Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 544South Africa
Upington City Football Club v Milford FC and Others (2024/060318) [2024] ZAGPJHC 544 (7 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
7 June 2024
Judgment
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## Upington City Football Club v Milford FC and Others (2024/060318) [2024] ZAGPJHC 544 (7 June 2024)
Upington City Football Club v Milford FC and Others (2024/060318) [2024] ZAGPJHC 544 (7 June 2024)
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sino date 7 June 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2024-060318
1. REPORTABLE: YES/NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
3. REVISED: YES/NO
7June
2024
In
the matter between:
UPINGTON
CITY FOOTBALL CLUB
Applicant
and
MILFORD
FC
FIRST RESPONDENT
NATIONAL
SOCCER LEAGUE
SECOND RESPONDENT
ARBITRATOR
ADVOCATE NYMAN
THIRD RESPONDENT
BAROKA
FC
FOURTH RESPONDENT
SOUTH
AFRICAN FOOTBALL ASSOCIATION
FIFTH RESPONDENT
RICHARDS
BAY FC
SIXTH RESPONDENT
UNIVERSITY
OF PRETORIA FC
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
REASONS
MANOIM
J:
Introduction
[1]
This is an urgent application in which the applicant Upington City
Football Club (“Upington”) seeks an interim
interdict to
prevent the second respondent, the National Soccer League (“NSL”)
from holding promotion and relegation
playoffs pending the outcome of
a review application. This is set out as Part A of the relief. In
terms of Part B, Upington seeks
to have its dispute with another club
Milford FC, (“Milford”) the first respondent, referred to
an arbitration panel
of the NSL. Only Part A was urgent and was the
one I was required to decide.
[2]
I heard the matter on Saturday 1 June 2024, a day before the first of
the matches which Upington sought to interdict,
was to be played.
Given the urgency of the situation and that the fate of four teams as
well as the NSL and many other parties
depended on the outcome, I
gave my order on the 1 June 2024 and indicated that my reasons would
follow. I dismissed the application
with costs. In these reasons I
explain why.
[3]
As will be noted amongst the seven respondents in this matter are
three other soccer teams. All have an interest in the
outcome of the
application. Upington and two of the other teams all compete in what
is known as the Motsepe Foundation League.
In the football hierarchy
this league is the second division. At the end of the season two of
these teams which have finished second
and third respectively in the
Motsepe Foundation League qualify for the playoffs to be promoted to
the first division, the Dstv
Premiership League. The third team in
the playoffs is Richards Bay. It finished in the second last place in
the Dstv Premiership
and hence still qualifies to contest the
playoffs against the second and third finishers from the lower
Motsepe Foundation League.
The three teams play each other twice and
the successful team qualifies to go, or remain as the case may be, to
the Dstv Premier
League. At stake for those seeking promotion is not
only prestige but also a more lucrative future for the successful
team.
[4]
Upington is not in the playoff. Instead Baroka FC (“Baroka”),
the fourth respondent, and Richards Bay the
sixth respondent, and
University of Pretoria the seventh respondent, are. There is no
dispute over the eligibility of the latter
two teams. The case would
merely serve to identify their third opponent. However, the
implications for Baroka are different. If
Upington succeeds it will
displace Baroka as the third side in the qualifying rounds.
Background
[5]
The reason for this goes back to a match that Upington played against
Milford FC on 6 April 2024. The outcome of that
match was that
Milford won 3-0. But Upington contends that Milford had for some
period of the game played without having two under
23 players on the
pitch. If Upington was correct this meant that the NSL had to
sanction Milford by deducting its three points
and three goals for
winning the match and awarding the three points and the three goals
to Upington. If this happened then according
to the arithmetic of the
league table, Upington would rank high enough in the league table to
displace Baroka and become instead
the third team in the qualifying
round. Although Milford is cited as a respondent it is not otherwise
effected by whether it must
forfeit the points as it has not
qualified for the playoffs even if it can retain the three points.
This may explain why it is
Baroka, not Milford, which along with the
NSL has opposed the application.
[6]
Of course, there is no guarantee for Upington that if it wins in the
court room and subsequent arbitration that promotion
would follow.
They would have to succeed in the playoffs. This case then might seem
about the right of Upington to participate
in the playoffs. But as I
go on to explain in terms of the relief sought in Part B it is not
even that. It amounts to a right to
have a new arbitration which
might consider new evidence and only then which might be sufficient
to lead to Upington being awarded
the points and the goals.
[7]
On 6 April 2024 Upington played a league game against Milford. In
terms of Rule 35.2 of the NSL handbook, each team must
at all times
field a minimum of two players who are under 23. A failure to do so
can result in a sanction against the defaulting
team. This in terms
of Rule 51.2 which states:
“…
ineligibility
if a player takes part in a match (he is on the team sheet, the field
of play or on the substitute bench at any time)
despite being
ineligible the member club which fielded will be sanctioned with a
forfeit of the match and minimum fine of R100,000,00.
The player may
also sanctioned.”
[8]
On the day in question in the 65
th
minute of the game,
Milford decided to substitute three, or possibly four of its players.
According to the report of the match
Commissioner, two under 23
players were substituted leaving only one under 23 player remaining
on the field. The match Commissioner
stated that the match continued
for about 4 minutes whilst Upington protested. According to him there
was an engagement with the
fourth official and only four minutes
later, in the 69
th
minute, did Milford then introduce
another substitute whose presence then brought Milford into
compliance once again.
[9]
The match Commissioner indicated that one of those under 23 players
who was substituted in the 65
th
minute, was a player
called Olwethu Cele wearing jersey number 22. Milford went on to win
the match 3-0.
The
protest
[10]
Upington lodged a protest with the NSL, and it was referred to the
NSL’s Disciplinary Committee (“the DC”).
Milford
denied it had been in contravention of the rule. Upington relied on
the report of the match Commissioner and another official.
However,
during the hearing, the DC found these officials reports unreliable.
One’s recollection was found to be faulty while
another
official sought to rely on notes that had got wet in the rain. At
issue for the DC was whether Cele was substituted, or
as Milford
contended, had remained playing after the 65
th
minute.
[11]
The DC wisely, instead of relying on recollections of officials,
decided to call for the video of the match. Matches
at this level of
the game are broadcast on Dstv. The video showed that at the end of
the game Cele was still on the field as a
player. He was distinctive
not only by his jersey number but also because he was bald and wore
an armband. Upington sought to first
challenge the authenticity of
the video. This challenge failed. Then it sought to argue that the
video only showed Cele congratulating
the other players after a goal
had been scored when he was seen in the company of the reserve
goalkeeper. This was to suggest he
had only run on the field to
celebrate with his teammates and not as proof that he was still
playing. This interpretation of the
video was also rejected by the
panel.
[12]
Cele did not testify. It was suggested in argument by Mr Thobejane
that his failure to testify should have resulted in
an adverse
inference. But Mr Majavu who appeared for the NSL pointed out that
Cele had attended the hearing and there was no need
to have called
him as the DC was satisfied from the video that he had been playing
until the end of the game. In short, the conclusion
was that Milford
was not in breach of rule 35.2. This meant the result stood.
[13]
Unhappy with the outcome Upington sought to appeal. In the normal
course the hierarchy of appeals in the NSL system is
that the appeal
against the DC’s decision first goes to an appeal panel. Then
there is a further appeal to an arbitrator
who can hear additional
evidence. On this occasion the CEO decided in terms of the rules to
refer the matter straight to an arbitrator
a power the CEO has in
terms of the Rules. The parties agreed to have the matter heard by
Advocate Nyman who is the third respondent.
[14]
There is a dispute of fact as to whether Upington agreed to this
expedited procedure. The NSL maintains it did while
Upington contends
otherwise. In any event the NSL argues that the rules permitted the
CEO to do so even absent an agreement.
[15]
When the matter came before the arbitrator the first issue, she had
to decide was whether the matter should be approached
as an appeal or
start de novo as requested by Upington. She decided that she would
only hear the matter as an appeal and that therefore
she was confined
the record that had served before the disciplinary committee.
[16]
The powers of the arbitrator are determined by article 81 of the SAFA
disciplinary code which states:
“
Notwithstanding
anything contained in these Rules, the powers of the arbitrator shall
be wide and shall be determined by the arbitrator
at his sole
discretion.”
[17]
Having made that determination despite the objections of Upington the
next issue was to decide whether Baroka should
be allowed to be a
party to the appeal. The arbitrator allowed it to be a party. Baroka
addressed legal argument but led no new
evidence since like the other
parties it was confined to the record of the DC.
[18]
The arbitrator conducted the hearing and gave her award which was to
uphold the decision of the DC. It is this decision
that Upington
seeks to review on Part B of its relief. Upington seeks to ground its
review on the provisions of PAJA although in
its founding affidavit
it does not indicate which provisions of PAJA it seeks to rely on.
[19]
In broad terms this is a review based on audi alterem partem.
Upington contends that the arbitrator erred by not allowing
it to
lead new evidence that had not been presented to the DC. This new
evidence it argued would establish its central premise
that Milford
had for four minutes played with only one under 23 on the field.
However, the case now was not premised on Cele but
on an entry on
Milford’s Facebook page, through which Upington seeks to
establish that despite the presence of Cele, there
was only one under
23 on the field for four minutes. This was not the argument made to
the disciplinary committee which was premised
on Cele. I quote from
the disciplinary committee’s record.
“
The
protest related to the contravention /violation of the provisions of
Rule 35.2 of the NSL handbook by Milford FC in that it
substituted
two under 23 players (Cele Olwethu jersey 22 card number 6651 and
Nzama Siyabonga jersey 25 card 7341) ......in the
65th minute with
two over aged players( Somabhele Unathi jersey 7 card 7336 and Siyaya
Skhumbuzo jersey 20 card 7337),.......,thereby
remaining with only
one under 23 player (Zikakayo Mvelo jersey 40 card 7551) in the field
of play.”
[20]
The arbitrator distilled the issue down to whether Cele was
substituted or not. The arbitrator on this point upheld the
decision
of the DC finding no merit in the appeal. The arbitrator in her award
also refers to the fact that Mr Thobejane had changed
his position on
appeal. She noted:
“
In light of
these written submissions, it was with surprise that in his Heads of
Argument and during his oral submissions, Mr Thobajane
no longer
placed reliance on the aforementioned grounds of appeal. Instead, he
introduced an entirely new ground of appeal. In
a nutshell, Mr
Thobajane conceded that Mr Cele remained on the field for the
duration of the match but he raised a new submission
from the bar,
unsupported by the evidence. He also failed to share the new
submissions with the legal representative of the First
to Third
Respondents, even though he was requested to do so.
In consequence, the
new submissions are not considered herein and stand to be rejected.”
[21]
Although before me Mr Thobejane argues that this decision consists of
multiple review grounds it amounts to two grounds
of review. That the
arbitrator should have considered the case
de novo
and that if
she had she would have had to consider the evidence of the new
submissions he sought to put forward.
Analysis
[22]
I now with this background turn to whether Upington has made out a
case for an interim interdict that:
“
The
2
nd
respondent, the National Soccer League, is interdicted from
proceeding with the promotion/relegation playoffs fixtured to
commence
on the 02
nd
June 2024, pending the outcome of the review application brought by
the applicant in Part B of the notice of motion.”
[23] There is no
dispute that the decision of the arbitrator is subject to the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of
2000 (“PAJA”)
because it meets the definition of administrative action in terms of
section 1(b) of PAJA, namely the
exercise by a juristic person, other
than an organ of state, of a public power or the discharge of a
public function.
[24]
Indeed, as Unterhalter J observed in
Ndoro
v SAFA
[1]
there are circumstances
where private entities (i.e. the NSL) may discharge public functions
even if they do not emanate from a
statutory source. In that case he
found that “
“…
.
while there are broad criteria for making an evaluation as to whether
a competence enjoyed by a private entity is a public power
or public
function, there is no warrant to conclude that, simply because a
private
entity is powerful and may do things that are of great interest to
the public, it discharges a public power or function.
Rather, it is
the assumption of exclusive, compulsory, coercive regulatory
competence to secure public goods that reach beyond
mere private
advancement that attracts the supervisory disciplines of public
law.”
[2]
[25] A decision by
the NSL or one of its entities to determine whether a team qualifies
for promotion playoffs or not falls
into the latter category
identified by Unterhalter J, and thus involves the exercise of a
public power or public function hence
constitutes administrative
action and thus is reviewable under PAJA.
[26] That being
said I now consider if a case has been made out for an interim
interdict. It is trite law that for an interim
interdict the
applicant needs to establish:
a.
A prima facie right to the relief
sought.
b.
A well-grounded apprehension of
irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted.
c.
The balance of convenience favours
the granting of interim relief.
d.
The applicant has no
alternative remedy.
[27] Both the NSL
and Baroka challenge the application on grounds of urgency. They also
argue that even if it is urgent Upington
has not made out a prima
facie case nor that the balance of convenience favours granting the
relief.
[28] I consider
that the case is urgent, and the urgency is not self-created as the
decision of the arbitrator was only handed
down on 31 May and the
application was launched on the same day. Given that the match was to
take place on 2 June there is not
much else Upington could have done
to act more expeditiously other than not to bring the case at all
[29] I now turn to
whether it has made out a prima facie case. The right as I mentioned
earlier is the right to interdict
the match pending a new arbitration
that is to be established in terms of Part B. It is thus a
prima
facie
right to have an arbitration not a right to contest the
playoffs. The latter is a possible but by no means probable outcome
of
the arbitration if its case, premised on the new evidence,
prevails.
[30] But to prevail
Upington would have to persuade the arbitrator that its new evidence,
based it seems on what Milford has
stated on its Facebook page about
who it substituted at what time, is conclusive evidence that it had
played for four minutes without
two players under 23. It is by no
means clear that this is the correct inference to be drawn from the
Facebook entries.
[31] In any event
it seems from the DC record that there was considerable confusion
about the substitutions timing as the
fourth official only had place
on his board to signal three substitutions. But from the record
Milford contends that it had wanted
to at that same time substitute
four players and hence be compliant with the two players under 23 age
rule requirement. Before
this additional substitution could be made
it seems that an Upington player had of his own accord resumed the
match and hence the
fourth substitution which may have been the under
23 player had only been possible four minutes later.
[32] If this is
correct and I am in no position to comment on this, it may well mean
that this explanation will not invite
any points loss sanction
against Milford. Nor it is clear to me that a point loss sanction is
mandatory in terms of the rules.
The correct decision maker on
this should have been the DC. Upington even with the benefit of the
video did not raise this
point at the DC hearing, as it was fixated
on the presence or absence of Cele. It would have been manifestly
unfair to have regard
to this in later proceedings when it was not
raised when it should have been. Unfairness here would not only be to
Milford but
also to Baroka whose presence in the playoffs would be at
stake. This again weakens the claim of the prima facie right.
[33]
Nor have I been convinced that the arbitrator exercised her
discretion in any manner that is reviewable. She considered
the
arguments and made a rational and with respect fair decision.
Upington had based its case on incorrect facts concerning Cele
and
coming to the end of the road on that before the DC, in the
proceedings before the arbitrator had tried to put up an entirely
new
case. The arbitrator in my view correctly rejected this. Nor can the
arbitrator be criticized for allowing Baroka to present
its
arguments. Baroka was a party with a legal interest in the outcome of
those proceedings because it potentially faced exclusion
from the
playoffs if Upington had prevailed. If this was an issue of joinder
it was a party entitled to be joined.
[3]
[34] Thus, the
prima facie right contended for is not only of a tenuous nature - the
right to have a new arbitration –
but also based on slender
facts. It is then a prima facie case which is open to much doubt, not
merely some doubt.
[35] I turn then to
the balance of convenience. The NSL makes a powerful argument about
the inconvenience of cancelling the
first playoff game which is to
feature Baroka on the afternoon before the game. Since I find these
arguments convincing, I quote
them in full:
“
While
the Upington deal in a cursory fashion with the balance of
convenience, focussing only on consequences to Upington, it is
in
truth impossible to now call off the Play-Off matches and in
particular the first two matches…...
In
respect of these matches all manner of arrangements have already been
made and in compliance with various internal and statutory
prescripts, and most importantly, at tremendous cost. These include:
-
29.1
Risk categorization and safety arrangements under the Safety: and
Recreational Events Act, 2010;
29.2.1
Match official
arrangements;
29.2.2
Broadcast
arrangements and in line contractual obligations the League owes to
its broadcast sponsors with huge penalty provisions
for non-
compliance;
29.4
Ticketing arrangements — for supporters who will attend the
match tomorrow;
29.5 Stadium and
safety and security staff have been arranged to deal with matters as
they arise;
29.6 The teams
(University of Pretoria FC and Baroka FC) have been notified, made
their arrangements and will attend the match and
play).”
[36] The only
balance of convenience argument advanced by Upington is that if the
games are delayed there is no prejudice
to the other teams as the
playoffs can resume once the arbitration is concluded. This means
that three other teams who have had
nothing to do with the Milford
game must wait for some indefinite date to find out when they may
play and whom they may play against.
Note that the three teams all
play each other twice on a home and away basis.
[37]
In interim interdicts our courts adopt a sliding scale when looking
at the strength or weakness of an applicant’s
case in
establishing the requisites. As Erasmus puts it so succinctly “…
.:
the stronger the prospects of success (i.e. the strength of the
applicant’s case), the less need for the balance of convenience
to favour the applicant; the weaker the prospects of success,
the
greater the need for the balance of convenience to favour him
.”
[4]
[38] Upington has
brought a case based on a weak prima facie right. It has not been
able to put up a strong case on the balance
of convenience. On the
contrary the respondents have shown why the balance of convenience
strongly favours them. For this reason,
I found the application was
unsuccessful and I dismissed it on 1 June.
[39] I attach below
the order I gave on 1 June.
ORDER:-
[40]
IT IS ORDERED THAT:
1. The application
is dismissed;
2. Costs are
awarded to the second respondent including the costs of two legal
representatives;
3. Costs are
awarded to the fourth respondent including costs of one legal
representative.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of hearing:
01 June 2024
Date of Reasons:
07 June 2024
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Applicant:
L E Thobejane
Instructed
by.
Botha Massyn & Thobejane
Associated
Attorneys
Counsel for the Second
Respondent:
K Hopkins
SC
Z
Majavu
Instructed
by:
Majavu Incorporated
Representative for the
Fourth Respondent: L Mpahlele
Instructed
by:
Fairbridges Wertheim Becker
[1]
2018 (5) SA 630 (GJ)
[2]
Ibid, paragraph 23.
[3]
“See
Timasani
(Pty) Ltd & another v Afrimat Iron Ore (Pty) Ltd
[2021] 3 All SA 843
(SC A) paragraph 15, where the court held: “
The
test is whether a party has a direct and substantial interest in the
subject matter of the proceedings, i.e. a legal interest
in the
subject matter of the litigation which may be prejudicially affected
by the judgment of the court.
[4]
Erasmus,
Superior
Court Practice
Volume 2, 2023, D 6-16D. Relying on
Olympic
Passenger Service v Ramlagan
1957 (2) SA 382(D)
and
Eriksen
Motors (Welkom) Ltd v Protea Motors (Warrenton)
1973 (3) SA 685
(A).
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