Case Law[2022] ZASCA 168South Africa
Mapholisa N O v Phetoe N O and Others (163/2021) [2022] ZASCA 168; 2023 (3) SA 149 (SCA) (30 November 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
30 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative law – review of decision of one organ of state by another – whether review under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) or principle of legality – exhaustion of internal remedies – applicability of s 7(2) of PAJA or under principle of legality.
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 168
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mapholisa N O v Phetoe N O and Others (163/2021) [2022] ZASCA 168; 2023 (3) SA 149 (SCA) (30 November 2022)
Mapholisa N O v Phetoe N O and Others (163/2021) [2022] ZASCA 168; 2023 (3) SA 149 (SCA) (30 November 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2022_168.html
sino date 30 November 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no
: 163/2021
In
the matter between:
MESHACK
MAPHOLISA N O
APPLICANT
and
ADV
K I A PHETOE N O
FIRST RESPONDENT
PROF
S M DAWJEE N
O
SECOND RESPONDENT
DR
J BASSON N O
THIRD RESPONDENT
DR
M N MABASA N
O
FOURTH RESPONDENT
MS
CHOKOE N
O
FIFTH RESPONDENT
MS
D P MTHIMUNYE-HLUYO N O
SIXTH RESPONDENT
DR
P
MILLER
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
THE
HEALTH PROFESSIONS COUNCIL
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
MALINDA
MILLER
NINTH RESPONDENT
VIOLET
GAOLEBALE SENNA
TENTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Mapholisa
N O v Phetoe N O and Others
(163/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 168
(30 November 2022)
Coram:
PLASKET and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and WINDELL,
CHETTY and MALI AJJA
Heard:
1
November 2022
Delivered:
30 November 2022
Summary:
Administrative law – review of
decision of one organ of state by another – whether review
under the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) or
principle of legality – exhaustion of internal remedies –
applicability of s 7(2) of
PAJA or under principle of legality.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Fabricius J, sitting as court of first instance) :
1
Leave to appeal is granted with costs, including the costs of two
counsel.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
3
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
1
The decision by the Professional Conduct Committee of the Medical and
Dental Professions Board, as contemplated in the Health
Professions
Act 56 of 1974, constituted of the first to sixth respondents and
taken on 3 July 2017 (the decision) is reviewed and
set aside.
2 The decision is
substituted with the following:
“
The
point in limine is dismissed.”
3 The seventh respondent
is directed to pay the applicant’s costs.’
JUDGMENT
Mali
AJA (Plasket and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Windell and Chetty AJJA
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal brought by the applicant,
Mr Meshack Mapholisa
in his official capacity (Mr Mapholisa). The
application is against an order of the Gauteng Divison of the High
Court, Pretoria
(the high court) dismissing an application to review
a decision of the Professional Conduct Committee (the PCC) of the
Health Professions
Council of South Africa (the HPCSA). After the
high court refused leave to appeal, Mr Mapholisa petitioned this
Court. It referred
his application for oral argument in terms of
s
17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, and directed
that the parties be prepared to argue the merits of the appeal if
called upon to do so.
Factual background
[2]
Mr Mapholisa was appointed as a
pro
forma
complainant by the Registrar of the HPCSA, in terms of the Health
Professions Act 56 of 1974 (the Act), read with the Regulations
Relating to the Conduct of Inquiries into Alleged Unprofessional
Conduct under the Act (the regulations).
[1]
As Mr Mapholisa brought the application for review, he litigated as
an organ of state. So too is the body that took the decision
under
challenge.
[3]
The first to sixth respondents are members of the PCC, a committee
established in
terms of s 15
(fA)
of the Act, read with
regulation 6 of the regulations. They are cited in their official
capacities. The seventh respondent, Dr
Percy Miller (Dr Miller) is a
registered medical doctor under the Act and practising as such in the
private sector. He was the
respondent in a complaint of
unprofessional conduct referred to the PCC. The eighth respondent is
the HPCSA, a statutory body established
in terms of s 2 of the Act.
The ninth respondent is Ms Malinda Miller (Ms Miller). She lodged the
complaint against Dr Miller.
The tenth respondent is Ms Violet
Gaolebale Senna (Ms Senna), who is now deceased. She was Dr Miller’s
patient and the complaint
laid against Dr Miller was in respect of
his treatment of Ms Senna. Before dealing with the two points that
arise in this application,
it is necessary to consider the
disciplinary system created by the Act and the Regulations.
The disciplinary
system and the complaint
[4]
The Act provides for the establishment of professional boards for the
respective medical
professions and the Medical and Dental Professions
Board is one of those (the Board). The procedure for dealing with
complaints
against health professionals is set out in the
regulations. Regulation 2 deals with the lodging of a complaint,
requiring that
the complaint must be in writing and be addressed
either to the registrar of the HPCSA, the HPCSA itself or a
professional board
of the HPCSA.
In terms of
reg
4,
t
he registrar is the
official, who deals with the complaint initially, irrespective of
whom it was addressed to, and may, for instance,
call for more
information.
[5]
The complaint is then referred to a preliminary committee. Its task
is to scrutinise
complaints and decide on the substance of same. In
the process, the committee may dismiss frivolous complaints. It would
proceed
with complaints that appear to have merit. At this stage, the
respondent is asked to state their case. The preliminary committee
may dismiss a complaint if it is satisfied with the explanation given
by the respondent. If, however, it is satisfied that there
are
grounds to proceed, it must refer the complaint to an inquiry.
[2]
[6]
In terms of reg 6, the chairperson of the appropriate professional
board, on the request
of the registrar, must appoint a PCC to enquire
into the matter. The PCC hears the evidence and decides on the guilt
or innocence
of the respondent. In terms of reg 11(1), ‘the
respondent or the
pro forma
complainant may appeal to the
appeal committee against the findings or penalty of the professional
conduct committee or both such
finding and such penalty’.
[7]
In terms of reg 11(9), the appeal committee considers the appeal ‘on
the papers’.
Having considered representations and argument by
the parties, it then must determine the appeal. In terms of reg
11(11), the decision
of the appeal committee ‘will be of force
and effect from the date determined by the committee and may be set
aside by a
High Court if approached in terms of section 20 of the
Act’. Section 20 provides a right to appeal to the High Court
against
all decisions that may be made by the HPCSA or its
structures.
[8]
On 8 July 2013, Ms Miller lodged a complaint with the HPCSA arising
from doctor-patient
interactions between Dr Miller and Ms Senna. Ms
Miller made allegations of misconduct against Dr Miller. Based on
these allegations,
the Board appointed a Committee of Preliminary
Inquiry (the prelim committee) to investigate the complaint and make
a determination
thereon. The prelim committee convened on 12 December
2013 and resolved that Dr Miller was guilty of misconduct and that a
penalty
of a fine of R10 000 be imposed.
[9]
In his capacity as a
pro forma
complainant, Mr Mapholisa
prepared charges against Dr Miller, which were served on Dr Miller on
11 February 2014. Dr Miller was
given an option to accept or reject
the admission of guilt fine determined by the prelim committee. Dr
Miller rejected payment
of this fine, after which a Professional
Conduct Inquiry ensued.
[10]
At the inquiry a point
in limine
was raised on Dr Miller’s
behalf. It was argued that Ms Miller, who laid the complaint, had no
locus standi
because she was not Dr Miller’s patient and
was not in a position to provide evidence as to what transpired
between Dr Miller
and Ms Senna. On 3 July 2017, the PCC upheld the
point
in limine
. The PCC furnished the following reasons for
its decision:
‘
. .
. the regulations are not clear on the issue of locus standi. The
committee is now of the view that it must fall back on the
rules of
evidence and procedure, as clarified by the case of De La Rouviere v
South African Medical and Dental Council.
The
committee therefore have decided that the complainant in this case
[Ms Miller] has no locus standi and therefore the point in
limine is
upheld
.’
[11]
Mr Mapholisa approached the high court for the review and setting
aside of the decision of the
PCC. Dr Miller raised a point
in
limine
namely that Mr Mapholisa had failed to exhaust the
internal remedy of an appeal provided for in terms of the
regulations, as he
was obliged to do in terms of s 7(2) of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (the PAJA). The
high court dismissed
the application on the basis of the point
in
limine
. The high court also dealt with
locus standi
issue
that had been upheld by the PCC, concluding that the PCC had not
acted irregulary.
[12]
The high court’s reasons for its finding that Ms Miller did not
have standing were the
following:
‘
There
is also another issue. The seventh respondent attended to his
patient, the tenth respondent on 14 May 2012. The ninth respondent
(
not the patient of the seventh respondent) laid a complaint with the
council on 8 July 2014. The patient himself laid no complaint.
The
ninth respondent had no factual information upon which the Committee
could rely. Applicant informed the Committee that he would
not call
the patient as a witness. There would therefore have been no
admissible evidence before the Committee. Applicant in his
reply to a
request for Further Particulars stated that the complainant had cited
from “a humanitarian perspective”.
It is of course time
that “any person” can lay a complaint in terms of the
Regulations. The Regulations however makes
detailed provisons for a
“sifting” process, by way of “preliminary inquiry”
for instance. The Regulations,
with whom a [complaint] must be
lodged, must also categorise it according to their significance and
seriousness. It is therefore
clear in my view that no every
complainant has a right to be heard by a Committee totally
irrespective of his or her knowledge
of any alleged misconduct by a
medical professional. Some admissible knowledge or intent would at
least have to be present if the
particular patient does not give
evidence. The decision of the Committee was therefore correct.’
The issues
[13]
The principal issue that arises in this application is whether the
high court was correct that
the internal remedy of an appeal ought to
have been exhausted in terms of s 7(2) of the PAJA, given that the
review was brought
by one organ of state against another. If the
answer is ‘yes’, the application will be unsuccessful. If
the answer
is ‘no’, the merits of the matter may have to
be decided, ie, whether the PCC’s decision to uphold the point
in limine
should be reviewed and set aside.
The review of
administrative action
[14]
Generally speaking, the decision-making of a statutory disciplinary
body, such as the PCC, would
constitute administrative action as
defined in s 1 of the PAJA. It provides that administrative action
means ‘any decision
taken, or any failure to take a decision,
by . . . an organ of state’ when ‘exercising a public
power or performing
a public function in terms of any legislation’
but does not include such species of public power as executive,
legislative
and judicial powers. Section 6(1) of the PAJA provides
that administrative action is subject to review and s 6(2) sets out
the
grounds for review.
[15]
Section 7(2) places a procedural hurdle in the way of a person
wishing to review an administrative
action. It provides:
‘
(a)
Subject to paragraph
(c)
,
no court or tribunal shall review an administrative action in terms
of this Act unless any internal remedy provided for in any
other law
has first been exhausted.
(b)
Subject to paragraph
(c)
,
a court or tribunal must, if it is not satisfied that any internal
remedy referred to in paragraph
(a)
has been exhausted, direct that the person concerned must first
exhaust such remedy before insitituting proceedings in a court
or
tribunal for judicial review in terms of this Act.
(c) A court or tribunal
may, in exceptional circumstances and on application by the person
concerned, exempt such person from the
obligation to exhaust any
internal remedy if the court or tribunal deems it in the interest of
justice.’
[16]
If s 7(2) applies, this would non-suit Mr Mapholisa because it is
common cause that he has not
exhausted the internal remedy of the
appeal created by reg 11 and neither has he applied to be exempted
from the obligation. Assuming
for present purposes that the appeal
procedure applies to a finding such as the one made by the PCC in
this case, the result would
be, if the PAJA applies, that the high
court was precluded from reviewing the PCC’s decision, and thus
correctly dismissed
the application.
[17]
If, however, the PAJA does not apply, the position will be different.
In order to determine whether
or not the PAJA applies, it is
necessary to consider the Constitutional Court’s decision in
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd
(
Gijima
).
[3]
The court found that the PAJA did not apply when an organ of state
reviewed its own decision, and that the pathway to review in
these
circumstances is the principle of legality that is sourced in s 1
(c)
of the Constitution, the founding value of the rule of law. The
reason for this conclusion was that s 33(1) of the Constitution,
to
which the PAJA gives effect, ‘ . . . creates rights enjoyed
only by private persons’ and that ‘ . . . the
bearer of
obligations under the section is the State’.
[4]
The court had earlier stressed that it was not considering ‘a
scenario where an organ of state that is in a position akin
to that
of a private person (natural or juristic) may be seeking to review
the decision of another organ of state’.
[5]
It thus left open the question that we are required to answer in this
case, namely whether PAJA applies to one organ of state reviewing
another organ of state.
[18]
It was argued on Dr Miller’s behalf that
Gijima
is only
applicable to self reviews and that it does not apply to this matter
because it concerns an organ of state reviewing the
decision of
another organ of state. I disagree. Despite the fact that in
Gijima
an organ of state sought to review and set aside its own decision,
the Constitutional Court quite clearly reasoned that the rights
under
s 33 of the Constitution are enjoyed by private persons and not
organs of state. This reasoning applies, it seems to me,
whether an
organ of state is reviewing its own decision, as in
Gijima
, or
reviewing the decision of another organ of state, as in this case.
[19]
I am fortified in my conclusion by the view expressed by this Court
in
Special Investigating Unit and Another v Engineered Systems
Solutions (Pty) Ltd
when it remarked:
‘
Although
the scenario seemed to have been left open by the Constitutional
Court in
Gijima
,
it seems doubtful that the SIU would be regarded as being
in
a position akin to that of a private person.
The
Constitutional Court in
Gijima
went on to say “it seems inconsonant that the State can be both
the beneficiary of the rights and the bearer of the corresponding
obligation that is intended to give effect to the rights. This must,
indeed, be an indication that only private persons enjoy rights
under
section 33”, and by extension under PAJA.’
[6]
[20]
There is an exception to the
Gijima
rule.
It is that if an organ of state applies to review an administrative
action when acting in the public interest, rather than
in its own
interest, it steps into the shoes of private persons, and then may
use the PAJA.
[7]
But the
exception does not apply in this case. Mr Mapholisa makes no claim to
act in the public interest and clearly stated in
the founding
affidavit that he brought the review application ‘in my
capacity as
pro
forma
complainant’, duly appointed as such by the registrar of the
HPCSA.
[21]
As the pathway to review in this case is the principle of legality
under the common law, and
not the PAJA, regulates the procedure. And
the common law has no rule similar to s 7(2) of the PAJA. In fact,
the common law approach
to the exhaustion of internal remedies is to
the exact opposite effect – that there is no duty to exhaust
internal remedies,
unless a statute places an obligation on a person
to do so.
[8]
As Jafta J said in
Dengetenge
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sphere Mining & Development Co Ltd
,
[9]
where internal remedies are created, the common law rule is to the
effect that ‘the choice was that of the aggrieived party
either
to pursue those remedies before going to a court of law or to proceed
straight to seek the review of the offending decision
in court’.
The mere fact that an internal remedy has been created does not give
rise to an inference that there is a duty
to use it.
[10]
[22]
There is no indication in either the Act or the Regulations that
parties to disciplinary proceedings
must first exhaust internal
remedies before they may apply to review administrative decisions
taken against them. The result, is
that, in this case, there was no
obligation placed on Mr Mapholisa by the legislation to exhaust the
internal remedy, and his failure
to have done so did not stand in the
way of the high court reviewing the decision of PCC. The high court
erred in its conclusion
to the contrary.
The merits of the
review
[23]
As far as the
merits
are concerned, I
think the issue is clear. It is so that the person who lodged the
complaint against Dr Miller was not his patient.
But the definition
of the term ‘complainant’ in reg 1 of the regulations is
wide enough to include her. It defines
that term to mean ‘any
natural or juristic person, group or professional body, including a
professional association or society,
a teaching or training
institution, or any health care or related facility, that lodges a
complaint against a registered person
about alleged unprofessional
conduct’.
[24]
The PCC found that Ms Miller did not have
locus standi
to lay
a complaint. In terms of s 3
(k)
of the Act, one of the objects
and functions of the the PCC is to exercise its powers and discharge
its responsibilities in the
best interest of the public and in
accordance with national health policy determined by the Minister.
The definition of complainant
in reg 1 must be interpreted in this
context. A wide group of persons and bodies are identified as
potential complainants so as
to protect the public effectively from
professional misconduct by health professionals, and thus further the
public interest.
[25]
The PCC seems to have been confused between two distinct concepts –
who may lodge a complaint,
on the one hand, and how a complaint may
be proved on the other. Its reasoning appears to have been that
because the complainant
was not the victim of Dr Miller’s
alleged unprofessional conduct, and thus could not give admissible
evidence to prove it,
she had no standing to lodge a complaint. In
this the PCC made an error of law that was material, with the result
that the decision
to stop the disciplinary process was invalid.
Conclusion
[26]
In my view, Mr Mapholisa has established reasonable prospects of
success, with the result that
his application for leave to appeal
must succeed. He has also established that the high court erred in
dismissing his application
because he had not exhausted the internal
remedy of an appeal, and that the PCC’s decision was tainted by
irregularity. He
must therefore succeed in his appeal.
[27]
In the result I make the following order:
1 Leave to appeal is
granted with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2 The appeal is upheld
with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
3 The order of the high
court is set aside and replaced with the following order:
‘
1
The decision by the Professional Conduct Committee of the Medical and
Dental Professions Board, as contemplated in the Health
Professions
Act 56 of 1974, constituted of the first to sixth respondents and
taken on 3 July 2017 (the decision) is reviewed and
set aside.
2 The decision is
substituted with the following:
“
The
point in limine is dismissed.”
3 The seventh respondent
is directed to pay the applicant’s costs.’
N
P MALI
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
applicant:
J C Uys SC and N Felgate
Instructed
by:
K M Mmuoe Attorneys Inc, Johannesburg
Lovius Block,
Bloemfontein
For
seventh respondent: S L P
Mulligan
Instructed
by:
MacRobert Attorneys, Pretoria
Neuhoff Attorneys,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Regulations
Relating to the Conduct of Inquiries into Alleged Unprofessional
Conduct GN R102,
GG
31859,
6 February 2009.
[2]
Regulation 4(8) of the regulations.
[3]
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd
(
Gijima)
[2017]
ZACC 40
;
2018 (2) SA 23
( CC); 2018 (2) BCLR 240 (CC).
[4]
Ibid
para
29.
[5]
Ibid
para
2.
[6]
Special
Investigating Unit and Another v Engineered Systems Solutions (Pty)
Ltd
[2021] ZASCA 90
;
[2021] 3 All SA 791
(SCA);
2022 (5) SA 416
(SCA)
para 25.
[7]
See
Hunter
v Financial Sector Conduct Authority and Others
[2018] ZACC 31
;
2018 (6) SA 348
(CC);
2018 (12) BCLR 1481
(CC) para
49 and
Compcare
Wellness Medical Scheme v Registrar of Medical Schemes and Others
[2020]
ZASCA 91
;
2021 (1) SA 15
(SCA) para 21.
[8]
See
L G Baxter
Administrative
Law
(1984) at 720-723; Plasket ‘The Exhaustion of Internal
Remedies and section 7 (2) of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000’ (2002) 119
SALJ
50
at 50-51; see also Hoexter and Penfold
Administrative
Law in South Africa
3
ed (2021) at 745-746.
[9]
Dengetenge
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sphere Mining & Development Co Ltd
and Others
[2013] ZACC 48
;
2014 (3) BCLR 265
(CC);
2014 (5) SA 138
CC para 115.
[10]
See
Bindura
Town Management Board v Desai & Co
1953 (1) SA 358
( A) at 362H-363H and
Welkom
Village Management Board v Leteno
1958
(1) SA 490( A)
at 502G-503D.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Magwala v Chief Sinthumule and Others (744/2021) [2023] ZASCA 62 (5 May 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 62Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Manyaka v S (434/2020) [2022] ZASCA 21; 2022 (1) SACR 447 (SCA) (23 February 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 21Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Makhala & Another v S (438/20) [2022] ZASCA 19; 2022 (1) SACR 485 (SCA); [2022] 2 All SA 367 (SCA) (18 February 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 19Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Nkomo and Others v S (130/2022) [2024] ZASCA 61 (26 April 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 61Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Motsima and Another v Kopa and Others (1316/23) [2025] ZASCA 144 (7 October 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 144Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar