Case Law[2022] ZASCA 49South Africa
Minister of Health and Another v Alliance of Natural Health Products (South Africa) (256/2021) [2022] ZASCA 49; 2022 (5) SA 392 (SCA); [2022] HIPR 195 (SCA) (11 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
11 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Medicine – regulations under Medicines and Related Substances Act 101 of 1965 (the Act) – ultra vires to extent that they purport to regulate substances that are not medicines as defined in the Act.
Judgment
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## Minister of Health and Another v Alliance of Natural Health Products (South Africa) (256/2021) [2022] ZASCA 49; 2022 (5) SA 392 (SCA); [2022] HIPR 195 (SCA) (11 April 2022)
Minister of Health and Another v Alliance of Natural Health Products (South Africa) (256/2021) [2022] ZASCA 49; 2022 (5) SA 392 (SCA); [2022] HIPR 195 (SCA) (11 April 2022)
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sino date 11 April 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 256/2021
In
the matter between:
THE
MINISTER OF HEALTH
FIRST
APPELLANT
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN HEALTH PRODUCTS
REGULATORY
AUTHORITY
SECOND
APPELLANT
and
THE
ALLIANCE OF NATURAL HEALTH
PRODUCTS
(SOUTH AFRICA)
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Minister of Health and
Another v Alliance of Natural Health Products (South Africa)
(Case
no 256/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 49
(11 April 2022)
Coram:
VAN DER MERWE, SCHIPPERS AND NICHOLLS JJA and
TSOKA and MOLEFE AJJA
Heard
:
7 March 2022
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation
to the
parties’ legal representatives by email. It has been published on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII.
The date
and time for hand-down is deemed to be 09h45 on 11 April 2022.
Summary:
Medicine – regulations under
Medicines and Related Substances Act 101 of 1965 (the Act) –
ultra
vires
to extent that they purport to
regulate substances that are not medicines as defined in the Act.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division
of the High Court, Pretoria (Kubushi J sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The order of the court a quo is varied by deleting para 2 thereof and
by
substituting the words ‘South African Health Products Regulatory
Authority’ with the words ‘Minister’.
2
The appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
counsel.
3
The cross-appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
counsel.
JUDGMENT
Van der Merwe JA (Schippers
and Nicholls JJA and Tsoka and Molefe AJJA concurring)
[1]
The Minister of Health (the Minister) is the first appellant in this
matter.
The
second appellant is the South
African Health Products Regulatory
Authority (the Authority). It was established as an organ of state
and juristic person by s 2
of the Medicines and Related Substances
Act 101 of 1965 (the Act). The respondent is The Alliance of Natural
Health Products (South
Africa) (the Alliance), a voluntary
association with the capacity to sue or be sued in its own name.
[2]
After a public consultative process that had stretched over several
years
and in consultation with the Authority, the Minister, acting in
terms of s 35 of the Act, made the regulations that are the subject
of this appeal. They are the General Regulations published on 25
August 2017 under GN 859, in
GG
41064 (the regulations). The
Alliance sought declaratory orders as well as the review and setting
aside of the regulations, in whole
or in part, in the Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria. As I shall explain, Kubushi J
partly upheld the challenge to the
regulations, hence the appeal.
Broadly stated, the issue in the appeal is whether any review ground
of the Alliance was good.
[3]
In essence, the Act is aimed at regulating four types of things. They
are:
medicines; scheduled substances; medical devices and
in vitro
diagnostic devices (IVDs). The Act defines each type in
comprehensive terms. For the said purpose, the Act affords functions
and powers
to both the Minister and the Authority. In terms of s 22A,
the Minister may prescribe scheduled substances on the recommendation
of the Authority. The
section provides
for the scheduling of prescribed substances on
different levels (Schedules 0 to 6). The manner in which the
availability of these
substances to the public is controlled, depends
on the level of scheduling.
[4]
Section 14 of the Act provides that the Authority may from time to
time
determine that a medicine, medical device, IVD or any class or
category of any of them, shall be subject to registration. The
procedure
for registration is set out in s 16. Section 1(3) provides:
‘
In
determining whether or not the registration or availability of a
medicine is in the public interest, regard shall be had only to
the
safety, quality and therapeutic efficacy thereof in relation to its
effect on the health of man or any animal, as the case may
be.’
[5]
It appeared from the evidence that there is a substantial market
worldwide
and in South Africa for complementary medicines and health
supplements. There was no dispute that this market should be
regulated
in the public interest. That, in the main, was the purpose
of the replacement of the previous General Regulations under the Act,
with the current ones. The regulations therefore introduced a new
category, namely complementary medicines (Category D). They are
subcategorised into discipline-specific medicines and health
supplements. Complementary medicines in each of the two subcategories
that are intended for use in humans, consist, in terms of Annexure 1
to the regulations, of the following:
‘
33.
Complementary Medicines: Discipline-Specific Traditional
Claims
33.1
Aromatherapy
33.2
Homeopathy
33.3
Phytotherapy
33.4
Traditional Chinese Medicine
33.5
Unani Medicine
33.6
Western Herbal Medicine
33.7
Combination Product
33.8
Other Herbal
34.
Complementary Medicines: Health Supplements
34.1
Amino acids
34.2
Aminosaccharides
34.3
Animal Extracts, Products and Derivatives
34.5
Carotenoids
34.5
Enzymes
34.6
Fats, Oils and Fatty Acids
34.7
Minerals
34.8
Polyphenols (including Bioflavonoids)
34.9
Probiotics
34.10
Saccharides (including prebiotics)
34.11
Vitamins
34.12
Multiple substance formulation
34.13
Other’
[6]
The regulations attach a number of obligations to complementary
medicines
and, where applicable, health supplements. These include
obligations in respect of: the labelling of containers (reg 10(1)(cc)
and
10(3)(b)); furnishing of professional information in hard copy or
electronically (reg 11(2)(t)); providing a patient information
leaflet (reg
12(2)(n)); and advertising (reg 42(5)(c)(ii)). There
can be no doubt
that compliance with these obligations requires significant effort
and costs.
[7]
The review ground relied upon in the Alliance’s
founding affidavit was that
the scope and ambit of the regulations
exceeded the rule-making powers of the Minister in terms of the Act.
In essence, the contention
was that the Minister was only empowered
to regulate medicines and scheduled substances within the meaning of
the Act. However, so
it was contended, the regulations purported to
regulate substances that were neither medicines nor scheduled
substances and, to that
extent, they were
ultra vires
(the
ultra vires
ground).
[8]
In its supplementary founding affidavit in terms of Uniform rule
53(4),
the Alliance put forward two additional review grounds. These
were firstly that despite having published draft regulations for
public
comment on 27 January 2017, the Minister failed to consider
the comments received in response thereto (or a summary thereof).
The
contention was that this tainted the regulations with procedural
unfairness under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of
2000 (PAJA), or with procedural irrationality under the principle of
legality (the procedural ground). In the second place, the Alliance
relied upon the substantive irrationality of the regulations. This
was principally based on evidence that the Authority was faced
with a
considerable backlog of applications for the registration of
substances, that had built up over a number of years. In the
light
hereof, the Alliance averred that in the absence of evidence that the
Authority would have the capacity to cope with additional
demands
that the regulations placed on it, the regulations were irrational.
[9]
In the answering affidavit on their behalf, the Minister
and the Authority (collectively
the appellants) contended that the
application raised an impermissible abstract challenge. They denied
that the regulations were
ultra vires
in any respect, on the
basis that the definition of ‘medicine’ in the Act was
sufficiently wide to include all complementary medicines
and health
supplements as defined in the regulations. These definitions lie at
the heart of the dispute between the parties and I
shall reproduce
them shortly.
