Case Law[2024] ZASCA 100South Africa
Trustco Group Holdings Limited v Financial Services Tribunal and Another (471/2023) [2024] ZASCA 100; 2024 (5) SA 394 (SCA) (19 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
19 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Statutory interpretation – Financial Markets Act 19 of 2012 (Financial Markets Act) – powers of Johannesburg Stock Exchange – has wide powers in terms of its Listing Requirements and Financial Markets Act to direct restatement of financial statements – appointment of a panel of Financial Services Tribunal in terms of s 224 of the Financial Sector Regulation Act 9 of 2017 – does not require a person with experience or expert knowledge of financial services or the financial system.
Judgment
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## Trustco Group Holdings Limited v Financial Services Tribunal and Another (471/2023) [2024] ZASCA 100; 2024 (5) SA 394 (SCA) (19 June 2024)
Trustco Group Holdings Limited v Financial Services Tribunal and Another (471/2023) [2024] ZASCA 100; 2024 (5) SA 394 (SCA) (19 June 2024)
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sino date 19 June 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 471/2023
In
the matter between:
TRUSTCO
GROUP HOLDINGS LIMITED
APPELLANT
and
FINANCIAL
SERVICES TRIBUNAL
FIRST
RES
PONDENT
JSE
LIMITED
SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Trustco Group Holdings
Limited v Financial Services Tribunal and Another
(471/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 100
(19 June 2024)
Coram:
DAMBUZA, SCHIPPERS and WEINER JJA, SMITH and MBHELE AJJA
Heard
:
14 May 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down of the judgment is deemed
to be 11h00 on 19 June 2024.
Summary:
Statutory interpretation – Financial Markets Act 19 of 2012
(Financial Markets Act) – powers of Johannesburg Stock Exchange
– has wide powers in terms of its Listing Requirements and
Financial Markets Act to
direct restatement of financial statements –
appointment of a panel of Financial Services Tribunal in terms of s
224 of the
Financial Sector Regulation Act 9 of 2017 – does not
require a person with experience or expert knowledge of financial
services
or the financial system.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Potterill J, sitting as court
of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs on the attorney and client scale,
including the costs of two counsel, where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Smith
AJA (Dambuza, Schippers and Weiner JJA and Mbhele AJ concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This appeal concerns: (a) the power of the second respondent, the
Johannesburg Stock
Exchange (the JSE), to direct listed entities to
restate financial statements; and (b) whether a panel of the
Financial Services
Tribunal (the Tribunal) to hear an application for
the reconsideration of a decision in terms of s 230 of the Financial
Sector
Regulation Act 9 of 2017 (the FSR Act), was properly
constituted. The appeal is with the leave of this Court.
[2]
The JSE is a securities exchange, licensed in terms of the Financial
Markets Act 19
of 2012 (the
Financial Markets Act). The
appellant,
Trustco Group Holdings Limited (Trustco), is listed on the JSE and
the Namibian Stock Exchange. The first respondent
is the Tribunal,
established in terms of s 219 of the FSR Act. Apart from filing
reasons in terms of rule 53 of the Uniform
Rules of Court, the
Tribunal did not participate in the proceedings before the Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the
high court), nor in this
Court.
[3]
On 22 November 2020, the JSE directed Trustco to restate its
financial statements
for the year ending 31 March 2019 to correct
certain entries relating to loans by its Chief Executive Officer and
major shareholder,
Dr Quinton van Rooyen, and reclassification of
immovable properties from inventory to investment property.
[1]
The JSE also directed Trustco to reverse the profits declared in
pursuance of those transactions.
[4]
After the JSE dismissed Trustco’s objection filed in terms of
its Listings Requirements,
on 10 February 2021, Trustco filed an
application with the Tribunal for the reconsideration of the JSE’s
decision in terms
of s 230 of the FSR Act. The Tribunal dismissed
that application on 22 November 2021.
[5]
On 31 January 2022, Trustco launched an application in the high court
seeking to review
and set aside the Tribunal’s determination,
inter alia, on the grounds that the JSE lacks the power to direct
listed companies
to restate their financial statements and that a
panel of the Tribunal had not been properly constituted in terms of s
224 of the
FSR Act. The high court (Potterill J) dismissed the
application with costs.
