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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Moroka v Premier of the Free State Province and Others (295/20)
[2022] ZASCA 34 (31 March 2022)
Moroka v Premier of the Free State Province and Others (295/20)
[2022] ZASCA 34 (31 March 2022)
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sino date 31 March 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 295/20
In the matter between:
MOIPONE
MOROKA
APPELLANT
and
PREMIER
OF THE FREE STATE
FIRST RESPONDENT
COMMISSION OF
TRADITIONAL
LEADERSHIP
DISPUTE AND CLAIMS
SECOND RESPONDENT
PRESIDENT OF THE
REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
THIRD RESPONDENT
MINISTER OF
COOPERATIVE
GOVERNANCE AND
TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS
FOURTH RESPONDENT
FREE STATE HOUSE
OF TRADITIONAL
LEADERS
FIFTH RESPONDENT
MAROKA SIBONELA
KINGSLEY
SIXTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Moipone Moroka v
Premier
of the Free State
Province and Others
(295/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 34
(31 March 2022)
Coram:
PETSE AP AND MBHA, MOKGOHLOA, MOTHLE AND HUGHES
JJA
Heard
:
07 September 2021
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme Court
of Appeal website and release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 09h45 on
31 March 2022.
Summary:
Customary law – whether the Premier
contravened section 21(2)(
b
)
of the
Traditional Leadership and Governance Framework Act 41 of 2003
when he referred the dispute in respect of the senior traditional
leadership to the Commission before the Free State House of
Traditional
Leaders could deal with the dispute – decision of the
Commission on Traditional Leadership Dispute and Claims – whether
the Commission
had authority to investigate and make recommendations
in respect of a dispute which arose after 1 September 1927 in terms
of
s 25(2)
(viii)
of
the Traditional Leadership and Governance Framework Amendment Act 23
of 2009 (the Amendment Act) – whether the Commission had
authority
to deal with the dispute which was submitted to it after six months
from the date of coming into operation of the Amendment
Act – the
Commission had no such authority.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Free State Division of the
High Court, Bloemfontein (Jordaan J with Murray AJ sitting as court
of first instance):
1 The appeal is upheld with
costs.
2 The order of the high court is
set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
2.1
The findings and recommendations of the Commission on Traditional
Leadership Disputes
and Claims (the Commission) concerning the senior
traditional leadership position of the Barolong Boo Seleka published
on 29 February
2016 are reviewed and set aside.
2.2
The decision of the Premier of the Free State Province accepting the
findings
and recommendations of the Commission is reviewed and set
aside.
2.3
The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this
application.’
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Mokgohloa JA (Petse AP and
Hughes JA concurring):
[1]
The issue in this appeal concerns the lawfulness of the decision
taken by the first
respondent, Premier of the Free State (the
Premier) to refer the dispute regarding the senior traditional
leadership of Barolong
Boo Seleka to the second respondent,
Commission of Traditional Leadership Disputes and Claims (the
Commission) before affording the
Free State House of Traditional
Leaders (the House) an opportunity to deal with the dispute in terms
of s 21(2)
(b)
of the Traditional Leadership and Governance
Framework Act 41 of 2003 (the Act). The Free State Division of the
High Court, Bloemfontein
(the high court) found that the Premier did
not contravene the Act and dismissed the application with costs.
[2]
Dissatisfied with the decision of the high court, the appellant (Ms
Moipone Moroka),
sought leave to appeal and raised a further ground
of appeal that the Commission had no authority to investigate and
make recommendations
to the Premier regarding the Barolong Boo Seleka
senior traditional leadership. She relied on s 25(5) of the
Traditional Leadership
and Governance Framework Amendment Act 23 of
2009 (the Amendment Act). Based on this, the high court granted leave
to this court.
[3]
There are two preliminary issues that I need to deal with before
dealing with the merits
of this matter. These are: (a) whether the
appeal has become moot, and (b) whether this court can entertain an
issue that is raised
for the first time on appeal.
[4]
Before the hearing of this appeal, the parties were directed in
writing to file written
submissions answering the following: ‘the
sixth respondent in this case, Sehunelo Kingsley Moroka, having
passed away on 15 August
2020, does this then not mean it is open to
the Barolong Boo Seleka Royal Family to nominate another person to
fill the vacancy?
And if the nomination process needs to start all
over again in accordance with the prescripts of the Free State
Traditional Leadership
and Governance Act 8 of 2005, does that not
mean that the appeal has become moot?’ Both the appellant and the
first respondent
delivered written submissions.
[5]
In his written submissions and at the hearing of the appeal, the
Premier argued that
the matter has become moot in that the son of the
sixth respondent, Mr Letshego Archibald Moroka, has already been
identified as
a legitimate successor. Furthermore, that the Premier
has appointed Mr Samuel Lehulere Moroka (Letshego’s uncle) as a
regent until
Letshego is ready to ascend the throne.
[6]
The appellant, on the other hand, contended that the findings and
recommendations of
the Commission did not mention the name of
Kingsley Moroka. According to the appellant, the findings of the
Commission were, in essence,
confined to the identification of the
rightful ruling house of the Barolong Boo Seleka as the house of
Richard Maramantsi. Consequently,
while it may be open to the
Barolong Boo Seleka Royal Family to nominate another person to fill
the vacancy, the Commission’s report
dictated that such person
should come from the house of Richard Maramantsi and not the family
of Kgosi Tsipinare that had for at
least 137 years been the royal
family of Barolong Boo Seleka.
[7]
I find the appellant’s contention to have merit. Her attack on the
findings and recommendation
of the Commission was not in respect of a
specific person recommended but of the house or bloodline the
traditional leadership had
to follow. Therefore this issue is still
alive and has to be dealt with.
[8]
Regarding the argument raised for the first time on appeal, the most
common situation
when an appeal court may consider an argument raised
for the first time on appeal is where the argument involves a
question of law.
Such argument must be apparent from the record,
which could not have been avoided if raised at the proper juncture.
In the context
of the facts of this case, both the timing of the
referral of the dispute to the Commission by the Premier and the date
of commencement
of chapter 6 of the Act are not only sufficiently
canvassed on the papers but are, most importantly, also common cause.
The attack
on the Commission’s authority is a point of law and this
court can deal with it. Furthermore, this court’s consideration of
the
new point of law will not occasion unfairness to the parties.
Thus, the interests of justice do not militate against the
consideration
of the new argument raised by the appellant for the
first time on appeal. I now turn to deal with the merits of the
appeal.
[9]
The dispute in this case arose against the backdrop of contestations
in relation to
various kingships or queenship by traditional leaders
around the country. In order to attempt and resolve these
contestations, Parliament,
acting in terms of s 22 of the Act,
established the Commission on Traditional Leadership and Disputes and
Claims (the Commission).
In terms of s 23(1)
(a)
of
the Act, the Minister,
[1]
after
consultation with the National House of Traditional Leaders, must
appoint a chairperson and not more than four persons for a
period not
exceeding five years as members of the Commission. Such members must
have knowledge of customary law, customs and the
institution of
traditional leadership. The Commission’s functions included the
investigation and resolution of traditional leadership
claims and
disputes in the Republic.
[10] On 1
February 2010, the Act was amended extensively in terms of the
Amendment Act. The functions of the
Commission regarding resolution
of traditional leadership disputes were altered so that the
Commission could only deal with disputes
dating from 1 September
1927. I shall return to this Amendment Act later.
[11] The
factual background of this matter can be summarised as follows. There
appears to be a lengthy history
of leadership contestation between
the Barolong Boo Seleka Royal Family and the Barolong Boo Seleka
Royal Khuduthamaga. This contestation
dates back to the 1880s when
the traditional leadership moved from one lineage to another. During
the 1880s, Kgosi Moroka II married
a woman by the name of Nkhabele
who came with a child named Tshipinare. Therefore, Tshipinare became
the stepson to Kgosi Moroka
II. Tshipinare grew up to be a brave
warrior and saved his stepfather Kgosi Moroka’s life in the war
against the BaSotho. As a
result, Kgosi Moroka II decided that
Tshipinare should be his successor. It is from this time that the
traditional leadership of
the Barolong Boo Seleka vested in the
Tshipinare’s lineage until the passing on of Kgosi Ramokgopa Moroka
in 2011.
