Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 323South Africa
Fuels Industry Association of South Africa v Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources and Others (2024/130293) [2025] ZAGPJHC 323 (21 March 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 March 2025
Judgment
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## Fuels Industry Association of South Africa v Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources and Others (2024/130293) [2025] ZAGPJHC 323 (21 March 2025)
Fuels Industry Association of South Africa v Minister of Mineral and Petroleum Resources and Others (2024/130293) [2025] ZAGPJHC 323 (21 March 2025)
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# REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number:
2024-130293
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES
(3) REVISED: NO
DATE: 21/3/2025
In the matter between:
FUELS
INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION OF
Applicant
# SOUTH AFRICA
SOUTH AFRICA
And
MINISTER
OF MINERAL
AND
First
Respondent
# PETROLEUM RESOURCES
PETROLEUM RESOURCES
THE
CONTROLLER OF PETROLEUM
Second Respondent
# PRODUCTS
PRODUCTS
THE
FUEL RETAILERS'
ASSOCIATION
Third Respondent
THE
RETAIL MOTOR
INDUSTRY
Fourth Respondent
# ORGANISATION
ORGANISATION
AMISTEC
(PTY) LTD t/a LIQUID
FUELS
Fifth Respondent
# WHOLESALES ASSOCIATION
WHOLESALES ASSOCIATION
PETROLEUM
RETAILERS’ ALIGNMENT FORUM
Sixth Respondent
ROYALE
ENERGY (PTY)
LTD
Seventh
Respondent
NATIONAL
ENERGY REGULATOR
Eighth
Respondent
# OF
SOUTH AFRICA
OF
SOUTH AFRICA
Constitutional
Law – suspension of
administrative action as just and
equitable remedy under section 172(1)(b) of Constitution -decisions
of Minister of Mineral and
Petroleum Resources in terms of
Petroleum
Products Act 120 of 1977
relating to the imposition of interim
amendments to Retail Accounting System governing the Fuel Industry
taken
in
contravention of judgment of High Court – inherently
unconstitutional - appropriate remedy is
suspension of the decisions pending
review – no necessity for declaration of invalidity or even for
constitutional issue to
hinge on such invalidity for
section
172(1)(b)
to apply.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
FISHER J
## Introduction
Introduction
[1]
This application is the further instalment
in a saga involving regulation of the fuel industry in South Africa.
[2]
The processes which have unfolded over more
than a decade relate to how State regulation of the petroleum
industry affects the competing
commercial rights of retailers of fuel
and other petroleum-based products and the oil companies that own the
sites from which the
fuel is distributed.
[3]
The relief is sought as a matter of urgency
by the applicant Association which represents the petroleum industry
in South Africa.
The applicant brings the application in its own
right and on behalf of four of its members: Astron Energy (Pty) Ltd,
BP Southern
Africa (Pty) Ltd, Engen Petroleum (Pty) Ltd, and Sasol
Limited.
[4]
The purpose of the application is to
achieve the urgent suspension of two decisions taken by the Minister
of Mineral and Petroleum
Resources (the Minster) pending the review
of those decisions.
[5]
The impugned decisions relate to the
interim restructuring by the Minister of the system of regulation
that has governed the fuel
industry and the determination of the
petrol price in South Africa for more than a decade.
[6]
This
restructuring purports to be a response to an order handed down by
Opperman J in this court in the matter of
Fuel
Retailers Association v Minister of Energy and Others
[1]
(
FRA
).
[7]
That judgment is central to this
application. It involved the review by the Fuel Retailers Association
(which is the third respondent
in this application) of the system of
regulation of the industry that came into effect in 2013.
[8]
In terms of
FRA
the court directed that the Minster
conduct a review of the decision taken in 2013 which imposed a system
of governmental regulation
that did not allocate a retail margin.
[9]
The Minster was directed to conduct the
review contemplated within nine months of the order and according to
specified directives
of Opperman J.
[10]
The review ordered by Opperman J has not
been undertaken by the Minister. There is no indication that it has
even been commenced.
Instead, an interim position has been put in
place by the Minster which is intended to operate pending the ordered
review.
[11]
The applicant contends that the interim
position that the impugned decisions contemplate is unlawful, inter
alia, for being in conflict
with the order of Opperman J in
FRA
.
[12]
The applicant contends further that the
implementation of the decisions on an interim basis will result in
irreversible and catastrophic
consequences for an industry that is a
driver of the South African economy.
[13]
The third respondent has represented the
retailers in the litigation throughout and continues to represent
them in these proceedings.
It opposes the application, inter alia, on
the basis that it is not urgent. It argues further that, far from
being in conflict
with the order in
FRA,
it in fact represents compliance
therewith.
[14]
The government respondents in the form of
the Minister, the Controller and the National Energy Regulator
(NERSA) abide this court’s
decision. The other respondents
don’t directly oppose.
[15]
Viewed broadly, then, the case, involves
the competing rights and interests entailed in the commercial
relationships between the
owners of the retail sites, which are, in
the main, the oil companies and
the
retailers that operate the sites under State licence in the fuel
industry.
## The impugned decisions
The impugned decisions
[16]
The first decision in issue was taken on 22
August 2024 and is to the effect that an interim retail margin would
be allocated in
the retail sector of the fuel industry to operate
pending a full review of the regulation of the industry. The full
review is clearly
that contemplated by Opperman J in
FRA.
[17]
The second decision was taken on 04
November 2024 and in terms thereof, the impugned retail margin in
issue was put into effect
pending the contemplated review.
[18]
The creation of this new notional interim
margin entails the reduction of an existing margin, in the form of an
allowance of a share
of the fuel price which was previously allocated
to the owners of the retail site.
A
classic case of borrowing from Peter to pay Paul.
[19]
This abrupt change to the system comes in a
context where there are existing commercial relationships between the
oil companies
and the retailers which are based on the system that
prevailed before the taking of the impugned decisions – i.e.
a regulatory landscape which did not set a
margin in the retail sector.
[20]
This shift, obviously creates a situation
where the contracts which form the basis of these relationship will
require renegotiation.
[21]
The oil companies argue that these
decisions, if implemented, will lead to chaos in the industry.
[22]
This relief is sought under part A of the
application and pending the determination of the application for the
review and the setting
aside of the impugned decisions contained in
part B.
[23]
The application for the suspension of the
decisions is brought in terms of section 172(1)(b) of the
Constitution predominantly on
the basis that the suspension would be
just and equitable remedial relief flowing from conduct of the
Minister that is in direct
defiance of a court order and, as such,
constitutionally invalid.
## Background
Background
[24]
It is helpful to begin with a
characterisation of the participants in the Fuel Industry with
reference to how their participation
dictates the fuel price.
Participants in the
fuel industry
[25]
The focus of the fuel industry in South
Africa is on the refining, storage, transportation, and marketing of
imported crude oil.
This
focus leads to specialist services which include refiners, primary
storage, secondary storage, wholesale and retail.
[26]
All market activity is closely regulated
under licence. Some oil companies hold refining/ manufacturing
licences and a wholesale
licence while others hold one or the other.
[27]
With the exception of a few training sites,
liquid fuel manufacturers and wholesalers are prohibited by section
5(a) of the Petroleum
Products Act 120 of 1977 (the Act) from holding
retail licences for petroleum and liquid fuels. The oil companies are
thus reliant
on licenced retailers to sell their product. This, in
and of itself, is a regulatory provision which protects the retail
industry.
[28]
The petrol pump price is fully regulated.
It comprises a number of price elements, some of which are calculated
on the basis of
external international factors and others which
pertain to the domestic market. The external factors are US Dollar-
based, and
the internal factors are the subject of the close
regulation in issue.
[29]
The external factors move constantly and
account for most of the movements in the petrol price. Both the world
market price of oil
and the exchange rate are outside the control of
the domestic industry.
[30]
The domestic petrol price which is
published monthly by the Department of Energy (DoE) takes account of
movements in these factors.
[31]
At issue in these proceedings is the retail
end of the fuel supply chain and more specifically the commercial
relationships between
retailers and the owners of the retail sites.
These owners are for the most part, the oil companies who are also
generally the
wholesalers.
[32]
It is, thus, convenient for present
purposes to view the competing camps as the owners or oil companies
and the retailers. It is,
however, accepted that, within these two
camps, there are different ways of the participants doing business
with one another.
[33]
There are approximately 5600 licensed
retail sites in South Africa. The vast majority are owned by the oil
Companies who enter into
commercial relationships with licensed
retailers in relation to the use of the retail site. These
relationships include lease agreements,
franchising agreements and
service level agreements.
[34]
A central focus of Opperman J in
FRA
was the differing commercial
relationships and forces which operate in these two types of
ownership models. The sites owned by the
oil companies are known in
the industry as Company Owned Retail Operated (CORO) sites; the sites
owned by the retailers themselves
are known as Retail Owned Retail
Operated (RORO) sites.
[35]
A key feature of the domestic regulation is
the providing of allowable returns or margins along the value chain.
In this manner,
the petrol pump price is calculable according to set
margins and formulae.
[36]
This process has the effect of eradicating
uncertainty and keeping the fuel price stable. This, in turn,
encourages investment by
existing and new entrants into the industry.
[37]
The calibration of the margins along the
chain is intricate and is the product of specialist economic
intervention at government
level.
[38]
The fuel price is pivotal to every aspect
of the broader economy. If the fuel price goes up this has a direct
effect on the cost
of living.
[39]
It is helpful to understand the background
to the formulation of the system of regulation that maintained prior
to the impugned
decisions which have now served to change this
system.
The
advent of the new regulatory system or RAS
[40]
Before 2011, the fuel industry was
regulated by the Marketing of Petroleum Activities Return system and
its guidelines.
[41]
In 1996 the government began planning and
working towards the institution of a new system which would be
purpose designed to regulate
the domestic fuel industry in a newly
democratic South Africa. This system is known as the Regulatory
Accounting System (RAS).
[42]
After intensive investigation of the
markets over years, the RAS reached its implementation stage in 2011.
[43]
The implementation commenced with a
two-year transitional phase. This transitional period was necessary
to enable market participants
to prepare for the full implementation
of the RAS as a new petrol price accounting and regulatory system.
[44]
This entailed stakeholders, at each stage
of the domestic fuel supply chain, bringing about changes in their
commercial relationships
so as to align these with the new system.
[45]
The DoE took the decision finally to
implement the RAS in December 2013 (the 2013 decision).
[46]
The adoption of the RAS, as one would
expect in such a vital sector, had been preceded by an intensive
period of research, development,
and assessment in relation to the
form the regulations should take and the likely impact on the various
role players in the industry
and the economy as a whole.
[47]
This
research
process spanned nearly a decade and entailed intensive and complex
analyses of the fuel price with reference to SA’s
developing
economy, the state of the commercial relationships within the sector,
and the effect of constitutional development and
changes to the law
after 1994.
[48]
As part of this process and at great
expense, the DoE appointed a cohort of experts to report and make
recommendations as to how
the regulation could take place in the most
efficient and just manner possible.
[49]
One of the experts that conducted intensive
research into the model was Bates White, a firm based in the US. The
firm is specialist
in providing econometric and economic
analysis
with
respect,
inter
alia,
to
fuel
pricing
across
jurisdictions.Bates White undertook a
detailed review of the market and reported and made recommendations
toward a new system.
[50]
A
further
key stage in the process was the appointment of an entity called the
Institute for Petroleum and Research (IPSR). The expertise
of this
institute was employed to enable the minister to set the
activity-based margins for each part of the industry on an annual
basis.
[51]
Ultimately, this process yielded the RAS in
the form that it took prior to the impugned decisions.
[52]
A
hallmark
of the RAS is that it provides set or determinable recovery margins
across the various participants in the industry. This
manifests in
the cents per litre that accrue to each identified activity along the
retail petroleum value chain.
[53]
Regulated firms may not increase prices so
as to obtain profits in excess of these stipulated margins. This
consistency in the market
allows for a set and stable petrol price.
[54]
The RAS, however, stopped short of
regulating the retail industry in this respect. This has been a bone
of contention for years
and has resulted in the saga of litigation of
which this application is the latest development.
[55]
The RORO retailers obtain a margin on the
basis of their ownership. The CORO retailers previously got no
margin.
[56]
The CORO retailers represented by their
association, which is the third respondent in this application sought
to review the decision
to implement the 2013 decision without setting
a margin for them.
[57]
This culminated in the judgment of Opperman
J in
FRA.
[58]
The order in this judgment is central to
the impugned decisions of the Minster in this case. It deserves a
sub- heading of its own.
Fuel Retailers
Association v Minister of Energy (FRA)
[59]
In
FRA
,
the Fuel Retailers Association applied to review and set aside the
2013 decision to implement the RAS on the basis that it did
not
provide for a margin for retailers. The retailers were successful in
their claim for a review of the RAS model as embodied
in the then
Minister’s 2013 decision.
[60]
The analysis by Opperman J of the process
which had been undertaken by the DoE for the purpose of the
determination of the RAS under
the 2013 decision is detailed and
requires no repetition here. It suffices to state that it is clear
from the judgment that the
process unfolded over years and was
rigorous and required crucial expertise.
[61]
The problem, as encapsulated by Opperman J,
was as follows:
“
[22]
As mentioned, the RAS stipulates a margin
for each activity.
This
application is concerned only with the margin allocated to the
retailing sector within the petroleum industry.
The retail margin includes a return on the
capital for the owner of the assets portion (CAPEX) through which
they can achieve a
return on their investment or capital expenditure
in the assets required along the petroleum value chain (tanks,
storage units,
pumps, land and the like), and an operating costs
portion (OPEX) which is a straight cost-recovery facet to compensate
parties
for the costs involved in providing the services required
along
the
petroleum
value
chain. The
OPEX
recovery
is
not
a
profit-making margin. It covers costs such
as labour and overheads incurred by the service station
operator (the retailer) in distributing
petrol without adding a return or margin.
[23]
The RAS does not differentiate between RORO
and CORO sites but the margins it provides for are based on and
benchmarked against
a RORO site.
[24]
In theory, both the OPEX recovery and
CAPEX return will be recovered by a
retailer
in a RORO site. In a CORO site, the retailer will recover the OPEX
and the oil
company
the CAPEX return.”
(Emphasis
added)
[62]
Opperman J
identified that the retail margin
contemplated would, in effect, be a component stipulated for CORO
retailers in the model which
would take the form of an amount that
would compensate them for what was referred to as an entrepreneurial
compensation (EC). She
characterised this compensation
as follows:
“
An
entrepreneurial compensation (EC) allocation (or trading margin) is a
portion of the retail margin, over and above the OPEX recovery,
that
would be allocated to retailers to compensate them for the provision
of services associated with operating service stations.
They ensure a
return on a retailer’s risk and investment in providing
services.”
[2]
[63]
In summary, the court found that there had
been errors in the processes adopted in making the determinations of
margins in the retail
sector. The central problem identified in the
judgment was what Opperman J saw as a failure of the Minister to take
cognisance
of the fact that CORO sites predominate in the SA retail
industry.
[64]
The Bates White report had recommended that
a benchmarking analysis be embarked upon in order to establish
appropriate
return
on retail assets
by
the owners
and
the
viability
of
service
stations.
An
“efficient
benchmark
service
station model” was proposed in the Bates White report.
[65]
Opperman J had a difficulty with the fact
that the benchmark service station around which the economic
modelling took place was
a RORO site.
[66]
The mandate of IPSR had been, inter alia,
to determine with reference to the Bates White report and other
industry data an appropriate
rate of return for owners for its assets
based on a Capital Asset Pricing or CAPEX margin. Part of the data
considered was the
benchmark service station contemplated in Bates
White report – i.e. a RORO model.
[67]
The CAPEX margin allowed to the owners of
the sites was ultimately determined based on the reasonable rate of
return on investment
of the site owners. No retail margin was
recommended in that, as the Minister explained, it was considered
that it was best for
the retail industry to operate on the basis of
market forces.
[68]
In short, the Minister took the decision
not to create a retail margin and the 2013 decision approved the RAS
model in this form.
[69]
Whilst the process was unfolding a Special
Committee was appointed to deal with the implementation of the RAS as
the implementation
phase approached in 2011. It was known as the RAS
Technical Committee (RTC).
[70]
During the phasing in period between 2011
to 2013, the RTC allowed for an interim informal retail margin to
flow to the retailers.
This is relevant in that it is this informal
position which has been reverted to by the Minister in taking the
impugned decisions
in issue.
[71]
This interim retail allocation employed in
the 2011 phasing in period entailed certain components of the CAPEX
due to owners being
allocated to the retailers. These components of
the CAPEX concerned are those known as: (i) the small stock premium
margin and
(ii) the marketability adjustment margin.
[72]
This
phasing
in position was universally accepted as a makeshift temporary
arrangement which allowed for a bridging between the outgoing
system
which had involved some return for retailers and the new RAS.
[73]
It
was cautioned in the report of ISPR that the if the shift of CAPEX
margins received by oil companies to retailers was retained
this was
likely to have an effect on the delicate commercial relationships in
the retail space in that such a move would inevitably
cause oil
companies to extract returns from increased franchise and rental
fees.
[3]
This
stands to reason.
[74]
After the 2013 decision, the DoE continued
to publish a notional EC or retail margin as a guide to the industry.
But this figure
is part of the CAPEX which goes to the owners of the
sites.
[75]
It
was accepted by Opperman J in
FRA
that
the proposal that the CAPEX portion of the retail margin be split
between wholesalers and retailers (to accommodate an EC)
would
require additional expert consultation.
[4]
The IPSR had stated that this determination was beyond its mandate.
The IPSR had also emphasised that such a split would have to
be based
on ‘sound economic logic’
[5]
.
[76]
It
is important that the two components of the CAPEX which were employed
in the determination of the notional retail margin which
was
routinely published as a guide only bear no relationship to the
requirements of the retail industry. This was accepted by Opperman
J.
[6]
[77]
The carving out of these components was
nothing more than convenience at a time of transition of commercial
relationships from the
old system to the RAS.
[78]
Under the impugned decisions the Minister
has simply reinstated this interim bridging phase of a decade ago
without any proper review
process as to the viability of this move.
These parts of the CAPEX are now abruptly afforded the status of a
set margin which owners
are obliged to pay to the retailers. I will
expand on the effects of this move later.
[79]
Opperman J appreciated that difficulties
were likely to arise from a move which resulted in the Capex being
split between owners
and retailers. She stated the following with
reference to the carving out of these components from the CAPEX:
“
Even
if retailers were in a reasonable position to negotiate with the oil
companies that supply them (which they are not), the inevitable
outcome of the DoE’s decision to allow the EC to be determined
by the commercial negotiations is that either the retailers
are
under-compensated (because they cannot procure an adequate return for
their retail activities), or the asset-owners are under-compensated
(because they have allowed retailers to take an EC out of the CAPEX
that they would otherwise be entitled to). This flaw in the
RAS means
that it is arbitrary and incapable of giving effect to the objectives
that it was designed to achieve.”
[7]
[80]
This statement appears to acknowledge that
this EC or retail margin must be sourced as an extra feature of the
RAS. Where this extra
feature should be sourced was not expanded upon
by the court. It was, however, accepted by the court that the
determination of
what a regulated split in the CAPEX between owners
and retailers would look like would entail a not insubstantial
reassessment
of the industry.
[81]
The court recognised that the reassessment
would be required to take into account dynamic economic developments
in the retail space
of non-petroleum activities such as convenience
stores, eateries and the sale of non-controlled products which
contribute to the
profitability of the retailor.
[82]
To my mind the value attributable to the
service station assets as drawcard for other enterprises to be
conducted by the retailer
on site is indeed a relevant consideration.
For example, there may be sites where the retail of petrol is not the
focal point of
the relationship, and the profit is intended to be
derived from the retailer’s use of the site for the other
enterprises.
Whether this aspect is likely to be properly served by
the implementation of a retail margin is beyond the scope of this
judgment.
Judges are not economists.
[83]
In
her brief assessment of the position in the judgment, Opperman J
acknowledged that a decision by an oil company to forgo portion
of
its CAPEX margin would inevitably have the result that it would be
unable to fully recover its return on capital investment
and that
this would have repercussions for the whole industry and for
investment in the sector including investment by foreign
oil
companies
[8]
.
[84]
After
having framed the commercial relationship between the oil companies
and the retailers as one where the fate of retailers "is
entirely in the hands of oil companies”,
[9]
the
learned judge concluded by stating that “the very structure of
the RAS- the framework itself – is the source of
the
problem.”
[10]
[85]
The oil companies argued that these
assumptions were not necessarily founded in evidence before the
court.
It was
argued, there was no evidence to show that the commercial
negotiations had failed to provide adequate returns for retailers.
[86]
The court found this submission to be
unpersuasive. It found that retailers were forced to work within a
regulatory scheme that
is hostile to their ability to profit from the
commercial relationship. This finding was made on the basis of what
the court found
was an unequal bargaining relationship.
[87]
The oil companies and the DoE argued that
retail sites as to location, infrastructure, income and expenditure
were all individual
and thus not necessarily subject to an exercise
which was based on uniformity. They emphasised that the spread was
between a service
station in the heart of Sandton and one in a remote
rural area where there was little motor vehicle traffic.
[88]
It was argued on behalf of the oil
companies that without evidence of the market data the court should
be hard pressed to conclude
that the lack of regulation led to a lack
of viability.
[89]
The
court rejected this argument and held that the mere fact of unequal
bargaining power in the relationship between owner and retailer
makes
for the necessity of regulation in this sphere.
[11]
[90]
The thrust of the judgment appeared to be
to the effect that any system that did not contain a regulated margin
for the retail sector
was objectionable per se.
[91]
The order reads as follows:
“
The
original decision of the first respondent or her delegates [the
Minister], taken in November 2013,
to
implement the RAS without providing for a ring-fenced
Entrepreneurial Compensation (EC) to be
claimed exclusively by the retailers in
Company Owned Retailer Operated (CORO)
sites and/or specifying the items to be
claimed under the EC by retailers in CORO sites, is reviewed and set
aside.
3.
The determination of the treatment and
calculation of the EC for retailers in CORO sites as an allocation
within the retail margin
of the RAS (the determination) is referred
back to the first respondent [the Minister]
to
decide in accordance with this Court’s
judgment, within a period of 9 months
from the date of this order.
4.
Pending the determination, the 2020 RAS
Benchmark Service Station Matrix and any subsequently issued (or yet
to be issued) Matrices
are to remain in force and effect.
5.
Pending the determination, the status
quo of the outcome of each CORO site fuel
retailer’s
negotiation with its fuel supplier/landlord is to be maintained and
all new
agreements
still to be concluded between CORO site retailer’s and fuel
suppliers/landlords are to be on the
basis that the Minister’s decision has not been
reviewed or set aside.”
(Emphasis
Added)
[92]
The order thus appeared, on the face of it,
to suggest that the Minister had not in 2013 been and was not then at
liberty to deny
the retailers a margin.
[93]
The oil companies sought leave to appeal
the judgment to the SCA on the basis, inter alia, that it sought,
impermissibly, to dictate
to the Minister as to the exercise of his
executive powers.
[94]
They raised also that there was no evidence
before the court that the unregulated retail space was fundamentally
non-viable and
that the assumptions made in this regard had not been
open to the court to make.
[95]
One would think the proliferation of CORO
sites in the sector in and of itself may suggest some viability in
the industry. However,
the ordered review may indeed uncover problems
of the nature identified in the judgment. This process has, however,
not yet been
undertaken.
[96]
In her judgment in the application for
leave to appeal, Opperman J clarified that her judgment did not
intend to dictate that the
Minister was not entitled to approve a RAS
which did not allow for a set margin. She stated that it was merely
required in terms
of her judgment that there be further consideration
of the model in its entirety as it relates to CORO sites. The court
stated
that there was, in fact, no prescription from the court which
infringed against the doctrine of separation of powers.
[97]
The application for leave to appeal by the
applicants was, on this basis, dismissed with costs.
[98]
What is of some significance to this
application is that there is no indication in the judgment that any
information was placed
before Opperman J in relation to the timeframe
and budget considerations which would be required for the Minister to
undertake
the further consideration of the RAS model in its entirety.
[99]
The
judge, however, expressed herself to be acutely aware of the fact
that there had to be a viable interim position in place pending
the
reconsideration of the RAS. This position was held to be the status
quo, and this is reflected in the terms of the order.
[12]
[100]
In fact, the Minister is precluded by the
order from allowing a position other than the status quo pending the
reconsideration which
the judgment contemplates.
[101]
The court said the following in regard to
the ordered interim position.
“
Clearly
such a holding pattern [the retention of the status quo] while the
DoE reconsiders the position is preferable as it will
ensure
contractual stability and will eliminate commercial uncertainty.
This
is what I seek to achieve in the order that I intend
making.”
[13]
[102]
It
is important that the process contemplated by the court was that an
expert assessment of the RAS based on an economic modelling
around
CORO sites be obtained and that recommendations flowing from such a
process would “have to be traversed with all stakeholders
and
the Minister [would] have to decide whether the RAS in its amended
form is to be implemented.”
[14]
[103]
The date of the order in
RAF
was 22 September 2023, and the nine
months allowed to the process was thus set to expire before the end
of May 2024.
## The Ministers response to
the order inFRA
The Ministers response to
the order in
FRA
[104]
The Minister did not embark on the process
contemplated in the order - i.e. an expert review of the RAS which
used the CORO site
as its benchmark and entailed consultation with
stakeholders.
[105]
There has been no consultation with
stakeholders and no expert consideration of the complex economic
inquiries that such a process
expressly called for.
[106]
The
Minister
abides this court’s decision and has provided no information in
relation to why this process has not been undertaken
in accordance
with the order in
FRA
.
[107]
There may, however, be a clue in the fact
that a set time period of only nine months was allowed for this
process.
[108]
It appears that nine months may have been
insufficient. This could be for a number of possible reasons
including the complexity
of the ordered assessment and budget
constraints. Regardless, the Minister clearly understood himself by
the terms of the order
to be immutably bound to act within this time
limit.
[109]
It seems to me that this understanding has
led to him taking the precipitous step in issue.
[110]
What he should properly have done was place
before a court the fact that the time limit in the order had been set
by Opperman J
without any apparent evidential assessment of the time
it would actually take for the process to be undertaken.
