Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 992South Africa
Umkhonto Wesizwe Party and Another v Judicial Service Commission and Others (2024/111939) [2024] ZAGPJHC 992 (5 October 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 October 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Umkhonto Wesizwe Party and Another v Judicial Service Commission and Others (2024/111939) [2024] ZAGPJHC 992 (5 October 2024)
Umkhonto Wesizwe Party and Another v Judicial Service Commission and Others (2024/111939) [2024] ZAGPJHC 992 (5 October 2024)
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sino date 5 October 2024
FLYNOTES:
PROFESSION
– Judge –
JSC
and impeached judge
–
Refusal
of request to postpone JSC sitting pending legal controversy
surrounding Dr Hlophe’s designation to JSC –
Decision
to proceed with sitting did not infringe any rights – Source
of any limitation of rights was full court’s
order and not
conduct of JSC – JSC’s work could lawfully proceed in
Dr Hlophe’s absence – Not irrational
–
Applicants failed to demonstrate that decision was taken in breach
of any rights – Application dismissed.
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
SIGNATURE
DATE: 5 October 2024
Case
No.
2024-111939
In the matter between:
UMKHONTO WESIZWE
PARTY
First Applicant
MANDLAKAYISE
JOHN HLOPHE
Second Applicant
and
JUDICIAL SERVICE
COMMISSION
First Respondent
SPEAKER
OF THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
Second
Respondent
DEMOCRATIC
ALLIANCE
Third Respondent
CORRUPTION
WATCH NPC
Fourth
Respondent
FREEDOM
UNDER LAW
Fifth
Respondent
ALL OTHER PARTIES
REPRESENTED
IN
THE NATIONAL ASSEMBLY
Sixth to Twenty-First Respondents
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The
applicants approached me on an urgent basis seeking two kinds of
relief, one in the alternative to the other. The primary and
final
relief they seek is an order declaring a decision of the first
respondent, the JSC, to proceed with its October 2024 sitting
next
week, to be irrational, unlawful and unconstitutional. In the
alternative, the applicants seek interim relief restraining
the JSC
from proceeding with its work until a final decision about the
rationality of its refusal to postpone its October 2024
sitting is
taken, or until a controversy about the designation of the second
applicant, Dr. Hlophe, as one of its members, is resolved.
The decision of the
Full Court in
Democratic Alliance v Hlophe
2
Dr.
Hlophe is the Leader of the Opposition in the National Assembly, and
a Member of Parliament elected on the party list of the
first
applicant, the MK Party. It was in that capacity that Dr. Hlophe was
designated, by the National Assembly, to take up one
of the six seats
on the JSC accorded to members of the National Assembly under section
178 (1) (h) of the Constitution, 1996.
3
On
27 September 2024, a Full Court sitting in the Western Cape
interdicted and restrained Dr. Hlophe from “participating in
the processes of” the JSC (see
Democratic Alliance v Hlophe
[2024] ZAWCHC 282
(27 September 2024)). The Full Court’s
order is interlocutory in nature. It will stand unless and until it
is set aside on
appeal, or an application for final relief concerning
the lawfulness of Dr. Hlophe’s designation to JSC is
determined. It
forms no part of my task to comment on the correctness
of the Full Court’s order or of the reasons given for it.
4
In
other words, the Full Court’s order stands as a fact. The
primary question before me is whether the JSC acted rationally
in
light of that fact by refusing the MK Party’s request that its
forthcoming sitting – scheduled to commence on 7
October 2024 –
be postponed until the legal controversy surrounding Dr. Hlophe’s
designation to the JSC is resolved.
If I find that this decision was
irrational, then I must declare it so. If I find that the JSC’s
decision to proceed with
its work regardless was rational, a
secondary question arises. That question is whether there is any
cause to interdict the JSC
from proceeding, or to otherwise order it
to suspend its work, on the basis that the MK Party’s or Dr.
Hlophe’s constitutional
rights would be unjustifiably infringed
by the JSC continuing to perform its functions.
5
In my view, the JSC acted rationally in refusing to postpone
its October 2024 sitting. Further, I think that the JSC’s
decision
to proceed with its October 2024 sitting did not infringe,
even
prima facie
, any of the MK Party’s or Dr. Hlophe’s
rights. Assuming in the applicants’ favour that their
constitutional rights
have been limited, the source of any such
limitation was the Full Court’s order, not the JSC’s
conduct in light of
that order.
6
In what follows, I give my reasons for reaching these
conclusions.
The rationality of the
JSC’s decision
7
After the Full Court handed its order down, on 30 September
2024, the applicants’ attorney wrote to the JSC. He intimated
that the applicants intended to seek leave to appeal against the Full
Court’s order, and asked the JSC to postpone its October
2024
sitting until such time as the application for final relief before
the Full Court had been determined, or until the outcome
of a similar
application pending at that time before the Constitutional Court was
known, or “until the National Assembly
has determined, one way
or the other, whether it is legally empowered to designate another
member of the opposition or to put the
same question for the vote,
whatever the case may be”.
8
The JSC convened an emergency meeting and responded to the
letter the next day through its Chairperson, the Chief Justice. The
Chief
Justice explained that the JSC had resolved, by a majority, to
proceed with its October 2024 sitting. The Chief Justice pointed
out
that the JSC is bound by the Full Court’s judgment and order,
and explained what, in the JSC’s view, that means.
The Chief
Justice said that the Full Court had not set aside Dr. Hlophe’s
designation to the JSC. The JSC accordingly remains
properly
constituted and able to proceed with its work in Dr. Hlophe’s
absence. The Chief Justice pointed out that the Full
Court accepted
that the JSC would lawfully be able to continue its work in Dr.
Hlophe’s absence. She also disclosed that
the JSC had made its
decision “in view of
section 18
(2) of the
Superior Courts Act
10 of 2013
”.
9
It seems to me that essence of the position spelled out in the
JSC’s letter was that the Full Court’s decision is an
“interlocutory order not having the effect of a final judgment”
under
section 18
(2) of the Act, meaning that an application for
leave to appeal would not automatically suspend it; that the Full
Court’s
order prevented the JSC from proceeding in Dr. Hlophe’s
presence; and that the JSC’s work could nonetheless lawfully
proceed in Dr. Hlophe’s absence.
10
I
cannot say that this position is irrational. An irrational decision
is one that lacks any connection to a lawful reason or purpose
–
one that is based on a brute preference; that is taken on a whim; or
that is so tainted by bad reasons as to be unconnected
to any good
ones (see
Industrial Zone (Pty)
Ltd v MEC for Economic Development, Environment, Agriculture and
Rural Affairs, Gauteng
[2023] ZAGPJHC 376 (25 April 2023), paragraph 7)
. The JSC’s
position exhibits none of these attributes.
11
Mr Mpofu, who appeared for the MK Party, argued that the JSC
had misconstrued the nature of the Full Court’s order. He said
that the Full Court’s order is final in effect, meaning that
the application for leave to appeal that the applicants delivered
on
30 September 2024 suspended it. I do not think that this is correct.
A final order generally has three qualities: it is not
susceptible to
alteration by the court that made it; it is definitive of the
parties’ rights; and it disposes of a substantial
portion of
the relief claimed in the proceedings on which it is made (see,
generally,
Zweni v Minister of Law and Order of the Republic of
South Africa
[1993] 1 All SA 365
(A)). The Full Court’s
order does none of these things. It is merely a temporary restraint
pending the outcome of a definitive
ruling about whether Dr. Hlophe
was lawfully designated to the JSC. It will be confirmed or
discharged when the court that granted
it makes a final determination
of that issue. The JSC was accordingly correct to conclude that the
Full Court’s order was
not suspended by the application for
leave to appeal.
12
It was next contended that the JSC was wrong to conclude that
it would be properly constituted in Dr. Hlophe’s absence. In
this respect, Mr. Mpofu relied on the decisions of the Supreme Court
of Appeal in
Judicial Service Commission v Cape Bar Council
2013
(1) SA 170
(SCA) (“
Cape Bar Council
”) and
Acting
Chairperson: Judicial Service Commission v Premier of the Western
Cape Province
2011 (3) SA 538
(SCA) (“
Premier of the
Western Cape
”). Those decisions, insofar as they are
relevant, are authority for the proposition that the JSC is not
properly constituted
if any of its constitutionally appointed members
is absent from its deliberations without justification (see
Cape
Bar Council
, paragraphs 35 and 36).
13
In
Hlophe v Judicial Service Commission
[2022] 3 All SA
87
(GJ), (“
Hlophe
”) a Full Court of this division
parsed
Cape Bar Council
and
Premier of the Western Cape
to mean that the absence of an
ex officio
member of the JSC
was not in itself fatal to the validity of the JSC’s
proceedings. The absence must also be unjustified.
Mr. Mpofu
submitted that
Hlophe
does not bind me insofar as it departs
from the decisions in
Premier of the Western Cape
and
Cape
Bar Council
. I am prepared to assume that he is correct, but I do
not think that this helps his argument. I see no discontinuity
between the
three decisions: what matters is not simply whether a
designee is absent, but whether there is a justification for that
absence.
14
In this case, Dr. Hlophe’s absence from the October 2024
sitting of the JSC is not merely justified: it is mandated by the
Full Court’s order. Were I at large to go behind that order, I
might have been called upon to decide whether the Full Court’s
order constitutes sufficient justification to exclude Dr. Hlophe from
the JSC’s sitting. However, I am neither required nor
entitled
to do that. The fact of the Full Court’s order is justification
enough for Dr. Hlophe’s absence. The JSC was
accordingly
correct to conclude that it could lawfully proceed in Dr. Hlophe’s
absence.
15
Mr. Mpofu also argued that the Full Court’s decision
cast the validity of all six of the National Assembly’s
designations
to the JSC into doubt. For that additional reason, he
submitted, the JSC cannot lawfully or rationally proceed with its
deliberations.
However, it seems to me that the Full Court’s
decision did not taint the appointment of any of the National
Assembly’s
designees other than that of Dr. Hlophe. The order
is quite clear that only Dr. Hlophe is restrained from participating
in the
JSC’s work. Moreover, no-one asked the Full Court to
consider the legality of any of the other designations. The issue was
simply not before it. Nor does it follow that to impugn Dr. Hlophe’s
designation is to impugn the designation of the other
five National
Assembly members. Dr. Hlophe was restrained from participating the
JSC’s work because he is a former Judge
removed from office for
gross misconduct. None of the other designees bears that
characteristic.
16
It was not suggested that the JSC was wrong to conclude that
it could not proceed in Dr. Hlophe’s presence. It follows that
none of the reasons the JSC gave for refusing to postpone its October
2024 sitting were so tainted by mistakes of fact or of law
as to
render the decision to proceed irrational.
17
For these reasons, the JSC’s decision to proceed with
its October 2024 sitting was plainly rational.
The interim relief
18
My conclusion on the final declaratory relief sought entails
the proposition that there is no
prima facie
basis on which to
assail the rationality of the JSC’s decision for the purposes
of obtaining interim relief. What remains
are the threats to the
applicants’ rights said to be embodied in the JSC’s
decision to proceed with its October 2024
sitting. The threat to
rights Mr. Mpofu identified was the continuation of the JSC’s
work without one of its democratically
elected designees being able
to participate in it. This was said to limit the suite of political
rights guaranteed in section 19
of the Constitution.
19
I shall assume in the applicants’ favour that this
constitutes a limitation of either or both of their constitutional
rights.
However, it seems clear to me that the limitation of rights
arises from the Full Court’s order, not from the JSC’s
decision to proceed. It is the Full Court, and not the JSC, which has
decided that Dr. Hlophe may not participate in the JSC’s
proceedings. The JSC was required to act in light of the Full Court’s
decision, which it, like me, must treat as valid and
binding. As long
as it acted rationally in light of the Full Court’s order, the
JSC could not itself infringe any of the
applicants’ rights.
20
It follows that the applicants cannot demonstrate, even
prima
facie,
that the JSC’s decision to proceed was taken in
breach of any of their rights. There is accordingly no basis for the
interim
relief claimed.
Costs
21
This means that the application must be dismissed. The JSC did
not seek costs against the applicants. However, both the third
respondent,
the DA, and the fifth respondent, FUL, sought a punitive
costs order against the applicants in the event that the application
failed.
22
FUL amplified its submissions by reference to a press release
issued by the MK Party in the aftermath of the Full Court’s
ruling. As Mr. Mpofu accepted, the content of that press release is
deeply troubling. I will not give it credence by repeating its
contents here. It is enough to say that the press release constituted
a gratuitous and wholly unjustified attack on the Full Court’s
decision, and on the judiciary in general. It reflects poorly on the
MK Party, and upon the individuals who are responsible for
drafting
and issuing it. Dr. Hlophe, and former President Jacob Zuma, who is
the leader of the MK Party, have been invited to dissociate
themselves from it. I hope that they do so.
23
Nevertheless, our Constitution protects free expression. It
even protects the expression of that which should not be expressed,
so long as it does not amount to hate speech. It may be true, as Mr.
du Plessis submitted, that the press release was contemptuous
and
that, for that reason, the right to free expression does not extend
to it. But it forms no part of my function to make that
determination
here. The issue of which side of the line the press release falls was
not fully argued before me, and there is no
reason why the contempt
it may very well have constituted cannot be explored, and if
necessary punished, in other proceedings.
24
Mr. Bishop, who appeared for the DA, argued that, because
neither FUL nor the DA are organs of state, the applicants do not
benefit
from the
Biowatch
costs shield that applies to a
litigant raising a constitutional issue in good faith (see,
generally,
Biowatch Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources
2009
(6) SA 232
(CC)). However, this overlooks the fact that the
Constitutional Court has frequently applied a costs shield in favour
of private
parties unsuccessfully litigating constitutional issues
against other private parties (see, for example,
Barkhuizen v
Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC) paragraph 90 and
Campus Law
Clinic (University of KwaZulu-Natal Durban) v Standard Bank of South
Africa Ltd
[2006] ZACC 5
;
2006 (6) SA 103
(CC), paragraph 28).
25
In any event, I do not think that the correct approach to
costs in this case starts with the classification of the parties as
private
or public. Although the JSC is indisputably an organ of
state, the remaining litigants before me cannot easily be classified
as
private or public. They are, rather, nominally private bodies and
individuals acting in what they consider to be the public interest.
Although the issues before me were mercifully straightforward, the
parties before me are engaged in a wider dispute about the very
nature of South African democracy. The applicants say that Dr.
Hlophe’s democratic mandate as a duly elected Member of
Parliament
designated to the JSC trumps any incongruency between his
status as an impeached Judge and the role in appointing Judges his
designation
to the JSC gives him. The DA, FUL and several other
parties before the Full Court see things the other way around.
26
For now, the Full Court has determined that there is enough
reason to doubt the legality of the National Assembly’s
decision
to designate Dr. Hlophe to the JSC to prevent Dr. Hlophe
from participating in the JSC’s work until the issue is finally
resolved. The applicants took the view that this meant the JSC should
not proceed until the controversy is settled. They approached
me to
decide whether the JSC can be forced to acquiesce in that view. I
have held that it cannot, but I cannot say that the applicants
acted
vexatiously or in bad faith merely by asking me to take that
decision. Nor can I say that the applicants have misconducted
themselves in the course of the litigation before me.
27
Accordingly, given the nature of this case, and the importance
of the issues that surround it, I do not think that it would be fair
to mulct the applicants in costs, even though they have been
unsuccessful.
Order
28
For all these reasons, the application is dismissed, with each
party paying their own 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
it to the electronic file of
this matter on Caselines, and by publication of the judgment to the
South African Legal Information
Institute. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 5 October 2024
HEARD ON:
4 October 2024
DECIDED ON:
5 October 2024
For
the First Applicant:
DC
Mpofu SC
L
Moela
V
Mokwevho
L
Ndabula
Instructed
by KMNS Inc
For
the Second Applicant:
V
Ngalwana SC
N
Khooe
Instructed
by KMNS Inc
For
the First Respondent:
NH
Maenetje SC
CA
Lewaak
M
Kritzinger
Instructed
by the State Attorney
For
the Third Respondent
For
the Fifth Respondent
M
Bishop
E
Cohen
Instructed
by Minde Shapiro and Smith Inc
M
du Plessis SC
S
Pudifin-Jones
S
Scott
S
Mohapi
T
Skosana
Instructed
by Nortons Inc
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