Case Law[2024] ZASCA 154South Africa
Hanekom N O and Others v Nuwekloof Private Game Reserve Farm Owners Association (502/2023) [2024] ZASCA 154; 2025 (2) SA 128 (SCA) (12 November 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
12 November 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Appeal from adjudicator under the Community Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 to the high court – two judges of the high court hearing appeal – nature of proceedings before the adjudicator and the high court – whether leave to appeal to this Court should have been sought from the high court in terms of s 16(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the SC Act) or special leave to appeal from this Court in terms of s 16(1)(b) and 17(3) of the SC Act adjudicator performs an administrative function – high court sits as a court of first instance – special leave to appeal granted by this Court a nullity – no jurisdiction to hear the appeal.
Judgment
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## Hanekom N O and Others v Nuwekloof Private Game Reserve Farm Owners Association (502/2023) [2024] ZASCA 154; 2025 (2) SA 128 (SCA) (12 November 2024)
Hanekom N O and Others v Nuwekloof Private Game Reserve Farm Owners Association (502/2023) [2024] ZASCA 154; 2025 (2) SA 128 (SCA) (12 November 2024)
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sino date 12 November 2024
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THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 502/2023
In
the matter between:
WILLEM TOBIAS HANEKOM
N O
FIRST APPELLANT
LOURENS HERMANUS
TALJAARD N O
SECOND APPELLANT
THE COMMUNITY SCHEMES
OMBUD
SERVICE
THIRD
APPELLANT
ZAMA MATAYI N
O
FOURTH APPELLANT
and
NUWEKLOOF
PRIVATE GAME RESERVE
FARM
OWNERS’
ASSOCIATION
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Hanekom N O
and Others v Nuwekloof Private Game Reserve Farm Owners’
Association
(502/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 154
(12 November 2024)
Coram:
PONNAN, MAKGOKA and WEINER JJA and MANTAME and
MASIPA AJJA
Heard:
10 September 2024
Delivered:
12 November 2024
Summary:
Appeal from adjudicator under the
Community
Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 to the high court – two
judges of the high court hearing appeal – nature
of proceedings
before the adjudicator and the high court – whether leave to
appeal to this Court should have been sought
from the high court in
terms of s
16(1)
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the SC Act)
or
special leave to appeal from this Court in terms of s 16(1)
(b)
and
17(3) of the SC Act adjudicator performs an administrative function –
high court sits as a court of first instance –
special leave to
appeal granted by this Court a nullity – no jurisdiction to
hear the appeal.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Nuku and Nziweni JJ, sitting as court
of first instance):
The appeal is struck from
the roll with costs, including the costs of two counsel, where so
employed.
JUDGMENT
Weiner JA (Mantame AJA
concurring)
Introduction
[1]
This
appeal arises from an order of the
Western
Cape Division of the High Court (the high court),
which
set aside an order of the fourth appellant, the Community Schemes
Ombud Service (the CSOS) adjudicator (the adjudicator).
Although
the question raised in this appeal was
the
correctness of the adjudicator’s decision, a preliminary point
arose, and this Court must first decide whether it has
jurisdiction
to entertain this appeal.
The
primary question in this appeal is whether the high court (consisting
of two judges) sat as a court of appeal in respect of
the
adjudicator’s decision under the Community Schemes Ombud
Service Act 9 of 2011 (the Act) or as a court of first instance.
If
the high court sat as a court of first instance, the appellants
should have sought leave to appeal from the high court in terms
of
s
16(1)
(a)
[1]
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the SC Act) and not special leave to appeal
from this Court, in terms of ss 16(1)
(b)
[2]
and 17(3)
[3]
of the SC Act, as
they did.
[2]
The first and second appellants are cited
herein in their official capacities as trustees of the WTH Trust (the
Trust), established
and registered with the Master of the High Court
under number IT 954/2011. The Trust owns one of the properties in the
Nuwekloof Private Game Reserve (the Reserve).
The
third appellant is the CSOS, a juristic person established in terms
of s 3 of the Act. It provides a dispute resolution
service in
respect of a community scheme. The fourth appellant is Zama Matayi N
O cited in her official capacity as the adjudicator,
appointed as
such in terms of s 21(2)
(b)
of
the Act. The third and fourth appellants take no part in these
proceedings.
[3]
The
respondent is the Nuwekloof
Private Game Reserve Farm Owners' Association (the Association), a
voluntary association which manages
the Reserve. The Reserve
comprises six properties owned by various owners, which have been
leased to the Association. The Reserve
is a community scheme as
defined in the Act.
Background
facts
[4]
The
trustees of the WTH Trust
(the Trust) concluded an agreement of sale with the trustees of the
Nuwekloof Trust in terms of which
the Trust purchased Portion 5 of
the Farm 320, in the Kannaland Municipality, Ladysmith, Western Cape
(the property). In terms
of the sale agreement, the Trust, upon
registration of transfer of the property into its name, became a
member of the Association.
[5]
The
Trust
failed to pay certain levies to the Association, which invoked clause
5.13 of the Association’s 2017 Constitution
[4]
which provided:
‘
When
a Member is in default of any payment obligation (general and/or
special levies and/or obligatory loans), or any other obligation
as
set out herein, to the Association the defaulting Member shall
(unless otherwise determined by the Trustees) not be entitled
to any
of the privileges of Membership including (but not limited to):
5.13.1
his right to access and/or use of the Reserve and/or any of the
common property and/or any Services;
5.13.2
his right to vote in regard to any aspect;
until
he shall have paid the full amount due, together with interest and
costs and/or any other amount which may be due and payable
by him
and/or had rectified any other breach in terms hereof, to the
Association.’
[6]
On
24
February 2022, the Trust applied to the CSOS in terms of s 38 of the
Act
[5]
for an order declaring
clause 5.13 of the 2017 Constitution invalid.
On
11 August 2022, the adjudicator made an order in which the relief
sought by the Trust was granted. The adjudicator declared clause
5.13
to be invalid and set it aside and ordered the Association to remove
clause 5.13 from its 2017 Constitution.
The
Association, being dissatisfied with the adjudicator’s order,
appealed to the high court in terms of section 57(1) of
the Act
[6]
to have the order set aside. In terms of s 57(1) of the Act, an
appeal against the adjudicator’s decision is limited to a
question of law. To bring its appeal within the purview of that
provision, the Association contended that the adjudicator erred
in
law by holding that clause 5.13 was contrary to public policy.
[7]
The appeal served before two judges of the
high court, on 18 November 2022, and it delivered its judgment on 30
January 2023. It
upheld the Association’s appeal; the order
made by the adjudicator was set aside; and the adjudicator’s
order was replaced
by one in which the Trust’s application was
dismissed.
[8]
The trustees thereafter applied in terms of s 16(1)
(b)
and
17(3) of the SC Act to this Court for special leave to appeal, which
was granted on 5 May 2023. The Trust contended that this
Court,
accordingly, has jurisdiction to hear this appeal.
Status
of the appeal
[9]
Section
57(1) of the Act provides; ‘An applicant, the association or
any affected person who is dissatisfied by an adjudicator’s
order, may appeal to the [h]igh [c]ourt, but only on a question of
law’.
The
Association contends that such an appeal is similar, in material
respects, to an appeal against a decision of the National Consumer
Tribunal under the National Credit Act 34 of 2005 (the NCA). In
National
Credit Regulator v Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd and Another (Lewis)
,
[7]
this Court held that such an appeal is a statutory appeal and not a
‘judicial appeal’ and therefore the court seized
with
such an appeal is a court of first instance. Accordingly, the proper
approach in such cases is to follow the procedure set
out in s
16(1)
(b)
of
the SC Act
.
Thus,
the Association argues that having not sought and obtained leave from
the high court, this Court had no jurisdiction to hear
the appeal.
[10]
It
was submitted by the Trust that an adjudication in terms of the CSOS
is not an administrative appeal and (contrary to the decision
in
Lewis
)
because s 56(2)
[8]
of the Act
requires the registrar of a court to register an adjudication order
as an order of the high court.
But
this submission ignores the fact that s 152 of the NCA
[9]
also provides that any order of the National Credit Tribunal may be
enforced ‘
as
if it were an order of the [h]igh [c]ourt
’.
In
Lewis
,
this Court found that that provision did not change the status of the
statutory appeal to a judicial appeal.
[11]
Despite
the fact that the registrar of the court is required to register the
order as an order of court in terms of s 56, this does
not alter the
principle that the status of an adjudication order remains an
administrative decision. The order must only be registered
if a party
lodges the order and requests registration.
[10]
The
registration is
an
administrative formality to facilitate enforcement, when invoked.
That formality, which only arises when the party wishes to
enforce
the order, does not convert the substantive nature of the original
decision from an administrative one to a judicial one.
[12]
This Court, in
Lewis
,
considered why it was undesirable that s
16(1)
(b)
of the SC Act should apply to appeals
from bodies outside the judicial system. It bears repeating what was
said in
Lewis,
as
such principles apply with equal force to appeals from the
adjudicator under the CSOS. Wallis JA stated as follows:
‘
In
principle there are a number of reasons why s 16(1)
(b)
of
the SC Act should be confined to applications for leave to appeal
against decisions by the high court given on appeal to it from
other
courts within the judicial system, that is, the magistrates’
courts and full bench appeals from the high court sitting
at first
instance. The first is that there is a fundamental difference between
an appeal from a court and an appeal from a body
outside the judicial
system. The latter may be an administrative tribunal, or a board or
official dealing with purely administrative
matters, where the
decision in question may have little or no legal content, but may be
a matter of administrative discretion.
The ‘appeal’
brings it before the court for the first time. By contrast, once a
matter has been heard by a court of
first instance and the
dissatisfied party has exercised a right of appeal, the right to a
further appeal should depend not only
on the question whether there
are reasonable prospects of success, but also on the existence of
some compelling circumstances warranting
a further appeal. The reason
for such a limitation lies in the principle that there should be
finality in litigation. Accordingly,
the law places a limit on
the number of appeals that may be pursued within the court system and
empowers appellate courts to regulate
the cases that come to them by
way of provisions requiring leave to appeal from those courts
.
[11]
The
second point of principle lies in the fact that an appeal within the
justice system is a clearly defined process, whereby the
correctness
of the decision of the court appealed from is assessed within defined
boundaries. The appeal proceeds on the record
of the proceedings in
the lower court and the factual findings of that court and its
exercise of discretion in reaching its decision
are given respect and
only departed from on limited grounds. That is by no means true of
statutory appeals from tribunals and officials.’
[12]
The
first issue in a statutory appeal is to ascertain the nature of the
right of appeal conferred by the statute. In determining
that
question courts follow the taxonomy laid down by Trollip J
in
Tikly
v Johannes
. …
Unlike appeals within the judicial system therefore statutory appeals
may have a widely varying nature and involve
different types of
hearing.
[13]
The
third point concerns the nature of a statutory appeal and the terms
in which the right of appeal is granted. These may, when
properly
construed, mean that the appeal to the high court is final and not
subject to any further appeal at all. That may especially
be the case
when the statute provides that the decision by the court will stand
in the place of or be deemed to be the decision
of the original
decision-maker. If the appeal to the high court is taken to
result in a decision by that court given on appeal
to it there will
be conflict between the statute conferring the right of appeal and
the SC Act. That is manifestly undesirable.
[14]
The
fourth point is that it is almost inevitable, as recognised expressly
in s 148(2)
(a)
of
the NCA, that the decisions of statutory bodies and officials in
these matters will constitute administrative action and be subject
to
judicial review under the provisions of PAJA. Such proceedings
are conventionally pursued in the high court before a single
judge
sitting at first instance. That judge will deal with the question of
leave to appeal against the judgment and may direct
that it be heard
before either a full court or this court, depending on the nature and
complexity of the issues raised. It seems
anomalous that, if the
dissatisfied party was content to proceed by way of an appeal on the
record of the administrative decision-maker,
any appeal flowing from
the judgment would require special leave to appeal from this court,
when common experience teaches that
there may be considerable overlap
between appeal and review grounds.
[15]
Finally,
I revert to the point made earlier that the test for granting special
leave to appeal is more
stringent
than the test for leave to appeal, Given the fact that restrictions
on the right of appeal have been held by the Constitutional
Court to
constitute a limitation on the right of access to courts under s 34
of the Constitution, it seems to me that we should
prefer an
interpretation of s 16(1)
(b)
that
least restricts the ability of a disappointed litigant to seek relief
by way of an appeal within the justice system.
[16]
For
those reasons I conclude that an appeal from the decision of a high
court under s 148(2)
(b)
,
whether constituted of a single judge, or two judges, or as a full
court, lies with leave of that court sitting as a court of
first
instance. Such leave should be sought in terms of s 16(1)
(a)
of
the SC Act and not by way of an application for special leave to
appeal from this court.’
[17]
(footnotes omitted).
[13]
As
pointed out in
Lewis,
[18]
where the decision of the statutory body is also subject to judicial
review, an anomaly would arise between the situation where
there is
an appeal against a review
judgment
and the situation where there is an appeal against a statutory appeal
judgment, if the latter would always require special
leave from this
Court, but the former would not.
This
too, points to the conclusion that the appeal is not a judicial
appeal.
This
Court’s inherent powers under s 173 of the Constitution
[14]
The
Appellants
have submitted in the alternative that in the ‘special
circumstances’ of this case,
[19]
this Court should exercise its inherent powers under s 173 of
the Constitution, to regulate its own procedure, by deciding
this
appeal. For this proposition, the appellants relied on the exception
carved out in
Lewis
.
There this Court found that leave should have been granted by the
high court, and not by this Court.
