Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 576South Africa
Makaba Khumalo and Associates CC v Acting Director General Department of Water Affairs and Another (A36/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 576 (17 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
17 July 2023
Headnotes
a pre-project inception engagement meeting and on 15 February the appellant submitted a preliminary revised project budget.
Judgment
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## Makaba Khumalo and Associates CC v Acting Director General Department of Water Affairs and Another (A36/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 576 (17 July 2023)
Makaba Khumalo and Associates CC v Acting Director General Department of Water Affairs and Another (A36/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 576 (17 July 2023)
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sino date 17 July 2023
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: A36/2022
DOH: 22 February 2023
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
/YES
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
/YES
3.
REVISED.
DATE:
17 July 2023
SIGNATURE
In the matter of:
MAKABA
KHUMALO AND ASSOCIATES CC
Appellant
AND
THE
ACTING DIRECTOR GENERAL
DEPARTMENT
OF WATER AFFAIRS
First Respondent
MINISTER,
DEPARTMENT OF WATER
AND
SANITISATION
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
THIS JUDGMENT HAS BEEN
HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY
E-MAIL. THE DATE AND TIME OF HAND DOWN IS
DEEMED TO BE 17 JULY 2023
BAM J (TOLMAY J AND
MALINDI J Concurring)
A. Introduction
1.
This is an appeal against the decision of
the court
a quo
of
21 October 2020, (Kubushi J) sitting as court of first instance.
Before the court were two applications. The first was the appellant’s
application for a mandamus that the first respondent issue it with an
official order number and sign a service level agreement
(SLA) to
allow the appellant to implement the contract it had been awarded.
The second application was the respondents’ counter
application
for a review. On the appellant’s application the court found
that, on a preponderance of probabilities, the appellant
had not
proved its case. The court’s reasons for its conclusion are
precisely the reasons for upholding the review application.
The award
of Tender W[...] was thus set aside.
B. The Parties
2.
The
appellant, Makaba-Khumalo and Associates CC, is a close corporation
duly incorporated in terms of the Close Corporations Act
[1]
,
with its registered address recorded as 1[...] N[...] J[...] Square,
2[...] J[...] Avenue, Centurion, Gauteng. The appellant renders
management consultancy services as part of its business. Throughout
these proceedings, the appellant has been represented by its
sole
member, Mr Hlabezulu Khumalo.
3.
The first respondent is the Director
General of the Department of Water and Sanitation with its offices
situated at 1[…]th
Floor S[...] Building, F[...] B[...]
Street, Pretoria. The second respondent is the Minister of the
Department of Water and Sanitation.
The Minister was served via the
State Attorney at Salu Building, Corner Andries and Schoeman Streets,
Pretoria.
C. Background
4.
On 14 December 2017 the appellant submitted
a bid in response to tender number W[...] published by the Department
of Water and Sanitation.
The tender was for the development of a
business case and transition to an independent economic regulator;
finalisation of the
pricing regulations and infrastructure funding
model; and strengthening of various regulatory tools, for a period of
36 months.
On 6 February 2018 the appellant’s bid priced at R 9
181 254.00, excluding VAT, saw it being declared the successful
bidder.
The Department issued the appellant with an appointment
letter which the appellant signed on 7 February 2018 accepting the
appointment.
The letter advised the appellant that, ’the
required services should only be rendered after the issue of an
official order
and conclusion of a service level agreement’.
On 9 February 2018 the Appellant and first respondent held a
pre-project
inception engagement meeting and on 15 February the
appellant submitted a preliminary revised project budget.
5.
On 5 April 2018, the appellant sent back
the draft contract it had been asked to review before same could be
signed by the Department.
It further relayed to the Department that
it was in agreement with the terms. The contract had the commencement
date of 1 April
2018 with the expected completion date being 30 March
2021. The appellant became concerned when it did not hear from the
Department
after returning the contract and began writing letters of
enquiry to several officials as set out in the record. On 30
May
2018, a Mr. Anil Singh, Deputy Director General: Regulation (DDG
Regulation) wrote back and advised that the Supply Chain Unit had
received two legal challenges to the tender process and that the
matter was being dealt with internally.
6.
Three months went by with no communication
from the department. On 18 September 2018, the Department advised the
appellant that
there were suspected irregularities in the process
leading up to its appointment. On 20 March 2019, the Department’s
Internal
Audit unit completed its investigation. In a letter dated 12
April 2019, the Department advised the appellant of the
administrative
irregularities and further proposed a withdrawal of
the appointment by mutual agreement. By that time it is not in
dispute that
the Department had already been served with the
appellant’s papers for a mandamus on 26 March 2019. The
appellant rejected
the offer of a mutual withdrawal of its
appointment. On 6 September 2019, the Department filed its answering
affidavit which was
due on 4 April 2019 simultaneously with a counter
application to review and set aside the decisions of the Bid
Evaluation Committee
(BEC) and Bid Adjudication Committee (BAC),
including the letter of appointment.
7.
The court a
quo
dismissed the main application and upheld the counter application. In
dismissing the main application, the court found that: (i)
that the
appellant had failed to disclose a conflict of interest between one
of its team members, a Ms. Mtetwa, and one Ms. Moshidi,
the
chairperson of the BEC; (ii) that the appellant was not tax
compliant; (iii) the BEC’s failure to consider and record
that
the appellant’s bid price excluded VAT constituted a reviewable
irregularity; finally, and despite there being a dispute
of fact,
(iv) that the appellant had failed to sign all the tender documents.
8.
The
court further concluded that there was a satisfactory explanation for
the delay in launching the review application. From
reading the
judgement, it is not entirely clear whether the court made the remark
having concluded that there had not been a delay
or that there had
been an unreasonable delay, for which an adequate explanation had
been provided, and on that basis chose to condone
it. It then
proceeded to review and set aside the decision of the BEC of 29
January 2018 and that of the BAC of 1 February 2018.
The court
further declared the letter of appointment null and void. The
appellant’s application for leave to appeal was turned
down by
the court
a
quo,
on 9 June 2020. The present appeal is with leave of the Supreme Court
of Appeal, which was granted on 21 October 2021. Before us,
the
applicant contested most of the court quo’s findings, beginning
with the court’s conclusion on the issue of delay.
The review
had been brought on the basis of the Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act
[2]
(PAJA) and on the common law principle of legality. Having made up
its mind that the correct route to bring a self-review is that
of
legality, the court recorded that it would ignore all references to
(PAJA)
[3]
.
(i) Delay
9.
Before the court
a
quo
and in this court, the appellant
made the point that the respondents were grossly out of time in
filing the review. Underscoring
that the court had erred, the
appellant pointed to the following:
(i) The sole basis for
the court’s finding on the issue of delay was that the
documents and evidence pertinent to the merits
of the review were
available. The appellant submits that whilst this is one of the
considerations it is not the only consideration.
(ii) By referring to the
period of the delay as being 11 months, the court misdirected itself.
The delay was in fact 19 months.
(iii) Finally, whilst the
court had correctly accepted that no explicit application for
condonation was required in a legality review,
it ignored an
important injunction of the Constitutional Court that no discretion
can be exercised in the air.
10.
Before this court, the respondents accepted
that their answering affidavit did not address the delay in launching
the review at
all. Instead, the answering affidavit explained only
the reasons the Department did not and could not issue the appellant
with
an official order for the Tender and sign a service level
agreement, as sought in the appellant’s notice of motion. The
court
a quo
confirmed that the clock starts ticking from the date the applicant
became aware or ought reasonably to have been aware of the
action
taken. Disposing of the appellant’s challenge of undue delay,
the court reasoned:
'I find that the
applicant’s argument that there has been undue delay in this
instance, to not be acceptable. Firstly, it
need to be said that this
is not a case where the court is faced with a situation where due to
the delay, documents and evidence
are lost or destroyed thus
undermining the court’s ability to fully evaluate the
allegation of illegality. In this instance
the evidence is available
and I have been able to evaluate the alleged irregularity and found
it to exist.
Secondly,
the explanation proffered by the Department as to why the review was
done eleven (11) months after the appointment was
made, is to me,
satisfactory.’
[4]
11.
