UITZIG SECONDARY SCHOOL GOVERNING BODY AND ANOTHER v MEC FOR EDUCATION, WESTERN CAPE 2020 (4) SA 618 (WCC)

/ / 2020, community Schemes, COVID-19, News

Case summary written by Marc Barros Gevers and checked by Kirsten Chetty.

Background

The parties in this matter are as follows: the First Applicant is the School Governing Body of Uitzig Secondary School (“the First Applicant”); the Second Applicant is Uitzig Secondary School (“the Second Applicant”); the First Respondent is the MEC for Education, Western Cape (“the First Respondent”), and; the Second Respondent is the Western Cape Education Department (“the Second Respondent”). For ease of reference, the parties herein will be referenced collectively, as the Applicants and the Respondents, respectively. This case, as above cited, specifically deals with whether an administrative decision could be suspended in terms of section 18(1) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (“the Act”), where an application that had been dismissed was being appealed.

The Applicants had initially brought an application to review and set aside the administrative decision of the Respondents to close down the Second Applicant. An interim order was initially granted, which suspended the implementation of the Respondents’ decision, and following the finalisation of the matter, the court a quo dismissed the application. Pursuant to this, the Applicants lodged an appeal against the court a quo’s judgment and order with the Supreme Court of Appeals (“SCA”). 

Pending the outcome of the application for leave to appeal, the Applicants sought clarification as to the effects of section 18 of the Act, under the circumstance. Section 18 of the Act provides for the suspension of decisions pending the outcome of an appeal. The relevant provisions of section 18, hereto, provide:

  1. Subject to subsections (2) and (3), and unless the court under exceptional circumstances orders otherwise, the operation and execution of a decision which is the subject of an application for leave to appeal or of an appeal, is suspended pending the decision of the application or appeal.

3. A court may only order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or (2), if the party who applied to the court to order otherwise, in addition proves on a balance of probabilities that he or she will suffer irreparable harm if the court does not so order and that the other party will not suffer irreparable harm if the court so orders.

The Applicants argued that as a result of having lodged an appeal with the SCA, section 18(1) suspended the court a quo’s judgment and order dismissing their application to review and set aside the Respondents’ decision, which in effect also suspended the execution and implementation of the Respondents’ decision. The Applicants further argued that they would suffer irreparable harm should the Respondents’ decision not be suspended, pending the appeal application, while the Respondents would not suffer the same fate. While it is common cause that section 18(1) suspends decisions pending an appeal, the Applicants brought this application to enforce the consequences of section 18(1) and prevent the Respondents’ from closing down the Second Applicant.

The Respondents contended that the purpose of section 18(1) was similar to that of the common law rule, such that an application for leave to appeal only suspends orders or decisions, where relief is granted against a litigant, pending such appeal. The Respondents further argued that where an application is dismissed, such dismissal cannot be suspended “simply because there is nothing to appeal that can operate or upon which execution can be levied.” The Respondents submitted that the Applicants should rather have launched an application for an interdict against the implementation of their decision. 

Given the circumstances of this case, the court thus had to determine whether section 18(1) of the Act could apply, contrary to the common law rule, where the decision being appealed was not an order which was executable.

Court held

The court emphasised that should a party wish to enforce an order that is under appeal this is to be done by way of a substantive application in terms of section 18(3) of the Act. Due to the fact that the Respondents failed to observe the requisite procedure they cannot implement their decision, pending the outcome of the appeal. 

The court held that, while the common law creates a distinction between orders that may be suspended pending an appeal, section 18(1) does not and that same applies to all decisions or order. Restricting the application of section 18(1), to that of the common law rule, would not only frustrate the purpose of the suspension principle, but would also offend section 9(1) of the Constitution by creating a discriminatory approach to litigants. Moreover, the requirement of exceptional circumstances in the suspension provision (justifying deviation therefrom) demonstrates the importance and potency of this principle.

In light of the above, the court ultimately ordered that the Respondents’ decision to close the Second Applicant was suspended in terms of section 18(1) of the Act, and further that the initial order from the court a quo, suspending the Respondents’ decision, was ‘revived’ pending the appeal application. Costs of the application (including the costs of two Counsel) were awarded against the First Respondent.

Value

This decision clarified the application of section 18(1) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, such that section 18(1) applies to all decisions or orders irrespective of whether such orders are “executable” in nature. The decision further provided that the purpose of this section is to provide protection to a litigant pending a full investigation of the matter by the Court on appeal, and that any limitation of its application would hinder the realisation of the constitutional right to equality before the law.

Meta Description

The primary issue that the court had to determine in this matter was whether an administrative decision could be suspended in terms of section 18(1) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013, where an application that had been dismissed was being appealed.

Focus Keywords

Administrative Action; Leave to Appeal; Suspension of Decision; Section 18(1) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013; Common Law.

Share Article: