Case Law[2024] ZASCA 106South Africa
Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy v Becker and Others (1199/23) [2024] ZASCA 106; [2024] 9 BLLR 893 (SCA) (28 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
19 January 2023
Headnotes
Summary: National Nuclear Regulator Act 47 of 1999 – Board of Directors of Regulator appointed by the Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy in terms of s 8(4) – Minister’s power in terms of s 9(1) to discharge a director of the Board from office inter alia for misconduct.
Judgment
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## Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy v Becker and Others (1199/23) [2024] ZASCA 106; [2024] 9 BLLR 893 (SCA) (28 June 2024)
Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy v Becker and Others (1199/23) [2024] ZASCA 106; [2024] 9 BLLR 893 (SCA) (28 June 2024)
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sino date 28 June 2024
FLYNOTES:ADMINISTRATIVE
ADMINISTRATIVE – Nuclear Regulator –
Discharge
of director
–
Minister’s
power in terms of section 9(1) of Act to discharge director of
Board – Not established that director
committed “misconduct”
– Minister wrongly believed that Board is supposed to
advocate for nuclear activities
– Wrongly believed any
director who opposes nuclear activities can be discharged for
misconduct – Minister wrongly
conflated nuclear desirability
and nuclear safety – Wrongly believed that disclosure of
director’s views on desirability
of nuclear power
constituted misconduct –
National Nuclear Regulator Act 47
of 1999
,
s 9(1).
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 1199/2023
In the matter between:
MINISTER OF MINERAL
RESOURCES AND ENERGY
Appellant
and
PETER
BECKER
First Respondent
NATIONAL NUCLEAR
REGULATOR
Second Respondent
CHAIRPERSON OF THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF THE NATIONAL
NUCLEAR REGULATOR
Third Respondent
Case no: 966/2023
And in the matter
between:
NATIONAL NUCLEAR
REGULATOR
First Appellant
CHAIRPERSON OF THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF THE NATIONAL
NUCLEAR REGULATOR
Second Appellant
and
PETER
BECKER
First Respondent
MINISTER OF MINERAL
RESOURCES AND ENERGY
Second Respondent
Case no: 1013/2023
And in the matter
between:
PETER
BECKER
Appellant
and
MINISTER OF MINERAL
RESOURCES AND ENERGY
First Respondent
NATIONAL NUCLEAR
REGULATOR
Second Respondent
CHAIRPERSON OF THE
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
OF THE NATIONAL
NUCLEAR REGULATOR
Third Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Minister
of Mineral Resources and Energy v Becker and Others
(Case
no 1199/23);
National Nuclear Regulator
and Another v Becker and Another
(Case
no 966/2023);
Becker v Minister of
Mineral Resources and Energy and Others
(Case
no 1013/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 106
(28 June 2024)
Coram:
MOLEMELA P, SCHIPPERS and MEYER JJA and TLALETSI
and KOEN AJJA
Heard:
17 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 released to
SAFLII. The time and date for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 28
June 2024.
Summary:
National Nuclear Regulator Act 47 of 1999
–
Board of Directors of Regulator appointed by the Minister of Mineral
Resources and Energy in terms of
s 8(4)
– Minister’s
power in terms of
s 9(1)
to discharge a director of the Board from
office inter alia for misconduct.
Constitutional and
Administrative Law - principle of legality and review under
Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
– whether Minister’s
discharge of Director for misconduct was unlawful, unconstitutional
and invalid.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Mantame J, sitting as court of first
instance):
1.
The appeal of the Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy
(Case no 1199/2023) is dismissed with costs, including those
of two
counsel where employed.
2.
The appeal of the National Nuclear Regulator and the
Chairperson of the Board of Directors of the National Nuclear
Regulator
(Case no 966/2023) is dismissed with costs, including those
of two counsel where employed.
3.
The cross-appeal of Mr Peter Becker (Case no 1013/2023) is
dismissed with each party to pay their own costs.
JUDGMENT
Meyer JA and Tlaletsi
AJA (Molemela P, Schippers JA and Koen AJA concurring):
[1] These are two
appeals and a cross-appeal, with the leave of this Court, against the
judgment of the Western Cape Division
of the High Court, Cape Town,
per
Mantame J (the high court), delivered on 19 January 2023.
Mr Peter Becker (Mr Becker), who was a Director of the National
Nuclear
Regulator, was discharged as a director by the Minister of
Mineral Resources and Energy (the Minister) on 25 February 2022 in
terms
of
s 9(1)
of the National Nuclear Regulator Act 47 of 1999 (the
Act).
[2] As a result, Mr
Becker initiated review proceedings against the Minister, the
National Nuclear Regulator and the Chairperson
of the Board of
Directors of the National Nuclear Regulator (jointly referred to as
the Regulator). He challenged the Minister’s
decision on the
grounds that it was unconstitutional and unlawful, and sought an
order reviewing and setting aside the decision
under the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) or the principle of
legality.
[3] The high court
made the following order:
‘
1.
The decision of the Minister taken on 25 February 2022 to discharge
Mr Becker with immediate effect is declared unlawful,
unconstitutional and invalid in terms of Section 172(1)
(a)
of the Constitution.
2. The reasons and
decision[s] of the Minister taken on 25 February 2022 to discharge Mr
Becker from his office as a Director
of the Board is reviewed and set
aside.
3. The first,
second and third respondent[s] are ordered to pay costs of this
application including the costs of two (2) Counsel.’
[4] The appellant
in the first appeal, the Minister, seeks an order upholding the
appeal with costs, including those of two
counsel. The Regulator, the
appellant in the second appeal, seeks identical relief. In the
cross-appeal lodged by Mr Becker, he
seeks an order that paragraphs 1
and 2 of the high court’s order ‘operate retrospectively’
[5] The preamble to
the Act reads:
‘
To
provide for the establishment of a National Nuclear Regulator in
order to regulate nuclear activities, for its objects and functions,
for the manner in which it is to be managed and for its staff
matters; to provide for safety standards and regulatory practices
for
protection of persons, property and the environment against nuclear
damage; and to provide for matters connected therewith.’
The
Regulator was established as a juristic person in terms of s 3 of the
Act.
[1]
[6] The objects of
the Regulator are listed in s 5 of the Act. It reads:
‘
The
objects of the Regulator are to-
(a)
provide for the protection of persons,
property and the environment against nuclear damage through the
establishment of safety standards
and Regulatory practices;
(b)
exercise regulatory control related to
safety over-
(i)
the siting, design, construction,
operation, manufacture of component parts, and decontamination,
decommissioning and closure of
nuclear installations; and
(ii)
vessels propelled by nuclear power or
having radioactive material on Board which is capable of causing
nuclear damage,
through the granting of
nuclear authorisations;
(c)
exercise regulatory control over other
actions, to which this Act applies, through the granting of nuclear
authorisations;
(d)
provide assurance of compliance with
the conditions of nuclear authorisations through the implementation
of a system of compliance
inspections;
(e)
fulfil national obligations in respect
of international legal instruments concerning nuclear safety; and
(f)
ensure that provisions for nuclear
emergency planning are in place.’
[7]
The Regulator is governed and controlled, in accordance with the Act,
by a Board of Directors. The Board must ensure that
the objects of
the Regulator referred to in s 5 are carried out; it also exercises
general control over the performance of the
Regulator’s
functions.
[2]
The Board consists
of the following directors appointed by the Minister: (a) one
representative of organised labour; (b) one representative
of
organised business; (c) one person representing communities which may
be affected by nuclear activities; (d) an official from
the
Department of Minerals and Energy; (e) an official from the
Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism; (f) not more than
seven other directors; and (g) the Chief Executive Officer.
