Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 50South Africa
Medical Information Technology South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another v Public Protector and Others (29760/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 50 (31 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
31 January 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Medical Information Technology South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another v Public Protector and Others (29760/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 50 (31 January 2023)
Medical Information Technology South Africa (Pty) Ltd and Another v Public Protector and Others (29760/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 50 (31 January 2023)
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sino date 31 January 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO.: 29760/2020
Reportable:No
Of
Interest to other Judges:No
Revised
30/01/2023
In
the matter between
MEDICAL
INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY SA
(PTY)
LTD
FIRST APPLICANT
JACOB
MALEME POO
SECOND APPLICANT
and
PUBLIC
PROTECTOR
FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
MEC FOR HEALTH,
FOR
KWAZULU-NATAL PROVINCE
SECOND RESPONDENT
HEAD
OF DEPARTMENT,
DEPARTMENT
OF HEALTH, KWA ZULU-NATAL
THIRD RESPONDENT
KWAZULU-NATAL
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
FOURTH RESPONDENT
THE
MEC FOR HEALTH, GAUTENG
FIFTH RESPONDENT
HEAD
OF DEPARTMENT,
GAUTENG
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
SIXTH RESPONDENT
GAUTENG
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
MINISTER
OF PUBLIC SERVICE AND
ADMINISTRATION
EIGHTH RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
MANAMELA
AJ
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicants launched a review application in terms of Rule
53(1)(b) of the Uniform Rules of
Court, against the specific findings
and remedial actions set-out under the Public Protector Report 109 of
2019/2020 issued on
13 January 2020, entitled “
Report
on an investigation into Allegations of Maladministration and
Procurement irregularities by the Kwazulu-Natal Department
of Health
”
(“the Report”), specifically the findings made under
paragraphs 6.2, 6.3, 7.2, 7.3 and 7.4 as well as all and
any other,
paragraphs pertaining to and/or relating to the said findings and
remedial actions (including but not limited to paragraphs
(viii)(b),(c), (ix)(b), (c) and (d) of the executive summary).
[2]
The first respondent issued the Report subsequent an investigation
conducted in terms of section
6 and 7 of the Public Protector Act,
[1]
following allegations of maladministration and improper awarding and
extension of procurement contracts to Medical Information
Technology
SA (Pty) Ltd (“the first applicant”) by the Kwa-Zulu
Natal Department of Health (“the fourth respondent”)
as
well as allegations of conflict of interests between the fourth
respondent and Dr Poo (“the second applicant”).
[3]
The first applicant is a private company which provides information
technology solution software
and services to health care
organisations, also internationally and provided the same services to
the fourth respondent. The second
applicant is a medical
practitioner, who is a sessional employee of the seventh respondent,
permanently employed by the first applicant.
The relief sought
relating to the second applicant was postponed
sine die.
[4]
The first respondent is the Public Protector, a Chapter Nine
institution established in terms
of section 181(1)(a) of the
Constitution read with section 1A(1) of the Public Protector Act. The
second, third, fourth, fifth,
sixth, seventh and eighth respondents
are various government institutions responsible for health and public
services, respectively,
cited is so far as they may have an interest
in the findings of this matter.
[5]
In principle the first respondent made findings, in specified parts
of the Report, that the allegations
made were substantiated and
issued recommendations in regard to remedial actions to be
implemented by the second to the eighth
respondents.
[6]
The applicants challenges those findings and recommendations made by
the first respondent based
on the doctrine of legality, on the basis
that, the investigation by the first respondent were conducted
inadequately, that the
first respondent came to an incorrect
conclusion, that the first respondent failed to consider relevant
information, documents
or contracts relating to the second
applicant’s position and have made remedial directions which
are incomprehensible, vague,
inconclusive and/or irrational.
[7]
The first respondent opposed this application and contends that the
applicants’ case should
be dismissed on the grounds that they
have not made out a case for review.
[8]
The second, third, fourth and fifth respondents filed notices to
abide by the decision of the
court. The sixth and seventh respondent
have not opposed the application. The eighth respondent opposed the
application in respect
of the relief sought under paragraph 2.2 of
the notice of motion. However, the applicants no longer persisted
with this relief
as they filed a notice of withdrawal and tendered
costs to the eighth respondent on 10 November 2021.
FACTUAL BACKGROUND
[9]
The first respondent received the first complaint around 23 June
2015. The first complaint was
made by the Honourable Jerich Nkwanyana
of the Inkatha Freedom Party. The second complaint was made on 5
August 2015, by the Honourable
Imran Keeka of the Democratic Alliance
and the third anonymous complaint was made on 16 August 2016, all the
complaints pertained
to allegations of the improper awarding and
extension of contracts to the first applicant by the fourth
respondent and the alleged
conflict of interest between the fourth
respondent and the second applicant.
[10]
In respect of allegations of improper procurement and extension of
contracts, the first respondent
made findings under paragraph 6.2 of
the report, that:
“
6.2
Regarding whether the Department improperly procured and extended the
services of
Meditech SA and if so whether such conduct was improper
and amounted to maladministration and irregular and/or fruitless and
wasteful
expenditure as contemplated by
section 6(4)
of the
Public
Protector Act, 1994
and
section 1
of the
Public Finance Management
Act, 1999
.
6.2.1 the allegation that
the Department improperly procured the services of Meditech SA is
substantiated.
6.2.2 the subsequent
extension of contracts, with substantial extension in the scope of
work, were also improper.
6.2.3 the Department
improperly extended the 2001 contract and the subsequent extension
with Meditech SA and failed to ensure that
the procurement followed a
process that is transparent, equitable and fair in line with Section
217 of the Constitution and Treasury
Regulation 16A3.29 (a) and
amounts to maladministration and improper conduct.
6.2.4 The expenditure
incurred as a result of the irregular extension amounts to irregular
expenditure in terms of section 1 of
the PFMA, 1999.
6.2.5 By entering into
the 2016 project with Meditech SA, the Department failed to follow a
process that is transparent, equitable
and fair in line with Section
217 of the Constitution and National Treasury Regulation 16A3.29(a)
amounts to maladministration
and improper conduct in terms of
section
6(4)
of the
Public Protector Act, 1994
.
6.2.6 the 2016 project to
implement the licences, included and increase the scope of work
procurement of hardware at a substantial
cost to the Department and
amounts to irregular expenditure in terms of
Section 1
of the PFMA,
1994.”
[11]
The recommendations made by the first respondent relating to the
findings in paragraph 6.2 above,
as stated under paragraph 7.2 are
that-
THE MEC KZN HEALTH
“
7.2.1
Take cognizance of the findings regarding the conduct and
maladministration by the Department relating to the irregularities
in
the report;
7.2.2 Ensure that the HOD
considers the report, and where appropriate, acts in terms of
section
84
and as contemplated in
section 85
of the PFMA;
7.2.3 Ensure that the HOD
considers the acts of maladministration and improper conduct referred
to in this report and takes appropriate
disciplinary action against
the officials of the Department in respect of their conduct referred
to therein; and
7.2.4 Consider
commissioning a forensic investigation into all Meditech SA contracts
regarding systemic administrative deficiencies
allowing
maladministration and related improprieties in its procurement
system”
THE HOD KZN HEALTH
“
7.2.5
Considers the report and, where appropriate, acts in terms
of
section
84
and as contemplated in
section 85
of the PFMA;
7.2.6 Considers the acts
of maladministration and improper conduct referred to in this report
and takes appropriate disciplinary
action against the officials of
the Department in respect of their conduct referred to herein;
7.2.7 The HOD, through
the Provincial Treasury evaluates the effectiveness of the
Department’s internal controls on Supply
Chain Management
processes, with specific reference to the procurement of IT related
goods and services, with view to take corrective
action to prevent a
recurrence o the improprieties referred to in this report;
7.2.8 The HOD reports to
the Provincial Treasury and the Auditor-General, particulars of the
alleged financial misconduct and the
steps taken in connection with
such financial misconduct, in terms of
section 84
and as contemplated
in
section 85
of the PFMA; and
7.2.9 To ensure that
prior to signing a formal contract or service level agreement with a
contractor must (sic) that such contracts
or agreements are legally
sound to avoid potential litigation and to minimise potential fraud
and corruption. This must include
legal vetting by at least the Legal
Services of the Department.”
Alleged Conflict of
interest that existed between the second applicant and the fourth
respondent
[12]
In respect of allegations of conflict of interest between the second
applicant and the fourth
respondent, the first respondent made the
following findings in paragraph 6.3 of the report:
“
6.3
Regarding whether the Department failed to consider the conflict of
Interest that
existed between Dr Poo, a director in Meditech SA, and
the Department, when it appointed Meditech SA, and if whether such
conduct
was improper and amounted to maladministration as
contemplated by
Section 6(4)
of the
Public Protector Act, 1994
.
6.3.1 the allegation that
the Department failed to consider the conflict of interest that
existed between Dr Poo, a director in
Meditech SA, and the
Department, when it appointed Meditech SA, is substantiated.
6.3.2 although Dr Poo was
not employed by Meditech SA when it entered the initial contract with
the Department in 1988, he was employed
with Gauteng Department of
Health in March 2008, as a Sessional Doctor and in March 2009 by
Meditech SA. He became a Director in
Meditech on 22 May 2012.
6.3.3 Dr Poo’s
conduct as an employee of the state is in contravention of Regulation
13 (c) of the Public Service Regulation,
2016 that prohibits and
employees of the Public Service from conducting business with an
organ of state or to be a director of
a company conducting business
with an organ of state, and creares a conflict of interest as defined
by the Directive of conducting
business with the state.”
[13]
The first respondent issued the following remedial action in
paragraphs 7.3 and 7.4 (“conflict
of interest directions”)
of the Report:
THE MEC GAUTENG
HEALTH
“
7.3.1
To take cognizance of the findings regarding the issue of
the
conflict of interest mentioned on the report.
7.3.2 Ensures that the
HOD considers the report and, acts in terms of section 8 of the
Directive on Conducting Business with an
Organ of State and its
regulations, that was issued by the Minister of Public Service and
Administration in January 2017.”
THE HOD GAUTENG
HEALTH
“
7.3.3
Take not of my findings in this report and act in accordance
with his
duty to report contraventions in terms of section 8 of the Directive
on Conducting Business with an Organ of State and
its regulations,
that was Issued by the Minister of Public Service and Administration
in January 2017.”
THE DIRECTORATE OF
PRIORITY CRIME INVESTIGATION
“
7.4
Consider this report and establish if any acts of impropriety
identified herein amount to act of a criminal conduct
in terms of the
Prevention and Combating of Corrupt Activities Act, 2004
.”
[14]
The said findings are also contained in paragraphs (viii)(b) and (c),
(ix)(b), (c) and (d) of
the executive summary of the Report.
[15]
The first tender awarded to the first applicant was around 1988, at
Addington Hospital, as a
pilot project, before being rolled out to
other hospitals.
ISSUES OF
DETERMINATION
[16]
The issues to be considered are:
[16.1]
Whether the first respondent’s purporting to exercise
jurisdiction over the complaint, insofar as it related to agreements
concluded between the parties prior to 2016, is under
section 6(9)
of
the
Public Protector Act, unlawful
and invalid, due to her failure to
consider whether special circumstances exist and to make a decision
in that regard first.
[16.2]
Whether there is a basis for the findings and recommendations
that
were made by the first respondent, and whether they are unreasonable,
irrational and unlawful.
[16.3]
Whether the first respondent's investigations were inadequate
and
whether she came to incorrect conclusions based on the facts and
evidence before her.
