Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 968South Africa
Du Plessis N.O and Another v Minister of Finance and Others (18568/22) [2024] ZAGPPHC 968 (17 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 September 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Du Plessis N.O and Another v Minister of Finance and Others (18568/22) [2024] ZAGPPHC 968 (17 September 2024)
Du Plessis N.O and Another v Minister of Finance and Others (18568/22) [2024] ZAGPPHC 968 (17 September 2024)
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sino date 17 September 2024
# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
# GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case number:
18568/22
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
17 September 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
## JOHANNES HENDRICUS DU
PLESSIS N.O
First applicant
JOHANNES HENDRICUS DU
PLESSIS N.O
First applicant
(
as
joint liquidator of Double Ring 222 (Pty) Ltd
)
## QUINTON SIMON JOSEPH
N.O
Second applicant
QUINTON SIMON JOSEPH
N.O
Second applicant
(
as
joint liquidator of Double Ring 222 (Pty) Ltd
)
## and
and
MINISTER
OF FINANCE
First respondent
DEPARTMENT
OF NATIONAL TREASURY
Second respondent
MOGAJANE,
DONDO
Third respondent
(
as
the Director-General of National Treasury
)
MINISTER
OF HOME AFFAIRS
Fourth respondent
# ORDER
ORDER
The
application for leave to appeal is refused with costs, including the
costs of two counsel.
#
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
This
judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the Court online
digital data base of the Gauteng Division, Pretoria and by
email to
the attorneys of record of the parties. The date of the delivery of
the judgment is deemed to be 17 September 2024.
## Chabedi, AJ Introduction
Chabedi, AJ Introduction
[1]
The applicants are joint liquidators
in the insolvent estate of an
entity named Double Ring 222 (Pty) Ltd (“Double Ring”).
The only asset in the estate
of Double Ring are the alleged claims
against the fourth respondent (the Department of Home Affairs) in
terms of a Service Level
Agreement terminated in 2009.
[2]
The applicants sought a specific order
directing the first, second
and third respondents (the “National Treasury”) to comply
with the provisions of the Public
Finance Management Act 1 of 1999
(“PFMA”), Supply Chain Management Instruction 5 of 2016
(“SCM Instruction 5”)
and National Treasury Circular
issued on 26 March 2018 (“Treasury Circular”), by
enforcing their directives to the
Department of Home Affairs, to make
payment to the applicants of the amount of $2 095 238.09 together
with interest thereon.
[3]
The court dismissed the application
with costs. The applicants now
seek leave to appeal the judgment and order of the court.
[4]
The applicants have raised two grounds
of appeal. The first ground
relates to the question whether there was a directive issued by
National Treasury to the Department
of Home Affairs to pay Double
Ring the specified amount of money. The second ground relates to the
question whether the National
Treasury had the duty in terms of the
PFMA, the Treasury Instructions and Circular, to enforce the
directive.
[5]
As regard the first question, the applicants
argue that the court was
wrong in not finding that the National Treasury’s letter of 29
June 2010 addressed to the Department
of Home Affairs constituted the
directive.
[6]
The applicants contend that the court
erred on the facts by finding
that the undertaking by the Department of Home Affairs to pay Double
Ring the amount of R15,84 million
($2 095 238.09) in the latter of 18
April 2009 was conditional, and by finding that the amount agreed
upon (by the Department and
Double Ring) was not certain. The
applicants also argued that the court was also wrong in finding that
the claim was subject to
a pending dispute between Double Ring and
the Department of Home Affairs, because the amount claimed in this
application represents
the undisputed portion of the claim.
[7]
First,
the court made no finding that the letter of 18 April 2009
constituted an undertaking by the Department of Home Affairs to
pay
Double Ring. That question was simply not before the court.
[1]
[8]
Second,
the National Treasury’s letter of 29 June 2010 recommends that
the Director-General must seriously consider settling
the dispute
between the Department and Double Ring “
along
the lines of the letter of 18 April 2009
”.
The Department’s letter of 18 April 2009 states that the
Department will pay all the amounts not in dispute into
a nominated
attorney’s trust account upon compliance by Double Ring with
certain pre-conditions set out in paragraphs 1 to
3 of the letter.
The total of the said undisputed amounts is not mentioned in the
letter. The applicants did not deal with these
conditions at all.
[2]
[9]
Therefore,
on the facts, the letter of 18 April 2009 was conditional and did not
specify the amount to be paid by the Department
of Home Affairs to
Double Ring.
[3]
The
National Treasury’s letter of 20 January 2009 to the Department
of Home Affairs also did not mention any specific amount
as having
been confirmed as the undisputed amount owing to Double Ring.
[4]
The letter only refers to the amount of R15,84 million, which Double
Ring stated was for unpaid invoices during 2008.
[10]
The
relief sought by the applicants was specific and direct. It did not
refer to the letter of 29 June 2010, nor did it call for
the
interpretation of its content. The applicants moved from the premise
that the directive as phrased in the relief exists, and
it was for
the court to compel the National Treasury to enforce it.
[5]
[11]
Having had regard to the argument submitted on behalf
of the
applicants in this regard, I am not persuaded that there was a
directive. The applicants’ argument that the letter
of 29 June
2010, read together with the letters of 18 April 2009 and 20 January
2009, must be interpreted to constitute a “directive”
is
confirmation that there was no directive. Accordingly, the court did
not err on the facts as argued.
[12]
As to the second question, whether the National Treasury
had the duty
in terms of the PFMA, the Treasury Instructions and Circular, to
enforce the directive, I point out that the applicants’
application for leave to appeal has not pointed out any errors made
in the judgment in this regard. The judgment found that the
PFMA, the
Treasury Instructions and Circular as specified in the relief sought,
do not make provisions for the powers sought to
be enforced by the
applicants.
[13]
In the notice for leave to appeal the applicants accepted
that
section 6 of the PFMA does not prescribe the manner in which the
National Treasury must enforce the PFMA.
[14]
It was however argued on behalf of the applicants that
the courts
have on numerous occasions found ways to fashion solutions to give
effect to legislation and the Constitution and therefore
that “
it
is not unusual for Treasury to make payment on behalf of a department
and the State Liability Act 14 of 2011 in sections 5, 11(e)
and (f)
empowers Treasury to in certain circumstances make payment on behalf
of a department and then. Withhold voted funds to
recover the
payment
. This argument is new, was not part of the applicants’
case and does not relate to any part of the judgment. There is in any
event no merit to this argument.
[15]
A
party applying for leave to appeal must demonstrate that there are
reasonable prospects of success and/or that there is some other
compelling reasons why the appeal should be heard including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration.
[6]
[16]
In
determining an application for leave to appeal under the Superior
Courts Act, the court must then consider whether there is some
measure of certainty that another court would differ from the
judgment which is a subject of appeal and thus the prospect that
the
appeal would be successful.
[7]
In the case of
Smith
v S
,
in considering what constituted reasonable prospect of success in
section 17(1)(a)(i), the court stated that:
“
What
the test of reasonable prospect of success postulates is a
dispassionate decision, based on the fact and the law that a court
of
appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion different to that of a
trial court. In order to succeed therefore the Appellant
must
convince this court on proper grounds that he has prospects of
success on appeal and that those prospects are not remote but
have a
realistic chance of succeeding. More is required to be established
that there is a mere possibility of success, that the
case is
arguable on appeal or that the case cannot be categorised as
hopeless. There must, in other words be a sound rational basis
for
the conclusion that there are reasonable prospects of success
.”
[8]
[17]
Based on the reasons discussed above and more fully
on the findings
made in the judgment, I am not convinced that the application for
leave to appeal would have any reasonable prospects
of success.
[18]
Counsel
for the applicants in oral argument argued, with reference to the
case in
Ramakatsa
and Others v African National Congress and Another,
[9]
that
even if the court finds on the facts that the appeal would not have
any reasonable prospects of success, this case raises important
issues of law whether, in light of section 6 of the PFMA and the
Constitution, the National Treasury has the legal duty to issue
directives to state organs and departments to pay service providers
and the concomitant power to enforce such directives. Counsel
argued
on this basis that there are compelling reasons to grant leave to
appeal.
[19]
I
disagree. In
Ramakatsa
the
court stated that even in those circumstances, the merits of a case
remain vitally important and are often decisive.
[10]
This
application failed principally on the absence of a directive sought
to be enforced. At a secondary, but equally important level,
the
application also failed on the absence of the laws on which the
directive could be issued and enforced. Without the directive
and the
legal basis thereof, the question of law sought to be argued by the
applicants would be a notional one and consequently,
serve no
purpose.
[20]
It
is a well-established principle of our law that the court does not
exercise its discretion in favour of deciding points that
are merely
abstract, academic or hypothetical ones. A court’s discretion
on the point of law must lie in the intrinsic character
and object of
the remedy.
[11]
I
am therefore not persuaded that there are compelling reasons why the
appeal should be heard.
## Conclusion
Conclusion
[21]
In conclusion, on the issue whether there was a directive
and whether
the National Treasury had the duty to enforce such directive, I find
that there are no reasonable prospects of success.
I also find that
there are no compelling reasons on which to grant leave to appeal. I
further find no cogent reasons why costs
should not follow the course
and why the costs of counsel where employed should not be recovered.
[22]
In the premises, I make the following order:
The application for leave
to appeal is refused with costs, including the costs for the
employment of two counsel.
MPD
Chabedi
Acting
Judge of the High Court Gauteng Division, Pretoria
# APPEARANCES
APPEARANCES
For the applicants:
Adv XT Van Niekerk
Pistorius Scheepers
Attorneys Inc
For
the first, second and
third respondents:
Adv ZZ Matebese SC
Adv L
Mthimkhulu (formerly Mgwetyana) State Attorney, Pretoria
Date of hearing:
9 September 2024
Date of Judgment:
17 September 2024
[1]
Judgment, para [61]
[2]
Judgment, para [29]
[3]
Ibid
,.
[4]
Judgment, para [30]
[5]
See Judgment paras [34] - [35]
[6]
Section 17(1)(
a
)(
i
)
and (ii) of the Superior Court Act 10 of 2013
[7]
Land
and Agricultural Development Bank of South Africa and another v Van
Den Berg and Others
[2022]
1 All SA 457
(FB) at para [16]
[8]
2012 (1) SACR
576
(SCA)
at
para
7;
see
also
MEC
for
Health,
Eastern
Cape
v
Mkhitha
M
and
Another
(2016) ZASCA 176
at para 17.
[9]
[2021] ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021)
[10]
At para [10]
[11]
JT
Publishing (Pty) Ltd and another v Minister of Safety and Security
and others
1997(3)
SA 514 (CC) 524I - 525A-D at para [15],
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