Sunday Times

Hlophe delay on ban case has big tobacco fuming

Top judge overturns date deal in lockdown case on cigarette ban

- By CAIPHUS KGOSANA

● British American Tobacco SA and other litigants challengin­g the lockdown ban on tobacco sales say they are mystified by a six-week delay in their case.

E-mails between the applicants’ attorneys and Lizette Potgieter, registrar for Western Cape judge president John Hlophe, show she asked lawyers for both sides to agree on a date, and they settled on Tuesday June 30.

On Thursday, Potgieter told the litigants Hlophe would only schedule the matter before a full bench in August.

The applicants then discovered that the state attorney had written to Hlophe without consulting them, asking that the case be delayed because there were “substantia­l new matters” in the responding affidavits, including testimony from two experts, to which the state needed time to respond.

Mike Evans, the applicants’ lawyer, told the Sunday Times no new matters were introduced, and everything in the affidavits was in response to co-operative governance & traditiona­l affairs minister Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma’s court papers.

In a letter to his clients, he said: “In my 33 years of practice I have never seen a situation like this before, where the parties are given the go-ahead in urgent applicatio­n to agree on a date, they do so, all the papers are filed, and two days later that decision is reversed.”

● Western Cape judge president John Hlophe has been dragged into the legal challenge against the ban on cigarette sales brought by tobacco giant British American Tobacco SA (Batsa) and nine others.

The litigants have questioned Hlope’s conduct after he overturned an agreement to hear the matter on Tuesday and instead postponed it by a month, without giving reasons. This left them fuming and threatenin­g to take the case to another court.

They also accuse the state attorney, representi­ng co-operative governance & traditiona­l affairs minister Nkosazana DlaminiZum­a and President Cyril Ramaphosa, of first having agreed to schedule the matter for Tuesday before backtracki­ng, claiming Batsa and the others introduced “substantia­lly new material” in their responding affidavits, which would take time to respond to.

Batsa and its co-applicants — which include organisati­ons representi­ng tobacco farmers — went to the Western Cape High Court asking it to set aside a three-month ban on tobacco sales introduced during the nationwide lockdown.

Dlamini-Zuma argued in court that the ban was essential to fight the Covid-19 pandemic as smokers are more vulnerable to the disease, a claim she says is backed by the World Health Organisati­on.

On Friday, the high court in Pretoria turned down an applicatio­n by the FairTrade Tobacco Associatio­n to reverse the ban, with costs.

The Sunday Times has seen e-mails between Lizette Potgieter, registrar in the chambers of the Western Cape judge president, and the applicants’ lawyers, in which all the parties first agree the matter should be heard on an urgent basis on June 30, a date they then proposed to Hlophe.

They wrote to Hlophe on June 18 asking that the case be heard on June 25 or 26, and asked for a meeting with him via video conferenci­ng to discuss the date.

On Monday, the applicants’ lawyer, Mike Evans of Webber Wentzel attorneys, wrote to Potgieter asking if Hlophe had read the email.

“We and our clients, and I’m sure the respondent­s and their legal teams as well, are very anxious to receive the answer to the request set out in the attached letters … Please can you either forward us a response or arrange a meeting for the legal teams with the honourable Judge President?” Evans wrote.

Potgieter responded on Tuesday, informing Evans that Hlophe would not meet them but wanted the lawyers to agree to a hearing date.

Evans responded twice, saying he had proposed June 30 to the state attorney and was waiting for a response, and again a short while later to say they had agreed on the date. It was also agreed that the replying affidavits would be filed on Tuesday, and that the applicants’ heads of argument would be filed on Thursday, followed by those of the respondent­s on Friday.

However, on Thursday, Potgieter stunned the litigants when she told them Hlophe would schedule the matter before a full bench only in six weeks’ time.

“At the direction of the Judge President, this matter can only be heard next term after Full Bench Appeals, that is after 4 August, 2020,” Potgieter wrote.

Evans responded, telling Potgieter to ask Hlophe to reconsider his decision because the matter was urgent and he had allowed the state and the applicants to decide on a date, which they had done, and all papers had been filed.

The applicants later found out that the state attorney had written to Hlophe without consulting them, agreeing that the case be delayed on the basis that the litigants had included “substantia­l new matters” in their responding affidavits, including testimony from two experts.

But the applicants insist that no new matters were introduced and everything they included was in response to what Dlamini-Zuma had raised.

Evans later wrote to his clients, telling them what happened: “In my 33 years of practice I have never seen a situation like this before, where the parties are given the goahead in urgent applicatio­n to agree on a date, they do so, all the papers are filed, and two days later that decision is reversed.”

He said they had thought about transferri­ng the applicatio­n to the high court in Pretoria on an urgent basis, but the state attorney’s office did not agree.

“This is a unique scenario which I cannot explain,” he wrote.

Evans told the Sunday Times yesterday: Evans told the Sunday Times on Saturday that he could not explain the decision by Hlophe to postpone the case for that length of time.

“What prompted the Judge President, when he had said we could agree on a date, and when we had agreed on 30 June as the hearing date, to suddenly shift the date to August 4 without either side asking him to do so?

“The second question is, assuming the minister needed more time to reply to our papers; why six weeks and not two weeks? We took eight days to prepare the replying papers. They could have approached the Judge President for a hearing in early July”

Evans said his clients had no other recourse but to abide by Hlophe’s decision.

Efforts to get comment from Hlophe or Potgieter proved fruitless.

Nathi Mcube, spokespers­on for the office of the chief justice, would not comment, saying such matters would not be discussed outside court.

Hlophe has been dogged by controvers­y over the past 15 years, with numerous complaints of gross misconduct being lodged against him at the Judicial Service Commission.

On Friday, Lunga Mtshali, spokespers­on for Dlamini-Zuma, issued a statement saying they rejected “misleading public comments by Batsa” that the government had caused a delay in the matter.

“The comments attributed to Batsa’s spokespers­on in the media to the effect that the government is the cause of the delay in the hearing are inexplicab­le, and are incorrect. It was the Judge President alone who decided the matter should be heard in early August. The Judge President took that decision [on Thursday] morning before the State Attorney had raised the issue of the new matter in the applicants’ replying papers. The Judge President affirmed that decision [on Friday] morning after considerin­g representa­tions from both Batsa’s attorneys and the State Attorney.”

Batsa issued a statement on Friday describing as “worrying” and “inexplicab­le” the decision not to consider the urgent applicatio­n to lift the tobacco sales ban during this legal term. The company said this will cost SA more than R1.4bn and thousands of jobs.

“This delaying of justice and a resolution of this issue is inexplicab­le. By the time the case is heard, the ban will have been in place for four-and-a-half months, during which time billions of illegal cigarettes would have been sold.

“Thousands of jobs stand to be lost in the economy as criminalit­y becomes the new normal. We are considerin­g all our legal options and will be liaising directly with the government, as we both had previously agreed that the matter was urgent and needed to be heard on Tuesday,” said Batsa spokespers­on Johnny Moloto.

 ??  ?? Western Cape judge president John Hlophe
Western Cape judge president John Hlophe
 ?? Picture: Gallo Images/Bongiwe Gumede ?? Western Cape judge president John Hlophe is the subject of controvers­y after delaying the hearing of an urgent applicatio­n.
Picture: Gallo Images/Bongiwe Gumede Western Cape judge president John Hlophe is the subject of controvers­y after delaying the hearing of an urgent applicatio­n.
 ??  ?? Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma
Nkosazana Dlamini-Zuma

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