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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Dynamic Recovery Services (Pty) Ltd v State Information Technology SOC Limited and Another (51825/2021)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 898 (10 September 2024)
Dynamic Recovery Services (Pty) Ltd v State Information Technology SOC Limited and Another (51825/2021)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 898 (10 September 2024)
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sino date 10 September 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
Number: 51825/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 6/9/24
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
DYNAMIC
RECOVERY SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
STATE INFORMATION
TECHNOLOGY SOC
LIMITED
First Respondent
CYBERLINX
SECURITY (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
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 10 September 2024.
Summary: The applicant
seeks to be awarded or protected from a costs order on application of
the
Biowatch
principle. The applicant is not insulated from a
costs order once the matter becomes moot. Continuation with a moot
matter is tantamount
to an abuse of Court process and actually
constitutes reckless litigation. A costs order is warranted under
those circumstances.
Where an applicant asserted a constitutional
right, a protection in
Biowatch
becomes available until the
matter changes character and loses the constitutional touch. A party
who asserts a constitutional right
is not liable to costs in the
event the matter is dismissed by a Court. The appropriate order is
that of each party paying its
own costs. Held: The applicant is
liable to pay punitive costs for costs incurred after mootness and
not other prior costs as insulated
by
Biowatch
.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA, J
Introduction
[1]
Is
the
Biowatch
[1]
principle a watchdog against cost orders for all instances where a
case has been dismissed by a Court? In this judgment, the reach
and
purport of the
Biowatch
judgment shall be considered. As a departure point, an award of costs
involves an exercise of a wide discretion, which is to be
exercised
judiciously with due regard to the applicable principles. This matter
involves a unique situation where an applicant,
as a
dominis
litis,
declares that the litigation it had commenced had become moot and
severed only the issue of costs to be decided independently.
[2]
The genesis of the matter before Court now
is a review application seeking to review and set aside
administrative decisions made
by the first respondent, State
Information Technology Agency SOC Ltd (SITA) during 2021. One of the
impugned decisions favoured
the second respondent, Cyberlinx Security
(Pty) Ltd (Cyber). The review application was litigated with a fair
amount of apparent
acrimony and was characterised by a barrage of
interlocutory applications. To my mind, that manner of litigation was
uncalled for
given the focal point of the dispute between the parties
involved. Since the matter has become frugal and linear, it is
unnecessary
for this Court to definitively express a view on those
interlocutory applications. Owing to the fact that the applicant has
declared
that the review application has since become moot, the
remaining issue for determination is the issue of costs.
[3]
This judgment shall only deal with the
issue of costs associated with the review application which has since
been declared moot
by the applicant itself. For avoidance of doubt,
an interlocutory application dubbed “cost
de
bonis propriis
application” was
later settled by the parties and shall not form part of this
judgment.
Background facts
appertaining the present application
[4]
In 2020, SITA issued a request for bids
under reference number RFB2268/2020 for the RENEWAL OF EXISTING
MCAFEE LICENCES AND SUPPORT
SERVICES TO SITA FOR THE DEPARTMENT OF
DEFENCE for a period of 36 months. The applicant, Dynamic Recovery
Services (Pty) Ltd (Dynamic)
submitted a bid for the said request.
Owing to some validity issues, this request was subsequently
cancelled. Prior to the cancellation,
on 24 February 2021, SITA
issued another request for the same services under reference number
RFB2382/2020 for a period of 24 months.
Cyber is a splinter entity
from Dynamic. Dynamic and ostensibly Cyber responded to this second
request.
[5]
On 15 April 2021, SITA informed Dynamic
that its bid to the second request was unsuccessful. On 20 April
2021, SITA informed Dynamic
that the first request was cancelled.
When Dynamic was so informed, Cyber had already invoiced SITA for the
licenses. Aggrieved
by the decision to cancel the first request and
the non-award of the second request, on or about 15 October 2021,
almost six months
later, Dynamic launched a Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act, 2000 (PAJA) review against the decisions
of SITA as outlined
above. As pointed out above, the prosecution of
the review application was not smooth and a number of interlocutory
applications
were launched, some of which were unnecessary, in my
view.
[6]
Ultimately, the review application was
enrolled for hearing in the opposed motion Court on 23 January 2023.
At this point of enrolment,
the costs
de
bonis propriis
interlocutory
application was not ripe for hearing. The allocated judge, Madam
Justice Neukircher, took a view that since the interlocutory
application was not ripe for hearing and that this matter deserved a
special third Court allocation, it ought to be removed from
the
normal opposed motion roll. The learned Neukircher J informed the
parties in writing on 13 January 2023 of her decision to
remove the
matter from the roll. Efforts were made to have the matter feature in
the third Court motion roll. The parties met with
the Deputy Judge
President of this Division to sort out the logistical arrangements to
have this matter heard on 28-29 August 2024
in the third Court.
