President to, in terms of a statute, declare a state of emergency
only if: (a) the life of
the nation is threatened by war, invasion,
general insurrection, disorder, natural disaster, or other public
emergency, and (b)
if such declaration is necessary to restore peace
and order.
[115]
Section 37(2) provides for the effective date, duration and extension
of a state of emergency. It provides
that a declaration of a state of
emergency, and any legislation enacted or other action taken in
consequence of that declaration,
may be effective only: (a)
prospectively; and (b) for no more than 21 days from the date of the
declaration, unless the National
Assembly resolves to extend the
declaration. The Assembly may extend a declaration of a state of
emergency for no more than three
months at a time. The first
extension of the state of emergency must be by a resolution adopted
with a supporting vote of a majority
of the members of the Assembly.
[116]
Any subsequent extension must be by a resolution adopted with a
supporting vote of at least 60 per cent
of the members of the
Assembly. Such a resolution may be adopted only following a public
debate in the Assembly.
[117]
Section 37(3) provides for the justiciability of the State’s
powers in a state of emergency. In terms
thereof, any competent court
may decide on the validity of: (a) the declaration of a state of
emergency; (b) any extension of a
declaration of a state of
emergency; or (c) any legislation enacted, or other action taken, in
consequence of a declaration of
a state of emergency.
[118]
The most far-reaching provisions are those contained in s 37(4),
which authorises derogation from the Bill
of Rights. It reads:
‘
Any
legislation enacted in consequence of a declaration of a state of
emergency may
derogate
from the Bill of Rights only to the extent that—
(a)
the derogation is strictly required by the emergency; and
(b)
the legislation—
(i)
is consistent with the Republic’s obligations under
international law applicable to states of emergency;
(ii)
conforms to subsection (5); and
(iii) is published in the
national Government Gazette as soon as reasonably possible after
being enacted.’
[119]
Lastly, section 37(5) tempers the State’s power during a state
of emergency. It provides that no Act
of Parliament that authorises a
declaration of a state of emergency, and no legislation enacted or
other action taken in consequence
of a declaration, may permit or
authorise: (a) indemnifying the state, or any person, in respect of
any unlawful act; (b) any derogation
from this section; or (c) any
derogation from a section mentioned in column 1 of the Table of
Non-Derogable-Rights, to the extent
indicated opposite that section
in column 3 of the Table. That Table identifies only the right to
human dignity, and the right
to life as being non-derogable in their
entirety.
[120]
The
State of Emergency Act constitutes
legislation envisaged in s
37(1) of the Constitution. In terms of s 1(1) thereof, the President
may by proclamation in the Gazette
declare a state of emergency in
the Republic or in any area within the Republic of South Africa. In
terms of s 1(2), the President
is enjoined to state briefly, the
reasons for the declaration of the state of emergency. Section 1(3)
provides that the President
may at any time withdraw the proclamation
by like proclamation in the Gazette.
[121]
Section 2(1)(
a
)
of the SOEA empowers the President to make emergency regulations in
respect of the Republic or of any area in which the state
of
emergency has been declared, for as long as the proclamation
declaring the state of emergency remains in force. Such regulations
must be necessary or expedient to: restore peace and order; make
adequate provision for terminating the state of emergency; or
deal
with any circumstances which have arisen or are likely to arise as a
result of the state of emergency. In terms of s 2(1)(
b
)
the President is required to, in addition to the publication of the
regulations in the Gazette, ‘cause the contents of the
regulations to be made known to the public by appropriate means’.
[122]
Section 2(2)
(a)
provides for the matters in respect of which the emergency
regulations may be made by the President. They include the power to
delegate ‘persons or bodies . . . to make orders, rules
and bylaws for any of the purposes for which the President
is
authorised by [the] section to make regulations, and to prescribe
penalties for any contravention of or failure to comply with
the
provisions of such orders, rules or bylaws’.
[123]
Section 2(3) circumscribes the State’s exercise of power in a
state of emergency and tempers the emergency
regulations in certain
instances. It provides that:
‘
No
provision of this section shall—
(a)
authorise the making of any regulations which are inconsistent with
this Act or section 37 of the Constitution; or
(b)
authorise the making of any regulations whereby—
(i)
provision is made for the imposition of imprisonment for a period 5
exceeding three years;
(ii)
any duty to render military service other than that provided for in
the Defence Act, 1957 (Act No. 44 of 1957), is imposed;
or
(iii)
any law relating to the qualifications, nomination, election or
tenure of office of members of Parliament or a provincial
legislature, the sittings of Parliament or a provincial legislature
or the powers, privileges or immunities of Parliament or a
provincial
legislature or of the members or committees thereof, is amended or
suspended.’
[124]
Section 3 provides for parliamentary supervision over the
proclamation of a state of emergency. This is
central to the DA’s
contention. I will revert fully to it.
[125]
The lapsing of emergency regulations is regulated in s 4(1), which
provides that any regulation, order,
rule or bylaw made in pursuance
of the declaration of a particular state of emergency, or any
provision thereof, shall cease to
be of force and effect:
‘
(a)
as from the date on which the proclamation declaring that state of
emergency is withdrawn by the President under section 1(3);
(b)
as from the date on which the National Assembly –
(i)
resolves not to extend the declaration of that state of emergency; or
(ii)
resolves under section 3(2)(a) to disapprove of any such regulation,
order, rule, bylaw or provision, to the extent to which
it is so
disapproved; or
(c)
as from the date on which the declaration of that state of emergency
lapses as contemplated in the said s 37(2)(b), whichever is
the
earlier date.’
[126]
Section 4(2) provides that the provisions of subsection (1) shall not
derogate from the validity of anything
done in terms of any such
regulation, order, rule, bylaw or provision up to the date upon which
it so ceased to be of force and
effect, or from any right, privilege,
obligation or liability acquired, accrued or incurred, as at the said
date, under and by
virtue of any such regulation, order, rule, bylaw
or provision.
[127]
From the above exposition of s 37 of the Constitution and
State of
Emergency Act, on
the one hand, and of the DMA, on the other, the
most conspicuous difference is that the declaration of a state of
emergency is,
in terms of
s 3
of the
State of Emergency Act, subject
to parliamentary supervision, whereas there is no such supervision
when a state of disaster is declared. But there are other
differences,
which are set out below.
[128]
First, a state of emergency is provided for in the Constitution,
whereas a state of disaster derives from
an Act of Parliament –
the DMA. Second, the declaration of a state of emergency is made by
the President, whereas a state
of disaster is declared by the
Minister.
[129]
Second, the purpose of a state of emergency is to restore peace and
order when the life of the nation is
threatened by war, invasion,
general insurrection, disorder, natural disaster, or other public
emergency. For a state of disaster,
it must be that existing
legislation and contingency arrangements do not adequately provide
for the Executive to deal effectively
with a disaster, or that other
special circumstances warrant the declaration of a national state of
disaster.
[130]
Third, in a state of emergency, the powers to make emergency
regulations reside with the President, whereas
in a state of
disaster, the power to make regulations lies with the Minister.
Fourth, the duration of a state of emergency is 21
days, unless
Parliament resolves to extend its declaration. A state of disaster
endures for three months and may be extended by
the Minister.
[131]
Fifth, the extension of a state of emergency may only be effected
after debate in the National Assembly,
whereas under the DMA, the
Minister is empowered to extend a state of national disaster without
reference to the National Assembly.
Sixth, courts are expressly
empowered to pronounce on the validity of the declaration of a state
of emergency, incidental regulations
and action. There is no such
provision in the DMA for a state of disaster.
[132]
Seventh, in a state of emergency derogation from the Bill of Rights
is expressly permitted in certain circumstances.
The derogation from
the Bill of Rights is not expressly permitted in a state of disaster.
Eighth, the State’s powers are
circumscribed during a state of
emergency in that the State is not indemnified for unlawful acts, and
that the derogation from
the Bill of Rights is circumscribed. There
is no similar provision in respect of a state of emergency.
[133]
I revert to s 3 of the SOEA. It sets out Parliament’s role in
the declaration of a state of emergency.
It provides as follows:
‘
Parliamentary
supervision
(1)
A copy of any proclamation declaring a state of emergency and of any
regulation, order, rule or bylaw made in pursuance
of any such
declaration shall be laid upon the Table in Parliament by the
President as soon as possible after the publication thereof.
(2)
In addition to the powers conferred upon the National Assembly by
section 37(2)
(b)
of the Constitution . . . the National
Assembly may –
(a)
disapprove of any such regulation, order, rule or bylaw or of any
provision thereof; or
(b)
make any recommendation to the President in connection with any such
proclamation, regulation, order, rule, bylaw or provision.’
[134]
Because
there is no similar provision for Parliament’s role in the DMA
when a state of disaster is declared, or extended,
the DA had
initially contended in its founding affidavit that this breaches the
doctrine of separation of powers, and is therefore,
invalid and
unconstitutional. Subsequent to the launch of the application,
Freedom
Front Plus
[95]
was handed down, in which similar arguments were rejected. This had
the effect that the court below was bound by
Freedom
Front
Plus
unless
it found it to be clearly wrong. As a result, the DA did not pursue
the
de
facto
state
of emergency and lack of parliamentary supervision issues in the
court below. But it reserved its right to raise them in this
Court,
which it did.
[135]
As mentioned, the DA’s overarching complaint was that the
absence in the DMA of express safeguards
similar to those found in s
37 of the Constitution, rendered the DMA unconstitutional. It said
that those safeguards are necessary
for the exercise of Executive
power because of the severe restriction on fundamental rights
inherent in a state of emergency. The
DMA, with its capacity to
similarly restrict fundamental rights, and achieve a similar outcome
as in a state of emergency, does
not have such safeguards. The DA
asserted that the absence of these safeguards in the DMA has the
effect that the DMA does not
withstand constitutional scrutiny.
[136]
In this Court, the National Executive contended that
Freedom
Front
Plus
was dispositive of the DA’s
assertions. For its part, the DA asserted that the case was wrongly
decided, and urged us to overturn
it. It is to that judgment I now
turn. The applicant in that matter was Freedom Front Plus,
a
registered political party with seats in the National and Provincial
Legislatures.
In its
judgment, the court identified as a weakness, the assumption by the
applicant, that the same derogation of rights may occur
under a state
of disaster as under a state of emergency because the DMA does not
have the same safeguards as s 37 provides for
in the case of states
of emergency.
[137]
The court below juxtaposed a state of emergency with a state of
disaster as follows:
‘
That
states of emergency and states of disaster are fundamentally
different legal animals is patently clear. The jurisdictional
requirements of states of emergency spell this out. A state of
emergency is limited to the direst of circumstances.
It may
only be declared when the “life of the nation” is under
threat. Additionally, it must be necessary to
restore “peace
and order”. Unless these requirements are met, the
declaration of a state of emergency would be
unlawful.
States
of disaster, on the other hand, cover a wide range of different
circumstances. This is apparent from the definition
of a
disaster. While a disaster may take many forms, and may threaten
lives and the well-being of communities, it does not involve
a threat
to the life of the nation, nor does it disrupt peace and order.’
[96]
[138]
The court went on to explain the rationale for the derogation from
fundamental rights during states of emergency,
as being the
protection of the constitutional order itself, and ultimately,
restoring the constitutional state. This, it said,
explained ‘why
the jurisdictional requirements under s 37(1) are so strict’,
and the safeguards in s 37 are built in.
[139]
Turning to the DMA, the court reasoned that it ‘does not permit
a deviation from the normal constitutional
order’, but merely
permits the executive to enact regulations or issue directions, which
‘may well limit fundamental
rights’. But, said the
court, ‘the fundamental rights remain intact in the sense that
any limitation is still
subject to being judicially tested against s
36 of the Constitution’. The court stated that this was the
reason why the DMA
did not need to contain the safeguards found in s
37 of the Constitution because the court’s power to rule on the
validity
of regulations was ‘never removed or suspended to
begin with’.
[140]
The court further explained that this judicial power holds for the
safeguard provided in s 37(5) of the
Constitution, which prohibits
the state from granting indemnities in respect of unlawful acts.
Lastly, the court summarily dismissed
the complaint about the lack of
Parliament’s role where a state of disaster is declared in
terms of the DMA, as follows:
‘
Once
the fundamental distinction between a state of emergency and a state
of disaster is understood, this complaint loses its force.
It
is because of the constitutional deviations that are permitted under
a state of emergency that parliamentary oversight is expressly
included in s 37. Where no such deviation is permitted, it is
not necessary to make special provision for parliamentary oversight.
That oversight is a normal component of our constitutional framework
. . .’
[97]
[141]
Concerning the last point, the court pointed out that the DMA did not
render inoperable, Parliament’s
role to scrutinise and oversee
executive action as set out in ss 42(3), 55(2)
(b)
(i)
and 92(2) of the Constitution. Accordingly, the court dismissed the
attack on the constitutionality of the DMA.
[142]
The court in
Freedom Front
Plus
predicated
its conclusion on two grounds. First, that a state of emergency and a
state of disaster are conceptually different. Secondly,
that a state
of disaster did not render ss 42(3), 55(2)(
b
)(i),
and 92(2) of the Constitution inoperable, and therefore Parliament
can still hold the Executive accountable, even in the absence
of an
express provision for that role
[143]
In my view, with respect to the first ground, the court
mischaracterized the core of Freedom Front Plus’
argument,
which is also the DA’s argument in the present case. The
contention was not that a national state of disaster is
conceptually
the same as a state of disaster. It was about the fact that through a
state of disaster, the Minister is empowered
to issue regulations so
broad and intrusive, as would be found in a state of emergency. The
only difference is that the Minister
achieves the same outcome but
without having to comply with the onerous injunctions of s 37,
especially those relating to parliamentary
control.
[144]
It is that mischaracterization of the argument that led the court in
Freedom Front Plus
to hold, wrongly in my view, that because the two are conceptually
different, the DMA is constitutionally valid. This is at the
heart of
the court’s judgment, which had a direct influence on the
outcome and the order.
[145]
As regards the second ground, the court reasoned that because the
courts’ power to pronounce on the
validity of the state of
disaster, and Parliament’s power to hold the executive
accountable, are extant, s 27 of the DMA
is constitutionally
compliant. I disagree with this reasoning. Whether a statute is
constitutionally compliant, does not depend
on whether is justiciable
or not. Nor does it depend on whether Parliament can hold the
Executive accountable.
