Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 178South Africa
Air Chefs Soc Limited v Public Protector of Republic of South Africa & Others (31083-2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 178 (29 February 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: Application for leave to appeal – s 17(1)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – an applicant now faces a higher and a more stringent threshold – leave to appeal refused.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Air Chefs Soc Limited v Public Protector of Republic of South Africa & Others (31083-2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 178 (29 February 2024)
Air Chefs Soc Limited v Public Protector of Republic of South Africa & Others (31083-2020) [2024] ZAGPJHC 178 (29 February 2024)
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sino date 29 February 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
1. Not Reportable
2. Not of Interest to
Other Judges
Case
NO
:
31083/2020
DATE
:
29
th
February
2024
In the matter between:
AIR
CHEFS SOC LIMITED
Applicant
and
THE PUBLIC PROTECTOR
OF
THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
First
Respondent
MANTELL
,
SIMON t/a MANTELLI BISCUITS
Second
Respondent
SOUTH
AFRICAN AIRWAYS SOC LIMITED
Third
Respondent
Neutral
Citation
:
Air Chefs v The Public Protector
and Other (31083/2020)
[2024] ZAGPJHC ---
(29 February
2024)
Coram:
Adams J
Heard
:
29 February 2024 – ‘virtually’ as a videoconference
on
Microsoft Teams
.
Delivered:
29 February 2024 – This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties' representatives by
email, by
being uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 11:30 on 29
February 2024.
Summary:
Application for leave to appeal –
s 17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013
– an applicant now faces a higher and a
more stringent threshold – leave to appeal refused.
ORDER
(1)
The second respondent’s
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT [APPLICATION
FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL]
Adams J:
[1].
I shall refer
to the parties as referred to in the original review application by
the applicant (Air Chefs) for the review and the
setting aside of a
report by the Public Protector and her findings in the said report.
The second respondent (Mantelli’s)
had also instituted a
counter-application in which he sought a review and setting aside of
certain of the remedial action ordered
by the Public Protector and
for an order substituting such remedial action with other remedial
action. The second respondent is
the applicant in this application
for leave to appeal and the applicant is the respondent herein. On 26
January 2024 I dismissed
both the review application and the review
counter-application and each party I had order to pay his own costs.
[2].
The second
respondent
applies for leave to
appeal against that portion of my judgment and the order (paragraphs
2 and 3), as well as the reasons therefor,
in terms of which I had
dismissed his counter-application and ordered each party to bear his
own costs.
[3].
The application for leave to
appeal is mainly against my factual findings and legal conclusion
that the second respondent is not
entitled to the relief sought by
him. I erred, so the second respondent submits,
in
fact and in law in not granting an order in the manner sought by him
for a review of certain of the findings and the remedial
action in
the report of the Public Protector dated 31 January 2020. I should
not have accepted, so the contention goes, the explanation
proffered
by the applicant that after the first letter of award (LoA) was sent
to the second respondent, it dawned on the applicant
that the award
of the tender was problematic in that its implementation would
result, from a practical point of view, in difficulties.
It is also
contended by the second respondent that I erred in law in finding
that the relief sought by the second respondent is
wholly incompetent
for the simple reason that the counter-application is in the nature
of a judicial review of an administrative
decision.
[4].
Nothing new has been raised by the second respondent in this
application for leave to appeal. In my original judgment, I have
dealt
with most, if not all of the issues raised by the second
respondent in this application for leave to appeal and it is not
necessary
for me to repeat those in full.
Suffice to restate what I said in my judgment, namely
that
the Public Protector does not have judicial review powers. The Public
Protector’s main function is to investigate and
to report on
maladministration, and then to take appropriate remedial action, in
connection with the affairs of any State institution
or on the abuse
of power or unfair, capricious, discourteous or other improper
conduct or undue delay by a person performing a
function connected
with his or her employment by such State institutions. Her powers are
limited to her investigating and reporting
on maladministration or
such other misconduct by a person in the employ of a State
institution, ‘which results in unlawful
or improper prejudice
to any other person’, and then to take ‘appropriate
remedial action’.
[5].
The traditional test in deciding whether leave to
appeal should be granted was whether there is a reasonable prospect
that another
court may come to a different conclusion to that reached
by me in my judgment. This approach has now been codified in
s
17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, which came into
operation on the 23
rd
of August 2013, and which provides
that leave to appeal may only be given where the judges concerned are
of the opinion that ‘the
appeal would have a reasonable
prospect of success’.
[6].
In
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
[1]
,
the SCA held that the test of reasonable prospects of success
postulates a dispassionate decision, based on the facts and the
law
that a court of appeal ‘could’ reasonably arrive at a
conclusion different to that of the trial court. These prospects
of
success must not be remote, but there must exist a reasonable chance
of succeeding. An applicant who applies for leave to appeal
must show
that there is a sound and rational basis for the conclusion that
there are prospects of success.
[7].
The ratio in
Ramakatsa
simply followed
S
v Smith
2012 (1) SACR 567
(SCA),
[2011] ZASCA 15
, in which Plasket AJA
(Cloete JA and Maya JA concurring), held as follows at para 7:
‘
What
the test of reasonable prospects of success postulates is a
dispassionate decision, based on the facts and the law that the
Court
of Appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that
of the trial court. In order to succeed, therefore, the
appellant
must convince this Court on proper grounds that he has prospects of
success on appeal and that those prospects are not
remote, but have a
realistic chance of succeeding. More is required to be established
than that there is a mere possibility of
success. That the case is
arguable on appeal or that the case cannot be categorised as
hopeless. There must, in other words, be
a sound, rational basis for
the conclusion that there are prospects of success on appeal.’
[8].
In
Mont
Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen
[2]
,
the Land Claims Court held (in an
obiter
dictum
)
that the wording of this subsection raised the bar of the test that
now has to be applied to the merits of the proposed appeal
before
leave should be granted. I agree with that view, which has also now
been endorsed by the SCA in an unreported judgment in
Notshokovu
v S
[3]
.
In that matter the SCA remarked that an appellant now faces a higher
and a more stringent threshold, in terms of the Superior
Court Act 10
of 2013 compared to that under the provisions of the repealed Supreme
Court Act 59 of 1959. The applicable legal principle
as enunciated in
Mont
Chevaux
has also now been endorsed by the Full Court of the Gauteng Division
of the High Court in Pretoria in
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others v Democratic
Alliance In Re: Democratic Alliance v Acting National Director
of
Public Prosecutions and Others
[4]
.
[9].
I am not persuaded that the
issues raised by the second respondent in his application for leave
to appeal are issues in respect
of which another court is likely to
reach conclusions different to those reached by me. I am therefore of
the view that there are
no reasonable prospects of another court
making factual findings and coming to legal conclusions at variance
with my factual findings
and legal conclusions. The appeal,
therefore, in my view, does not have a reasonable prospect of
success.
[10].
Leave to appeal should therefore
be refused.
Order
[11].
In the circumstances, the
following order is made:
(1)
The second respondent’s
application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs.
L R ADAMS
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
HEARD
ON: 29
th
February 2024
JUDGMENT
DATE: 29
th
February
2024 – Judgment handed down electronically
FOR THE
APPLICANT: Advocate
M Majozi, together with Advocate Sihawu
INSTRUCTED
BY: Motalane
Incorporated, Waterkloof Ridge, Pretoria
FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT: No
appearance
INSTRUCTED
BY: No
appearance
FOR THE SECOND
RESPONDENT: Advocate Guy Elliot SC
INSTRUCTED
BY: Francis
Thompson & Aspden, Cape Town
FOR THE THIRD
RESPONDENT: No
appearance
INSTRUCTED
BY: No
appearance
[1]
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another
(724/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021);
[2]
Mont
Chevaux Trust v Tina Goosen,
LCC 14R/2014 (unreported).
[3]
Notshokovu
v S,
case
no: 157/2015
[2016] ZASCA 112
(7 September 2016).
[4]
Acting
National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others v Democratic
Alliance In Re: Democratic Alliance v Acting National
Director of
Public Prosecutions and Others
(19577/09) [2016] ZAGPPHC 489 (24 June 2016).
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