[16.4]
Whether the Report contains remedial directions which are
incomprehensible, vague, inconclusive and/or irrational, rendering
them unenforceable.
[17]
In regard to the conflict of interest findings that relate to the
second applicant whether:
[17.1]
insofar as
they rely on the Public Service Regulations, 2016,
[2]
Regulation 13(c), they omit to take into account the transitional
arrangements in circumstances where the conclusion of the Master
Agreement fell into the transitional period and Regulation 13(c) was
therefore not applicable;
[17.2]
are therefore tainted by a material error in law and in
fact are
illegal having been made contrary to the law;
[17.3]
were in any event made without any warning that such finding could
be
made and were accordingly procedurally irrational and unfair in
circumstances where the Interim Report found there was no conflict
of
interest.
[17.4]
whether the findings and the remedial actions taken by the
first
respondent are lawful, i.e. are within the permissible law and are
rational.
[17.5]
whether the challenge to the Report as raised by the applicants
under
the relief sought in paragraph 1 and 2, is a challenge that must be
raised in terms of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act,
[3]
(“PAJA”).
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
[18]
Section 217 of the Constitution requires that when an organ of state
contracts for goods and
services, it must do so in accordance with
principles of fairness, equitability, transparency, competitiveness
and cost-effectiveness.
[19]
Regulation 13(c) of the Public Service Regulations, 2016, introduced
a prohibition on employees
conducting business with an organ of state
or being a director of a public company conducting business with the
state.
[20]
Part 5 of National Treasury Practice Note 11 of 2008/2009, provides
that: if the unsolicited
proposal agreement is concluded, then the
institution must prepare and issue bid documents. Regarding the
bidding process its requires:
“
5.1
Bid process.
5.1.1 The process to be
followed when procuring a service provider shall include:
(a) The preparation of a
Request for Qualification (RFQ) to test the market for the existence
of other private entities capable
of providing the product or
service;
(b) The preparation of a
draft contract for the provision of the product or service should
there be no adequate response to the
RFQ;
(c) The preparation of a
Request for Proposals (RFP) with a draft contract should there be one
or more adequate responses to the
RFQ;
(d) Conducting a
competitive bidding process in terms of the institution’s
supply chain management system among the firms
qualified in the RFQ
and the proponent; and
(e) Reimbursing the
proponent should the proponent not be awarded the contract for the
provision of the product or service at the
conclusion of the
competitive bidding process. The quantum of reimbursement shall be
those audited costs of the proponent from
the point in time where the
accounting office or accounting authority was solicited by the
proponent to the conclusion of the competitive
process, in terms of
the unsolicited proposal agreement.
5.2 The
aforegoing bid process must –
(a) be developed by the
institution;
(b) disclose that the bid
originated from an unsolicited proposal; and
(c) provide the agreed
costs and terms of payment to the proponent, and require that all
bidders, save for the proponent, make allowance
for these costs and
pay such costs to the proponent directly, if their bid is
successful.”
ANALYSIS
[21]
Generally, judicial review is the principal mechanism used by the
courts to guard against the
exercise of public institutions, and
abuse of power. Judicial review does not concern the merits of the
decisions, it purely focuses
on the process by which decisions were
made. It is a remedy of last resort and it is only available when all
alternative recourses
are exhausted.
[22]
The first point to address in this matter is the applicant’s
own jurisdiction to launch
a review application. It is common cause
that there is no direct findings or recommendations for remedial
action against the applicants.
[4]
The applicants contents that the Report negatively impacted their
business, rights and reputation which is contested by the first
respondent. It is apparent from the Report that the first respondent
mainly seeks to protect the legal prescripts, in particular
section
217 of the Constitution. It would have been worse for the applicants
if the recommendations made included the blacklisting
of the first
appellant.
[23]
The applicants filed a request for information in terms of section
18(1) of the Promotion of
Access to Information Act
[5]
,
requesting 36 records relating to the report, which were not
provided. Notwithstanding that, the applicants relies on some supply
chain management correspondences which granted permission for the
third respondent to proceed with the procurement process. The
process
undertaken was not in line with the prescripts of the law and cannot
be justified.
[24]
One of the submission made by the applicants, is that if the relevant
findings and recommendations
remain unchallenged it will be
prejudicial to the applicants. The level of interest held by the
applicants in the Report issued
by the first respondent is below that
of the other respondents whom it affects. A party is entitled to join
and intervene in proceedings
where they have a direct and substantial
interest in the matter.
[6]
[25]
Section 1(c) of the Constitution serves as a regulatory clause with
which the state, its organs
and officials are forbidden to exercise
powers beyond those conferred upon them by law.
Jurisdiction and
special circumstance
[26]
The crux of the findings made by the first respondent is that the
awarding of the contracts to
the first applicant was improper, as it
appears that there were no competitive bids for the service rendered,
as such there was
a breach of section 217 of the Constitution. The
first respondent contents that when the contract concluded in 2016,
between the
fourth respondent and the first applicant, the fourth
respondent failed to follow a transparent, equitable and fair process
in
line with the prescripts of section 217 of the Constitution, the
National Treasury Regulations 16A3.19(a) and that this amounts
to
maladministration and improper conduct in terms of
section 6(4)
of
the
Public Protector Act.
[27
]
It is unclear how maladministration findings and remedial action
against government and its officials
adversely affect the rights of
an entity that had benefitted from an uncompetitive process.
[28]
The applicant cannot raise their hand from the fence, on behalf of
the second, third and fourth
respondents to demonstrate that the
process was above board.
[29]
In
Minister
of Finance v Afribusiness NPC
,
[7]
the Constitutional court dismissed leave to intervene in proceedings,
on the basis of
ultra
vires
.
Lawfulness and
rationality of findings and recommendations
[30]
I found the remedial directions made by the first respondent are
comprehensible to the findings
and are rational.
Whether the
investigation was adequate
[31]
In paragraph 5.2.42 of the Report, the first respondent stated that:
“
On
4 May 2016, the Chief Director, Supply Chain Management (SEM) Mr C
Malaba (“Malaba”), made a submission to the HOD,
Dr ST
Mtshali, requesting him to grant approval for deviation from normal
SCM processes to a bid for the “Appointment of
a Service
Provider to implement Meditech SA License for a system which is
already in existence for Grey’s Hospital, KwaMashu
Community
Health Care (CHC) and one adjoining clinic and also provide support
at 3 hospitals, once CHC and one clinic for a period
of 3 years
(“2016 Project”). The submission was recommended by the
CFO on 09 May 2016 and approved by the HOD on 11
May 2016.”
[32]
The above process, was not done in line with the National Treasury
Practice Note 11 of 2008/2009,
referred to above. The first
respondent in her Report took note of the fact that only one bid was
received and evaluated by the
Technical Evaluation Committee (TEC), a
score of 88.5 out of 100 for functionality was awarded to the first
applicant, against
no other competitor.
Effect of the remedial
actions
[33]
The first respondent does not find that the applicants should not
have been appointed, the issue
is rather one of process which should
have been open and fair in terms of section 217 of the Constitution.
[34]
Findings made by the first respondent have no negative or direct
impact on the applicants.
At the very least the first applicant
fails to demonstrate such impact. In
Giant
Concerts CC v Rinaldo Investment (Pty) Ltd
[8]
the Court held that:
“
[35]
…where a litigant acts solely in his or her own interest,
there is no broad or unqualified capacity to litigate
against
illegalities…
[43] The own
interest litigant must therefore demonstrate that his or her interest
or potential interest are directly
affected by the unlawfulness
sought to be impugned.”
[35]
None of the remedial actions have any implications for the
applicants. It is directed at the
second and third respondents. The
remedial action is of a cautionary nature relevant state departments.
Conflict of interest
[
36]
The applicants correctly point out that the findings and the remedial
actions made by the first respondent
constitute an administrative
action under PAJA and that it relates to the exercise of public power
which must comply with the requirements
of the Constitution under the
principle of legality.
[37]
The findings under paragraph 6.3 of the Report illustrates that the
second applicant violated
Regulation 13(c). The Regulation prohibits
employees of the State to do business with the State.
Applicability of PAJA
[38]
On the question of legality as a ground for review and whether the
first respondent acted beyond
her powers when making the specific
findings, the applicants contents that the first respondent made no
mention of special circumstances
considered to permit a complaint on
incidents or matters that occurred more than two years’ prior
the alleged complaint,
as she should have in terms of
section 6(9)
of
the
Public Protector Act, and
alternatively in terms of PAJA.
[39]
The applicant contents, that the legal process applicable to state
contracts at the time when
the contract was procured, are not the
same as today.
[40]
The applicants failed to prove any prejudice alleged to be suffered
and have further failed to
proof that the specific findings and
recommendations of the first respondent should stand. It is rather
the rights of the public
that is affected by the exclusive and unfair
advantage resulting from a perpetual arrangement with the applicants.
[41]
The findings point to a failure by the fourth respondent to consider
the conflict of interest.
The finding made was that the second
applicant was an employee of the State and also an employee of the
first applicant. A declaration
of interest had to be concluded in
terms of on this conflict of interest that had arisen.
[42]
The Regulations remain valid as they have not been declared unlawful
and unconstitutional. At
the time when the first respondent made this
finding, and to date the Regulation is still valid and applicable.
The finding is
factually correct and lawful.
[43]
The section 6(9) inquiry provides the first respondent with
discretionary powers. Viewing the
rental Agreements, on an objective
basis which were concluded in 2001 and 2016, it is apparent that
there was a continuation of
the rendering of services.
CONCLUSION
[44]
The remedial action and the findings are rational in that the
evidence relied upon justifies
that a rational and reasonable
conclusion exists. I find that the applicants failed to demonstrate
that its potential interest
or existing interest are directly
affected by the findings and the recommendations.
[45]
Although I have decided to consider the merits of the application, I
find the review application
is dismissible on the basis that the
applicant lacks
locus standi
.
COSTS
[46]
It would therefore, be appropriate for the applicants to bear the
costs of this unnecessary application
for review.
ORDER
[47]
The following order is order-
(a)
The Applicants’ case is dismissed,
(b)
The Applicants non-compliance with Section
7(1) of PAJA and the late institution of judicial review proceedings
in respect of the
relief sought under paragraph 1 and 2 of the Notice
of Motion, is condoned,
(c)
The first Respondent is to liable for the
costs of this application on attorney and client scale, including the
costs of two counsels.
P
N MANAMELA
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of hearing:
30 August 2022
Judgment
delivered:
30 January 2023
APPEARANCES:
Counsels
for the Applicant:
Adv. A Botha SC
Attorneys
for the Applicant:
Werksmans Inc. Attorneys
Counsels
for the First Respondent:
Adv. B Shabalala and Adv. N
Ali
Attorneys
for the First Respondent:
Nompumelelo Hadebe Inc. Attorneys
Other
Respondents:
No Appearance
[1]
Act
23 of 1994.
[2]
GG
No. 40167, No. R. 877, 29 July 2016.
[3]
Act
3 of 2000.
[4]
Paragraph
109.1, p 113, Founding Affidavit.
[5]
Act
2 of 2000.
[6]
Morudi
v NC Housing Serivces and Development Co Limited
2019
(2) BCLR 261
(CC) at paras 29-30. See also
Gory
v Kolver N. O. and Others (Starke and Others Intervening)
2007
(4) SA 97 (CC).
[7]
2022
(4) SA 362 (CC).
[8]
2013
(3) BCLR 251
(CC), paras 35 and 43.
sino noindex
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