[20]
As a result, the order of this Court granting special leave was a
nullity. Despite this finding, the Court heard the appeal, based
on
what it considered ‘special circumstances.’ Those
included that t
he
parties came in good faith having received special leave to appeal
from this Court.
[21]
To strike
the appeal from the roll, reasoned Wallis JA, would be a gross
technicality and waste of resources, given that the parties
were
likely to revert to the high court to seek leave, and if refused,
they would end up again in this Court.
[22]
These considerations, the court concluded, constituted ‘special
circumstances in which the court can in the exercise of its
inherent
jurisdiction to regulate its own procedure condone the irregular
manner in which this appeal reached us.’
[23]
[15]
A
similar approach was taken in
Gaone
Jack Siamisang
Montshiwa
(Montshiwa
),
[24]
where the court of first instance comprised two judges. The
application for leave to appeal was considered, and refused, by a
single judge. The applicant applied to this Court for leave to
appeal. The minority held that the proceedings in the application
for
leave to appeal were irregular and the consequent order a nullity. As
such, the matter ought to have been struck from the roll.
The
majority reasoned that to strike the matter from the roll would have
amounted to an absurdity as in all probability, the matter
would end
up before this Court again. This would serve only to waste the Court
and the applicant’s resources. The majority
consequently held
that by virtue of this Court’s inherent powers under s 173 of
the Constitution, it was entitled to consider
the merits of the
application for leave to appeal and, if appropriate, to determine the
appeal. It did so and dismissed the application.
[16]
The
Trust urged upon us to follow the same approach adopted in
Lewis
and
Montshiwa
.
With specific reference to
Lewis
,
it was contended that there are also ‘special circumstances’
to hear the appeal. The same circumstances as relied
upon in
Lewis
,
were cited by the appellants.
But
these circumstances were all considered in
Lewis,
when Wallis JA cautioned that the result in that case was an
‘exception’ which would not apply again, as parties were
now aware of the correct procedure to follow in cases such as the
present.
[25]
It is clear that
Wallis JA did not seek to lay down a general exception.
[17]
Heeding
both Wallis JA’s cautionary note, and previous authorities
dealing with the issue of lack of jurisdiction, this Court
is at
liberty not to follow the approach taken in
Lewis
and
Montshiwa
and refuse to entertain this appeal. Both
Lewis
and the majority in
Montshiwa
acknowledged that they did not have jurisdiction to hear the matters
before them. However, they adopted what they deemed a pragmatic
approach. The approach adopted does not accord with the earlier
jurisprudence of this Court. It is trite that this Court can only
entertain an appeal, if it has jurisdiction to do so. As stated in
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd
:
[26]
‘
[L]eave
to appeal is one of the jurisdictional requirements of ss 20 and 21
of the Supreme Court Act . . .and the petitioner did
not seek leave
from the court
a quo
to appeal against the final order. . . That being the case this court
is not competent either to grant leave or to entertain an
appeal
against the final order without leave. . .[T]his court’s
“inherent reservoir of power to regulate its procedures
in the
interests of the proper administration of justice” does not
extend to the assumption of jurisdiction not conferred
upon it by
statute.
Rex v Milne and Erleigh
(6) 1951 (1) (A) SA 1 at 5
in
fin
,
“
[this]
Court was created by the South African Act and its jurisdiction is to
be ascertained from the provisions of that Act as amended
from time
to time and from any other relevant statutory enactment.”
Nowadays
its jurisdiction derives from the Supreme Court Act and other
statutes but the position remains basically the same.’
[27]
[18]
The court’s inherent power under s173
of the Constitution cannot be resorted to when the court lacks
jurisdiction. As Bosielo
JA explained in
Oosthuizen
v Road Accident Fund
2011 (6) SA 31
(SCA) para 17:
‘
A
court’s inherent power to regulate its own process is not
unlimited. It does not extend to the assumption of jurisdiction
which
it does not otherwise have. In this regard see National Union of
Metal Workers of South Africa &
others v Fry’s Metal (Pty) Ltd
where this Court stated that: “While it is true that this
Court’s inherent power to protect and regulate its own process
is not unlimited – it does not, for instance, “extend to
the assumption of jurisdiction not conferred upon it by statute”.
[19]
Thus, if
the high court was sitting as a court of first instance, leave to
appeal should have been sought from it. That being so,
this Court did
not have jurisdiction and erroneously granted special leave to
appeal. Such order is a nullity and can, as found
in
Master
of the High Court Northern Gauteng High Court, Pretoria v Motala NO
and Others (Motala)
,
[28]
be disregarded by this Court, where Ponnan JA, stated:
‘
Being
a nullity a pronouncement to that effect was unnecessary. Nor did it
first have to be set aside by a court of equal standing.
For as
Coetzee J observed in
Trade
Fairs and Promotions (Pty) Ltd v Thomson & another
1984 (4) SA 177
(W) at 183E: “[i]t would be incongruous if
parties were to be bound by a decision which is a nullity until a
Court of an
equal number of Judges has to be constituted specially to
hear this point and to make such a declaration”.’
[29]
[20]
In
Department
of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Limited
,
[30]
the Constitutional Court held that:
‘
Motala
is only authority for the proposition that if a court “is able
to conclude that what the court [that made the original decision]
has
ordered cannot be done under the enabling legislation, the order is a
nullity and can be disregarded” . . .
Motala
correctly holds that where an order is made without jurisdiction. . .
another court may refuse to enforce it. Again, it is the
court that
is entitled to act, not the party.’
[31]
[21]
This
Court is, accordingly, not bound to follow the decisions in
Lewis
and
Montshiwa
,
which appear to be clearly wrong. As stated in
Patmar
Explorations (Pty) Ltd and Others v Limpopo Development Tribunal and
Others:
[32]
‘
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.’
[22]
As this Court lacked jurisdiction to grant special leave to appeal,
the matter is not properly
before us. We are accordingly not free to
enter into the substantive merits of the appeal.
[23]
The following order is made:
The appeal is struck from
the roll with costs, including the costs of two counsel, where so
employed.
S E WEINER
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Ponnan
JA (Makgoka JA and Masipa AJA concurring)
[24]
The
preliminary question that confronts us in this matter is whether we
have jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. As a starting
point this
Court does not have any original jurisdiction.
[33]
Its jurisdiction is derived from the Constitution and is principally
limited to decide appeals and issues connected with appeals
(which
includes applications for leave to appeal).
[34]
[25]
The
jurisdictional requirements for a civil appeal from the high court
sitting as a court of first instance are twofold: first,
there is a
‘decision’ of that court within the meaning of s 16(1)
(a)
of
the SC Act; and, second, the required leave to appeal has been
granted under s 17(2) of the SC Act.
[35]
Both requirements must be met. It is only the second that occupies
our attention in this matter. The right to appeal to this Court
is
neither automatic, nor absolute, since leave to appeal is required.
Leave is a condition for exercising the right or, put differently,
it
is a jurisdictional fact for an appeal. As Brand JA said in
Newlands
Surgical Clinic
:
‘
Leave
to appeal . . . constitutes what has become known, particularly in
administrative law parlance, as a jurisdictional fact.
Without the
required leave, this court simply has no jurisdiction to entertain
the dispute.’
[36]
[26]
Where, as here, the high court, whose
judgment is sought to be appealed, sat as a court of first instance,
it must first be approached
for leave. If that is granted, the
condition is met. If it is refused, the party wishing to appeal has a
right to petition this
Court for such leave. As Corbett CJ pointed
out in
National Union of Metalworkers of
SA v Jumbo Products CC
(
Jumbo
Products
):
‘
.
. . no appeal lies to this Court . . . except either where the Court
a quo has itself granted leave to appeal or where, the Court
a quo
having refused such leave, such leave has been granted by this Court.
Thus, as is clear from the subsection, this Court’s
jurisdiction to grant leave itself is dependent on the Court a quo
having refused such leave. The proper procedure, as imperatively
laid
down by section 20(4)
(b)
,
is for the would-be appellant to apply for leave first to the court
against whose judgment the appeal is to be made. If that Court
grants
leave, then this Court may entertain the appeal. If that Court
refuses leave, then (but only then) may this Court consider
an
application for leave to appeal. Thus section 20(4)
(b)
not only prescribes the proper procedure, but it also defines the
jurisdiction of this Court to entertain an application for leave
to
appeal.’
[37]
Although,
said with reference to s 20(4)
(b)
of
the Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959
[38]
(the predecessor to the SC Act), the principle so firmly established
in
Jumbo
Products
applies
equally here.
[27]
It
must thus follow that the order granting special leave to the
appellant to appeal to this Court is a nullity. The consequence,
ordinarily at any rate, is that the matter falls to be struck from
the roll. However, the contention advanced is that this Court
can,
in the exercise of its inherent jurisdiction to regulate its own
procedure, entertain the appeal. In that regard, reliance
was placed
on the approach adopted in
Lewis
,
[39]
which thereafter found favour with the majority in
Montshiwa
.
[40]
[28]
Although
this Court, like the Constitutional Court and High Courts, has the
inherent power to protect and regulate its own process,
that ‘does
not extend to the assumption of jurisdiction not conferred upon it by
statute.’
[41]
If the
Constitution or a statute does not provide for such a right that is
the end of the matter and this Court cannot assume the
power.
