Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 378South Africa
Bloemfontein Correctional Contract (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (067524/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 378 (14 April 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 April 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Bloemfontein Correctional Contract (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (067524/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 378 (14 April 2024)
Bloemfontein Correctional Contract (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (067524/23) [2024] ZAGPPHC 378 (14 April 2024)
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sino date 14 April 2024
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case No.
067524/23
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHERS JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 14/4/24
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
BLOEMFONTEIN
CORRECTIONAL CONTRACT (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
First
Respondent
G4S
CORRECTION SERVICES (BLOEMFONTEIN) RF (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
This
matter was heard in open court and disposed of in terms of the
directives issued by the Judge President of this Division.
The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
JUDGMENT
KUBUSHI
J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
There is a dispute between the applicant and the 1
st
respondent in regard to a concession agreement that was concluded
between them. The concession agreement concerns the operations
at the
Mangaung Correctional Centre. The applicant, in turn entered into a
subcontract with the 2
nd
respondent relating to the
services that should be provided, in terms of the concession
agreement at the Centre. Pursuant to that
dispute, the 1
st
respondent seeks to terminate the concession agreement alleging
certain breaches of the agreement which it is said are incapable
of
being remedied. The termination of the concession agreement will,
obviously, affect the 2
nd
respondent.
[2]
The applicant is contesting the merits of the termination of the
concession agreement
by the 1
st
respondent and had
previously approached court on an urgent basis for interim
interdictory relief wherein it sought to challenge
the 1
st
respondent’s purported cancellation of the concession agreement
and to prevent the implementation of the termination without
its
merits being properly ventilated. By consent between the
parties the matter was referred for mediation but could not
be
resolved. The parties then agreed that the matter be referred for
special motion allocation. In the mean while the applicant
instituted action against the 1
st
respondent to prevent
the unlawful cancellation of the concession agreement and seeks
specific performance of its rights under
the concession agreement.
[3]
In the above-mentioned proceedings the subcontractor to the
concession agreement was
cited as the 2
nd
respondent,
except that it was not a party to the mediation process.
[4]
In the present proceedings, the applicant seeks interim interdictory
relief against
the 1
st
respondent for an order that the
1
st
respondent not proceed with the termination of the
concession agreement, this time pending the finalisation of the
action it has
instituted against the 1
st
respondent. The
applicant has also in these proceedings cited the subcontractor as
the 2
nd
respondent. No relief is actually wanted against
the 2
nd
respondent and it has been cited in the papers by
virtue of its interest in the outcome of the proceedings. Even
though no
relief is sought against it, the 2
nd
respondent,
has filed an extensive answering affidavit in support of the relief
sought in relation to the stay of the termination.
[5]
At the commencement of the hearing I was informed that a dispute has
arisen between
the 1
st
and the 2
nd
respondents
which requires determination before the application could be heard.
[6]
The 1
st
respondent in rising, raised an in limine point as
to the standing of the 2
nd
respondent to seek the relief
sought by the applicant against the 1
st
respondent
together with costs in the event of such relief being granted. It
should be stated that the point
in limine
was raised for the
first time in court – that is, it was neither covered in the
1
st
respondent’s answering affidavit nor in its
heads of argument. This is a concern that was raised by the 2
nd
respondent in argument. Counsel for the 2
nd
respondent
lamented the fact that he was not informed that the point will be
taken, nor were the unreported judgments upon which
counsel for the
1
st
respondent relied for his argument, provided to him
for preparation of argument and as such he was not really prepared
for argument.
[7]
For his argument that the 2
nd
respondent has no standing
in these proceedings, counsel for the 1
st
respondent
relied on the principle of privity of contract, which provides that a
party cannot sue or be sued on a contract which
it is not a party
to. Counsel pointed out that the 2
nd
respondent was
not a party to the concession agreement and there being no privity of
contract between the 1
st
respondent and the 2
nd
respondent, the 2
nd
respondent has no standing to assert
any rights or obligations which attach to an agreement to which it is
not a party. Counsel
reinforced his argument by relying on two
judgments, namely,
Ndaba v Braithwaite NO
2013 JDR 1284 LC
para 33; and
Manhatten Hotel v South African Gymnastic Federation
2017 JDR 0127 GP para 45, whereat the doctrine was applied with
approval.
[8]
It was argued on behalf of the 2
nd
respondent that it is
not open for the 1
st
respondent to take the point as it
did. The contention being that the 2
nd
respondent is
entitled to participate in these proceedings because it has an
interest in the matter. An allegation that has been
admitted by the
1
st
respondent. In this regard counsel referred to
paragraph 8 of the founding affidavit that states the reason why the
2
nd
respondent has been cited. In paragraph 8.1 the reason
given is that the 2
nd
respondent is cited by virtue of its
interest in the outcome of the proceedings in its capacity as the
operating subcontractor.
The paragraph is admitted by the 1
st
respondent in its answering affidavit, as such there is nothing
suggesting that the 2
nd
respondent has no standing in
these proceedings or that it has been improperly cited, so it was
argued. In support of this argument,
counsel relied on the principle
set out in the SCA judgment in
Van Staden and Others NNO v Pro-Wiz
(Pty) Ltd
(412/2018)
[2019] ZASCA 7
(8 March 2019) para 13, which
was further positively referred to
in Lutchman N.O. and Others v
African Global Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others; African Global Holdings
(Pty) Ltd and Others v Lutchman
N.O. and Others
(1088/2020 and
1135/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 66
(10 May 2022), wherein it is stated that ‘
as a matter of principle when a party is cited in legal proceedings
it is entitled
without more to participate in those proceedings. The
fact that it was cited as a party gives it that right.
[9]
Counsel for the 1
st
respondent in his argument was not
diametrically opposed to the argument that a party who is cited in
legal proceedings is entitled
to participate in those proceedings. He
actually did not take issue with the 2
nd
respondent
participating in the proceedings like filing an answering affidavit
providing the facts to the court. What counsel seemed
opposed to was
the 2
nd
respondent coming, as he referred in his argument,
by the back door, to seek, in its heads of argument, the relief that
is sought
by the applicant when there is no
lis
between the
1
st
respondent and the 2
nd
respondent, and when
the 2
nd
respondent has not made out a cause of action
against the 1
st
respondent in its papers. Furthermore,
there is no existing agreement between the 1
st
respondent
and the 2
nd
respondent – the concession agreement
that is at issue in these proceedings, is between the applicant and
the 1
st
respondent.
[10]
Counsel for the 1
st
respondent’s suggestion is that
the interest contended for must be a direct interest and should not
be indirect. Counsel
argued that the 2
nd
respondent’s
interest is financial interest and that such an interest does not
translate to legal interest. In support of
this submission, counsel
referred the court to the SCA judgment in
Medihelp v Minister of
Finance NO
(1387/2018)
[2020] ZASCA 29
(26 March 2020) where the
court at paras 7 -9 remarked as follows:
“
[7]
A person might lack standing to sue or be sued in either of two
circumstances. The first is where the
person is in law not capable of
suing or being sued, such as an unassisted minor or a person
suffering from a mental disorder.
The second is where the person
indeed has such capacity, but has insufficient interest in the
proceedings.
[8]
In respect of the latter circumstance the general rule is that a
party claiming relief
in respect of any matter must establish a
direct interest in that matter. A direct interest is one that is not
academic, abstract
or hypothetical. An interest which all citizens
have, would generally be too remote to found standing. An actual and
existing interest
in the matter is required.
[9]
Standing is thus determined without reference to the merits or
demerits of the claim in question.”
[11]
Counsel for the 2
nd
respondent on the other hand argued
that the interest that the 2
nd
respondent is contending
for is extensive interest and not only financial interest. The
interest includes the interest of employees
of the 2
nd
respondent, the inmates at the Centre and public interest. This
allegation, according to counsel, is only noted in the 1
st
respondent’s answering affidavit, and should be taken as
admitted.
[12] The
question that arises in this matter is whether the 2
nd
respondent is entitled to participate in these proceedings and to
seek the relief sought by the applicant against the 1
st
respondent, even if it is in support of the applicant, in
circumstances where there is no
lis
between them.
[13]
Participation in this matter would be for the 2
nd
respondent to file an answering affidavit to the applicant’s
founding affidavit, to file heads of argument and to argue the
matter
in court as counsel for the 2
nd
respondent seeks to do.
