THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case No: 484/2021
In the matter between:
HELEN SUZMAN FOUNDATION APPLICANT
and
THE SPEAKER OF THE NATIONAL
ASSEMBLY FIRST RESPONDENT
THE PRESIDENT OF THE REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA SECOND RESPONDENT
THE CABINET OF THE REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA THIRD RESPONDENT
CHAIRPERSON OF THE NATIONAL
COUNCIL OF PROVINCES FOURTH RESPONDENT
THE MINISTER OF COOPERATIVE
GOVERNANCE AND TRADITIONAL
AFFAIRS FIFTH RESPONDENT
Neutral citation: Helen Suzman Foundation v The Speaker of the National
Assembly and Others (484/2021) [2023] ZASCA 6
(03 February 2023)
Coram: DAMBUZA, PLASKET and MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JJA, and BASSON and CHETTY AJJA
2
Heard: This appeal was, by consent between the parties, disposed of without
an oral hearing in terms of s 19(a) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013.
Delivered: This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives via e -mail, publication on the Supreme Court of
Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand -down are
deemed to be 11h00 on 03 February 2023.
Summary: Reconsideration application brought in terms of s 17(2)(f) of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – the inquiry is whether grave injustice would
result if the order sought to be reconsidered were to stand – in this case the basis
of the reconsideration application was that costs in an application for leave to
appeal should not have been granted against the applicant based on the Biowatch
principle – no evidence that the relevant principles were ignored or that discretion
was exercised improperly in making the costs award.
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ORDER
On application for reconsideration: referred by Maya P in terms of s 17(2)(f)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013:
The application is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
Dambuza JA (Plasket and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Basson and Chetty
AJJA concurring)
Introduction
[1] This is an application, brought by the Helen Suzman Foundation (HSF) in
terms of s 17(2)(f) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, for the reconsideration
of an adverse costs order made pursuant to this court ’s dismissal of the HSF’s
petition for leave to appeal against an order of a full court of the Gauteng Division
of the High Court, Pretoria (the full court). The President of this court referred
the reconsideration of the costs order for argument in open court and the parties
agreed that it should be determined without oral argument, in terms of s 19(a) of
the Superior Courts Act.
[2] The background to this application is the following. The HSF brought an
urgent application for declaratory relief against the Government of the Republic
of South Africa, represented by the Speaker of Parliament, the President, the
Cabinet, the Chairperson of the National Council of Provinces and the Minister
of Co -operative Governance and Traditional Affairs ( the Minister). The order
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sought was es sentially to the effect that Parliament had failed to fulfil its
obligations, in terms of ss 42(3), 44(1), 55(1), and 68 of the Constitution , to
provide a legislative response specific to the Covid-19 pandemic.
[3] In order to manage the Covid-19 pandemic, a national state of disaster had
been declared by the Minister, in terms of s 27(1) of the Disaster Management
Act 57 of 2002 (DMA) . Regulations and directions had been issued in terms of
the DMA concerning a broad range of issues, including the lockdown of the entire
population and the control of economic activity . The HSF ’s application
challenged the continued reliance of the government on the DMA as the source
of authority for managing the pandemic . It contended that the Minister, the
Cabinet, and the President were deliberately evading the open, accountabl e and
participatory Parliamentary lawmaking processes envisaged by the Constitution,
by failing to enact specific legislation to manage the pandemic, rather th an
governing by decree in terms of the DMA. It sought a declarator that Parliament
had failed to initiate, prepare and pass legislation to regulate the state’s response
to the harm caused by the Covid-19 pandemic and that the Cabinet had failed to
initiate that legislation as it was obliged to do under s 5(2)(d), and to further fulfil
its obligations under s 7(2) of the Constitution, to ‘respect, protect and fulfil the
rights in the Bill of Rights regarding their legislative responses to the impact of
Covid -19’. The government parties opposed the application on the basis that they
were not under an obligation to pass specific legisla tion and that the DMA
provided a proper, comprehensive legislative framework for management of
disasters, including the Covid-19 pandemic.
[4] The full court rejected the contention by the HSF that the DMA was
intended to be a stop-gap measure in times of disasters. It found that the question
whether a positive obligation exists on Parliament and the Executive to legislate
5
is a fact specific enquiry, and that n othing in the language of s 7(2) of the
Constitution created an obligation on the Cabinet and Parliament to initiate and
pass specific Covid-19 legislation. It therefore dismissed the application.
[5] The full court ordered each party to pay its own costs. That costs order was
premised on a finding that the HSF had sought to assert a ‘constitutionally
discernible right’ , in the public interest , and the matter raised important
constitutional issues regarding the responsibilities of the government to legislate.
The full court found that it was appropriate that the HSF be afforded the
protection provided by the Biowatch principle (to which I shall refer more fully
below) against an adverse cost s order. It also made no order as to costs when
refusing leave to appeal.
[6] The HSF then petitioned this court for leave to appeal. Its application was
refused but this time, a costs order was made against it. In this application the
HSF contends that it should have been given the benefit of the Biowatch principle
once more, for t he same reasons given by the high court. It argued that no
argument on costs was made or considered in that application; that even those of
the respondents who had requested that costs be awarded in their favour had
advanced no reason as to why the Biowatch principle should not be applied; and
that t heir argument rested only on the premise that there were no reasonable
prospects of success on appeal.
[7] Section 17(2)(f) provides:
‘The decision of the majority of the judges considering an applicat ion [for leave to appeal]
referred to in paragraph (b), or the decision of the court, as the case may be, to grant or refuse
the application shall be final: Provided that the President of the Supreme Court of Appeal may,
in exceptional circumstances, whether of his or her own accord or on application filed within
a month of the decision, refer the decision to the court for reconsideration and, if necessary,
variation.’
6
Simply put, this subsection creates an opportunity for reconsideration of a
decision made by this court on an application to it for leave to appeal. Importantly,
the President of this Court permits such reconsideration only in exceptional
circumstances. In S v Liesching and Others1 the Constitutional Court held that the
primary object of the section is to enable the President of this Court to deal with
situations where grave injustice might otherwise result, and that it is not intended
to afford disappointed litigants a further chance to obtain an order that had already
been refused. In this case such injustice might result if an award of costs was
made injudiciously, contrary to the established guiding principles on the awarding
of costs by courts.
[8] There is no suggestion that the Biowatch principle has abolished the
discretion vested in courts with regard to costs orders. Courts must, however,
commence a consideration of a costs award from the premise that in constitutional
litigation an unsuccessful private litigant in proceedings against the State
ordinarily ought not to be ordered to pay cost s. The principle, however, must be
considered holistically. In Biowatch Trust v Registrar , Genetic Resources and
Others2 the principle was articulated thus:
‘If there should be a genuine, non -frivolous challenge to the constitutionality of a law or of
State conduct, it is appropriate that the State should bear the costs if the challenge is good, but
if it is not, then the losing non-State litigant should be shielded from the costs consequences of
failure. In this way the responsibility for ensuring that the law and State conduct are
constitutional is placed at the correct door’.
This principle is qualified. If a matter which otherwise falls within the principle
‘is frivolous or vexatious, or in any other way manifestly inappropriate, the
1 S v Liesching and Others [2018] ZACC 25; 2019 (4) SA 219 (CC); 2018 (11) BCLR 1349 (CC); 2019 (1) SACR
178 (CC) paras 138-139.
2 Biowatch Trust v Registrar, Genetic Resources and Others [2009] ZACC 14; 2009 (6) SA 232 (CC); 2009 (10)
BCLR 1014 (CC) para 23. See too Affordable Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Another
[2005] ZACC 3; 2006 (3) SA 247 (CC); 2005 (6) BCLR 529 (CC) para 138.
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applicant should not expect that the worthiness of its cause will immunize it
against an adverse costs award’.3
[9] It was submitted by the HSF that the bar to justify departure from the
Biowatch principle is set high. I agree. As already stated, the courts have set the
bar at litigation that is frivolous, manifestly inappropriate and vexatious, and
where the conduct of an unsuccessful private litigant deserves censure.4 In Motala
v Master, North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria5 this court made the point that the
Biowatch principle is not a licence to litigate with impunity against the State. It
referred to the following remarks of the Constitutional Court in Lawyers for
Human Rights v Minister in the Presidency and Others:6
‘[The Biowatch rule], of course, does not mean risk-free constitutional litigation. The court, in
its discretion, might order costs, Biowatch said, if the constitutional grounds of at tack are
frivolous or vexatious - or if the litigant has acted from improper motives or there are other
circumstances that make it in the interests of justice to order costs. The High Court controls its
process. It does so with a measure of flexibility. So a court must consider the “character of the
litigation and [the litigant's] conduct in pursuit of it”, even where the litigant seeks to assert
constitutional rights.’
[10] In this Court the respondents did not suggest that the full court application
was frivolous or vexatious litigation. The ir argument was that the costs order
against the HSF was properly made, based on events that unfolded after the full
court had refused leave to appeal, but prior to the lodging in this Court of the HSF
application for leave to appeal.
3 Para 24.
4 Affordable Medicines Trust (note 2) para 138.
5 Motala v Master, North Gauteng High Court [2019] ZASCA 60; 2019 (6) SA 68 (SCA) para 98.
6 Lawyers for Human Rights v Minister in the Presidency and Others [2016] ZACC 45; 2017 (1) SA 645 (CC);
2017 (4) BCLR 445 (CC) para 18.
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[11] During that period this Court handed down judgment in President, RSA
and Another v Women ’s Legal Centre Trust and Others 7. The issue in that case
was the State’s failure to recognize and regulate Muslim marriages . The
Women’s Legal Centre Trust had sought a declarator couched in terms similar to
those sought by the HSF in this case – that the state had a duty to prepare, initiate,
introduce and bring into operation legislation recognising Muslim marriages. A
further declaratory order sought was that the President and the Cabinet had failed
to fulfil that obligation. In the alternative it sought a declarator that the Marriage
Act 25 of 1961 and the Divorce Act 70 of 1979 be declared unconstitutional to
the extent that there was no provision therein for recognition of Muslim
marriages. Both pieces of legislation were found exclusionary and discriminatory
for failure to regulate Muslim marriages. However, the court was concerned about
separation of powers. For that reason, it refused to grant the declarator sought in
the main prayer . It referred to the judgments of the Constitutional Court in
Glenister v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others8 and Carmichele
v Minister of Safety and Security and Another (Centre for applied Legal Studies
intervening)9 in which that court held that courts cannot direct the State to locate
a response in one piece of legislation rather than another. The Court remarked on
the absence of precedent of courts directing the enactment of legislation under s
7(2) of the Constitution . It held that for a court to order the State to enact
legislation on the basis of s 7(2) alone in order to realise fundamental rights ,
would be contrary to the doctrine of separation of powers.10
[12] The respondents’ argument was that this decision was already in the public
domain when HSF launched the application for leave to appeal. HSF would
7 President, RSA and Another v Women ’s Legal Centre Trust and Others [2020] ZASCA 177; 2021 (2) SA 381
(SCA).
8 Glenister v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others [2011] ZACC 6; 2011 (3) SA 347 (CC); 2011
(7) BCLR 651 (CC) at paras 65 to 68.
9 Carmichele v Minister of Safety and Security and Another (Centre for Applied Legal Studies intervening) [2001]
ZACC 22; 2001(4) SA 938 (CC); 2001 (10) BCLR 995 (CC) para 44.
10 Women’s Legal Centre Trust (note 7) para 43.
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therefore have been aware of the judgment. It should not have proceeded with the
application. Doing so was unreasonable and placed the HSF outside the realm of
the Biowatch protection, so it was submitted.
[13] The judicial discretion of a court on costs has not been abolished by the
Biowatch principle. In public interest cases, however, the exercise of that
discretion is guided first and foremost by Biowatch together with the traditional
guiding principles, including the conduct of the parties in the litigation and
success on merits.
[14] I cannot find any valid basis for the HSF’s contention that this court did
not ‘apply’ the Biowatch principle when considering the application for leave to
appeal. To reach that conclusion one would have to assume that the court simply
ignored the principle which, apart from being the pri mary guideline, had been
pertinently brought to its attention through the judgment of the full court. The
court was aware, from the judgment of the full court, that the Biowatch principle
had been applied by the full court – and that it had done so not once, but twice. It
would also have been aware of the respondents’ reliance o n the judgment in
Women’s Legal Centre Trust in the application for leave to appeal , particularly
the contentions that the issues raised therein had been determined ‘convincingly
and conclusively’, and that the HSF had acted unreasonably in seeking leave to
appeal.11 The costs award was made in this context.
[15] Given the submissions made to the court in the application for leave to
appeal, together with the fact that Biowatch is not unqualified,12 I am unable to
11 The respondents referred to the judgment in the answering papers in the application for leave to appeal and HSF
responded in its replying papers.
12 See s16.
10
find that grave injustice would result if the decision sought to be reconsidered
would stand. Consequently, the following order shall issue:
The application is dismissed with costs.
___________________
N DAMBUZA
ACTING DEPUTY PRESIDENT
Mabindla-Boqwana JA (concurring):
[16] I am in agreement with the ultimate conclusion and order proposed by my
colleague in the first judgment. There is, however, one issue regarding the
application that concerns me, which I consider important to express an opinion
on. This has to do with whether s 17(2)(f) of the Superior Courts Act envisages
the kind of application brought by the applicant for reconsideration. The issue is
a bit nuanced. At first glance, it seems trifling. Yet, I believe that it warrants
further thinking. I say so for the reasons that follow.
[17] Section 17(2)(f) provides that:
‘The decision of the majority of the judges considering an application [for leave to appeal]
referred to in paragraph (b), or the decision of the court, as the case may be, to grant or refuse
the application shall be final: Provided that the President of the Supreme Court of Appeal may
in exceptional circumstances, whether of his or her own accord or on application filed within
one month of the decision, refer the decision to the court for reconsideration and, if necessary,
variation.’ (My emphasis.)
[18] This section confers a discretion on the President of this Court ‘to refer a
refusal of an application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal for
11
reconsideration, and, if necessary, variation, in circumstances where an applicant
has been denied leave to appeal by the Supreme Court of Appeal on petition
pursuant to the provisions of section 17(2)(b)’.13 (My emphasis.)
[19] As stated in Liesching, the court reconsidering is not considering an appeal
on the merits; rather, it is reconsidering the decision refusing leave to appeal .
Essentially, the court is required to decide whether the court below and the two
judges of the Supreme Court of Appeal should have found that reasonable
prospects of success existed to grant leave to appeal’.14 (My emphasis.)
[20] The two judges of the Supreme Court of Appeal in the present matter
refused leave to appeal the decision of the full court, with costs. The applicant is
not aggrieved by the decision to dismiss the application for leave to appeal and
is, therefore, content not to persist with a reconsideration of whether there were
reasonable prospects of success on appeal. Rather, its discontent is limited to the
costs order granted against it by the two judges. Put differently, this Court is not
asked to consider whether the full court and the two judges should have found
that there are reasonable prospects of success on appeal; which is the purpose of
s 17(2)(f), in my view.
[21] My reading of s 17(2)(f) is that this Court, in reconsidering the decision of
the Court that considered the petition, essentially steps into the shoes of the two
judges by re-looking at the decision of the court below refusing leave to appeal
and, if necessary, varying the decision of the two judges in respect of what was
brought on petition.
13Liesching; para 118; see footnote 1.
14 Ibid para 36; see also Notshokovu v S [2016] ZASCA 112; 2016 JDR 1647 (SCA) para 2.
12
[22] In the present matter, the question of costs was not one of the issues which
the two judges were called upon to consider when determining the petition. This
is because, as regards costs, the full court had applied the Biowatch principle and
had made no order as to costs. The applicant took no issue with that order.
[23] The application brought to the President of this Court and referred to us is
not the decision of the full court and that of the two judges refusing leave to
appeal. The costs order complained about was granted in the first instance by the
two judges determining the petition. They did not change the decision of the full
court in respect of costs on the merits (or otherwise) of the case, but instead only
ordered costs in respect of the application for leave to appeal.
[24] Accordingly, the issue that the applicants have brought for reconsideration
is a matter that ought to have been taken on appeal to the Constitutional Court, in
my view. This Court is, therefore, not at liberty to change the costs order granted
by the two judges. Only the Constitutional Court may vary that decision.
[25] What I am proposing is unrelated to the question of whether a costs order
on its own can be appealed against. Instead, the issue that I am raising is whether
a court reconsidering the result of a petition can conside r any matter other than
that which involves the question of whether the court below and the two judges
considering the petition should have found that there indeed were reasonable
prospects of success on appeal, which in essence is the purpose of s 17(2)(f).
[26] It may, conceivably, be argued that the cost s order is part of the refusal
decision. The difficulty with that argument is that, absent a reconsideration of the
refusal for leave to appeal part of the order, the decision loses the character of the
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sort contemplated for referral in terms of s 17(2) (f). This is because the order of
the court below as to whether le ave to appeal should have been granted, is no
longer open for reconsideration. The substance for reconsideration is the refusal
of the leave to appeal. Mindful of the fact that this has not been raised by the
parties, I make no finding on this aspect.
____________________________
NP MABINDLA - BOQWANA JA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
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Appearances:
For appellant: M du Plessis SC with A Coutsoudis
Instructed by: Webber Wentzel, Sandton
Symington De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For first respondent: IV Maleka SC with M Salukazana
Instructed by: State Attorney, Cape Town
State Attorney, Pretoria
State Attorney, Bloemfontein