Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 998South Africa
Mogale City Local Municipality and Another v Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Limited (2022/002958) [2022] ZAGPJHC 998 (8 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
8 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Mogale City Local Municipality and Another v Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Limited (2022/002958) [2022] ZAGPJHC 998 (8 December 2022)
Mogale City Local Municipality and Another v Inzalo Enterprise Management Systems (PTY) Limited (2022/002958) [2022] ZAGPJHC 998 (8 December 2022)
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sino date 8 December 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
CASE NO: 2022/002958
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
8/12/2022
In the appeal between:
MOGALE
CITY LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
First Appellant
MUNICIPAL
MANAGER
Second Appellant
and
INZALO ENTERPRISE
MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS
(PTY)
LIMITED
Respondent
JUDGEMENT
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN AJ
[SENYATSI J ET MOORCROFT AJ CONCURRING]
[1]
The appellants will be referred to as such
or as the Municipality and the Municipal Manager, respectively, as
the context may require,
and the respondent will be referred to as
Inzalo
INTRODUCTION
[2]
This matter has its roots in the failure of
the Municipality to follow prescribed supply chain procedures and its
own policies in
this regard as well the abuse of the deviation
procedure which permits the appointment of a service provider without
requesting
suppliers to bid in an open and transparent process.
[3]
On
14 June 2022 Inzalo was granted urgent relief by Molahlehi J against
the Municipality and the Municipal Manager.
[1]
[4]
The order reads as follows:
“
2.
Interdicting and restraining:
2.1 The First Respondent
is interdicted and restrained from implementing and giving effect in
any manner whatsoever to:
2.1.1
the award of a tender under reference number RFP COR(ICT) 05/2021 in
respect of the provision of a mSCOA
[2]
-compliant
financial management system (“mSCOA) financial management
system”) for a period of 36 months (“the
Tender”);
or
2.1.2 the appointment of
any service provider for the supply of a mSCOA financial management
systems or any component of a mSCOA
financial management system;
Hereinafter
referred to as “the Impugned Decision.”
2.2. The appointed
service provider/s as contemplated in paragraph 2.1 above are
interdicted and restrained from carrying out any
work and/or
continuing with any work in terms of the award of the tender and/or
any contracts which may have been concluded between
the First
Respondent and the said service provider/s as pertaining to a
mSCOA-compliant financial system, or the supply of any
component
thereof.
3. The interim relief
contained in paragraph 2 above is granted pending:
3.1 The institution and
final determination of the Applicant’s internal remedies in
respect of the Impugned Decision within
15 days of receipt of the
items set out in paragraph 4 and 5 below; and
3.2. The institution and
final determination of the Applicant’s application to review
and set aside the Impugned Decision
to be instituted within 15 days
of the final determination of the Applicant’s internal remedies
alternatively within 15 days
of receipt of the items set out in
paragraph 4 and 5 below.
4 The First and Second
Respondents are directed to furnish to the Applicant within 10 days
of this Court order the following documents
in respect of the
Impugned Decision: -
4.1 The First
Respondent’s written reasons for the Impugned Decision
(“The Written
Reasons”);
4.2 The First
Respondent’s notice of cancellation in respect of RPF CORP(ICT)
05/2021;
4.3 The First
Respondent’s record of decision in respect of the Impugned
Decision including but not limited to the reports,
meeting agendas,
attendance registers, scoring sheets, minutes, and the like of the
following committees: -
4.3.1 the First
Respondent’s bid steering committee (“BSC”);
4.3.2.the First
Respondent’s bid evaluation committee (“BEC”); and
4.3.3 the First
Respondent’s bid adjudication committee (“BAC”).
4.4 Proof of the First
Respondent’s compliance with its state procurement obligations
including but not limited to proof of
publishing notices in respect
of the Impugned Decision on its website and the eTender Publication
Portal;
4.5 Proof of the First
Respondent’s compliance with MSCOA obligations in terms of the
numerous directives issued by the National
Treasury in respect of the
appointment and replacement of the Municipality’s financial
management system and service provider.
5. In the event that the
First Respondent appointed the service provider in terms of some
other procurement process including but
not limited to: Regulation 32
or 36 of the Supply Chain Management Regulations, the First
Respondent is ordered to provide the
following information in respect
of the Impugned Decision: -
5.1 A copy of the letter
sent to the National and/or Provincial Treasury setting out the
reasons for the deviation;
5.2 A copy of the
response received from the National and/or Provincial Treasury;
5.3 The bid evaluation
committee appointment letters, meeting agenda, report and minutes;
5.4 The bid adjudication
committee appointment letters, meeting agenda, report and minutes;
5.5 The Municipality’s
written reasons for its decision to appoint the service provider;
5.6. The service
provider’s bid and/or quotation; and
5.7 The record of the
decision and the First Respondent’s written reasons for the
Decision (“the Written Reasons”),
including but not
limited to: -
5.7.1. proof that the
First Respondent published the Notice of Intention to Award (i.e.,
successful preferred bidder) on the eTender
Publication Portal within
7 days of the Impugned Decision;
5.7.2. proof that the
First Respondent published the Notice of Final Award (i.e successful
bidder) on the eTender Publication Portal
within 7 days of the
Impugned Decision;
5.7.3. proof that the
First Respondent published the Notice of Unsuccessful Bidder on the
eTender Publication Portal within 7 days
of the Impugned Decision;
5.7.4. proof that the
Notice of Intention to Award (i.e., preferred bidder) was published
on its website;
5.7.5. proof that the
First Respondent published the Notice of Final Award (i.e. success
bidder) on its website;
5.7.6. proof that the
First Respondent published the Service Level Agreement concluded
between the First Respondent and service
provider on its website
timeously;
5.7.7.
proof that the First Respondent conducted a due diligence in terms of
the National Treasury’s Circular No.6 of the
MFMA;
[3]
5.7.8. proof that the
First Respondent obtained the approval and/or commentary of the
Provincial Treasury or the National Treasury
in terms of National
Treasury’s Circular No. 6 of the MFMA;
5.7.9. proof that the
First Respondent obtained the approval of its council
and its budget in terms of National Treasury’s
Circular No 6 of
the MFMA;
5.7.10 bid adjudication
and bid evaluation reports and the First Respondent’s Written
Reasons (for both its decision for the
purported award, its failure
to cancel the Invalid Tender and its decision to appoint a service
provider by means of a deviation).
6 The relief sought in
paragraph 2 above will lapse in the event of the Applicant failing to
exhaust its internal remedies as set
out in paragraph 3.1 above or to
bring a review application as set out in paragraph 3.2 above.
7.The First and Second
Respondents are directed, jointly and severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved pro tanto from liability,
to pay the Applicant’s
costs.
8. The
Applicant is granted leave to bring the review application referred
to in paragraph 3.2 above on these papers duly supplemented,
as and
where may be necessary.”
[5]
The undisputed facts are that the
Municipality required the services of a service provider who could
provide it with a financial
management system. The financial
management system had to be compliant with the MSCOA standards as set
out in the regulations by
the Minister of Finance acting with the
concurrence of the Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional
Affairs. The regulations
are promulgated in terms of section 168 of
the MFMA and more specifically the regulations as set out in the
Annexure to the Government
Gazette of 22 April 2014 No. 37577.
[6]
The purpose thereof was to set a national
standard for the uniform recording and classification of municipal
budget and financial
information at a transactional level. The MFMA
and the regulations prescribe a standard chart of accounts for
municipalities and
municipal entities which would be aligned to the
budget formats and accounting standards prescribed for municipalities
and municipal
entities and with the standard chart of accounts for
national and provincial governments. The aforesaid prescribe the
national
norms and standards across the whole of government for the
purpose of national policy coordination and reporting benchmarking
and
performance measures in the local government sphere. They also
prescribes the minimum prescribed business processes and the minimum
financial and business applications or systems requirements as
stipulated by the National Treasury.
[7]
The phrase "standard chart of
accounts" is defined in the regulations to mean:
“
a
multi-dimensional classification framework providing the method and
format for recording and classifying financial transaction
information in the general ledger forming part of the books of
account containing a standard list of all available accounts.”
[8]
The above regulations
were intended to take effect in July 2017. Ever since the Minister
continued to publish notices pursuant to
the MSCOA regulations and,
more specifically, Circular No 107, applicable for the 2021/22
Medium
Term Revenue and Expenditure Framework
(“MTREF”),
also known as the Municipal Budget Circular for the 2021/22 MTREF
dated 4 December 2020. A portion of a further
circular styled
annexure “B”, is the process forward with municipal
integrated financial management and internal control
systems, known
as Circular No 6, dated 2 August 2016, MFMA Circular No 83, and
pertains to the advertisement of bids and the publication
of notices
in respect of the award of bids. The MFMA Circular No 83 cancelled
bids, variation and extensions of existing contracts
on the e-tender
publication portal, during July 2016, as well as the Municipal SCOA
Circular No 5 – implementation, with
the out of compliance date
15 July 2016..
[9]
In the Answering
Affidavit filed on behalf of the Municipality and the Municipal
Manager there is an annexure “FA8”
which is indexed and
contain all the documentation the Municipality could find. It is
clear from these documents that the tender
was advertised twice
during 2021 and found to be unresponsive. The bid committee
recommended that the tender be cancelled and readvertised
as a
competitive tender. No explanation was provided as to bidders from
the earlier bidding process were not notified about the
cancellation.
[10]
In
paragraph 27 and 28 of the Answering Affidavit it is stated that Ms
Diale in her capacity as Acting Accounting officer of the
Municipality appointed Solvem (Pty) Ltd (“Solvem ”) on 29
April 2022
[4]
and that it is on
site and has been performing services from 1 May 2022.
[11]
Ms. Diale furnished
Solvem with a letter of appointment without a deviation report or
recommendation from the Municipality’s
evaluation and
adjudication committees and was acting on a frolic of her own, and in
contravention of the standards set out in
the MFMA and the Treasury
circulars.
[12]
The “Letter of
Appointment” contains a condition in paragraph 2 thereof i.e.,
that Solvem should submit its written
acceptance to the Municipality
within 3 working days from receipt thereof and conclude a Service
Level Agreement with the Municipality
within a month.
[13]
It is also signed by
Ms Diale on behalf of the Municipality and by a Mr Oosthuizen on
behalf of Solvem.
[14]
Item 7 listed on
Annexure “FA8” refers to a minute between the
Municipality and Solvem regarding a request for comments
on the
Master Services Agreement dated 5 May 2022. Item 9 of “FA8”
refers to a Master Service Agreement between Solvem
Consulting (Pty)
Ltd and the Municipality. This was presumably intended to be the
Service Level Agreement. It is signed by a representative
of Solvem
Consulting (Pty) Ltd in Cape Town on 3 May 2022 and was never signed
by the Municipality. If this was the proposed Service
Level agreement
it is not only not signed but purports to introduce a different
entity to the contractual relationship with the
Municipality. It is
not the entity mentioned in the letter of appointment.
[15]
It is of interest to
note that Solvem was disqualified by the Municipality’s bid
evaluation committee in the tender process
that took place during
September 2021. No reasons are advised by the Municipality as to
whether this time around Solvem met the
minimum requirements.
[16]
It is clear that
Inzalo’s constitutional right to administrative fair procedure
was infringed and that Solvem’s so-called
appointment fails the
legality test.