[111]
On a proper assessment of what the process
ordered by Opperman J would entail based on evidence, one would think
that a condonation
of a failure to meet the
deadline
imposed
and
a
proper
determination
of
a
structural
mandamus going forward would have
substantial prospects of success.
The aftermath of the
Minster’s impugned decisions
[112]
In response to a complaint from the oil
companies on 02 September 2024 to the effect, inter alia, that they
had not been consulted
on these precipitous decisions either as to
content or to date of implementation, the Minister sent a notice in
terms of which
he suddenly required that the oil companies
individually provide detailed submissions of the implementation
challenges and their
earliest proposed implementation date. Such
submissions were to reach the Minister by 16h00 on that same day.
[113]
Thus, a matter of hours was allowed for
submissions from the oil companies. It was not clear whether the date
for implementation
which the decision set at 04 September 2024 would
possibly be moved on the basis of these submissions.
[114]
As it happened, there was no extension
despite some hurried submissions by some oil companies.
[115]
The applicant alleges for the purposes of
the review that this conduct of the Minster amounts to procedural
unfairness. It seems
to me, prima facie, that this ground of
complaint has prospects of being upheld.
[116]
There was, in tandem, an internal appeal
process being conducted by the applicants. The appeal failed on the
basis that the Minister
had made the determination and could not sit
in appeal of his own decision.
## The competing arguments
which are raised against this background
The competing arguments
which are raised against this background
[117]
As indicated above, the applicant bases its
case on section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution. It argues that the
decisions of the Minister
are in direct contravention of the court
order of Opperman J and specifically the orders
to: (i) implement a comprehensive review of
the RAS with the accent on a CORO benchmark and including
consultation with industry
stakeholders; (ii) to make whatever
changes to the RAS that are rationally recommended by that review
process; (iii) to implement
such changes in a rational manner; and
(iv) to maintain the prevailing status quo in the industry pending
the determination.
[118]
The applicant characterises the impugned
decisions as a cynical attempt by the Minister to portray the
decisions as compliance with
the order when they are, in fact, a
patent contravention. The conduct, furthermore, it argues,
countermands the interim facility
put in place by Opperman J pending
the contemplated review.
[119]
This conduct, it argues, strikes at the
heart of the rule of law. It thus argues that, once it is accepted
that the decisions are
in contravention of the court order, this is
determinative of the matter; the decisions must be suspended, and
there need be no
further consideration of any other aspects relating
to justice and equity.
[120]
In short, the argument of the applicant is
that it is axiomatically the case that it is just and fair under
section 172(1)(b) to
suspend an administrative decision taken in
direct contravention of a court order.
[121]
The third respondent argues, on the other
hand, that the decisions represent compliance with the court order
and that the interim
position required in the order, thus, no longer
has any application.
[122]
It is not disputed on behalf of the third
respondent that, to the extent that the decisions represent
non-compliance with the judgment,
this would be actionable.
[123]
The
third
respondent,
however,
takes
issue
with
the
cause
of
action
under
section 172 (1)(b). The argument goes that the
only cause of action available to the applicant would have been an
interdict against
the implementation of the decisions.
This, it reasons, is because the case does
not involve a constitutional inquiry. It thus argues that section 172
(1)(b) has been,
impermissibly, invoked in a bid to circumvent having
to establish the requirements for an interim interdict against the
Minister
– which, it is argued, the applicant is unable to do.
[124]
I move now to consider these arguments.
Are the decisions in
compliance with or in conflict with the order of Opperman J ?
[125]
The inquiry begins with a determination of
the meaning of the judgment. Once this is established, it can be
assessed whether there
has been compliance.
[126]
The
proper
approach to interpreting court orders was set out by the Appellate
Division in
Firestone
[15]
and
more recently by the Constitutional Court in
Eke
.
[16]
[127]
Essentially, the inquiry is purposive and
is to be determined primarily from the language of the judgement and
order read as a whole.
[128]
To
my
mind, there can be no doubt, on a reading of the judgment, that the
court required an intensive expert reconsideration and a
final
determination of how the RAS should operate. It is, furthermore,
abundantly clear that the court found that, in the interim to
this
final determination, there could be no change to the RAS.
[129]
It is not seriously disputed that the
contemplated process has not been undertaken. As I have said, there
is no indication that
it has even been commenced.
[130]
The order made it clear that, until a
determination in accordance with the judgment is made by the
Minister, the interim position
which would be most just and fair was
for the status quo to remain – i.e. the RAS in its then form to
remain in place.
[131]
Either the Minster is obtuse or creating a
pretext of compliance with the order. It matters not what the
explanation is. The objective
fact is the decisions do not constitute
compliance with the order.
[132]
The Minister’s attempt to impose an
interim order devised by him in the stead of the court imposed
interim position is patently
incompetent.
[133]
Where there is, prima facie, an indication
that an order handed down by a court is being circumvented, this is
an affront to the
rule of law and cannot be tolerated.
[134]
The
actions
of the Minister, if left, unchecked threaten to undermine public
trust and respect for the court and their orders.
[135]
This stands as its own prejudice and, to my
mind, is determinative.
[136]
I am thus in agreement with Mr Snyckers SC,
for the applicant, that the patent unlawfulness of the decisions
suffices, in and of
itself, to satisfy the requirement of justice and
equity under section 172(1)(b).
[137]
The decision by the Minister to substitute
what is in effect a structural mandamus in the order with a decision
that stands in direct
circumvention of such structural mandamus is
obviously in conflict with the terms of the judgment.
[138]
This brings me to the consideration of
whether the remedial provisions of
section
172(1)(b) can be invoked on these facts .
Can section 172(1)(b)
be competently invoked?
[139]
Section 172 (1) of the Constitution reads
as follows in relevant part:
“
172.
Powers of courts in constitutional matters
(1.) When deciding a
constitutional matter within its power, a court
a.
must declare that any law or conduct that
is inconsistent with the Constitution is invalid to the extent of its
inconsistency; and
b.
may make any order that is just and
equitable …”
[140]
Thus,
provided
there is a constitutional issue involved in the determination of the
matter at hand, section 172 remedial power is available
to an
applicant for relief. The third respondent argues that there is not
such an issue at stake. This is akin to the taking of
an exception.
[141]
The third respondent argues further that,
even if it is accepted that there is a constitutional issue at stake
in the matter, section
172(1)(b) does not empower this court to grant
the remedial relief in the form of the suspensive order sought
because the constitutional
matter in question must involve a
declaration of constitutional invalidity.
[142]
Thus, in sum, the argument of the third
respondent is that the case is not a constitutional matter and that
section 172(1) remedial
powers cannot be invoked for this reason and
in any event these remedial powers can only be invoked in the context
of a declaration
of inconsistency with the Constitution.
[143]
As
to the question of whether a constitutional issue is at stake, The
Constitutional Court in
Jiba
stated
that “for a constitutional issue to arise the claim advanced
must require the consideration and application of some
constitutional
rule or principle in the process of deciding the matter.
[17]
”
[144]
The decisions are manifestly against the
purpose of the judgment of Opperman
J. The reconsideration of
the margin was patently meant to be one which allowed for finality
and clarity in the sector.
[145]
The judgment considered what the position
interim to this finality should be and stated that the least
disruptive interim position
would be to maintain the status quo being
the industry being left to market forces and negotiation.
[146]
Properly construed, the judgment means that
pending the final determination of the position a court ordered
interim position will
prevail.
[147]
In
EFF
v Gordhan
[18]
the
Constitutional Court held that courts have a general power to suspend
administrative action in constitutional matters and that
such power
is sourced in section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution.
[148]
As
to
the question of whether the issue must involve a declaration of
invalidity, this issue was
comprehensively
addressed by the Constitutional Court in
Head
of Department: Mpumalanga Department of Education and Another v
Hoërskool Ermelo and Another
[19]
,
where it was held that the Court's power to make a just and equitable
order within its jurisdiction did not depend on first declaring
law
or conduct invalid or even on the dispute hinging on constitutional
invalidity.
[149]
Moseneke DCJ writing for the majority had
the following to say on this issue:
“
It
is clear that section 172(1)(b) confers wide remedial powers on a
competent court
adjudicating
a constitutional matter. The remedial power envisaged in section
172(1)(b)
is
not only available when a court makes an order of constitutional
invalidity of a law or
conduct
under section 172(1)(a). A just and equitable order may be made even
in
instances
where the outcome of a constitutional dispute does not hinge on
constitutional
invalidity
of legislation or conduct
.
This ample and flexible remedial jurisdiction in constitutional
disputes permits a court to forge an order that would place substance
above mere form by identifying the actual underlying dispute between
the parties and by
requiring
the
parties
to
take
steps
directed
at
resolving
the
dispute
in
a
manner
consistent with constitutional requirements.”
[20]
[150]
On the application of these principles, it
is clear that the constitutional authority of the judiciary is at
issue. Thus, section
172(1)(b) is properly invoked.
[151]
Thus, the argument that the applicant has
not established a cause of action is rejected. It is also accepted
that the mere fact
of the non-compliance in the circumstances serves
to establish that the suspension is just and fair.
[152]
But, even if this were not the case, an
evaluation of what is just and fair on the facts of this case,
regardless of the inherent
unlawfulness for breach of the order must
also clearly favour the applicant. For the sake of completeness, I
turn to this separate
evaluation.
[153]
It is clear that, even if the applicant had
sought to interdict the implementation of the decisions, which would
have been an unnecessarily
cumbersome and less direct approach, the
applicant would have succeeded. A consideration of the balance of
convenience would have
served to keep the court-ordered interim
position in place pending in this context pending the review.
[154]
To
my
mind, considerations of justice and fairness in the weighing up of
the considerations in both matters would result in similar
outcomes.
[155]
The assertion on behalf of the third
respondent that the applicant has sought, by way of resort to
suspension, to obtain a less
rigorous evaluation of justice and
fairness is without any merit.
[156]
A
determination of a just and equitable order, of necessity, requires a
careful consideration of the interests of parties on both
sides of
the litigation
[21]
.
[157]
The oil companies raise that the
industry at large is based on long standing and carefully crafted
commercial relationships. There
are, they say, back-to-back
agreements that sit like dominoes behind the relationships with the
retailers.
[158]
This government intervention which has come
suddenly and with no consultation and no warning puts these
relationships in jeopardy.
This, the applicants argue, has the
potential to bring about immediate closures of retail businesses.
This, they say is especially
true of the more marginal retailers who
are being managed by many of the oil-companies on the basis of the
extending of loan finance
and other support structures which are
designed to allow for their long-term viability.
[159]
If these symbiotic commercial structures
are to be dismantled, this will also have a knock-on effect on the
relationships which
the retailers have with others – for
example persons who run convenience stores on the sites.
[160]
The interim feature of the relief is a
further problem for the industry. It stands to reason that the
suspension or cancellation
of these pivotal relationships in this
sector will make it impossible for projections and business policies
to be set along the
fuel chain.
[161]
This has negative implications for business
confidence and foreign investment in this sector.
[162]
The uncertainty that this brings is
prejudicial to all parties, including the retailers. Recall, the
warning of IPSR when the RAS
was considered in the first instance to
the effect that the likely result of the imposition of a margin which
takes from the owners
will be a raising of the cost of the use of the
services for the retailers.
[163]
The point made by the applicant is that
these leases, supply contracts, and service contracts which are
currently in place as a
natural incident of market forces serve to
balance risk and return.
[164]
A renegotiation of these contracts would be
costly and time consuming for all parties. The scope for legal
disputes to arise is
wide.
[165]
The
applicant
makes a compelling case to the effect that the disruption to the
retailer industry will hit retailers who may be operating
on slim
profit margins hardest.
Closures
of retail sites will lead to significant job losses across the value
chain.
[166]
These sites often serve as economic and
social hubs in their communities. This is particularly relevant in
rural areas. The closure
of these sites would reduce local economic
activity and create insecurity in marginal areas.
[167]
The applicants raise that many marginal
sites are operated by historically disadvantaged individuals and if
these decisions are
not suspended this will affect the drive towards
economic empowerment.
[168]
The lack of certainty in such a vital
sector which is dominated by international companies has the
potential to deter investment
across the board and not only in the
fuel industry.
[169]
Furthermore, on a prima facie assessment of
the review grounds, there are substantial prospects of success for
the applicant with
respect to the Part B relief.
## Urgency
Urgency
[170]
The weighing up of the justice and equity
consideration reveal also that these decisions must be suspended
urgently. The rule of
law prejudice also dictates that the matter be
treated as one of urgency.
## Costs
Costs
[171]
To my mind there is no reason why the costs
should not follow the result. The only respondent that joined issue
with the applicant
was the third respondent. The other respondents
sensibly did not put in opposition.
[172]
I agree with Mr Snyckers that the matter is
sufficiently complex and important to warrant a cost award on scale
C.
## Order
Order
[173]
In the circumstances, I grant the following
order.
1.
The applicant’s non-compliance with
the Uniform Rules of Court relating to forms, service and time
periods is condoned, and
this application is dealt with as a matter
of urgency under Uniform Rule 6(12).
2.
Pending
the
final
adjudication
of
the
relief that
will be sought
in
Part
B
of this application:
2.1.
the decision by the Minister of Mineral and
Petroleum Resources (“the Minister”) on 4 November 2024
to ringfence the
Entrepreneurial Compensation (“EC”) as
implemented and calculated in the current Regulatory Accounting
System (“RAS”)
model and Benchmark Service Station
(“BSS”) matrix as in interim measure, pending the review
of the RAS (“the
4 November 2024 decision”) is suspended;
and
2.2.
the decision by the Minister on 22 August
2024 that the EC component within the retail margin should be
ring-fenced exclusively
for retailers as calculated in the current
RAS model and BSS matrix as an interim measure, pending the full
review of RAS (“the
22 August 2024 decision”) is
suspended.
3.
The costs of Part A of this application are
to be paid by the third respondent, such costs to be determined on
scale C and to include
the costs of two counsel where employed.
# FISHER J
FISHER J
# JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
JOHANNESBURG
## This Judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading
to the electronic file on
Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 21 March 2025.
This Judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading
to the electronic file on
Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 21 March 2025.
Heard:
24 February 2025
Delivered:
21 March 2025
# APPEARANCES:
APPEARANCES:
Applicant’s
counsel:
Adv. F Snyckers SC
Adv.
D Sive
Applicant’s
Attorneys:
Fasken
(Bell Dewar Incorporated)
Third
Respondent's Counsel:
Adv. G Quixley
Adv.
F Hobden
Third
Respondent Attorneys:
Seton Smith &
Associates
[1]
Fuel
Retailers Association v Minister of Energy and others
2023
JDR 3638 (GJ,) [2023] 4 All SA 739 (GJ).
[2]
Id
at para 27
[3]
Id
at para 52.
[4]
Id
at para 63
[5]
Id
at para 63
[6]
Id
at para 117.
[7]
Id
at para 118
[8]
Id
at para 92.
[9]
Id
at para 93.
[10]
Id
at para 97.
[11]
Id
at para 114.
[12]
Id
at para 140.
[13]
Id
at para 138.
[14]
Id
at para 139.
[15]
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro AG
1977 (4) SA 298
(A) at 304D-H.
[16]
Eke
v Parsons
2016 (3) SA 37
(CC) at para 29.
[17]
General
Council of the Bar of South Africa v Jiba
[2019] ZACC 23
; 2019 JDR
1194 (CC);
2019 (8) BCLR 919
(CC) at para 38.
[18]
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Gordhan and Others; Public Protector and Another
v Gordhan and Others (CCT 232/19; CCT 233/19)
[2020] ZACC 10
;
2020
(8) BCLR 916
(CC);
2020 (6) SA 325
(CC) (29 May 2020) at para 114
[19]
Head
of Department: Mpumalanga Department of Education and Another v
Hoërskool Ermelo and Another 2010 (2) SA 415 (CC).
[20]
Id
at para 97.
[21]
Hoërskool
Ermelo - above n 10 supra at para 96.
sino noindex
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