Case Law[2022] ZASCA 158South Africa
South African Health Products Regulatory Authority and Another v African Christian Democratic Party (869/2021) [2022] ZASCA 158 (21 November 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
21 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Civil procedure – supervisory order – affected parties not heard before order made – order not applied for by any party – no evidence to justify making of order – order set aside.
Judgment
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## South African Health Products Regulatory Authority and Another v African Christian Democratic Party (869/2021) [2022] ZASCA 158 (21 November 2022)
South African Health Products Regulatory Authority and Another v African Christian Democratic Party (869/2021) [2022] ZASCA 158 (21 November 2022)
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sino date 21 November 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case no: 869/2021
In the matter between:
SOUTH AFRICAN HEALTH
PRODUCTS
REGULATORY
AUTHORITY
First Appellant
MINISTER OF
HEALTH
Second Appellant
and
AFRICAN CHRISTIAN
DEMOCRATIC PARTY
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
South
African Health Products Regulatory Authority and Another v African
Christian Democratic Party
(869/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 158
(21 November 2022)
Coram:
Petse AP, Makgoka and Plasket JJA and Windell and
Mali AJJA
Heard:
14 November 2022
Delivered:
21
November
2022
Summary:
Civil procedure – supervisory order –
affected parties not heard before order made – order not
applied for by
any party – no evidence to justify making of
order – order set aside.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Sardiwalla J sitting as court of first
instance):
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
Paragraphs 1 and 2 of the high court’s order are set aside.
JUDGMENT
Plasket JA (Petse AP,
Makgoka JA and Windell and Mali AJJA concurring):
[1]
The respondent, the African Christian Democratic Party (the ACDP),
applied to the
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the high
court) for an order directing the first appellant, the South African
Health
Products Regulatory Authority (the SAHPRA) to remove
restrictions on the use of a drug called Ivermectin, an animal
remedy, for
the treatment of Covid-19 in humans, including doing ‘all
things necessary to regulate and ensure the manufacture’ of
Ivermectin. The orders sought by the ACDP were, in terms of paragraph
3 of the notice of motion, to ‘operate until such time
as
clinical evidence demonstrates Ivermectin to not be effective in the
treatment of Covid-19’.
[2]
In due course, the ACDP, as well as the applicants in three similar
matters, on the
one hand, and the SAHPRA and the second appellant,
the Minister of Health (the Minister), on the other, settled the four
matters.
They agreed to the terms of an order. The high court made
two additional orders, however, that the ACDP and the other
applicants
had not sought, that the parties had not agreed to and to
which the SAHPRA and the Minister had registered their objections.
Paragraphs
1 and 2 of the order read as follows:
‘
1
SAHPRA is ordered to report back to the Court, by way of affidavit,
every three
months following the date of the granting of this order,
until otherwise ordered on inter alia: --
1.1
adjustments made to the Programme and why
such adjustments were necessary, for the prevention and/or treatment
of COVID-19;
1.2
newly approved unregistered Ivermectin
products;
1.3
newly authorized importers;
1.4
the number of Ivermectin products made
available for named patients under the Programme; and
1.5
the particulars of healthcare facilities
(including hospitals, pharmacies, compounding pharmacies and licensed
dispensing doctors)
that have been authorized to hold stock of
unregistered and/or compounded Ivermectin products.
2
Any party to this application may approach
the Court by way of Notice of Motion and Supplementary Affidavits,
after having given
reasonable notice in the circumstances to all
relevant parties, for relief pertaining to:
2.1
the insufficiency or the impracticality of
the Programme, or any amendments affected thereto by SAHPRA;
2.2
any party’s failure to give effect to
the content of the Court order; and
2.3
any further aspects relating to the
administration and allowance of the use of Ivermectin as a treatment
against COVID-19, which
is in the public interest and necessary to be
considered by the Court.’
[3]
After the order was made, the SAHPRA and the Minister made an
application for the
rescission of the two paragraphs. In the
alternative, they sought leave to appeal. Sardiwalla J granted the
alternative relief
with the result that this appeal is before us with
his leave.
[4]
Only the ACDP opposed the appeal. Shortly before it was to be heard,
the ACDP withdrew
its opposition following an undertaking by the
SAHPRA and the Minister that they would not seek a costs order
against it. With
the consent of both appellants, the matter was dealt
with in terms of
s 19
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
. This section provides that this court may ‘dispose of an
appeal without the hearing of oral argument’.
