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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 489
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## Minister for the Department of the Water and Sanitation v Batlhokomedi Management Services CC and Others (028612/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 489 (31 May 2024)
Minister for the Department of the Water and Sanitation v Batlhokomedi Management Services CC and Others (028612/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 489 (31 May 2024)
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sino date 31 May 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
Number: 028612/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 31/5/24
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
THE MINISTER FOR THE
DEPARTMENT OF THE
WATER
AND SANITATION
Applicant
and
BATLHOKOMEDI
MANAGEMENT SERVICES CC
AND
SIX
OTHERS
1
st
to 7
th
Respondents
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
for hand-down is deemed to be
10: 00 am on 31 May 2024.
Summary: Urgent
application seeking an extension of declaration of invalidity.
Principles applicable to an application of this nature
considered.
The Court had declared a decision to award a tender to be invalid and
set aside the service level agreement (SLA) entered
into as a result
of the tender process. For a period of nine months, the Court
suspended the declaration of invalidity as well
as the setting aside
of the SLA without stating what the applicant should do to regularise
the defect that led to the invalidity.
Barely 11 days before the
expiry of the suspension period, the applicant launched the current
application seeking to extend the
suspension of invalidity for a
further period of six months. Held: (1) The application is struck off
the roll due to lack of urgency
(2) The applicant is to pay costs on
party and party costs scale C which costs include the costs of a
senior counsel.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
To
my mind, this application agitates an important question of the
difference, if any, between a declaration of invalidity contemplated
in section 172(1)(a) of the Constitution of the Republic of South
Africa, 1996 (Constitution) and a judicial review of an
administrative
action within the contemplation of Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act (PAJA)
[1]
.
At this early stage of this judgment, it is important to set out what
section 172(1)(a) of the Constitution provides. It states,
when
deciding a constitutional matter within its powers, a Court (a) must
declare that any law or conduct that is inconsistent
with the
Constitution is invalid to the extent of its inconsistency.
[2]
Section 172(1)(b)(ii) of the Constitution
provides that a Court may make any order that is just and equitable,
including an order
suspending the declaration of invalidity for any
period and on any conditions, to allow the competent authority to
correct the
defect. Section 6(1) of PAJA specifically provides that
any person may institute proceedings in a Court or a tribunal for the
judicial
review of an administrative action. Section 1 of PAJA
defines what an administrative action means.
[3]
Section 8(1) of PAJA provides that the
Court or tribunal, in proceedings for judicial review in terms of
section 6(1), may grant
any order that is just and equitable,
including certain orders outlined in subsections (1)(a)-(f).
Conspicuously present in those
competent orders is an order of
setting aside the administrative action concerned. Conspicuously
absent from the competent orders
is the order to suspend the review
order on any conditions.
[4]
Section 167(7) of the Constitution informs
us that a constitutional matter includes any issue involving the
interpretation, protection
or enforcement of the Constitution. In
order to place the present application in its proper context,
section 33(1) of the
Constitution provides that everyone has the
right to administrative action that is lawful, reasonable and
procedurally fair. Section
33(3) provides that national legislation
must be enacted to give effect to rights guaranteed in section 33(1).
PAJA is such a national
legislation.
[5]
Against the above backdrop, the application
that serves before me has as its genesis a PAJA review instituted by
Batlhokomedi Management
Services CC (Batlhokomedi). Flowing from the
said review application, an agreed draft order was adopted by my
learned sister Van
Der Schyff J. That order contained in it, an order
that the tender that was declared to be constitutionally invalid with
a consequence
that the SLA was set aside, it’s declaration of
invalidity and the setting aside of the SLA was suspended until 31
May 2024.
[6]
As it shall be demonstrated later in this
judgment, this Court takes a view that the Court beaconed by Van Der
Schyff J was not
faced with a constitutional matter but a PAJA
review. As such, the Court was confined to the reliefs contemplated
in section 8
of PAJA. However, this Court not being a Court of appeal
is not empowered to set aside that order. However, in my view, this
Court
is entitled to refuse to grant the relief sought in this
instance if it is not satisfied that the applicant is not without a
substantial
redress in due course.
Background facts
pertinent to the application
[7]
Regard been had to the introduction
outlined above, the salient facts for this application are briefly
that on or about 15 July
2022, Batlhokomedi as a tenderer for the
advertised 36 months security tender to be awarded by the department
of the water and
sanitation, was advised that it was unsuccessful.
Aggrieved by such a decision, Batlhokomedi launched a PAJA review.
The deponent
contended that the irregularities outlined in the
founding affidavit offended section 6(2)(b); (c); and (i) of PAJA. It
is apparent
that the applicant conceded that its award of the tender
was reviewable in terms of the section 6(2) grounds as punted for by
Batlhokomedi.
[8]
This concession led to an agreed order
drafted in the manner in which it was drafted by the parties involved
and adopted by Van
Der Schyff J. It suffices to mention at this stage
that the suspension was not one contemplated in section 172(1)(b) of
the Constitution
because it was not made in order to allow the
applicant to correct the defect. On the applicant’s version in
the 9 months
suspension period, without being so ordered, it
attempted to redo the tendering process to no avail. On
Batlhokomedi’s version,
the applicant did not do enough and
ignored certain available processes.
[9]
Having failed to rerun the tender process,
11 days before the lapse of the ordered suspension, the
applicant launched the
present application and sought amongst others,
the following relief on an urgent basis:
“
That
the period of suspension of the declaration of invalidity and the
setting aside of the award Tender W[...] for the rendering
of private
security to the Department of Water and Sanitation nationally for a
period of 36 months as per the Order granted by
Honourable Madam
Justice Van Der Schyff dated 4 September 2023, be extended for a
further period of 6 months.”
[10]
Batlhokomedi opposes the relief sought on
the basis that it is not urgently needed and that this Court lacks
the necessary jurisdiction
to amend or vary the remedy fashioned by
Van Der Schyff J.
Analysis
[11]
Before hearing this application, this Court
expressed its discomfort with regard to the principles applicable to
the request sought
by the applicant. Amongst a myriad of submissions,
laid a submission that the
Allpay
judgment is authority for the proposition that in a tender situation
a suspension of invalidity is appropriate. This Court disagreed
that
the situation appertaining this matter is on all fours with
Allpay
.
[12]
In
Allpay
the Court specifically called into aid section 172(1)(b)(ii) powers.
It specifically stated that in line with the empowering section
it
may suspend until any new payment process is operational. Its order
was specific and it stated that the declaration of invalidity
was
suspended pending the decision of SASSA to award a new tender after
completion of an ordered tender process. To my mind, this
type of a
suspension accords with the letter of section 172(1)(b)(ii).
[13]
This Court takes a view that the suspension
in
casu
was an incompetent order in the first place. Seized with a PAJA
review, Van Der Schyff J was, in my view, confined to the remedies
contemplated in section 8 of PAJA. It is indeed so as confirmed in
Allpay
that remedial correction is grounded in section 172(1)(b)(ii) and is
a logical consequence flowing from invalid and rescinded contracts.
The default position is one that requires the consequences of
invalidity to be corrected or reversed.
[14]
Unfortunately in
casu
no corrective measures were ordered to justify the exercise of
suspension powers contemplated in the empowering section. As pointed
out above, although Batlhokomedi, in its PAJA review contended
constitutional invalidity, such was clearly related to section
6(2)(i) of PAJA because, it alleged that section 217 of the
Constitution was breached.
[15]
On
application of the principle of subsidiarity, a litigant cannot place
direct reliance to the provisions of the Constitution in
an instance
where an Act of Parliament is in place. In terms of section 217(3) of
the Constitution, national legislation must be
implemented. The
Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act, 200 (PPPFA)
[2]
is the national legislation contemplated. Nevertheless, even if it
could be argued that alleging a breach of section 217 of the
Constitution amounts to raising a constitutional matter within the
meaning of section 67(7), the difficulty in this matter is that
the
order does not suspend the declaration of invalidity in order to
correct the defect. This failure is fatal in my view because
it
defeats the very unique purpose of the powers in the section. What
becomes the worth of suspending an invalidity without a concomitant
order of correcting the defect. In all instances where section
172(1)(b)(ii) powers were invoked corrective measures were ordered
to
legitimise the situation that seeks to promote unlawfulness.
[16]
On the face of it, the invalidity order was
suspended for no apparent reason. This is the basis of the discomfort
expressed to counsel
for the applicant. Veritably, the question is
should this Court extend the period what would be the purpose for
that particularly
where this Court is not empowered to amend a final
order. Clearly, when the suspension was made, it was not for the
purposes of
correcting the defect. Even if it may be argued that
applying the interpretative tools to the order, this Court cannot
emerge with
a compliant order. It is only an appeal or possibly a
variation order that could cure the incompetency.
[17]
Having
raised that discomfort, Mr Seneke SC appearing for the applicant,
directed me to several Constitutional Court authorities.
In
New
Nation Movement NPC and Others v President of the Republic of South
Africa and Others
(
New
Nation
)
[3]
,
the constitutionality of certain sections of the Electoral Act were
challenged. The Constitutional Court having declared those
sections
to be constitutionally invalid, made the following pertinent order:
“
The
declaration of unconstitutionality referred to in paragraph 4 is
prospective with effect from the date of this order,
but
its operation is suspended for 24 months to afford Parliament an
opportunity to remedy the defect giving rise to the
unconstitutionality
.” [Own
emphasis]
[18]
This
order, in my view, accords with the provisions of section
172(1)(b)(ii)) of the Constitution. The Constitutional Court stated,
as it should, the purpose of the suspension of the invalidity. In
Speaker
of the National Assembly and Others v New Nation Movement
NPC
and Others
(
Speaker
II
)
[4]
,
the Constitutional Court was faced with an extension of a suspension
of invalidity. Unlike in this matter, the order in
New
Nation
was specific as to the purpose of the suspension. In dealing with the
power to grant an extension, which must be granted sparingly,
the
Court stated the following:
“
A
proper case justifying the need for an extension must be made out
because the effect of suspending the operation of
a declaration
is to preserve law which
has been found unconstitutional and void, as was the case here, to
afford Parliament opportunity to remedy
the defect.”
[19]
The Court in
Speaker
II
was at pains to justify an extension
of a suspension and ultimately laid the following important basis:
“
This
view should not be mistaken for tolerance of Parliament’s
tardiness or failure to meet its deadlines. This Court was
merely
cognisant of the nature of the matter, which
clearly
transcends the interests of the parties, and implicates the interests
of the general public and our democracy.
These factors, in my view, warranted the grant of the extension as a
just and equitable remedy and it was in the interests of justice
to
make an order towards that end.”[Own emphasis]
[20]
The
matter before me does not transcends the interests of the parties and
does not implicate the interests of the general public
and our
democracy. It is more of a self-serving of interests. It seeks to
serve the selfish interests of the applicant, to continue
paying
public funds out of an unlawful contract. To my mind an extension is
not there for the mere taking. A proper case for the
need of the
extension must be made. In my view only a purposed suspension order
is capable of being justified. Mr Seneke SC directed
the attention of
this Court to another judgment of the Constitutional Court of
Speaker
of the National Assembly and Another v New Nation Movement NPC and
Others
(
Speaker
I
)
[5]
.
[21]
In
Speaker
I
,
the Court suggested certain factors that must be considered in
determining whether to grant extension. Those are (a)
the sufficiency
of the explanation provided for failing to comply with the original
period of suspension; (b) the potential prejudice
that is likely to
follow if an extension is or is not granted; and (c) the prospects of
curing the constitutional defects within
the new deadline or, more
generally, the prospects of complying with the deadline. Of
significance, the Court emphasised that the
power must be exercised
sparingly in following the earlier judgment of
Minister
of Justice and Correctional Services v Ramuhovhi
(
Ramuhovh
i)
[6]
.
[22]
In
Ramuhovhi
,
the extension was to afford Parliament an opportunity to correct the
defect. The Court in
Ramuhovhi
refused to grant the extension on the basis that the extension will
serve no purpose given the measures put in place in the event
the
invalidity was not corrected. In
casu
,
this Court takes a view that the extension will serve no purpose
because the applicant has already issued notices of terminations.
The
question then becomes what will be in place during the suspension
period if the contracts declared invalid and set aside no
longer
exists. This will imply that if the applicant still requires the
services of a private security, it could invoke the procedures
in the
Supply Chain Management (SCM), guided of course by the urgent need of
such services.
[23]
Mr Seneke SC placed heavy reliance on what
was said in
Speaker I
at paragraph 61 regarding the importance of obeying Court orders. The
situation that obtained in
Speaker I
does not obtain in
casu.
In more specific terms, the speaker was ordered to correct the defect
within 24 months. In
casu
the suspension is not coupled with any opportunity to correct the
defect. After 31 May 2024, the effect of the lapse of the suspension
of the invalidity will simply be that there is no more a private
security tender. Therefore, if the applicant still requires those
services, there is nothing that will prevent it to engage its SCM
optimally in order to address what Mr Seneke SC referred to as
possible vandalism.
[24]
The applicant does not necessarily require
this extension in order to address the alleged potential vandalism.
The applicant is
not exposed to any non-compliance with a Court
order. The order did not direct the applicant to regularise anything.
This, to my
mind, is inevitable in a situation where a Court is asked
to review. Once it does so, section 8 of PAJA directs what ought to
happen.
If this Court were to extend the suspension of invalidity, in
instance where the extension is purposeless, this Court would be
using its extension powers liberally as opposed to sparingly as
decreed.
[25]
For all the above reasons this Court is not
satisfied that a proper case justifying the need to extend has been
made. The applicant
does not deserve a continuation of this
‘reprieve’. It must simply optimally deploy its SCM
policy now that piggy-bagging
has proven to be of no use as alleged
and argued. Even though this matter was heard as one of urgency, this
Court is not satisfied
that an urgent relief is necessary in the
circumstances where there are substantial redresses in the SCM. This
Court should not
allow being abused in circumstances where a clear
solution lies in the hands of the applicant. An argument that the
applicant has
no alternative remedy other than to approach this Court
to extend a purposeless suspension, which is incapable of breeding
contempt
order, must be rejected.
[26]
Accordingly, the appropriate order to make
is to strike this matter off the roll for lack of urgency. What
remains is the issue
of costs. Counsel for Batlhokomedi Mr Els SC
strenuously argued that a punitive costs order must be made. I do not
believe that
this is a case involving opprobrium. The appropriate
cost order is one of party and party costs to be taxed or settled at
scale
C, which costs include the costs of a senior counsel.
[27]
For all the above reasons, I make the
following order:
Order
1.
The application is struck off the roll for
want of urgency
2.
The applicant must pay the costs of the
respondents on a party and party scale to be taxed or settled at
scale C and the costs should
include the costs of employing a senior
counsel.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant:
Mr
T Seneke SC, Ms M Magagane and CT Malatji
Instructed by:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
For Respondent:
Mr APJ Els SC
Instructed by:
Hibbert Attorneys,
Pretoria
Date
of the hearing:
30
May 2024
Date
of judgment:
31
May 2024
[1]
Act 3 of 2000
[2]
Act 5 of 2000.
[3]
2020 (6) SA 257 (CC).
[4]
2023 (7) BCLR 897 (CC).
[5]
2022 (9) BCLR 1165
(CC).
[6]
2020 (3) BCLR 300
(CC)
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