Case Law[2022] ZASCA 89South Africa
Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Another v British American Tobacco South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (309/21) [2022] ZASCA 89; [2022] 3 All SA 332 (SCA) (14 June 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
14 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Constitutional law – COVID-19 pandemic – regulation made under Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002 (the Act) – prohibiting sale of tobacco and related products – challenged as infringement of fundamental rights – dignity, bodily and psychological integrity, freedom of trade and deprivation of property – limitation under s 36 of Constitution – to reduce strain on health system – not established – interpretation of ss 27(2)(n) and 27(3) of the Act – tobacco ban unnecessary – appeal dismissed.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZASCA 89
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Another v British American Tobacco South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (309/21) [2022] ZASCA 89; [2022] 3 All SA 332 (SCA) (14 June 2022)
Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Another v British American Tobacco South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (309/21) [2022] ZASCA 89; [2022] 3 All SA 332 (SCA) (14 June 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2022_89.html
sino date 14 June 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 309/21
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF COOPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
AND
TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS
FIRST
APPELLANT
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
SECOND APPELLANT
and
BRITISH
AMERICAN TOBACCO SOUTH
AFRICA
(PTY) LTD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
JT
INTERNATIONAL SOUTH AFRICA
(PTY)
LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
MELINDA
FERGUSON
THIRD RESPONDENT
KEOAGILE
MOLOBI
FOURTH RESPONDENT
LIMPOPO
TOBACCO PROCESSORS
(PTY)
LTD
FIFTH RESPONDENT
SOUTH
AFRICAN TOBACCO
TRANSFORMATION
ALLIANCE NPC
SIXTH RESPONDENT
BLACK
TOBACCO FARMERS
ASSOCIATION
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
SUIDER
AFRIKA AGRI INISIATIEF NPC
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
SOUTH
AFRICAN INFORMAL TRADERS
ALLIANCE
NINTH RESPONDENT
LA
TOSCANA INVESTMENTS CC T/A
J
J CALE TOBACCONISTS
TENTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Minister
of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs and Another v
British American Tobacco South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others
(case no 309/21)
[2022] ZASCA
89
(
14
June
2022)
Coram:
MAYA P and ZONDI, VAN DER MERWE and SCHIPPERS JJA and MOLEFE AJA
Heard:
3 March 2022
Delivered:
14 June 2022
Summary:
Constitutional law – COVID-19
pandemic – regulation made under Disaster Management Act 57 of
2002 (the Act) –
prohibiting sale of tobacco and related
products – challenged as infringement of fundamental rights –
dignity, bodily
and psychological integrity, freedom of trade and
deprivation of property – limitation under s 36 of Constitution
–
to reduce strain on health system – not established –
interpretation of ss 27(2)
(n)
and 27(3) of the Act – tobacco ban unnecessary – appeal
dismissed.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Ndita, Steyn and Slingers JJ) sitting as
court of first instance:
1
The appeal is
dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The cross-appeal is
upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
3
Paragraph 224.2 of
the order of the Western Cape Division of the High Court is
set aside
and replaced with the following order:
‘
The
first and second respondents are ordered to pay the applicants’
costs, including the costs of two counsel and the qualifying
expenses
of the applicants’ expert witnesses.’
JUDGMENT
Schippers
JA (Maya P, Zondi and Van der Merwe JJA and Molefe AJA concurring)
[1]
On
30 January 2020 the World Health Organisation (WHO) declared the
outbreak of a novel virus, namely SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19), a ‘Public
Health Emergency of International Concern’. In response to the
COVID-19 pandemic the first appellant, the Minister of Co-operative
Governance and Traditional Affairs (the Minister), the Cabinet member
responsible for the administration of the Disaster Management
Act 57
of 2002 (the Act), on 15 March 2020 declared a national state of
disaster in terms of s 27(1) of the Act. The Minister made
a series
of regulations under s 27(2) of the Act to contain the spread of
COVID-19. These included a nationwide lockdown, defined
as ‘the
restriction of movement of persons’, which came into effect on
23 March 2020, and a prohibition on the sale
of tobacco products,
e-cigarettes and related products.
[1]
[2]
The
term, ‘tobacco product’ is defined in the Tobacco
Products Control Act 83 of 1993 (Tobacco Products Control Act)
and
includes a product containing tobacco intended for human consumption
and any device manufactured for use in the consumption
of tobacco.
Vaping products that do not contain tobacco are not currently
regulated in South Africa, but were restricted in the
same way as
tobacco products during the lockdown. These products include
e-cigarettes, designed to deliver an aerosol to users
by heating a
solution of substances which may or may not contain nicotine.
[2]
[3]
In
some respects, the lockdown in South Africa resembled lockdowns in
other countries. However, this was not the case when it came
to
smoking and vaping. South Africa was the only country in the world to
prohibit the sale of tobacco and vaping products to consumers
during
a national lockdown, save for Botswana and India.
[3]
Countries such as Italy, France, Switzerland and Spain had expressly
classified tobacconists and other retailers that sell tobacco
and
vaping products as essential shops that could remain open during
lockdown.
[4]
The
respondents are farmers, processors, manufacturers, retailers and
consumers, situated at every level of the supply chain for
tobacco
and vaping products. In June 2020 they launched an urgent application
in the court below, for an order declaring that Regulation
45, which
provided that ‘[t]he sale of tobacco, tobacco products,
e-cigarettes and related products is prohibited, except
for export’
(Regulation 45), was unconstitutional and invalid. The prohibition
applied during Alert Level 3 of the national
state of disaster.
[4]
[5]
The application was heard by a full court
of the Western Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (the high
court) (Ndita, Steyn
and Slingers JJ) on 5 and 6 August 2020.
After judgment had been reserved, Regulation 45 was rescinded by the
Minister on
17 August 2020, upon the move to Alert Level 2. The high
court made an order declaring Regulation 45 inconsistent with the
Constitution
and invalid, and directed each party to pay its own
costs. With the leave of that court, the appellants appeal the order
of invalidity,
and the respondents, the costs order.
The
basic facts
[6]
The first respondent, British American
Tobacco South Africa (Pty) Ltd (BATSA), after the lockdown had come
into effect on 26 March
2020, decided not to challenge the
prohibition on the sale of tobacco until it became clear that the
Government intended to continue
enforcing the ban on cigarette sales.
It was anticipated that the extension of the lockdown would be
accompanied by a relaxation
of certain restrictions imposed in terms
of the regulations, including the sale of tobacco and vaping
products. However, that did
not happen and the ban remained in force
when Alert Level 5 lockdown was extended until 30 April 2020.
[7]
In his address to the nation on 23 April
2020, the President said that the sale of cigarettes would be
permitted when the country
moved to the Alert Level 4 lockdown on 1
May 2020. Pursuant to the President’s speech, a draft framework
for all five alert
levels called ‘The Risk Adjusted Strategy’
was published on 25 April 2020. It included tables for each of
the
five alert levels setting out proposed permitted activities and
goods that could be sold during each level. In line with the
President’s
announcement, the table applicable to Alert Level 4
included ‘tobacco products’ as goods that would be
permitted to
be sold.
[8]
The draft Risk Adjusted Strategy called for
public comment. BATSA made written representations which included the
following. There
was insufficient evidence to draw any firm
conclusions on the relationship between smoking, vaping and COVID-19.
An extension of
the ban on the sale of tobacco products would have an
adverse impact on the revenue of local suppliers, distributors,
retailers,
wholesalers and BATSA’s sustainability programme for
10 000 informal traders. The ban was likely to result in the
closure
of operations including farming, processing and local
production, and result in the illicit trade completely replacing all
legal
tobacco and vaping products.
[9]
Despite the President’s statement
that the sale of cigarettes would be permitted in Alert Level 4, on
29 April 2020 the Minister
announced that the prohibition on the sale
of tobacco and vaping products would continue. The Minister’s
reasons were twofold.
First, consumers in the lower economic bracket
tend to share lit cigarettes (manufactured or hand-rolled), thereby
increasing the
risk of coming into contact with infected saliva. This
would increase the transmission of COVID-19. In addition, these
consumers
do not observe social distancing. Second, the disease
allegedly has an adverse impact on the lungs of smokers.
[10]
On
24 May 2020 the President announced that the country would move to
Alert Level 3 with effect from 1 June 2020, and that the sale
of
tobacco products would remain prohibited, ‘due to the health
risks associated with smoking’. Regulation 45 formed
part of
the regulations published in Government Gazette 43364 dated 28 May
2020.
[5]
[11]
The continued prohibition on the sale of
tobacco products had an adverse effect on some 11 million users of
tobacco and vaping products
in South Africa. They use these products
for pleasure and to manage or relieve stress during their daily
lives. Their inability
to enjoy the daily pleasures of smoking and
vaping had a negative impact on their emotional well-being and
personal autonomy.
[12]
Regulation 45 resulted in heavy losses to
the fiscus because tobacco manufactures, such as BATSA and the second
respondent, JT International
South Africa (Pty) Ltd, pay substantial
excise duties, which the illicit tobacco trade does not pay. BATSA
alone usually collects
and pays about R214 million weekly in excise
revenue to the fiscus, or over R900 million monthly. According to the
organisation
Tax Justice SA, the ban on the sale of cigarettes during
the lockdown resulted in the loss to the national Government of some
R35
million per day in excise duties. This means that a total amount
of approximately R2.4 billion in taxes was lost during the first
eight weeks of the lockdown.
[13]
There was no unanimity within the Cabinet
concerning the ban on cigarette sales. On 30 April 2020 the Minister
of Finance publicly
stated that he was not in favour of continuing
the ban on alcohol and tobacco, because it had cost the country at
that stage, some
R1.5 billion in lost revenue, but that he had lost
that debate.
[14]
On 15 May 2020 a research paper entitled,
‘LIGHTING UP THE ILLICIT MARKET: SMOKERS’ RESPONSES TO
THE CIGARETTE SALES
BAN IN SOUTH AFRICA’, was published by Prof
Corné van Walbeek, Samantha Filby and Kirsten van der Zee of
the Research
Unit on Economics of Excisable Products at the
University of Cape Town (the Walbeek Report).
[15]
The Walbeek Report is the product of an
online survey conducted from 29 April 2020 to 11 May 2020, which
commenced during Alert
Level 5 that changed to Alert Level 4 on 1 May
2020. The survey targeted people ‘who were regular cigarette
smokers in the
period immediately before the ban on cigarette sales
was announced on 25 March 2020’. The aim of the research was to
‘explore
how cigarette smokers responded to the ban’ on
the sale of cigarettes and ‘assess the implications of a
response on
the market for cigarettes in South Africa’.
[16]
The main findings of the Walbeek Report may
be summarised as follows. Of the 10 257 people who continued smoking,
90% continued
to buy cigarettes illegally after the lockdown
commenced. The range of prices of cigarettes increased dramatically:
from R0.50
to R4.00 each before lockdown, to R0.50 to R14.00 each
thereafter. The survey results showed that since the lockdown, the
price
of cigarettes increased by 4.4% per day which suggested that
‘cigarettes experienced hyper-inflation in the first two weeks
of May 2020’. Approximately 16% of smokers reported
successfully quitting smoking during the lockdown. Smokers who
responded
to the survey questionnaire expressed anger at the
prohibition (5 322) and 1 511 said that it impacted adversely on
their emotional
well-being.
[17]
The Walbeek Report states that according to
an estimate of revenues for the 2019/2024 fiscal year, the number of
legal cigarettes
increased by 11% in 2019/2020, probably due to a
decrease in the illicit trade and not an increase in smoking
prevalence. The prohibition
on cigarette sales as part of South
Africa’s response to COVID-19, was likely to undo this
progress. The ban on tobacco sales
fuelled the illicit market for
cigarettes. Illicit traders ‘gained a foothold in a market
where they previously could not
compete’, by exploiting the ban
and the desperation of smokers. When the ban was lifted a price-war
would ensue between cigarette
producers, resulting in a decrease in
cigarette prices and ultimately an increase in cigarette consumption
in the country.
[18]
The Report concludes that the ban on
cigarette sales ‘is failing in what it was intended to do’.
While it was aimed
at supporting public health, people were buying
cigarettes illegally in large quantities, despite the lockdown. The
ban was feeding
the illicit market which would be difficult to
eradicate. The Walbeek Report states: ‘It was an error to
continue with the
cigarette sales ban into Level 4 lockdown’.
[19]
As stated above, on 1 June 2020 the
respondents successfully launched an application in the high court
for an order declaring that
Regulation 45 was unconstitutional and
invalid. The grounds were that Regulation 45 constituted an
infringement of the fundamental
rights to dignity, privacy, bodily
and psychological integrity, freedom of trade, and property.
[20]
The
high court found that Regulation 45 did not reduce the strain on the
health system. Therefore, the appellants had not shown
that
Regulation 45 was necessary or that it furthered the objectives set
out in s 27(2)
(n)
of the Act.
[6]
On this basis the
court concluded that the jurisdictional facts envisaged in that
provision were absent and consequently, Regulation
45 was
ultra
vires
.
The
rights implicated
[21]
The
respondents alleged that Regulation 45 limited the right to dignity
enshrined in s 10 of the Constitution,
[7]
for the following reasons. Consumers of tobacco and vaping products
were denied the right to exercise their free will: they were
prevented from buying these products during the lockdown. This
infringement of personal autonomy, ie the ability to regulate one’s
own affairs, was an unconstitutional limitation of the right to
dignity.
[8]
[22]
It
was further alleged that Regulation 45 was a limitation of the right
to privacy contained in s 14 of the Constitution.
[9]
It denied consumers the right to purchase tobacco products for use in
the privacy of their homes – conduct in respect of
which
consumers legitimately harbour an expectation of privacy.
[10]
This constituted an unjustifiable intrusion by the State into the
private sphere, particularly in the context of the lockdown where
persons were generally confined to their homes.
[23]
Section 12(2)
(b)
of the Constitution, which forms part of the right to freedom and
security of the person, provides that ‘[e]veryone has the
right
to bodily and psychological integrity, which includes the right . . .
to security in and control over their body’.
The respondents
alleged that ‘control’ includes the protection of one’s
autonomy or bodily self-determination
against interference, and that
Regulation 45 limited the freedom and autonomy of adults to choose
tobacco and vaping products,
which they enjoyed and found relaxing
when coping with stress, particularly during the lockdown. This was a
limitation of the right
to bodily and psychological integrity.
[24]
Regulation
45, it was also alleged, constituted a limitation of the right to
choose and practise a trade or occupation freely, guaranteed
under
s 22 of the Constitution.
[11]
Prior to the lockdown, the sale of tobacco and vaping products was
lawful. The effect of Regulation 45 was that individual tobacco
farmers could not sell, and nobody could buy their tobacco. This was
likely to threaten the viability of their farming. These farmers
could be faced with a stark choice whether to continue their chosen
trade or occupation, or cut their losses and leave the industry.
Tobacconists who sold only tobacco and vaping products were unable to
trade. Their right to choose their trade was taken away by
Regulation 45. Manufacturers, wholesalers and general retailers
were denied the right to practise their trade or occupation,
which
the respondents alleged, was arbitrary and not rationally related to
the achievement of a legitimate government purpose.
[25]
Finally,
the respondents asserted that Regulation 45 was a limitation of the
right not to be deprived of property, contained in
s 25(1) of the
Constitution.
[12]
For the
duration of the prohibition on the sale of tobacco, farmers were
unable to sell their recently-harvested crops, which could
go to
waste. They were also unable to use their farms productively, in
which they had invested substantial capital. Manufacturers
were not
able to use their costly factories and equipment to manufacture
tobacco and vaping products, or sell what they had produced.
Wholesalers and retailers were unable to sell their stock-in-hand of
tobacco and vaping products, or utilise their facilities
beneficially. All of these industry participants were unable to
alienate their property (tobacco and vaping products) and realise
the
value in that property for commercial gain. Manufacturers and
wholesalers were unable to employ their capital assets to turn
a
profit. This was a significant limitation of the use, enjoyment and
exploitation of their property.
The
rights were limited
[26]
Counsel for the appellants contended that
Regulation 45 did not limit the relevant fundamental rights based on
two arguments. The
first was that Regulation 45 did not prohibit the
use
of
tobacco products, but rather their
sale
.
But this is a distinction without a difference. The Minister’s
affidavit makes it plain that the only reason for the prohibition
on
the sale of tobacco and vaping products, was to make it impossible
for people to
consume
those products during the lockdown. In fact, the Minister’s
case was that the
use
of tobacco products and the behavioural risks associated with that
use (the sharing of lit cigarettes), increased the risks of
developing a more severe form of COVID-19, and the transmission of
the disease.
[27]
The second argument was that the primary
right implicated by Regulation 45 was the right to freedom of
trade, occupation and
profession in s 22 of the Constitution,
and that even if the regulation had a limiting effect on the right to
dignity and
privacy, that effect was incidental to its main purpose –
to regulate the rights of tobacco farmers and tobacconists to sell
their products.
[28]
This
argument however has no basis in the evidence. The Minister herself
stated that Regulation 45 ‘seeks to reduce the incidence
of
smoking’. This is a direct limitation of the rights to dignity,
and the right to bodily and psychological integrity. In
these
circumstances, it is difficult to see how the effect of Regulation 45
was incidental. Further, the authorities on which the
appellants
relied, namely
Soobramoney
[13]
and
Dawood
,
[14]
do not support their contention that the limitation exercise must be
performed under s 22 of the Constitution, because that is
the primary
right implicated.
[29]
Soobramoney
concerned
the interpretation and application of the rights to housing, health
care, food, water and social security in ss 26 and
27 of the
Constitution.
[15]
The
Constitutional Court in
Dawood
held
that in many cases where the value of human dignity is implicated,
the ‘primary constitutional breach occasioned may
be of a more
specific right such as the right to bodily integrity, the right to
equality or the right not to be subjected to slavery,
servitude or
forced labour’.
[16]
It
means no more than this: in a case where it is alleged that the right
to dignity is infringed, the correct enquiry may involve
the breach
of some other fundamental right.
[30]
The reason for the second argument is not
far to seek. The Minister preferred to apply the rationality test
applicable to s 22,
rather than the more stringent proportionality
test required by s 36 of the Constitution. The jurisprudence of the
Constitutional
Court referred to below, however, does not permit the
Minister to preclude the s 36 enquiry in this manner.
[31]
In
any event, the appellants’ second argument has already been
rejected by this Court in
Esau
,
[17]
a case in which the constitutionality of the Level 4 Regulations was
challenged. Plasket JA said:
‘
I
accept too that regulations 28(1), 28(3) and 28(4) also infringe the
fundamental right to human dignity to the extent that they
limit the
freedom that everyone has to make their own decisions, as consumers,
as to what goods they wish to purchase. These regulations
also
infringe the fundamental right to freedom of trade, occupation and
profession – the right to “perform activities
by means of
which a livelihood is pursued”. This right is infringed in that
people may only practise their chosen trade,
occupation or profession
to the extent permitted by the regulations.’
