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[2016] ZACC 4
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Minister for Environmental Affairs and Another v Aquarius Platinum (SA) (Pty) Ltd and Others (CCT102/15) [2016] ZACC 4; 2016 (5) BCLR 673 (CC) (23 February 2016)
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Heads of arguments
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT 102/15
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
FOR ENVIRONMENTAL
AFFAIRS
First Appellant
DEPARTMENT
OF ENVIRONMENTAL
AFFAIRS
Second Appellant
and
AQUARIUS
PLATINUM (SA) (PTY)
LIMITED
First Respondent
MINISTER
OF WATER AND
SANITATION
Second Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF WATER
AND
SANITATION
Third Respondent
MINISTER
OF MINERAL
RESOURCES
Fourth Respondent
PRESIDENT
OF THE REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
Fifth Respondent
and
LEON
BEKKER
Amicus Curiae
Neutral
citation:
Minister
for Environmental Affairs and Another v Aquarius Platinum (SA) (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[2016] ZACC 4
Coram:
Moseneke DCJ, Cameron J, Jafta J, Khampepe J,
Madlanga J, Nkabinde J, Nugent AJ, Van der Westhuizen J and Zondo J
Judgments:
Jafta J
Heard
on:
17 November 2015
Decided
on:
23 February 2016
Summary:
National Environmental Management Laws
Amendment Act 25 of 2014 — Constitutional validity of
publication of Act in absence
of regulations — Act validly
promulgated
Rationality
of President’s decision to publish Act in absence of
regulations — Publication of Act may precede regulations
—
section 32 prescribed for publication of Act before regulations —
Decision not irrational
ORDER
On
appeal from the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division,
Pretoria:
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The order of the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division,
Pretoria is set
aside and replaced with the following order:
“
The
application is dismissed.”
JUDGMENT
JAFTA
J (Moseneke DCJ, Cameron J, Khampepe J, Madlanga J, Nkabinde J,
Nugent AJ, Van der Westhuizen J and Zondo J):
[1]
This case concerns the validity of the
decision of the President of the Republic of South Africa to publish
an Act of Parliament
which he had assented to and signed. The
High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria (High Court)
declared that
the President’s decision was irrational and set
it aside.
[1]
Its order was submitted to this Court for confirmation as required by
the Constitution.
[2]
Section 172(2)(d) confers the right of appeal against this kind of
order on any person or organ of state with sufficient
interest.
Hence the appeal pursued by the Minister for Environmental Affairs
and her Department.
[2]
The first appellant is the Minister of
Environmental Affairs (Minister) and the second appellant is the
Department of Environmental
Affairs. They were cited together
with the President and the Minister of Mineral Resources as well as
the Minister of Water
and Sanitation as respondents in the High
Court. The proceedings in the High Court were instituted by
Aquarius Platinum (SA)
(Pty) Ltd (Aquarius) which sought an order
declaring invalid the President’s decision to publish an Act.
[3]
Aquarius also sought the review of the
refusal to grant a water license to it. However, the claim
against the Minister of
Water and Sanitation does not form part of
these proceedings. The High Court postponed the
determination of that claim
and decided the claim against the
President only. Consequently, the Minister of Water and
Sanitation and her Director-General
did not participate in the
present proceedings, even though they were cited. The President
and Minister of Mineral Resources
too had no participation both here
and in the High Court.
[4]
Although Aquarius initiated the application
for confirmation of the High Court’s order, it later
withdrew as an applicant
for confirmation and respondent in the
appeal. This left as active parties the appellants. At
the request of the Court,
Mr Leon Bekker, who was counsel for
Aquarius until it withdrew from the proceedings, assisted it with
submissions, for which the
Court is indebted to him.
Constitutional
and legislative scheme
[5]
For a proper understanding of the
constitutional challenge and the order granted by the High Court, it
is necessary to set out the
legal framework before narrating the
facts. The Constitution confers the legislative power at the
national sphere upon Parliament.
[3]
In the exercise of this power, Parliament passes legislation which is
introduced to it in the form of Bills. In the
National
Assembly, Bills may be introduced by a Cabinet member, a Deputy
Minister or a member of the Assembly only.
[4]
The Bill does not assume the status of a law until it has been
assented to and signed by the President.
[5]
[6]
Section 79 introduces the President as a
role player in the process of making legislation. But the
President’s role
is activated only after Parliament has
completed its functions and has presented the Bill to the President.
Upon receipt
of a Bill, there are two options open to him. He
may assent to and sign the Bill, in which case a further step would
follow.
This is the prompt publication of a Bill which has been
converted into an Act of Parliament following the assent to and
signing
by the President.
[7]
On the other hand, if the President has
reservations about the constitutionality of the Bill, he may decline
to assent to and sign
it. In that event, the President must
refer the Bill back to the Assembly for reconsideration. To
facilitate a proper
reconsideration of the Bill, the President must
specify the grounds on which his reservations are based. If,
following reconsideration,
the Bill addresses the President’s
reservations he must assent to and sign it. If not he may refer
the matter to the
Constitutional Court for a decision on its
constitutionality. However, the President is not precluded from
signing a Bill
even if his reservations were not all accommodated.
[6]
[8]
The publication of a Bill that has become
an Act of Parliament is governed by section 81 of the Constitution.
It provides:
“
A
Bill assented to and signed by the President becomes an Act of
Parliament, must be published promptly, and takes effect when
published or on a date determined in terms of the Act.”
[9]
A closer examination of section 81 reveals
that it deals with three issues. First, it tells us that a Bill
that has been assented
to and signed by the President becomes an Act
of Parliament. Second, it requires that the new Act be
published without delay.
Third, it states that as a general
rule, the Act comes into force upon publication unless stated
otherwise. It is not unusual
for Parliament to include a
provision in an Act that states that it will come into operation on a
date determined by the President
or the relevant Minister.
[7]
[10]
Sometimes Parliament prescribes a method in
terms of which the date of coming into force is determined. For
example, an Act
may have a provision that says that it will come into
force six months from the date on which it is published. In
that case
the Act does not come into operation immediately upon
publication. Nor is the determination of the date left to the
President.
Nor is the date specified. Instead the Act
prescribes the method in terms of which the date must be determined.
In
that case the date of the publication would be a point of
reference from which the period of six months would be calculated.
[11]
However, it is apparent from the text of
section 81 that publication is a peremptory requirement that must be
performed promptly
after a Bill has been assented to and signed by
the President. Publication must occur irrespective of whether
the relevant
Act is to come into force immediately or on some future
date. This suggests that in some cases there may be no
connection
between the publication and the date of coming into
operation. Therefore, it does not follow as a matter of course
that the
person who publishes an Act must satisfy herself that it is
conducive for the Act to be implemented.
[12]
But, if the Act in question empowers the
President to determine the date of coming into effect, then the
President must be satisfied
that the Act is ready to commence
operating before choosing the date. This is so because the
power to determine the date
was conferred for a specific purpose.
That purpose is to put the Act into force. If the President
were to determine
the date and purport to put the Act into force on a
date when it is practically impossible to do so, he would have
exercised the
power but not to achieve the purpose for which it was
conferred. Were he to do so deliberately, he would have
exercised the
power for a wrong purpose. But if the same
conduct were to amount to an error, there would be no rational
connection between
the exercise of the power and the purpose.
Put differently, the President’s decision would have failed to
meet the
rationality standard.
[13]
In
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association
,
[8]
the President mistakenly believed that it was appropriate to put an
Act into force. He then by proclamation determined the date
on which
the Act was supposed to have commenced operating. When it was
brought to his attention that the regulatory framework
necessary for
implementing the Act was still to be made and that, without the
framework, the Act could not be applied, the President
approached the
High Court for an order setting aside his decision. In that
case this Court held that the power vested in
the President to
determine the date on which the Act would come into operation imposed
on him the duty to satisfy himself that
it was appropriate to bring
the Act into force. In coming to this opinion the President
would, this Court observed, take
into account all relevant factors
including the time needed for making the necessary regulations.
[9]
[14]
Since in that case the President could not
bring the Act into force in the absence of the regulations, his
subjective but mistaken
belief that it was appropriate to do so, was
regarded as failing to meet the standard of objective rationality.
The Court
reasoned that decisions must be rationally connected to the
purpose for which the power was granted. On the relevant facts,
the exercise of power by the President could not achieve the
prescribed purpose of bringing the Act into operation.
[10]
Accordingly, the President’s decision was set aside. A
similar approach was followed in
Kruger
.
[11]
[15]
The duty to ascertain whether the
circumstances are ripe for bringing an Act into operation arises also
where the publication alone
would cause it to come into force.
This means that the President or the Minister who publishes an Act
must first determine
whether it is appropriate to put it into
operation. It is now convenient to set out what happened in
this case.
Factual
and litigation background
[16]
Aquarius carries on a mining business at
Kroondal in the North West Province. This mining operation
produced tailings which,
as required by the relevant legislation, had
to be deposited and stored in prescribed dams so as to protect the
environment.
When Aquarius realised that its storage dams were
progressively filling up it decided to create a new one described as
the West-West
Pit. To establish the new storage facility,
Aquarius was required to obtain statutory authorisations including a
water licence,
an environmental authorisation and a ministerial
approval to operate the West-West Pit storage. These permits
were obtainable
from different departments: Department of
Environmental Affairs, Department of Mineral Resources and the
Department of Water and
Sanitation.
[17]
In March 2013 Aquarius received an
environmental authorisation that was granted in terms of the National
Environmental Management
Act (Environmental Act).
[12]
In June 2013, the Minister of Mineral Resources granted Aquarius
permission to construct and operate the West-West Pit storage.
This permission was issued in terms of the Mineral and Petroleum
Resources Development Act.
[13]
The Department of Water and Sanitation took no decision on the
application for a water licence and as a result in October
2014
Aquarius approached the High Court for the review of that
failure to determine its application.
[18]
Meanwhile Parliament had amended the
Environmental Act to streamline the requirements for authorisations.
This objective was
achieved through two amendment Acts. These
were the National Environmental Laws Amendment Act
[14]
and the National Environmental Management: Waste Amendment Act.
[15]
These Acts introduced new and different requirements in the storage
and management of mining tailings. The amendments
required that
“residue stockpiles and residue deposits” be managed in
the prescribed manner on a site demarcated for
that purpose in the
environmental management plan or programme. The manner of
managing tailings was to be prescribed by regulations.
This
meant that for the amended legislation to be implemented there should
be relevant regulations in place. These regulations
were to be
made by the Minister charged with the responsibility to administer
the National Environmental Management: Waste Act.
[16]
[19]
Both the Environmental Amendment Act and
the Waste Amendment Act, having been passed by Parliament, were
submitted to the President
to assent to and sign them into law.
Having done so the President, acting in terms of the Constitution,
published both Acts
so as to notify the public.
[20]
As the content of these publications has a
bearing on whether the President acted rationally, it is necessary to
quote them verbatim.
Both publications were made on 2 June
2014. In respect of the Environmental Amendment Act, Government
Gazette No. 37713 reads:
“
It
is hereby notified that the President has assented to the following
Act, which is hereby published for general information—
Act
no 25 of 2014: National Environmental Management Laws Amendment Act,
2014.”
[21]
In identical terms Government Gazette No.
37714 which refers to the Waste Amendment Act reads:
“
It
is hereby notified that the President has assented to the following
Act, which is hereby published for general information:
Act
no 26 of 2014: National Environmental Management: Waste Amendment
Act, 2014.”
[22]
What immediately strikes one’s
attention is the expressed purpose of the publications. Both
Gazettes commenced by notifying
the public that the President has
assented to the relevant Act and proceeded to announce that each Act
is published for general
information. There is no mention of
the dates on which those Acts would come into force. This is
not surprising because
each Act contains a provision that prescribes
how that date should be determined. For example, the
Environmental Amendment
Act, on which Aquarius based its challenge
against the President’s decision, stipulates that it will come
into effect three
months from the date of publication.
[23]
On the expiry of three months from 2 June
2014, the Environmental Amendment Act came into operation in
September 2014. However,
the regulations that were necessary
for the implementation of some of its provisions were not in
existence. A vacuum was
created because the new Act had
repealed some of the old legislation when it came into force whereas
provisions that were supposed
to replace that old legislation could
not be put into effect without the supporting regulations. This
generated uncertainty
that led to the constitutional challenge by
Aquarius.
[24]
Aquarius held the view that the President prematurely published the
Environmental Amendment Act at the time when the regulations
were not
set in place. It contended before the High Court that the
President’s decision did not meet the rationality
requirement.
The High Court captured the argument in these terms:
“
The
upshot of the argument on behalf of Aquarius is that the decision of
the President to publish NEMLAA [Environmental Amendment
Act] at a
stage where nothing had been done to formulate the regulations
required under NEM: WA to regulate mine residues, was
not objectively
rational having regard to the powers given to the President in
sections 79 and 81 of the Constitution to cause
legislation to become
effective. The President should have exercised the power in a
responsible and considered manner, having
assessed the progress that
had been made to promulgate the related regulations required to
implement the amendments to various
legislation as a result of NEMLAA
[Environmental Amendment Act].”
[17]
[25]
Although the Minister of
Environmental Affairs was cited as a respondent together with the
President and the other Ministers, she
did not file opposing papers
explaining the failure to make regulations before the Act came into
force on 2 September 2014.
She was content to oppose the
relief sought by filing a notice raising a legal argument and
advancing it at the hearing.
The President did not participate
in the hearing. It appears that he left opposing the
application to the Ministers.
[26]
Relying on the decision of this Court in
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association
, the High
Court held that publication of an Act which brings it into force must
be rational. The Court concluded that the
present publication
was premature because it was done before the regulations were made,
which still were not in existence even
at the time the High Court
heard the matter and delivered its judgment on 27 May 2015.
[27]
Having outlined the hiatus that arose from the absence of regulations
when the Environmental Amendment Act came into operation,
the High
Court held:
“
The
above simply demonstrate the irrationality of the President’s
decision to put into effect the amendments without proper
regulations
for implementation. To that extent the proclamation is invalid
and should be set aside.”
[18]
[28]
Consequently, it declared that the publication of the Act by the
President was irrational and set it aside.
[19]
The order was submitted to this Court for confirmation.
Issue
in this Court
[29]
The single issue that arises with regard to both the confirmation and
appeal is whether the decision by the President to publish
the
Environmental Amendment Act was irrational because the publication
was done without the regulations necessary for implementing
the Act
being in existence. If indeed the President has acted
irrationally, the High Court order must be confirmed.
In
contrast, if it was rational then the appeal must be upheld and the
order should not be confirmed.
[30]
The determination of this issue requires the proper interpretation of
section 32 of the Environmental Amendment Act, read
with section
81 of the Constitution. This is so because section 32
prescribes the method of determining the date on which
the Act was to
come into operation.
[31]
But before addressing the issue, a preliminary observation needs to
be made. While the matter was pending in this Court,
the
Minister of Environmental Affairs published the relevant regulations
on 24 July 2015. This was done almost a year after
the Act had
come into force. The publication influenced Aquarius to abandon
its request for confirmation. However its
withdrawal does not
affect the determination whether the High Court’s order should
be confirmed. The duty to consider
confirmation of that order
arises directly from the Constitution and is activated independently
of what the parties to particular
litigation wish. This Court
would have been obliged to consider that order even if none of the
parties participated in the
proceedings before it. This is
because the High Court’s order would remain in suspension until
confirmed by this Court.
Meaning
of section 32
[32]
Section 32 of the Environmental Amendment Act provides:
“
This
Act is called the National Environmental Management Laws Amendment
Act, 2014, and comes into effect three months from the date
of
publication of this Act by the President in the Gazette in terms of
section 81 of the Constitution.”
[33]
Apart from stating the short title of the Act, section 32 empowers
the President to publish the Act in the Gazette, acting
in terms of
section 81 of the Constitution. Notably, in this provision,
Parliament did not authorise the President to determine
the date on
which the Act would come into force. Nor could the default
position apply. The default position would apply
where the Act
itself did not determine the date. In that event the Act would
come into effect upon publication in terms of
section 81 of the
Constitution.
[34]
But in section 32, Parliament itself has determined the date on which
the Environmental Amendment Act would come into force.
It
stipulates that the Act will commence operating three months from the
date of publication. Thus in the context of section
32,
publication serves a dual purpose. It informs the general
public about the Act and it is also a reference point from
which the
date of its commencement is ascertained.
[35]
The question that arises is whether the President was duty bound to
check that the relevant regulations were or would be in
place before
publishing the Act. For it would have been irrational for the
President to publish in the absence of the regulations
if the
legislation required him to ascertain that the regulations existed
before he published the Act. Section 32 cannot
be construed as
imposing a duty of that sort. It is not necessary for us to
consider whether, where the Act determines its
own coming into force
at a future date, the President is ever under a duty to consider
whether regulations would then be in place.
This is because
there was no suggestion that the President had any reason not to
assume that the regulations would be in place.
[36]
In the absence of express terms, the duty to assess whether it would
be appropriate to bring an Act into operation arises in
three
instances only. The first is where the Act authorises the
President to determine the date of coming into effect.
The
second is where the Act says it will come into force on the date of
publication. The third is where the Act is silent
on the issue
and the default position in section 81 of the Constitution is
triggered. In both the second and third instances,
the act of
publication alone would bring the Act into effect. In other
words, the purpose of the power to publish there is
to bring
legislation into force in both instances.
[37]
As Chaskalson P observed in
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association
, the power to
bring legislation into force imposes a duty to exercise that power
only when the functionary on whom it is conferred
has determined that
it was appropriate to bring the legislation into operation.
[20]
What emerges from this statement is that the power to put legislation
into effect has the corresponding duty of first determining
whether
relevant circumstances permit that the legislation should commence
operating. Where no criteria have been set for
the exercise of
the power, the functionary would have to decide which factors must be
taken into account. In
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association
, it was
stated:
“
The
factors relevant to this decision do not in themselves become
jurisdictional facts on which the exercise of the President’s
decision depends. It is for the President to decide which
factors are relevant, and in the light of those factors to make
the
political judgment as to whether it is appropriate to bring the Act
into force.”
[21]
[38]
However, where the legislation in question may not be brought into
operation without regulations being in place, the existence
of those
regulations becomes an essential requirement for the exercise of the
power. But there is an exception to this rule.
Here, the
publication by the President did not instantly bring the Act into
force. There was no suggestion that the
President had any
reason to think that the regulations would not exist before the Act
came into operation. The necessary
regulations could still be
made within the period of three months before the Act came into
effect. Had these regulations
been in place on or before 2
September 2014, the Act would have been properly brought into force.
The purpose of three months
[39]
Parliament considered that it would be
inappropriate to bring the Environmental Amendment Act into force
immediately upon publication.
Hence it delayed the coming into
operation of that Act by a period of three months. This was to
afford the Minister of Environmental
Affairs time to make regulations
necessary for the implementation of the Act. It is
inconceivable that the period of three
months set in section 32 was
determined without the Minister’s input. Parliament, in
its wisdom, had decided that the
period was sufficient for the
Minister to make the necessary regulations.
[40]
In these circumstances, the President had
no reason to believe that the Minister would fail to make the
regulations within the stipulated
time for the Act to be
implemented. It was not irrational for the President to publish
the Act in the absence of the relevant
regulations. The scheme
of section 32 is that the publication of the Act may precede the
making of the regulations.
It follows that the High Court erred
in holding that the President’s decision to publish the Act was
irrational.
Minister’s conduct
[41]
The fault for putting the Environmental
Amendment Act into force without the necessary regulations lies
squarely on the Minister’s
shoulders. She and she alone
is to blame and not the President. The Minister was the
functionary mandated to make the
regulations within three months from
the date of publication. This she failed to do and there is no
explanation for the failure,
despite the fact that she was cited as a
party to the proceedings. It may well be that she has a
plausible explanation for
her failure but we simply do not know
because she chose not to furnish it. For now it is fair to
infer from her failure to
give an explanation that she has none.
Otherwise she would have provided one if she had it. More so
because the matter
raises a serious dereliction of duty on her part.
[42]
The Minister’s failure to make
regulations here has serious implications to upholding the
Constitution and the rule of law.
Her omission undermined not
only the legislative process authorised by the Constitution but also
thwarted the operation of
legislation in the making of which she had
participated. In fact, it appears from the parliamentary
records that it was the
same Minister who introduced the Bill in
Parliament and that section 32 was already part of it when it was
introduced.
[22]
So, she was privy to deciding what was adequate time for making the
necessary regulations, presumably after some research
or
investigation.
[43]
Every Minister carries an obligation to
uphold the Constitution as well as to respect and promote the rights
in the Bill of Rights.
One of them is everyone’s right to
an environment that is not harmful to their health or wellbeing and
also the right to
have the environment protected, for the benefit of
present and future generations, through reasonable legislative and
other measures.
[23]
The Environmental Amendment Act is a legislative measure the Minister
was duty-bound to enforce. Here the omission
had quite the
opposite effect. From September 2014 when the Act came into
force to July 2015 when she published the regulations,
a lacuna was
created which may have had catastrophic consequences. Yet the
Minister did not consider it necessary to explain
the lapse in these
proceedings.
[44]
When it became clear to the Minister that
the making of the regulations would not be completed before the Act
came into effect,
it was expected of her to take necessary steps to
avoid the hiatus that ensued. This is exactly what
President Mandela
did in
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association
. An
application to a competent court to have the publication set aside
could have prevented that lacuna. This was not
done and we are
not told why.
Order
[45]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The appeal is upheld.
2.
The order of the High Court of South
Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
“
The
application is dismissed.”
For
the Appellants:
M M Oosthuizen SC and R M Molea instructed by the State Attorney
At
the request of the Court:
L Bekker
[1]
Aquarius Platinum (SA) Pty Ltd v Minister of
Water and Sanitation and Others
[2015]
ZAGPPHC 584 (High Court judgment).
[2]
Section 172(2) proclaims that an order of
constitutional invalidity of the conduct of the President has no
force unless confirmed
by this Court.
[3]
See section 42 and 43 of the Constitution.
Section 42 provides that—
“
(1)
Parliament consists of—
(a)
the National Assembly; and
(b)
the National Council of Provinces.
(2)
The National Assembly and the National Council of Provinces
participate
in the legislative process in the manner set out in the
Constitution.
(3)
The National Assembly is elected to represent the people and to
ensure government by the people under the Constitution. It does this
by choosing the President, by providing a national forum
for public
consideration of issues, by passing legislation and by scrutinizing
and overseeing executive action.
(4)
The National Council of Provinces represents the provinces to ensure
that provincial interests are taken into account in the national
sphere of government. It does this mainly by participating in
the
national legislative process and by providing a national forum for
public consideration of issues affecting the provinces.
(5)
The President may summon Parliament to an extraordinary sitting
at
any time to conduct special business.
(6)
The seat of Parliament is Cape Town, but an Act of Parliament
enacted in accordance with section 76(1) and (5) may determine that
the seat of Parliament is elsewhere.”
Section
43 provides:
“
In
the Republic, the legislative authority—
(a)
of the national sphere of government is vested in Parliament, as
set
out in section 44;
(b)
of the provincial sphere of government is vested in the provincial
legislatures, as set out in section 104; and
(c)
of the local sphere of government is vested in the Municipal
Councils,
as set out in section 156.”
[4]
See section 73 of the Constitution which
provides:
“
(1)
Any Bill may be introduced in the National Assembly.
(2)
Only a Cabinet member or a Deputy Minister, or a member or committee
of the National Assembly, may introduce a Bill in the Assembly, but
only the Cabinet member responsible for national financial
matters
may introduce the following Bills in the Assembly:
(a)
a money Bill; or
(b)
a Bill which provides for legislation envisaged in section 214.
(3)
A Bill referred to in section 76(3), except a Bill referred to in
subsection (2)(a) or (b) of this section, may be introduced in the
National Council of Provinces.
(4)
Only a member or committee of the National Council of Provinces
may
introduce a Bill in the Council.
(5)
A Bill passed by the National Assembly must be referred to the
National Council of Provinces if it must be considered by the
Council. A Bill passed by the Council must be referred to the
Assembly.”
[5]
Section 79 of the Constitution provides:
“
(1)
The President must either assent to and sign a Bill passed in terms
of this
Chapter or, if the President has reservations about the
constitutionality of the Bill, refer it back to the National
Assembly
for reconsideration.
(2)
The joint rules and orders must provide for the procedure for the
reconsideration of a Bill by the National Assembly and the
participation of the National Council of Provinces in the process.
(3)
The National Council of Provinces must participate in the
reconsideration
of a Bill that the President has referred back to
the National Assembly if—
(a)
the President’s reservations about the constitutionality of
the Bill relate to a procedural matter that involves the Council; or
(b)
section 74(1), (2) or (3)(b) or 76 was applicable in the passing
of
the Bill.
(4)
If, after reconsideration, a Bill fully accommodates the President’s
reservations, the President must assent to and sign the Bill; if
not, the President must either—
(a)
assent to and sign the Bill; or
(b)
refer it to the Constitutional Court for a decision on its
constitutionality.
(5)
If the Constitutional Court decides that the Bill is constitutional,
the President must assent to and sign it.”
[6]
Section 79(4) of the Constitution.
[7]
See for example
section 53
of the
National
Environmental Management Act 107 of 1998
which provides that—
“
[t]his
Act comes into operation on a date fixed by the President in the
Gazette.”
And
section 84
of the
National Environmental Management: Waste Act 59 of
2008
in relevant part states that—
“
[t]his
Act is called the
National Environmental Management: Waste Act,
2008
, and takes effect on a date determined by the Minister by
proclamation in the Gazette.”
[8]
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of
South Africa and Another: In re Ex Parte President of the Republic
of South Africa
and Others
[2000] ZACC
1
;
2000 (2) SA 674
(CC);
2000 (3) BCLR 241
(CC).
[9]
Id at para 80.
[10]
Id at paras 85-9.
[11]
Kruger v President of the Republic of South
Africa and Others
[2008] ZACC 17; 2009
(1) SA 417 (CC); 2009 (3) BCLR 268 (CC).
[12]
Above n 7.
[13]
28 of 2002.
[14]
25 of 2014 (Environmental Amendment Act).
[15]
26 of 2014 (Waste Amendment Act).
[16]
59 of 2008.
[17]
High Court judgment above n 1 at para 19.
[18]
Id at para 29.
[19]
The High Court issued the following order:
“
1.
The publication by the fourth respondent (the President) of the
National Environmental Laws Amendment Act 25 of 2014 in the
Government Gazette 37713 2 June 2014, without promulgating the
regulations
for the implementation of the amendments envisaged in
the above-mentioned Act, is reviewed and set aside;
2.
The relief sought by the applicant in prayer 4 of the
amended notice
of motion is dismissed;
3.
The fifth and sixth respondent are jointly and severally
ordered to
pay 60% of the applicant’s costs.”
[20]
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association
above
n 8 at para 80.
[21]
Id at para 81.
[22]
She introduced the Bill to the National Assembly
on 14 August 2013. This is reflected in the Announcements,
Tablings and
Committee Reports, no 100 of 2013 published on
Parliament’s official website under Parliamentary Papers that
can be accessed
here:
http://www.parliament.gov.za/live/commonrepository/Processed/20140411/531358_1.pdf
[23]
Section 24 of the Constitution provides:
“
Everyone
has the right—
(a)
to an environment that is not harmful to
their health or wellbeing; 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 justifiable
economic and social development.”