Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 857South Africa
Metropol Consulting (PTY) Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (21725/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 857 (3 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 November 2022
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZAGPJHC 857
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Metropol Consulting (PTY) Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (21725/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 857 (3 November 2022)
Metropol Consulting (PTY) Ltd v City of Johannesburg Metropolitan Municipality and Another (21725/2018) [2022] ZAGPJHC 857 (3 November 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPJHC/Data/2022_857.html
sino date 3 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
No.: 21725/2018
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.NO
3/11/2022
In
the matter between:
METROPOL
CONSULTING (PTY) LTD
Applicant/Plaintiff
and
CITY
OF JOHANNESBURG METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent/First Defendant
MATHIPANE
TSEBANE INC. ATTORNEYS
Second Respondent/Second
Defendant
JUDGMENT
HANDED DOWN ELECTRONICALLY ON MICROSOFT TEAMS BY CIRCULATION TO THE
PARTIES AND/OR LEGAL REPRESENTATIVES BY EMAIL, AND
BY UPLOADING ONTO
CASELINES
JUDGMENT
Date
and time for hand-down is deemed to have been on: 03rd November 2022
CORAM:
CONSTANTINIDES AJ:
INTRODUCTION
1.
This is an application by the Applicant (“Metropol”) for
leave
to amend its Declaration dated the 2
nd
August 2019
by deleting of the Declaration in its entirety and substitution with
a Declaration annexed to the Plaintiffs’
Notice of Amendment in
terms of Rule 28 dated the 24
th
May 2021.
2.
The First Respondent (“the City”) has opposed the
aforesaid application
on the following grounds:
““
1.
The Plaintiff served its declaration in this action on 2 August 2019.
2
On 1 November 2019, the City delivered a notice in terms of the rule
23(1) calling on
the plaintiff to remove causes of complaint
identified in its declaration….
3.
The City complained that Claim A of the declaration did not disclose
an enforceable cause
of action against the City. The complaint was
that:
3.1
Claim A did not disclose a claim in contract against the City despite
purporting to do so.
The Plaintiff was not a party to the Service
level Agreement (“SLA”) referred to in paragraphs 2.15 –
2.16 of
the declaration and the SLA could therefore not confer the
rights the plaintiff sought to enforce. The City was not a party to
the alleged agreement between the plaintiff and the second defendant
(“Mathipane”) referred to in paragraphs 2.17 –
2.18
of the declaration and that agreement therefore could not confer the
obligations the plaintiff sought to enforce.
3.2
Accordingly, the claim was not supported by any of the contracts
referred to in the declaration.
3.3
The plaintiff’s oblique reliance at paragraph 10.10 of the
declaration on “direct
contractual privity” between it
and the City was unsustainable as the plaintiff did not allege a
trilateral contract between
all the parties or a bilateral contract
between it and the City that conferred any right on the plaintiff or
obligation on the
City of the kind the plaintiff sought to enforce.
3.4
The plaintiff’s reliance on the City’s conduct in
relation to the alleged agreement
between Mathipane and the plaintiff
fell short of disclosing a contractual basis for any obligation on
the City of the kind that
the plaintiff sought to enforce.
3.5
Even if it were found that the declaration disclosed a contractual
cause of action against
the City, the declaration fell short of the
requirements of rule 18(6) as the declaration did not state whether
the contract was
written or oral and/or when, where and by whom on
behalf of each party it was concluded.
3.6
Even if it were found that the declaration disclosed a cause of
action against the City,
and complied with the Rule 18(6), the
declaration failed to disclose an enforceable cause of action against
the City because the
plaintiff did not allege that the City paid
Mathipane the claimed amount in circumstances where, on its own
version, the plaintiff
was only entitled to demand receipt of payment
after
Mathipane had received payment from the City.
4.
The City contended that Claim A lacked averments necessary to sustain
a cause of action or
was vague and embarrassing.
5.
The City also complained that Claim B, pursued against Mathipane and
in the alternative to
Claim A, did not disclose an enforceable cause
of action. The City’s complaint was that:
5.1
Claim B relied on fictional fulfilment by Mathipane of an alleged
condition precedent of
its agreement with the plaintiff in
circumstances where the obligations that Mathipane bore under the
agreement and that allegedly
gave rise to the condition precedent
were self-evidently not condition precedents to the non-fulfilment of
which could be fictionally
fulfilled;
5.2
Even if it were found that the Mathipane’s obligations were a
condition precedent
to the agreement (between plaintiff and
Mathipane), in breach of rule 18(4), the declaration failed to set
out any facts from which
a conclusion that Mathipane deliberately and
intentionally frustrated fulfilment of the condition could be drawn.
