Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 655South Africa
Mashao NO v Government Employees Pension Fund and Others (5382/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 655 (6 June 2023)
Headnotes
the notion that government knows best - end of enquiry - might have been satisfactory in the pre-democratic era. It is no longer compatible with a democratic government based on the rule of law as envisaged by our Constitution.[1] Citizens are entitled to explanations and to conduct which is rational and founded in law. The core question is whether the Fund's refusal to finalise the claim on the basis that the Department has not provided a Z102 form is rational and one founded in law.
Judgment
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## Mashao NO v Government Employees Pension Fund and Others (5382/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 655 (6 June 2023)
Mashao NO v Government Employees Pension Fund and Others (5382/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 655 (6 June 2023)
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sino date 6 June 2023
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH
AFRICA,
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case No.: 5382/2022
In the application
between:
ZANELE
PHILADELPHIA MASHAO N.O.
Applicant
and
GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES PENSION FUND
First
Respondent
GOVERNMENT
PENSIONS ADMINISTRATION AGENCY
Second
Respondent
MEC
FOR HEALTH: GAUTENG PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
Third
Respondent
MASTER
OF THE HIGH COURT: JOHANNESBURG
Fourth
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
Zanele
Philadelphia Mashao N.O. v Government Employees Pension Fund & 3
Others
(Case
No.
5382/2022
)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 655 (6 May 2023)
JUDGMENT
DE
VOS AJ
:
[1] Ms
Thokozile
Jaqueline Dingiswayo was employed by the third respondent ("the
Department") and was a member of the first respondent
("the
Fund"). She has passed away. The applicant, Ms
Mashao is handling Ms Dingiswayo's estate. In
this capacity, Ms
Mashao lodged a claim for payment of leave days, pension and death
benefits, on behalf of Ms Dingiswayo's estate
with the Fund in 2018.
[2] Ms Mashao spent four
years responding to requests for documents from the Fund and the
Department. The documents Ms Mashao
submitted went missing.
She resubmitted the forms. The claim was not processed. Her
requests for responses were ignored.
Letters of demands from
attorneys she instructed were left unanswered. The manner she
was then treated is not what we hope
for from the state. At last, Ms
Mashao instituted the present proceedings to move the matter along.
Even after launching
proceedings, Ms Mashao tried to resolve the
matter through an invitation to mediation, phone calls and letters to
the Fund and
the Department. Neither the Department nor the
Fund assisted Ms Mashao. In fact she had to approach Court to
obtain
an order compelling the respondents to file their written
submissions in order to have the matter set down.
[3] As all Ms Mashao's
efforts to resolve this matter outside court have been ignored, she
now asks this Court to order the Fund
to furnish her with reasons for
the delay, alternatively to review the Fund's decision not to
finalise the claim and to order the
Fund to make payment of the
claim.
[4] The Fund opposes the
relief sought. The basis for the opposition is the Department's
failure to provide the Fund with a Z102
form. The Fund relies
on section 26(1) of the Government Employees Law, 1996 as basis for
its refusal to consider the claim
without the Z102 form. The
hold-up appears to be that the Department has not signed the Z102
form.
[5]
Ms Mashao's
request for reasons is exactly what citizens can demand from the
state. The Constitutional Court has held that
the notion that
government knows best - end of enquiry - might have been satisfactory
in the pre-democratic era. It is no
longer compatible with a
democratic government based on the rule of law as envisaged by our
Constitution.
[1]
Citizens are
entitled to explanations and to conduct which is rational and founded
in law. The core question is whether the
Fund's refusal to
finalise the claim on the basis that the Department has not provided
a Z102 form is rational and one founded
in law.
[6]
The Fund's
reliance on section 26(1) has to be considered.
[2]
The Court has carefully scrutinised the section. Section 26(1)
does not empower the Fund to refuse to consider the
claim without a
Z102 form. The section is silent on the requirement of a form.
The section is not authority for the position
adopted by the Fund. No
other section in the Government Employees Law demands such a document
to be provided. Similarly, there
is no provision in the Rules which
states, as a requirement, that the applicant has to submit or obtain
the Z102 form. There
is no legal basis relied on, or found, on
which the Fund could demand the submission of the Z102 form.
[7] There is also no
basis made out in the pleadings for the necessity of the Z102 form.
The pleadings state only that the
Fund cannot process the claim
without the form. The Court does not know what the form
contains or why it is required.
[8] The Court invited the
Fund to point it to any provision in the law that demands the Z102.
The Court asked the Fund to
refer it to any case law that supported
its position that it could sit on its hands and wait for a form from
the Department.
It was conceded no law or authority could be
produced.
[9]
In fact, our
courts have on two occasions held that there is no basis in law for
the Fund to insist on a Z102 form. The first
is the matter of
Mpofu v
the Government Employees Pension Fund
[3]
penned by Goosen J
and the second is
Mhlontlo
v the Government Employees Pension Fund
[4]
by Govindjee AJ.
Both these judgments hold that there is no basis in law for the Fund
to demand the Z102 form and in both
judgments the Fund's approach of
demanding the Z102 is deprecated.
[10]
To the contrary,
Goosen J in
Mpofu
[5]
interpreted section 26(1) to place an obligation on the Fund to
effect payment within 60 days of the benefit becoming due.
‘
The respondent is
generally obliged to conduct itself in a manner that is consistent
with the provisions of the Constitution. It
must promote the spirit,
purport and objects of the Constitution. As a pension fund,
established by government to administer the
funds of state employees
who are its members, it is obliged to act with fidelity and the
utmost good faith in the interests of
its members. It cannot adopt an
obstructive and obfuscating approach to the processing of claims made
by or on behalf of members
of the Fund. Nor can it choose to ignore
communications from a member who seeks to protect his or her
interests. The respondent’s
conduct in this matter amounts to
precisely this.’
[6]
[11]
This
interpretation has been supported by Govindjee AJ in
Mhlontlo
.
[7]
[12]
In addition to the
case law, the Court also considers Rule 22. Rule 22 creates a
right for a claimant to communicate directly
with the Fund.
[8]
This means the Fund is under an obligation to communicate with the
claimant. The facts of this case indicate that the Fund
stone-walled Ms Mashao and worse, tells this Court it will not
communicate directly with her, in conflict with its own rules.
[13] Ms Mashao has relied
on the rights to fair administrative action in this context.
She has set out that the decision to
refuse to process the claim
without the Z102 is reviewable. A host of grounds of review have been
presented. It does not
matter whether the avenue of a review or
a mandamus is followed: the Fund has acted in conflict with section
26, Rule 22 and the
case law from this division. It weighs with
the Court that the right protected by section 26 and rule 22 is the
constitutional
right to social security. The Fund has therefore
not only acted in conflict with statutory provisions but have also
infringed
fundamental rights without providing any law justifying the
limitation.
[14]
The Fund has sat
on its hands. The Fund has made no allegation that it has lifted a
finger to obtain the Form. The Fund's sole effort
has been, in its
answering affidavit, to blame the Department. The Courts have
on three previous occasions deprecated the
Fund's conduct, in
particular, for hiding behind the Z102 form. First, in
Mahlangu
[9]
the Court showed its dissatisfaction with a costs order and referred
to the Fund's conduct as "scandalous" -
"This Court can find
no fault with the said submissions in respect of costs made on behalf
of the Applicant. It is scandalous
that a member of the Fund
who has served his employer faithfully for a period of 35 years
should have payment of his pension benefit
withheld on such flimsy
grounds. A cost order on a punitive scale will assist somewhat
to ensure that the Applicant is not
kept out of pocket. It will
also mark this Court’s displeasure as to the manner in which
the First Respondent has conducted
itself in this litigation."
[10]
[15]
Second, in
Hangana
v the Government Employees Pension Fund
[11]
Revelas J dealt with the Fund's demand for a Z102. The context
related to an amendment that was to be made to a Z102 and the Fund
refusing to deal with the matter until the Department had provided
the Z102 form. Revelas J criticised the Fund for being involved
in
"blame shifting" and held as follows: -
"Clearly the
respondent had a constitutional duty to see that the applicant was
paid out the correct pension amounts. She was
entitled thereto.
The
applicant correctly makes the point that she was entitled to relief
in terms of the
Promotion
of Administrative Justice
Act, 3 of 2000
, as well as declaratory relief in terms of the
Constitution. The respondent in this case failed to act in accordance
with its statutory
and constitutional obligations and chose to shift
the blame onto the Department. Once
the
respondent realized that there was an error in its calculation of the
pension payment, it should have taken steps to rectify
it, and not
wait for the applicant to take it up with the department or until it
was brought to court before finally acting.’
[12]
[16] Third, in
Mhlontlo
Govindjee AJ criticised the Fund and the Department of being involved
in "passing the buck" -
"Unfortunately, it
appears as if many retired government employees battle, for one
reason or another, to access the benefits
to which they are entitled
following many years of service and contribution. It goes without
saying that pension funds should only
be paid upon receipt of
adequate proof of the amount due. On this occasion, the buck is being
passed between the Department and
the respondent in respect of the
verification process required before the correct amount may be paid
to the applicant."
[13]
"These sentiments
may be echoed in this case and the respondent’s conduct in the
matter deprecated. The applicant has
succeeded in establishing that
the respondent has failed to act in accordance with its
constitutional and statutory obligations.
The order issued is
directed to compel the respondent to do so."
[14]
[17] This Court similarly
expresses its dissatisfaction with the Fund relying on a Z102 form in
circumstances where three courts
have previously told the Fund it
cannot use the absence of the form as an excuse. The Fund
cannot fold its hand and say it
awaits the Z102 form. Its conduct is
subject to the rule of law and it must find the basis for its
position in the existing law.
The Fund cannot refuse to assist
claimants when the statutory framework requires it to engage with
claimants. The Court shows
its displeasure at the Fund for
litigating a defence which it must know is bad in law by awarding
punitive costs.
[18] The Court repeats
what the Courts have previously found -
1. There is no basis in
section 26(1) to demand a Z102 form.
2. The Fund is obliged to
engage directly with a claimant by virtue of Rule 22.
3. The Fund cannot pass
the buck to the Department.
[19] In the result I make
the following order:
1.
The first respondent is ordered forthwith to take all steps necessary
to procure the proper and comprehensive calculation of
Ms
Dingiswayo's benefits in terms of the Government Employees Pension
Law, 1996, and to thereafter process Ms Dingiswayo's claim
(brought
by the applicant) for further payment
of benefits.
2. The first respondent
is ordered to pay the costs of the application on an attorney and
client scale.
DE VOS AJ
JUDGE OF HIGH COURT
Counsel
for the Applicants:
Adv
WW Mukantsi
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv
L Msikinya
Attorneys
for the Applicants:
TPK
Tepanyeka Attorneys
Attorneys
for the Respondent:
Msikinya
Attorneys and Associates
Argument
took place on 9 May 2023
Date
of judgment: 6 June 2023
[1]
Matatiele Municipality and Others v President of the Republic of
South Africa and Others (1) (CCT73/05)
[2006] ZACC 2
;
2006 (5) BCLR
622
(CC);
2006 (5) SA 47
(CC) (27 February 2006) para 109
[2]
Section 26 provides -
"‘Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any law contained, a benefit payable in
terms of this Law shall be paid
to the member, pensioner or
beneficiary entitled to such benefit within a period of 60 days from
the benefit becoming payable
to the member, pensioner or
beneficiary, which 60 days shall be calculated from the day
following the date on which the benefit
becomes payable: Provided
that a benefit shall become payable to a member, pensioner or
beneficiary on the last day of service
at the employer of that
member or pensioner or the death of that pensioner."
[3]
Mpofu v Government Employees Pension Fund (228/2015) [2015] ZAECPEHC
53 (4 August 2015)
[4]
Mhlontlo v Government Employees Pension Fund (2398/20) [2021]
ZAECPEHC 46 (19 August 2021)
[5]
Mpofu v Government Employees Pension Fund (228/2015) [2015] ZAECPEHC
53 (4 August 2015)
[6]
Mpofu
(above) paras 18, 21
[7]
Mhlontlo v Government Employees Pension Fund (2398/20) [2021]
ZAECPEHC 46 (19 August 2021) para 20
[8]
The
Rule provides -
“
22.Communication-
"For
purposes of communication in regard to membership of the
Fund, payment of member and employer contributions to
the Fund,
payment of other monies owing by members and the employer to the
Fund, and related matters, the Fund shall communicate
with the
departments, administrations, institutions and bodies where members
are or were in service:Provided that where any such
matter or any
other matter cannot be effectively dealt with my means of such
communications the Fund shall communicate with the
Minister:Provided
further that a member or pensioner shall have the right to
communicate direct with the Fund in regard to any
matter was affects
him or her personally. All factors and interest rates to be
decided by the Board after the required
consultation processes, as
set out in the rules, shall be communicated to the employer and the
members in accordance with the
provisions set out above.”
[9]
Mahlangu v Government Employees Pension Fund and Another (3297/2018)
[2020] ZAGPPHC 814 (17 August 2020)
[10]
Mahlangu
(above) para 24
[11]
Hangana v Government Employees Pension Fund (2608/2017) [2018]
ZAECPEHC 78 (6 November 2018)
[12]
Hangana (above)
para
14
[13]
Mhlontlo (above)
para
13
[14]
Mhlontlo (above)
para
21
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