Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 78South Africa
Schreiber and Another v African National Congress (2021/26339) [2023] ZAGPJHC 78 (2 February 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 February 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Access to records In terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 - Right to gain access dependant on right which requester wishes to exercise or protect. Such right not limited to fundamental Constitutional right. Compliance with provisions of PAIA is a necessary precondition to lodge an application to Court.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAGPJHC 78
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Schreiber and Another v African National Congress (2021/26339) [2023] ZAGPJHC 78 (2 February 2023)
Schreiber and Another v African National Congress (2021/26339) [2023] ZAGPJHC 78 (2 February 2023)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2023_78.html
sino date 2 February 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER: 2021/26339
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
In
the application of:
LEON
AMOS
SCHREIBER
First
Applicant
THE
DEMOCRATIC ALLIANCE
Second
Applicant
and
THE
AFRICAN NATIONAL CONGRESS
Respondent
Coram:
Wepener
J
Date
of hearing:
30 January
2023
Date
of judgment:
2 February 2023
This
judgment is made an Order of Court by the Judge whose name is
reflected herein, duly stamped by the Registrar of the Court
and is
submitted electronically to the Parties/their legal representatives
by email. The judgment is further uploaded to the electronic
file of
this matter on Caselines by the Judge his secretary. The date of this
Order is deemed to be 2 February 2023
Summary
:
Access to records In terms of the
Promotion of Access to Information
Act 2 of 2000
- Right to gain access dependant on right which
requester wishes to exercise or protect. Such right not limited to
fundamental
Constitutional right. Compliance with provisions of PAIA
is a necessary precondition to lodge an application to Court.
JUDGMENT
Wepener,
J:
[1]
The first applicant is Leon Schreiber ('Schreiber'), a member of the
National Assembly who represents the
second applicant, the Democratic
Alliance ('DA'), in the National Assembly. The second applicant is
the Democratic Alliance, a
registered political party and body
corporate with perpetual succession and capable of suing in its own
name.
[2]
The respondent is the African National Congress ('ANC') a registered
political party. It is common cause that
the ANC is a 'private body
for purposes of the Promotion of Access to Information Act
[1]
('PAIA').
[3]
The applicant seeks the following relief:
‘
1.
That the decision of the ANC to refuse the applicant's request for
access to information dated 22 February 2021 is declared unlawful
and
invalid and is set aside.
2
That the ANC is directed to provide all of the information and
records sought in the applicants' request for access to information
dated 22 February 2021 within 5 court days.’
There
is also the usual requests for costs.
[4]
If regard is had to the affidavits filed in the matter there are a
number of disputes that can be identified,
save that I could discern
no serious dispute of fact that may have a bearing on the issues to
be determined.
[5]
During the course of last year the applicants filed a supplementary
affidavit in which its sought leave from
the court to file that
affidavit. It was alleged that the information became available
subsequent to the filing of all the affidavits
and that the
information obtained contradicted much of that which is contained in
the answering affidavit. There was no address
during argument
regarding the affidavit nor was there any opposition to the court
receiving the affidavit and no affidavit was
sought to be filed in
response thereto. In the circumstances the supplementary affidavit
properly forms part of the papers before
me. The ANC filed its
answering affidavit late and sought condonation for the late filing.
The application for condonation was
not opposed and it, too, is
admitted.
[6]
Prior to the hearing, and at my invitation, the parties held a
pre-hearing meeting and filed a revised joint
practice note which
limited the issues for determination to six in number. However, after
hearing argument for the applicants,
counsel for the ANC, at the
outset of his address, limited the issues further by abandoning
reliance on some of the issues and
or not pursuing others. What
remained was:
[6.1]
whether the DA had locus standi to bring the application and the
affect of the DA's locus stand on the costs of
the application;
[6.2]
whether the request for documents complies with s50(1)(a) of PAIA
[2]
– more particularly, whether the applicants demonstrated that
the records which it requested were for the exercise or protection
of
any rights.
[7]
The first issue will not result in the matter being finalised without
the second issue being determined. However,
counsel for the ANC
submitted that a precondition for the exercise of a right to access
any records in terms of s50(1)(a) is that
the requester should have
first requested the required record in terms of s 53 of PAIA.
[3]
Only after such application can a party, competently, rely on the
provisions of s 58
[4]
of PAIA
and allege that there was a refusal to furnish the record and
approach a court due to such refusal. This submission was
met by
argument that as long as one party, in this case Schreiber, indeed
has locus standi, the matter can and should be decided
on the merits.
For the proposition reliance was placed on Oakdene Square
Properties.
[5]
In my view, it
may very well be so that Schreiber has a clear case to bring the
application (and his right was not disputed save
to the extent set
out below), but that does not permit the DA to attempt to enforce
provisions of PAIA without it having complied
with the prerequisites
contained in PAlA to enable it to launch an application of this
nature. The DA failed to follow the prerequisite
steps in order to
rely on a right to approach a court for relief, and thus failed to
lay a basis for its right to be an applicant
in this matter as it
never qualified as a 'requester' in terms of s 78(1) of PAIA.
[6]
However, the right of Schreiber is not tainted and any relief, if
granted, will be granted to Schreiber. Counsel for the ANC was
unable
to suggest what prejudice there may have been due to the DA being
cited as a party. The submission that the law regarding
the locus
standi of the DA had to be researched is not convincing as the fact
that the DA had not requested any records and thus
had no right to
utilise the provisions of PAlA, in my view, did not require any
substantial research. Its irregular joiner consequently
has no
material bearing on the costs in this matter.
[8]
Having regard to the papers before me, the issue, although resulting
in a finding in favour of the ANC, pales
into insignificance.
Schreiber set out all the facts in his affidavit and the DA, save for
its name in the heading and a letter
attached to the papers, added
nothing to the matter.
[9]
The only issue then is whether, by requesting the documents,
Schreiber has shown that he requested it for
the exercise of a
particular right. In so far as there are disputes on the affidavits,
these are resolved on the basis of the version
of the ANC, but that
the uncontested version of Schreiber is also to be taken into
account. The records requested by Schreiber
are those of the ANC in
relation to the process and decisions of the ANC's National Cadre
Deployment Committee between 1 January
2013 and 1 January 2021.
[10]
These records are required because the policies and practices of
cadre deployment by the ANC influence which individuals
are appointed
and employed by State institutions. In answer to this, the deponent
on behalf of the ANC denies that the ANC has
loyalty to it as a
precondition for employment in the public sector. However, it is
common cause that the ANC's Deployment Committee
is indeed at least a
recommending committee which recommends individuals for appointment
by the authorised State decision makers.
Counsel for the ANC
submitted that there are instances where the wishes of the Deployment
Committee are not taken into account.
The corollary of this is that
there are indeed instances where the appointments are so made.
[11]
The evidence before this court goes much further. In the
supplementary affidavit, which was not objected to and which
I
permitted to be introduced contains evidence which was placed before
the Commission into State Capture (the Zondo Commission').
During his
evidence, the president of the ANC (who was also president of the
country) stated that it is inappropriate for activities
of the
Deployment Committee to be done in dark corners and he accepted that
it should instead be done openly and transparently.
The Deployment
Committee documents, which were disclosed at the Zondo Commission,
demonstrate that not only that the Deployment
Committee, inter alia,
gets involved in judicial appointments' it recommended names of
persons as judges or candidates for the
Bench.
[12]
The National Chairperson of the ANC gave evidence before the Zondo
Commission where he said, of the deployees so recommended
by the
Deployment Committee that:
'Comrades
once deployed are expected to work on behalf of the [ANC] movement in
the public service and parastatals',
In
my view, such a deployment may detract from the objectivity of the
person so employed who had to 'work' on behalf of the ANC.
[13]
There is also the evidence of the Ms. Hogan, who is a former Minister
of Public Enterprises, who stated that it was a
practice of the ANC's
structures which showed a sense that certain ANC committees
'saw
it as their right to instruct a Minister who should be appointed and
not appointed',
a
practice which she considered to be 'an abuse of power and is
usurping executive authority'. In her evidence she describes
significant
pressure that she faced to appoint particular candidates
within State-owned enterprises. She further said:
(T)here
was no clarity . . . I would ask now who is
the Deployment Committee and who is doing what?'
She
said she was left 'very confused about what is happening'. Ms. Hogan
described the effect of the ANC's Deployment Committee
as having the
result that "a handful of people' simply decide, without any
transparency, on the appointment of a 'huge number
of people' in
government. She further stated that the Deployment Committee "
if captured… it can have a fundamental
impact on government'
as a result of the Committee's undue influence on appointments. Ms.
Hogan stated that the internal ANC dynamics
'encouraged
and entrenched nepotism and patronage from within the ranks of the
ANC and the Tri-Partite Alliance and this would have
very damaging
consequences for State owned enterprises and, by extension, for the
economy.'
[14]
This evidence was uncontradicted. I do not deal in any detail with
all the allegations in the affidavits, which reference
is made to and
which was led before the Zondo Commission. Not much of this was
referred to during argument before me.
[15]
The final question remains whether the documents were required within
the context of s50(1)(a) of PAIA and that this
should be determined
with regard to the particular right which is or is not inextricably
bound-up with the facts of the matter.
[7]
What may be required of a party is based on the fact that the term
'required' is a flexible one.
[8]
[16]
Schreiber said that the information required is necessary for him to
protect certain rights. He pointed to three purposes
of rights.
Firstly, that the DA (of which he is a member) in its capacity as
official opposition in Parliament wishes to enact
legislation to
govern the practice of cadre deployment and to control its
detrimental impacts on the public. In order to properly
craft
legislation one needs to know exactly what cadre deployment consists
of and what its consequences may be. Schreiber attached
a draft bill
that would impact on the matter if passed by Parliament. The ANC's
response was that the desire to draft a bill is
not done in an
exercise of any right or any fundamental right but is done as a duty
of a political party that is represented in
Parliament. The
requirements of PAlA do not refer to any fundamental right as if such
right has to appear in the Bill of Rights.
It is not in dispute that
Schreiber has the right to introduce a bill into Parliament, whether
he may do so by virtue of his right
or a duty placed on the official
opposition or political party, in my view, makes no difference.
[17]
Secondly, it is common cause that as a member of Parliament,
Schreiber has a duty of oversight over appointments to organs
of
state and the performance of organs of state. In my view, it is
indeed so that the parliamentary oversight is best served with
full
knowledge of all the factors that go into the decisions to appoint
individuals. Again, the ANC submitted that no fundamental
right was
involved. It is not contested that Schreiber, in the aforesaid
capacity, has both the right and duty of oversight in
parliamentary
processes, which include the appointment of individuals to serve in
organs of state. That right and duty necessitates
the disclosure of
facts in relation to the appointment of individuals.
[18]
Thirdly, Schreiber advances that a category of litigation is
relevant. The category includes applicants for positions
who may have
been denied opportunities or who may wish in future to apply for
opportunities in the public service who will be enabled
to enforce
their rights with a better understanding of how cadre deployment
works. In this regard individuals using the information
may be able
to challenge unlawful or irregular appointments in court.
[19]
I am not convinced that Schreiber's application based on these
undisclosed 'thousands of applicants for positions has
a proper
basis. In Unitas it was said:
[9]
'The
real issue is, therefore, whether in the circumstances of this case,
s 50 afforded Mrs.
Van
Wyk a right to what amounts to a pre-action discovery’
and
further:
[10]
"I
do not believe that open and democratic societies would encourage
what is commonly referred to as "fishing expeditions",
which could well arise ifs 50 is used to facilitate pre- action
discovery as a general practice…. nor do I believe that
such a
society would require a potential defendant, as a general rule, to
disclose his or her whole case before any action is launched.
The
deference shown by s 7 to the rules of discovery is, in my view, not
without reason. These rules have served us well for many
years. They
have their own built-in measures of control to promote fairness and
to avoid abuse. Documents are discoverable only
if they are relevant
to the litigation, while relevance is determined by the issues on the
pleadings. The deference shown to discovery
rules is a clear
indication, I think, that the Legislator had no intention to allow
prospective litigants to avoid these measures
of control by
compelling pre-action discovery under s50 as a matter of course.
[20]
1 am of the view that the aggrieved persons may well take steps
should they wish to take legal steps and obtain documents
through
discovery. Such documents would be in the possession of the official
of state who took the decision in relations to the
appointment. In so
far as these documents may not be in that person's possession, the
Rules of Court
[11]
provide for
assistance. I am consequently not convinced that Schreiber's
catch-all application on behalf of unknown persons meets
the
requirement that the record is either required or necessary for him.
Despite my conclusion on this latter aspect, it is relevant
to note
that the applicant has set out the three grounds (and others) in his
affidavit as being the reasons why the information
is required for
the exercise or protection of a right and will be of assistance in
the exercise or protection of that right.
[12]
Schreiber has set out, and prima facie established, the right which
is sufficient proof for an applicant to result in his entitlement
to
access to the record for the exercise and protection of the right.
[13]
[21]
There is no meaningful denial that the records are required for the
purposes established by Schreiber. This strengthens
the case that the
documents are indeed required, at least on the basis of the first two
purposes set out by Schreiber.
[22]
The parties did not address me regarding a time period for compliance
with nor the question of costs save for the ANC's
submission that the
DA caused additional research. In the circumstances, I accept that
the time period for compliance to be five
court days. Both parties
were represented by two counsel and I accept that both parties
regarded that step as being justified.
[23]
In the circumstances, I issue the following order:
1.
The decision of the ANC to refuse Schreiber's request for a access to
information dated 22 February 2021 is declared
unlawful and invalid
and is set aside.
2.
The ANC is directed to provide all the information and records sought
in Schreiber's request for access to information
dated 22 February
2021 within 5 court days of service of this order.
3.
The ANC shall pay the costs of this application including the costs
of two counsel.
W.L.
Wepener
Judge
of the High Court of South Africa
Counsel
for the Applicants: N.
Ferreira with A. Raw
Attorneys
for the Applicants: Minde Shapiro
& Smith Incorporated
Counsel
for the Respondent: W. Mokhare SC with
A. Moodley
Attorneys
for the Respondent: L Mafesta Attorneys
[1]
Act 2 of 2000.
[2]
'50(1) A requester must be given access to any record of a private
body if -
(a)
that record is required for the exercise or protection of any
rights;
[3]
(1) A request for access to a record of a private body must be made
in the prescribed form to the private body concerned at its
address,
tax number or electronic mail address.
(2)
The form for a request for access prescribed for the purposes of
subsection (1) must at least require the
requester
concerned -
(a)
to provide sufficient particulars to enable the head of the private
body concerned to identify -
(i)
the record or records requested; and
(ii)
the requester.
(b)
to indicate which form of access is required;
(c)
to specify a postal address or fax number of the requester in the
Republic;
(d)
to identify the right the requester is seeking to exercise or
protect and provide an explanation of why the requested record
is
required for the exercise or protection of that right;
(e)
if, in addition to a written reply, the requester wishes to be
informed of the decision on the request in any other manner,
to
state that manner and the necessary particulars to be so informed;
and
(v)
if the request is made on behalf of a person, to submit proof of the
capacity in which the requester is making the request,
to the
reasonable satisfaction of the head.
[4]
'If the head of a private body fails to give the decision on a
request for access to the requester concerned within the period
contemplated in section 56(1), the head of the private body is, for
the purposes of this Act, regarded as having refused the
request.'
[5]
Oakdene Square Properties (Pty) Limited and Others vs Farm Botha's
Fontein (Kayalami) (Pty) Limited and Others
[2013] 3 All SA 303
(SCA) para 6.
[6]
(1) A requester or third party referred to in section 74 may only
apply to a court for appropriate relief in terms of section
82 after
that requester or third party has exhausted the internal appeal
procedure against a decision of the information officer
of a public
body provided for in section 74.’
[7]
Unitas Hospital v Van Wyk and Another
[2006] ZASCA 34
;
2006 (4) SA 436
(SCA) para 6.
[8]
Unitas para 18.
[9]
At para 20.
[10]
At para 21
[11]
Rule 38. See also Nampak Glass (Pty) Ltd v Vodacom (Pty) Ltd
2019
(1) SA 257
(GJ).
[12]
See Cape Metropolitan Council y Metro Inspection Services CC
2001
(3) SA 1013
(SCA) para 28; Clutchco (Pty) Ltd v Davis
2005 (3) SA
486
(SCA) para 13.
[13]
Claase v Information Officer, South African Airways (Pty) Ltd
2007
(5) SA 469
(SCA) para 8.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Schepers v Wilhemina N.O. and Others (37609/2021) [2023] ZAGPJHC 235 (16 March 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 235High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Schorr and Others v Reckmann and Others (22734/2022) [2024] ZAGPJHC 1203 (26 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPJHC 1203High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Schubach v TLR Industrial (Pty) Ltd and Others (124591/2023) [2025] ZAGPJHC 114 (22 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 114High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Scholtz and Another v TMA Express Road (Pty) Ltd and Another (2025/071413) [2025] ZAGPJHC 750 (4 August 2025)
[2025] ZAGPJHC 750High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
Scribante Concrete (Pty) Ltd v Drift Supersand (Pty) Ltd (11139/22) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1273 (3 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1273High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar