Case Law[2023] ZASCA 81South Africa
East Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants v Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors (113/2022) [2023] ZASCA 81 (31 May 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
31 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Application for leave to appeal – referral to oral argument in terms of s 17(2)(d) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – Mandatory Audit Firm Rotation Rule – Auditing Professions Act 26 of 2005 – review – dismissal based on delay – prospects of success – whether promulgation of Rule ultra vires.
Judgment
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## East Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants v Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors (113/2022) [2023] ZASCA 81 (31 May 2023)
East Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants v Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors (113/2022) [2023] ZASCA 81 (31 May 2023)
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sino date 31 May 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 113/2022
In
the matter between:
EAST
RAND MEMBER DISTRICT OF
CHARTERED
ACCOUNTANTS FIRST
APPELLANT
JAROSLAV
CERNY SECOND
APPELLANT
and
INDEPENDENT
REGULATORY BOARD
FOR
AUDITORS FIRST
RESPONDENT
CHAIRPERSON
OF THE INDEPENDENT
REGULATORY
BOARD FOR AUDITORS SECOND
RESPONDENT
CHIEF
EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF THE
INDEPENDENT
REGULATORY BOARD
FOR
AUDITORS THIRD
RESPONDENT
Neutral Citation:
East
Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants and Another v
Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors and Others
(113/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 81
(31 May 2023)
Coram:
PONNAN, NICHOLLS, MABINDLA-BOQWANA and WEINER JJA and SIWENDU AJA
Heard:
5 May 2023
Delivered:
31 May 2023
Summary:
Application for leave to appeal – referral to oral argument
in terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
–
Mandatory Audit Firm Rotation Rule – Auditing Professions Act
26 of 2005 – review – dismissal based on
delay –
prospects of success – whether promulgation of Rule
ultra
vires
.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (Davis
J) sitting as a court of first instance):
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld with costs, such costs to include the costs of
two counsel, where so employed.
3.
The attorneys for both the appellants and the respondents shall only
be entitled to recover from their clients fifty percent
of the costs
associated with the preparation, perusal and copying of the record in
the appeal.
4.
The order of the high court is set aside and substituted with the
following:
‘
1.
The application succeeds with costs.
2.
The Mandatory Audit Firm Rotation Rule (MAFR) as promulgated on 5
June 2017 in Government Gazette No 40888 is reviewed and set
aside.’
JUDGMENT
Siwendu
AJA (Ponnan, Nicholls, Mabindla-Boqwana and Weiner JJA concurring):
[1]
The first applicant,
East
Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants, is a voluntary
association, and the second applicant, Mr Jaroslav Cerney serves
as
its chairman (the applicants). Members of the first applicant are
chartered accountants. Approximately fifteen percent are registered
auditors who practice in small to medium sized firms. They are
subject to professional regulation by the first respondent, the
Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors (IRBA), a statutory body
established in terms of s 3 of the Auditing Professions
Act 26 of 2005
(the Act).
[1]
The objects and functions of the IRBA, which are
set
out in s 2 of the Act, include the regulation of audits performed by
auditors, setting and maintaining requisite standards of
competence
and ethics, and providing for disciplinary procedures.
[2]
[2]
The applicants seek the leave of this Court to appeal against the
dismissal of their application by
the Gauteng Division of the High
Court, Pretoria (high court) to review and set aside the
Mandatory
Audit Firm Rotation Rule (MAFR), which was promulgated by the IRBA on
5 June 2017 in Government Gazette No 40888.
The
dismissal of the review by the high court, prompted a petition to
this Court. The two judges who considered the petition referred
the
application for the hearing of oral argument in terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
with a direction to the parties to be prepared to address the court
on the merits if called upon to do so.
[3]
Audit firms play a pivotal role in ensuring that representations made
by companies in Annual F
inancial
Statements are
reliable, accurate and
portray a fair and balanced position of a company’s financial
affairs. Investors and the public rely
on the accuracy of those
representations to make investment decisions. The industry has been
marred both locally and globally by
accounting scandals with dire
consequences for investors and the public. In part, the IRBA
attributes the genesis of the problem
to the long tenure of audit
firms, which have in some instances endured for 80 to 114 years. It
claims that Chief Financial Officers,
who hold sway in the decision
to appoint an audit firm, are drawn from a limited pool of auditors,
often from the same auditing
firms. According to the IRBA, the
acquaintance between audit committee
chairs and incumbent auditors
exacerbates
the perception of a lack of independence and poses a threat to audit
outcomes. It identified the need for measures to
‘s
trengthen
auditor independence to enhance audit quality
’
,
a trend adopted and followed by regulators in other international
jurisdictions.
[4]
O
n
4 December 2015, t
he
IRBA introduced its first innovation, namely, to make
it
compulsory for all audit reports of public entities to disclose the
number of years that an audit firm or sole practitioner had
been the
auditor of a particular entity (the audit tenure).
[3]
After considering
other
measures like
Mandatory
Audit Tendering (MAT)
[4]
and
Joint Audits (JA)
[5]
, it took a
decision on 28 July 2016 to introduce the MAFR. The IRBA had prepared
a
consultation
paper, which it had distributed to stakeholders for comment. On 6
December 2016, after receiving the first round of
comments, it
published a second notice, inviting comments by 25 January 2017 on
prescribed parameters as to how to implement the
MAFR.
[6]
The applicants made written comments, and thereafter held a meeting
with the IRBA’s then Chief Executive Officer, with a
view to
objecting to the introduction of the MAFR. T
he
IRBA nevertheless took a decision to introduce the final rule, on 28
March 2017.
[5]
O
n
5 June 2017, the IRBA published
the
MAFR,
[7]
which was to come into
effect on 1 April 2023. The MAFR in relevant part reads:
‘
1.
An audit firm, including a network firm as defined in IRBA Code of
Professional Conduct for Registered Auditors, shall not serve
as the
appointed auditor of a public interest entity for more than 10
consecutive financial years.
2. Thereafter, the audit
firm will only be eligible for reappointment as the auditor after the
expiry of at least five financial
years.’
The
publication of the MAFR must be viewed against the backdrop of
s 92
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
, which regulates individual audit
tenure. That section provides that an individual auditor or
designated auditor may not serve
as an auditor of a company for more
than five years. It provides for a cooling off period of two years
between the appointment
cycles.
[6]
On 22 September 2017, the applicants, asserting their right under
s
5(1)
of
PAJA,
[8]
requested reasons from
the IRBA for the decision to adopt the MAFR. The IRBA furnished its
reasons on 1 December 2017, as required
by
s 5(2)
of
PAJA. On 29 May 2018, the
applicants
instituted the review,
some
179 days after receiving the reasons. Relying on PAJA, alternatively
the principle of legality, the applicants sought an order
to review
and set aside:
‘
1.1
the decision by the first respondent (“IRBA”) taken on or
about 28 July 2016 to introduce mandatory audit firm rotation
(“MAFR”);
1.2 the decision by the
IRBA taken on or about 28 March 2017 on a final rule in relation to
MAFR; and
1.3 the promulgation of
the final rule in relation to MAFR on or about 5 June 2017.’
[7]
The IRBA opposed the review on two grounds, the first being that the
applicants delayed in instituting
the review.
The
second was that the decisions were quintessentially policy
pronouncements taken pursuant to the subordinate rule making powers
conferred on it by the Act and therefore not susceptible to review.
Before the hearing, the applicants reformulated the relief
sought.
Instead of seeking to review the preceding decisions, they restricted
themselves to the promulgation of the MARF.
[8]
The high court found that the applicants had instituted the review
outside of the period prescribed
in s 7(1)
[9]
of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA), and
that they had accordingly delayed unreasonably in doing so.
When the
high court considered the prospects of success to determine whether
it should condone the delay, it held that it could
not find ‘the
proverbial smoking gun’. It found it unnecessary on that
account to fully traverse the merits of the
review. Thus, the
application centres in the first place on whether or not the high
court’s finding on delay is correct.
In order to decide whether
the delay precluded the applicants from pursuing the review, a
consideration of the merits of the review,
is inescapably called into
play. This matter turns on a question of statutory interpretation.
Although numerous grounds have been
raised, the primary complaint
involves the IRBA’s power to promulgate the MAFR, and whether
the exercise of that power was
ultra
vires
the Act.
[10]
It became
apparent during the argument that there were reasonable prospects of
success on appeal, and, in view of the importance
of the matter to
the parties and the public, and its obvious Constitutional
implications, leave to appeal must be granted. In what
follows the
applicants will accordingly be referred to as the first and second
appellants.
The
Delay
[9]
Section 7(1) of PAJA states in
the relevant part that:
‘
Any
proceedings for judicial review in terms of section 6(1) must be
instituted without unreasonable delay and not later than 180
days
after the date—
. .
.
(
b
)…
on which the person concerned was informed of the administrative
action, became aware of the action and the reasons for
it or might
reasonably have been expected to have become aware of the action and
the reasons.’
[10]
The high court
departed
from the premise that each of the decisions taken by the IRBA was
subject to review ‘despite their quasi-legislative
nature’.
The high court
concluded
that:
‘The first decision
on 28 July 2016 and the 180 days period lapsed on 25 January 2017;
the second decision was on [28] March
2017 and the 180 day period
lapsed around 20 September 2017.’
[11]
This Court in
Esau and Others
v Minister of Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs and
Others
held
that:
‘
As a general rule,
policies that have been formulated and adopted by the executive will
not be ripe for review until they are implemented,
usually after
having been given legal effect by some or other legislative
instrument. Two principles come into play in this regard:
first, that
in order for an exercise of public power to be ripe for review, it
should ordinarily be final in effect; and secondly,
that the decision
must have some adverse effect for the person who wishes to review it,
because otherwise its setting aside would
be an academic exercise
which courts generally eschew.’
[11]
On the
strength of
Esau
,
the decisions preceding the publication of the MAFR were not ripe for
review until the promulgation of the rule on 5 June 2017.
The
high court accordingly erred.
[12]
Ordinarily, the period within which to institute the review would
have commenced
on
5 June 2017, the date of the promulgation of the MAFR.
[12]
Reasons
for the decision were sought on 22 September 2017. Those reasons were
furnished on 1 December 2017. It was thus only from
that date that
the 180 days began to run.
[13] Although
the high court accepted that the review ‘in respect of the last
impugned decision’ was launched
179 days after the applicants
received the reasons, it criticised the applicants for its dilatory
conduct and found the delay unreasonable.
It held that, even though
the statutory period in s 7(1) of PAJA was 180 days, the appellants
were required to explain the delay
in only launching the review on
the 179
th
day. The criticism was not justified. The IRBA
received the request for reasons on 22 September 2017, it delayed its
response until
1 December 2017. When one has regard to the
content of the reasons, they amount to no more than a regurgitation
of what was
conveyed in the public notices preceding the publication.
The IRBA was not without fault. It could have provided those reasons
earlier to prevent any further delay, if time was of the essence.
There has been no explanation for its own delay.
[14]
Importantly, although published on 5 June 2017, the MAFR was only to
take effect on 1 April 2023, approximately
five years after the
institution of the review. Potentially, the real effect of the MAFR
will only be fully known or felt some
10 years from the date of its
implementation. There was no unreasonable delay in the institution of
the review. In these circumstances,
the decision of the high court
accordingly falls to be set aside.
[15]
Turning to the merits of the appeal, we have read the voluminous
record, and the high court has pronounced itself
on the merits of the
review, albeit briefly. Both parties agreed that the matter is indeed
important and that they and the profession
at large would benefit
from this Court’s consideration of the matter.
[13]
Is the MAFR ultra
vires the Act?
[16]
The IRBA may not exercise a power not conferred on it by its founding
legislation nor can it act in a manner that
is inconsistent with the
Act.
[14]
Counsel for the IRBA
submitted that s 10(1)
(a),
read with ss 4(1)
(b)
,
(c)
and
(e),
of the Act is the source of the IRBA’s power to promulgate the
MAFR. Section 10(1) reads:
‘
10.
(1) The Regulatory Board may, by notice in the Gazette, prescribe
rules with regard to–
(a)
any matter that is required or permitted to be
prescribed in terms of this Act; and
(b)
any other matter for the better execution of this
Act or function or power provided for in this Act.’
[17]
Section 10(1)(
a)
permits
the IRBA to prescribe rules on matters ‘required or permitted’
to be prescribed
by the Act, while s
10(1)
(b)
provides
for rules aimed at a better execution of the Act
.
The matters that the IRBA is permitted to prescribe under s 10(1)
(a)
are located in s 4, which deals with its general functions. The
section states in relevant part that:
‘
4(1)
The Regulatory Board must, in addition to its other functions
provided in this Act
. . .
(b)
take steps it considers necessary to protect the
public in their dealings with registered auditors;
(c)
prescribe standards of professional competence,
ethics and conduct of registered auditors
. . .
(e)
prescribe auditing standards.’
Section 4 confines the
IRBA’s rule making power to ‘the prescription of
standards’ in respect of defined functional
areas. As the
appellants correctly contend, the MAFR is not a standard of
competence or a professional standard. The net effect
of the MAFR, as
counsel for the IRBA conceded during the hearing, is that it imposes
a broad restriction on companies, audit committees
and their current
and future shareholders from appointing an audit firm of their
choice. At the same time, it prohibits audit firms
from accepting
appointments even if selected by a company.
[18]
Confronted with these difficulties, counsel for the respondents
sought instead to rely on s 10(1)
(b)
of the Act and
submitted that the IRBA took steps to protect the public from a
series of accounting scandals. However, when published,
no reference
was made to that provision. Reliance was then only placed on s
10(1)
(a)
. That was the stance taken by the IRBA in its
opposing affidavit as well. There is thus no support for the
submission. I accordingly
find that the promulgation of the MAFR is
ultra vires
the Act and falls to be set aside.
[19]
What remains is the issue of costs.
The
costs of the appeal, including those of the application for leave to
appeal must obviously follow the result. The appellants
contended
that insofar as the proceedings before the high court were concerned,
they should be awarded costs on a punitive scale.
In motivating for
such an order, it was submitted that account had to be taken of: (a)
the failure by the IRBA to fully comply
with an interlocutory order
by Basson J; (b) the costs associated with an application to amend
its notice of motion and the objection
by the IRBA in terms of rule
30 and rule 30A; and, (c) the general conduct of the IRBA in the
litigation, which led to a striking
out application. The
interlocutory order by Basson J, granted the appellants costs on a
punitive scale. That addressed many of
the appellants’
complaints. Moreover, the subsequent interlocutory disputes formed
the subject of an application to strike
out, which the appellants
abandoned.
[20]
It is necessary to comment on the size of the record, which consists
of 15 volumes, comprising 2633 pages.
It is awash with reports
and unnecessary material, not required for the adjudication of the
matter. This Court has expressed its
displeasure in numerous matters
at the disregard for the rules in the preparation of the record and
the cost to the parties when
that happens.
[15]
The necessary record to resolve the application should not have
exceeded seven volumes. Both parties were responsible for the state
of the record. Accordingly, the attorneys for both the appellants and
the respondents
shall
only be entitled to recover from their clients no more than
fifty
percent of the costs associated with the preparation, perusal and
copying of the record
in
the appeal in this Court.
[21]
In the result, I make the following order:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is upheld with costs, such costs to include the costs of
two counsel, where so employed.
3.
The attorneys for both the appellants and the respondents shall only
be entitled to recover from their clients fifty percent of
the costs
associated with the preparation, perusal and copying of the record in
the appeal.
4. The order of the high
court is set aside and substituted with the following:
‘
1. The application
succeeds with costs.
2. The Mandatory
Audit Firm Rotation Rule (MAFR) as promulgated on 5 June 2017 in
Government Gazette No 40888 is reviewed
and set aside.’
_________________________
N T Y SIWENDU
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the applicants:
HF
Oosthuizen SC with him DJ Smit
Instructed
by:
Warrener
de Agrela & Associates Inc, Johannesburg
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents:
LT
Sibeko SC with him S Tshikila and RV Mudau
Instructed
by:
Cliffe
Dekker Hofmeyer Inc, Sandton
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
The
predecessor
of the IRBA was
the
Public Accountants’ and Auditors’ Board established in
1951.
[2]
‘Section 2 states that: ‘The objects of this Audit Act
are —
(a)
to
protect the public in the Republic by
regulating audits performed by registered auditors;
(b)
to provide for the establishment of an
Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors;
(c)
to improve the development and
maintenance of internationally comparable ethical standards and
auditing standards for auditors
that promote investment and as a
consequence employment in the Republic;
(d)
to set out measures to advance the
implementation of appropriate standards of competence and good
ethics in the auditing profession;
and
(e)
to provide for procedures for
disciplinary action in respect of improper conduct.’
[3]
Government Gazette (GG) 39475 Government Notice (GN) 138 4 December
2015.
[4]
MAT
would make it compulsory for companies to put the engagement of an
audit form out to a public tender process to enhance competition
and
provide an equal opportunity for all audit firms to tender for
appointment.
[5]
A joint Audit entails the appointment of more than one audit firm.
This would ensure that the firms rotate in cycles to ensure
continuity.
[6]
GG 40392 GN 170 1 November 2016.
[7]
The MAFR is published in GG 40888 GN 100 5 June 2017.
[8]
Section 5(1) states that ‘Any person whose rights have been
materially and adversely affected by administrative action
and who
has not been given reasons for the action may, within 90 days after
the date on which that person became aware of the
action or might
reasonably have been expected to have become aware of the action,
request that the administrator concerned furnish
written reasons for
the action.
(2)
The administrator to whom the request is made must, within 90 days
after receiving the request, give that person adequate
reasons in
writing for the administrative action.’
[9]
‘Section 7(1) states that: ‘Any proceedings for judicial
review in terms of section 6 (1) must be
instituted
without unreasonable delay and not later than 180 days after the
date—
(a)
. . .
(b)
where no such remedies exist, on which
the person concerned was informed of the administrative action,
became aware of the action
and the reasons for it or might
reasonably have been expected to have become aware of the action and
the reasons.’
[10]
‘Empowering provision’ is defined in section 1 of PAJA
as ‘a law, a rule of common law, customary law, or an
agreement, instrument or other document in terms of which an
administrative action was purportedly taken.’
[11]
Esau
and Others v Minister of Co-Operative Governance and Traditional
Affairs and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 9
;
[2021] 2 All SA 357
(SCA);
2021 (3) SA 593
(SCA) para 45.
[12]
In terms of
section
7(1)
(b)
of
PAJA, this was when the applicants were ‘informed’ of
the administrative action, ‘became aware of the action
and the
reasons for it or might reasonably have been expected to have become
aware of the action and the reasons.’
[13]
Liberty
Group Limited v Moosa
(126/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 52
(14 April 2023) para 1 (which refers with
approval to
Body
Corporate of Marine Sands v Extra Dimensions
121 (Pty) Ltd
[2019] ZASCA 161
para 1). In contrast, see
A
Penglides (Pty) Ltd and Another v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry
and Fisheries and Another
[2022] ZASCA 74
;
2022 (5) SA 401
(SCA) para 18, where the court did
not pronounce itself on the merits.
[14]
Fedsure
Life Assurance Ltd v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan
Council
1999(1) SA 374 (CC). See also
Affordable
Medicines Trust v Minister of Health
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006
(3) SA 247
(CC) at para 119.
[15]
City of
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Takubiza Trading &
Projects CC and Others
[2022] ZASCA 82
;
2023 (1) SA 44
(SCA) para 18 to 19.
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