[18]
[32]
The contention that Regulation 45 was not a
limitation of the relevant fundamental rights was not pressed before
us, although we
were informed that it had not been abandoned. Rather,
the case was argued on the basis that the rights implicated were
limited,
but that Regulation 45 was reasonable and justifiable under
s 36 of the Constitution. It is to that enquiry that I now turn.
The
s 36 limitation enquiry
[33]
The
determination of the constitutionality of Regulation 45 involves a
two-stage analysis: the respondents are required to establish
that
the regulation limits one or more fundamental rights and if they do
so, the burden shifts to the appellants to justify the
limitation in
terms of s 36(1) of the Constitution.
[19]
If the limitation is not reasonable and justifiable under s 36(1),
Regulation 45 must be declared to be inconsistent with the
Constitution and invalid to the extent of that inconsistency.
[20]
[34]
At
the outset, the approach to a justification analysis under s 36 of
the Constitution in a time of national crisis such the COVID-19
pandemic, as stated in
Esau
,
[21]
bears repetition:
‘
[T]he
executive has no free hand to act as it pleases, and all of the
measures it adopts in order to meet the exigencies that the
nation
faces must be rooted in law and comply with the Constitution . . .
That
is not to say that the courts have untrammelled powers to interfere
with the measures chosen by the executive to meet the challenge
faced
by the nation. Judicial power, like all public power, is subject to
the rule of law.’
[22]
[35]
The
s 36 limitation enquiry requires a balancing of two sets of
interests. On the one hand, there is the right that is limited:
its
nature; its importance in an open and democratic society based on
human dignity, equality and freedom; and the nature and extent
of the
limitation. On the other hand, there is the importance of the purpose
of the limitation. What must be assessed overall,
is whether the
limitation is proportional (whether it invades the fundamental right
as little as possible, balancing the harm caused
against the purpose
served) and whether it is reasonable (having regard to its purpose
and effect).
[23]
[36]
The
principles governing the limitation enquiry are settled. The party
seeking to justify an impugned law – usually the organ
of state
responsible for its administration – must put the factual
material or policy considerations justifying it before
the court.
[24]
Although the party relying on the justification must establish the
facts on which the justification depends, a legislative choice
is not
always subject to courtroom fact-finding and may be based on
reasonable inferences unsupported by empirical data.
[25]
Where the State fails to prove data and there are cogent objective
factors pointing in the opposite direction, the State would
have
failed to establish that the limitation is reasonable and
justifiable.
[26]
[37]
The Minister’s case on justification
may be summarised as follows. The overarching reasons for prohibiting
the sale of tobacco
and vaping products for domestic consumption in
Alert Level 3 of the lockdown, were to protect human life and health,
and reduce
the potential strain on the health system, particularly
given the then predicted steep rise in the rate of infections
following
the lifting of the Level 4 restrictions on work and the
movement of people necessary to re-start the economy. The use of
tobacco
products increased behavioural risks associated with the
transmission of COVID-19, as some smokers share lit cigarettes. The
emerging
research concerning the relationship between smoking tobacco
products and COVID-19 showed that the severity of COVID-19 outcomes
is greater in smokers than non-smokers. Smokers have higher intensive
care unit (ICU) admission rates, a higher need for ventilators
and a
higher mortality rate than non-smokers. Smoking thus increases the
strain on the country’s health care resources, including
health
workers.
[38]
It is convenient at this point to deal with
the ground of justification based on the behavioural risks concerning
the sharing of
lit cigarettes. Regulation 45 did little to address
this concern. As the Walbeek Report shows, some 90% of smokers did
not stop
smoking during the lockdown and continued to purchase
cigarettes illicitly. Thus, smokers would have continued to share
illicit
cigarettes despite Regulation 45. And there is no evidence of
any sharing of vaping products by the users of those products.
[39]
Aside from this, any concerns about the
sharing of lit cigarettes could have been addressed by measures other
than an absolute prohibition
on the sale of cigarettes. The founding
affidavit states that the Minister could have embarked on a targeted
awareness campaign
aimed at ensuring that tobacco users do not behave
in a manner that might increase the spread of COVID-19. The
Government implemented
widespread education and awareness campaigns
to inform people about social distancing and sanitising measures to
reduce the spread
of the disease. For example, the Minister advised
the public not to share spoons at funerals. Similar measures could
have been
taken in relation to the use of tobacco and vaping
products.
[40]
The
remaining reasons for promulgating Regulation 45, the Minister said,
were supported by a WHO statement and scientific brief
dated 11 May
2020 and 26 May 2020, respectively. In the ‘WHO statement:
Tobacco use and COVID-19’, the WHO said this.
A review of
studies by public health experts convened by the WHO on 29 April 2020
found that smokers were more likely to develop
severe disease with
COVID-19, compared to non-smokers. Available research suggested that
smokers were at a higher risk of developing
severe disease and death.
The WHO recommended that smokers take immediate steps to quit by
using proven methods.
[27]
[41]
The WHO’s Scientific Brief entitled
‘Smoking and COVID-19’ concludes as follows:
‘
At
the time of this review, the available evidence suggests that smoking
is associated with increased severity of disease and death
in
hospitalised COVID-19 patients. Although likely related to severity,
no evidence to quantify the risk to smokers of hospitalisation
with
COVID-19 or of infection by SARS-Cov-2 was found in the peer-reviewed
literature. Population-based studies are needed to address
these
questions.’
[42]
The WHO statement and Scientific Brief
however, do not support the Minister’s justification for the
prohibition. In neither
publication is it suggested that the sale of
tobacco or vaping products should be prohibited. The Scientific Brief
itself states:
‘
There
are currently no peer reviewed studies that have evaluated the risk
of SARS-Cov-2 infection among smokers. This research question
requires well-designed population-based studies that control for age
and relevant underlying risk factors.’
[43]
As to the risk of smokers being
hospitalised for COVID-19, the Scientific Brief states:
‘
There
are currently no peer-reviewed studies that directly estimate the
risk of hospitalisation with COVID-19 among smokers. However,
27
observational studies found that smokers constituted 1.4-18.5% of
hospitalised adults. Two meta-analyses have been published
which
pooled the prevalence of smokers in hospitalized patients across
studies based in China. The meta-analysis by Emami et al.
analysed
data for 2986 patients and found a pooled prevalence of smoking of
7.6% (3.8% -12.4%) while Farsalinos et al. analysed
data of 5960
hospitalized patients and found a pooled prevalence of 6.5% (1.4% -
12.6%).’
[28]
[44]
More fundamentally, in order to
establish the primary justification that smokers have higher ICU
admission rates, a higher need
for ventilators and a higher mortality
rate than non-smokers, which would increase the strain on health care
resources, the Minister
was required to show: (i) that smoking leads
to a more severe COVID-19 disease progression; (ii) that a temporary
ban on the sale
of tobacco products during lockdown will reverse or
lessen that disease progression; (iii) that Regulation 45 is
effective in materially
reducing the number of smokers; and (iv) that
the reduction in smoking over the period that the ban was intended to
be in place
would have led to reduced ICU bed occupancy at a level
that would have had a material impact on the ability of the public
health
system to cope with COVID-19 admissions: in short, that the
purpose of Regulation 45 outweighed the limitation of the relevant
rights. Each of these requirements is dealt with, in turn.
Does
smoking lead to more severe COVID-19 progression?
[45]
The Minister’s statement that
‘smokers are more likely to develop severe disease with
COVID-19, compared to non-smokers’,
was not established in the
evidence. The WHO Scientific Brief states that there is no
peer-reviewed studies to estimate the risk
of hospitalisation of
smokers who contract COVID-19. This is hardly surprising given that
according to the medical literature,
the pandemic, an evolving
infectious disease, was still under progression and there was limited
data with regard to clinical characteristics
of patients and their
prognostic factors, and smoking was assumed to be possibly associated
with an adverse disease prognosis.
[46]
What is more, the appellants’ expert,
Prof London, a Professor of Public Health and Family Medicine at the
University of Cape
Town (UCT), conceded that the findings in the
literature on the risk of infection or hospitalisation for COVID-19
are mixed; and
stated that the literature as to whether or not
smoking is a risk factor for severe COVID-19 goes both ways. Prof
London referred
to five studies published in peer-reviewed scientific
journals showing that smoking is a risk factor for severe COVID-19,
and the
opposite view taken in two peer-reviewed articles relied on
by the respondents’ expert, Dr Morjaria, a Consultant Physician
in Respiratory Medicine. However, the Scientific Brief by the WHO
dated 30 June 2020, and the five studies relied on by Prof London,
were published after the promulgation of Regulation 45, and thus were
not considered by the Minister.
[47]
It seems to me that on balance, Dr
Morjaria’s opinion that the scientific evidence on the question
whether smoking increases
COVID-19 disease progression is ‘mixed
and inconclusive’, is sound. It follows that the Minister’s
statement
that ‘[a]t this point in time, the evidence as a
whole suggests that smokers are more likely than non-smokers to
develop
a severe case of COVID-19, requiring a ventilator or
admission to ICU’, is unsustainable on the evidence.
The
effect of quitting smoking on COVID-19 disease progression
[48]
Even if this Court were to find that an
association between smoking and disease progression in relation to
COVID-19 is established
on the papers, the Minister had to establish
that the temporary ban on smoking during the lockdown was likely to
reverse or lessen
the progression of the disease. The reason is
obvious: if smoking is associated with severe COVID-19 but that
association would
continue even if a person were to stop smoking,
then Regulation 45 would be incapable of achieving its stated purpose
of reducing
the burden on the health system to cope with severe cases
of COVID-19.
[49]
The point is that the medical evidence on
both sides showed that the dangers from cigarette smoking, more
specifically its adverse
effects on the respiratory system that
impairs pulmonary defence mechanisms, result from long-term chronic
use. Thus, even if it
were assumed that the Minister has shown that
the smoking population is more susceptible to certain COVID-19 risks,
that susceptibility
would be the result of years or decades of prior
smoking. The Minister bore the onus of showing that this
susceptibility would
be reduced or reversed by a temporary cessation
of smoking during the tobacco ban.
[50]
The Minister apparently did not appreciate
this issue and made no attempt to discharge this onus. The issue is
not addressed at
all in the WHO literature on which the Minister
relied. Neither Prof London nor Dr Nyamande, a Specialist Physician
and Pulmonologist
and the Minister’s expert, addressed the
issue in their affidavits. They dealt with the general health
benefits resulting
from quitting smoking, but did not say that this
would assist in relation to COVID-19.
[51]
Prof London conceded that there is no
scientific data to show that quitting smoking will reduce disease
severity in relation to
COVID-19. He suggested tentatively that
‘quitting smoking may reverse the receptor upregulation that is
thought to be the
mechanism by which smoking increases the risk for
severe COVID-19 disease’. However, Prof London agreed that this
would only
be the case ‘if the link between upregulation of
ACE-2 receptors and increased risk for severe COVID-19 is accepted’.
Dr Morjaria however showed that this link is ‘speculative’,
because there is no peer-reviewed evidence establishing
the clinical
significance of upregulation of ACE-2 receptors in relation to
COVID-19 risks. He said that the literature cited by
Prof London
suggests that downregulation of ACE-2 associated with quitting
smoking, is not immediate and is observed in smokers
who had quit for
at least a year.
[52]
In short, there was no scientific
justification for the continued ban on the sale of tobacco products:
there is no evidence that
short-term quitting has clinical
significance for COVID-19 severity and outcomes.
[53]
That left Dr Egbe as the only expert to
address the issue on behalf of the Minister. But Dr Egbe is not a
medical doctor: she is
a Research Psychologist. Moreover, Dr Egbe
conceded that ‘there is not yet enough data to assess whether
and/or to what extent
the chance of infection or disease progression
decreases when a person quits smoking’. At most, Dr Egbe
suggested that it
was ‘logical’ to believe that stopping
smoking would ‘give [smokers’] lungs a fighting chance
against the
disease’.
[54]
In the light of what is stated above, Dr
Morjaria’s conclusion that there is no consensus that current
smoking is a risk factor
for infection or COVID-19 disease
progression, in my view, is consistent with the medical evidence, and
makes good sense. He said:
‘
[B]ased
on currently available data in the evolving literature there is an
emerging consensus that risk factors for severe COVID-19
include:
older age, male gender, medical comorbidities including
cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, hypertension, increased body
mass
index (BMI), chronic kidney disease, solid organ transplants and
chronic pulmonary diseases. . . [T]here is no consensus in
relation
to current smoking being a risk factor for infection or COVID-19
disease progression. While some of these generally accepted
risk
factors for COVID-19 severity can be caused by smoking . . . the
impact of smoking in relation to these diseases occurs over
a long
period of time, often many years (not weeks or months).’
[55]
If quitting smoking does not confer a
benefit in relation to the chance of infection or COVID-19 disease
progression (as opposed
to general improvements in health), it means
that the objectives of Regulation 45 would not have been achieved.
Accordingly, the
Minister did not show that the temporary ban on
smoking would have lessened or reversed COVID-19 disease progression.
Regulation
45 did not materially reduce the number of smokers
[56]
The respondents relied on the Walbeek
Report to show that Regulation 45 was ineffective in reducing the
number of smokers. According
to the Report, 90% of survey respondents
who did not quit smoking indicated that they had purchased cigarettes
during the lockdown.
This means that of the total survey respondents,
16% had quit smoking and only 8.4%, ie 10% of 84% had not purchased
cigarettes
during the lockdown. Differently stated, 75.6% of survey
respondents had purchased cigarettes during the lockdown. Even the
report
by Genesis Analytics (Genesis), a firm of economists engaged
by the Minister to provide an economic assessment of the respondents’
arguments, states that ‘76% would be a high proportion’.
[57]
The Minister claimed that Regulation 45 was
effective in reducing the number of smokers, based on a study by the
Human Sciences
Research Council (HSRC), a report by Genesis, a survey
by M4Jam (Pty) Ltd (M4Jam), the evidence of Mr Richard Murgatroyd, an
economist
and partner at RBB Economics (RBB), and expert evidence by
Dr Ross, the Deputy Director of the Research Unit on the Economics of
Excisable Products at UCT.
[58]
The HSRC study was conducted between 27
March 2020 and 24 April 2020, during Alert Level 5 over the first
four weeks of the lockdown.
The statement in the HSRC study that
11.8% of smokers were able to buy cigarettes during this period has
little probative value
because, as stated in the Genesis Report,
smokers would have stockpiled cigarettes when the lockdown was first
announced. In any
event, the RBB Report offers several reasons for
being sceptical of the results of the HSRC study. For example, the
RBB Report
states:
‘
[I]t
it is inherently far more plausible that smokers were able to
continue consuming tobacco products without having to make purchases
during the period covered by the HSRC study, by consuming stockpiles
accumulated before the ban, than during the period covered
[by] the
van Walbeek study. Consistent with this, the van Walbeek study finds
that most respondents (90% of smokers) had stocked
up on cigarettes
before the start of the lockdown.’
[59]
The survey by M4Jam also has little
probative value because M4Jam is not a market research company, but a
crowd-sourcing data platform.
The author of the survey herself
describes it as ‘an informal and non-scientific survey’
and cautions that ‘the
information contained therein is not
intended as a substitute for any formal research conducted by any
third party’. The
Genesis Report states that a ‘non-trivial’
proportion of smokers had stopped smoking. Genesis did not, however,
perform
any independent research to compute what that proportion is.
[60]
Dr Ross dealt with this issue most fully on
behalf of the Minister. According to Dr Ross, Regulation 45 would
have reduced smoking
prevalence (the percentage of adults who smoke)
and smoking intensity (the number of cigarettes consumed by a smoker
per day),
because smokers would have been unable to afford the full
price of cigarettes that are sold unlawfully during lockdown. In
fact,
she said that this price would consist of ‘both monetary
value (money paid to the seller) and the effort expended to purchase
cigarettes (e.g. time, travel expenses, risk of prosecution). The ban
on cigarette sales increased both components of the price’.
[61]
Dr Ross performed a price elasticity
exercise regarding smoking prevalence and said that there would be a
‘10% to 15% quit
rate’, and pointed out that this was
close to the number of 16% in the Walbeek Report. Since there are 8
million smokers
in South Africa, Dr Ross concluded that ‘if 10%
to 15% of them quit smoking due to the ban, this represents 0.8 to
1.2 million
quitters’.
[62]
The evidence of Dr Ross on behalf of the
Minister is entirely destructive of the Minister’s case
concerning the effectiveness
of Regulation 45 – its foundation
is illegality. It means that any reduction in smoking would have
occurred because smokers
would not have been able to afford the
prices of cigarettes on the black market. The Minister’s claim
that Regulation 45
was effective because most smokers would have
contravened the law, but a small minority of them would not have been
able to afford
the prices of illicit cigarettes, is constitutionally
perverse – it relies on unlawful conduct (the sale of illegal
cigarettes
at a premium) in order to achieve the intended outcome (a
reduction in smoking).
[63]
This perversity is exacerbated by the fact
that the State could have achieved the same outcome by imposing a
temporary increase
in excise duty on cigarettes, so that the price of
cigarettes sold lawfully would be the same as the price of cigarettes
sold unlawfully
during the lockdown. The difference, as the full
court pointed out, is that the fiscus would then have collected the
tax revenue
lost when cigarettes were sold unlawfully while
Regulation 45 was in force. In other words, there was an option that
was less restrictive
than limiting the respondents’
constitutional rights. That option would have had the additional
advantage of generating funds
to expand the number of ICU beds beyond
the number that might have been saved by the tobacco ban.
[64]
What all of this shows is that on the
Minister’s own evidence, Regulation 45 did not achieve its
stated purpose: ‘to
reduce the incidence of smoking’.
This, because only 10% to 15% of smokers would have stopped smoking,
and then only for
the reason that they would not have been able to
afford the price of illegal cigarettes. Although the appellants
submitted that
number of quitters referred to in the Walbeek report
(16%) is significant, the fact remains: some 90% of smokers continued
to smoke
while Regulation 45 was in force.
The
purpose of Regulation 45 did not outweigh the limitation of the
rights
[65]
The
Minister was obliged to show that the benefits of Regulation 45
exceeded the harm it caused, failing which the limitation of
constitutional rights would not be reasonable and justifiable.
Section 36(1) of the Constitution requires the court to ‘weigh
the extent of the limitation of the right against the purpose for
which the legislation was enacted’.
[29]
[66]
According to the Minister, Regulation 45
would have made available more ICU beds and ventilators by preventing
smokers from contracting
a more serious form of COVID-19. The
Minister contended that if 1% of the 8 million smokers in South
Africa had to contract COVID-19,
and 5% of that number needed ICU
beds, about 4 000 smokers would require ICU beds and ventilators.
There are approximately 3 300
ICU beds in South Africa.
[67]
Counsel for the appellants submitted that
the 1% number was ‘illustrative’. This means that the
Minister did not put
up any evidence to support the contention that
admitting 4 000 smokers to ICUs would place undue strain on the
health system.
For this reason, I do not think that the respondents’
calculation that there would have been about 16 fewer patients in the
ICU than would have been the case had there been no prohibition on
the sale of tobacco products, and that this did not show that
the
health system would not have been able to cope, takes the matter any
further.