The
facts
[6]
The following material facts are common cause. Between 2015 and 2018,
Dr Van
Rooyen advanced to Huso Investments (Pty) Limited (Huso)
and other subsidiaries of Trustco loans amounting to approximately N$
546 million. Huso was a related company in which Dr Van Rooyen owned
all the shares. In 2018, Trustco acquired all Huso’s
issued
shares.
[7]
The loans were initially reflected in Huso’s financial
statements as equity,
in other words, they were reflected as
investments by Dr Van Rooyen. However, by the time Trustco had
acquired Huso’s shares,
the loan amount had been reclassified
as a liability, namely a debt owed to Dr Van Rooyen.
[8]
The sale of shares agreement in respect of Trustco’s purchase
of Dr Van Rooyen’s
shares in Huso included an ‘earn-out’
mechanism in terms of which the former would be allocated shares in
Trustco if
it met certain profit thresholds. A few weeks after the
conclusion of the sale of shares agreement, Dr Van Rooyen ‘forgave’
the loans, resulting in a N$ 546 million profit in Trustco and
triggering the ‘earn-out’ mechanism, which allowed Dr
Van
Rooyen to acquire the Trustco shares.
[9]
In October 2018, Dr Van Rooyen advanced a second loan of N$ 1 billion
to Trustco,
which he also ‘forgave’ during 2019. That
amount was then also reflected in Trustco’s financial
statements as
profit, again allowing Dr Van Rooyen to acquire more
shares in terms of the contractual ‘earn-out’ mechanism.
[10]
The next entry in Trustco’s financial statements with which the
JSE took issue, was the
reclassification of properties owned by
Trustco in Elisenheim, Windhoek, Namibia, from inventory to
investment property. Trustco
explained that the reclassification was
done because a decline in demand meant that it did not anticipate
selling the properties
in the foreseeable future. It thereafter
revalued the properties and, as a result, reported a profit of N$ 693
million.
[11]
On 5 December 2019, the JSE advised Trustco that its financial
statements had been selected for
review under its ‘pro-active
review process’, in terms of which listed companies’
financial statements are reviewed
at least once every five years. The
JSE referred three issues to its Financial Reporting Investigation
Panel (FRIP).
[2]
Two related to
entries in respect of the loans by Dr Van Rooyen, and the other to
the entries reflecting the reclassification of
the immovable
properties from inventory to investment property.
[12]
On the FRIP’s advice, the JSE informed Trustco, on 16 October
2020, that the entries did
not comply with the International
Financial Reporting Standards (the IFRS).
[3]
[13]
Trustco objected to that decision in terms of clause 1.4 of the JSE
Listings Requirements. On
11 November 2020, the JSE dismissed the
objection and directed Trustco to restate its annual financial
statements for the year
ending 31 March 2019 to correctly reflect the
nature of the transactions.
[14]
Trustco’s reconsideration application was heard by a panel
appointed and chaired by the
Tribunal’s chairperson, retired
Judge Harms. A practising advocate and an attorney served with Judge
Harms on the panel.
Both parties submitted opinions by their
respective accounting experts. Trustco relied on a report filed by an
accountant, Mr Tapiwa
Njikizana, and the JSE relied on the FRIP
report and the opinion of Professor Maroun, a chartered accountant.
[15]
As mentioned earlier, the Tribunal dismissed Trustco’s
application for the reconsideration
of the JSE’s decision on 22
November 2021. Trustco launched its review application challenging
the Tribunal’s decision
in February 2022.
[16]
In February 2023, Trustco agreed to restate its financial statements
and undertook to:
(a)
arrange for the shares issued to Dr Van Rooyen to be returned to
Trustco;
(b)
reinstate the loans waived by the former; and
(c)
reverse the profits declared pursuant to the waiver of the loans.
It
is common cause, however, that it did so without prejudice to its
rights and solely to ensure the lifting of the suspension of
the
trading of its shares on the JSE. The issue of mootness accordingly
does not arise.
Proceedings
in the high court
[17]
In the high court, Trustco challenged the Tribunal’s decision
on three main grounds, namely:
(a)
On a proper interpretation of ss 220(2), 224(2) and 225(2)(
a
)
of the FSR Act, the Tribunal panel was improperly constituted;
(b)
The JSE does not have the power to direct listed companies to restate
their financial statements; and
(c)
The Tribunal accorded undue deference to
the views of the JSE and its expert witness.
[18]
Regarding (a), Trustco argued that the panel constituted to decide
the reconsideration application
violated the provisions of the FSR
Act because it comprised only lawyers who lacked the necessary
financial expertise and experience.
The decision to constitute the
panel was therefore irrational and unreasonable, and rendered the
procedure adopted by the Tribunal
unfair.
[19]
As regards (b), Trustco argued that the JSE does not have the power
under para 8.65 of its Listings
Requirements to direct companies to
restate their financial statements. That provision, according to
Trustco, envisages a more
drastic procedure, namely the ‘reissue’
of financial statements. Restatements, on the other hand, are
voluntary acts
which may be undertaken by listed entities under para
3.14 of the Listing Requirements. In the event, publication on the
JSE’s
real time Stock Exchange News Service would have more
effectively informed the public that the JSE had taken issue with
Trustco’s
financial statements, so Trustco argued.
[20]
Trustco’s contentions in respect of the undue deference review
ground were based mainly
on the Tribunal’s statement in the
reasons it provided under rule 53 that ‘[a]lthough the Tribunal
is an “expert”
tribunal, it is obviously less qualified
than the JSE to make multi-faceted and polycentric decisions. . .’
This statement,
Trustco contended, was a critical concession by the
Tribunal that, because the panel comprised only persons with legal
expertise,
it lacked the expertise properly to adjudicate issues
involving complicated financial and accounting principles.
[21]
The JSE took issue with those contentions and argued that Trustco’s
failure to challenge
the decision of the Tribunal chairman, Judge
Harms, to appoint the panel was fatal to its application. That
decision, the JSE contended,
constituted administrative action as
defined in terms of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of
2000 (PAJA) and it thus
remained valid and effectual until set aside
by a competent court.
[4]
Not
having challenged the decision to appoint the panel, Trustco was
precluded from arguing that because the panel was not properly
constituted, its process was procedurally unfair or unreasonable.
[22]
As to the restatement issue, the JSE argued that para 8.65 of the
Listing Requirements grants
it wide permissive powers ‘in its
sole discretion’ to instruct a listed entity to publish or
reissue any information
it deems appropriate. In addition, in terms
of the
Financial Markets Act, the
JSE is obliged to supervise
compliance with its Listings Requirements,
[5]
and grants it wide permissive powers to impose sanctions and to do
‘all other things that are necessary for, incidental or
conducive to the proper operation of an exchange and that are not
inconsistent with this Act’.
[6]
Relying on the judgment in
Huge
Group Ltd v Executive Officer: Financial Services Board
,
[7]
the JSE contended that the power in terms of para 8.65 of the Listing
Requirements to instruct companies to reissue or publish
any
information that the JSE deems appropriate, contextually and
purposely interpreted, includes the power to direct restatement
of
financial statements.
[23]
In respect of the undue deference argument, the JSE contended that
the Tribunal properly evaluated
and analysed the expert evidence
submitted by the parties and gave comprehensive reasons for
preferring the testimony of the JSE’s
experts. The Tribunal’s
decision was thus underpinned by an objective consideration of the
evidence.
[24]
The high court found that since Trustco did not assail Justice Harms’
decision to appoint
the panel, the court could not find ‘that
the constitution of the Panel by retired Judge Harms was procedurally
unfair or
that the constitution of the Panel was a decision of the
Panel and is reviewable’. The high court found, furthermore,
that
on a reasonable construction of ss 220, 224 and 225 of the FSR
Act, it is not a legal requirement that a panel constituted in terms
of s 224 should include a person with financial experience and
expertise. The court observed that, even though the contended
requirement
of having financial expertise on the panel is not
unreasonable, ‘a Panel consisting of lawyers is eminently
suited to adjudicate
a reconsideration in evaluating facts and
evidence’.
[25]
Regarding the restatement issue, the high court upheld the JSE’s
contention that para 8.65
of the Listing Requirements, properly
interpreted, includes the power to direct listed entities to restate
their financial statements.
