Case Law[2023] ZASCA 147South Africa
De Nysschen v Government Employees Pension Fund and Others (864/2022) [2023] ZASCA 147; [2024] 4 BLLR 349 (SCA) (9 November 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
9 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Civil Procedure – whether competent for a court to grant an order for payment of a debt which was not sought – proper approach to pleadings.
Judgment
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## De Nysschen v Government Employees Pension Fund and Others (864/2022) [2023] ZASCA 147; [2024] 4 BLLR 349 (SCA) (9 November 2023)
De Nysschen v Government Employees Pension Fund and Others (864/2022) [2023] ZASCA 147; [2024] 4 BLLR 349 (SCA) (9 November 2023)
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sino date 9 November 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case No: 864/2022
In the matter between:
PETRONELLA DE
NYSSCHEN
APPELLANT
and
GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES
PENSION
FUND FIRST
RESPONDENT
CHAIRPERSON: BOARD OF
TRUSTEES, GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES PENSION
FUND SECOND
RESPONDENT
GOVERNMENT PENSIONS
ADMINISTRATION
AGENCY
THIRD RESPONDENT
CHIEF EXECUTIVE
OFFICER:
GOVERNMENT PENSIONS
ADMINISTRATION
AGENCY
FOURTH
RESPONDENT
DEPARTMENT OF
EDUCATION,
NORTH WEST
PROVINCE
FIFTH
RESPONDENT
ADMINISTRATOR:
DEPARTMENT
OF EDUCATION, NORTH
WEST
PROVINCE
SIXTH
RESPONDENT
HEAD OF DEPARTMENT:
DEPARTMENT OF
EDUCATION
NORTH WEST
PROVINCE
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
De Nysschen v
Government Employees Pension Fund and Others
(864/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 147
(09 November 2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA, MOCUMIE, MAKGOKA and WEINER JJA and
SIWENDU AJA
Heard:
11 SEPTEMBER 2023
Delivered:
09 November 2023
Summary:
Civil Procedure – whether
competent for a court to grant an order for payment of a debt which
was not sought – proper
approach to pleadings.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
North West Division of the
High Court, Mahikeng (Gura J sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
Paragraphs 3.2 and 3.3 of the order of the
high court are set aside.
###
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Dambuza JA (Mocumie,
Makgoka, Weiner JJA, and Siwendu AJA concurring):
[1]
The issue in this appeal is the competency of an order granted by the
North West Division of the High
Court, Mahikeng (the high court),
without it having been sought by any of the parties before court. The
appellant, Ms Petronella
De Nysschen launched an application in the
high court, seeking an order that the North West Province Department
of Education
[1]
be directed to
submit her ‘pension fund exit documents’ or pension
withdrawal documents, to the first respondent, the
Government
Employee Pension Fund
[2]
(the
GEPF) for processing. The high court granted the order sought by the
appellant, but then went further to grant an order that
she pay to
the Department an amount of R5 194 418.72, which was to be deducted
from the proceeds of her pension benefit. This appeal
is only against
the order for payment. Leave to appeal was granted by the high court.
[2]
The context in which the contested order was granted is the
following. From 15 January 1979 to 26 June
2013, the appellant was
employed by the North West Province Department of Education (the
department).
[3]
She was promoted
at various stages of her career, until she reached the level of
Executive Manager (Chief Director) in the Human
Resources Division of
the Department. It was common cause that, as an employee of the
Department, she was a member of the GEPF.
[4]
On 26 June 2013 her employment was terminated by the Head of the
Department following charges of misconduct. After her dismissal,
the
appellant’s membership of the GEPF terminated, and as a result,
she received a net pension benefit of R5 194 418.72
from
the GEPF.
[3]
The appellant successfully challenged her dismissal at the General
Public Service Sectoral Bargaining
Council in an arbitration. The
arbitrator found her dismissal to have been substantively and
procedurally unfair, and directed
that she be reinstated to her
position on the terms that had governed her employment prior to her
dismissal, without loss of benefits.
An attempt by the Department to
review the arbitral award in the Labour Court was abandoned following
the intervention of the then
Provincial Director-General, Professor T
J Mokgoro, as a result of which a written Deed of Settlement was
concluded between the
appellant and the Department on 27 May 2015.
[4]
Of relevance in this appeal is paragraph 5 of the Deed of Settlement
which reads as follows:
‘
5
RE-INSTATEMENT OF PENSIONABLE BENEFITS: PENSION NUMBER 96401807
The
Employer shall reinstate the employee’s pensionable years of
service and benefits to the actuarial monetary value which
the
Employee would have been entitled to had the Employee
not
been dismissed
in
accordance with the calculations of the GEPF.’
(emphasis
in the original text).
[5]
On the same day as the conclusion of the settlement agreement, the
Department’s erstwhile Superintendent-General,
Dr I S Molale,
wrote a letter to the GEPF requesting it to furnish the Department
with a detailed calculation of the financial
obligation to be paid by
the Department to the GEPF. The payment was necessary for
reinstatement of the appellant’s pensionable
service. The
Superintendent-General specified that the reinstatement pensionable
service would be effected in accordance with the
provisions of s17(4)
of the Government Employees Pension Law (Pension Law).
[5]
This section provides that:
‘
If
any action taken by the employer or if any legislation adopted by
Parliament places any additional financial obligation on the
Fund,
the employer or the Government or the employer and the Government, as
the case may be shall pay to the Fund an amount which
is required to
meet such obligation.’
[6]
The Superintendent-General’s response was that when the
appellant was dismissed in March 2013,
her membership of the GEPF
automatically ceased, leading to payment of her pension benefits
directly to her. He asserted that when
the appellant was reinstated
on 1 April 2015:
‘
Her
pension contributions for the period 1 July 2013 [the date of her
dismissal] up to 31 March 2015 [the date preceding her reinstatement]
[would] be recovered from her pensionable emoluments (back pay) and
paid in full to GEPF’.
In essence,
the Superintendent-General maintained that once the appellant was
reinstated, the provisions of s 17(4) were triggered.
[7]
The requested calculation was received by the Department on 18 June
2015.
[6]
The GEPF advised that
the amount payable by the Department for the appellant’s
re-admission to the fund was R7 016 767.76,
which included Income Tax
and interest.
[7]
That amount was
paid by the Department.
[8]
Subsequent to her reinstatement, the appellant continued in her
employment with the Department until
she reached the prescribed
retirement age of 60 years, on 11 March 2020. She retired from public
service with effect from 1 April
2020. Four months prior to her
retirement, she served a formal notice of her intended retirement on
the Department’s administrator
(the sixth respondent). On 7
February 2020, she delivered her completed exit documents
[8]
to the Department’s Human Resources Management Division. The
next step was for the Department to complete the prescribed
pension
withdrawal form
[9]
and submit
it, together with the completed exit documents, to the third
respondent, the Government Pensions Administration Agency
(GPAA).
This the Department failed to do, despite several enquiries and
reminders by the appellant.
[9]
In an email dated 9 July 2020, the appellant requested the
Superintendent-General to intervene. The
response was that the
Department had paid an amount of R7 016 767.76 to GEPF ‘to
ensure smooth transition and proper continuation’
of the
appellant’s pensionable service from 1979 to 2020, with the
view that the appellant would refund the Department the
pension
benefit paid to her upon her dismissal. She had not refunded the
money as expected. Furthermore, the appellant’s
representation
of her pensionable service in her exit documents as starting from
1979 to 2020 was incorrect, it was alleged. According
to the
Department the correct service period began from her date of
reinstatement until her date of retirement. The Department
gave the
appellant 14 days to advise it on how the ‘departmental debt
would be recovered.’
[10] In a
letter dated 14 July 2020 the appellant’s attorneys wrote to
the Head of the Department as follows:
‘
At
all relevant times to the negotiations which preceded the signing of
the Settlement Agreement, the Department was aware that
our client
had received payment of a pension gratuity calculated on a basis of
(unfair) dismissal, and utilised these funds as
a result of the loss
of her remuneration;
The Department did,
however, decide to fully and retrospectively to the 15 January 1979
reinstate our client’s pensionable
services and benefits, and
paid the amount as calculated by the GEPF (which calculation
reflected the pension gratuity paid to
Mrs De Nysschen previously)
over to the GEPF;
It had never been
contemplated between the parties that Mrs De Nysschen would be
required to reimburse the pension gratuity received
prior to the
Settlement Agreement, and for that reason, the agreement contains no
such reason. The intention of the parties at
the time of the
signature is clearly recorded in clause 5 of the settlement
agreement, i.e for the Department to reinstate the
full actuarial
value of our client’s pension interest with the GEPF, as if she
had not been dismissed, and to pay the amount
required to do so, as
calculated by the GEPF’s actuaries, over to the Fund.’
This led to an impasse.
The Department insisted, even on receipt of a letter of demand from
the appellant’s attorneys, that
the appellant should complete
fresh exit documents with a rectified period of her pensionable
service.
[11]
Ultimately, the appellant approached the high court for the relief
that has already been stated. In support of
her application, she
asserted that the restoration of her pre-reinstatement pensionable
service by the Department rendered her
pensionable service effective
from 15 January 1979 to 1 April 2020. Consequently, she asserted, her
pensionable service was correctly
stated in her exit documents. She
stressed further that the Department was obliged to submit her
withdrawal documents without delay,
and that its refusal to do so
constituted unlawful self-help which bordered on extortion. She also
pointed out that it was open
to the Department to indicate, on the
withdrawal form, the alleged departmental debt, and request the GEPF
to exercise its discretion
in terms of s 21(3) of the Pension
Law.
[10]
[12] As
against the GEPF and the GPAA, the appellant contended that, they
both had no valid reason for their failure
to process her pension
benefit because the GEPF used the same personal electronic database
(PERSAL) as the Department. In addition,
the GPAA had all her
employment and pension details. No relief however, was sought against
these entities.
[13]
The Department’s answer was a combination of defences. It
contended that the relief sought by the appellant
would result in
contravention of the objectives of the Public Finance Management
Act
[11]
(the PFMA). The
suggestion was that processing her exit documents in terms of the
pensionable service of January 1979 to her retirement
date would
result in a double payment of pension benefit to her. The Department
also argued that the appellant’s case was
frivolous,
misconceived and constituted an abuse of court processes. It
persisted in its refusal to submit the appellant’s
exit
documents. Relying on s 17(4) of the Act, it demanded that the
appellant should consent to a set-off of the departmental debt
against the pension benefit due to her, to enable the Department to
recoup what had already been paid out to her. It also invoked
the
provisions of Government Employee Pension Fund Rule 10.2, arguing
that in terms thereof, the appellant was obliged to pay back
the
pension benefit that had been paid to her after her dismissal.
[12]
[14] The high
court was in agreement with the appellant that her pensionable
service period commenced from 15 January
1979 and continued until 31
March 2020. It also found that, in refusing to submit her exit
documents, the Department had acted
unlawfully. Hence, it granted the
interdictory relief that the appellant had sought.
[15] The high
court then went further to find that ‘the major issue between
the parties’ would remain unresolved
if its judgment did not
‘address’ the alleged debt. It reasoned as follows:
‘
[t]he
facts of this application are so clearly interwoven with the
circumstances surrounding the payment to the applicant of R5
194
418.72 that the interests of justice demand that the cloud around
this payment be settled once and for all in this judgment
. . .
Having perused paragraph
5 of the settlement agreement several times I find nothing therein
which says the applicant is not liable
to repay the money which she
has already received. As a matter of fact, the whole settlement
agreement between the parties is silent
about the R5 194 418.72 which
the applicant received in 2013. Equally the arbitration agreement is
also silent about the said payment
of 2013. Throughout the whole
case, the applicant does not come out clear to state who is liable to
reimburse the Department of
R5 194 418.72 which she
has received . . .
Therefore, I find no
justification in law and on facts why the applicant repudiates
liability in this case. What the parties and
the court know is that
the alleged payment was neither a bonus nor a gift to the applicant.
She cannot escape liability of refunding
this money. The Department
paid this money to the GEPF after the applicant was reinstated. I
repeat, by paying the money to the
GEPF, the Department was not
redeeming its own indebtedness to the GEPF but the indebtedness of
the applicant to the tune of R5
194 418.72.’
[16] The high
court was correct in finding that the reason for the refusal to
submit the appellant’s exit documents
to the GEPF was not a
valid defence to the relief sought by the appellant. It was not in
dispute that the Department, as the appellant’s
employer, was
obliged to facilitate the processing of her pension benefit
documents. Once the interdictory relief was granted,
that should have
been the end of the matter.
[17]
The court erred in granting the further, unsolicited order for
payment against the appellant. Apart from the fact
that no such order
had been sought by the Department, the issue of the (re)payment of
the pension benefit was not necessary for
determination of the
mandatory interdict. Both this court and the Constitutional Court
have repeatedly expressed the principle
that the dispute between
parties is defined in the pleadings before court. Courts may, on
their own accord raise issues of law
that emerge fully from the
record where consideration of those issues is necessary for the
decision of the case.
[13]
In
this case, the foundation for the relief sought by the appellant was
the Department’s refusal to submit her exit documents
to the
GEPF. The Department’s defence was that, its refusal to submit
the documents was justified given the appellant’s
obligation to
pay to it the pension benefit paid to her. The issue fell to be
determined solely on the pleadings and evidence rather
than on the
interests of justice basis advanced by the high court.
[18] As it
was submitted on behalf of the appellant, if the Department intended
to claim, in these proceedings, repayment
of a debt due to it, it was
incumbent upon it to set out a properly pleaded claim, and the relief
sought. It failed to do so despite
a number of invitations extended
to it by the appellant. It merely contended that the appellant was
indebted to it. It was improper
for the high court to grant relief
that had not been sought. The appeal must therefore succeed.
Consequently, I make the
following order:
1
The
appeal is upheld with costs.
2
Paragraphs
3.2 and 3.3 of the order of the high court are set aside.
____________________
N DAMBUZA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
Counsel for the
appellant:
MG Higte
Instructed
by:
Nienaber
and Wissing Attorneys,
Mahikeng
McIntyer
Van Der Post,
Bloemfontein
Counsel for the fifth to
seventh respondents: TJ Makgate and S Raselalome
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Mahikeng
[1]
The
Department, together with its administrator and its Head of
Department cited are the fifth, sixth and seventh respondents
in
this appeal. They were cited as the fifth, sixth and seventh
respondents in the high court application.
[2]
The
Government Employees Fund, the Chairman of its Board of Trustees,
the Government Pensions Administration Agency and its Chairman,
being the first to fourth respondents in this appeal, were cited as
the first to fourth respondents in the high court application.
[3]
Prior
to 1994 the North West Province was part of the old Transvaal
Province. It includes part of the old homeland of Bophuthatswana;
https/www.sahistory.org.za. Although the parties agree that the
appellant was employed by the North West Province from 1979 it
can
be assumed that prior to 1994 she was employed either by the old
South African Government or the Government of Bophuthatswana.
[4]
The
GEPF was founded in May 1996 when various public sector pension
funds were consolidated into GEPF; https/www.gepf.co.za. The
appellant’s membership would have derived from her employment
in the public sector prior to 1994.
[5]
Government
Employees Pension Law, 1996 (Act 21 of 1996).
[6]
The
term pensionable service ‘buy back’ is used by the
parties to describe the procedure in terms of which a (former)
member of GEPF is re-admitted to the fund.
[7]
As
explained in para 2 above, there is no disagreement between the
parties about the appellant’s assertion that what was
paid out
to her after Income Tax deduction was R5 194 418.72.
[8]
Forms
Z864, Z894, Z583 and a ‘Choice Form’.
[9]
Z102.
[10]
The section provides that:
‘
21
(3) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (1) or of any other
law
(a)
any amount which is payable to the employer or the Fund by any
member in the employment of such employer on the
date of his or
her
retirement or discharge, or which the employer is liable to pay in
respect of such member;
(b)
any amount which has been paid to any member, pensioner or
beneficiary in accordance with the provisions of this
Law and to
which
such
member, pensioner or beneficiary was not entitled;
(c)
the amount of any loss which has been sustained by the employer
through theft, fraud, negligence or any misconduct
on the part of
any
member, pensioner or beneficiary which has been admitted by such
member or pensioner in writing or has been proved in a court
of
law;
(d)
any amount, plus interest at the rate determined by the Board after
consultation with the actuary, due to the
Fund in respect of an
amount for which the Fund becomes liable under a guarantee furnished
in respect of a member for a loan
granted by some other person to
that member in terms of the rules.’
[11]
Public
Finance Management Act No.1 of 1999
.
[12]
Rule
10 of the GEPF Rules deals with ‘[r]ecognition of previous and
other periods of service as pensionable service’.
Rule 10.2
provides that:
‘
In
a case of a person who was re-admitted to the fund, and who at an
earlier stage received a benefit (excluding a benefit payable
for
the reason referred to in rule 14.1.1 and 14.3.1) from the Fund, the
Temporary Employees Pension Fund or a previous fund,
such earlier
period of pensionable service in respect of which a benefit as
aforesaid was paid to him or her; Provided that-
(a)
the recognition of such earlier period of
pensionable service shall be subject to the provisions of rule 17
mutatis mutandis
;
(b)
if such a person was a member of the
Government Service Pension Fund immediately prior to the fixed date,
his or her written request
was received by the Fund within the
twelve-month period immediately following the fixed date;
(c)
if such a person was a member of the
Temporary Employees Pension Fund or a previous fund, as the case may
be, immediately prior
to the date determined in terms of 14(1) or 15
(1) of the Law, his or her written request was received by the Fund
within the
twelve-month period immediately following that date;
Provided that the Regulations pertaining to the Temporary Employees
Pension
Fund or the previous fund provided for the recognition of
such period of service as pensionable service;
(d)
if such a member was so re-admitted to the
Fund after the fixed date or the date determined in terms of section
14(1) and 15(1)
of the Law, as the case may be, the
re-admittance took place within a period of thirty-six months after
the member had
terminated his or her membership of the Fund, the
Temporary Employees Pension Fund, or a previous fund; Provided,
further, that
such written request by the member was received by the
Fund within the twelve month period immediately following his or her
re-admittance
to the Fund;
(e)
the member referred to in
(b)
,
(c)
or
(d)
above
submits proof to the satisfaction of the Board of such previous
pensionable service and offers payment of the amount of
such benefit
to the Board’.
[13]
See
Bliss
Brand (Pty) Ltd v Advertising Regulatory Board NPC and Others
[2023]
ZACC 19
and other authorities cited in that judgment.
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