The rule against delay was espoused in
Altech Radio Holdings (Pty) Limited and
Others
v
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality,
where the court said:
‘…
[I]s
a principle that flows directly from the rule of law and its
requirement for certainty. The Constitutional Court has held that
there is a strong public interest in both certainty and finality.’
[5]
12.
In
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Limited
v
Gijima Holdings (Pty) Limited
,
(
SITA),
prior to concluding that SITA had delayed launching its self-review,
it was said:
‘
The
reason for requiring reviews to be instituted without undue delay is
thus to ensure certainty and promote legality: time is
of utmost
importance. In Merafong Cameron J said:
“
The
rule against delay in instituting review exists for good reason: to
curb the potential prejudice that would ensue if the lawfulness
of
the decision remains uncertain. Protracted delays could give rise to
calamitous effects. Not just for those who rely upon the
decision but
also for the efficient functioning of the decision-making body
itself.
”
‘
[6]
13.
When
assessing
delay in a legality review, the test, as referred to by the court
a
quo
, and extracted from
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality
v
Asla
Construction (Pty) Ltd
, involves a two
staged enquiry. The first stage is a factual enquiry:
‘
[48]…Firstly,
it must be determined whether the delay is unreasonable or undue.
This is a factual enquiry upon which
a value judgment is made, having
regard to the circumstances of the matter. Secondly, if the
delay is unreasonable, the question
becomes whether the Court’s
discretion should nevertheless be exercised to overlook the delay to
entertain the application.
[49]
The standard to be applied in assessing delay under both PAJA and
legality is thus whether the delay was unreasonable. Moreover,
in
both assessments the proverbial clock starts running from the date
that the applicant became aware or reasonably ought to have
become
aware of the action taken…’
[7]
14.
There are a number of reasons as to why the
court’s approach in assessing delay makes it susceptible to
attack. To start with,
the court's finding rested solely on the basis
that documents and evidence were not lost and that the court’s
ability to
evaluate the alleged irregularities was not undermined. It
is not clear whether the court was satisfied that the delay, although
unreasonable, was ameliorated by the explanation and chose to ignore
it or that there had not been a delay at all. Owing to the
lack of
clarity, one cannot be sure whether the court had exercised its
discretion at all on the issue. Accordingly, this court
is at large
to evaluate the issue based on the common cause facts. In so doing we
are fortified by the observations of the Constitutional
Court in
City
of Cape Town
v
Aurecon
South Africa (Pty) Ltd
that:
‘…
There
can be no question of undue interference by the SCA where no
discretion to grant condonation has been exercised by the High
Court. If anything, the SCA had exercised a narrow discretion in
refusing to grant condonation.[43] As was recently
held by this
Court, “[i]nterference on appeal in a lower court’s
exercise of a discretion is possible only if the discretion
was not
judicially exercised.’
[8]
15.
The court was obliged to take into account,
amongst others, the prejudice the delay would have on the appellant
and the fullness
of the explanation. Also important to note is that
the period of the delay was 19 and not 11 months as calculated by the
respondents
and the court. In any event, our conclusion is that the
court’s conclusions on the question of delay was reached
without
taking all the facts into account. The Department’s
case for the delay in launching this review, or the lack thereof —
as it admits that it did not address the issue at all — was
wanting and characterised by a singular lack of candidness. Part
of
that reticence to account fully before the court may be inferred from
the extract below in the Department’s answering
affidavit:
‘
During
August 2018, the Department received complaints from two bidders who
sought amongst others the review of the adjudication
process that led
to the appointment of the applicant. The two bidders PwC… and
an entity named Exceed Empowerment Services
(Pty) Ltd whose bid was
excluded. The letters of complaint are attached herewith and marked
annexure MT5 and MT6.’
16.
The statement that the Department received
letters of complaints in August 2018 is not borne out by the record.
When the court was
dealing with the application for the mandamus, it
indirectly accepted that the Department had received the complaints
in March
2018 and it noted that the letter from PwC is dated 26 March
while the one from Webster Attorneys is dated 28 March 2018. In
addition,
as early as on 30 May 2018, Mr Anil Singh, an official of
the Department, no less than DDG: Regulation in rank, had written to
the appellant copying several members of the Department advising that
the Department’s supply chain unit had received challenges
to
the appellant’s appointment. The statement is accordingly
undermined by the record.