Background
[5]
The four applications brought against the SAHPRA and the Minister
were due to be argued
together, from 29 to 31 March 2021, before
Sardiwalla J. The parties settled the matters before the hearing and
draft orders in
each matter were prepared.
[6]
On 29 March 2021, the parties met with Sardiwalla J. He requested
them to consolidate
the four settlement agreements into one order. He
also said that he thought a supervisory order should be included
requiring the
SAHPRA to report to him every three months. He stated,
according to the deponent to the founding affidavit in the
rescission/leave
to appeal application, that he ‘regarded
himself as “seized” of all matters involving Ivermectin’.
[7]
On 1 April 2021, the SAHPRA’s attorney sent Sardiwalla J a
letter attaching
a consolidated draft order that the parties agreed
to, plus one compiled by the four applicants that contained the
supervisory
order as well. They had drafted this document to meet the
direction issued by Sardiwalla J. In the letter, Sardiwalla J was
informed
that the SAHPRA and the Minister objected to the supervisory
order being made and requested an opportunity to present oral
argument.
Both the SAHPRA and the Minister filed heads of argument.
[8]
Counsel for the ACDP then wrote to Sardiwalla J to inform him that
his client wished
to file heads of argument concerning the
supervisory order, while another of the applicants advised Sardiwalla
J that he was taking
instructions from his client on the issue. He
suggested that the order by agreement be granted and that argument on
the supervisory
order be heard on a date to be arranged. This was
supported by another of the applicants.
[9]
Later that day the parties were advised that Sardiwalla J had decided
to hear the
parties at 10h00 on 6 April 2021. On that morning, the
SAHPRA filed supplementary heads of argument. Apart from the SAHPRA
and
the Minister, none of the other parties filed heads of argument.
When the SAHPRA’s attorney telephoned Sardiwalla J’s
registrar to obtain the link for a virtual hearing, he was told that
Sardiwalla J would no longer be hearing the parties as he
had made a
decision, and that his order would be sent to the parties shortly.
[10]
A short while later, the SAHPRA’s attorney was asked by
Sardiwalla J’s registrar
to send her the agreed draft order as
well as the draft order containing the supervisory order in Microsoft
Word format. He did
so. Two hours later, Sardiwalla J issued an order
that included the supervisory order.
[11]
As no reasons accompanied the order, the SAHPRA’s attorney
requested reasons from Sardiwalla
J. In his letter, the attorney
stated that the SAHPRA intended appealing against the supervisory
order and that, to facilitate
doing so, it requested that the parties
be ‘provided with written reasons for paragraphs 1 and 2 of the
court order’.
He said that this request was made because the
supervisory order was ‘explicitly not the subject of agreement
between the
parties’; that the SAHPRA had informed the court in
writing of this fact; and that both the SAHPRA and the Minister had
filed
heads of argument opposing the grant of the order. He concluded
by saying that ‘[d]espite having delivered written submissions
and having been asked to appear in court on 6 April 2021, the hearing
did not take place’.
[12]
On 25 June 2021, Sardiwalla J furnished reasons. They made no mention
of the supervisory order
or why he had granted it.
The issues
[13]
In addressing the legal issues that arise in this appeal, it is
necessary to commence with a
first, fundamental, principle. It is
that judicial power has limits. In
S
v Mabena and Another
[1]
Nugent JA said:
‘
The
Constitution proclaims the existence of a state that is founded on
the rule of law. Under such a regime legitimate state authority
exists only within the confines of the law, as it is embodied in the
Constitution that created it, and the purported exercise of
such
authority other than in accordance with law is a nullity. That is the
cardinal tenet of the rule of law. It admits of no exception
in
relation to the judicial authority of the state. Far from conferring
authority to disregard the law the Constitution is the
imperative for
justice to be done in accordance with law. As in the case of other
state authority, the exercise of judicial authority
otherwise than
according to law is simply invalid.’
[14]
And, in
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
,
[2]
Harms JA made the point that ‘in exercising the judicial
function, judges are themselves constrained by the law’. He
then explained that ‘[t]he independence of the Judiciary
depends on the Judiciary's respect for the limits of its powers’
and that ‘its function is to adjudicate the issues between the
parties to the litigation and not extraneous issues’.
[15]
The first difficulty that arises in respect of the supervisory order
is that Sardiwalla J failed
to afford the SAHPRA and the Minister a
hearing despite knowing that they had not agreed to the supervisory
order and opposed it
being made. He had agreed to a hearing but
inexplicably changed his mind and made the order, including the
supervisory order, in
the absence of the parties and without hearing
argument. In these circumstances, an oral hearing was, without doubt,
essential.
Courts decide matters, particularly opposed matters, in
open court, and the exceptions to this rule are limited. Indeed, the
idea
that all judicial proceedings must be conducted in open court is
over two centuries old in this country, dating back to 1813.
[3]
Section 32
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
now provides that
except where otherwise provided for in the Act or in another law,
‘all proceedings in any Superior Court
must, except in so far
as any such court may in special cases otherwise direct, be carried
on in open court’.
[4]
Determining justiciable disputes in open court, where the parties are
heard, is the default position in our legal system.
[16]
Section 34 of the Constitution gives effect to the founding value of
the rule of law. It 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.’
[17]
The rule of law consists of both substantive and procedural
elements.
[5]
One of its most
fundamental procedural elements is that when a person may be
adversely affected by an exercise of public power,
they are entitled
to be heard.
[6]
In
De
Beer NO v North-Central Local Council and South-Central Local Council
and Others (Umhlatuzana Civic Association intervening)
[7]
Yacoob J held:
‘
This
s 34 fair hearing right affirms the rule of law, which is a founding
value of our Constitution. The right to a fair hearing
before a court
lies at the heart of the rule of law. A fair hearing before a court
as a prerequisite to an order being made against
anyone is
fundamental to a just and credible legal order. Courts in our country
are obliged to ensure that the proceedings before
them are always
fair. Since procedures that would render the hearing unfair are
inconsistent with the Constitution courts must
interpret legislation
and Rules of Court, where it is reasonably possible to do so, in a
way that would render the proceedings
fair. It is a crucial aspect of
the rule of law that court orders should not be made without
affording the other side a reasonable
opportunity to state their
case.’
[18]
In
Knoop
NO and Another v Gupta and Another
[8]
in which, as in this case, an order had been granted that none of the
parties had applied for and without hearing the parties on
the issue,
Wallis JA held that the order was invalid. This was so because when
‘an issue is not raised in the pleadings or
affidavits in a
case, and the order granted is one on which neither party has been
heard, there is a breach of a fundamental constitutional
right’.
In this matter, the order must be set aside for the same reason.
[19]
Secondly, the fact that the supervisory order had not been applied
for by any of the parties
and was not an issue in the pleadings
requires that it be set aside. In
Fischer
and Another v Ramahlele and Others
[9]
this court dealt with a situation in which an application and
counter-application had been referred to oral evidence on an issue
that, one way or the other, would have been dispositive of both. The
judge had, however, required the parties to address him on
two other
issues that he had identified, and which were not canvassed in the
papers. He decided the matter on the basis of one
of his own points
without, it would appear, the necessary evidence.
[20]
In upholding the appeal against the order made in those
circumstances, Theron and Wallis JJA
said the following:
[10]
‘
[13]
Turning then to the nature of civil litigation in our adversarial
system, 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 their 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 “(i)t 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.
[14] It is not for the
court to raise new issues not traversed in the pleadings or
affidavits, however interesting or important
they may seem to it, and
to insist that the parties deal with them. The parties may have their
own reasons for not raising those
issues. A court may sometimes
suggest a line of argument or an approach to a case that has not
previously occurred to the parties.
However, it is then for the
parties to determine whether they wish to adopt the new point. They
may choose not to do so because
of its implications for the further
conduct of the proceedings, such as an adjournment or the need to
amend pleadings or call additional
evidence. They may feel that their
case is sufficiently strong as it stands to require no
supplementation. They may simply wish
the issues already identified
to be determined because they are relevant to future matters and the
relationship between the parties.
That is for them to decide and not
the court. If they wish to stand by the issues they have formulated,
the court may not raise
new ones or compel them to deal with matters
other than those they have formulated in the pleadings or
affidavits.’
It
was, Theron and Wallis JJA concluded, ‘impermissible’ for
the court to decide the matter as it had.
[11]
So too in this matter.
[21]
Thirdly, the supervisory order was granted despite the complete
absence of evidence to justify
it. In
Minister
of Health and Others v Treatment Action Campaign and Others (No.
2)
[12]
the court held that the remedial powers of our courts to grant
mandatory relief against the government ‘includes the power
where it is appropriate to exercise some sort of supervisory
jurisdiction to ensure that the order is implemented’. How
these powers are exercised ‘depends on the circumstances of
each particular case’
[13]
but ultimately a supervisory order may be made ‘if it is
necessary to secure compliance with a court order’.
[14]
Important as a supervisory order may be in appropriate cases, the
granting of this type of relief must be carefully considered
–
and justified on the facts – particularly because of its
separation of powers implications.
[15]
[22]
In this case, not only was there no evidence as to the necessity of a
supervisory order but the
fact that the SAHPRA and the Minister had
settled the matter and agreed to an order suggests that there was
probably no necessity
for one. Furthermore, had Sardiwalla J allowed
the parties to argue the matter, he would have been informed of the
separation of
powers problems that the grant of the supervisory order
would create, and the possible consequence of it purporting to
by-passing
the obligation, imposed by
s 7(2)
of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
, to exhaust the internal remedy
created by
s 24A
of the
Medicines and Related Substances Act 101 of
1965
. Finally, it strikes me as telling that the reasons that
Sardiwalla J furnished made no mention of the supervisory order and
consequently
gave no reason at all for it being granted. And this
despite being pertinently asked to furnish reasons on this very issue
–
the only issue that was not agreed to and was in dispute. For
this reason too, the order cannot stand.
Conclusion
[23]
The appeal must succeed for the three inter-related reasons of a
failure to hear the SAHPRA and
the Minister before making the
supervisory order; the fact that it was not an issue on the pleadings
and was not applied for by
any party; and that it was granted in the
absence of any evidence to establish that it was necessary. As the
SAHPRA and the Minister
undertook not to seek any costs order against
the ACDP, no order of costs will be made.
[24]
I make the following order:
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
Paragraphs 1 and 2 of the high court’s order are set aside.
C Plasket
Judge of Appeal
APPEARANCES
For the first
appellant:
G Marcus SC (with A Hassim
SC)
Instructed
by:
Hahn & Hahn Attorneys, Pretoria
Symington & De Kok,
Bloemfontein
For the second
appellant: T Skosana SC
(with T Lupuwana and M S Manganye)
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Pretoria
State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
[1]
S
v Mabena and Another
[2006]
ZASCA 178
;
2007 (1) SACR 482
(SCA) para 2.
[2]
National
Director of Public Prosecutions v Zuma
[2009]
ZASCA 1
;
2009 (2) SA 277
(SCA) para 15.
[3]
See the historical survey of the rule from Roman-Dutch times to
1959, when the Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959 was passed, in
Financial
Mail (Pty) Ltd v Registrar of Insurance and Others
1966 (2) SA 219
(W) at 220E-221G.
[4]
As to the importance of open justice, see
South
African Broadcasting Corporation Ltd v National Director of Public
Prosecutions and Others
[2006] ZACC 15
;
2007 (1) SA 523
(CC);
2007 (2) BCLR 167
(CC) paras
29-30.
[5]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of SA and Another; In re ex parte
President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
[2000]
ZACC 1
;
2000 (2) SA 674
(CC);
2000 (3) BCLR 241
(CC) para 37.
[6]
De
Lange v Smuts NO and Others
[1998] ZACC 6
;
1998 (3) SA 785
(CC);
1998 (7) BCLR 779
(CC) paras 46
and 131. See too A S Mathews
Freedom,
State Security and the Rule of Law
(1988) at 20.
[7]
De
Beer NO v North-Central Local Council and South-Central Local
Council and Others (Umhlatuzana Civic Association intervening)
[2001]
ZACC 9
;
2002 (1) SA 429
(CC);
2001 (11) BCLR 1109
(CC) para 11.
[8]
Knoop
NO and Another v Gupta and Another
[2020]
ZASCA 149
;
2021 (3) SA 135
(SCA) para 28.
[9]
Fischer
and Another v Ramahlele and Others
[2014]
ZASCA 88; 2014 (4) SA 614 (SCA).
[10]
Paras
13-14.
[11]
Para
24.
[12]
Minister
of Health and Others v Treatment Action Campaign and Others (No. 2)
[2002]
ZACC 15
;
2002 (5) SA 721
(CC);
2002 (10) BCLR 1033
(CC) para 104.
[13]
Para
113.
[14]
Para
129.
[15]
Modderfontein
Squatters, Greater Benoni City Council v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty)
Ltd (Agri SA and Legal Resources Centre, amici
curiae); President of
the Republic of South Africa and Others v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty)
Ltd (Agri SA and Legal Resources Centre,
amici curiae)
[2004]
ZASCA 47
;
2004 (6) SA 40
(SCA) para 39.
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