Foskor (Pty) Ltd v Competition Commission and Others (CO037Aug10/VAR240Feb16) [2019] ZACT 85 (18 December 2019)

75 Reportability
Competition Law

Brief Summary

Competition — Consent Order — Variation of consent order — Foskor (Pty) Ltd seeking to vary terms of 2011 Consent Order regarding pricing of phosphoric acid — Tribunal determining that Foskor's request for variation based on alleged mistake and changed circumstances was not valid — New consent agreement reached between Foskor and the Competition Commission allowing for amended pricing conditions — Tribunal confirming new agreement as a consent order.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns an interlocutory (jurisdictional) determination by the Competition Tribunal of South Africa arising from an application connected to the variation or amendment of an earlier consent order. The proceedings stem from Foskor (Pty) Ltd’s attempt to alter the terms of a consent order confirmed by the Tribunal on 28 February 2011 (“the 2011 Consent Order”), which had regulated Foskor’s pricing conduct following a Competition Commission investigation into alleged excessive pricing.


The applicant was Foskor (Pty) Ltd (“Foskor”), a vertically integrated supplier in phosphate-based products in South Africa. The first respondent was the Competition Commission (“the Commission”). The second respondent was Omnia Group (Pty) Ltd (“Omnia”), a downstream fertiliser manufacturer and a major domestic purchaser of Foskor’s phosphoric acid. The third to sixth respondents were the complainants in the original Commission complaint (case no: 2007Dec3382).


Procedurally, the matter followed a “convoluted history”. After the 2011 Consent Order was confirmed, a dispute arose in 2014 regarding whether Foskor remained obliged to price domestic phosphoric acid on an FOB Richards Bay basis. Omnia approached the High Court for declaratory relief on interpretation; Foskor resisted and advanced contentions including ambiguity and reliance on an unsigned “third addendum”. The High Court, and later a Full Bench on appeal, rejected Foskor’s interpretation and confirmed that the third addendum did not form part of the order. After those proceedings, Foskor pursued a variation application at the Tribunal. During the course of the Tribunal proceedings, the Commission and Foskor concluded a new consent agreement (filed on 25 April 2017) intended to amend the pricing obligation in clause 5.4. Omnia opposed confirmation of that agreement, contending that the Tribunal lacked power to amend its prior consent order except on the limited grounds in section 66(b) of the Competition Act.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the Tribunal’s statutory power to vary or amend an existing consent order regulating pricing conduct, particularly where the Commission and the respondent now agree on amended terms in light of alleged changed circumstances and/or hardship, and where an interested third party (Omnia) objects.


2. Material Facts


Foskor produces rock phosphates and phosphoric acid and operates at upstream and downstream levels in phosphate-based fertiliser supply. It is the only local miner of phosphate rock and, at the time described in the judgment, the only supplier of phosphoric acid in South Africa. Omnia operates primarily in downstream fertiliser markets and is described as Foskor’s largest South African purchaser of phosphoric acid, buying about half of Foskor’s domestic phosphoric acid sales. Phosphoric acid is an input into Omnia’s NPK fertilisers.


In 2007, the Commission received complaints against Foskor from animal feed producers. After investigation, the Commission formed the view that Foskor charged domestic customers an FOB Richards Bay price plus a 75% notional freight cost to India, which the Commission regarded as excessive pricing contrary to section 8(a) of the Competition Act 89 of 1998.


Foskor and the Commission concluded a consent agreement in July 2010. At the confirmation hearing on 26 January 2011, the Tribunal required greater clarity on the pricing methodology, resulting in a signed addendum (the “first addendum”) that substituted clause 5.4 and recorded, in substance, that Foskor would not revert to its past import-parity policy with notional freight to India and that, henceforth, Foskor would charge “a price based on the FOB Richards Bay Port” in respect of phosphoric acid. A second addendum (23 February 2011) introduced an express admission of contravention and an administrative penalty. A third addendum (containing monitoring provisions for three years) was mentioned at the 28 February 2011 hearing but was not signed by the Commissioner by then and was not confirmed as part of the 2011 Consent Order.


After the 2011 Consent Order, Foskor priced domestic phosphoric acid on an FOB Richards Bay basis until mid-2014. From around September 2014, Foskor priced above the FOB Richards Bay price. Omnia then approached the Commission for clarity, contending Foskor was in breach.


While the Commission engaged Omnia, Omnia applied to the High Court seeking a declaration that the 2011 Consent Order required Foskor to sell domestic phosphoric acid at an FOB Richards Bay-based price. In that litigation, Foskor argued clause 5.4 was ambiguous and sought variation, including on the basis that the third addendum had been excluded by omission or error and that its pricing obligation was limited to three years. The High Court held that the remedy was removal of the notional India freight charge and that clause 5.4 required Foskor to desist from charging additional charges to the FOB price. It also held the third addendum did not form part of the order and stated that if there was an obvious error or omission, the affected parties should approach the Tribunal for rectification. Foskor’s appeal to a Full Bench was unsuccessful; the Full Bench confirmed the clause 5.4 interpretation and rejected reliance on mistake to set aside the consent order.


Foskor then applied to the Tribunal seeking (i) amendment of clause 5.4 and (ii) a declaration that the unsigned third addendum formed part of the 2011 Consent Order. Foskor initially relied on grounds of common mistake (invoking section 66(c)) and obvious error or omission (invoking section 66(b)), but in reply introduced changed circumstances/hardship. Omnia brought an application to strike out parts of the replying affidavit, and Foskor sought leave to file a supplementary affidavit (including evidence from a former Commission employee on alleged intentions during settlement negotiations). The Commission did not oppose supplementation insofar as it related to changed circumstances but opposed the introduction of the former employee’s evidence.


During this period, the Commission conducted reviews of Foskor’s pricing and concluded (as recorded in the judgment) that Foskor’s phosphoric acid pricing during investigated periods was below cost, indicating the excessive pricing concern had fallen away. The Commission and Foskor then concluded a new consent agreement whose purpose was to remove the obligation in clause 5.4 requiring pricing based on FOB Richards Bay, leaving only an undertaking not to revert to the prior import-parity policy including notional freight to India. The Commission asked the Tribunal to confirm this new consent agreement as a consent order under section 49D. Omnia opposed, arguing the Tribunal could not amend the 2011 Consent Order on grounds other than those in section 66(b).


The Tribunal issued a direction separating jurisdictional questions from the merits of the amendment. By the time of decision, the Tribunal treated earlier issues (including Foskor’s section 66(b) case) as overtaken by events, because the live question had crystallised into whether the Tribunal may, as a matter of law, amend or vary the 2011 Consent Order based on changed circumstances/hardship and on terms agreed between the Commission and Foskor.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were jurisdictional and concerned the scope of the Tribunal’s statutory powers, rather than the substantive merits of what the amended pricing condition should be.


