Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 286South Africa
Nene v National Lotteries Commission (0224114-2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 286 (14 March 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Nene v National Lotteries Commission (0224114-2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 286 (14 March 2024)
Nene v National Lotteries Commission (0224114-2024) [2024] ZAGPJHC 286 (14 March 2024)
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sino date 14 March 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
: 024114/2024
DATE
:
14-03-2024
1.REPORTABLE:
NO
2.OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO.
3. REVISED
In
the matter between
NOMPUMELELO
NENE
Applicant
and
NATIONAL
LOTTERIES COMMISSION Respondent
JUDGMENT
EX TEMPORE
WILSON,
J
: The applicant, Ms. Nene, is the
first respondent's company secretary.
She
was suspended from that role on 18 November 2022. A disciplinary
enquiry was instituted against her in February 2023. On 20
November
2023, the latest version of the charge sheet was proffered against
her. The disciplinary enquiry is due to lead evidence
on 26 March
2024.
That
is just over a week from now. Ms Nene now approaches me for relief
effectively staying the continuance of that enquiry on that
date.
There
are a number of proceedings being taken by Ms Nene that form a
backdrop to this application.
One
of these proceedings is a review of certain adverse findings made
against her by the Auditor General, which is pending before
the
Pretoria High Court. Another is a complaint pending before the
Commission on Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration (CCMA).
During the course
of argument, however, it became clear to me that neither of these
proceedings are really the basis on which Ms
Nene now moves her
application.
The
sole basis identified by Mr Alcock, who initially appeared for Ms
Nene, and again by Ms Nene who gave submissions on her own
behalf
after Mr Alcock withdrew during replying argument, is that Ms Nene
fears that the disciplinary inquiry is so tainted by
natural
injustice and illegality, that its outcome is a foregone conclusion.
Ms
Nene fully expects to be dismissed, and to lose her job and her
livelihood as a result of that dismissal. Ms Nene has not yet
lost
her livelihood, because she continues to be on full pay during the
currency of her suspension and the disciplinary enquiry.
But
it is the fear that once she is dismissed at some future date, that
she will lose her benefits and her job that animates this
application
and that loss is in Ms Nene's mind a foregone conclusion.
The
test for the Court's intervention in the proceedings of a domestic
tribunal of any sort is clear. There must be exceptional
circumstances. Those exceptional circumstances, in my view, must be
such that the proceedings in which the Court is asked to intervene
are so tainted by unfairness or illegality that the applicant should
no longer be subjected to them.
In
this case, that test overlaps with the operative part of the test for
urgency. The operative part of the test for urgency, in
this case, is
that the applicant will not receive substantial redress if she has to
pursue her case in the ordinary course.
It
follows that if Ms Nene is correct and the outcome of her
disciplinary inquiry is a foregone conclusion, on the basis that the
proceedings against her are so tainted by unfairness or illegality
that she should not have to subject herself to them, then this
matter
is urgent, because the continuance of the disciplinary enquiry is a
little under two weeks away. And as Ms Nene herself
pointed out,
there is a lot to do between now and then to prepare herself for it.
There is no prospect of her being able to stay
the inquiry except
through an urgent application.
The
sole question before me, then, at least for the purposes of deciding
whether or not this matter is urgent, is really whether
the case that
Ms Nene presses, that the outcome of the enquiry is a foregone
conclusion, has any support in the facts that have
been pleaded and
proved before me.
It
is plain to me on the papers that there is no such support for Ms
Nene's apprehensions to be found on the facts of this case.
There is
no basis laid in the founding or replying papers, to suggest that the
disciplinary inquiry to which Ms Nene is to be subject,
is unfair or
unlawful in any respect – let alone a basis on which I could
conclude that it is so unfair and so unlawful that
I must intervene
now to prevent Ms Nene from being subjected to it.
Ms Nene, I
think honestly and in good faith, believes that she is being
subjected to significant unfairness. In the course
of arguing her
case in reply, she listed some of what she thought were the
irregularities that have been committed by the inquiry.
These consist
in the main of the inquiry's refusal to accede to her requests for
information. Ms Nene also complains of the disciplinary
inquiry’s
dismissal of a number of applications
in
limine
that she has brought.
As
apprehensive as these events may make Ms Nene feel, they do not
in my view rise to the standard required for me to intervene.
There
are in other words no exceptional circumstances in this case. There
are instead a number of pre-hearing skirmishes in which
Ms Nene has
been substantially unsuccessful.
There
is no basis for me to find that Ms Nene's lack of success in
convincing the inquiry of her views, means that evidence cannot
be
fairly led against her and that she will be prejudiced in any way
when the evidence commences on 26 March.
For
all those reasons it seems to me that this matter cannot be urgent
and that it falls to be struck from the roll.
I
leave aside the question of whether I have jurisdiction over the
claim at all. It seems to me that Ms Nene's claim not having
been pleaded in contract deprives the high court of jurisdiction on
the merits. But I have assumed, as I believe I am required
to do,
that I do have jurisdiction and that there is merit in Ms Nene's
claim, in order to decide the issue of urgency.
However, for the
reasons I have given, because there are no exceptional circumstances
in this case, there is also no urgency. The
matter will be struck
from the roll.
I
turn to the question of costs. By anybody's reckoning, this
litigation has not been well-conducted. The practice directives of
this Court have been ignored. Ms Nene has been permitted by her
attorneys to prosecute her case on an urgent basis in the
absence of
an allegation of any primary facts that could support a claim of
urgency.
The
respondents have been prejudiced by Ms Nene and by her attorney's
insistence that the matter be heard on this week's urgent
roll, as
opposed to the urgent roll for next week, at which time Ms Nene's
urgency, if she had it, would still have been preserved.
In
addition, the affidavits in this case, which I can only assume have
been settled by Ms Nene's attorneys, make reckless allegations
without factual foundation.
Finally, Ms Nene's
attorneys did not appear today. Mr Alcock, who was instructed to
act on her behalf until he had to withdraw,
was left to press the
case on his own. He was required on several occasions to take
instructions directly from Ms Nene and was
ultimately left with no
choice in the absence of Ms Nene's attorneys, but to withdraw and
allow Ms Nene to press her case in the
way she thought best. Taken
cumulatively, this conduct is
prima
facie
worthy of censure.
Attorneys are not
post boxes. They contract with a member of the public on the basis
that they will provide legal services. Where
those legal services
require advocacy, it is the attorney, and not the client, that briefs
the advocate and it is the attorney
with whom the advocate has that
briefing relationship.
An
attorney that allows hyperbolic claims to be made in order to get
into urgent court and then abandons their client during the
hearing,
in circumstances where it must at least have been foreseeable that
Ms Nene would want to be fully involved in the
argument of the
case
prima facie
misconducts
themselves.
Ms.
Nene’s attorney’s failure to attend the hearing placed Mr
Alcock in an intolerable position.
This
conduct calls for an explanation and if it is not explained, it calls
for censure. For all those reasons I make the following
order
1.
The application is struck from the roll,
for want of urgency.
2.
The applicant’s attorneys are invited
to show cause, on affidavit, supplemented, if necessary, by written
legal submissions,
by no later than 28 March 2024, why they should
not bear the costs of this application
de
bonis propriis
, on the scale as between
attorney and client, including the costs of two counsel.
3.
The first respondent may, if so advised,
submit affidavits, written legal argument, or both, in response to
the material submitted
in terms of paragraph 2 above, by no later
than 11 April 2024.
WILSON, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
14 March 2024
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