Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 983South Africa
Abdulla v Johannesburg Stock Exchange Limited and Others (23/40855) [2023] ZAGPJHC 983 (5 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
5 September 2023
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Abdulla v Johannesburg Stock Exchange Limited and Others (23/40855) [2023] ZAGPJHC 983 (5 September 2023)
Abdulla v Johannesburg Stock Exchange Limited and Others (23/40855) [2023] ZAGPJHC 983 (5 September 2023)
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FLYNOTES:
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW – Review – Fine and public censure
–
Imposed
by JSE for transgressions of listing requirements – Tribunal
suspending payment of fine but not publication
of censure –
Decision assailed on basis that two relevant considerations given
insufficient or excessive weight –
Neither the harm of
publishing his censure pending reconsideration or his prospects of
success on reconsideration were weighed
in a manner that deprived
the decision of its underlying rationality or of a logical
connection to the surrounding facts
– Application dismissed
–
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
,
s
6(2)(e)(iii).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
#### Case
No.23/40855
Case
No.
23/40855
REPORTABLE
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
05/09/23
In the matter between:
KHALID
ABDULLA
Applicant
and
JOHANNESBURG
STOCK EXCHANGE LIMITED
First Respondent
ANDRE
VISSER
NO
Second Respondent
FINANCIAL
SERVICES TRIBUNAL
Third Respondent
Summary
Administrative law –
review under
section 6
(2) (e) (iii) of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
– decision assailed on the
basis that two relevant considerations given insufficient or
excessive weight – in
such a case, the weight attached to
a particular factor must be assessed in the context of all the
reasons the decision-maker gives,
in the context of the facts on
which the decision was made, and in the context of the purpose and
scope of the power the decision-maker
exercises – no
disproportion of weight in this sense demonstrated –
application dismissed.
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
After an investigation, the first respondent, the JSE,
concluded that the applicant, Mr. Abdulla, had transgressed various
provisions
of its Listings Requirements. The Listings Requirements
serve both as set of conditions for entry on to the stock exchange
and
as a system of rules governing those who are permitted to
transact on the exchange. It is not necessary for me to set out the
nature
of Mr. Abdulla’s alleged transgressions in any detail.
It is enough to say that the JSE found them to warrant a R2 million
fine and what is referred to in the Requirements as a “public
censure”. That censure took the form of a detailed statement
of
the facts found during the JSE’s investigation and the reasons
for the sanction it decided to impose. The statement was
to be
published on the Stock Exchange News Service (“SENS”)
which appears from the papers to be the primary source
of
authoritative information about the stock exchange and its
operations.
2
Mr. Abdulla strongly disagrees with both the JSE’s
conclusions as to his alleged transgressions and with the sanction
the
JSE decided to impose. He applied, under section 230 of the
Financial Sector Regulation Act 9 of 2017 (“the FSRA”),
for the reconsideration of the JSE’s finding that he had
transgressed the Listings Requirements and for the reconsideration
of
the sanction imposed. That reconsideration is undertaken by the
Financial Services Tribunal, established under section 219 of
the
FSRA. “Reconsideration” under the FSRA is a
“reconsideration” in the fullest sense. The Tribunal may
hear new evidence, make its own inquiries and investigations, and is
at large to replace the JSE’s decision with the decision
it
would have made had it been in the JSE’s shoes (see section 234
of the FSRA, read with section 218).
3
Section 231 of the FSRA provides, however, that an application
for reconsideration does not automatically suspend the decisions
sought to be reconsidered. Mr. Abdulla was required to apply to the
Tribunal for the suspension of the JSE’s decision while
the
Tribunal reconsiders it. The Tribunal, in a decision of its Deputy
Chair, decided to suspend the payment of the fine that the
JSE had
imposed on Mr. Abdulla, but it declined to suspend the publication of
the censure.
The
review
4
Mr. Abdulla now applies to me to review and set aside the
Tribunal’s decision not to suspend the publication of the
censure.
He also asks me either to refer the suspension application
back to the Tribunal for a fresh decision, or to substitute the
Tribunal’s
decision for one suspending the whole of the
sanction imposed on him.
5
Mr. Leech, who appeared together with Ms. Griffiths for Mr.
Abdulla, motivated Mr. Abdulla’s application on the grounds
that
the Tribunal had failed to attach sufficient weight to
particular considerations, and that it had attached too much weight
to others.
Decisions that are flawed in this respect are in principle
reviewable under section 6 (2) (e) (iii) of the Promotion of
Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”), but only
where a relevant consideration has been ignored, an irrelevant
consideration
has grounded the decision, or “where a factor
which is obviously of paramount importance is relegated to one of
insignificance,
and another factor, though relevant is given weight
far in excess of its true value” (see
Bangtoo Bros and
others v National Transport Commission
1973 (4) SA 667
(N) at
685C–D, quoted with approval
in Tellumat (Pty) Ltd v Appeal
Board of the Financial Services Board
[2016] 1 All SA 704
(SCA)
at paragraph 42).
6
In applying this test, the reviewing court “must be
careful not to overturn a decision on review merely because it
disagrees
with it. It must be alive to the fact that it was primarily
for the decision maker to determine which facts are relevant and
which
not” (
Tellumat
at paragraph 42). In addition,
“[e]xcept where a legal rule shapes the procedure and substance
of deliberation, there is
very little, if any, room . . . for a court
to order a decision-maker to attach specific weight to one or other
of the considerations
that they are required to assess, or to set
aside a decision simply because a Judge would have weighed things up
differently, or
would have sought more or better information
than the decision-maker thought was necessary” (see
Eloff
Landgoed (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the
Environment
2023 JDR 2205 (GP) at paragraph 32).
7
The question that naturally arises is where the line is to be
drawn between reviewing a decision because weighty factors were
treated
too lightly or insignificant factors were over-emphasised
(which is appropriate) and substituting the weight that the reviewing
court would subjectively have attached to those factors for the
weight that the decision-maker thought was wise (which is not).
I am
not sure that there is an easy way to draw this line, but it seems to
me that, where the weight a decision-maker attaches
to a particular
factor deprives the decision of the logical or rational basis that
the decision-maker offers for their decision
overall, or of a
connection to purpose of the power being exercised, or of a
connection to the facts on which the decision was
made, that is a
good indication that the factor concerned has been unlawfully
weighed. In other words, the weight attached to a
particular factor
must be assessed in the context of all the reasons the decision-maker
gives, in the context of the facts on which
the decision was made,
and in the context of the purpose and scope of the power the
decision-maker exercises.
8
For example, if a decision-maker identifies the impact of
authorising a particular activity as the primary consideration in
deciding
whether or not to allow the activity to go ahead, it will
not generally be permissible for the decision-maker to ignore or
treat
lightly reliable information about the nature of the impact the
activity will have. Just how much weight is to be attached to a
particular consideration or kind of information depends on the nature
of the power being exercised and the facts before the decision-maker.
There is no easy formula for deciding just how much weight is enough,
too much, or too little, independently of the context in
which the
decision is made.
The
Tribunal’s decision
9
The two factors which the Tribunal was said to have weighed
inappropriately in this case were the capacity of publication of the
censure to cause Mr. Abdulla harm, and Mr. Abdulla’s prospects
of success in securing a more lenient sanction from the Tribunal
than
the JSE imposed.
10
Mr. Leech accepted that the possibility that the publication
of the censure would cause harm to Mr. Abdulla was present to the
Tribunal’s
mind. This is plain from paragraph 16 of the
decision, where the Tribunal replicated Mr. Abdulla’s concern
that publication
would “affect his reputation”. That
notwithstanding, the Tribunal found, consistent with the approach it
seems to have
developed in similar cases, that there could be no
legally recognisable harm attached to the publication of a summary of
the JSE’s
investigations and conclusions, together with the
sanction it had chosen. Publication in itself has no consequences for
Mr. Abdulla
other than to alert those using the exchange to the fact
of the investigation and its outcome. The Tribunal found that there
was
no reason to keep the JSE’s conclusions “under wraps”
pending reconsideration, just as there is generally no reason
to keep
the fact of an adverse judgment against a litigant secret pending
appeal.
11
During argument, Mr. Green, who appeared together with Mr.
Kruger for the JSE, emphasised the JSE’s role as the provider
of
authoritative and useful information to those who transact on the
exchange. He argued that there is a public interest in permitting
publication of the JSE’s findings and sanctions as soon as they
are made, and that the refusal to suspend publication pending
reconsideration promotes that interest. I think there is some
substance in that submission, but even if there were not, I cannot
conclude that the minimal weight the Tribunal attached to any
potential harm to Mr. Abdulla’s reputation was in any sense
inappropriate or unlawful. By the time the matter was argued, Mr.
Abdulla had abjured the allegation that the publication would
be
defamatory. At the outset of the hearing before me, Mr. Leech
abandoned Mr. Abdulla’s prayer for an interdict against
publication pending the outcome of an action for defamation. Once he
did that, it seems to me that any suggestion of legally relevant
harm
to Mr. Abdulla’s reputation had to be discounted. The weight
the Tribunal attached to the harm that would be caused
by publication
of the censure seems, in these circumstances, to have been entirely
appropriate, or at any rate not so out of proportion
with its proper
weight as to render the Tribunal’s decision unlawful.
12
Mr. Green undertook on behalf of the JSE that, were I to
dismiss this application, the JSE would ensure that the statement of
public
censure it put out would encompass the fact that Mr. Abdulla
is seeking the reconsideration of its decision, and that the fine it
imposed has been suspended while he does so. In these circumstances,
any harm to Mr. Abdulla seems to me to be slight indeed. Anyone
reading the censure will know that the process has not been
completed, and Mr. Abdulla’s censure may yet be expunged.
13
That leaves the question of whether the Tribunal appropriately
weighed Mr. Abdulla’s prospects of success on reconsideration.
The Tribunal was not satisfied that Mr. Abdulla had any reasonable
prospect of success on reconsideration. Mr. Leech did not urge
me to
find otherwise. He submitted rather that there was some prospect
that, even if the findings that Mr. Abdulla had transgressed
the
Listings Requirements were upheld, the sanction imposed might be
found, upon reconsideration, to have been excessive. Mr. Leech
criticised the Tribunal for over-emphasising Mr. Abdulla’s lack
of prospects on the merits and for failing to deal explicitly
with
his prospects of reversing or materially altering the JSE’s
sanction.
14
Mr. Leech spent some time dealing with what he submitted was
the disproportion of the fine imposed on Mr. Abdulla. But that of
course
is irrelevant. The fine has been suspended. The question is
really whether the Tribunal overlooked any reason to think that the
public censure would be reversed. But it follows from the Tribunal’s
conclusions that Mr. Abdulla had poor prospects of reversing
the
JSE’s findings on the merits, that the Tribunal must have
thought Mr. Abdulla’s prospects of reversing the public
censure
were remote at best. The Tribunal found, in essence, that Mr. Abdulla
had raised no real dispute about the fact that he
had conducted
himself in breach of the Listings Requirements in the respects the
JSE alleged, and that he had otherwise advanced
what the Tribunal
regarded as meritless procedural criticisms of the way the JSE
conducted its investigation. Given the nature
of the transgressions,
the Tribunal would have had no reason to think that the relatively
light penalty of a public censure would
be found inappropriate.
15
For all these reasons, on reading the Tribunal’s
decision as a whole, I cannot say that either the harm to Mr. Abdulla
of
publishing his censure pending reconsideration or his prospects of
success on reconsideration were weighed in a manner that deprived
the
decision of its underlying rationality, or of a logical connection to
the surrounding facts.
16
The review application should accordingly be dismissed.
Costs
17
Mr. Green argued that Mr. Abdulla should pay the costs of the
application on the attorney and client scale. The basis of that
submission
was that the application had started out as a wide-ranging
attack on the Listings Requirements themselves. It also rested on the
allegation that the JSE had defamed Mr. Abdulla. It sought a series
of interdicts effectively suspending any action to enforce
the
outcome of the JSE’s investigation until Mr. Abdulla had been
able to review it, and until he had been able to pursue
an action in
respect of the defamation he said it embodied.
18
Wisely, Mr. Leech abandoned all of that relief at the outset
of his argument, focussing only on the narrow issue of whether the
Tribunal’s decision not to suspend the JSE’s decision
pending reconsideration was reviewable on the grounds I have
outlined.
19
Punitive costs orders are appropriate only where litigation
was manifestly ill-conceived from the outset, or where a party or
their
legal representatives have misconducted themselves in their
handling of the case. I do not think that either of those conditions
applies here. While some of Mr. Abdulla’s more exotic prayers
might have attracted a punitive costs order had they been persisted
with, at the core of his case was a genuine grievance, which, while
misplaced, was not completely misconceived. A reasonable
decision-maker
might just as easily have declined to deal with the
JSE’s decision piecemeal, and might appropriately have
suspended both
the public censure and the fine the JSE issued,
reasoning that either all of the sanction should be suspended, or
none of it should.
Had I been at large to substitute my opinion
for that of the Tribunal, I might have reached that conclusion.
20
But that I may not do. Administrative decisions are not
reviewed on the basis of whether they conform to the approach the
reviewing
court thinks it would have taken had it been the
decision-maker. They are reviewed on the basis of whether the
decision taken was
objectively reasonable, lawful and procedurally
fair. The decision is assessed in the context of the decision-maker’s
reasons,
the nature and purpose of the power being exercised and the
facts on which the decision was based. Applying that test, I am
unable to find that the Tribunal committed any reviewable error.
21
The application is dismissed with costs, including the costs
of two counsel.
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
to Caselines,
and by publication of the judgment to the South African Legal
Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 5
September 2023.
HEARD
ON:
31 August 2023
DECIDED
ON:
5 September 2023
For
the Applicant: Q Leech SC
J
Griffiths
Instructed by Clyde &
Co
For
the First and Second I Green SC
Respondents:
M Kruger
Instructed by Webber
Wentzel
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