Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 574South Africa
Lesego Thabang Masilo (Pty) Ltd and Another v Transnet Group Capital and Another (28215/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 574 (18 July 2023)
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Lesego Thabang Masilo (Pty) Ltd and Another v Transnet Group Capital and Another (28215/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 574 (18 July 2023)
Lesego Thabang Masilo (Pty) Ltd and Another v Transnet Group Capital and Another (28215/2020) [2023] ZAGPPHC 574 (18 July 2023)
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sino date 18 July 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT
OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO 28215/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
(4)
Date: 18 July 2023
Signature:
In
the matter between:
LESEGO
THABANG MASILO (PTY) LTD
1
st
Applicant
LESEGO
THABANG
MASILO
2
nd
Applicant
And
TRANSNET
GROUP CAPITAL
1
st
Respondent
REG
NO: 1[...]
BOZ
TECHNICAL SERVICES AND PROJECT
2
nd
Respondent
MANAGEMENT
(PTY) LTD
REG
NO: 2[...]
JUDGMENT
NYATHI J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an interlocutory application
in terms of Rule30A of the Uniform Rules of Court in a pending review
application (the main
application) by the applicants. The order
sought is in the following terms:
1.1
That
the first respondent be ordered to dispatch to the Registrar of the
above Honourable Court within 10 days of the granting of
this order
the full and complete record of its decision to any matter in
question in the main application, which are or have at
any time been
in the first respondent’s possession or control as envisaged in
terms of Rule 53 (1) of the Uniform Rules of
Court, and to notify the
applicants that it has done so;
[2]
The said record is to include but
not limited to:
(a) The written submission by TRANSNET
FREIGHT to TRANSNET GROUP CAPITAL in relation to the sufficiency of
the funds as requested
by the Chairperson of the NATIONAL ACQUISITION
COUNCIL on the resolution of 17 April 2019.
(b) The contract of the second
respondent referred to as contract 4[...].
(c) Records of all deliberations of
the NAC which resulted in the withdrawal of tender number
3[...].0[...].
(d) The records that relate to the
making of the decision which the applicants seek to be reviewed and
set aside.
[3]
In the event of the first respondent
seeking to exclude certain documents from the record of his
decision/submission/approval, the
first respondent is hereby ordered
to provide a detailed index of such documents and reasons thereof to
justify the exclusion of
such documents.
[4]
In the event of the applicants
disputing the exclusion of one or more of the documents listed in
paragraph two above from the record
of each decision submission
approval, the applicants are hereby granted leave to approach the
above Honourable Court on the same
papers, supplemented, if
necessary, for further appropriate relief.
[5]
The applicants seek costs of this
application.
[6]
At the commencement of the hearing
Mr. Monnakgotla placed on record that prayers 2(a) and 2(b) in the
Notice of Motion will no longer
be pursued because as regards the
former, the documents became available as part of the annexures and
as for the latter, an undertaking
was made on behalf of the
respondents that the documents will be dispatched soon.
[7]
This then leaves prayers 2(c) and
2(d) up for contention in this application.
B.
BRIEF BACKGROUND
[8]
On 25 October 2018 the first
respondent advertised a tender for the supply and delivery of quarry
material containing tender number
3[...].0[...] and the closing date
of the tender was stipulated as 22 November 2018. Afterwards, an
extensive procurement process
which entailed the submission of
written applications and attending of briefing sessions was pursued.
[9]
On 14 June 2019 the applicants
received correspondence from the first respondent dated 2 May 2019
advising that it has decided to
withdraw the tender because of what
it characterized as the “change in circumstances” and
that therefore there was
no longer a need for the goods and services
previously sought. It is this decision that the applicants seek to
review. In terms
of the review application the first respondent was
required to deliver the record of the proceedings, as contemplated in
Rule 53.
[10]
On 4 August 2020 the first
respondent delivered to the applicants what it reported to be the
full and complete record as requested.
