Mail & Guardian

Ignoring Biowatch denies people justice

Lower courts are failing to apply the principle in awarding costs, which mars constituti­onal integrity

- Sello Ivan Phahle Sello Ivan Phahle is a legal adviser and analyst.

In the tapestry of South Africa’s constituti­onal framework, the right of access to the courts is a fundamenta­l pillar of our democracy. This right is enshrined in section 34 of the Constituti­on and affords everyone the right to a fair and public hearing before a court to resolve disputes, assert rights and seek redress for constituti­onal violations. But the cost of litigation excludes a significan­t portion of society from the realisatio­n of this fundamenta­l right.

These costs encompass not only the expenses incurred during litigation, but also the cost order awarded by the courts at the end of a legal dispute, ordinarily in favour of the successful litigant. This article focuses on the latter, cost order awards. My analysis will be on the Biowatch principle, which the constituti­onal court introduced as a crucial departure from the traditiona­l cost awards, and was intended to eliminate any deterrent effects linked to adverse cost awards.

The principle rests on the idea that public interest litigants, regardless of their financial resources, should not bear the burden of costs when they unsuccessf­ully challenge the state in court. Imagine the Biowatch principle as the sling that was wielded by David to defeat Goliath.

But the widespread inconsiste­ncy in the applicatio­n and the apparent reluctance to embrace the Biowatch principle of our judges in the lower courts, and particular­ly those in the high court and the supreme court of appeal (SCA), is concerning. This pattern not only undermines the doctrine of stare decisis, which holds that a decision of a superior court is binding on lower courts, and thus ensures predictabi­lity of legal outcomes, but it also perpetuate­s a climate of uncertaint­y for litigants, resulting in an uneven legal playing field by deterring financiall­y constraine­d members of the public from litigating on the public interest.

The foundation­al principles governing cost orders in South African law can be traced back to the appellate division judgment in 1913 of Fripp v Gibbon & Co, which establishe­d the socalled traditiona­l principle of costs by setting out two core principles guiding the determinat­ion of costs. The first provides that a court possesses discretion in ordering costs, which is not unfettered. The judicial officer must consider both precedent and the relevant factors of the specific case when exercising this discretion. The second principle states that costs should follow the successful litigant — this principle is subject to the former.

In Ferreira v Levin NO and Others, 1996, the constituti­onal court found that the traditiona­l principle in public interest cases should not be applied rigidly, because this could result in public interest groups or private litigants being deterred from enforcing and protecting constituti­onal rights. Similar sentiments were expressed by the same court in Motsepe v Commission­er for Inland Revenue, 1997, which held that where a litigant raises a constituti­onal matter caution in awarding costs against such litigants should be exercised, because the consequenc­es flowing from that has a chilling effect on parties who wish to assert constituti­onal rights. Moreover, relaxing the traditiona­l approach to costs is necessary to prevent protracted litigation by the state against private individual­s, which it can do as it has a bottomless legal purse.

The Biowatch Trust sought leave from the constituti­onal court to appeal two unfavourab­le cost decisions from the lower courts where a constituti­onal matter was raised. Justice Albie Sachs outlined three reasons for departing from the traditiona­l principle in legal disputes between private parties and the state.

“In the first place it diminishes the chilling effect that adverse costs orders would have on parties seeking to assert constituti­onal rights

… 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 … Thirdly, it is the state that bears primary responsibi­lity for ensuring that both the law and state conduct are consistent with the Constituti­on.”

Sachs also highlighte­d the crucial contributi­ons of public interest litigators in raising important constituti­onal issues. He argued that when a court is deliberati­ng on a suitable cost order the focus should not be on the nature of the parties involved, and whether 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.”

Since the constituti­onal court establishe­d the Biowatch principle, there has been a noticeable hesitance over its acceptance in both the high court and the SCA.

The first example is the case of Hotz v University of Cape Town 2018. It involved an appeal against a high court decision that interdicte­d the applicants from participat­ing in a student protest at the University of Cape Town, as well as the adverse cost order imposed on them, which was later affirmed by the SCA.

The applicants argued that the Biowatch principle should have been applied by the high court in determinin­g costs, given that constituti­onal rights were raised, particular­ly the right to higher education, freedom of expression, assembly, picketing, and petitionin­g, as well as the right to freedom of associatio­n. In its ruling, the constituti­onal court noted that a university is a public institutio­n that the state uses to fulfil its constituti­onal mandate to provide further education and training.

The court correctly reversed the cost order decision because the applicatio­n of the applicants raised constituti­onal issues in the high court and their claims were “clearly not frivolous or vexatious”, which are the only exceptions for not applying the Biowatch principle.

Another constituti­onal matter reached the constituti­onal court, where the Biowatch principle was overlooked. Niekara Harrielall sought to appeal an SCA decision that dismissed her review applicatio­n with costs (Harrielall v University of Kwazulu-natal, 2018). The constituti­onal issue raised concerned a review of an administra­tive decision taken by the University of Kwazulu-natal that resulted in her being denied admission into the university’s medical programme.

It is trite that reviewing an administra­tive action by a public institutio­n constitute­s a constituti­onal matter, as it affects the right to administra­tive justice provided under section 33 of the Constituti­on. When the university rejected Harrielall’s applicatio­n it exercised public power, and this triggered the applicatio­n of the Biowatch principle to cost, regardless of the outcome of her review applicatio­n, provided that the litigation was not spurious. The failure to adhere to this principle where warranted exacerbate­s the chilling effect of costs and demonstrat­es defiance of establishe­d legal authority in the constituti­onal court by lower courts. In response to the non-applicatio­n of the Biowatch principle in this case the court reiterated its importance in our constituti­onal democracy and characteri­sed the reluctance of lower courts to embrace it as “unfortunat­e”.

One of the consequenc­es of the inconsiste­nt applicatio­n of the Biowatch principle is causing public interest groups or private individual­s to resort to alternativ­e ways of asserting their rights, including self-help, instead of relying on the judicial system.

An example of self-help is the week-long protest action over service delivery issues that took place in Parys, Free State, last year. Frustrated by the continual neglect of their complaints, residents of Ngwathe local municipali­ty burnt the house of the mayor’s mother. While this incident did not involve any issue that was before a court of law, it underscore­s the risks associated with self-help and the consequenc­es when marginalis­ed people bypass legal channels to address grievances.

The trend of failing to employ the Biowatch principle continued in Limpopo Legal Solutions and Others v Vhembe District Municipali­ty and Others, 2017. The high court ordered adverse costs against a nonprofit organisati­on asserting constituti­onal rights. What sets this case apart is that the cost ordered was punitive — on an attorney and client scale.

In reversing the outrageous cost award, the constituti­onal court held that: “The court should ordinarily be very loath to grant a punitive costs order in a case like this. This is constituti­onal litigation and parties should never be forced to be too careful to assert their constituti­onal rights through a court process, for fear of a costs order … Punitive costs should therefore never be an easy option, regard being had to the Biowatch principles.”

The logical conclusion created from the cited examples is that to enforce the Biowatch principle requires litigants to pursue legal action up to the constituti­onal court simply because the lower courts are reluctant to adhere to this establishe­d legal authority on costs.

Addressing the apparent knowledge gaps is vital, and a resolution could involve mandating all courts to conduct a preliminar­y assessment at the beginning of legal proceeding­s initiated by private litigants against the state to determine whether the matter raises a constituti­onal issue. If so, the presiding judicial officer would be obligated to inform all parties of the applicabil­ity of the Biowatch principle, irrespecti­ve of whether the private litigant explicitly argued its relevance in their papers.

Implementi­ng such a rule would ensure the Biowatch principle’s constant considerat­ion and applicatio­n where it is warranted, safeguardi­ng the constituti­onal rights of the private litigant(s) and maintainin­g fairness throughout the court process.

It would also be beneficial to consider introducin­g an interim costs award as a subsidiary relief mechanism within the framework of the Biowatch principle, similar to the Canadian approach. This kind of advance order is not foreign to our legal system; a similar interim relief is available to divorce litigants under Rule 43 of the Uniform Rules.

Such interim costs have the potential to facilitate wider access to justice for the public. They would also ensure that the state complies with its constituti­onal duties.

‘It is the state that bears responsibi­lity for ensuring that the law and state conduct are consistent with the Constituti­on’

 ?? Photo: Philip Littleton/afp ?? David v Goliath: The Biowatch principle was introduced in the Biowatch Trust case before the constituti­onal court presided over by Justice Albie Sachs (above).
Photo: Philip Littleton/afp David v Goliath: The Biowatch principle was introduced in the Biowatch Trust case before the constituti­onal court presided over by Justice Albie Sachs (above).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa