Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 6South Africa
Altron TMT (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2023-042792) [2024] ZAGPPHC 6 (5 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
5 January 2024
Headnotes
such an appeal would be moot.
Judgment
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## Altron TMT (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2023-042792) [2024] ZAGPPHC 6 (5 January 2024)
Altron TMT (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (2023-042792) [2024] ZAGPPHC 6 (5 January 2024)
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sino date 5 January 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2023-042792
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
5 January 2024
In
the matter between:
ALTRON
TMT (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
First Respondent
BRILLIANT
TELECOMMUNICATIONS (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
CBX
TECH (PTY)
LTD
Third Respondent
REASONS
# DE VOS AJ
DE VOS AJ
[1]
On 30 October 2023, this Court granted an order refusing an
application for leave to appeal
by Brilliant Telecommunications
(“Brilliant Tel”) with costs on a punitive scale.
[2]
The Court granted the order with reasons to follow. These are
the reasons.
[3]
Brilliant Tel and Altron bid for the same tender. Brilliant Tel was
successful. Altron
is reviewing the award. Altron is, as part
of its procedural rights, entitled to the record of the decision. The
Municipality was
willing to provide the record, but Brilliant Tel
objected. Brilliant Tel objects on the basis of confidentiality.
Brilliant Tel
contends that the record contains pricing and other
trade secrets which its competitor, Altron, cannot have. Altron
claimed it
had a right to the record in order to pursue its review of
the tender award.
[4]
The parties resolved the issue by entering into a confidentiality
agreement. The agreement
provided that Altron’s legal team
would have access to the alleged confidential documents. They were
prohibited from disclosing
the alleged confidential documents to
Altron until a Court had made a final decision on the confidentiality
of these documents.
Only if the Court found the documents were
not confidential could the legal team disclose the documents to
Altron, and they would
become a matter of public record.
[5]
This Court was seized with the confidentiality dispute. The dispute
was to determine whether
the documents referred to in the
confidentiality agreement were, in fact, confidential. The documents
covered by the confidentiality
agreement are broader than the Rule 53
record. The documents covered by the agreement included the Service
Level Agreement between
Brilliant Tel and the Municipality, concluded
after Brilliant Tel received the award. These would not normally form
part of the
record, as it was concluded subsequent to the decision to
award the tender. However, the parties included it in the reach
of the confidentiality agreement.
[6]
The dispute was heard in the urgent court over two days. The
Court dismissed Brilliant
Tel’s claim that the documents were
confidential and ordered that they be disclosed to Altron and
uploaded onto caselines
– to form part of the court file.
[7]
Brilliant Tel’s grounds for leave to appeal are directed at the
Court’s finding
that the matter was urgent, the documents are
not confidential and that it is to pay the costs of the proceedings
on a punitive
scale. Altron opposes the application for leave
to appeal and contends that the order was interlocutory and,
therefore, not
subject to an appeal; the documents have already been
released, rendering the application moot, and the application, in any
event,
bears no prospects of success.
[8]
I deal with the grounds of appeal relating to the documents first
before the grounds of
appeal in relation to urgency are addressed.
Confidential
documents
[9]
It is common cause that by the time the application of leave to
appeal was launched, the
documents had been released to Altron, were
uploaded onto caselines and were in the public domain. Specifically,
all parties accepted
that the documents referred to in paragraph 52.2
of the court order have been delivered to Altron. They were from that
moment on,
and still are, in the public domain. This cannot be
undone.
[10]
Altron submits that, in light of the disclosure of the documents,
even if Brilliant Tel is granted leave
to appeal, there is no issue
which is to be disposed of on appeal which will have any practical
impact or will lead to a prompt
resolution of the real issues between
the parties. On this basis, contends Altron, the matter is
moot.
[11]
Section 16(2)(a) of the Superior Courts Act gives an appeal court the
power to dismiss an appeal where the
judgment or order on appeal
would have no practical effect or result. Similarly, a court hearing
an application for leave to appeal
may dismiss the application if it
is of the view that the judgment or order on appeal would have no
practical effect or result.
[12]
Our courts have, on two occasions, dealt with mootness relating to
the disclosure of a confidential document.
On both occasions, the
Courts, both of which bind this Court, held that such an appeal would
be moot.
[13]
The first
is the judgment of the Supreme Court of Appeal in
Qoboshiyane
NO and Others v Avusa Publishing Eastern Cape (Pty) Ltd and Others
(“Qoboshiyane NO”).
[1]
In that matter, the MEC for Local Government and Traditional Affairs
appointed an independent investigative team to look into allegations
of maladministration in the Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality.
The investigation resulted in a report. The media sought
access
to the report, and the MEC refused the request on grounds of
confidentiality. The media challenged the confidentiality claim
by
the MEC. The High Court dismissed the MEC’s claim of
confidentiality and ordered the disclosure of the report. The
MEC did
so. Eight days after disclosing the report, the MEC sought
leave to appeal against the High Court’s decision
to order the
disclosure.
[14]
The Supreme Court of Appeal dismissed the MEC’s appeal on the
ground that (amongst others) the issue
had become moot as the report
was already in the public domain. The Court held –
“
The disclosure of
the report means that any judgment or order by this court will have
no practical effect or result as between the
parties. In the
circumstances this court may dismiss the appeal on that ground
alone.”
[2]
[15]
The facts in
Qoboshiyane NO
are similar. The reasoning of the
Court on the issue of mootness binds this Court.
[16]
The second
judgment is that of the Constitutional Court in
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another (Open Democratic Advice Centre as
Amicus Curiae).
[3]
The case also turned on a claim of confidentiality. The broader
circumstances were different as Ms Van Wyk sought a report from
a
hospital for purposes of her delictual claim against the hospital
after her husband died in its care. Dr Naudé,
a
specialist physician who was one of the medical doctors who had
treated her deceased husband, had prepared a report on the nursing
conditions at the hospital. He did this in his capacity as the
director of the multi-intensive care unit at the hospital
and as
chairperson of the hospital board. Ms Van Wyk believed that
this report could help her to establish negligence on
the part of the
hospital staff.
[17]
The High Court ordered the disclosure of the report. The
Hospital appealed and a majority of the Supreme
Court of Appeal
upheld the confidentiality claim. Ms Van Wyk then sought leave
to appeal from to the Constitutional Court.
Before the Constitutional
Court heard the application for leave to appeal, Ms Van Wyk had
obtained a copy of the report.
[18]
The Constitutional Court refused to grant leave to appeal because the
resolution of the main issue would
have no practical effect on the
parties, as Ms Van Wyk had already been provided with the report on
the basis of mootness.
[19]
It is common cause that the documents in paragraph 52.2 of the
order have been given to the applicant.
The concrete position is that
the documents have been disclosed. They have been provided to Altron,
they have been uploaded onto
caselines, and they are a matter of
public record. No practical purpose would be served in
reversing the decision in paragraph
52.2 on appeal. The appeal would
be of academic interest only. Any appeal against the Court's order to
disclose the documents is,
therefore, moot.
[20]
Brilliant Tel has provided no argument, case law or fact to dissuade
the Court that the matter is not moot.
It has not sought to
distinguish the present matter from
Qoboshiyane NO
and
Van
Wyk
and has provided no case law to the contrary.
[21]
The Court appreciates that there are instances where leave should be
granted, even when the issues have become
moot, where a public
interest would be served by such an appeal. However, no such case has
been made before this Court. Brilliant
Tel has not identified any
legal issue of public importance that arose in this matter that would
affect matters in future or any
grounds to demonstrate that it would
be in the interests of justice to grant leave to appeal. Brilliant
Tel has not sought to make
out such a case on the papers before the
Court.
[22]
For these reasons, the application for leave to appeal against the
decision to disclose the documents falls
to be dismissed.
Urgency
[23]
Brilliant Tel seeks leave to appeal against the Court’s
decision that the matter is urgent. Altron
contends that the
decision on urgency is not appealable, and, in addition, reversing
the decision on urgency on appeal will have
no practical effect or
result.
[24]
An order in
terms of rule 6(12) that a matter should be heard as a matter of
urgency is not final nor definitive of the rights of
the parties nor
does it have the effect of disposing of at least a substantial
portion of the relief claimed in the main proceedings.
An order, in
terms of rule 6(12), is no more than an order directing how a matter
should proceed.
[4]
The
procedural character of a decision on urgency has been repeatedly
held to be non-appealable.
[5]
The court in
Lubumbo
v Presbyterian Church of Africa
[6]
held that an order that a matter should be heard as a matter of
urgency is not appealable. This approach was also adopted by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Cornerstone
Logistics (Pty) Ltd and Another v Zacpak Cape Town Deport (Pty)
[7]
where
the court held that the issue of urgency was moot because the court
a
quo
decided
to hear and dispose of the matter on a semi-urgent basis, and that
could not be undone.
[25]
The Court has already determined the matter is urgent. The parties
agreed to an interim order, the matter
was fully ventilated, decided
and implemented. It is unclear how, practically, Brilliant Tel
proposes an appellate court
must undo these events that followed on a
finding of urgency.
[26]
Altron submits that the application was instituted on 1 August 2023,
argued on 18 August 2023 and 1 September
2023 and judgment was
granted on 8 September 2023. By the time the application for leave to
appeal was argued on 13 October 2023
more than 2 months would have
expired since the application for the release of the documents was
instituted. Altron submits that
the question of urgency is now of
academic interest only. No point would be served in an appeal court
revisiting the issue of urgency
because the merits were heard and
decided. This cannot be reversed. There is absolutely no prospect of
an appeal court referring
the application to the High Court for a
hearing on the merits
de novo
.
[27]
These submissions are persuasive.
[28]
Even if the Court were wrong in this regard, and were it not for the
binding authorities on the point, the
Court could only grant leave to
appeal if it were in the interest of justice, but, again, Brilliant
Tel has made no case in this
regard. Brilliant Tel has not advanced
any reasons why it would be in the interest of justice to grant leave
to appeal on the issue
of urgency.
[29]
Furthermore,
when pronouncing on urgency, a court is exercising a wide discretion.
An appeal court can only interfere with the exercise
of that
discretion if it is manifest that the judge misdirected herself.
[8]
This has not been shown. Whilst Brilliant Tel takes issue with the
Court’s approach to urgency, the basis for its claim of
misdirection is merely a regurgitation of the same arguments on
self-created urgency.
[30]
For these reasons, the application for leave to appeal against
urgency is dismissed.
Further
affidavit
[31]
Brilliant Tel complained of the fact that the documents had become
public in its application for leave to
appeal. This fact, of
course, does not arise from the record as it transpired after the
hearing.
[32]
The Supreme
Court of Appeal in
South
African Police Service Medical Scheme and Another v Lamana and
Others
[9]
held
that where facts relevant to the exercise of the appeal court’s
discretion under s21A(1) of the Supreme Court Act 59
of 1959 (the
predecessor to
s16(2)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
) do
not appear from the record, those facts must be placed before the
court by way of an affidavit by the party seeking to rely
on them and
in sufficient time to enable the other party to deal with those
facts. The same applies to an application for leave
to appeal in
whatever court it is brought. The same view was held by the
Constitutional Court in
Van
Wyk v Unitas Hospital and Another (Open Democratic Advice Centre as
Amicus Curiae).
[10]
[33]
Brilliant Tel did not place this evidence properly, through the
filing of an affidavit, before the Court.
It introduced the evidence
in its application for leave to appeal as one of the grounds for
appeal.
[34]
Altron responded to the introduction of this piece of evidence by
filing an affidavit setting out how the
documents had been disclosed
and were part of the public domain. In response, Brilliant Tel
delivered a
Rule 30
notice claiming that Altron's affidavit was
irregular. Altron, in turn, and out of an abundance of caution,
delivered an
application for leave to deliver its affidavit.
Brilliant Tel opposed the introduction of Altron’s affidavit.
[35]
The contents of the affidavit Altron seeks to place before the Court
are relevant to the determination of
whether granting leave to appeal
will serve any practical purpose. The contents are not
disputed. Altron could only
appropriately place them before the
Court by means of an affidavit. In addition, Altron was responding to
Brilliant Tel's irregular
introduction of evidence in its application
for leave to appeal. In these circumstances, it is entirely
appropriate that Altron
filed this additional affidavit. To the
extent necessary the Court permits the filing of this further
affidavit.
Costs
[36]
Altron has been substantively successful and is entitled to its
costs. No basis has been presented
to deviate from this
principle. Brilliant Tel was asserting its commercial interest
in litigation and was unsuccessful. In
such circumstances, Altron is
entitled to its costs.
[37]
Altron also requested a punitive costs order from this Court to show
its displeasure in how Brilliant Tel
had conducted itself,
particularly as it repeatedly increased the costs involved in this
litigation. The Court was persuaded by
this argument, particularly in
light of Altron’s approach to the further affidavit and its
approach to the hearing of this
application for leave to appeal.
[38] It
weighs with the Court that Brilliant Tel inappropriately placed facts
before the Court, then opposed Altron's
attempt to place facts before
the Court properly, filed a
Rule 30
notice and then opposed the
introduction of the affidavit, containing common cause facts which
are relevant to the determination
of the dispute. Brilliant
Tel’s opposition was baseless.
[39]
Brilliant Tel responded to Altron’s further affidavit. The
content of this affidavit is unfortunate.
It contains largely,
personal attacks on Altron's attorney of record. It does not dispute
the relevant facts: that the documents
are part of the public domain.
Not only are the attacks inappropriate and ad hominem, but they also
rely on an entirely faulty
premise. Brilliant Tel's premise for its
attack on Altron's attorney is that it contends Altron was engaging
in sharp practices
in disclosing the documents so soon after the
judgment was handed down. Brilliant Tel claims that it was
entitled to 15 days
to consider whether it sought leave to appeal,
and during this period, Altron was not entitled to disclose the
documents. Brilliant
Tel contends that the release of the documents
was a purposeful stratagem to render the application for leave to
appeal moot.
[40]
The order of this court is interlocutory. Therefore, not even the
application for leave to appeal would have
suspended its operation.
It is only final orders that are suspended pending an appeal. The
right which Brilliant Tel claims Altron
infringed, does not accrue to
Brilliant Tel in these circumstances. There is a second way in
which Brilliant Tel is mistaken.
There is nothing which states that
Altron was prohibited from implementing the order for 15 days until
Brilliant Tel’s period
for launching its application for leave
to appeal has expired. The Court asked counsel for Brilliant
Tel on what basis this
submission rests. The Court was not provided
with case law or authority to support the submission. Brilliant
Tel relied solely
on the rules providing that it had 15 days to
institute its application for leave to appeal. Brilliant Tel’s
submission is
not borne by the authority it relies on.
[41]
Brilliant Tel attacked Altron’s attorney in a manner which was
unfortunate. Worse for Brilliant Tel
when asked what the basis for
its attack was, it could point to no such basis in law.
[42]
The second issue which must be considered is Brilliant Tel's approach
to the hearing of this application
for leave to appeal. In short,
Brilliant Tel did not comply with the court order for the filing of
written submissions prior to
the hearing of the application for leave
to appeal. The heads were filed the day before the hearing and then
additional heads were
presented on the day. Altron referred to
this as a basis for punitive costs against Brilliant Tel. The
Court, out of
fairness to Brilliant Tel, inquired how it would like
to deal with this, in particular, whether it wished to file any
affidavits
to explain the issue. The concern, as expressed by the
Court was that in so doing, the costs involved would escalate.
Counsel for
Brilliant Tel elected to file another affidavit to
explain the non-compliance with the Court order. This led to a
further
exchange of affidavits. In these further affidavits,
Brilliant Tel persisted with the ad hominem attacks and indicated
that
there was something untoward in being required to file a further
affidavit. The Court did not require the filing of a further
affidavit, counsel for Brilliant Tel made that election.
[43]
When combined with an application for leave to appeal against a
decision which has been implemented, absent
any allegation of broader
public interest, the application for leave to appeal is to be
dismissed with costs on a punitive scale.
[44]
The Court notes that it had omitted to mention the costs involved in
the application for leave to introduce
the further affidavit in its
order of October 2023. The Court is empowered to vary its
orders, particularly when it erroneously
omits to deal with costs. In
this case one aspect of the issue of costs was not expressly
mentioned. To the extent this omission
may lead to confusion,
the Court wishes to vary the costs order to include these costs
specifically. In the order which follows,
this is corrected.
Order
[45]
The following order is made:
a) The
application for leave to appeal is dismissed.
b)
Brilliant Tel is to pay Altron’s costs on an attorney and
client scale, including the costs incurred
as a result of Brilliant
Tel’s opposition to Altron’s further affidavit, and
including the costs in relation to the
filing of affidavits in
response to Brilliant Tel’s late filing of its written
submissions.
I de Vos
Acting Judge of the High
Court
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.
Counsel for Altron:
T Prinsloo
Instructed by:
Lowndes Dlamini In
Counsel for
Brilliant Tel:
TJ Maschaba SC
Instructed by:
Kekana Hlatswayo
Radebe
Date of the
hearing:
13 October 2023
Date of judgment:
5 January 2023
[1]
(864/2011)
[2012] ZASCA 166
;
2013 (3) SA 315
(SCA) (21 November
2012)
[2]
Id
at p
ara
5
[3]
[2007] ZACC 24
;
2008 (2) SA 472
(CC) at
[26]
[4]
Dickson and Another v Fisher’s Executors
1914 AD 424
at 427;
Lubumbo at 243A-B
[5]
Mannat and Another v De Kock and Others (18799/2018)
[2020] ZAWCHC
54
(22 June 2020); Ba-Mamohlala and Big Mash JV v Mafube Local
Municipality and others
Free
State Provincial Division, case number 3942/2021 (unreported)
[6]
1994 (3) SA 241
(SE)
[7]
Ltd 2022 JDR 0101 (SCA) at [30]
[8]
Id at para [30]
[9]
2011 (4) SA 456
(SCA) at [13]
[10]
Above
at para 16
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