Appealability of a High Court order

In the recent case of MEC for Economic Development, Gauteng and Another v Sibongile Vilakazi and Others (783/2023) [2024] ZASCA 126, the issue of appealability of a High Court order was debated. 

8 Oct 2024 5 min read Dispute Resolution Alert Article

At a glance

  • The Western Cape High Court recently confirmed that the Community Schemes Ombud Service (CSOS), its staff members, and its adjudicators are all immune from costs orders in respect of legal proceedings instituted against the CSOS in the High Court.
  • This judgment could be problematic as it removes any liability for the CSOS in successful appeals against incorrect adjudication orders, potentially reducing the incentive for proper administration and informed adjudication.

The case involved an appeal against the judgment of the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (High Court) granting the respondents interim relief pending the finalisation of a review application. The respondents were members of the Gauteng Growth and Development Agency’s (the second appellant) board of directors until 24 March 2023, when the MEC for Economic Development, Gauteng (the first appellant), being of the view that the relationship between her and the board members had irretrievably broken down, terminated their directorship and dissolved the board. Aggrieved by the first appellant’s decision, the respondents brought an application, among other things, for an order reviewing and setting aside the decision. The notice of motion was structured in two parts, with Part A, among other things, seeking the suspension of the first appellant’s decision pending the finalisation of the relief sought in Part B, which was the review application.

The High Court found in favour of the respondents and ordered that the first appellant’s decision to terminate their directorships be suspended with effect from 24 March 2023; that the respondents be reinstated as board members with effect from the same date; and that the first appellant be interdicted from appointing any board members in substitution of the respondents. The High Court also ordered the appellants to pay the respondents’ costs on the attorney and client scale. This punitive costs order was based on a finding that, in dissolving the board, the first appellant was motivated by ulterior purposes.

The appellants contend that the High Court failed to properly consider whether the respondents had established the legal requirements for interim relief and had impermissibly purported to pronounce finally on issues which fell for decision in the review application. They appealed against the order with leave of the High Court.

Before the Supreme Court of Appeal

It was against this backdrop that the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) had to consider, among other things, whether the order of the High Court was a “decision” as contemplated in terms of section 16(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (Superior Courts Act). In other words, whether the order of the High Court was appealable.

According to the respondents, the High Court’s order was classically interlocutory and therefore not appealable. They based their reasoning on the fact that, according to them, the High Court’s order was “pending the finalisation of the review envisaged in Part B of the notice of motion” and submitted that the first appellant’s decision was merely “suspended” as opposed to “set aside”. Properly construed in terms of the accepted canons of construction, the order was manifestly temporary in nature and effect, or so counsel for the respondents argued.

In considering the appealability of the order, the SCA had due regard for the already established requirements for appealability of an order: (i) that the decision must be final in effect and not open to alteration by the court of first instance; (ii) it must be definitive of the rights of the parties; and (iii) it must have the effect of disposing of at least a substantial portion of the relief claimed in the main proceedings. The SCA also had regard for the established position in our law which states that even if an order does not meet the above requirements, a matter may still be appealable if it is in the interest of justice that it should be regarded as such.

Determining whether a decision can be appealed

Additionally, the SCA was of the view that an interim order that was interlocutory to a review application, was not necessarily decisive as to appealability. In deciding whether an order is appealable, not only the form of the order must be considered, but also, and predominantly, its effect. Thus, an order that appears in form to be purely interlocutory will be appealable if its effect is such that it is final and definitive of any issue or portion thereof in the main action. By the same token, the SCA noted that an order which might appear, according to its form, to be finally definitive in the above sense may, nevertheless, be purely interlocutory in effect – the circumstances of each case will determine this.

When the above was applied to the facts of this case, the SCA said that there was little doubt that the order was appealable. According to the court, the judgment in this case purported to make final pronouncements regarding virtually all the issues that would have fallen for decision in the review application. In the SCA’s opinion, these related not only to the rationality of the MEC’s decision but also her bona fides. Additionally, the SCA noted that because a punitive costs order was made against the first appellant based on the findings of the High Court, the judgment had the effect of disposing of a substantial portion of the relief sought in Part B of the notice of motion. Further, the suspension of the first appellant’s decision to dissolve the board and the reinstatement of the respondents as board members had immediate and substantial consequences for the second appellant. Apart from the fact that the first appellant’s decision to terminate the respondents’ memberships of the board had been suspended, the first appellant was also interdicted from appointing other board members in their stead.

For these reasons, the SCA was satisfied that the High Court’s order met all the requisites for appealability, that the order was a “decision” as contemplated in section 16(1)(a) of the Superior Courts Act and, finally, that it was in the interest of justice that the appeal be heard.

In summary, an order of a High Court will only be appealable in instances where the decision is final in effect and not open to alteration by the court of first instance, where it is definitive of the rights of the parties and where it has the effect of disposing of at least a substantial portion of the relief claimed in the main proceedings. In instances where an order does not meet the criteria set out above, the order may still be appealable if it is in the interest of justice. The facts of each case will have to be carefully considered before arriving at a decision regarding the appealability of an order.

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