Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 1232South Africa
Democratic Alliance v City of Johannesburg and Others (2024/024479) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1232; 2025 (3) SA 204 (GJ) (4 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Democratic Alliance v City of Johannesburg and Others (2024/024479) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1232; 2025 (3) SA 204 (GJ) (4 December 2024)
Democratic Alliance v City of Johannesburg and Others (2024/024479) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1232; 2025 (3) SA 204 (GJ) (4 December 2024)
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sino date 4 December 2024
FLYNOTES:
MUNICIPALITY
– City manager –
Appointment
–
Court
a quo declaring appointment invalid – City council failing
to comply with directives of order – Re-adopting
resolutions
that court a quo declared unlawful – Measures taken in
purported compliance with order were insufficient
– Nothing
to suggest that its conduct was born of wilful and mala fide
determination to disobey order – Appropriate
remedy –
Resolution declared invalid – City council allowed to
consider its position.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED.
4
December 2024
Case
No.
2024-024479
In
the matter between:
THE
DEMOCRATIC ALLIANCE
Applicant
and
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG
First
Respondent
COUNCIL
OF THE CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
Second
Respondent
CITY
MANAGER, CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
Third
Respondent
FLOYD
BRINK
Fourth
Respondent
EXECUTIVE
MAYOR, CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
Fifth
Respondent
KABELO
GWAMANDA
Sixth
Respondent
SPEAKER,
CITY OF JOHANNESBURG
Seventh
Respondent
MARGARET
ARNOLDS
Eighth
Respondent
MEC
FOR CO-OPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
AND
TRADITIONAL AFFAIRS, GAUTENG
Ninth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF CO-OPERATIVE GOVERNANCE
AND
TRADITIONAL AFFARIS
Tenth
Respondent
Summary
A municipal council’s
rules of procedure adopted under section 160 (6) (b) of the
Constitution, 1996 are binding. A municipal
council that adopts a
resolution in breach of its own rules acts inconsistently with
section 1 (c) of the Constitution, 1996.
A court order is not to
be interpreted in isolation from the reasons given for it or from the
circumstances surrounding its issuance.
When criticising a
judicial decision, organs of state have a heightened duty to ensure
that their criticism is reasonably related
to the facts surrounding
the decision and the text of the decision itself. While not
necessarily contemptuous, gratuitous, ill-tempered
or unfounded
criticism of court decisions by organs of state will often be
inconsistent with an organ of state’s duty under
section 165
(4) of the Constitution to “assist and protect the courts”
and to ensure the courts’ “independence,
impartiality,
dignity, accessibility and effectiveness”.
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
On 7 November 2023, Budlender AJ, sitting in this court,
handed down an order which declared invalid a resolution of the
second
respondent, the City Council, taken on 23 February 2023. Under
that resolution, the City Council appointed the fourth respondent,
Mr. Brink, to the post of City Manager of the first respondent, the
City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality (“the
City”).
Budlender AJ also declared another resolution invalid. The City
Council took that resolution on 22 February 2023.
The resolution
reversed the City Council’s previous resolution (taken on 10
August 2022) to re-advertise the post of City
Manager in terms of
section 54A (5) of the Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000 (“the
Systems Act”). The City Council took
the 10 August 2022
resolution because it had reached the conclusion that a previous
effort to recruit a City Manager had not produced
an appointable
candidate.
2
The nett effect of Budlender AJ’s order was to reverse
Mr. Brink’s appointment. Realising this, Budlender AJ declared
that, notwithstanding the fact that Mr. Brink had been unlawfully
appointed, his official decisions and acts would not be rendered
invalid merely because of the unlawfulness of his appointment.
Budlender AJ also, in paragraph 4 of his order, suspended his
declarations
of invalidity for ten days “in order to allow for
the appointment of an Acting City Manager” (see
Democratic
Alliance v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality
[2023]
ZAGPJHC 1374 (7 November 2023), paragraph 56 (4)).
3
This case is about what the City Council did to comply with
Budlender AJ’s order. Instead of causing Mr. Brink to vacate
his
office, and appointing an Acting City Manager, the City Council
purported to comply with Budlender AJ’s order by passing
another resolution. That resolution was adopted on 29 November 2023.
Its effect was, in substance, to re-adopt the resolutions that
Budlender AJ had declared unlawful. In consequence, Mr. Brink did not
vacate his office. An Acting City Manager was not appointed,
and
things carried on more or less as if Budlender AJ’s order had
never been given.
4
The applicant, the DA, which is an opposition party on the
City Council, now impugns the lawfulness of that outcome and the
process
the City Council adopted to reach it. The DA’s case is,
first, that the outcome breached the terms of Budlender AJ’s
order itself. The DA contends that Budlender AJ’s order created
a vacancy in the office of the City Manager. That meant that
Mr.
Brink had to leave his post, that an Acting City Manager had to be
appointed, and that the permanent vacancy had to be readvertised,
as
was required by the City Council’s own 10 August 2022
resolution.
5
Secondly, the DA contends that the manner in which the City
Council went about readopting the resolutions Budlender AJ had
declared
unlawful was itself procedurally flawed. It did not comply
with the City Council’s own standing rules. Nor did it comply
with section 20 of the Systems Act, which regulates the conduct of
the City Council’s meetings.
6
On these bases, the DA asks me to review and set aside the
resolution that the City Council passed in the aftermath of, and in
purported
compliance with, Budlender AJ’s order.
7
The DA then goes a step further. It says that, by failing to
ensure that Mr. Brink left his post, and by essentially readopting
the invalidated resolutions, the City Council, and its officers,
acted in contempt of Budlender AJ’s order. It asks me to
declare that this was so. It also asks me to impute that contempt to
the City’s principal officers, who are joined to these
proceedings in their personal and in their official capacities. The
City’s Executive Mayor is cited as the fifth respondent,
and
the former occupant of that office, Mr. Gwamanda, is cited as the
sixth respondent. The City Council’s Speaker is cited
as the
seventh respondent, and the former occupant of the Speaker’s
office, Ms. Arnolds, is cited as the eighth respondent.
8
The DA asks that I declare that these respondents’
conduct in preparing and passing the 29 November 2023 resolution was
contemptuous
of Budlender AJ’s order. It asks me to commit Mr.
