Biowatch Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others (CCT 80/08) [2009] ZACC 14; 2009 (6) SA 232 (CC) ; 2009 (10) BCLR 1014 (CC) (3 June 2009)

80 Reportability
Constitutional Law

Brief Summary

Costs — Constitutional litigation — Approach to costs awards — Biowatch Trust, an environmental NGO, sought information from governmental bodies regarding genetically modified organisms and was largely successful in its claim but ordered to pay its own costs and those of Monsanto, which intervened — High Court's costs orders challenged on appeal — Court held that costs awards in constitutional matters should consider the nature of the issues rather than the status of the parties, emphasizing the need for a flexible approach to support public interest litigation — Leave to appeal granted to address the implications of costs orders on constitutional rights and public interest advocacy.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter concerned an application for leave to appeal and, if granted, an appeal in the Constitutional Court of South Africa in which the dispute was solely about costs in constitutional litigation. The merits of the underlying information-access dispute were not before the Constitutional Court; only the correctness of the costs orders made in earlier courts was in issue.


The applicant was the Trustees for the time being of the Biowatch Trust (Biowatch), an environmental watchdog organisation that sought access to information from state bodies responsible for the regulation of genetically modified organisms. The first to third respondents were organs of state and office-bearers involved in the regulatory framework, namely the Registrar, Genetic Resources, the Executive Council for Genetically Modified Organisms, and the Minister for Agriculture. The fourth respondent, Monsanto South Africa (Pty) Ltd (Monsanto), and two other GMO producers (Stoneville Pedigreed Seed Company and D & PL SA South Africa Inc) intervened in the High Court proceedings to protect alleged confidential commercial information.


The procedural history was central to the costs question. In the High Court, Biowatch obtained substantial relief on the merits against the state respondents, including findings that the Registrar had failed in several respects to comply with constitutional and statutory duties concerning the release of information. Despite this, the High Court made no costs order in Biowatch’s favour against the state, and further ordered Biowatch to pay Monsanto’s costs (while the other interveners did not seek costs). Biowatch appealed on costs only to the Full Court of the North Gauteng High Court, which dismissed the appeal by majority. An initial attempt to obtain direct access to the Constitutional Court was refused as it was not appropriate to bypass the Supreme Court of Appeal. Biowatch then sought special leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal, which was refused without reasons. Biowatch subsequently returned to the Constitutional Court for leave to appeal.


The general subject matter underlying the dispute was Biowatch’s attempt to obtain information held by the state concerning GMO-related matters, implicating the constitutional rights of access to information and environmental protection. In the Constitutional Court, however, the dispute focused on the proper approach to costs in such constitutional litigation, including the impact of costs orders on public interest litigants and the proper allocation of costs risks where the state fails to discharge regulatory responsibilities affecting competing private interests.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause in substance (as reflected in the High Court’s judgment on the merits, accepted as the platform for the costs inquiry) that Biowatch had made multiple attempts to obtain information from state officials responsible for genetic resources and GMO regulation. These requests preceded litigation and culminated in court proceedings when the information was not provided.


The High Court’s merits judgment (as summarised in the Constitutional Court judgment) established that Biowatch had a clear right to at least some of the information sought; that the Registrar’s failure to grant access to such information constituted a continued infringement of Biowatch’s rights under section 32(1)(a) of the Constitution; and that Biowatch had no alternative remedy to enforce those rights. The High Court also accepted that certain information (or portions of records) could legitimately be refused under the grounds of refusal contained in the Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 (PAIA).


Although the High Court was critical of the breadth and lack of precision in some of Biowatch’s requests and in aspects of the notice of motion, it nonetheless declined to non-suit Biowatch on that basis and proceeded to determine the matter, granting Biowatch relief across eight of eleven categories of information requested. The Constitutional Court treated Biowatch’s success in overcoming preliminary objections and obtaining substantial categories of information as a material fact for purposes of applying costs principles.


A further material feature was that Monsanto and other private GMO producers had intervened. The High Court accepted that Biowatch’s approach had “compelled” Monsanto to come to court to protect its interests in confidentiality. However, the Constitutional Court treated it as significant that the underlying case was, in its essence, not litigation to resolve a private dispute between Biowatch and Monsanto, but litigation about whether the state had properly discharged constitutional and statutory obligations in dealing with access to information and confidentiality.


The impugned costs outcomes were, chronologically, that Biowatch—despite being largely successful against the state and obtaining information opposed by Monsanto—was left to pay its own costs and also to pay Monsanto’s costs. This cumulative burden, and its potential wider consequences for constitutional and public interest litigation, formed part of the factual matrix relevant to the interests-of-justice enquiry and to the evaluation of whether the High Court had misdirected itself on costs.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were directed to the proper judicial approach to costs in constitutional litigation and the circumstances in which appellate interference with costs discretion is justified. Although costs are typically discretionary, the Constitutional Court treated the constitutional dimension of such discretion as raising a constitutional issue within its jurisdiction.


The Court identified four related issues concerning costs awards in constitutional litigation. The first issue was whether costs outcomes should be determined by the status of the parties (for example, public interest NGO versus commercial entity) or rather by the nature of the issues and the character of the litigation.


The second issue concerned the general approach to costs in constitutional litigation in proceedings between private parties and the state, particularly the principle that adverse costs orders against unsuccessful litigants may chill the vindication of constitutional rights, balanced against the need to sanction frivolous or abusive litigation.


The third issue concerned constitutional litigation in which the state is sued for failing to fulfil regulatory responsibilities that affect competing private interests, and how costs should be approached where private parties intervene to protect their interests in a state-held regulatory process (such as confidentiality claims).


The fourth issue concerned the role of appellate courts in interfering with costs orders, including the standard for setting aside a costs order as an improper exercise of discretion, and the kinds of misdirection that justify appellate substitution.


These issues involved questions of law (the articulation of general principles applicable to costs in constitutional litigation), questions of application of law to fact (whether the High Court’s reasons justified departing from the ordinary constitutional costs approach), and an evaluative component inherent in the costs discretion and the assessment of whether a misdirection occurred.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The Constitutional Court approached the matter from the premise that costs awards in constitutional litigation are not merely incidental, because they may materially affect access to courts and the enforcement of constitutional rights. The Court affirmed that costs in constitutional matters raise a constitutional issue, and that while courts retain a flexible discretion, it was both possible and desirable to identify general points of departure developed through prior jurisprudence.


On the question of whether costs should depend on party status or issues, the Court rejected an approach that would begin by privileging or disfavoring litigants based on whether they act in the public interest, whether they are indigent, or whether they have substantial resources. The Court emphasised that equal protection under the law requires that parties not be treated as enjoying enhanced or diminished status for costs purposes purely because of their identity or funding model. The appropriate starting point was said to be the nature of the issues and whether the costs order would hinder or promote constitutional justice. At the same time, the Court stressed that public interest or constitutional character does not immunise a litigant from costs sanctions where the litigation is frivolous, vexatious, abusive, or otherwise improper.


In setting out the general approach for suits between private litigants and the state, the Court relied on the principle articulated in Affordable Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Another that ordinarily, in constitutional litigation, if the state loses it should pay the successful private party’s costs, while if the state wins each party should generally bear its own costs. The Court explained the rationale as including the need to reduce chilling effects on constitutional litigation, the broader public value of constitutional adjudication beyond the immediate parties, and the state’s primary responsibility to ensure that law and conduct are consistent with the Constitution. The Court reiterated that departure from this approach requires carefully articulated and convincing reasons, particularly where the private litigant has achieved substantial success.


The Court then considered cases where constitutional litigation arises in a regulatory setting in which multiple private parties are affected. It reasoned that even though private parties may have opposing interests, the litigation should not be treated as “private-party versus private-party” where the essential question is whether the state has fulfilled constitutional and statutory regulatory obligations. In such contexts, the Court indicated that costs awards should remain guided by the overarching principle of not discouraging constitutional claims. This approach had consequences for the impugned costs order between Biowatch and Monsanto, because Monsanto’s involvement was linked to the state’s failure to perform its initial duty to separate confidential from non-confidential information in the first place.


On the role of appellate courts in costs matters, the Court reaffirmed that costs orders are discretionary and that appellate interference requires “good reason”. Drawing on Giddey NO v JC Barnard and Partners, and the approach to discretionary decisions discussed in South African Broadcasting Corporation Ltd v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others with reference to Bookworks (Pty) Ltd v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council and Another, the Court treated the key inquiry as whether the discretion was exercised judicially and on correct principles and facts, and whether there was a misdirection (including a demonstrable blunder or unjustifiable conclusion). Where a court fails to have regard to the constitutional setting in which costs discretion must be exercised, this may amount to a serious misdirection justifying appellate reconsideration.