[42]
As Van der Merwe JA observed in
DRDGOLD
Limited v Nkala
:
‘
This
court has no original jurisdiction and its common law inherent power
to regulate its own procedures – now entrenched
in s 173 of the
Constitution – does not clothe it with jurisdiction.’
[43]
[30]
No authority was cited in
Lewis
for the rather radical departure from the established jurisprudence
of this Court. Indeed, as Innes CJ made plain in
Jumbo
Products
,
this Court’s jurisdiction to grant leave itself is dependent on
the high court having refused such leave. The would-be appellant
in
Lewis
did not apply for leave from the court of first instance and thus
failed to take the first step.
[44]
Therefore, as the high court in
Lewis
had not refused leave, it was not open to this Court to even consider
an application for leave to appeal, much less deal with the
appeal on
its merits. The matter was approached on the footing that had leave
to appeal been sought from the high court it would
have been refused
and, inasmuch as an application for special leave had succeeded,
ordinary leave would have been granted by this
Court on petition to
it.
[31]
The Court accordingly entered into the merits in
Lewis
without
the required leave and absent a necessary jurisdictional fact. In
that, it took the view that it could ‘in the exercise
of its
inherent jurisdiction to regulate its own procedure condone the
irregular manner in which this appeal reached us’.
[45]
However, absent the requisite leave, this Court lacked jurisdiction
and could not ‘condone the irregular manner in which
the appeal
had reached [it]’ – certainly not by dint of ‘the
exercise of inherent jurisdiction to regulate its
own procedure’.
Inasmuch as the Court had no jurisdiction to dispose of the matter,
the only course open to it, were it disinclined
to strike the appeal
from the roll as being a nullity, would have been for it to defer the
hearing or determination of the appeal
to enable the appellant to
obtain the necessary leave.
[46]
However, as Harms JA pointed out in
Pharmaceutical
Society
,
‘
the
circumstances should be appropriate before this extraordinary
procedure may be adopted’.
[47]
[32] I
do not subscribe to the view that it was open to this Court ‘to
carve out an exception’ (the
exact contours of which remain
undefined) in
Lewis
or to adopt a ‘pragmatic approach’
in
Montshiwa
, to the question of jurisdiction. As a matter of
simple logic, the Court in each instance either had jurisdiction to
entertain
the appeal or it did not. If it did not, that ought to have
been the end of the matter. Jurisdiction is a logically anterior
question.
In
Lewis
, two judgments were penned. Both dealt
fairly extensively with the issues raised and the substantive merits
of the appeal. Although
jurisdiction merited a mention in the last
two paragraphs of the second judgment, the question, in truth,
remained unresolved,
because the stance adopted was that the Court
could condone the irregular manner in which the appeal had reached
it. In my view,
however, it could not by the simple expedient of the
grant of condonation clothe itself with jurisdiction that it did not
otherwise
possess.
[33]
The considerations that weighed with the court in
Lewis
, which
came to be described as ‘special circumstances’, could
hardly be invoked to trump principle. And, despite the
cautionary
note in that matter that the special circumstances of the case will
not be repeated, it will not take a great deal of
ingenuity for other
would-be appellants to contend, as in
Montshiwa
and this
matter, that there are indeed special circumstances present that
warrant a consideration of their appeal.
[34] As
the minority put it in
Montshiwa
(per Siwendu AJA, Van Der
Merwe JA concurring):
‘
Significantly,
several decisions by this Court consistently affirm that absent leave
being granted, it lacks the jurisdiction to
entertain an appeal. The
decision
in
Absa Bank Ltd v Snyman
(
Absa
Bank
)
illustrates this point. There, the court confirmed another decision
by this Court in
Newlands
Surgical Clinic (Pty) Ltd v Peninsula Eye Clinic (Pty) Ltd (Newlands)
where
under the rubric of an ‘inherent reservoir of power to regulate
its procedures in the interest of proper administration
of justice’
the court deliberated on whether it may entertain a matter not the
subject of the order granting leave to appeal.
Confirming the
often-cited decision of this Court in [
Moch
],
it held that such a power does not extend to an assumption of
jurisdiction not conferred upon it by statute. The upshot of these
decisions, which have not been set aside, is that this Court’s
inherent power to regulate its affairs, condone an irregularity
or
address prejudice predominantly applies to matters regulated by its
rules and not to matters not expressly provided by the governing
statute. Even there, the power will be exercised sparingly . . .’
[48]
[35] It
is thus well-settled that this Court cannot, under the guise of
exercising its inherent power, enter into
the merits of an appeal
over which it has no jurisdiction. Jurisdiction is a necessary
precondition for the exercise of its inherent
power. The conclusion
that the order granting leave was a nullity and that we therefore
lack jurisdiction, has to be the end of
the matter. In my view, it
must follow from this that the contrary approach adopted in
Lewis
and by the majority in
Montshiwa
is plainly wrong.
[36]
Before concluding, it is perhaps necessary to address the apparent
incongruity in adopting the reasoning
in
Lewis
,
as Weiner JA has done, in the face of the conclusion that the Court
in that matter suffered a want of jurisdiction.
It
seems to me that even if the dicta relied on by Weiner JA were to be
regarded
as
having no status other than that of an expression of opinion by one
Judge of Appeal, concurred in by four others, its persuasive
value is
irresistible, with which we would not readily disagree.
[49]
In that regard, the following by Schreiner J, albeit in a different
context in
Petersen
v Jajbhay
,
is instructive:
‘
I
come now to the argument relating to the remarks made by the Chief
Justice and Mr Justice Watermeyer in
Jajbhay
v Cassim
.
It is contended that those expressions of opinion were
obiter
dicta
and
that I should examine the whole question afresh in the light of the
actual decision given in that case. Now, there is no doubt
that
obiter
dicta
,
however weighty, are not entitled to be regarded as binding upon any
court however humble it might be. An inferior Court –
a
magistrate’s court – is entitled to disagree with an
obiter
dictum
in
the Appellate Division or in the Privy Council. And indeed if a
magistrate holds a clear view of the wrongness of such a dictum
it is
his duty if there are no actual decisions binding him to give effect
to the view he holds. But I do not think that in the
present case it
is either necessary or desirable for me to pass by the views
expressed by the Chief Justice and Watermeyer J, and
to embark on a
re-examination of the position in the light of the decision in order
to see whether I agree with the views expressed
by those learned
Judges. The statements in question were deliberate statements closely
related to the actual basis of a decision
and they were intended to
deal with cases of the class which I have now to deal with. If I felt
that those statements expressed
a view with which I disagree I would
be obliged to investigate the matter further and more closely. Even
though I am not obliged
to do so I am of course entitled to
re-investigate the foundation of those statements assuming, as I do,
that they are
obiter
dicta
.
But I am not disposed to do so because the views there expressed, if
I may respectfully say so, appeal to me as in conformity
with public
policy and sound reason.’
[50]
[37] In
the result, I agree with the conclusion reached by Weiner JA that the
matter falls to be struck from the
roll.
V M PONNAN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
P
Zietsman SC with JL van Dorsten
Instructed by:
Michalowsky Geldenhuys
& Humphries,
Cape
Town
Lovius
Block Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
S
Olivier SC with HL du Toit
Instructed by:
De Klerk & Van
Gend Inc, Cape Town
McIntyre
& Van Der Post, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section
16(1)(
a
)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the SC Act) provides:
‘
(1)
Subject to section 15 (1), the Constitution and any other law-
(a)
an appeal against any decision of a Division as a
court of first instance lies, upon leave having been granted-
(i) if the court
consisted of a single judge, either to the Supreme Court of Appeal
or to a full court of that Division, depending
on the direction
issued in terms of section 17 (6); or
(ii) if the court
consisted of more than one judge, to the Supreme Court of Appeal;’
[2]
Section
16(1)
(b)
provides:
‘
[
A]n
appeal against any decision of a Division on appeal to it, lies to
the Supreme Court of Appeal upon special leave having been
granted
by the Supreme Court of Appeal.’
[3]
Section
17(3) of the SC Act provides:
‘
An
application for special leave to appeal under section 16 (1)
(b)
may be granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal on application filed
with the registrar of that court within one month after the
decision
sought to be appealed against, or such longer period as may on good
cause be allowed, and the provisions of subsection
(2)
(c)
to
(f)
shall
apply with the changes required by the context.’
[4]
There
is a dispute over whether the Trust was bound by the Constitution,
which it had not signed, but that issue is not relevant
to the
appeal, in view of the decision to which I have come.
[5]
Section
38
(1)
of the
Community
Schemes Ombud Service Act 9 of 2011 (the Act) provides:
‘
(1)
Any person may make an application if such person is a party to or
affected materially by a dispute.’
[6]
Section
57(1) of the Act provides:
‘
(1)
An applicant, the association or any affected person who is
dissatisfied by an adjudicator's order, may appeal to the High
Court, but only on a question of law.’
[7]
National
Credit Regulator v Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd and Another
(Lewis)
[2019] ZASCA 190
;
2020 (2) SA 390
(SCA);
[2020] 2 All SA 31
(SCA)
para 56.
[8]
Section
56(2) of the Act provides:
‘
(2)
If an adjudicator's order is for the payment of an amount of money
or any other relief which is beyond the jurisdiction of
the
magistrate's court, the order may be enforced as if it were a
judgment of the High Court, and a registrar of such a Court
must, on
lodgement of a copy of the order, register it as an order in such
Court.’
[9]
Section
152
of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
provides:
‘
(
1)
Any decision, judgment or order of the Tribunal may be served,
executed and enforced as if it were an order of the High Court.
. .’
[10]
CSOS
Practice Directive on Dispute Resolution of 2019, para 31.4.
[11]
Lewis
para
50.
[12]
Ibid
para 51.
[13]
Ibid
para 52.
[14]
Ibid
para 53.
[15]
Ibid
para 54.
[16]
Ibid
para 55.
[17]
Ibid
para 56.
[18]
Lewis
para 56.
[19]
Special
leave to appeal having been granted by this Court, without demur
from the respondents. The appellants contending that
if special
leave was granted, it follows that leave would have been granted by
the high court.
[20]
Lewis
op
cit para 56.
[21]
Ibid
para 57.
[22]
Ibid.
[23]
Ibid
para 58.
[24]
Gaone
Jack Siamisang Montshiwa (Montshiwa)
(Ex Parte Application)
[2023]
ZASCA 19
;
2023
JDR 0647 (SCA).
[25]
Lewis
para
58.
[26]
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd. t/a American Express Travel Service
[1996]
ZASCA 2; 1996 (3) SA 1 (SCA).
[27]
Ibid
para 4 and 32.
[28]
Master
of the High Court Northern Gauteng High Court, Pretoria v Motala NO
and Others
[2011] ZASCA 238; 2012 (3) SA 325 (SCA).
[29]
Ibid para 14.
[30]
Department
of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Limited
[2016] ZACC 39; 2017 (1) BCLR 1 (CC); 2017 (2) SA 622 (CC).
[31]
Ibid para 197 and fn 156 therein.
[32]
Patmar
Explorations (Pty) Ltd and Others v Limpopo Development Tribunal and
Others
[2018] ZASCA 19
;
2018 (4) SA 107
(SCA) para 3.
[33]
Moch
fn
26 paras 4-5;
Pharmaceutical
Society of South Africa and Others v Minister of Health and Another;
New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Limited v Tshabalala-Msimang
and
Another
[2004]
ZASCA 122
;
2005
(3) SA 238
(SCA);
[2005] 1 All SA 326
(SCA);
2005 (6) BCLR 576
(SCA) para 19
(
Pharmaceutical
Society
).
[34]
Ibid; Constitution s 168(3);
S
v Basson
[2004]
ZACC 13
;
2004
(6) BCLR 620
(CC)
para 103.
[35]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
1993
(1) SA 523
(A)
at 531B-C;
DRDGOLD
Limited and Another v Nkala and Others
[2023] ZASCA 9
;
2023 (3) SA 461
(SCA) (
DRDGOLD
)
para 17.
[36]
Newlands
Surgical Clinic (Pty) Ltd v Peninsula Eye Clinic (Pty) Ltd
2015
(4) SA 34
SCA;
[2015]
2 All SA 322
(SCA) para 13.
[37]
National
Union of Metalworkers of SA v Jumbo Products CC
[1996]
ZASCA 87
;
1996
(4) SA 735
(A)
740A-D.
[38]
Section 20(4) provides: ‘No appeal shall lie against a
judgment or order of the court of a provincial or local division
[read: high court] in any civil proceedings . . . except -
.
. . .
(b) . . . with the leave of the court against whose
judgment or order the appeal is to be made or, where such leave has
been refused,
with the leave of the [Supreme Court of Appeal].’
[39]
Lewis
paras
57-58.
[40]
Montshiwa
para
26.
[41]
Moch
paras
4-5.
See
also
Sefatsa
v Attorney-General, Transvaal
1989
(1) SA 821
(A) at 834E.
[42]
Pharmaceutical
Society
para
20.
[43]
DRDGOLD
fn 35
para 13.
[44]
Pharmaceutical
Society
para
23.
[45]
Lewis
para
58.
[46]
See
Pharmaceutical
Society
paras
25–26 and the cases there cited.
[47]
Ibid
para 26.
[48]
Montshiwa
para
18.
[49]
Durban
City Council v Kempton Park (Pty) Ltd
1956 (1) SA 54
(N) at 59D-F and
Rood
v Wallach
1904 TS 187
at 195-6.
[50]
Petersen
v Jajbhay
1939
TPD 182
at 185. See also
Turnbull-Jackson
v Hibiscus Coast Municipality and Others
[2014] ZACC 24
;
2014 (6) SA 592
(CC);
2014 (11) BCLR 1310
(CC) paras
54-71.
sino noindex
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