[17]
Whilst
it is correct that unfair and illegal administrative decisions stand
until formally set aside by a review the present case
does not quite
rise to the level of the
Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and others v Chief
Executive Officer, South African Social Security Agency and
others
[5]
decision
and relief in the form of a structural interdict. More on this will
follow below.
THE
APPLICATION FOR LEAVE TO APPEAL
[18]
An
application for leave to appeal the latter order was launched on 30
June 2022 and was heard on 3 August 2022 together with an
application
for Molahlehi J’s recusal.
[6]
Both applications were dismissed with costs on 15 August 2022.
[7]
[19]
The whole notion of structural relief was also raised as one
of the grounds in the Application for Leave to Appeal. No concession
was however forthcoming at the time to the effect that the contract
was awarded irregularly.
[20]
I now turn to the
Contempt of Court proceedings which were heard by Manoim J. These
proceedings are relevant because of the defences
raised before us in
the automatic appeal which follows on a section 18 enforcement order.
THE
CONTEMPT OF COURT PROCEEDINGS
[21]
On 25 August 2022 Inzalo instituted Contempt of Court proceedings
against the respondents
based on the breach of the order granted on
14 June 2022. The Municipal Manager was cited in his official and
personal capacity
in this application (hence the presence of three
respondents).
[22]
Manoim J heard the Application for Contempt of Court proceedings on 7
September 2022.
[23]
For the sake of convenience, he categorised the various orders
granted by Molahlehi J 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.”
[24]
At the time the hearing of the Contempt application took place the
Municipality had not
yet complied with any of the obligations imposed
in terms of the order granted by
Molahlehi J.
[25]
It raised the same defence i.e., that it is not certain how Solvem
was appointed. The Acting
accounting officer, Ms Diale, allegedly
made the appointment on 29 April 2022 and Solvem commenced work on 1
May 2022 and has been
rendering services since then. Ms Diale and
another employee whose involvement was not made clear, were put on
special leave following
a special council meeting on 18 May 2022.
[26]
It also claimed that it was waiting on the results of two Anton
Piller awards and the process
was incomplete at the time of the
hearing for contempt of Court, It alleged that it has searched its
own premises for the relevant
documentation and could find none and
hence it is unable to comply with the documentary part of the order.
[27]
The Municipality conceded in front of Manoim J that the process was
irregular.
[28]
The Municipal Manager claimed that he was only appointed on 9 May
2022 (after Ms Diale
appointed Solvem) and for that reason he could
not supply any further information.
[29]
An undertaking was given and recorded as “X1” to Manoim
J’s order to
the effect that an application for self-review of
the Impugned Decision will be brought within 15 days of receipt of
the Diale
documents from the Sheriff.
[30]
In the answering affidavit of the Municipal Manager in the
application heard by Molahlehi
J, he stated as follows:
“
31 Furthermore, if
such an interdict is granted the first respondent shall act in breach
of its appointment of SOLVEM (PTY) LTD
if it prevents SOLVEM PTY) LTD
from acting in terms of the appointment. The practical effect if
relief in this regard is granted
will be devastating:
31.1 The first respondent
will have to cancel its appointment of the service provider and
physically prevent the service provider
to render services in terms
of the appointment. I respectfully submit that the first respondent
should not be ordered to do this,
in particular not in the absence of
the service provider.
31.2 The first respondent
will have to face legal action by SOLVEM (PTY) LTD which will
undoubtedly follow.
31.3. The most
devastating consequences 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 (sic) no
payments and without its income
the first respondent will come to a
standstill.
31.4 This must be
contrasted with the prejudice which the applicant consistently allege
it will suffer, namely impairment of its
constitutional right to fair
administrative procedure. I respectfully submit that the trite
considerations with regard to the balance
of convenience, no
alternative remedy and irreparable harm which the parties may suffer,
clearly favours the first respondent and
the application should not
be granted.
31.5 If protection of the
applicant’s right to fair administration will not ultimately
cause the applicant damages, the whole
process will be to no avail.