[3]
[8]
A director holds office for a period specified in the letter of
appointment but not exceeding three years and may be reappointed
upon
expiry of that term of office.
[4]
The Minister may at any time discharge a director of the Board from
office if the director has repeatedly failed to perform his
or her
functions efficiently, or if, because of any physical or mental
illness or disability, the director has become incapable
of
performing his or her functions, or of performing them efficiently,
or for misconduct.
[5]
[9] The Regulator’s
role is thus to ensure safety in respect of all nuclear activities
when they are undertaken. The
stated policy of the government and the
Department of Mineral Resources and Energy (the Department) is the
extension of Koeberg’s
lifecycle and the extension of nuclear
energy as a component of the ‘energy mix’ in South
Africa. The Board is not
involved in determining governmental policy
regarding the use of nuclear energy.
[10] On 10 June
2021, the Minister appointed Mr Becker as the non-executive director
of the Board of the Regulator in terms
of s 8(4)
(a)
(iii) of
the Act as a person representing ‘communities, which may be
affected by nuclear activities’. At the time of
his appointment
and throughout his tenure as a director of the Board, Mr Becker held
the position of spokesperson of the Koeberg
Alert Alliance (the KAA),
an organisation that is opposed to nuclear energy in general, and in
particular, to the extension of
the life-span of the Koeberg Nuclear
Power Station in Cape Town. Mr Becker’s appointment followed
his nomination by civil
society concerned about nuclear power in
South Africa, for and on behalf of the KAA.
[11] The Board
comprises individual directors, each of whom holds divergent views as
to nuclear desirability in South Africa.
However, nuclear safety is
the statutorily prescribed imperative of the Board and the guiding
factor which ought to inform each
of the decisions that serves before
the Board.
[12] On 30 June
2021, an article titled ‘Thyspunt nuclear hearings distract
from Koeberg problems’ was published
in Energize, an online
publication (the Energize article). In essence, the article provided
commentary in relation to Eskom’s
application to the Board for
a license of a site located at Thyspunt, at which it intended to
establish a nuclear power station.
In the article Mr Becker is
identified as the spokesperson for the KAA, and a newly appointed
director of the Board. He is quoted
as having said:
‘
It
is disappointing to see money and time being spent on pursuing
nuclear power for the Thyspunt site after the government had stated
that there was no money to fund a new nuclear build.
The existing Koeberg
plant is more of a concern, where reactor 1 was down since January
due to an increasing leak rate of a steam
generator within the
containment building. The plant manager, Velaphi Ntuli was then
suspended on 4 June 2021 and two weeks later
reactor 1 was running
again. Was the leak actually fixed in the short period or did the new
acting plant manager override Ntuli’s
concerns? We call for
transparency and that Ntuli be allowed to speak publicly about his
decision not to restart the reactor.
We should be worrying
about the safety of the existing plant at Koeberg, especially as it
approaches the end of its design lifetime.
There are several issues
that need to be addressed before the Koeberg plant can be considered
safe by modern standards, and that
will come with a significant cost,
says Becker.
Much like an old car,
there comes a time when it is just not worth repairing it to the
point where it is as safe as a new car. It
was unwise to spend money
refurbishing the plant before finding out what would have to be done
to obtain a license to extend its
life. We are probably going to have
load shedding for the next 2 or 3 years. It will only make the
situation worse to repeatedly
shut down Koeberg for refurbishing work
over that time. Eskom has said the refurbishing of Koeberg to allow
the life extension
would cost R20 billion. Based on other large Eskom
projects, this is likely to double or even triple.’
[13] On 19 July
2021, Mr Becker sent an email to Mr Gino Moonsamy of the Regulator,
which included this statement:
‘
This
week I am hosting a meeting of civil society organisations in my
capacity as rep on the Board. The goal is to collect the top
concerns/questions relating to nuclear safety across organisations…’
The email was then sent
to the Board’s CEO, Dr Mzubani Tyobeka. His response queried
whether Mr Becker, purportedly representing
the Board without its
mandate, was entitled to host a meeting with selected stakeholders.
Dr Tyobeka also stated:
‘…
I
have no doubt that Mr Becker is driven by good intentions, but those
good intentions may be at odds with the principles of good
corporate
governance…’
[14] On 27 July
2021, Mr Becker sent an email to the chairperson, Mr Thapelo
Motshudi, with the subject heading ‘Request
for guidance –
incremental decisions’. He queried why Eskom would be spending
money on replacing its steam generators
at Koeberg in circumstances
where it was uncertain whether the Board would approve the extension
of the Koeberg plant beyond July
2024.
[15] At a Board
meeting held on 29 July 2021, members of the Board questioned Mr
Becker’s potential conflict evidenced
by his statements
published in the Energize article and invited him to explain how he
would manage situations where he had to take
a position in civil
society (as KAA spokesperson) which was opposed to the Board’s
processes. Mr Becker responded by stating,
inter alia, that he had
stated that his engagements had been in his capacity as their
representative on the Board. Mr Becker assured
the Board that his
statements to the media were not based on any confidential
information which he had acquired by virtue of his
status as a
director.
[16] The Board took
the view that Mr Becker’s statements in the Energize article
had to be withdrawn as they were an
incorrect representation of what
it does and of the decisions it makes. Mr Becker indicated that there
might be an opportunity
to amend the statements to remove the
impression that the Board was pursuing a pro-nuclear power stance. It
was resolved by the
Board that an independent legal opinion should be
obtained on the matter. As a result of the advice received, the
chairperson addressed
a letter to the Minister in which he was asked
to act on the recommendations in the opinion.
[17] In a statement
to the press on 18 August 2022, Mr Becker as spokesperson of the KAA,
commented on speculation that Eskom
had already concluded a contract
to extend the life of the Koeberg nuclear power plant beyond 2024, in
the absence of a public
participation process having been conducted.
The KAA expressed concern over the ‘imbalance of power between
Eskom and the
Board, stating:
‘
The
fact that the NNR receives about 75% of its revenue from application
and authorisation fees, and the bulk of that is from Eskom,
only adds
to this concern. Without those fees, the NNR would not even be able
to pay staff salaries.’
[18] On 14 October
2022, the Minister received a letter from Mr Becker in which he
recorded his disagreement with the Board’s
legal opinion and
the allegations upon which it is based. He requested that the
Minister allow him an opportunity to make representations
regarding
the legal opinion.
[19] On 17 January
2022, the Minister received a legal opinion from Mr Becker’s
erstwhile attorneys, countering the
legal opinion provided to the
Board. On 18 January 2022, the Minister advised Mr Becker’s
attorneys that the allegations
against Mr Becker were of a serious
nature and could affect his continued presence on the Board. As a
result, the Minister suspended
Mr Becker with immediate effect,
pending his final decision. Furthermore, Mr Becker was given the
opportunity to provide written
representations as to why he should
not be discharged.
[20] On 16 March
2022, after Mr Becker’s suspension, the Daily Maverick online
news service published an article entitled
‘Koeberg nuclear
power plant rejuvenation: Protesters say silence is a killer’.
In this article, Mr Becker as the spokesperson
for the KAA, is quoted
inter alia having said:
‘
This
has a moral component, a society component, an intergenerational
ethic component – this is not for a bunch of engineers
to
decide alone. That is why the community needs to be consulted, and
the public needs to have their say.’
[21] On 8 February
2022, Mr Becker brought an urgent court application, challenging the
lawfulness of the Minister’s
decision to suspend him. The
urgent application was settled. On 8 February 2022, the Western Cape
Division of the High Court made
the settlement an order of court,
inter alia providing time frames for the delivery of Mr Becker’s
written representations
to the Minister regarding his discharge as a
director, and for the taking of a decision by the Minister.
Additionally, provision
was made for the holding of no meetings of
and the taking of no decisions by the Board or any of its
sub-committees pending the
decision of the Minister.
[22] Mr Becker made
written submissions to the Minister on 10 February 2022. He
expressed the view that the Minister
had failed to specify the
grounds for his discharge as contemplated in s 9(1) of the Act. On 15
February 2022, the Minister wrote
to Mr Becker, setting out those
grounds and providing him with a further opportunity to make
representations. Mr Becker’s
representations were furnished to
the Minister on 21 February 2022. In a letter dated 25 February 2022,
the Minister informed Mr
Becker of his decision to discharge him from
the Board and provided reasons for his decision.
[23] The Minister’s
reasons were the following:
‘
a.
As a director of the NNR, you have placed yourself in a position in
which you have a personal interest, which conflicts
with your duties
to the NNR;
b. You have publicly
vocalised your opinions on nuclear activity and your opposition to
the lifespan extension of Koeberg which
is in conflict with the
independent or neutral role and function of the NNR. There can be
little doubt on how you would vote, were
you still to be a member of
the NNR Board, when the question of the lifespan extension for the
Koeberg station comes before the
NNR Board. You are thus not
qualified to make a decision on the Board. Your continued
involvement, when you are unable to bring
an independent mind to bear
on decisions in relation to the safe operation and/or extension of
Koeberg, because you have already
indicated your position, amounts to
misconduct, in my view;
c. You hosted
meetings with civil society organisations either in your capacity as
a member “
on”
or “
of”
the NNR
Board and gave the impression that you are acting on behalf of the
NNR Board, with no authority to do so;
d. You have acted
in conflict with your obligations both in law and in contract; and
e. The conflict of
interest that exists is material and fundamental as it is impossible
for you to avoid or manage the actual
conflict as well as the
appearance of conflict. It would on the face of it appear that you
have no hesitation to make the public
aware of your conflict.’
[24] A director can
only be removed in the limited circumstances mentioned in
s 9(1)
of the Act. The three listed grounds for discharging a director –
failure to perform, incapacity or misconduct –
are
jurisdictional facts or preconditions for the lawful exercise of the
Minister’s power.
[25]
Where a statute specifies the existence of a jurisdictional fact for
the exercise of the public power, ‘if the
jurisdictional fact
does not exist, then the power may not be exercised and any purported
exercise of the power would be invalid’.
[6]
It follows that if Mr Becker, objectively, was not guilty of
misconduct, the Minister’s decision was unlawful. In our
constitutional
era, all jurisdictional facts are reviewable by the
court on an objective basis as an integral part of the principle of
legality.
The mere say-so of the Minister that Mr Becker committed
misconduct does not demonstrate that it is so. The Act does not
provide
that the Minister may discharge a member of the Board if, ‘in
the opinion of the Minister’ the member has committed
misconduct. A Board member may only be discharged for actual
misconduct. To justify his decision, the Minister must demonstrate
that his finding of misconduct was based on reasonable grounds.
[7]
Even if the question of whether Mr Becker committed misconduct to
some extent involves a value judgment, that does not immunise
the
Minister’s decision from judicial review. The Constitutional
Court has expressly held that in relevant circumstances-
‘
.
. . it does not follow from this that the decision and evaluation
lies within the sole and subjective preserve of the President.
Value
judgments are involved in virtually every decision any member of the
Executive might make where objective requirements are
stipulated. It
is true that there may be differences of opinion in relation to
whether or not objective criteria have been established
or are
present. This does not mean that the decision becomes one of
subjective determination, immune from objective scrutiny.’
[8]
[26] For the
reasons that follow, we are of the view that on an objective basis it
has not been established that Mr Becker
committed ‘misconduct’
as contemplated in s 9(1) of the Act. First, the Minister wrongly
believed that the Board is
supposed to advocate for nuclear
activities. His state of mind is illustrated by what he stated at an
ANC conference in May 2022.
He was quoted as saying:
‘
[T]hose
who resist nuclear power while serving on the Board of the National
Nuclear Regulator will be fired’
and
‘
If
you resist nuclear and you [are] a Board member, I fire you, simple.
You can’t be in a Board of something you’re
not
advocating for’.
The Minister did not make
these statements in the abstract or in general; it was his
explanation of why he ‘fired’ Mr
Becker. However, the
Board’s functions are not to advocate either for or against
nuclear activities. Its function is to ensure
that nuclear activities
are undertaken in a safe manner.
[27] Second, the
Minister wrongly believed any director who opposes nuclear activities
can be discharged for misconduct. He
plainly believed that he is
entitled to discharge a director who ‘resists nuclear’ or
who does not ‘advocate
for’ nuclear. He was wrong.
Resisting or advocating for nuclear energy – even publicly –
is not misconduct for
purposes of s 9 of the Act. It could never be,
since the role of the Board is concerned with the safety of a
specific proposed
nuclear activity, not the desirability of nuclear
activity in general.
[28] Third, the
Minister wrongly conflated nuclear desirability and nuclear safety.
In the reasons for his decision to discharge
Mr Becker as a director
of the Board, the Minister stated that the KAA ‘is opposed to
any new nuclear plants being established,
as well as the extension of
the life of Koeberg’, and Mr Becker ‘hold[s] those same
views’. The Minister stated
that Mr Becker would be unable to
‘make an objective decision, when presented with objective,
scientific evidence in respect
of the extension of the life of
Koeberg’, and therefore any decision he would make in that
regard ‘will be prejudiced
as [Mr Becker had] already indicated
[his] views’.
[29] This statement
is unfounded. Mr Becker fully explains in his replying affidavit that
he is able to disentangle his views
concerning the desirability of
nuclear activities from an evaluation of a specific activity’s
safety. Mr Becker is well entitled
to hold and maintain his views
about the desirability of nuclear activities while being a member of
the Board. So are the other
Board members. For example, the
Minister’s representative on the Board, Mr Maphoto, plainly has
strong views in favour of
the desirability of nuclear power. The
Board itself and its chair have also adopted a pro-nuclear stance,
which was also included
in their annual report presented to
Parliament in 2022. The Minister says that Mr Maphoto and the other
Board members can distinguish
between nuclear desirability and
nuclear safety and can advocate for nuclear without a conflict of
interest arising. Yet, the Minister
is unable to appreciate that the
rule is the same for a person who resists nuclear activities, like Mr
Becker. This is arbitrary
and irrational decision-making.
[30]
Fourth, the Minister wrongly believed that he could discharge a
director in anticipation of misconduct by that director.
The Minister
contends that he was entitled to reach a conclusion that Mr Becker
was guilty of misconduct, on the basis of conduct
that Mr Becker
would commit in the future. This is no ground for a finding of
misconduct. In this case, the Minister speculated
that Mr Becker
would bring a biased mind to bear on future decisions of the Board.
He based this speculation on Mr Becker’s
conduct and legitimate
opinions – including what he said to the press –
pertaining to questions of the desirability
of nuclear power. The
Minister’s reasoning is thus a
non-sequitur
. If holding
such views is not misconduct, as the Minister accepts in his
affidavit, then the fact that they are held cannot be
used to draw an
inference that misconduct will be committed in the future.
[31]
As a matter of fact, Mr Becker was suspended and then discharged by
the Minister before he even had an opportunity to
participate in any
decision-making by the Board relating to an application for a license
for a nuclear installation or anything
related to nuclear power. Mr
Becker was never given any opportunity to demonstrate his ability to
participate in decisions about
the safety of nuclear activities in an
unbiased fashion. Furthermore, if the Minister was correct that Mr
Becker’s views
about nuclear desirability justified discharging
him, then the same would necessarily apply to the other directors who
have expressed
favourable views about nuclear energy. On the
Minister’s approach, they too would not be able to exercise a
proper judgment
about the safety of a proposed nuclear activity,
because they favour nuclear power. This demonstrates the fallacy in
the Minister’s
contentions.
[32]
Fifth, the Minister wrongly believed that the disclosure of a
director’s views on the desirability of nuclear power
constitutes misconduct. In his reasons for discharging Mr Becker, the
Minister explicitly records his view that Mr Becker had ‘publicly
vocalised [his] opinions on nuclear activity . . . conflict with the
neutral role and function of the Regulator’ and that
‘because
[Mr Becker had] already indicated [his] position’ this ‘amounts
to misconduct’. However, the Minister
has repeatedly stated
that it is permissible for directors to hold personal views opposed
to or in favour of nuclear energy. What
is prohibited, the Minister
now says in his affidavit, is the public expression of those views by
directors on the Board. It appears
that the Minister believes that a
director can hold views on the desirability of nuclear power, as long
as those views are not
disclosed. But, the Minister again did not
apply this standard to members of the Board who publicly advocate for
nuclear energy
such as Mr Maphoto.
[33]
Sixth, the Minister erroneously based his decision on the wrong
facts. His decision is premised on two fundamental factual
errors:
First, the Minister said that he decided to discharge Mr Becker
because he had met with civil society and had ‘given
the
impression that [he was] acting on behalf of the NNR Board, with no
authority to do so’. However, Mr Becker explains
that when he
met with representatives of civil society (in discharging his duties
as director) he did not do so as a representative
of the Board, and
he gave no such impression. He explains that he met with civil
society as their representative ‘on’
the Board. Mr
Becker’s version is corroborated by affidavits of two persons
who attended the meeting. Neither Mr Becker’s
version, nor its
corroboration in the supporting affidavits is denied by the Minister
in his affidavit. The Minister could not
deny Mr Becker’s
version, as he did not attend the meeting and has no personal
knowledge of what was discussed. The Minister’s
second factual
error was his belief, expressed in the Newz Room Africa interview,
that Mr Becker ‘led a march’ against
a decision of the
Board. Mr Becker denies this. His denial is not addressed by the
Minister. The Minister produces no evidence
to explain his belief.
[34]
Seventh, the Minister unfairly made up his mind before Mr Becker made
representations concerning his discharge. The process,
therefore, was
procedurally unfair and irrational. On 3 February 2022, before the
representations were made or were due, the Minister
was interviewed
on Newz Room Africa. He said this:
‘
But
it is simple, if you are an anti-nuclear activist. You can’t
sit on the Board of nuclear, and get all the details of the
plans and
go and plan a program against that entity. It is not allowed.’
Thus,
the representations process was a sham.
[35]
In his answering affidavit, the Minister admits making this comment
at the time he did, but denies that he prejudged
Mr Becker’s
case. He says that he was merely expressing a ‘prima facie
view’. He says that he could have been
convinced otherwise by
Mr Becker’s representations. But those contentions are not
borne out by the facts. What the Minister
said is not consistent with
the expression of a preliminary view. He was expressing a firm view
that Mr Becker was disqualified
from being a director on the Board:
‘. . . it is simple … It is not allowed’. The
irresistible inference is
that the Minister ignored Mr Becker’s
representations.
[36]
After Mr Becker had been discharged as a director, the Minister made
further public comments, which confirm that he had
a fixed view with
a predetermined outcome. The Minister said: ‘If you resist
nuclear and you [are] a Board member, I fire
you, simple. You can’t
be in a Board of something you’re not advocating for’.
The Minister does not deny
making these statements. He attempts
to justify them by contending that he ‘did not intend to
suggest that members of the
Board would be removed for holding
personal views on the desirability of nuclear which were different
from those of the Government’.
But this is clearly not so: his
statement is unequivocal that one who is critical about the
desirability of nuclear energy will
be ‘fire[d]’.