[68]
As is demonstrated above, the Minister did
not discharge the onus of showing that the infringement of the
fundamental rights in
issue was justified. On the contrary, the
evidence shows that the purpose sought to be achieved by Regulation
45 did not outweigh
the limitation of those rights. There can be no
question that Regulation 45 was an unjustifiable limitation of the
rights to dignity,
and bodily and psychological integrity.
[69]
The third respondent stated that she was
involved in a life-threatening car accident as a result of which she
developed post-traumatic
stress disorder (PTSD). She smokes organic
tobacco in order to cope with PTSD, which she finds pleasurable and
relaxing, and which
has helped her overcome her addiction to hard
drugs, which included heroin and crack cocaine. She has been clean
for 20 years.
When she ran out of tobacco on 1 May 2020, in
desperation she resorted to smoking Rooibos tea and herbal teas, and
bought tobacco
on the black market at three times the normal price.
After this purchase she suffered a panic attack and heart
palpitations. This
evidence shows that Regulation 45 unjustifiably
limited the autonomy and freedom of persons to regulate their own
affairs, to choose
which products to buy to cope with stress, and to
exercise control over their bodily and psychological well-being.
[70]
The high court’s finding that the
right to privacy was infringed, however, is inconsistent with the
reach and operation of
that right. In
Bernstein
the Constitutional Court said:
‘
The
truism that no right is to be considered absolute implies that from
the outset of interpretation its right is always already
limited by
every other right accruing to another citizen. In the context of
privacy this would mean that it is only the inner sanctum
of a
person, such as his/her family life, sexual preference and home
environment, which is shielded from erosion by conflicting
rights of
the community. . . . Privacy is acknowledged in the truly personal
realm, but as a person moves into communal relations
and activities
such as business and social interaction, the scope of personal space
shrinks accordingly.’
The
Court went on to say:
‘
A
very high level of protection is given to the individual’s
intimate personal sphere of life and the maintenance of its basic
preconditions and there is a final untouchable sphere of human
freedom that is beyond interference from any public authority. So
much so that, in regard to this most intimate core of privacy, no
justifiable limitation thereof can take place. But this most
intimate
core is narrowly construed. This inviolable core is left behind once
an individual enters into relationships with persons
outside this
closest intimate sphere; the individual’s activities then
acquire a social dimension and a right of privacy
in this context
becomes subject to limitation.’
[30]
[71]
Applied to the present case, Regulation 45
did not impact on any particular person or his or her private life.
Neither did it limit
the intimate personal sphere of life of any
individual. Instead, Regulation 45 prohibited the sale of tobacco and
vaping products,
which involved an individual’s outside
relations with others. Therefore, the right to privacy was neither
implicated nor
infringed.
[72]
Regulation 45 threatened the stability of
the entire tobacco value chain. Tobacconists who sold only tobacco
and vaping products
were unable to trade at all. They were the only
retailers of goods that were prevented from opening their doors under
Alert Level
3. Many informal traders were forced to close their shops
or stalls.
[73]
Regulation 45 meant that tobacco farmers
had no buyers for their tobacco and were likely to go out of
business. Although the Minister
said that exports were permitted, it
was not feasible, in a very short period of time, for local tobacco
farmers to find external
purchasers to purchase the volumes of
tobacco that BATSA would have purchased. Thus, tobacco farmers were
unable to sell harvested
tobacco crops and forced to continue
operations without any income or cash flow from the rest of the
tobacco value chain.
[74]
When the application was launched there
were more than 200 commercial farmers and over 150 emerging farmers
producing tobacco in
South Africa. They provided about 8 000 jobs for
employees, responsible for more than 30,000 dependants, mainly in
rural areas
of the country where employment opportunities are scarce.
The inability of tobacco farmers to sell their crops undermined their
ability to continue paying their workers and jeopardised their
financial ability. This was aggravated by the fact that tobacco
farmers were excluded from the R1.2 billion disaster relief fund
intervention made available to assist South African farmers with
the
impact of COVID-19.
[75]
As a result of Regulation 45, BATSA lost
revenue of approximately R322 million per week. Its total loss of
revenue exceeded R2 billion
in the nine-week period since the
lockdown commenced.
[76]
Regulation
45 unjustifiably limited the right to freedom of trade. As was held
in
South
African Diamond Producers
,
a law ‘providing that certain persons may no longer continue to
practise [a] trade, would limit the choice element of section
22; in
these cases there is a legal barrier to choice’.
[31]
The Minister contended that Regulation 45 was temporary. However, it
was not clear at the time when the prohibition would end –
the
Minister herself contemplated that the prohibition could continue for
a year. Regulation 45 was rescinded in August 2020. Before
that
however, tobacconists and tobacco farmers did not know for how long
they would be prevented from practising their trade.
[77]
Regulation
45 was also an unjustified limitation of the right to property. It
substantially interfered with the right to use or
exploit property,
as described in paragraph 25 above. The Minister’s contention
that this limitation also was temporary,
is untenable for the reasons
advanced above. Had the prohibition continued in force for a year as
envisaged by the Minister, very
few businesses would have been able
to survive. Given the substantial limitation on the right to
property, the Minister was required
to show a rational connection
between the deprivation and the end sought to be achieved (the
purpose of Regulation 45), which had
to be proportionate.
[32]
This was not shown.
[78]
In conclusion on the justification
analysis: The extent to which Regulation 45 limited the rights in
issue, particularly given the
lack of factual and scientific evidence
to support its promulgation, was disproportionate to the nature and
importance of the rights
infringed, which are foundational to a
democracy. As the Constitutional Court recently held:
‘
.
. . [T]
he
rights in the Bill of Rights are an embodiment of the very character
or cornerstone of our constitutional democracy. Both the
nature and
importance of the right must necessarily be taken into account. And
the State has no inherent “right” to
limit these rights.
But it is constitutionally obliged to respect, protect, promote and
fulfil them.’
[33]
[79]
In sum, as stated in the Walbeek Report,
‘the disadvantages of the ban outweigh the advantages’.
For all of the above
reasons, and on the facts, the Minister failed
to justify the limitation of constitutional rights in terms of s 36
of the Constitution.
The high court was thus correct in coming to
this conclusion.
The
application to review Regulation 45
[80]
The respondents contended that Regulation
45 was unlawful and fell to be reviewed and set aside in terms of the
Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) or the
principle of legality, on the following grounds. The Minister
abdicated her power to the National
Coronavirus Command Council
(NCCC). The Minister had no power under the Act to prohibit the sale
of tobacco and vaping products.
Regulation 45 was unnecessary and
unreasonable. The Minister did not follow a fair procedure in making
the regulations.
[81]
The high court found that the review
grounds based on abdication of power and that the Act does not
authorise the making of a regulation
prohibiting the sale of tobacco
products, had no merit. It held that the threshold for valid
regulation in terms of s 27(2)
(n)
of the Act was that the regulation must be ‘strictly necessary
to achieve and/or further the objectives set out in section
27(2)
(n)
’;
and that unless it was shown Regulation 45 served to reduce the
strain on the health system, it would be
ultra
vires
. The appellants say that the
latter findings are incorrect.
[82]
Before us, counsel for the respondents,
rightly, did not press the argument that the Minister had abandoned
her power to the NCCC.
It was however submitted that Regulation 45
was unlawful for the following reasons. Section 27(2)
(i)
of the Act expressly empowers the making of regulations that suspend
or limit only the sale of alcohol, therefore s 27(2)
(n)
of the Act must be interpreted so as to exclude regulations that
suspend or limit the sale of any other products. Section 27(2)
does
not grant the Minister the power to make regulations that prohibit
the sale of tobacco products in a manner inconsistent with
the
Tobacco Products Control Act. Regulation
45 was not necessary as
contemplated in s 27(2)
(n)
of the Act. Regulation 45 was vitiated by procedural irrationality,
alternatively, procedural unfairness.
[83]
The review was brought in terms of
both the PAJA and the principle of legality. It would make no
difference to the outcome if the
provisions of the PAJA are not
applied. On this basis, the respondents’ review grounds are
considered under the principle
of legality.
The
interpretation of s 27(2)(n) of the Act
[84]
This
Court in
Capitec
[34]
has explained that the triad of text, context and purpose in
statutory interpretation should not be used in a mechanical fashion.
It is the relationship between the words used, the concepts expressed
by those words and the place of the contested provision within
the
scheme of the statute as a whole, which constitutes the unitary
exercise of interpretation.
[85]
The starting point is the purposes of the
Act. According to its long title, it was passed to provide for:
‘
an
integrated and co-ordinated disaster management policy that focuses
on preventing or reducing the risk of disasters, mitigating
the
severity of disasters, emergency preparedness, rapid and effective
response to disasters, and post-disaster recovery and rehabilitation;
the
establishment and functioning of national, provincial, and municipal
disaster management centres. . . .’
[86]
Section 1 defines a ‘disaster’
as:
‘
.
. . a progressive or sudden, widespread or localised natural or
human-caused occurrence which
(a)
causes or threatens to cause-
(i)
death injury or disease;
(ii)
damage to property, infrastructure or the environment; or
(iii)
significant disruption of the life of the community; and
(b)
is of a magnitude
that exceeds the ability of those affected by the disaster to cope
with its effects using only their own resources.’
[87]
Consistent with the purposes of the Act, s
23(1) provides that the National Disaster Management Centre must
determine whether a
disastrous event or the threat of such event
should be regarded as a disaster under the Act and if so, the
National Centre must
assess the magnitude and severity or potential
magnitude and severity of the disaster and classify the disaster as a
local, provincial
or national disaster.
[88]
Section 27(1) of the Act empowers the
Minister to declare a national state of disaster if ‘existing
legislation and contingency
arrangements do not adequately provide
for the national executive to deal effectively with the disaster’,
or ‘other
special circumstances warrant the declaration of a
national state of disaster’. Section 27(2)
(a)-(m)
lists the matters in respect of which the Minister is empowered to
make regulations. Subsection 2
(n)
specifically authorises the Minister to make regulations or issue
directions concerning ‘other steps that may be necessary
to
prevent an escalation of the disaster, or to alleviate, contain and
minimise the effects of the disaster’, ie in relation
to
matters other than those stated in s 27(2)
(a)-(m).
[89]
These provisions of the Act make it clear
that if it is necessary to suspend or limit the sale of a commodity
other than alcohol,
in order to prevent an escalation of a disaster,
or to alleviate, contain and minimise its effects, and if doing so is
necessary
for one or more of the purposes set out in s 27(3), then
the Minister is empowered to make regulations suspending or limiting
the
sale of that commodity in terms of s 27(2)
(n)
.
This construction accords with the plain language of ss 27(2) and
27(3), the immediate context of s 27(2)
(n)
,
and the purposes of the Act.
[90]
The
respondents’ reliance on the maxim
inclusio
unius est exclusio alterius
for the submission that the power to make regulations under s
27(2)
(n)
must be interpreted to exclude the making of regulations that suspend
or limit the sale of any products other than alcohol, because
s
27(2)
(i)
expressly empowers the making of regulations that suspend or limit
the sale of only alcohol, is misplaced. It ignores the catch-all
power conferred by s 27(2)
(n)
,
in terms of which regulations may be made concerning other steps that
may be necessary to contain the disaster. Such steps would
include a
hard lockdown in order to prevent the spread of COVID-19. While it is
correct that the maxim is one of common sense,
it is not a rule of
interpretation and must always be applied with great caution.
[35]
[91]
The jurisdictional requirements for the
exercise of the power under s 27(2)
(n)
are these. There must be a national state of disaster. The Minister
must consult the responsible Cabinet member. The steps taken
to
prevent an escalation of a disaster, or to alleviate, contain and
minimise its effects, must be necessary. Whether these steps
are
necessary turns on the objectively ascertained facts, and not on the
subjective beliefs of the Minister. The power in s 27(2)
(n)
,
as in the case of all the powers specified in s 27(2),
must
‘be exercised only to the extent that this is necessary’
for the purposes specified in s 27(3).
[92]
Moreover,
the above interpretation is sensible.
[36]
The original lockdown regulations (Alert Level 5) confined people to
their homes and suspended the sale of many goods. The purpose
of
those regulations was to prevent non-essential movement of and
contact between people, in order to slow the spread of COVID-19,
and
to enable the health system to implement measures to cope with an
anticipated surge in the numbers of gravely ill people. On
the
respondents’
inclusio
unius
argument, in order to achieve these objectives, the Minister was
empowered to suspend only the sale of alcohol, and not any other
commodity. The argument is untenable. It ignores the purposes of the
Act and s 27(2)
(n)
.
Regulation
45 is consistent with the
Tobacco Products Control Act
[93
]
The respondents argued that
Regulation 45
was invalid because it is inconsistent with the
Tobacco Products
Control Act, since
it purported to prohibit the sale of tobacco
products in all circumstances – including instances where the
sale of tobacco
products is permitted under the
Tobacco Products
Control Act. Section
27(2) of the Act should be interpreted in a way
that the Minister is not empowered to make regulations which are
inconsistent with
an Act of Parliament. Unless s 27(2) is construed
in this manner, so it was submitted, Regulation 45 is
ultra
vires
.
[94]
The
submission is unsound. Section 27(2), properly interpreted, indeed
permits the Minister to suspend or limit rights conferred
in terms of
other Acts of Parliament. That much is clear from the matters in
respect of which the Minister is empowered to make
regulations or
issue directions in s 27(2)
(a)-(m).
Most
of these matters are regulated by legislation, such as resources of
the national Government including stores, equipment, vehicles
and
facilities;
[37]
personnel who
render emergency services;
[38]
the regulation of traffic;
[39]
the provision, control or use of temporary accommodation;
[40]
the sale of alcohol;
[41]
and
the installation and maintenance of lines of communication.
[42]
[95]
The point may be illustrated by reference
to s 27(2)
(i)
of the Act. If the sale of alcohol is suspended or limited during a
national state of disaster in terms of s 27(2)
(i)
,
the provisions of the
Liquor Act 59 of 2003
and provincial liquor
laws would remain extant, but their enforcement is temporarily
suspended or limited, whilst the regulation
under s 27(2)
(i)
of the Act is operative. This is specifically authorised in terms of
s 27(2), and is a consequence of the declaration of a
national
state of disaster. For these reasons, the respondents’ argument
that the power to regulate does not include the
power to prohibit, is
unsustainable.
[96]
Further,
the power to make regulations under s 27(2) of the Act is not
rendered ‘subject to’ any Act of Parliament.
On the
contrary, s 27(1) empowers the Minister to declare a national state
of disaster by notice in the Gazette if ‘existing
legislation
and contingency arrangements do not adequately provide for the
national executive to deal effectively with the disaster’,
[43]
or if there are other special circumstances that warrant such
declaration.
[44]
That this was
the position when the state of disaster was declared in March 2020 as
a result of the COVID-19 pandemic, is an understatement.
As was
stated in
Esau
,
[45]
the pandemic ‘
posed,
and continues to pose, the biggest threat to this country since the
Spanish influenza pandemic of the immediate post-World
War I years a
century ago’. And contrary to the respondents’ assertion,
nothing turns on the fact that the Minister
declared a national state
of disaster in terms of s 27(1)
(b)
rather than s 27(1)
(a)
.
[97]
The
respondents’ reliance on
Smit
[46]
for the proposition that s 27(2) ‘would . . . be
unconstitutional if it purported to confer on the Minister the power
to
make regulations that have the effect of amending an Act of
Parliament’, is inapposite. Sections 27(2) and 27(3) do not
assign
to the Minister plenary legislative power: it does not grant
the Minister the power to pass, amend or repeal an Act of
Parliament.
[47]
What is more,
ss 27(2) and 27(3) provide a ‘clear and binding framework for
the exercise of the powers’.
[48]
Regulation
45 was unnecessary
[98]
The jurisdictional facts for the exercise
of the power conferred by s 27(2)
(n)
of the Act, have been stated above. Section 27(3) requires that the
powers referred to in s 27(2) be exercised only to the extent
that it
is necessary, in this case, ‘for the purpose of assisting and
protecting the public’ (s 27(3)
(a)
),
or ‘dealing with the destructive and other effects of the
disaster’ (s 27(3)
(e)
).
[99]
Neither power in s 27(2) nor s 27(3) is
expressly said to be exercisable on the basis of the Minister’s
subjective belief,
and as stated, whether the exercise of the powers
in s 27(3) is necessary, involves an objective enquiry. In other
words, it is
for a court to determine whether Regulation 45 was
necessary. It is not for the Minister to say that she believed that
Regulation
45 was necessary to protect the public or to deal with the
destructive effects of COVID-19.
[100]
The
appellants, in reliance on
Fair
Trade Independent Tobacco Association
,
[49]
contended that ‘necessary’ in this context means
‘rational and reasonably necessary’. It was submitted
that the high court, on the authority of
Pheko
,
[50]
erred in concluding that the term ‘necessary’ should be
narrowly interpreted; and that
Pheko
essentially dealt with the concept ‘evacuation’.
[101]
Pheko
concerned
the interpretation of s 55(2)
(d)
of the Act, in relation to a local disaster declared in terms of s
55(1) of the Act. Section 55(2)
(d)
authorises the making of regulations concerning ‘the evacuation
to temporary shelters of all or part of the population from
the
disaster-stricken or threatened area if such action is necessary for
the preservation of life’.
[51]
Section 55(2)
(d)
is the local disaster equivalent of s 27(2)
(d)
.
Nkabinde J held that s 55(2)
(d)
must be ‘interpreted narrowly’ and that ‘the
Municipality’s powers following upon the declaration of a
local
state of disaster must be exercised only to the extent that it is
strictly necessary for the purposes set out in s 55(3)’.
[52]
[102]
In
Minister
of Finance v Afribusiness NPC
,
[53]
the interpretation of
s 5(1)
of the
Preferential
Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000
was
in issue. It provides that the relevant Minister ‘may make
regulations regarding any matter that may be necessary or expedient
to prescribe in order to achieve the objects of this Act’.
[54]
Madlanga J, writing for the majority, held that the word necessary in
that context means something ‘needing to be done’
or
‘that must be done’.
[103]
Applied
to the present case, the word ‘necessary’ in
s
27(3) must be narrowly construed, to mean ‘strictly necessary’
or ‘essential’, to assist and protect the
public or to
deal with the destructive effects of COVID-19. I say this for the
following reasons. First, if the legislative intent
was that the
power in 27(3) should be exercised to the extent
reasonably
necessary, the lawgiver would have said so. Second, it is a settled
rule of interpretation that words in a statute bear the same
meaning
throughout the statute, unless such interpretation would result in
injustice, incongruity or absurdity.
[55]
Consequently, the term ‘necessary’ cannot mean one thing
in s 55(3) of the Act, and another in
s
27
(3)
.
Third,
and contrary to the appellants’ submission, the meaning of
‘necessary’ cannot depend on the nature of the
matter in
s 27(2) in respect of which regulations are made. Fourth, the power
conferred on the Minister by s 27(2) cuts across
and effectively and
temporarily suspends various statutes dealing with the matters listed
in s 27(2)
(a)
-
(m)
.