Applying these principles to the High Court’s refusal to order the state to pay Biowatch’s costs, the Court found that the High Court’s reasons were laconic and did not show that it had properly located the costs decision in the constitutional context, nor that it had properly measured the extent of Biowatch’s success and the chilling effect of depriving a substantially successful constitutional litigant of costs. The Court treated the omission of the constitutional dimension as a serious misdirection, placing the Constitutional Court “at large” to reconsider the costs order.


The Court accepted that Biowatch’s requests were in some respects imprecise and broad, but held that such imprecision did not rise to the level of misconduct justifying departure from the general constitutional costs approach. The High Court had been able to adjudicate the merits thoroughly, Biowatch’s application was not characterised as frivolous or vexatious, and Biowatch had been compelled to litigate by the state’s persistent failure to supply information it was legally obliged to provide. The Court also placed weight on the state’s role as an impartial steward required to balance transparency with lawful confidentiality, especially given the public controversy surrounding GMOs, and noted that rule-of-law considerations reinforced the importance of transparency and manifest fidelity to PAIA and the Constitution.


As to Monsanto’s costs award, the Court reasoned that the matter before the High Court was not truly a dispute between Biowatch and Monsanto, but rather a dispute between Biowatch and the state regarding the state’s handling of access to information and confidentiality. Monsanto was entitled to intervene to protect legitimately confidential information, but the litigation was provoked by the state’s failure to discharge its responsibilities. In this regulatory context affecting competing private interests, the Court stated that the general point of departure should be that the state bears the costs of litigants who have been successful against it, and ordinarily no costs orders should be made against private litigants who became involved. On this basis, the Court found the High Court’s costs order in favour of Monsanto unsustainable, again because the High Court did not properly take account of the constitutional nature of the litigation, the state’s role in spawning the litigation, and the fact that Biowatch obtained crucial information whose disclosure Monsanto had opposed.


In dealing with what further costs orders should follow, the Court did not intervene in the Supreme Court of Appeal costs order because Biowatch had not appealed that order in the Constitutional Court nor sought amendment. The Court nonetheless ordered the state to pay Biowatch’s costs in the Constitutional Court because the state had not opposed the application while also not abandoning the High Court costs order in its favour, thereby compelling Biowatch to seek relief in the Constitutional Court.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Constitutional Court granted leave to appeal and upheld the appeal on costs. It set aside the relevant paragraphs of the Full Court’s order and substituted an order that the first, second, and third respondents were to pay Biowatch’s costs in the High Court.


The Court further ordered that the first, second, and third respondents pay the costs occasioned by Biowatch’s application for leave to appeal to the Constitutional Court, including the costs of two counsel. The Court set aside the High Court’s order that Biowatch pay Monsanto’s costs, and replaced it with the position that no costs order should be made in relation to Monsanto’s participation.


The Court declined to interfere with the costs order made by the Supreme Court of Appeal in the special leave application, on procedural grounds related to the scope of the appeal before the Constitutional Court.


Cases Cited


Ferreira v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and Others [1995] ZACC 2; 1996 (4) BCLR 441 (CC); 1996 (2) SA 621 (CC).


Affordable Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Another [2005] ZACC 3; 2005 (6) BCLR 529 (CC); 2006 (3) SA 247 (CC).


Motsepe v Commissioner for Inland Revenue (as quoted in Affordable Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Another [2005] ZACC 3; 2005 (6) BCLR 529 (CC); 2006 (3) SA 247 (CC)).


Barkhuizen v Napier [2007] ZACC 5; 2007 (7) BCLR 691 (CC); 2007 (5) SA 323 (CC).


Campus Law Clinic v Standard Bank of South Africa and the Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development [2006] ZACC 5; 2006 (6) BCLR 669 (CC); 2006 (6) SA 103 (CC).


Giddey NO v JC Barnard and Partners [2006] ZACC 13; 2007 (2) BCLR 125 (CC); 2007 (5) SA 525 (CC).


South African Broadcasting Corporation Ltd v National Director of Public Prosecutions and Others [2006] ZACC 15; 2007 (2) BCLR 167 (CC); 2007 (1) SA 523 (CC).


Bookworks (Pty) Ltd v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan Council and Another 1999 (4) SA 799 (T).


Walele v City of Cape Town and Others [2008] ZACC 11; 2008 (11) BCLR 1067 (CC); 2008 (6) SA 129 (CC).


Wildlife and Environmental Society of South Africa v MEC for Economic Affairs, Environment and Tourism, Eastern Cape, and Others 2005 (6) SA 123 (ECD).


Silvermine Valley Coalition v Sybrand van der Spuy Boerderye and Others 2002 (1) SA 478 (CPD).


Fuel Retailers Association of South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Director General, Environmental Management, Department of Agriculture, Conservation and Environment, Mpumalanga Province and Others [2007] ZACC 13; 2007 (10) BCLR 1059 (CC); 2007 (6) SA 4 (CC).


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (section 9(1); section 24; section 32; Schedule 2, section 6).


Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000.


National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998 (section 31; section 32, including subsections 32(2) and 32(3)).


Genetically Modified Organisms Act 15 of 1997.


Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959 (section 21A).


Companies Act 61 of 1973.


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The Constitutional Court held that the award of costs in constitutional litigation raises a constitutional issue and that it is in the interests of justice to entertain an appeal on costs alone where the matter implicates issues of general constitutional importance, including potential chilling effects on constitutional litigation.


It held that the starting point in constitutional costs analysis is the nature of the issues and the character of the litigation, not the identity, status, or resources of the parties. It reaffirmed that in constitutional litigation between a private party and the state, the ordinary approach is that if the private party is substantially successful, the state should pay costs, and if the private party is unsuccessful, each party ordinarily bears its own costs, subject to departures where litigation is frivolous, vexatious, or abusive.


It further held that where the state fails in its constitutional and statutory regulatory obligations in a dispute affecting competing private interests, the costs risk should generally be located at the state, and ordinarily there should be no adverse costs orders between private parties drawn into the litigation by the state’s failure properly to discharge its duties.


On the facts, the High Court’s failure to situate the costs decision in the constitutional context and its inadequate treatment of Biowatch’s substantial success constituted a misdirection justifying appellate interference. The High Court’s costs order against Biowatch in favour of Monsanto was likewise unsustainable and was set aside. The state respondents were ordered to pay Biowatch’s costs in the High Court and in the Constitutional Court proceedings, while no costs order was made concerning Monsanto’s participation.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied and developed the principle that costs discretion in constitutional matters must be exercised with regard to the advancement of constitutional justice, including the deterrent (“chilling”) effect that adverse costs orders may have on litigants seeking to vindicate constitutional rights.


It reaffirmed that constitutional litigation costs should not be determined by a litigant’s perceived moral worth, public-interest orientation, or financial means. The operative enquiry is whether the litigation raises genuine constitutional issues and whether the litigant’s conduct warrants censure (for example, where the litigation is frivolous, vexatious, or abusive).


It confirmed as a general point of departure, derived from constitutional jurisprudence, that in constitutional litigation between a private party and the state, where the private party succeeds substantially, the state should ordinarily bear the costs; where the private party fails, each party should ordinarily bear its own costs, absent special circumstances justifying departure.


It applied the appellate principle that costs orders, though discretionary, may be interfered with where the discretion was not exercised judicially, including where the court applied wrong legal principles, misapprehended material facts, or committed a serious misdirection such as failing to account for the constitutional setting relevant to costs.


It articulated that where constitutional litigation is triggered by the state’s failure to perform its regulatory role affecting multiple private interests, costs should generally be allocated so that the state bears the costs of successful litigants against it, and there should ordinarily be no costs order between private parties who become involved in the regulatory dispute.

About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Constitutional Court
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Constitutional Court
>>
2009
>>
[2009] ZACC 14
|

|

Biowatch Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others (CCT 80/08) [2009] ZACC 14; 2009 (6) SA 232 (CC) ; 2009 (10) BCLR 1014 (CC) (3 June 2009)

Links to summary

CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 80/08
[2009] ZACC 14
TRUSTEES
FOR THE TIME BEING OF THE BIOWATCH TRUST
Applicant
versus
REGISTRAR,
GENETIC RESOURCES
First
Respondent
EXECUTIVE
COUNCIL FOR GENETICALLY MODIFIED ORGANISMS
Second
Respondent
MINISTER
FOR AGRICULTURE
Third
Respondent
MONSANTO
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
STONEVILLE
PEDIGREED SEED COMPANY
Fifth
Respondent
D
& PL SA SOUTH AFRICA INC
Sixth
Respondent
with
CENTRE
FOR CHILD LAW
First
Amicus Curiae
LAWYERS
FOR HUMAN RIGHTS
Second
Amicus Curiae
CENTRE
FOR APPLIED LEGAL STUDIES
Third
Amicus Curiae
Heard
on : 17 February 2009
Decided
on : 3 June 2009
JUDGMENT
SACHS
J:
Introduction
This case is all about
costs awards, and only about costs awards. These awards ordinarily
come at the tail-end of judgments
as appendages to decisions on the
merits. In this matter, however, they occupy centre-stage, indeed,
the whole stage. The
sole issue revolves around the proper
judicial approach to determining costs awards in constitutional
litigation.
The application for leave
to appeal was prompted by two unfavourable decisions on costs made
in respect of The Biowatch Trust
(Biowatch), an environmental
watchdog that sought information from governmental bodies
1
with statutory responsibilities for overseeing genetic modification
of organic material.
2
The first decision related to a dispute between Biowatch and the
governmental bodies. The High Court held that the Registrar
for
Genetic Resources (the Registrar) had been in default of his
responsibilities in a number of respects, and made several
orders
in Biowatch’s favour.
3
But, to mark its displeasure at what it regarded as inept requests
for information, first by letter and then in the notice
of motion,
the High Court decided to make no costs order against the
governmental bodies in Biowatch’s favour.
The second costs decision
concerned Monsanto SA (Pty) Ltd (Monsanto), the South African
component of a multinational diversified
biotechnology company
involved in the research, development and sale of Genetically
Modified Organisms (GMOs) in South Africa.
Monsanto, together with
two other producers of GMOs,
4
was permitted to intervene in the litigation. The High Court held
that Monsanto had been compelled by Biowatch’s conduct
to
intervene in the litigation, more particularly to prevent Biowatch
from having access to confidential information which
Monsanto had
supplied to the Registrar. Because of its displeasure at the lack
of precision as to the information sought by
Biowatch, the Court
ordered Biowatch to pay Monsanto’s costs.
The net result was that,
although Biowatch had been largely successful in its claim against
the government agencies, and even
though it obtained information,
whose release Monsanto had strongly opposed, it found itself in the
position of having to foot
the bill for all its own costs, and in
addition, to pay the costs incurred by Monsanto. Biowatch appealed
to the Transvaal
Provincial Division (Full Court)
5
on the question of the costs decisions only, but the Full Court, by
a two to one majority, ruled against it. It then applied
for leave
to appeal directly to this Court against the Full Court’s
judgment but that application was refused on the basis
that it was
not appropriate to by-pass the Supreme Court of Appeal. The
Supreme Court of Appeal was then approached to grant
special leave
to appeal, but that application was refused without reasons being
given. Biowatch then applied to this Court
once again for leave to
appeal. We are now called upon to decide whether leave to appeal
should be granted, and if so, whether
the appeal should be upheld.
A
shockwave appears to have swept through the public interest law
community. When Biowatch’s application for leave to appeal
was
set down for hearing in this Court, three public interest
non-governmental organisations (NGOs) applied for and were granted

the status of amici to assist the Court. The Centre for Child Law
and Lawyers for Human Rights presented joint argument dealing
with
the deleterious effect that negative costs orders would have on the
capacity of public interest law bodies to initiate
litigation in
defence of constitutional rights. They contended that the effect
would be particularly severe on bodies that
were dependent on
support from international donors. Aligning itself with these
submissions, the Centre for Applied Legal
Studies went on to
emphasise the particular importance of facilitating public interest
litigation to protect environmental
rights.
Should
leave to appeal be granted?
The determination of this
issue requires us to consider two related questions, namely, does
it raise a constitutional issue,
and whether it is in the interests
of justice for the matter to be heard.
Does
the case raise a constitutional issue?
This judgment does not
deal with costs orders in general, but only with the proper
approach to costs awards in constitutional
litigation. The cases
cited at the hearing showed that although when dealing with costs
this Court has frequently referred
to the need to take account of
the constitutional dimension of a case, it has tended to do so on a
rather ad hoc, case-by-case
manner. The need for flexibility and a
careful case-by-case approach was in fact emphasised in one of the
first cases heard
by this Court,
Ferreira v Levin
.
6
In a judgment on costs given separately from the judgment on the
merits, Ackermann J pointed out that the courts have over
the
years, developed a flexible approach to costs which proceeds from
two basic principles, the first being that the award
of costs,
unless otherwise enacted, is in the discretion of the presiding
judicial officer, and the second that the successful
party should,
as a general principle, have his or her costs.
He
went on to explain that—
“
without
attempting either comprehensiveness or complete analytical
accuracy, depriving successful parties of their costs can
depend on
circumstances such as, for example, the conduct of the parties, the
conduct of their legal representatives, whether
a party achieves
technical success only, the nature of the litigants and the nature
of the proceedings. 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.”
7
(Footnotes omitted.)
During the thirteen years
that have passed since
Ferreira v Levin
was decided we have
indeed gained considerable experience of costs awards made on a
case-by-case basis. A number of signposts
have emerged. Without
departing from the general principle that a court’s discretion
should not be straitjacketed by inflexible
rules, it is now both
possible and desirable, at least, to develop some general points of
departure with regard to costs in
constitutional litigation. More
specifically, it is necessary to attempt to delineate the proper
starting point for deciding
costs in a case involving
constitutionally protected rights to information
8
and environmental justice.
9
The award of costs in a
constitutional matter itself raises a constitutional issue and
therefore this Court has jurisdiction
to hear it.
Is
it in the interests of justice for the matter to be heard?
Section 21A of the
Supreme Court Act
10
provides that appeals solely on costs should only be entertained in
exceptional circumstances. Counsel for Monsanto contended
that
since no exceptional circumstances existed in the present matter,
this Court should not entertain the application for
leave to
appeal. Counsel for Biowatch responded that section 21A of the
Supreme Court Act was not binding on this Court.
This response is
correct. Nevertheless, the principle underlying the section is
manifestly meritorious. Appeals on this limited,
subsidiary issue
pile costs upon costs, favouring litigants with deep pockets. They
may usurp valuable appellate court time
on ancillary questions that
have no importance for the general public, and be of interest only
to the litigants. In short,
they are a side-show to the real
issues that should occupy the court’s time (although as the facts
of this case indicate,
they can be an important side-show). Thus,
although an appeal to this Court on a costs award only may be
competent even if
no exceptional circumstances exist, it will not
normally be in the interests of justice for leave to appeal to be
granted.
In my view, the present
case raises matters of special constitutional concern. The amici
contend forcefully that if the approach
suggested by the High Court
is allowed to stand, public interest litigation could be
jeopardised by the severe financial penalty
that costs orders would
impose on the organisations bringing these suits. Many civil
society groups seeking constitutional
justice are heavily dependent
on funds from donors. The amici submitted that donors would be
reluctant to provide financial
support for litigation if they
feared that the money would be swallowed up in satisfying adverse
costs orders. Whether or not
this argument is legitimate, the
practical implications of the High Court decisions on costs in this
case are undoubtedly wide-ranging.
A question of general
importance arises, namely whether the general principles developed
by the courts with regard to costs
awards need to be modified to
meet the exigencies of constitutional litigation. The answer to
this question has a direct bearing
on the correct approach to the
issues at the heart of this matter.
I accordingly conclude
that it is in the interests of justice for leave to appeal to be
granted.
The
issues
This case raises four
issues concerning costs awards in constitutional litigation. They
are:
(a) whether
costs awards in constitutional litigation should be determined by
the status of the parties or by the issue
;
(b) what the general
approach should be in relation to suits between private parties
and the state;
(c) what the general
approach should be in constitutional litigation where the state
is sued for a failure to fulfil its
constitutional and statutory
responsibilities for regulating competing claims between private
parties; and
(d) the role of
appellate courts in appeals against costs awards.
Whether
costs awards in constitutional litigation should be determined by
status or by issue
The
applicant’s argument to some extent, and the submissions of the
amici heavily, emphasised the role of public interest
advocacy
groups in promoting constitutional litigation. The arguments
underlined the ruinous effects that adverse costs orders
could have
on the capacity of these bodies to exist and do their work. The
contention was that the High Court misdirected
itself in not giving
any, or sufficient, regard to the fact that Biowatch was a public
interest NGO litigating not on its own
behalf, but in the public
interest. Monsanto’s response was precisely the converse,
namely, that Biowatch had inserted itself
into a matter in which it
had no direct interest of its own, and accordingly had to bear the
consequences of its inappropriate
involvement.
In my view, it is not
correct to begin the enquiry by a characterisation of the parties.
Rather, the starting point should
be the nature of the issues.
Equal protection under the law requires that costs awards not be
dependent on whether the parties
are acting in their own interests
or in the public interest. Nor should they be determined by
whether the parties are financially
well-endowed or indigent or, as
in the case of many NGOs, reliant on external funding. The primary
consideration in constitutional
litigation must be the way in which
a costs order would hinder or promote the advancement of
constitutional justice.
Section 9(1) of the
Constitution provides that everyone is equal before the law and has
the right to equal protection and benefit
of the law. No party to
court proceedings should be endowed with either an enhanced or a
diminished status compared to any
other. It is true that our
Constitution is a transformative one based on the understanding
that there is a great deal of systemic
unfairness in our society.
This could be an important, even decisive factor to be taken into
account in determining the actual
substantive merits of the
litigation. It has no bearing, however, on the entitlement of all
litigants to be accorded equal
status when asserting their rights
in a court of law. Courts are obligated to be impartial with
regard to litigants who appear
before them. Thus, litigants
should not be treated disadvantageously in making costs and related
awards simply because they
are pursuing commercial interests and
have deep pockets. Nor should they be looked upon with favour
because they are fighting
for the poor and lack funds themselves.
What matters is whether rich or poor, advantaged or disadvantaged,
they are asserting
rights protected by the Constitution.
Thus in
Affordable
Medicines
11
this Court stated that the ability to finance the litigation was
not a relevant consideration in making a costs order. It
held that
the general rule in constitutional litigation that an unsuccessful
litigant ought not to be ordered to pay costs
to the state should
not be departed from simply because of a perceived ability of the
unsuccessful litigant to pay. It accordingly
overturned the High
Court’s order of costs against a relatively well-off medical
practitioners’ trust that had launched
unsuccessful proceedings.
Conversely, a party should not get a privileged status simply
because it is acting in the public
interest or happens to be
indigent. It should be held to the same standards of conduct as
any other party, particularly if
it has had legal representation.
This means it should not be immunised from appropriate sanctions if
its conduct has been
vexatious, frivolous, professionally
unbecoming or in any other similar way abusive of the processes of
the Court.
This is not to deny that
vulnerable sectors of society are particularly dependent on the
support they can get from public interest
groups. A perusal of the
law reports shows how vital the participation of public interest
groups has been to the development
of this Court’s jurisprudence.
Interventions by public interests groups have led to important
decisions concerning the rights
of the homeless,
12
refugees,
13
prisoners on death row,
14
prisoners generally,
15
prisoners imprisoned for civil debt
16
and the landless.
17
There has also been pioneering litigation brought by groups
concerned with gender equality,
18
the rights of the child,
19
cases concerned with upholding the constitutional rights of gay men
and lesbian women,
20
and in relation to freedom of expression.
21
Similarly, the protection of environmental rights will not only
depend on the diligence of public officials, but on the existence

of a lively civil society willing to litigate in the public
interest. This is expressly adverted to by the National
Environmental
Management (NEMA)
22
which provides that a court may decide not to award costs against
unsuccessful litigants who are acting in the public interest
or to
protect the environment and who had made due efforts to use other
means for obtaining the relief sought.
Nevertheless, even
allowing for the invaluable role played by public interest groups
in our constitutional democracy, courts
should not use costs awards
to indicate their approval or disapproval of the specific work done
by or on behalf of particular
parties claiming their constitutional
rights. It bears repeating that what matters is not the nature of
the parties or the
causes they advance but the character of the
litigation and their conduct in pursuit of it. This means paying
due regard to
whether it has been undertaken to assert
constitutional rights and whether there has been impropriety in the
manner in which
the litigation has been undertaken. Thus, a party
seeking to protect its rights should not be treated unfavourably as
a litigant
simply because it is armed with a large litigation
war-chest, or asserting commercial, property or privacy rights
against poor
people or the state. At the same time, public
interest groups should not be tempted to lower their ethical or
professional
standards in pursuit of a cause. As the judicial oath
of office affirms, judges must administer justice to all alike,
without
fear, favour or prejudice.
23
What
the general approach should be in relation to suits between private
parties and the state
In
Affordable
Medicines
24
this Court held that as a general rule in constitutional
litigation, an unsuccessful litigant in proceedings against the

state ought not to be ordered to pay costs. In that matter a body
representing medical practitioners challenged certain aspects
of a
licensing scheme introduced by the government to control the
dispensing of medicines. Ngcobo J said the following:
“
The
award of costs is a matter which is within the discretion of the
Court considering the issue of costs. It is a discretion
that must
be exercised judicially having regard to all the relevant
considerations. One such consideration is the general
rule in
constitutional litigation that an unsuccessful litigant ought not
to be ordered to pay costs. The rationale for this
rule is that an
award of costs might have a chilling effect on the litigants who
might wish to vindicate their constitutional
rights. But this is
not an inflexible rule. There may be circumstances that justify
departure from this rule such as where
the litigation is frivolous
or vexatious. There may be conduct on the part of the litigant
that deserves censure by the Court
which may influence the Court to
order an unsuccessful litigant to pay costs. The ultimate goal is
to do that which is just
having regard to the facts and the
circumstances of the case. In
Motsepe v Commissioner for Inland
Revenue
this Court articulated the rule as follows:
‘
[O]ne
should be cautious in awarding costs against litigants who seek
to enforce their constitutional right against the
State,
particularly, where the constitutionality of the statutory
provision is attacked, lest such orders have an unduly
inhibiting
or “chilling” effect on other potential litigants in this
category. This cautious approach cannot, however,
be allowed to
develop into an inflexible rule so that litigants are induced
into believing that they are free to challenge
the
constitutionality of statutory provisions in this Court, no
matter how spurious the grounds for doing so may be or
how remote
the possibility that this Court will grant them access. This can
neither be in the interest of the administration
of justice nor
fair to those who are forced to oppose such attacks.’”
25
(Footnotes omitted.)
In
Affordable Medicines
the general rule was applied so as to
overturn a costs award that had been given in the High Court
against the applicants, the
High Court having reasoned in part that
the applicants had been largely unsuccessful and that they had
appeared to be in a
position to pay. Although Ngcobo J in
substance rejected the appeal by the medical practitioners on the
merits, he overturned
the order on costs made by the High Court
against them, and held that both in the High Court and in this
Court each party should
bear its own costs. In litigation between
the government and a private party seeking to assert a
constitutional right,
Affordable Medicines
established the
principle that ordinarily, if the government loses, it should pay
the costs of the other side, and if the government
wins, each party
should bear its own costs.
26
The rationale for this
general rule is three-fold. In the first place it diminishes the
chilling effect that adverse costs
orders would have on parties
seeking to assert constitutional rights. Constitutional litigation
frequently goes through many
courts and the costs involved can be
high. Meritorious claims might not be proceeded with because of a
fear that failure could
lead to financially ruinous consequences.
Similarly, people might be deterred from pursuing constitutional
claims because
of a concern that even if they succeed they will be
deprived of their costs because of some inadvertent procedural or
technical
lapse. Secondly, constitutional litigation, whatever the
outcome, might ordinarily bear not only on the interests of the
particular
litigants involved, but on the rights of all those in
similar situations. Indeed, each constitutional case that is heard
enriches
the general body of constitutional jurisprudence and adds
texture to what it means to be living in a constitutional
democracy.
Thirdly, it is the state that bears primary
responsibility for ensuring that both the law and state conduct are
consistent
with the Constitution.
27
If there should be a genuine, non-frivolous challenge to the
constitutionality of a law or of state conduct, it is appropriate

that the state should bear the costs if the challenge is good, but
if it is not, then the losing non-state litigant should
be shielded
from the costs consequences of failure. In this way responsibility
for ensuring that the law and state conduct
is constitutional is
placed at the correct door.
At the same time,
however, the general approach of this Court to costs in litigation
between private parties and the state,
is not unqualified. If an
application is frivolous or vexatious, or in any other way
manifestly inappropriate, the applicant
should not expect that the
worthiness of its cause will immunise it against an adverse costs
award.
28
Nevertheless, for the reasons given above, courts should not
lightly turn their backs on the general approach of not awarding

costs against an unsuccessful litigant in proceedings against the
state, where matters of genuine constitutional import arise.

Similarly, particularly powerful reasons must exist for a court not
to award costs against the state in favour of a private
litigant
who achieves substantial success in proceedings brought against it.
Merely labeling the
litigation as constitutional and dragging in specious references to
sections of the Constitution would,
of course, not be enough in
itself to invoke the general rule as referred to in
Affordable
Medicines
. The issues must be genuine and substantive, and
truly raise constitutional considerations relevant to the
adjudication.
The converse is also true, namely, that when
departing from the general rule a court should set out reasons that
are carefully
articulated and convincing. This would not only be
of assistance to an appellate court, but would also enable the
party concerned
and other potential litigants to know exactly what
had been done wrongly, and what should be avoided in the future.
What
the general approach should be in constitutional litigation where
the state is sued for a failure to fulfil its responsibilities
for
regulating competing claims between private parties
Affordable Medicines
does not extend the general rule stated above to constitutional
litigation between private parties. In
Barkhuizen
,
29
a motorist pursuing a claim against a private insurance company
sought to overturn decisions given against him in the High
Court
and the Supreme Court of Appeal, respectively. The issue was the
enforceability of a provision in a standard-form contract
that
limited the period in which a claimant could institute proceedings
against insurers who had repudiated liability. The
majority of the
Court held that the appeal should be dismissed. On the question of
costs, the majority judgment by Ngcobo
J stated:
“
This
is not a case where an order for costs should be made. The
applicant has raised important constitutional issues relating
to
the proper approach to constitutional challenges to contractual
terms. The determination of these issues is beneficial
not only to
the parties in this case but to all those who are involved in
contractual relationships. In these circumstances
justice and
fairness require that the applicant should not be burdened with an
order of costs. To order costs in the circumstances
of this case
may have a chilling effect on litigants who might wish to raise
constitutional issues. I consider therefore that
the parties
should bear their own costs, both in this Court and the Courts
below.”
30
It
should be mentioned that
Barkhuizen
is a relatively pure
case of private parties being involved in constitutional
litigation. Indeed, the voluntariness of the
relationship between
the parties was central to the dispute. By the nature of their
subject matter, constitutional issues
cannot be expected to arise
frequently in cases where the state is not a party. But from time
to time they will come to the
fore. Thus in
Campus Law Clinic
,
where a public interest NGO sought unsuccessfully to intervene in a
dispute between a bank and a mortgagor, the Court did
not award
costs as asked for by the bank, because the Campus Law Clinic
sought to raise important constitutional issues, albeit

unsuccessfully.
31
Constitutional issues are
far more likely to arise in suits where the state is required to
perform a regulating role, in the
public interest, between
competing private parties. One thinks of licences, tender awards,
and a whole range of issues where
government has to balance
different claims made by members of the public.
32
Usually, there will be statutes or regulations which delineate the
manner in which the governmental agencies involved must
fulfil
their responsibilities. In matters such as these a number of
private parties might have opposite interests in the outcome
of a
dispute where a private party challenges the constitutionality of
government action. The fact that more than one private
party is
involved in the proceedings does not mean, however, that the
litigation should be characterised as being between the
private
parties. In essence the dispute turns on whether the governmental
agencies have failed adequately to fulfil their
constitutional and
statutory responsibilities. Essentially, therefore, these matters
involve litigation between a private
party and the state, with
radiating impact on other private parties. In general terms costs
awards in these matters should
be governed by the over-arching
principle of not discouraging the pursuit of constitutional claims,
irrespective of the number
of private parties seeking to support or
oppose the state’s posture in the litigation. As will be seen,
this approach has
significant implications for the disputed costs
award between Monsanto and the applicant.
The
role of appellate courts in appeals against costs awards.
It
is clear that a court of first instance has a discretion to
determine the costs order to be awarded in the light of the
particular circumstances of the case, and that a court of appeal
will require good reason to interfere with the exercise of
this
discretion. In dealing with an appeal against an award of security
for costs under the Companies Act
33
this Court in
Giddey
34
reaffirmed the ordinary rule that the approach of an appellate
court to an appeal against the exercise of discretion by another

court will depend upon the nature of the discretion concerned.
Thus, where the discretion contemplates that the Court may
choose
from a range of options, the discretion would be discretion in the
strict sense, and would not readily be departed from
on appeal.
O’Regan J explained that—
“
the ordinary approach
on appeal to the exercise of the discretion in the strict sense is
that the appellate court will not consider
whether the decision
reached by the court at first instance was correct, but will only
interfere in limited circumstances;
for example, if it is shown
that the discretion has not been exercised judicially or has been
exercised based on a wrong appreciation
of the facts or wrong
principles of law. Even where the discretion is not a discretion
in the strict sense, there may still
be considerations which would
result in an appellate court only interfering in the exercise of
such a discretion in the limited
circumstances mentioned above.”
35
Her
judgment went on to hold that the court at first instance must
consider all the relevant facts placed before it and then
perform
the required balancing exercise. It is best placed to make an
assessment of the relevant facts and correct legal principles,
and
—
“
it
would not be appropriate for an appellate court to interfere with
that decision as long it is it is judicially made, on the
basis of
the correct facts and legal principles. If the court takes into
account irrelevant considerations or bases the exercise
of its
discretion on wrong legal principles, its judgment may be
overturned on appeal. Beyond that, however, the decision
of the
court of first instance will be unassailable”
36
In
South African Broadcasting Corporation
37
the issue was whether this Court should uphold an appeal against a
discretion exercised by the Supreme Court of Appeal not
to allow
cameras in court in a matter in which there was high public
interest. In refusing to interfere with this discretion
the
majority judgment emphasised that the question was not whether this
Court would have permitted radio and TV broadcasting
of the appeal
in the circumstances of the case. Rather it was whether the
Supreme Court of Appeal did not act judicially in
exercising its
discretion, or based the exercise of that discretion on wrong
principles of law, or misdirection on the material
facts. The
majority judgment went on to state with apparent approval);that
Cloete J had formulated the test more crisply in
Bookworks
,
38
the question being whether the court exercising the discretion had
committed some “demonstrable blunder” or reached an

“unjustifiable conclusion”.
39
Applying
these above considerations to this case
The question in this
matter is whether, given the reasons advanced by the High Court for
the decisions on costs, and in the
light of all the considerations
referred to above, the applicant has met the strict criteria
required for appellate interference
with the discretion exercised
by the High Court.
The High Court judgment
on the merits has been carefully reasoned. The bulk of the
judgment relates not to the merits but to
defensive points advanced
in
limine
in an attempt by the Registrar, supported
by Monsanto, to block the application from being dealt with at all.
The High Court
found in favour of the applicant in respect of all
these points. One of the defensive arguments raised by the state
and Monsanto
was that the catch-all requests of Biowatch to the
Registrar, and the notice of motion based on these requests, were
clearly
vexatious and oppressive. The Court stated
40
that there was substance in the submission and that Biowatch’s
approach seems to have been to expect the respondents and
the court
to read through all the correspondence and define precisely the
information requested and still outstanding.
The
Court later stated, however:
“
Requests
for access to information under section 32 of the Constitution
should obviously not be formulated in too general a
manner. But
requesters for information under section 32 of the Constitution –
or for that matter under Promotion of Access
to Information Act
(PAIA)
41
– would not always have knowledge of the precise description of
the record in which the information sought, is contained.
In the
present case the Registrar − notwithstanding Mr. Rip’s
submission to the contrary – never stated in his answering

affidavit that he had any difficulty in ascertaining precisely what
information Biowatch was looking for from time to time.
The
Registrar’s subjective opinion about Biowatch’s request for
information cannot convert an oppressive request into
an
unoppressive one or
vice versa
. The request still needs to
be considered objectively. But what is important about the
Registrar’s viewpoint is this, namely,
that if he had any doubt
about the nature and or validity of Biowatch’s requests he was,
in my view, enjoined to establish
precisely what it was seeking and
to assist it in its endeavors to achieve that. The Registrar was
not entitled to adopt a
passive role in the regard. If, after
having engaged Biowatch, he had any doubt about the
bona fides
of its requests and that he genuinely opined that it was vexatious
and oppressive or unintelligible he could and should have
refused
it on that ground. The fact that he did not do so is rather
significant.”
42
It
concluded that
“
Despite
the obvious merit in some of the submissions made on behalf of all
the respondents in connection with the overbreath
of Biowatch’s
requests for information, I do not believe that the interests of
justice will be served if Biowatch were to
be non-suited on that
ground alone.”
43
The High Court then went
on to deal with the merits, and summarised its findings as follows:
“
To
summarise then: Biowatch has, in my view, established that it has a
clear right to some of the information to which access
was and is
now requested; that the Registrar’s failure to grant it access to
such information as it was legally entitled
to, constituted a
continued infringement of Biowatch’s rights under section
32(1)(a) of the Constitution;
44
that Biowatch had no alternative remedy to enforce its rights; that
Biowatch should not be non-suited for the inept manner
in which the
information sought in its fourth request, as well as in its notice
of motion, is formulated; and that the Registrar
would be entitled
to refuse access to certain records, or parts thereof, in terms of
the grounds for refusal contained in Chapter
4 of Part 2 of PAIA.”
45
(Footnotes added and omitted.)
A
fair reading of the judgment leaves one with no doubt that on both
procedural and substantive issues the applicant achieved

substantial success against the governmental agencies. Not only
did the appropriate officials fail to fulfil their constitutional

and statutory duties in providing information, thus compelling
Biowatch to litigate, the governmental agencies compounded this
by
obdurately raising a series of unsustainable technical and
procedural objections to Biowatch’s suit. Similarly, although

Monsanto succeeded in its principal objective, which was to prevent
disclosure to Biowatch of information of a confidential
character,
it not only prolonged the litigation unnecessarily with its
strongly pursued and futile attempts to keep Biowatch
out of court
altogether on procedural grounds, but failed to stop Biowatch
acquiring crucial information sought.
Against
the background of the extensively and carefully reasoned judgment,
the High Court’s reasons for refusing to award
costs against the
state and in favour of Biowatch, and for requiring Biowatch to pay
Monsanto’s costs, it comes as a surprise
to see that the two
adverse costs decisions are dealt with in the following laconic
paragraph:
“
As
far as costs are concerned, the general rule in litigation is that
the costs should follow the result. However, although
Biowatch has
been partially successful in obtaining some of the relief sought,
the manner in which some of its requests for
information were
formulated, as well as the manner in which the relief claimed in
the notice of motion was formulated, has
convinced me that it
should not be granted a costs order in its favour in these
circumstances. Furthermore, the approach adopted
by it compelled
Monsanto, Stoneville and D & PL SA to come to court to protect
their interests. The issues were complex
and the arguments
presented by them were of great assistance. Stoneville and D &
PL SA did not seek any costs order against
the applicant. On
behalf of Monsanto its counsel sought an order for costs against
the applicant. In my view the applicant
should be ordered to pay
Monsanto’s costs. No other order as to costs is warranted in the
circumstances of this case.”
46
Both costs decisions have
been challenged.
Decision
by the High Court that the state should not bear the costs incurred
by Biowatch in that Court
I deal first with the
refusal of the High Court to order the state to pay Biowatch’s
costs. The High Court accepted that
ordinarily the applicant as
the successful party should receive its costs against the state.
In depriving Biowatch of its
costs against the state, it gave no
indication that it had properly measured the extent of Biowatch’s
victory in successfully
launching a meritorious application to
secure its rights to information in relation to
constitutionally-protected environmental
interests, or paid heed to
the constitutional character of the litigation and the chilling
effect of depriving Biowatch of
its costs.
It
should be noted that before granting leave to appeal, the High
Court judge observed that he had not in his judgment referred
to
the constitutional dimension of the matter. In the written
judgment in which he granted leave to appeal to the Full Court,
he
stated however, that the constitutional dimension had been at the
back of his mind. Even so, his failure to expressly locate
the
costs awards in a constitutional setting must raise serious doubts
as to the weight, if any, given to the constitutional
context.
The majority of the Full
Court, in dismissing the appeal against the High Court’s orders,
similarly disregarded these essential
features.
47
The
omission of the constitutional dimension constitutes a serious
misdirection. In these circumstances this Court is at large
to
reconsider the decision of the High Court not to award costs
against the state in favour of Biowatch.
As stated above
48
the general rule for an award of costs in constitutional litigation
between a private party and the state is that if the private
party
is successful, it should have its costs paid by the state, and if
unsuccessful, each party should pay its own costs.
In the present
matter, Biowatch achieved substantial success. Not only did it
manage to rebut a number of preliminary objections
aimed at keeping
the case out of court altogether, it also succeeded in getting a
favourable response from the Court to eight
of the eleven
categories of information it sought. In these circumstances the
“misconduct” of Biowatch would need to
have been of a
compelling order indeed to justify a failure to award costs against
the state. The reasons advanced by the
High Court for making no
award of costs do not, however, persuade.
The lack of precision and
the sweeping character of the requests for information as well as
of the claims made in the notice
of motion, had not prevented the
High Court from being able to give a thorough and
well-substantiated judgment on the merits.
Far from being
frivolous or vexatious, the application raised important
constitutional issues and achieved considerable success.
Biowatch
had been compelled to go to court. The root cause of the dispute
had been the persistent failure of the governmental
authorities to
provide legitimately-sought information. They were obliged to pass
on information in their possession, save
only for material which
could reasonably be withheld in order to protect certain prescribed
interests. As the High Court ultimately
found, the bulk of the
requests referred to information that had indeed to be disclosed.
Only after four requests had been
made to different state
officials, without success, was litigation embarked upon.
49
Constitutional
issues were implicated in two ways. The applicant was pursuing
information in terms of a right conferred by
section 32 of the
Constitution, and the information sought concerned environmental
rights protected by section 24 of the Constitution.
The
government’s duty was to act as impartial steward, and not to
align itself either with those who had furnished the information
or
with parties seeking access to it. It was important that the
objectivity not only be present, but be seen to be present
in
circumstances where the information related to questions of general
public interest and controversy, and there was no lawful
ground to
withhold it. This required objectivity and distance in respect of
any competing private interests that might be
involved. The
greater the public controversy, the more the need for transparency
and for manifest fidelity to the principles
of the Constitution, as
ultimately given effect to by PAIA. The papers indicated that in
other countries there had been direct
physical intervention to
prevent the production of GMOs and that considerable tension
existed in this country between supporters
and opponents of genetic
modification of foodstuffs. In these circumstances rule of law
considerations would require the government
to be astute to act in
a way which would encourage parties who have strong and
diametrically opposed opinions to submit themselves
to the
regulated and rational balancing of interests provided for by the
Constitution and PAIA.
The lack of precision in
the pre-litigation requests for information could well have called
for comment from the High Court.
But in reality it appears to have
had relatively little significance for the manner in which the case
was ultimately determined.
Biowatch achieved a substantial degree
of success. The High Court itself did the balancing of interests
which the governmental
authorities should have undertaken in the
first place. Whatever ineptitude there might have been in the
manner in which the
requests were framed fell far short of the kind
of misconduct that would have justified the Court in refusing to
follow the
general rule, namely that, where an applicant succeeds
substantially in a constitutional suit against the government, the

government should pay the applicant’s costs.
To my mind, the refusal
of the High Court to order the government to pay the costs of the
applicant was out of sync with its
judgment on the merits. The
application was largely successful. The government had obstinately
refused to provide information
which, it subsequently became clear,
it was duty bound to supply. Then, instead of welcoming a judicial
decision on questions
of considerable public importance, the
governmental bodies sought to frustrate the proceedings on purely
technical grounds.
In these circumstances the High Court erred in
allowing lapses by Biowatch to negate the general rule that the
government
pay Biowatch’s costs. And the majority in the Full
Court erred in failing to uphold Biowatch’s appeal against this
refusal.
The result is that the appeal to this Court must succeed,
and the state must be ordered to pay Biowatch’s costs in the High

Court.
The next question is
whether the state should be ordered to pay the costs incurred by
Biowatch in the appeals heard in the Full
Court and in this Court,
and in the application for leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of
Appeal.
The state did not contest
either of these appeals or take any steps relative to the
application to the Supreme Court of Appeal.
In my view, the state
must bear the consequences of the approach it took. The root cause
of the dispute was the obduracy
of the state officials’ refusal
to supply information they were duty-bound to give. The same
tenacious resistance was manifested
in the High Court. The failure
of the High Court to order the state to pay Biowatch’s costs was
manifestly wrong. Yet at
no stage after the High Court decision
was made did the state acknowledge that it should have been ordered
to pay the costs.
An acknowledgment of this kind would have ended
the litigation as far as the state was concerned.
Biowatch has, however,
not pursued a costs order against the state in relation to its
unsuccessful appeal to the Full Court.
This is because it was
represented by in-house counsel of the Legal Resources Centre in
that appeal.
In their written argument
and at the hearing of the matter, Biowatch contended that it was
entitled to a reversal also of the
costs order made against it in
its unsuccessful application for leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court of Appeal. However, in
applying for leave to appeal to this
Court, Biowatch took issue only with the costs order in the High
Court, and with the judgment
of the Full Court. It lodged no
appeal in this Court against the costs order granted by the Supreme
Court of Appeal. Nor
did it seek leave during the hearing to amend
its application to encompass that order. In these circumstances it
would not
be appropriate to consider intervening in the costs order
granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal.
I turn now to the costs
incurred by Biowatch in this Court. The state has not opposed
Biowatch’s application for leave to
appeal to this Court. At the
same time, it has failed to abandon the costs order made by the
High Court in its favour. This
compelled Biowatch to come to this
Court for relief. Biowatch has been successful and should receive
the costs incurred in
the process. The result is that the state
must pay Biowatch’s costs in the High Court and in this Court.
Costs
in favour of Monsanto
The evidence indicates
that Biowatch and Monsanto have been at conflict over these issues
for a number of years. This undoubtedly
entered into the manner in
which the case was litigated. Yet the dispute before the High
Court was not one between Biowatch
and Monsanto. The case was
between Biowatch and the state. It turned on the responsibilities
of the state to make information
given to it by Monsanto and other
parties available to Biowatch. Thus, as far as this particular
matter is concerned, the
litigation was not about a dispute between
Biowatch and Monsanto. The extra-curial battles between Biowatch
and Monsanto crystallised
in this case in the context of the
state’s responsibilities to provide information about GMO
experimentation. It was the
state’s duty to grasp the nettle and
draw an appropriate line between information to be disclosed and
information to be withheld.
Its failure to make any initial
determination provoked the litigation. Then once the litigation
commenced, Monsanto was fully
entitled to join the proceedings in
order to protect information furnished by it that fell within the
appropriate categories
of confidentiality. Thus, Monsanto joined
the matter not because of any mischievous, frivolous, or
constitutionally inappropriate
conduct on the part of the applicant
– the fact that it was vexed by Biowatch’s application did not
mean that the application
was vexatious –it entered the forensic
fray because the governmental authorities had failed to exercise
their constitutional
and statutory obligations to separate the
confidential wheat from the non-confidential chaff.
It might well be that
given the regulatory role of the government bodies and their
failure to deal from the outset with the
question of
confidentiality, a costs award requiring the state to bear the
costs of both Biowatch and Monsanto might have been
justified.
This issue was not raised by Monsanto, however, and need not be
pursued. For present purposes what matters is
that this case did
not truly involve litigation between private parties. It was
litigation in which private parties with competing
interests were
involved, not to settle a legal dispute between themselves, but in
relation to determining whether the state
had appropriately
shouldered its constitutional and statutory responsibilities.
In this respect the case
resembled
Walele
,
50
where the applicant sought to review a decision of a municipality
to approve building plans. The effect of Mr Walele’s successful

review was that the decision was set aside and referred back, which
affected the rights of the citizens that sought the approval
of the
building plans. The controversy in that case had started with a
dispute between private parties. Yet as the body responsible
for
dealing with the proposed plans and the objections made to them, it
was the City Council that was made to pay the costs.
I conclude, then, that
the general point of departure in a matter where the state is shown
to have failed to fulfill its constitutional
and statutory
obligations, and where different private parties are affected,
should be as follows: the state should bear the
costs of litigants
who have been successful against it, and ordinarily there should be
no costs orders against any private
litigants who have become
involved. This approach locates the risk for costs at the correct
door - at the end of the day,
it was the state that had control
over its conduct.
In the present case the
High Court misdirected itself in respect of the factors it was
obliged to consider when it held that
the applicants should pay
costs in favour of Monsanto. In its curt appraisal of costs, the
High Court did not take appropriate
account of the fact that the
litigation was essentially constitutional in nature. Nor did it
deal adequately with the fact
that it was the state’s conduct
that had provoked the litigation in the first place. Nor did it
take account of the fact
that its order afforded Biowatch crucial
information whose release Monsanto had resolutely opposed.
This Court is accordingly
at large to review the costs award in favour of Monsanto and come
to its own conclusion. In doing
so I will give due acknowledgement
to the fact that the High Court was extremely troubled by the lack
of precision in the claims
made by Biowatch. At the same time, it
is necessary to bear in mind that this was fresh constitutional
terrain for all. The
litigation commenced before the PAIA came
into force, and all the parties had to feel their way. In
addition, all the factors
which have already been referred to in
the discussion on the failure of the High Court to order the state
to pay Biowatch’s
costs, are relevant to the appraisal of the
correctness of the order that Biowatch pay Monsanto’s costs.
Taking all these
considerations into account, the costs award in
favour of Monsanto is unsustainable. No order at all should have
been made
between the two private parties involved in the matter.
By the same token, even
though it wrongly sought costs against Biowatch in the High Court,
and then tenaciously defended the
costs award made in its favour in
the Full Court and in this Court, Monsanto should not be ordered to
pay Biowatch’s costs
in any of the Courts. The key factor once
again is that it was the failure of the state functionaries to
fulfill their constitutional
and statutory responsibilities that
spawned the litigation and obliged both parties to come to court.
Conclusion
The form of Biowatch’s
request for information did not justify the two decisions on costs
made by the High Court. The High
Court could have shown its
disapproval in less drastic ways. The manner it chose was
demonstrably inappropriate on the facts,
and unduly chilling to
constitutional litigation in its consequences. The appeal must be
upheld and the governmental authorities
must be ordered to pay the
costs incurred by Biowatch in the High Court and in this Court.
Furthermore, the order of the High
Court requiring the applicant to
pay Monsanto’s costs must be set aside. There should be no costs
order made in respect
of the participation by Monsanto.
Order
I therefore make the
following order:
1. Leave to appeal is
granted.
2. The appeal against the
order made by the Full Court of the North Gauteng High Court dated
6 November 2007 succeeds and paragraphs
2 and 3 of that order are
set aside.
3. In the place of those
portions of the order granted by the Full Court there is
substituted—
“
(i) The
appeal against paragraph (d) of the order of the North Gauteng
High Court dated 23 February 2005 succeeds
(ii) Paragraph (d) of
that order is set aside and replaced with the following order:
‘
First,
second and third respondents are ordered to pay applicant’s
costs.’”
4 First, second and
third respondents are ordered to pay the costs occasioned by the
application for leave to appeal to
this Court, such costs to
include the costs of two counsel.
Langa CJ, Moseneke DCJ,
Cameron J, Mokgoro J, Ngcobo J, Nkabinde J, O’Regan J, Skweyiya
J, Van der Westhuizen J and Yacoob
J concurred in the judgment of
Sachs J.
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Counsel for the Fourth
Respondent:
Counsel for the First and
Second Amici Curiae:
Counsel for the Third
Amicus Curiae:
Advocate G Marcus SC and
Advocate R Moultrie instructed by the Legal Resources Centre.
Advocate F Snyckers
instructed by Bowman Gilfillan Inc.
Advocate S Budlender
instructed by the Centre for Child Law and Lawyers for Human Rights
Advocate R Keightley and
Advocate C Cooper instructed by the Centre for Applied Legal
Studies.
1
The Ministry of Agriculture, and, more
particularly, the Directorate, Genetic Resources.
2
In terms of the
Genetically Modified Organisms Act 15 of 1997
.
3
Trustees, Biowatch Trust v Registrar: Genetic Resources, and
Others
2005 (4) SA 111
(T).
4
Stoneville Pedigreed Seed Company and D & PL SA South Africa
Inc.
5
Trustees, Biowatch Trust v Registrar: Genetic Resources, and
Others,
Case number A831/2005, North Gauteng High Court,
Pretoria, 6 November 2007,
unreported.
6
Ferreira v Levin NO & Others; Vryenhoek & Others v Powell
NO & Others
[1995] ZACC 2
;
1996 (4) BCLR 441
(CC);
1996 (2)
SA 621
(CC).
7
Id at para 3.
8
Section 32 of the Constitution provides that:
“
(1) Everyone
has the right of access to—
(a) any
information held by the state; and
(b) any
information that is held by another person and is required for
the exercise or protection of any rights.
(2) National
legislation must be enacted to give effect to this right, and
may provide for reasonable measures to alleviate
the
administrative and financial burden on the state.”
The
Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000
was enacted to give
effect to this right. It came into effect after proceedings in this
matter had commenced.
9
Section 24 of the Constitution provides that:
“
Everyone
has the right—
(a) to
an environment that is not harmful to their health or
well-being; and
(b) to
have the environment protected, for the benefit of present and
future generations, through reasonable legislative
and other
measures that—
(i) prevent
pollution and ecological degradation;
(ii) promote
conservation; and
(iii) secure
ecologically sustainable development and use of
natural resources while promoting economic and social

development.”
10
59 of 1959.
11
See
Affordable Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health
and Another
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2005 (6) BCLR 529
(CC);
2006 (3) SA
247
(CC) at para 139.
12
See for example
Occupiers of 51 Olivia Road, Berea Township and
197 Mainstreet Johannesburg v City of Johannesburg and Others
[2008] ZACC 1
;
2008 (5) BCLR 475
(CC);
2008 (3) SA 208
(CC);
Jaftha
v Schoeman and Others; Van Rooyen v Stoltz and Others
[2004]
ZACC 25
;
2005 (1) BCLR 78
(CC);
2005 (2) SA 140
(CC);
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Various Occupiers
[2004] ZACC 7
;
2004
(12) BCLR 1268
(CC);
2005 (1) SA 217
(CC)
;
and
Government
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Grootboom and Others
[2000] ZACC 14
;
2000 (11) BCLR 1169
(CC);
2001 (1) SA 46
(CC).
13
See
Union of Refugee Women and Others v Director: Private
Security Industry Regulatory Authority and Others
[2006] ZACC
23
;
2007 (4) BCLR 339
(CC);
2007 (4) SA 395
(CC); and
Lawyers for
Human Rights and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and Another
[2004] ZACC 12
;
2004 (7) BCLR 775
(CC);
2004 (4) SA 125
(CC).
14
See
S v
Makwanyane and Another
[1995] ZACC 3
;
1995 (6)
BCLR 665
(CC);
1995 (3) SA 391
(CC).
15
See
August and Another v Electoral Commission and Others
[1999]
ZACC 3
;
1999 (4) BCLR 363
(CC);
1999 (3) SA 1
(CC).
16
Coetzee v Government of the Republic of South
Africa; Matiso and Others v Commanding Officer Port Elizabeth Prison
and Others
[1995] ZACC 7; 1995 (10)
BCLR 1382 (CC); 1995 (4) SA 631 (CC).
17
See for example
President of the Republic of South Africa and
Another v Modderklip Boerdery (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2005] ZACC
5
;
2005 (8) BCLR 786
(CC);
2005 (5) SA 3
(CC); and
Alexkor Ltd
and Another v Richtersveld Community and Others
[2003] ZACC 18
;
2003 (12) BCLR 1301
(CC);
2004 (5) SA 460
(CC).
18
See for example
Van der Merwe v Road Accident Fund and Others
[2006] ZACC 4
;
2006 (6) BCLR 682
(CC);
2006 (4) SA 230
(CC);
K
v Minister of Safety and Security
[2005] ZACC 8
;
2005 (9) BCLR
835
(CC);
2005 (6) SA 419
(CC); and
Carmichele v Minister of
Safety and Security and Another
[2001] ZACC 22
;
2001 (10) BCLR
995
(CC);
2001 (4) SA 938
(CC).
19
See for example
Director of Public Prosecutions, Transvaal v
Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development and Others
[2009] ZACC 8
;
Gumede (born Shange) v President of the Republic
of South Africa and Others
[2008] ZACC 23
;
2009 (3) BCLR 243
(CC);
AD and Another v DW and Others
[2007] ZACC 27
;
2008 (4)
BCLR 359
(CC);
2008 (3) SA 183
(CC);
S v M (Centre for Child Law
as Amicus Curiae)
[2007] ZACC 18
;
2007 (12) BCLR 1312
(CC);
2008
(3) SA 232
(CC) and
Bhe and Others v Magistrate, Khayelitsha, and
Others
(
Commission for Gender Equality as Amicus Curiae
)
;
Shibi v Sithole and Others; South African Human Rights Commission
and Another v President of the Republic of South Africa and
Another
[2004] ZACC 17
;
2005 (1) BCLR 1
(CC);
2005 (1) SA 580
(CC).
20
See for example
Fourie and Another v Minister of Home Affairs and
Another
[2003] ZACC 11
;
2003 (10) BCLR 1092
(CC);
2003 (5) SA
301
(CC); and
National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and
Another v Minister of Justice and Others
[1998] ZACC 15
;
1998
(12) BCLR 1517
(CC);
1999 (1) SA 6
(CC).
21
See for example
South African Defence Union v Minister of Defence
and Others
[2007] ZACC 10
;
2007 (8) BCLR 863
(CC);
2007 (5) SA
400
(CC).
22
See section 31 of
National Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998
which deals with access to information and protection of
whistle-blowers. Also see
section 32
-which provides for wide
standing to enforce environmental laws. Subsections (2) and (3) in
particular, address the issue of
costs awards within the context of
environmental litigation and state that:
“
(2) A
court may decide not to award costs against a person, or group
of persons which fails to secure the relief in respect
of any
breach or threatened breach of any provision including a
principle of this Act or any other statutory provision
concerned
with the protection of the environment or the use of natural
resources if the court is of the opinion that
the person or
group of persons acted reasonably out of a concern for the
public interest or in the interest of protecting
the environment
and had made due efforts to use other means reasonably available
for obtaining the relief sought.
(3) Where
a person or group of persons secures the relief sought in
respect of any breach or threatened breach of any
provision of
this Act or any other statutory provision concerned with the
protection of the environment, a court may
on application—
(a) award
costs on an appropriate scale to any person or persons entitled
to practise as advocate or attorney in the
Republic who
provided free legal assistance or representation to such person
or group in the preparation for or conduct
of the proceedings;
and
(b) order
that the party against whom the relief is granted pay to the
person or group concerned any reasonable costs
incurred by such
person or group in the investigation of the matter and its
preparation for the proceedings.”
23
Schedule 2, section 6 of the Constitution.
24
Above n 10.
25
Id at para 138.
26
See for example
Du Toit v Minister of Transport
[2005] ZACC
9
;
2005 (11) BCLR 1053
(CC);
2006 (1) SA 297
(CC) at para 55, in
which the majority in this Court held “although the respondent had
asked for a costs order, the applicant
has brought an important
issue to this Court regarding the application and interpretation of
the relevant provisions of the Act.
I therefore make no order as to
costs.”;
Volks NO v Robinson and Others
[2005] ZACC 2
;
2005
(5) BCLR 446
(CC);
2004 (6) SA 288
(CC); and
Jooste v Score
Supermarket
Trading (Pty) Ltd (Minister of Labour
intervening)
[1998] ZACC 18
;
1999 (2) BCLR 139
(CC);
1999 (2) SA
1
(CC). Also see
Steenkamp NO v The Provincial Tender Board of
the Eastern Cape
[2006] ZACC 16
;
2007 (3) BCLR 300
(CC);
2007
(3) SA 121
(CC).
27
We do not need to deal here with the legislation
enacted prior to 1994.
28
See
Wildlife and
Environmental Society of South Africa v MEC for Economic Affairs,
Environment and Tourism, Eastern Cape, and Others
2005 (6) SA 123
(ECD) at 144B-C, where Pickering J held that he was
regrettably obliged to order an environmental NGO to pay costs in
relation
to an application that was unnecessary and unreasonable
because its very real concerns had already been met, and the
application
was doomed to failure from its inception. See also
Silvermine Valley Coalition v Sybrand
van der Spuy Boerderye and Others
2002
(1) SA 478
(CPD) at 493C-E, where, after stating that NGOs should
not have unnecessary obstacles placed in their way when they act in
a
manner designed to hold the state, and, indeed, the private
community, accountable to the constitutional commitments of our new

society, including the protection of the environment, Davis J
refused to make an order of costs against the unsuccessful
environmental
applicant, but nevertheless ordered the applicant to
pay the wasted costs occasioned by the matter having been brought
without
justification on an urgent basis.
29
Barkhuizen v Napier
[2007] ZACC 5
;
2007 (7) BCLR 691
(CC);
2007 (5) SA 323
(CC).
30
Id at para 90.
31
Campus Law Clinic v Standard Bank of South Africa and the
Minister for Justice and Constitutional Development
[2006] ZACC
5
;
2006 (6) BCLR 669
(CC);
2006 (6) SA 103
(CC) at para 28. At the
same time it should be noted that despite the generality of the
principle relating to costs adverted
to in
Barkhuizen
(above
n 29), there have been a number of cases involving litigation
between private parties on constitutional matters where this
Court
has ordered that costs should follow the result. Usually these
matters have turned on the relationship between competing

constitutional principles. The classic example is that of
defamation where the plaintiff will generally raise dignity/privacy

interests and the defendant will rely on free speech. There have in
fact been a number of cases in this Court where costs followed
the
result see
Khumalo and Others v Holomisa
[2002] ZACC 12
;
2002
(8) BCLR 771
(CC);
2002 (5) SA 401
(CC) (defamation);
Laugh It
Off Promotions CC v South African Breweries International (Finance)
BV t/a Sabmark International and Another
[2005] ZACC 7
;
2005 (8)
BCLR 743
(CC);
2006 (1) SA 144
(CC) (trademark property protection
versus freedom of speech); and
NM v Smith
[2007] ZACC 6
;
2007
(7) BCLR 751
(CC);
2007 (5) SA 250
(CC) (privacy versus freedom of
speech - costs allowed subject to tender made in High Court). The
present matter does not, however,
require us to consider whether the
award of costs in those matters is consistent with the decision in
Barkhuizen
or with the general principles outlined in this
judgment.
32
See for example
Fuel Retailers Association of
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Director General, Environmental Management,
Department of Agriculture,
Conservation and Environment, Mpumalanga
Province and Others
[2007] ZACC 13
;
2007 (10) BCLR 1059
(CC);
2007 (6) SA 4
(CC).
33
61 of 1973.
34
Giddey NO v JC Barnard and Partners
[2006] ZACC 13
;
2007 (2)
BCLR 125
(CC);
2007 (5) SA 525
(CC).
35
Id at para 19.
36
Id at para 22.
37
South African Broadcasting Corporation Ltd v National Director of
Public Prosecutions and Others
[2006] ZACC 15
;
2007 (2) BCLR 167
(CC);
2007 (1) SA 523
(CC).
38
Bookworks (Pty) Ltd v Greater Johannesburg Transitional
Metropolitan Council and Another
1999 (4) SA 799
(T).
39
Id at 807G-J and 808A-B. See also
National Coalition
above n
20.
40
Above n 3 at para 42.
41
The High Court was referring to the
Promotion of Access to
Information Act 2 of 2000
.
42
Above n 3 at para 43.
43
Id at para 44.
44
See above note 7.
45
Above n 3 at para 66. Chapter 4 of
Part 2
of PAIA provides that
information may be refused in certain circumstance involving
privacy, commercial information, confidential
information,
protection of safety of individuals and of property and protection
of privileged records, and protection of research
information.
46
Id at para 68.
47
In his lengthy minority judgment, however, Poswa
J, correctly highlighted the significance of the constitutional
context in which
the costs issues had to be determined.
48
Above at [21].
49
Two to an official in the Directorate, Genetic Resources, one to an
official within the Ministry of Agriculture and the fourth
to the
Registrar, Directorate Genetic Resources, the first respondent in
this matter.
50
Walele v City of Cape Town and Others
[2008] ZACC 11
;
2008
(11) BCLR 1067
(CC);
2008 (6) SA 129
(CC).