The applicants insists that
this record is incomplete. A further supplementary record was
subsequently delivered, this too, so
allege the applicants, is
incomplete.
[11]
Through this interim application the
applicants seek an order compelling the first respondent to dispatch
the full record of its
decision to cancel and/or withdraw tender
number 3[...].0[...], together with the record of proceedings leading
up to the impugned
decision for the cancellation.
[12]
The first respondent opposes this
application and rests its opposition on the premise that:
12.1
The documents had already been provided;
12.2
request for the contract between translate 3 trail and the second
respondent
is irrelevant; and lastly;
12.3
that no request for specific documents was made, but rather that the
applicants’
request was general in nature and could not be
complied with.
C.
INADEQUACY OF THE RECORD/THE MISSING
DOCUMENTS
[13]
Having regard to the concession made
and accepted by the parties in paragraph [6] above at the
commencement of this hearing, what
remains outstanding and subject of
this application, are the following:
13.1
Records of all deliberations of the NAC which resulted in the
withdrawal of
tender number 3[...].0[...].
13.2
Records relating to the making of the decision which the applicants
seek to
be reviewed and set aside.
D.
APPLICANTS’ SUBMISSIONS:
[14]
The applicants submit that the
purpose of Rule 53 is primarily intended to operate in the
applicants’ favour. It is there
to ensure that review
applications are not launched in the dark and the applicant would be
at the mercy of the respondent’s
answering affidavit to apply
to amend, at great cost, its notice of motion and supplement its
founding affidavit. The records allow
the applicant to properly
assess the lawfulness of the decision maker’s process.
[15]
The
applicants rely on the decision of
Democratic
Alliance v Acting National Director of Public Prosecutions
[1]
where the SCA held that:
“
Without
a record a court cannot perform its constitutionally entrenched
review function, with the result that a litigant’s
rights in
terms of section 34 of the Constitution to have a justiciable dispute
decided in a fair public hearing before the court
with all the issues
being ventilated, would be infringed”.
[16]
In placing reliance on the
aforementioned case, it is trite law that an applicant in review
proceedings is entitled to the full
and complete record of the
decision sought to be reviewed. (See:
South
African Football Association v Stanton Woodrush (Pty) t/a Steven
Smidt & Sons
2003 (3) SA 313
(SCA).
E.
MEANING OF RECORD
[17]
The
phrase “a record of proceedings”, has been described in
Johannesburg
City Council v The Administrator, Transvaal, and Another
[2]
by Hiemstra J (as he then was) as follows:
“
The
words record of proceedings cannot be otherwise construed, in my
view, than as a loose description of the documents, evidence,
arguments and other information before the tribunal relating to the
matter under review, at the time of the making of the decision
in
question. It may be a formal record and dossier of what has happened
before the tribunal, but it may also be a disjointed indication
of
the material that was at the tribunal's disposal.”
[18]
In
City
of Cape Town v South African National Road Agency Ltd
[3]
it was held that:
“
Any
record of deliberations by the decision-maker would be relevant and
susceptible to inclusion to the record … the content
of the
deliberations can often be the clearest indication of what the
decision-maker took into account and what it left out of
account.”
[19]
In
Helen
Suzman Foundation v Judicial Service Commission
[4]
the
majority stated the difference as follows (at 15B–C):
“
It
is helpful to point out that the rule 53 process differs from normal
discovery under
rule
35
of
the Uniform Rules of Court. Under rule 35 documents are discoverable
if relevant, and relevance is determined with reference
to the
pleadings. So, under the rule 35 discovery process, asking for
information not relevant to the pleaded case would be a fishing
expedition. Rule 53 reviews are different. The rule envisages the
grounds of review changing later. So, relevance is assessed as
it
relates to the decision sought to be reviewed, not the case pleaded
in the founding affidavit.”
[5]
F.