[10]
With regard to the procedural ground, the Minister confirmed on oath
that he had considered
the comments received in response to the 2017
draft regulations. The alleged substantive irrationality was
similarly disputed on
the basis of factual allegations that could not
be rejected out of hand. In sum they were: that when the Authority
was established
during 2015, it inherited a backlog of applications
for registration that had built up under the auspices of its
predecessor; that
the focus had since shifted from the drafting of
the regulations and guidelines thereto to implementation; that the
budget and resources
of the Authority had been increased; that its
structural organisation had been improved; and that therefore it had
the capacity to
administer the regulations.
[11]
The court a quo rejected the argument that the application
constituted an impermissible
abstract challenge and found for the
Alliance on the
ultra vires
ground. In
the result it found it unnecessary to consider the other review
grounds. It considered
that the partial declaration of invalidity in
respect of the regulations should be suspended for a period of 12
months and made the
following order on the merits:
‘
2.
The definition of “medicine” in
section 1
of the
Medicines and
Related Substances Act No.101 of 1965
is declared to apply only to
substances that are used or purport to be suitable for use or are
manufactured or sold for use in the
diagnosis, treatment, mitigation,
modification or prevention of maladies, in order to achieve a
medicinal or therapeutic purpose,
in human beings and animals.
3.
The General Regulations promulgated on 25 August 2017 under General
Notice 859 in Government 41064
are declared unlawful to the extent
that they apply to “complementary medicines” and “health
supplements” that are not “medicines”
or “Scheduled
substances” as defined in
section 1
of the
Medicines and Related
Substances Act No. 101 of 1965
.
4.
The declaration of invalidity is suspended for a period of twelve
(12) months to allow the South
African Health Products Regulatory
Authority an opportunity to correct the defect.’
[12]
The court a quo granted leave to appeal to the appellants. It also
gave leave to the
Alliance to cross-appeal against para 4 of its
order. The Alliance supported paras 2 and 3 of the order before us on
all the aforesaid
grounds. I find it expedient, however, to first
consider the
ultra vires
ground.
[13]
The appellants persisted with the argument that
the challenge to the regulations on the
ultra
vires
ground was impermissibly
abstract. The Alliance readily conceded the abstract nature of this
part of its application on the basis
that it did not relate to a
particular set of facts. If the regulations, or part thereof, are
beyond the powers of the Minister,
they are invalid under the
Constitution. It follows that the judgment in
Savoi
and Others v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Another
[2014] ZACC 5
;
2014 (5) BCLR 606
(CC);
2014 (1) SACR 545
(CC);
2014 (5) SA 317
(CC) at paras 9-13, is in
point. It tells us that the abstract nature of an application brings
two factors to the fore. The first
is standing, that is, whether the
applicant is entitled to challenge the validity of the provisions in
question. If so, the second
factor is the application of the heavy
burden on the applicant to show that the provisions are
constitutionally unsound or invalid
merely on their face.
[14]
The Alliance acts on behalf of its members, which include
manufacturers and retailers
of complementary medicines and health
supplements. Their rights are directly affected in an adverse manner
by what they perceive
to be invalid regulatory measures. The Alliance
therefore clearly had standing to attack the regulations on this
ground and the appellants
did not contend otherwise.
[15]
I deal below with whether the regulations are
ultra vires
merely on their face. Before I do so, I need to say something about
the applicability of PAJA to the making of the regulations. I
intend
to follow the approach of this court in
Esau and Others v Minister
of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 9
;
[2021] 2 All SA 357
(SCA);
2021 (3) SA 593
(SCA) at paras
77-84. In
City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality v Cable City
(Pty) Ltd
[2009] ZASCA 87
;
[2010] 1 All SA 1
(SCA);
2010 (3) SA
598
(SCA) para 10, Maya JA, writing for the court and with reference
to the judgment of Chaskalson CJ in
Minister of Health and Another
NO v New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Ltd
and Others (Treatment
Action Campaign and Innovative Medicines SA as Amici Curiae)
[2005] ZACC 14
;
2006 (2) SA 311
(CC);
2006 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) para 113,
expressed agreement with the contention that the making of
regulations by a Minister constitutes administrative action
within
the meaning of PAJA. We are bound by this
dictum
unless we are
convinced that it is clearly wrong. No attempt at all was made to
convince us of that. In the result the matter had
to be decided under
PAJA.
[16]
Section 35(1) of the Act provides for no less than 45 topics in
respect of which the
Minister is empowered to make regulations. Most
of them relate directly to medicines, scheduled substances, medical
devices or IVDs.
The few that do not, are not applicable to
substances that are not medicines. What remains is s 35(1)(xlv),
which provides for the
making of regulations:
‘
[G]enerally
for the efficient carrying out of the objects and purposes of this
Act, and the generality of this provision shall not
be limited by the
preceding paragraphs of this subsection.’
[17]
The Act does not tabulate its objects and purposes and they have to
be gathered from
its provisions as a whole, including the objects of
the Authority in terms of s 2A, namely:
‘
Objects
of Authority
– The objects of the Authority are to provide for the monitoring,
evaluation, regulation, investigation, inspection, registration
and
control of medicines, Scheduled substances, clinical trials and
medical devices, IVDs and related matters in the public interest.’
I am prepared to accept,
therefore, that the objects and purposes of the Act include matters
related to the regulation and control
etc of medicines and scheduled
substances.
[18]
It is important to note that the Act does not in this regard refer to
substances related
to medicines but to matters related to the
regulation, registration and control of medicines. Therefore, despite
the wide wording
of s 35(1)
(xlv)
, it is difficult to
comprehend that it encompasses a power to regulate substances that
are not medicines in terms of the Act. In
any event, it was clear
from the answering affidavit and reaffirmed before us, that the case
for the appellants was that the regulations
purport only to regulate
medicines within the meaning of the Act. Whether that is so, as I
have said, is the nub of the case.
[19]
The definition of ‘medicine’ in the Act is the following:
‘
(a)
. . . any
substance or mixture of substances used or purporting to be suitable
for use or
manufactured
or sold for use in—
(i)
the diagnosis, treatment, mitigation, modification or prevention of
disease, abnormal physical or mental state or the symptoms
thereof in
humans; or
(ii)
restoring, correcting or modifying any somatic or psychic or organic
function in humans; and
(b)
includes any
veterinary medicine.’
The appeal does not concern para
(b)
of the definition.
[20]
To qualify as a medicine, a substance (or a mixture of substances)
must: be used; purport
to be suitable for use; or be manufactured or
sold for use for a purpose set out in subparas
(a)
(i) or
(a)
(ii) of the definition. It was rightly common cause between
the parties that on a sensible contextual interpretation of the
definition
these are limited to therapeutic or medicinal purposes.
The heads of argument of the appellants therefore aptly stated that
medicines
‘must always have or claim to have a therapeutic
purpose’. This makes eminent sense. On this interpretation,
drinking water is
clearly not a medicine under the Act, but water
that is claimed to have the ability to cure a disease, would be one.
[21]
The regulations define ‘complementary medicine’ as any substance
or mixture of substances
that:
‘
(a)
originates from plants, fungi, algae, seaweeds, lichens, minerals,
animals or other substance as determined by the Authority;
(b)
is used or purporting to be suitable for use or manufactured or sold
for use –
(i)
in maintaining, complementing or assisting the physical or mental
state; or
(ii)
to diagnose, treat, mitigate, modify, alleviate or prevent disease or
illness or the symptoms or signs thereof or abnormal physical
or
mental state of a human being or animal; and
(c)
is used –
(i)
as a health supplement; or
(ii)
in accordance with those disciplines as determined by the Authority.’
[22]
Thus, to qualify as a ‘complementary medicine’, a substance must
comply with each of
paras (a), (b) and (c) of the definition.
Paragraph (a) sets a requirement of origin, in wide terms. Paragraph
(b) departs from the
definition of ‘medicine’ in the Act.
The
addition of the word ‘alleviate’ in subpara (b)(ii) is not
material. The same does not, however, apply to the phrase
‘maintaining,
complementing or assisting the physical or mental
state’ in subpara (b)(i). It does not restrict complementary
medicines to substances
that have or claim to have a therapeutic
purpose. On the contrary, on its plain meaning subpara (b)(i) has
nothing to do with somatic,
psychic or organic malfunctioning, but
refers to contributing to (maintaining, complementing or assisting)
the normal functions of
the human body or mind (the physical or
mental state).
[23]
As I have said, in terms of para (c) a complementary medicine must
also be used as
a health supplement or ‘in accordance with those
disciplines as determined by the Authority’. In terms of the
regulations ‘as
determined by the Authority’ means as determined
by it in guidelines published from time to time. The evidence did not
reveal anything
in that regard.
[24]
However, ‘health supplement’ is defined as follows:
‘
.
. . any substance, extract or mixture of substances as determined by
the Authority, sold in dosage forms used or purported for use
in
restoring, correcting or modifying any physical or mental state by –
(a)
complementing health;
(b)
supplementing the diet; or
(c)
a nutritional effect,
and
excludes injectable preparations, medicines or substances listed as
Schedule 1 or higher in the Act.’
[25]
It is true that this definition echoes the phrase ‘restoring,
correcting or modifying’
in subpara (a)(ii) of the definition of
‘medicine’ in the Act. But the definition of ‘health
supplement’ does not end there.
It proceeds to state the additional
requirement that the restoring, correcting or modifying has to be
achieved by: complementing
health; supplementing a diet; or a
nutritional effect. Clearly therefore, this third element of the
definition of ‘complementary
medicine’ takes it even further away
from substances that have or claim to have a therapeutic purpose.
Whilst some complementary
medicines and health supplements as defined
in the regulations would be medicines under the Act, many would not.
[26]
In sum, the regulations purport to regulate substantial numbers of
substances that
are not medicines under the Act. The court a quo
correctly concluded that, to this extent, the regulations are
ultra
vires
and invalid. Paragraph 3 of its order cannot be faulted. It
follows that the appeal must fail on the
ultra vires
ground
and that it is unnecessary to make a final determination of the other
review grounds.
[27]
In my view, however, para 2 of the order cannot stand. That is so for
two reasons.
The first is that the judgment of the court a quo
demonstrated that there had been no dispute as to the proper
interpretation of
the definition of ‘medicine’ in the Act before
it. It is trite that a court should not issue
a declarator
in answer to a hypothetical or academic question.
Secondly, this part of the order impermissibly departed from the
language of the
Act. It not only introduced the word ‘maladies’,
but failed to give due recognition to subpara
(a)
(ii) of the
definition of ‘medicine’. As the propriety of para 2 of the order
was raised
mero motu
by this court, setting it aside should
not entitle the appellants to costs.
[28]
It remains to consider the cross-appeal against the suspension of the
declaration of
invalidity. The Alliance contended that there was no
justification for the suspension. However, it appeared not to have
recognised
that the court a quo had in this regard exercised a true
or strict discretion that may not lightly be interfered with. See
Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development
Corporation of South Africa Limited and Another
[2015] ZACC 22
;
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC);
2015 (10) BCLR 1199
(CC) paras
88-90. I find no
reason in principle to interfere with the suspension
order. It was at least justified on the following basis. As I have
said, it
is widely accepted that there is a public interest need to
also regulate complementary medicines and health supplements that are
not medicines under the Act. Therefore, it is in the public interest
to regulate these substances under the regulations during the
interim
period of consideration of the appropriate regulation thereof. The
cross-appeal must therefore fail. However, para 4 of the
order should
be altered to refer to the Minister and not to the Authority.
[29]
For these reasons the following order is issued:
1
The order of the court a quo is varied by deleting para 2 thereof and
by substituting the words ‘South African Health Products Regulatory
Authority’ with the words ‘Minister’.
2
The appeal is dismissed with costs, including the costs
of two counsel.
3
The cross-appeal is dismissed with costs, including the
costs of two counsel.
C H G VAN DER MERWE
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellants:
G Marcus
SC
(with him N Rajab-Budlender SC)
Instructed
by:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
State Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
D Borgström SC (with him M Seape)
Instructed
by:
Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyer
Inc., Sandton
Webbers Attorneys, Bloemfontein
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