6.
The City contended that Claim B did not comply with rule 18(4) and,
by virtue of rule 18(12),
constituted an irregular step that fell to
be set aside in terms of rule 30(1).
7.
in response to the City’s rule 23(1) notice, on 24 January
2020, the plaintiff delivered
a notice in terms of rule 28(1) in
which it conveyed its intention to amend its declaration by replacing
it entirely with the declaration
attached to the rule 29(1) notice.
BACKGROUND
3.
It is common cause that this is the second application that Metropol
has launched
to obtain leave to amend its declaration of the 2
nd
August 2019. In the first application for leave to amend, which was
argued before Opperman J, Metropol sought to amend its Declaration
to
introduce the claim for specific performance of a tacit agreement
that it had allegedly concluded with the City.
4.
According
to Metropol, it had provided certain debt collection services on
behalf of the City and was claiming payment of R266 095 033.60.
The aforesaid application was dismissed with costs by Opperman J who
found that Metropol was relying on an illegal Agreement.
[1]
5.
Thereafter, Metropol was unsuccessful in seeking leave to appeal to
the Supreme
Court of Appeal and the Constitutional Court. The City
now argues that :
“
6.
… Opperman J’s Judgment is definitive of Metropol’s
inability to pursue a claim for
specific performance of the tacit
agreement.
7
The claim that Metropol seeks to introduce by amendment on this
occasion is materially
the same as the claim it sought to introduce
by amendment before Opperman J. The current proposed claim is still a
claim for specific
performance of the tacit agreement Metropol
alleges the parties concluded.
8.
Crucially, Metropol relies on the same facts and circumstances as it
did in its previous
proposed declaration to establish the tacit
agreement.
9.
The difference in Metropol’s approach on this occasion is that,
firstly, Metropol has
selectively omitted certain allegations that
are known to be true and that are fatal to its case, and, secondly,
Metropol has alleged
that the tacit agreement was concluded pursuant
to a ‘deviation’ permitted by the City’s Supply
Chain Management
Policy (“SCMP’).
10.
Therefore, the main issue in this application is whether the proposed
declaration is substantively different
from the proposed claim that
Opperman J rejected on the ground that it was unenforceable.”
6.
The present application is a second application for leave to amend
its declaration
and claim specific performance of the tacit agreement
allegedly concluded pursuant to a deviation allegedly permitted by
the City’s
SCMP.
7.
According to the city this proposed amendment cannot be distinguished
from its
predecessor, and it seeks an order that the Court dismiss
this application in order to ensure that Metropol does not pursue a
claim
determined finally by our Courts to be unenforceable.
8.
The City persists in its argument that there is no substantive
difference between
the two proposed Declarations as the present
proposed Declaration does not disclose a cause of action that can be
enforced.
9.
In the
present matter, the new allegation made by Metropol is that the
parties have concluded a tacit agreement
pursuant
to a valid deviation
.
The City complains that the proposed amendment relying on an alleged
deviation does not raise a triable issue and is pursued in
bad
faith.
[2]
(emphasis added)
10.
As stated
in the introduction above, the litigation history of Metropol’s
claim is detailed in the City’s Notice of
Objection.
[3]
11.
This Court, by agreement between the parties, had referred Metropol’s
original application
to trial on the 13
th
May 2019.
Metropol in its Declaration initially sought to enforce its alleged
claim against the City based on a tacit Agreement
in terms of which
it claimed that it was entitled to payment for certain debt
collection services which it had allegedly performed
for the City.
12.
The City objected to the proposed amendment in which Metropol has
claimed specific performance
of an alleged tacit agreement.
13.
Metropol’s Counsel aptly summarises the basis upon which the
City opposes the order
sought by the Plaintiff as follows:
“
4.3
In essence, the First Defendant contends that for the reasons
advanced by it, the application is not bona fide,
does not raise
triable issues and the First Defendant will be prejudiced if the
amendment is granted.”
[4]
14.
Metropol submits that:
“
5.3
Whilst the cause of action is still founded on the tacit agreement,
the amendment now sets out the basis upon which
the procurement
provisions were lawfully deviated from and which renders the tacit
agreement legal, as it does not contravene the
procurement
provisions.
5.4
The issue as to whether a deviation from the procurement provisions
occurred or not, will, depending upon
the pleaded facts, be a factual
issue to be determined by the trial court at a hearing in due course
and after viva voce evidence
has been heard and documents presented
and furnished to the trial court.
5.5
The issue to be considered in determining this application is whether
on the pleaded facts in the proposed
declaration, a cause of cause of
action is made out to the effect that the tacit agreement is legal
and therefore, does not contravene
the procurement provisions
…
5.9
The First Defendant’s contention that the Plaintiff is acting
in bad faith by pursuing the same claim
which has already been found
to be unenforceable, by deliberately omitting the material facts in
order to ‘sidestep’
the issues, makes no sense
whatsoever. As stated …, the issue is whether on the facts as
now pleaded, a triable issue has
been created in the sense as set out
above. If so, the fact that previously omitted facts were excluded is
irrelevant to the determination
of the application.
[5]
15.
The City’s first objection was that:
“
12.1 The City
is an Organ of State and is therefore subject to the peremptory
procurement provisions of the Municipal Finance Management
Act 56 of
2003 and the
Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999
, all of which
give effect to section 217 of the Constitution;
12.2 The
allegations in the proposed amendment were that the parties conspired
to circumvent the City’s procurement
process in that the
allegations ………….. established that the
plaintiff together with officials within
the City devised a scheme by
which the plaintiff would receive payment for services it was not
entitled to perform because the
City had rejected its tender;
12.3
accordingly, the tacit agreement was intentionally concluded in
violation of Section 217 of the Constitution which made
it contra
bonos mores and illegal;
12.4 The
proposed amendment ought not to be allowed because, if allowed, it
would advance a claim in terms of which the plaintiff
sought specific
performance of an illegal agreement which the rule ex turpi causa did
not permit. Hence the claim is excipiable.
[6]
16.
In argument in the previous hearing for the application for leave
amend the
Plaintiff had stated that the Court should not refuse the
proposed amendment because
inter alia
at trial they may reveal
that the City’s SCMP allowed a tacit agreement concluded in the
circumstances pleaded and thereby
making it lawful and enforceable.
17.
The City countered the aforesaid argument on the basis that a
proposed amendment
could not be granted “…
on
speculation about an SCMP that was not relied on, referred to or
attached to the proposed amendment.”
“
17.
This Court heard the application for leave to amend and upheld this
City’s objection. A copy of the Judgment
is attached hereto as
annexure “D”.”
…
21.
In each application for leave to appeal, the Plaintiff purported to
rely on the SCMP despite never including
it in its papers or
disclosing its contents and asserted that the tacit agreement could
not be found to be illegal until a Court
satisfied itself that it was
illegal when considered against the provisions of the SCMP.
22.
It is in the context of the above facts and circumstances that the
proposed Declaration (dated 24 May 2021)
that is the subject of the
City’s objection must be considered.”
[7]
18.
Metropol alleges that it was under no obligation to have attached the
SCMP to
the proposed declaration and it argues that the city is in
possession of same and is aware of its contents. Metropol alleges
that
this is akin to expecting a plaintiff to make discovery at this
early stage of the proceedings.
19.
In the
proposed Amendment before Opperman J
at
paragraph 13 to 18 of
the
Judgment, the Judge sets out the essential allegations that Metropol
relied on to support its claim for specific performance
of the tacit
agreement and that it sought to introduce by amendment. Opperman J
concluded that the true meaning of the allegations
was that ‘…
the
parties conspired to circumvent the City’s procurement
processes using an intermediary in the form of a successful tenderer,
Mathipane.”
[8]
20.
According
to Opperman J, that was the only interpretation that the allegations
could reasonably bare.
[9]
21.
The city
submitted that given the substantive similarity between the two
claims, Opperman J’s conclusions applied equally
to the current
proposed claim. By applying the principle that agreements concluded
in contravention of the “constitutional
standard”, i.e.
in purported circumvention of a fair and transparent public
procurement process,
[10]
are
illegal and that a Court will never permit enforcement of an illegal
contract.
[11]
22.
In the present case, the First Defendant’s grounds of objection
are as
follows:
“
30.
In the proposed Declaration, the plaintiff attempts to overcome the
difficulties of the first proposed declaration
by:
30.1
omitting the allegations in the first proposed declaration that it
submitted a bid in the City’s
tender for debt collection
services and that its bid was rejected;
30.2
omitting the allegations in the first proposed declaration that
Mathipane was awarded the tender that
resulted in the SLA between
Mathipane and the City in terms of which Mathipane would render debt
collection services to the City;
30.3
omitting the SLA as an attachment;
30.4
omitting the allegations in the first proposed declaration that it
concluded a written contract with
Mathipane (‘the contract’)
in terms of which it would render the section 118 debt collection
with the result that Mathipane
‘would effectively be precluded
from recovering the section 118 debts’ which function was to be
‘solely and exclusively
reserved for the plaintiff’;
30.5
omitting the contract as an attachment;
30.6
introducing new allegations that the tacit agreement was concluded
pursuant to a deviation in terms of the Regulations of the
SCMP;
(emphasis added)
30.