17.
That the letters are both dated March 2018
and the Department never explained to the court whether they were
delivered by e-mail
or by ordinary post or hand delivered, in which
case, a date stamp would be evidence of when the Department received
them, is on
its own telling. It is most probable, based on Singh’s
letter, that the PwC letter had been e-mailed to the Department in
March 2018 already, if not, in April but certainly not later than 30
May 2018. As for the letter from Webster attorneys, it is
not
addressed to anyone. It makes no reference to any person in the
Department. Apart from not carrying any email address, the
letter
makes no sense at all. It requests that the implementation of the
tender be put on hold and further advises that its company,
Exceed
Empowerment, does not appear in the Successful Bidder list. When
considering that this particular bidder’s bid had
neither been
acknowledged nor evaluated by the Department, it is incomprehensible
how the respondents regarded the letter as a
legitimate complaint
warranting the Department’s attention, let alone an
investigation. This too was never explained to the
court by the
respondents.
18.
Lastly, if the Department’s word is
to be accepted that it received the letters of complaint in August
2018, which on its
own invites an answer as to the Department’s
failure to proceed with the exercise towards implementation for six
months since
the letter of appointment, the terse statement below
does little, if anything, to explain the delay from 7 February and
August
2018:
‘
Thereafter,
between the period February to August 2018, a series of
pre-contractual engagements took place between the applicant
and
officials of the Department, including a draft contract which the
applicant was requested to review.’
19.
As a matter of fact, the last communication
exchanged between the appellant and the Department towards
implementation of the tender
was on 5 April 2018, when former
returned a contract it was asked to review before signature.
Thereafter it all went quiet from
the Department’s side. So, it
is simply not borne out by the record that there were pre-contractual
activities from February
till August. This was six months —
from the date of the letter of appointment to the date of the alleged
receipt of complaints
— for which the Department provided no
explanation.
20.
A further consideration is that while the
Department was comfortable to inform the court that the investigation
was completed on
20 March 2019, it never informed the court when the
Department’s Internal Audit was actually instructed to conduct
the audit.
It did not provide a single email communication or
internal memorandum, or minute, of when the decision was taken; when
it was
conveyed to the internal Audit; and when the investigation
commenced.
21.
The Department provided no explanation why
it took seven months — from August 2018 to 20 March 2019 —
to complete an
internal investigation, involving only four bidders.
Having concluded its internal investigation on 20 March 2019, it
would be
a further six months before the Department filed its review
by way of a counter application. The last six months too was never
explained. In total the period that had lapsed since the letter of
appointment was issued is 19 months. In
Aurecon
South Africa (Pty) Ltd
v
City
of Cape Town
, the SCA, rejecting the
City’s contentions that it launched the review as soon as it
had information that the tender was
tainted by irregularities,
stated:
‘
That
interpretation would automatically entitle every aggrieved applicant
to an unqualified right to institute judicial review only
upon
gaining knowledge that a decision (and its underlying reasons), of
which he or she had been aware all along, was tainted by
irregularity, whenever that might be. This result is untenable as it
disregards the potential prejudice to the respondent (the
appellant
here) and the public interest in the finality of administrative
decisions and the exercise of administrative functions.’
[9]
22.
The delay in launching the review was stark
and it called for an explanation, which was never provided. But as we
know, this is
not the end of the enquiry and so, we proceed to
evaluate the Department’s prospects of success based on the
court’s
findings.
(ii) Conflict of Interest
23.
The appellant’s case before the court
a quo
and
this court is that there was no relationship to disclose and
certainly no conflict of interest. The background facts to this
finding are: One of the appellant’s team members, a Ms
Nonhlanhla Johanna Mtetwa had previously worked in the department
as
part of two consultant companies between December 2011 to March 2014.
Her CV says she worked as an administrator. During the
period Ms.
Mtetwa reported to Ms. Moshidi and had listed the latter as one of
her references. The court began its analysis by making
reference to
SBD4 form, the form dealing with declarations of interest. The
opening paragraph to SBD4 reads:
‘…
In
view of possible allegations of favouritism, should the resulting bid
or part thereof, be awarded to persons
employed
by the state,
or t
o
persons connected with or related to them
,
it is required that the bidder or his / her authorised representative
declare his /her position in relation to the evaluating/adjudicating
authority where-
-
the bidder is…
-
The legal person on whose behalf the
bidding document is signed,
has a
relationship with
persons / a person
who are/is involved in the evaluation and or adjudication of the bid
(s), or where it is known that such
a
relationship exists
between the person
or persons for or on whose behalf the declarant acts and persons who
are involved with the evaluation and or
adjudication of the bid. (Own
underline)
24.
Question 2.9 in SBD4, which incidentally is marked 2.10, reads:
‘
Are
you, or any person connected with the bidder aware of
any
relationship
(family, friend, or other)
between any other bidder and any persons employed by the state who
may be involved with the evaluation
and or adjudication of this bid?’
(Own underline)
The appellant’s
answer to the question is, ‘No.’ The court after its
analysis found that:
‘
By
not declaring that the applicant or anyone of its employees know Ms
Moshidi, the applicant made a false declaration and its bid
ought to
have been rejected.’
25.
This was the court’s first incorrect finding. SBD4 is about
relationships not knowledge
of a person. To buttress the claim of a
relationship, the respondents did no more than refer to Ms. Mtetwa’s
being part of
a consultant firm that had done work for the Department
and the fact that she had listed Ms. Moshidi as a referee in her CV.
We
will revert to this issue. Next, the court made reference to an
enquiry made by the investigation team. A question was asked of
Mr.
Khumalo, whether he or any member of his team and or associates had a
relationship with members of the BEC or were aware of
any possible
conflict of interest, which Mr. Khumalo denied stating that neither
he nor the members of his team knew Ms. Moshidi
would be in the BEC.
26.
The contention which found favour with the court
a quo
was
that in its pricing proposal the appellant had listed Ms. Mtetwa as a
project administrator, a position said to be just under
Mr.
Khumalo’s. Drawing from the listing, it was argued that it was
highly unlikely that the appellant would not have known
that Ms.
Mtetwa 'was attached’ to the Department for three years and
that he did not see that her CV had listed a senior
official of the
Department as reference. Agreeing with the contention the court
remarked:
‘
The
contention made, correctly so, is the failure to disclose this fact
was simply inexcusable.’
27.
The error in the court’s reasoning was the failure to recognise
that none of what
the respondents had placed before it established
the existence of a relationship between Ms. Moshidi and Ms. Mtetwa.
As we had
indicated earlier, SBD4 calls for disclosure of
relationships, not just knowing a person. At no point did the
respondents
place facts before the court to establish the existence
of a relationship between the two individuals. Their claim of a
relationship
pivoted around the word, ‘knew’ and the
phrase ‘attached to the department,’ whatever the latter
may mean,
but they failed to prove the existence of a relationship.
Before the court
a
quo
and in this court the respondents relied on speculation and
conjecture
[10]
,
because it is simply not possible to infer a relationship, much less
a conflict of interest, from reading a name listed in a CV
as a
referee. Thousands of young people have former teachers, former
headmasters, former supervisors and managers listed as references
in
their CV. Can it be argued rationally and persuasively that in all
those instances there is a relationship? The answer is a
‘No’.
28.
The nature of the relationship between Ms. Mtetwa and the Department
was also incorrectly
characterised in the judgement. Ms. Mtetwa was
not the consultant to the Department. She had been brought in, at the
level of an
administrator, by a firm that had been awarded a
consultancy contract. As part of the appellant’s team, she
would have earned
about R 201 000.00 over the period of the tender.
One must also remember that the respondents were applicants in the
counter application
and had the opportunity to reply to the
appellant’s answers as set out in its reply. They never did.
Hence the dispute fell
to be determined on the basis of the Plascon
Evans rule, in favour of the appellant, as the respondent. For all
these reasons,
the court erred and its finding cannot stand. There
was no relationship established by the respondents which called for
disclosure
on the part of the appellant and certainly, no conflict of
interest.
(iii) Tax Compliance
Tax Clearance
Certificate (TCC)
29.
