Case Law[2022] ZASCA 51South Africa
Advertising Regulatory Board NPC and Others v Bliss Brands (Pty) Ltd (786/21) [2022] ZASCA 51; [2022] 2 All SA 607 (SCA); 2022 (4) SA 57 (SCA); [2022] HIPR 201 (SCA) (12 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
12 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative Law – private body exercising public functions – submission to jurisdiction – powers of the Administrative Regulatory Board (ARB) – complaints relating to advertising by non-members of ARB – whether lawful for ARB to consider – whether ARB structures independent, usurp judicial authority or follow fair procedures – civil procedure – courts should decide issues defined by parties – court raising constitutionality of ARB’s powers mero motu – inappropriate.
Judgment
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## Advertising Regulatory Board NPC and Others v Bliss Brands (Pty) Ltd (786/21) [2022] ZASCA 51; [2022] 2 All SA 607 (SCA); 2022 (4) SA 57 (SCA); [2022] HIPR 201 (SCA) (12 April 2022)
Advertising Regulatory Board NPC and Others v Bliss Brands (Pty) Ltd (786/21) [2022] ZASCA 51; [2022] 2 All SA 607 (SCA); 2022 (4) SA 57 (SCA); [2022] HIPR 201 (SCA) (12 April 2022)
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sino date 12 April 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 786/21
In the matter
between:
ADVERTISING
REGULATORY BOARD NPC FIRST
APPELLANT
COLGATE-PALMOLIVE
(PTY) LTD SECOND
APPELLANT
COLGATE-PALMOLIVE
COMPANY THIRD
APPELLANT
and
BLISS
BRANDS (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Advertising
Regulatory Board NPC and Others v Bliss Brands (Pty) Ltd
(case
no 786/21)
[2022] ZASCA
51
(
12
April
2022)
Coram:
PETSE
DP, SCHIPPERS, PLASKET and HUGHES JJA and MATOJANE AJA
Heard:
1
March 2022
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
12 April
2022.
Summary:
Administrative
Law – private body exercising public functions – submission to
jurisdiction – powers of the Administrative Regulatory
Board (ARB)
– complaints relating to advertising by non-members of ARB –
whether lawful for ARB to consider – whether
ARB structures
independent, usurp judicial authority or follow fair procedures –
civil procedure – courts should decide
issues defined by
parties – court raising constitutionality of ARB’s powers
mero
motu
– inappropriate.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (Fisher J sitting as court
of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg,
is
set aside and replaced by the following:
‘
The relief sought
in paragraphs 1, 4, 5, 6 and 8 of the applicant’s amended notice of
motion is dismissed with costs, including
the costs of two counsel.’
3
The relief sought by the applicant in paragraphs 2, 3 and 7 of its
amended notice of motion
is remitted to the
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
for
determination.
JUDGMENT
Schippers
JA (Petse DP, Plasket and Hughes JJA and Matojane AJA concurring)
[1]
The
first appellant, the Advertising Regulatory Board NPC (ARB), is a
non-profit company which carries on business as an independent,
self-regulatory body in the advertising industry. Its members are
required to adhere to the Code of Advertising Practice (the Code),
which is based on international best practice for advertising
self-regulation and is the guiding document of the ARB. The Code
states
that its two main purposes are to protect the consumer and to
ensure professionalism among advertisers; and that advertising is a
service to the public and thus ‘should be informative, factual,
honest and decent’. All advertising in the electronic broadcast
media is subject to the Electronic Communications Act 36 of 2005
(ECA). Every electronic broadcaster must adhere to the Code as
determined
and administered by the ARB,
[1]
which has replaced and performs the same functions as the former
Advertising Standards Authority of South Africa (ASA).
[2]
The second and third appellants, Colgate-Palmolive (Pty) Ltd and
Colgate-Palmolive Company (Colgate), and the respondent, Bliss Brands
(Pty) Ltd (Bliss Brands), are competitors in the toiletries business.
[2]
In
December 2019 Colgate lodged a complaint with the ARB that Bliss
Brands, in the packaging of its Securex soap, had breached the
Code
by exploiting the advertising goodwill and imitating the packaging
architecture of Colgate’s Protex soap. Although Bliss Brands
is not
a member of the ARB, it raised no objection to the ARB’s
jurisdiction and participated fully in its hearings, taking the
matter all the way to the ARB’s Final Appeal Committee (FAC). After
the FAC dismissed its appeal, Bliss Brands applied to the Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the high court) to review
and set aside the FAC’s decision.
[3]
The
high court (Fisher J)
mero
motu
questioned the constitutionality of the ARB’s powers. Bliss Brands
then amended its notice of motion and supplemented its founding
papers so that they bore little resemblance to its original
application. It raised a number of constitutional points which found
favour with the court. It made a series of orders which effectively
dismantled the system of self-regulation of advertising in South
Africa in its entirety. This included an order declaring part of the
ARB’s Memorandum of Incorporation (MOI) ‘unconstitutional,
void
and unenforceable’, together with further declaratory and
interdictory relief. The issue in this appeal, which is before us
with the leave of the high court, is whether it was correct in making
those orders.
The complaint and
proceedings below
[4]
The
Directorate of the ARB, responsible for adjudicating complaints at
first instance, found that Bliss Brands had not breached the
Code in
the packaging of its Securex soap. Colgate appealed to the
Advertising Appeals Committee (AAC), which overturned the
Directorate’s
decision. Bliss Brands then lodged an appeal to the
FAC. It found in favour of Colgate in a split decision. Its
chairperson, Judge
Ngoepe, cast the deciding vote. The FAC’s ruling
required Bliss Brands to cease distribution of the offending Securex
packaging.
This was followed by a brief FAC decision clarifying the
costs award in its earlier ruling.
[5]
Subsequently,
Bliss Brands brought an urgent application in the high court to
suspend the FAC’s ruling, pending a review application.
That
application was dismissed. Undeterred, on 2 October 2020 Bliss Brands
launched another urgent application for interim relief,
coupled with
an application to review the FAC’s ruling based on a violation of
the principle of legality and various grounds under
the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA). It did not challenge the
ARB’s jurisdiction, nor did it suggest that
its participation in
the ARB’s proceedings was anything but voluntary.
[6]
On 30
October 2020 Fisher J issued a directive that the parties submit
argument on the constitutionality of those parts of the Code
and the
MOI, which authorised the Directorate and the Committees of the ARB
to determine whether the packaging of a product constituted
passing
off or breach of copyright (the directive). The parties were also
required to address the basis of the ARB’s jurisdiction
‘to usurp
the function of the courts in relation to these issues’.
[7]
The
directive resulted in a fundamental change to the relief sought by
Bliss Brands. It asked for an order that the entire MOI of
the ARB be
declared ‘unconstitutional and void’. In the alternative it
sought declaratory orders that clause 3.3 of the MOI is
unconstitutional; that the ARB has no jurisdiction over any person
who is not a member of the ARB; that the ARB may not issue rulings
in
relation to any non-member or that non-member’s advertising; and
that the rulings of the FAC in August 2020 are unlawful.
[8]
The
high court made the following declaratory orders. Clause 3.3 of the
MOI is unconstitutional and invalid because it permits the
ARB to
decide complaints concerning advertisements of non-members. The ARB
has no jurisdiction over non-members in any circumstances,
and may
not issue any rulings in relation to non-members or their
advertising. The FAC’s ruling (upholding Colgate’s complaints
against Bliss Brands’ soap packaging with costs) is unlawful. It
was set aside.
[9]
Before
addressing the correctness of these orders, it must again be
emphasised that a court should decide only the issues before it,
as
pleaded by the parties. In
Fischer
v Ramahlele
,
[3]
this Court said:
‘
[I]t it is for
the parties, either in the pleadings or affidavits (which serve the
function of both pleadings and evidence), to set
out and define the
nature of the dispute, and it is for the court to adjudicate upon
those issues. That is so even where the dispute
involves an issue
pertaining to the basic human rights guaranteed by our Constitution,
for “it is impermissible for a party to
rely on a constitutional
complaint that was not pleaded”. There are cases where the parties
may expand those issues by the way
in which they conduct the
proceedings. There may also be instances where the court may mero
motu raise a question of law that emerges
fully from the evidence and
is necessary for the decision of the case. That is subject to the
proviso that no prejudice will be caused
to any party by its being
decided. Beyond that it is for the parties to identify the dispute
and for the court to determine that
dispute and that dispute alone.’
[10]
This
admonition, regrettably, was disregarded by the high court. Bliss
Brands’ submission to the jurisdiction of the ARB should
have put
paid to any challenge to jurisdiction, or to the constitutionality of
the Code or MOI. Instead, the issuance of the directive
resulted in
virtually an entirely new case for decision. Most recently, the
Constitutional Court has affirmed the rule that constitutional
issues
should only be raised by courts
mero
motu
in exceptional circumstances.
[4]
This is not such a case.
[11]
The
high court found that the submission to the ARB’s jurisdiction by
Bliss Brands ‘cannot be said to constitute actual consent’.
This
finding is unsustainable on the evidence. The letter advising Bliss
Brands of the complaint requested it to ‘inform us if
you do not
consider yourself to be bound by the ARB’, and advised that Bliss
Brands was not obliged to respond or furnish a defence.
[12]
Bliss
Brands responded in full, contesting the merits of the complaint
without raising any objection to the ARB’s jurisdiction,
its
legitimacy or its procedures. It participated fully in the hearing of
the complaint at all stages of the proceedings, without
a hint of
protest. It accepted the Directorate’s ruling on the complaint in
its favour. When Colgate’s appeal to the AAC was
upheld, Bliss
Brands lodged an appeal to the FAC. It even sought an alternative
order of remittal to the FAC for a rehearing, if
the main relief for
substitution of the FAC’s ruling was refused.
[13]
This
Court has repeatedly held that a failure to raise any objection to
jurisdiction and subsequent participation in proceedings is
sufficient to demonstrate submission to jurisdiction.
[5]
Bliss Brands unquestionably submitted to the jurisdiction of the ARB.
Although the appeal could be disposed of solely on this basis,
we
were urged by counsel for the ARB not to do so, because the high
court’s pronouncements on the constitutionality of clause 3.3
of
the MOI and its finding that the ARB may not issue rulings in
relation to non-members or their advertising, will create legal
uncertainty. This, in turn, will impede the ARB in carrying out its
functions as a self-regulating body in the advertising industry.
[14]
More
fundamentally, however, the high court’s analysis included
statements of principle which the appellants have criticised. For
example, the high court stated that the ARB is not empowered to
determine breaches of the Code under the ECA; that the powers it
exercises in relation to the regulation of advertising by non-members
is not sourced in law and thus unconstitutional; that a non-member
is
‘denied the right to defend itself in a court of law on the merits
of a complaint’; and that the AAC and FAC may reasonably
be
perceived to lack independence. We must proceed to address these
criticisms and insofar as they are valid, so declare, since otherwise
the high court’s statements of principle would remain
authoritative.
The ARB’s
powers are sourced in law
[15]
The
high court accepted that private bodies are capable of exercising
public powers in the absence of statutory authorisation, if
sourced
in an instrument or agreement, such as the MOI. Despite this, it held
that the ARB could not make decisions regarding the
advertisements of
non-members – even where this was being done for the benefit of the
ARB’s members. The issue, the court said,
was whether the exercise
of public power was lawful.
[16]
PAJA
expressly contemplates that a juristic entity other than an organ of
state may take decisions that constitute administrative
action in
terms of an ‘empowering provision’. The latter is defined as ‘a
law, a rule of common law, customary law, or an agreement,
instrument
or other document in terms of which an administrative action was
purportedly taken’.
[6]
PAJA
deliberately gives a person other than an organ of state a larger set
of permissible empowering provisions than those given
to organs of
state.
[7]
[17]
The
ARB’s MOI and Code, incorporating its Procedural Guide, constitute
empowering provisions. The mere absence of a statutory source
for
these powers is therefore no barrier to the ARB validly exercising
public functions. To hold otherwise would invalidate the actions
of
all other private bodies that perform vital public functions in the
public interest, without any empowering statute, such as sports
professional bodies,
[8]
the
Press Council,
[9]
professional
associations and the like. It would also force courts to adopt a
strained interpretation of the phrase ‘public powers
or public
functions’ to exclude such private bodies, thereby limiting the
protective reach of judicial review proceedings under
PAJA and the
principle of legality.
[18]
The
ARB is empowered to consider complaints on four bases:
(a)
If the advertiser is a member of the ARB, or a member of one of the
industry bodies that is a member of
the ARB, then the ARB is entitled
to consider the complaint because the advertiser has agreed to be
bound by the Code, either directly
or indirectly through its
membership of an industry representative body or association.
(b)
If the publisher of the advertisement is a member of the ARB, then
the ARB is entitled to consider the
complaint because the publisher
has agreed to abide by the Code. The Code precludes those who are
bound by it from accepting advertising
that conflicts with the Code.
(c)
If neither the publisher nor the advertiser are members of the ARB,
the ARB is still entitled to consider
the complaint on behalf of its
members, so that they may decide whether or not to publish that
advertisement. In
Herbex
,
[10]
this Court expressly confirmed that the ARB may do so.
(d)
If the advertisement is broadcast by a broadcast service licensee in
terms of the ECA, s 55(1) of
the ECA confers on the ARB the
power to consider complaints in respect of that advertisement.
[19]
The
high court’s orders cut across (b), (c) and (d) and preclude the
ARB from exercising its powers on those bases. As to (d), the
court
held that s 55 ‘does no more than identifying the Code as a code to
which broadcasting service licensees must adhere. It
does not empower
the ARB to determine breaches of the Code’.
[20]
Section
55 of the ECA provides:
‘
Control over
advertisements
(1) All
broadcasting service licensees must adhere to the Code of Advertising
Practice (in this section referred to as the Code) as
from time to
time determined and administered by the Advertising Standards
Authority of South Africa and to any advertising regulations
prescribed by the Authority in respect of scheduling of adverts,
infomercials and programme sponsorships.
(2) The
Complaints and Compliance Committee must adjudicate complaints
concerning alleged breaches of the Code by broadcasting service
licensees who are not members of the Advertising Standards Authority
of South Africa, in accordance with section 17C of the ICASA
Act, as
well as complaints concerning alleged breaches of the advertising
regulations.
(3) Where a
broadcasting licensee, irrespective of whether or not he or she is a
member of the said Advertising Standards Authority
of South Africa,
is found to have breached the Code or advertising regulations, such
broadcasting licensee must be dealt with in
accordance with
applicable provisions of sections 17A to 17H of the ICASA Act.’
[21]
These
provisions make three things clear. First, all broadcast service
licensees (whether members or non-members of the ARB) are obliged
to
comply with the Code as administered by the ARB. Second, there are
two separate streams for the initial determination of complaints
concerning breaches of the Code: if the licensee is an ARB member,
the ARB is obliged to decide whether there has been a breach of
the
Code; where the licensee is not a member of the ARB, the Complaints
and Compliance Committee of Independent Communications Authority
of
South Africa (ICASA) decides that issue. And third, it is only after
there has been a finding of a breach of the Code that the
licensee
must be dealt with in accordance with the applicable provisions of
ss 17A to 17H of the ICASA Act.
[22]
Any
other interpretation would render meaningless the words, ‘who are
not members of the Advertising Standards Authority of South
Africa’
in s 55(2). It is a settled principle that every word in a statute
must be given a meaning and not be treated as tautologous
or
superfluous.
[11]
This is
buttressed by the provisions of s 55(1), which enjoins all broadcast
service licensees to comply with the Code: it cannot
be suggested
that such compliance by licensees who are members of the ARB, is
contractual. Thus, the contention on behalf of Bliss
Brands that s
55(2) only applies to non-members and does not confer on the ARB any
statutory power to determine breaches of the Code
by licensees who
are its members, because they are subject to contractual obligations,
is incorrect. And a construction that the
obligation on all broadcast
service licensees to comply with the Code, and that the sanctions for
its breach are regulated by the
ECA, but that breaches of the Code by
licensees who are members of the ARB are regulated contractually, is
plainly insensible.
