Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1172South Africa
Gallant v Minister of Defence and Others (A96/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1172 (25 November 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
25 November 2024
Headnotes
on 02 October 2017. It was decided at the board to offer you a subsequent contract in the CSS for the period of ten (10) years with effect from 01 July 2018 in your present mustering and with the salary and military/functional rank as on the day of your current CSS contract.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1172
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Gallant v Minister of Defence and Others (A96/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1172 (25 November 2024)
Gallant v Minister of Defence and Others (A96/2024) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1172 (25 November 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZAGPPHC/Data/2024_1172.html
sino date 25 November 2024
#
IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
(1) REPORTABLE:
YES
/
NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/
NO
(3) REVISED.
DATE: 25 November 2024
CASE NO: A96/2024
In the matter
between:
GALLANT, BENITA
NOLA
APPELLANT
And
THE MINISTER OF
DEFENCE AND MILITARY VETERANS
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE SECRETARY FOR
DEFENCE
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE CHIEF OF SOUTH
AFRICAN NATIONAL DEFENCE FORCE
THIRD RESPONDENT
THE CHIEF FOR SOUTH
AFRICAN NAVY
FOURTH RESPONDENT
THE CHIEF HUMAN
RESOURCES
FIFTH RESPONDENT
ADJUDANT GENERAL:
DEFENCE LEGAL SERVICE DIVISION
SIXTH RESPONDENT
Coram:
Mnqibisa-Thusi J
et
Collis & Millar JJ
Heard
on:
16 October 2024
Delivered:
25 November 2024 -
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to
the parties' representatives by email,
by being uploaded to
the
CaseLines
system of the GD and by release
to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
08H30 on 25 November
2024.
ORDER
It
is Ordered
:
[1]
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
JUDGMENT
MILLAR J
(
MNQIBISA-THUSI
et
COLLIS JJ CONCURRING)
[1]
The appellant was a
military law officer
[1]
who brought an
application against the respondents (for convenience referred to
collectively as the SANDF) for declaratory orders
relating
inter
alia
to
an offer and acceptance of further employment. The application was
refused
[2]
by the High Court. Leave
to appeal to this
court is with the leave of the court
a
quo
.
[3]
BACKGROUND
[2]
On 27 November 2017 the appellant,
who was at that time employed on a
fixed term Core Service System (CSS) Contract by the SANDF received a
letter which purported
to confirm the expiry of her existing contract
on 30 June 2018 and to be an offer in respect of a new CSS contract
for a period
of 10 years. The 10 year contract would commence on 1
July 2018 and expire on 30 June 2028.
[3]
On the same day that the letter
was received, the appellant purported
to accept the offer contained in it. This set in motion a series of
events which led ultimately
to the institution of proceedings by her
for the following declaratory orders:
“
1.
An order that the Applicant’s 10(ten) year CSS Contract which
was
offered and accepted by the Applicant on 29 November 2017, be
implemented and captured on the system with effective date from 1
July 2018;
2.
An order that the Respondents pay to the Applicant all the benefits,
allowances and benefits associated with the position she became
entitled to in terms of the 10(ten) year CSS Contract with effective
date as from 1 July 2018.
3.
A declaratory order that the Department of Defence (Defence Legal
Service Division) acted unlawfully by deciding on 30 May 2018 to
implement the decision taken by the Defence Legal Service Contract
Renewal Board on 28 February 2018 not to renew the Applicant’s
employment contract with the Department of Defence Core Service
System.”
[4]
The case that was argued on appeal
had, besides the relief originally
claimed, two further alternative claims. The first was that
even if it was found that
no offer had been made to the appellant,
the SANDF was bound to give effect to the offer as its making (and
acceptance) was an
administrative act on the part of the SANDF which
had to be given effect to until set aside. The second was that even
if no contract
came into existence, the extant contract was not
terminated in terms of the SANDF policy and that in consequence it
renewed automatically.
[5]
Before dealing with the
issues on appeal, it is necessary to set out the chronological
background. While this is not in dispute
between the parties,
it provides the context for the issues in this appeal. I intend
to draw from the Court
a
quo’s
summation
[4]
.
[6]
The appellant joined the Army
Reserve Force during 2008 and attended
a Basic Army Orientation Course during February 2008. She attended an
Advanced Military
Law Course during June 2009.
[7]
During 2012, the
appellant applied for appointment in the regular force as a result of
an advertisement for such post. She was accepted
and signed a 5 year
contract of employment with the Department of Defence on 18 June 2013
in terms of section 52(1) of the Defence
Act.
[5]
She was assigned as a
Defence Counsel or Military Law Practitioner and assigned to the
South African Navy.
[8]
The appointment was for a fixed
period of five (5) years subject to
the following suspensive conditions:
[8.1]
That she was declared medically fit for her post and utilization; and
[8.2]
That she successfully completed a basic military course and/or
formative officer’s
course.
[9]
She was assigned to the
Navy and therefore had to attend
both a basic
military course and the formative officer’s course in the naval
core. The appellant denied that the courses referred
to in her letter
of appointment were naval courses. The appointment letter did not
indicate that she must complete the naval courses
but it is a matter
of common sense that the courses were in the branch of service
[6]
to which she had been
appointed – the Navy.
[10]
The appellant was refused attendance at the required
naval courses
due to her medical condition. Application was made by her for an
inter-branch transfer to the Army during 2013. The
transfer was
premised on her being unable to meet the physical medical
classification of G1K1 as required for officer training
in the Navy.
The appellant was classified as G2K1 which meant that she did not
meet the physical requirements to even attend the
naval officer
training.
[11]
The appellant requested that the basic army courses
she had completed
during 2008 and 2009 be accredited as naval courses, but this request
was declined. These courses were attended
to during 2008 and 2009
when she joined the Reserve Force and was in the Army.
[12]
The appellant was nominated and accepted to attend a
Selection Board
for the purposes of determining whether she qualified to be enrolled
at the naval college for formative officer’s
training. This was
within a year of her five (5) year appointment in 2013. She attended
such Board but was not recommended to attend
the officer’s
training due to the fact that she was found medically unfit to attend
the course. It is not in dispute that
the Navy Formative Officers’
Course is more rigorous than the equivalent courses for the other
branches of service and in
particular that for the Army.
[13]
The appellant’s request for an inter-service transfer
was
declined in January 2014 and it was further decided that she was to
remain in the navy and had to comply with the conditions
of her
appointment.
[14]
It was not in issue between the parties that the primary
reason
advanced for the Army’s decision to refuse to approve her
transfer was that military law officers in the Army were
over
supplied whilst a need existed for Naval military officers. This was
a matter of the operational requirements of the respective
services.
[15]
The appellant was nominated on 14 December 2016 to attend
a naval
formative course but was not accepted on the course due to her
medical condition. However, she attended an Army course
from 15
January 2017 to 15 June 2017 which she successfully completed.
This was done without the knowledge or approval of
the Navy.
[16]
On 21 November 2017 the Director: Legal Services Support,
addressed a
letter to the appellant and informed her that her contract would
expire on 30 June 2018. She was advised to apply
for a renewal
or give notice that she did not intend to do so. The appellant was
further
informed that an application for
renewal would be presented to the Personnel Utilization Committee for
consideration which would
make a recommendation to the Chief of the
Navy.
WAS A CONTRACT
CONCLUDED ON 29 NOVEMBER 2017?
[17]
I intend to deal firstly with whether or not a contract
was concluded
on 29 November 2017 and thereafter, with the two alternative claims.
[18]
The letter containing the offer was in the following
terms:
1.
“
You are aware that your current employment contract with
the Department of Defence lapses on 30 June 2018.
2.
In order to consider your further employment in the DOD a contract
selection Board was held on 02 October 2017. It was decided at
the
board to offer you a subsequent contract in the CSS for the period of
ten (10) years with effect from 01 July 2018 in your
present
mustering and with the salary and military/functional rank as on the
day of your current CSS contract.
3.
Your contract in the CSS will be subject to the following:
a.
That you are medically fit for your mustering/post/utilisation on
reporting for duty,
b.
That you successfully complete all the prescribed military and
functional courses in accordance with your corps/mustering within
your contract period.
c.
That
you remain medically fit for service in your specific mustering/post/
utilisation for the duration of your contract period;
d.
That you accept the SANDF transfer and deployment policy, with the
understanding that you may be transferred at any time in the interest
of the SANDF to any place in the SANDF to any place of the world.
4.
Should you decide not to accept the offer of this new contract you
are
to please state such intention in writing to the Fleet Internal
Appointments section (Room 185).”
[19]
It is clear from the terms of the letter that the offer
was conveyed
to the appellant on the day the letter was authored. Attached to the
letter was a copy of a CSS Contract, signed by
the appellant as
offeree. Two persons signed as witnesses, Warrant Officer Mdlalose
and another person whose name is unknown. The
covering letter
was signed by Warrant Officer Engelbrecht. The contract was unsigned
on behalf of or by the SANDF as offeror.
[20]
The appellant, in an effort to comply with requirement
that she
attend the prescribed Navy courses as mentioned already sought to
have the Army courses she had attended, accredited by
the Navy. This
was declined and she was notified of this on 18 July 2018. The
appellant remained non-compliant with the conditions
of her
employment as a naval officer in terms of the initial 5 year
contract.
[21]
On 10 September 2018 the appellant was informed that
her employment
contract was expiring on 30 September 2018. It appears that the
extant contract was extended from 30 June 2018 to
30 September 2018.
She was also informed that the contract renewal board had granted her
an extension of her 2013 CSS contract
for a further period
until 31 December 2019. The extension was also subject to her being
declared medically fit for her mastering/utilization
and successful
completion of the required Navy courses as stipulated in her initial
contract.
[22]
It was at this point that the appellant indicated that
she was not
prepared to accept the extension of her existing contract because in
her view she had already accepted a ten (10) year
contract on 29
November 2017. This was the first time that her career manager, the
Adjutant General: Defence Legal Service Division
became aware of the
existence of the alleged ten (10) year contract.
[23]
A board of enquiry into the circumstances under which
the 10 year
contract had been signed followed. The appellant, in reply, said of
this:
“
During the
Board of Inquiry WO1 Engelbrecht was asked whether he had authority
to sign the contract to which he answered in the
negative. I admit
that WO1 Engelbrecht did not have authority to sign the contract. It
is however denied that WO1 Engelbrecht ever
signed the
contract. I signed the contract with two witnesses. WO1 Engelbrecht
only signed the covering letter of 29 November
2017, which he was
duly authorised to do.”
[24]
It is readily apparent that the appellant knew that
the contract
which she had signed had not been signed on behalf of the SANDF.
Warrant Officer Engelbrecht had not signed the contract
on behalf of
the SANDF.
[25]
The appellant, accepting that Warrant Officer Engelbrecht
knew he did
not have authority to bind the SANDF, nevertheless proceeded both in
her engagement with her career officer and in
both the court
a quo
and this court, to argue that the covering letter in its terms
constituted a binding offer of employment which she accepted.
[26]
The two propositions are
irreconcilable and mutually destructive. If Warrant Officer
Engelbrecht did not have authority to sign
the contract, it follows
that the contents of the covering letter which he did sign, could not
be construed as a binding offer.
[7]
The appellant on her own
version knew
this
and accepted this to be so.
