Case Law[2023] ZASCA 149South Africa
Ilse Becker and Others v The Financial Services Conduct Authority and Others (454/2022) [2023] ZASCA 149; 2024 (2) SA 348 (SCA) (10 November 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
10 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Constitutional law – financial services regulation – whether ss 154, 167 and 231 of the Financial Sector Regulation Act 9 of 2017 (the Act) unconstitutional and invalid – failure to observe procedural fairness in deciding whether a person has contravened a financial sector law – challenge to constitutional validity in terms of s 33 of the Constitution – subsidiarity – application of s 3 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
Judgment
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## Ilse Becker and Others v The Financial Services Conduct Authority and Others (454/2022) [2023] ZASCA 149; 2024 (2) SA 348 (SCA) (10 November 2023)
Ilse Becker and Others v The Financial Services Conduct Authority and Others (454/2022) [2023] ZASCA 149; 2024 (2) SA 348 (SCA) (10 November 2023)
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sino date 10 November 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 454/2022
In
the matter between:
ILSE
BECKER
FIRST APPELLANT
EUGENE
BECKER
SECOND APPELLANT
FUSION
GUARANTEES (PTY) LTD
THIRD APPELLANT
and
THE
FINANCIAL SERVICES
CONDUCT
AUTHORITY
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
HONOURABLE MINISTER
ENOCH
GODONGWANA IN HIS
CAPACITY
AS THE MINISTER
OF
FINANCE
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE
NATIONAL CREDIT REGULATOR
THIRD RESPONDENT
THE
PRUDENTIAL AUTHORITY
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Ilse
Becker and
Others v The Financial Services Conduct Authority and Others
(454/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 149
(10
November 2023)
Coram:
PETSE DP and MOTHLE and MEYER JJA and
SIWENDU and UNTERHALTER AJJA
Heard:
15 September
2023
Delivered:
10 November
2023
Summary:
Constitutional
law – financial services regulation – whether
ss 154, 167
and 231 of the Financial Sector Regulation Act 9 of 2017 (the Act)
unconstitutional and invalid – failure to
observe procedural
fairness in deciding whether a person has contravened a financial
sector law – challenge to constitutional
validity in terms of
s 33 of the Constitution – subsidiarity –
application of s 3 of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice
Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Ncongwane AJ, sitting as court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to include the costs of
two counsel, where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Unterhalter AJA (Petse
DP and Mothle and Meyer JJA and Siwendu AJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The first and second appellants, Ms Ilse Becker and Mr
Eugene Becker
respectively, (the Beckers) are the directors of the third appellant
(Fusion Guarantees (Pty) Ltd (Fusion)). Fusion
is a company, the
business of which is to offer guarantees and sureties. The first
respondent is the Financial Services Conduct
Authority (the
Authority). The Authority was established in terms of s 56 of
the Financial Sector Regulation Act 9 of 2017
(the Act). Among its
functions, the Authority is charged with the power to regulate and
supervise the conduct of financial institutions
in terms of the Act.
[2]
At the behest of the Authority an investigation was conducted,
in
terms of s 80 of the Financial Institutions Act 80 of 1998, into
the affairs of Fusion. Mr Panday rendered an inspection
report, dated
16 July 2019. He concluded that Fusion was in contravention of the
Short-Term Insurance Act 53 of 1998
. On 12 February 2020, Mr Dikokwe
of the Authority gave notice to Fusion and the Beckers of the
Authority’s intention to take
regulatory action against them.
The notice stated that, based on the findings of the investigation,
the Authority was of the
prima facie
view that Fusion, through
the agency of the Beckers, was in contravention of certain financial
sector laws. The Authority indicated
that it intended to impose an
administrative penalty of R200 million on Fusion, and make a
debarment order in respect of the
Beckers for a period of 15 years.
The notice set out the factors that the Authority took into
consideration in determining
the regulatory actions the Authority
intended to take. Fusion and the Beckers were afforded an opportunity
to make submissions
on the investigation report, the proposed
administrative penalty, and the proposed debarment.
[3]
Fusion and the Beckers took up this invitation, and made
detailed
submissions. They also made application to the Gauteng Division of
the High Court, Pretoria (the high court) to declare
ss 154, 167, 230
and 231 of the Act (collectively, the impugned provisions)
unconstitutional and invalid. They cited, among others,
the Authority
and the Minister of Finance as respondents. Before the high court,
the challenge to s 230 was not persisted
with. The high court
dismissed the application. With its leave, Fusion and the Beckers now
appeal to this Court. The Authority
and the Minister of Finance
oppose the appeal and seek its dismissal. While this litigation has
been engaged, the Authority has
not taken a final decision to impose
an administrative penalty or make a debarment order.
The
issues on appeal
[4]
In oral argument before us, counsel for Fusion and the
Beckers,
commendably, simplified their challenge on appeal. First, they no
longer challenge the impugned provisions on the basis
that they
infringe s 22 of the Constitution. Second, they draw a
distinction between the finding of the Authority that there
has been
a contravention of a financial sector law and the appropriate
sanctions that should be imposed, upon such a finding having
been
made.
[5]
Third, the challenge they make is directed, in the first
place, to
the scheme of the Act in terms of which the Authority makes a finding
of a contravention of a financial sector law. Fusion
and the Beckers
contend that the Act does not permit them a hearing in respect of
this finding. That, they contend, is unfair and
constitutes an
infringement of s 33 of the Constitution.
[6]
Fourth, when the Authority comes to decide upon the appropriate
sanctions that should be imposed upon persons found to have
contravened a financial sector law, here a different kind of
unfairness
arises. The Authority is not an impartial and independent
tribunal, and hence the power of the Authority to impose an
administrative
penalty and order disbarment offends s 34 of the
Constitution.
[7]
Fifth, if we do not find that the challenge, predicated
upon s 33
of the Constitution, is valid, then Fusion and the Beckers do not
persist in their challenge under s 34.
The
fairness challenge
[8]
Fusion and the Beckers challenge the constitutional validity
of the
powers enjoyed by the Authority, in terms of the Act, to make a
debarment order and impose administrative penalties. Section
154 sets
out the consultation requirements with which the Authority must
comply, before making a debarment order in respect of
a natural
person. The Authority must give a draft of the debarment order to the
person affected; provide reasons and other relevant
information about
the proposed debarment; and invite the person to make submissions ‘on
the matter, and give the person a
reasonable period to do so’.
Section 154(3) then provides as follows:
‘
In
deciding whether or not to make a debarment order in respect of a
natural person, the responsible authority must take into account
at
least –
(a)
the submissions made by, or on behalf of, the person; and
(b)
any advice from the other financial sector regulator.’
[9]
Section 167(1) of the Act empowers the Authority to impose
an
administrative penalty upon a person if they have contravened a
financial sector law. Section 167(2) sets out the matters that
the
Authority must, and those that they may, have regard to in
determining an appropriate administrative penalty for particular
conduct. The Authority must have regard to ‘any submissions by,
or on behalf of, the person that is relevant to the matter,
including
mitigating factors referred to in those submissions’
(s 167(2)
(a)
(iii)).
[10]
The constitutional challenge of Fusion and the Beckers, regarding the
power
of the Authority to make a debarment order and impose an
administrative penalty, has undergone some refinement. Their
challenge
was ultimately cast in the following way. Sections 154 and
167 afford a right to those who might be subject to sanction to make
submissions to the Authority, and the Authority is required to
consider those submissions before deciding whether or not to exercise
its powers of sanction. But this is inadequate protection. Section
33(1) of the Constitution provides that everyone has the right
to
administrative action that is lawful, reasonable and procedurally
fair. While ss 154 and 167 provide for those at risk of sanction
to
make submissions before the Authority determines whether to impose a
sanction, there is no like procedural fairness that is
accorded to
persons under the Act whose conduct has been found by the Authority
to have contravened a financial sector law. Such
a finding is the
jurisdictional predicate for the exercise of powers by the Authority
to impose a sanction, whether by imposing
an administrative penalty
or making a debarment order. Yet, so it was contended, the competence
of the Authority to decide whether
a contravention of a financial
sector law has taken place is unconstrained by the obligation to
invite submissions from the person
who is alleged to have acted in
contravention of the law, and only then to determine whether there
has been a contravention, taking
account of these submissions. This
want of constraint upon the exercise of the Authority’s power
is an infringement of the
rights of Fusion and the Beckers to
procedural fairness, recognised in s 33(1) of the Constitution.
[11]
Counsel for the Minister of Finance submitted that the constitutional
challenge
made by Fusion and the Beckers was not open to them because
the principle of constitutional subsidiarity provided a complete
answer
to their challenge. The Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) was enacted to give effect to the rights
protected
in s 33 of the Constitution. Where a statute confers
power to take administrative action, such action is made subject to
the
disciplines of PAJA, unless the statute excludes its application
or is otherwise inconsistent with PAJA. Absent such exclusion or
inconsistency, a statute cannot be directly challenged for its
inconsistency with s 33 of the Constitution because whatever
administrative action the statute empowers, it is subject to the
protections of PAJA which, in turn, gives effect to the rights
in
s 33 of the Constitution.
[12]
The
principle of subsidiarity was central to the reasoning that led the
high court to dismiss the constitutional challenge.
Before us,
the application of the principle of subsidiarity was debated, and, in
particular, the holding of the Constitutional
Court in
Zondi
v
Member of the Executive Council for Traditional and Local Affairs &
Others
(
Zondi
).
[1]
Zondi
requires that before a statute can be found to be inconsistent with
s 33 of the Constitution, the statute must be read with
PAJA.
Generally, PAJA will be of application to any administrative action
that the statute empowers, and hence, no s 33 inconsistency
can
arise, unless PAJA is itself deficient in some way in giving effect
to the rights in s 33.
[13]
What
Zondi
requires is that we read the Act with PAJA. Fusion
and the Beckers contend that the Act excludes their right to
procedural fairness
when the Authority determines whether they have
contravened a financial sector law. Whether that is the correct
interpretation
of the Act is a matter to which I will come. However,
that is the cause of action upon which they rely. If the Act is
interpreted
as Fusion and the Beckers submit it should be, then the
Act would be subject to a direct challenge under s 33 because
PAJA
would have been found to be of no application to the exercise of
powers by the Authority in determining whether there had been a
contravention of a financial sector law. The principle of
subsidiarity does not obviate the need to consider the interpretation
of the Act that Fusion and the Beckers contend for. Rather,
Zondi
requires us to engage that interpretative question. And I turn to
this issue.
[14]
Fusion and the Beckers recognise that the Act does provide them with
a right
to make submissions. Section 154 requires the Authority,
before making a debarment order, to provide reasons for the proposed
debarment.
The Authority must invite the person who may be debarred
to make submissions ‘on the matter’, and afford a
reasonable
time within which to do so. Plainly, the obligation to
provide reasons is intended to allow the person who may be subject to
sanction
to make informed submissions. These submissions must be
considered before the Authority decides whether or not to make a
debarment
order.
[15]
I do not understand Fusion and the Beckers to contest this
understanding of
what s 154 requires of the Authority. Their
contention is that these duties of fairness are of application before
the Authority
decides whether or not to make a debarment order. The
Act does not extend these duties to the decision of the Authority as
to whether
a person has contravened a financial sector law.
Section 153(1)
(a)
provides that the Authority may make a
debarment order if the person concerned has contravened a financial
sector law. And so the
finding of a contravention is a jurisdictional
predicate for the exercise by the Authority of its power to sanction
by recourse
to the making of a debarment order. However, if the
Authority is not required to invite and consider submissions from the
person
who has been investigated, as to whether they have contravened
a financial sector law, before deciding this issue, then the Act
fails to respect the constitutional right to procedural fairness,
which s 33(1) of the Constitution entrenches.
[16]
This legislative omission, it was submitted, gives rise to
considerable risk
for the Beckers. Should the Authority make a
debarment order, s 230 provides that persons aggrieved by that
decision may apply
to the Financial Services Tribunal (the Tribunal)
for a reconsideration of the decision. However, the process to secure
a
reconsideration takes time. In the interim, the debarment is
enforced, with its drastic consequences for the Beckers, both as to
what they may not do and the public opprobrium they will suffer. This
is so because s 231 provides that neither an application
for a
reconsideration of a decision, nor the proceedings that follow,
suspend the decision of the Authority, unless the Tribunal
so orders.
The Beckers complain that the first stage in the process by which
sanctions may be visited upon them lacks procedural
fairness. That
renders invalid the competence of the Authority to impose sanctions,
as also the enforcement of these sanctions,
pending their
reconsideration by the Tribunal. Put simply, if the exercise of
competence by the Authority requires no procedural
fairness so as to
decide whether a person has contravened a financial sector law, then
no decision as to sanctions predicated upon
a finding of
contravention is valid, whatever adherence to procedural fairness the
Authority then demonstrates.
[17]
The same challenge is directed at s 167 of the Act. The
Authority may
impose an appropriate administrative penalty upon a
person who has contravened a financial sector law. As I have
explained, s 167(2)
(a)
(iii) of the Act requires that in
determining an appropriate penalty, the Authority must have regard to
any submissions ‘relevant
to the matter’, made by or on
behalf of the person who might be sanctioned. Fusion submitted that
procedural fairness accorded
to a person at the stage of sanction
cannot cure the absence of procedural fairness when the Authority
determines whether a contravention
of a financial sector law has
taken place. The imposition of an administrative penalty is rendered
invalid by the failure to observe
procedural fairness in determining
that a contravention took place.
[18]
The challenge that Fusion and the Beckers make rests on a single
proposition:
that the Act does not require the Authority to invite a
person to make submissions, nor to consider their submissions, before
it
decides whether this person has contravened a financial sector
law. If the proposition is correct, this would constitute an
infringement
of the right to procedural fairness, entrenched by
s 33(1) of the Constitution, and would render the power of the
Authority
to impose sanctions in terms of ss 154 and 167 invalid, as
also the interim imposition of the sanction pending a reconsideration
that s 231 enjoins. Implicit in this submission is the following
interpretation of the Act: the power of the Authority to
decide
whether a person has contravened a financial sector law, though
administrative action, is not subject to obligations to
observe
procedural fairness imposed by s 3 of PAJA.
[19]
But is the proposition correct? Section 154(1), as we have observed,
requires
the Authority to invite submissions before making a
debarment order. The Authority must give the person affected the
draft debarment
order ‘along with reasons for and other
relevant information about the proposed debarment’. The reasons
for, and relevant
information concerning, the proposed debarment
order must necessarily traverse why the order is required. As a
matter of law, a
debarment order can only be required if there has
been a contravention of a financial sector law. The reasons must
therefore engage
why it is that the Authority considers there to be a
basis to conclude that such a contravention has taken place. The
reasons are
given to permit a person against whom a debarment order
may be made to offer informed submissions. Section 154(1) refers to a
proposed
debarment. The Authority has not made a decision to make a
debarment order when it invites submissions. It may do so, but only
once it has invited submissions and considered them, before taking a
decision.
[20]
Since a contravention of a financial sector law is the essential
premise upon
which any sanction may be required, I interpret s 154(1)
to mean that the submissions that are invited, and must be
considered,
concern every matter relevant to making a debarment
order. The text of s 154(1) says so. It refers to submissions
‘on
the matter’. No matter is more central to such a
decision than the issue as to whether a contravention of a financial
sector
law has taken place. It would also be a perverse incongruity
if s 154(1) required the Authority to provide reasons that
engage
the issue of contravention, but exclude from submission, and
hence consideration, what might be said by a person as to why no
contravention
had taken place or that the contravention is of a
lesser kind or degree.
[21]
I find that the correct interpretation of s 154(1) does not
exclude from
submission or consideration the issue as to whether a
person has contravened a financial sector law. On the contrary, this
lies
at the very heart of the matter. It follows that, properly
understood, when the Authority comes to consider whether to make a
debarment
order, it cannot have made a final decision as to whether
there was a contravention of a financial sector law. As occurred in
this
matter, the investigation may have led the Authority to conclude
that there is a
prima facie
evidence of a contravention. Any
decision on the issue, however, must await the submissions of the
person alleged to have contravened
the financial sector law, and the
Authority’s consideration of those submissions.
[22]
Once this is so, the Act permits no want of procedural fairness as to
the making
of a debarment order. On the contrary, it requires that
the Authority provide reasons for its proposed order, and these
reasons
must traverse the issue of contravention. Furthermore, it
requires the Authority to invite submissions that engage this issue.
The constitutional challenge of the Beckers, who face a proposed
debarment order, cannot succeed. The challenge to s 231 of
the
Act was framed as an entailment of the invalidity that was said to
attach to the debarment order. It must therefore also fail.
[23]
For like reasons, the challenge of Fusion to s 167 must also
fail. Although
its wording and structure differ somewhat from s 154,
as we have observed, it requires the authority to have regard to
submissions
‘relevant to the matter’. Nothing is more
relevant to the matter than the issue as to whether a person has
contravened
a financial sector law, the very predicate upon which any
imposition of an administrative penalty rests. It follows, then, here
too, that the Authority can make no final decision as to whether a
contravention has taken place until it has considered the submissions
of the person alleged to have contravened a financial sector law.
Thus, for the reasons given, the Act permits of no want of procedural
fairness in conferring a power upon the Authority to impose an
administrative penalty.
[24]
Sections 154 and 167 cannot be interpreted to exclude submissions
concerning
whether a person has contravened a financial sector law
from the remit of the submissions that the Authority must invite an
affected
person to make. However, even if ss 154 and 167 could be
read on the basis that they do not, in terms, expressly require the
Authority
to invite such submissions (contrary to the interpretation
I consider to be correct), the interpretative outcome is no
different.
Section 91 of the Act stipulates that PAJA applies to any
administrative action taken by the Authority. Whether the Authority’s
decision as to whether a person has contravened a financial sector
law is a discrete action, as the Beckers and Fusion contend,
or
whether it forms part of what the Authority determines when deciding
whether to impose a sanction, it is administrative action
on the part
of the Authority to which PAJA applies. Hence, the duty of the
Authority to observe procedural fairness is inescapable
and the Act,
on this score, suffers no constitutional defect.
[25]
As I understood the position of counsel for Fusion and the Beckers,
if their
challenge on the grounds of procedural fairness, in terms of
s 33(1) of the Constitution, failed, then, they do not pursue
their challenge to the Act based upon the proposition that the
Authority is not an independent tribunal or forum, and thus its
power
to make a debarment order or impose an administrative fine offends
against the protections of s 34 of the Constitution.
I have
found that the procedural fairness challenge cannot prevail, and
hence, say nothing more of the challenge of Fusion and
the Beckers in
terms of s 34.
Remedy
[26]
For these reasons, the appeal of Fusion and the Beckers must be
dismissed.
Although the appeal raises issues of some constitutional
import, this litigation has been pursued by Fusion and the Beckers to
defend themselves against a regulatory imposition. That is of course
their right. But having not prevailed, in my judgment, they
should
bear the costs of this appeal.
[27]
In the result: the appeal is dismissed with costs, such costs to
include the
costs of two counsel, where so employed.
__________________________
D
N UNTERHALTER
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
A R G
Mundell SC (with D van Niekerk)
Instructed
by:
Cowan-Harper-Madikizela Attorneys, Sandton
Bezuidenhouts Inc.,
Bloemfontein
For
the first respondent:
A Cockrell SC
Instructed
by:
Mothle Jooma Sabdia Inc., Pretoria
Matsepes Inc.,
Bloemfontein
For
the second respondent: L Gcabashe
SC (with P Jara)
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney, Pretoria
The State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Zondi
v Member of the Executive Council for Traditional and Local Affairs
& Others
[2004]
ZACC 19
;
2005 (3) SA 598
(CC);
2005 (4) BCLR 347
(CC) paras 99 and
103.
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