Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 720South Africa
Member of Executive Council For Economic Development, Environment, Agriculture and Rural Development (Gauteng) and Another v Phumelela Gaming and Leisure Limited and Others (2019/11734) [2024] ZAGPJHC 720 (12 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
12 August 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Member of Executive Council For Economic Development, Environment, Agriculture and Rural Development (Gauteng) and Another v Phumelela Gaming and Leisure Limited and Others (2019/11734) [2024] ZAGPJHC 720 (12 August 2024)
Member of Executive Council For Economic Development, Environment, Agriculture and Rural Development (Gauteng) and Another v Phumelela Gaming and Leisure Limited and Others (2019/11734) [2024] ZAGPJHC 720 (12 August 2024)
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sino date 12 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED.
12 August 2024
Case
No. 2019/11734
In the matter between:
MEMBER OF THE
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT,
ENVIRONMENT, AGRICULTURE AND
RURAL
DEVELOPMENT (GAUTENG)
First Applicant
GAUTENG
GAMBLING BOARD
Second
Applicant
and
PHUMELELA
GAMING AND LEISURE LIMITED
First Respondent
PREMIER
OF GAUTENG PROVINCE
Second Respondent
4RACING
(PTY) LTD
Third Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J
:
1
The applicants seek leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of
Appeal against my judgment in
Phumelela Gaming and Leisure Limited
v Member of Executive Council for Economic Development, Environment,
Agriculture and Rural
Development (Gauteng)
(2019/11734) [2024]
ZAGPJHC 510 (30 May 2024). In that judgment, I reviewed and set aside
an amendment to regulation 276 of Gauteng
Gambling Regulations, 1997.
The effect of the amendment was to eliminate a subsidy paid to the
first respondent, Phumelela. The
subsidy amounted to half the
proceeds of a levy placed on horseracing bets in Gauteng. The purpose
of the subsidy was to enable
Phumelela to stage horseraces in Gauteng
and to run the totalisator governing bets placed on them.
2
Having found that the regulatory amendment was unlawful, I set
it aside, and directed that the money payable to Phumelela, and to
the third respondent, 4Racing, under regulation 276 in its
pre-amended form, be paid to those entities.
3
The applicants contend that there is a reasonable prospect
that a court of appeal will conclude that I was wrong to characterise
the amendment as unlawful; that even if I was correct in that
respect, I nonetheless erroneously set the amendment aside; and that
even if I was correct to set the amendment aside, that I was wrong
grant the payment relief. The applicants also contend that I
incorrectly dismissed a conditional counter-application brought
against regulation 276 in is pre-amended form.
4
Because new counsel were briefed for the application for leave
to appeal, and because those counsel raised legal contentions that
were not argued before me
a quo
, I sought written submissions
on the application and entertained oral argument for half a day. I am
grateful to counsel for their
considered and exhaustive treatment of
my judgment, and of the new contentions sought to be raised on
appeal.
5
Nonetheless, I am not persuaded that the appeal now proposed
stands reasonable prospects of success. Nor can I see a compelling
reason to send the matter on appeal notwithstanding the absence of
prospects on the merits.
The
unlawfulness of the amendment
6
At the core of my judgment is a simple proposition: the first
applicant, the MEC, was not entitled to withdraw the regulation 276
subsidy without directly engaging with Phumelela. The notice and
comment procedure the MEC adopted did not constitute such engagement,
and it is common cause that the MEC did not otherwise engage with
Phumelela. In the absence of such engagement, the amendment to
regulation 276 was neither procedurally fair nor procedurally
rational.
7
Exhaustive though they are, the applicants’ grounds of
appeal do not seriously assail that proposition. It was contended
that
a meeting between the Gambling Board and Phumelela constituted
the direct engagement that I found was absent in my judgment
a
quo
. But that cannot be. The Gambling Board and the MEC are
separate entities. The decision-maker was the MEC, not the Gambling
Board.
There can be no suggestion that engagement with the Gambling
Board constituted engagement with the MEC.
8
Mr. Snyckers, who appeared for 4Racing in the application for
leave to appeal, described the amendment to regulation 276 as a “bill
of attainder”. I appreciate the quaintness of the metaphor, but
it does capture something about the core of my decision.
There was no
serious issue taken with the proposition that Phumelela was the only
person whose rights stood to be affected by the
amendment. A
regulatory change that only directly affects one person is not truly
legislative in nature. Nor is it a policy-making
exercise. It is an
administrative decision on which the affected party has a right to be
heard. A call for comment issued to the
general public is
insufficient to give effect to that right, and a failure to give
effect to the right vitiates the decision.
9
If I am right that direct engagement was required, then every
other ground advanced against my decision on the lawfulness of the
amendment falls away. In particular, it does not matter whether I was
right to conclude that the MEC failed to apply his mind to
the
decision (though it seems to me inarguable that he did not). Nor does
it matter whether I was right to hold that the Promotion
of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”) applies to
the exercise of powers to make or amend regulations (a
point on which
I was in any event bound by two decisions of the Supreme Court of
Appeal). 4Racing argued that the procedural irrationality
of the
MEC’s approach meant that the amendment was susceptible to
legality review. Given that I found that the amendment
was
procedurally irrational, I would still have concluded that the MEC’s
decision was unlawful even if PAJA did not apply.
The failure
directly to engage Phumelela on the elimination of its subsidy was
enough to render the decision unlawful on either
basis.
Remedy
10
The applicants contend my judgment
a quo
might
reasonably be read to disclose a failure to appreciate that I had a
discretion to refuse to set aside the amendment, its
unlawfulness
notwithstanding, and a failure to appreciate that I had a discretion
not to order the payment relief. My apparent
failure to appreciate my
discretion, it was argued, could vitiate the remedy I granted, and
entitle a court of appeal to interfere
with the setting aside and
payment relief.
11
However, my judgment is not reasonably open to the
interpretation the applicants urge. The contention that I failed to
appreciate
that I had a discretion depends on focussing only on the
last sentence of paragraph 7 and the first sentence of paragraph 35
of
my decision, while ignoring everything else in the judgment. It is
not realistic to expect an appeal court to squint at my decision
in
that way. Read as a whole, my judgment discloses that the outcome I
reached was, in my view, the only appropriate outcome on
the facts
and the applicable law. That does not mean that I failed to
appreciate that I had a discretion. It means only that I
appreciated
that discretions are not exercised in the air, but on particular
facts and legal principles, which I addressed in my
judgment
a
quo
. To say that those facts and principles drive me to a
particular conclusion is not to say that I have no discretion. It is
the
only proper way to exercise one.
12
My discretion having been properly exercised, the
Constitutional Court’s decision in
Trencon Construction
(Pty) Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa
Limited
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC) at paragraphs 82 to 92 prevents a
court of appeal from interfering with the remedy I ordered, even if
it would have ordered
a different one. The approach taken in
Trencon
,
it seems to me, precludes the prospect that the payment relief will
be interfered with on appeal.
13
It was finally suggested that the payment remedy I granted was
not reasonably related to the defect I identified in the decision
to
amend regulation 276. The argument was that since the defect was
merely procedural, the proper approach was to suspend any declaration
of unlawfulness and allow the MEC to rerun the amendment process. The
implication was that payment relief would only have been
appropriate
if I had correctly identified something substantively unlawful in the
regulatory scheme the MEC sought to introduce
by way of the
amendment.
14
However, if our administrative law ever admitted of two tiers
of unlawfulness, it no longer does. The proper approach is not to
assess the remedy to be granted in light of the nature of the defect
found in an unlawful decision. It is to craft a remedy that
will
correct the unlawfulness of the decision, whatever its source. In
this case, the appropriate corrective was to order the payment
of
what would have been due had the amendment not been effected.
The
counter-application
15
I was not persuaded that the counter-application stands
prospects of success on appeal. There was nothing in the arguments
raised
in the application for leave to appeal that can get around
section 22 (1) (b) of the Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999
(“the
PFMA”). As I held in my judgment
a quo
, that
provision excludes the proceeds of the gambling levy at issue in this
case from the general requirement that “[a]ll
money received by
a provincial government . . . be paid into the province's Provincial
Revenue Fund”. It is the exclusion
authorised “by an Act
of Parliament” permitted under section 226 (1) of the
Constitution, 1996.
16
Such an exclusion must of course be reasonable, but the
applicants’ argument is not that section 22 (1) (b) of the PFMA
is
unreasonable. The argument is that it is not an exclusion at all.
I do not think that there is any prospect of that contention
surviving contact with the plain text of the provision.
Absence
of any other compelling reason to grant leave to appeal
17
Mr. Friedman, who appeared for Phumelela, conceded in his
written submissions that this case has “an important feel”
about it. That “feel” may arise from the amount of money
involved (R500 million by the applicants’ reckoning).
It may
also arise from the breadth and apparent importance of the legal
contentions upon which the applicants intend to rely on
appeal. The
applicants’ approach was very much that this application is a
prelude to further proceedings in the Supreme Court
of Appeal,
whether to ask for leave that I might refuse, or to argue the appeal
with my leave.
18
Of course, there was no disrespect intended in that approach,
and I took no offence. The point is rather that the applicants’
submissions were steeped in the sense that a full rehearing of the
case before the Supreme Court of Appeal is inevitable, no matter
how
I dispose of this application.
19
Mr. Friedman submitted, however, that this sense was not
justified by anything concrete. I think he was right. Though the
applicants’
submissions touch on important issues of
constitutional and administrative law, few of the contentions the
applicants wish to raise
on appeal are in any sense novel, and those
contentions that might fairly be characterised as novel simply do not
arise on the
facts of this case.
20
Nor is there any great legal controversy to be resolved on
appeal, because the facts of this case are so clear. The state cannot
expect to promulgate a regulation that only directly affects the
interests of a single person, and then fail to engage with that
person except through a notice and comment procedure. If it
nonetheless does so, and then amends the regulation so as to deprive
that person of money to which they would otherwise be entitled, the
proper approach in our law is to set the regulation aside and
direct
that the money be paid back, unless there are good reasons, such as
the disruption of critical state services, not grant
that relief. In
this case, there were no such reasons. It seems to me that this case
is no more controversial or complex than that.
Order
21
For all these reasons, the application for leave to appeal is
dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel where
employed.
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 12
August 2024.
HEARD
ON:
8 August 2024
DECIDED
ON:
12 August
2024
For
the Applicants:
JJ Gauntlett SC
F B
Pelser
O
Ben-Zeev
X Ngcobo
Instructed
by Ka-Mbonane Cooper
For the First
Respondent A Friedman
Instructed by Fluxmans
Inc
For
the Third Respondent: F Snyckers SC
A
d’Oliveira
Instructed
by Truter Jones Inc
sino noindex
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