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: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZAGPPHC 248
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Foursight IT Business Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Department of Home Affairs and Another (024313/23)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 248 (3 March 2025)
Foursight IT Business Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Department of Home Affairs and Another (024313/23)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 248 (3 March 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2025_248.html
sino date 3 March 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number: 024313/23
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE: 3/3/25
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
FOURSIGHT
IT BUSINESS SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
DEPARTMENT
OF HOME AFFAIRS
First Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF
HOME
AFFAIRS
Second Respondent
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date
and for hand-down is deemed to
be 3 March 2025.
Summary: A party faced
with an exercise of public power has as an option a PAJA or Legality
review. Where a simple declaratory relief
is sought, a Court bound by
the pleaded case cannot order a review relief where one was not
sought. The remedies for breach of
a contract are well known. The
trite principle is that a party is bound by its pleaded case, it
being the case the other party
is called upon to meet. A suggestion
that fraud as defined in law is absent, is a suggestion that the
Department had exercised
statutory power in the absence of the
necessary jurisdictional requirements. Where the evidence
demonstrates the known elements
of fraud, namely; (a)
misrepresentation; (b) intention to defraud; (c) the action was
against the law; and (d) there was prejudice
or potential prejudice,
then fraud exists by whatever name it may be labelled or not
labelled. Held: (1) The application is dismissed
with no order as to
costs.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
In the present application, which was
midway dubbed a PAJA review, it is common cause that the applicant
before me, Foursight IT
Business Solutions (Pty) Ltd (Foursight) was
awarded a contract by the Department of Home Affairs to render
certain IT-related
services over a period of five years. It also, was
common cause that midway the tenure of the agreement, the Department
prematurely
cancelled the agreement for reasons outlined in the
Treasury Regulations. The said termination gave birth to the present
application.
In opposing the application, the Department launched
what it termed a conditional application seeking, for different
reasons, to
review and set aside the awarded contract.
[2]
It must be mentioned that on the allocated
day of the hearing, the arguments commenced after 10h00 for reasons
that on CaseLines
there was a notice indicating that the application
was removed from the roll. As the allocated judge, I did not read the
papers
owing to the purported removal from the roll. It was only on
the morning of the hearing day that I was alerted to the fact that
the application had not been removed and was proceeding. Under those
constrained circumstances, I availed myself to the parties,
in order
to hear arguments, disadvantaged as I was.
The relief sought
[3]
It is significant to, at this embryonic
stage, set out what the applicant sought as reliefs in its notice of
motion. This will be
the reliefs that will navigate this Court in
this judgment. It must be indicated that, initially, the applicant
wished to obtain
the reliefs sought now on an urgent basis.
Therefore, for the purposes of this judgment, the relief to have the
matter heard as
one of urgency in terms of rule 6(12)(a) and (b) of
the Uniform Rules shall be omitted from the reliefs sought by the
applicant
before me.
[4]
The reliefs sought are:
1.
Declaring
the
decision of the respondents to terminate the Master Service Agreement
with the applicant
unlawful and invalid
.
2.
It be ordered that the Master Service
Agreement is
restored with immediate
effect.
3.
Alternative to prayer 2 above, that it
be ordered that the respondent subject
itself
to the dispute to mediation process as required by the Master Service
Agreement.
4.
Costs of suit;
5.
Further and or alternative relief.
[5]
This Court must immediately remark that
other than seeking a declarator that the termination is unlawful and
invalid, no relief
is sought that the decision to be so declared,
must be judicially reviewed. The restoration of the Master Service
Agreement must
mean a contractual remedy of specific performance, a
discretionary remedy, this Court must mention. Also, the alternative
relief
is contractual in nature and in a form of specific
performance.
[6]
During argument, it was pointed out to
counsel for the applicant, Mr
Amm SC
,
that regard being had to the fact that in cancelling the contract,
the Department clearly exercised statutory power and or public
power,
the competent and available remedy for the applicant is a judicial
review. In retort, and with sufficient confidence, this
Court must
state, he submitted that the present application is a PAJA review,
even though, not a single section of PAJA was referenced
anywhere in
the papers. Of course, at that time, this Court was on its back foot,
having not read the papers in advance, for reasons
outlined above,
had to accept a submission from a senior officer of the Court.
[7]
This Court must state that regard being had
to the notice of motion referenced above, it turns out that the
submission by counsel
that this is a PAJA review is, with respect,
not correct. It is unclear to this Court whether, the submission was
made with an
honest error, in a genuine believe that it is a correct
one or was intended to mislead this Court. This Court will leave it
at
that. That notwithstanding, this Court takes a firm view that this
is not a PAJA review. Even if this Court were to consider the
mere
verbiage of further and or alternative relief, the allegations made
in the founding affidavit, do not justify a judicial review
remedy.
[8]
For the sake of completeness, however,
section 6(1) of PAJA provides that any person may institute
proceedings in a Court or a tribunal
for the judicial review of an
administrative action. An administrative action is defined in section
1 of PAJA. Nowhere in the founding
affidavit does the deponent of the
applicant state that the cancellation of the contract decision by the
Department amounts to
an administrative action. Undoubtedly, nowhere
in the notice of motion does the applicant seek a judicial review
relief.
Relevant background
facts
[9]
As indicated above, it is common cause that
Foursight was awarded a contract to perform certain services. This
was a culmination
of the bid adjudication process that unfolded. It
is unnecessary for the purpose of this judgment to recount the bid
adjudication
process. It suffices though to mention that a bid
adjudication process was undertaken.
[10]
Of particular relevance, it is common cause
that Foursight appointed a subcontractor, aptly named Aim-Right. In
the course of the
delivery of the services, it turned out that
Aim-Right had failed to meet the required deliverables. Aim-Right
used the employees
of the Department to perform the subcontracted
work. This happened on the instruction of one Mr Khuzwayo, an
official of the Department
who was intimately involved in the bid
adjudication process. The director of Foursight, considered what was
happening with Aim-Right
and the employees of the Department, through
Mr Khuzwayo, to be extremely offensive, and she instructed her
attorneys of record
to report the incident and to terminate Aim-Right
as a subcontractor. In the letter seeking to terminate Aim-Right, it
was mentioned
that Foursight was aware that Aim-Right used the
personnel of the Department at certain places and misusing taxpayers’
money.
[11]
Ultimately, on 13 August 2021, the director
of Foursight reported the observed irregularities attached to the
execution of the contract.
Such prompted the Department to conduct an
investigation into the alleged irregularities. The investigations
revealed various irregularities
in the bid adjudication process. For
the sake of brevity, the investigations were conducted by a company
known as BDO Advisory
Services (Pty) Ltd (BDO). On or about 6
September 2022, BDO produced a report of the investigations and
furnished it to the Department
for consideration. The report is about
110 pages long. The contents of the report were not, in these
proceedings, challenged by
Foursight.
[12]
The BDO report revealed amongst others that
an invoice of R45 000.00 was raised by Foursight, which invoice
represented that
at Bloemfontein SITA certain services were
performed. However, it turned out that payment of that invoice was
made before the installation
of the device. The author of the report
considered the payment to constitute an irregular expenditure since
Foursight did not render
the alleged services. A number of other
invoices raised by Foursight were questioned for validity. BDO
recommended that the Department
should consider referring the matter,
they investigated, to the SAPS for an investigation into
contravention of Prevention and
Combatting of Corrupt Activities Act
(PRECCA). This recommendation simply suggested to the Department that
corruption was involved
in the tender process that the BDO was tasked
to investigate.
[13]
Having studied the report, the Department
on 09 March 2023 wrote a letter of cancellation directed to Foursight
and referenced the
provisions of the Treasury Regulation 16A.9.1. In
parts, the letter read:
“
The
accounting officer or accounting authority
must
–
(f)
Cancel a contract awarded
to a supplier of goods or services –
(ii)
If
any official
or
other role players
committed
any
corrupt or fraudulent
act
during
the bidding process
or the
execution
of
that contract that benefitted that
supplier.
6
Consequent to the above, and in carrying out the
DHA’s
duties and obligations in terms of the Treasury Regulations referred
to above, the DHA
has no other option but to cancel the Master
Services Agreement with immediate effect.
[14]
This cancellation gave rise to the urgent
application which was launched on or about 15 March 2023. By
agreement, the urgent application
was removed from the roll on 4
April 2023. Ultimately, the application emerged before me as a
special motion allocation.
Evaluation
[15]
This Court has already found that, despite
desperate pleas from counsel for the applicant, this is not a PAJA
review. The relief
sought by the applicant is not one competent under
PAJA. There is no legal basis upon which this Court can declare that
the cancellation
is unlawful and or invalid on the strength of the
present papers. With respect, the submission that these papers
presents a PAJA
review, lame as it is, appears to be an afterthought,
in order to address a fundamental problem highlighted by this Court
during
oral submissions. There is no doubt that in terms of the law,
the TR 16A.9.1, the Director General was obliged to cancel the
agreement
in the circumstances where, any official or other role
player committed a corrupt or fraudulent act at any of the two
stages. Either
during the bidding process or execution of the
contract stages. Not seized with a review application, it is
unnecessary for this
Court to express a view whether the fraudulent
or corrupt acts occurred at any of the mentioned stages. It may be
true that presence
of fraud or corruption at any of the stages is a
jurisdictional requirement for the exercise of the cancellation
power. Not seized
with a review application, it is academic for this
Court to answer the question whether the necessary jurisdictional
requirements
were present or not. Therefore, the cancellation at play
here is not one that is contractual in nature, but an exercise of
statutory
power.