Despite the claims made by the respondents that the appellant’s
submission of a copy
of the TCC was invalid, the Court
a quo
accepted that the appellant had submitted a valid TCC with its
bid. However, it was submitted that when the BEC sat on 26 January
2019, the print drawn by the Department’s officials from the
Treasury’s Central Supplier Database, (CSD) to validate
the
appellant’s tax compliance status, showed that the appellant
was non tax compliant. The court concluded that the irregularity
complained of had nothing to do with the validity of the appellant’s
TCC but with the conduct of the respondents’ officials
in
failing to notify the applicant about its non-compliance status and
affording it the opportunity to rectify it. As a result,
there was no
evidence on file that the non-compliance status was ever rectified,
hence the TCC considered during the evaluation
process was invalid.
Before going any further, in many parts of the judgment and the
record itself, it is written that the BEC
met on 24 January 2019. It
is therefore unclear how a printout drawn from the CSD on 26 January
would have served before the BEC
on 24 January 2019.
30.
In their allusion to Note 7
[11]
,
both in the court a
quo
and in this court, the respondents left out two critical parts. Those
parts are produced here-below:
‘
Paragraph
3.3: Accounting Officers and Accounting Authorities must therefore
accept printed or copies of TCC submitted by bidders
and verify them
on e-Filing…
Application
during supply chain management process
:
4.1 Designated employee
(s) must verify the bidder’s tax compliance status prior to the
finalisation of the award of the bid
or price quotation.
4.2: Where the
recommended bidder is not tax compliant, the bidder must be notified
of their non-tax compliant status and be granted
reasonable timeframe
to rectify their tax compliance status with the SARS. The bidder must
therefore provide the procuring entity
with proof of its tax
compliance status which must be verified via CSD or eFiling.’
31.
Before the court
a
quo
and this court, the appellant made submissions explaining what is
essentially captured in paragraph 26 of this judgment. It is
because
of the fluid nature of CSD that taxpayers are afforded the
opportunity to rectify their status with SARS should the CSD
show a
non-compliance tax status. On the respondents’ version none of
this was done. Before this court, the respondents accept
that the
appellant had submitted a valid TCC but averred that they had failed
to advise and afford the appellant the opportunity
to rectify the
non-compliance status depicted on CSD. But the respondents were
precluded from relying on a ground that they had
never pleaded. It is
thus for this court to evaluate the ground on the basis of the cases
made by the respective parties in their
pleadings
[12]
.
In
Altech
the court remarked:
‘
Search
hard enough in public procurement cases, such as this and one will
surely find compliance failures along the way. There will
seldom be a
public procurement process entirely without flaw. But, perfection is
not demanded and not every flaw is fatal. Nor
does every flaw in a
tender process amount to an irregularity, much less a material
irregularity. Public contracts do not fall
to be invalidated for
immaterial or inconsequential irregularities. Indeed, as it has been
put, ‘[n]ot every slip in the
administration of tenders is
necessarily to be visited by judicial sanction’
[13]
32.
In
AllPay Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd
v
Chief
Executive Officer South African Social Security Agency,
it was
said:
‘…
The
proper approach is to establish, factually, whether an irregularity
occurred. Then the irregularity must be legally evaluated
to
determine whether it amounts to a ground of review under PAJA. This
legal evaluation must, where appropriate, take into account
the
materiality of any deviance from legal requirements, by linking the
question of compliance to the purpose of the provision,
before
concluding that a review ground under PAJA has been established.’
[14]
33.
The starting point in evaluating this ground is that the appellant
had met the requirements
of the Tender. It submitted a valid TCC. It
was for the respondents to advise the appellant upon learning of its
non-compliant
status on CSD. On their own version, they did not do
so. Having spent 19 months before bringing the review, it never once
occurred
to the respondents that they had flouted a critical aspect
of validating the appellant’s tax compliance status in the
procurement
process. They now plead with this court to throw them a
lifeline to undermine a contract they had voluntarily concluded.
