Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 226South Africa
Elite Plumbing And Industrial Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Casper Le Roux Inc Attorneys and Another (2022/14821) [2023] ZAGPJHC 226 (6 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
6 March 2023
Headnotes
SUMMARY
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Elite Plumbing And Industrial Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Casper Le Roux Inc Attorneys and Another (2022/14821) [2023] ZAGPJHC 226 (6 March 2023)
Elite Plumbing And Industrial Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Casper Le Roux Inc Attorneys and Another (2022/14821) [2023] ZAGPJHC 226 (6 March 2023)
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sino date 6 March 2023
FLYNOTES: PAIA AND PRIVATE BODY
PAIA
– Private body – Internal appeal – Approach to
court – Requester who has not exhausted the internal
appeal
procedure referred to in section 74 or the complaints procedure
referred to in section 77A may not approach a court
for relief in
terms of section 82 – Promotion of Access to Information Act
2 of 2000, s 78.
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case No. 2022/14821
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
(3)
REVISED: YES.
DATE:
06 March 2023
In
the matter between:
ELITE
PLUMBING AND INDUSTRIAL SOLUTIONS
(PTY)
LTD Applicant
and
CASPER
LE ROUX INC ATTORNEYS First
Respondents
JADEL
DEVELOPMENT (PTY) LTD Second
Respondents
JUDGMENT
HOPKINS
AJ
1.
The applicant seeks an order from this court directing
the
respondents to furnish it with information sought in two requests for
information, dated 10 January 2022 and 17 February 2022
respectively.
It does so in terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act No.
2 of 2000 (‘PAIA”), specifically
section 53(1) which
deals with requests for access to the record of a private body.
2.
By way of some background, the applicant was owed R349,618.58
by the
second respondent for services that it had rendered. The second
respondent apparently did not pay the applicant because
it had not
been paid by its own creditors, the main culprit being a developer
called Malan Developments (Pty) Ltd. Eventually,
the applicant sued
the second respondent and obtained a judgement against it for the
payment of what was owing together with interest
and costs. Sometime
later, the applicant heard that Malan Developments (Pty) Ltd had been
liquidated and that the liquidator had
paid the second respondent an
amount of R12,589,614.65. The liquidator supposedly paid the money
into the first respondent’s
trust account. The first respondent
is a firm of attorneys who had been representing the second
respondent in the litigation. The
applicant, encouraged by this news,
wrote to the firm of attorneys requesting details about the money
that it had supposedly received
on behalf of the second respondent.
The firm of attorneys declined to provide the information, claiming
that it was protected by
attorney-client privilege. The applicant
then made two formal requests for access to the information under
section 53(1) of PAIA.
Those formal requests, too, were refused. This
precipitated the applicants approaching this court for an order to
compel the firm
of attorneys to provide it with the information that
sought.
3.
It is useful at this juncture to consider the legislative
scheme that
affords citizens a right to access information. Prior to the
constitutional era, citizens had no general right of access
to
information in South Africa. In fact, quite the contrary was true.
The apartheid State directed considerable resources towards
maintaining secrecy in government. There were many statutes that
contained provisions which made it a criminal office for officials
to
release information to the public. The inclusion of a right of access
to information in the Constitution was therefore seen
as an important
measure of assuring citizens that the government would, in the
future, be committed to upholding the constitutional
values of
transparency, openness, participation and accountability. But PAIA
does not only provide citizens with a right of access
to information
held by public bodies. It also provides a right of access, under
certain conditions, to information held by private
bodies. In
Centre
for Social Accountability vs. Secretary of Parliament and Others
2011
(5) SA 279
(ECG) at 53 it was held that the distinction between the
right to information held by the State on the one hand, and
information
held by private institutions on the other, is significant
because in the case of the former the right is unqualified whereas in
the case of the latter it is limited to information that is
necessarily required for the exercise or protection of a right.
4.
In this case we are dealing with information held by a
firm of
attorneys on behalf of its client, ie. information held by a private
body. Section 50 of PAIA deals with the right of access
to a record
held by a private body. Section 50(1) provides that:
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;
(b)
that person complies with the procedural requirements in this Act
relating to a request for access to that record;
(c)
access to that record is not refused in terms of any ground for
refusal contemplated in Chapter 4 of this Part.
5.
As to the requirement in section 50(1)(
a
),
Mr Ossin
,
who represented the respondents, sought to persuade me that what the
applicant actually wants from the firm of attorneys is not
a record
properly so-called but rather information, a less exact term. He then
sought to draw a distinction between the two concepts.
Essentially,
he argued that the information sought by the applicant - details
about the money received from the liquidator - falls
outside the
definition of a record. I disagree. The term
record
is defined
in section 1 of PAIA to mean “any recorded information (
a
)
regardless of form or medium; (
b
) in the possession or under
the control of the private body; (
c
) whether or not it was
created by that private body”. The information sought by the
applicant, in my view, falls squarely
within this definition. But
even if there was some doubt, section 2 of PAIA instructs every court
to prefer any reasonable interpretation
of a provision in PAIA that
is consistent with the objects of PAIA over any alternative
interpretation that is not. The objects
of PAIA are set out in
section 9 and they include giving effect to the constitutional right
of access to
any
information held by a private person where
that information is required in order to exercise or protect a right.
In my view the
provisions of PAIA must be generously and purposively
interpreted in order to give effect to that object. The right that
the applicant
seeks to protect is its right to be paid by the second
respondent in accordance with the judgment that it obtained. That
right
can only be vindicated, according to the applicant, if it knows
what has happened to the money that the second respondent received
from the liquidator.
6.
The next requirement is more controversial. Section 50(1)(
b
)
of PAIA provides that the requester is only entitled to access the
record of a private body where the requester has complied with
the
procedural requirements in PAIA. In that regard
Mr Ossin
furnished
the court with detailed heads of argument in which he outlined a
number of procedural shortcomings. Of particular significance
to this
judgment are his arguments around the respondents’ claim that
the applicant fatally failed to exhaust its internal
remedy before
approaching this court for relief. It is to this issue that I now
turn my attention.
7.
The procedure for obtaining access to a record of a private
body
starts with a formal request from the requester to the head of the
private body. Section 53(1) provides that the request must
be made in
the prescribed form and that it must be made to the private body at
its address, fax number or by email. According to
section 53(2) the
form for the request must (
a
) provide sufficient particulars
to enable the head of the private body
inter alia
to identify
the record being requested and who the requester is, (
b
)
indicate which form of access is required, (
c
) specify the
postal address of fax number of the requester, (
d
) identify
the right that 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 (
f
) 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.
8.
In terms of section 56, the head of the private body is
required to
notify the requester within 30 days whether the request for access is
granted or refused. According to section 58,
a failure to make a
decision is deemed to be a refusal.
9.
If the request is granted, all is good and well. However,
if the
request is refused then, according to Chapter 2 of Part 3 in PAIA,
the aggrieved requester may apply to court for appropriate
relief in
terms of section 82 of the Act. Section 82 empowers the court hearing
such an application to grant any order that is
just and equitable.
Broadly the court can grant an order confirming the decision to
refuse access to the record or one that sets
aside the decision and
replaces it with something else. The type of relief contemplated in
section 82, although not a closed list,
is set out in subsections
(a
)
to (
e
). The question that I am seized with, however, is
whether or not an applicant, before approaching the court for relief
in terms
of section 82 of PAIA, is obliged to first exhaust an
internal remedy.
10.
Section 78 deals with applications to court. Section 78(1) is
particularly relevant.
It provides as follows:
A
requester… may only apply to a court for appropriate relief in
terms of section 82 in the following circumstances:
(a)
after
that requester… has exhausted the internal appeal procedure
referred to in section 74; or
(b)
after the requester… has exhausted the complaints procedure
referred to in section 77A.
11.
The wording of section 78(1) is clear. A requester may only apply to
court after
it has first exhausted the internal appeal procedure
referred to in section 74 or after it has exhausted the complaints
procedure
referred to in section 77A. Stated differently, an
aggrieved requester who has not exhausted the internal appeal
procedure referred
to in section 74 or the complaints procedure
referred to in section 77A may not approach a court for relief in
terms of section
82. There is thus an internal appeal procedure and a
complaints procedure. These, if they apply, must be exhausted before
the requester
can approach a court.
12.
When does the internal appeal procedure referred to in section 74
apply and
when does the complaints procedure referred to in section
77A apply? Let me begin with the internal appeal procedure referred
to
in section 74: the text of section 74 commences with the words “a
requester may lodge an internal appeal against a decision
of the
information officer of a public body…”. There is no
mention in section 74 of the internal appeal procedure
applying to a
decision taken by the head of a private body. The internal appeal
procedure referred to in section 74 is therefore
not applicable in
this case.
13.
Does the complaints procedure referred to in section 77A apply to the
head of
a private body? Chapter 1A deals with complaints that an
aggrieved requester may make to the Information Regulator. I pause to
point out that the
Information Regulator
is defined in section
1 of PAIA to mean the Information Regulator established in terms of
section 39 of the Protection of Personal
Information Act, 2013
(“POPI”). Section 39 of POPI provides that:
There
is hereby established a juristic person to be known as the
Information Regulator which:
(a)
has jurisdiction throughout the Republic;
(b)
is independent and is subject only to the Constitution and to the
law and must be impartial and perform its functions and exercise
its
powers without fear, favour or prejudice;
(c)
must exercise its powers and perform its functions in accordance
with this Act [POPI] and the Promotion to Access Information Act
[PAIA]; and
(d)
is accountable to the National Assembly.
14.
Returning to section 77A of PAIA, which deals with complaints to the
Information
Regulator, subparagraphs (1) and (2) are relevant. They
provide as follows:
(1) A
requester… referred to in section 74 may only submit a
complaint to the Information
Regulator in terms of this section after
the requester… has exhausted the internal appeal procedure
against a decision of
the information officer of a public body
provided for is section 74.
(2) A
requester –
(a)
that
has been unsuccessful in an internal appeal to the relevant authority
of a public body;
(b)
aggrieved
by a decision of a relevant authority of a public body to disallow
the late lodging of an internal appeal
in terms of section 75(2);
(c)
aggrieved
by a decision of the information officer of a public body referred to
in paragraph (
b
) of a definition of a public body in section
1…; or
(d)
aggrieved
by a decision of the head of a private body to refuse a request for
access…made within 180 days of
the decision, submit a
complaint, alleging that the decision was not in compliance with this
Act, to the Information Regulator
in the prescribed manner and form
for appropriate relief.
15.
Section 77A(2) applies to two different types of requesters: a
requester of
access to information held by a public body and a
requester for access to the record of a private body. We see this
from the body
of the text. Section 77A(1) provides that, in the case
of a public body, a requester must first exhaust the internal appeal
in
section 74 before it is entitled to submit a complaint to the
Information Regulator. In the case of a private body, as we have
already seen, there is no requirement to first exhaust an internal
appeal because PAIA does not make any provision for an internal
appeal against a refusal by the head of a private body. Thus, where a
requester has been refused access by the head of a private
body, that
requester may, within 180 days of the decision, forthwith lodge a
complaint to the Information Regulator.
16.
In the context of requests made for access to a record held by a
private body,
the scheme of the legislation allows a citizen to
approach the head and request access to the record. If the head
refuses access,
the aggrieved requester may lodge a complaint with
the Information Regulator under section 77A. Sections 77A to 77K deal
more fully
with the complaints procedure but, by way of a brief
summary, the complaint must be made in writing and the Information
Regulator,
upon receiving it, must investigate the complaint and
thereafter advise the parties of the course of action that it
proposes. It
may, for example, decide to take no action at all, or it
may try to assist the parties to reach a settlement, or it may make
an
assessment of whether the private body has complied with its
obligations. Ultimately, the Information Regulator may serve an
enforcement
notice on the head of the private body either confirming,
amending or setting aside the decision that is the subject of the
complaint
or requiring the head to take such action as may be
specified in the notice. Non-compliance with an enforcement notice is
an offence.
17.
In other words, according to the scheme of the legislation, a citizen
can request
access to a record of a private body and if the request
is refused, the citizen has recourse to an entire complaints
procedure
that will yield a decision from the Information Regulator.
18.
Let me now return to section 78 of the Act which deals with
applications to
court, specifically section 78(1)(
b
) which
expressly provides that:
A
requester… may only apply to court for appropriate relief in
terms of section 82… after the requester… has
exhausted
the complaints procedure referred to in section 77A.
19.
Those words “may only apply to court… after the
requester…
has exhausted the complaints procedure referred to
in section 77A” make it plain that an aggrieved requester for a
access
to a record of a private body is not entitled to approach a
court unless it has first exhausted the complaints procedure referred
to in section 77A. When a statute expressly states that an internal
remedy must be exhausted before an application to court can
be
launched, the exhaustion of that remedy is an indispensable
requirement for the launching of the application to court. There
is
good reason for this as the Constitutional Court explained in
Koyabe
and Others vs. Minister of Home Affairs and Others (Lawyers for Human
Rights as Amicus Curiae)
2010 (4) SA 327
(CC) at paras 35 and 36:
Internal
remedies are designed to provide immediate and cost-effective relief,
giving the executive the opportunity to utilise its
own mechanisms,
rectifying irregularities first, before aggrieved parties resort to
litigation. Although courts play a vital role
in providing litigants
with access to justice, the importance of more readily available and
cost-effective internal remedies cannot
be gainsaid.
First,
approaching a court before the higher administrative body is given
the opportunity to exhaust its own existing mechanisms
undermines the
autonomy of the administrative process. It renders the judicial
process premature, effectively usurping the executive
role and
function. The scope of administrative action extends over a wide
range of circumstances, and the crafting of specialist
administrative
procedures suited to the particular administrative action in question
enhances procedural fairness as enshrined
in our Constitution. Courts
have often emphasised that what constitutes a “fair”
procedure will depend on the nature
of the administrative action and
circumstances of the particular case. Thus, the need to allow
executive agencies to utilise
their own fair procedures is crucial in
administrative action.
20.
It is common cause that the applicant in this case did not exhaust
the complaints
procedure referred to in section 77A. It was not, in
the circumstances, entitled to approach this court for relief in
terms of
section 82 of the Act. I therefore agree with
Mr Ossin
that the applicant’s failure to exhaust the internal remedy is
fatal to its application to this court in these proceedings.
21.
The respondents had other strings to their bow, however, in light of
the view
that I have already expressed on the peremptory language
employed in section 78(1) of PAIA, it is unnecessary for me to engage
them.
22.
The application is dismissed with costs.
HOPKINS
AJ
Heard
on 16
February 2023
Judgment
delivered on 06
March 2023
Appearances
For
the applicants: Adv.
Terence Ossin
Instructed
by: Casper
le Roux Inc.
Johannesburg
For
the respondent: Ms.
Riekie Erasmus
Instructed
by: Riekie
Erasmus Attorneys
Johannesburg
Case
No: 2022/14821
ELITE PLUMBING AND INDUSTRIAL
SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD V CASPER LE ROUX INC ATTORNEYS AND ANOTHER
SUMMARY
Flynote
Promotion
of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 (PAIA) – section 50 –
Requests
for access to records of a private body –
section 53 – form of request – section 78 and 82 –
applications
to court – requirements in section 74 and
77A – internal procedures applicable to requests to private
bodies
before approaching court
1.
The applicant sought an order from this court in
terms of the Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000
(‘PAIA”),
directing the respondents to furnish it with
information sought in two requests for information addressed to the
respondents in
terms of section 53(1) of PAIA, both of which were
refused, thereby precipitating this application.
2.
The information sought was regarding alleged
moneys received by the first respondent on behalf of the second
respondent as payment
from liquidation proceedings of one of the
second respondent’s creditors. The applicant sought to protect
its right to be
paid by the second respondent in accordance with a
judgment it had obtained against it for moneys owed. That right could
only be
vindicated, according to the applicant, if it knew what had
happened to the money that the second respondent received from the
liquidator.
3.
PAIA provides citizens with the right of access
to information and draws a distinction between information held by
public entities
and information held by private bodies. The
distinction being important in that in the case of the former, the
right is unqualified
whereas in the case of the latter, it is limited
to information that is necessarily required for the exercise or
protection of
a right. In this case, section 50(1) being relevant as
it deals with requests to private bodies (The firm of attorneys in
this
case).
4.
It was agued on behalf of the respondents that
the requests did not meet the requirements set out in section 50(1)
of PAIA in that
the details about the money received from the
liquidator (information sought) fell outside the definition of a
record. The court
disagreed with this argument, conceding that the
information sought by the applicant fell within the definition of
“record”
as per the Act. It also fell within the holistic
interpretation of the Act and its objectives.
5.
The court then proceeded to deliberate on the
second requirement in section 50(1)(b), which provides that the
requester must be
given access to any record of a private body if
that person has complied with the procedural requirements in PAIA.
The respondents
argued that the applicant had failed to exhaust its
internal remedies before approaching the court for relief.
6.
In deciding on this factor, the court deliberated
on Section 78 of the Act. The section provides that a requester may
only apply
to court after it has first exhausted the internal appeal
procedure referred to in section 74 or after it has exhausted the
complaints
procedure referred to in section 77A. There is thus an
internal appeal procedure and a complaints procedure. These, if they
apply,
must be exhausted before the requester can approach a court.
7.
Section 74 refers to an internal appeal against a
decision of the information officer of a public body and thus does
not apply to
this matter.
8.
Remaining was whether the complaints procedure
referred to in section 77A applied to the head of a private body.
This section deals
with complaints to the Information Regulator and
applies to two different types of requesters: a requester of access
to information
held by a public body and a requester for access to
the record of a private body.
9.
The court found that upon interpretation of the
section, in the case of a private body, there was no requirement to
first exhaust
an internal appeal because PAIA did not make any
provision for such. Thus, where a requester had been refused access
by the head
of a private body, that requester may, within a specified
period of time, lodge a complaint to the Information Regulator under
section 77A.
10.
The court held: The words “may only apply
to court… after the requester… has exhausted the
complaints procedure
referred to in section 77A” make it plain
that an aggrieved requester for access to a record of a private body
is not entitled
to approach a court unless it has first exhausted the
complaints procedure referred to in section 77A.
The
applicant did not exhaust the complaints procedure referred to in
section 77A. Application therefore dismissed with costs.
sino noindex
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