[146]
It is correct that a state of disaster does not render ss 42(3),
55(2)(
b
)(i),
and 92(2) of the Constitution inoperable, and therefore Parliament
can still hold the Executive accountable. In our constitutional
scheme, no legislation can permissibly render these provisions
inoperable. Ordinarily, Parliament’s supervisory role over
legislation is inherent in these provisions, and therefore, does not
have to be expressly spelt out. But s 27 of the DMA is no
ordinary
legislation. Like the
State of Emergency Act, it
gives the Executive
extra-ordinary powers to severely limit fundamental rights. That
explains why, for a state of emergency, the
framers of our
Constitution saw it necessary to make an express provision in
s 3
of
the
State of Emergency Act, for
Parliament’s role when a state
of emergency is declared. Absent this provision, the
State of
Emergency Act would
most certainly be unconstitutional, despite the
presence of
ss 42(3)
,
55
(2)(
b
)(i),
and 92(2) of the Constitution.
[147]
Similarly, the fact that these provisions remain extant in a state of
disaster, is no answer to the constitutional
challenge to s 27 of the
DMA based on the lack of an express role for Parliament when a state
of disaster is declared under it.
The powers conferred on the
Executive by s 27 of the DMA and their far-reaching effect, remove
the provision from the category
of ordinary legislation and place it
squarely in the category of extra-ordinary legislation, much the same
as the
State of Emergency Act. Because
of this, Parliament’s
role, in addition to the role envisaged by
ss 42(3)
,
55
(2)(
b
)(i),
and 92(2) of the Constitution must be provided for, and spelt out, as
it is in
s 3
of the
State of Emergency Act.
[148
]
Having regard to all of the above, I conclude that
Freedom
Front Plus
was wrongly decided, and
this Court should overturn it.
[149]
As a nation, we are fortunate that currently, we have a vibrant and
robust Parliament. That may not always
be the case. In the absence of
an express provision for Parliament’s role in the DMA, an
Executive-friendly Parliament could
decide to remain supine and do
nothing to hold the Executive accountable in any form. This would
allow the Minister, for example,
to extend a state of disaster
contrary to the provisions of
s 27(3)(
a
)-(
e
).
Under those circumstances, the promises of
ss 42(3)
,
55
(2)(
b
)(i),
and 92(2) of the Constitution will ring hollow. The country would be
in an unlawful and prolonged state of disaster until
the decision is
set aside by a competent court. By the time this is achieved, much
damage might have been caused to the fabric
of our constitutional
democracy.
[150]
The Executive’s powers in the DMA severely limit fundamental
rights as much as they do in a state
of emergency. It is for this
reason that Parliament’s role should be clearly and expressly
circumscribed in the legislation
itself. In other words, when
Parliament confers extraordinary powers on the Executive as s 27
does, it is required to put in place
mechanisms to scrutinise and
oversee the Executive action taken in terms of the provision. This
must include, at least: (a) a duty
by the Executive to report to
Parliament on what action has been taken pursuant to the provision;
(b) Parliament’s power
to disapprove of the Executive’s
decisions. These are necessary to give effect to the injunction of s
42(3) of the Constitution.
[151]
As
mentioned, in respect of a state of emergency, the Constitution
requires Parliament to exercise strict control over its declaration,
and any extension thereof. I have already set out in detail those
safeguards. One of the main reasons for this is that a state
of
emergency results in derogation of rights. Currie and De Waal point
out that the hallmark of a state of emergency is the suspension
of a
normal legal order, including the widespread limitation of various
human rights, to address the emergency.
[98]
[152]
On a proper analysis of the regulations that may be enacted in terms
of s 27(2), it is clear that save for
the power of detention without
trial permitted in s 37(4) of the Constitution, almost every
restriction of rights available to
the President in a state of
emergency, is also available to the Minister in a state of disaster.
The only power the Minister lacks
is that of detention without trial,
as allowed in s 37(4) of the Constitution. Thus, a
de
facto
state of emergency can result
following a declaration of a state of disaster, but without any
parliamentary role and the safeguards
of s 37 of the Constitution.
[153]
The simple question is this: does s 27 of the DMA empower the
Minister, through a state of disaster, to
achieve a substantially
similar result to a state of emergency? Although this requires an
objective analysis of the provision,
how the Executive responded to
the Covid-19 pandemic gave a glimpse of what life would be like in a
state of emergency, especially
during the so-called hard lockdown
period. A curfew was imposed; citizens were confined to their homes;
businesses were precluded
from operating; some citizens were
arrested, and some killed, for violating the state of disaster
regulations.
[154]
This, in effect, amounted to the suspension of the normal legal order
– emblematic of a state of emergency.
This was achieved through
the permissive s 27 of the DMA, instead of the elaborate and
circumscribed provisions of s 37 of the
Constitution, read together
with the relevant provisions of the
State of Emergency Act. Viewed
in
this light,
s 27
of the DMA permits an unlawful suspension of the
normal legal order – precisely the purpose of s 37 of the
Constitution.
[155]
South
Africa is a signatory to various international instruments on human
rights, which it is obliged to comply with. Some of the
relevant
instruments include the International Covenant on Civil and Political
Rights (ICCPR),
[99]
which
allows signatories in ‘time of public emergency’ to
derogate from the Covenant, including limitations on human
rights,
‘to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of the
situation.’ South Africa is also a signatory to the
African
Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights, which, significantly,
does not provide for states of emergency, nor the possibility
of
derogations being made, even in the event of a civil war.
[156]
In
its analysis of how countries responded to the Covid-19 pandemic, the
United Nations identified South Africa among the 15 countries
where
troubling allegations of police abuse were identified.
[100]
South Africa was described as having a toxic lockdown culture and
police and other security forces are said to have used excessive
and
sometimes deadly force to enforce lockdowns and curfew measures.
[157]
The author of a research paper makes the following observations about
South Africa’s response to the
Covid-19 pandemic:
‘
The
various reports of the excessive use of power by law enforcement and
arguably unnecessary restrictions on the movement of goods
and
people, call into question whether South Africa is honouring its
obligations as set out in international and regional instruments
(ICPPR and African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights). The
human rights abuses that have been recorded to date, stand
in stark
contrast to the African Charter that holds that no derogation on
human rights can be made.
This
begs the question whether the country is in a state of disaster or a
state of emergency.
’
[101]
(Emphasis added.)
[158]
I make these points not to suggest that the Executive’s
response to the Covid-19 pandemic, and the
regulations made under s
27(2) were unreasonable or disproportionate. What I endeavour to
demonstrate is that a state of disaster
brings about a situation akin
to a state of emergency in which human rights can be derogated as
would be the case in a state of
emergency. All this happens without
the people, through their democratically elected representatives in
Parliament, having any
say about it, either at the declaration of the
state of disaster, or when it is extended.
[159]
The point is that the extent to which s 27 permits the denudation of
human rights is so intrusive that it
ought to occur only with
Parliament’s approval, control and supervision. The fact that
there is no role for Parliament under
these circumstances, to my
mind, offends the very essence of a constitutional democracy such as
ours.
[160]
I
appreciate that a disaster is, by its very nature, unpredictable. It
demands of the Executive to respond speedily and adequately
to it.
Time is of the essence. I accept that the Executive should have the
necessary flexibility to meet the challenges of a disaster.
I also
accept that in suitable circumstances, the Executive should have the
power to take urgent action
inconsistent
with existing laws, as the Constitutional Court pointed out in
Executive
Council
.
[102]
But
it is because of the very drastic nature of such powers, and their
impact on fundamental rights, that there should be legislated
control
and supervision of the Executive by Parliament.
[161]
Section 27 of the DMA makes no provision for Parliament’s role
in all circumstances, irrespective
of the nature of the disaster. As
pointed out in
Esau
,
disasters, and their effect, differ. This Court explained:
‘
[I]
n
some cases, such as a flood or an earth quake, for instance,
extremely urgent action may be required to manage the disaster, while
in other cases, a long drought, for instance, more time for
reflection, planning and consultation may be available to
decision-makers.
The definition of a disaster recognizes a sliding
scale in the nature of disasters, ranging from the sudden to the
progressive.
. .’
[103]
[162]
In my view, the normative position should be that the declaration of
a state of disaster and the extension
thereof, must have the
imprimatur of Parliament. Where the nature of the disaster is such
that this is not feasible, the Executive
may well proceed to declare
it without reference to Parliament. That should be the exception,
rather than the norm. Where this
is the case, Parliament should be
consulted as soon as circumstances permit, for it to: (a) ratify the
declaration of a state of
disaster, and (b) approve any extension
thereof.
[163]
In the present case, Parliament sought to demonstrate that it indeed
hold the Executive accountable during
the Covid-19 pandemic. It
pointed to what it considered extensive Parliamentary oversight
exercised through the various portfolio
committees of the National
Assembly, as well as through the various select committees of the
National Council of Provinces. It
detailed engagements between these
legislative bodies and members of the Executive.
[164]
That may be so, and it is commendable. But it is not an answer to the
question of whether s 27 is constitutionally
valid. As mentioned, the
constitutional validity of section 27(2) is an objective enquiry. It
is not dependent on whether the engagements
held in respect of a
particular disaster were adequate or not. The fact is that those
engagements are neither required by the DMA
nor are there mandatory
legislative mechanisms in place for them to occur. They occurred out
of the goodwill of Parliament and
its sense of duty. Formalizing the
role of Parliament in the DMA would ensure that for future states of
disaster, reliance is not
placed on the goodwill and ardour of the
relevant Parliament to hold the Executive accountable. If
anything, the evidence
by Parliament to demonstrate that during the
state of disaster, it exercised its supervisory role, fortifies the
view why that
role needs to be expressly provided for in s 27 of the
DMA.
[165]
I conclude that the DMA permits the Minister, by fiat of s
27(2)
(a)
-
(o)
,
to achieve an outcome similar to a state of emergency without the
constitutional safeguards attendant in a state of emergency.
The
absence of an express provision for parliament’s role in all
circumstances in a state of disaster offends the very essence
of a
democratic state such as ours based on the principles of
transparency, accountability, and responsiveness, among others.
It is, to my mind, unconstitutional.
[166]
Had I commanded the majority, I would have upheld the Democratic
Alliance’s appeal with costs and
declared s 27(2)
unconstitutional and invalid based on lack of parliamentary
supervision in a state of disaster. To remedy the
defect, the
Democratic Alliance proposed that there should be a read-in of s
24(4A) to provide for parliamentary control, in a
similar manner that
s 37(3) does, together with the power of Parliament to disapprove any
declaration, regulation or direction.
I would grant that order
subject to a rider that where the nature of the disaster is such that
obtaining prior parliamentary approval
is not feasible, Parliament
should be consulted as soon as circumstances permit for its
ratification.
________________________
TM
MAKGOKA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For
appellant: G Marcus SC (with him P Olivier)
Instructed
by: Minde Shapiro Inc., Cape Town
Symington
De Kok Inc., Bloemfontein
For
first and fourth respondents: W Trengove SC (with him A Hassim
and
T
Moshodi)
Instructed by: State
Attorney, Cape Town
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
second and third respondents: H N Maenetje SC (with him A Nase)
Instructed
by: State Attorney, Cape Town
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
[1]
Esau
and Others v Minister of Co-Operative Governance and Traditional
Affairs and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 9;
[2021] 2 All SA 357
(SCA);
2021 (3) SA 593
(SCA)
para 140 (
Esau
).
[2]
Government
Notice No 313 published on 15 March 2020.
[3]
Disaster
Management Act 57 of 2002
:
Amendment of Regulations issued
in terms
of
s 27(2)
in Government Notice No 398,
GG
43148
published on 25 March 2020.
[4]
See
Government
Notice No 480
GG
43258.
[5]
The
relief sought was set out as follows in the Notice of Motion:
‘
1.
Condonation is granted for the applicant’s non-compliance with
the prescribed
forms, time periods and service requirements and
leave is granted for this application to be heard as one of urgency
in terms
of Uniform
Rule 6(12).
0cm; line-height: 150%">
2.
Section 27 of the Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002 (‘the
Act’)
is declared to be unconstitutional and invalid.
3.
In order to remedy this unconstitutionality, and with effect from
the date
of the order, section 27 of the Act is ordered to be read
as if a new section 27(4A) has been added immediately after section
27(4), reading as follows:
“
(a)
A copy of any declaration of a
national state of disaster and any regulation or direction made
or
issued under section 27(2) shall be laid upon the Table in
Parliament by the Minister as soon as possible after the publication
thereof.
(b)
The National Assembly may at any time –
(i)
by resolution disapprove of any such declaration, regulation or
direction; or
(ii)
by resolution make any recommendation to the Minister in connection
with such declaration,
regulation or direction.
(c)
Any such declaration, regulation or direction shall cease to be of
force and effect as
from the date on which the National Assembly
resolves under subsection (b)(i) to disapprove of such declaration,
regulation or
direction, to the extent to which it is so
disapproved.
(d)
The provisions of subsection (c) shall not derogate from the
validity of anything done
in terms of any such declaration,
regulation or direction up to the date upon which it so ceased to be
of force and effect, or
from any right, privilege, obligation or
liability acquired, accrued or incurred, as at the said date, under
and by virtue of
any such declaration, regulation or direction.
(e)
The provisions of subsections (a) to (d) apply equally to an
extension of a national
state of disaster in terms of section
27(5)(c).
4.
The first respondent is directed to table before the National
Assembly within
three days of this order:
4.1
the declaration of the national state of disaster in GN 313
GG
43096 of 15 March 2020;
4.2
the regulations issued in terms of section 27(2) of the Act
published in GNR 480
GG
43258 of 29 April 2020 (‘the
COVID regulations’); and
4.3
all directions and regulations issued under the COVID regulations
(including all
directions and regulations that remain valid under
regulation 2(3) of the COVID regulations).
5.
It is declared that none of the declarations, regulations and
directions made
in terms of section 27 of the Act prior to the date
of this order are invalidated only by virtue of the orders in
paragraphs
2 to 4 (inclusive) above.
6.
Paragraphs 2 to 5 of this order are referred to the Constitutional
Court for
confirmation.
7.
Those respondents opposing any part of the relief sought are
directed to pay
the applicant’s costs, jointly and severally,
one paying the other to be absolved, including the costs of two
counsel.’
[6]
Section
76 of the Constitution.
[7]
Paras
37- 40 of the judgment of the full court.
[8]
Dawood
and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Others; Shalabi and
Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Others;
Thomas and
Another v Minister of Home Affairs
and
Others
[2000] ZACC 8
;
2000 (3) SA 936
;
2000 8 BCLR 837
(CC) (
Dawood)
.
[9]
In re:
Constitutionality of the Mpumalanga Petitions Bill, 2002 (1) SA 447
(CC);
2001
(11) BCLR 1126 (CC).
[10]
Ibid
para 19.
[11]
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health
and Another
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2005 (6) BCLR 529
(CC);
2006 (3) SA 247
(CC) para 34.
[12]
7(2)
Lawsa
3 ed para 26.
