Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others (CT5/95) [1996] ZACC 27; 1996 (2) SA 621 (CC); 1996 (4) BCLR 441 (CC) (19 March 1996)

80 Reportability
Constitutional Law

Brief Summary

Constitutional Law — Right against self-incrimination — Section 417(2)(b) of the Companies Act — Applicants challenged the constitutionality of the provision compelling them to answer self-incriminating questions at an enquiry — Court declared the provision invalid to the extent that it allowed such evidence to be used in criminal proceedings — However, applicants remained obliged to answer questions at the enquiry, as the ruling did not affect their obligations in that context — Applicants not entitled to costs as they were not successful in substance against the respondents.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


Introduction


This judgment concerns costs following earlier constitutional proceedings in which the Constitutional Court declared section 417(2)(b) of the Companies Act invalid to a limited extent. The present decision does not revisit the merits of the constitutional challenge; it determines whether any party should be awarded costs in the Constitutional Court proceedings and clarifies the position regarding an attempted late “withdrawal” of a costs claim.


The proceedings arose from two linked matters, namely Ferreira v Levin NO and Others and Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others, in which the applicants challenged the constitutionality of compelled questioning under section 417 enquiries and, in particular, the use of self-incriminating answers in later proceedings. The respondents included office-holders and other interested parties connected to liquidation-related enquiries (including provisional liquidators and the Master of the Supreme Court), who sought to interrogate the applicants under section 417.


Procedurally, the applicants initially approached the Witwatersrand Local Division for interim interdicts pending the Constitutional Court’s determination of constitutionality. Those interdict applications were dismissed, but appeals to the Full Bench succeeded with costs, and the Full Bench directed that the costs of the first-instance interdict applications would be “costs in the cause” in the matter before the Constitutional Court. The Constitutional Court thereafter declared section 417(2)(b) invalid to the extent set out in its earlier order, made no costs order at that time, and allowed the parties an opportunity to pursue the costs issue further. Only the applicants in the Ferreira and Vryenhoek matters took up that opportunity, leading to the present costs judgment.


The general subject-matter of the dispute in this phase is the proper costs outcome in constitutional litigation involving private parties, in circumstances where the applicants achieved a measure of constitutional success but where the Court assessed whether that success translated into “substantial success” in the real dispute between the litigants and whether fairness justified any costs shifting.


Material Facts


The applicants brought interdict proceedings in the Witwatersrand Local Division seeking to restrain questioning or compel procedural protections pending the Constitutional Court’s determination of the constitutionality of section 417(2)(b). Those interdict applications were dismissed at first instance, and the applicants appealed.


On appeal to the Full Bench of the Witwatersrand Local Division, the applicants were successful and were awarded costs, with the Full Bench additionally directing that the costs of the applications in the court of first instance would be costs in the cause in the matter before the Constitutional Court. That costs direction meant that the ultimate disposition of those costs depended on the Constitutional Court’s costs order.


In the Constitutional Court, the applicants’ central practical concern was to avoid answering questions at a section 417 enquiry that might incriminate them, particularly because section 417(2)(b) compelled answers and, as framed, allowed the subsequent use of self-incriminating evidence in proceedings against them. The High Court (Van Schalkwyk J) referred five issues to the Constitutional Court under section 102(1) of the Interim Constitution, including the constitutionality of section 417(2)(b) and four further issues relating to declaratory relief on admissibility and procedure. The respondents did not oppose the referrals, or at least there was nothing suggesting that they did.


The Constitutional Court held that none of the matters had been correctly referred. Nonetheless, in exceptional circumstances, it entertained the section 417(2)(b) issue by way of direct access in terms of section 100(2) of the Interim Constitution. In its earlier merits decision, the Court declared section 417(2)(b) invalid to a limited extent (as reflected in the earlier order), but it did not then make a costs order, inviting further argument on costs if pursued.