We align ourselves with the comments of the court in
SITA
:
“…
On
the contrary, there is a higher duty on the state to respect the law,
to fulfil procedural requirements and to tread respectfully
when
dealing with rights. Government is not an indigent or bewildered
litigant, adrift on a sea of litigious uncertainty, to whom
the
courts must extend a procedure circumventing lifeline. It is the
Constitution’s primary agent. It must do right, and
it must do
it properly.”
[15]
34.
It follows that the court erred in upholding this ground and its
finding cannot stand.
Value Added Tax
35.
This point is recorded solely to be dismissed as it has no merit. The
Court
a quo
found that the BEC had failed to record and
consider that the applicant’s pricing was VAT exclusive whilst
the other bidders’
was VAT inclusive. It was submitted by
the respondents that the failure to record this distinction shows
that there was lack
of fairness. It is however, worth recording that
the respondents themselves submitted that even if the appellant’s
bid were
to be considered with VAT having been included, it would
still have been the lowest price at R10 466, 629, 60, while the
closest
contestant’s bid price, PwC’s stood at R 10 518,
162.17, including VAT.
36.
The BEC recommendation report is a very short report comprising four
pages. In no less than
three instances, the appellant’s bid
price is recorded specifically as VAT exclusive. Firstly, on page 124
is the heading:
Consideration of Points (Price and Preference). In a
small table, two entities are set out PwC and the appellant. The
column dealing
with price carries the heading, Bid Price/(VAT
exclusive), the appellant’s bid price is recorded as excluding
VAT at R9 181,
254. 00.
[16]
while PwC’s is recorded as R 10 518 162.17, the latter includes
VAT. In the very next page in one short paragraph, the appellant’s
bid price is again noted as VAT exclusive. Below the paragraph is the
final recommendation which sets out the appellant’s
bid price
with a clear note that it excludes VAT. Exactly what the respondents
meant with the submission that the BEC had failed
to record and
consider that the appellant’s bid price excludes VAT remains
unclear. It is plain from the BEC’s report
that this was not
the case. The point has no merit and the finding of the court in this
regard falls to be set aside.
Failure to sign
documents
37.
The court
a quo
found that the appellant’s failure to
sign paragraph 35 of page 36 of the ‘Acceptance of Terms and
Special Conditions’
form, constituted an irregularity. The
attack raised by the appellant is three-fold and, as will be
demonstrated, appears to have
elicited no real answer from the
respondents: It submitted that: (i) There was a factual dispute of
fact; (ii) No member
of the BEC or BAC, the two committees that
had passed the appellant’s bid, had confirmed the allegations
under oath; (iii)
The court a quo did not find, at least explicitly,
that the defence of the appellant was outlandish, unmeritorious or
fictitious
and that it fell to be rejected on paper. Both before this
court and in the court
a quo
, the respondents simply stated
that ‘despite this non-compliance by the applicant, the BEC
administrative checklist dated
18 January 2018 listed all four
bidders to have met the administrative requirements of the Tender as
part of Phase 1 compliance’.
They then repeated the court’s
finding that the failure to sign each and every form constituted an
irregularity which vitiated
the tender process.
38.
In
Allpay
the court informs that we must first consider
whether there has been an irregularity. Thereafter, we must consider
the materiality
of the deviation as against the requirements of the
statutory provision and its purpose. Nowhere in their papers both
before this
court and in the court
a quo
do the respondents
point to any material deviance from any legislative prescript. Nor do
they point to any harm or offence to the
purpose of any rule. If
anything, this particular point appears to have been a
make-weight-point. It, like all the so-called irregularities
raised
by the respondents were simply not irregularities at all. If one
reads the judgment of the court
a quo
, the fault in all of
these so-called irregularities, was placed at the doors of the
respondents.
39.
The appellant flatly denied that it had left blank spaces in
completing any of the forms.
Although the court had referred to the
Plascon Evans rule it incorrectly applied the rule as the appellant
was the respondent in
the review. The court also ignored that no
member of either the BEC or the BAC had confirmed the findings of the
Investigation
Committee under oath. Further, the court had not found,
explicitly, that the version of the appellant was unmeritorious and
fictitious
and on those bases fell to be dismissed on paper. It is
our conclusion that the court erred in upholding this ground as it
lacked
merit from the start.
Conclusion
40.
It is time to bring this long outstanding matter to an end. Our
conclusion is that the respondents
had failed to explain the delay in
bringing the review. Whether the court had exercised its discretion
to ignore the delay, given
its pronouncement that the delay had been
explained, or had found there had not been a delay, the court erred
and its finding falls
to be set aside. The finding of the court
disregarded the injunction of the court in
SITA
, that:
‘…
From
this, we see that no discretion can be exercised in the air. If we
are to exercise a discretion to overlook the inordinate
delay in this
matter, there must be a basis for us to do so. That basis may be
gleaned from facts placed before us by the parties
or objectively
available factors. We see no possible basis for the exercise of the
discretion here. That should be the end of the
matter.’
[17]
41.
We have already found that there is no merit to any of the alleged
irregularities. Accordingly,
the appeal must be upheld. It is
noteworthy that the respondents had not alleged anywhere that
granting of the order sought by
the appellant might be moot either
because the services had already been rendered by some other entity
or were no longer relevant
to the Department’s pre-determined
objectives. In our view, public interest will be best served by
upholding the rule
of law and holding the respondents to the contract
they had voluntarily concluded with the appellant, from whose
services the public
will benefit.
G. Order
42.
The appeal is upheld.
42.1
The order of the court
a quo
is set aside and is replaced with the following:
(i)
The first and second respondents must issue the appellant with an
official
order for tender number W[...] 1[...] within 30
days from
date of this order;
(ii)
The first and second respondents must sign the service level
agreement in
respect of tender number W[...] 1[...], within 30 days
from
date of this order;
and
(iii)
The application for review is dismissed with costs.
42.2
The respondents are ordered to pay the appellant’s costs of
appeal.
NN BAM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing:
22 February 2023
Date
of Judgement:
17 July 2023
Appearances:
For
Appellant:
Ms
L Mbanjwa
(An
Attorney with right of appearance)
Mbanjwa
Incorporated
Monument
Park,
Pretoria
For
Respondents:
Adv
M.P.D Chabedi
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney Pretoria
[1]
Act
69 of 1984
[2]
Act
3 of 2000
[3]
CaseLines,
070-22 paragraph 67 of the judgement
[4]
CaseLines
070-25 paragraph 75 of the judgement
[5]
1104/2019)
[2020] ZASCA 122
(5 October 2020), paragraph 16
[6]
(CCT254/16)
[2017] ZACC 40
;
2018 (2) BCLR 240
(CC);
2018 (2) SA 23
(CC) (14
November 2017), paragraph 44
[7]
[2019]
ZACC 15
, paragraphs 48-49
[8]
(CCT21/16)
[2017] ZACC 5
;
2017 (6) BCLR 730
(CC);
2017 (4) SA 223
(CC) (28
February 2017), paragraph 52
[9]
(20384/2014)
[2015] ZASCA 209
(9 December 2015), paragraph 16
[10]
Knoop
and Another NNO v Gupta (No 2) (
Case
No 116/2020)
[2020] ZASCA 163
(9 December 2020), See footnote 23:
‘
evidence
does not include contention, submission or conjecture.’
[11]
Note
7 is the Treasury Instruction Note issued during 2017/2018 financial
year, on 24 May 2017
[12]
South
African Transport and Allied Workers Union and Another
v
Garvas and Others
(CCT
112/11)
[2012] ZACC 13
;
2012 (8) BCLR 840
(CC);
[2012] 10 BLLR 959
(CC); (2012) 33 ILJ 1593 (CC);
2013 (1) SA 83
(CC) (13 June 2012),
paragraph 114:
‘
Holding
parties to pleadings is not pedantry. It is an integral part of the
principle of legal certainty which is an element of
the rule of law,
one of the values on which our Constitution is founded. Every party
contemplating a constitutional challenge
should know the
requirements it needs to satisfy and every other party likely to be
affected by the relief sought must know precisely
the case it is
expected to meet…’
[13]
note
3 paragraph 54
[14]
CCT48/13,
[2013] ZACC 42
, paragraph 28
[15]
Note
6, paragraph 50
[16]
CaseLines
029 -3
[17]
Note
6 paragraphs 43 and 49
sino noindex
make_database footer start
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