[7]
In the meanwhile, the period of two years
allocated to the second request awarded to Cyber expired on 31 March
2023. Despite this
event, litigation continued unabated. At a much
later date, Dynamic informed the respondents that the review
application has since
become moot because it was overtaken by the
events- expiry of the two years period. Owing to this stance, all the
parties agreed
that only the issue of costs associated to the review
application was a live issue and required determination by this
Court. Prior
to the hearing of the matter, as the allocated judge, I
raised certain issues and directed the parties to attend to them and
or
prepare submissions on them.
Analysis
[8]
Thematically,
the present motion agitates the question whether the
Biowatch
insulation on mulcting with or awarding of costs does vacate during a
litigation process, and if so, when? This motion presents
a unique
situation where an applicant, as a
dominis
litis,
without necessarily terminating the
lis,
informed
the respondents that the relief it sought has since lost its
practical benefit to it, and in a manner of speaking, the
motion has
since become moot. A matter becomes moot if it no longer presents a
live dispute between the parties.
[2]
[9]
Courts exist in order to resolve concrete
disputes between litigants. A Court, unless the interests of justice
dictate otherwise,
generally dismisses matters which no longer
present a live dispute and decidedly shy away from disseminating
legal advice on academic
matters.
[10]
In
Koko
v Eskom Holdings SOC Limited,
[3]
the following was said:-
“
[21]
The doctrine of mootness is well developed in the American
constitutional jurisprudence. A case becomes moot if
a party seeks to
obtain judgment on a pretended controversy, when in reality there is
none, or a decision in advance about a right
before it has actually
been asserted and contested, or a judgment upon some matter which
when rendered, for any reason, cannot
have practical effect upon an
existing controversy. Courts exist to resolve an existing controversy
and not abstract issues.
[22]
The mere fact that the matter is moot does not constitute an absolute
bar for a court to hear a matter. The
overriding factor is that the
order will have some practical effect on the parties and others. The
Constitutional Court had set
out the following as potentially
relevant factors; the nature and the extent of the practical effect
that any possible order might
have; the importance of the issue; the
complexity of the issue; the fullness or otherwise of the argument
advanced and resolving
disputes between different courts. Added to
the factors is the interest of justice.” (Footnotes omitted)
[11]
Before the present review application
became moot, the applicant was principally seeking to review and set
aside two separate, but
distinct administrative decisions taken by an
organ of the State, SITA. As outlined above, the first decision
related to the cancellation
of a bidding process for the acquisition
of the services of providing and maintaining the McAfee licence for a
period of three
years. The second decision related to the awarding of
a tender to Cyber for the provision of the same services in the
cancelled
bid for a period of two years, much to the chagrin of the
applicant.
[12]
When the applicant launched the review
proceedings, the awarded tender had already run for a period of six
months and Cyber had
already been remunerated in some respects.
However, since the award was for a period of two years, there was
some eighteen months
period left on the awarded contract. This, it
seems, somewhat gave the applicant a hope that this matter shall be
dealt with before
the lapse of that remaining period.
When
did the application for review
become moot
?
[13]
This question, although it assumed some
significance for the parties during the argument of this matter, in
my view, recedes into
the background regard being had to the primary
question outlined earlier. I say so for reasons that will become
apparent in due
course. If the Court was, as it were, compelled to
answer this question so elevated to some prominence by the parties
before it,
it would answer it in favour of the applicant as the
dominis
litis
. For
the sake of posterity, the contention of the applicant is that the
application acquired mootness in March 2023 -at the end
of the
two-year period of the award.
[14]
The contention of SITA was somewhat
ambivalent. Mr Manchu SC, appearing for SITA, submitted that when the
applicant gained knowledge
of the payment made to Cyber, the review
application became moot. However, in consonant with the applicant, he
conceded that the
application was indeed mooted in March 2023. The
contention of Cyber also vacillated between various positions. On the
one hand,
it contended that the application was mooted from the get
go, whilst on the other hand, it pointed out to various dates in
2022.
The above contentions notwithstanding, mootness is not
equivalent to the decay of a claim. In the context of prescription,
once
a matter prescribes, it gains the status of being unenforceable
in law. On the contrary, a moot matter does not automatically gain
the status of unenforceability in law.
[15]
A
Court, unlike in a prescribed matter, retains a discretion to, if the
dictates of justice so commands, entertain a moot matter.
