Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 715South Africa
Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Others: In re: Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Another (2022/002958) [2022] ZAGPJHC 715 (21 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 September 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Others: In re: Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Another (2022/002958) [2022] ZAGPJHC 715 (21 September 2022)
Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Others: In re: Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Another (2022/002958) [2022] ZAGPJHC 715 (21 September 2022)
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sino date 21 September 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO:
2022/002958
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
21/09/2022
In
the matter between:
INZALO
ENTERPRISE MANAGEMENT
Applicant
SYSTEMS
(PTY) LTD
And
MOGALE
CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent
MAKHOSANA
MSEZANA N.O
Second Respondent
MAKHOSANA
MSEZANA
Third Respondent
In
re:
INZALO
ENTERPRISE MANAGEMENT
Applicant
SYSTEMS
(PTY) LTD
And
MOGALE
CITY LOCAL MUNICIPLAITY
First Respondent
MUNICIPAL
MANAGER
Second Respondent
JUDGMENT
MANOIM
J:
[1]
This is an application to place the respondents in contempt of an
order given by Molahlehi
J on 14 June 2022. This case centres on a
tender that the Mogale City Council put out for the provision of a
financial management
system. The contract was to last for three
years. The system is referred to as the Municipal Standard Charter of
Accounts (MSCOA)
and has to be compliant with regulations that govern
local authority accounting. The tender was apparently not awarded
because
it was considered unsuccessful and was then re-advertised
again with the same result. However, one firm, Solvem was then
appointed
as the service provider. It remains unclear to this day as
to how it was appointed, by what process, and by whom for the
Municipality.
[2]
The applicant in these proceedings, Inzalo was amongst the firms that
tendered. When
Inzalo learnt that the contract had been awarded
outside of the tender process, it brought an urgent application to
challenge it.
Molahlehi J who heard the matter as an urgent
application gave an interim order in which he interdicted the
implementation of the
decision to appoint the service provider
(referred to in the order as the impugned decision) and then
interdicted the appointed
service provider from continuing to work on
the financial system pending a review to be brought by Inzalo. In the
interim as well
the Municipality was required to provide a list of
documents to Inzalo and to indicate what process had been followed to
appoint
it. At that time Inzalo did not know the name of the
appointed service provider nor if more than one firm had been
appointed. For
this reason, the firm is simply referred to in the
order as the “appointed service provider/s”. However,
since this
order was granted, it has emerged that a single service
provider was appointed, a firm known as Solvem.
[3]
The Municipality applied for leave to appeal the Molahlehi J decision
but was refused.
At the time of the hearing of this contempt
application the Municipality stated it intended to petition the
Supreme Court of Appeal.
It has since done so.
[4]
Inzalo then brought this contempt application on 26 August 2022. The
central contention
is that the Municipality has done nothing to
implement the Molahlehi J order. I will not repeat the terms of the
whole order as
it is lengthy. The order is in the form of an interim
interdict pending Inzalo bringing internal remedies in terms of the
Municipal
regulations and thereafter a review. The conduct sought to
be interdicted can be summarised as follows:
a.
The first part of the order is to interdict
the Municipality and the appointed service provider (now known to be
Solvem) from further
implementing the latter’s award as service
provider for the MSCOA system. (Paragraph 2 of the order).
b.
The second part of the order requires the
Municipality to provide information to the applicant, inter alia the
record of decision,
and proof that it has complied with its various
regulatory obligations (paragraph 4)
c.
The final part (paragraph 5) requires
information in the event that the appointment had been made following
some process other than
the tender process.
[5]
At the time I heard this application the Municipality has not
complied with any of
these obligations. The applicant contends that
for this reason the Municipality and its Manager, the second
respondent, are in
contempt of court and should be ordered to show
cause why a warrant should not be issued for the arrest and committal
of the municipal
manager and, in the alternative, for both
respondents jointly and severally to pay a fine of R 250 000. This
more punitive aspect
of the relief was later ameliorated after the
hearing at my request. The amended draft order omits the committal
aspect but still
provides for the respondents to show cause why they
should not be fined an amount of R 250 000 to be paid to the
applicant.
[6]
The Municipality contends that it can justify its non-compliance with
the order. In
brief it puts up the following explanation. It is not
certain how Solvem got appointed. Extraordinary as this claim might
sound,
the Municipality says it was the Acting accounting officer, a
Ms Diale, who allegedly made the appointment on 29 April 2022. Solvem
commenced work on 1 May 2022, and it is alleged has been rendering
services since then. Diale and another employee, whose involvement
is
not made clear, were put on special leave following a special council
meeting on 18 May 2022.
[7]
Since then, the Municipality has also obtained two Anton Piller
awards against Diale;
one in the High Court in Pretoria and the other
in the High Court in Polokwane. But it does not yet know what fruits
this process
will yield. This is because the Anton Piller process
requires the sheriffs to hand over the seized documents to an
independent
attorney to assess the documents before they can be given
to the Municipality. That process remained incomplete at the time of
the hearing. The Municipality states further it can find no other
documents of the kind sought on its premises although it claims
it
searched for them. Accordingly, it contends it has been impossible to
comply with the documentary part of the order.
[8]
It must be noted that the Municipality does not contend that the
award was lawful.
Mr Botha who appeared for it stated in no uncertain
terms that he concedes the process was irregular. This concession may
indeed
render some of the document requests otiose. After all, if the
triad of tender committees had never been established to award the
contract to Solvem then asking for that which does not exist seems
pointless. That said however, the lack of any positive response
from
the Municipality to the situation in which it finds itself is a
matter of concern. If its current officials are groping in
the dark
to find the answers they need to say so and why. This it has not done
and only in response to this application has it
given some, but
wholly unsatisfactory explanation.
[9]
On behalf of the second respondent the argument was that he has only
recently taken
up office (on 9 May 2022) and thus after Diale had
appointed Solvem. He claims for this reason he is not in a position,
as at this
time, to provide further information.
[10]
What the respondents have now offered is to bring an application for
self-review of the impugned
decision within 15 days of receipt of the
Diale documents from the Sherriff. I have annexed this undertaking as
“X1”
to the order I have granted.
[11]
More controversial is its response to the interdict from continuing
to make use of the services
of Solvem. Here there is a dispute of
facts which I cannot easily resolve. At the time the Molahlehi J
order was obtained, Inzalo
did not yet know the identity of the
appointed provider. Now in this application that firm has been
identified as Solvem. It is
common cause that the process of
integrating a new MsCOA supplier is not a straightforward matter of
installing a new software
package. The process requires integration
although neither party explains how long this may take. What is not
clear from the facts
is who is providing the current service, Solvem
or the prior supplier, whose name is not known to me. In the original
application
the Municipality said the following:
“
31.3
The most devastating consequence will be that the first respondent's
ability to collect rates and taxes due to it, will come
to a
standstill. I can state as a fact that the first respondent's
contract with its previous service provider came to an end and
that
the previous provider is still only involved in a temporary
transitional process. If the present newly
appointed service provider does not
carry on with the performance of its obligations without
interruption, the first respondent
will not be able to send out
accounts in respect of rates and taxes. No accounts means no payments
and without its income the first
respondent will come to a
standstill.
[12]
Inzalo suggests that the problem is easily resolved, and the previous
provider can continue to
provide the service. The Municipality allege
that the contract has expired. Inzalo argues that a deviation can be
obtained to extend
the contract. But Inzalo is not in a position to
make these recommendations. It does not know whether this solution is
either feasible
technically or whether the previous provider is
willing to do so, and if so, at what price for its services.
[13]
The Municipality paints a grave picture of any disruption to the
status quo. The solution suggested
by Inzalo, it contends, would
sever the financial artery of the municipality. Accounts could not be
rendered to ratepayers with
consequences of its income. This is the
reason the Municipality wishes to both appeal the Molahlehi J
decision, and, it now says,
to bring about a self-review of the type
contemplated in
Gijima
.
In that case the Constitutional Court held that an organ of state may
seek the review of its own decision in terms of the principle
of
legality.
[1]
[14]
In respect of the petition to appeal it
inter alia
seeks a
structural remedy of the type granted by the Constitutional Court in
Allpay Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and others v
Chief Executive Officer, South African Social Security Agency and
others
2014 (4) SA 179
(CC).
[15]
The Municipality relies on getting a form of structural relief both
as the basis for its appeal
to the SCA should it succeed with its
petition and as relief in the proposed self-review. In
Allpay
the court held in relation to the correction of invalidity that a
just and equitable order must be made and then explained how
this is
arrived at:
“
This
corrective principle operates at different levels. First, it must be
applied to correct the wrongs that led to the declaration
of
invalidity in the particular case. This must be done by having due
regard to the constitutional principles governing public
procurement,
as well as the more specific purposes of the Agency Act. Second, in
the context of public-procurement matters generally,
priority should
be given to the public good. This means that the public interest must
be assessed not only in relation to the immediate
consequences of
invalidity — in this case the setting-aside of the contract
between SASSA and Cash Paymaster — but
also in relation to the
effect of the order on future procurement and social-security
matters.
The
primacy of the public interest in procurement and social-security
matters must also be taken into account when the rights,
responsibilities and obligations of all affected persons are
assessed. This means that the enquiry cannot be one-dimensional. It
must have a broader range.”
[2]
[16]
In following this judgment, I have eschewed following a one
dimensional approach. It is impossible
for me on these papers to
decide the dispute over the ongoing service provision. The most I can
decide is that the consequences
for the Municipality and the public,
of further interdicting the operations of the Solvem are so massively
consequential that prudence
dictates that I accept the
Municipality’s’ version. But there is also another reason
for doing so. Solvem was not a
party to the original application
(admittedly for understandable reasons) and is not a party to the
present one, although it should
have been given the nature of the
relief in 2.5 of the order which imposes obligations on it.
[17]
I am thus not able to grant this relief nor to conclude that based on
the papers that the Municipality
is in wilful default until further
facts are made known. However, I am less inclined to be sympathetic
to the Municipality’s
failure to give reasons as was required
in terms of paragraphs 4 and 5 of the Molahlehi J order. Even if the
Municipality is genuinely
in the dark, as it claims it is, it could
still nevertheless have taken steps to give reasons to say so. This
is part of its obligations
as a public body to be transparent in
terms of the Constitution. It is not a private contracting party
hedging its bets. Here I
find the Municipality in certain respects is
prima facie in contempt of the Molahlehi J order and must show cause
why it should
not be sanctioned for non-compliance.
[18]
In respect of the other information sought, I am willing to give some
latitude to the finalisation
of the Anton Piller process in the
manner suggested in the proposed draft order made by the Municipality
at my request. This will
mean that compliance with this undertaking
is a factor that a court hearing the
rule nisi
may take into
account for the purpose of determining whether the respondents have
discharged their prima facie contempt of the
Molahlehi J order. The
terms of the undertaking are set out in Annexure X to the order.
[19]
The relief I have decided upon is an amalgam of the relief offered by
both parties in their draft
orders submitted to me at the end of the
hearing. The relief recognises the Municipality’s difficulties
whilst at the same
time not letting them off the hook entirely.
Costs
[20]
The fact that I have not found the Municipality in wilful default in
every respect at this stage
does not mean that they get a free pass.
The failure to make some attempt to give reasons, to communicate with
the applicant about
its difficulties and to be pro-active about
self-review deserves censure in the form of a punitive costs order. I
am therefore
awarding the applicant costs on an attorney client
scale.
ORDER:-
[21]
In the result it is ordered and declared that:
1.
The Applicant’s non-compliance with
any of the forms and procedures and prescribed time periods provided
for in the Uniform
Rules is hereby condoned and the forms and
procedures and prescribed time periods provided for in the Uniform
Rules are dispensed
with and that this application be heard,
determined, and disposed of as an urgent application in accordance
with the provisions
of Uniform Rule 6(12).
2.
The First Respondent (“
the
Municipality
”) and Second
Respondent (“
the Municipal
Manager
”) are in wilful and
deliberate contempt of order 4 and 5 of this court as granted by the
Honourable Justice Molahlehi on
14 June 2022 under case number
2022/2958, set out on Case lines from 000-1 to 000-7 (“
the
Molahlehi
Court
Order
”).
2.1.
The Municipality and the Municipal Manager
are ordered and directed to immediately deliver to the Applicant
within 7 (seven) days
of this court order:
2.1.1.
The Municipality’s written reasons
for the Impugned Decision together with the items stipulated in
prayer 4 and where applicable
5 of the Molahlehi J Court Order; and
2.1.2.
In the event that the Municipality is
unable to deliver any of the items stipulated in prayer 4 and 5 of
the Molahlehi J Court Order,
then in such event the Municipal Manager
is ordered and directed to deliver together with the written reasons
by the Second Respondent
as aforesaid a duly sworn and commissioned
affidavit setting out the reasons why such items have not been
delivered to the Applicant.
3.
A
rule
nisi
is
hereby issued calling upon all persons with a legitimate interest to
show cause, if any, on a date to be arranged with the Registrar
why
the following orders should not be made final: -
3.1.
That the First Respondent and/or the Second
Respondent and/or the Third Respondent, jointly and severally, the
one paying the other
to be absolved, be ordered to pay a fine in the
amount of R250,000 to the Applicant;
3.2.
For purposes prayer 3.1 above, it is hereby
ordered and directed that the Applicant is granted leave to file a
supplementary affidavit
setting out any further facts within 30 days
of granting this court order.
3.3.
Further, for the purpose of prayer 3 above,
the First and Second respondent may file an affidavit to demonstrate
their compliance
with the undertaking given by them set out in
Annexure X hereto.
4.
The First Respondent is to pay the costs of
this contempt of court application, such costs to be taxed on the
attorney client scale,
including the cost of counsel.
Annexure X
1.
The first respondent is ordered to, within
15 days after receipt of the documents and other material from the
Sheriff of the High
Court, Polokwane and the Sheriff of the High
Court, Pretoria seized by them as a result of the Anton Piller orders
executed by
them, launch an application for the self-review of its
impugned decision referred to in prayer 3.1 of the notice of motion.
2.
The Sheriff of the High Court, Polokwane
and the Sheriff of the High Court, Pretoria are directed to deliver
to the first respondent
the documents and other material seized by
them as a result of the Anton Piller orders executed by them within
10 days after this
order is e-mailed to them.
N. MANOIM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHNANNESBURG
Date of
hearing:
07 September 2022
Date of
judgment:
21 September 2022
Counsel for the
Applicant:
WH Pocock
Instructed
by
Di Siena Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondents:
J.J. Botha and J.P. Slabbert
Instructed
by:
Smith Van Der Watt Incorporated
[1]
State
Information Technology Agency Soc Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2018 (2) SA 23
(CC)
paragraph
41.
[2]
AllPay
paragraphs
32-3.
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