Gwamanda and Ms. Arnolds to prison in consequence of that contempt.
9
The DA’s application is opposed by City itself, by the
City Council, and by the offices of the City Manager, the Speaker and
the Executive Mayor (the third, fifth and seventh respondents).
Nothing turns on these distinctions though, and, where I need to
refer to these respondents collectively, I shall refer to them as
“the City”.
10
The City says that the City Council was perfectly entitled to
readopt the resolutions appointing Mr. Brink, and that it did so
lawfully.
The City calls attention to what it claims was the purely
procedural effect of Budlender AJ’s judgment and order. The
City
says that Budlender AJ’s judgment went no further than to
criticise the City Council for acting under rule 64 of its standing
rules to adopt the resolutions he declared invalid. Rule 64
allows a matter to be placed before the City Council urgently.
There
was, Budlender AJ found, no warrant for acting under rule 64. The
appointment of a City Manager is not an inherently urgent
matter, and
there was no basis on which to conclude that the circumstances under
which the 22 and 23 February 2023 resolutions
were adopted justified
the use of rule 64.
11
It follows, the City argues, that the invalid resolutions
could be readopted without engaging rule 64, which is exactly what
the
City Council did. There was nothing in Budlender AJ’s order
that required the City either to remove Mr. Brink from office,
or to
readvertise his post, so long as the City Council corrected the
procedural defect Budlender AJ identified. Because of this,
the City
says, there can be no question that it, or any of its organs or
office bearers, are in breach, let alone contempt, of
Budlender AJ’s
order.
12
In my view, Budlender AJ’s judgment and order went
further than a mere critique of the City Council’s choice of a
rule
under which to adopt the invalid resolutions. He criticised the
haste with which the City Council did so. He emphasised the need
for
careful deliberation over the appointment, and the need to ensure
that all the material relevant to the appointment was before
the City
Council when it adopted the resolution. In addition, Budlender AJ’s
order clearly left a vacancy in the office of
the City Manager. The
effect of Budlender AJ’s order was to revive the 10 August 2022
resolution to advertise the post as
vacant. It follows that the
only way in which the order could have been complied with was by
removing Mr. Brink and appointing
an Acting City Manager in terms of
paragraph 4 of the order.
13
The City Council tried to avoid these consequences by quickly
re-adopting the invalid resolutions during the period for which
Budlender
AJ suspended his order. But all that did was to replicate
the haste and the absence of relevant material that led Budlender AJ
to invalidate the resolutions in the first place. Although the City
Council purported to adopt the resolutions under the rules applicable
to ordinary, non-urgent, motions, the speed with which it had to act
to pass them during the suspension period meant that it was
forced to
breach those rules. In particular, it ignored the fourteen-day notice
period for new motions being placed before the
City Council required
by rule 94 (1).
14
It follows that the City acted neither in compliance with
Budlender AJ’s judgment and order, properly construed, nor in
terms
of its own binding standing rules. The resolutions it adopted
to cure the defects Budlender AJ identified are themselves invalid,
and must be set aside. Mr. Brink must leave his post, and an Acting
City Manager must be appointed while the City deliberates on
how to
fill the vacancy Mr. Brink will leave behind him.
15
Nevertheless, while I am satisfied that the City breached the
terms of Budlender AJ’s order (at least by readopting the
resolutions
he invalidated in breach of its own rules, by failing to
cause Mr. Brink to vacate his office and by failing to appoint an
Acting
City Manager), I cannot say that it has acted in contempt of
that order. The City was wrong to construe Budlender AJ’s order
as it did, and the measures it took in purported compliance with that
order were insufficient. But there is nothing before me to
suggest
that its conduct, or that of its officers, was born of wilful and
mala fide
determination to disobey or circumvent Budlender
AJ’s order, rather than an unseemly and perhaps self-serving
haste to negotiate
the complications the order presented for the
City’s administration.
16
In what follows, I give my reasons for reaching these
conclusions. I turn first to the DA’s review application.
The
review
17
The DA asks me to review and set aside the 29 November 2023
resolution under section 1 (c) of the Constitution, 1996. That
provision,
it has long been held, requires the exercise of all public
power to be consistent with the rule of law.
18
The DA’s case is that the 23 November 2023 resolution
was adopted in breach of two sets of fairly basic rules binding on
the
City Council. The first set of rules was that imposed on the City
Council by Budlender AJ’s order. The second set of rules
is
embodied in the City Council’s own standing rules governing the
conduct of its proceedings.
19
I deal first with Budlender AJ’s order.
Budlender
AJ’s order
The
interpretation of court orders
20
There was a dispute between the parties about the proper
approach to the interpretation of Budlender AJ’s order. Mr.
Ngcukaitobi,
who appeared for the City, submitted that the proper
approach to the interpretation of a court order is that set out in
Firestone South Africa v Genticuro AG
1977 (4) SA 298
(A) at
304D-H (“
Genticuro
”) and in
Administrator, Cape
v Ntshwaqela
1990 (1) SA 705
(A) at 716B-C (“
Ntshwaqela
”).
In
Genticuro
, the Appellate Division held that the meaning of
a court order is to be determined by reference to the language it
deploys read
in light of the judgment that preceded it. If, on such a
reading, the meaning of the order is unambiguous, then no extrinsic
evidence
is admissible to interpret the order. In
Ntshwaqela
,
the Appellate Division added a further qualification: that a court’s
order, being the “executive part” of the
judgment, must
be interpreted on its own terms, and those terms, if unambiguous, may
not be restricted or extended by the reasons
given in the rest of the
judgment.
21
Ms Steinberg, who appeared for the DA, argued that this
approach to interpretation has now been overtaken. The proper
approach is
that spelled out in
Democratic Alliance v Electoral
Commission
2021 JDR 2070 (CC) at paragraphs 12 and 13
(“
Democratic Alliance
”).
Democratic Alliance
,
it was submitted, makes clear that the “modern approach”
to interpretation is not to separate a judgment from its
order –
only having regard to the judgment if the order is ambiguous –
but to construe the order by reference to the
reasons given for it in
the judgment, whether or not the order seems unambiguous on its face.
22
It seems to me that Ms. Steinberg’s submission is the
correct one. It is correct not only because it is derived from a
decision
of the Constitutional Court which binds me. It is also
correct because it makes more sense than the approach of carving up a
document,
assigning a hierarchy to each part of that document, and
then only moving down the hierarchy where a more important piece of
writing
seems “ambiguous” unless read with a less
important one.
23
The “modern approach” to interpretation to which
the Constitutional Court referred in
Democratic Alliance
takes
the document in which a word or phrase appears as the ordinary frame
of context in which to determine that word or phrase’s
particular meaning. How a document is construed depends both on the
grammatical meaning ordinarily attached to the words or phrases
used,
and the context in which they are deployed. Assigning meaning to a
word or phrase can become trickier if there is something
about the
circumstances surrounding the production of the document itself that
is critical to its meaning, but the interpretive
exercise always
starts with the words used in their documentary setting – the
text and its structure. The facts surrounding
the production of the
document are relevant if they can tell us something useful about what
those words mean (
Capitec Holdings Ltd v Coral Lagoon Investments
194 (Pty) Ltd
2022 (1) SA 100
(SCA), paragraphs 46 to 51). The
exercise is not a hierarchical one. It is one which gives weight to
textual and circumstantial
context where they are needed to determine
the meaning of the words or phrases a document uses. Meaning and
context are inseparable,
but neither fully determines the other.
24
In discerning the impact of the modern approach on this case,
I need do no more than return to what the Appellate Division first
said in
Genticuro
: that the meaning of an order is to be
construed, at least in part, by reference to the reasons given for
it. As
Democratic Alliance
confirms, the meaning of an order
may also be construed by reference to any judgment given on an
application for leave to appeal
against it (
Democratic Alliance,
paragraph 13. See also
Transasia 444 (Pty) Ltd v Minister of
Mineral Resources and Energy
[2024] ZASCA 145
(23 October 2024)).
25
The point is not to restrict or extend the meaning of the
order, but to read the order in light of its supporting reasons to
give
it the meaning it always had. The problem with the decision in
Ntshwaqela
is that it can be read to assume that a court order
read in isolation is capable of bearing a pre-existing, a-contextual
and purely
grammatical meaning which can then illegitimately be
extended or restricted by too readily construing the order in light
of the
reasons given for it. I am not sure that this is what
Ntshwaqela
in fact concludes, since the decision itself
acknowledges that an order must be read in light of the reasons given
for it. But
this sharp interpretive separation between judgment and
order was the approach that Mr. Ngcukaitobi urged. For that reasons I
have
given, I do not think it is the correct one.
The
text of Budlender AJ’s order
26
Budlender AJ’s order had four relevant paragraphs. The
first paragraph declared the City Council’s resolution of 22
February 2023 invalid. The 22 February 2023 resolution rescinded the
Council’s 10 August 2022 resolution to readvertise the
position
of City Manager. The second paragraph of Budlender AJ’s order
declared the Council’s 23 February 2023 resolution
invalid.
That resolution approved Mr. Brink’s appointment as City
Manager, and authorised the Executive Mayor to offer Mr.
Brink a
five-year contract, and to negotiate the terms and conditions of that
contact with Mr. Brink. The third paragraph of Budlender
AJ’s
order declared invalid “any employment contract and/or
performance contract” concluded between the Executive
Mayor and
Mr. Brink pursuant to the 22 and 23 February 2023 resolutions.
27
The effect of the first three paragraphs of Budlender AJ’s
order was accordingly to declare the offer of the appointment to
Mr.
Brink invalid, to declare any contract concluded pursuant to that
offer likewise invalid, and to require the City Manager’s
post
to be advertised as vacant. That tends to create the impression that
Budlender AJ intended to cause Mr. Brink to vacate his
office.
28
Paragraph four of the order suspended paragraphs 1 to 3 of the
order for ten court days “to allow for the appointment of an
Acting City Manager”. On its face, this also tends toward the
view that Budlender AJ’s intent was to cause Mr. Brink
to
vacate his office, at least insofar as he occupied it on a permanent
basis.
The
proper interpretation of Budlender AJ’s order
29
The City applied for leave to appeal against Budlender AJ’s
order. The effect of that application was to suspend the whole
order
pending appeal. On 24 November 2023, Ms. Arnolds asked the City
Council’s programming committee to place an item on
the
Council’s agenda for its 29 November 2023 meeting. That item
was described as “[a]
Report for Council to
Review its Previous Resolutions Which Remedied the Obstruction of the
Recommended Appointment of Mr. Floyd
Brink to be the City Manager in
Accordance with Section 59(3)(a) of the Municipal Systems Act and
Judgments of the Johannesburg
High Court (No-041913/2023) and Eastern
Cape High Court (No-862/2022)”. This item was to become the
vehicle for the readoption
of the resolutions Budlender AJ had
declared invalid.
30
Budlender AJ dismissed the application for leave to appeal on
27 November 2023. At that point, his order became final. Two days
later, on 29 November 2023 the City Council adopted the resolutions
that the DA now asks me to invalidate. The City Council did
so under
the heading of the item placed on the City Council’s agenda at
Ms Arnolds’ behest five days earlier.
31
It seems clear that the City Council’s approach was that
nothing at all needed to change in consequence of Budlender AJ’s
order, so long as resolutions replacing those Budlender AJ declared
invalid could be passed during the ten day suspension Budlender
AJ
placed on the declarations of invalidity he issued. This much is
clear from the report laid before the Council on 29 November
2023,
when it adopted the replacement resolutions. Paragraph 3.1.1. of that
report states that Budlender AJ declared the 22 and
23 February
resolutions invalid “only on the basis that when the Council
resolved to approve the resolutions . . . it did
not comply with its
Rules. [Budlender AJ] found Council did not follow Rule 64 (3) when
such resolutions were tabled” Budlender
AJ’s judgment,
the report continued, “does not preclude the resubmission of
the resolutions”. At paragraph 3.2.2.
the report states that,
but for the procedural defect Budlender AJ identified, “the
resolutions remain factually correct
and legally competent”. It
followed that all the Council needed to do was readopt them under the
correct rule. This is what
the Council then said it did, purportedly
curing the procedural defect that Budlender AJ identified.
32
The report laid before the City Council was mistaken. What
Budlender AJ’s judgment identified was not just a technical
defect
in the procedure the Council adopted, but an inappropriate
haste to adopt the 22 and 23 February 2023 resolutions in
circumstances
where lengthier consideration was necessary,
using the ordinary notice periods and procedures provided for in the
standing
rules. At paragraph 29 of his judgment, Budlender AJ noted
that those rules would ordinarily require fourteen days’ notice
be given to the secretary of the City Council of a motion to be
placed before it; that such a motion must be considered by the
programming committee of the City Council before it is placed on the
City Council’s agenda; and that notice of any City Council
meeting must be given to every councillor at least three days in
advance.
33
It was the departure from these rules that Budlender AJ
disallowed. He was specifically critical of the use of the urgent
procedures
provided for in rule 64 to engineer that departure (see
paragraphs 35 to 37). But his judgment is not limited to that
criticism.
Properly construed, Budlender AJ’s judgment makes
the positive assertion that the appointment of the City Manager is so
“substantive”
an issue (see paragraph 34) that the use of
the urgent procedures in rule 64 could not be justified on the facts
before him, and
that the ordinary rules, particularly rule 94 (1),
which provided for a 14 day notice period for new motions to be
placed before
the City Council, should have been followed.
34
Construed in this light, the meaning of Budlender AJ’s
order is clear. The City Council was sent back to the drawing board.
Mr. Brink’s appointment was reversed. The decision to
readvertise the post of City Manager was revived. Mr. Brink would
have to vacate his permanent appointment as City Manager, and an
Acting City Manager would have to be appointed to replace Mr. Brink
while the Council considered what to do next. It was, in other words,
not open to the City Council to readopt the 22 and 23 February
2023
resolutions with the same unseemly haste that undercut their validity
in the first place.
35
Mr. Ngcukaitobi argued that I cannot interpret Budlender AJ’s
order as creating a vacancy in the office of the City Manager,
because Budlender AJ declined explicitly to order Mr. Brink to vacate
his office and because he also declined to order the readvertisement
of the City Manager’s post. This was despite the fact that the
DA asked for relief in those terms before him. For the reasons
I have
given, I think that Budlender AJ’s order does explicitly reopen
a vacancy in the office of the City Manager. If it
did not, there
would be no point in paragraph 4 of the order, which specifically
provides for the appointment of an Acting City
Manager. It is true
that Budlender AJ did not order that the post be readvertised, but
the effect of the order is to revive the
10 August 2022 resolution,
which does require readvertisement. Accordingly, the variance between
the relief the DA sought in its
notice of motion and the relief
Budlender AJ actually granted does not materially change the meaning
of Budlender AJ’s order.
36
It follows that the 29 November 2023 resolution was taken in
breach of Budlender AJ’s order, and is invalid at least for
that
reason.
Breach
of the standard rules
37
Ms. Steinberg submitted that haste with which the City Council
acted once Budlender AJ’s order became final also resulted in
a
number of other illegalities. I need only deal with one of these
illegalities in any detail.
38
If the City Council wanted to readopt the resolutions
Budlender AJ had declared invalid, it would have to do so using the
ordinary
procedures for placing business before the Council. This
would have entailed compliance with rule 94 (1), which requires any
motion
to be placed before the Council to be signed and submitted to
the Secretary of Council fourteen days before the Council meeting
at
which it is to be considered.
39
It is common cause that rule 94 (1) was not complied with when
the City Council adopted the 29 November 2023 resolution. In its
papers, the City originally contended that rule 94 (1) does not
apply, because the resolution was introduced by the Speaker, not
“a
councillor”. Wisely, that contention was not persisted with in
oral argument. Rule 94 (1) requires a “councillor”
who
wishes to introduce a motion to do so by submitting a signed draft
resolution to the Secretary of Council 14 days before the
meeting at
which it is to be considered. The Speaker is a “councillor”.
There is no indication that I can see in the
standing rules that
suggests that the Speaker is not a “councillor” for the
purposes of rule 94 (1).
40
In oral argument Mr. Ngcukaitobi instead submitted that the
City is not bound by its own standing rules. For that reason rule 94
(1) presented no barrier to the Council considering a motion filed
beyond its strictures if the Council chose to do so. In support
of
this proposition, Mr. Ngcukaitobi referred me to rule 1 (3) of the
standing rules, which states that “[t]hese rules are
not
intended to diminish or restrict the Council’s powers,
privileges and immunities”. That, however, simply begs the
question of what power, privilege or immunity authorised the Council
to act outside its own standing rules.
41
Section 160 (6) (b) of the Constitution is the foundation of
the City Council’s power to make rules governing its “business
and proceedings”. It follows that the Council’s standing
rules derive their legal force from the Constitution itself,
and that
the Council has the right and the obligation to govern its business
and proceedings in terms of those constitutionally
authorised rules.
It was not argued that the City Council had any specific right to
depart from its rules save insofar as the standing
rules themselves
provide. Mr. Ngcukaitobi could identify no power, privilege or
immunity that would allow the Council to do so.
I can think of none.
Nor was it argued that the rules themselves provide a basis on which
the Council was entitled to dispense
with the requirements of rule 94
(1).
42
It has long been established that a legislative body is bound
by its own internal rules and procedures, and that it cannot act to
limit its members’ rights and privileges in the absence of a
constitutionally valid internal rule or procedure that authorises
it
to do so (see, for example,
Speaker of the National Assembly v De
Lille
1999 (4) SA 863
(SCA)). By the same token, I do not think
that it is open to the City Council to arrogate an unspecified power,
privilege or immunity
to depart from its rules whenever expedient,
especially when those rules confer rights on its own members. It
seems to me that
at least one of the purposes of Rule 94 (1) is to
give councillors adequate notice of motions that have been proposed
and submitted
to the Secretary of Council. It accordingly confers a
right on any councillor who wishes to preview those motions to do so.
43
It follows that rule 94 (1) was binding on the City Council,
and the admitted non-compliance with it is fatal to the validity of
the 29 November 2023 resolution.
Other
alleged illegalities
44
Aside from non-compliance with rule 94 (1), it was contended
that the 29 November 2023 was invalid because the City Council’s
programme committee did not have the resolution before it when it
accepted the agenda item under which the resolution was adopted;
because the programme committee could not reasonably have inferred
from the material before it that a motion to adopt the resolution
would be moved; and because the City Council impermissibly considered
the resolution after it unlawfully excluded the media and
the general
public.
45
Having reached the conclusion that the resolution was invalid
for non-compliance with Budlender AJ’s order, and for
non-compliance
with rule 94 (1), it is not necessary for me to
address these further grounds of invalidity. The facts surrounding
these grounds
are to some extent contested. For example, while there
can be no doubt that the programme committee was, at least initially,
very
confused about what it was being asked to put on the City
Council’s agenda for the 29 November 2023 meeting, the extent
to
which the confusion was ultimately resolved at the programme
committee meeting is in dispute. Resolving that dispute would require
me to engage with the transcript of the meeting, which is in several
respects obscure.
46
In addition, the question of whether the resolution should
have been adopted in public seems to me to depend on a value
judgement,
to be made in the context of the City’s own bylaws,
about whether it is reasonable to do so having regard to the nature
of
the business to be transacted and the circumstances in which the
resolution is to be taken (see section 20 (1) of the Systems Act).
It
is not necessary for me to decide whether that judgement was properly
made to resolve this case, and I do not wish to speculate
on whether
the City Council might in future be entitled to deliberate on the
appointment of its City Manager in a closed session.
47
Section 20 (2) (f) of the Systems Act states that the City
Council must consider any matter “prescribed by regulation”
in open session. Ms. Steinberg submitted that the City Manager’s
recruitment and appointment is a matter “prescribed
by
regulation”, in the sense that it is a regulated process, which
is required to be dealt with in public. It is true that
the process
of appointing a City Manager is governed by statute and regulation,
but it does not necessarily follow that this means
that section 20
(2) (f) requires it to be debated in public. It seems to me that
section 20 (2) (f) might instead mean that regulations
must prescribe
a list of matters to be dealt with in open session. I was not taken
to such a list, and I heard insufficient argument
on the proper
interpretation of section 20 (2) (f), which is an issue I prefer to
leave open.
48
Nevertheless, for the reasons I have given, the 29 November
2023 resolution cannot stand. It must be declared unconstitutional
and
invalid, because it was adopted in breach of Budlender AJ’s
order, and in breach of the City Council’s own standing
rules.
It was, accordingly, adopted in breach of section 1 (c) of the
Constitution.
49
Before I turn to the remedy that follows from this finding of
invalidity, I shall deal with the DA’s contention that the City
and its officers acted in contempt of Budlender AJ’s order when
they brought about the adoption of the 29 November 2023 resolution.
The
contempt proceedings
50
I have found that the City Council adopted the 29 November
2023 resolution in breach of Budlender AJ’s order. Properly
construed,
that order required Mr. Brink to leave his post. The City
Council would then ordinarily have been bound by the 10 August 2022
resolution
to readvertise the post. Assuming it was open to the City
Council to rescind the 10 August 2022 resolution, then Budlender AJ’s
order required the City Council to follow its own standing rules
before doing so. That entailed compliance with rule 94 (1).
51
None of this happened. The DA contends that the City and its
officers instead rushed through the 29 November 2023 resolution in a
deliberate and bad faith attempt to frustrate these consequences of
Budlender AJ’s order.
52
That, if true, would ordinarily mean that the City, and those
of its officers who deliberately sought to frustrate the
implementation
of Budlender AJ’s order, would be in contempt of
court. This is because wilful and
mala fide
violation of a
court order is a species of contempt.
53
During argument, Ms. Steinberg submitted that, once I am
satisfied, as I must be, that the City and its officers had notice of
Budlender
AJ’s order, and that they had acted in breach of it,
I have no reason on the facts before me not to conclude that the
City’s
breach of the order was contemptuous. This is because,
once notice and breach of a court order has been established, it is
for
the alleged contemnor to adduce evidence that their breach of the
order was not wilful, or that, though wilful, the conduct that
breached the order was undertaken in good faith.
54
Ms. Steinberg contended that no such evidence has been
produced. Ms. Steinberg submitted that what I have before me is
evidence
that the City and its officers knew about the order, and
that they acted in breach of it. I have nothing before me that would
allow
me to conclude that the breach was inadvertent or in good
faith.
55
The two officers the DA seeks to commit for contempt are Mr.
Gwamanda and Ms. Arnolds. They have submitted affidavits in which
they
deny that they acted in breach of Budlender AJ’s order,
but nevertheless assert that any breach was inadvertent and
bona
fide
. Ms. Steinberg submitted that these affidavits are
inadmissible because they have been filed out of time and out of
sequence, and
my leave has not been sought to admit them. Mr.
Ngcukaitobi submitted that the Deputy Judge President of this court
has already
granted leave to file these affidavits while he was case
managing this matter, and that the affidavits are properly before me.
56
I would have been hard-pressed to refuse to consider
affidavits submitted by alleged contemnors facing committal solely on
the technical
basis that they have been filed in breach of the rules
of court. I need not, however, resolve the controversy about their
admissibility
in order to conclude that neither the City nor Mr.
Gwamanda nor Ms. Arnolds acted in wilful and
mala fide
breach
of Budlender AJ’s order.
57
As must be abundantly clear by now, the City adopted and then
acted under an erroneous construction of Budlender AJ’s order.
That construction was that the 22 and 23 February 2023 resolutions
were perfectly valid, but for the use of rule 64 of the standing
rules to adopt them. On the basis of that construction, the City
rushed through the readoption of those resolutions without engaging
the urgent procedures for which rule 64 provides. But nor did it
bring itself within the provisions of its standing rules that
did
apply.
58
The process the City adopted was sloppy and self-serving. It
did not bespeak a nuanced appreciation of Budlender AJ’s
judgment
and order. At times, the process may have involved a degree
of deceit, especially insofar as the City Council’s programme
committee appears, at least initially, to have been told that the
agenda item under which the 29 November 2023 resolution was merely
a
“report back” to the Council rather than a substantive
motion introduced to readopt the resolutions Budlender AJ
declared
invalid.
59
Be that as it may, in order to commit Ms. Arnolds and Mr.
Gwamanda for contempt, I must be convinced of their wilfulness and
bad
faith beyond reasonable doubt. I must, in other words, be
satisfied that the only reasonable inference from the proven facts is
that they wilfully and in bad faith sought to transgress what they
knew to be the clear strictures of Budlender AJ’s order.
The
facts do not bear this out. The City, Ms. Arnolds and Mr. Gwamanda
had clearly been advised that the consequences of Budlender
AJ’s
order were purely procedural, and that the order could be complied
with by merely readopting the 22 and 23 February
2023 resolutions
without engaging rule 64. That advice is recorded in the report to
the City Council under which the 29 November
2023 resolution was
adopted. There is nothing before me to suggest that this advice was
itself contrived to subvert Budlender AJ’s
order. In addition,
the advice, though clearly wrong, was not so poor as to constitute a
bad faith effort to breach the terms of
the order. Nor was it
suggested that Mr. Gwamanda or Ms. Arnolds had the specialist legal
knowledge necessary to second-guess this
advice.
60
At best for the DA, the undisputed facts support two equally
likely interpretations. The first is that the City ineptly and
self-servingly
read Budlender AJ’s order down to mean what the
majority coalition on the City Council wanted it to mean. The second
is that
several City officials and office bearers contrived what
those involved knew to be a wholly erroneous interpretation of the
order
as a way of subverting its true effect. I incline toward the
first interpretation, but even if there was nothing to choose between
these two possibilities, I still could not hold the City, Ms. Arnolds
or Mr. Gwamanda in contempt, even on the civil standard of
a balance
of probabilities which would apply if Ms. Arnolds’ and Ms.
Gwamanda’s committal to prison was not sought.
61
Accordingly, I must refuse the DA’s application to hold
the City in contempt, and to commit Ms. Arnolds and Mr. Gwamanda to
prison, on the basis that they did not wilfully and
mala fide
violate the terms of Budlender AJ’s order.
62
This conclusion renders it unnecessary for me to consider the
City’s primary line of defence against the contempt
application:
that Budlender AJ’s order was merely declaratory
in nature, and not one which imposed specific obligations on the City
to
do, or to refrain from doing, anything in particular. Mr.
Ngcukaitobi submitted that it is not possible – or at least
that
it has never been held that it is possible – to act in
breach of a declaratory order. It was submitted that only judgments
ad factum praestandum
– that is, judgments that impose
specific mandates or prohibitions on particular people – are
capable, in principle,
of being contemptuously breached.
63
However, as Ms. Steinberg pointed out, Budlender AJ’s
declaratory orders were orders
in rem
. In other words, they
were declarations to the whole world that the resolutions he declared
invalid were null and void (or at least
would be null and void once
the suspension he placed on them expired). Orders of that nature
require all those who have had notice
of them to act on the basis
that the acts they declare void are of no force or effect.
Accordingly, it could have been and in fact
was contemptuous of the
City and its officers to revive the nullified resolutions, especially
as they did so in a manner inconsistent
with the terms of the order
that required the City to appoint an Acting City Manager, and to
refrain from adopting the same botched
procedure that rendered the 22
and 23 February 2023 resolutions invalid in the first place.
64
For the reasons Ms. Steinberg gave, I incline toward the view
that a declaratory order of the nature Budlender AJ granted might in
principle provide a basis on which to pursue a claim of contempt
against an officer of state who wilfully and
mala fide
ignores
it. The most obvious example of such conduct in this case would have
been if the City had repudiated Budlender AJ’s
declarations,
and continued to carry out official acts on the basis that the 22 and
23 February 2023 resolutions remained valid.
65
In any event that is not what the City did. It in fact
purported to comply with Budlender AJ’s order – albeit on
the
basis of a mistaken construal of what that order meant. For the
reasons I have given, the City’s construal of the order cannot,
on balance, be characterised as a wilful and
mala fide
attempt
to disobey it. It is accordingly unnecessary for me to finally
resolve the question of whether the form of Budlender AJ’s
order made it impossible for anyone to act in contempt of it.
The
press release of 29 November 2023
66
The DA alleges one further form of contempt. That allegation
relates to a press release the City issued on 29 November 2023, in
which it announced that it had readopted the 22 and 23 February 2023
resolutions. The press release is noteworthy in at least two
respects. First, the City confirms its understanding of Budlender
AJ’s order: viz. that the order declared no more than that
“Council had failed to follow its own procedures in relation to
urgent matters requiring Council consideration and approval”.
67
The second notable portion of the press release is the opinion
it expresses of the way Budlender AJ decided the case before him.
Budlender AJ was criticised as having “failed to independently
and without bias, consider the valid and substantial legal
arguments
presented before [him] on the process enlisted by Council in
approving the report to appoint the City Manager in February
2023”.
68
The source of this criticism appears to have been Budlender
AJ’s own disclosure, made shortly before the matter was argued
before him, that, as a practicing advocate, he had represented both
the DA and the City Council in a number of other matters. At
paragraph 8 of his judgment, Budlender AJ records that neither the DA
nor the City asked for his recusal on that, or on any other,
basis.
69
Strictly speaking, Budlender AJ need not have disclosed his
role representing both parties as counsel in other matters. At the
time
of his acting appointment, he was a practicing advocate.
Practicing advocates and attorneys make up the bulk of the acting
judiciary.
It is near inevitable that an acting Judge will, sooner or
later, preside over matters involving parties they have represented
or acted against as legal practitioners. Most litigants –
especially those who use the courts as frequently as the DA and
the
City – know this. They also know that, when a legal
practitioner takes up an acting appointment, they leave their
adversarial
role behind, and are presumed to be impartial merely by
virtue of their acting appointment.
70
Of course, an acting Judge may have special knowledge of the
affairs of a litigant before them which they acquired while
representing
that litigant. That knowledge may affect, or might
reasonably be perceived to affect, their approach to the case they
must decide
as an acting Judge. In that event, the acting Judge will
recuse themselves whatever the parties want, since they would be
unable
to hear the case detached from the parties and innocent of the
facts on which they will have to deliver judgment. However, this
was
not one of those cases. It was not suggested that Budlender AJ had
special knowledge of either party’s affairs that might
affect
his impartiality.
71
The DA was rightly critical of the City’s choice to
question Budlender AJ’s impartiality. The City did not ask for
Budlender
AJ’s recusal when given an opportunity do so. It did
not raise any complaint of bias during the proceedings. It did not
criticise
Budlender AJ’s conduct of the case in its application
for leave to appeal. In those circumstances, the suggestion that bias
tainted Budlender AJ’s decision was wholly unfounded. It was,
in my view, a gratuitous attempt to pour scorn on a decision
the City
did not like, but which it could find no legitimate ground to
challenge.
72
Both the City and Mr. Gwamanda issued the press release in
their capacities as organs of state. When criticising a judicial
decision,
an organ of state, as a “role model
par
excellence
” (
S v Williams
1995 (2) SACR 251
(CC),
paragraph 47) has a heightened duty to ensure that its criticism is
reasonably related to the facts surrounding the decision
and the text
of the decision itself. While not necessarily contemptuous,
gratuitous, ill-tempered or unfounded criticism of court
decisions by
organs of state will often be inconsistent with an organ of state’s
duty under section 165 (4) of the Constitution
to “assist and
protect the courts” and to ensure the courts’
“independence, impartiality, dignity, accessibility
and
effectiveness”. In choosing to make such an unfounded and
ill-tempered attack on Budlender AJ’s decision, the City
and
Mr. Gwamanda acted inconsistently with that obligation. Mr.
Ngcukaitobi could not argue that a declaratory order to that effect
would be inappropriate. I intend to make such an order.
73
The question of whether the press release also constituted
contempt of court is more difficult. The species of contempt the DA
alleges
is that of scandalising the court. Contempt of court in that
form is committed whenever a person intentionally utters or publishes
such “words as tend, or are calculated, to bring the
administration of justice into contempt” (
In re Phelan
1877 Kotze 5
at 7). I do not think that the press release either
tended or was calculated to achieve that end.
74
Litigants frequently accuse judges of bias. Generally, they
mean no more than that their case did not turn out the way they
wanted.
The City and Mr. Gwamanda meant more than that. As organs of
state and as frequent litigators, they must have known what bias
really
meant. They must also have known that that they had no
reasonable basis on which to contend that Budlender AJ was biased.
Still,
the reasonable reader of the City’s press release would
have understood the imputation of bias as the empty rhetoric of a
sore loser. The reader would have found the suggestion that Budlender
AJ was biased wholly incredible, in light of the facts, also
set out
in the press release, that the City had abandoned its appeal against
Budlender AJ’s order, and that it had purported
to comply with
that order. In those circumstances, the press release did not tend to
bring the administration of justice into contempt.
75
Was the press release nevertheless calculated to do so? I
think not. The tenor of the document is that of a face-saving device.
Both the City and Mr. Gwamanda had been told that they had presided
over an illegality. What is more, they must have been convinced
that
there was no prospect of persuading a court of appeal otherwise. Were
there any such prospect, the City’s appeal would
not have been
abandoned. The City and Mr. Gwamanda thumbed their noses at Budlender
AJ while accepting that his judgment had to
be complied with. That
was obviously petulant, but it was not contemptuous.
76
In a constitutional democracy, judges exercise enormous power.
The way that we exercise that power will inevitably be criticised.
Because judges make mistakes, some of that criticism will be
accurate. At other times, criticism of judges will be inaccurate but
nonetheless valuable, because, though wrong, it is made in good faith
and illuminates important points of law, or encourages public
debate
about the judiciary and our role. Criticism of the judiciary will
also sometimes be ill-informed, inaccurate or downright
nonsensical.
However, given the power we exercise, that will not in itself make
the criticism contemptuous. What is required, in
addition, is that
the criticism be made with the intent to denigrate the judiciary as
an institution, and thereby to impede its
effectiveness. Criticism of
that kind is actionable because it is, in essence, an attack on the
Constitution itself.
77
A press release issued in a fit of pique by a losing litigant
will seldom rise to that level of seriousness. In this case, the
City’s
press release certainly did not. Accordingly, I cannot
find that the press release was contemptuous in the relevant sense.
Remedy
78
The upshot of all this is that the 29 November 2023 resolution
was adopted in breach of Budlender AJ’s order and in breach
of
the City Council’s own standing rules. For those reasons, it is
invalid, and must be set aside. Much of the argument before
me
concerned the question of what must happen then. The DA says that the
effect of such an order would be that Mr. Brink must vacate
the post
of City Manager, and that the post must be readvertised.
79
I agree that, if the resolution is invalid, then so is Mr.
Brink’s permanent appointment as City Manager. That means that
Mr. Brink’s permanent appointment must be reversed, and Mr.
Brink must be ordered to leave his post. The only basis on which
I
would have been inclined to exercise my remedial discretion against
that outcome would be if some disastrous consequence might
befall the
City and its inhabitants unless Mr. Brink were left in post. None has
been identified.
80
The question of whether I should order that the post be
readvertised is more complex. Certainly, the effect of invalidating
the
29 November 2023 resolution is that the 10 August 2022 resolution
which required such readvertisement stands, and must be implemented.
Ms. Steinberg argued that the 10 August 2022 resolution was in effect
a decision under section 54A (5) of the Systems Act to readvertise
the post because, as the resolution itself states, there was “no
suitable candidate who complie[d] with the prescribed requirements”.
That decision having been taken in terms of a statutory provision,
the City Council is
functus officio
on the issue, and may not
ignore, rescind or set aside its own previous decision to readvertise
the post.
81
The question of the extent to which a City Council may revisit
or rescind its own resolutions was not dealt with in any depth before
me. As Mr. Ngcukaitobi pointed out, the Supreme Court of Appeal has
held,
obiter
, that a City Council has the general power to
“rescind or alter” its own resolutions (see
Manana v
King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality
(2011) 32 ILJ 581 (SCA) at
paragraph 22). That
dictum
notwithstanding, it seems to me
that there is a distinction to be drawn between a resolution in
discharge of a statutory obligation
on the one hand and a resolution
in the exercise of a more plenary legislative or policy-making power
on the other. In the same
way that organs of state are not entitled
to ignore or reverse their own administrative decisions without court
oversight, it seems
to me that municipal councils may not be entitled
to revisit resolutions which have been adopted in discharge of a
statutory obligation
unless they demonstrate to a court that there
are grounds on which to conclude that the resolution was adopted
unlawfully.
82
Section 54A (5) of the Systems Act states that a “municipal
council must re-advertise the post [of City Manager] if there is
no
suitable candidate who complies with the prescribed requirements”.
The 10 August 2022 resolution recorded the City Council’s
conclusion that there was no such suitable candidate. It also
constitutes a decision to take the action section 54A (5) requires
the City Council to take if and when it reaches that conclusion: the
post of City Manager must be readvertised.
83
The 22 and 23 February 2023 and 29 November 2023 resolutions
are, at their core, attempts to revisit that conclusion. In their
over-wordy
way, they each constitute the City Council’s attempt
to change its mind: to conclude that Mr. Brink was in fact a
“candidate
who complies with the prescribed requirements”;
that he should be offered the post; and that readvertisement was not
necessary,
because section 54A (5) does not apply after all.
84
Almost no argument was advanced before me about whether the
City Council was entitled, in principle, to change its mind in that
way. The main issue before me was whether Budlender AJ’s order
had been complied with. I have held that it was not, but I
think that
it would be stretching Budlender AJ’s order too far to conclude
that it forbade the City Council from ever revisiting
the 10 August
2022 resolution to readvertise the City Manager’s post as
vacant. The City Council may not in any event be
entitled to do so,
but nothing in Budlender AJ’s order had any bearing on that
entitlement, if it exists.
85
It follows that the appropriate remedy at this stage of the
proceedings is to declare the 29 November 2023 resolution invalid,
and
to allow the City Council to consider its position. It may decide
to let the 10 August 2022 resolution stand, in which case there
will
be no need to consider whether that resolution can be rescinded. If
left to stand, it clearly requires the readvertisement
of the City
Manager’s post. If the City attempts to rescind the resolution
again, then the question of whether it is entitled
to do so may well
arise in future litigation. But that question is neither properly
before me nor ripe for determination.
86
Whatever might happen next, everyone before me accepted that
section 59 (3) (a) of the Systems Act does not provide the City
Council with a general power to alter or rescind its previous
resolutions. That provision, which appears to have been the vehicle
through which the City Council thought that it could readopt the 22
and 23 February 2023 resolutions, allows the City Council to
“
review
any decision taken by . . . a political structure, political office
bearer, councillor or staff member in consequence of
a delegation or
instruction”. It applies
only to delegated powers
exercised on the City Council’s behalf by its officials or
office bearers. It does not apply to the
City Council’s own
resolutions.
Costs
87
Mr. Ngcukaitobi accepted that costs must follow the result in
the event that the DA achieves substantial success. I think that the
invalidity and the setting aside of the 29 November 2023 resolution
is success, and that it is substantial enough to justify an
award of
costs in the DA’s favour. The complexity of this case justifies
taxation of counsel’s costs on the “C”
scale.
Order
88
For all these reasons –
88.1 The following
decisions of the second respondent, taken on 29 November 2023, are
declared unconstitutional, unlawful and invalid,
and are set aside
–
88.1.1 The
decision to approve the “
Report for Council
to Review its Previous Resolutions Which Remedied the Obstruction of
the Recommended Appointment of Mr. Floyd
Brink to be the City Manager
in Accordance with Section 59(3)(a) of the Municipal Systems Act and
Judgments of the Johannesburg
High Court (No-041913/2023) and Eastern
Cape High Court (No-862/2022)” (“the report”).
88.1.2
The
decision to readopt the following resolutions –
88.1.2.1 that
“the documented evidence reaffirms the evidence of acts of
obstruction of the recommended appointment
of Mr. Brink in the
reports in annexure C and D [to the report], and remedies in the
procedurally challenged resolutions in annexure
E and F [to the
report]";
88.1.2.2 that
"in light of such reaffirmed evidence, the resolutions in
annexure E [to the report], which addressed
the acts of obstruction
of the recommended appointment of Mr. Brink in the report of the
Speaker be readopted and implemented in
terms of legislation";
88.1.2.3 that
"in light of such reaffirmed remedies, the resolutions in
annexure F [to the report], which remedied
the acts of obstruction of
the recommended appointment of Mr. Brink in the report of the Mayor
be readopted and implemented in
terms of legislation";
88.1.2.4 that
"the terms of reference of investigations that were approved
pursuant to the resolutions in annexure
E and F [to the report] be
amended to include the allegations and evidence that is contained in
this report;
88.1.2.5 that
"the Executive Mayor be authorised to issue a new appointment to
Mr. Brink and also conclude a new
contract of employment with him in
accordance with applicable legislation"; and
88.1.2.6 that
"in the event of unforeseen delays and/or challenges in
implementing the above resolutions, the Executive
Mayor be authorised
to comply with the court order of 07 November 2023, and employ any of
the remedies in section 54A of the MSA,
and appoint Mr, Brink who is
the recommended qualifying candidate by the Selection Panel, to be an
Acting City Manager until resolution
2.5 is implemented, and his new
appointment is issued, and his new contract is concluded”.
88.2 Any employment
contract and/or performance contract any of the respondents may have
concluded with the fourth respondent
pursuant to the invalid
resolutions are declared unconstitutional, unlawful and invalid, and
is set aside.
88.3 Decisions
taken, and acts performed, by the fourth respondent in his official
capacity will not be invalidated by reason
only of these declarations
of invalidity.
88.4
The
fourth respondent is directed to relinquish his permanent appointment
as the first respondent’s City Manager within ten
days of the
date of this order, or as soon as an Acting City Manager is
appointed, whichever occurs first.
88.5 It is declared
that, in publishing the press release “City of Johannesburg
confirms appointment of City Manager”
on 29 November 2023, the
first and sixth respondents breached their obligations under section
165 (4) of the Constitution to “assist
and protect the courts”
and to ensure the courts’ “independence, impartiality,
dignity, accessibility and effectiveness”.
88.6 The first
respondent is directed to pay the costs of this application,
including the costs of two counsel. Counsels’
costs may be
taxed on scale “C”.
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 4 December 2024.
HEARD
ON:
12
November 2024
DECIDED
ON:
4
December 2024
For
the Applicant:
C
Steinberg SC
D
Sive
D
Mutemwa-Tumbo
Instructed
by Minde Shapiro and Smith Inc
For
the First, Second, Third,
Fifth
and Seventh Respondents:
T
Ngcukaitobi SC
R
Tulk
T
Mpulo-Merafe
Instructed
by Malebye Motaung Mtembu Inc
sino noindex
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