To my mind,
it cannot be correct to conclude that mootness ousts the jurisdiction
of a Court. Dogmatically, a Court can only dismiss
a matter in
instances where it retains jurisdiction over a matter. Just to
buttress this point, section 16(2) of the Superior Courts
Act
[4]
accords a Court hearing an appeal a discretionary power by reasons of
mootness to dismiss an appeal. Nonetheless, none of the two
respondents asserted that the matter was moot at any point. The
mootness point was sprung as a surprise package by the applicant
itself. Stealing from the sports parlance, the applicant issued to
itself a red card.
[16]
Accordingly, the question of when the
review application become moot has no significance when the primary
question which this matter
agitates is to be answered. Similarly, the
allied question of who caused the application to be moot lacks the
driving force. A
matter becomes moot because its practicality and
benefit, in a manner of speaking, gets overtaken by events. In the
present matter,
had it been heard and decided on 23 January 2023, it
would not have been overtaken by the event-the expiry of the awarded
contract.
It is common cause that this Court, per the learned Madam
Justice Neukircher, removed the matter from the opposed motion roll
for
reasons spelled out in an email directed to the parties ten days
before the allocated date of hearing.
[17]
It is unnecessary in this judgment to
interrogate and deliver any comment on the validity or otherwise of
the reasons for the removal
of the matter. This Court was reliably
informed by all the parties that the review application was ripe for
hearing on 23 January
2023. Nevertheless, the applicant, with full
knowledge of the looming mootness of the review application, did not
persist that
the review application be heard ahead of the looming
mootness, nor took prudent steps to prevent the identified mootness
event
from setting in.
[18]
This Court pointed out to counsel for
Dynamic that it is difficult to fathom how a blame may be approbated
to anyone for the happening
of a mootness event. It must be so that
it was within the knowledge of Dynamic that the awarded contract is
to expire within a
period of two years. By way of an example, it is
unheard of for a party to contend that another party has caused the
prescription
of a matter to happen. In order to prevent prescription,
a party to be hit by prescription is required to take steps to
interrupt
the running of prescription. If hit by prescription, it is
difficult to accept that a party may escape the legal consequences of
prescription simply because some party is to blame for the happening
of prescription. In similar vein, a party staring mootness
in the
face has a duty to take prudent and necessary steps to prevent the
mootness from setting in.
[19]
Having said all that, I now turn to the
veritable question pertinent to the primary question outlined
earlier.
Does
a matter loose, at any stage of the litigation, the shield of the
Biowatch principle and if so when
?
[20]
The melancholic reality is that the
Biowatch
insulation is often times abused by litigants. The Constitutional
Court issued the following stern warning:
“
[25]
Merely labelling the litigation as constitutional and dragging in
specious references to sections of the Constitution
would, of course,
not be enough in itself to invoke the general rule as referred to in
Affordable
Medicines
.
The
issues must be genuine and substantive, and truly raise
constitutional considerations relevant to the adjudication.”
[5]
[21]
The
key and central question on the application of what popularly assumed
the tag ‘the
Biowatch
principle’, is whether a litigant asserts a constitutional
right or not. Differently put, is the litigant presenting a
constitutional
matter or not? I must confess, regard being had to the
provision of section 2
[6]
of the
Constitution, deciding whether a legal matter is a constitutional
matter or not is but a difficult pony to ride. This section
is cast
in a manner that would, in my view, bring almost every conceivable
legal dispute within the realm of a constitutional matter.
[22]
Nevertheless, in the present motion,
Dynamic effectively alleged a breach of section 217 of the
Constitution. By that reason, the
review application asserted a
constitutional right. In fact, all the parties are congruent to each
other that the review application
set off as a constitutional matter.
The respondents, in consonant to each other, submitted that at a
point, the review application
lost its constitutional nature, and it
was thereby spewed out of the
Biowatch
insulation.
[23]
At no stage is it apparent or pleaded that
Dynamic changed its pleadings from asserting a constitutional right
to a non-constitutional
right. This position puts paid to any
assertion that the applicant acted like a chameleon and changed
colour of its asserted claim.
Up until the applicant red carded
itself, the application was endowed with the armour of the
Biowatch
insulation because it asserted a breach of a constitutional right. To
my mind, although the applicant correctly conceded that after
31
March 2023, it became liable for the costs of litigation, such
liability arose not because the litigation changed texture and
colour
but because the applicant was reckless, as it were, in not
terminating the
lis
after it acquired a mootness status which rendered it susceptible to
being dismissed. Nevertheless, even if, as it appears to be
the case,
after the review application achieved mootness, in persisting with a
costs claim only, Dynamic would no longer be asserting
a
constitutional right. Once mootness sets in, the honeymoon is over.