The court was of the view that without
that power, ‘the JSE has in fact no teeth to correct the
position to protect the public
with the financial statements setting
out the full picture’.
[26]
The high court also made short shrift of the undue deference
argument, finding that ‘the
Panel did not just sit back and
defer to the JSE’. It was also satisfied that the Tribunal had
properly analysed the experts’
views.
The
contentions on appeal
[27]
In its written argument, Trustco persisted only with two appeal
grounds, namely that:
(a)
the FSR Act, properly interpreted, requires that in cases involving
only accounting issues, the panel must include persons with
financial
expertise and experience; and
(b)
para 8.65 of the Listing Requirements does not empower the JSE to
issue directives for listed companies to restate financial
statements. The JSE is consequently only empowered to direct a
‘re-issue’ of financial statements, which is a more
invasive procedure that requires of the JSE to take other ancillary
steps.
[28]
However, in oral argument before us, Trustco all but abandoned those
points. It instead resuscitated
the undue deference argument and, in
addition, raised a new argument, namely that in appointing the panel
in terms of s 224 of
the FSR Act, Judge Harms had a discretion to
include a person with financial expertise. According to Trustco,
Judge Harms, on his
own admission, failed to exercise that discretion
thereby rendering the appointment of the panel fundamentally flawed.
[29]
Because Trustco did not unequivocally abandon the arguments relating
to the composition of the
panel and the power of the JSE to direct
restatements of financial statements, I am constrained to deal with
them before I consider
the new arguments advanced on appeal.
Discussion
[30]
First, regarding the composition of the panel, s 220 of the FSR Act
provides that the Tribunal
members must include, ‘at least two
persons who are retired judges, or are persons who have suitable
expertise and experience
in law’ and, ‘at least two other
persons with experience or expert knowledge of financial products,
financial services,
financial instruments, market infrastructures or
the financial system’. In terms of s 224(4),
[8]
panels must consist of ‘a person to preside over the panel, who
must be a person referred to in s 220(2)
(a)
[9]
or 225(2)
(a)
(i)’,
[10]
namely a retired judge or person with legal experience or expertise,
and ‘two or more persons who are Tribunal members or
persons on
the panel list’.
[31]
These sections do not contain any express or implied requirement for
a panel constituted under
s 220 to include a person with knowledge of
accounting practices or international financial reporting standards.
The interpretation
contended for by Trustco simply does not find any
support in the express and unequivocal language of these provisions.
[32]
Second, the argument that the JSE does not have the power to direct
listed entities to restate
financial statements is, in my view,
equally unsustainable. It was thus no surprise that it was not
pursued in oral argument before
us. Counsel for the JSE correctly
submitted that para 8.65 of the Listing Requirements confers on the
JSE wide permissive powers
to instruct listed entities, in its sole
discretion, to ‘publish or reissue any information it deems
appropriate’.
These wide powers are underpinned by
ss 10(2)
(m)
and
11
(1)
(g)
(v) of the
Financial Markets Act which
,
respectively, empowers the JSE to do ‘all other things that are
necessary for, or incidental or conducive to the proper
operation of
an exchange and that are not inconsistent with this Act’ and
empowers the JSE to impose any penalty that is
‘appropriate in
the circumstances’.
[33]
Construed
in terms of established canons of interpretation, that is, regard
being had to the text, context and purpose
of
the JSE Listing Requirements, this construction also makes business
sense.
[11]
It is manifestly
essential that investors on the JSE are able to rely on accurate
financial statements that comply with international
accounting
standards. It is also self-evident that a market cannot properly
operate without them. It is the JSE’s statutory
obligation, in
terms of its Listing Requirements under the
Financial Markets Act, to
hold listed entities to this imperative. And, where financial
statements do not accurately reflect the nature of financial
transactions
in accordance with international accounting standards,
the JSE must be entitled to direct restatement of the financial
statements
to ensure that the full and correct position is stated.
Both these grounds of review can therefore not succeed.
