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[2010] ZASCA 31
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MEC KwaZulu-Natal for Local Government, Housing and Traditional Affairs v Yengwa and Others (147/2009) [2010] ZASCA 31; 2010 (5) SA 494 (SCA) (26 March 2010)
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THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF
SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Case
No: 147/2009
In the matter
between:
THE MEMBER OF THE
KWAZULU-NATAL
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
FOR LOCAL
GOVERNMENT,
HOUSING AND TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS
Appellant
and
M S YENGWA
First Respondent
UMVOTI
MUNICIPALITY
Second Respondent
P M S NGUBANE
Third Respondent
S V ZONDI
Fourth Respondent
R MAHRAJ
Fifth Respondent
B H DLADLA
Sixth Respondent
H J DLUDLA
Seventh Respondent
M B MBATHA
Eighth Respondent
T M MCHUNU
Ninth Respondent
C N MKHIZE
Tenth Respondent
E N NGCOBO
Eleventh Respondent
S SHANGASE
Twelfth Respondent
E S SHANGE
Thirteenth Respondent
MINISTER FOR
PROVINCIAL AND LOCAL
GOVERNMENT
Fourteenth Respondent
Neutral
citation:
MEC
KwaZulu-Natal v Yengwa
(147/09)[2010]
ZASCA 31 (26 March 2010)
Coram:
MTHIYANE,
LEWIS, VAN HEERDEN, MHLANTLA JJA and SERITI AJA
Heard:
11
March 2010
Delivered: 26
March 2010
Summary:
Order
â High Court made order after substratum of the litigation had
fallen away â order having no practical effect on the parties
â
order set aside on appeal.
Costs
â Provincial MEC seeking costs order against councillors for voting
contrary to his directions â councillors protected from
costs when
performing local government functions â the rule in the
Swartbooi
case and s 28(1)(b) of Act 117 of 1998 applicable.
___________________________________________________________
ORDER
On appeal from:
KwaZulu-Natal High Court (Pietermaritzburg) (Van Heerden AJ sitting
as court of first instance)
The appeal succeeds partially and
the following order is made:
1 The order of the court a quo
declaring invalid r 38(1) of the Regulations Published in terms of
the
Local Government Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000
is set aside.
2 The appellant is ordered to pay
the costs of the second to thirteenth respondents.
___________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
MTHIYANE JA (Lewis, Van Heerden,
Mhlantla JJA and Seriti AJA concurring)
[1] This appeal is about costs,
in truth much ado about nothing, because if the appellant had brought
reason to bear on the matter
from the outset, this case would not
have come to this court. Section 21A of the Supreme Court Act 59 of
1959 provides that appeals
against cost orders alone should be
entertained only in exceptional circumstances. (See
Trustees for the Time Being of the Biowatch Trust v Registrar,
Genetic Resources & others
;
1
President, Ordinary
Court Martial & others v Freedom of Expression Institute &
others
.
2
)
But for prayer (a) of the order of the court a quo declaring r 38(1)
of the Regulations in terms of the
Local Government: Municipal
Systems Act 32 of 2000
invalid, we would have struck the appeal from
the roll.
[2] The litigation giving rise to
this appeal has its genesis in the second respondentâs council
chamber which had to consider an
application by the first respondent,
Mr M S Yengwa, for the post of Municipal Manager. The post was
advertised during February 2007.
It was stated as a requirement that
the prospective applicant should have âa recognised B degree in
Public Administration, or relevant
fieldsâ. This provision was in
the job description prescribed by r 38(1) of the Regulations.
[3] Although the first respondent
did not have the Bachelorâs degree mentioned in r 38(1) the
Municipal Council resolved to appoint
him, despite the opposition by
the appellant, the Member of the KwaZulu-Natal Executive Council for
Local Government, Housing and
Traditional Affairs, as they considered
Yengwa to be appropriately qualified to do the job.
[4] The third to the thirteenth
respondents, councillors of the second respondent, voted in favour of
the resolution appointing Mr
Yengwa despite the fact that the Town
Clerk, Mr Pienaar, had, prior to the vote being taken, drawn their
attention to the provision
of r 38(1) which required the Bachelorâs
degree qualification.
[5] On 22 May 2007 the appellant
brought an application in the KwaZulu-Natal High Court,
Pietermaritzburg on an urgent basis seeking
an order declaring void
and setting aside the resolution taken by the second respondent on 16
April 2007 to appoint Mr Yengwa as
its Municipal Manager. The
appellant also asked for an order that the third to thirteenth
respondents, namely those councillors of
the second respondent who
successfully voted in favour Mr Yengwaâs appointment, pay the costs
of the application. In the alternative
the appellant asked that the
second respondent pay such costs.
[6] On 25 May 2007, some three
days after the institution of the application, it was brought to the
appellantâs attention, through
the second respondentâs notice of
opposition, that Mr Yengwa, for personal reasons, could not and did
not accept his appointment
and that the necessity for the main relief
sought by appellant had accordingly fallen away. The notice also
advised that should the
application be withdrawn the second
respondent would not seek any costs associated with its opposition
but, if not, it would seek
an order for the appellant to pay the
costs thereof. The notice also advised that as a matter of law and
principle the second respondent
opposed the costs order sought
against the third to thirteenth respondents, its councillors.
[7] Because the second
respondent, in its opposition, placed in dispute the constitutional
validity of r 38(1), on which the appellant
relied for its relief,
the fourteenth respondent, the Minister for Provincial and Local
Government, was joined as a party. The respondents
also filed a
Notice of Intention to seek an order in terms of s 172(1) of the
Constitution declaring r 38(1) invalid and having it
set aside. The
fourteenth respondent elected to abide the decision of the court.
[8] Despite the fact that there
was no longer a lis between the parties, Mr Yengwa having indicated
that he was not taking up the
post, the appellant decided to press on
with its application and insisted on its costs being paid by the
third to thirteenth respondents,
alternatively by the second
respondent.
[9] The matter came before Van
Heerden AJ who, while accepting that the substratum of the
application had fallen away and that the
application had in essence
developed into a fight about costs, considered himself bound to
determine what the âliveâ issues were
âat the time the
application was launched, irrespective of whether someâ of those
issues were at that stage only of academic
interest.
[10] There is no doubt that in
order to decide the question of costs the learned judge would have
been entitled to have regard to
the merits, but he appears to have
gone further than that in the present matter: he ended up making an
order declaring r 38(1) invalid
and setting it aside, as if there was
still a live issue between the parties.
[11] In my view, once the
substratum of the application had fallen away it was no longer
necessary to make an order declaring r 38(1)
constitutionally
invalid. The weight of authority is totally against deciding matters
which have no practical effect on the parties.
As a matter of
judicial policy constitutional issues are generally to be considered
only if and when it is necessary to do so (
S
v Dlamini
;
S
v Dladla & others
;
S v Joubert
;
S v Schietekat
;
3
Uthukela District
Municipality & others v President of the RSA & others
;
4
Independent Electoral
Commission v Langeberg Municipality
.
5
)
Mr Pillemer for the respondents did submit â without any degree of
conviction, it must be said â that the retention of the order
might
be of assistance to the second respondent and other similar councils,
who would know where they stand in relation to r 38(1),
if the order
were to remain. Mr Stewart for the appellant joined issue, contending
that there was no uncertainty in the regulation.
In any event it is
not the function of this court to give advice but rather to hand down
decisions on matters which have a practical
effect on the parties.
The doors of counsel and attorneys are open to those who seek advice
and other similar services. In conclusion
I consider that the order
of invalidity should not have been made and falls to be set aside.
[12] I turn to the question of
costs. In the court a quo the appellantâs application was dismissed
with costs. Although the appellant
had throughout persisted in asking
that the councillors should pay the costs of suit, on appeal he
indicated that a costs order was
no longer sought against them
personally. But he still asked that each party pay its own costs of
the application. Subsequently,
however, during the hearing of the
appeal Mr Stewart for the appellant received instructions to concede
that the councillors were
entitled to their costs but in respect of
the second respondent, he submitted that both the appellant and the
second respondent should
each bear their own costs.
[13] In my view the appellantâs
earlier insistence that the councillors should pay the costs was
futile and ill-conceived in the
light of the decision in
Swartbooi
& others v Brink & others
6
which laid down that councillors cannot be held personally liable for
costs incurred in the performance of their functions as councillors.
The appellant would also have been aware of the protection they enjoy
under
s 28(1)(b)
of the
Local Government: Municipal Structures Act
117 of 1998
from personal liability for the costs of legal
proceedings. It is difficult to understand why the appellant pressed
on and insisted
on payment of costs in the light of the
abovementioned authority on the point. He surely would have had
access to legal advice in
the matter. I do not see any reason why the
appellant should not be ordered to pay the costs of the councillors
even though the appeal
is decided substantially in his favour.
[14] As to the second respondent
and the appellant one is confronted with a head-to-head contest
between two state entities; the costs
payable by both are drawn from
the public purse. In such a case the court has cautioned that organs
of state must âavoid legal
proceedings against one anotherâ and
must make every reasonable effort to resolve inter governmental
disputes before having recourse
to the courts. (See the
Uthukela
case supra.
7
)
For that reason it seems that a fair decision would be that each
party pay its own costs. In my view, however, such an order would
not
be appropriate. There is a need for the court to show its disapproval
of the conduct of the appellant in brazenly embarking on
a futile
mission, when the lis between him and the second respondent had
fallen away. This information was conveyed to him three
days after
the application had been launched. The appellantâs obduracy led to
considerable costs being incurred. There is no reason
why this court
should not depart from the normal rule, and by way of marking its
disapproval of the appellantâs conduct, make an
order that he
should pay the second respondentâs costs. Accordingly, that order
will issue.
[15] In the result the appeal
succeeds partially and the following order is made:
1 The order of the court a quo
declaring invalid r 38(1) of the Regulations Published in terms of
the
Local Government Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000
is set aside.
2 The appellant is ordered to pay
the costs of the second to thirteenth respondents.
___________________
K K
Mthiyane
Judge of
Appeal
APPEARANCES
APPELLANT: A M Stewart SC (with
him T S I Mthembu)
Instructed by PKX Attorneys,
Pietermaritzburg
McIntyre & Van der Post,
Bloemfontein
SECOND TO THIRTEENTH
RESPONDENTS: M Pillemer SC
Instructed by Kathy James
Attorneys, Mayville
Honey Attorneys, Bloemfontein
FOURTEENTH RESPONDENT:
Instructed by State Attorney,
KwaZulu-Natal
State Attorney, Bloemfontein
1
2009
(6) SA 232
(CC);
[2009] ZACC 14
para 11.
2
[1999] ZACC 10
;
1999 (4) SA 682
(CC) para 13.
3
[1999] ZACC 8
;
1999 (4) SA 623
(CC) para 27.
4
[2002] ZACC 11
;
2003 (1) SA 678
(CC) paras 11-17.
5
[2001] ZACC 23
;
2001 (3) SA 925
(CC) paras 9-14.
6
2006 (1) SA 203
(CC) paras 17-23.
7
Para 13.