RESPONDENTS’ CASE
[20]
The first respondent opposes the
filing of the deliberations of the NAC which resulted in the
withdrawal of the tender and the records
relating to the making of
the decision. The first respondent contends that this is not a
request for a specific document, but merely
asserts generality.
[21]
Mr. Motepe for the respondents
argued that the question to be answered is:
“
When
NAC took the decision to cancel the tender, what was before it?”
He then proceeded to answer by
referring to annexure “SV4” which is a submission by
Transnet Group Capital to the NAC
asking for the tender to be
cancelled. In paragraph 9 thereof it bears the caption “
reasons
for proposed none award of business.”
It then substantiates as follows: “
it
came to the project team's attention that the formation material
forms part of the national contract that Transnet freight rail
has in
place after evaluation of the quarry material tender was concluded.
Transnet freight rail confirmed that there is already
an existing
contract (4[...]) For the supply and delivery of quarry material and
that the material will be issued as a free issue
and hence the
request to cancel this inquiry.”
G.
DISCUSSION
[22]
While the above may be true, the
correct answer to the above inquiry, in my opinion, lies in the
proper interpretation of the question.
It is not only what was before
the NAC that is required to be availed, but the record of the
deliberations of the NAC meetings
where the above documents were
before it as well as the deliberations that took place. This should
normally include the agenda
and minutes of the meetings and where
recorded, the record and possibly transcripts thereof.
[23]
The Helen Suzman Foundation matter
referred to above makes that abundantly clear.
[24]
Regarding the issue of costs, the
law is settled and no case has been made for a departure from the
basic rule that costs ought
to follow the cause.
H.
CONCLUSION
[25]
The applicants have made a
compelling case for the relief sought; in the result the following
order is made:
1.
The first respondent is hereby
ordered to dispatch to the Registrar of above Honourable Court, the
following documents:
a.
Records of all deliberations/submissions
which led to the approval by the national acquisition council on 17
April 2019, to withdraw
the first respondent’s tender number
3[...].0[...].
b.
Records relating to the making of the
decision/approval by the national acquisition council on 17 April
2019, which resulted in
the withdrawal of the tender number
3[...].0[...].
2.
In the event of the first respondent
seeking to exclude certain documents from the record office decision
/ submission / approval,
the first respondent hereby order to provide
detailed index of such documents and the reasons thereof to justify
the exclusion
of such documents. In the event of the applicants
disputing the exclusion of one or more of the documents listed in
paragraph four
above, from the record of his
decision/submission/approval, the applicants are hereby granted leave
to approach the above Honourable
Court on the same papers,
supplemented, if necessary, for further appropriate relief.
3.
The first respondent is hereby ordered to
pay the costs of this application.
J.S.
NYATHI
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date of hearing:
23 May 2022
Date of Judgment:
18 July 2023
On behalf of the
Applicants:
Adv. L. Monnakgotla
Instructed
by:
Ntantiso
Attorneys.
E-mail:
siphathekile@ntantisoattorneys.co.za
;
yanga@ntantisoattorneys.co.za
On behalf of the
Respondents:
Adv. J. Motepe SC
With: Adv.
Hlalethoa
Instructed
by:
DIALE
MOGASHOA Attorneys.
E-mail:
Donald@dm-inc.co.za
Delivery
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploaded on the
CaseLines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be
18
July 2023
.
[1]
Democratic
Alliance v Acting National Director of Public Prosecutions and
Others
2012 (3) SA 486
(SCA).
[2]
Johannesburg
City Council v. The Administrator, Transvaal and Another 1969 (2) SA
72 (T).
[3]
City
of Cape Town v. SANRAL Ltd [2013] ZAWCHC (High Court SANRAL)
[1]
[4]
Helen
Suzman Foundation v Judicial Service Commission
2018 (4) SA 1
(CC);
See also
Makate
v Joosub NO
(unreported,
GP case no 57882/19 dated 30 June 2020).
[5]
Quoted
from Erasmus Superior Court Practice – RS 20, 2022, D1-107
footnote 8.
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