Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 399South Africa
Minister of Water and Sanitation v Fumile Advisory Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (60250/2018; 86068/2018) [2025] ZAGPPHC 399 (14 April 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 April 2025
Headnotes
during the ‘closure process’ at Roodeplaat (meeting). This meeting
Judgment
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## Minister of Water and Sanitation v Fumile Advisory Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (60250/2018; 86068/2018) [2025] ZAGPPHC 399 (14 April 2025)
Minister of Water and Sanitation v Fumile Advisory Services (Pty) Ltd and Others (60250/2018; 86068/2018) [2025] ZAGPPHC 399 (14 April 2025)
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sino date 14 April 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NUMBER: 60250/2018
CASE
NUMBER: 86068/2018
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES / NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGE:
YES / NO
(3)
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
MINISTER
OF WATER & SANITATION
Plaintiff
And
FUMILE
ADVISORY SERVICES (PTY) LTD First Defendant
JOHN
HLAKUDI
Second Defendant
MBALENHLE
MANAUKUZA
Third Defendant
NOMBULELO
MBEKI
Fourth Defendant
SIFISO
MKHIZE
Fifth Defendant
REBECCA
NKOMO
Sixth Defendant
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by
uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. As a
courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal
representatives by email.
The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10h00 on
14 April 2025
.
JUDGEMENT
LE
GRANGE AJ:
[1]
This matter pertains to the appointment of the first defendant
(Fumile) to perform specified professional accounting services
to the
plaintiff (the Minister) for the tax year 2017/2018.
[2]
Subsequent to Fumile’s appointment, the Minister instituted
review proceedings (under Case number: 60250/2018) claiming
that
Fumile’s appointment was irregular.
[3]
Fumile retaliated, denying the irregularity, and claimed in a
counter-application payment of all outstanding invoices
for services
rendered as depicted in:
·
Invoice
2
[1]
(dated 3 May 2018) to the
amount of R 21 883 431.34; and
·
Invoice
3
[2]
(dated 28 June 2018) to the
amount of R 11 190.28.
[4]
The
Minister simultaneously issued summons against Fumile (and various
officials of its own department) (under Case number 86068/2018),
re-claiming payment of the amount paid to Fumile in terms of Fumile’s
Invoice 1
[3]
(dated 1 March
2018) to the amount of R 17 900 594.37.
[5]
The total amount claimed by Fumile for the work
done during the 6-month period from 3 January 2018 to 22 June 2018
amounts to R
50 974 523.
Issues
[6]
The issues, which is up for adjudication before
this Court, has been curtailed by the parties themselves, and has
ended up in an
order of this court granted on 19 December 2019, the
relevant part of which reads as follows:
‘
HAVING
read the documents filed of record, heard Counsel for the parties and
considered the matter:
IT IS ORDERED BY
AGREEMENT THAT:
…
3.
[Fumile]’s counterclaim is referred
for trial and shall be heard together with Case number 86068/18
following issues:
3.1
Whether or not [Fumile] had undertaken and/or performed any work
pursuant to the agreement concluded
between the parties? And if so;
3.2
the determination of the financial value of the work so performed in
terms of the agreement.’
[7]
The issues before this Court are therefore
crisp and as follows:
(i)
Under case number 86068/2018: Is the
Minister entitled to repayment of the amount of R 17 900 594.37 due
to the appointment being
irregular?
(ii)
Under case number 60250/2018: Did Fumile
undertake and/or performed any work pursuant to the agreement
concluded between the parties?
And if so;
(iii)
What is the financial value of the work so
performed in terms of the agreement?
Enrichment
[8]
The Minister’s cause of action is
based on unjustified enrichment due to an illegal contract. The
Minister claims that Fumile’s
appointment was irregular,
irrational, and unlawful and that it is entitled to restitution of
the amount of R 17 900 594.37 (Invoice
1) based upon a void or
voidable contract – i.e. in terms of the
Condictio
ob turpen vel iniustam causam
.
[9]
The onus to prove its claim, foremost the
basis thereof (that the contract was illegal) lies with the Minister.
[10]
Pertaining to illegality, the Minister
elected not to further advance the allegation of illegality in the
review proceedings, by
withdrawing its review of Fumile’s
appointment.
[11]
This led counsel for Fumile to conclude, at
the opening stage of the trial, that the Minister’s claim ‘of
R 17 million
is not at play anymore.’
[12]
Added hereto, the Minister elected not (or
failed) to lead evidence regarding the question of legality.
[13]
For this reason, I did not find it strange
that counsel for the Minister did not deal with its enrichment claim
in its argument,
and did it become
a
fait a compli
early on, that the issue
of legality and hence the claim was stillborn – as initially
assumed by counsel for Fumile.
[14]
Instead, the Minister opted to advance a
case, in the trial by way of cross-examination, of overpayment and/or
set-off which has
not been pleaded.
[15]
In the premises, the Minister’s claim
stands to be dismissed.
[16]
By dismissing the Minister’s claim, I
certainly do not find that Fumile was not overpaid on Invoice 1,
however the Minister
has simply failed to advance a claim in its
pleadings and to prove same, which proverbially left Fumile
(potentially) of the hook.
Services rendered and
the value of those services
[17]
Fumile
bears the onus to prove that it rendered the services (as set out in
the Invoices), and the financial value of those services
rendered.
[4]
[18]
Taking a step back, the Department of Water
and Sanitation (Department) in previous years obtained negative
audits from the Auditor
General and had challenges with specific
areas of its reporting. To this end, Fumile was appointed to assist
the Department with
its financial reporting for the tax year
2017/2018, with an aim to obtain a positive audit (the project). The
project was to be
undertaken and performed nationally in all
provinces and according to the Service Level Agreement and annexure C
thereto, Fumile
had to supply certain deliverables.
[19]
With the purpose to relieve it of its
burden, counsel for the Minister called 5 witnesses being Mr Moyo, Mr
Muradya, Mr Chesaina,
Mr Motloung and Mr Nteo.
Mr Moyo
[20]
Mr Moyo testified that he, being a senior
directors of Fumile, was allocated to be the provincial leader to
oversee a team conducting
the project in two provinces, i.e. the
Easter Cape and KwaZulu Natal.
[21]
He further, in detail, set out what Fumile
had to do in conducting the project
.
For instance (to understand the nature of the evidence having been
led) on the expenditure side, he stated that:
‘
And
our role here was
to
ensure that each payment is indeed valid and represents services
rendered. And that involved us looking at the primary supporting
documents such as the independent payment certificates which are
prepared by the department’s engineers could be internal
engineers or external engineers and that payment certificate will
have basically measured the nature and extent of works that have
been
per formed and compare it to the invoice or inform the invoice of
that service provider.
So
our role was
to ensure that each expenditure which is being claimed by a service
provider had a completion certificate with it and that rendered
it a
valid expenditure to the project. And we also looked at the
expenditure being presented and going through the payment system
of
the department.
Which
basically relays to us reviewing
the bank statements, reviewing the bus report, bus is the accounting
system that the department has deployed in order to account
for its
financial transact ions. So whatever transact ion the department
concludes is then recorded on the bus system which is
an accounting
system that is also utilised to inform the financial reporting
process for the department to arrive at the annual
financial
statements.
So
that is basically the scope of work
that was done on the expenditure side and in our delivery
[indistinct] the listing of the expenditure that have been verified,
M' Lord, will then be presented to the department.’ [Emphasis
added.]
[22]
He concluded by stating that the work
having been done in a specific province would then be send to head
office where it was consolidated
by a team to form a final report.
[23]
Mr
Moyo further testified about a meeting that was held during the
‘closure process’ at Roodeplaat (meeting). This meeting
(as evidenced by the minutes
[5]
)
was heavily relied upon by the Minister during the trial to lay
emphasis upon the fact that the Department officials were unsatisfied
with the services rendered by Fumile – the work thus being
substandard.
According
to Mr. Moyo the meeting (and the minutes) is confirmation that
services were rendered in fact and that the parties were
in the
process, which is normal in the industry, to iron out different
balances, calculations and findings in the effort to enable
the
minister to attain a proper audit opinion. The meeting was nothing
but a processes to engage with the Department to ultimately
ensure a
complete, correct and comprehensive report, with which both parties
agree. I can at this junction state that I accept
Mr Moyo’s
explanation and finds, on this basis alone, that work was indeed
performed on some of the deliverables by Fumile.
[24]
In relation to the value of the services
rendered, Mr Moyo explained that timesheets (as compiled by the
employees to track and
record the time that they have spent in
performing the work) (timesheets) were used to determine the value of
the services rendered,
and to justify the amounts claimed by Fumile
in the invoices.
[25]
These
timesheets
[6]
have as content:
(i) the name of the person who did the work, (ii) the week/period
during which the work was done, (iii) the hours
that was spend on a
specific deliverable, and importantly (iv) the specific deliverable
itself on which the hours have been spend.
[26]
Mr Moyo, like the other witnesses, quickly
came under fire in cross examination, regarding the veracity and
correctness of the timesheets.
In this regard, Mr Moyo admitted to
the fact that various timesheets which was placed before the Court
did not pertain to the Department
but to other clients of Fumile like
Transnet. There were also various duplications of timesheets, and
some timesheets indicated
that the employee seemed to bill hours for
a holiday.
[27]
In the premises, the Minister’s
concern as to the veracity and correctness of the timesheets were, on
the face of the timesheets
alone, certainly real.
[28]
Seeming that the timesheets were voluminous
and that the employees it pertains to (or who compiled them) where in
the reagent of
approximately 30 people, and due to the fact that
there was a disparity in respect of the total amounts calculated by
Fumile in
comparison with the amounts calculated by the officials of
the Department with regard to the timesheets which were bound and
contained
in Bundle E1, E2 and E3, I directed that the parties work
together to remove all discrepancies, irrelevant timesheets and to at
least try and come to an agreement as to what hours, timesheets, or
portions thereof are not in dispute. Save for ironing out some
duplicate and irrelevant timesheets and agreeing that the timesheets
provided in E1 to E3 added up to the invoices claimed, the
parties
were unable to reach an agreement as to the amount of the hours spend
or work performed.
[29]
As to the hourly rates it seems common
cause that Fumile is bound to charge the rates that are regulated by
the South African Institute
for Chartered Accountants, and which were
further agreed upon with the office of the Auditor General. These
rates appear in the
calculations after each invoices (i.e. the
annexures to E1 to E3) and although it was not confirmed to be
correct, the correctness
thereof was never put in disputed.
[30]
To a question as to who is responsible to
verify the correctness or veracity of the timesheets of the officials
of Fumile, Mr Moyo
answered as follows:
‘
[T]his
is in the
form of a hierarchy
…, at a provincial level you will have myself as the highest
in the hierarchy and reporting directly to me there will be
a senior
manager, who will then have other report to him which are third level
now that I am talking about and a fourth level,
let us say that is
the hierarchy. So, my timesheet will basically be my completion,
which obviously, after I submit, I share with
my leadership in terms
of the overall hierarchy of the project. But, below my role my
senior
manager
[i.e. for the Easter Cape Mr
Raymond Matlou and for KZN Mabulelane Mahlangu] would be responsible
to basically monitor all the
hierarchy’s below him or her and
we would therefore be responsible for making sure that the timesheets
are correct and accurate…
In terms of the hierarchy
that I have explained, the head office leadership team, which is
above me, will receive timesheets from
me,
which I will have
confirmed that I am comfortable and I am happy with the veracity and
the hours that have been charged
,
and based on that the head
office team will rely on my submission as the senior project manager
and take those time sheet, consolidate,
aggregate them and then
prepare an invoice at that level
.’ [Emphasis added]
[31]
The last portion is worrying to say the
least and does in no way provide a process of confirmation or
verification of the correctness
of hours claimed by each individual
in their timesheets.
[32]
What is further worrying is the fact that
Mr Moyo (a director of Fumile and a provincial team leader) failed to
properly understand
the scope of work which Fumile had to deliver. He
was of the view that Fumile only had to determine the possibility of
the expenditure
being irregular and not to confirm that it was indeed
irregular. The latter which according to him fell outside the scope
of work.
He later, after an ‘explanatory objection’
rectified this to say that it was not part of the work at that stage
and
had to be conducted later.
David Muradya
[33]
Mr Muradya was appointed as project leader
for the Limpopo Province, and his evidence was not much different. He
also explained
in detail what Fumile had to do and how it would be
done. Like the previous witness, Mr Muradya also
ran
through the timesheets explaining what they are about.
Mr Chesaina
[34]
The third witness, Mr Chesaina, was
appointed team leader to aid the supervisor and the team who worked
on the project in Mpumalanga
-, Gauteng - and Western Cape Province.
Similarly, he testified in detail what they had to do and how it
would be done.
[35]
Strangely, differently to Mr Moyo, Mr
Chesaina stated that he could not testify about the timesheets as he
had no control over it
and was this done by the project leader at the
head office, being a certain person by the name of Asanda, the
surname of whom he
had forgotten.
Mr. Motloung
[36]
The fourth witness to be called by Fumile
was Mr. Motloung who was the team leader of the team(s) that were
deployed to conduct
the accounting services on behalf of Fumile at
the Freestate -, Northern Cape - and North West Province. Mr.
Motloung also stated
that the timesheets were compiled by the
employees themselves (i.e. each member of the team), to be submitted
on a weekly basis
and
had to be
authorised by him
.
Mr Nteo
[37]
The last witness to be called by Fumile was
Mr Nteo, an executive director and shareholder of Fumile, who was
appointed to be the
engagement director and leader of the entire
project and the leader of the project management office. He was thus
leader to the
4 provincial leaders who testified before him.
[38]
Mr Nteo explained how the project came
about, how it was planned and executed through the 9 provinces.
Similarly to the other witnesses,
this was left unchallenged,
together with the allegations that: (i) the final consolidated report
was accepted by the Department,
and in certain parts ended up in the
Department’s financial statements, the latter which were
ultimately approved by the
Auditor General; and (ii) certain parts of
this consolidated report were tabled in Parlement.
[39]
Considering the evidence of the witnesses
in toto, it cannot be said that Fumile did not perform accounting
services, which exclude
services pertaining to asset verification (it
being common cause were not performed). This finding is supported by
the meeting
that were held and the fact that the Fumile’s final
report (or portions thereof) was received and subsequently utilised
by
the Department.
[40]
The question however remained whether the
contents of the timesheets were a true reflection of the actual time
spend on specific
work by a specific individual.
[41]
Mr Nteo, similarly, to all the
above-mentioned witnesses, failed to confirm the correctness of the
contents of his own (let alone
his team’s) timesheets and that
the correct hourly rate was subsequently used to calculate the value
of the services that
he (and/or his team) rendered in a specific
province. The closest to a confirmation of the hours and work done by
employees of
Fumile, came from Mr Motloung who confirmed that the
bundle of timesheets (which he was referred to) did relate to the
work done
by the team in those provinces.
[42]
Mr Nteo confirm that the timesheets
originated from the various provinces and were consolidated by
himself.
Stating: ‘… and once I am happy M’Lord then I will
agree to the timesheet.’ To this the Court was provided
with a
‘control sheet’ consisting of the hours, per the
timesheets (duplicates, and those relating to third parties
excluded)
which added up to be equal to the amounts claimed in the invoices.
[43]
It
was Mr Nteo’s view that the parties are expected to work
together where the timesheets and the invoices are in dispute
and to
agree to a final figure. The view is unfortunately wrong and no such
obligation rests upon an opposing litigant. I may say,
in the
instance it would not have assisted, save for obvious discrepancies
which were raised by the Minister, due to the lack of
knowledge at
the side of the Minister who could not have been in the position to
either confirm or deny the hours spend by every
employee. For this
reason, and due to the obvious discrepancies within the timesheets
and the calculations, the Minister persisted
with the issues in
dispute and emphasised that evidence must be led about the work
performed by each and every employee
[7]
,
certainly with the view that it be tested for correctness.
[44]
Mr Nteo’s testimony worsened for
Fumile when he indicated, while admitting to a discrepancy to the
timesheet of an employee
by the name of Kathrine Mbaloi, that he
himself had a continuous problem with her and other employees (which
he failed to name
but did admonish) who provided timesheets which
were copy-pasted from old timesheets.
[45]
Mr Nteo then continued to state the
methodology of how Fumile would use the timesheets to compile their
claim per the invoice. He
stated as follows:
‘
So,
Counsel, on this case,
when we do our
timesheets
and capture information for
purposes of the records and the claim, that is the invoice.
We
look at the week ending and we look at the details of what a person
has done, whether it is consistent with the plan for that
week
.
And once we are satisfied with that, the
manager would approve
. So in this case,
like I was saying, remember the manager would be receiving and he
would see the signature is the same. It is
the same manager that has
been approving all this time, she is. So he will be receiving than 30
timesheets per week, not only coming
from this project of DWS but any
other project that we are working on to approve this. So if now he is
involved on other projects,
now when we
see the week ending and we look at the hours and we look at what was
supposed to be done in terms of the details. Along
with the plan of
that week, we are happy with that and we take the total hours and we
complete it into our
.
…
The only thing that I was
saying, M’ Lord, there was that tendency of them instead of
starting a timesheet afresh in terms
of copying it. They will take
the one that they have used previously but what is important, M
’Lord, for us as the management
or office of project
management,
we look at our plan for this week, this is what we are
covering. Did they cover that? Yes, they covered it. Did she spend
time for
that project for that period? Yes, she did and then the
manager will approve
. And it is not the only project that I am
doing, M’ Lord, but in terms of this dates, what is important
for us is the week
ending.’ [Emphasis added.]
[46]
The methodology that he explained here did
not coincide with his previous testimony and that of Mr Moyo –
that a process of
verification in hierarchical order took place to
confirm the correctness of the timesheets the latter which was used
to compile
the invoices – but is rather a case where the
manager at the head office (receiving the timesheets) approved hours
which
management felt would be sensible after considering the
timesheets, what work had to performed and what were performed during
the
week. The latter which is more in line with the testimony of Mr
Chesaina and the fact that the only signature on all of the
timesheets
is that of Mr Molako, the manager at the head office.
[47]
Mindful of the inner conflicting versions,
it is important to note that neither the employees’ nor the
senior manager of the
provinces or the provincial leaders’
signatures appears on these timesheets.
[48]
The latter’s signature which is not
necessary, according to Mr Nteo, as the mere sending of the
timesheets to the head office
is proof of verification. He thus
stated:
‘
[The
provincial leaders] are saying that they are happy with what their
teams have done. And once they send them, we take that as
an approval
but the approval for purposes of
completing invoice and record purposes is this done by the office of
the project management.
’
[Emphasis added.]
[49]
One would have expected, even more so once
no agreement could have been reached as proposed by this Court, that
Fumile would have
called as witness the employees themselves, who
performed the work to confirm the correctness of their timesheets.
This would also
have led to the confirmation of what work (if any)
had been performed during the hours claimed in each individual’s
timesheet(s).
[50]
Fumile’s failure to lead firsthand
evidence regarding the above left the timesheets uncorroborated and
empty, which in turn
left the value of its claim unproved.
Further interlocutory
applications
[51]
It need be stated that after the hearing,
both parties approached the Court with further applications which
delayed judgement in
this matter.
[52]
Fumile sought to join a party which
application was later withdrawn, while the Minister sought to amend
their particulars of claim
by adding further allegations to paragraph
5.1.4A thereof, and to re-open its case to adduce further evidence in
order to counter
Fumile’s assertions that the work was
accepted, approved and incorporated into the financial statements of
the Department
which was subsequently audited by the Auditor-General,
and also tabled at Parlement – assertions which was left
unchallenged
during the trial.
[53]
I have considered all application in line
with the evidence tendered and find them without merit, especially
due to my findings
above.
[54]
For this reason, the applications that are
left, stands to be dismissed.
Costs
[55]
Seeing that both parties failed in their
claim(s) I find it fair that neither should be responsible for the
other’s costs.
Order
[56]
In
the result the
following order is made:
1.
The
plaintiff’s application to amend is dismissed.
2.
The
plaintiff’s application to re-open its case is dismissed.
3.
The
plaintiff’s claim is dismissed.
4.
The
first defendant’s counterclaims are dismissed.
5.
Each
party to pay its own costs.
AJ
le Grange
Acting
Judge
APPEARANCES
PLAINTIFF:
HOR Modisa
together with P Loselo as instructed by
the State Attorneys, Pretoria.
FIRST
DEFENDANT: ME Manala together with BN Rasalanavho
as
instructed by Matela Sibanyoni & Associates Inc.
SECOND TO SIXTH
DEFENDANTS: No appearance.
[1]
Caselines
01-67.
[2]
Caselines
01-68.
[3]
Caselines
01-66.
[4]
Pillay
v Krishna and Another
1946
AD 946.
[5]
Caselines
36-47
[6]
Caselines
08-111 onwards.
[7]
Caselines
49-121
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