[34]
I now consider the new submissions advanced in oral argument before
us. The argument that Judge
Harms failed to exercise his discretion
to appoint a person with financial expertise as a member of the
panel, is premised on the
following statements contained in his
‘REASONS IN TERMS OF UNIFORM
RULE 52(1)(b)
’. He said the
following in respect of his decision to appoint the panel:
(a)
‘I consider the general nature of the case (e.g., is it about
the Pension Funds Adjudicator, the FAIS Ombud, a debarment,
an
administrative penalty, emanates from a body such as the JSE, etc.),
ask about the size of the record (in this matter eventually
[it] was
extensive), the workload of panellists and their availability and the
equal spread of the workload. I have regard to potentiality
of
conflict, representativity, seniority and general experience as well
as the duty to induct younger (new) members into potentially
challenging cases. I am conscious of the judicial anathema to
choosing horses for courses.’
(b)
‘I did not receive or read the record before settling the panel
and only read it in preparation for the hearing after
receiving the
heads of argument. I knew, from experience, that matters relating to
the JSE before the (former) Financial Services
Appeal Board and this
Tribunal can be difficult and because of the many kinds of decisions
the JSE may make are of different kinds.
(I was also the chairman of
the former JSE Appeal Board until my appointment as a judge in
1986.)’;
and
(c)
‘Past JSE matters raised no accounting issues, and I was
unaware that there were issues, that according to the applicant,
could only be decided by someone with the “necessary and
statutory required knowledge and expertise of the application of
International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”) to
be so appointed for the matter under consideration”,
which, by
definition, excludes all the potential chairs.’
[35]
Counsel for Trustco submitted that these statements indicate that
Judge Harms, on his own admission,
was unaware of the nature and
complexity of the issues that the Tribunal would be required to
consider before appointing the panel.
He was consequently oblivious
of the need to appoint someone with the requisite financial expertise
and experience. His failure
to exercise his discretion in respect of
that issue not only taints the appointment of the panel but also
renders the entire process
pursuant thereto procedurally unfair and
reviewable, so the argument went.
[36]
In my view, there are several insurmountable difficulties with this
argument. The first problem
relates to the timing and the manner in
which the point was raised. It is common cause that this review
ground was not raised in
the high court, neither was it raised in
Trustco’s written argument on appeal to this Court. As
mentioned earlier, it was
raised for the first time during oral
argument before us. This has important consequences for the context
in which Judge Harms’
reasons should be construed. When he
prepared those reasons, Judge Harms was obviously unaware of the
allegation that he did not
exercise a discretion and consequently did
not address that issue at all. He explained that ‘[t]hese
“reasons”
are submitted because of the applicant’s
displeasure with the record of the proceedings’. Having failed
to challenge
Judge Harms’ decision to appoint the panel and to
draw his attention to the allegation that he failed to exercise a
discretion,
it can hardly lie in Trustco’s mouth to construe
the reasons he provided for a different purpose in support of this
new review
ground.
[37]
Moreover, the manner in which the point was raised creates a more
fundamental problem for Trustco.
The decision to constitute a panel
of the Tribunal in terms of s 224(1) of the FSR Act is a
self-standing administrative act. In
taking this decision, Judge
Harms was exercising a public power which – at least according
to Trustco – adversely affected
its rights and accordingly had
‘a direct, external effect’.
[12]
In terms of the legal principle enunciated in
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
[13]
and
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Kirland Investments
,
[14]
that administrative decision remained valid and effectual until set
aside by a competent court.
[38]
Trustco’s answer to this assertion was that as
dominus
litis
, it was entitled to challenge either (a) the decision of
the Tribunal chairman to constitute the panel; or (b) the decision of
the Tribunal, on the basis that the process was procedurally and
substantively irrational because the panel had been improperly
constituted and lacked the necessary expertise. It had chosen the
latter option and was accordingly not required to amend its notice
of
motion to assail the decision of the Tribunal chairman.
[39]
In my view, this argument does not bear scrutiny. It is a direct
attack on Judge Harms’
decision to constitute the panel in the
manner that he did. This was not an issue to which the respondents
were required to address
their minds. Had the challenge been raised
in the founding papers, the Judge would have been able to answer it.
A party is required
to make out its case in the founding
affidavit;
[15]
even less is it
permitted to mount a challenge to a decision in heads of argument.
The new challenge advanced during oral argument,
namely that Judge
Harms failed to exercise a discretion in terms of s 224 of the FSR
Act when appointing the panel, is ‘a
full-frontal attack’
on an administrative act, which could only be undone by virtue of
judicial review in terms of PAJA.
In my view, Trustco’s failure
to adopt that course is fatal to its case.
[40]
In any event, the statements cited by Trustco in support of its
submission that Judge Harms failed
to exercise a discretion were
quoted selectively and out of context. The Judge explained the
procedure he followed in appointing
the panel and stated that he
accepted ‘that the Minister appointed all by following the
statutory prescripts and that all
members of the Tribunal and on the
panel list are equal and independent and competent to decide any of
the many and varied issues
under the many Acts listed in Schedule 1
of the Act that fall under the jurisdiction of the Tribunal’.
He explained furthermore
that ‘[t]he composition of a panel is
a matter that is settled after a request from the Secretary of the
Tribunal, considering
the statutory requirement, before a hearing
date is determined.
She proposes a panel, and we then discuss it
before I make my decision.
’ (Emphasis added.)
[41]
Those reasons, having been provided in the absence of a specific
allegation regarding the exercise
of a discretion by Judge Harms,
establish that he considered the panel proposed by the Secretary and
that he exercised a discretion
in deciding on the panel members,
having regard to ‘the general nature of the case’. This
review ground is therefore
also unsustainable and falls to be
dismissed on any of the foregoing bases.
[42]
Regarding the undue deference review ground, Trustco submitted that
the Tribunal’s reasoning
shows that the panel members were
under the erroneous impression that they were required to defer to
the JSE’s views. Because
they lacked the necessary financial
expertise to understand and objectively analyse the merits and
demerits of the financial experts’
opinions, they impermissibly
abdicated their statutory responsibility to render a decision based
on their own assessment of the
evidence. In support of this assertion
Trustco pointed to the following aspects of the Tribunal decision:
(a)
The Tribunal acknowledges that it is not an ‘expert tribunal’
and that it is obviously less qualified than the JSE
to make
‘multi-faceted and polycentric decisions’;
(b)
The Tribunal was under the erroneous impression that the
Administrative Law principle of ‘deference’ was
applicable
and that they were therefore constrained to show respect
to the JSE’s decision.
[16]
That rule is peculiar to judicial reviews,
[17]
and was not relevant to an application for the reconsideration of the
JSE’s decision in terms of s 230 of the FSR Act; and
(c)
While dealing with the opinion of Trustco’s expert, Mr
Njikizana, in a perfunctory manner, the Tribunal accorded
disproportionate
deference to the JSE’s views and quoted
extensively from its submissions. The panel members accepted the
JSE’s views
indiscriminately and therefore failed to decide the
disputed issues based on their own objective assessment of the
evidence.
[43]
In my view, this criticism is unjustified and is belied by the
Tribunal’s extensive analysis
of Mr Njikizana’s opinion,
the JSE’s submissions and the reasons it gave for preferring
the opinion of the JSE’s
expert, Prof Maroun. The Tribunal
explained that Mr Njikizana was not ‘entirely objective’
and that his report contained
‘a mix of allegation of fact,
interpretation and adjudication and therefore transgresses the limits
of “expert evidence”’.
The Tribunal then proceeded
to juxtapose Mr Njikizana’s opinion with that of the JSE, Prof
Maroun and the FRIP. And, cautioning
that ‘[n]umbers do not
count, reasons do’, the Tribunal then considered Mr Njikizana’s
conclusion that ‘form
trumps substance’, and his opinion
in respect of the presumption regarding fair representation of
financial transactions.
The Tribunal provided extensive reasons for
its finding that the presumption did not avail Trustco and why it
preferred the JSE’s
approach, which emphasises substance over
form.
[44]
The criticism that the Tribunal did not give due consideration to Mr
Njikizana’s opinion
is also demonstrably unfounded. The
Tribunal analysed his submissions and, thereafter, dealt with the
JSE’s views. It again
considered Trustco’s submission
that the JSE’s stance overrode the requirements of the IRFS.
The Tribunal then carefully
weighed up the conflicting opinions and
gave comprehensive reasons why it preferred the JSE’s views. I
need not concern myself
with the soundness of the Tribunal’s
reasoning since it is the propriety of the process that resulted in
its decision and
not the correctness of its findings that must be
considered in review proceedings. I am therefore of the view that
this review
ground must also fail. Consequently, the appeal falls to
be dismissed.
Costs
[45]
Counsel for the JSE asked the Court to award costs on a punitive
scale to show its disapproval
of the unacceptable manner in which
Trustco conducted the litigation. I agree. Trustco has vacillated
regarding its review grounds
throughout the proceedings both in the
high court and in this Court and, in the end, it presented oral
argument in respect of issues
not foreshadowed in the pleadings or
its heads of argument. The JSE has been put out of pocket because it
was compelled to incur
unnecessary costs to defend litigation that
had no reasonable prospects of succeeding. It is thus only fair that
the JSE should
be indemnified in respect of those unnecessary
expenses through a punitive costs order.
Order
[46]
In the result I make the following order:
The
appeal is dismissed with costs on the attorney and client scale,
including the costs of two counsel, where so employed.
________________________
J E SMITH
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
W Trengrove SC with S Scott
Instructed
by
Norton Rose Fulbright South Africa Inc., Johannesburg
Webbers, Bloemfontein
For
the second respondent:
I Green SC with M Kruger
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel, Johannesburg
Honey Attorneys,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Inventory property is an asset held for sale in the ordinary course
of business. Investment property (land or buildings) is held
to earn
rental or for capital appreciation. Property can only be
reclassified for accounting purposes if there is a change in
use.
[2]
The FRIP is an advisory panel of financial reporting experts whose
function is to investigate and advise the JSE on alleged cases
of
non-compliance with financial reporting standards in annual and
interim reports and any other company publications. It is
established in terms of para 8.65 of the JSE Listing Requirements.
[3]
The
IFRS are a set of accounting rules for the financial statements of
public companies that are intended to make them consistent,
transparent, and easily comparable. They are issued by the
International Accounting Standards Board and are intended to foster
greater corporate transparency regardless of the company or the
country.
[4]
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
[2004] ZASCA 48
;
[2004] 3 All SA 1
(SCA);
2004 (6) SA 222
(SCA) para
26;
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd
[2014] ZACC 6; 2014 (5) BCLR 547 (CC); 2014 (3) SA 481 (CC).
[5]
Section
10(2).
[6]
Section
10(2)
(m)
.
[7]
Huge
Group Limited v JSE Limited and Another
15380/2015
GLD (21 July 2017), para 55 where the court held that the JSE’s
power under Listing Requirement 8.65 to direct
companies to reissue
financial statements does not ‘exclude from the ambit of that
provision an instruction to restate
annual financial statements’.
[8]
Section 224(2) reads as follows: ‘(2) The panel constituted to
consider an application for the reconsideration of a decision
is the
decision-making body of the Tribunal, and the panel exercises any of
the powers of the Tribunal relating to the reconsideration
of the
decision.’
[9]
Section 220(2) reads as follows: ‘(2) The Tribunal members
must include—
(a)
at least two persons who are retired judges, or are persons with
suitable expertise and experience in law; and (b) at least
two other
persons with experience or expert knowledge of financial products,
financial services, financial instruments, market
infrastructures or
the financial system.’
[10]
Section 225 provides that: ‘(1) The Minister must establish
and maintain a list of persons who are willing to serve as
members
of panels of the Tribunal.
(2)
The persons included in the panel list must— (a) have relevant
experience in or expert knowledge— (i) of law;
or (ii) of
financial products, financial services, financial instruments,
market infrastructures or the financial system; and
(b) be a fit and
proper person to be included in the panel list.’
[11]
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and Another
[2021]
ZACC 13
;
2021 (6) SA 1
(CC);
2021 (8) BCLR 807
(CC);
Natal
Pension Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13; 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA); [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA).
[12]
Section
1 of PAJA.
[13]
Oudekraal
fn 4.
[14]
Kirland
fn 4.
[15]
Director
of Hospital Services v Mistry
(272/77)
[1978] ZASCA 126
(9 November 1978).
[16]
Staufen
Investments (Pty) Ltd v The Minister of Public Works, Eskom Holdings
SOC Ltd & Registrar of Deeds, Cape Town
[2020] ZASCA 18; [2020] 2 All SA 738 (SCA); 2020 (4) SA 78 (SCA).
[17]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism and Others
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC) paras 46-48.
sino noindex
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