[14]
That the 2
nd
respondent has filed an answering affidavit
to the applicant’s answering affidavit is not at issue. Counsel
for the 1
st
respondent, correctly so, conceded that it was
expected of the 2
nd
respondent, like in this matter, to
file an answering affidavit in order to provide facts and information
to the court. What counsel
for the 1
st
respondent places
in issue, is the filing of heads of argument and argument in court.
Is the 2
nd
respondent entitled to do so?
[15] The
argument by the 1
st
respondent’s counsel that there
should be a lis between the parties that entitles the 2
nd
respondent to participate in the proceedings seems to be persuasive.
However, the 2
nd
respondent’s contention is that it
has a substantial interest in the matter. The Supreme Court of Appeal
in the
Medihelp
held that, the general rule is that a party
claiming relief in respect of any matter must establish a direct
interest in that matter.
There appears to be no direct interest
that can be attributed to the 2
nd
respondent’s
claim. Its interest together with the interest of its employees and
the inmates is dependent on the success
of the applicant’s
claim. The requirement as set out in
Medihelp
is not
substantial or extensive interest as argued by the 2
nd
respondent, but direct interest.
[16]
Furthermore, the applicant seeks in these proceedings, as earlier
stated, interim interdictory
relief. The 2
nd
respondent in
paragraph 83 of its answering affidavit states that:
“
83.
for these reasons, G4S [which is the 2
nd
respondent] supports the relief sought in relation to the stay of
termination.”
However, in the heads of argument this
is not what the 2
nd
respondent is contending for.
The rights which the 2
nd
respondent is said to be
asserting, as argued by the 1
st
respondent’s
counsel, is the relief that the 2
nd
respondent seeks as
per paragraph 63 and 64 of its heads of argument. The said
paragraphs read as follows:
“
63.
In the circumstances, and the reasons set out above, all the
requirements for an interim interdict have
been satisfied and the
interim interdict ought to be granted pending the outcome of the
action.
64. G4S
[which is the 2
nd
respondent], insofar as it has supported
the application and made common cause against it, also seeks its
costs, including the
costs of 2 counsel.”
[17] The
relief contended for in the answering affidavit is not the same
relief the 2
nd
respondent wants in the heads of argument.
In the answering affidavit the 2
nd
respondent supports the
relief sought by the applicant in relation to the termination of the
concession agreement. The termination
of the concession agreement is
not an issue before this court. The relief the 2
nd
respondent seeks in the heads of argument which it wants to argue
before court, is for the granting of the interim interdict. This
submission was never raised in the answering affidavit, hence the
argument by the 1
st
respondent that the 2
nd
respondent is coming through the back door.
[18] It
is common cause that the 2
nd
respondent is not a party to
the concession agreement and that in accordance with the
well-established doctrine of privity of contract
it cannot sue or be
sued in terms thereof. Therefore, for purposes of these proceedings,
it is accepted without any conclusion
being made, that the doctrine
of privity of contract finds application in the circumstances of this
matter. The 2
nd
respondent is not a party to the
concession agreement that is at issue in these proceedings, there is
therefore no privity of contract
between the 1
st
respondent and the 2
nd
respondent. Additionally, the 2
nd
respondent has not, in its papers, raised an existing lis between it
and the 1
st
respondent.
[19] It
is on the basis of the aforementioned reasons that it is found that
the 2
nd
respondent cannot be allowed to seek relief
against the 1
st
respondent as it seeks to do in the heads
of argument. In fact, it should not be allowed to participate in
these proceedings at
all. The decision reached is only in respect of
the proceedings that are before this court.
[20] The
question of costs was not argued.
[21] The
following order is granted:
1.
The point
in limine
raised by the 1
st
respondent is upheld.
2.
The 2
nd
respondent is not to participate in these proceedings.
KUBUSHI
J
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Appearances
:
For the applicant:
Adv Warren Pye SC
Instructed by:
Fasken Attorneys
For the first defendant:
Adv PG Cilliers SC
Adv TWG Bester SC
Adv M Rantho
Instructed by:
AM Vilakazi INC Attorneys
For the Second defendant:
Adv Bruce Leech SC
Adv Luke Choate
Instructed by:
Webber Wentzel Attorneys
Date of judgment:
17 April 2024
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