Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 69South Africa
Famous Idea Trading 4 (Pty) Ltd t/a Dely Road Courier Pharmacy v Government Employees Medical Scheme and Others (B1205/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 69 (5 February 2024)
Headnotes
decisions taken by private parties to appoint service providers are capable of being reviewed – Private parties inviting tenders for service is vastly different from a public procurement process – Decision is not reviewable in terms of common law – Application dismissed – Uniform Rule 53.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Famous Idea Trading 4 (Pty) Ltd t/a Dely Road Courier Pharmacy v Government Employees Medical Scheme and Others (B1205/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 69 (5 February 2024)
Famous Idea Trading 4 (Pty) Ltd t/a Dely Road Courier Pharmacy v Government Employees Medical Scheme and Others (B1205/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 69 (5 February 2024)
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FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Review –
Record
–
Commercial
decision relating to procurement of services by medical
scheme – Whether respondent is obliged to deliver
record in
terms of rule – Cannot be held that decisions taken by
private parties to appoint service providers are capable
of being
reviewed – Private parties inviting tenders for service is
vastly different from a public procurement process
–
Decision is not reviewable in terms of common law –
Application dismissed – Uniform Rule 53.
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number:
B1205/2023
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED:
DATE: 5/2/2024
SIGNATURE:
In the application of:
FAMOUS IDEA TRADING 4
(PTY) LTD t/a DELY ROAD COURIER
PHARMACY
Applicant
And
GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES MEDICAL SCHEME
First Respondent
CHAIRPERSON OF THE
BOARD OF TRUSTEES OF
THE
GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES MEDICAL SCHEME
Second
Respondent
THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES
OF THE GOVERNMENT
EMPLOYEES
MEDICAL SCHEME
Third Respondent
MARARA
PHARMACY (PTY) LTD t/a MEDIPOST
PHARMACY
Fourth Respondent
PHARMACY
DIRECT (PTY) LTD
Fifth Respondent
HH
DURRHEIM (PTY) LTD t/a MEDIPOST PHARMACY
Sixth Respondent
Delivered.
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email. The date and time for
hand down is deemed to be 10h00 on 5
February 2024.
JUDGMENT
RANCHOD J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is a matter in which the applicant seeks to have the award of a
tender by the first respondent
to the fourth and fifth respondents
reviewed and set aside and certain other ancillary relief. In terms
of Rule 53 of the Uniform
Rules of Court
[1]
the applicant called upon the first and second respondents to deliver
the record of the decision challenged in this application.
[2]
For the sake of convenience, the applicant will be referred to as
‘Famous Idea’, the
first, second and third respondents as
‘GEMS’ and the fourth and fifth respondents as ‘the
Joint Venture’.
[2]
The
sixth respondent does not oppose the application presumably because
the applicant does not seek any relief against it but is
cited in the
application “only insofar as it may consider itself interested
in the issues raised herein”.
[3]
GEMS did not deliver the Rule 53 record or its written reasons.
Instead, it filed a notice in
terms of Rule 6(5)(d)(iii)
[3]
of the Rules, raising a point of law.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
[4]
Famous Idea launched the main application on 9 March 2023 seeking the
following relief:
“
1.