[27]
Additionally, it is not
in issue that the appellant also failed to comply with any of the
conditions to which the purported offer
in the covering letter had
been made subject to. Her argument in this regard was that she had
attended Army courses but these were
not the specific courses that
were to be attended in order for her to fulfil the conditions that
the purported offer required.
The terms of her existing contract
required fulfilment of the conditions attached to it
per
specifica.
[8]
The appellant was
required to attend navy courses and not those offered by other
branches of the SANDF.
[28]
It is not a matter of substantial compliance insofar
as an
equivalence between the Navy and Army courses are concerned. The
appellant attended and completed the Army courses but was
not, due to
her G2K1 classification, even accepted to attempt the Navy courses.
So even if the covering letter had been a binding
offer, (which it
was not) the appellant did not comply with the conditions to which it
was subject.
[29]
On a proper consideration of events, the appellant knew
that she
would not or could not comply with the condition to which the
purported offer had been subject, for the plain reason that
her
extant 5 year contract had been subject to the same conditions and
she had been unable to fulfil them.
[30]
The letter of 27 November 2017, did not contain an offer
that was
capable of being accepted by the appellant and so contractually it
was a nullity. However, even if it could have been
accepted, she had
failed to fulfil the conditions that it was subject to.
[31]
The fact that the SANDF permitted the non-compliance
with or waived
conditions in respect of the extant 5 year contract did not mean that
it would do so in respect of any subsequent
contract. This, however,
is the seed from which the appellant would have her alternative
claims grow.
ALTERNATIVE CLAIMS
ARGUED DURING THE APPEAL
[32]
Neither of the alternative claims argued on appeal were
pleaded in
the original notice of motion although both of these were argued
before the court
a quo.
[33]
Firstly, were the unauthorised contents of the letter
of 27 November
2017, notwithstanding that it was not an offer which was capable of
being accepted by the appellant, of such a nature
that it constituted
for the SANDF an administrative decision to which the SANDF was
bound?
[34]
It was argued for the appellant that the mere conveyance
of the
letter to the appellant and her purported acceptance was
administrative action and that even though it may have been
unauthorised
and invalid, it stood and was to be complied with until
it was set aside by a court. The argument went further –
presumably
to counter the failure to plead that the conveyance of the
letter was administrative action, that it was incumbent upon the
SANDF
to apply to have it set aside or otherwise be bound by it.
[35]
The appellant relied on
Department
of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
[9]
where it was held that :
“
Our
Constitution confers on Courts the role of the arbiter of legality.
Therefore, until a Court is appropriately approached and
an allegedly
unlawful exercise of public power is adjudicated upon, it has binding
effect merely because of its factual existence.”
[36]
The proposition is trite but not applicable in the present
matter. In
Department of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
the
parties had had a binding agreement and sought to extend it. This was
in the context of public procurement which is subject
to prescribed
processes. In issue was whether or not proper process had been
followed in coming to the decision to extend the contract
and whether
the person who had agreed to it was authorized to do so. The facts in
the present matter are distinguishable because
in the present case,
it is not whether
a correct process was
followed to extend a contract but rather whether a contract had ever
come into being in the first place.
[37]
The second alternative claim, that the extant 5 year
contract had not
been terminated because the SANDF had failed to follow due process in
doing so, is without merit for the following
reasons.
[38]
In
Minister
of Defence v Xulu
[10]
it was held that once an
employment contract had been entered into “…
the
SANDF’s obligation [was] to give effect to the soldier’s
constitutional and statutory right to fair labour practices.
The
Policy was designed to give effect to the rights and set out the
manner in which the public power was to be exercised.”
[39]
It is only once an
employment contract has come into existence that the policy and the
obligation of the SANDF to act in terms of
it becomes operative.
Insofar as the letter of 27 November 2017 is concerned, inasmuch as
the appellant could not have been “press
ganged”
[11]
into service by the
unilateral decision taken on the part of the SANDF, similarly, it
could not be bound to an employment contract
by the unilateral act of
the appellant.
[40]
It is not in issue that
the SANDF followed proper procedure with regards to the extant 5 year
contract. The appellant was invited
to apply for a renewal of that
contract but declined
[12]
to do so. Her reason for
declining is irrelevant. For this reason alone the present case is
distinguishable from
Minister
of Defence v Xulu
.
However, if there was a basis to impugn the process in regard to the
first contract, this ought to have been done in terms of
The
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act.
[13]
[41]
In summary, firstly, the letter of 27 November 2017
did not
constitute an offer that was capable of being accepted. There being
no employment relationship created in consequence of
that letter, the
SANDF was under no
obligation to the
appellant in respect thereof.
[42]
Secondly, since the creation of an employment
relationship is a
bilateral act, the authoring of the letter alone was not an
administrative act to which the SANDF was bound.
[43]
Lastly, insofar as the SANDF policies were of application
to the
appellant’s extant 5 year contract, they complied by inviting
her to apply for an extension – an invitation
which she
declined. On this aspect the court
a quo
correctly found that
any challenge in this regard ought to have been brought in terms of
PAJA, which she had not.
[44]
It is for these reasons that I propose the order that
I do.
[45]
In regard to costs, these will follow the result.
[46]
In the circumstances, I propose the following order:
[46.1] The
appeal is dismissed with costs.
A MILLAR
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I AGREE AND IT IS SO
ORDERED
N MNQIBISA-THUSI
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
I AGREE
C COLLIS
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD ON:
16 OCTOBER 2024
JUDGMENT DELIVERED ON:
25 NOVEMBER 2024
COUNSEL FOR THE
APPELLANT:
ADV. GL VAN DER
WESTHUIZEN
INSTRUCTED BY:
GRIESEL VAN ZANTEN INC
REFERENCE:
MS. H VAN ZANTEN
COUNSEL FOR THE
RESPONDENTS:
ADV. HA MPSHE
INSTRUCTED BY:
THE STATE ATTORNEY
REFERENCE:
MS. N MBATA
[1]
Appointed
and assigned as a defence counsel in terms of
section 14(3)(a)
of
The
Military Discipline Supplementary Measures Act No. 16 of 1999
.
[2]
On
24 November 2023.
[3]
Leave
to appeal was granted on 13 February 2024.
[4]
Paragraphs
[6] to [16] are paraphrased from the judgement of the court a quo
dated 24 November 2023 and are reflected in that
judgement as
paragraphs [3] to [13]. Additionally, paragraphs [20] to [23]
are also paraphrased from the same judgment
and are reflected
therein as paragraphs [14] to [17].
[5]
42
of 2003.
[6]
The SA National
Defence Force comprises of the Army, Air Force, Navy and Medical
Services.
[7]
Makate
v Vodacom Ltd
2016
(4) SA 121
(CC) at paras [48] – [49].
[8]
Van Diggelen v
De Bruin and Another
1954
(1) SA 188
(SWA) at 192H-193F.
[9]
2017
(2) SA 622
(CC) at para [147]. See also
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and
Others
2004
(6) SA 222
(SCA) at para [26].
[10]
2018
(6) SA 460
(SCA) at para [44].
[11]
“
press
gang” – A body of men employed under the command of an
officer to press men for service in the army or navy.
[12]
Para
[22]
supra
.
[13]
3
of 2000. See also
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Others
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC) at para
[26]
.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Gallant v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Others (63900/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 101 (13 February 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 101High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Gallant v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Others (63900/2019) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1978 (24 November 2023)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 1978High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)100% similar
Mogale v Minister of Police and Others (36031/2019) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1201 (18 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1201High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
T.M v Minister of Police (33413/2015) [2025] ZAGPPHC 46 (21 January 2025)
[2025] ZAGPPHC 46High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar
Marule v Minister of Police (86694/2014) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1213 (14 November 2024)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1213High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)99% similar