[37]
The appeals of the Minister and that of the Regulator, therefore,
fall to be dismissed with costs, including those of
two counsel. This
brings us to Mr Becker’s cross-appeal against the failure of
the high court to set aside the Minister’s
decision
prospectively from now. What Mr Becker seeks is for the high court’s
declaration that the Minister’s decision
to discharge him was
unlawful, unconstitutional and invalid to operate from the date of
this order so that he could serve the balance
of his term for which
he had been appointed as a director of the Board.
[38]
In his letter of appointment, the Minister appointed Mr Becker for a
three-year term commencing in June 2021. In terms
of s 8(12)
(b)
‘[a] director . . . holds office for a period specified in the
letter of appointment but not exceeding three years and may
be
reappointed upon expiry of that term of office’. Mr Becker was
nominated by communities which may be affected by nuclear
activities,
and he was appointed by the Minister as a non-executive director on
the Board of the Regulator to represent those communities.
[39]
The relief sought by Mr Becker in his cross-appeal is, in our view,
legally unsustainable. Mr Becker’s three-year
term on the Board
expired on 5 June 2024. It is not known whether those communities
which may be affected by nuclear activities
would want Mr Becker to
again represent them on the Board, or whether they would prefer to
nominate someone else. There was no
evidence placed before the high
court that the communities which may be affected by nuclear
activities would want Mr Becker to
represent them on the Board of the
Regulator further and that he would be the person who would carry
their nomination. Mr Becker’s
cross-appeal, therefore, must
also fail. The
Biowatch
rule applies here. Each party should bear its own costs in respect of
Mr Becker’s appeal.
[9]
[40]
In the result, the following order is made:
1. The appeal of
the Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy
(Case no 1199/2023)
is dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel where
employed.
2. The appeal of
the National Nuclear Regulator and of the Chairperson of the Board of
Directors of the National Nuclear
Regulator (Case no 966/2023) is
dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel where employed.
3. The
cross-appeal of Mr Peter Becker (Case no 1013/2023) is dismissed with
each party to pay their own costs.
P A MEYER
JUDGE OF APPEAL
P TLALETSI
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the Minister of
Mineral Resources: D Borgstrom SC with C Cawood
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Cape Town.
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein.
For the National Nuclear
Regulator and the
Chairperson of the Board
of Directors of the
National Nuclear
Regulator:
I Jamie
SC with L Stansfield
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Cape Town
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein.
For Mr Peter
Becker:
G.M Budlender SC with M.N de Beer
Instructed
by:
Macroberts Attorneys Inc., Pretoria
Claude
Reid Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Section
3 reads:
‘
A
juristic person to be known as the National Nuclear Regulator,
comprising a Board, a chief executive officer and staff, is hereby
established.’
[2]
Subsections
8(1) and (2).
[3]
Subsection
8(4).
[4]
Subsection
8(12)
(b).
[5]
Subsection 9(1).
[6]
South
African Defence and Aid Fund v Minister of Justice
1967
(1) SA 31
(C) at 34H, affirmed by the Constitutional Court in
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South African Rugby
Football Union
and
Others
2000 (1) SA 1
(CC);
1999 (10) BCLR 1059
at fn 132 as the ‘leading
authority on “jurisdictional facts” in our law’.
[7]
Walele
v City of Cape Town
and
Others
[2008] ZACC 11
;
2008 (6) SA 129
(CC);
2008 (11) BCLR 1067
(CC) para
60.
[8]
Democratic
Alliance v President of South Africa and Others
[2012]
ZACC 24
;
2012 (12) BCLR 1297
(CC);
2013 (1) SA 248
(CC) para 23.
[9]
Nu
Africa Duty Free Shops (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Finance and Others
[2023]
ZACC 31
;
2023 (12) BCLR 1419
(CC);
2024 (1) SA 567
(CC) paras 149
and 279-284.
sino noindex
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