[12]
[23]
Parliament
has determined that any advertiser who wishes to advertise by means
of a broadcasting service licensee must comply with
the provisions of
the Code. The order of the high court prevents the ARB from
performing this statutory duty in terms of s 55 of
the ECA, by
prohibiting the ARB from determining any complaint in respect of
non-member advertising, even where that advertisement
is broadcast by
a broadcasting service licensee. It does so in circumstances where
the issue did not arise for determination in the
context of the
dispute between the parties.
[24]
As
regards the powers of the ARB under (a), (b) and (c), the ARB is
entitled to consider, on behalf of its members, complaints in
respect
of advertisements published by non-members of the ARB, so that its
members may make an election whether or not they wish
to publish that
advertisement. This is an incident of their constitutional rights to
freedom of expression and association.
[13]
The high court’s order prevents the members of the ARB from using
their chosen method of deciding which advertisement they wish
to
publish and which advertisers they wish to associate with. This
constitutes an unjustifiable limitation on the rights of members
to
freedom of expression and association. I revert to this aspect below.
The
Herbex
decision
[25]
Herbex,
a seller of complementary medicines, had for a number of years
submitted to the jurisdiction of the ASA, even though it was
not a
member. It then sought an order declaring that the ASA’s rulings
were legally unenforceable against non-members. The ASA
acknowledged
that it had no jurisdiction over non-members, but argued that it was
entitled to make determinations on the advertisements
of non-members
for the benefit of its own members.
[26]
The
high court (Du Plessis AJ) rejected the ASA’s arguments, holding
that it had no lawful power to make rulings on the advertisements
of
non-members in any circumstances, without the consent of the
non-member. It made the following order:
‘
It is declared
that the respondent [the ASA] has no jurisdiction over any person or
entity who is not a member of the respondent and
that the respondent
may, in the absence of a submission to its jurisdiction not require
the applicant [Herbex] to participate in
its processes, issue an
instruction, order or ruling against the applicant or sanction
it.
’
[14]
[27]
The
ASA appealed to this Court. On the day of the hearing the parties
reached a settlement. This Court endorsed the settlement, upheld
the
appeal and set aside the high court’s order in substantial part,
replacing it as follows:
‘
It is declared
that:
1.1
The advertising Standards Authority of South Africa (the ASA) has no
jurisdiction over any
person or entity who is not a member of the ASA
and that the ASA may not, in the absence of a submission to
jurisdiction, require
non-members to participate in its processes,
issue an instruction, order or ruling against the non-member or
sanction it;
1.2
The ASA may consider and issue a ruling to its members (which is not
binding on non-members)
on any advertisement, regardless of by whom
it is published, to determine, on behalf of its members, whether its
members should accept
any advertisement before it is published or
should withdraw any advertisement if it has been published.
2.
The ASA’s is directed to include in its standard letter of
complaint the contents
of para 1 and that a non-member is not obliged
to participate in any ASA process, but that should it not
participate, the ASA may
still consider the complaint, for the
purposes set out in para 1.2.’
[28]
The
whole of clause 3.3 of the ARB’s MOI is taken almost verbatim from
paragraph 1 of this Court’s order in
Herbex
.
It states:
‘
The Company has
no jurisdiction over any person or entity who is not a member and may
not, in the absence of a submission to its jurisdiction,
require
non-members to participate in its processes, issue any instruction,
order or ruling against the non-member or sanction it.
However, the
Company may consider and issue a ruling to its members (which is not
binding on non-members) regarding any advertisement,
regardless of by
whom it is published to determine, on behalf of its members, whether
its members should accept any advertisement
before it is published or
should withdraw any advertisement if it has been published.’
[29]
The
high court declared that clause 3.3 is unconstitutional. It reasoned
that the part of paragraph 1.1 of this Court’s order in
Herbex
which states that ‘the respondent [the ASA] has no jurisdiction
over any person or entity who is not a member of the respondent’,
is an order
in
rem
,
but that paragraphs 1.2 and 2 are orders
in
personam
,
confined to the parties to the settlement agreement, and ‘not of
general application’.
[30]
These
conclusions are incorrect. The
Herbex
order, while granted by consent, is an order of court which is no
less binding or effective. A court, in exercising its discretion
whether to make a settlement agreement an order of court is required
to assess the ‘wider impact which its order may potentially
have’.
[15]
It may not simply
accept any settlement order proposed by the parties and is required
to ‘act in a stewardly manner’. It has
the power to insist on
changes to proposed terms of the settlement and may even reject the
settlement outright.
[16]
Once
a settlement agreement is made an order of court, it stands to be
interpreted like any other order.
[17]
[31]
When a
court considers a judgment
in
rem
on appeal, it may not simply set that judgment aside by virtue of a
settlement agreement between the litigating parties. It must
be
satisfied that ‘the setting-aside is justified by the merits of the
appeal’.
[18]
This is not a
novel principle, but settled law that has consistently been applied
by this Court.
[19]
[32]
Applied
to the present case, this Court in
Herbex
was satisfied that on the merits, setting aside the prohibition on
the ASA from deciding whether an advertisement breached the Code,
so
as to enable it to determine, on behalf of its members, whether they
should accept an advertisement for publication or withdraw
the
advertisement if it has been published, was justified.
[20]
Consequently, the declaratory relief which this Court granted in
Herbex
– the whole order – was plainly one
in
rem
:
it pronounced upon the limits and powers of the ASA in relation to
every non-member advertiser, not only Herbex.
[33]
This
conclusion is reinforced by the terms of the order. It granted the
ASA (now the ARB) the power to consider and issue a ruling
to its
members ‘on any advertisement, regardless of by whom it is
published’, and to determine, on behalf of its members, whether
they ‘should accept any advertisement before it is published or
should withdraw any advertisement if it has been published’.
The
addition of the phrase ‘regardless of by whom it is published’,
places it beyond question that the order in
Herbex
is not confined to the parties in that litigation.
[34]
The
high court declared that clause 3.3 of the MOI is unconstitutional,
contrary to the order made and precedent established in
Herbex
.
This Court has emphasised that the doctrine of precedent is ‘an
intrinsic feature of the rule of law’, without which ‘there
would
be no certainty, no predictability and no coherence’.
[21]
To deviate from this doctrine is ‘to invite legal chaos’.
[22]
The order in
Herbex
ought to have disposed of Bliss Brands’ constitutional challenge.
Constitutional
rights: freedom of expression and association
[35]
The
ARB’s members are entitled to refuse to publish advertising as part
of their right to freedom of expression in s 16 of the Constitution,
a right recognised in international law. General Comment No 34 of the
United Nations Human Rights Committee states:
‘
Freedom of
opinion and freedom of expression are indispensable conditions for
the full development of the person. They are essential
for any
society. They constitute the foundation stone for every free and
democratic society
.
. .
Any form of effort
to coerce the holding or not holding of any opinion is prohibited.
Freedom to express one’s opinion necessarily
includes freedom not
to express one’s opinion.’
[23]
[36]
English
authority similarly demonstrates that the right to freedom of
thought, opinion and expression, extends to the freedom not
to hold
and not to have to express opinions.
[24]
American cases are to the same effect: it is a violation of the First
Amendment to force an individual to be an instrument for advocating
public adherence to an ideological point of view that he or she finds
unacceptable.
[25]
For
corporations as for individuals, the right to speak includes within
it the choice of what not to say.
[26]
[37]
In
Remuszko
v Poland
,
[27]
the applicant complained that the refusal by a newspaper to publish a
paid advertisement, which was upheld by the courts, violated
his
right to freedom of expression protected by Article 10 of the
European Convention on Human Rights.
[28]
The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) agreed with the conclusion
of the domestic courts that in a pluralistic media marketplace,
publishers should not be obliged to carry advertisements proposed by
private parties, and that this was compatible with the freedom
of
expression standards under the Convention.
[29]
The ECHR held:
‘
[P]rivately held
newspapers must be free to exercise editorial discretion in deciding
whether to publish articles, comments and letters
submitted by
private individuals or even by their own staff reporters and
journalists. The State’s obligation to ensure the individual’s
freedom of expression does not give private citizens an unfettered
right of access to the media in order to put forward opinions.
. . .
In the Court’s view these principles apply also to the publication
of advertisements. An effective exercise of the freedom
of the press
presupposes the right of the newspapers to establish and apply their
own policies in respect of the content of advertisements.
It also
necessitates that the press enjoys freedom to determine its
commercial policy in this respect and to choose with whom it
deals.’
[30]
[38]
The
high court distinguished
Remuszko
on the basis that it was ‘not a case where the right to commercial
activity was completely cut off, as in the case when an ad alert
is
issued’. Where an offending advertiser has ignored a reasonable
request for co-operation, the ARB may issue an ad alert to its
members, who may not carry the offending advertisement.
[39]
But
the finding that the effect of an ad alert is to completely cut off
commercial activity, has no basis in the evidence. The high
court
concluded that the ARB’s public power resides in ‘the coercive
effect of the ad-alert’, because the members of the ARB
comprise
‘the whole of the print, digital and broadcast media in South
Africa’. There is no such allegation in the founding papers.
It was
made for the first time in reply. This is impermissible.
[31]
And the allegation that a product with offending packaging cannot be
offered for sale, was not pleaded in any of the affidavits.
The
founding affidavit states that the members of the ARB comprise ‘major
participants in the advertising industry’ and ‘represent
a wide
cross-section of the advertising media, agencies and marketers’. In
its answering affidavit, the ARB expressly denied that
its members
represent the entire advertising industry and set out its membership,
which comprises six members and their members.
[40]
Even
on Bliss Brands’ version, the effect of an ad alert issued by the
ARB is that ARB members will decline to publish that particular
advertisement. It remains open to the advertiser to publish that
advertisement on any platform unconnected to the ARB, for example,
on
its own website, on social media including Facebook or Instagram, or
through any advertising or media house which is not a member
of the
ARB.
[41]
The
ARB’s power to consider complaints relating to advertisements by
non-members for the benefit of its own members, advances the
right to
freedom of association. The Constitutional Court has held that the
right of association, ‘enables individuals to organise
around
particular issues of concern’ and permits a group ‘to
collectively contest and ameliorate the structure of social power
within its midst’.
[32]
[42]
This
is precisely what the members of the ARB have done. They have
organised around the shared goal of promoting ethical standards
in
advertising, as reflected in the Code. They have agreed to
collectively delegate decision-making to the ARB’s expert
adjudicative
bodies that determine complaints on their behalf. In
doing so, the ARB’s members have given effect to two important
components
of the s 18 right: the right of self-regulation; and the
right to choose not to associate.
[43]
The
right to self-regulation includes the right of associations to adopt
rules and standards to regulate their conduct in their dealings
with
the outside world.
[33]
In
Datafin
,
[34]
Sir John Donaldson MR explained this type of self-regulation as
follows:
‘
Self-regulation .
. . can connote a system whereby a group of people, acting in
concert, use their collective power to force themselves
and others to
comply with a code of conduct of their own devising. This is not
necessarily morally wrong or contrary to the public
interest,
unlawful or even undesirable.’
[44]
Datafin
has frequently been
cited by our courts as a leading authority on the judicial review of
private bodies.
[35]
It
concerned the Panel on Takeovers and Mergers which, like the ARB,
exercises public powers primarily based in contract. The Panel’s
Code lacks the force of law but states that those wishing to take
advantage of securities markets in the United Kingdom should conduct
themselves according to its Code, and that those who do not conduct
themselves in this way cannot expect to enjoy the facilities
of the
securities markets and may find that those facilities are withheld.
The court observed that despite the lack of any authority
de jure,
the Panel,
‘
. . . exercises
immense power de facto by devising, promulgating, amending and
interpreting the City Code on Take-overs and Mergers,
by waiving or
modifying the application of the code in particular circumstances, by
investigating and reporting on the alleged breaches
of the code and
by the application or threat of sanctions. These sanctions are no
less effective because they are applied indirectly
and lack a legally
enforceable base.’
[36]
[45]
The
ARB exercises similar powers, save that its powers in respect of
non-members are circumscribed. As was held in
Herbex
,
absent a submission to jurisdiction, the ARB may only make rulings on
the advertisements of non-members for the benefit of its own
members,
which are not binding or legally enforceable against non-members. The
impact of ARB rulings on non-members is therefore
indirect, in cases
where they engage the services of an ARB member to approve, create,
disseminate or publish their advertising.
Members of the ARB are
bound to comply with the Code and ARB decisions, and are obliged to
decline to approve, create or carry advertisements
that breach the
Code. Non-members who do not wish to meet the ethical standards
contained in the Code are free to approve, create
and publish their
advertising using the services of non-members of the ARB.
[46]
The
right of association includes the right to dissociate, as the
Constitutional Court has recently held:
‘
In sum, choosing
to associate is an exercise of the right to freedom of association.
Choosing to dissociate from that which you earlier
associated with is
also an exercise of that right. Choosing not to associate at all too
is an exercise of the right. A restraint
on any of these choices is a
negation of the right.’
[37]
[47]
These
rights of association and dissociation entitle every individual
member of the advertising industry to choose what advertisers
they
wish to associate with and what advertisements they approve, create
or carry, subject to certain legal limits. This is what
the members
of the ARB have done.
[48]
In
turn, Bliss Brands and other non-members have exercised their right
to dissociate by choosing not to join the ARB. They are free
to make
that election. Having done so, Bliss Brands cannot now demand that
members of the ARB should ignore their contractual obligations
by
carrying advertisements that breach the Code. Nor can Bliss Brands
lawfully demand that the ARB may not issue rulings for the
guidance
of its members. In short, the right to dissociate does not give Bliss
Brands the unfettered right to dictate to the ARB
and its members how
they should exercise their rights of association.
Access to court
[49]
The
remaining constitutional challenges can be dealt with shortly. They
are all variations on a theme: the ARB’s processes infringe
the
right of non-members of access to court under s 34 of the
Constitution,
[38]
and usurp
judicial functions in various respects. The high court held that ‘a
constraint on the right to trade freely on the scale
precipitated by
an ad alert is inherently an infringement of the rights of the person
and property and entails the protections under
section 34’.
[50]
The
existence of an adjudicative administrative tribunal such as the ARB
does not however limit the right of access to courts. It
is a
‘tribunal or forum’ envisaged in s 34 of the Constitution.
[39]
Its decisions are subject to judicial control at two levels. First, a
dissatisfied respondent is entitled to apply to court for an
interdict suspending the operation of a decision pending a challenge
(as Bliss Brands did in this case). Second, once internal processes
are concluded, decisions of the ARB are subject to judicial
review.
[40]
And that is
precisely what Bliss Brands did in this case – it took the
decisions adverse to it on review.
[51]
In
this regard, the high court’s reliance on
Chief
Lesapo
[41]
was misplaced. The case involved a constitutional challenge to a
legislative provision which permitted a bank to seize a defaulting
debtor's property, sell it by public auction and defray the debt
owed, without recourse to a court of law. The statute was struck
down
on the ground that it rendered the bank a judge in its own cause and
breached the fundamental principle against self-help in
circumstances
where the coercive power of the State was invoked without the
sanction of a court. By contrast, the ARB’s decision-making
processes are strictly governed by the Code, the MOI and its internal
procedures. Its adjudicative procedures, with rights of appeal
before
bodies that include legal practitioners and retired judges, are the
very antithesis of self-help. As with any completed administrative
process that adversely affects a person’s rights, a dissatisfied
person may approach a court to review decisions taken by the ARB’s
adjudicative bodies. This is a right guaranteed by ss 33 and 34 of
the Constitution.
[52]
The
high court upheld the complaint by Bliss Brands that the AAC and FAC
lack independence due to the funding model which, the court
held,
‘creates room for the perception of a lack of independence where
the complainant is a funder and a member and the respondent
is a
non-member’, and in the nomination process for members of the AAC
and FAC.
[53]
This
finding however is insupportable on the evidence. Not every member of
the ARB is a member or funder of, or contributor to, the
ARB. On both
these committees only one member represents a funder, and not every
member of the AAC or FAC is a funder. No reasonable,
objective and
informed person would consider it likely that the few funders (who
are almost exclusively individual companies) influence
the running of
the entire ARB. Funders represent a minority: 38 out of more than 335
direct and indirect national and international
members of the ARB.
The members of the AAC or FAC are not informed as to whether or not a
complainant or respondent is a funder.
Further, the structure of the
committees promotes independence: the Chairperson of the AAC must be
an independent practising advocate;
and the chairperson of the FAC,
an independent practising or retired legal practitioner or judge.
[54]
The
high court concluded that the procedures of the ARB lack fairness
because the ‘Procedural Guide makes no provision for the rules
of
evidence . . . applicable to court proceedings’, and no appeal to a
court lies against a decision of the ARB. Then it said that
a
non-member is ‘denied the right to defend itself in a court of law
on the merits of the complaint’, and that ‘a determination
by the
ARB as to whether clauses 8 and 9 [of the MOI] have been breached
impliedly ousts the jurisdiction of the ordinary courts
by
establishing a parallel dispute resolution process’.
[55]
The
court erred. No dissatisfied respondent in an adjudicative
administrative process is entitled to ‘appeal’ to a court against
an administrative decision – the remedy is to review under PAJA.
There is no principle of law requiring an adjudicative administrative
tribunal to adopt the same rules of evidence that apply in courts. In
Turner
[42]
Botha JA said:
‘
The principles of
natural justice do not require a domestic tribunal to follow the
procedure and to apply the technical rules of evidence
observed in a
court of law, but they do require such tribunal to adopt a procedure
which would afford the person charged a proper
hearing by the
tribunal, and an opportunity of producing his evidence and of
correcting or contradicting any prejudicial statement
or allegation
made against him.
[56]
The
high court seems to have overlooked the flexible requirements of
procedural fairness under PAJA. Section 3(2)
(a)
provides that ‘[a] fair administrative procedure depends on
circumstances of each case’. Section 3(4) permits departures from
requirements of procedural fairness under s 3(2) where this is
reasonable or justifiable. Section 3(5) of PAJA permits an
administrator
to follow a procedure that is ‘fair but different’
to the requirements of s 3(2).
[57]
Finally,
on this aspect, the high court stated that an ad alert ‘has all the
features of an indirect boycott’, which it said was
relevant to a
consideration of the constitutionality of the ARB’s process because
of the element of unfairness. The fact that an
ad alert has the
effect of a boycott was not pleaded and therefore not traversed in
the affidavits before the high court.
[58]
The
high court held that the issues raised by clauses 8 (exploitation of
advertising goodwill) and 9 (imitation) of the Code are squarely
legal issues which entail the same enquiries as those which courts
are called upon to consider in cases dealing with passing off
and
contraventions of copyright and trade marks. However, the mere fact
that elements of a complaint before the ARB might overlap
with
elements of a cause of action that could be pursued in a court or
other tribunal, does not mean that the ARB ousts the court’s
jurisdiction.
[43]
The ARB and
the courts are different fora with distinct powers. The ARB operates
consensually and is not permitted to determine questions
as to
whether the packaging or get-up of a particular product constitutes
passing off or breach of copyright. The ARB may only determine
whether its Code has been breached. It does not exercise a judicial
function when doing so.
Conclusion
[59]
In the
result the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg,
is
set aside and replaced by the following:
‘
The relief sought
in paragraphs 1, 4, 5, 6 and 8 of the applicant’s amended notice of
motion is dismissed with costs, including
the costs of two counsel.’
3
The relief sought by the applicant in paragraphs 2, 3 and 7 of its
amended notice of motion
is remitted to the
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
for
determination.
A SCHIPPERS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
first appellant:
S
Budlender SC (with him N Ferreira, K Harding and K Mvumu)
Instructed
by:
Fairbridges Wertheim
Becker Attorneys, Johannesburg
E
G Cooper Majiedt Inc, Bloemfontein
For second and
third
appellants:
G Marcus SC (with him C McConnachie)
Instructed
by:
Kisch Africa Inc, Sandton
Phatshoane Henney
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
C
D A Loxton SC (with him F Southwood SC)
Instructed
by:
Eversheds
Sutherland (SA) Inc, Johannesburg
Honey Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Section 55 of the Electronic
Communications Act 36 of 2005 (ECA).
[2]
Section 1 of the ECA defines the
Advertising Standards Authority of South Africa as ‘the entity
which regulates the content of
advertising, or any entity that
replaces it but has the same functions.’
[3]
Fischer and Another v
Ramahlele and Other
s
[2014] ZASCA 88
;
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA);
[2014] 3 All SA 395
(SCA)
para 13, footnotes omitted; affirmed by the Constitutional Court in
Public Protector v
South African Reserve Bank
[2019] ZACC 29
;
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC) para 234.
[4]
AmaBhungane
Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC and Another v Minister of
Justice and Correctional Services and Others; Minister
of Police v
AmaBhungane Centre for Investigative Journalism NPC and Others
[2021] ZACC 3
;
2021
(3) SA 246
(CC)
para
58.
[5]
Naidoo v EP Property Projects
(Pty) Ltd
and
Others
[2014] ZASCA
97
para 27;
Purser v
Sales; Purser and Another v Sales
and Another
[2000] ZASCA 135
;
2001
(3) SA 445
(SCA) para 22.
[6]
Section 1 of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
[7]
South African National Parks
v MTO Forestry (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2018] ZASCA 59
;
2018 (5) SA 177
(SCA) para 50.
[8]
Ndoro and Another v South
African Football Association
2018
(5) SA 630 (GJ).
[9]
Media 24 Holdings (Pty) Ltd v
Chairman of the Appeals Board of the Press Council of South Africa
and Another
[2014]
ZAGPJHCl 194 para 19.
[10]
Advertising Standards
Authority v Herbex (Pty) Ltd
2017
(6) SA 354 (SCA).
[11]
Wellworths Bazaars Limited v
Chandler’s Limited and Another
1947 (2) SA 37
(A) at 43, affirmed in the minority judgment of
Cameron J in
National
Credit Regulator v Opperman and Others
[2012] ZACC 29
;
2013 (2) SA 1
(CC) para 99.
[12]
Natal Joint Municipal Pension
Fund v Endumeni
[2012] ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18.
[13]
Section 16(1) of the
Constitution states that everyone has the right to freedom of
expression, which includes freedom of the press
and other media;
freedom to receive or impart information or ideas; freedom of
artistic creativity; and academic freedom and freedom
of scientific
research. Section 18 provides that everyone has the right to freedom
of association.
[14]
Herbex (Pty) Ltd v
Advertising Standards Authority
[2016] 3 All SA 146
(GJ) para 90.
[15]
Eke v Parsons
[2015] ZACC 30
;
2016 (3) SA 37
(CC) para 23.
[16]
Eke v Parsons
fn 15 para 34.
[17]
Eke v Parsons
fn 15 para 29.
[18]
Airports Company South Africa
v Big Five Duty Free (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2018] ZACC 33
;
2019 (5) SA 1
(CC) para 1.
[19]
Marine 3 Technologies
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Afrigroup Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2014] ZASCA 208
;
2015 (2) SA 387
(SCA) para 6;
The
Gap Inc v Salt of the Earth Creations (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2012] ZASCA 68
;
2012 (5) SA 259
(SCA) para 2.
[20]
Herbex
fn 14 para 17.2.
[21]
True Motives 84 (Pty) Ltd v
Mahdi and Another
2009 (4) SA 153
(SCA) para 100.
[22]
Camps Bay Ratepayers’ and
Residents’ Association and Another v Harrison and Another
[2010]
ZACC 19
;
2011 (4)
SA 42
(CC) para 29.
[23]
General Comment No 34 on Article
19 of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (12
September 2011) paras 2 and
10.
[24]
RT (Zimbabwe) and Others v
Secretary of State for the Home Department; KM (Zimbabwe) v
Secretary of State for the Home Department
[2012] 4 All ER 843
para 32.
[25]
Wooley v Maynard
[1977] USSC 59
;
430 U.S. 705
(1977) at 714.
[26]
Miami Herald Publishing Co v
Tornillo
418 U.S.
(1974) 241 at 258;
Pacific
Gas and Electric Company v Public Utilities Commission of California
475 U.S. 1
(1986) at 10-11 and 15-17.
[27]
Remuszko v Poland
(Application no
1562/10
),
16 July 2013.
[28]
Article 10 of the Convention for
the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms states:
‘
1.
Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall
include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart
information and ideas without interference by public authority and
regardless of frontiers. This Article shall not prevent states
from
requiring the licensing of broadcasting, television or cinema
enterprises.
2.
The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and
responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities, conditions,
restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary
in a democratic society, in the interests of national security,
territorial integrity or public safety, for the prevention of
disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, for the
protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the
disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining
the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.’
[29]
Remuszko
fn
26 para 86.
[30]
Remuszko
fn
26 para 79.
[31]
Director of Hospital Services
v Mistry
1979 (1)
SA626 (A) at 635H-636F.
[32]
National Union of Metal
Workers of South Africa v Lufil Packaging (Isithebe) and Others
[2020] ZACC 7
;
2020 (6) BCLR 725
(CC); (2020) 41 ILJ 1846 (CC) at
737.
[33]
The African Commission on Human
and People's Rights has acknowledged self-governance as an essential
component of freedom of association.
The ‘Guidelines on Freedom of
Association and Assembly in Africa’, para 36(a) state:
‘Associations shall be self-governing
and free to determine their
. . . internal accountability mechanisms and other internal
governance matters’.
[34]
R v Panel on Takeovers and
Mergers, ex parte Datafin plc and Another (Norton Opax plc and
Another intervening)
[1987] 1 All ER 564
at 567.
[35]
AAA Investments (Pty) Ltd v
Micro Finance Regulatory Council and Another
[2006] ZACC 9
;
2007 (1) SA 343
(CC) para 32;
Calibre
Clinical Consultants (Pty) Ltd and Another v National Bargaining
Council for the Road Freight Industry and Another
[2010] ZASCA 94
;
2010 (5) SA 457
(SCA) para 25.
[36]
Datafin
fn
33 at 564.
[37]
New Nation Movement NPC and
Others v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
[2020] ZACC 11
;
2020 (6) SA 257
(CC) para 58.
[38]
Section 34 of the Constitution
provides:
‘
Everyone
has the right to have any dispute that can be resolved by the
application of law decided in a fair public hearing before
a court
or, where appropriate, another independent and impartial tribunal or
forum.’
[39]
Metcash Trading Limited v
Commissioner, South African Revenue Service and Another
2001 (1) SA 1109
(CC) para 47.
[40]
Metcash
fn 35 paras 58, 60 and 62.
[41]
Chief Lesapo v North West
Agricultural Bank and Another
2000 (1) SA 409 (CC).
[42]
Turner v Jockey Club of South
Africa
1974 (3) SA
633
(A) at 646F.
[43]
Nestlé (South Africa) (Pty)
Ltd v Mars Inc
2001
(4) SA 542
(SCA) paras 20 and 21.
sino noindex
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