[13]
Justice
Alliance of South Africa v President of Republic of South Africa and
Others, Freedom Under Law v President of Republic
of South Africa
and Others, Centre for Applied Legal Studies and Another v President
of Republic of South Africa and Others
[2011]
ZACC 23
;
2011 (5) SA 388
(CC);
2011 (10) BCLR 1017
(CC) para 61.
[14]
Executive
Council of the Western Cape Legislature and Others v President of
the Republic of South Africa and Others
[1995]
ZACC 8
;
1995 (10) BCLR 1289
;
1995 (4) SA 877
(CC) (
Executive
Council
).
[15]
Ibid
para 62.
[16]
Dawood
fn 8
above para 54.
[17]
Smit v
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others
[2020] ZACC 29
;
2021 (1)
SACR 482
(CC);
2021 (3) BCLR 219
(CC) para 31.
[18]
Also see s
26(3)
of the DMA, which enjoins the Minister to act in close cooperation
with other spheres of government.
[19]
Section
9 of the DMA.
[20]
The Notice in the Government Gazette declaring the State of Disaster
stated: ‘Considering the magnitude and severity of
the
Covid-19 outbreak which has been declared a global pandemic by the
World Health Organisation (WHO) and classified as a national
disaster by the Head of the National Disaster Management Centre, and
taking into account the existing measures undertaken by
organs of
state to deal with the pandemic, I, the undersigned, Dr Nkosazana
Dlamini Zuma, the Minister of Cooperative Governance
and Traditional
Affairs, as designated under Section 3 of the Disaster Management
Act, 2002 (Act No 57 of 2002)…hereby
declare a national state
of disaster…’.
[21]
GN
312,
GG
43096
of 15 March 2020.
[22]
Esau
fn 1
above
para
11.
[23]
Ibid
para
13.
[24]
Ibid
para 12.
[25]
Ibid para 16;
Minister
of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Another v
British American Tobacco South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2022]
ZASCA 89
;
[2022] 3 All SA 332
(SCA)
para
91 (
British
American Tobacco
).
[26]
Esau
fn 1
above para 5.
[27]
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above
paras
91-92.
[28]
Ibid para 99.
[29]
Section
27(2) of the DMA.
[30]
Esau
fn
1 above.
[31]
Ibid
para
15-16.
[32]
Esau
fn 1
above paras 54-55.
[33]
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 91.
[34]
Ibid paras 34 and 97.
[35]
Patmar
Explorations (Pty) Ltd and Others v Limpopo Development Tribunal and
Others
[2018]
ZASCA 19; 2018 (4) SA 107 (SCA).
[36]
Ibid paras 3-4.
[37]
Ayres
and Another v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and
Another
[2022]
ZACC 12
;
2022 (5) BCLR 523
(CC);
2022 (2) SACR 123
(CC).
[38]
Ibid
paras 16-17.
[39]
Esau
fn 1
above paras 7 and 88.
[40]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
[2012]
2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18.
[41]
See
ss 23(3) and 23(8) of DMA.
[42]
Executive
Council
fn
14 above para 206.
[43]
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 97.
[44]
Section
27 (1) of the DMA;
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 96.
[45]
Executive
Council
item
(e) para 206.
[46]
Section
27(2) of the DMA;
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 91.
[47]
Ibid
para 206.
[48]
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 103.
[49]
Esau
fn
1 above paras 15 -16;
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 91.
[50]
Ibid.
[51]
Helen
Suzman Foundation
v
Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
(32858/2020)
[2020] ZAGPPHC 574 (5 October 2020) paras 70-71;
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 91.
[52]
Section
59 of the DMA.
[53]
De
Beer v Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs
[2020]
ZAGPPHC 184;
2020 (11) BCLR 1349
(GP) (
De
Beer
).
[54]
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 97.
[55]
Ibid
para 97.
[56]
Attorney-General,
OFS v Cyril Anderson Investments (Pty) Ltd
1965
(4) SA 628
(A)
at 639C-D (
Attorney-General,
OFS
).
See also, for example,
Government
of the Province of the Eastern Cape v Frontier Safaris (Pty)
Ltd
[1997] ZASCA 84
;
[1997]
4 All SA 500
(A);
1998
(2) SA 19
(SCA)
at 28B-D (
Frontier
Safaris
).
[57]
Attorney-General,
OFS
above
at 639C-D. See also, for example,
Frontier
Safaris
above
at 31B-I.
[58]
AAA
Investments (Propriety) Limited v The Micro Finance Regulatory
Council and Another
[2006]
ZACC 9; 2006 (11) BCLR 1255 (CC); 2007 (1) SA 343 (CC).
[59]
Ibid
para 89.
[60]
Ibid
para 136.
[61]
Section 26(1) of the DMA.
[62]
Nu
Africa Duty Free Shops (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Finance and Others
;
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Ambassador Duty Free (Pty)
Ltd and Others
;
Minister
of Finance v Ambassador Duty Free (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2023]
ZACC 31
;
2023 (12) BCLR 1419
(CC);
2024 (1) SA 567
(CC) (
Nu
Africa
).
[63]
Ibid
para 95.
[64]
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 97;
Nu
Africa
fn
62 above para 23.
[65]
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above
para
97.
[66]
Ibid
para 100.
[67]
Ibid
para 100.
[68]
Section 37(4) that:
‘
Any
legislation enacted in consequence of a declaration of a state of
emergency may derogate from the Bill of Rights only to the
extent
that- (u) the derogation is strictly required by the emergency; and
(6) the legislation- (i) is consistent with the Republic’s
obligations under international law applicable to states of
emergency; (ii) conforms to subsection (5); and (iii) is published
in the national Government Gazette as soon as reasonably possible
after being enacted.’
[69]
Section
37(5) provides that:
‘
No
Act of Parliament that authorises a declaration of a stale of
emergency, and no legislation enacted or other action taken in
consequence of a declaration, may permit or authorise- (a)
indemnifying the state, or any person, in respect of any unlawful
act; (b) any derogation from this section; or (e) any derogation
from a section mentioned in column 1 of the Table of Non-Derogable
Rights, to the extent indicated opposite that section in column 3 of
the Table.
[70]
Freedom
Front Plus v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
[2020] ZAGPPHC 266;
[2020] 3 All SA 762
(GP) para 68 (
Freedom
Front Plus
).
[71]
Ibid para 65.
[72]
Esau
fn 1
above para 10.
[73]
Compare:
British American
Tobacco
fn
25 above;
Freedom
Front Plus
fn
70 above;
De
Beer
fn 53 above.
[74]
Freedom
Front Plus
fn
70 above para 68.
[75]
Esau
fn 1
above para 14.
[76]
British
American Tobacco
fn
25 above para 88.
[77]
Ibid
para
91.
[78]
Ibid
para 91.
[79]
Freedom
Front Plus
fn
70 above para 65.
[80]
United
Democratic Movement v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
[2017] ZACC 21
;
2017 (8)
BCLR 1061
(CC);
2017 (5) SA 300
(CC) (
UDM
).
[81]
Ibid
para 38.
[82]
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others;
Democratic Alliance v Speaker of the National Assembly
and Others
[2016]
ZACC 11
;
2016 (5) BCLR 618
(CC);
2016 (3) SA 580
(CC) para 87.
[83]
Ibid
para 93.
[84]
The contents of this document were alluded to in and annexed to the
first respondent’s answering affidavit.
[85]
UDM
fn 80
above para 39.
[86]
Ibid
paras 40-41.
[87]
See
ss 42(3) and 55(2)
(b)
of
the
Constitution.
[88]
Freedom
Front Plus
fn
70 above para 69.
[89]
P de Vos et al
South
African Constitutional Law in Context
2
ed (2021).
[90]
Op cit at 180.
[91]
Compare
Esau
fn 1
above paras 94-95.
[92]
One
Movement South Africa NPC v President of the Republic of South
Africa and Others
[2023]
ZACC 42
;
2024 (3) BCLR 364
(CC);
2024 (2) SA 148
(CC) para 37.
[93]
Section
102 of the Constitution provides:
‘
(1)
If the National Assembly, by a vote supported by a majority of its
members, passes
a motion of no confidence in the Cabinet excluding
the President, the President must reconstitute the Cabinet.
(2)
If the National Assembly, by a vote supported by a majority of its
members, passes
a motion of no confidence in the President, the
President and the other members of the Cabinet and any Deputy
Ministers must
resign.’
[94]
CUSA
v Tao Ying Metal Industries and Others
[2008]
ZACC 15
;
2009 (2) SA 204
(CC);
[2008] 1 BLLR 1
(CC); (2008) 29 ILJ
2461 (CC).
[95]
Freedom
Front Plus
fn
70 above.
[96]
Freedom
Front Plus
fn
70 above paras 59-60.
[97]
Ibid para 68.
[98]
I Currie and J de Waal
The
Bill of Rights Handbook
6
ed (2013) chapter 33.
[99]
South Africa ratified the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights on 10 December 1998, with entry into force in
March
1999.
[100]
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-coronavirus-un-rights-idUSKCN2291X9
.
The other countries include Nigeria, Kenya, the Philippines, Sri
Lanka, El Salvador, Dominican Republic, Peru, Honduras, Jordan,
Morocco, Cambodia, Uzbekistan, Iran and Hungary.
[101]
Disaster Management Act Research
Paper May 2020.
[102]
Executive
Council
fn
14 above para 62.
[103]
Esau
fn 1 above para 97.
sino noindex
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Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Another v British American Tobacco South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (309/21) [2022] ZASCA 89; [2022] 3 All SA 332 (SCA) (14 June 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 89Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa99% similar
The Minister of International Relations and Co-operation NO and Another v Neo Thando / Elliot Mobility (Pty) Ltd and Another (444/2023) [2024] ZASCA 134; [2025] 1 All SA 31 (SCA) (4 October 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 134Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Pennington and Another (162/2022) [2023] ZASCA 51 (14 April 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 51Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Assmang (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service and Others (311/2024) [2025] ZASCA 121 (29 August 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 121Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar