Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 807South Africa
Afriforum v South African Human Rights Commission and Others (14370/2019 ; 31328/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 807; 2023 (6) SA 188 (GJ) (14 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 July 2023
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Afriforum v South African Human Rights Commission and Others (14370/2019 ; 31328/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 807; 2023 (6) SA 188 (GJ) (14 July 2023)
Afriforum v South African Human Rights Commission and Others (14370/2019 ; 31328/2019) [2023] ZAGPJHC 807; 2023 (6) SA 188 (GJ) (14 July 2023)
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sino date 14 July 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
Case no:
14370/2019
31328/2019
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
In
the matter between:
AFRIFORUM
First
Applicant
And
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
First
Respondent
THE
CHAIRPERSON:
BONGANI
CHRISTOPHER MAJOLA N.O
Second
Respondent
COMMISSIONER
PRISCILLA JANA N.O
Third
Respondent
JULIUS
MALEMA
Fourth
Respondent
ECONOMIC
FREEDOM FIGHTERS
Fifth
Respondent
And,
In
the matter between
FREDERIK
WILLEM DE KLERK N.O
First
Applicant
DAVID
WHITEFOORDT STEWARD N.O
Second
Applicant
HERMAN
BAILEY N.O
Third
Applicant
BEN
COETZEE BESTER N.O
Fourth
Applicant
WARREN
ALEXANDER MORTEN CLEWLOW N.O
Fifth
Applicant
ELIZABETH
DE KLERK N.O
Sixth
Applicant
THEUNIS
ELOFF N.O
Seventh
Applicant
DEENADA
YALEN KONAR N.O
Eighth
Applicant
FORTUNATE
MASHEBU MATHEBULA N.O
Ninth
Applicant
And
THE
SOUTH AFRICAN RIGHTS COMMISSION
First
Respondent
THE
CHAIRPERSON:
BONGANI
CHRISTOPHER MAJOLA N.O
Second
Respondent
COMMISSIONER
PRISCILLA JANA N.O
Third
Respondent
JULIUS
MALEMA
Fourth
Respondent
ECONOMIC
FREEDOM FIGHTERS
Fifth
Respondent
This judgment has been
delivered by uploading it to the court online digital database of the
Gauteng Division of the High Court
of South Africa, Johannesburg, and
by email to the attorneys of record of the parties. The deemed date
and time of the delivery
is 10H00 on 14 July 2023.
THE ORDER
(1) It is declared
that:
(i) The South African
Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) is not empowered by the Constitution
or by the South African Human Rights
Commission Act 40 of 2013
(SAHRCA) to make definitive decisions about whether or not a
contravention of section 10 of the Promotion
of Equality and
Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000 (PEPUDA)has or has
not occurred.
(ii) The opinion
which the SAHRC is empowered to form pursuant to section 13(3) of
SAHRCA is relevant only to whether the
bringing of proceedings in a
competent court is appropriate, if at all.
(iii) Any act by the
SAHRC purporting to constitute a definitive decision on an issue
addressed in section 13(3) of SAHRC is ultra
vires the SAHRCA.
(2) The ‘finding’
of the SAHRC of 9 March 2019 purporting to exercise a power that the
SAHRC does not have was
unlawful and is set aside.
(3) The SAHRC
shall, in both applications, bear the costs of the applicants,
including the costs of two counsel where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Sutherland DJP:
Introduction
[1] Before the
court are two review applications. The subject matter of the
applications is a communication dated 8
March 2019 from the South
African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) to the several complaints who
had, in terms of section 13(3)
(a) of the South African Human Rights
Commission Act 40 of 2013 (SAHRCA) lodged complaints about the speech
given by Mr Julius
Malema in November 2016 to a gathering outside the
Newcastle Magistrates’ Court, where he was facing criminal
charges for
incitement to seize land. Among several complainants were
the FW De Klerk Foundation and Afriforum who are the applicants in
these
proceedings. Except where necessary these two parties
shall be referred to collectively as the complainants. Joining the
proceedings in the Afriforum case is Mr Malema himself, and his
political Party, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) who both, along
with the SAHRC, oppose the application. They are not parties in
the other application, but that is of no consequence.
[2] The gravamen of
the complaints is that the speech in whole or in part, constituted a
contravention of section 10 of the
Promotion of Equality and
Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000. (PEPUDA). Section
10 provides:
‘
Prohibition
of hate speech
(1)
Subject to the proviso in section 12, no person may publish,
propagate, advocate or communicate words based on one or
more of the
prohibited grounds, against any person, that could reasonably be
construed to demonstrate a clear intention to-
(a)
be hurtful;
(b)
be harmful or to incite harm;
(c)
promote or propagate hatred.
(2)
Without prejudice to any remedies of a civil nature under this Act,
the court may, in accordance with section 21 (2)
(n)
and
where appropriate, refer any case dealing with the publication,
advocacy, propagation or communication of hate speech
as contemplated
in subsection (1), to the Director of Public Prosecutions having
jurisdiction for the institution of criminal proceedings
in terms of
the common law or relevant legislation.’
[3] The
complainants had lodged their complaints to the SAHRC that such a
contravention occurred pursuant to section 13(3)(a)
of the SAHRCA,
the provisions of which are addressed hereafter.
[4] The text of the
SAHRC’s communication to all the complainants was identical and
was addressed ‘Dear Complainant’.
It referred to the
complaint that had been lodged and traversed its rationale for
exonerating Mr Malema. Then it ended with the
following:
‘
(18) Thus it is
the Commission’s view that the statement in this context does
not amount to hate speech.
(19) In view of the
above, your complaint is hereby concluded in terms of clause 11(d)(i)
of the gazetted handling procedures of
the Commission on the basis
that the conduct of Mr Malema did not violate the rights of White
People.
(20) The commission will
now accordingly close its file on the matter.
(21) Should you not be
satisfied with this decision you may challenge the decision through
the High Court by way of a judicial review.
An application for
judicial review must be made within 180 of the date on which you
became aware of the decision. A person who
seeks judicial review
after this period will not be successful unless the court is
satisfied that it is in the interests of justice
to allow the
review.’
[5] It is not
obvious on the papers that when this letter was dispatched to the
complainants whether it was, at that moment,
accompanied by a
document that had been earlier composed styled: '
Findings of the
SAHRC regarding certain statements made by Mr Malema and another
member of the EFF’
. The ‘Findings’ document is
dated ‘March 2019.’ The Findings are significant
because it was therein
that the SAHRC articulated its conclusion and
the rationale it relied upon to reach it; the letter simply
regurgitated much of
the contents and addressed the complaints
directly. For practical purposes the two documents must be taken as
one and constitutes
the ‘decision’ which is the subject
matter of the review.
[6]
Contemporaneously with this communication the SAHRC called a press
conference to publicise its decision.
[7] These events
provide the platform for the litigation which has led to this
hearing.
What is the status
of the ‘decision’ of the SAHRC of 8 March 2019?
[8] When the
complainants brought review proceedings, as invited so to do, the
SAHRC advanced the stance that the Promotion
of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) applied to its decision. That was wholly
consistent with the letter of 9 March which
alluded to the period
prescribed by PAJA to bring a review. The SAHRC was thus
unequivocally asserting that it had made a ‘decision’
as
defined in section 2 of PAJA.
[9] The
complainants fell in with that premise.
[1]
Various grounds of review were articulated. In essence these
grounds, generically fall into two categories: first, that the
SAHRC
failed to apply its mind properly to the legal test for a
contravention of section 10 and therefore applied a wrong test,
and
secondly the decision to exonerate Mr Malema was grievously
unreasonable in relation to the common cause facts. The SAHRC resists
the review as groundless. The EFF and Mr Malema agree with the SAHRC.
[10] However, during the
hearing there was, in response an enquiry by the court as to why it
was thought that the decision constituted
a decision contemplated by
PAJA and was thus reviewable, a
volte face
by the SAHRC
occurred. It now contends that the decision is not susceptible to
review. Paradoxically the two complainants persisted
that it is
reviewable.
[11] In my view any
‘decision’ about hate speech which the SAHRC is lawfully
capable of taking is indeed not a ‘decision’
of the type
that is reviewable. This case manifests a bizarre example of
confusion and, regrettably, on the part of the SAHRC,
ostensibly, a
dollop of hubris. This judgment is burdened with explaining how this
unhappy affair came about.
The scheme and
structure of the SA Human Rights Commission Act
[12] The reason that the
SAHRC was invented is because section 181(1)(b) of the Constitution
declared that it should exist in order
to ‘ …strengthen
constitutional democracy …’ The SAHRC is one of what are
popularly known as the Chapter
9 institutions. Pursuant thereto,
Parliament initially enacted the Human Rights Act 54 of 1994 (The Old
HRA) to create the SAHRC.
This statute was repealed by the enactment
of the South African Human Rights Commission Act 40 of 2013. (SAHRCA)
At all material
times relevant to this case, only SAHRCA was
applicable.
[13] It is necessary to
belabour the role and powers of the SAHRC under SAHRCA.
[14] The preamble to
SAHRCA provides thus, to describe the origin and mandate of the
SAHRC:
‘…
since the
Constitution provides that the South African Human Rights
Commission must—
promote
respect for human rights and a culture of human rights;
promote
the protection, development and attainment of human rights;
monitor
and assess the observance of human rights in the Republic; and
annually
require relevant organs of state to provide it with information on
the measures that they have taken towards the realisation
of the
rights in the Bill of Rights concerning housing, health care, food,
water, social security, education and the environment;
AND
SINCE the Constitution provides that the South African
Human Rights` Commission—
has
the powers, as regulated by national legislation, necessary to
perform its functions, including the power to investigate and
to
report on the observance of human rights; to out research; and to
educate; and
has
the additional powers and functions prescribed by national
legislation.’
[15] Section 2 of SAHRCA
thereupon prescribes the objects of the SAHRC:
(a)
to promote respect for human rights and a culture of human rights;
(
b
)
to promote the protection, development and attainment of human
rights; and
(
c
)
to monitor and assess the observance of human rights in the Republic.
[16] Thereafter, section
13 follows, in which the powers and functions of the SAHRC are
stipulated.
[2]
The critical
portion for the purposes of this case is section 13(3):
(3)
The Commission is competent-
(a)
to
investigate
on its own initiative or
on receipt of a complaint, any alleged violation of human rights, and
if, after due investigation, the
Commission is of the
opinion
that there is substance
in any
complaint made to it, it must, in so far as it is able to do so,
assist the complainant
and other persons adversely affected thereby,
to
secure redress
, and where it is
necessary for that purpose to do so, it may arrange for or provide
financial
assistance to enable
proceedings to be taken to a competent court for the necessary relief
or may direct a complainant to an appropriate forum; and
(b)
to
bring proceedings
in a competent court or tribunal
in its own name, or on behalf of a person or a group or class of
persons.
(Emphasis
supplied)
[17] The SAHRC is a
creature of statute and its powers are circumscribed by the enabling
statute. Axiomatically, any act performed
by it that does not fall
within the compass of the SAHRCA cannot be lawful.
[3]
[18] What does section
13(3) envisage to be the role and function of the SAHRC? The
First point of note is that this section
empowers the SAHRC to take
certain forms of action. The section does compel these actions.
[19] There are two
categories of action.
19.1 In the first
category, the SAHRC may conduct investigations. This it may do
mero
motu
or when prompted to do so when a complaint is made to it.
It follows that the purpose of an investigation, as the section
explicitly provides, is to form an ‘opinion’ whether or
not there is ‘
substance
’ to an ‘
[alleged]
violation of human rights.
19.2 The second
category is what the SAHRC may do as a result of the opinion it has
formed. If it concludes there is substance
to a complaint, the SAHRC
has a choice to either assist a complainant or the victims of the
alleged violation to bring proceedings
in a competent court or bring
such proceedings in its own right or on behalf of an affected person
or class of affected persons.
[20] It is plain that the
SAHRC is not empowered or authorised to decide whether or not a
violation of human rights has
indeed
occurred. It follows that
it is not within the power or authority of the SAHRC to pronounce
that an
alleged
violation is
indeed
a violation and
moreover, it is not within the power or authority of the SAHRC to
exonerate a person from an allegation of having
violated human
rights. The SAHRC’s opinion is relevant only to whether there
is
substance
to an allegation, which justifiably could be the
subject matter of court proceedings. To use different and
familiar nomenclature,
the question the SAHRC asks itself is whether
there is a
prima facie
case to be met by the alleged violator.
If the SAHRC reaches that conclusion, it may cause proceedings to be
brought. In the case
of an alleged contravention of section 10 of
PEPUDA, the competent court in which to bring such proceedings in the
Equality Court.
[21] If the SAHRC decides
to investigate, pursuant to a complaint, as it claims to have done in
this matter, then its further conduct
in that regard is regulated by
section 15. Section 15 prescribes an array of procedures and powers
which would be necessary in
order to conduct, if necessary, a
fact-finding exercise
, including interrogations. The need for
such powers would arise, typically, when, for example, an allegation
is met with a denial
and a dispute of fact arises. Section 16 takes
this further by providing for search and seizure powers. One can
imagine this procedure
being necessary when making enquiries about,
for example, allegations of human trafficking or workplace slavery.
It may be useful
to note that the investigation process as described
in sections 15 and 16 seems to be strictly confined to fact-finding
and is
distinct from the qualitative process of evaluating the
significance of the facts so gathered. Bearing in mind that the SAHRC
does
not make a definitive decision as to whether a violation has
indeed occurred, the SAHRC is not required or permitted to conclude
that an allegation of fact has been proven. That is a decision
to be made by a court in due course.
[22] The complaints
handling regulations under SAHRCA promulgated in 2017 contain
provisions which should raise an alarm. Para 3(2)
states that the
SAHRC has a wide discretion whether to investigate an act –
that
per se
is unobjectionable. The regulations then go
on to state that an investigation leads to a ‘determination’.
This
terminology is a dangerous exaggeration of what statute
provides, if what is contemplated is a definitive ‘decision’.
If a definitive decision is meant, then it is ultra vires. In
para 11 there is an allusion to the ‘conclusion of a
complaint.’ SAHRC may in terms of 11(a), reject a referral or,
in 11 (d), ‘find’ there was no violation.
(The
SAHRC’s Letter of 9 March 2019 referred to para 11(d)) Para
12(5) states the SAHRC must notify the parties of the outcome
of an
investigation in form of ‘findings’. Again, this
terminology is suggestive of a role and powers not conferred
by the
SAHRCA. If they are interpreted to expand the powers of the SAHRC
beyond the provisions of the statute they are ultra vires.
These
regulations may be the source of the erroneous stance that the SAHRC
initially took and has now abandoned.
[23] Accordingly, the
supposition on the part of the SAHRC when it pronounced that Mr
Malema was exonerated from a contravention
of section 10 of PEPUDA,
led to an act or so - called ‘decision’ which was ultra
vires and therefore null ab initio.
No such ‘decision’
was lawfully capable of being made by the SAHRC. To that extent and
on that premise the purported
‘decision’ could not be
made.
[4]
. What the SAHRC did was
to purport to exercise a power it did not have. On that ground the
‘decision’ ought be reviewed
and set aside. As alluded
to, both complainants stood steadfast on the proposition that the
SAHRC was capable of making a reviewable
decision on the merits of
the complaint that Mr Malema committed hate speech. Nonetheless what
turned out to be the critical issue;
ie could the SAHRC make such a
decision, was fully argued.
[24] The Old HRA of 1994
made provision under the terms of the Interim Constitution for a
Human Rights Commission. Section
7 set out its powers. Those
provisions were no more extensive than those in the SAHRCA of 2013.
Section10 of the Old HRA provided
for reports. It described in
section 10 the outcome of its investigations as ‘findings’
which were to be notified to
the complainants and affected persons.
There is an appeal panel decision by the SAHRC under the Old HRA
reported as
Freedom Front v South African Human Rights Commission
and Another
2003 (11) BCLR 1283
(SAHRC
). The Panel, in that
appeal, overturned an initial decision of the SAHRC. On appeal the
SAHRC appeal panel declared that
the slogan ‘Kill the Farmer
Kill the Boer’ was indeed hate speech forbidden by section
16(2)(c) of the 1996 Constitution.
This took place in terms of
regulations which provided for hearings and appeals against
‘determinations’. It
is not apparent that these
regulations could have been consistent with the provisions of the
statute insofar as the SAHRC purported
to make, itself, definitive
decisions about what constituted hate speech. The reported decision
seems to do just that. It is the
only report of its kind known to me.
Perhaps, it might be supposed that the current misstep by the SAHRC
is, in part, explained
by this historical error and a wrong grasp of
its role.
[25] The provisions of
PEPUDA add nothing to the scope of the role and powers of the SAHRC.
The SAHRC is mentioned in section 28(2)
in relation to its reporting
duties already provided for in section 15 of SAHRCA. These have no
bearing on the controversy.
Did Mr Malema
contravene section 10 of PEPUDA?
[26] Whether Mr Malema
transgressed section 10 of PEPUDA was of course the gravamen of these
review applications. The complainants
can get no answer from this
court. This court,
qua
High
Court has no jurisdiction to ‘decide’ such a question:
the answer is reserved for the Equality Court, and it is
to that
court the complainants must go to obtain an answer.
[5]
The SAHRC may opine that there is no contravention of section 10 of
PEPUDA but for the reasons already traversed that opinion has
no
status whatsoever. The opinion of the SAHRC on such a question ranks
with the opinion of any other person eligible to bring
a case before
the Equality Court.
[27] Therefore, whether
the remarks of Mr Malema, inter alia, that the land shall be acquired
by Black South Africans one way or
another from the Whites who had
slaughtered Africans like animals in the process of colonial
dispossession, but, at least for the
present, he makes no call for
the concomitant slaughter of Whites constitutes a contravention of
section 10 of PEPUDA must remain
uncertain, awaiting an authoritative
pronouncement by a court of competent jurisdiction. Whether the
notion that these remarks
are not unlawful, as is the opinion of the
SAHRC, stands up to scrutiny in the light of the equality
jurisprudence of the courts
must await adjudication.
Costs
[28] The liability for
costs in this case is dictated by an unusual set of circumstances.
The SAHRC wrongly purported to decide
a question it had no power to
decide and broadcast so-called ‘findings’
exonerating Mr Malema. The SAHRC expressly
invited a review of those
findings. In all of this the SAHRC is wrong. Were it not for that
conduct there would have been no review
applications at all.
Moreover, the purported decision was no lawful decision at all; it
was a mere opinion.
[29] These circumstances
seem to me to be a proper basis why the SAHRC should bear the
complainants’ costs.
[30] Mr Malema and the
EFF joined, at their own instance, to safeguard their interests and
made common cause with the SAHRC albeit
that they articulated a
distinct intellectual premise for the application of the principles
of review and of the provisions of
PEPUDA. They should bear their own
costs.
[31] For these
reasons the order set out above has been made.
Roland Sutherland
Deputy Judge
President, Gauteng Division, Johannesburg.
Heard:
8 May 2023
Judgment:
14 July 2023
Appearances:
For Afriforum:
Adv C Woodrow SC
With him Adv M
Oppenheimer,
Instructed by Hurter
Spies Incorporated
For FW De Klerk
Foundation:
Adv MJ Engelbrecht SC,
Instructed by Crafford
Attorneys
For South African
Human Rights Commission:
Adv K Hardy,
With her, Adv T Tsagae
Instructed by South
African Human Rights Commission
For Mr Julius Malema
and EFF:
Adv K Premhid,
With him Adv P Vabaza,
Instructed by Ian Levitt
Attorneys
[1]
The EFF and Mr Malema, who joined the proceedings questioned whether
PAJA was the correct jurisprudential platform and suggested
that a
review on the Principle of Legality might be the correct platform.
Happily, that question need not be decided.
13.Powers
and functions of Commission
.—
(1)In
addition to any other powers and functions conferred on or assigned
to it by section 184 (1), (2) and (3)
of the
Constitution, this Act or any other law and in order to achieve its
objects—
(
a
)
the Commission is competent and is obliged to—
(i)
make recommendations to organs of state at all levels of government
where it considers such action advisable for the adoption
of
progressive measures for the promotion of human rights within the
framework of the Constitution and the law, as well
as
appropriate measures for the further observance of such rights;
(ii)
undertake such studies for reporting on or relating to human rights
as it considers advisable in the performance of its functions
or to
further the objects of the Commission; and
(iii)
request any organ of state to supply it with information on any
legislative or executive measures adopted by it relating
to human
rights; and
(
b
)
the Commission—
(i)
must develop, conduct or manage information programmes and education
programmes to foster public understanding and awareness
of Chapter 2
of the Constitution, this Act and the role and activities of
the Commission;
(ii)
must as far as is practicable maintain close liaison with
institutions, bodies or authorities with similar objectives to
the
Commission in order to foster common policies and practices and to
promote co-operation in relation to the handling of complaints
in
cases of overlapping jurisdiction or other appropriate instances;
(iii)
must liaise and interact with any organisation which actively
promotes respect for human rights and other sectors of civil
society
to further the objects of the Commission;
`(iv)
may consider such recommendations, suggestions and requests
concerning the promotion of respect for human rights as it may
receive from any source;
`(v)
must review government policies relating to human rights and may
make recommendations;
(vi)
must monitor the implementation of, and compliance with,
international and regional conventions and treaties, international
and regional covenants and international and regional charters
relating to the objects of the Commission;
(vii)
must prepare and submit reports to the National Assembly pertaining
to any such convention, treaty, covenant or charter
relating to the
objects of the Commission; and
(viii)
must carry out or cause to be carried out such studies concerning
human rights as may be referred to it by the President,
and the
Commission must include in a report referred to in section 18
(1) a report setting out the results of each study
together with
such recommendations in relation thereto as it considers
appropriate.
(2)
(
a
)
T
he Commission may recommend to Parliament or
any other legislature the adoption of new legislation which will
promote respect
for human rights and a culture of human rights.
(
b
)If
the Commission is of the opinion that any proposed legislation might
be contrary to Chapter 2 of the Constitution
or to
norms of international human rights law which form part of South
African law or to other relevant norms of international
law, it must
immediately report that fact to the relevant legislature.
(3)The
Commission is competent—
(
a
)
to investigate on its own initiative or on receipt of a complaint,
any alleged violation of human rights, and if, after
due
investigation, the Commission is of the opinion that there is
substance in any complaint made to it, it must, in so far as
it is
able to do so, assist the complainant and other persons adversely
affected thereby, to secure redress, and where it is
necessary for
that purpose to do so, it may arrange for or provide financial
assistance to enable proceedings to be taken to
a competent court
for the necessary relief or may direct a complainant to an
appropriate forum; and
(
b
)
to bring proceedings in a competent court or tribunal in its own
name, or on behalf of a person or a group or class of persons.
(4)
All organs of state must afford the Commission such assistance
as may be reasonably required for the effective exercising
of its
powers and performance of its functions.’
[3]
This is the basic rule of law
:
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of SA and another: In
Re Ex parte President of the Republic of SA and others
2000(2) SA
674 (CC) Affordable Medicines Trust v Minister of Health
2006 (3) SA 347 (CC).
[4]
See:
CUSA
v Tao Ying Metal Industries and Others
[2008] ZACC 15
;
2009 (2) SA 204
(CC
)
at:
[67]
Subject to what is stated in the following paragraph, the role of
the reviewing court is limited to deciding issues that
are raised in
the review proceedings. It may not, on its own, raise issues
which were not raised by the party who seeks
to review an arbitral
award. There is much to be said for the submission by the workers
that it is not for the reviewing court
to tell a litigant what it
should complain about. In particular, the LRA specifies the grounds
upon which arbitral awards may
be reviewed. A party who seeks
to review an arbitral award is bound by the grounds contained in the
review application.
A litigant may not, on appeal, raise a new
ground of review. To permit a party to do so may very well undermine
the objective
of the LRA to have labour disputes resolved as
speedily as possible. [68] These principles are, however, subject to
one qualification.
Where a point of law is apparent on the
papers, but the common approach of the parties proceeds on a wrong
perception of
what the law is, a court is not only entitled, but is
in fact also obliged,
mero
motu
,
to raise the point of law and require the parties to deal therewith.
Otherwise, the result would be a decision premised on an
incorrect
application of the law. That would infringe the principle of
legality. Accordingly, the Supreme Court of Appeal
was entitled
mero
motu
to
raise the issue of the commissioner's jurisdiction and to require
argument thereon. However, as will be shown below, on a proper
analysis of the record, the arbitration proceedings, in fact, did
not reach the stage where the question of jurisdiction
came
into play.
[5]
There is a curious paradox about the jurisdictional role of the High
Court in litigation under PEPUDA. The Equality Court is
an ad hoc
creature which comes into existence whenever the High Court or the
Magistrates Court is convened to ‘sit as an
Equality Court’.
The High court
qua
High Court can review a
judgment of the Magistrates Court sitting as an Equality Court but
has no original jurisdiction to pronounce
on the issues regulated by
PEPUDA; thar is possible only when the High Court sits qua Equality
Court’ A review against
a decision of the SAHRC per se
is not within the purview of the review jurisdiction provided in
PEPUDA but, rather, is competent
under PAJA. However, for the
reasons already addressed, the SAHRC cannot make definitive
decisions on PEPUDA issues and therefore
the question of a review
jurisdiction by the High Court in respect of such issues cannot
arise. Whether this structural quagmire
is really useful might be a
question worthwhile for Parliament to give attention.
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