7
omitting the SCMP as an attachment; and
30.8
introducing new allegations that Mathipane was a party to the tacit
agreement.
31.
The omitted allegations constituted facts that were essential to a
claim that the plaintiff was so committed to that it appealed
this
court’s refusal of its application to amend all the way up to
the Constitutional Court hoping that that Court would
overturn the
refusal and allow it to proceed with its claim.
32.
More fundamentally, the omitted allegations were supported by
documentary evidence. The Plaintiff’s bid, the SLA and the
Contract
were all attached to the first proposed declaration. The
Plaintiff attached those documents as proof that the City had
initiated
an ordinary tender process, that the Plaintiff and
Mathipane participated, and that the City rejected the Plaintiff’s
bid
before awarding the tender to Mathipane and Others. ….
33.
The
facts pleaded in the first proposed declaration remain allegations
that this Court can and should take account of.
34.
In the absence of a compelling explanation why the facts have been
omitted, the proposed amendment would not
raise a triable issue
because the omitted facts which are facts this Court must take
account of, materially contradict the plaintiff’s
claim that
the parties concluded a tacit agreement pursuant to a lawful
deviation from the SCMP necessitated by an emergency.
35.1
In the context of the application that preceded this action, ………
. It is an act
of bad faith
to pursue the same claim (i.e.
a tacit agreement, that the Court has found to be unenforceable
by omitting material that is fatally inconvenient and without
explanation, introducing averments that purport to sidestep the
difficulties
with the claim but are undermined by the omitted facts.
35.3
Having insisted on the centrality of the SCMP to the question whether
the alleged tacit agreement is
lawful, it is a manifest act of bad
faith for the Plaintiff, without explanation
,
to refer selectively to its terms without disclosing its contents in
full.
The inference to draw from such conduct is that the Plaintiff
has
shielded from scrutiny the terms of the SCMP that would demonstrate
that its claim is unsustainable.
[12]
(emphasis added)
23.
The First Defendant’s objection states further that:
“
36.
…. The Plaintiff’s claim is based on the SCMP. It is
therefore obliged to place the SCMP before the
court as it would be
obliged to do were its claim based on a written contract. The City
contends that the provisions of Rule 18(6)
apply in the circumstances
of this case. The City accordingly objects to the proposed amendment
on the ground that, if it were
allowed, it would constitute an
irregular step that would fall to be set aside in terms of Rule
30(1).
37.
If it is found that the proposed declaration cannot be disallowed on
the basis set out above, the City nevertheless
contends that the
claim advanced in the proposed declaration is excipiable because it
is illegal:
37.1
The SCMP and the regulations set out the requirements and conditions
that must be fulfilled to ensure
lawful emergency deviation
procurement process. A deviation undertaken in contravention of the
requirements of the SCMP and the
regulations cannot be sanctioned by
the manager. It follows that an agreement is illegal if it arises out
of any process that purports
to be a deviation, but which is
undertaken in contravention of the requirements of the SCMP and the
regulations.
37.2
The allegations in the proposed declaration are that the parties
engaged in conduct that gave rise
to a tacit agreement that the
manager allegedly sought to make lawful by complying with the
requirements of the SCMP and the regulations.
The SCMP and the
regulations do not permit that.
37.3
Moreover, the proposed declaration lacks particularity such that this
Court cannot determine whether
the requirements of the SCMP and the
regulations were satisfied in a manner that makes the alleged
emergency deviation lawful.
The plaintiff does not state:when and how
the manager allegedly complied with the requirements of the SCMP. The
plaintiff also
does not state when each element of the conduct that
is the subject of the tacit agreement occurred, the absence of that
particularly
means this court cannot assess compliance with the
regulations and the SCMP.
37.4
Accordingly it does not follow from the allegations in the proposed
declaration that the deviation
was lawful.
38.
In the circumstances the proposed amendment should be refused. Were
it allowed, it would introduce a claim
that is excipiable either
because it contains insufficient allegations to sustain the claim or
because it is vague and embarrassing.”
[13]
24.