The Tribunal was required to determine whether, as a matter of law, it had the power to vary or amend a previously granted consent order (confirmed in terms of section 49D) on the basis of changed circumstances and/or hardship, where the Commission and the respondent had subsequently reached agreed amended terms, and where an interested third party opposed confirmation.


A further related question (driven by Omnia’s opposition) was whether the Tribunal’s power to vary its own orders was confined to the limited grounds listed in section 66(b) (ambiguity, obvious error or omission) or whether the Tribunal could rely on its general powers in section 27(1)(d) to make rulings or orders necessary or incidental to the performance of its functions under the Act.


The dispute was primarily a question of law (statutory interpretation and institutional competence), informed by the statutory context and constitutional considerations (notably access to justice and the interpretive injunction that the Act be read consistently with the Constitution). To the extent that “changed circumstances” and “hardship” were referenced, they served mainly as the context for the legal question, because the Tribunal did not reach the merits of whether the variation should ultimately be granted.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Tribunal began by locating the dispute within the statutory framework governing consent orders under section 49D. It emphasised that section 49D creates a mechanism enabling the Commission to regulate firm conduct expeditiously, but with transparency and accountability. While a consent order depends on agreement between the Commission and a respondent, it is not legally enforceable until confirmed by the Tribunal. The Tribunal’s role is not to hear evidence in confirming a consent order, but it must nevertheless be satisfied (drawing from Competition Appeal Court authority) that the agreement is rational, promotes the objectives of the Competition Act, serves the public interest, and is not so inappropriate as to bring the competition authorities into disrepute.


The Tribunal distinguished the character of consent agreements in competition enforcement from ordinary private settlements. It explained that consent agreements relate to public rather than private interests, given the Commission’s regulatory mandate to promote competition and prevent abuse of dominance. The Tribunal further reasoned that behavioural remedies in consent orders may require ongoing compliance and monitoring, and thus do not necessarily have the same finality as a private settlement where res judicata typically follows.


Against that background, the Tribunal addressed Omnia’s core contention: that a consent order, like any other Tribunal order, could only be varied under section 66(b). The Tribunal considered this approach overly narrow because it would require the Tribunal to ignore other provisions of the Act and the broader regulatory mandate assigned to the competition authorities. It reasoned that pricing remedies in abuse of dominance matters operate in dynamic markets, and that it is not possible at the time of imposing a pricing remedy to foresee all future market changes that might make continued enforcement inappropriate or harmful.


The Tribunal accepted, at the level of principle, that a respondent should not be denied relief in cases of changed circumstances or hardship, because such denial would not align with the Tribunal’s mandate. The key question then became whether the Act empowered the Tribunal to grant such relief.


The Tribunal held that section 27(1)(d)—which empowers the Tribunal to make “any ruling or order necessary or incidental to the performance of its functions in terms of this Act”—is sufficiently broad, when interpreted in context and consistently with the Constitution, to include the power to amend or vary a consent order on the grounds of changed circumstances or hardship. In reaching that conclusion, the Tribunal relied significantly on constitutional and appellate guidance concerning the breadth of the Tribunal’s discretionary powers. It referred to the Constitutional Court’s endorsement in Competition Commission of South Africa v Hosken Consolidated Investments Limited and Another (CCT296/17) [2019] ZACC 2; 2019 (4) BCLR 470 (CC); 2019 (3) SA 1 (CC) of the wide formulation of section 27(1)(d), and the policy concern that overly technical readings of the Tribunal’s powers can become barriers to justice where the dispute falls within the Tribunal’s mandate.


The Tribunal also addressed Omnia’s reliance on Mike's Chicken & Two Others and Astral Foods Limited & The Competition Commission 32/CAC/SepU03. It read that decision as establishing that section 27(1)(d) was not intended to cover an eventuality specifically dealt with by section 66(b), but not as a general prohibition on relying on section 27(1)(d) in contexts not captured by section 66(b). It distinguished Mike’s Chicken on the basis that it concerned interpretation of an order and whether it was ambiguous, whereas the present matter concerned the ability to seek relief from an ongoing pricing remedy in changed circumstances within a regulatory context.


The Tribunal further reasoned that interpreting section 27(1)(d) to include relief for hardship or changed circumstances could have the effect of extending the variation grounds beyond section 66(b), but considered such an extension necessary to ensure the Tribunal can perform its functions consistently with constitutional requirements. It invoked the Competition Act’s interpretive directive in section 1(2) (interpretation consistent with the Constitution and the Act’s purposes) and acknowledged section 1(3) (permitting consideration of foreign and international law). In this connection, it referred to foreign jurisprudence cited by the Commission, particularly United States case law recognising that injunction-like consent decrees may require adaptation to changed conditions, and used this material as supportive context rather than as a direct source of authority.


The Tribunal nevertheless cautioned that recognising jurisdiction to vary for hardship or changed circumstances does not mean such relief must be granted in every case. The discretion under section 27(1)(d) should be exercised only when warranted, and any intervention must comply with legality, transparency, and fairness. In consent order contexts under section 49D, the Tribunal indicated that the jurisdictional threshold for amendment includes investigation by and agreement from the Commission, and that transparency and fairness would be served by a public hearing on the merits of the amendment with interested parties afforded the opportunity to make submissions.


Applying these principles to the live controversy, the Tribunal concluded that it was legally competent for the Tribunal to consider the Commission’s application to confirm the new consent agreement as a variation of the 2011 consent order under section 27(1)(d), read with sections 1(2) and 1(3). The decision did not finally determine whether the new consent agreement should be confirmed on its merits; it determined that the Tribunal had the power to consider it and directed that the application be set down for that merits hearing.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Tribunal granted an order holding that the Commission’s application for confirmation of the new consent agreement (which sought to vary the 2011 consent order) can be considered by the Tribunal in terms of section 27(1)(d) read with sections 1(2) and 1(3) of the Competition Act.


The Tribunal authorised the Commission to proceed to set its application down for a hearing on the merits by arrangement with the Registrar.


No order as to costs was made.


Cases Cited


Omnia v Foskor and Others Case number: 14554/2015 (delivered on 16 October 2015).


Foskor (Pty) Ltd v Omnia Group (Pty) Ltd Case number: A203/2016 (delivered on 06 November 2017).


GlaxoSmithKline South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another v David Lewis N.O. and Others Case number: 62/CAC/Apr06.


Netcare Hospital Group (Pty) Ltd & Another v Norman Manoim N.O. & Others Case Number: 75/CAC/Apr08.


Mike's Chicken & Two Others and Astral Foods Limited & The Competition Commission 32/CAC/SepU03.


Competition Commission of South Africa v Hosken Consolidated Investments Limited and Another (CCT296/17) [2019] ZACC 2; 2019 (4) BCLR 470 (CC); 2019 (3) SA 1 (CC).


