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[2016] ZAGPJHC 235
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Mostert v Registrar of Pension Funds and Others (07352/2015) [2016] ZAGPJHC 235 (25 August 2016)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 07352/2015
DATE:
25 AUGUST 2016
In
the matter between:
Mostert,
Antony Louis
N.O
......................................................................................................
Applicant
And
The
Registrar of Pension
Funds
..................................................................................
First
Respondent
The
Chief Master of the High
Court
.......................................................................
Second
Respondent
The
Minister of
Finance
.............................................................................................
Third
Respondent
Hislop,
Raymond
.......................................................................................................
Fourth
Respondent
Judgment
on the application for leave to appeal
Van
der Linde, J:
[1]
This is an application for leave to appeal
against an order I made on 24 June 2016, dismissing the applicant's
application for the
review and setting aside of a regulation made by
the third respondent on 22 April 2003.
[2]
Applications for leave to appeal are now
dealt with under
s.17
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. A
reasonable prospect of success on appeal is still the very first
requirement. The other two, set out in
s.17(1)(b)
and (c), need not
detain one here; they are met.
[3]
A constitutional interests of justice
requirement has however become the overriding consideration; compare
City of Tshwane Metropolitan
Municipality v Afriforum and Another,
[2016] ZACC 19
(19 May 2016) at [40]. Although that case concerned an
interim order and a previous statute, the present statute is likely
to be
interpreted similarly.
[4]
This requirement would subsume, I suggest,
also the requirement of a reasonable prospect of success. This latter
requirement is
thus the focus of the present application.
[5]
I held the applicant not-suited for failure
to have complied with
s.7
of PAJA, the central time-barring provision
of PAJA. That was the ratio decidendi of the judgment, and it formed
the basis of the
dismissal of the applicant's claims. It will be
recalled that the applicant applied to review and set aside a
regulation made by
the third respondent, many years after the
regulation was made.
[6]
The application papers did not raise the
time-barring issue, but the Minister argued from the Bar that the
applicant's application
was self-evidently out of time since it was
not brought within the 180 day period laid down by
s.7
of PAJA. The
Minister also argued that the fact that the parties did not on the
affidavits engage on the issue, was not a bar to
the court deciding
it. To the contrary, the submission was that the court had no power
to review an administrative act if
s.7
had not been complied with.
[7]
In upholding the Minister's argument, I
held that the applicant was obliged to have dealt with the issue; and
ought to have disclosed
when he acquired actual knowledge of the
regulation. Not having done so, and since the application was
self-evidently brought more
than 180 days after the administrative
act was performed, the applicant's review application could not
succeed.
[8]
In this application for leave, the
applicant argues aspects of that issue which were not raised at the
hearing and which I had not
considered mero motu. Specifically, the
correct application of
s.7
of PAJA in the context of the review of a
regulation now comes into stark relief, and particularly its feature
of affecting not
one individual but the public at large.
[9]
The applicant argues (amongst other things)
that in that scenario it cannot be that an applicant for review is
non-suited for failing
to have brought the application within 180
days of knowledge of the decision and reasons for it, since this may
result in an untenable
inconsistency where many members of the public
are affected. There will be as many knowledge dates as there are
members of the
public.
[10]On
this argument actual knowledge of the applicant is irrelevant. If a
respondent were minded to rely on non-compliance with
the 180 day
period, it was up to it to place facts before the court by means of
which it could then fix a deemed date of having
acquired knowledge,
according to the submission.
[11]The
Minister's response, that the public are deemed to have knowledge
from the date of publication of the regulation, does not
assist,
according to the applicant; regulations are subject to proof, and a
court cannot take judicial notice of them.
[12]The
applicant also attacked my finding on another basis: that it was in
any event not a given that asserting and proving compliance
with the
time-barring provision was, as it were, an essential element of the
applicant’s cause of action. Parties may validly
decide in
advance that the time-bar will not be an issue they wish to raise,
since they wish the court to decide the merits; in
such a case it
would not be required to raise the issue at all in the affidavits. If
that is right then, in general, an applicant
need not raise the
issue, and could wait to see whether the respondent raises it. If so,
then the applicant could deal with it
in reply.
[13]The
registrar's argument is that the applicant's case is bad on the
merits, and so even if he might succeed on the time-barring
issue
that does not follow that the appeal has reasonable prospects of
success. This submission is, with respect, appealing; but
the
conceptual difficulty I have with it is that an appeal is about
overturning the judgment (in a trial) or order (in an application)
of
the court a quo. In this matter the order followed the finding on the
time-bar. There was by definition no finding on the merits;
it was
all obiter, engaged in only because counsel had fully argued those.
There could therefore be no appeal against those views,
and a
fortiori no opposition to any supposed appeal against them.
[14]At
the end of the day one must assess whether another court could
reasonably come to a different result to the one to which
I came on
the time-bar. I believe there is a reasonable prospect of success, on
the basis that weighty propositions were put up
now that I did not
consider before.
[15]The
Supreme Court of Appeal is in my view the appropriate forum. In the
result I make the following order:
(a)Leave
to appeal is granted to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
(b)The
costs of the application for leave to appeal are costs in the appeal.
WHG van der Linde
Judge, High Court
Johannesburg
For the applicants: Adv. C.D.A. Loxton SC
Adv.
A. Milovanovic
Instructed
by: AL Mostert & Co Inc
The
Woodlands Office Park
Building
14, First Floor
Woodlands
Drive
Woodmead
Johannesburg
Tel:
011-656 3880
Ref:
AL Mostert/PIC2/0008
For
the first respondent: Adv. A. Cockrell SC
Adv.
N. Mbelle
Instructed
by: Rooth & Wessels Inc
C/o
Le Roux Viviers Attorneys
355
Beyers Naude Drive
Northcliff
Ext
Randburg
Tel:
011-4314117
Ref:
M Van Rooyen/MAT26093
For the third
respondent: Adv. H. Maenetje, SC
Adv. S. Khumalo
Instructed by: The
Office of the Minister of Finance
c/o The State Attorney
Fourth Floor, Fedsure
Forum South Block
Van der Walt Street
Pretoria
Date
argued: 18 August, 2016
Date
of judgement: 25 August, 2016