Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 948South Africa
Bloemfontein Correctional Contracts Proprietary Limited v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (067524/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 948 (26 September 2024)
Headnotes
the in limine point and did not allow the 2nd respondent to participate in the proceedings. The reasoning of the court was on the basis that there was no privity of contract between the 1st respondent and the 2nd respondent, neither was there any lis between them, and the 2nd respondent had failed to establish a direct and substantial interest in the proceedings.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Bloemfontein Correctional Contracts Proprietary Limited v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (067524/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 948 (26 September 2024)
Bloemfontein Correctional Contracts Proprietary Limited v Minister of Justice and Correctional Services and Another (067524/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 948 (26 September 2024)
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sino date 26 September 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
067524/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE:
26/09/2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
BLOEMFONTEIN
CORRECTIONAL CONTRACTS
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF JUSTICE AND CORRECTIONAL SERVICES
First Respondent
G4S
CORRECTION SERVICES (BLOEMFONTEIN)
RF
(PTY)
LIMITED
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]
The applicant, who is the 2
nd
respondent in the main application, applies in terms of rule 49(1) of
the Uniform Rules of Court read with section 17(1) of the
Superior
Courts Act 10 of 2013 (“the
Superior Courts Act&rdquo
;), for
leave to appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal, alternatively, to the
Full Court of this Division of the High Court, against
the whole
order of this Court delivered on 17 April 2024.
[2]
For the sake of convenience, the parties in
this application are referred to as cited in the main application.
Facts
[3]
The application for leave to appeal
emanates from an
in limine
point taken by the 1
st
respondent in the main application. The primary issue that was sought
to be adjudicated in the main application was in relation
to a
concession agreement that was concluded between the applicant and the
1
st
respondent. The concession agreement involved the operations at the
Mangaung Correctional Centre (“the Centre”) whereat
the
applicant had been awarded a tender to operate the Centre. The
applicant in turn subcontracted the 2
nd
respondent in respect of the services that were to be provided at the
Centre.
[4]
A dispute arose between the applicant and
the 1
st
respondent pertaining to the concession agreement. Pursuant to the
said dispute, the 1
st
respondent wanted to terminate the agreement, alleging certain
breaches of the agreement by the applicant. The applicant, in
contestation
of the impending termination of the agreement,
approached court for interim interdictory relief pending the
institution of an action
against the 1
st
respondent to prevent the allegedly unlawful cancellation of the
agreement. The application was opposed by the 1
st
respondent.
[5]
The applicant had in those proceedings
cited the 2
nd
respondent with no specific relief sought against it. It was alleged
that the 2
nd
respondent was cited in the papers by virtue of its interest in the
outcome of the proceedings. Even though no particular relief
was
sought against it, the 2
nd
respondent filed an extensive answering affidavit and heads of
argument in support of the relief sought by the applicant. In
addition,
the 2
nd
respondent, through its counsel, made appearance at the hearing of
the main application with the intention to argue its purported
case
in support of the applicant.
[6]
It is against this backdrop that at the
commencement of the hearing, the aforesaid
in
limine
point was taken. The 1
st
respondent, in raising this point, lamented that the 2
nd
respondent had no standing in the proceedings on the ground of
privity of contract. The 1
st
respondent contended that as the 2
nd
respondent was not a party to the concession agreement, it (the 2
nd
respondent) had no standing to assert any rights or obligations which
attach to an agreement to which it is not a party.
[7]
Both the applicant and the 2
nd
respondent opposed the
in limine
point contending that the 2
nd
respondent was entitled to participate in the proceedings because it
has an interest in the matter, which interest the 1
st
respondent had, apparently, admitted in its answering affidavit.
[8]
Besides
the reason advanced by the applicant in its founding papers why it
had cited the 2
nd
respondent in the papers, being its interest in the outcome of the
proceedings, no other reason was proffered by the 2
nd
respondent. It was only in oral argument that the 2
nd
respondent’s counsel mentioned that the interest contended for
by the 2
nd
respondent included the interest of its employees, the inmates of the
Centre and public interest. This, the 1
st
respondent opposed on the ground that such interest was not a direct
interest as envisaged in the
Medihelp
judgment,
[1]
but
was, instead, a financial interest which carried no weight.
[9]
The court
a
quo
ruled in favour of the 1
st
respondent. It upheld the
in limine
point and did not allow the 2
nd
respondent to participate in the proceedings. The reasoning of the
court was on the basis that there was no privity of contract
between
the 1
st
respondent and the 2
nd
respondent, neither was there any
lis
between them, and the 2
nd
respondent had failed to establish a direct and substantial interest
in the proceedings.
Grounds for Leave to
Appeal
[10]
The 2
nd
respondent raised a plethora of grounds in its application and
supplementary application for leave to appeal, which are not to
be
repeated in this judgment. The sum total of all these grounds
is
the issue of determination of a direct and substantial interest in
the outcome of proceedings. These grounds were summarised
as follows
during oral argument:
[11]
It is argued that the court
a
quo
misdirected itself when it made the
following findings:
11.1
that there was no direct and substantial interest on the part of the
2
nd
respondent.
11.2
that there was no privity of contract between the 1
st
and
2
nd
respondents.
11.3
that the relief sought in the heads of argument differed from the
relief that was called for
in the answering affidavit.
[12]
The 1
st
respondent is opposing the application for leave to appeal on a point
in
limine
and the merits. The point
in limine
is taken on the ground that the order is not appealable. The defence
on the merits is that there are no reasonable prospects of
success,
no compelling reason that the appeal be heard, and no question of law
of importance, whether because of its general application
or
otherwise, in respect of which a decision of the Supreme Court of
Appeal is required.
Issues for determination
[13]
On the
in limine
point, the issue is whether the order
is appealable.
[14]
On the merits, the issue is whether the 2
nd
respondent has made out a case to be granted leave to appeal in terms
of uniform
rule 49(1)
read with
section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts
Act. The
question, therefore, is whether the 2
nd
respondent has made out a case to be granted leave to appeal.
Applicable Law
[15]
As earlier indicated, the 2
nd
respondent has approached this court for leave to appeal in terms of
uniform
rule 49(1)
read with
section 17(1)
of the
Superior Courts
Act. Uniform
rule 49(1)
provides as follows:
“
49.
Civil
Appeals from the High Court
(1)
(a) When leave to appeal is
required, it may on a statement of the grounds therefor be requested
at the time of the judgment
or order.
(b)
When leave to appeal is required and it has not been requested at the
time of the judgment or order, application for such
leave shall be
made and the grounds therefor shall be furnished within fifteen days
after the date of the order appealed against:
Provided that when the
reasons or the full reasons for the court’s order are given at
a later date than the date of the order,
such application may be made
within fifteen days after such later date: Provided further that the
court may, upon good cause shown,
extend the aforementioned periods
of fifteen days.”
[16]
Section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act, on
the other hand, provides that –
"17.
Leave to Appeal
(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned
are of the opinion that-
(a)
(i) the appeal would
have a reasonable
prospect of success; or
(ii)
there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration.”
Discussion
[17]
The test for the granting of the
application for leave to appeal based on
section 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act, is
trite and need not be repeated in this
judgment.
[18]
Applying the test stated in
section
17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act, when
considering all of the
grounds raised by the 2
nd
respondent in the application for leave to appeal, in this court’s
opinion, there are no reasonable prospects that the appeal
will
succeed; and there are no compelling reasons, presented to this
court, why the appeal should be heard. This is said based
on the
reasons that follow hereunder:
Whether there was
direct and substantial interest on the part of the 2
nd
respondent.
[19]
In the main application, on the basis of
the
Medihelp
judgment, it was found that the 2
nd
respondent has no standing because it has no direct interest in the
proceedings.
[20]
Relying
on the
Van
Staden
judgment,
[2]
the
high watermark of the 2
nd
respondent’s submission during argument in the main
application, was that it was entitled to participate in the
proceedings
by merely being cited in the proceedings and that it was
given such right by merely being cited. In light of the
Medihelp
judgment that held that for a party to have standing, it must have a
direct interest in such proceedings, the court
a
quo
dismissed the 2
nd
respondent’s argument and found that there was no direct
interest on the part of the 2
nd
respondent, and as such, the court made an order that the 2
nd
respondent should not participate in the proceedings.
