Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 821South Africa
Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Others (2022/12127) [2022] ZAGPJHC 821 (7 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 September 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Application – for the implementation of an order pending the outcome of leave to appeal or appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal. The requirements for the granting of an order in terms of section 18 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 considered – applicant bears the onus to prove the existence of ‘exceptional circumstances’ and should discharge the onus imposed by section 18(3) to show irreparable harm – application granted.
Judgment
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## Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Others (2022/12127) [2022] ZAGPJHC 821 (7 October 2022)
Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Ltd v Mogale City Local Municipality and Others (2022/12127) [2022] ZAGPJHC 821 (7 October 2022)
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sino date 7 October 2022
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# (GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No. 2958/2022
REPORTABLE:
No
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: No
REVISED:
No
12
October 2022
In
the matter between:
INZALO
ENTERPRISE MANAGEMENT
SYSTEMS
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MOGALE
CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent
MAKHOSANA
MSEZANA N.O
Second Respondent
MAKHOSANA
MSEZANA
Third Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties' legal representatives by email, and
uploaded on caselines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be
12 October 2022.
Summary:
Application – for the implementation of an
order pending the outcome of leave to appeal or appeal to the
Supreme
Court of Appeal. The requirements for the granting of an order in
terms
of section
18
of
the
Superior
Courts Act 10
of
2013
considered
– applicant bears the onus to prove the existence of
‘exceptional circumstances’ and should discharge
the onus
imposed by
section
18(3)
to
show
irreparable harm – application granted.
JUDGMENT
Molahlehi
J
Introduction
[1]
This
is an opposed urgent application instituted in terms of
section 18
of
the
Superior Courts Act, (the
Act).
[1]
In this regard, the applicant seeks an order to declare the execution
and the operation of the order made by this court on 14 June
2022 (14
June 2022 order) not suspended consequent to the petition filed with
the Supreme Court of Appeal (SCA) by the respondents
on 15 September
2022. The petition is filed by the first respondent, Mogale City
Local Municipality (the municipality).
[2]
The essence of the 14 June 2022 order,
which the applicant seeks to enforce pending the application for
leave to appeal to the SCA,
interdicted and restricted the
municipality from implementing its decision to appoint a service
provider for the development and
supply of a MSCOA Financial
Management System (the financial system). The order further directed
the municipality to provide the
applicant with written reasons for
the appointment of Solvem, the company that is alleged to have been
appointed as a service provider
to develop a financial system for the
municipality.
[3]
The brief history of this matter is that
after the above order, the municipality instituted leave to appeal
against the order. This
court dismissed the leave to appeal on 15
August 2022.
[4]
On 7 September 2022, the applicant
instituted contempt of court proceedings against the municipality and
the municipal manager.
It is apparent, as was the case in the main
application, that the respondents did not, in the contempt
proceedings, dispute the
irregularity and the unlawfulness of the
impugned tender issued by the municipality to Solvem. The
municipality further indicated
that it intended to institute a
self-review of the awarding the impugned tender.
[5]
On 7 September 2022, the municipality
filed a petition to the Supreme Court of Appeal (the SCA) to set
aside the 14 June 2022 order.
That petition is still pending before
the SCA.
[6]
The applicant's contempt of court
application was heard on 7 September 2022, and the judgment was
delivered on 21 September 2022.
In that matter, Manoim J, after
finding that the matter deserved to be treated as urgent, proceeded
to find that: (a) the respondents
were in contempt of the 14 June
2022 order, and (b) directed that the respondents provide written
reasons for the impugned decision
within seven days of that order.
Preliminary
points
[7]
The applicant has raised the following
preliminary points:
(a)
The late filing of the answering
affidavit.
(b)
Lack of authority of the municipal
manager to defend the proceedings.
(c)
Lack of authority to depose to the
answering affidavit by the municipal manager.
(d)
Issue
estopel
(e)
Res judicata
The
late filing of the answering affidavit
[8]
The municipality and the municipal
manager have not made a substantive application for condonation of
the late filing of the answering
affidavit. However, it seems to me
that the interest of justice directs that the late filing of the
answering affidavit should
be condoned. In terms of the times set out
in the notice of motion, the respondents were required to file their
answering affidavit
by no later than 17h00 on Monday, 26 September
2022.
[9]
The notice of motion is dated 22
September 2022, and the respondents' answering affidavit was filed by
email at 12h35 on 27 September
2022. The period of the delay is in my
view, is not excessive, and it should be noted that it occurred in
the context where the
applicant required the municipality to prepare
its answer over the weekend. It seems to me, based on these facts, it
is in the
interest of justice that the late filing of the answering
affidavit deserves to be condoned.
