Case Law[2022] ZASCA 167South Africa
MEC Responsible for Local Government, Western Cape v Matzikama Local Municipality and Others (747/2021) [2022] ZASCA 167; 2023 (3) SA 521 (SCA) (30 November 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
30 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Constitutional law – provincial government powers in relation to local government – s 106(1) of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 – appointment of investigation into maladministration, fraud, corruption or other serious malpractice in a municipality – Member of the Executive Council may, in terms of s 106(1), appoint investigators to investigate allegations of theft.
Judgment
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## MEC Responsible for Local Government, Western Cape v Matzikama Local Municipality and Others (747/2021) [2022] ZASCA 167; 2023 (3) SA 521 (SCA) (30 November 2022)
MEC Responsible for Local Government, Western Cape v Matzikama Local Municipality and Others (747/2021) [2022] ZASCA 167; 2023 (3) SA 521 (SCA) (30 November 2022)
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sino date 30 November 2022
THE
SUPR
EME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 747/2021
In
the matter between:
MEMBER
OF EXECUTIVE COUNCIL RESPONSIBLE
FOR
LOCAL GOVERNMENT, WESTERN
CAPE
APPELLANT
and
MATZIKAMA
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
FIRST RESPONDENT
CHARL
STRYDOM N
O
SECOND RESPONDENT
ESTELLE
MYNHARDT N
O
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
MEC
Responsible for Local Government, Western Cape v Matzikama Local
Municipality and Others
(747/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 167
(30 November 2022)
Coram:
Plasket, Hughes and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and
Basson and Mali AJJA
Heard:
10 November 2022
Delivered:
30 November 2022
Summary:
Constitutional law – provincial
government powers in relation to local government –
s 106(1)
of
the
Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000
–
appointment of investigation into maladministration, fraud,
corruption or other serious malpractice in a municipality –
Member of the Executive Council may, in terms of
s 106(1)
, appoint
investigators to investigate allegations of theft.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Western Cape Division of
the High Court, Cape Town (Hockey AJ sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
Paragraphs 3, 5 and 6 of the high court’s order are set aside
and
paragraph 3 is replaced with the following:
‘
3.1
The applicant’s application is dismissed with costs, including
the costs of two counsel.
3.2 The
respondent is directed to pay the applicant’s costs in respect
of the applications to amend the
notice of motion and to strike out.’
JUDGMENT
Plasket
JA and Basson AJA (Hughes and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Mali AJA
concurring)
[1]
In terms of s 106(1) of the Local Government: Municipal Systems Act
32
of 2000 (the Systems Act), when a Member of the Executive Council
responsible for local government in a provincial government (the
MEC)
has reason to believe that certain forms of abuse of power have
occurred or are occurring in a municipality, they may appoint
one or
more persons to investigate and report on the allegations. The
section reads as follows:
‘
If
an MEC has reason to believe that a municipality in the province
cannot or does not fulfil a statutory obligation binding on
that
municipality or that maladministration, fraud, corruption or any
other serious malpractice has occurred or is occurring in
a
municipality in the province, the MEC must –
(a)
by written notice to the municipality, request the
municipal council or municipal manager to provide the MEC with
information required
in the notice; or
(b)
if
the MEC considers it necessary, designate a person or persons to
investigate the matter.’
[2]
In this
appeal, the MEC for Local Government in the Western Cape provincial
government appointed two people in terms of s 106(1)
– the
second and third respondents (the investigators) – to
investigate allegations relating to a number of abuses
of power,
including the theft of municipal money, in the Matzikama Local
Municipality (the municipality). The appeal concerns a
narrow but
important issue, namely, whether s 106 em
powers
an MEC to appoint an investigation into criminal conduct other than
fraud or corruption, which are specifically mentioned
in the
section. In order to answer the question raised, it is
necessary to interpret s 106(1) and to consider the judgment
in
City
of Cape Town v Premier, Western Cape, and Others
,
[1]
a matter that Hockey AJ in the
Western
Cape Division of the High Court, Cape Town (the
high
court) considered himself bound by.
Litigation history
[3]
In September 2019 eight complaints concerning misconduct in the
administration
of the municipality were brought to the attention of
the MEC. They included the alleged irregular appointment of certain
individuals
without having the requisite qualifications, the
irregular appointment of two family members of the mayor, the alleged
theft of
municipal funds in the amount of R 320 000 (the theft
allegation) and irregular payments made to a former ward councillor.
After considering the complaints and after having afforded the
municipality an opportunity to make representations as required
by s
106(1)
(a)
and s 5 of the Western Cape Monitoring and Support
of Municipalities Act 4 of 2014, the MEC took a decision on 21
September 2020
that six of those allegations to which the
municipality had given an inadequate explanation should be
investigated by the investigators.
One of these complaints related to
the theft allegation.
[4]
The municipality launched an urgent application against the MEC and
the
investigators to interdict the implementation of the MEC’s
decision, pending the completion of a process of inter-governmental
dispute resolution in terms of the Intergovernmental Relations
Framework Act 13 of 2005 (the Framework Act). In the alternative,
it
sought to review and set aside the MEC’s decision. The MEC
launched a counter-application in which he sought an order
that the
municipality, and all those working for it, be directed to cooperate
with the investigators.
[5]
The municipality’s case changed fundamentally. It abandoned
reliance
on the Framework Act as the basis for an interim interdict
and applied to amend its notice of motion to convert its case into a
review of the MEC’s decision. Its application to amend was
granted. A second interlocutory application, brought by the MEC
to
strike out matter from the municipality’s replying affidavit,
was substantially unsuccessful.
[6]
After the interlocutory issues had been dealt with, the key issue
before
the high court was whether the MEC had reason to believe that
‘maladministration, fraud, corruption or any other serious
malpractice’ had occurred or were occurring in the
municipality. The high court was satisfied that the MEC had carefully
considered all the complaints with the information at his disposal
and that he had ‘reason to believe that serious malpractice
has
occurred or was occurring when he made the decision to initiate the
investigation’. It accepted that the MEC did not
act with an
ulterior motive when he took the decision. It concluded that all of
the allegations were of such a serious nature that
it could not be
said that, if found to be true, they did not constitute one or more
of the forms of misconduct that may trigger
a s 106(1) investigation.
The high court dismissed the municipality’s application (save
in respect of the theft allegation)
and granted the MEC’s
counter-application. It made an order that each party pay its own
costs.
[7]
The high court, relying on the judgment in
City of Cape Town
,
held that the MEC had no power in terms of s 106(1) to refer the
allegation of theft for investigation ‘especially in light
of
the fact that this issue had already been referred to the police for
criminal investigation’. The upshot of this finding
is that
allegations of criminal conduct in a municipality, with the exception
of fraud and corruption, may not be referred for
investigation in
terms of s 106(1).
[8]
The MEC sought and was granted leave to appeal against the setting
aside
of the referral of the theft allegation to the investigators,
as well as against the costs order. These were embodied in paragraphs
3, 5 and 6 of the high court’s order. It dismissed the
municipality’s application for leave to appeal against the
dismissal of the bulk of its application and granted the MEC’s
counter-application. This appeal was unopposed and was disposed
of in
terms of
s 19
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. I turn
now to the issues that require determination.
The exclusion of theft
from the investigation
City
of Cape Town
[9]
In
City
of Cape Town
,
the MEC had appointed an investigation in terms of
s
106(1)
into certain alleged criminal conduct within the city and in a
second municipality. The Premier then appointed a commission, in
terms of the Commissions Act 8 of 1947, to investigate the same
conduct. He later dissolved the commission and simultaneously
appointed a second commission with the same terms of reference. When
he did this, the high court held, it had the effect of dissolving
the
s 106(1) investigation too.
[2]
The issues for determination, when the city applied for the setting
aside of the appointment of the second commission, were whether
the
Premier could appoint a commission to investigate local government
affairs otherwise than through s 106(1); and whether the
Premier had
appointed the commission for an ulterior motive.
[10]
During the
course of reasoning that the appointment of the commission was
invalid on both accounts, the court made certain observations
concerning s 106(1). These included that it was undesirable for a
commission to investigate criminal conduct because this blurred
the
lines between the functions of the police and the executive.
[3]
More importantly, however, the court held:
[4]
‘
A
power on the part of the Premier to appoint a commission to
investigate suspected criminal conduct in relation to a municipality,
independently of the provisions of s 106 of the Systems Act, would
again result in the provisions of this section becoming superfluous.
In such an event, the Premier would be entitled to appoint a
commission to investigate suspected criminal conduct of whatever
nature, and not merely fraud and corruption in relation to a
municipality. This would not only intrude upon the autonomy of the
police to perform such a function, but also the autonomy of local
government.’
[11]
The court
also held in the following paragraph that the effect of s 106 ‘is
to limit the power of the Premier to appoint a
commission of inquiry,
with coercive powers, to investigate only the crimes of fraud and
corruption in relation to a municipality.’
[5]
[12]
What stands out in the
City of Cape Town
judgment is that no
contextual process of interpreting s 106 was undertaken by the court.
Instead, it appears to have simply accepted
that only the crimes of
fraud and corruption may be investigated in terms of s 106. In order
to determine whether this conclusion
is correct, and hence the
correctness of Hockey AJ’s setting aside of the referral of the
theft allegation for investigation,
it is necessary to interpret s
106(1). We turn now to that exercise.
The scheme of s 106
[13]
The power
conferred upon the MEC by s 106(1) of the Systems Act is dependent on
the jurisdictional fact that the MEC has
reason
to believe that maladministration, fraud, corruption or any other
serious malpractices had occurred or were occurring in
the
municipality. If this jurisdictional precondition is satisfied the
MEC may appoint an investigation.
[6]
The MEC’s belief is objectively justiciable. That means that
the belief must be based on reasonable grounds.
[7]
[14]
Section
106(1) must be construed within the broader context of the
Constitution and the Systems Act. On a general level, the
constitutional values and principles governing public administration
set out in s 195 of the Constitution are implicated. The
Constitutional Court in
Khumalo
and Another v Member of the Executive Council for Education
KwaZulu-Natal
[8]
emphasised that where ‘a responsible functionary is enlightened
of a potential irregularity, s 195 [of the Constitution]
lays a
compelling basis for the founding of a duty on the functionary to
investigate and, if need be, to correct any unlawfulness
through the
appropriate avenues’ and that this duty ‘is founded,
inter
alia
,
in the emphasis on accountability and transparency in s
195(1)
(f)
and
(g)
and
the requirement of a high standard of professional ethics in s
195(1)
(a)
’.
[15]
Section 40 of the Constitution created government ‘as national,
provincial and local
spheres of government which are distinctive,
interdependent and interrelated’. Section 151(3) provides that
a municipality
‘has the right to govern, on its own initiative,
the local government affairs of its community, subject to national
and provincial
legislation, as provided for in the Constitution’.
Section 155(6) provides for the establishment and monitoring of
municipalities
by provincial governments. The section says:
‘
Each
provincial government must establish municipalities in its province
in a manner consistent with the legislation enacted in
terms of
subsections (2) and (3) and, by legislative or other measures, must –
(a)
provide for the monitoring and support of local government in the
province; and
(b)
promote the development of local government capacity to enable
municipalities to perform
their functions and manage their own
affairs.’
[16]
Section 125 allocates a number of functions to provincial
governments. Section 125(2)
(g)
allows for executive authority
to be exercised by ‘performing any other function assigned to
the provincial executive in
terms of the Constitution or an Act of
Parliament’. Section 105 of the Systems Act assigns a
monitoring function to provincial
executives in respect of local
governments. Section 105(1) states:
‘
The
MEC for local government in a province must establish mechanisms,
processes and procedures in terms of section 155(6) of the
Constitution to-
(a)
monitor municipalities in the province in managing their own affairs,
exercising their powers
and performing their functions;
(b)
monitor the development of local government capacity in the province;
and
(c)
assess the support needed by municipalities to strengthen their
capacity to manage
their own affairs, exercise their powers and
perform their functions.’
[17]
It is within this legislative context that s 106 is located. It is
part of the system for
the monitoring, by provincial executives, of
local governments so that the performance of local governments may be
strengthened
and improved, and municipal officials be held
accountable for their administration. Section 106 is therefore a
mechanism by which
an MEC may investigate allegations that serious
problems have arisen relating to the administration and governance of
a municipality.
The purpose of activating the mechanism is to obtain
the necessary facts so that the source of the problem can be
identified, with
a view to remedying the weakness in the system.
[18]
Section 106(1), when it refers to the crimes of fraud and corruption,
does not state expressly
that only these crimes, and no others, may
be investigated in terms of the section. We would have expected this
to have been stated
clearly had that been the intention of the
legislature. The terms ‘maladministration’ and ‘serious
malpractice’
are broad enough to encompass both conduct that is
criminal and conduct that is not. For instance, the theft of money
from a municipality
by a municipal official is, without doubt, a
serious malpractice.
[19]
The restricted interpretation of the section by the high court would
have to rely on a
tacit exclusion of crimes other than theft or
corruption, being read into the section. There is no indication,
whether from the
context that we have outlined above or from the
provision itself that this was intended. Indeed, there are strong
indicators that
pull in the opposite direction.
[20]
First, such an interpretation is arbitrary and could lead to
arbitrary results. It is arbitrary
because there is no apparent basis
why investigators may investigate allegations of fraud or corruption
but not, for instance,
theft. Its arbitrariness of result may be
illustrated by the following example: if investigators were appointed
to investigate
allegations of fraud, and they found that the evidence
they uncovered proved theft, the restricted interpretation would mean
that
they could not report their findings to the MEC because it would
be beyond the scope of their mandate. They would have to report
that
they found no evidence of fraud.
[21]
Secondly, the restricted interpretation, as the above example
illustrates, would undermine
the purpose of s 106. Only some forms of
maladministration and serious malpractices could be investigated and
remedied, while those
forms that are tainted by criminality could not
be. On the face of it, the more serious forms of maladministration
and serious
malpractice would in this way be shielded from
investigation. When viewed in the context sketched above and of s 106
being a purpose-built
mechanism not only for monitoring and
strengthening of local government but also for accountability, the
restricted interpretation
is not a sensible meaning to give to the
section.
[22]
Thirdly, it seems to us that the exclusion of all criminal conduct
apart from fraud and
corruption from investigation may well have the
effect of rendering s 106 investigations a dead letter. The Local
Government: Municipal
Finances Management Act 56 of 2003 creates, in
s 173, a broad range of criminal offences related to
maladministration of municipal
finances. Other local government
statutes, including the Systems Act, create even more offences
related to the way in which municipalities
are administered. Their
combined effect is that a large swathe of maladministration has been
criminalised. The restricted interpretation
would block s 106
investigations into the very matters that it was meant for.
[23]
Finally, the concerns expressed by the court in
City of Cape Town
about the blurring of the lines between the executive and the police
are, in our view, more apparent than real. A criminal investigation
and a s 106 investigation serve very different purposes. One is aimed
at detecting and punishing crime while the other, as we have
explained, is concerned with monitoring, remedying the problems
identified and holding municipal officials to account. Furthermore,
specific, objectively justiciable jurisdictional facts have to be
present before the power to appoint investigators is triggered.
And
administrative justice principles – whether in terms of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
or the principle of
legality – are designed to prevent any abuse of discretion on
the part of MECs. In particular, they may
not exercise their powers
for an improper purpose or an ulterior motive, in bad faith or
unreasonably.
City of Cape Town
is itself a good example of
this.
[24]
For all of the above reasons, we conclude that
s 106(1)
does not mean
that only the crimes of fraud and corruption may be investigated and
that other crimes, such as theft, may not be.
That means that we are
of the view that
City of Cape Town
was wrongly decided in this
respect. It follows that the high court in this matter erred in
excluding from the investigation the
theft allegations. The result is
that the MEC’s appeal on the merits must succeed.
Costs
[25]
As stated above, two interlocutory applications served before the
high court. They were
an application brought by the municipality to
amend its notice of motion, which was granted, and an application
brought by the
MEC to strike out several paragraphs of the
municipality’s replying affidavit, which was refused (save for
one paragraph).
The court then dismissed the municipality’s
application, save for the theft allegation, and granted the MEC’s
counter
application. The high court held that each party should pay
its own costs. Two reasons were furnished for this order. First, the
MEC was ‘mostly successful in his opposition to the final
interdict’ but ‘substantially unsuccessful’ in
opposing the application to amend and the application to strike out.
Secondly, both parties were litigating with public funds.
[26]
A
court
of appeal will only interfere with the exercise of a
discretion regarding costs in circumscribed instances
[9]
and would be slow to substitute its own decision simply because it
does not agree with a permissible option chosen by the lower
court.
[10]
It will, however,
interfere if the court’s discretion was exercised on the basis
of wrong principles. In this matter, the
high court equated the
municipality’s limited success on the two procedural points
with the MEC’s substantive success
on the merits. It also took
into account the irrelevant fact that public funds were used by both
parties. The high court misdirected
itself in both respects, meriting
interference on appeal.
The
costs order therefore falls to be set aside and must be replaced with
a costs order in favour of the MEC on the merits, but
the
municipality’s success in the interlocutory applications must
also be accounted for in the order that we make.
The order
[27]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
Paragraphs 3, 5 and 6 of the high court’s order are set aside
and
paragraph 3 is replaced with the following:
‘
3.1
The applicant’s application is dismissed with costs, including
the costs of two counsel.
3.2 The
respondent is directed to pay the applicant’s costs in respect
of the applications to amend the
notice of motion and to strike out.’
C
PLASKET
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
A
C BASSON
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
Appellant:
Karrisha Pillay SC (with her Cecily-Ann Daniels)
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Cape Town
State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
For
Respondents: No appearance
[1]
City
of Cape Town v Premier, Western Cape, and Others
[2008]
ZAWCHC 52
;
2008 (6) SA 345
(C) (
City
of Cape Town
).
[2]
Ibid
p
ara
34.
[3]
Ibid
p
ara
154.
[4]
Ibid
p
ara
155.
[5]
Ibid
para 156.
[6]
Duncan
v Minister of Law and Order
1986 (2) SA 805
(A) at 818F-I.
[7]
Minister
of Law and Order and Others v Hurley and Another
1986 (3) SA 568
(A) at 578B-D and 579D-F;
Democratic
Alliance Western Cape and Others v Minister of Local Government,
Western Cape and Another
2005
(3) SA 576
(C) para 25.
[8]
Khumalo
and Another v Member of the Executive Council for Education
KwaZulu-Natal
[2013]
ZACC 49
;
2014
(5) SA 579
(CC) para 35.
[9]
Public
Protector v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service and
Others
[2020]
ZACC 28
;
2022
(1) SA 340
(CC) para 31.
[10]
Florence
v Government of the Republic of South
Africa
[2014]
ZACC 22
;
2014
(6) SA 456
(CC)
para
113;
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
[2019] ZACC 19
;
2019 (6) SA 253
(CC) para 144.
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