[12]
After the passing of Kgosi Ramokgopa, the royal family identified
Kgosana Gaopalelwe Moroka, the appellant’s
brother, as a successor.
However, Kgosana Gaopalelwe had, at that stage, not yet reached
maturity and his mother, Kgosigadi AGG Moroka,
the appellant’s
mother, was identified as the Regent. It seems that the other
faction, led by the sixth respondent, the late Kingsley
Sehunelo
Moroka, objected to this and wrote a letter to the Premier in pursuit
of its objection. The Premier responded in a letter
dated 18 October
2011 as follows:
‘
4.
Regarding the matter at hand I wish to respond as follows:
The
Act (the Free State Traditional Act of 2005) defines the “Royal
Family” as “the core customary institution or structure
consisting of immediate relatives of the ruling family within the
traditional community who have been identified in terms of custom,
and includes, where applicable, other family members “who are close
relatives of the ruling family”. According to section 18
therefore
only immediate relatives of the ruling Moroka Family of the late
Kgosi Ramokgopa Moroka are entitled to identify the successor
of the
Chieftaincy. The Royal Family of Moroka has identified Kgosana
Gaopalelwe Moroka as the successor to the Chieftaincy of the
Barolong
Boo Seleka, however according to the Royal Family Kgosana Gaopalelwe
Moroka has not yet reached a matured age and is not
yet ready to be
installed as Kgosi. The Royal Family will inform the Premier when
Kgosana Gaopalelwe Moroka is ready to take over.
The Premier will
recognize Kgosana Gaopalelwe Moroka as Kgosi by way of a notice in
the Provincial Gazette and by issuing of a certificate
of recognition
to him.
5.
In the light of the above, it would appear that your resolution of 25
August 2010 in which you resolved to relieve Kgosigadi AGG
Moroka of
all her responsibilities and duties in Barolong Boo Seleka is in
conflict with the Free State Traditional Leadership and
Governance
Act No.8 of 2005.This also applies to your decision of 21 November
2010 to recognize SK Moroka (sixth respondent) as the
rightful leader
of Barolong Boo Seleka Tribe. Both these resolutions can only be
taken by the Royal Family as defined in the Act.’
[13] It
is not clear as to what happened after the Premier’s letter of 18
October 2011 but ultimately, Kgosi
Gaopalelwe Moroka ascended the
throne until his passing in July 2013, after which the dispute
resurfaced. It is this dispute that
the Premier referred to the
Commission for investigation and this was done without affording the
House an opportunity from the outset
to deal with the dispute in
terms of s 21 of the Act. This is evident from the minutes of the
meeting of the Free State House of
Traditional Leaders held on 30-31
January 2014, which records the following:
‘
It
was unanimous that it was wrong that the House was not included in
the initial stages of the dispute but appreciated that there
are
moves by the department to advice Premier to establish the commission
or to the refer the matter to the Commission on traditional
leadership disputes and claims to investigate and recommend. … The
House was unanimous that the only known royal leaders of Barolong
boo
Seleka to them has been the current royal family until this dispute
The House is in agreement that the matter will best be resolved
by
the neutral body which is the commission. … The House recognises
the current royal family and will abide by findings and determination
as recommended by the commission’.
However, once the Free State
House of Traditional Leaders was consulted, it endorsed the proposed
referral of the dispute to the Commission
by the Premier as is
apparent from the excerpt from its minutes quoted above.
[14] The
reason for not affording the House an opportunity to resolve the
dispute initially, is captured in
a letter written by the chairperson
of the House to the HOD of the Department of Cooperative Governance
and Traditional Affairs (COGTA)
on 3 February 2014 which reads:
‘
6.
On 30 – 31 January 2014 the full sitting of the House argued that
the involvement of the House in this dispute resolution might
have
created doubts of biasness because some of the family members who are
involved in the succession dispute are members of the
House and
considering that a number of interventions did not yield success; the
sitting concurred with the resolution that the matter
must be
resolved by the neutral body.’
[15]
Furthermore, and on 18 March 2014, the HOD of COGTA, directed by the
Premier, wrote a letter to the chairperson
of the Commission
requesting it to investigate and recommend the rightful successor for
the position of a senior traditional leader
of Barolong Boo Seleka.
In this letter, the HOD stated that the names of Ms Moipone Maria
Moroka (the appellant) and the late Kingsley
Sehunelo Moroka (the
sixth respondent) were forwarded to the Premier by the opposing
groups as the possible successors to Kgosi Gaopalelwe
Moroka. The
letter further stated that attempts by COGTA and the Free State House
of Traditional Leaders to resolve the dispute had
failed.
[16]
Section 21(2)
(a)
of the Act provides that disputes relating to
senior traditional leadership must first be referred to the relevant
House, which House
must, in accordance with its internal rules and
procedures, seek to resolve the dispute. It is only if the House is
unable to resolve
the dispute that such dispute must be referred to
the Commission. As already indicated above, the dispute in this
matter was referred
to the House to deal with it after the House had
initially been overlooked. However, nothing turns on this for on
balance, in my
view, the Premier substantially complied with the
prescripts of s 21(2)
(a)
of the Act.
[17] As
requested by the Premier, the Commission met, investigated the
dispute and made its findings that
the rightful ruling house is the
house of Setilo whose descendants were from the house of Ramantshi
Richard. The Commission, therefore,
recommended that the royal house
identify a candidate from the house of Setilo to succeed Kgosi
Gaopalelwe Moroka. The Commission’s
recommendation had the
far reaching effect of wresting the traditional leadership from
the house of Tshipinare which had ruled
from the 1880s. Of importance
in this regard is the question posed by the Commission itself: can
the chieftainship be reversed and,
if so, after how long? Curiously,
the Commission refrained from answering this question and instead
left it to the Premier to answer.
Based on this report, the Premier,
without answering the question posed by the Commission, advised the
royal family that he recognises
the sixth respondent as the senior
traditional leader of Barolong Boo Seleka.
[18] This
then raises the question whether the Commission had the authority to
investigate the dispute. The
authority and functions of the
Commission are provided for in s 25 of the Amendment Act as follows:
‘
Functions
of Commission
(1)
The Commission operates nationally in plenary and provincially in
committees and has authority to investigate and make recommendations
on any traditional leadership dispute and claim contemplated is
subsection (2).
(2)(a)
The Commission has authority to investigate and make recommendations
on –
…
(viii)
all traditional leadership claims and disputes dating from 1
September 1927 to the coming in operation of Provincial Legislation
dealing with traditional leadership and governance matters; and
…
(5)
Any claim or dispute contemplated in this Chapter submitted after six
months after the date of coming into operation of this chapter
may
not be dealt with by the Commission.’
[19] The
appellant contended that the Commission had no authority to
investigate the dispute because the dispute
did not arise from what
transpired on 1 September 1927 or thereafter but rather from what
transpired in the 1880s, long before the
cut-off date, ie 1 September
1927. The Premier, on the other hand, argued that the dispute did not
arise in the 1880s, but in 2011
when Kgosi Ramokgopa died. The
Premier submitted that in trying to resolve the dispute, the
Commission had to look into the evidence
dating back prior to 1
September 1927; this, however, does not, so went the argument, imply
that the dispute itself arose before
1 September 1927. I agree with
the Premier’s submission. The dispute arose in 2011 when the rival
group led by Kingsley Moroka
opposed the appointment of Kgosi
Gaopalelwe Moroka as the successor to Kgosi Ramokgopa.
[20] The
appellant contended further that the Commission had no authority to
investigate the present dispute
as it was not submitted to the
Commission within six months after the coming into operation of the
Amendment Act on 1 February 2010.
[21]
The cardinal question relating to s 25(5) of the Amendment Act is the
phrase ‘may not’. The appellant
argued that this phrase means
‘shall not’ whilst the respondent argued otherwise. The basic
tenet of statutory interpretation
is that the words used in the
statute must be given their ordinary meaning unless a contrary intent
is manifest from the statute
itself.
In
doing so, the language used is construed in the light of the ordinary
rules of grammar and syntax; the context in which the provision
appears; and the apparent purpose to which it is directed
[2]
.
[22] I
agree with the first respondent’s submissions that as a general
rule the word ‘may’ in a statute
confers the power to exercise a
discretion. However, in the present matter the power to exercise a
discretion is couched in the negative
which, in my view, in effect,
takes away the power to exercise a discretion. Simply put, on a
purposive and contextual construction
of s 25(5), the phrase ‘may
not’ means that the Commission did not have the necessary authority
to deal with the dispute referred
to it after six months of coming
into operation of the Amendment Act. As stated earlier, the Amendment
Act came into operation on
1 February 2010. The dispute in question
was referred to the Commission in 2014. Therefore the Commission had
no authority to deal
with this dispute and the appeal should
consequently succeed on this point.
[23] In
the result, the following order is made:
1The appeal is upheld with costs.
2 The order of the high court is
set aside and replaced with the following:
‘
2.1
The findings and recommendations of the Commission on Traditional
Leadership Disputes
and Claims (the Commission) concerning the senior
traditional leadership position of the Barolong Boo Seleka published
on 29 February
2016 are reviewed and set aside.
2.2
The decision of the Premier of the Free State Province accepting the
findings
and recommendations of the Commission is reviewed and set
aside.
2.3
The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of this
application.’
_________________
F E
MOKGOHLOA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Mbha JA dissenting (Mothle JA
concurring):
[24] I
have read the judgment written by my colleague Mokgohloa JA (the
majority). Regrettably, I am unable
to agree, with respect, with the
majority’s approach in dealing with the issues central to this
appeal and the majority’s proposed
outcome thereof. I am of the
view that the court a quo’s findings of fact, and its conclusion
that the Free State House of Traditional
Leaders (the House) properly
dealt with the leadership dispute of the Barolong before it was
referred to the Commission, were correct
and were based on the
undisputed evidence before it. Consequently, such findings are
unassailable and cannot be disturbed. In addition,
the appellant
failed to satisfy the requisite and applicable test governing the
raising of new points of law on appeal.
[25] I
will also demonstrate in this judgment that the Commission was
legally competent and properly authorised
to deal with the Barolong
traditional dispute. Properly interpreted, s 25(5) of the Act
did not proscribe the Commission from
accepting the referral to deal
with the dispute. In addition, the appellant, by participating and
cooperating with the Commission
as it dealt with the said dispute
tacitly, if not expressly, consented that the Commission was
empowered and authorised to investigate
and resolve the dispute. By
so doing, the appellant effectively submitted to the jurisdiction of
the Commission.
[26] The
majority has correctly set out the background to the dispute with
reference to the historical biography
of the Barolong and properly
located the genesis of the dispute. I do not, therefore, intend to
repeat that narration. However, for
this judgment, it is important to
set out and highlight the essential grounds on which the appellant
premised her application in
the court a quo.
[27] The
appellant instituted review proceedings to set aside the findings and
recommendations of the Commission
dated 29 February 2016 and the
decision of the Premier dated 2 November 2017 accepting the findings
and recommendations of the Commission.
The review application was
premised on the following grounds:
(a)
That there was non-compliance with the provisions of s 21(2) of
the Traditional Leadership
Governance Framework Act 41 of 2003 (the
Act), in that the dispute was never referred to the House before
being referred to the Commission;
and
(b)
That the Commission’s decision was arbitrary and did not take into
account all relevant
facts. Furthermore, the Commission failed to
properly interpret and apply the provisions of s 25(3)
(a)
of the Act, which enjoined the Commission, when considering a dispute
or claim, to consider and apply customary law and the customs
of the
relevant traditional community as they were when the event that gave
rise to the dispute or claim occurred.
[28]
In its judgment delivered on 19 September 2021, the court a quo found
that there was no merit to the
appellant’s ground for review based
on the alleged breach of s 21(2) of the Act that the dispute was
never dealt with in the
House before it was referred to the
Commission for investigation and resolution. In arriving at this
finding, the court a quo referred
to the long history of the Barolong
dispute and the correspondence from the House in which the latter had
ultimately resolved that
the dispute be referred to the Premier,
after its attempts to resolve it, had yielded no positive outcome.
[29] The
court a quo referred to a letter dated 3 February 2014, by Mr Morena
L S Moloi (Mr Moloi), chairperson
of the House, to the HOD:
Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (CoGTA). The Premier
provided this letter in his Notice
of Compliance in terms of Rule 53
of the Uniform Rules of Court. The following excerpts from the
letter, which the court a quo quoted
verbatim, are relevant:
(a)
In paragraph 4, Mr Moloi wrote that after the death of Kgosi G Moroka
in July 2013, the same
conflict resurfaced ‘prompting the
Department of Cooperative Governance, representatives of the
Free
State House of traditional leaders
and State law advisors, in
August 2013, to meet the clashing Barolong Boo Seleka Royal Family
and the Barolong Boo Seleka Khuduthamaga
to
discuss amicable ways
to resolve the dispute
. The meeting resolved that the matter
should be referred to the Premier to either:
4.1
Establish the commission of enquiry in terms of s 127
(e)
of the Constitution of South Africa or
4.2
Refer the matter to the Commission to investigate and make
recommendations’. (Emphasis added.)
(b)
In paragraph 5, Mr Moloi stated that during its sitting on 21 January
2014, the executive
committee of the House acknowledged that the
Barolong succession dispute has been going on for a number of years
and has been addressed
on numerous platforms; ‘while numerous
attempts by the House and the department of CoGTA to resolve it
proved unsuccessful’.
Mr Moloi further indicated that in the
meeting, the House unanimously decided that the situation in Thaba
Nchu (among the Barolong),
was negatively affecting the institution
of traditional leadership and service delivery and needed urgent
resolution. On that day,
the executive committee of the House
resolved that the dispute be referred to the Premier for
intervention, in line with the resolution
that was taken on 27 August
2013 between the House, the department of CoGTA and the two factions
within the Barolong and, importantly,
to include the item in the
order paper of the full sitting of the House for further discussion.
(c)
In paragraph 6, Mr Moloi indicated that on ‘30-31 January 2014, the
full sitting of the
House argued that the involvement of the House in
this dispute resolution might have created doubts of biasness because
some of the
family members who are involved in the succession dispute
are members of the House and
considering that a number of
interventions did not yield success
, the sitting concurred with
the resolution that the matter must be
resolved by the neutral
body
’. (Emphasis added.)
(d)
In paragraph 7 of the letter, Mr Moloi wrote that ‘[t]aking into
account that the available
provincial avenues to resolve the dispute
have been exhausted, the Free State House of Traditional Leaders
humbly requests the Premier
to consider one of the options referred
to in paragraphs 4.1 and 4.2 above to, resolve [the] Barolong boo
Seleka succession dispute’.
[30] The
court a quo also referred to a letter dated 18 March 2014 written by
Mr Duma (HOD: Cooperative Governance
and Traditional Affairs), which
stated the following:
‘
(ii)
. . . On 19 July 2013, two names of Ms
Moipone Maria Moroka (the appellant) and Mr Kinsley Sehunelo
Moroka
(sixth respondent) were forwarded to Premier from both opposing
groups of which the matter constituted a dispute.