[16]
Therefore, the competent relief available
to the applicant is a PAJA or legality review. There is no doubt in
my mind that in cancelling
the Master Service Agreement, the Director
General was performing an administrative action which is certainly
reviewable under
PAJA. A careful and proper read of the founding
papers, other than fortuitous reference to unlawfulness and
invalidity, the applicant
does not make a case for judicial review.
Its case was one of a simple declaratory relief, which, on its own
admission is a discretionary
relief. The deponent of the founding
affidavit had the following to say in pinning the applicant’s
colours to the mast:
“
51
In the premises, the grant or refusal of declaratory orders lies in
the discretion of the
Court which must be exercised judicially given
the facts pertaining to a particular matter and the facts of this
matter are (i)
there is no misconduct or impropriety on the part of
the applicant (and it is not alleged), (ii) the applicant has been
forthcoming
in respect of the improprieties and misconduct of the
respondent’s employees (iii) and that public policy (
pacta
sunt servanda
) demands that contracts
must be honoured at all levels unless the Court of law decides
otherwise.”
[17]
Contrary to the repeated submissions by
counsel for the applicant that this is a PAJA judicial review,
launched in a complete disregard
of the rule 53 procedure, the
present application has, written all over it, a declaration of rights
and a breach of contract. I
reiterate, it is not a PAJA judicial
review. On application of the
Oudekraal
principle, the decision to cancel the contract factually remains and
is adorned with legal consequences until set aside by a Court
of law
by way of a judicial review. In the present constitutional order,
there are only two judicial review pathways available
for the
exercise of public power, namely; PAJA or Legality/Rationality
review. The applicant chose neither. The net effect of this
is that
the cancelation remain as a valid administrative decision capable of
producing legal consequences.
[18]
It was not contended before me that the
TR16A.9.1 was in any manner or shape unconstitutional. I suggested to
counsel for the applicant
that perhaps that should have been the
case. On application of the principles of contract law, a party faced
with a repudiation,
has an election to make. Either to cancel the
contract and sue for damages or to ignore the repudiation (in this
instance the cancellation)
and approach a competent Court for a
relief of specific performance. Even if this Court were to accept
that, put at its lowest
ebb, the case for the applicant is one for
specific performance, in the exercise of its discretion this Court
would refuse to grant
that relief. The contract has been cancelled,
thus, the only competent contractual remedy available is that of
damages claim. There
is no damages claim before me.
[19]
As I conclude, counsel for the applicant
persistently beat the drum of absence of fraud as legally defined. In
his heads of arguments,
he referenced Amler’s, Snyman and other
sources just to demonstrate that there was no legally defined fraud
involved. The
ad nauseam
beating of the fraud drum was unhelpful to the applicant’s
pleaded case. Counsel baldly and with sufficient perspicacity
submitted that having scoured the 110 paged report of BMO, he could
not find the word fraud imprinted in the report. It is indeed
so that
the report does not, in print form, mention the word fraud. But, what
is certainly replete in the report is the evidence
of presentation of
invoices that were neither due nor payable. One such invoice of
R45 000.00 was, as reported and not disputed
in these
proceedings, presented by Foursight. The elements of the offence of
fraud are (a) misrepresentation; (b) intention to
defraud; (c)
unlawfulness; and (d) prejudice or potential prejudice.
[20]
If regard is had to the R45 000.00
which was paid to Foursight and Aim-Right, when the duo issued the
invoices, they were seeking
to represent to the Department that the
invoices were due and payable, whilst knowing fully well that the
services were not performed.
Intention (
mens
rea
) is
all about a state of mind. Knowing that the services were not
performed, by invoicing, the duo intended to defraud the department
(make it look like the services were performed). Their actions are
clearly unlawful and had prejudiced the Department – effecting
an irregular expenditure contrary to the law. If fraudulent acts are
not apparent in the report, then there is certainly something
wrong
with our law of identifying the elements of a particular offence. To
my mind, it was not required of BMO, without legally
trained mind to
imprint the word fraud in their report. But, they, indeed reported
what clearly constituted fraud and or corruption,
regard being had to
the elements of the offences. Corruption and fraud are generally
joined to the heap. They are offences involving
an element of
dishonesty. Often times, they are inextricably intertwined.
[21]
Given the conclusions this Court reached,
consideration of the conditional self-review application is
unnecessary. It was,
ex
abudandi
cautela,
argued before me. With regard to costs, although the application was
jumbled up, it appears to be one that falls under the
Biowatch
principle. For that reason alone, this Court will not make a costs
order against the applicant.
[22]
For all the above reasons, I am constrained
to make the following order:
Order
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
There is no order as to costs.
GN
MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE
HIGH
COURT GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Mr G W
Amm SC and Mr M Maphuta
Instructed
by:
K
Montjane Inc Attorneys, Tembisa
For
the Respondents:
Mr
J Hershensohn SC and Mr E van As
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
Date
of the hearing:
26
February 2025
Date
of judgment:
3
March 2025
sino noindex
make_database footer start