According to the City in its Heads of Argument, it is stated that the
tacit
agreement according to the Plaintiff arose due to the fact that
the City
inter alia
trained Metropol’s staff on the use
of the City’s SAPS/VENUS software, installed the software on
Metropol’s computers,
gave Metropol access to the sensitive and
classified information and issued all instructions in respect of the
recovery of section
118 debts directly to Metropol.
25.
Metropol had accordingly
invoiced Mathipane (and not the City)
for services it had rendered and the City paid Mathipane (not
Metropol) for the services Metropol rendered, and upon receiving
payment from the City, Mathipane, as the “conduit” paid
Metropol what was due, minus 10%. (emphasis added)
26.
Metropol
had allegedly complied with its obligations to the City by allegedly
rendering its services during March 2015 to November
2016 to the
City. Due to the aforesaid, according to Metropol, the City became
indebted to Metropol in the amount of R266 095 033.60.
[14]
27.
The City summarises this matter as follows:
“
19.
Metropol relied on substantively
the
same allegations
in the proposed amendment before Opperman J. At paragraphs 13 to 18
of the judgment, the Judge set out the essential allegations
that
Metropol relied on to support its claim for specific performance of
the tacit agreement that it sought to introduce by amendment.
Opperman J concluded that the true meaning of the allegations was
that ‘
the
parties conspired to circumvent the City’s procurement process
using an intermediary in the form of a successful tenderer,
Mathipane.’”
[15]
According
to Opperman J that was the only interpretation that the allegations
could reasonably bear.
[16]
28.
The City
submitted that by applying the principle that agreements which are
concluded in contravention of “the constitutional
standard”,
i.e. in purported circumvention of a fair and transparent public
procurement process,
[17]
are
illegal and that a Court will never permit enforcement of an illegal
contract.
[18]
29.
Based on the aforesaid the City seeks an order that this Court also
refuse the
application for the proposed amendment.
30.
The City points out that Metropol for the “first time” in
the history
of this litigation now states that the tacit agreement
was concluded in accordance with a deviation permitted by the SCMP.
According
to Metropol, this policy allows the deviation in the case
of an emergency and where there is a sole provider.
31.
Metropol’s Counsel stated that the Court should look at the
pleading as
it stands. Metropol’s Counsel argued that the
payment being made to Mathipane, less 10%, does not amount to
anything untoward
with this tacit agreement and nevertheless these
issues would be argued at trial as these are allegedly factual issues
as to when,
where and how this tacit agreement was concluded.
32.
Metropol argued that there is no prejudice to allowing the proposed
amendment
and persisted with the argument that the deviation was
allegedly permitted by the SCMP and this in fact has created a
triable issue.
33.
According to Metropol, the Court should not adopt a technical
approach to this
application to allow the proposed amendment and the
Court was requested to exercise its discretion. Metropol argued that
the Court
would be adopting an over technical approach by preventing
Metropol from ventilating its issues at trial.
34.
The City also states in the Heads of Argument:
“
23.
The immediate, insurmountable difficulty with Metropol’s
contention is that the ‘tacit deviation’
from a policy is
no more than noncompliance with the policy. …..For a
procurement deviation to be lawful, it must be express,
overt and in
terms of the policy. ….”
[19]
35.
In paragraph 3.4 of the proposed declaration Metropol states that
section 36(1)(a)(i)
and (ii) of the regulations provides that a SCMP
may allow the accounting officer to dispense with official
procurement processes
required by SCMP and procure required goods and
services which may include direct negotiations, but only
inter
alia
in an emergency or if such goods and services are produced
or are available from a single provider.
36.
Metropol furthermore in its proposed amendment states the following
in paragraphs
3.7 to 3.9:
“
3.7
In terms of Section 21(1)(a) and (b) of [the City’s] policy,
deviations from the procurement mechanisms entailed
in the [the
City’s] policy may be allowed in emergency or exceptional cases
or if such goods and services are produced or
are available from a
single/sole provider only, a sole supplier being defined in Section 1
as read with Section 19.5 of [the City’s]
policy;
3.8
Section 21(1) [of the City’s] policy provides, inter alia, that
the deviations from the procurement
mechanisms must be recommended by
the head of the department for consideration by Executive Acquisition
Committee and the city
manager must record the reasons for the said
deviations from the procurement mechanisms;
3.9
The city manager of [the city] in his capacity as the accounting
officer deviated from the procurement mechanisms
entailed in [the
City’s] policy by dispensing of the procurement processes so as
to allow [the City] to procure the required
services from the
plaintiff, which included direct negotiations taking place between
duly authorised representatives of [the City],
[Mathipane] and the
Plaintiff.”
[20]
37.
In paragraph 3.10 Metropol stated that the City’s procurement
process
was dispensed with due to the fact that “
at all
material times”
the City was experiencing a debt recovery
crisis and therefore “
an emergency had arisen which
justified the procurement by ‘the City’ of Metropol’s
services without procurement
processes taking place” i.e.
a
deviation; and therefore the relevant debt collection services “
were
only available from the Plaintiff, the Plaintiff being a single/sole
provider as envisaged by the SCMP as read with the Regulations.
38.
In paragraph 3.11, Metropol alleged that the city manager had “
duly
complied with”
the requirements of the SCMP read with the
Regulations “
so as to enable the deviations from the
procurement mechanisms”
and “
the procurement
processes to be dispensed with”
as envisaged in terms of
the SCMP read with the Regulations.
39.
The City
points out that at paragraph 3.12 Metropol accepted that a tacit
agreement was concluded “
in
the absence of procurement processes taking place”
but contended that the aforesaid conduct was legal because “
the
accounting officer [i.e. the city manager] was lawfully entitled to
dispense with the procurement process by virtue of the fact
and
circumstances which was set out above.”
[21]
40.
The City argues that Metropol has failed to demonstrate the legality
of the
aforesaid tacit agreement even on a
prima facie
basis
as the requirements for a valid deviation have not been met when the
parties concluded the alleged tacit agreement.
41.
According to the City, if Metropol cannot demonstrate that certain
facts exist
to permit the deviation and the tacit agreement, then the
aforesaid conduct is once again illegal.
42.
It was pointed out to the Court that Metropol’s claim that
there was an
emergency is in fact contradictory to Metropol’s
own allegations that the City had issued a tender for section 118
debt collection services and it is common cause that Metropol’s
bid was rejected and the tender was awarded to a panel of attorneys.
Therefore the fact that Metropol’s bid had been rejected is
clearly destructive of the allegation that an emergency situation
arose which required the City to procure the same services in respect
of which the bid was rejected without following the proper
procurement processes.
43.
Furthermore, Metropol’s argument that it is a single or sole
service provider
once again fails as on Metropol’s
own
version
, the City awarded the tender to a panel of Attorneys,
including Mathipane, the aforesaid firm that had been allegedly used
as a
“conduit” for payment of Metropol’s account.
44.
Therefore, Metropol cannot possibly be a “single and/or sole
provider”.
45.
According to Metropol’s Counsel, the material facts upon which
it relies
will be assessed and investigated and resolved at trial
stage.
46.
The City
has quoted two cases in regard to whether the amendment raises a
triable issue depends on the answer to the question whether
the
proposed claim is sustainable at trial.
[22]
47.
In the case of
Knox v. D’Arcy and Another v. Land and
Agricultural Development Bank of South Africa [2013] 3 ALL SA (404)
SCA at para 35
the SCA held:
“
It is trite
that litigants must plead material facts relied upon
as
a basis for the relief sought and define the issues in their
pleadings to enable the parties to the action to know what case
they
have to meet.
The
party may not plead one issue and then at the trial, and in this case
on appeal,
attempt
to canvass another which was not put in issue and fully
investigated
.”
(emphasis added and footnotes omitted)
[23]
48.
Therefore based on Metropol's own proposed pleadings, at this stage
it is apparent
that Metropol's allegation of a “
lawful”
deviation from the procurement provisions and the alleged tacit
Agreement is unsustainable and to argue that the City “
may
deviate”
and that it is a factual issue to be canvassed at
the trial is not sufficient to convince this Court that there was a
lawful “
deviation”.
49.
According to the City’s Counsel it was argued that only in a
“
truly urgent situation and where there was only a single
supplier”
this would allow the City to deviate from the
SCMP policy in order to ensure that there was no need for a lengthy
process (“emergency”).
However, the aforesaid facts are
not before this Court.
50.
Furthermore issue was taken by the City that the correct SCMP policy
was not
placed before this Court to enable the Court to assess
whether this present application for the proposed amendment is sound.
51.
Metropol did not provide sufficient evidence to show that it was a
“sole
supplier” as Metropol would still need to satisfy
the requirements for this deviation. The procedure was not pleaded
and
details of substantive compliance was not pleaded.
52.
The City’s Counsel argued that even if the Court is to omit the
previous
facts of the previous application for application of the
proposed amendment, the existence of Mathipane is destructive to the
present
action. Mathipane is on the panel of Attorneys and therefore
is a supplier of the Section 118 debts. Therefore, there are at least
two collectors in this scenario.
53.
The City’s Counsel argued that the Plaintiff deliberately
omitted the
facts of the previous matter and this amounts to bad
faith on the part of Metropol as the City must once again defend an
application
of a proposed amendment which is unsustainable at trial.
Therefore the City argues there is no triable issue and the pleader
ought
to have disclosed the facts to this court..
54.
The City has argued that it was not unreasonable in opposing this
application
as this is a clear case of the misuse of public funds,
which verges on skulduggery and ought not to be countenanced by this
Court.
55.
According to Metropol, the history of this matter is “irrelevant
to the
present application, but relevant to the Trial Court”.
56.
“Opperman
J in the conclusion to her judgment in Metropol’s application
for leave to appeal
[24]
stated
the following:
[13]
Whether illegality appeared ex facie the proposed declaration was the
principal issue raised by the first defendant’s
objection to
the plaintiff’s amendment. The plaintiff during the hearing,
did not contend for an alternative construction
of the proposed
declaration either in its written or oral argument. It did not offer
an alternative interpretation that would explain
how the tacit
agreement complied with the constitutional standard and somehow saved
it from being, on the face of it, illegal.
[14] The
repeated criticism in the application for leave to appeal is that
this court could not have made a factual
finding of invalidity
premised solely on the allegations in the proposed declaration. This
court did not. The relevant principle
is that, on exception (here
taken in the context of an objection to an amendment), the pleaded
allegations are taken at face value
on the assumption that they would
be established at trial.
[25]
The implication of that principle is that illegality may be
determined from the proposed declaration alone.
[15]
Because the illegality appears ex facie the proposed declaration, the
court need not wait for the first defendant
to raise the illegality
before refusing to enforce the agreement. A court is duty bound to
raise illegality mero motu and refuse
enforcement even if a defendant
does not plead it. As Mthiyane JA said in Madzivhandila and Others v
Madzivhandila and Another
[26]
:
“
The approach to
be followed where a question of illegality is raised was laid down in
Yannakou v Apollo Club. Trollip JA writing
for the majority
said:.‘...it is the duty of the court to take the point of
illegality mero motu, even if the defendant does
not plead or raise
it; but it can and
will only do so if the illegality
appears ex facie the transaction
…” (Emphasis
added)……
[20] In my
view there is only one interpretation these allegations can
reasonably bear.”
[27]
It
is that the parties conspired to circumvent the City’s
procurement processes using an intermediary in the form of a
successful
tenderer, Mathipane.
“
[21]
These allegations, if accepted, establish that Metropol together with
certain officials of the city devised a scheme
in consequence of
which Metropol would receive payment for services it was not entitled
to perform because the City had rejected
its tender. Thus the tacit
agreement was concluded in violation of Section 217 of the
Constitution and the subordinate legislation
thereunder. The Scheme
was neither a ‘system’ contemplated by Section 217 nor
was it fair, equitable, transparent,
competitive and cost effective.”
“The Constitutional standard”. The pleaded case bares all
the hallmarks of what
the Constitutional Standard Terms is faced
against secrecy, irregularity, unfairness and wastefulness.”
57
The present application for leave to allow the amendment of the
proposed
declaration does not remedy or address the aforesaid finding
of Opperman J. Metropol has failed to provide sufficient facts to
satisfy the court that the alleged “deviation” has
legalised the tacit agreement between the parties.
CONCLUSION
58
Based on the aforesaid, the Court is not prepared to exercise its
discretion in favour of Metropol as this is once again an attempt
to
muddy the waters and to override the Judgment of Opperman J as
Counsel for Metropol has repeatedly stated in argument that he
believed that Opperman J was incorrect in her findings.
59
It is trite that costs normally follow the result and therefore I
accordingly make the following order:
1.
The Applicant’s application is dismissed with costs which costs
include
the costs of two Counsel.
H
CONSTANTINIDES A J
Acting
Judge of High Court
Gauteng
Division
JOHANNESBURG
Counsel
for the plaintiff: Adv S Pincus SC
Instructed
by: Howard S Woolf
Counsel
for the first defendant: Adv R Pearse SC, Adv M Seape, Adv J Chanza
Instructed
by: Moodie & Robertson
Counsel
for the second defendant: No opposition
Date
of hearing : Tuesday 25 October 2022
Date
of handing down of the
judgment:
3
rd
November 2022
[1]
Judgment, p. 001-129, paragraph 25.
[2]
Paragraph 16 of the First Defendant’s Heads of Argument.
(054-23)
[3]
Notice of Objection (
001-40
)
[4]
Plaintiff’s Heads of Argument. (
054
-9)
[5]
Plaintiff’s Heads of Argument –
(054-12
to 054-13)
[6]
1
st
Defendant’s objection to the proposed amendment Paras
12.1-12.4
-
(034-31 to 034-32)
[7]
The First Defendant’s Objection to the Proposed Amendment –
(034-33
and 034-34)
[8]
Judgment, page 001 – 127 para 20.
[9]
Ibid
[10]
Section 217 of the Constitution provides that Organs of State
must
procure goods and services ‘in accordance with a system that
is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and cost effective”
[11]
Judgment page 001 – 127 paras 23 – 29.
[12]
First Defendant’s Objection to Proposed Amendment –
034-42
to 034-44
.
[13]
Paragraph 36 to 38 of the First Defendant’s Objection to the
Proposed Amendment, pages
034/44
034/45
[14]
Respondent’s Heads of Argument, paragraphs 18.6 to 18.9 –
054 –
22 CaseLines.
[15]
1
st
Respondent’s Heads of Argument, paragraphs 19,
(054-26)
Judgment
page 001 – 127 paragraph 20.
[16]
Idid.
[17]
Section 21(7) of the Constitution provides that Organs of the State
must
procure
goods and services in accordance “with a system which is fair,
equitable, transparent, competitive and cost-effective”
Paragraphs
20 of the Respondent’s Heads of Argument –
054-27.
[18]
Judgment – page 009-127, paras 23 to 29.
[19]
Paragraph 23 of the 1
st
Respondent’s Heads of Argument –
054
– 28 of CaseLines.
[20]
Paragraphs 25.3 of the 1
st
Respondent’s Heads of Argument –
054
– 29 to 054 – 30 of the CaseLines.
[21]
See paragraphs 25.5 to 25.6 of the1st Respondent’s Heads of
Argument
054
– 30 of CaseLines.
[22]
Ciba-Geigy
(Pty) Ltd v. Lushof Farms (Pty) Ltd en ‘n Ander
2002 (2) SA
447
(SCA) at paragraph 34
where
the SCA referred with approval to the statement in
Trans
Drakensberg Bank Ltd (under Judicial Management v. Combined
Engineering (Pty) Ltd and Another
1967 (3) SA 632
(D) at 641 A –
B:
“
Having
already made his case in his pleading, if he wishes to change or add
to this, he must explain the reason and
show prima facie
that he has something deserving of consideration, a triable issue
;
he cannot be allowed to harass his opponent by an amendment which
has no foundation.
He cannot place on the record an
issue for which he has no supporting evidence,
where
evidence is required, or, save perhaps in exceptional circumstances,
introduce an amendment which would make the pleading
excipiable …”
(Emphasis added) See: paragraph 30.1.1
054 – 34
and
054 – 35
of 1
st
Respondent’s
Heads of Argument.
[23]
054 –
35
of
1
st
Respondent’s Heads of Argument.
## [24]Metropol
Consulting (Pty) Ltd v City of Jhb Metropolitan Municipality and
Another (21725/2018) [2020] ZAGPJHC 207 (11 June 2020)
[24]
Metropol
Consulting (Pty) Ltd v City of Jhb Metropolitan Municipality and
Another (21725/2018) [2020] ZAGPJHC 207 (11 June 2020)
[25]
Stewart
and Another v Botha and Another
,
[2008] ZASCA 84
;
2008 (6) SA 310
(SCA) at para 4
[26]
(584/2002) [2004] ZASCA 12
[27]
Children’s
Resource Centre Trust and Others v. Pioneer Food (Pty) Limited and
Others
2013 (2) SA 213
(SCA) at para [36];
cited with approval in
H
v. Foetal Assessment Centre
2015 (2) SA 193
(CC) at para [10].
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
South African National Civil Organisation v Ramosie and Others (7016/2019) [2022] ZAGPJHC 323 (6 May 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 323High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South Africa Enterprise Development (PTY) Ltd v Kerani BTW CC (2021/7285) [2022] ZAGPJHC 371 (1 June 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 371High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Municipal Workers Union National Medical Scheme (SAMUMED) v City of Ekurhuleni and Others (5068/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 701; [2022] 4 All SA 878 (GJ) (25 August 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 701High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Municipal Workers Union v Imbeu Development and Project Management (PTY) Ltd and Another (30236/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 717 (22 September 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 717High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar
South African Reserve Bank v Chauke (2021/40383) [2022] ZAGPJHC 162 (18 March 2022)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 162High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)99% similar