In that success costs pursuit exercise, no constitutional
right is
capable of being asserted. It is for that reason that this Court
takes a view that Dynamic is liable to pay the costs
after the
mootness set in. The veil would have fallen off the face.
[24]
The
Constitutional Court in
Normandien
Farms (Pty) Ltd v South African Agency for Promotion of Petroleum
Exportation and Exploitation (SOC) Limited and Others
(Normandien)
[7]
stated the following:
“
[69]
I consider it to be highly inappropriate for Normandien to leave
litigation pending before this Court with the
knowledge that the case
is moot on the facts.
[71] It
is clear that Normandien’s actions were merely a disguised
attempt to recover costs.
[72]
The effect of these factors is that Rhino by Normandien’s
dilatory conduct has been forced to pursue
this litigation before
this Court even though Normandien recognised that the case was moot.
Normandien’s conduct is reprehensible and an abuse of
process which warrants a punitive costs order.”
[25]
One of the conduct that was found to be
reprehensible by the Constitutional Court was the refusal by
Normandien to withdraw the
action that was moot, simply because an
offer to pay its costs was not made. Similarly, in this matter,
despite contending that
the matter was moot, Dynamic persisted to
pursue this matter on the issue of costs. Dynamic ought to have
terminated the present
litigation shortly after 31 March 2023, when,
on its own version, at that time, the review application was moot.
Persisting with
the review application in order to obtain a
favourable costs order was equally reprehensible and an abuse of
process. As it was
the case in
Normandien
,
a punitive costs order is warranted for that conduct.
[26]
Thus, to my mind, the review application
did not at any stage lose the
Biowatch
insulation to the extent that it still asserted a constitutional
right. It remained the pleaded case of Dynamic that in making
and
cancelling the awards, SITA did not act fairly, equitably and
transparently as enjoined by section 217(1) of the Constitution.
When
the review application became moot, it simply assumed the risk of
being dismissed by virtue of it being moot. It was never
dismissed.
It simply remained the candidate of being dismissed should it find
itself in a Court of law. However, the prudent thing
to have been
done was for Dynamic to have terminated the litigation related to the
review application as soon as it dawned on it
that the application
had acquired mootness status. The next question I turn to is whether
the
Biowatch
principle applies in instances where the applicant red carded itself.
Does
Biowatch principle apply in this particular instance
?
[27]
Just
to recap, the principle developed in
Affordable
Medicines
[8]
and perfected in
Biowatch
is that in a constitutional matter, a litigant against the State or
its organ is entitled to costs if successful in the litigation.
If no
success is achieved, the litigant is not liable to be mulcted with
costs owing to the chilling effect of such orders. The
exception to
that general principle is that frivolity and vexatiousness denudes
the litigant of the insulation. The opaqueness
in the present matter
emerges because the applicant wittingly, as it were, in my view, red
carded itself. Although it did not terminate
the litigation formally,
technically, it did so because it did not persist with the review
relief. The question of awarding costs
always comes at the tail end
of any litigation. What precedes the possible award of costs is a
finding of either success or failure
with regard to the relief a
party seeks.
[28]
Unfortunately, this Court did not receive
the pleasure of expressing a view whether the application should have
failed or succeeded.
Ordinarily, in terms of Rule 41(1)(a) of the
Uniform Rules of Court, where a party withdraws a matter such a party
must consent
to pay the costs associated with the aborted litigation.
Despite having red carded itself, the applicant chose not to invoke
this
rule. Nevertheless, the applicant had available to it the option
not to tender costs for any reason it chooses to employ, including
that it is protected by
Biowatch
.
However, Rule 41(1)(c) allows the other party to apply to Court on
notice for an order as to costs. Since neither success nor
failure
was achieved in the present application, it is unwise and actually
inappropriate for this Court to make any speculation
on the issue of
success or failure. Were this Court to do so, it would, contrary to
the doctrine of mootness, be giving the parties
legal advice as
opposed to resolving a concrete dispute, it being the role of a
Court.
[29]
As
section 16(2)(a)(i)
[9]
of the
Superior Courts Act provides that mootness leads to a dismissal of a
matter, generally, a Court should not entertain a matter
that has
become moot. This Court agrees with Mr Manchu SC for SITA, who ably
argued that an applicant faced with mootness cannot
proceed with the
issue of costs only unless exceptional circumstances are
demonstrated.
[10]
Idiomatically speaking, the baby gets thrown out with the bathwater.
Once the matter loses its practical benefit, so does a party
lose the
opportunity to seek a costs relief? In
Khumalo
and Another v Twin City Developers (Pty) Ltd and Others,
[11]
the majority Court had the following to say:
“
[58]
In
Mgwenya NO & others v Kruger &
another
, the first respondent, an
ordained pastor of the Apostolic Faith Mission Church of South
Africa, whose pastoral status was terminated
by the Church passed
away before the hearing of the appeal. In view of the demise of the
first respondent, the appellants conceded
that there was no live
issues remaining between the parties and that the appeal and any
order made thereon would have no practical
effect or result. The
appellants however contended that the church would be saddled with
costs orders made in favour of first respondent
and this would be
most ‘unfair’ to the church.
[62]
For all those reasons there are no exceptional circumstances
justifying this court to have regard only to
the consideration of
costs. The appeal must therefore fail.”
[30]
On that approach, it becomes unnecessary
for the Court to hold a crystal ball in order to see whether the
review will have achieved
some success to be awarded costs on
application of the
Biowatch
principle.
[31]
On
the contrary, on application of the usual consequences of mootness, a
matter is dismissible as opposed to being capable of achieving
some
success. Accordingly, on application of the
Biowatch
principle, having not achieved success, Dynamic should not be mulcted
with costs. Having not assessed the merits or demerits of
the review
application, this Court is not in a position to conclude that the
application was frivolous and vexatious. None of the
respondents
suggested that the review application was frivolous and vexatious. In
law, a claim is vexatious if it has little to
no chance of succeeding
in law and it is instituted only to annoy another party.
[12]
[32]
A claim is frivolous if it is one
that has no serious purpose or value. It is clear that mootness has
nothing to do with the merits
or demerits of a claim. Like in a
prescription situation, even a good claim in-law is capable of being
incapacitated by prescription
if it sets in. Thus, the conclusion to
reach is that the
Biowatch
principle finds application in so far as the failure or dismissal
part is concerned. Due to the claim being overtaken by events,
Dynamic was
en
route
to
having the review application dismissed on the ground of mootness. It
matters not, in my view, the basis of the dismissal of
the claim, as
confirmed in
Biowatch
,
a Court must be loath to turn its back against applying the general
principle in
Affordable
Medicines
.
Conclusions
[33]
In summary, Dynamic is liable to pay the
costs associated with the review application after 31 March 2023.
With regard to the costs
prior thereto, on application of the
Biowatch
principle, Dynamic is not liable to pay costs. On that score, the
appropriate order to make is one of each party paying its own
costs.
Order
1
The applicant is to pay the litigation
costs occasioned after 31 March 2023 and those costs must be taxed or
settled on a scale
of attorney and client which costs must include
the costs of employing two counsel.
2
With regard to the costs associated with
the litigation prior to 31 March 2023, each party must bear its own
costs.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
Applicant:
Mr
Johan De Waal SC
Instructed by:
Bowman Gilfillan Inc,
Cape Town
For 1
st
Respondent:
Mr T Manchu SC and Ms
Z Ngwenya
Instructed by:
Madhlopa & Thenga
Inc Parktown
For the 2
nd
Respondent:
Mr DB Du Preez SC and
Mr J Vorster
Date
of the hearing:
28
August 2024
Date
of judgment:
10
September 2024
[1]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources and Others
2009 (10) BCLR 1014 (CC).
[2]
National
Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality and Others v Minister of Home
Affairs and Others
2000
(2) SA 1
(CC) at para 21 fn 18.
[3]
[2018] ZALCJHB 76.
[4]
Act
10 of 2013 as amended.
[5]
Biowatch
above
n 1.
[6]
This Constitution is the supreme law of the Republic; law or conduct
inconsistent with it is invalid and the obligations imposed
by it
must be fulfilled.
[7]
2020 (6) BCLR 748 (CC).
[8]
Affordable
Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of Health and Another
2005 (6) BCLR 529 (CC).
[9]
When
at the hearing of an appeal the issues are of such a nature that the
decision sought will have no practical effect or result,
the appeal
may be dismissed on this ground alone.
[10]
Section 16(2)(a)(ii) provides that save under exceptional
circumstances, the question whether the decision have no practical
effect or result is to be determined without reference to any
consideration of costs.
[11]
[2017] ZASCA 143.
[12]
Fisheries
Development Corporation of SA Ltd v Jorgensen and Another;
Fisheries
Development Corporation of SA Ltd v AWJ Investments (Pty) Ltd and
Others
1979
(3) SA 1331
(W) at 1339E-F.
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