Constitutional rights does (sic) not exist in vacua. The applicant
did not make a case that it will
suffer damages if the urgent relief
which it now seeks, is not granted.
32 I do not at this stage
indulge in the question whether the applicant acted correctly or
incorrectly in appointing the service
provider; the fact of the
matter is that a service provider has been appointed and is on site
rendering services in terms of the
appointment.”
[31]
The so-called petition (it is actually an application to appeal to
the SCA in terms of
section 17(2)(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
) which was only filed on 15 September 2022 was already referred
to and foreseen in the argument before Manoim J and it was submitted
that by appealing the Municipality intended to obtain a form of
structural relief as set out below in conjunction with a self-review.
[32]
The aforesaid concession was only made in the contempt proceedings.
[33]
Manoim J gave regard to the intention to obtain structural relief
coupled with an application
for self-review and considered the risk
of the Municipality’s financial artery being severed as
formulated in paragraph 31.3
of the answering affidavit in the
proceedings before Molahlehi J (quoted above).
[34]
The notion of structural relief coupled with the fact that the stated
intention of the
Municipality was to bring an application for
self-review to obtain a structural remedy of the type granted in
Allpay
– decision led him not to decide the issue of
ongoing service provision. He held that the most he can decide is
that to further
interdict the operations of Solvem are so massively
consequential that prudence dictates that he accepts the
Municipality’s
version. He was also motivated to do so because
Solvem was not a party to the original proceedings nor a party to the
Contempt
of Court proceedings, although he found it should have been
given the nature of the relief in 2.5 of the order which imposes
obligations
on it.
[35]
This led him to conclude that he cannot find that the Municipality is
in wilful default
until further facts are made known. He nevertheless
held the Municipality and the Municipal Manager in contempt in
respect of the
failure to provide reasons as was required in terms of
paragraphs 4 and 5 of Molahlehi J’s order.
[36]
He ultimately granted the following order:
“
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 in 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 ordered, 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) [my insertion]
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.”
[37]
On 15 September, the
Application for leave to appeal to the SCA was duly filed. It had the
effect of suspending the Molahlehi J
Court Order. In these
proceedings the argument is repeated that Solvem should have been
cited as a party before the interdictory
relief could be granted and
that the illegality of its “appointment” as “service
provider’ does not entitle
a court to order interdictory relief
until same is reviewed and set aside.
THE
SECTION 18 APPLICATION
[38]
On 22 September 2022
Inzalo launched proceedings under
section 18
of the
Superior Courts
Act for
enforcement of the Molahlehi J Court Order. It alleged that
the Municipality’s conduct is egregious and baseless. It is
further
alleged that it deliberately dragged its feet and did nothing
to have its own illegal conduct reviewed. It is specifically alleged
that it is still operating the old financial system despite expiry of
the service level agreement with the previous service provider.
[39]
It is also alleged
that the Municipality never had the need to permit Solvem to continue
developing a new financial system and that
the notion that the
Molahlehi J Court Order would wreak havoc with its financial billing
system is false.
[40]
I addition it is
alleged that the Municipality still refuses to provide Inzalo with
the written reasons in respect of the award
despite the Molahlehi
Court Order and it having been found guilty of Contempt of Court by
Manoim J in respect of its failure to
respond in terms of paragraphs
4 and 5 of the aforesaid order.
[41]
Inzalo requires the
aforesaid to meaningfully prepare its objection against the Award in
terms of Regulation 63 of the Municipality’s
Supply
Chain Management (“
SCM”)
policy. It is emphasized that the written reasons are a new document
that must be delivered by the Municipality whenever
an aggrieved
person intends to challenge the lawfulness of any administrative
action by an organ of state. The failure to do provide
same is an
infringement of section 33 of the Constitution and a breach of
section 5 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act, 2000 (Act 3
of 2000) (“PAJA”).
[42]
Under the rubric of
exceptional circumstances Inzalo alleges it is a matter of urgency,
that the Court processes thus far has been
abused, that the
application for leave to appeal to the SCA is a continuation of such
abuse, that the Municipality and the Municipal
Manager was at all
times able to deliver the aforesaid reasons and that its failure to
do so is to insulate and protect the unlawful
award. The failure to
comply with the existing orders merely serves to entrench Solvem’s
perceived rights. In addition, all
of the aforesaid is funded by
taxpayers’ monies.
[43]
The Municipality has
also not published its decision as it is required to do under the SCM
regulations and Circulars of National
Treasury.
[44]
The Municipality’s
response to the above is inter alia that as a consequence of Manoim
J’s judgment that Solvem should
have been joined, it is
justified to act accordingly given that the matter of Solvem’s
non-joinder is now either res judicata
or due to issue estoppel
finally adjudicated as between the respective parties.
[45]
It also contends that
Manoim J’s order as to timeframes are tantamount to structural
interdict being in place and that the
Section 18 order is an abuse of
procedure.
[46]
It further argues
that Inzalo can bring its own review application.to set the
appointment aside and that the urgency contended for
is self-created.
[47]
It further states
that the wrong laptop was seized in terms of the Anton Piller orders
and that the city allocated cell phone must
still be analysed.
[48]
Molahlehi J dismissed
the technical points raised by the applicant pertaining to the
Municipal Manager’s authority to oppose
the proceedings and
file an answering affidavit. Given that the Section 18 application
was filed about 4 days after the notice
for leave to appeal to the
SCA was delivered, he also held that Inzalo’s urgency was not
self-created.
[49]
The defences of res
judicata (and presumably issue estoppel) were found not to be
demonstrated given that Manoim J’s order
has two elements i.e.,
a finding of Contempt of Court and a Rule Nisi.
[50]
The Court held that
the question whether exceptional circumstances prevail as intended in
section 18 is a factual bound issue. It
was emphasised that the
Municipality undermined its own procurement policies, the principle
of legality and that the Constitutional
rights of fair administrative
rights of Inzalo were infringed. Over and above that the illegal
conduct of the municipality continued
even beyond the award of the
tender. In addition, the Municipality conceded the irregularity of
the awarding of the tender and
its intent to self-review.
[51]
Therefore, the Court
found that to allow the 14 June 2022 order to remain suspended
pending the application for leave to appeal
would amount to
countenancing the illegal conduct of the Municipality and the
Municipal Manager unabated. The aforesaid facts persuaded
the court
that exceptional circumstances are present.
[52]
It also held that the
continued illegal conduct of the municipality to allow the
development of the financial system in the absence
of a formal
appointment letter will result in irreparable harm. At the same time
there was insufficient information before the
Court relating to the
alleged damage the municipality will suffer if the court were to hold
otherwise. The Municipality did not
update the court regarding the
details of the development of the financial system nor was any
information supplied as to the current
role of the old service
provider. There was also no information supplied as to the progress
of the illegal awarding of the tender.
For the aforesaid reasons, the
Court held that there is no likelihood that the Municipality would
suffer irreparable harm if the
relief sought in terms of section 18
were granted.
[53]
Hence the relief
sought by Inzalo in terms of section 18 was granted and the order
granted on 14 June 2022 was not suspended pending
the application for
leave to appeal to the SCA filed by the Municipality and the
Municipal Manager. The latter was ordered to pay
the costs of the
application the one paying the other to be excused.
EVALUATION
[54]
Section 18 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013 (“the Act”) reads as follows:
“
18 Suspension
of decision pending appeal
(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)
Subject to subsection (3), unless the court under exceptional
circumstances orders otherwise, the operation and execution of
a
decision that is an interlocutory order not having the effect of a
final judgment, which is the subject of an application for
leave to
appeal or of an appeal, is not suspended pending the decision of the
application or appeal.
(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)-
(i)
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.
(5)
For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), a decision becomes the
subject of an application for leave to appeal or of an appeal,
as
soon as an application for leave to appeal or a notice of appeal is
lodged with the registrar in terms of the rules”
[55]
We are seized with the automatic appeal
against the judgment of Molahlehi J in the aforesaid section 18
proceedings. We are enjoined
to deal with it as a matter of extreme
urgency and the order so granted remains suspended pending the
outcome of this judgment.
[56]
The Municipality
could easily have given effect to the interdictory relief and
terminated any co-operation with Solvem as the interdict
required. It
was also effectively free to continue with the previous service
provider until such time as it appointed a new service
provider to
provide it with a software programme capable of compliance with the
so called MSCOA standards.
[57]
The
test to be applied by the Court a quo was formulated in
Incubeta
Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Ellis
[8]
,
by Sutherland J (as he then was) as follows:
“
The
requirements are:
·
First, whether
or not ‘exceptional circumstances’ exist, and
·
Second, proof
on a balance of probabilities by the applicant of –
the presence
of irreparable harm to the applicant/victor, who wants to put into
operation and execute the order; and,
the absence of
irreparable harm to the respondent/loser, who seeks leave to appeal.”
[58]
In
Knoop
NO and another v Gupta (execution
)
[9]
the Supreme Court of Appeal came to a similar conclusion and held
that the effect of sections 18(1) and (3) is that an applicant
seeking an execution order must prove three things, namely:
“
(a)
exceptional circumstances,
(b)
that it will suffer irreparable harm if the order is not made; and
(c)
that a party against whom the order is sought will not suffer
irreparable harm if the order is made.”
[59]
Counsel
for the appellants argued before us that due to the Oudekraal
-principle
[10]
the illegal
conduct of the Municipality and the Municipal Manager remains in
place until reviewed and set aside. In the ordinary
case of
illegality that argument would be correct. That, however, cannot
apply in this case.
[60]
The letter of appointment is conditional to
a service level agreement being concluded within a month. This
condition was never fulfilled
and the so-called Master Service
Agreement which was disclosed in any event sought to introduce a new
party to the matter i.e.,
Solvem Solutions (Pty) Ltd. The
Municipality never signed same.
[61]
Thus, there is at present no vinculum juris
between the Appellants and Solvem.
[62]
It was further argued that the findings
made by Manoim J as to the issue of Solvem’s non-joinder has
made the issue res judicata,
alternatively, due to the operation of
issue estoppel, it stands, and as a result it prevents the continued
operation of the interdictory
part of the orders made by Molahlehi J.
This it was argued, prevented the interdictory part of the orders
made by Molahlehi J,
from being part of a section 18 enforcement
order.
[63]
In my view this argument ignores several
issues underlying the concepts of res judicata and issue estoppel.
[64]
A contempt of Court Application with the
type of order as made by Manoim J hardly meets the requirements for
res judicata or issue
estoppel. To qualify same must meet the
following requirements:
“
The
exceptio res judicata is based on the irrebuttable presumption that a
final judgment on a claim submitted to a competent court
is correct.
This presumption is founded on public policy, which requires that
litigation should not be endless and on the requirement
of good
faith, which does not permit of the same thing being demanded more
than once.
[11]
[65]
It
is, inter alia, a requirement that the judgment or order must be
final and definitive on the merits of the matter. The judgment
must
also be that of a competent court. Consequently, an order given in
interim interdict proceedings o
r
an order that is subject to variation or review because of changed
circumstances
cannot be relied upon.
[12]
(my
underlining)
[66]
In
addition, the same thing must have been demanded twice. A Contempt of
Court application seeks to bring to the Court’s attention
a
breach of its order and involves the Court imposing a punitive
sanction.
[13]
[67]
On the basis of the aforesaid, res judicata
cannot apply.
[68]
As far as issue estoppel is concerned, it
is important to note that the ambit of the exceptio res judicata has
been extended by
the relaxation in appropriate cases of the
common-law requirements that (a) the relief claimed and (b) the cause
of action be the
same.
“
Where
the circumstances justify the relaxation of these requirements those
that remain are that (a) the parties must be the same
and (b) the
same issue must arise. The latter involves an inquiry into whether an
issue of fact or law was an essential element
of the judgment on
which reliance is placed. It has become commonplace to speak of
‘issue estoppel’ when the plea of
res judicata is raised
in the absence of a commonality of cause of action and relief
claimed.”
[14]
[69]
The question thus arises whether I should
hold that, because Manoim J found that Solvem should have been joined
to the initial proceedings
as well as the contempt proceedings, the
underlying order to these section 18 proceedings is, for some or
other reason, to be found
wanting.
[70]
In my opinion, this is not the case. In the
present matter, there is no indication to what extent, if any, it was
argued before
Manoim J whether any vinculum juris existed as between
the Municipality and Solvem. In the absence of such indication, we
are unable
to say that due to the contempt of court judgment the
finding that Solvem should have been joined is binding or renders
issue estoppel
of application. If anything, the fact that this is not
only a case of illegal conduct by a state organ which must still be
set
aside, but also involves a contractual issue as to whether any
agreement came into existence at all due to the conditionality of
the
letter of appointment suggests the opposite. There is no indication
that here was an earlier finding as to the existence of
a vinculum
juris with Solvem (other than in the context of an irregularity) or
that same was argued before Manoim J. Hence issue
estoppel cannot
succeed. Absent such vinculum juris nothing stands in the way of the
execution of the interdictory components of
Molahlehi J’s
order, and neither was Inzalo obliged to join Solvem. It should not
be forgotten that Solvem is on site rendering
services at risk under
a non-existing agreement and has no legal interest in the matter.
Nothing stands in the way of the interdictory
relief granted by
Molahlehi J being made operative.
[71]
I have considered the various circumstances
pertaining to exceptional circumstances and irreparable harm as well
as Molahlehi J’s
approach thereto.
[72]
I am of the view that Molahlehi J approach
cannot be faulted.
[73]
In the circumstances, the appeal cannot
succeed.
[74]
The following order is thus made:
74.1
The appeal is dismissed.
74.2
The appellants are ordered to pay the costs
of this appeal jointly and severally, the one paying the other to be
excused.
S VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
I agree and it is so
ordered.
ML SENYATSI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
I agree and it is so
ordered.
J MOORCROFT
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
:
For The Appellants: Adv
JJ Botha instructed by Smith van der Watt Inc.
For the Respondent: Adv
Wayne Pocock instructed by Di Siena Attorneys
Hearing Date: 28 October
2022
[1]
See paragraph 1 of
Molahlehi
J ‘s reasons.
[2]
The Municipal Standard Charter of Accounts.
[3]
The
Local
Government: Municipal Finance Management Act, 2003 (Act No. 56 of
2003).
[4]
See Annexure “FA7” to the Answering Affidavit.
[5]
2014(4) SA 170 (CC).
[6]
See
dates at end of Leave to Appeal Judgement.
[7]
See paragraphs 9,17 and 18 of the Leave to Appeal Judgement.
[8]
2014 (3) SA 189 (GJ)
[9]
2021
(3) SA 135
(SCA) as quoted in Erasmus Superior Court Practice RS
16, 2022, A2-66.
[10]
Oudekraal Estates
(Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
2010 (1) SA 333 (SCA).
[11]
See
Amlers
Precedents of Pleadings
9th ed Harms p 314
[12]
See
Amlers
Precedents of Pleadings
9th ed Harms, p 315.
[13]
See
Amlers Precedents of Pleadings 9th ed Harms, p 316
[14]
See
Amlers
Precedents of Pleadings
9th ed Harms, p316.
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