To show cause, if any, why an order should not be granted in the
following terms:
THAT:
1.1
The decision of the first respondent and/or second respondent
and/or
third respondent (“GEMS”), taken on or about October
2022, to reject the applicant’s bid for the appointment
of a
service provider to render medical courier pharmacy services under
Tender GEMS/ MEDICINE COURIER
PHARMACY/2022/CON003 (“the
Impugned Tender
”) is
unlawful, invalid, and is hereby reviewed and set aside;
1.2
The decision of GEMS, taken on or about October 2022, to award the
Impugned Tender to a joint venture
comprised of the fourth and fifth
respondents (“the
Joint Venture
”), is declared:
1.2.1
A nullity;
alternatively
1.2.2
Unlawful, invalid, and is hereby reviewed and set aside;
1.3
Any and all contract(s) concluded between the fist respondent, and
the joint venture comprised of the
Joint Venture, pursuant to the
Impugned Tender – is/are declared:
1.3.1 A
nullity;
alternatively
1.3.2
Unlawful, invalid, reviewed and set aside;
1.4
The first respondent and
/or third respondent are hereby
ordered to award the Impugned Tender to the applicant;
1.5 ln
the alternative to prayer 1.4 above, the applicant is hereby:
1.5.1 Awarded
Tender GEMS/ MEDICINE COURIER PHARMACY/2022/CON003, and the first
respondent is hereby ordered to conclude
a contract with the
applicant on the same terms and conditions as those of the contract
concluded between
it (the first respondent) and the Joint Venture,
alternatively
1.5.2 Awarded
such compensation and/or damages, to be paid by the first respondent,
as the Court may deem appropriate;
1.6
lnsofar as any respondent opposes the relief sought in this
application, the applicant is awarded costs
of this application to be
paid by such respondent, jointly and severally with any other
respondent so opposing;
1.7
The applicant is granted such further and/or alternative relief as
may be just in the circumstances.
TAKE NOTICE FURTHER that
in terms of Rule 53(1) (b) of the Uniform Rules of Court, the first
and/or second respondents are required,
within fifteen (15) days of
receipt of this notice of motion, to dispatch to the Registrar, the
record of the decisions challenged
in this application."
[5]
On 4 February 2022, GEMS issued a (second) request for bids for the
appointment of a service provider
to render medical courier pharmacy
services (the ‘Impugned Tender’). Famous Idea submitted
its bid in April 2022. In
November of the same year, it learned that
GEMS had rejected its bid, and that the Joint Venture’s bid had
been accepted.
Famous Idea, aggrieved at the outcome of its bid,
launched the review application, as I said, on 9 March 2023.
[6]
The relevant factual chronology:
6.1
On 4 February 2022, GEMS issued the second request for bids for the
appointment of a service provider
to render medical courier pharmacy
services (
the impugned tender
);
6.2
On 10 April 2022, Famous Idea submitted its bid, in response to GEMS’
invitation;
6.3
On 25 November 2022, Famous Idea learnt that GEMS had rejected its
bid, and that the Joint Venture’s
bid had been accepted;
6.4
On 8 March 2023, Famous Idea issued the review application in terms
of which it sought to review GEMS
decision to award the impugned
tender to the Joint Venture;
6.5
On 23 March 2023, GEMS filed its notice of
intention to oppose the review application;
6.6
On 24 March 2023, GEMS filed its notice in terms of rule 6(5)(d)(iii)
raising a point of law that GEMS’
decision to award the
impugned tender to the Joint Venture is not reviewable;
6
.7
On 4 April 2023, Famous Idea filed its notice in terms of rule 30A
seeking to compel GEMS to disclose
its record of decision to award
the impugned tender to the Joint Venture;
6.8
On 5 April 2023, the Joint Venture filed its notice of intention to
oppose the review application;
6.9
On 14 April 2023, GEMS filed its notice in terms of rule 30/30A
alleging that Famous Idea’s rule
30A notice constitutes an
irregular step;
6.10 On
9 May 2023, GEMS filed its application in terms of rule 30/30A
alleging that Famous Idea’s rule
30A notice constitutes an
irregular step;
6.11 On
10 May 2023, Famous Idea filed its notice of intention to oppose
GEMS’ application in terms of rule
30/30A;
6.12
On
10 May 2023, Famous Idea filed its application in terms of rule 30A
seeking to compel GEMS to disclose its record of decision
to
award the impugned tender to the Joint Venture;
6.13
On 19 May 2023, GEMS filed a notice in terms of rule 30/30A noting
that Famous Idea’s application in
terms of rule 30A constitutes
an irregular step.
[7]
The issue before this Court (in this interlocutory application) is
whether GEMS is obliged (and
should be ordered) to deliver the record
in terms of Rule 53.
The
competence of the Rule 6(5)(d)(iii) notice
[8]
Famous Idea says it instituted the review application in terms of
Rule 53. It is not an application
in terms of Rule 6. It contends
that apart from the fact that the provisions of Rule 6 do not,
without more, automatically apply
to an application instituted under
Rule 53, the distinction between the two provisions has been
recognised by our courts, for example
in
Jocky
Club of South Africa v Forbes
.
[4]
Further, that Rule 6(5)(d)(iii), relied upon by GEMS, is not one of
the sub-rules which are specifically made applicable to Rule
53
applications.
[5]
It is not one
of the sub-rules relating to “
set
down of applications”.
GEMS’
reliance on Rule 6(5)(d)(iii) is misplaced, says Famous Idea, and the
application to compel the disclosure of the Rule
53 record should
succeed on this basis alone, and the GEMS’ Rule 30/30A
application dismissed.
[9]
Counsel for Famous Idea referred to
Trustees
for the Time Being of the Legacy Body Corporate v Bae Estates and
Escapes (Pty) Ltd and Another
,
[6]
where the Supreme Court of Appeal (the SCA) recently confirmed that
decisions of private bodies are not immune from judicial review.
The
Court stated as follows:
“…
The
principles in this regard have mostly evolved from the so-called
‘Jocky Club’ cases, where voluntary associations
are
required to afford their members a fair and impartial hearing before
their domestic tribunals. Counsel for the trustees sought
to
distinguish these cases from the present case on two bases: first,
that the trustees did not act in their capacity as a domestic
tribunal. Secondly, that as members of such associations, they were
persons affected by the finding of a domestic tribunal which
was
invalid for want of observance of the rules of natural justice.
[7]
”
“…
The
identity or form of the decision-maker is immaterial. What is
important is the effect of its decision and its implications on
the
subject to whom it is directed. It is therefore irrelevant whether
the body entrusted with the decision is styled ‘tribunal’,
‘committee’, ‘task team’, ‘board of
trustees’, etc. As to the second, it is common cause that
Bae
Estates was directly and materially affected by the trustees’
decision. There is no rational and justifiable basis why
the rules of
natural justice should not apply to the trustees’ decision.
This is particularly so in circumstances where Bae
Estates had, to
the knowledge of the trustees, been freely operating within the
scheme for at least a year…
[8]
”
[10]
The SCA then considered the grounds on which a decision of a private
body could be subjected to judicial
review at common law, and held as
follows:
“
...This
would be the case where a decision-maker failed to comply with the
elementary principles of justice, such as, for example,
where the
tribunal misconceives the nature and ambit of its powers or where it
acts capriciously or mala fide, or where its findings
in the
circumstances are so unfair that they cannot be explained unless it
is presumed that the tribunal acted capriciously or
with mala
fides.
[9]
In
Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Co v Johannesburg Town Council
Innes CJ observed that the grounds upon which a review may
be brought
under common law are ‘somewhat wider’ than those that
would justify a review of judicial proceedings. It
is well
established that common-law review, inter alia, applies also where
the decision under review is taken without a hearing
having taken
place. And, where the duty or power is created, not by statute, but
consensually, as in relation to domestic tribunals.”
[10]
[11]
Famous
Idea argued that the submission by GEMS that the court lacks
jurisdiction to entertain the review application is without
merit. I
n
its founding affidavit it says that the impugned decisions were taken
by the Board of GEMS. Such boards, it contends, fall within
the ambit
of Rule 53 and referred the court to two decided cases
[11]
.
[12]
GEMS, for its part submitted that
Uniform Rule 53(1), in terms of which the review application is
brought, restricts the type of proceedings or decisions which are
reviewable in terms thereof, to the decisions or proceedings of any
inferior court, and of any tribunal, board or officer performing
judicial, quasi-judicial, or administrative functions. It relies,
inter
alia,
on the decision of the SCA in
Government
Employees Medical Scheme and Others v Public Protector of the
Republic of South Africa and Others
[12]
that specifically deals with GEMS’s very position and the
nature of powers exercised by it which, it says, is dispositive
of
the question of law on confined legal grounds and for that reason,
the impugned decision is not reviewable. Famous Idea did
not refer to
the SCA decision in its heads of argument at all. The case is
important, says GEMS, because it constitutes binding
authority which
effectively compels a finding in GEMS’s favour insofar as the
legal question is concerned, without the need
for a record or a
consideration of the merits. I revert to the case presently.
[13]
In
Competition
Commission of South Africa v
Standard
Bank of South Africa Ltd
[13]
the
Constitutional Court held that the court may only order the
production of the record of a decision under Rule 53 after
it has
been determined that it has jurisdiction in the review.
[14]
The majority of the court stated :
“
Therefore,
[Rule 53] enables an applicant to raise relevant grounds of review,
and the court adjudicating the matter to properly
perform its review
function. However, for a court to perform this function, it must have
the necessary authority. It is not prudent
for a court whose
authority to adjudicate a review application is challenged to proceed
to enforce rule 53 and order that disclosure
should be made, before
the issue of jurisdiction is settled. The object of rule 53 may not
be achieved in a court that lacks jurisdiction.
For these additional
reasons, we agree with the first judgment [of Theron J] that Boqwana
JA erred in ordering that the Commission
should disclose its record
of investigation before the question of jurisdiction was determined.
Once carried out, and in the event
that the Competition Appeal Court
concluded that it has no jurisdiction, what is to be done in terms of
the order cannot be undone
.”
[15]
[14]
For purposes of determining the jurisdictional question of law raised
by GEMS, the common cause fact is that the
impugned decision concerns
the appointment of a service provider to render medical courier
pharmacy services, i.e., the exercise
of a private contractual power.
The SCA’s findings in
Government
Employees Medical Scheme and Others v Public Protector of the
Republic of South Africa and Others
[16]
are
relevant. I revert to it presently.
[15]
In
Ndoro
and Others v South African Football Association
[17]
the Court extracted the following three important principles that
have emerged from the case law:
15.1. Private entities
may discharge public functions by recourse to powers that do not have
a statutory source and may be characterised
as public powers.
15.2. The mere fact that
a private entity exercises public power does not mean that all its
conduct amounts to the exercise of a
public power or the performance
of a public function – it all depends on the relevant power or
function; and
15.3. The fact that a
private entity is powerful and may do things of great interest to the
public does not mean that it discharges
a public power or
function.
[16]
The Court in Ndoro emphasised that:
“
. . .
it
is the assumption of exclusive, compulsory, coercive regulatory
competence to secure public goods that reach beyond mere private
advancement that attracts the supervisory disciplines of public
law
.”
[18]
[17]
In
Government Employees Medical Scheme and Others
the SCA,
with specific reference to GEMS,
inter alia
, confirmed that:
17.1
A medical scheme is a
sui
generis
non-profit entity registered in terms of section 24(1) of the MSA,
which operates for the benefit of its members;
[19]
17.2
The powers and functions of a medical scheme are limited by its
registered rules and the MSA;
[20]
17.3
The business of a medical scheme does not appear to encompass the
performance of a public governmental function
or the exercise of a
public power;
[21]
17.4
The relationship between members and a medical scheme is essentially
one of a contractual nature;
[22]
17.5
GEMS is a restricted medical scheme and only employees qualifying to
be registered as members and their dependants
may be registered as
beneficiaries of the scheme. GEMS’ rules are, therefore, not of
general application and only apply to
a restricted class of
persons.
[23]
17.6
Although GEMS is restricted to government employees, membership is
not compulsory;
[24]
17.7
GEMS does not itself provide a health service and like other medical
schemes it operates in the nature of
a health insurance;
[25]
17.8
GEMS is a medical scheme no different to other medical schemes and
governed by the same regulatory framework,
which entails that it is
like all other medical schemes subject to the MSA, its registered
rules and it is regulated by the Council
for Medical Schemes;
[26]
17.9
GEMS is a body corporate managed by a board of twelve trustees. The
mere fact that the Minister may appoint
50% of GEMS’s does not
mean that the government exercises control over the affairs of
GEMS;
[27]
17.10
Although the right to appoint 50% of the trustees as provided to the
Minister in terms of GEMS’s rules, those
rules may be varied by
the Board of Trustees, without reference to the Minister;
[28]
and
17.11
With reference to
Calibre
Clinical Consultants (Pty) Ltd v National Bargaining Council for the
Road Freight Industry (“Calibre”),
[29]
it is
doubtful whether a body can be said to exercise a public power or
perform a public function only because the public has an
interest in
the matter.
[30]
[18]
Quintessentially, the impugned decision is simply a commercial
decision
relating
to the procurement of services by a medical scheme.
[19]
Famous Idea strenuously relies on
Metropolitan
Health Corporate (Pty) Ltd and Others v South African Police Service
Medical Scheme (POLMED) and Another
[31]
for
many of its contentions, including its stance that since the legal
question does not concern so-called jurisdiction proper,
the Court
per se
has
review jurisdiction. However, I was informed by counsel for the Joint
Venture that the SCA has since, on 4 September 2023, granted
leave to
appeal to the relevant medical scheme (POLMED) against the decision
of the court
a
quo in Metropolitan.
[20]
It appears that in the
Polmed
matter the Court ordered
production of the record
without
first determining whether it
has jurisdiction in the review. The Court appears not to have
embarked upon that determination at all,
because of its finding that
the issue of jurisdiction had not been raised. The
Polmed
matter
therefore does not constitute any authority for the proposition that
a medical scheme’s decisions are susceptible to
the Court’s
review jurisdiction, and it lends no support for the case sought to
be advanced by Famous Idea.
[21]
In any event, in my view, GEMS’s position in the present matter
is distinguishable from
Metropolitan. In casu
it is not
necessary to have any regard to the merits of the main application in
dealing with the jurisdictional challenge, since
the SCA has already
finally pronounced on GEMS’s specific
sui generis
position.
The SCA’s findings are binding on this Court and, even
considered in isolation, are sufficient to sustain GEMS’s
submissions on the question of law in the notice.
[22]
Famous
Idea did not formally object against the competency of GEMS’
Notice in terms of rule 30. It instead, took a further
step by
launching the application to compel the filing of the record. It had
also agreed
[32]
that the
issues for determination in GEMS’s Notice and the interlocutory
matters overlap because they essentially turn on
the same anterior
legal question(s). Yet it now contended that GEMS’ Notice was
not competent, because rule 6(5)(d)(iii)
does not apply to a review
in terms of rule 53.
[23]
In doing so, Famous Idea primarily, but generally, without reference
to specific paragraphs, relies on
Jockey
Club of South Africa v Forbes.
[33]
However, upon closer scrutiny,
Jockey
Club
paints a very different picture than the one contended for. The
Court, amongst other things, in its analysis of the position:
23.1
Indicated that in substance the drafter of Rule 53 has done no more
than to adopt the ordinary procedure
under Rule 6 to the special
exigencies of a particular application on notice of motion;
[34]
23.2
Made no finding that Rule 6(5)(d)(iii), or Rule 6 generally, is not
applicable to Rule 53 and referred to
the interrelationship between
Rule 6 and Rule 53;
23.3
Referred in the context of adherence to Rule 53 with approval to
Federated
Trust Ltd v Botha
[35]
,
where it was stated that rules need not be slavishly observed,
because “(R)ules are not an end in
themselves
to be observed for their own sake. They are provided to
secure
the inexpensive and expeditious completion of litigation before
the
courts…”.
[24]
Rule 53(1)(a) entitles a respondent to show cause why a decision
should not be reviewed. The entitlement
is not circumscribed and does
not preclude a respondent’s right to show such cause by virtue
of a dispositive legal question,
which is the very purpose of Rule
6(5)(d)(iii). A contrary interpretation would, bizarrely, entail that
a respondent would never
be entitled to oppose a review in terms of
Rule 53 by virtue of a dispositive anterior legal question, be it in
terms of Rule 6(5)(d)(iii),
or otherwise. It could therefore become
entangled remediless in a review where there is lack of jurisdiction
and be subject to
the dictates of a mala fide applicant who may abuse
the rule for any potential ulterior purpose.
[25]
The
above-mentioned matter of
Competition
Commission of South Africa
[36]
,
provides a clear example of how the Court should first determine, in
compliance with the above principles, whether it has review
jurisdiction before it can make an order compelling delivery of a
record. This determination is conducted prior to, and without
making
a determination in respect of the merits of the grounds of review
sought to be relied upon.
[26]
Famous Idea makes a singular bold, vague and unsubstantiated
allegation in the founding affidavit that it
also “
relies
on the grounds of review at
common
law, on the basis of the facts set out in this affidavit”
.
[37]
The inference which it wants this Court to draw is not
supported by any primary facts contained in the founding affidavit.
[27]
A dangerous precedent would be set if it were to be held that
the decisions taken by private parties to appoint service providers
are capable of being reviewed. If the ambit of the common law review
is broadened (which is effectively what Famous Idea is asking
this
Court to do) then the decisions of private parties in South Africa
who invite potential service providers to quote and tender
for a
service would suddenly be susceptible to potential review
applications by any unsuccessful party.
[28]
The situation of private parties inviting quotes and/or
tenders for a service is vastly different from a public procurement
process
where parties know beforehand that their information will be
disclosed should a decision be reviewed.
A
review application in a private commercial context will allow
competitors to bypass the strict legislative requirements for
obtaining
information held by a private body in terms of PAIA.
[38]
Should the common law review be broadened, or if this Court takes a
view that the reviewability of the decision (i.e. the review
jurisdiction) is linked with the merits (which it is not), then a
private party would automatically have a right to the information
held by another private party by merely launching an application in
terms of Rule 53. Such an approach cannot be countenanced.
Conclusion
[29]
It follows, in my view, that the impugned decision is not reviewable
in terms of the common law because it
does not fall in the category
of administrative action which may potentially still be subject to
common law review. Consequently,
the review application and the
interlocutory applications launched by Famous Idea must also fail.
Costs
[30]
Counsel for GEMS submitted that the legal questions raised should be
decided in favour of GEMS and the review
application should be
dismissed with costs on the attorney and client scale, inclusive of
the costs of two Counsel, as the review
application was so manifestly
ill-conceived that it constituted an abuse of process justifying a
punitive costs order. The argument
is persuasive. However, I do not
think it was of such an egregious nature that punitive costs should
be awarded in this instance.
[31]
I make the following order:
1.
The application by the first, second and third respondents in
terms of the Rule 6(5)(d)(iii)
notice) succeeds with costs, such
costs to include the costs of opposition of the fourth and fifth
respondents. The costs shall
include the costs of two counsel where
so employed.
2.
The application for review and the
interlocutory applications by the applicant fall to be dismissed
with
costs including the costs of two counsel where so employed.
RANCHOD J
Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of hearing:
3 October 2023
Date
of judgment:
5 February
2024
Appearances:
For
Famous Idea:
Adv
S Tshikila &
Adv
T Kgomo
Instructed
by Malatji & Co Attorneys
The
Ridge
1
Discovery Place
Cnr
Rivonia Road &
Katherine
Street
Sandton,
Johannesburg
For
First, Second and Third Respondents
Adv
A Bava SC &
Adv
K Schabort
Instructed
by Gildenhuys Malatji Inc
GMI
House Harlequins Office Park
164
Totius Street
Groenkloof,
Pretoria
For
Fourth and Fifth Respondents
Adv
E Kromhout &
Adv
H Wessels
Van
Der Merwe Attorneys
62
Rigel Avenue
Waterkloof,
Pretoria
[1]
Rule
53(1) provides, “Save where any law otherwise provides,
all proceedings to bring under review the decision or
proceedings of
any inferior court and of any tribunal, board or officer performing
judicial, quasi-judicial or administrative
functions shall be by way
of notice of motion directed and delivered by the party seeking to
review such decision or proceedings
to the magistrate, presiding
officer or chairperson of the court, tribunal or board or to the
officer, as the case may be, and
to all other parties affected—
(a) calling upon such
persons to show cause why such decision or proceedings should not be
reviewed and corrected or set aside,
and
(b)
calling upon the magistrate, presiding officer, chairperson or
officer, as the case may be, to dispatch, within 15 days after
receipt of the notice of motion, to the registrar the record of such
proceedings sought to be corrected or set aside, together
with such
reasons as the magistrate, presiding officer, chairperson or
officer, as the case may be is by law required or desires
to give or
make, and to notify the
applicant that
such magistrate, presiding officer, chairperson or officer, as the
case may be has done so.
[2]
Fourth
and Fifth Respondents submitted a bid as a ‘joint venture’
by them. (Founding affidavit paragraph 10 in the
main application).
[3]
Rule
6(5)(d) any person opposing the grant of an order sought in the
notice of motion shall –
...
(iii)
if such person intends to raise any question of law only, such
person shall deliver notice of intention to do so, within
the time
stated in the preceding subparagraph, setting forth such question.
[4]
1993
(1) SA 649 (A).
[5]
Expressio
unius est exclusion alterius.
[6]
2022
(1) SA 424
(SCA).
[7]
At
par 39.
[8]
At
par 40
[9]
At par 41
[10]
At par 42
[11]
L
F Boshoff Investments (Pty) Ltd v Cape Town Municipality; Cape Town
Municipality v L F Boshoff Investments (Pty) Ltd
1969 (2) SA 256
(C), at 274E-H;
Body
Corporate of the Laguna Ridge Scheme NO 152/1987 v Dorce
1999
(2) SA 512 (D).
[12]
2
021
(2) SA 114 (SCA).
[13]
2020 (4) BCLR 429 (CC).
[14]
Competition
Commission
:
para [118] – [119].
[15]
At
:par
[202]-[203]. See also
Commissioner
for South African Revenue Services and Another v Richards Bay Coal
Terminal (Pty) Ltd
[2023] JOL 58425
(SCA) par [7].
[16]
2021
(2) SA 114 (SCA).
[17]
2018
(5) SA 630
(GJ) par [23].
[18]
Ibid
par
[23]. See also:
Klein
v Dainfern College
2006 (3) SA 73
(T) par [24], where common law review in the
distinguishable circumstances of a domestic tribunal exercising
coercive action
over an individual was acknowledged.
[19]
Par
[21].
[20]
Par
[21].
[21]
Par
[22].
[22]
Par
[22].
[23]
Par
[22].
[24]
Par
[22].
[25]
Par
[23].
[26]
Par
[24].
[27]
Par
[36].
[28]
Par
[36].
[29]
2010
(5) SA 457 (SCA).
[30]
Par
[37]. Notably, the court in
Calibre
held that when procuring services to manage its AIDS Programme and
Wellness Fund, the Bargaining Council performed a quintessentially
domestic function rather than exercising a public power.
[31]
[2023] ZAGPPHC 302 (9 May 2023)
[32]
Caselines:
Section 15, p12 (annexure “B”, para 3 of Famous Idea’s
attorney’s letter).
[33]
1993
(1) SA 649 (A).
[34]
Para
27.
[35]
1978
(3) 645 (A) at para 654 C-D.
[36]
Ibid.
See
also
Commissioner
for South African Revenue Service and Another v Richards Bay Coal
Terminal (Pty) Ltd
[2023] JOL 58425
(SCA)
and
Cell C
(Pty) Ltd Commissioner, South African Revenue Service 2022 (4) SA
183 (GP).
[37]
Paragraph
101.3, Caselines 01-54.
[38]
Paragraph 5 of the answering affidavit of Marara JV, CL 16-16 to
16-19.
sino noindex
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