(iii)
All endeavours of the department and the Free State House of
Traditional Leaders to resolve
the matter amicably weren’t
fruitful, thus the Premier couldn’t exercise his powers to appoint
a successor. There is therefore
a void in the functioning of that
traditional council and thereby necessitating an urgent intervention
to break the stalemate in
that traditional community.
(iv)
The department has found it prudent to request the Commission on
Traditional Leadership Disputes
and Claims investigate the matter and
advise the Premier.’
[31]
Based on the aforementioned undisputed evidence, the court a quo
rejected the appellant’s contention
that the Premier circumvented
the provisions of s 21(2) of the Act by making his decision
before the House had an opportunity
to attempt to resolve the
dispute. In my view, it is clear, as appears from Mr Moloi’s
aforesaid letter, which the House had on
numerous occasions
unsuccessfully attempted to resolve the matter.
[32]
Since the preparation of her judgment, Mokgohloa JA has now,
in her latest judgment, accepted that the Barolong traditional
dispute
was indeed referred to the House, which ultimately attempted
to resolve it. This acceptance is not without significance. It bears
mentioning that this was a primary issue for determination, which
served before the court a quo. As stated earlier, the court a quo
dismissed the appellant’s contention that the Premier circumvented
the provisions of s 21(2) by making his decision before
the
House had the opportunity to attempt to resolve the dispute.
[33]
The belated acceptance by Mokgohloa JA serves, with respect, to
underscore the patent prejudice that
will be suffered by the Premier
as a result of permitting a completely new point of law of
jurisdiction to be raised in this appeal,
which I address in the
paragraphs immediately below.
[34]
I have set out in a fair amount of detail the appellant’s cause of
action, from which it will be noted
that her complaint was based
entirely on non-compliance and breach of the provisions of s 21(2)
of the Act. However, on appeal,
the appellant raised a new ground of
appeal, namely that the Commission had no authority to investigate
and make recommendations
to the Premier regarding the dispute of
traditional leadership of the Barolong. In this respect, the
appellant sought to rely on
s 25(5) of the Traditional
Leadership and Governance Framework Amendment Act 23 of 2009 (the
Amendment Act), which provides
that any dispute submitted six months
after the coming into operation of the applicable chapter, ie on 1
February 2010, may not be
dealt with by the Commission.
[35]
The majority accepts quite rightly, in my view, that the attack on
the Commission’s authority and jurisdiction
is a new point of law.
However, I differ with the majority’s approach in dealing with the
new issue raised namely, that ‘consideration
of the new point of
law will not occasion unfairness to the parties’.
[3]
[36] The
law governing the raising of a new point of law on appeal is trite.
In
Provincial
Commissioner, Gauteng South African Police Services and Another v
Mnguni,
[4]
this court expressed itself as follows:
‘
It
is indeed open to a party to raise a new point of law on appeal for
the first time, with the provision that it does not result
in
unfairness to the other party; that
it does not
raise new factual issues
and does not cause prejudice. In
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007] ZACC
5
;
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC) Ngcobo J said the following (para 39):
“
The
mere fact that a new point of law is raised on appeal is not itself
sufficient reason for refusing to consider it. If the point
is
covered by the pleadings
and
its consideration on appeal involves no unfairness to the party
against whom it is directed, this Court may in the exercise of
its
discretion consider the point. Unfairness may arise, where for
example, a party would not have agreed on material facts, or on
only
those facts stated in the agreed statement of facts had the party
been aware that there were other legal issues involved and
that “[it]
would similarly be unfair to the party if the law point and all its
ramifications were not canvassed and investigated
at trial.”.’
(Emphasis
added.)
[37]
In developing the jurisprudence on this matter, the Constitutional
Court has laid a further requirement
that it must be in the interests
of justice that the new point of law be entertained. The court in
Mighty Solutions CC t/a
Orlando Service Station v Engen Petroleum Ltd and Another (Mighty
Solutions)
,
[5]
per Van der Westhuizen J, expressed itself as follows in this regard:
‘
It
would hardly be in the interests of justice for an appeal court to
overturn the judgment of a lower court on the basis that Court
was
never asked to decide. As lawyers always say, “on this basis alone”
this Court should not entertain the enrichment argument.’
The
enrichment argument had been raised for the first time in the
Constitutional Court.
[38]
Van der Westhuizen J continued as follows in para 63:
‘
In
Lagoonbay
this Court stated that it must be in the interests of justice, which
takes into account the public interest and whether the matter
has
been fully and fairly aired, to hear a new argument for the first
time. In this case the issue was not properly raised on either
the
facts or the law.’
[39]
The appellant has, in my view, failed to meet each and every element
of the test I have explained above.
The new point of law is not
foreshadowed in the pleadings, and neither was any fact whatsoever
pertaining thereto referred to in
the court a quo.
[40]
I must, however, point out that in the Commission’s report
published on 29 February 2016, the Commission
recorded that s 25(5)
of the Act, as amended, provides that any claim or dispute
contemplated in this chapter submitted after
six months after the
date of coming into operation of this chapter may not be dealt with
by the Commission.
[41]
However, it must be noted that this is stated by the Commission
generally as part of the explanation
of its statutory mandate to deal
with issues and disputes pertaining to traditional leadership. In
this regard, the Commission refers
expressly to specific provisions
in the Act governing its establishment, purpose and operation. It is
also significant to note that
the Commission does not state or
acknowledge that it did not have the necessary power or capacity to
deal with the traditional leadership
of the Barolong dispute that was
validly referred to it to investigate and make recommendations in
relation thereto. It cannot, therefore,
by any means be maintained
that the issue of the Commission’s power to investigate the dispute
was squarely raised in the pleadings.
[42]
What is crying out for an explanation, in my view, is that whilst the
Commission published its final
report on 29 February 2016, the
appellant only initiated her review application on 4 September 2018.
It is common cause that the
Commission never filed any papers and was
never represented in the court a quo. Neither was it before us in
this appeal. There is
no explanation why the appellant initiated her
application, clearly involving the Commission after it had already
ceased to exist.
The Premier does not, as a result, have the benefit
of the Commission’s stance as to why it proceeded to entertain the
dispute.
Accordingly, I find that the Premier has been prejudiced by
all these events in the conduct of his case.
[43]
In
Mphephu v
Mphephu-Ramabulana and Others,
[6]
this court had occasion to consider the establishment, aim and
purpose of the Commission, both under the old 2003 Act and the 2009
Amendment Act. It affirmed the Commission’s competency to deal with
traditional leadership disputes and claims, as in this case.
Importantly, the court noted that the Commission’s additional
lifespan of five years, which was due to expire in 2016, was extended
to 31 December 2017 by way of proclamation by the President. I will
later deal with the significance of the fact that the Commission
is
no longer in existence. That the Commission was legally competent to
deal with the Barolong traditional leadership dispute, is
therefore
without any doubt. It follows that the Commission had the authority
to accept relevant referrals to investigate, for as
long as such
investigations could be finalised within its prescribed lifespan. The
words ‘may not’ within s 25(5) must therefore
be read in
that context.
[44]
I make the following example, to show the impracticality of
interpreting this section in the manner supported
by my colleagues:
if the Commission received only two referrals within the six-month
laid down period and completed the investigations
in that same year,
this would mean that for the remaining four years the Commission
would not be able to do any other work for which
it was constituted.
Surely this could never have been the intention of the legislature.
[45]
In light of what is stated in the preceding paragraph, it follows
that the majority’s reliance on s 25(5)
of the Amendment Act,
as a basis for holding that the Commission lacked competency to deal
with the Barolong traditional leadership
dispute, is, with respect,
erroneous. Interpreted purposefully and contextually
[7]
in relation to the stated aims and objectives of the Commission as
set out in the rest of the enabling Act, it becomes immediately
apparent that the Commission was well within its powers when it
accepted the referral of the dispute within the legislated period
of
its lifespan.
