Ex Parte Nkala and Others (2018/44060) [2018] ZAGPJHC 657 (13 December 2018)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Class Actions — Settlement Approval — Application for approval of a Settlement Agreement following a certified class action for silicosis and tuberculosis claims against mining companies — Applicants, comprising surviving class representatives and settling mining companies, sought certification of four new classes for settlement purposes — Court satisfied with the proposed two-stage procedure for optimal protection of class members' rights — Order granted for the certification of new classes and issuance of a rule nisi for further processes.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns an ex parte application in the Gauteng Local Division, Johannesburg, brought at the first stage of an application for judicial approval of a proposed class action settlement agreement. The matter arises as a sequel to the earlier class certification decision in Nkala and Others v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others (the 2016 certification judgment), in which the court certified class actions relating to occupational lung diseases contracted by gold mineworkers.


The applicants comprised, on the one hand, the surviving class representatives from the previously certified class action (the first to forty-eighth applicants) and, on the other hand, a group of prospective defendant mining companies that had negotiated and concluded a settlement with those representatives (the forty-ninth to sixty-seventh applicants). The settling mining companies had also incorporated a special purpose vehicle (described as the Agent) to represent them for certain purposes connected to the settlement and the associated trust mechanism.


The procedural posture was explicitly staged. The applicants sought, at stage one, the certification of new “Settlement Classes” and the issue of a rule nisi to facilitate notice to class members and interested parties, and to provide for a later return day (stage two) at which the court would consider, after participation and submissions, whether to grant final approval of the settlement agreement and make it an order of court. The judgment addressed only this preliminary procedural and class-definition stage, not the substantive fairness approval of the settlement.


The general subject-matter concerns the proposed resolution, through a settlement structure including a dedicated trust, of claims arising from silicosis and pulmonary tuberculosis allegedly contracted by current and former underground gold mineworkers who performed qualifying risk work on specified mines after 12 March 1965, as well as claims by their dependants where such mineworkers had died.


2. Material Facts


In May 2016, this court certified a class action against a number of mining companies following consolidated applications, and it certified two broad classes (a silicosis class and a pulmonary tuberculosis class) together with identified class representatives and three teams of attorneys as class legal representatives. The 2016 certification order contemplated that any settlement reached would require approval by the court before it could take effect.


After the certification judgment, a number of the certified class representatives died. The present application was accordingly brought by the 48 surviving class representatives, together with 19 mining companies that had reached settlement with them. The judgment identified that there were also non-settling mining companies (eight prospective defendants) that were not parties to the settlement agreement.


Following protracted negotiations, the class representatives and the settling mining companies concluded a Settlement Agreement on 3 May 2018. The settlement contemplated that it would be binding on class members who do not opt out, and that once the opt-out period expired and the settlement became operative, the previously certified class action would terminate as against the settling mining companies. The settlement also provided for the establishment of the Tshiamiso Trust, tasked with identifying and locating beneficiaries, and with assessing, processing, and paying claims by eligible mineworkers and dependants of deceased mineworkers in respect of silicosis and pulmonary tuberculosis.


A central factual premise accepted for purposes of the stage-one application was that there was no established precedent or procedure in South Africa for obtaining judicial approval of settlement agreements intended to bind absent class members. The applicants therefore proposed a two-stage procedure, involving the issue of a rule nisi at stage one to ensure prior notice of the proposed settlement and participation mechanisms, followed by an approval hearing at stage two.


The court’s order, made at this stage, incorporated a detailed draft order agreed by all applicants. It defined four settlement classes (two relating to silicosis and dependants; two relating to tuberculosis and dependants), maintained the surviving class representatives as representatives for the settlement classes, confirmed the class lawyers, directed extensive publication and notice measures, and set procedural steps for participation by class members and other interested parties ahead of the return day.


3. Legal Issues


The primary legal question at this stage was procedural and structural: whether the court should, in the absence of a settled domestic procedural template for class settlement approval, grant stage-one relief comprising the certification of settlement-specific classes and the issue of a rule nisi that would regulate notice and participation, and pave the way for a later hearing on whether the Settlement Agreement should be approved and made an order of court.


The dispute at this stage was predominantly concerned with the application of legal procedure to the management of a class settlement, rather than the determination of contested facts about liability or quantum. It required the court to make an evaluative procedural judgment about whether the proposed staged approach appropriately protected the interests of class members, particularly absent class members whose rights could be affected if the settlement were approved.


The court was not called upon, at this stage, to decide the final substantive question of whether the settlement was reasonable, fair, and adequate; it was asked to decide whether to implement a process (through certification of settlement classes and a rule nisi) that would enable that question to be properly ventilated on the return day.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court situated the application as a continuation of the 2016 certification proceedings and emphasised that the earlier certification order required that any settlement would only be effective if approved by the court. In the present matter, the applicants therefore approached the court for approval in a manner designed to ensure that class members would receive notice and an opportunity to participate before any binding effect could be imposed.


A key part of the court’s reasoning addressed the procedural mechanism proposed. The court accepted that there was not yet an established South African procedure for class settlement approval that binds absent class members, and it recorded the applicants’ proposal of a two-stage process that mirrors approaches used in other jurisdictions. For purposes of the present decision, the court regarded it as sufficient that the proposed approach was consistent with the rule nisi procedure known to South African practice.


In explaining the nature and utility of a rule nisi, the court referred to SAFCOR Forwarding (Johannesburg) (Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission and quoted Corbett JA’s description of the rule nisi as a useful procedure, commonly used where interim relief is sought and where a prima facie case is shown. The court treated the rule nisi mechanism in this matter as serving a protective and participatory function: it would ensure that proposed class members and interested parties would have an opportunity to become acquainted with the settlement’s terms, to consider their rights (including opting out), and to raise objections before the court determined whether to approve the settlement.


The court also accepted the structure of the stage-one relief sought, namely that it should define and certify settlement classes and regulate notice, participation, and timing for the later approval hearing. Having considered the application and heard counsel for the applicants, the court stated that it was satisfied, for present purposes, that the relief sought at this stage should be granted. The judgment therefore implemented the agreed draft order as an order of court, leaving the substantive approval of the settlement to be determined at stage two on the return day.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court granted the stage-one relief and made an order in terms of the draft order agreed by all applicants. The order declared the existence of four Settlement Classes, granted leave to the first to forty-eighth applicants to act as class representatives of those classes, and certified the same three teams of attorneys (Richard Spoor Inc, Abrahams Kiewitz Inc, and the Legal Resources Centre) as the joint legal representatives for the settlement classes.


The court issued a rule nisi calling on members of the Settlement Classes and interested parties to show cause on 29 to 31 May 2019 why a final order should not be granted making the Settlement Agreement (including its addenda) an order of court, declaring it binding on class members who do not opt out, and terminating the previously certified class actions against the settling mining companies once the settlement becomes operative.


The order also established a detailed regime for notice and publication, including notice-board publications, newspaper advertisements, radio announcements, website publication, and mechanisms for obtaining the full settlement text, together with deadlines for notices of intention to participate, affidavits, and written argument. It further directed service of the application and rule nisi order on specified parties, including respondents in the 2016 Nkala matter who were not party to the settlement.


As to costs, the order contemplated that costs of publication in the press and over radio would be borne by the Founders (as defined in the order), and it included a provision that parties opposing the relief on the return day (or such of them as the court may determine) could be directed to pay costs on the return day. The judgment itself did not finally determine contested costs liability at this preliminary stage beyond making the agreed procedural order.


Cases Cited


Nkala and Others v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others (2012/48226, 2012/31324, 2012/31326, 2012/31327, 2012/48226, 2013/08108) [2016] ZAGPJHC 97; [2016] 3 All SA 233 (GJ); 2016 (7) BCLR 881 (GJ); 2016 (5) SA 240 (GJ) (13 May 2016).


SAFCOR Forwarding (Johannesburg) (Pty) Ltd v National Transport Commission 1982 (3) SA 654 (A).


Blom and Others v Anglo American South Africa Ltd (referred to in the definition of the earlier silicosis class; no law report citation provided in the judgment text).


Legislation Cited


No legislation was expressly cited in the judgment text provided.


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were expressly cited in the judgment text provided. The court referred to the rule nisi procedure as a recognised procedural mechanism in South African practice.


Held


The court held, at the first stage of the settlement approval process, that it was appropriate to grant procedural relief establishing a framework for notice and participation in relation to a proposed class settlement. It accordingly declared four settlement classes for silicosis-related and tuberculosis-related claimants (and their dependants), confirmed the surviving class representatives and class lawyers for purposes of settlement, and issued a rule nisi regulating the steps leading to a return-day hearing at which the court would decide whether to approve the settlement agreement and make it an order of court.


The court further held that, should the settlement not be approved on the return day or should it fail due to a suspensive condition not being met, the certification of the settlement classes would terminate with immediate effect, reflecting the provisional nature of the stage-one certification.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Court approval is required before a settlement agreement negotiated in the context of a certified class action may take force and effect in a manner that binds class members, where the certification order so provides.


In the absence of an established domestic precedent for binding class settlement approval procedures, a two-stage approach that provides for prior notice to class members and a subsequent approval hearing may be adopted, provided it is consistent with South African procedural mechanisms.


The rule nisi procedure may be used to structure an interim process that safeguards the interests of affected persons by ensuring notice, an opportunity to consider the settlement’s terms, and an opportunity to participate and raise objections before the court makes a final approval decision.

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[2018] ZAGPJHC 657
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Ex Parte Nkala and Others (2018/44060) [2018] ZAGPJHC 657 (13 December 2018)

REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Case
Number: 2018/44060
In the
ex parte
application of:
BONGANI
NKALA
1
st
Applicant
SIPORONO
PHAHLAM
2
nd
Applicant
THEMBEKILE
MNAHENI
3
rd
Applicant
MATONA
MABEA
4
th
Applicant
ALLOYS
MNCEDI
MSUTHU
5
th
Applicant
MASIKO
SOMI
6
th
Applicant
MTHOBELI
GANGATHA
7
th
Applicant
LANDILE
QEBULA
8
th
Applicant
JOSEPH
LEBONE
9
th
Applicant
ZAMA
GANGI
10
th
Applicant
MALUNGISA
THOLE
11
th
Applicant
MONOKOA
THOMAS
LEPOTA
12
th
Applicant
MZAWUBALEKWA
DIYA
13
th
Applicant
MSEKELI
MBUZIWENI
14
th
Applicant
NANABEZI
MGODUSWA
15
th
Applicant
THULENKHO
KUSWANA
16
th
Applicant
MALEBURU
REGINA
LEBITSA
17
th
Applicant
MATAASO
MABLE
MAKONE
18
th
Applicant
MATSEKELO
CISILIA
MASUPHA
19
th
Applicant
MATIISETSO
MASEIPATI JESENTA
NONG
20
th
Applicant
BANGUMZI
BALAKISI
21
st
Applicant
WATU
DALA
22
nd
Applicant
DYAMARA
JIBHANA
23
rd
Applicant
MANTSO
MOKOENA
24
th
Applicant
MBIKANYE
SAWULE
25
th
Applicant
ZONISELE
NKOMPELA
26
th
Applicant
ISHMAEL
MOTLEKE
27
th
Applicant
THABO
NTSALA
28
th
Applicant
ZIMOSHILE
BOZO
29
th
Applicant
ZAMUKULUNGISA
DYANTYI
30
th
Applicant
AGRIPPA
DLISANI
31
st
Applicant
MNCEDISI
DLISANE
32
nd
Applicant
LUVOKO
MADINDALA
33
rd
Applicant
MTUTUZELL
DAVID
MTSHANGE
34
th
Applicant
MONDE
MXESIBE
35
th
Applicant
MZWANELE
BUNYONYO
36
th
Applicant
MZIKAYISE
NQOSE
37
th
Applicant
XOLISILE
BUTHU
38
th
Applicant
ZOLISA
JEJANA
39
th
Applicant
MALEPA
PUSO
40
th
Applicant
ELIA
MOTLALEPULA
PHETANE
41
st
Applicant
MOTLALEPULA
MOKOENA
42
nd
Applicant
SEKHOBE
LETSIE
43
rd
Applicant
TSHEHLA
SOLOMON
HLALELE
44
th
Applicant
MONA
ASHTON
MELAO
45
th
Applicant
NKOSI
SELATA
SELATA
46
th
Applicant
EDGAR
NTJANA
NTJANA
47
th
Applicant
EZEKIEL
MUTSANA
MASUPHA
48
th
Applicant
HARMONY GOLD MINING COMPANY LIMITED
(Registration
number
M1950/038232/06)
49
th
Applicant
RANDFONTEIN ESTATES LIMITED
(Registration
number
1889/00251/06)
50
st
Applicant
AVGOLD LIMITED
(Registration
number
1990/007025/06)
51
st
Applicant
UNISEL GOLD MINES LIMITED
(Registration
number
1972/010604/06)
52
nd
Applicant
LORAINE GOLD MINES LIMITED
(Registration
number
1950/039138/06)
53
rd
Applicant
ANGLOGOLD ASHANTI LIMITED
(Registration
number
1944/01734/06)
54
th
Applicant
FREE STATE CONSOLIDATED GOLD MINES
(OPERATIONS) LIMITED
(Registration
number
1937/009266/06)
55
th
Applicant
GOLD FIELDS LIMITED
(Registration
number
1968/004880/06)
56
th
Applicant
GOLD FIELDS OPERATIONS LIMITED
(Registration
number
1959/0032096/06)
57
th
Applicant
NEWSHELF 899 (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration
number
2007/019941/07)
58
th
Applicant
BEATRIX MINES (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration
number
1977/002138/07)
59
st
Applicant
FARWORKS/682 (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration
number
M1964/004462/07)
60
nd
Applicant
DRIEFONTEIN CONSOLIDATED
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
(Registration
number
1993/002956/07)
61
st
Applicant
SIBANYE GOLD LIMITED
(Registration
number
M2002/031431/06)
62
nd
Applicant
ANGLO AMERICAN SOUTH AFRICA LIMITED
(Registration
number
1917/005309/06)
63
rd
Applicant
AFRICAN RAINBOW MINERALS
(Registration
number
1933/004580/06)
64
th
Applicant
FREEGOLD (HARMONY) (PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
(Registration
number
2001/029602/07)
65
th
Applicant
GFL MINING SERVICES LIMITED
(Registration
number
1997/019961/06
66
th
Applicant
GFI JOINT VENTURE HOLDINGS
(PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED
(Registration
number
1998/023354/07
67
th
Applicant
K2018259017 (SOUTH AFRICA)
(PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
(Registration
number
2018/259017/07
68
th
Applicant
IN RE: Application to certify
settlement classes and approve a settlement agreement
JUDGMENT
MOJAPELO
DJP
:
[1]
This
is a sequel to the judgment granted by this Court on 13 May 2016 in
Nkala
and Others v Harmony Gold Mining Companies Ltd and Others
[1]
(
Nkala
2016
).
A brief background is apposite.
Background
[2]
In
that case this court certified a class action against a number of
mining companies following a number of applications which were

consolidated under case number 2012/48226.
[3]
In
the certification judgment the Court certified two classes on whose
behalf actions were to be instituted by the class representatives

against the named mining companies. The class representatives were
also certified. The certified classes may be broadly described
as the
silicosis class and the tuberculosis class.
[4]
The
silicosis class comprised of current and former underground
mineworkers who have contracted silicosis, and the dependants of

underground mineworkers who died of silicosis (whether or not
accompanied by any other disease –
(a)
Where
such mineworkers work or have worked on one or more of the gold mines
listed on the attached to the court order as Annexure
A after 12
March 1965;
(b)
Whose
claims are not among the claims which, by agreement, are to be
determined by arbitration in the matter of
Blom
and Others v Anglo American South Africa Ltd
,
and who are not named plaintiffs in the action instituted in the
United Kingdom against Anglo American South Africa Ltd under
case
numbers HQ11X03245, HQ11X03246, HQ12XX02667 and HQ12X05544;
(c)
Who
are not named plaintiffs in the action instituted in the United
Kingdom against Anglo American South Africa Limited under case

numbers HQ11X03245, HQ11X03246, HQ12XX02667 and HQ12X05544 (the
silicosis class).
[5]
The
tuberculosis class comprised of current and former underground
mineworkers who contracted pulmonary tuberculosis, and the dependants

of diseased underground mineworkers who died of pulmonary
tuberculosis (but excluding silico-tuberculosis), where such
mineworkers
work or have worked for at least two years on one or more
of the gold mines listed in Annexure “A” to that court
order
after 12 March 1965 (the pulmonary tuberculosis class).
[6]
In
the same judgment (
Nkala
2016)
three teams of legal representatives namely, Richard Spoor Inc
Attorneys, Abrahams Kiewitz Inc Attorneys and the Legal Resources

Centre, were certified as the class legal representatives.
[7]
The
following class representatives have since passed away and are
therefore not cited as representatives of the settlement classes:
Mr
Maphatsoe Kompi, Mr Mokholofu Boxwell, Mr Zwelendaba Mgidi, Mr
Michael Litabe, Mr Liphapang Lebina, Mr Zaneyeza Ntloni, Mr Tekeza

Joseph Mdukisa, Mr Tohlang Paolosi Mako, Mr Mahola Emmanuel Selibo,
Mr Malefetsane Mohlakasi, Mr Mthethelele Nelson Satu, Mr Myekelwa

Mkenyane, Mr Patrick Sitwayi, Mr Zwelakhe Dala, Mr Vuyani Dwadube, Mr
Matela Hlabathe, Mr Siqhamo Richard Hoyi and Mr Buzile Nyakaza.
[8]
The
1
st
to 48
th
applicants in the present application are surviving class
representatives in the class action certified on 13 May 2016.
[9]
The
49
th
to 67
th
applicants before this court were prospective defendants who have
reached settlement with the class representatives, which settlement

is referred to further hereunder. They are referred to as the
settling mining companies.
Settlement
Agreement
[10]
Following
protracted negotiations, a Settlement Agreement was concluded on 03
May 2018 between the settling mining companies and
the class
representatives.
[11]
There
are eight prospective defendants in the certification class action
which are not parties to the Settlement Agreement. They
are: DRDGold
Limited, East Rand Proprietary Mines Limited, Randgold and
Exploration Company Limited, Evander Gold Mining Company
Limited,
Blyvooruitzicht Gold Mining Company Limited, Doornfontein Gold Mining
Company Limited, Simmer and Jack Mines Limited and
African Rainbow
Minerals Gold Limited (the non-settling mining companies).
[12]
The
settling mining companies (49
th
– 67
th
applicants) have incorporated and registered a company as a special
purpose vehicle to represent all of them in relation to certain

matters in the Settlement Agreement and its accompanied Tshiamiso
Trust. The company is referred to as the Agent.
[13]
It
is proposed that the Settlement Agreement should be binding on all
class members who do not opt out of it and that once the opting
out
period shall have expired, the class action certified in
Nkala
2016
shall terminate as against the settling mining companies.
[14]
The
Settlement Agreement makes provision for the establishment of the
Tshiamiso Trust (“the Trust”) in terms of which
the
claims of eligible mineworkers and the dependants of deceased
mineworkers arising from silicosis and pulmonary tuberculosis
will be
paid. The Trust will identify and locate those beneficiaries and will
assess, process and pay their claims.
[15]
In
terms of the certification judgment in
Nkala
2016
,
any Settlement Agreement reached between the class representatives
and the mining companies shall only be of force and take effect
if
approved by this Court.
[2]
Present
Application
[16]
The
purpose of the present application is to seek the approval of this
Court for the Settlement Agreement. The application is brought
in two
stages. At the first stage, it is proposed that four new classes be
certified for the purposes of settlement and that a
rule
nisi
be issued. Once the rule
nisi
has been issued, the second stage will occur on the return day, and
will involve full ventilation of the question whether the Settlement

Agreement should be approved by the Court.
[17]
There
is as yet no established precedent or procedure in South Africa for
obtaining approval of settlement agreements that are to
bind class
members. The two-stage procedure proposed in this application
comprises (a) stage one, which is prior notice of the
proposed
settlement to the class; and (b) stage two, being an approval
hearing. The proposed procedure is said to follow procedures
employed
in other jurisdictions (including Australia, Canada and the United
States of America). For present purposes, it suffices
that it is
consistent with the well-known rule
nisi
procedure
in South Africa.
[18]
Corbett
JA described the rule
nisi
procedure
in
SAFCOR
Forwarding (Johannesburg) Pty Ltd v National Transport Commission
1982 (3) SA 654
(A) at 674H – 675A as follows:

The
procedure of a rule
nisi
is
usually resorted to in matters of urgency and where the applicant
seeks interim relief in order adequately to protect his immediate

interests. It is a useful procedure and one to be encouraged rather
than disparaged in circumstances where the applicant can show,
prima
facie
, that his rights have been
infringed and that he will suffer real loss or disadvantage if he is
compelled to rely solely on the
normal procedures for bringing
disputes to Court by way of notice of motion or summons…

[19]
The
two-stage procedure seeks to afford optimal protection to the
proposed class members by ensuring that they have the opportunity
to
familiarise themselves with the terms of the settlement agreement, to
raise any objections they may have and to consider their
rights in
relation to the settlement.
[20]
The
present application is brought
ex
parte
jointly by the 48 surviving class representatives of the certified
classes, the nineteen settling mining companies and the Agent.
[21]
This
is the first stage of the approval application in which the
applicants seek the certification of four new classes for the
purposes of settlement; and the issuing of a rule
nisi
to
deal with further processes that should unfold after the first stage.
[22]
Having
considered the application and having heard counsel on behalf of all
the applicants, I am, for present purposes, satisfied
that the relief
sought at this stage should be granted.
[23]
The
following order is made:
The Draft Order attached hereto which
was agreed to by all the applicants, and which I have today
initialled and dated, together
with the Annexures referred to
therein, is hereby made an order of this Court.
________________________
P. M. MOJAPELO
DEPUTY JUDGE PRESIDENT
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Date of Hearing: 13
December 2018
Date of Judgment:
13 December 2018
Counsel for the Applicants:
Adv A. Cockrell SC
Adv A. Dodson SC
Adv J. Bleazard
Adv C. Tabata
Adv Y. Ntloko
Instructed by:
Richard Spoor Inc Attorneys
1
st
– 48
th
Applicants’ Attorneys
Abrahams Kiewitz Inc Attorneys
1
st
– 48
th
Attorneys
Legal Resources Centre
1
st
– 48
th
Applicants’ Attorneys
Bowman Gilfillan Inc Attorneys
49
th
– 70
th
Applicants
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO.: 44060/18
JOHANNESBURG, 13 December 2018
BEFORE
THE HONOURABLE DEPUTY JUDGE PRESIDENT MOJAPELO
Ex
Parte:
BONGANI
NKALA AND 67
OTHERS
Applicants
IN
RE:  Application to certify settlement classes and approve a
settlement agreement
COURT
ORDER
HAVING
read the papers and heard counsel in the above matter, the following
order is made:
1 It is declared that the following
groups of persons constitute four separate classes (collectively “
the
Settlement Classes
”):

Class
1
All persons:
i.
who as at the Effective Date are
undertaking, or prior to the Effective Date have undertaken, Risk
Work;
ii.
who on or before the Effective Date have
or will have contracted Silicosis or will have been exposed to silica
dust;
iii.
who undertake or have undertaken Risk Work
on one or more of the Qualifying Mines after 12 March 1965; and
iv.
who are not listed in Schedule D of the
Trust Deed.
Class 2
The dependants of any of
the persons contemplated in class 1 who (i.e such persons) are
deceased as at the Effective Date.
Class 3
All persons:
i.
who as at the Effective Date are
undertaking, or prior to the Effective Date have undertaken, Risk
Work;
ii.
who on, before or after the Effective Date
have or will have contracted Tuberculosis; and
iii.
who undertake or have undertaken Risk Work
on one or more of the Qualifying Mines after 12 March 1965.
Class 4
The dependants of any of
the persons contemplated in class 3 who (i.e such persons) are
deceased as at the Effective Date.”
2
The first to
forty-eighth applicants are granted leave to act as the class
representatives of the Settlement Classes.
3
Richard Spoor Inc, Abrahams Kiewitz Inc and the Legal
Resources Centre are certified as the joint legal representatives of
the Settlement
Classes for the further conduct of the class actions
(“
the Class Lawyers
”).
4
A rule nisi is
issued calling on the members of the Settlement Classes and any
interested parties to show cause on
29
to 31 May 2019
why a final order should not be made in the following terms:
4.1
The settlement agreement attached to this order marked “
A
”,
as amended by both the addendum to the settlement agreement attached
to this order marked “
B”
(“
the Addendum
”)
and the second addendum to the settlement agreement attached to this
order marked “
B1
” (“
the Second Addendum

and the Settlement Agreement, the Addendum and the Second Addendum
together constitute “
the Settlement Agreement
”),
is made an order of court;
4.2
It is declared that the Settlement Agreement is binding on all
members of the Settlement Classes
save
for those persons who give written notice that they wish to be
excluded from the Settlement Classes, on or before the date

stipulated in the opt-out notice described in paragraph 12.2.3 below
(“
the
Settling Claimants
”);
4.3
The class actions
that were certified by this Court in the matter of
Nkala
and Others v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others
[2016]
ZAGPJHC 97;
[2016] 3 All SA 233
(GJ);
2016 (7) BCLR 881
(GJ);
2016
(5) SA 240
(GJ) (13 May 2016) (“
Nkala
”)
under
consolidated
case number 48226/12 are terminated as against the 49
th
to 67
th
applicants (“
the
Settling Companies
”)
if and when the Settlement Agreement becomes operative under clause
2.9 of the Settlement Agreement.
4.4
The parties opposing the grant of the relief on the return day (or
such of them as this Court may determine) are directed to
pay the
costs of the application or such costs as this Court may determine,
jointly and severally.
5
Members of the
Settlement Classes and other interested parties may participate in
the hearing on the return day, and may address
the Court on the
reasonableness, fairness and adequacy of the Settlement Agreement, on
the basis set out in paragraph 9 below.
6
T
he
applicants must take the following steps to give notice to members of
the Settlement Classes and interested parties of the
steps that must be taken to participate in the hearing on the return
day:
6.1
The Class Lawyers must forthwith:
6.1.1 publish a class notice in the
form of Schedule 7 of the Addendum (“
the settlement hearing
notice
”) on a prominent notice board at each of the offices
of the Class Lawyers for a period of not less than 30 days;
6.1.2 request the Employment Bureau of
Africa in Southern Africa to display the notice on a prominent notice
board at each of its
offices for a period of not less than 30 days;
6.1.3 request Legal Aid South Africa
to display the notice on a prominent notice board at each Justice
Centre and public office
of Legal Aid South Africa for a period of
not less than 30 days;
6.1.4 request the National Union of
Mineworkers, the Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union,
the National Union of Metalworkers
of South Africa, United
Association of South Africa and Solidarity to display the notice on a
prominent notice board at each of
their regional offices for a period
of not less than 30 days;
6.1.5 deliver a copy of the notice to
each advice office, paralegal office and community-based organisation
with which the Class
Lawyers are familiar and which are likely, in
the opinion of the Class Lawyers, to be approached by members of the
classes, and
request them to display the notice on a prominent notice
board at their offices for a period of not less than 30 days;
6.1.6 post the notice on a website
managed by the Class Lawyers for a period of not less than 30 days;
and
6.1.7 take the steps reasonably within
the power of the Class Lawyers to ensure compliance by the agencies
referred to in paragraphs
6.1.2 to 6.1.5 with the requests referred
to in those paragraphs.
6.2
The Settling Companies that constitute the founders in terms of the
Trust Deed attached to the Settlement Agreement (“
the
Founders”
) must take steps reasonably possible to publish
the settlement hearing notice –
6.2.1 as an advertisement in the
newspapers listed in Schedule 8 of the Addendum and in the languages
there stipulated. The notice
must be published in each such newspaper
once per week for a period of four weeks;
6.2.2 as a radio announcement
broadcast on each of the radio stations listed in Schedule 9 of the
Addendum (in the languages there
stipulated) and based on the form
attached and marked “
C
”.  Such broadcasts are
to be made twice daily on alternate days for a period of four weeks.
6.3
The Settling Companies must publish the settlement hearing notice:
6.3.1 on the homepage of each of the
Settling Companies’ websites (if any) for a period of not less
than 30 days;
6.3.2 on a prominent notice board for
mineworkers at each of the mines, listed on the settlement hearing
notice, that they own,
operate or control, for a period of not less
than 30 days; and
6.3.3 where they do not own, operate
or control a mine listed in the settlement hearing notice, by
requesting the companies that
own, operate or control such mines to
display the notice on a prominent notice board for mineworkers at
each mine, for a period
of not less than 30 days.
6.4
The Class Lawyers and the Settling Companies must publish the full
text of the Settlement Agreement on the websites referred
to in
paragraphs 6.1.6 and 6.3.1 above and must make available the full
text of the Settlement Agreement to any person purporting
to be a
class member who requests it.
7 The publication of the settlement
hearing notice in accordance with paragraph 6 of this order must be
completed no later than
fourteen weeks before the hearing on the
return day – i.e., by 20 February 2019.
8 The costs associated with
publication in the press and over radio of the settlement hearing
notice are to be borne by the Founders.
9 Any member of the Settlement Classes
or any other interested party who wishes to participate in the
hearing on the return day
must take the following steps to do so:
9.1
Notice of intention to participate in the hearing, based on the form
attached and marked “
D”
, must be served on Richard
Spoor Inc Attorneys and filed at the above court by no later than ten
weeks prior to the return day
– i.e., by 20 March 2019;
9.2
Should no notice of intention to participate in the hearing be
received on or before 20 March 2019, the matter shall be set
down for
hearing on an unopposed basis on 3 April 2019;
9.3
Any
affidavit
for purposes of the hearing must be served on
Richard Spoor Inc Attorneys and filed at the above court, by no later
than ten weeks
prior to the return day – i.e., by 20 March
2019;
9.4
Any
written argument
for purposes of the hearing must be
served on Richard Spoor Inc Attorneys and filed at the above court,
by no later than five weeks
prior to the return day – i.e., by
24 April 2019,
and Richard Spoor Inc Attorneys must
then forthwith serve on the remaining attorneys for the applicants
and to the participators’
attorneys copies of every document
thus served on them, provided that service in terms of this order may
be effected at the email
addresses of the attorneys listed in the
notice of motion and the email addresses in the notices of intention
to participate.
10 The applicants may –
10.1
by no later than seven weeks before the return day, i.e. by 10 April
2019,
file replying
affidavits in response to any affidavits filed in terms of paragraph
9 above;
10.2
by no later than three weeks before the return day, i.e., by 8 May
2019, file written argument.
11 The court will by no later than two
weeks before the return day, i.e., by 5 May 2019, determine which of
the the members of the
Settlement Classes and the interested parties,
if any, that have filed affidavits and/or written argument, will be
allowed to make
oral submissions at the hearing.
12 The court shall, when giving its
final decision in this matter, simultaneously issue–
12.1
an approved summary of the decision; and
12.2
directions for the publication of –
12.2.1 the court’s decision;
12.2.2 the Settlement Agreement, if
approved; and
12.2.3 the opt-out notice to members
of the Settlement Classes based on
Schedule 3
of the Addendum (the newspaper and print notice), and as a radio
notice based on the form attached and marked “
E
”,
or such other form as the court deems appropriate, if the Settlement
Agreement is approved.
13 Should the court not approve the
Settlement Agreement on the return day or should the Settlement
Agreement not become operative
due to failure of a suspensive
condition, the certification of the Settlement Classes shall
terminate with immediate effect.
14 Upon issue of this rule nisi order,
a copy of the application and the rule nisi order shall be served on

14.1
Xulu Attorneys Incorporated of 85 St George’s Mall, First
Floor, Nedbank Building, Cape Town; and
14.2
Those of the respondents in
Nkala
that are not party to the
Settlement Agreement, at the addresses for service specified in those
proceedings.
15 Save in respect of the order in
paragraph 14 above, service in terms of this order may be effected by
email to the email address
specified in any notice of intention to
participate.
BY
THE COURT
____________________
THE
REGISTRAR
[1]
Nkala
and Others v Harmony Gold Mining Companies Limited and Others
(2012/48226, 2012/31324, 2012/31326, 2012/31327, 2012/48226,
2013/08108) [2016] ZAGPJHC 97;
[2016] 3 All SA 233
(GJ);
2016 (7)
BCLR 881
(GJ);
2016 (5) SA 240
(GJ) at pp. 695 – 701
[2]
See
paragraph 13 of the Court Order in
Nkala
2016