It stands to reason that such a power must be exercised only if it is
strictly necessary. Finally, this construction is reinforced
by the
purposes of the Act and the fact that a declared national state of
disaster is of a short duration – three months.
[56]
[104]
The objectives sought to be achieved
by Regulation 45 have been outlined in the Minister’s reasons,
stated above. The Minister
accepted that the reasons for the
prohibition on the sale of tobacco products were confined to the
health risks it posed during
the pandemic. The Minister referred to
scientific literature dealing with the pandemic and contended that
the use of tobacco products
increased the risk of developing a more
severe form of the disease. However, the Minister conceded that the
scientific knowledge
on this issue was ‘still evolving’,
and that the medical literature was not ‘absolutely
conclusive’, but
said that it provided a sufficient basis for
her to ‘rationally conclude that smoking presents heightened
COVID-19 risks’.
[105]
But that is not the test. Section 27(2)
(n)
and s 27(3) posit an objective enquiry as to whether Regulation 45
was necessary to assist and protect the public, and deal with
the
destructive effects of the pandemic. The scientific evidence shows
that it was not. And as stated above, assuming that there
is a causal
link between smoking and the risk of contracting a more severe form
of COVID-19, the Minister would have had to show
that stopping
smoking during the tobacco ban would have reversed or reduced the
risk of contracting a severe form of COVID-19.
This too, has not been
established in evidence.
[106]
To
be valid, the making of Regulation 45 had to comply with the
constitutional principle of legality, which applies to all exercises
of public power and requires that the relevant functionary act
intra
vires
the empowering provision.
[57]
For these reasons, the high court correctly held that inasmuch as
Regulation 45 was not necessary to achieve any of the purposes
listed
in ss 27(2) and 27(3) of the Act, it was
ultra
vires
.
[107]
It
follows that the decision in
Fair
Trade Independent Tobacco Association
,
[58]
in which an application to review and set aside Regulation 45 was
dismissed, is incorrect. It must be regarded as overruled.
Procedural
irrationality
[108]
Procedural
irrationality entails looking at the process leading to the exercise
of public power as a whole and determining whether
the steps in that
process are rationally related to the end sought to be achieved; and
if not, whether the absence of a particular
step (part of the means)
or the absence of a connection between a particular step in the end,
taints the whole process with irrationality.
[59]
Procedural rationality does not mean that the decision-maker must
always afford a hearing to an affected party.
[60]
[109]
On 25 April 2020 the Minister briefed the
media regarding a draft framework for each of the five Alert Levels
to be implemented
from 1 May 2020. The draft framework proposed that
the manufacturing and sale of tobacco products would be permitted in
Alert Levels
4, 3, 2 and 1. Pursuant to this media briefing, a draft
Risk Adjusted Strategy to ease the lockdown restrictions, was
published
for public comment by 27 April 2020.
[110]
On 27 April 2020 the government received
816 sector submissions and 70 014 emails from members of the
public. There were submissions
in favour of lifting the prohibition
on tobacco sales, including one from BATSA, referred to above. A
large number of submissions
were also made on the other side, in
which it was argued that the prohibition on the sale of tobacco
products under Alert Level
4, should continue.
[111]
Before making Regulation 45, the Minister
considered the main issues relevant to the continuation of the
prohibition on the sale
of tobacco, tobacco products, e-cigarettes
and related products during the Alert Level 3 period. These were the
public health-related
reasons pointing towards continuing the
prohibition. The submissions in favour of lifting the prohibition
were also considered,
such as those made by BATSA during the public
participation process which preceded the making of the COVID-19
regulations for the
Alert Level 4 period, and those mentioned by
BATSA in a subsequent media statement on 6 May 2020.
[112]
Both sides of the issue were discussed and
debated in the NCCC and the Cabinet. Ultimately, it was decided that
the prohibition
should be continued. Given these facts, I do not
think it can be said that the decision to continue the prohibition on
the sale
of tobacco and vaping products, was procedurally irrational.
The
cross-appeal on costs
[113]
There can be no doubt that the respondents
had achieved substantial success in the high court. The full court
however ordered the
parties to pay their own costs on the following
grounds. The Minister was ‘under both a constitutional and
moral obligation
to act swiftly at a time when very little was known
about the COVID-19 pandemic and the scientific knowledge thereof was
[scant]
and constantly developing’. The prohibition on the sale
of tobacco products had been lifted shortly after the matter had been
argued.
[114]
The
respondents had raised constitutional issues and had been
substantially successful before the full court. The
Biowatch
principle was therefore applicable,
[61]
namely that in constitutional litigation between a private party and
the State, the general rule is that the private party should
have its
costs paid by the State, and if unsuccessful, each party should pay
its own costs. The Constitutional Court said that
‘particularly
powerful reasons must exist for a court not to award costs against
the state in favour of a private litigant
who achieved substantial
success in proceedings brought against it’.
[62]
[115]
The appellants accept that the
Biowatch
principle would apply if their appeal were to succeed and that there
should then be no costs order against the respondents in this
Court
or in the high court. But they say that if the appeal fails, the
principle does not apply and the respondents are not entitled
to
their costs. The contention is untenable.
[116]
It
is trite that in awarding costs, a court exercises a discretion. An
appellate court will interfere with such discretion only
if the court
below ‘did not act judicially in exercising its discretion, or
based the exercise of that discretion on wrong
principles of law, or
misdirection on the material facts’.
[63]
[117]
This is such a case. The full court did not
consider the
Biowatch
principle. The fact that the prohibition on the sale of tobacco
products had been lifted shortly after the matter was argued, did
not
mean that the respondents were not justified in approaching the high
court to set it aside on an urgent basis. The respondents
had
requested the Minister to lift the prohibition before the application
was launched, but the Minister declined to do so.
[118]
That
the Minister was compelled to act swiftly in response to the COVID-19
pandemic, did not alter the fact that the Minister acted
unconstitutionally.
[64]
The
respondents were compelled to go to court to vindicate their
constitutional rights. The Minister filed voluminous answering
papers, including expert evidence running into hundreds of pages. It
is unfair that the respondents should pay these costs, occasioned
by
the manner in which the Minister chose to litigate.
[119]
It follows that the cross-appeal must be
upheld with costs, including the qualifying expenses of the
respondents’ expert witnesses.
The
order
[120]
In the result, the following order is
issued:
1
The appeal is
dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The cross-appeal is
upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
3
Paragraph 224.2 of
the order of the Western Cape Division of the High Court is
set aside
and replaced with the following order:
‘
The
first and second respondents are ordered to pay the applicants’
costs, including the costs of two counsel and the qualifying
expenses
of the applicants’ expert witnesses.’
A SCHIPPERS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellants:
M T K Moerane SC (with him A Breitenbach SC,
K Pillay and S Kazee)
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney, Cape Town
The State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
For
respondents:
A Cockrell SC (with him A Toefy)
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel, Cape Town
Webbers Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Regulation
27 of the Regulations published under GN R480,
GG
43258, 29 April 2020.
[2]
The
concept, ‘vaping’ refers to the process in terms of
which a consumer inhales, exhales, holds or otherwise has
control
over an electronic delivery system, with or without nicotine.
[3]
Botswana
banned the import and sale of tobacco and tobacco-related products
during a declared six-
month
state
of public emergency
–
https://theconversation.com/tobacco-bans-during-lockdown-should-encourage-renewed-anti-smoking-drives-139690
.
India imposed a ban on tobacco products and e-cigarettes –
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0033350621004418
.
[4]
Regulation
45 was published under GN R608,
GG
43364, 28 May 2020.
[5]
See
fn 4.
[6]
27(2)
(n)
of
the
Disaster Management Act 57 of 2002
provides:
‘
27
Declaration
of national state of disaster
. . .
(2)
If
a national state of disaster has been declared in terms of
subsection (1), the Minister may, subject to subsection (3),
and
after consulting the responsible Cabinet member, make regulations or
issue directions or authorise the issue of directions
concerning-
.
. .
(n)
other steps that may be necessary to prevent an
escalation of the disaster, or to alleviate, contain and minimise
the effects
of the disaster . . . .’
[7]
Section
10 of the Constitution reads:
‘
Everyone
has inherent dignity and the right to have their dignity respected
and protected.’
[8]
Barkhuizen
v Napier
[2007]
ZACC 5
(CC);
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC) para 57.
[9]
Section
14 of the Constitution provides:
‘
Everyone
has the right to privacy, which includes the right not to have–
(a)
their person or home searched;
(b)
their property searched;
(c)
their possessions seized; or
(d)
the privacy of their communications infringed.’
[10]
Bernstein
and Others v Bester N O and Others
[1996] ZACC 2
(CC);
1996 (2) SA 751
(CC) para 77;
Khumalo
and Others v Holomisa
[2002] ZACC 12
(CC);
2002 (5) SA 401
(CC) para 27.
[11]
Section 22 of the Constitution provides:
‘
Every
citizen has the right to choose their trade, occupation or
profession freely. The practice of a trade, occupation or profession
may be regulated by law.’
[12]
Section 25(1) of the Constitution reads:
‘
No
one may be deprived of property except in terms of law of general
application, and no law may permit arbitrary deprivation
of
property.’
[13]
In
Soobramoney v
Minister of Health, KwaZulu-Natal
[1998]
ZACC 17; 1998 (1) SA 765 (CC).
[14]
Dawood
and
Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Others; Shalabi and Another v
Minister of Home Affairs and Others; Thomas and
Another v Minister
of Home Affairs and Others
[2000]
ZACC 8; 2000 (3) SA 936 (CC).
[15]
Soobramoney
fn 13 paras 15-16 and 19.
[16]
Dawood
fn 14 para 35.
[17]
Esau
and
Others v Minister of Co-Operative Governance and Traditional Affairs
and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 9; 2021 (3) SA 593 (SCA).
[18]
Esau
fn 17 para 118.
[19]
‘
36
Limitation
of rights
(1)
The
rights in the Bill of Rights may be limited only in terms of law of
general application to the extent that the limitation
is reasonable
and justifiable in an open and democratic society based on human
dignity, equality and freedom, taking into account
all relevant
factors, including-
(a)
the nature of the right;
(b)
the importance of the purpose of the limitation;
(c)
the nature and extent of the limitation;
(d)
the relation between the limitation and its purpose; and
(e)
less restrictive means to achieve the purpose.
(2)
Except
as provided in subsection (1) or in any other provision of the
Constitution, no law may limit any right entrenched
in the Bill of
Rights’;
Esau
fn
17 para 108.
[20]
Section
172(1)
(a)
of the Constitution.
[21]
Esau
fn 17.
[22]
Esau
fn 17 paras 5 and 6.
[23]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Another v Minister of
Justice and Others
[1998] ZACC 15
;
1999 (1) SA 6
(CC) para 35.
[24]
Minister
of Home Affairs v National Institute for Crime Prevention and the
Reintegration of Offenders (NICRO) and Others
[2004]
ZACC 10
;
2005 (3) SA 280
(CC) (NICRO).
[25]
NICRO
fn 24 paras 35 and 36.
[26]
Teddy
Bear Clinic for Abused Children and Another v Minister of Justice
and Constitutional Development and Another
[2013]
ZACC 35
;
2014 (2) SA 168
(CC) para 84.
[27]
The
WHO statement also describes what happens when a smoker quits, as
follows:
‘
Within
20 minutes of quitting, elevated heart rate and blood pressure drop.
After 12 hours, the carbon monoxide level in the bloodstream
drops
to normal. Within 2-12 weeks, circulation improves and lung function
increases. After 1-9 months, coughing and shortness
of breath
decrease.’
[28]
According
to the Farsalinos paper the pooled prevalence of 6.5% (1.4% - 12.6%)
represented one quarter of the population smoking
prevalence rate in
China of 26%.
[29]
Investigating
Directorate: Serious Economic Offences and Others v Hyundai Motor
Distributors (Pty) Ltd and Others: In Re Hyundai
Motor Distributors
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Smit N O and Others
[2000] ZACC 12
;
2001 (1) SA 545
(CC)
;
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality
fn 23 para 37.
[30]
Bernstein
and Others v Bester and Others NNO
[1996] ZACC 2
;
1996 (2) SA 751
(CC) paras 67 and 77. (Footnotes omitted.)
## [31]South
African Diamond Producers Organisation v Minister of Minerals and
Energy N O and Others[2017]
ZACC 26; 2017 (10) BCLR 1303 (CC); 2017 (6) SA 331 (CC)para
68.
[31]
South
African Diamond Producers Organisation v Minister of Minerals and
Energy N O and Others
[2017]
ZACC 26; 2017 (10) BCLR 1303 (CC); 2017 (6) SA 331 (CC)
para
68.
## [32]First
National Bank of SA Limited t/a Wesbank v Commissioner for the South
African Revenue Services and Another; First National
Bank of SA
Limited t/a Wesbank v Minister of Finance[2002]
ZACC 5; 2002 (4) SA 768; 2002 (7) BCLR 702 (CC) para100;Reflect-All
1025 CC and Others v MEC for Public Transport, Roads and Works,
Gauteng Provincial Government and Another[2009]
ZACC 24; 2009 (6) SA 391 (CC); 2010 (1) BCLR 61 (CC) para 48;Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Limited v Member of the Executive Council for
Economic Development, Environmental Affairs And Tourism,
Eastern
Cape and Others[2015]
ZACC 23; 2015 (6) SA 125 (CC); 2015 (9) BCLR 1052 (CC) para 80.
[32]
First
National Bank of SA Limited t/a Wesbank v Commissioner for the South
African Revenue Services and Another; First National
Bank of SA
Limited t/a Wesbank v Minister of Finance
[2002]
ZACC 5; 2002 (4) SA 768; 2002 (7) BCLR 702 (CC) para
100;
Reflect-All
1025 CC and Others v MEC for Public Transport, Roads and Works,
Gauteng Provincial Government and Another
[2009]
ZACC 24; 2009 (6) SA 391 (CC); 2010 (1) BCLR 61 (CC) para 48;
Shoprite
Checkers (Pty) Limited v Member of the Executive Council for
Economic Development, Environmental Affairs And Tourism,
Eastern
Cape and Others
[2015]
ZACC 23; 2015 (6) SA 125 (CC); 2015 (9) BCLR 1052 (CC) para 80.
## [33]Economic
Freedom Fighters and Another v Minister of Justice and Correctional
Services and Another[2020]
ZACC 25; 2021 (2) BCLR 118 (CC); 2021 (2) SA 1 (CC); 2021 (1) SACR
387 (CC) para 35. (Footnotes omitted.)
[33]
Economic
Freedom Fighters and Another v Minister of Justice and Correctional
Services and Another
[2020]
ZACC 25; 2021 (2) BCLR 118 (CC); 2021 (2) SA 1 (CC); 2021 (1) SACR
387 (CC) para 35. (Footnotes omitted.)
## [34]Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others[2021]
ZASCA 99; [2021] 3 All SA 647 (SCA); 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA) para 25.
[34]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194
(Pty) Ltd and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 99; [2021] 3 All SA 647 (SCA); 2022 (1) SA 100 (SCA) para 25.
[35]
Competition
Commission of South Africa v Pickfords Removals SA (Pty) Ltd
[2020] ZACC 14
;
2021 (3) SA 1
(CC) para 50.
## [36]Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality[2012]
ZASCA 13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA) para
18.
[36]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13; [2012] 2 All SA 262 (SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA) para
18.
[37]
Section
27(2)
(a).
[38]
Section
27(2)
(b).
[39]
Section
27(2)
(e).
[40]
Section
27(2)
(h).
[41]
Section
27(2)
(i).
[42]
Section
27(2)
(j).
[43]
Section
27(1)
(a).
[44]
Section
27(2)
(b)
[45]
Esau
fn
17 para 140.
[46]
Smit
v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others
[2020]
ZACC 29; 2021 (3) BCLR 219 (CC).
[47]
Smit
fn 46 para 31.
[48]
Smit
fn
46 para 36.
[49]
Fair
Trade Independent Tobacco Association v President of the Republic of
South Africa and Another
2021 (1) BCLR 68
(GP) para 87.
[50]
Pheko
and Others v Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality
[2011] ZACC 34
;
2012 (2) SA 598
(CC) para 52.
[51]
Section
27(2)
(d)
of the Act is in identical terms but applies where a national state
of disaster has been declared.
[52]
Pheko
fn
50 para 42.
[53]
Minister
of Finance v Afribusiness NPC
[2022] ZACC 4.
[54]
Minister
of Finance
fn 53 para 114.
## [55]Liesching
and Others v S and Another[2016]
ZACC 41; 2017 (4) BCLR 454 (CC); 2017 (2) SACR 193 (CC) para 33.
[55]
Liesching
and Others v S and Another
[2016]
ZACC 41; 2017 (4) BCLR 454 (CC); 2017 (2) SACR 193 (CC) para 33.
[56]
Section
27(5) of the Act states that national state of disaster that has
been declared lapses three months after it has been declared,
and
may be extended by the Minister for one month at a time before it
lapses.
## [57]Fedsure
Life Assurance Ltd and Others v Greater Johannesburg Transitional
Metropolitan Council and Others[1998]
ZACC 17; 1999 (1) SA 374; 1998 (12) BCLR 1458 (CC)paras
57-59.
[57]
Fedsure
Life Assurance Ltd and Others v Greater Johannesburg Transitional
Metropolitan Council and Others
[1998]
ZACC 17; 1999 (1) SA 374; 1998 (12) BCLR 1458 (CC)
paras
57-59.
[58]
Fair
Trade Independent Tobacco Association
fn
49 paras 2, 13 and 99.
[59]
Albutt
v Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation
2010 (3) SA2 93 (CC) 49-51;
Democratic
Alliance v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
2013 (1) SA 248
(CC) para 39;
Law
Society of South Africa and Others v President of the Republic of
South Africa and Others
2019 (3) SA 30
paras 61-65.
[60]
Democratic
Alliance
fn 59 para 65.
[61]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources
and
Others
[2009]
ZACC 14
;
2009 (6) SA 232
(CC) para 43.
[62]
Biowatch
fn 61 para 24.
[63]
Biowatch
fn 61 para 31.
[64]
Pheko
fn
50 para 52.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Minister of International Relations and Co-operation and Others v Simeka Group (Pty) Ltd and Others (610/2021) [2023] ZASCA 98; [2023] 3 All SA 323 (SCA) (14 June 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 98Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa99% similar
The Minister of International Relations and Co-operation NO and Another v Neo Thando / Elliot Mobility (Pty) Ltd and Another (444/2023) [2024] ZASCA 134; [2025] 1 All SA 31 (SCA) (4 October 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 134Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa99% similar
Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others v Pennington and Another (162/2022) [2023] ZASCA 51 (14 April 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 51Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa99% similar
Democratic Alliance v Minister of Co-operative Governance and Traditional Affairs (700/2022) [2024] ZASCA 65; [2024] 3 All SA 1 (SCA); 2024 (9) BCLR 1189 (SCA); 2024 (5) SA 463 (SCA) (30 April 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 65Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa99% similar
Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Others v Wilhelm Pretorius and Others (440/2022) [2023] ZASCA 155 (17 November 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 155Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar