Independent South African National Civic Organisation v Luyenge and Others (5374/2022) [2023] ZAFSHC 249 (20 June 2023)

80 Reportability
Civil Procedure

Brief Summary

Civil Procedure — Membership Dispute — Expulsion of member — Applicant sought to declare the expulsion of the first respondent as unlawful and to invalidate subsequent decisions made by him — First respondent alleged he was not properly notified of suspension or expulsion and claimed authority to act on behalf of the applicant — Court held that the applicant's National Management Committee had the authority to suspend and expel the first respondent in accordance with its constitution, and that the first respondent's actions post-expulsion were unlawful and void ab initio.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were a motion application in the Free State Division of the High Court, Bloemfontein, in which the applicant sought predominantly declaratory relief concerning the internal governance of a civic organisation and consequential steps flowing from that relief, including directions to the Electoral Commission of South Africa.


The applicant was the Independent South African National Civic Organisation. The principal opposing parties were the first respondent, Zukile Luyenge, who (on his version) remained the organisation’s president, and the second respondent, Molahleli Jacob Rantso, who opposed but did not file an answering affidavit. Other respondents included individuals deployed as councillors, two municipalities, a district municipality, and the Electoral Commission of South Africa.


The matter was heard on 9 February 2023 and judgment was delivered on 20 June 2023. The relief sought was rooted in alleged suspension and expulsion decisions taken internally within the applicant organisation during late 2021, and the alleged invalidity of actions taken thereafter, including purported changes to councillor deployments and party leadership/contact details reflected with the Electoral Commission.


A substantial procedural feature was a point in limine raised by the first respondent, challenging the authority of Bakoena Stephen Ramosie, the deponent to the founding affidavit, to launch the application and to depose to the affidavit on behalf of the applicant. The first respondent also relied on an earlier Free State High Court matter (case number 2830/2022) described as similar, in which an application was dismissed on the basis that Ramosie lacked authority to depose to the affidavit.


2. Material Facts


The dispute arose within the applicant organisation, with the court describing it as “essentially a dispute between two groups” within the applicant: one associated with Ramosie (the founding deponent) and the other led by the first respondent, who was described as the president of the applicant.


On the applicant’s version, a letter dated 29 November 2021 from the office of the Deputy Secretary General notified the first respondent that the National Management Committee (NMC) had resolved to suspend him with immediate effect on stated grounds. Those grounds included allegations that the first respondent had acted contrary to an NMC resolution and the organisation’s constitution by unilaterally convening a meeting in East London, despite an asserted resolution about the convening of NMC meetings and their venue. The first respondent was also notified of a disciplinary hearing scheduled for 29 December 2021 in Pietermaritzburg.


The applicant alleged that the first respondent ignored the suspension and continued acting as president. A further letter dated 20 December 2021 expanded the allegations of gross misconduct, including that the first respondent had purportedly “replaced” and “rearranged” office-bearers without mandate, misrepresented the applicant to organs of state (including the IEC and municipalities) during a period in late November to early December 2021, and colluded with third parties in conduct described as fraudulent misrepresentation of representatives. The disciplinary hearing was again stated to be set for 29 December 2021.


On 29 December 2021, according to the applicant, the first respondent failed to attend the disciplinary hearing, and a resolution was taken to expel him both as president and as a member. The applicant stated that a letter to that effect was addressed to the first respondent on that date (and transmitted to him on 6 January 2021, as recorded in the judgment). The applicant further asserted that the first respondent did not respond to the correspondence, did not challenge the decisions, and did not utilise internal review/appeal procedures allegedly available under the constitution.


In addition, the applicant alleged that the first respondent withdrew the applicant’s candidates who were holding seats in local municipalities and replaced them with his own candidates without consent or mandate from the NMC, and in breach of the constitution. The applicant contended that the replacement candidates were not members of the organisation. It further complained that the IEC continued to communicate with the municipalities and refused to reinstate the applicant’s candidates on its proportional representation list.


A number of these factual assertions were disputed. The first respondent denied that he was notified of suspension or expulsion and alleged that he was never invited to a disciplinary hearing. He maintained that he remained the president and that his actions were authorised and constitutionally compliant. He also asserted that Ramosie and the Deputy Secretary General had been expelled and were no longer members.


A further set of material facts related to authority and internal governance. The first respondent challenged Ramosie’s authority on the basis that an NMC meeting of 22 October 2022 was not properly convened or constituted and that only six members were present. The court, however, recorded that the minutes and attendance register for that meeting reflected 28 members present and that this would render the meeting quorate according to the constitutional definition of quorum (being 50% + 1 of members present as determined by the structure’s composition). The court further noted that the first respondent produced no evidence supporting the allegation that Ramosie had been expelled, while Ramosie appended a membership form in reply.


The record also reflected significant inconsistencies in competing accounts concerning meetings on 27 November 2021. The applicant relied on minutes of an NMC meeting in Pietermaritzburg on that date at which the first respondent was suspended, while the first respondent relied on minutes of a “National Consultative Meeting” held in East London on the same date in which Ramosie was reflected as attending as Secretary General. The court emphasised that these materials raised unanswered questions and contributed to its view that the matter could not be properly decided on the papers.


Finally, the court recorded that internal remedies had not been shown to have been utilised, despite constitutional provisions assigning the NMC functions to enforce discipline and mediate and settle disputes within and between structures.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions concerned the authority (locus standi) of the founding deponent to represent the applicant in launching the application, and whether the application could competently be resolved on the papers given the depth of internal conflict and contradictions in the evidence.


The dispute primarily involved the application of organisational constitutional provisions to contested facts, including questions about whether meetings were properly convened, whether disciplinary steps were properly taken, and whether the internal structures had validly authorised litigation. The court also confronted a broader value-laden and institutional question concerning the propriety of judicial intervention where internal constitutional mechanisms existed to resolve disputes and enforce discipline.


A further issue was whether the relief sought would entail impermissible judicial involvement in matters implicating separation of powers, given that the applicant sought orders that would effectively direct or constrain the conduct of other organs/entities of state (notably the IEC and municipalities) in relation to party leadership/contact details and councillor deployments.


Costs raised an additional issue: given that both factions purported to act in the applicant’s name, the court had to decide whether it would be appropriate for costs to be paid from the applicant’s resources, and whether any personal costs consequences were justified in light of the conduct and posture of the parties.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the point in limine challenging authority, the court engaged with the first respondent’s contention that Ramosie lacked authority because the relevant NMC meeting of 22 October 2022 was not properly constituted and because Ramosie was allegedly expelled. The court assessed the documentary material and recorded that the minutes and attendance register reflected 28 attendees, and that this would satisfy the constitutional quorum requirement. The court treated the first respondent’s assertion of only six attendees as either an oversight or a deliberate attempt to subvert the record.


The court also considered the allegation that Ramosie was no longer a member. It noted the absence of supporting evidence from the first respondent and the presence of a membership form appended by Ramosie in reply. Against that background, the court stated that it was satisfied that Ramosie was properly authorised to launch the application and to depose to the necessary affidavits.


The court then turned to the broader merits and context and formed the view that the papers reflected a “distasteful pursuit of position and power” and serious infighting among senior members. It highlighted the existence of multiple High Court applications brought by the rival factions in different divisions, all aimed at ousting the opposing group. The court did not treat the litigation as an appropriate mechanism to “referee” the internal conflict.


The court stressed that both sides’ papers contained contradictions and irregularities. It referred in particular to the conflicting accounts of the 27 November 2021 meetings and the unexplained implausibility arising from Ramosie’s apparent appearance in minutes for different meetings in different provinces on the same day. It also pointed to complexities relating to communications and documents concerning disciplinary action against the Deputy Secretary General, including uncertainty about authorship and authorisation of certain correspondence. On the first respondent’s side, the court noted unsupported assertions (including alleged expulsions) and questioned the reliability of documents relied upon, including an attendance register presented as an NMC register which was alleged by a confirmatory deponent to be a register for a public community meeting.


In this evidentiary setting, the court concluded that there was “all manner of manipulation”, which created a situation in which the court could not decide the matter on the papers. The court also found that no evidence had been placed before it to show that internal remedies had been utilised, let alone exhausted. It connected this conclusion to provisions of the organisation’s constitution that vested the NMC with responsibilities to enforce discipline and mediate disputes.


The court then articulated a cautionary principle: parties should be slow to approach courts to resolve disputes that are adequately catered for in internal instruments like an organisation’s constitution. It considered that the relief sought would require the court to breach separation of powers boundaries and to impermissibly interfere in how other organs/entities of state perform their functions. The court regarded such interference as unjustified in circumstances where internal processes had not been invoked to address the underlying disputes.


On costs, the court rejected both parties’ approaches as framed. It considered it unfair for costs to be paid from the applicant’s “coffers” because, on its assessment, neither faction demonstrated a genuine commitment to the organisation’s aims and constitutional prescripts, but rather appeared to be pursuing their own ends. This evaluation informed the court’s decision to structure the costs order so that costs were borne personally by the protagonists rather than by the organisation.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the application in its entirety.


The court also dismissed the point in limine raised by the first respondent challenging Ramosie’s authority.


The court ordered that each party pay their own costs, but directed that Bakoena Stephen Ramosie personally pay the applicant’s costs and that Zukile Luyenge personally pay the costs of the opposition in the matter.


Cases Cited


No reported case law was cited in the judgment. The judgment referred to a prior Free State High Court matter, described by case number only, namely Free State High Court case number 2830/2022 (unreported, further citation details not provided in the judgment).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was cited in the judgment.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rule 35(12).


Held


The court held that the founding deponent, Bakoena Stephen Ramosie, was duly authorised to launch the application and to depose to the founding affidavit, and the first respondent’s authority challenge was therefore rejected.


Notwithstanding that finding on authority, the court held that the matter could not appropriately be determined on the papers because the evidence reflected material contradictions and indications of manipulation by both factions, and because the court was not an appropriate forum to referee internal power struggles where internal constitutional mechanisms existed.


The court further held that the relief sought would entail impermissible judicial intrusion, including interference implicating separation of powers, particularly in circumstances where internal remedies had not been invoked to resolve the disputes.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that internal dispute-resolution and disciplinary mechanisms contained in an organisation’s constitution should, where available and adequate, be utilised to resolve disputes before seeking judicial intervention, especially in conflicts that are fundamentally internal and political/organisational in nature.


It further applied the procedural principle that where the papers reveal material contradictions, inconsistencies, or manipulations that prevent a reliable determination on affidavit, a court may decline to grant the substantive relief sought in motion proceedings on the existing record.


The judgment also applied separation-of-powers-related restraint, emphasising that a court should not grant relief that would require it to impermissibly interfere with the functioning of other organs/entities of state, particularly where alternative internal remedies exist and have not been pursued.


On costs, the judgment reflected the principle that where litigants purport to act for an organisation but their conduct demonstrates pursuit of factional interests, it may be inappropriate for costs to be borne by the organisation itself, and a court may craft a costs order that places the financial consequences personally on the individuals driving the litigation.

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[2023] ZAFSHC 249
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Independent South African National Civic Organisation v Luyenge and Others (5374/2022) [2023] ZAFSHC 249 (20 June 2023)

IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA,
FREE STATE
DIVISION, BLOEMFONTEIN
Case No: 5374/2022
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
CIRCULATE TO MAGISTRATES:
YES/NO
In the matter between:
INDEPENDENT
SOUTH AFRICAN NATIONAL
CIVIC
ORGANISATION
Applicant
And
ZUKILE
LUYENGE
First
Respondent
MOLAHLELI
JACOB RANTSO
Second
Respondent
MANGALI
ELISA MAHLAKU
Third
Respondent
MATJHABENG
LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
Fourth
Respondent
SELLO
JOHANNES LEHASA
Fifth
Respondent
LEJWELEPUTSWA
DISTRICT MUNICIPALITY
Sixth
Respondent
ELECTORAL
COMMISSION OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Seventh
Respondent
JUDGMENT
CORAM:
NAIDOO J
HEARD
ON:
9 FEBRUARY
2023
DELIVERED
ON:
20 JUNE 2023
[1]
This is essentially a dispute between two groups within the applicant
- the group which is associated
with Bakoena Stephen Ramosie
(Ramosie), the deponent to the Founding Affidavit, and the group led
by the first respondent, who
was the president of the applicant. The
applicant seeks an order,
inter alia
, in the following terms:

1.
Declaring that from 29 December 2021 the First Respondent was
expelled as a member of the Applicant.
2.
Declaring that from 29 December 2021 the First Respondent was removed
as the president of
the applicant.
3.
Declaring that all the decisions made by the First Respondent
subsequent his expulsion as
president and member of the Applicant
relating to the affairs of the Applicant in the Free State are
unlawful, invalid and
void ab initio.
4.
Declaring the deployment and or election of the Second and Third
Respondents into the Fourth
Respondent’s Council as Councillors
representing the Applicant, unlawful, invalid and
void ab initio
5.
Declaring the deployment and or election of the fifth Respondent into
the Sixth Respondent’s
Council as Councillor representing the
Applicant, unlawful, invalid and void ab initio.
6.
Directing the Seventh Respondent to remove the name of the First
Respondent as a party leader
and contact person of the Applicant from
its registration lists and replace it with names and particulars of a
person to be provided
by the Applicant.
7.
Costs of suit only in the event of opposition of the application”
Only
the first and second respondents proceeded with their opposition of
the application, although accused 5 had also filed a Notice
to
Oppose, and only the first respondent filed an Answering Affidavit.
Adv M Somandi represented the applicant and Adv M Nonkonyana

represented the first and second respondents.
[2]
The applicant’s case is that the first respondent acted in
contravention of the applicant’s
Constitution, and in a manner
that amounted to gross misconduct. On 29 November 2021, the
applicant, via the office of its Deputy
Secretary General (DSG),
addressed a letter to the first respondent notifying him that its
National Management Committee (NMC)
had taken a decision to suspend
him with immediate effect, and listed the grounds for such
suspension. In essence it was alleged
that the NMC had resolved that
all NMC meetings were to be convened by the Chairperson and DSG and
were to be held in Pietermaritzburg.
It is alleged that contrary to
this resolution and the constitution of the applicant, the first
respondent unilaterally called
a meeting which was held in East
London. The first respondent was also notified of a disciplinary
hearing to be held against him
on 29 December 2021 at 9.00 in
Pietermaritzburg.
[3]
The applicant alleges that the first respondent ignored the
suspension letter and continued to
conduct himself as President of
the applicant. A further letter of suspension was addressed to the
first respondent on 20 December
2021, in which he was informed that a
further decision was taken on 18 December 2021 to suspend him for
acts of gross misconduct.
This letter expanded on the first
respondent’s conduct at the meeting in East London, alleging
that he “replaced the
structure of the applicant and rearranged
the office bearers thereof, contrary to the NMC resolutions and the
constitution, and
without a mandate from the NMC.
[4]
Further allegations of gross misconduct detailed in the letter were
that during the period 19
November to 1 December 2021, the first
respondent misrepresented the applicant to organs of state such as
the Independent Electoral
Commission (IEC) and municipalities
purporting to have been mandated by the NMC to so act. Such conduct
caused the NMC “
great harm, humiliation and embarrassment

and also brought the organisation into disrepute. He is further
alleged to have colluded with third parties to commit acts
of fraud
against the applicant by misrepresenting that such third parties were
representatives of the applicant, who were authorised
to act on its
behalf. The first respondent was again notified that the disciplinary
hearing against him was to take place on 29
December 2021 in
Pietermaritzburg at 9:00.
[5]
On 29 December 2021, the first respondent failed to attend the
disciplinary hearing and a resolution
was taken to expel the first
respondent as president of the organisation and as a member. A letter
to this effect and reiterating
what was previously set out as gross
misconduct was addressed to the first respondent on 29 December 2021
and transmitted to him
on 6 January 2021. The applicants asserts that
the first respondent failed to respond to any of the correspondence
addressed to
him, nor did he challenge its decisions in any way. He
also did not utilise the review/appeal procedure provided for in the
applicant’s
constitution.
[6]
There are also allegations that the first respondent withdrew the
applicant’s candidates
who were holding seats in local
municipalities and replaced them with his own candidates, without the
consent of or mandate from
the NMC, and in violation of the
applicant’s constitution. In addition, the applicant alleges
that the candidates who replaced
their own candidates are not members
of the applicant. The applicant’s complaint against the seventh
respondent, the IEC,
is that it continues to communicate only with
fourth and sixth respondents and refuses to reinstate the applicant’s
candidates
on its Proportional Representation (PR) list, such
candidates being the persons legitimately elected by the applicant’s
membership.
[7]
As indicated, the first respondent was the only respondent that filed
an Answering Affidavit,
although the second respondent opposed the
application and was represented at the hearing in court. The first
respondent’s
version is almost diametrically opposed to that of
the applicant, particularly with regard to his suspension and
expulsion as president
and member of the applicant, as well as his
conduct which the applicant complains of. The first respondent
alleges that he is authorised
by the applicant to oppose this
application and depose to all affidavits on its behalf in this
matter. I will deal further with
this later. He and the applicant are
in agreement regarding the structure of the applicant and the that
the constitution thereof
regulates,
inter alia
, the
relationship of its members and the manner in which proceedings are
to be conducted and also provides for the way in which
the various
structures that comprise the applicant should operate. The first
respondent also concedes that the NMC is the highest
decision-making
body of the applicant.
[8]
He raised a point
in limine
, in which he attacked Ramosie’s
authority to depose to the Founding Affidavit, alleging that he is
not the Secretary General
of the applicant and that he was in fact
expelled from the applicant from approximately March 2022. In
addition, he alleges that
the Deputy Secretary General (DSG), Ms
Yvonne Kekezwa, was also expelled from the applicant and is no longer
a member thereof.
The first respondent further denies that he was
notified of his suspension or expulsion from the applicant, alleging
that he was
never invited to a disciplinary hearing. As far as he is
concerned, he remains the president of the applicant and is entitled
to
act as he did, and that such actions were in accordance with the
constitution of the applicant.
[9]
In Reply, Ramosie persisted with his assertion that he was properly
authorised by the applicant
to proceed with this application and to
depose to the necessary affidavits in support thereof. He denied that
he, Mr Bhekupiwe
Lucas Ntshangase, Deputy President and now acting
president of the appellant, or the DSG were expelled and are no
longer members
of the organisation. He gave a detailed explanation of
how a suspension letter was sent to the DSG and thereafter a letter
withdrawing
such suspension was sent to her, alleging that the first
respondent was well aware that she was always the DSG and a
councillor
in the King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality. An expulsion
letter, purportedly under his hand was sent to the DSG on 29 November
2021. Ramosie denies that he wrote or sanctioned such a letter. I
will deal further with the contents of the Replying Affidavit
where
necessary.
[10]    As
indicated, the Applicant’s constitution regulates the manner in
which the applicant is to function
at various levels and in various
respects. The parties have alluded to the relevant provisions
applicable to this matter. I will
set out such of the provisions as
may be relevant to issues raised by the parties.
Section 9
deals with the NMC and provides that the NMC is the highest decision-
making body of the applicant, in between National Conferences
or
National General Councils and is vested with the power to decide on
policy issues and programmes.
Section 10
sets out the
composition of the NMC as follows:

The
President, deputy President, National Chairperson, Secretary General,
Deputy Secretary General, National Treasurer, and Organiser
and
fourteen (14) directly elected NMC members and four (4) co-opted
members of the NMC”
The
parties in this matter are in agreement that this numbers 43 members.
This section also stipulates that Provincial Chairperson
and
Secretary have full voting rights.
[11]
Section 10 stipulates that the NMC shall ordinarily meet at least
once every three months on a date to be
fixed by the National Working
Committee (NWC), comprised of National Office Bearers. Special
meetings of the NMC shall be called
by the Secretary General
following a resolution by NWC or upon written request of not less
than two thirds of the provinces.
Section 11
sets out the
powers and duties of the NMC.
Section 12
provides for the
establishment of the NWC and
section 13
stipulates the powers
and duties of the NWC.
Section 16
provides for the
Provincial Management Committee (PMC) whose powers and duties are
detailed in
section 17
. One of the functions of the NWC is
carry out the decisions and instructions of the NMC. The PMC clearly
functions in conjunction
with national structures of the applicant.
Sections 64 and 65
deal with the Disciplinary Code of Conduct
and Disciplinary Procedure, respectively. There are also clear
hierarchical steps and
procedures to be followed in various aspects,
including resolution of disputes and enforcement of discipline.
[12]
Included in the duties of the NMC are to “Enforce discipline in
terms of relevant clauses in this Constitution”
[section
11.1(e)] and to “Endeavour to mediate and settle any disputes
within and between structures” [section 11.1(g)].
I mention
also that “quorum” is defined in section 4 of the
applicant’s constitution to mean “50% +1 of
members
present as determined by the composition stipulated in each structure
and shall apply to all ISANCO meetings and conferences
at all levels”
[13]    In
this matter a picture emerges of a distasteful pursuit of position
and power, resulting in serious in-fighting
amongst national office
bearers, who are senior members of the applicant. It emerged from the
papers that there have been several
High Court applications made by
Ramosie and the first respondent in the name of the applicant, in the
Eastern Cape and in the Free
State, all with the aim of each party
attempting to oust the other, or other members of the applicant.
I shall deal first
with the point
in limine
raised by the
first respondent in his Answering Affidavit. He prefaces this point
by mentioning Free State High Court case No.
2830/2022, which is
similar to the present application, and in which Ramosie was the
deponent to the Founding Affidavit in the
name of the applicant.
[14]
The first respondent challenged, in a point
in limine
, the
authority of Ramosie, and it was this point that was argued and
adjudicated by the court. The court dismissed the application
on the
basis that Ramosie did not have authority to depose to the affidavit.
The latter conceded that due to an oversight on the
part of his legal
representatives, the wrong document was attached to the papers as the
resolution authorising him to depose to
the affidavit. It does not
appear to be in dispute that the merits of the matter were not
considered by the court in that application.
[15]    In
spite of this the first respondent declares that this application is
a duplicate of case no. 2830/2022.
He once again challenges the
authority of Ramosie in this application, on the basis that the NMC
meeting of 22 October 2022 was
not properly convened or constituted.
To this end, he alleges that only six (6) members were present at
that meeting and could
not have validly to authorise Ramosie to act
on behalf of the applicant. A perusal of the minutes of the meeting,
together with
the attendance register of 22 October 2022, indicates
that 28 members were present at that meeting, which would render that
meeting
quorate, according to the definition of ‘quorum’
that I mentioned earlier. The first respondent’s assertions
were either an oversight or was a deliberate attempt to subvert the
evidence on record. A further ground for challenging Ramosie’s

authority was that he is no longer a member of the applicant, having
been expelled some months before he deposed to the affidavit
in this
matter. I note that no evidence of this was put forward by the first
respondent, and in fact was countered by the Ramosie
who appended his
membership form to his Replying Affidavit.
[16]    I
therefore am satisfied that Ramosie was properly authorised to launch
the present application and depose
to the necessary papers. I note
that in Reply Ramosie indicated that the administration officer of
the applicant, one Mr Jikajika
telephoned each member of the NMC on 5
October 2022 to inform them of the meeting of 22 October 2022.
Whether this was proper notice
in terms of the applicant’s
constitution is not for this court to decide. With regard to the
serving of the letter of suspension
and the letter of expulsion on
the first respondent, the first respondent denies that such service
was effected on him. The applicant
has attached to its papers, copies
of the said letters but was unable to provide proof that such notices
were served on or reached
the attention of the first respondent. On
that basis, I am constrained to find that the letters of suspension
and expulsion were
properly served on the first respondent, and his
non-response to those letters must be seen in that context.
[17]    As
I indicated earlier, the applicant appears to be a divided
organisation, with its senior members locked
in battle with each
other, attempting to assert themselves over the “opposing”
group. A number of inconsistencies appear
in the evidence put up by
both Ramosie and the first respondent, where both purport to be
authorised to act in the name of the
applicant. I do not intend to
deal with each of these but to mention one or two instances, in order
to highlight that approaching
the court to referee the conflict
between these two groups is not an appropriate course of action.
[18]
Ramosie in the
Founding Affidavit attached minutes of an NMC meeting which was held
in Pietermaritzburg, (KwaZulu Natal) on 27 November
2021, at which
the NMC resolved to suspend the first respondent with immediate
effect. The minutes reflect that there were five
attendees at the
meeting. The attendance register for that meeting was later furnished
by the applicant in response to the first
respondent’s Request
in terms of Uniform Rule 35(12). The attendance register reflects
that Ramosie was present at that meeting.
The first respondent
attached to his Answering Affidavit minutes of what is described as
the “National Consultative Meeting”,
which was held on 27
November 2021 in East London (Eastern Cape). The minutes reflect that
one of the attendees is Ramosie in his
capacity as Secretary General.
It was at this meeting that it was resolved to hold a disciplinary
hearing in respect of the DSG,
Ms Kekezwa. This immediately raises
the question how Ramosie could have attended two meetings on the same
day in two different
provinces of South Africa. No explanation is
given for this by either Ramosie or the first respondent. The holding
of this meeting
was one of the grounds for the alleged suspension and
ultimate expulsion of the first respondent.
[19]
Ramosie appears to have been party to the decision to discipline the
DSG, and he had addressed a letter of
suspension to her on 19
November 2021. When confronted in Answer with a letter ostensibly
sent by him on 29 November 2021, Ramosie
said in Reply that a meeting
of the NMC was held on 24 November 2021 where the suspension of the
DSG was discussed. The committee
concluded that the suspension was
not sanctioned by the NMC and should be set aside. He, consequently,
addressed a letter to her
on 25 November 2021 withdrawing the
suspension. This is not understood as he appears to have been present
at a meeting two days
later when it was resolved to discipline the
DSG, and yet said nothing about the withdrawal of the DSG’s
suspension. Ramosie
distanced himself from the letter of expulsion
sent to the DSG on 29 November 2021, alleging that he neither knew
about it nor
sanctioned it. A perusal of the letter shows that
Ramosie did not in fact sign the letter as the signature is preceded
by the letters
“pp” (per procurationem), which is used
when signing a letter on someone’s behalf. If he had no
knowledge of
this letter, it begs the question who authorised and who
signed the letter.
[20]    I
turn now to the first respondent. As I indicated, he makes bald
statements, for example, the allegation
that Ramosie was expelled
from the appellant and was no longer a member, without any supporting
evidence. He attached an attendance
register to the minutes of 27
November 2021, which I mentioned above, purporting to reflect the
members of the applicant who attended
the “National
Consultative” meeting. I note that the attendance register is
headed thus:

Attendance
Register
National
Management Committee
Venue:
East London
Date:
27/11/2021
Time: 10h00AM”
[21]    I
note further that a “Pastor Ndabambi”, also appears to
have attended the “National Consultative”
meeting in East
London and closed the meeting in prayer. Sonwabile Ndabambi deposed
to a Confirmatory Affidavit, on 19 January
2023, in support of the
first respondent’s Answering Affidavit, in which he requested
that this “spurious” application
be dismissed. Yet three
months earlier, on 25 October 2022, ostensibly in his capacity as
Acting Secretary General, he addressed
a letter of expulsion from the
applicant to the first respondent, and two months earlier on 9
November 2022, he addressed letters
of expulsion from the applicant
to the third and fifth respondents. The meeting held in East London
raises many unanswered questions.
[22]
Velly Janeiro Mokgotho, the Provincial Chairperson of the Applicant
for Mpumalanga Province, deposed to a
Confirmatory Affidavit to the
Applicant’s Replying Affidavit, in which he tells a different
story. He alleges that he does
not know about a National Consultative
meeting as no provision is made for such a meeting in the applicant’s
constitution,
and he did not attend such a meeting in East London. He
noted that he is reflected as the national chairperson in that minute
and
denies that he holds that position. He further alleges that he
did attend a meeting in East London on that morning of 27 November

2021, but it was a public community meeting which the applicant had
arranged to thank the public for voting for the applicant during
the
Local Government elections. The applicant did this in all provinces
where the applicant won votes. The meeting did not last
long, as he
was able to travel to Pietermaritzburg to attend the NMC meeting
scheduled for the same day (at 15h00).
[23]    Mr
Mokgotho further denies that the attendance register attached to the
minutes of the “National Consultative”
meeting is the
attendance register in respect of that meeting. He alleges that it is
the register signed by members of the public
who attended the meeting
he referred to, hence such a large number of names on the list. Based
on his knowledge of the NMC members
elected at the National
Conference in November 2020, this attendance register did not reflect
NMC members, but was a once-off public
meeting register. He also
points out that a party president does not sign minutes of a meeting
(as the first respondent did in
this instance) and asserts that the
minutes are false and have been created or fabricated by the first
respondent.
[24]
From what I have said it appears that neither Ramosie nor the first
respondent have approached this court
with clean hands. There appears
to be all manner of manipulation, which creates a situation that this
court cannot decide the matter
on the papers. In addition, no
evidence has been placed before me to indicate that internal remedies
have been utilised, let alone
exhausted, in order to resolve the
disputes I have mentioned. I have set out the constitutional
provisions above from which it
is clear that part of the functions of
the NMC is to enforce discipline in terms of the constitution and to
mediate and settle
disputes between its structures (and by
implication, its members). The manner in which the parties have
conducted themselves in
this matter is unacceptable and regrettable,
as they have moved a distance away from the aims and objectives of
the organisation
they serve, as reflected in the preamble to its
constitution.
[25]
The court must sound a stern warning to the parties in this matter,
and other like-minded parties that they
should be slow to approach
the courts to resolve disputes which are adequately catered for in
their internal instruments, such
as the constitution of the
applicant. The relief that the applicant seeks, requires this court
to breach the boundaries of the
separation of powers. It is
impermissible and unjustified for the court to do so in this
instance, as there are internal remedies
that have not been invoked
to resolve the disputes between the parties. The court is being asked
to (impermissibly) interfere with
the functioning of other
organs/entities of state and make orders in respect of the manner in
which they should perform their functions.
[26]
With regard to costs, both parties purport to be acting in the name
of the applicant. The applicant asks
for costs only in the event of
the application being opposed, while the first respondent seeks
punitive costs against Ramosie for
acting without proper authority. I
have made my view clear regarding Ramosie’s
locus standi
,
and regarding the conduct of both parties. In any event, the evidence
placed before me is confusing, contradictory and insufficient
to
justify granting the relief sought. I am also of the view that it
would be unfair for costs to be paid out of the coffers of
the
applicant, as the conduct of Ramosie and the first respondent
indicates that neither of them were committed to furthering the
aims
and objectives of the applicant or complying with the constitutional
prescripts that bind them, but rather appear to have
been pursuing
their own ends.
[27]    In
the circumstances, I make the following orders:
27.1
The application is dismissed;
27.2
The point
in limine
raised by the first respondent is
dismissed;
27.3
Each party is to pay their own costs, Bakoena Stephen Ramosie being
directed to personally pay the costs
of the applicant, while the
first respondent, Zukile Luyenge being directed to personally pay the
costs of the opposition in this
matter.
S. NAIDOO, J
On
behalf of Applicant:
Adv.
M Somandi
Instructed
by:
Duba
Attorneys
Office
68, First Floor
Arcade
Walk Through
Middestad
Cor
Elizabeth and Burger Streets
Bloemfontein
(Ref:ISA/0001/THU)
On
behalf of Defendant:
Adv
M Nonkonyana
Instructed
by:
M
Wakaba Attorneys
Mthatha
c/o
Gcasamba Inc Attorneys
Office
2, 7 Brill Street
Westdene
Bloemfontein