Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 253South Africa
Department of Social Development v Non-Profit Organisations Registered (2024/00063) [2024] ZAGPJHC 253 (18 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Department of Social Development v Non-Profit Organisations Registered (2024/00063) [2024] ZAGPJHC 253 (18 March 2024)
Department of Social Development v Non-Profit Organisations Registered (2024/00063) [2024] ZAGPJHC 253 (18 March 2024)
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sino date 18 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE:
No
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
3.
REVISED
18
March 2024
#### Case
No.2024-00063
Case
No.
2024-00063
In the matter between:
DEPARTMENT
OF SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
Applicant
and
THE NON-PROFIT
ORGANISATIONS REGISTERED
WITH THE APPLICANT AND
LISTED IN ANNEXURE “A”
TO
THE APPLICANT’S FOUNDING AFFIDAVIT
First
Respondent
ANY OTHER NON-PROFIT
ORGANISATION NOT
REGISTERED WITH THE
APPLICANT AND / OR ANY
PERSON WHO EMBARKS ON
AN ILLEGAL PROTEST
BY
SITTING-IN AT THE OFFICES OF THE APPLICANT
Second
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1.
On 15 March 2024, I dismissed an application brought by the
Department for Social Development for a wide-ranging interdict in
restraint
of protest action set to take place at or near its
Johannesburg offices on 18, 19 and 20 March 2024. I said at the time
that my
reasons would follow in due course. These are my reasons.
2.
There are three principal bases upon which I was bound to
refuse the relief sought. First, the Department had failed to
establish
a rational factual link between the respondents and any
reasonably anticipated unlawful activity. Second, the group of
individuals
cited as the second respondent was incapable of
meaningful definition, and in any event could only be identified, if
at all, once
any unlawful conduct had actually taken place. It
followed that the second respondent could not have been meaningfully
informed
of the breadth and application of the order before the
individuals comprising it were identified. Third, the relief itself
was
startlingly overbroad, and plainly invasive of the
constitutional rights to assemble, to demonstrate, to picket, and to
present
petitions.
No
link established between the respondents and reasonably anticipated
unlawful activity
3.
In
Commercial Stevedoring Agricultural and Allied Workers'
Union v Oak Valley Estates (Pty) Ltd
2022 (5) SA 18
(CC) (“
Oak
Valley
”), at paragraph 39, the Constitutional Court made
clear that interdicts in restraint of unlawful protest activity may
only
be granted where a factual link between an individual respondent
and actual or threatened unlawful conduct is shown. Without such
a
link, there can be no reasonable apprehension of harm, and
accordingly no grounds for the imposition of an interdict.
4.
In this case, the Department built its case upon a poster,
apparently disseminated among non-profit organisations registered
with
it, which called for a sit-in at its offices on 18, 19 and 20
March 2024, in protest against the Department’s plan to
establish
a panel charged with the distribution of resources to
non-profit organisations who provide social services that the
Department
itself lacks the capacity to deliver.
5.
The poster bears the hashtag “#Gauteng NPO’s”.
It was on this slender basis that counsel for the Department
submitted
that it was entitled to interdictory relief against each of
the 450 or so entities on its database of non-profit organisations
registered with it, or providing services to it. I rejected that
submission. The poster is not a statement of intent. It is a call
to
action. Even assuming that the poster is a call to unlawful action,
it provides no basis for the reasonable apprehension that
each one of
the 450 organisations involved in this application are about to
embark upon the advertised sit-in. There is no basis
on the papers
for concluding that each of those organisations had seen the poster,
let alone that they intended to answer its call.
6.
In order to establish the factual link required in
Oak
Valley
, more was plainly required than mere registration with the
Department as a non-profit organisation or as a service provider. The
Department was unable to provide any further basis to establish such
a link.
7.
It was argued before me that
Oak Valley
does not
require such a link where the individuals being placed under
interdict have deliberately sought to obscure their identities.
However, I do not think that
Oak Valley
goes that far.
Paragraph 42 of the
Oak Valley
decision says that “where
a strike is beset by unlawful conduct and large numbers of protesters
or strikers deliberately
conceal their identities – for
instance, through the wearing of masks – a Court may be
entitled to more readily conclude
that an applicant has a reasonable
apprehension that the participants in the strike will cause it
injury”. That plainly does
not mean that the requirement of a
rational factual link between the individual sought to be interdicted
and the unlawful conduct
complained of can be dispensed with
altogether. What it means is that a court need not insist on the
direct and individual identification
of a person within a group of
people who have disguised themselves for the purpose of engaging in
unlawful activity, if there are
other facts from which that person’s
participation in the unlawful activity can be inferred.
8.
In any event, the attempt at disguise to which the Department
adverted was an exhortation on the poster that participants in the
sit-in should wear face masks. The exhortation to wear face masks at
gatherings – especially at a gathering of people working
for
non-profit organisations who regularly come into contact with the
old, the frail and the sick – is plainly hygienic in
intent. It
is not a call to obscure the identities of the participants.
9.
For all these reasons, there was no basis on which I could
grant any interdictory relief against the first respondents. No
factual
link between any of them and any identified unlawful activity
– and accordingly no reasonable apprehension of harm –
was established.
The
second respondents
10.
No relief at all could be granted against the second
respondents, because nobody can say who they are. In
Kayamandi
Town Committee v Mkhwaso
1991 (2) SA 630
(C) at 634G-J Conradie J
emphasised that court orders may only be granted against clearly
defined parties who can be identified
in advance of the institution
of a lawsuit. This does not mean that each party must be individually
identified. Persons may be
joined to a lawsuit as members of a group
(for example, all the occupiers of a particular erf are regularly
made parties to eviction
proceedings). However, where they are not
individually identified, the group comprising the parties to the
lawsuit must be clearly
defined and easily ascertainable, such that
notice can meaningfully be given to the members of the group in
advance.
11.
In this case, the group comprising the second respondents is
notionally inclusive of anyone who chooses to participate in the
sit-in
if and when it goes ahead. There is no way that these
individuals can be identified in advance, and accordingly no
meaningful sense
in which they can be given notice of the application
for the interdict. Again, then, there can be no reasonable
apprehension that
any one of the multitude who could potentially
comprise the second respondent will conduct themselves unlawfully. As
a result,
no relief can be granted against that group.
The
overbreadth of the relief
12.
The Department claimed an interdict of startling overbreadth.
It sought more than the mere restraint of a sit-in. The notice of
motion seeks to restrain any “interference” with or
“obstruction” of the Department’s activities at
its
main offices; any “picketing” action; any “protest”
action; and incitement of any “picketing”
or “protest”
action. The problem with this relief is that it embraces a wide range
of conduct, some of which may be
perfectly lawful. In particular, the
right to picket is specifically protected in section 17 of the
Constitution, 1996. A picket
of any sort entails some interference
with access to or egress from a place of business. There is of course
a line between lawful
picketing and unlawful disruption or
interference, but the Department made no effort to suggest where that
line might be. In addition,
while “protest” action –
which the Department also seeks to restrain – is not
specifically protected by
section 17 of the Constitution, the rights
to “assemble” and “demonstrate” are.
“Protest” action
clearly encompasses assembly and
demonstration, and in the absence of any effort in the Department’s
notice of motion to
identify a boundary between unlawful protest
action that may properly be restrained, and lawful demonstration and
assembly that
may not be restrained, no relief could be granted at
all.
Order
13.
In sum, the Department sought overbroad relief that was
plainly invasive of constitutional rights against an ill-defined
group of
people. Where members of the group sought to be restrained
were identified, the Department could not establish a link between
those
individuals and any unlawful conduct that had caused it harm,
or was reasonably anticipated to do so.
14.
It was for those reasons that I dismissed the application,
with no order as to costs.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
or their legal representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 18
March 2024.
HEARD
ON: 15 March 2024
DECIDED
ON:
15 March 2024
REASONS:
18 March 2024
For
the Applicant:
K Nondwangu
Instructed by the State
Attorney
For
certain of the
W Sithole
First
Respondents:
Instructed by Webber Wentzel
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