After being informed that judgment on costs would be delivered, the attorneys for the applicant in the Ferreira matter lodged a document purporting to be a “Notice of Withdrawal” indicating that the costs application against the second respondent had been settled. The document did not indicate service on the other parties, nor did it comply with the requirements for withdrawal under Constitutional Court Rule 30.


Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether, in the exercise of the Constitutional Court’s discretion on costs, the applicants should be awarded their costs against the respondents given that the Court had upheld their constitutional challenge to a limited extent, and conversely whether the respondents—having in substance resisted aspects of the relief—should be awarded their costs against the applicants.


These questions primarily concerned the application of established costs principles to the particular circumstances of constitutional litigation, rather than the resolution of contested facts. The Court was required to make an evaluative assessment of substantial success, the real nature of the dispute between the parties, the causal connection between any opposition and any costs incurred, and considerations of fairness arising from the manner in which the matter came before the Court (including the incorrect referral).


A further procedural issue arose as to whether a costs claim could validly be “withdrawn” at that stage through a unilateral notice, or whether withdrawal required compliance with Rule 30.


Court’s Reasoning


The Court approached the costs issue by reference to the Supreme Court’s established but flexible principles governing costs, emphasising two foundational propositions. First, unless legislation provides otherwise, an award of costs lies in the discretion of the presiding judicial officer. Second, the general rule is that the successful party should receive costs, although that general rule yields to the discretionary nature of costs and to recognised exceptions. The Court explained that the established approach is sufficiently flexible to accommodate constitutional litigation, and that any adaptation of costs rules should occur incrementally on a case-by-case basis rather than through a comprehensive codification at that stage.


In assessing whether the applicants were entitled to costs, the Court focused on the substance of the dispute between the applicants and the respondents at the section 417 enquiry. Although the applicants had succeeded in obtaining an order limiting the use of compelled self-incriminating answers in subsequent criminal proceedings, the Court held that this did not resolve the real dispute between the parties to the enquiry. The respondents’ objective was to obtain the applicants’ evidence at the enquiry, and the applicants’ objective was to avoid answering incriminating questions. The Constitutional Court’s earlier order did not relieve the applicants of the obligation to answer; they remained compelled to respond to questions at the enquiry as they would have been even if the constitutional challenge had not been brought. On this analysis, the Court treated the applicants’ constitutional success as not amounting to success in the substantive controversy between the applicants and these respondents.


The Court also reasoned that the effect of the earlier constitutional order—excluding use of compelled self-incriminating evidence in subsequent criminal proceedings—was not something that affected the conduct of the enquiry itself or a matter over which the respondents had control. The Court characterised that consequence as one that would arise, if at all, in a later dispute between the applicants and the Attorney-General should criminal proceedings be instituted and such evidence tendered. On this reasoning, the Court considered it inappropriate to order the respondents to bear costs for a result that did not concern their interest in, or power over, the section 417 process.


The applicants relied on Canadian authorities in support of a costs award in constitutional litigation, including cases addressing the potential deterrent effect of adverse costs on constitutional claimants. The Court held that those authorities did not assist because the factual and procedural contexts were not comparable to the present case, and because the cited decisions did not support a general proposition that would justify a costs award here on these facts.


A further factor was that the applicants would in any event have had to approach the Constitutional Court to obtain the relief they did obtain, even if the respondents had not opposed, because the striking down of an Act of Parliament fell within the Court’s exclusive jurisdiction under section 98(2)(c) of the Interim Constitution. The Court considered it likely that it would still have required full argument, admitted amici, and solicited memoranda, and it was not shown that the applicants incurred additional costs because of opposition by the respondents. The Court also noted the procedural irregularity that none of the issues had been properly referred and that the Court had only entertained the constitutional issue by way of direct access as an indulgence given the exceptional circumstances, which weighed against awarding costs to the applicants.


Turning to whether the respondents should receive costs, the Court acknowledged that the general principle that a successful party is entitled to costs could be a point of departure because the respondents had in substance been successful in opposing the relief sought by the applicants. However, the Court took into account the impression that the respondents were also eager to obtain a definitive ruling on the issues referred and that they had not meaningfully opposed the referrals, including the question whether the matters met the section 102(1) threshold for referral. The Court stressed that parties, and respondents in particular, should not be encouraged to acquiesce in incorrect referrals and then claim costs in the Constitutional Court when the applicant fails to achieve substantial success. It reaffirmed the three conditions for a section 102(1) referral and indicated that inappropriate referrals should be opposed at the time they are sought rather than raised for the first time in the Constitutional Court.


The Court briefly addressed the “chilling effect” argument regarding adverse costs orders on private individuals seeking to vindicate constitutional rights against the state, describing it as an important policy issue, but held that it did not arise on the facts and should be left for an appropriate case. The Court further indicated that any such policy considerations would not necessarily translate in the same way to litigation between private parties.


On the attempted “Notice of Withdrawal”, the Court held that, absent compliance with Constitutional Court Rule 30—which requires an agreement in writing lodged by all parties specifying costs terms and payment of any registrar’s fees—and absent service on other parties, a matter in the Constitutional Court cannot validly be withdrawn. The Court regarded the late lodging of the purported withdrawal, without proper explanation and without earlier notification to the Court, as a discourtesy.


Ultimately, the Court concluded that justice and fairness would best be served by an order that each party pays its own costs, aligning this with the approach that would be adopted in the Supreme Court. It also observed that it was unnecessary to make a separate explicit order regarding the costs dealt with by the Full Bench, because those costs were ordered to be costs in the cause and would follow the Constitutional Court’s costs order.


Outcome and Relief


The Court ordered that all parties are to pay their own costs in the Constitutional Court proceedings.


No party was awarded costs against any other, and the costs orders made by the Full Bench (including the direction that certain costs were costs in the cause) were left to follow automatically from the Constitutional Court’s costs disposition.


The Court further held that the purported late “Notice of Withdrawal” did not amount to a valid withdrawal in the absence of compliance with Constitutional Court Rule 30 and proper service, and criticised the manner in which the document was lodged after notice of imminent judgment.


Cases Cited


Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others (CT5/95) [1996] ZACC 27; 1996 (2) SA 621 (CC); 1996 (4) BCLR 441 (CC)


Ferreira v Levin NO and Others, Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others 1996 (1) BCLR 1 (CC)


Ferreira v Levin NO and Others, Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others 1995 (2) SA 813 (W)


Kruger Bros. and Wasserman v Ruskin 1918 AD 63


Fripp v Gibbon & Co 1913 AD 354


Merber v Merber 1948 (1) SA 446 (A)


Union Government (Minister of Railways and Harbours) v Heiberg 1919 AD 477


Mofokeng v General Accident Versekering Beperk 1990 (2) SA 712 (W)


Giuliani v Diesel Pump Injector Services (Pvt) Ltd 1966 (3) SA 451 (R)


Regina v Big M Drug Mart Ltd [1985] 18 DLR (4th) 321


Operation Dismantle Inc et al v The Queen et al [1985] 18 DLR (4th) 481


Retail, Wholesale & Department Store Union, Local 580 et al v Dolphin Delivery Ltd [1986] 33 DLR (4th) 174


Re Lavigne & Ontario Public Service Employees Union et al (No 2) [1987] 41 DLR (4th) 86


S v Mhlungu [1995] ZACC 4; 1995 (3) SA 867 (CC); 1995 (7) BCLR 793 (CC)


S v Vermaas; S v Du Plessis [1995] ZACC 5; 1995 (3) SA 292 (CC); 1995 (7) BCLR 851 (CC)


Isaacs v Minister van Wet en Orde [1995] ZASCA 152; [1996] 1 All SA 343 (A)


Legislation Cited


Companies Act, section 417 and section 417(2)(b)


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993 (as amended), sections 98(2)(c), 100(2), 101(6), and 102(1)


Rules of Court Cited


Constitutional Court Rule 30


Held


The Court held that, despite the earlier declaration of invalidity in relation to section 417(2)(b), the applicants were not successful in substance in the dispute as between themselves and the respondents at the section 417 enquiry, because they remained obliged to answer self-incriminating questions and the declared limitation chiefly affected a potential later dispute about admissibility in criminal proceedings.


The Court held further that the respondents, although in substance successful in resisting aspects of the applicants’ sought relief, should not automatically obtain costs where they had not been sufficiently astute to prevent an incorrect referral under section 102(1), and where fairness considerations supported a neutral costs outcome.


The Court held that a purported unilateral notice filed after notice of imminent judgment did not constitute a valid withdrawal in the absence of compliance with Rule 30 and service on other parties, and that the manner of filing was discourteous.


The Court held that justice and fairness required that each party pay its own costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Costs are generally a matter within the discretion of the presiding judicial officer, and the general rule that the successful party should recover costs is subject to that discretion and to recognised exceptions based on fairness, the nature of proceedings, and the conduct of parties.


In assessing “success” for costs purposes, the Court may examine the substance of the dispute between the litigants rather than treating formal constitutional success as determinative, particularly where the relief obtained does not alter the practical position as between the parties before the Court.


Where relief falls within the Constitutional Court’s exclusive jurisdiction (including the striking down of an Act of Parliament under the Interim Constitution), an applicant may be required to approach the Court irrespective of opposition; in such circumstances a party seeking costs should demonstrate that opposition materially increased costs or that fairness otherwise supports a costs award.


For a referral under section 102(1) of the Interim Constitution to be competent, the Court reaffirmed that three conditions must be satisfied, namely that the issue may be decisive, that it falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court, and that it is in the interests of justice to refer it (including a reasonable prospect of invalidity and appropriateness of timing). Parties should oppose inappropriate referrals when sought, rather than acquiescing and later seeking costs consequences.


A withdrawal in the Constitutional Court requires compliance with Constitutional Court Rule 30, including a written agreement by all parties dealing with costs; absent such compliance and proper service, a purported unilateral withdrawal is ineffective.

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[1996] ZACC 27
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Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others (CT5/95) [1996] ZACC 27; 1996 (2) SA 621 (CC); 1996 (4) BCLR 441 (CC) (19 March 1996)

Links to summary

IN THE CONSTITUTIONAL COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
CASE NUMBER CCT 5/95
In the matter of
Ferreira, Clive
                                                                      Â
      Â
  Â
     Â
     Â
              Â
Applicant
and
Levin, Allan NO
                               Â
                                              Â
     Â
       Â
  Â
1st Respondent
Wilkens, Andrew David
                                                                               Â
  Â
2nd Respondents
Cooper, Brian St Clair
Van Der Merwe, Schalk Willem NO
                                                                                                          Â
 Â
In their capacities as the joint
provisional liquidators of Prima
Bank Holdings Limited
The Master of the Supreme Court
                                                 Â
   Â
          Â
Â
3rd Respondent
and
Vryenhoek, Ann
                                                                                           Â
      Â
 Â
1st
Applicant
Vryenhoek, Luke John
                                                                                Â
      Â
2nd
Applicant
Vryenhoek, Andrew
                                                                         Â
      Â
            Â
3rd
Applicant
v
Powell, Oliver NO
                                                                                        Â
    Â
1st Respondent
Brett, JJ NO
                                                                                                Â
    Â
2nd
Respondent
Avfin Industrial Finance (Pty) Ltd
                                                  Â
    Â
          Â
3rd
Respondent
(No. 2)
Heard on:
       Â
9 May 1995
Delivered on:
  Â
19 March 1996
__________________________________________________________________________
                                                               Â
JUDGMENT
                                                               Â
___________________________________________________________________
[1]
 Â
   Â
ACKERMANN
J:
On 6 December 1995 this Court declared section 417(2)(b) of the Companies
Act invalid to the extent indicated in the order.
[1]
No order was made as to costs but
the parties were afforded an opportunity of pursuing this matter further.
[2]
Â
Only the applicants in the
Ferreira
and
Vryenhoek
matters
have availed themselves of this opportunity.
[2]
 Â
   Â
The following are the salient facts
relating to costs. The applicants’ applications to the Witwatersrand Local
Division of the
Supreme Court for interdicts pending the determination by this
Court of the constitutionality of section 417(2)(b) of the Companies
Act (“the
Act”) were dismissed by Van Schalkwyk J. The appeals of all the applicants to
the Full Bench of the Witwatersrand
Local Division against such dismissals
were
Â
upheld with costs, that Court
ordering that the costs of the applications in the court of first instance were
to be “costs in
the cause in the matter before the Constitutional Court.”
[3]
The predominant reason for the
applicants’ approach both to the Witwatersrand Local Division and to this Court
was their objection
to answering questions which might tend to incriminate them
and the coercive features of section 417(2)(b) of the Act which not
only
compelled them to answer such questions but expressly provided that such
evidence, though self-incriminating, could subsequently
be used in proceedings
against the applicants (which by implication included criminal proceedings).
Van Schalkwyk J referred five
issues to this Court in terms of section 102(1)
of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993 (as
amended)(“the
Constitution”). The first related to the constitutionality of the
subsection of the Act referred to; the other four related to
declaratory orders
relating to the admissibility of evidence in subsequent criminal and civil
proceedings against the applicants
and the correct procedures to be followed at
enquiries in terms of section 417 of the Act. There is nothing to suggest that
the
respondents opposed any of these referrals. This Court held that none of
these matters had been correctly referred but, in the exceptional
circumstances
of the case, heard the first matter by way of direct access in terms of section
100(2) of the Constitution.
[4]
Â
[3]
 Â
   Â
The Supreme Court has, over the years,
developed a flexible approach to costs which proceeds from two basic
principles, the first
being that the award of costs, unless expressly otherwise
enacted, is in the discretion of the presiding judicial officer
[5]
and the second that the successful
party should, as a general rule, have his or her costs.
[6]
Â
Even this second principle is subject to the first.
[7]
The second principle is subject to
a large number of exceptions where the successful party is deprived of his or
her costs. Without
attempting either comprehensiveness or complete analytical
accuracy, depriving
Â
successful parties
of their costs can depend on circumstances such as, for example, the conduct of
parties,
[8]
the conduct of their legal
representatives,
[9]
whether a party achieves technical
success only,
[10]
the nature of the litigants
[11]
and the nature of the proceedings.
[12]
I mention these examples to
indicate that the principles which have been developed in relation to the award
of costs are by their
nature sufficiently flexible and adaptable to meet new
needs which may arise in regard to constitutional litigation. They offer
a
useful point of departure. If the need arises the rules may have to be
substantially adapted; this should however be done on
a case by case basis. It
is unnecessary, if not impossible, at this stage to attempt to formulate
comprehensive rules regarding
costs in constitutional litigation.
[4]
     Â
Mr
.
Unterhalt
er in the heads of argument filed on behalf of the applicants
submitted that the applicants had no choice but to seek relief from
the courts
and that their complaint, namely that section 417(2)(b) of the Act infringed
their right against self-incrimination,
was upheld by this Court. The fact that
they were unsuccessful in respect of four of the matters referred did not
detract from
the fact that their success in having section 417(2)(b) struck
down to the extent indicated in the order was substantial. In this
regard
reliance was placed on the
dictum
in
Giuliani v Diesel Pump Injector Services
(Pvt) Ltd
to the effect that
[t]he fact that defendant succeeded in reducing the amount claimed by
plaintiff does not, in my view, alter the fact that in these
circumstances the
plaintiff is the successful party in considering the question of costs, because
he had to come to court in order
to succeed to the extent that he did.
(See
Fripp v Gibbon & Co
1913 AD 354
at 361)
.
[13]
[5]
Â
    Â
In relation to section 417(2)(b) of the
Act the issue between the applicants and the respondents was whether the former
were obliged
to answer self-incriminating questions at the
Â
section 417 enquiry. The respondents wanted
the applicants’ evidence in this regard; the applicants refused. The order
granted
by this Court does not assist the applicants in their real dispute with
the respondents on this part of the case. They are still
obliged to answer
self-incriminating questions. The fact that such answers can no longer be used
against the applicants in any
criminal proceedings that might be brought
against them in no way concerns or affects the dispute between them and the
respondents.
The applicants are still obliged to answer all the questions put
to them as they would have been obliged to do if the constitutional
challenge
had not been raised. It is of no concern to the respondents that
self-incriminating evidence extracted at the enquiry
cannot be used against the
applicants in criminal proceedings against them. That would be a matter between
the applicants and the
Attorney-General which would arise only if the
applicants
Â
were charged and such
evidence tendered. This consequence in no way affects the conduct of the
section 417 enquiry, was never a
substantive issue between the respondents and
the applicants at the enquiry, and was not an issue over which the respondents
had
any control.
Â
They had neither the
interest nor the power
Â
to “consent” to
the evidence not being used against the applicants in subsequent criminal
proceedings.
[6]
     Â
Mr
Unterhalter
referred in his written argument to certain Canadian
authorities in support of the applicants’ claim for costs.
[14]
These cases do not assist the
applicants because they are, on the facts, not comparable to the present case.
In
Big M Drug Mart
the Crown had twice appealed unsuccessfully
Â
against a finding that a statute was
unconstitutional and the Supreme Court ordered it to pay the costs of the
second unsuccessful
appeal.
[15]
In
Operation Dismantle,
the
cruise missile testing case, the plaintiff organisation had successfully
pursued a Charter challenge against an agreement between
Canada and the United
States and obtained an injunction to prevent the testing of the cruise missile.
This was set aside on appeal
to the Federal Court of Appeal. The plaintiff’s
appeal to the Canadian Supreme Court was dismissed and plaintiff ordered to pay

the costs.
[16]
In
Dolphin Delivery
the defendant union had unsuccessfully
invoked a Charter right against the granting of an injunction. The defendant
union’s appeals
to both the British Columbia Court of Appeal and the Canadian
Supreme Court were dismissed and the Supreme Court ordered it to pay
the
plaintiff’s costs.
[17]
In
Lavigne
the appellant had
successfully invoked a Charter right and succeeded on appeal. The issue on
costs was whether the fact that the
Charter point successfully raised by the
appellant constituted
Â
a so-called “novel
issue” was sufficient to deprive the successful appellant of its costs. There
were cases going both ways.
The appellant was awarded 60% of its costs (the
reason for the partial award not being relevant to the present issue), the
Court
exercising its discretion on the basis that:
[i]ndividual Canadians, who would
otherwise find the costs of Charter litigation beyond their means, should not
be discouraged from
asserting their Charter rights simply because, if they
accept third party financial assistance, they will be deprived of the costs
of
the litigation.
[18]
[7]
      Â
The
applicants have not been successful in substance in their dispute with the
respondents. A further relevant consideration is
the fact that even if the
respondents had offered no opposition to the applicants, the applicants would
in any event have been
obliged to come to this Court to obtain the relief in
respect whereof they were successful. Even if the respondents had conceded
the
unconstitutionality of section 417(2)(b) of the Act to the extent found by this
Court, the applicants would still have been
obliged to come to this Court for
relief, inasmuch as the striking down of an Act of Parliament
Â
falls within its exclusive jurisdiction in
terms of section 98(2)(c) of the Constitution. I have little doubt that the
Court would
still have required full argument, would have admitted the
amici curiae
that it did admit and would
have
Â
solicited the memoranda it did
solicit.
Â
It has not been demonstrated
that the applicants incurred any more costs than they would have incurred if
the matter had not been
opposed by the respondents. The parties could have
conferred jurisdiction on the Witwatersrand Local Division in terms of section

101(6) of the Constitution but this was not a matter in issue or debated before
us. There is in any event nothing to show that
ultimately this Court would not
have been approached for a definitive order on section 417(2)(b). A further
relevant consideration
is the fact that we have found that none of the issues
was properly referred to us and only decided to hear the section 417(2)(b)

issue by way of direct access as an indulgence and in view of the exceptional
circumstances of the case.
[19]
In all these circumstances it
appears just and equitable not to award the applicants their costs.
[8]
      Â
The
remaining issue is whether the respondents are entitled to their costs. None of
the respondents filed any written argument,
as they were entitled to do. No
good reason suggests itself why, in the present case, the second general rule
as to costs, namely
that the successful party is entitled to his or her costs,
should not be the point of departure for considering whether the respondents

are entitled to their costs in this Court, inasmuch as they have in substance
been successful in opposing the relief sought by
the applicants.
[9]
      Â
One
is left with the strong impression, however, that the respondents were as
anxious as the applicants to obtain a definitive ruling
on the issues which Van
Schalkwyk J referred to us. Had the respondents opposed more critically the
matters which were referred
to this Court and, in particular, applied their
minds more carefully to the question whether such matters passed section 102(1)

scrutiny, it may well be that the matters would not have been referred to us at
all, or at least not all of them.
Â
Parties, and respondents in particular, should not be encouraged to
consent supinely to matters being referred to this Court in the
mistaken belief
that an applicant’s failure to achieve substantial success on referral will
automatically entitle the respondents
to their costs. It has been pointed out
in several judgments of this Court
[20]
that the power and duty to refer
under section 102(1) of the Constitution only arises when three conditions are
fulfilled:
(a)
      Â
there
is an issue in the matter before the court in question which may be decisive
for the case;
(b)
     Â
such
issue falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court; and,
(c)
      Â
the
court in question considers it to be in the interests of justice to refer such
issue to the Constitutional Court. For this third
leg of the test to be
satisfied there must be a reasonable prospect that the relevant law or
provision will be held to be invalid
and the court must also be satisfied that
the referral is being made at the appropriate stage in the proceedings.
If parties are of a mind
to oppose the relief being sought in a referral they should in the first place
be astute to prevent matters
being incorrectly referred and should oppose
inappropriate referrals at the time when they are sought; they should not sit
back
and raise their opposition for the first time in this Court after the
referral has been made.
[10]
Â
  Â
Mr
Unterhalter
referred in his argument, albeit in a somewhat different
context, to the “chilling effect” which an adverse order as to costs
would have
on private individuals who wish to, and have a constitutional right to, invoke
their constitutional rights against the
state. This is a very important policy
issue which deserves anxious consideration, but it does not arise in the
present case and
must properly be left to the appropriate case and occasion.
Whatever the ultimate view may be, however, it does not necessarily
follow that
the same approach should be adopted in litigation between private persons.
[11]
    Â
Justice
and fairness in the present case would, in my view, best be served if all
parties were ordered to pay their own costs. I
believe that to be in harmony also
with the approach that would be adopted in the Supreme Court.
[21]
It is unnecessary to make any
explicit order regarding the costs referred to in the judgment of the Full
Bench of the Witwatersrand
Local Division; those costs were ordered to be costs
in the cause of the matter before this Court and will, as an order of the Full

Bench, automatically follow the order made by this Court.
[12]
    Â
The
parties were informed yesterday that judgment in this matter would be given
today. After they had been so informed, the attorneys
for the applicant in the
Ferreira
matter filed with the Registrar
of this Court a document purporting to be a “Notice of Withdrawal” intimating
that the applicant
in the
Ferreira
matter
“hereby withdraws” his application for costs against the second respondent “the
matter having been settled between
the parties.” There is no indication on the
notice lodged with the Registrar that it had been served on the second
respondent
or on any other party. Constitutional Court Rule 30 provides as
follows:
Whenever all
parties, at any stage of the proceedings, lodge with the registrar an agreement
in writing that a case be withdrawn,
specifying the terms relating to the
payment of costs and payment to the registrar of any fees that may be due, the
registrar shall
without further reference to the Court enter such withdrawal.
In the absence of
compliance with rule 30 or service of any notice on the other parties, a matter
in this Court cannot validly be
withdrawn. Nothing accompanied the so-called
“Notice of Withdrawal” to indicate when the matter had been settled nor why the

Court had not been informed earlier of any such settlement. We consider this to
be a discourtesy to the Court.
[13]
    Â
It
is accordingly ordered that all parties are to pay their own costs.
Chaskalson P, Mahomed DP, Didcott J,
Kriegler J, Langa J, Madala J, Mokgoro J, O’Regan J, Sachs J and Trengove AJ
concurred in
the above judgment of Ackermann J.
Counsel for the Applicants:
                             Â
R.D.
Levin S.C.
D. Unterhalter
Instructed by:
                                                  Â
Moss-Morris
Inc.
Counsel for the 2nd Respondents in the
Ferreira Matter:
                                              Â
S.A.
Cilliers S.C.
R. Strydom
Instructed by:
                                                  Â
Hofmeyr
Inc.
Counsel for the 3rd Respondent in the
Vryenhoek Matter:
                                         Â
C.
Edeling
Instructed by:
                                                  Â
Allan
Levin & Associates
Counsel for the Amicus Curiae -
Fourie, J.S.N. and Others:
                              Â
W.H.
Trengove S.C.
G.J. Marcus
Instructed by:
                                                  Â
Deneys
Reitz
Â
[1]
Ferreira v Levin NO and
Others, Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others
1996 1 BCLR (CC) 1 para 157(1).
[2]
Id para 157(3) and
see also para 155.
[3]
Ferreira v Levin NO and
Others, Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others
1995 2 SA 813(W)
845G.
[4]
Ferreira v Levin
supra note 1 paras 9 to 19.
[5]
Kruger Bros. and Wasserman v
Ruskin
1918 AD 63
at 69.
[6]
Fripp v Gibbon
& Co
1913 AD 354
at 357;
Merber v Merber
1948 1 SA 446 (A) 452.
[7]
Union Government (Minister of Railways and Harbours) v
Heiberg
1919 AD 477
at 484;
Mofokeng v
General Accident Versekering Beperk
1990 2 SA 712
(W) 716D.
[8]
Cilliers
Law of Costs
(1972) 40-51.
[9]
Id 51.
[10]
Id 52.
[11]
Id 178-206.
[12]
Id 228-242.
[13]
1966 3 SA 451
(R) 452H.
[14]
Regina
v
Big M Drug Mart Ltd
[1985]
18 DLR (4th) 321;
Operation Dismantle Inc
et al v The Queen et al
[1985] 18 DLR (4th) 481;
Retail, Wholesale & Department Store Union, Local 580 et al v
Dolphin Delivery Ltd
[1986] 33 DLR (4th) 174 and
Re Lavigne & Ontario Public Service Employees Union et al (No 2)
[1987]
41 DLR (4th) 86.
[15]
Supra note 14 at
369.
[16]
Supra note 14 at
494.
[17]
Supra note 14 at
199.
[18]
Supra note 14 at 129 per White J.
[19]
Ferreira v Levin
supra note 1 para 10.
[20]
For example
S v Mhlungu
[1995] ZACC 4
;
1995 3
SA 867
(CC);
1995 7 BCLR 793
(CC) para 59;
Â
S v Vermaas, S v Du Plessis
[1995] ZACC 5
;
1995 3 SA 292
(CC);
1995 7 BCLR 851
(CC) paras 7-12 and
Â
Ferreira v Levin
supra note 1
paras 6-8.
[21]
See, for example,
Isaacs v
Minister van Wet en Orde
[1995] ZASCA 152
;
[1996] 1 All SA 343
(A) 352f-h.