[46]
As I have stated in paragraphs 37 and 38, in
Mighty Solutions
the Constitutional Court specifically cautioned against an appeal
court overturning a judgment of a lower court ‘on the basis that
Court was never asked to decide’. Accordingly, it is not in the
interest of justice to entertain the new point of law relating
to
jurisdiction. The acceptance by the majority, that the House
ultimately attempted to resolve the dispute, underscores the warning
by the Constitutional Court in
Mighty Solutions
. All these
factors, cumulatively taken, buttress the conclusion that it will not
be in the interest of justice to interface this
new point of law into
this appeal. In addition, I have pointed out that the Commission, a
body that was established to resolve small
traditional leadership
disputes, no longer exists. It is common cause that the Commission
expended time and resources investigating
the dispute and that the
appellant fully and willingly participated in such investigation.
Importantly, the report of the Commission,
particularly its contents,
has not been reviewed and set aside. The report still stands.
[47]
In any event, and as I will demonstrate in the paragraphs that
follow, the appellant acquiesced both
expressly and tacitly in
affirming the Commission’s authority to investigate and resolve the
traditional leadership dispute of
the Barolong and submitted to its
jurisdiction. The appellant’s belated attempt to rely on s 25(5)
of the Amendment Act is
accordingly without merit and cannot be
sustained.
[48]
Attached to the appellant’s founding affidavit is a letter dated
16 November 2017, written on
behalf of the appellant by her
attorneys to the Premier, in which the complaint is highlighted that
the Commission erred in various
ways in its investigation of the
dispute. For example, it is alleged that the Commission was biased
and applied a double standard
in accepting the sixth respondent’s
submissions and rejecting those in favour of the appellant.
Significantly, nowhere in the six-page
letter written on behalf of
the appellant is any issue raised regarding the Commission’s
authority to investigate the dispute.
On the contrary, the
Commission’s authority is affirmed in clear, expressed terms in the
said letter. It is appropriate to quote
from the relevant parts of
the letter. It reads:
‘
1.
Section 25 of the Traditional Leadership and Governance Act 2003. . .
provides for the operation of the Commission. The Commission
has
mandate in terms of section 25(vii) for all traditional leadership
claims and disputes dating from 1 September 1927 to the coming
into
operation of the provincial legislation dealing with traditional
leadership and governance matters.
In
the present case the Commission had to deal with the traditional
leadership of the Barolong Boo Seleka
.’
(Emphasis added.)
[49]
The contents of the Commission’s report put it beyond any doubt
that the appellant co-operated and
consciously participated from
beginning to end in all the activities of the Commission as it
investigated the dispute. In paragraph
5 of the report, the appellant
is positively identified and mentioned as one of the three parties
involved in the dispute. The other
two are Mr Sehunelo Kingsley
Moroka, the sixth respondent, and Mr Lebogang Hilary Moroka, the
seventh respondent.
[50]
The submissions made by all three parties, including the appellant,
are recorded from pages 42 to 50
of the report. The Commission’s
findings and recommendations are contained in pages 55 and 56.
Importantly, the appellant was party
to the decision that the dispute
be referred to the Commission. In Mr Moloi’s letter dated 3
February 2014, already referred to
in this judgment, it is expressly
stated that the executive committee of the House resolved that:
‘
The
dispute be referred to the Premier for intervention in line with the
resolution that was taken on 27 August 2013 between the House
representatives, the Head of Department of CoGTA, Barolong Boo Seleka
Royal Family and Barolong Boo Seleka Royal Khuduthamaga.’
Furthermore,
in the letter of the HOD of CoGTA dated 18 March 2014,
addressed to the Commission, requesting it to formally
intervene, it
is expressly mentioned that ‘. . . two names of Ms Moipone
Maria Moroka (the appellant) and Mr Kinsley Sehunelo
Moroka (the
sixth respondent) were forwarded to the Premier from both opposing
groups of which the matter constituted a dispute’.
[51]
In my view, considering the appellant’s conduct as described above,
and the particular circumstances
of the matter, specifically how it
evolved until it was referred to the Commission, this matter is on
all fours with our various
case law dealing with tacit consent and
submission to jurisdiction. In most of these cases, parties were
found to have consented
by way of conduct, either by joining issue
with the plaintiff, filing pleas or failing to raise an exception to
jurisdiction before
the closing of pleadings.
[8]
[52] I
found the facts in
Purser
and Another v Sales and Another
[9]
of particular interest. Briefly, this court dealt with a defendant
who filed a plea on the merits and participated from start to
the end
of a trial and only raised the issue of jurisdiction of the court
when the plaintiff attempted to enforce the judgment. Mpati
AJA
agreed with the conclusion by Theron J in
William
Spilhaus & Co (MB) (Pty) Ltd v Marx,
[10]
where the court held that a defendant who pleads to the main claim
without objecting to jurisdiction, must
after
litis contestatio
be
considered to have bound himself irrevocably to accept the
jurisdiction of the court even when failure to raise the question of
jurisdiction derives from a mistake on his part.
[53]
I do not have the slightest hesitation in finding that the
appellant’s conduct as described above,
considered in context,
leads ineluctably to the conclusion that she affirmed the
Commission’s authority in investigating and resolving
the dispute.
Clearly, as she was unhappy with the outcome and the findings of the
Commission, she then, as an afterthought and quite
opportunistically,
raised the issue of lack of authority of the Commission. Her conduct
cannot be countenanced and must be frowned
upon by this court.
[54]
I deem it expedient to deal, at this point, with the specific issue
of interpretation of s 25(5)
raised by my esteemed brother Petse
AP in his concurring judgment (the concurring judgment), which was
circulated after this dissenting
judgment had been prepared. The gist
of the point raised, in summary is this: no organ of state or public
official may act contrary
to or beyond the scope of their powers as
laid down in the law; the Commission, which is a creature of statute,
namely the
Traditional Leadership and Governance Framework Act 41 of
2003
, was expressly proscribed by
s 25(5)
to accept and deal
with the Barolong traditional leadership dispute referred to it; and
the phrase ‘may not’ in
s 25(5)
meant that the Commission
had no discretion whatsoever to choose to accept the referral.
[55]
The concurring judgment quite rightly refers to
Endumeni,
[11]
which sets out the important tool in any interpretation exercise,
being the language of the provision itself in the light of its
context and purpose, all of which constitute a unitary exercise.
However, the concurring judgment omits, with respect, to mention
and
apply, as I will demonstrate hereunder, the additional prescript laid
down in
Endumeni.
According to this
additional prescript, the interpretation of a legislative provision
must be done having regard to the context provided
by reading ‘
the
document as a whole and the circumstances attended upon its coming
into existence’.
[12]
(My emphasis.)
[56]
A simple reading of the concurring judgment reveals that it
completely omits to refer, as a whole, to
the purpose of both the
governing Act and of the provision of s 25(5). The aspect of
context, other than being recognised as
an important component of the
tool, is not given any elucidation at all. Thus, the concurring
judgment has simply looked and considered
s 25(5) by only
concentrating on the language, specifically, the words used therein.
[57]
The aforementioned method of interpretation is long established in
our law. In
Jaga v
Dongës N. O and Another; Bhana v Dongës and Another
,
[13]
Schreiner JA stressed that ‘[c]ertainly no less important than the
oft repeated statement that the words and expressions used in
a
statute must be interpreted according to their ordinary meaning is
the statement that they must be interpreted in the light of
their
context . . . Often of more importance is the matter of the statute,
its apparent scope and purpose, and, within limits, its
background’.
At page 664 Schreiner JA quoted with approval what was said by Lord
Greene in
Re Bidie
(194, Ch 121)
who
stated that ‘[t]he method of construing statutes that I myself
prefer is not to take out particular words and attribute to
them a
sort of
prima facie
meaning which may have to be displaced or modified, it is to read the
statute as a whole and ask myself the question: “In this
statute,
in this context relating to this subject matter, what is the true
meaning of that word?”’.
[58]
This approach has been affirmed in various cases in our courts. In
Capitec Bank Holdings
Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd and
Others,
[14]
this court noted that the Constitutional Court has ‘rejected the
idea of the plain meaning of the text or its primacy, since words
without context mean nothing, and context is everything’. At
paragraph 50, this court recognised that
Endumeni
gave ‘expression to the view that the words and concepts used in a
contract and their relationship to the external world were not
self-defining’.
Endumeni
emphasised, the court noted, that the meaning of a contested term in
a contract or provision of a statute, is properly understood
not
simply by selecting standard definitions of particular words often
taken from dictionaries, but by understanding the words and
sentences
that comprise the contested term as they fit into the larger
structure of the agreement, its context and purpose.
[59]
I have earlier dealt with the aim, purpose and objective of
establishing the Commission. This can only
be determined by reading
the entire enabling legislation as a whole.
[15]
The Commission’s sole mandate, function and purpose was to deal
with traditional leadership disputes. As this court held in
Mphephu
,
it initially had a five year lifespan from 2005 until 2010. The
second five year lifespan lasted until 2016, which was then extended
to December 2017. As of now, the Commission no longer exists. It is
not disputed that in its investigation of the dispute in this
case,
the Commission observed the prescripts of s 25(3)
(a)
of the Amendment Act obliging it to consider and apply customary law
and the customs of the Barolong people as they applied when
the
events occurred that gave rise to the dispute. As I have pointed out
earlier, all of this important contextual background has,
with
respect, been pointedly ignored in the concurring judgment in
interpreting s 25(5).
[60]
In the circumstances, I assert my earlier stance that properly
interpreted, and based on the particular
circumstances of this case,
s 25(5) cannot be interpreted to have prevented the Commission
from accepting the referral of the
Barolong traditional leadership
dispute in order to investigate and resolve the same.
[61]
For these reasons, I would have dismissed the appeal with costs.
_________________
B H MBHA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Petse AP (Mokgohloa and Hughes
JJA concurring):
[62] I
have had the advantage of reading with care the two judgments penned
by my colleagues Mokgohloa JA
(the main judgment) and Mbha JA (the
dissenting judgment). I agree with the conclusion reached in the main
judgment and the order
that it proposes. Regrettably, I find myself
in respectful disagreement with the dissenting judgment and the
proposed outcome.
[63] The
background facts have been set out in the main judgment and, to the
extent necessary, supplemented
in the dissenting judgment in
sufficient detail to promote a better understanding of what is at
issue in this matter. Thus, there
will be little virtue in rehashing
them in this judgment. I shall state the reasons for my disagreement
with the dissenting judgment
as briefly as possible.
[64]
At the outset it is necessary to reiterate that my disagreement with
the dissenting judgment stems from
its conclusion and the reasoning
underpinning that conclusion. The edifice of the dissenting judgment
rests on three cardinal pillars.
First, the legal point that the
appellant raised for the first time on appeal was not foreshadowed,
still less, canvassed on the
papers. Therefore, concludes the
judgment, it is not in the interests of justice to entertain it on
appeal. Second, the antagonists
had themselves consented to the
dispute between them being referred to the Commission for resolution.
Third, by submitting the dispute
to the Commission whilst fully aware
that the Commission was not empowered to deal with disputes referred
to it after the cut-off
date, namely 2 July 2010, the appellant
thereby acquiesced in the Commission entertaining the dispute and is,
as a result, precluded
from objecting to the legal competence of the
Commission to entertain the dispute. In support of the latter
proposition, the dissenting
judgment cites the decision of Theron J
in
William
Spilhaus & Co (MB) (Pty) Ltd v Max
.
[16]
William
Spilhaus
was referred to with approval by this court in
Purser
v Sales; Purser and Another v Sales and Another.
[17]
In my view none of these pillars can bear close scrutiny.
[65] The
main judgment has adequately dealt with the first one of the three
bases mentioned in the preceding
paragraph. Consequently, it is only
the second and third bases that will be the central focus of this
judgment.
[66]
Insofar as the second basis is concerned, that is, the appellant’s
acquiescence in the Commission entertaining
the dispute, I consider
that
William Spilhaus
does not avail the respondents in the
context of the facts in this case as it dealt with an entirely
different question to the one
confronting us in this matter. In
William Spilhaus
, the court was dealing with a case where the
defendant sought to object to the jurisdiction of the magistrates’
court after it
had already pleaded to the claim by delivering a plea
thereto. In considering the question whether or not it was still open
to the
defendant to do so, the court, in essence, held that a
defendant who elects to plead to a claim without raising an objection
to the
jurisdiction of the court, whilst aware at the time of filing
a plea that the court lacked jurisdiction, is precluded from
objecting
to the jurisdiction of the court after he has filed a plea
in circumstances where the court has material jurisdiction in regard
to
the plaintiff's claim. By failing to file a plea contesting the
court’s jurisdiction, such a party is taken to have consented to
the jurisdiction of the court that otherwise lacked the requisite
jurisdiction in respect of the defendant.
[67]
Submission by a litigant to a court’s jurisdiction may be inferred
from the conduct of that litigant
in not objecting to the
jurisdiction of the court concerned in circumstances where the court
is otherwise competent to adjudicate
the dispute. In
Mediterranean
Shipping Co v Speedwell Shipping Co Ltd and Another
[18]
it was put thus:
‘
Submission
to the jurisdiction of a court is a wide concept and may be expressed
in words or come about by agreement between the parties.
. . It may
arise through unilateral conduct following upon citation before a
court which would ordinarily not be competent to give
judgment
against that particular defendant. . . Thus where a person not
otherwise subject to the jurisdiction of a court submits
himself by
positive act or negatively by not objecting to the jurisdiction of
that court, he may, in cases such as actions sounding
in money,
confer jurisdiction on that court.’
[68]
In
MV
Alina II (no 2): Transnet Ltd v Owner of MV Alina II
[19]
this court said that the question of submission 'to the court's
jurisdiction' is a factual enquiry. It went on to say the following:
‘
Submission
may arise from conduct in litigation commenced against a person
before a court that lacks jurisdiction in respect of that
person or
that claim.’
[20]
(Footnotes
omitted.)
It
is important to emphasise that the court to whose jurisdiction the
litigant is said to have submitted must otherwise have the legal
competence to adjudicate the subject matter of the litigation even
though it lacks jurisdiction over the person who is party to the
proceedings.
[21]
[69]
The point here is that barring the belated objection to the
jurisdiction of the court, the court in
William
Spilhaus
was otherwise competent to entertain and determine the dispute
between the parties. In contrast, the situation in this case is
fundamentally
different. The Commission whose report took centre
stage in the review proceedings instituted by the appellant in the
high court
is a creature of statute, namely the
Traditional
Leadership and Governance Framework Act.
[22
]
Thus, it could only exercise such powers and perform such functions
expressly – or by necessary implication – conferred upon
it by
its empowering legislation.
[70]
It is trite that no organ of state or public official may act
contrary to or beyond the scope of their
powers as laid down in
law.
[23]
Although made in a different context, the remarks of the
Constitutional Court in
Fedsure
Life Assurance Ltd and Others v Greater Johannesburg Transitional
Metropolitan Council and Others
[24]
are instructive. There, the court said the following:
‘
[A]
local government may only act within the powers lawfully conferred
upon it. There is nothing startling in this proposition - it
is a
fundamental principle of the rule of law, recognised widely, that the
exercise of public power is only legitimate where lawful.
The rule of
law - to the extent at least that it expresses this principle of
legality - is generally understood to be a fundamental
principle of
constitutional law.’
Accordingly, what is stated in
the passages cited from
William Splihaus
and relied upon in
the dissenting judgment cannot, to my mind, be taken as authority for
the view expressed by my colleague Mbha
JA in his judgment in the
context of the facts of this case.
[71] What
occurred in this matter is not just an instance of a party failing to
raise an objection to jurisdiction,
coupled with that party's
subsequent participation in the proceedings which is what happened in
Purser
. Rather, the issue is whether the appellant's consent
to the 'jurisdiction' of the Commission vested the Commission with
legal competence
to investigate a dispute or claim referred to it six
months after the coming into operation of chapter 6 which is what
s
25(5)
, located in chapter 6, explicitly proscribes. This is a
fundamental distinction between this case and those relied upon in
the dissenting
judgment on this score.
[72]
It has long been recognised in our constitutional democratic order
that public power can only be exercised
if it is sourced in law. This
is what the doctrine of legality entails. In
AAA
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Micro Finance Regulatory Council and
Another
[25]
Langa CJ put it thus:
‘
The
doctrine of legality, which requires that power should have a source
in law, is applicable whenever public power is exercised.
. . Public
power . . . can only be validly exercised if it is clearly sourced in
law.’
[26]
Accordingly, that the parties
consented to the referral of the dispute or claim to the Commission
cannot confer jurisdiction on the
Commission where it has none in
terms of the Act. The Commission simply did not have the legal
competence to entertain disputes submitted
to it after six months
after the date of coming into operation of chapter 6. Differently
put, it could not arrogate to itself the
power to do so in the face
of clear and unambiguous statutory provisions to the contrary.
[73] The
conclusion reached in the preceding paragraph brings me to the third
and last of the three bases
to which reference is made in paragraph 3
above. This point necessarily raises the issue of the meaning to be
ascribed to s 25(5)
of the Act. As already mentioned above, s 25(5)
is located in chapter 6 of the Act. Chapter 6, which is headed
'Dispute and Claim
Resolution and Commission on Traditional
Leadership Disputes and Claims’, deals, amongst other things, with
the functions of the
Commission. Section 25(4) provides that:
‘
Subject
to subsection (5) the Commission–
(a)
may only
investigate and make recommendations on those disputes and claims
that were before the Commision on the date of coming into
operation
of this chapter; and
(b)
must complete
the matters contemplated in paragraph
(a)
within a period of five years, which period commences on the date of
appointment of the members of the Commission in terms of section
23,
or any such further period as the Minister may determine.’
Subsection (5), in turn, reads:
‘
Any
claim or dispute contemplated in this Chapter submitted after six
months after the date of coming into operation of this chapter
may
not be dealt with by the Commission.’
[74]
There are two important points that must be made about s 25(5). The
first is that chapter 6 took effect
on 1 February 2010. The second is
that it is common cause between the disputants that the dispute that
precipitated the review proceedings
in the high court was referred to
the Commission by the Premier only on 4 February 2014, some four
years after chapter 6 had taken
effect. The significance of this date
is that it unequivocally demonstrates that the dispute was submitted
to the Commission long
after six months after the date of coming into
operation, on 1 February 2010, of chapter 6 of the Act. Thus, the
Commission had no
authority to accept the referral and, pursuant
thereto, to investigate the dispute.
[75]
Before us some play was made in argument by counsel for the Premier
that s 25(5) says that ‘any claim
or dispute contemplated in
[Chapter 6] submitted after six months after the date of coming into
operation of this chapter
may not
be dealt with by the
Commission’. (My emphasis.) Emphasising the italicised words ‘may
not’, counsel for the Premier argued
that the section was couched
in permissive terms and in effect conferred a discretion on the
Commission as to whether or not it could
entertain a claim or dispute
submitted to it 'after six months after the date of coming into
operation' of chapter 6 of the Act,
that is 1 February 2010.
[76] The
contention advanced by counsel for the Premier requires that an
interpretive exercise be undertaken.
As I see it, the outcome of this
appeal hinges on the answer to the antecedent question that requires
to be addressed first before
all else is considered. This question
is: was the Commission acting within the bounds of the Act when it
entertained the claim or
dispute submitted to it by mutual agreement
between the parties long after the cut-off date having regard to the
provisions of s
25(5) quoted in paragraph 12 above? In my view the
answer must be No.
[77]
Before elaborating on why the Commission should have declined to
accept the referral to it of the dispute,
it is necessary to briefly
say something about the principles of statutory interpretation. As
has been said in a long line of cases
both of the Constitutional
Court and this court, the logical point of departure in any
interpretive exercise is the language of the
provision itself in the
light of its context and purpose all of which constitute a unitary
exercise.
[27]
[78]
Although the use of the word 'may' in s 25(5) of the Act might be
thought to imply that the Commission
had a discretion whether or not
to deal with any claim or dispute submitted to it after six months
after the date of coming into
operation of chapter 6 of the Act, this
cannot be so. On a proper reading of s 25(5) in its contextual
setting and the overarching
scheme of the Act as a whole it becomes
manifest that the Commission is precluded from investigating claims
or disputes referred
to it six months after the commencement of
chapter 6 of the Act.
[79] That
the word ‘may’ can, depending on the text, context and purpose of
the statutory provision under
consideration, be interpreted to mean
'must' is not novel. There is a long line of cases of the
Constitutional Court in which the
word 'may' was interpreted to mean
'must'.
[80]
In
Van
Rooyen and Others v The State and Others (General Council of the Bar
Intervening)
[28]
the court had occasion to consider the meaning of ‘may’ in s
13(3)(
a
A)
[29]
of the Magistrates’ Act.
[30]
There, the question was whether the Minister of Justice was vested
with a discretion not to suspend a magistrate on the recommendation
of the Magistrates Commission since the section provided that the
minister 'may' confirm a recommendation by the Magistrates'
Commission
that a magistrate be suspended. Chaskalson CJ answered the
question in the negative and said the following:
‘
As
far as the Act is concerned, if 'may' in s 13(3)(aA) is read as
conferring a power on the Minister coupled with a duty to use it,
this would require the Minister to refer the Commission's
recommendation to Parliament, and deny him any discretion not to do
so.
. . In my view this is the constitutional construction to be
given to s 13(3)(aA). On this construction, the procedure prescribed
by s 13(3) of the Act for the removal of a magistrate from office is
not inconsistent with judicial independence.’
[31]
[81]
Almost four decades ago in
Schwartz
v Schwartz
[32]
this court said the following of the word ‘may’:
‘
A
statutory enactment conferring a power in permissive language may
nevertheless have to be construed as making it the duty of the
person
or authority in whom the power is reposed to exercise that power when
the conditions prescribed as justifying its exercise
have been
satisfied.’
[82]
To conclude on this aspect, it is instructive, when construing the
provisions of s 25(5) of the Act,
to have regard to the comparable
provisions of s 58(A)4 of the South African Schools Act
[33]
(the Schools Act) which were considered by the Constitutional Court
recently in
Moodley
v Kenmont School and Others
.
[34]
Section 58(A)4 of the Schools Act provides that 'the assets of a
public school may not be attached as a result of any legal action
taken against a school.’ In
Moodley
the Constitutional Court recognised that in its current formulation s
58(A)4 proscribed in absolute terms the attachment of the assets
of
public schools
[35]
despite the use of the word 'may' in the statutory provision there
under consideration.
[83]
Insofar as the provisions of s 25(5) of the Act are concerned, it is
significant that the word ‘may’
is coupled with the word ‘not’
which is a clear indication that the Commission was not empowered to
deal with claims or disputes
submitted to it after the cut-off date.
And yet, this is precisely what the Commission did in the face of a
clear prohibition not
to do so. It bears emphasising that s 58(A)4 of
the Schools Act, just like s 25(5) of the Act in this case, the
word ‘may’
is coupled with the word ‘not’, both of which,
when used together, express a negative. In my view, the fact that the
appellant
raised that issue only belatedly on appeal rather than
squarely before the high court, does not matter. This must be so
because the
appellant's acquiescence in the Commission's
investigation of the dispute could not invest the Commission with
authority it did not
have. Nor can the Commission's failure to
address this aspect – to which it had itself adverted in its report
– assist the respondents.
The reason for this is not far to seek.
The supremacy of the Constitution and the rule of law are some of the
foundational values
of our democratic order.
[36]
[84]
To sum up, as the powers of the Commission were derived from the Act
in terms of which it was established,
it could therefore only
exercise such public powers and perform such public functions that
could be sourced in the Act itself. There
is nothing novel about
this. Indeed, this is a well entrenched principle of our
law.
[37]
And its logical corollary must be that the Commission was precluded
from doing anything proscribed by s 25(5) of the Act.
[85] It
is for all the foregoing reasons that I concur in the judgment of my
colleague Mokgohloa JA.
X M PETSE
ACTING PRESIDENT
SUPREME
COURT OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For appellant
:
Q Pelser SC
Instructed
by:
Hurter Spies Inc, Centurion
Rossouws
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
A Laka SC (with him T L Manye)
(heads of argument prepared by Z
Z Matebese SC with him T L Manye)
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Bloemfontein
[1]
In
terms of s 1 of the Act the Minister, for the purposes of the Act,
is the national Minister responsible for traditional leadership
matters.
[2]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
[3]
See para 5 of the majority judgment.
[4]
Provincial
Commissioner, Gauteng South African Police Services and Another v
Mnguni
[2013]
ZASCA 2
;
[2013] 5 BLLR 421
(SCA);
[2013] 2 All SA 262
(SCA); (2013)
34 ILJ 1107 (SCA) para 27. See also
Nwafor
v Minister of Home Affairs and Others
[2021] ZASCA 58
para 29.
[5]
Mighty
Solutions CC t/a Orlando Service Station v Engen Petroleum Ltd and
Another
[2015] ZACC 34
;
2016 (1) SA 621
(CC);
2016 (1) BCLR 28
(CC) para 62.
[6]
Mphephu v
Mphephu-Ramabulana and Others
[2019]
ZASCA 58; [2019] 3 All SA 51 (SCA);
2019 (7) BCLR 862 (SCA).
[7]
In
Cool Ideas 1186 CC
v Hubbard and Another
[2014] ZACC 16
;
2014 (4) SA 474
(CC);
2014 (8) BCLR 869
(CC) para
28, the Constitutional Court said ‘. . . (a) that statutory
provisions should always be interpreted purposively; (b)
the
relevant statutory provision must be properly contextualised’.
[8]
Zwelibanzi
Utilities v TP Electrical Contractors
[2011] ZASCA 33
;
Fairvest
Property Holdings v Valdimax CC t/a Fish and Chips Co and Others
2020 (3) SA 202
(GJ).
[9]
Purser
v Sales;
Purser
and Another v Sales and Another
[2000] ZASCA 135
;
2001
(3) SA 445
(SCA) para 18.
[10]
William
Spilhaus & Co (MB) (Pty) Ltd v Marx
1963 (4) SA 994
(C) at 1001G-1002B-C.
[11]
Natal Joint Municipal
Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
para 18.
[12]
See fn 9 above para 18.
[13]
Jaga v Dongës N. O
and Another; Bhana v Dongës and Another
[1950]
4 All SA 414
(A);
1950 (4) SA 653
(A) at 663.
[14]
Capitec Bank Holdings
Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments
194 (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2021] ZASCA
99
;
[2021] 3 All SA 647
(SCA) para 46.
[15]
Sigcau v Minister of
Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Others
[2017] ZASCA 80.
[16]
William
Spilhaus & Co (MB) (Pty) Ltd v Max
1936
(4) SA 994
(C) at 1001G-1002B-C (
William
Spilhaus
).
[17]
Purser
v Sales; Purser and Another v Sales and Another
[2000] ZASCA 135
;
2001 (3) SA 445
(SCA) para 18 (
Purser
).
[18]
Mediterranean
Shipping Co v Speedwell Shipping Co Ltd and Another
1986 (4) SA 329
(D) at 333E-G.
[19]
MV
Alina II (no 2): Transnet Ltd v Owner of MV Alina II
2011 (6) SA 206
(SCA) para 16.
[20]
Ibid para 14.
[21]
Compare:
Bonugli and
Another v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
2012 (5) SA 202
(SCA) paras 18-21.
[22]
Traditional
Leadership and Governance Framework
Act
41 of 2003
.
[23]
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health of RSA and Another
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006 (3) SA 247
(CC); para 49 and paras 75 to 77;
Albutt
v Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation and Others
[2010] ZACC 4
;;
2010 (2) SACR 101
(CC) paras 49-50;
Electronic
Media Network Ltd and others v e.tv (Pty) Ltd and others
[2017] ZACC 17
;
2017 (9) BCLR 1108
(CC) paras 25, 110-112;
Minister
of Constitutional Development and Another v South African
Restructuring and Insolvency Practitioners Association and Others
[2018] ZACC 20
;
2018 (5) SA 349
(CC);
2018 (9) BCLR 1099
(CC) paras
27-29.
[24]
Fedsure
Life Assurance Ltd and Others v Greater Johannesburg Transitional
Metropolitan Council and Others
[1998] ZACC 17
;
1999 (1) SA 374
(CC) para 56.
[25]
AAA
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Micro Finance Regulatory Council and Another
[2006] ZACC 9
;
2007 (1) SA 343
(CC) para 86.
[26]
See also:
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of South Africa and Another: In re Ex
Parte President of the Republic of South Africa and
Others
2000
(2) A 674 (CC)
[2000] ZACC 1
;
(
2000 (3) BCLR 241)
para 20 in which it was stated
that ‘[t]he exercise of all public power must comply with the
Constitution, which is the supreme
law, and the doctrine of
legality, which is part of that law.’
[27]
See
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA); para 18. See also
S
v Zuma and Others
[1995] ZACC 1
;
1995 (2) SA 642
para 18;
Kubyana
v Standard Bank of South Africa Ltd
[2014] ZACC 1
;
2014 (3) SA 56
(CC) para 18.
[28]
Van
Rooyen and Others v The State and Others (General Council of the Bar
Intervening)
[2002] ZACC 8
;
2002 (5) SA 246
(CC). See also
South
African Police Service v Public Servants Association
[2006]
ZACC 18
;
2007 (3) SA 521
(CC);
Joseph
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2009] ZACC 30
;
2010 (4) SA 55
(CC) para 73.
[29]
Section 13(3)(
a
A)
reads:
‘
T
he
Minister, on the advice of the Commission, may provisionally suspend
a magistrate from office if-
(i) the Commission,
after affording the magistrate a reasonable opportunity to be heard
regarding the desirability of
such provisional suspension, is
satisfied that reliable evidence exists indicating that an
allegation against that magistrate is
of such a serious nature as to
make it inappropriate for the magistrate to perform the functions of
a magistrate while the allegation
is being investigated; and
(ii) an
investigation has been instituted by the Commission into such
magistrate's fitness to hold office.’
[30]
Magistrates’
Act
90 of 1993.
[31]
Footnote
11
paras 181-182.
[32]
Schwartz
v Schwartz
[1984] ZASCA 79
;
1984 (4) SA 467
(A) at 473-474.
[33]
South African Schools Act 84 of 1996
.
[34]
Moodley
v Kenmont School and Others
[2019] ZACC 37
;
2020(1) SA 410 (CC) (
Moodley
).
[35]
Moodley
paras 25-26; and 30-31.
[36]
See s 1(d) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa,
1996.
[37]
See, for example, in this regard,
Fedsure
Life Assurance Ltd and Others v Greater Johannesburg Transitional
Metropolitan Council and Others
[1998] ZACC 17
;
1999 (1) SA 374
(CC) para 58. See also:
Naidoo
and Another v E P Properties (Pty) Ltd
[2014]
ZASCA 97
para 27.
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