Hosken Consolidated Investments Limited and Tsogo Sun Holdings Limited v CC Case Number: 154/CAC/Sep17.


Competition Commission and South Africa Airways (Pty) Ltd 18/CR/Mar01.


Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Ltd and Anglo-American Holdings Ltd 45/LM/Jun02 and 46/LM/Jun02.


Zondi v Member of the Executive Council for Traditional and Local Government Affairs and Others (CCT73/03) [2005] ZACC 18.


United States v Swift Co. [1932] USSC 87; 286 U.S. 106 (1932).


Rufo v Inmates of Suffolk County Jail [1992] USSC 8; 502 U.S. 367 (1992).


Lorraine NAACP v Lorain Bd. Of Educ. [1992] USCA10 1211; 979 F.2d 1141 (6th Cir. 1992).


Legislation Cited


Competition Act 89 of 1998, including sections 1(2), 1(3), 2, 8(a), 27(1)(d), 49, 49B, 49D, 50, 55(1), 58(1)(b), 66(b), and 66(c).


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rule 42(1).


Held


The Tribunal held that, properly interpreted in context and consistently with the Constitution, section 27(1)(d) of the Competition Act empowers the Tribunal to consider the amendment or variation of a consent order on the basis of changed circumstances or hardship, including where amended terms are agreed between the Commission and the respondent and presented for confirmation under the consent order mechanism.


The Tribunal further held that Omnia’s contention that variation is confined to the limited grounds in section 66(b) did not preclude reliance on section 27(1)(d) in this regulatory context. Accordingly, the Commission’s application to confirm the new consent agreement varying the 2011 consent order was legally competent to be entertained, and it could be set down for a merits hearing. No costs order was made.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A consent agreement concluded under section 49D is not enforceable until confirmed by the Tribunal as a consent order, and the Tribunal’s confirmation function requires satisfaction that the agreement is rational, advances the objectives of the Competition Act, serves the public interest, and is not so inappropriate as to undermine confidence in competition enforcement.


Consent orders in competition matters, particularly those imposing behavioural remedies, may require ongoing regulatory oversight and do not necessarily have the same finality as private civil settlements, because they address public-interest regulation of market conduct and may operate in dynamic market conditions.


The Tribunal’s power under section 27(1)(d) to make rulings or orders necessary or incidental to the performance of its statutory functions is broad, and—when interpreted in accordance with section 1(2) (constitutional consistency) and with regard to section 1(3) (foreign and international law)—includes the power to entertain variation or amendment of a consent order on grounds of changed circumstances or hardship, where such intervention is necessary to the Tribunal’s regulatory mandate and consistent with legality, transparency, and fairness.


Section 66(b) does not, in this context, exhaustively confine the Tribunal’s capacity to address post-order developments where the subject-matter remains within the Tribunal’s statutory mandate and where an acontextual reading would risk functioning as a barrier to justice.

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[2019] ZACT 85
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Foskor (Pty) Ltd v Competition Commission and Others (CO037Aug10/VAR240Feb16) [2019] ZACT 85 (18 December 2019)

COMPETITION
TRIBUNAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
No: CO037Aug10NAR240Feb16
In
the matter between:
Foskor
(Pty)
Ltd                                                       Applicant
and
The
Competition Commission                                  First

Respondent
Omnia
Group (Pty) Ltd                                             Second

Respondent
The
Complainants in case no: 2007Dec3382          Third
to Sixth Respondents
Panel :
Yasmin
Carrim (Presiding Member)
:
Andreas

Wessels (Tribunal Member)
:
Anton
Roskam (Tribunal Member)
Heard
on

: 10 May 2019 Last Submission Received : 27 May 2019
Reasons
Issued on        : 18 December
2019
Reasons
for Decision
Introduction
[1]
This matter concerns an application by Foskor (Pty) Ltd ("Foskor")
to vary the Competition Tribunal
("Tribunal") Consent Order
handed down on 28 February 2011. It comes with a convoluted history
which warrants some discussion
in detail.
[2]
Foskor is a producer of rock phosphates and phosphoric acid,
primarily for the international (i.e. export)
market.  Foskor is
involved at both the upstream and downstream levels in the supply of
phosphate-based fertilizers and is
the only vertically integrated
phosphate supplier in South Africa.
[3]
Foskor mines phosphate rock from its open-cast mine in Phalaborwa,
the only viable source of the rock in South
Africa. The phosphate
rock is then crushed, milled, concentrated and dried, and turned into
phosphate rock concentrate. Foskor
is the only local miner of
phosphate rock in South Africa and the only producer of the phosphate
rock concentrate.
[4]
Approximately 85% of the phosphate rock mined by Foskor is railed to
Foskor's manufacturing plant at Richards
Bay, while the rest is sold
locally and internationally.
[5]
Foskor's facility at Richards Bay consists of granulation, phosphoric
acid and sulphuric acid plants, supported
by various storage
facilities. At this facility, Foskor produces, amongst others,
two-phosphate based granular fertilizers, mono-ammonium
phosphate
("MAP") and diammonium phosphate ("OAP").
[6]
Phosphoric acid, on the other hand, is produced by reacting sulphuric
acid with phosphoric rock and recycled
phosphoric acid. Foskor
further uses phosphoric acid to produce MAP and OAP, which is also
sold as an input to nitrogen, phosphate
and potassium ("NPK")
fertilizer blends. Foskor is currently the only supplier of
phosphoric acid in South Africa.
[7]
Omnia Group (Pty) Ltd ("Omnia"), is a manufacturer and
retailer of fertilizers. Omnia is largely
active in the downstream
fertilizer market.
[8]
Omnia is the largest South African purchaser of Foskor's phosphoric
acid, purchasing approximately 50% of
the phosphoric acid of Foskor's
domestic sales. Phosphoric acid is an input in Omnia's NPK
fertilizers. Omnia produces NPK fertilizers
in granular and liquid
form and on-sells MAP, OAP and other blends of fertilizers. Its MAP
and OAP fertilizers are bought from
Foskor and compete with similar
products manufactured by Sasol and Foskor, as well as with imported
MAP and OAP products.
Consent
Order Proceedings
[9]
During 2007 the Competition Commission ("Commission")
received various complaints from animal feed
producers against
Foskor.
[1]
The Commission
investigated the complaints and found, inter alia, that Foskor was
charging local (domestic) customers a Free- on-
Board Richards Bay
price ("the FOB price") plus a 75% notional (not actual)
freight cost of shipping the product to India.
The Commission was of
the view that this amounted to an excessive price in contravention of
section 8(a) of the Competition Act,
89 of 1998 ("the Act").
[1O]
Following the Commission's investigation, Foskor and the Commission
concluded a consent agreement in July 2010. A hearing for

