THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Reportable
Case no: 346/04
In the matter between:
THE MICRO FINANCE REGULATORY COUNCIL Appellant
and
AAA INVESTMENT (PTY) LIMITED First Respondent
THE MINISTER OF TRADE & INDUSTRY Second Respondent
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Coram: Mpati DP, Streicher, Navsa, Nugent JJA et Combrinck AJA
Date of hearing: 26 August 2005
Date of delivery: 21 September 2005
Summary: Private regulator appointed for micro-lending industry ─ s 21 company
─ entitled to make rules in terms of its memorandum of association ─ whether making
of such rules constituted the exercise of public powers requiring legislative authority.
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JUDGMENT
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2
NAVSA et NUGENT JJA:
[1] ‘Neither a borrower nor a lender be;
For loan oft loses both itself and friend,
And borrowing dulls the edge of husbandry.’ 1
Shakespeare’s words are lost in the reality of the modern
commercial world. 2 The poor, especially, are exponentially
becoming borrowers 3 in what is known as the micro-lending
industry, which, as the name suggests, is the industry in which
lenders principally provide credi t to low-income earners in
relatively small amounts, at high mont hly interest rates, justified on
the basis of high risk.
[2] The present appeal concerns the regulation of the micro-
lending industry in South Africa and, more particularly, the powers
of a statutorily approved regulator.
1 Polonius to Laertes in Hamlet Act I Scene III
2 In a proposal for a directive of the European Parliament and of the Council on the
harmonisation of the laws, regulations and admin istrative provisions of the Member States
concerning credit for consumers dated 11 Sept ember 2002, the following appears: ‘Today
credit is made available to consumers via a wide range of financial instruments and it has
become the lubricant of economic life…
In macroeconomic terms the amount of credit circulating in the 15 Member States of the
European Union exceeds EUR 500 000 million corresponding to more than 7% of GPD.’
3 According to the research of Professor PG Du Plessis of the University of Stellenbosch –
The Micro-lending Industry in South Africa, July 1998 – it was estimated that 80% of South
Africa’s adult population were denied access to retail credit within the mainstream financial
services industry. The research indicated the size of the cash loan industry to be
approximately R10.1bn-R15bn and that it increased by 280% over the past two years. It also
showed that there are over 3 500 formal lendi ng agencies and over 27 000 informal lending
outlets with a large geographic dispersion. Statistics indicate a current and near future
individual market of approximately 3 million borrowers.
3
[3] Historically, persons w ho earned low incomes could not
obtain credit from established ba nks or other financiers. The main
reason for this was that such instit utions were subject to interest
rate limitations imposed by the Usury Act 73 of 1968 and were
loath to lend money to low-income earners because of the
perceived risk of default and th e disproportionate cost of
advancing small loans. Section 15A of the Usury Act, however,
permits the responsible Minister to exempt categories of money-
lending transactions from its prov isions on such conditions and to
such extent as he or she may deem fit. 4
[4] In 1992, the then responsible Minister, in response to
representations, exempted certain ca tegories of small loans from
its interest rate restrictions. As a result, a burgeoning micro-lending
industry came into existence.
5 Predictably, abuses resulted in this
industry, which, at the time , was unregulated. Government
threatened to withdraw the exempt ion. The second respondent,
the Minister of Trade and Indus try, who is presently the
responsible Minister in terms of the Usury Act, took advice from an
advisory panel about the best manner in which to regulate the
4 Section 15A provides: ‘The Minister may from time to time by notice in the Gazette exempt
the categories of money lending transactions, credit transactions or leasing transactions
which he may deem fit, from any or all of the prov isions of this Act on such conditions and to
such extent as he may deem fit, and may at any time in like manner revoke or amend any
such exemption.’
5 See fn 3 above.
4
industry. He consequently decided that he would do so through an
approved independent private body in which all interested parties
would be represented.
[5] On 1 June 1999 the Minister issued a notice under s 15A of
the Usury Act in terms of which he exempted micro-lending
transactions from the provisions of the Usury Act but only on
condition that:
‘(a) the entity concluding the … money lending transaction is registered as
a lender with a regulatory institution; and
(b) the lender shall at all times comply with this notice.’
The notice defined a ‘regulatory institution’ as a legal entity that,
amongst other things, is approved by the Minister as having the
capacity and mechanisms to ensure compliance by lenders with
the notice.
[6] The notice went on in annexure A, entitled Rules for
Purposes of Exemption Under Section 15A of the Usury Act , to set
out various rules in protection of the interests of borrowers, such
as methods of confidentiality of transactions, disclosure to
borrowers and methods of collection of repayments.
[7] On 16 July 1999 the Minister gave notice that the appellant,
a company that was incorporated in terms of s 21 of the
5
Companies Act 61 of 1973, was an approved regulatory institution
as contemplated by condition (a) of the exemption notice. The
Minister must have given his ap proval in the knowledge and with
the intention that the com pany would henceforth ensure
compliance with the terms of the exemption notice, and would
regulate the industry in accordanc e with its own powers as
conferred upon it by its memorandum of association.
[8] The appellant company came into being in anticipation of
being appointed as a regulatory body for the micro-lending
industry. The founding members of the company included
Government and representatives of the micro-lending industry and
consumers. We shall for the sake of convenience refer to the
appellant as the company.
[9] The company’s memorandum of association states that its
main object is ‘to promote the common in terests of money lenders
advancing small loans through the regulation of the small loans industry’.
[10] The specific powers of th e company, provided for in its
memorandum of association, include the power:
‘To make and enforce rules to be complied with by money lenders advancing
small loans registered with the company and any category of small loans in
particular.’
6
[11] In the exercise of its power s in terms of its memorandum of
association the company made a set of rules that were later
revised. Amongst other things, both se ts of rules allow for lenders
to register with the company. A lender who wishes to be registered
with the company is required to complete and to submit an
application for registration. In the application form the lender
undertakes to abide by the provisions of the Usury Act exemption
and the rules of the company. Upon acceptance of the application
by the company, and registration of the lender, the lender
becomes contractually obliged to abide by the exemption to which
we have referred and by the rules made by the company. Those
rules provide, amongst other things, for the manner in which the
lender must conduct various aspects of his or her business and for
the exercise by the company of discipline over the lender.
[12] Apart from that, the detailed provisions of the initial and the
revised rules are not material to this appeal except in one respect.
The revised rules (Rule 6) require lenders to submit to an
‘information broker’ (a person appointed by the company to
maintain a national loans register) ‘accurate data in respect of all
loans granted for the pur poses of such data being captured on the
national loans register.’ The purpose of the national loans register
7
is to enable lenders, by consulting the registrar, to determine
whether a borrower will be able to ma ke loan repayments. (One of
the revised rules prohibits lenders fr om making a loan without first
being satisfied that the borrower will be able to do so.)
[13] Thus the effect of the v arious measures to which we have
referred is that in order to conduct micro-lending transactions a
lender is required, as a condition of his or her exemption from the
provisions of the Usury Act, to register with the company. By
registering with the company the lender binds himself or herself to
the company contractually to abide by all its rules, and with the
ministerial rules that are contained in the exemption notice.
[14] The first respondent is a company with limited liability,
incorporated in terms of the Companies Act, operating in King
Williamstown in the Eastern Cape as a micro-lender, advancing
small, short term loans in return for interest. It advances loans of
up to R3 000-00 with a maximum loan repayment period of six
months.
[15] After the Minister approved the company as a regulatory
institution, the first respondent duly registered with it as a lender
8
and appears to have conducted it s business within the company’s
rules.
[16] During June 2001 the company announced its intention to
introduce the revised set of rules. This spurred the first respondent
into objecting to the proposed changes to the rules. It alleged, inter
alia, that the rules introduced by the company were
unconstitutional on various grounds, and it threatened legal
proceedings. Its principal objection s related to the introduction of
the national loans register with t he concomitant obligation upon
lenders to submit information for in clusion in the register, and the
prohibition upon lenders making loans without first satisfying
themselves that the borrower was able to make the required
repayments.
[17] After the company introduc ed its revised rules on 1 July 2002
it informed the first respondent that the introduction of the national
loans register was to promote responsible lending. The
Department of Trade and Industry, responding to the first
respondent’s objections (apparently on behalf of the Minister),
whilst not taking a final posit ion on the issue before legal
proceedings commenced, stated that it considered the changes to
the rules as not infringing the provisions of the Constitution.
9
[18] The first respondent then launched an application in the
Pretoria High Court for various forms of relief that were all aimed at
invalidating the company’s initial and revised rules.
[19] The grounds upon which t he first respondent sought to
attack the validity of the rules in its application went beyond those
that it had advanced earlier. Apart from the various constitutional
grounds upon which it had earlier relied the essence of the first
respondent’s attack upon the validity of the rules and which formed
the core of its argument before us, was this: It submitted that the
company, by making rules that bound lenders in the industry, was
purporting to exercise public regula tory powers, and that it had no
legislative authority for doing so. To phrase it in language that was
used by the first respondent, it wa s submitted that by making the
rules the company was purporting to legislate, without any
constitutional or other legislativ e powers to do so. Its further
submission, repeating an objecti on that it had made earlier, was
that the rule requiring disclosures to be made for the purposes of
the national loan register (which was introduced with the revised
rules) was in conflict with s 14 of the Constitution, which
guarantees the right to privacy.
10
[20] The application to the Hi gh Court succeeded and the rules
were set aside. The learned judge in the court below reasoned that
in making rules that bound part icipants in the micro-lending
industry the company was purpor ting to exercise legislative
powers, which it had no authority to do. In view of his finding it was
not necessary for the learned j udge to consider the further
constitutional challenge to the validity of the rules. This appeal
against that decision is before us with the leave of the court below.
[21] Before turning to the meri ts of the appeal there is a
preliminary matter that can be disposed of briefly. On 8 August
2005, subsequent to the filing of the heads of argument by the
parties, the Minister repealed the notice by issuing a new
exemption notice, 6 which also embraced all the rules adopted by
the company. It was contended on behalf of the first respondent
that this rendered the dispute academic and that the appeal should
be dismissed on the grounds set out in s 21A of the Supreme
Court Act 59 of 1959, namely, that any judgment or order would
have no practical effect.
[22] We disagree. The company and the Minister both contend
that the company has the right to continue making rules and do not
6 Government Notice 1407 of 2005 in Government Gazette 27889.
11
rule out the possibility of such rules being made in the future.
Furthermore, the company correctly points out that it has regulated
the affairs of lenders and borrowers who have subscribed to its
rules and that they, and it, thus require certainty in relation to their
existing and future rights and obligat ions. It is clear that a decision
by this Court will have a practical effect.
[23] The object of the company in terms of its memorandum of
association is to make and to enfo rce rules that are to be complied
with by micro-lenders that are regi stered with the company. That
is not an unlawful object, whether under the Usury Act or
otherwise, and the achievement of that object is not inconsistent
with the terms upon which the Minister approved the company as a
regulatory institution. On the contrary, the company was approved
by the Minister precisely to assume that function.
[24] The attack upon the validity of the rules made by the
company, on the grounds that it was not authorised to make the
rules, is in our view misconceived. That attack proceeds from the
premise that the company is a public regulatory authority that is
purporting unilaterally to impose a regulatory regime on micro-
lenders. That is not correct. The company is not, and does not
purport to be, a public regulator wi th authority unilaterally to
12
exercise powers over outside part ies. It is a company that
conducts business as a private regulator of lenders who choose to
submit to its authority by agreem ent. In regulating micro-lenders
who agree to such regulation it does not purport to be exercising
legislative or other public powers that require a constitutional or
legislative source. It purports only to regulate those who are
willing to submit to its regime and the source of its authority to do
so is their consent.
[25] Moreover, insofar as the consent of lenders to submit to that
regime might be said to be extracted by coercion, the source of
that coercion is not the rules of the company, or its act in making
those rules, but is rathe r the provision of the exemption notice that
compels any person who wishes to conduct business as a micro-
lender to submit to the company’s regulatory regime. We are not
called upon in this appeal to consider whether the Minister was
entitled to assert that coercion by requiring lenders to submit to
that private regulatory regime as a pre-condition to engaging in
micro-lending and we do not do so. The first respondent has
pointedly refrained from attacking the validity of the exemption
notice and the conditions that it contains. There is also no attack
in the present proceedings upon the validity of the first
13
respondent’s consent (or that of other micro-lenders) to abide by
the company’s rules, whether on the grounds that it had no
alternative but to do so if it wished to conduct business or on any
other grounds. The first respondent’s attack is directed solely to
the validity of the company’s act in making the rules.
[26] The validity or otherwise of the company’s act in making the
rules does not fall to be determined with reference to principles of
public and constitutional law, as contended for on behalf of the first
respondent, because the company does not purport to be
exercising public powers of legislation. On the contrary, it purports
only to be making rules that will be binding upon those who agree
to abide by them, in pursuance of the business that it conducts as
a private regulator. The validity of its act in making those rules falls
to be determined with reference to trite principles of company law
and in particular, whether it was empowered by its memorandum
of association to do so. We have already referred to the material
power conferred upon the company by its memorandum, which
clearly authorised it to make the rules. In those circumstances the
attack upon their validity on those grounds ought to have failed.
[27] The invasion of privacy attack on the revised rule relating to
the submission of information for purposes of the national loan
14
register is based on the view that the rule operates within the
public and constitutional law sphere. It was never suggested that
consent to such a rule in the private law context is impermissible
either in terms of the Constituti on or otherwise. We were, in any
event, not called upon to address that question. In the light of the
conclusions set out above it is unnec essary to consider this point
any further. For these reasons the appeal is upheld with costs,
including the costs of two counsel. The order of the court below is
set aside and the following order is substituted:
‘The application is dismissed with costs including the costs of two counsel if
applicable.’
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M S NAVSA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
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R W NUGENT
JUDGE OF APPEAL
CONCUR:
MPATI DP
STREICHER JA
COMBRINCK AJA