[21]
In this application, the argument is that
the finding of the court
a quo
that the 2
nd
respondent should not participate in the proceedings is novel and in
conflict with
Van Staden
which makes the court an outlier on this issue. The contention is
that another court would come to a different conclusion mainly
because the 1
st
respondent had on the facts conceded that the 2
nd
respondent had a direct and substantial interest.
[22]
As a point of departure, it should be said
that reliance by the 2
nd
respondent on
Van Staden
,
in this regard, was misguided.
Van
Staden
is no proposition that as a
matter of principle, a party cited in legal proceedings is entitled
without more to participate in
those proceedings.
Van
Staden
turned on its own specific
facts. As such, there is nothing novel about the finding of this
court. The law remains as stated by
the Constitutional Court that a
party can only participate in legal proceedings if such party has a
direct and substantial interest
in the outcome of the proceedings.
[23]
The
test of direct and substantial interest has been adopted and
confirmed by the Constitutional Court in
SA
Riding for the Disabled Association v Regional Land Claims
Commissioner and Others
,
[3]
where
it was held that:
"What constitutes a
direct and substantial interest is the legal interest in the subject
matter of the case which could be
prejudicially affected by the order
of the court. This means that the applicant must show that it has a
right adversely affected
or to be affected by the order sought."
[24]
In
Snyders
and Others v De Jager (Joinder)
,
[4]
the Constitutional Court held that:
“
A
person has a direct and substantial interest in an order that is
sought in proceedings if the order would directly affect such
a
person's rights or interest.”
[25]
The
inclination in this regard is to agree with the submission made by
the 1
st
respondent’s counsel that in order for a party to have
locus
standi
,
a party to litigation must have a direct and substantial interest in
the right which is the subject matter of the litigation (failing
which, a party lacks legal standing). Counsel correctly argued, also
that, in determining whether a party has a direct and substantial
interest in the matter, the test is whether he or she has a legal
interest in the subject matter of the litigation, which may be
affected prejudicially by the judgment of the court.
Accordingly, so counsel argued, although a party may have an interest
(other than a legal interest) in the outcome of the litigation (by
way of a financial interest or other interest), this does not
constitute a direct and substantial interest in the litigation. In
elucidation of this argument, counsel referred to a number of
Supreme
Court of Appeal judgments, that are, indeed, on point.
[5]
[26]
Counsel for the 2
nd
respondent argued further that the court
a
quo
misdirected itself in finding that
there was no direct and substantial interest on the part of the 2
nd
respondent. The contention is that the court
a
quo
could not have come to such a
finding because the 2
nd
respondent’s direct and substantial interest was conceded by
the 1
st
respondent in the answering affidavit. As such, counsel is of the
view that another court would come to a different conclusion
on
appeal.
[27]
This
argument by counsel for the 2
nd
respondent is unmeritorious. There is no concession made by the 1
st
respondent in this regard. As alleged in the applicant’s
founding papers, the 2
nd
respondent was cited in the papers by reason of its interest in the
outcome of the matter. The allegation was further elaborated
to state
that the interest contended for was extensive interest that included
the interest of the employees of the 2
nd
respondent, the inmates of the Centre and the interests of justice.
It cannot be disputed that an adverse outcome of the proceedings
can
only impact on the 2
nd
respondent’s financial interest as a subcontractor. It is thus
apparent that the interest referred to here is a financial
interest
and not a legal interest. The concession by the 1
st
respondent, if any, does not clothe the 2
nd
respondent with standing. The law as it stands is that there must be
a legal interest in the subject matter of the litigation,
which may
be affected prejudicially by the judgment of the court.
[6]
Whether there was no
privity of contract between the 1
st
and 2
nd
respondents
[28]
The court
a
quo
in
this regard made a finding that
there
was no privity of contract between the 1
st
respondent and the 2
nd
respondent, neither was there any
lis
between them that would give the 2
nd
respondent standing in the proceedings. Counsel for the 2
nd
respondent argues that the court
a quo
misdirected itself in concluding that the principle of privity of
contract played any role at all and that another court would
come to
a different conclusion on appeal.
[29]
In terms of the doctrine of privity of
contract, parties who are not privy to a contract cannot sue or be
sued on it. It goes without
saying that a subcontractor who has no
privity of contract with the party who has an agreement with the main
contractor, cannot
sue or be sued by such a party. Similarly, in this
matter, given that no privity of contract exists between the 1
st
respondent and the 2
nd
respondent, the 2
nd
respondent, as a subcontractor, cannot sue the 1
st
respondent with whom the applicant (the main contractor) has
contracted. The further agreement that counsel for the 2
nd
respondent seeks to rely on to establish privity of contract between
the 1
st
respondent and 2
nd
respondent does not assist because that agreement does not form part
of the cause of action in the main application (the interim
interlocutory relief). The claim in that application is based only on
the concession agreement.
Conclusion
[30]
The issue of whether the relief sought in
the heads of argument differed from the relief that was called for in
the answering affidavit
was extensively dealt with in the judgment of
the court
a quo
and does not require a repeat in this judgment.
[31]
Furthermore, the 1
st
respondent’s argument that the order of the court
a
quo
to not allow the 2
nd
respondent to participate in these proceedings does not directly
implicate the provisions of section 34 of the Constitution, is
correct.
[32]
The
Constitutional Court has held that “the right of access to
courts contained in section 34 [of the Constitution] is significant
in that it represents an enabling right to access a court to have a
justiciable dispute decided”.
[7]
As
argued by counsel for the 1
st
respondent, there is no dispute at all between the 1
st
respondent and the 2
nd
respondent and certainly no "justiciable dispute”. Were it
otherwise, a party would be permitted, under section 34,
to approach
a court in circumstances that no justiciable dispute exists. It is
neither sensible, nor in accord with section 34
of the Constitution.
[33]
Without having to deal with the question of
whether the order is appealable or not, it is obvious that there are
no reasonable prospects
of success on appeal. No case is made out for
the granting of the application for leave to appeal on the ground of
some compelling
reasons. The application ought to be dismissed.
Order
[34]
The application is dismissed with costs,
which costs are inclusive of the costs of senior counsel on scale A.
M KUBUSHI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
WB
Pye SC instructed by Faksen (Incorporated in SA as Bell Dewar
Inc.)
For
the First Respondent:
PG
Cilliers SC, TWG Bester SC & M Rantho instructed by AM
Vilakazi Tau Inc Attorneys
For
the Second Respondent:
Bruce
Leech SC & L Choate instructed by Webber Wentzel
Date
of hearing:
10
September 2024
Date
of judgment:
26
September 2024
[1]
Medihelp
v Minister of Finance NO
[2020] ZASCA 29
at paras 7 - 9.
[2]
Van
Staden and Others NNO v Pro-Wiz (Pty) Ltd
2019 (4) SA 532
(SCA) at para 13.
[3]
2017
(5) SA 1
(CC) at para 9.
[4]
2017
(5) BCLR 604
(CC) at para 9.
[5]
See
Bowring
NO v Vrededorp Properties CC and Another
2007 (5) SA 391
(SCA) at para 21;
Gordon
v Department of Health, KwaZulu-Natal
[2008] ZASCA 99
;
2008 (6) SA 522
(SCA) at para 9;
South
African History Archive Trust v South African Reserve Bank and
Another
2020 (6) SA 127
(SCA) at para 30;
Judicial
Service Commission and Another v Cape Bar Council and Another
2013 (1) SA 170
(SCA) at para 12;
Amalgamated
Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
1949 (3) SA 637 (A).
[6]
See also,
Cosira
Developments (Pty) Ltd v Sam Lubbe Investments CC t/a Lubbe
Construction and Others
2011 (6) SA 331 (GSJ).
[7]
See
Social
Justice Coalition and Others v Minister of Police and Others
2022 JDR 2047 (CC) at para 47.
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