confirmation of the consent agreement was held on 26 January 2011.
[11]
At that hearing the Tribunal was concerned about the wording of
clause 5.4 of the agreement, which, as originally formulated,
stated
that Foskor would not "revert to its past pricing policy".
It was not clear to the panel how Foskor would henceforth
price its
phosphoric acid in the domestic market in order to ensure that it did
not contravene section 8(a) of the Act. The Tribunal
accordingly
asked that clause 5.4 of the consent agreement be amended to indicate
the pricing methodology which Foskor would use
to determine the price
charged to domestic customers for phosphoric acid.
[12]
An addendum containing a new clause 5.4, was signed by Foskor and the
Commission on that day (26 January 2011) (the "first
addendum")
which read as follows:
"The Competition
Commission and Foskor hereby agree to the following amendment:  The
substitution of clause 5.4 of the
Consent Agreement with the
following: -
5.4 Foskor undertakes not
to revert to its past pricing policy for the sale of phosphoric acid,
phosphate rock, MAP and OAP. This
policy comprised of an import
parity benchmark for phosphoric acid which included notional freight
charges to India. Henceforth,
Foskor will charge a price based on the
FOB Richards Bay Port in respect of phosphoric acid."
[13]
The Tribunal was also of the view that there should be an express
admission by Foskor that its conduct contravened section
8(a) of the
Act, as well as an administrative penalty to punish Foskor for its
contravention. A further addendum incorporating
those two aspects was
consequently signed by the parties on 23 February 2011 (the "second
addendum").
[14]
Another hearing was then held on 28 February 2011. In that hearing
Foskor and the Commission advised the Tribunal of
the existence of a
third addendum which contained monitoring provisions for a duration
of 3 years. However, the third addendum
was not signed by the
Commissioner by the time of the hearing.
[15]
The Tribunal handed down the Consent Order as requested at the
hearing but only in relation to addenda one and two. The
third
addendum was not confirmed in that order of 28 February 2011 ("the
2011 Consent Order").
[16]
Foskor thereafter charged domestic customers, such as Omnia, an FOB
Richards Bay­ based price for its phosphoric
acid until about
mid-2014. However, from around September 2014, Foskor priced its
phosphoric acid in the local market above the
FOB Richards Bay price.
[17]
Omnia then approached the Commission seeking clarity on the
interpretation of Foskor's pricing obligation in the 2011
Consent
Order arguing that Foskor's new pricing policy was in breach of
Foskor's pricing obligations.
High
Court Proceedings
[18]
Whilst the Commission was engaging Omnia with regards to its
concerns, Omnia applied to the High Court for an order declaring
that
Foskor was required, under the 2011 Consent Order, to sell its
phosphoric acid to domestic customers at a price which was
based on
FOB Richards Bay.
[19]
It appears that Foskor, in that court, argued that there was
ambiguity in clause 5.4 and sought a variation of the consent
order
on the basis that the third addendum had been excluded by serious
omission or error. Hence, it was obliged to charge the
FOB Richards
Bay price for a period of only 3 years which the third addendum
provided for.
[20]
In relation to the meaning of clause 5.4 the High Court found that
the remedy for the excessive pricing was indeed the
FOB Richards Bay
price as benchmark excluding any additional charges:
"The excessive price
was remedied by the removal of the 75% CFR India freight charge. It
is exactly what the Competition Commission
and Foskor wished to
achieve. It requires Foskor to desist from charging any additional
charges to the FOB price."
[2]
[21]
In relation to the third addendum High Court found:
"[21] I interpose to
mention, in conclusion, that a further addendum [third unsigned
addendum] was considered by the Competition
Commission and which
Foskor maintain is part of the [Tribunal Consent] order. The document
is not signed, but it is annexed to
the papers ... The document does
not form part of the order... If there is an obvious error or
omission in the (Tribunal Consent[
order the parties affected should
address that issue to the Competition Tribunal for rectification (our
emphasis) ...
[19] Foskor it seems has
placed itself in a straitjacket, as it were, in the domestic market
as to how the price of phosphoric acid
is to be determined. Clause
5.4 places an obligation upon Foskor and requires obedience. The
allegations in the papers that Foskor
charged the FOB price for three
years subsequent to the order are not seriously disputed. It is
certainly compelling evidence of
the understanding of the consent
order by Foskor and its obligations. "
[3]
[22]
Foskor subsequently appealed to the Full Bench of the High Court but
was unsuccessful. The Full Bench confirmed the High
Court's
interpretation and found that the FOB Richards Bay Port price is the
published export price minus the CFR costs. In its
own assessment of
the interpretation of clause 5.4, the Full Bench found that there was
no ambiguity and that Foskor was attempting
to set aside the consent
order on the basis of mistake, which it couldn't do.
Variation
Application
[23]
Foskor then turned its focus to the variation application at the
Tribunal. In the variation application before us Foskor
asks the
Tribunal for an order:
23.1.  Amending
clause 5.4 of the first addendum to the 2011 Consent Order (which, as
mentioned, was included in the Tribunal
Order); and
23.2.  Declaring
that the proposed unsigned third addendum is part of the 2011 Consent
Order.
[24]
The relief was sought on two principal grounds. First, the agreement
was made an order of the Tribunal by a mistake common
to the parties.
Hence, in terms of section 66(c) the Tribunal was empowered to vary
it. Second, in the event that it was found
that the third unsigned
addendum is not part of the 2011 Consent Order, then this was as a
result of an obvious error or omission
and should be rectified by the
Tribunal in terms of section 66(b).
[25]
However, in its replying affidavit Foskor, who had previously relied
on mistake and error/omission as grounds for variation
under sections
66(b) and (c), now pleaded changed circumstances/hardship.
[26]
Omnia took exception to Foskor's changed case and new evidence in
reply and accordingly filed a notice of application·
to strike
out various portions of Foskor's replying affidavit.
[27]
Foskor opposed the strike out application and sought leave to file a
supplementary affidavit containing evidence of changed
circumstances
or hardship and which also included the confirmatory affidavit of
Mervin Dorosamy ("Dorasamy"), a former
employee of the
Commission, regarding the Commission's alleged intended duration of
the pricing condition ("supplementary
application").
[28]
The Commission did not oppose Foskor's supplementary application in
so far as it related to changed economic and market
circumstances.
The Commission however opposed Foskor's supplementary application to
the extent that Foskor seeks to introduce and
rely on the averments
of Dorosamy.
[29]
Omnia submitted that the new relief sought by Foskor in the
alternative (namely, a variation of the Tribunal Order on
the basis
of supposedly changed circumstances) was incompetent as a matter of
law, and that the new evidence which Foskor sought
to adduce about
the Commission's views or intentions in the settlement negotiations
in January 2011 was inadmissible.
[30]
However, in the course of this the Commission proceeded to
investigate Foskor's pricing and Omnia's concerns. The Commission
and
Foskor subsequently concluded a consent agreement to amend and/or
vary the terms of clause 5.4, which was jointly filed by
the parties
on 25 April 2017. Thus, the Commission and Foskor effectively sought
an amendment to their previous agreement through
the mechanism of a
new consent agreement as agreed to by both parties.
The
New Consent Agreement
[31]
The Commission's decision to conclude the amendment agreement with
Foskor ("new consent agreement") was primarily
informed by
the Commission's findings in its investigation into Foskor's pricing
for phosphoric acid.
[32]
The Commission conducted two reviews prior to concluding the new
consent agreement and found that Foskor's pricing for
phosphoric acid
during the investigated periods was below cost, indicating that the
excessive pricing concern had fallen away.
[33]
The purpose of the new consent agreement is to remove the third
obligation in clause 5.4 of the 2011 Consent Order, which
requires
Foskor to charge a price based on the FOB Richards Bay Port in
respect of phosphoric acid. The Commission and Foskor agreed
that the
amended pricing condition should read as follows:
"5.4 Foskor
undertakes not to revert to its pricing policy for the sale of
phosphoric acid, phosphate rock, MAP and OAP. This
policy comprised
of an import parity benchmark for phosphoric acid which included
notional freight charges to India."
[34]
In terms of the amended pricing condition, Foskorwill henceforth be
allowed to charge to its domestic customers a price
that is
reasonably related to the economic value of its goods as long as such
pricing is in accordance with the provisions of the
Act.
[4]
[35]
The Commission requests that we confirm the agreement as a consent
order in terms of section 490. Omnia opposes this
application on the
basis that the Tribunal cannot amend or vary its own order on any
other grounds other than those provided in
section 66(b).
Tribunal
Direction
[36]
Against this background the Tribunal issued a direction,4 with the
agreement of the parties, that the following points
should be first
be argued and determined:
"1.
Whether, on the grounds advanced by Foskor, the Competition Tribunal
has the power in terms of the
Competition Act or
in law, to vary or
amend the terms of the Tribunal order granted by consent on 28th
February 2011.
2.
Whether any of the variation grounds advanced by Foskor are precluded
by the order of the full bench
of the High Court on 06 November 2017.
3.
Whether the Tribunal can vary or amend the consent order granted on
28 February 2011 on the basis of
agreed terms between the Commission
and the Applicant (Foskor).
4.
Whether the Tribunal is permitted to vary an order in situations
arising in hardship, emanating from
a consent order issued by the
Competition Tribunal; and if so
a.
whether in the circumstances, Foskor should be permitted to file its
supplementary founding affidavit."
[37]
The Tribunal's direction effectively separated the jurisdictional
issues from the merits of the amendment itself.
Issues
overtaken by events
[38]
Up until the conclusion of the new consent agreement, Foskor's
variation application was not supported by the Commission
on the
grounds of mistake, error or omission. This created a difficulty for
Foskor as highlighted by the High Court because the
premise of the
order was the 2011 agreement between the Commission and Foskor.
[39]
The High Court remarked that the nature or form of the Tribunal order
sought to be varied by Foskor had a contractual
nature when it
explained why Foskor could not rely on unilateral mistake -
[10] The question thus in
fact raised is whether any of these grounds set out in para 9 above,
allows for the settlement agreement
and the order of court to be set
aside. This was however not the issue before the court a quo and the
agreement of compromise creates
new rights and obligations as a
substantive contract that exists independently from the original
cause.
[11] Foskor could only
raise these submissions if the consent agreement was obtained by
means of fraud or Justus provided the mistake
vitiated true consent
and did not merely relate to motive or to the merits of the dispute
or mistake common to the parties. None
of these grounds exist. A
unilateral mistake on the part of one party, that does not flow from
a misrepresentation by the other
does not allow the former party to
resile from a settlement agreement.(our emphasis) It seems that
Foskor consented to this clause
and now regret the results, this
however is not a ground to set aside the settlement and the court
order."
[5]
[40]
Hence Foskor could not rely on a variation of the consent order under
section 66(b)
unless this was supported by the Commission.
[41]
The Commission has persisted with its opposition to a variation of
the consent order under
section 66(b)
as sought by Foskor but has
instead concluded a new consent agreement which seeks to amend/vary
the 2011 Consent Order based on
changed circumstances.
[42]
As a result, the legal enquiry has now crystallised into one
essential enquiry namely, whether as a matter of law the
Tribunal can
vary or amend the 2011 Consent Order based on changed
circumstances/hardship and on terms agreed between the Commission
and
Foskor.
[43]
There is therefore no need for us to consider Foskor's application in
terms of section 66(b). Section 66(b) however remains
relevant
insofar as Omnia persists with its opposition to the new consent
agreement on the basis that a consent order can only
be amended on
grounds listed in section 66(b).
Our
Analysis
Section
490 and the nature of consent agreements
[44]
Section 49D of the Act provides as follows:
"490.
Consent Orders:
(1)    If,
during, on or after completion of the investigation of a complaint,
the Competition Commission and the
respondent agree on the terms of
an appropriate order, the Competition Tribunal, without hearing any
evidence, may confirm that
agreement as a consent order in terms of
section 58(1)(b);
(2)
After hearing a motion for a consent order, the Competition Tribunal
must­
(a)
make the order as agreed to and proposed by the Competition
Commission and the respondent:
(b)
indicate any changes that must be made in the draft order before it
will make the order; or
(c)
refuse to make the order."
[45]
The nature of consent orders has previously been considered by the
Competition Appeal Court.
[46]
In Glaxo SmithKline6 the Competition Appeal Court ("the CAC")
[6]
said:
"The terms of
section 490(1) in relation to the scope of the powers of the
Commission is clear. The language is clear, and
effect can be given
to the ordinary meaning of the words. Section 490 empowers the
Commission to agree the terms of an "appropriate
order"
with a respondent against whom a complaint has been laid and in
respect of whose practices an investigation has been
instituted. The
content of the agreement which the Commission is empowered to enter
into is limited to "the terms of an appropriate
order".
Clearly such order could be drafted in terms which incorporate an
annexed detailed agreement. An example of such an
agreement is the
December 2003 settlement agreement at issue here. The nature of the
agreement which the Commission can conclude
is limited to an
agreement on the terms of an appropriate order. That agreement is not
to be confused with a settlement agreement
which may itself be
incorporated in the proposed order. The actual terms of the proposed
order are not enforceable nor, indeed,
is any settlement agreement
which is referred to or incorporated in the proposed order legally
enforceable until it is dealt with
and confirmed by the Tribunal in
terms of section 490. The binding effect of the agreed order will be
limited to requiring the
parties to proceed with an application to
the Tribunal for confirmation of the agreed order in terms of section
490 of the Act."
[47]
In Netcare Hospital Group
[7]
the
CAC set out the test for confirmation of consent agreement agreements
as follows:
"In exerc,smg its
discretion whether to approve a consent order it must obviously be
satisfied that the objectives of the
Competition Act, together
with
the public interest, are served by the agreement. An agreement which
imposes an inordinately low penalty for a serious contravention
will
obviously bring the objects of the
Competition Act into
disrepute and
will be against public policy. It seems to me that the true inquiry
before the Tribunal in this context is whether
the agreement is a
rational one, whether it meets the objectives set out above and is
not so shockingly inappropriate that it will
bring the competition
authorities into disrepute. As indicated the Tribunal cannot hear any
evidence but it can surely make such
inquiries at the hearing as it
deems fit in order to satisfy itself that the abovementioned
objectives are properly met”
[8]
[48]
Section 49D
thus contains a unique framework which enables the
Commission to regulate the conduct of firms expeditiously but with
transparency
and accountability. While the jurisdictional requirement
for consent orders is an agreement between the Commission and a
respondent,
the agreement is not enforceable unless it is confirmed
by the Tribunal. The Tribunal on the other hand may confirm the
agreement
as an order but only if it promotes the objectives of the
Act, is in the public interest, rational and is not shockingly
inappropriate.
[49]
While consent agreements under section 49D are agreements between the
Commission and respondents with the purpose of
settling a dispute,
they differ from settlement agreements in private disputes because
they relate to matters of public not private
interests. The
Commission represents a public interest namely the promotion of
competition and the prevention of abusive conduct
by dominant firms
in markets. At the same time, they differ from plea bargain
arrangements because they are administrative and
not criminal in
nature.
[50]
Ordinarily, in civil proceedings settlement agreements concluded and
incorporated in a court order bring finality to
the /is between the
parties, and the /is becomes res judicata. This is not necessarily
the case in consent agreements which may
provide for behavioural
remedies. Behavioural remedies in consent agreements often require
the respondents to show ongoing compliance
with the agreed
behavioural remedy, including reporting obligations and the
Commission customarily continues to exercise its monitoring
function
as a regulator with general oversight functions over a particular
market.
[51]
Omnia insists that notwithstanding the special nature of consent
orders and the unique expedited mechanism of settlement
agreements
under section 49D, the Tribunal should treat all orders alike, and
that a variation of the 2011 consent order can only
be done on the
grounds contained in section 66(b).
[9]
Hence, in Omnia's view even if a respondent faced hardship or changed
circumstances, this Tribunal is precluded from granting a
variation
of the consent order in perpetuity unless the variation was sought on
the limited grounds contemplated in section 66(b).
[52]
But Omnia's stance requires us to approach the matter without regard
to the other provisions of the Act itself and our
mandate and
functions provided for therein.
[53]
The Act has established the Commission, the Tribunal and the
Competition Appeal Court in order to promote the objectives
stated in
the Preamble of the Act and the Purpose of the Act. The three
agencies constitute the regulatory framework for competition
matters
throughout the Republic.
[54]
The Commission and Tribunal's mandates include the promotion of
competition and economic growth. The Commission is mandated
inter
a/ia to investigate, refer and monitor the conduct of dominant firms.
The Commission performs its overall enforcement function
through the
powers granted to it under section 49 and the referral process
provided under sections 49B and 50.
[55]
Apart from its general functions, the Commission also exercises
monitoring and compliance functions over remedies imposed
by the
Tribunal on respondents in abuse of dominance cases, including
remedies contained in consent agreements. The monitoring
function
differs in accordance with the nature of the remedy imposed. For
example, in the case of administrative penalties or divestitures
the
Commission may monitor a once off compliance with the terms of the
remedy. In the case of behavioural remedies such as pricing
and
supply remedies there is usually ongoing monitoring by the Commission
for a specified period
[56]
In this case the behavioural remedy agreed to by the Commission and
Foskor has the aim of addressing a previous pricing
abuse, i.e.
excessive pricing. The pricing of a firm is however a dynamic process
because inter alia the costs of the firm to produce
or sell the
specific product or service may change over time. It is impossible at
the time of imposing a pricing remedy to foresee
all future changes
in a market, which could lead to detrimental consequences to the
firm.
[57]
We emphasize that this matter must be looked at in the context of
excessive pricing by a dominant firm, Foskor, that
entered into a
consent agreement with the Commission in relation to that conduct. In
this context we are not dealing with the conduct
between private
parties or acts of common law criminality but with ongoing dynamic
processes, i.e. the prices charged as well as
the costs of a specific
firm, Foskor, that can change over time in accordance with market
dynamics. Changing circumstances over
time therefore is a distinct
possibility in this context.
[58]
At the level of principle, we would agree with both the Commission
and Foskor that respondents cannot be denied relief
from the Tribunal
in changed circumstances or hardship because to do so would not be
accordance with the mandate and functions
of the Tribunal.
[59]
The question however is whether the Act itself empowers the Tribunal
to vary its orders on this basis.
[60]
Both the Commission and Foskor argue that section 27(1)(d), empowers
the Tribunal to amend its orders on the basis of
changed
circumstances/hardship. Omnia argues that we are precluded from
exercising our powers under section 27(1)(d) by Mike's
Chicken &
Two Others and Astral Foods Limited & The Competition
Commission10 and that we do not enjoy any inherent jurisdiction
as
high courts do.
[61]
Section 27(1)(d) provides that the Tribunal may make "any ruling
or order necessary or incidental to the performance
of its functions
in terms of this Act."
[10]
[62]
Section 27(1)(d) was recently considered by the Constitutional Court
in Competition Commission of South Africa v Hosken
Consolidated
Investments Limited and Another
[11]
where the Constitutional Court endorsed the CAC's views that the
Tribunal's discretionary powers under section 27(1)(d) were wide
and
urged it to exercise these in order to give relief to parties in the
interests of justice -
"Section 27(1)(d) of
the Act provides that the Tribunal may make any ruling or order that
is necessary or incidental to the
performance of its functions in
terms of the Act. Section 58 of the Act further grants the Tribunal
the power to make an appropriate
order in relation to a prohibited
practice including an order interdicting any such practice. Both of
these sections are formulated
widely enough to include the power to
grant declaratory relief in respect of issues in dispute referred to
it.
In
addition to the wide powers conferred upon the Tribunal, there are
persuasive policy considerations to conclude that the Tribunal
has
the power to grant declaratory orders"
[12]
[63]
The CAC in Hosken Consolidated Investments Limited and Tsogo Sun
Holdings Limited v CC
[13]
expressed the view that an unsatisfactory interpretation of the
powers of the Tribunal and could result in a barrier to justice.
[14]
[64]
In that case both the Constitutional Court and the CAC were of the
view that the Tribunal should not adopt an over-technical
approach to
parties seeking relief when the subject matter of the dispute falls
within the mandate of the Tribunal. Both courts
found that the
Tribunal was empowered to grant declaratory relief and ought to have
done so to avoid unnecessary and protracted
proceedings.
[65]
The Tribunal may be a creature of statute but as pointed out by the
Constitutional Court and the CAC, unlike other statutory
bodies it
enjoys a great degree of discretion in the conduct of its
proceedings, enjoys inquisitorial powers and can have regard
to
hearsay evidence.
[15]
[66]
In Mikes Chicken the CAC stated that "section 27(1)(d) was
obviously not intended to provide for an eventuality
covered
specifically by section 66(b)".
[16]
However, the CAC did not say, as Omnia suggests, that the Tribunal
was precluded from varying its orders on grounds other than
those
listed in section 66(b).
[67]
In any event the facts in Mikes Chicken differ from this case. In
that case the CAC was essentially concerned with whether
an order
handed down by the Tribunal intended to void certain supply
agreements. The Tribunal had found it had not intended for
such an
outcome. The CAC differed and found that the order was not ambiguous.
The enquiry in Mikes Chicken did not concern the
question whether a
respondent firm could, in the context of excessive pricing and a
pricing remedy to address that seek recourse
from the Tribunal based
on hardship or changed circumstances.
[68]
Omnia's argument also elides the issue of inherent jurisdiction and
our powers under section 27(1)(d). The subject matter
of the new
consent agreement concerns Foskor's contravention of excessive
pricing which is within the jurisdiction of the Tribunal.
Our powers
under section 27(1)(d) are those that are necessary or incidental to
our functions. A critical function for which the
Tribunal has been
established is to regulate the conduct of dominant firms such as
Foskor. We are not being asked to exercise jurisdiction
over matters
not allocated to us under the Act.
[69]
Furthermore, our functions under the Act must also be exercised in
accordance with the Constitution.
[17]
A respondent firm who is suffering hardship due to changed
circumstances cannot be denied access to courts, and justice, through

an acontextual interpretation of our legislation.
[70]
Therefore, when read in context of the Act, and the Constitution, the
Tribunal's powers under section 27(1)(d), must
necessarily include
the power to vary for changed circumstances or hardship.
[71]
It may be that the above interpretation of our powers under section
27(1)(d) may have the effect of "extending"
the grounds
listed in section 66(b). But such an extension must be viewed as
necessary to the exercise of our functions in accordance
with
Constitutional precepts. A respondent firm cannot be denied access to
courts, and justice, through an acontextual and unconstitutional

interpretation of our legislation.
[1]
17 Section 1(2) provides:
"This Act must be
interpreted -
(a)    In
a manner that is consistent with the Constitution and gives effect to
the purposes set out in section 2;
and
(b)    in
compliance with the international law obligations of the Republic."
[72]
Indeed, the Constitutional Court in Zondi v Member of the Executive
Council for Traditional and Local Government Affairs
and Others
[18]
had occasion to remark that the exceptions under Uniform Rule 42(1),
upon which section 66 is modelled, would necessarily need
to be
extended to address the modern Constitutional context:
"Under common law
the general rule is that a judge has no authority to amend his or her
own final order. The rationale for
this principle is two-fold. In the
first place a judge who has given a final order is functus officio.
Once a judge has fully exercised
his or her jurisdiction, his or her
authority over the subject matter ceases. The other equally important
consideration is the
public interest in bringing litigation to
finality. The parties must be assured that once an order of court has
been made, it is
final and they can arrange their affairs in
accordance with that order.
However, our
pre-constitutional case law recognised certain exceptions to this
general rule. These exceptions are referred to in
the Firestone case.
These are supplementing accessory or consequential matters such as
costs orders or interest on judgment debts;
clarification of a
judgment or order so as to give effect to the court's true intention;
correcting clerical, arithmetical or other
errors in its judgment or
order; and altering an order for costs where it was made without
hearing the parties. This list of exceptions
was not considered
exhaustive. It may be extended to meet the exigencies of modern times
(our emphasis)."
[19]
[73]
This does not mean that every case that is brought to the Tribunal on
the grounds of changed circumstances or hardship
should be granted.
Our discretion under section 27(1)(d) should only be exercised when
warranted and in cases where we do intervene
such intervention must
be in accordance with the principle of legality, transparency and
fairness as required by the Act.
[74]
This particular case is concerned with a consent order that was
granted under section 490. The jurisdictional threshold
for an
amendment would therefore require investigation by and agreement from
the Commission. The principles of transparency and
fairness would be
met by conducting the hearing of the merits of the amendment in
public and granting interested parties an opportunity
to make
submissions.
[75]
The Commission has referred us to foreign and international law which
it urges us to have regard to when interpreting
the Act as we are
enjoined to in s1(3) of the Act.
[20]
Section 1(3) provides that any person interpreting or applying this
Act may consider appropriate foreign and international law.
[76]
We are indebted to the Commission for its efforts in traversing the
relevant legislation and case law of many jurisdictions.
[21]
Of significance, for example, has been the development in the US
cases which resonates with the remarks of the Constitutional Court
in
Zondi but in the context of consent orders.
[77]
In United States v Swift Co.22 the Supreme Court said:
"We are not doubtful
of the power of a court of equity to modify an injunction in
adaptation to changed conditions though it
was entered by consent.
The power is conceded by the Government and is challenged by the
interveners only. We do not go into the
question whether the
intervention was so limited in scope and purpose as to withdraw this
ground of challenge, if otherwise available.
Standing to make the
objection may be assumed, and the result will not be changed. Power
to modify the decree was reserved by its
very terms and so from the
beginning went hand in hand with its restraints. If the reservation
had been omitted, power there still
would be by force of principles
inherent in the jurisdiction of the chancery. A continuing decree of
injunction directed to events
to come is subject always to adaptation
as events may shape the need."
[22]
[78]
In addition, the Supreme Court explained:
"There is need to
keep in mind steadily the limits of inquiry proper to the case before
us. We are not framing a decree. We
are asking ourselves whether
anything has happened that will justify us now in changing a decree.
The injunction, whether right
or wrong, is not subject to impeachment
in its application to the conditions that existed at its making. We
are not at liberty
to reverse under the guise of readjusting. Life is
never Static, and the passing of a decade has brought changes to the
grocery
business as it has to every other.
[23]
The
inquiry for us is whether the changes are so important that dangers,
once substantial, have become attenuated to a shadow. No
doubt the
defendants will be better off if the injunction is relaxed, but they
are not suffering hardship so extreme and unexpected
as to justify us
in saying that they are the victims of oppression."
[79]
In Rufo v /mates of Suffolk County Jai
[24]
,
the Supreme Court confirmed that modification of a consent decree may
be warranted under certain appropriate circumstances including
"when
the enforcement of the decree without modification will be
detrimental to the public interest."
[25]
[80]
In Lorraine NAACP v Lorain Bd. Of Educ
[26]
,
the Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit, clarified that in Rufo, the
Supreme Court had relaxed the Swift standard for the modification
of
consent decrees requiring a clear showing of grievous wrong and said:
"In Swift, the
Supreme Court stated that "nothing less than a clear showing of
grievous wrong" would support the
modification of a consent
decree. The Court, however recently abandoned the rigid Swift
standard and declared a lesser showing
sufficient for modification of
consent decrees entered in settlement of so-called "institutional
reform" litigation involving
and affecting the operation of
governmental institutions or organizations."
[27]
[81]
It is clear from the above decisions of the US Courts, that the
modification of a consent decree is permitted under certain

appropriate circumstances including when the enforcement of the
decree without modification will be detrimental to the public
interest.
Conclusion
[82]
The Tribunal should exercise its powers in order to give relief to
parties that are subject to its jurisdiction and not
interpret them
to serve as a barrier to justice.
[83]
As a matter of law, section 27(1)(d) interpreted in accordance with
the Constitution and having regard to foreign law
must include the
Tribunal's power to amend/vary a consent order on the grounds of
changed circumstances or hardship. Our discretion
under section
27(1)(d) would be exercised here as a necessary function of our
regulatory mandate under the Act, which is to regulate
the conduct of
firms in markets.
[84]
Any other interpretation would undermine the functions of the
Commission and Tribunal in exercising their mandate under
the Act.
ORDER
Accordingly,
the following order is hereby granted:
1.
The Commission's application for confirmation of the new consent
agreement which seeks to vary the 2011
consent order can be
considered by the Tribunal in terms of section 27(1)(d) read with
section 1(2) and 1(3).
2.
The Commission may proceed to set its application down for a hearing
on the merits by arrangement with
the Registrar
3.
There is no order as to costs.
Ms
Yasmin Carrim
Mr
Andreas Wessels and Mr Anton Roskam concurring
DATE:
18 December 2019
Case
Manager:                         Kameel

Pancham and Helena Graham
For
the Applicant:                      Adv.

N Cassim SC, Adv. Y Alli
Instructed
by:                            Shaheem

Samsodien Attorneys
For
the Commission:                 Bukhosibakhe

Majenge, Maya Swart,
and Nokuphiwa Kunene
For
Second Respondent:          Adv.
P Farlam SC
Instructed
by:                            Falcon

and Hume Inc.a
[1]
The Third to Sixth Respondents are the complainants in the complaint
filed with the Commission under case number 2007Dec3382.
[2]
Omnia v Foskor and Others Case number: 14554/2015 (delivered on 16
October 2015) at paragraph [18].
[3]
Omnia v Foskor and Others Case number: 14554/2015 (delivered on 16
October 2015) at paragraph [18].
[4]
On 11 February 2019.
[5]
Foskor (Pty) Ltd v Omnia Group (Pty) Ltd Case number: A203/2016
(delivered on 06 November 2017) at paragraphs [10] and [11].
[6]
GlaxoSmithKline South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another v David Lewis
N.0. and Others Case number: 62/CAC/Apr06.
[7]
Netcare Hospital Group (Pty) Ltd & Another v Norman Manoim N.0 &
Others Case Number: 75/CAC/Apr08.
[8]
Netcare Hospital Group (Pty) Ltd & Another v Norman Manoim N.0 &
Others Case Number: 75/CAC/Apr08 at paragraph [29].
[9]
Section 66(b) provides:
"66(b).
Variation of order-The Competition Tribunal, or the Competition
Appeal Court, acting of its own accord or on application
of a person
affected by a decision or order, may vary or rescind its decision or
order-....in which there is ambiguity, or an
obvious error or
omission, but only to the extent of correcting that ambiguity, error
or omission"
[10]
32/CAC/SepU03
[11]
Competition Commission of South Africa v Hosken Consolidated
Investments Limited and Another (CCT296/17)
[2019] ZACC 2
;
2019 (4)
BCLR 470
(CC);
2019 (3) SA 1
(CC).
[12]
See Competition Commission of South Africa v Hosken Consolidated
Investments Limited and Another (CCT296/17)
[2019] ZACC 2
at
paragraphs [76] and [77]."
[13]
In Hosken Consolidated Investments Limited and Tsogo Sun Holdings
Limited v CC Case Number: 154/CAC/Sep17.
[14]
In Hosken Consolidated Investments Limited and Tsogo Sun Holdings
Limited v CC Case Number:
154/CAC/Sep17
at paragraph [26].
[15]
See Competition Commission and South Africa Airways (Pty) Ltd
18/CR/Mar01 at page 5: "
Section 55(1)
of the
Competition Act
gives
the Tribunal member presiding a wide discretion to determine
procedural issues." See also Industrial Development Corporation

of South Africa Ltd and Anglo-American Holdings Ltd 45/LM/Jun02 and
46/LM/Jun02 where it was stated in paragraph [61]: "In
our law
the exercise of the inquisitorial power has been widely construed as
a survey of certain decisions shows. This is because
an
inquisitorial tribunal's purpose is to seek the 'complete truth' as
opposed to the adversarial tribunal's seeking of 'procedural
truth'
between the versions of two or more contending parties."
[16]
Mike's Chicken & Two Others and Astral Foods Limited & The
Competition Commission 32/CAC/Sept/03 at paragraph [14].
[17]
[18]
Zondi v Member of the Executive Council for Traditional and Local
Government Affairs and Others(CCT73/03) [2005] ZACC 18.
[19]
Zondi v Member of the Executive Council for Traditional and Local
Government Affairs and Others (CCT73/03)
[2005] ZACC 18
at
paragraphs [27] and [28].
[20]
Section 1(3)
provides that any person interpreting or applying this
Act may consider appropriate foreign and international law.
[21]
Commission's Heads of Argument
[22]
United States v Swift Co.
[1932] USSC 87
;
286 U.S. 106
(1932).
[23]
United States v Swift Co.
[1932] USSC 87
;
286 U.S. 106
(1932) at paragraph [114].
[24]
Rufo v /mates of Suffolk County Jail
[1992] USSC 8
;
502 U.S. 367
(1992).
[25]
Rufo v /mates of Suffolk County Jail
[1992] USSC 8
;
502 U.S. 367
(1992) at page
384.
[26]
Lorraine NAACP v Lorain Bd. Of Educ.
[1992] USCA10 1211
;
979 F.2d 1141
, 1148 (6th Cir.
1992).
[27]
Lorraine NAACP v Lorain Bd. Of Educ.
[1992] USCA10 1211
;
979 F.2d 1141
, 1148 (6th Cir.
1992) at paragraph [28].