Lack
of authority to institute and depose to the answering affidavit
by
the municipal manager.
[10]
The
applicant has challenged both the authority to oppose the proceedings
and depose to the answering affidavit by the municipal
manager. In
support of its contention that the municipal manager does not have
the authority to institute proceedings on behalf
of the municipality,
the applicant referred to the case of Kouga Municipality v SA Local
Government Bargaining Council,
[2]
where the applicant's application was dismissed for failing to prove
that the employee of the municipality had authority to institute
and
prosecute the proceedings on behalf of the municipality.
[11]
The
other case relied upon by the applicant in support of its contention
is Acting Municipal Manager v Madibeng Black Business Chamber.
[3]
In that case, the municipal manager relied on the general delegation
given by the municipality to prove authority to institute
and
prosecute the legal proceedings on behalf of the municipality.
[12]
I
deal first with the issue of lack of authority to depose to the
answering affidavit by the municipal manager. This issue is often
conflated with the issue of authority to institute or defend
proceedings by either an attorney or an individual. In clarifying
the
issue, the SCA in Ganes and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd,
[4]
held that it is irrelevant whether a person had been authorised to
depose to the founding affidavit (this would include the answering
affidavit). The court further held that:
"The
deponent to an affidavit in motion proceedings need not be authorised
to depose to the affidavit. It is the institution
of the proceedings
and the prosecution thereof which must be authorised."
[13]
It
is trite that the procedure to follow when challenging authority to
institute proceedings is that set out in rule 7(1) of the
Uniform
Rules of the Court (the Rules). The duty to prove authority arises
only when the authority to prosecute the process is
formally
challenged by issuing the notice in terms of rule 7(1) of the
Rules.
[5]
[14]
In the present matter, the applicant
availed itself of the procedure in rule 7(1) in challenging the
authority of the municipal
manager to defend the present application.
The challenge of the authority of the municipal manager is raised in
the context where
the application is, as stated earlier,
instituted
the application on an urgent basis. It is
important to note in this regard that the notice of motion and the
founding affidavit
was filed on 22 September 2022. The answering
affidavit was filed on 27 September 2022. The notice calling upon the
respondents
to prove authority was filed the following day, 28
September 2022.
[15]
In applying the principles discussed
earlier, it is clear that the point raised by the applicant
concerning the municipal manager's
authority to depose to the
answering is unsustainable.
[16]
As
concerning issue of authority to defend the application
,
it is clear in the above circumstances that the municipality and the
municipal manager were not afforded sufficient time to arrange
for a
meeting council to convene and consider taking a resolution to
authorise opposition to the applicant's application. It is
also
important to note that the issue was not formally raised in the main
application. In my view this application and the contempt
application
are part of the main application. It can thus be inferred that the
municipal manager’s authority having not been
challenged in the
main application can be taken to have been accepted.
Issue
estoppel
[17]
The municipality contends that the
applicant is
estopped
from instituting the section 18 application because it was brought
after (a) the unsuccessful leave to appeal, (b) unsuccessful
application of recusal of the presiding judge, and (c) the outcome of
the contempt of court application.
[18]
I agree with the applicant’s
contention that the above point, including others that I have found
to be unnecessary to deal
with in this judgment, are ill-founded. It
is correctly pointed out that section 18 of the Act applies to both
in relation to an
application for leave to appeal to the high court
or the SCA.
[19]
The
leave to appeal by the municipality in the present matter is
instituted in terms of section 17 (2) (b) of the Act,
[6]
which as indicated earlier was launched on 15 September 2022.
Res
judicata
[20]
The municipality contends that the
matter is
res judicata
because of the Manoim J’s judgment. There is no merit in this
contention because there is no prove that the requirements
of
res
judicata
has been satisfied. As
indicated earlier the Manoim J’s order has two elements to it,
namely, contempt of court and
rule
nisi
calling on the municipality to
deliver written reasons for its decision to award the tender.
[21]
The other point raised by the
municipality which bears no merit is that relating to the contention
that the applicant should institute
review application. The issue in
this application has nothing to do with review but rather whether the
court should uplift the
automatic suspension of the enforcement of
the 14 June 2022 order which suspension was consequent the leave to
appeal to the SCA.
Urgency
[22]
The
principles governing urgency were discussed in the main judgment and
will thus not be repeated in this judgment. In the present
matter the
municipality has however emphasised in its answering affidavit the
contention that the urgency is self-created.
[23]
It
is trite that an applicant is not entitled to rely on the urgency
that is self-created when seeking a deviation from the rules.
In
Association
of Mineworkers and Construction Union and Others v Northam Platinum
Ltd and Another
,
[7]
the court held that:
"…
the more immediate the reaction by the litigant to remedy the
situation by way of instituting litigation, the better
it is for
establishing urgency. But the longer it takes from the date of the
event giving rise to the proceedings, the more urgency
is diminished.
In short, the applicant must come to court immediately or risk
failing on urgency."
[24]
In Golding v HCI Managerial Services
(Pty) Ltd and others
[2015] 1 BLLR 91
(LC) at para 26, the court held
that:
"[26]
Urgency must not be self-created by an applicant as a consequence of
the applicant not having brought the application
at the first
available opportunity. In other words, the more immediate the
reaction by the litigant to remedy the situation by
way of
instituting litigation, the better it is for establishing urgency.
But the longer it takes from the date of the event giving
rise to the
proceedings, the more urgency is diminished. In short, the applicant
must come to court immediately or risk failing
on urgency."
[25]
In
University of the Western Cape Academic Staff Union and Others v
University of the Western Cape,
[8]
the court held that:
"…
if the applicants seeks this Court to come to its assistance it must
come to the Court at the very first opportunity,
it cannot stand back
and do nothing and some days later seek the Court's assistance as a
matter of urgency."
[26]
The case of the applicant in the present
matter is that urgency arose from the time the municipality filed the
petition with the
SCA in terms of section 18 of the Act. In other
words, the urgency was triggered by the filing of the leave to appeal
to the SCA.
The application was filed about four days after the
petition was filed with the SCA.
[27]
The applicant contends that applications
brought under section 18 of the Act are by their "nature very
urgent," and also
that urgency arises from the fact the two
previous orders were granted on the basis of urgency, i.e the order
interdiction the
municipality from proceeding with the impugned
tender and the contempt of court order made by Manoim J.
[28]
It is further argued on behalf of the
municipality that urgency arises from the fact that the municipality
continues to perpetuate
unlawfulness in not complying with the
interdict.
[29]
Before dealing with whether the
applicant has made out a case for urgency, I pause to deal briefly
with the provision of section
18 of the Act upon which the applicant
relies on in launching this application.
T
he
principles underlying the provisions of section 18 of the Act
[30]
The relevant parts of section 18 of the
Act provides as follows:
“
(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.
(2)
… … …
(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.
(4)
If a court orders otherwise, as contemplated in subsection (1)—
the
court must immediately record its reasons for doing so;
(ii)
the aggrieved party has an automatic right of appeal to the next
highest court;
(iii)
the court hearing such an appeal must deal with it as a matter of
extreme urgency; and
(iv)
such order will be automatically suspended, pending the outcome of
such appeal.”
## [31]The
principles fused in section 18 of the Act are summarised in
University of the Free State v Afriforum and Another,[9]as follows:
[31]
The
principles fused in section 18 of the Act are summarised in
University of the Free State v Afriforum and Another,
[9]
as follows:
"[9]
. . . Section 18(1) thus states that an order implementing a
pending judgment appeal shall only be granted 'under
exceptional
circumstances. The exceptionality of an order to this effect is
underscored by s 18(4), which provides that a court
granting the
order must immediately record its reasons; that the aggrieved party
has an automatic right of appeal; that the appeal
must be dealt with
as a matter of extreme urgency and that pending the outcome of the
appeal the order is automatically suspended.
[10]
It is further apparent that the requirements introduced by ss 18(1)
and (3) are more onerous than those of the
common law. Apart from the
requirement of 'exceptional circumstances' in s 18(1), s 18(3)
requires the applicant 'in addition'
to prove on a balance of
probabilities that he or she 'will' suffer irreparable harm if the
order is not made, and that the other
party 'will not' suffer
irreparable harm if the order is made. The application of rule 49(11)
required a weighing-up of the potentiality
of irreparable harm or
prejudice being sustained by the respective parties and where there
was a potentiality of harm or prejudice
to both of the parties, a
weighing-up of the balance of hardship or convenience, as the case
may be, was required. Section 18(3),
however, has introduced a higher
threshold, namely proof on a balance of probabilities that the
applicant will suffer irreparable
harm if the order is not granted
and conversely that the respondent will not if the order is granted."
[32]
In my view, the urgency in this matter
is not as alleged by the municipality self-created. It may of
course, have been ideal
for the applicant to have sought the section
18 relief at the time the municipality filed the leave to appeal
because that process
also suspended the enforcement of the 14 June
2022 order. The suspension of the enforcement of the order as a
result of the leave
to appeal, however, fell away when the
application for leave to appeal was dismissed. That, however, did not
detract from the right
of the applicant to seek relief when the
circumstances changed, consequent the application for leave to appeal
to the SCA. The
application for leave to appeal to the SCA has no
connection with the suspension of the implementation of the order of
14 June
2022 consequence of the leave to appeal being dismissed by
this court.
[33]
It is common cause that the applicant
filed the section 18 application about four days after the
municipality filed the application
for leave to appeal to the SCA.
[34]
The issue of whether there exist
exceptional circumstances to warrant granting the relief sought is a
matter of factual determination.
In the main judgment this court
found that the municipality undermined its own procurement policies,
the principle of legality
and the Constitution resulting in the
undermining of the fair administrative right of the applicant. The
court further found that
the illegal conduct of the municipality
continued even beyond the awarding of the tender.
[35]
It is important to note both in the main
case and in the contempt of court proceedings the municipality did
not dispute the irregularity
of the awarding of the tender. In both
processes the municipality in fact expressed the view that it was
intend on instituting
self-review.
[36]
In my view, allowing the suspension of
the implementation of the order of 14 June 2022 to stand consequent
the application for leave
to appeal to the SCA would amount to
countenancing the illegal conduct of the municipality and the
municipal manager to continue
unabated. Accordingly, I agree with the
applicant that there exist exceptional circumstance which entitles
the applicant to an
order that the operation of the 14 June 2022
order is not suspended following the filing of the leave to appeal to
the SCA.
[37]
I am further in agreement with the
applicant that the continued illegal conduct of the municipality in
particular that relating
to allowing the development of the financial
system in the absence of a formal appointment letter will result in
an irreparable
harm. On the other hand, there is insufficient
information relating to the alleged damage that the municipality will
suffer if
this court was to order otherwise. In this regard the
municipality has not provided the details about the development of
the new
financial system. There is also no information about the
progress on the investigation of the illegal warding of the tender.
The
municipality has also not provided any information as the current
role of the old service provider. For this reasons I am in agreement
with the applicant that there is no likelihood that the municipality
would suffer irreparable harm if the relief prayed for by
the
applicant was to be granted.
[38]
In light of the above, I am of the view
that the applicant’s application stands to succeed.
Order
[39]
In the premises the following order is
made:
1.
The late filing of the answering
affidavit is condoned.
2.
The second respondent has the authority
to defend and prosecute the defence against the application on behalf
of the second respondent.
3.
The operation and execution of the court
order granted by this court on 14 June 2022 under case number
2022/2958 is not suspended
pending the decision of any application
for leave to appeal or of any appeal in terms of
section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
.
4.
The respondents are to pay for the costs
of this application, the one paying the other to be absolved.
E
MOLAHLEHI J
Judge
of the High
Court
Gauteng Local
Division,
Johannesburg
Representation
For
the applicant: Adv W. H. Pocock
Instructed
by: Di Siena Attorneys Respondents:
For
the respondent: Adv. JJ Botha
Instructed
by: Smith Van der Watt Inc.
Heard:
29 September 2022
Delivered:
12 October 2022
[1]
Act number
10
of 2013.
[2]
(2010)
31 ILJ 1211.
[3]
(2022)
ZAPHC 171 (25 March 2022).
[4]
2004
(3) SA 615 (SCA).
[5]
Firstrand
Bank v Fillis
2010
(6) SA 565.
[6]
Section 17
(2) (b) of the Act provides:
“
(2)
(b) If leave to appeal in terms of paragraph (a) is refused, it may
be granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal on application
filed with
the registrar of that court within one month after such refusal, or
such longer period as may on good cause be allowed,
and the Supreme
Court of Appeal may vary any order as to costs made by the judge or
judges concerned in refusing leave.
[7]
2016)
37 ILJ 2840 (LC) at para 26.
[8]
(1999)
20 ILJ 1300 (LC) at para 15. 8.
[9]
(929/2016)
[2016] ZASCA 165
;
[2017] 1 All SA 79
(SCA);
2018 (3) SA 428
(SCA)
(17 November 2016.
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