Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 720South Africa
Iswelethu Cemforce CC v Trustees for the time being of the National Education Collaboration Trust and Another (17883/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 720 (21 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
21 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Iswelethu Cemforce CC v Trustees for the time being of the National Education Collaboration Trust and Another (17883/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 720 (21 August 2023)
Iswelethu Cemforce CC v Trustees for the time being of the National Education Collaboration Trust and Another (17883/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 720 (21 August 2023)
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sino date 21 August 2023
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case no:
17883/2021
(1)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(2)
REVISED:
SIGNATURE:
DATE: 21 August 2023
In
the matter between:
ISWELETHU
CEMFORCE CC
Applicant
and
THE
TRUSTEES FOR THE TIME BEING OF
THE
NATIONAL EDUCATION COLLABORATION
TRUST
First
Respondent
THE
MINISTER: GOVERNMENT OF THE
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA: DEPT OF BASIC
EDUCATION
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN J
Introduction
1.
The applicant,
Izwelethu Cemforce CC (Cemforce) applies to review a procurement
process concerning the provision of sanitation services
to rural
schools in KwaZulu-Natal, the Eastern Cape and Limpopo. The
review is under the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act 3 of 2000
(PAJA). The procurement process entails soliciting bids for the
appointment to a panel of professional service
providers to provide,
for a three-year period, planning, design, construction supervision
and related services to build toilet structures
at identified
schools.
2.
Cemforce
is in the business of providing sanitation solutions, specializing in
constructing and providing toilet structures.
It has been in
the business since 2002. Cemforce’s ‘VIP toilet product’
is approved by a statutory body known as Agrément
South Africa.
The product has been tested by the CSIR and accepted by government as
in conformity with national standards.
[1]
Cemforce has completed over 213 sanitation projects providing its VIP
toilet product.
3.
The first respondent,
the National Education Collaboration Trust (NECT) has been appointed
by the Department of Basic Education (the
Department) as the
implementing agent to assist to roll out a project known as the
Sanitation Appropriate for Education Project (the
SAFE project).
The SAFE Project is an initiative led by the Department to eradicate
pit latrines and provide dignified sanitary
and latrines facilities
in public schools. Its primary objective is to replace pit
toilets with appropriate sanitation. The
Department falls
under the second respondent, the Minister of Basic Education (the
Minister).
4.
The impugned tender
process is restricted to tenders from providers who can provide what
is known as a dry sanitation system.
This is a system which
separates urine from excrement, enables the evaporation of urine and
the drying of excrement in a substructure
followed by its periodic
removal. It is common cause that a dry sanitation system
involves technology that qualifies as an
alternative or innovative
building technology. The procurement process has two
phases. The first phase entailed
inviting expressions of
interest from potential bidders for inclusion on a panel. In
the second phase, only pre-qualified registered
bidders are eligible
to submit tenders. They do so by submitting quotes to construct
new ablution facilities for various schools
in KwaZulu-Natal, the
Eastern Cape or Limpopo Province.
5.
The
case pleaded and advanced by the applicant has evolved as the
litigation has unfolded, and in the result, this is a case where
caution must be exercised so that only the issues that are duly and
fairly canvassed on the affidavits are decided. During
argument, the applicant’s counsel advanced the case on two main
bases. First, it was contended that the specification or
requirement that the system be a dry sanitation system (the dry
sanitation specification) is irrational and unlawful. Secondly, a
formal qualifying criterion is impugned as irrational and unlawful:
specifically a specification or requirement that the technology
offered must be certified either by Agrément South Africa or under
the South African National Standards (SANS) system (the standards
specification). The applicant submits that that Regulation
18(15) of the Regulations relating to Minimum Norms and Standards
for
Public School Infrastructure specifically requires Agrément
certification.
[2]
Regulation 18(15) provides:
‘
Where
the use of alternative or innovative building technologies are to be
considered for the implementation of the norms and standards
contained in these Regulations, certification is required from
Agrément South Africa.’
6.
SANS
certification is obtained from the South African Bureau of Standards,
being the national standards body responsible for developing,
maintaining and promoting South African National Standards under the
Standards Act 8 of 2008
.
Agrément
South Africa is a body recognized and regulated under the Agrément
South Africa Act 11 of 2015 (the Agrément Act).
[3]
Its objects are multifold but essentially concern the use and
certification of fit-for-purpose ‘non-standardised construction
related products or systems.’
[4]
7.
Viewed simply, the
applicant’s grievance is that although its product is certified by
Agrément South Africa, it is not a dry sanitation
system and the
applicant is thereby excluded from consideration. The
applicant is further aggrieved as it takes the view
that because one
is dealing with alternative or innovative technologies, only products
that are certified by Agrément South Africa,
as its product is, can
lawfully be considered.
8.
It
should be noted upfront that NECT has already concluded contracts
with service providers in respect of multiple schools.
That
emerged from the Rule 53 record and is dealt with in the
supplementary founding affidavit and the NECT’s answering
affidavit.
Their appointment was pursuant to an invitation to
bid dated 21 January 2021.
[5]
As foreshadowed, only pre-qualified tenderers registered for the NECT
Infrastructure Framework Database were eligible.
On 25 February
2021, the Bid Adjudication Committee appointed contractors.
[6]
Works have commenced. The applicant does not seek to set aside
any of these tender awards or appointments. The
relief it seeks
will only affect future appointments. In this regard, it was
confirmed during the proceedings that there are
still many other
schools for which bids will be solicited in the roll-out of the
project.
9.
The application was
argued before me as a special motion on 16 May 2023. Mr Grobler
SC appeared for the applicant. Mr
Bham (with him Ms Tabata)
appeared for the NECT and Ms Hemraj SC (with her Advocates Bokaba and
Sonke) appeared for the Minister.
The issues in dispute
10.
It is necessary to
delineate the issues in dispute with reference to the case pleaded in
the founding affidavit and the supplementary
founding affidavit
delivered after the Rule 53 Record was supplied. I do so
with reference to the two main bases on which
the applicant impugns
the process referred to above.
11.
The subject of the
first main attack is the dry sanitation system specification.
This requirement appears initially in the expression
of interest
(phase one) and is carried through to the requests for quotations
(phase two). In the founding affidavit, the applicant’s
complaint was premised on the contention that the toilet structure
NECT required from bidders is one manufactured only by Bertram
(Pty)
Ltd known as ‘Amalooloo’ to the exclusion of any other product.
However, this premise falls in view of the
facts NECT put up in their
answering affidavit, which makes it clear that the process was not
limited to the ‘Amalooloo’ product,
but included any dry
sanitation system of which there are others. In fact,
contractors proposed six different technologies:
Amalooloo,
Cobro Concrete, Conloo/Conrite, Eldo Fox, Shocrete and Cemforce.
Without its premise, the case made out in
the founding
affidavit in respect of the dry sanitation system specification may
be said to be answered.
12.
However, on a more
generous reading of the founding affidavit the case may fairly be
understood to include a broader one that takes
issue with restricting
the tender process to any dry sanitation system to the exclusion of
other systems, even if water-wise.
Thus understood, the
complaint is that a dry sanitation system, such as the Amalooloo, is
unsafe and it is irrational to insist on
only that system. In
this regard it is said to pose a significant safety threat to younger
children and infants as children
can fall into the substructure pit,
where excrement is retained, contrary to the intentions of the SAFE
initiative. Other difficulties
with the system referred to that
they are said to smell bad and their lifespan can be affected by
solid waste disposal. The
system entails the dehydration of
solid waste, which may then be disposed of or used as fertilizer.
However, the subsequent
use of the solid waste is said to be unsafe
and cause illness (in part because it may contain Ascaris (roundworm
which is not eliminated
through the dehydration process). The
system is, moreover, dependent on rain water for handwashing which is
unsafe because,
it is said, it is cross-contaminated with impurities
such as bird- and insect waste. It is then submitted that
it is
irrational to then exclude other alternatives such as low flush
systems which only require 1-2 liters of water and which are more
hygienic.
13.
The NECT responds to
these complaints by stating that it is not for the applicant to
determine which systems are better in context:
that is for the
state functionaries to decide. The NECT provides a factual
response to the complaints about a dry sanitation
system and the
suitability or relative benefits of other systems, such as low-flush
systems. In short, the NECT explains that
the toilet systems
installed are designed to ensure that no-one can fall into them,
their depth is one metre and waste is regularly
removed. The
NECT accepts that the waste is used as an organic fertilizer but
contends it is safe to remove it. The NECT
disputes that
rainwater cannot be used to wash hands. The NECT explains that
low flush systems were not considered to be viable
because of the
scarcity of water in the affected rural areas and, it is said, they
cannot be regarded as a serious solution for communities
without
running water or a bulk water supply. The communities served by
the SAFE project are those in deep rural areas where
the main water
source is underground and tends to run dry within 10 years of
installing a borehole.
14.
During
argument, the applicant submitted that restricting bidders to a dry
sanitation system is in breach of Regulation 12(2) of the
Minimum
Norms and Standards Regulations.
[7]
This case was not, however, advanced in the founding affidavits and
was raised in reply.
15.
The
second main basis upon which the tender process is impugned relates
to the standards specification, in other words the specification
that
the alternative technology offered by bidders must be SANS Certified
or Agrément certified.
[8]
This is said to be in breach of Regulation 18(15) of the Regulations
Relating to Minimum Uniform Norms and Standards for Public
School
Infrastructure, which provides:
‘
Where
the use of alternative or innovative building technologies are to be
considered for the implement of the norms and standards
contained in
these regulations, certification is required from Agrément South
Africa.’
16.
The effect of this
contention, if correct, would be to restrict any tender process to
solicit alternative or innovative building technologies
to those that
are Agrément certified. As mentioned, although the applicant’s
product is not a dry sanitation system, it
does carry Agrément
certification.
17.
The Minister
defends the application by raising three technical or preliminary
points. First, the Minister contends that the
applicant ought
to have joined the appointed contractors. Second, the applicant
is said to lack standing to institute the application.
Third,
the Minister contends that the applicant has failed to make out a
prima facie
case in terms of PAJA’s essential requirements. More
specifically, it is contended that the grounds of review are not
adequately
pleaded and the definitional requirement that a decision
must ‘adversely affect the rights’ of a person to constitute
administrative
action is not met.
18.
During the hearing,
counsel for the NECT argued the case squarely on the merits of the
review. However, counsel had no
instructions to abandon
two technical or preliminary points advanced on its papers, being the
non-joinder and standing points also
raised by the Minister. On
the merits, the NECT defends the decision to restrict bidding to dry
sanitation systems centrally
on a factual basis, and by contending
that it is the appropriate sanitation solution for schools in deep
rural areas that are water
scarce and that have no bulk water supply
or running water, these being the affected schools. The NECT
defends the impugned
specification that allows either SANS or
Agrément certification on two grounds. The first, emphasized
in the answering affidavit
and heads of argument, amounts to a
contention that there is substantial compliance with the applicable
regulations, which, it is
submitted, permit of deviation based on
reasonable practicability. The second, emphasized in oral
argument is a legal
argument to the effect that the impugned
specification is authorized by the Minimum Norms and Standards
Regulations, properly construed
in light of the Agrément Act.
19.
In light of the above,
the following issues arise for decision:
19.1.
Does the applicant have
standing?
19.2.
Was the applicant
obliged to join the successful bidders who have commenced works?
19.3.
Has the applicant made
out a
prima facie
case under PAJA?
19.4.
Is the dry sanitation
systems specification lawful and rational?
19.5.
Is the standards
specification lawful and rational?
Standing
20.
The applicant
approaches the Court in its own interests, and, though only obliquely
asserted, the interests of other potential contractors
who may also
wish to tender on broader eligibility criteria. Only the
Minister articulated the challenge to the applicant’s
standing with
any clarity. The Minister contends that the applicant lacks
standing because its rights are not affected by the
process to date,
it has not submitted any expression of interest or bid and it only
has some future possible interest, insufficient
to ground standing.
As against this, the applicant pleaded and Mr Grobler submitted that
the applicant has standing because
it is wholly excluded from the
tender process due to its alleged illegality. If the
illegality is cured – specifically,
the restriction that only dry
sanitation systems may be supplied, it would be able to participate
in the tender process going forward.
21.
The
effect of the impugned specification, specifically the dry sanitation
systems specification, is to exclude the applicant from
being
appointed to the panel, and therefore to be considered for any of the
works. In
Giant
Concerts
,
the Constitutional Court held that
“
(t)he
own interest litigant must … demonstrate that his or her
interests or potential interests are directly affected by the
unlawfulness sought to be impugned”.
[9]
In
my view, the applicant has established own interest standing as
articulated in
Giant
Concerts
.
The exclusionary criteria impact directly and sufficiently on its
interests and potential interests.
Non-joinder
22.
The
Minister and the NECT pleaded that the applicant ought to have joined
the successful contractors who were appointed pursuant to
the three
requests for quotations submitted in January 2021.
[10]
The Minister advanced the point in argument too. The test for
joinder is whether a party has a legal interest in the
subject matter
of the litigation which may be affected prejudicially by the judgment
of the Court in the proceedings concerned.
[11]
In my view, the argument would have traction had the applicant
applied to review and set aside the awarded bids.
But,
the applicant made it clear in its supplementary founding affidavit
that it is not doing so and seeks no relief that will interfere
in
their rights as successful bidders. The stance adopted in the
supplementary founding affidavit limits the relief sought.
It
means that what is impugned is restricted to an exclusionary
criterion and can have only prospective effect, without interfering
with the rights of the affected contractors. In these somewhat
unusual circumstances, I conclude that it was not necessary
for the
successful contractors to be joined.
A
prima facie
case under PAJA
23.
The Minister submits
that the applicant has not made out a
prima
facie
case both
because the grounds of review relied upon under PAJA are not apparent
and because the applicant has not made out a case
that its rights are
adversely affected, this being a definitional requirement for a
decision to constitute administrative action.
24.
In
Bato
Star,
[12]
the Constitutional Court dealt with a submission that the cause of
action – there also a PAJA review –was not sufficiently clearly
or precisely disclosed to enable a response. The Constitutional
Court was willing in that case to assume in favour of the applicant
that the manner in which the case had been pleaded was not fatal to
its case. It did so in circumstances where the specific
provisions of PAJA relied upon were referred to only in written
argument. However, the Court held (footnotes omitted):
‘ …
Where
a litigant relies upon a statutory provision, it is not necessary to
specify it, but it must be clear from the facts alleged
by the
litigant that the section is relevant and operative. …. [i]t
must be emphasised that it is desirable for litigants
who seek to
review administrative action to identify clearly both the facts upon
which they base their cause of action, and the legal
basis of their
cause of action…
’
25.
There
is no question in this matter that this is an application for
judicial review in terms of PAJA. The applicant refers
expressly
to PAJA in the founding affidavit alleging that the
procurement decision is subject to the Act and constitutes
administrative action
susceptible to judicial review in terms of
section 6. The applicant does not refer in its founding
affidavits to the specific
grounds of review in section 6 upon which
it relies.
[13]
The
process is, rather, impugned as ‘unlawful’ and ‘irrational’
and the reasons for saying so are then spelt out, centrally
in
paragraphs 16 and 17 of the founding affidavit. While
there is and was no duty on the applicant to specify the statutory
provision relied upon, the question remains whether it is clear from
the facts alleged what sections are relevant and operative.
The applicant’s heads of argument do assist in this regard at least
in respect of the attack on the standards specification in
that
reliance is squarely placed on Regulation 18(15) of the Minimum Norms
and Standards Regulations and reference made to the Agrément
Act.
26.
In
my view, the way in which the applicant has set out its case in
respect of the standards specification satisfactorily discloses
a
cause of action under PAJA. The case, put simply, is that the
standards specification is unlawful because it breaches Regulation
18(5) of the Minimum Norms and
Standards Act. It
is unfortunate
that Mr Grobler does not specify which part of
section 6
of PAJA is
thereby triggered. However, in my view, this failure is not
fatal in this case because the argument is both clearly
advanced and
this is a classic legality argument embraced by
section 6(2)(a)(i)
,
section 6(2)(b)
or
section 6(2)(f)(i)
of PAJA.
[14]
27.
The
operative provisions relevant to the attack on the dry sanitation
system specification are less clear and one is left to speculate.
There are various possibly relevant and operative grounds of review.
In my view it was incumbent upon the applicant to specify
the grounds
relied upon as the Minister submitted. Nevertheless, I
will assume in the applicant’s favour that this
is not destructive
of this part of the case and in doing so I will approach the issue in
terms of
section 6(2)(e)(vi)
and
6
(2)(f) of PAJA, these being the
primary provisions dealing with arbitrariness and rationality.
[15]
28.
The Minister also
submitted that a case is not made out that the impugned procurement
process constitutes administrative action because
of a failure to
establish the definitional requirement that the impugned conduct
adversely affects the rights of the applicant.
29.
The
SCA dealt with this requirement in
Greys
Marine
[16]
in the following terms:
‘
While
PAJA's definition purports to restrict administrative action to
decisions that, as a fact, 'adversely affect the rights of any
person', I do not think that literal meaning could have been
intended. For administrative action to be characterised by its
effect
in particular cases (either beneficial or adverse) seems to me to be
paradoxical and also finds no support from the construction
that has
until now been placed on s 33 of the Constitution. Moreover, that
literal construction would be inconsonant with s 3(1),
which envisages that administrative action might or might not
affect rights adversely. The qualification, particularly
when
seen in conjunction with the requirement that it must have a 'direct
and external legal effect', was probably intended rather
to convey
that administrative action is action that has the capacity to
affect legal rights, the two qualifications in tandem
serving to
emphasise that administrative action impacts directly and immediately
on individuals.’
30.
There
is no dispute that a decision to award or refuse a tender constitutes
administrative action because the decision ‘materially
and directly
affects the- legal interests or rights of tenderers concerned.’
[17]
However, in this case the applicant is not a tenderer, successful or
unsuccessful as it was excluded from submitting a bid
due to an
exclusionary criterion which it contends is unlawful. In this
regard, I accept that there must a limit to when a
person can contend
that their rights are adversely affected due to their inability to
provide the works or goods sought in a tender
process. However,
a similar issue arose in
Earth
Life Africa,
[18]
in which a full bench of the Western Cape High Court held that a
ministerial determination that a quantity of new power generation
capacity would be sourced from nuclear energy adversely affected the
rights of non-nuclear power producers.
31.
In my view this is a
case where the rights of the applicant are adversely affected in the
sense articulated in
Greys
Marine
at least
because of the manner in which the case has been pleaded
.
Although the
applicant ultimately could not persist with the argument on the facts
established in answer, the case was advanced partly
on the basis that
the tender was limited to procuring one product, the Amalooloo.
The rights of suppliers of substantially
similar products can
legitimately contend that their rights are adversely affected
thereby, not least the rights that flow from section
217 of the
Constitution which imposes a duty on organs of State, when they
contract for goods or services to do so in accordance
with a system
which is ‘fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and
cost-effective’, which rights are given effect to in,
inter
alia,
the
Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000
and the
particular tender system in place.
The dry sanitation
system specification
32.
In
my view, the NECT has factually answered the complaint about the dry
sanitation system specification. I accept that
there is
scope under PAJA to review as irrational the use of an unsafe system
where the very purpose is to secure safety. But
on the evidence
I cannot conclude that the systems are unsafe. In this regard,
the applicant contends – in general terms
– that the system is
unsafe as a child can fall into the substructure. The NECT has
responded – also in general terms –
to say that the systems that
will be used are designed to ensure this cannot happen. I must
accept the NECT’s version, not
least on the limited information the
applicant supplies on the issue.
[19]
In my view, the further complaints about the drawbacks of a dry
sanitation system are insufficiently substantiated to ground
a
rationality review.
33.
The further argument
was advanced that it is irrational to exclude from consideration
other water-wise systems, such as low-flush
systems. In
my view, that case is also answered factually. As Mr Bham
submitted, on the evidence before me, the
affected schools are all in
water scarce, deep rural areas where there is no bulk-water supply or
running water. The use of
low-flush systems was accordingly
regarded as unsuitable. Moreover, the NECT explains that the
tender requirement must be understood
against the settling of water
scarcity in South Africa. Africa is categorised as a
water-stressed continent. The
2014 Intergovernmental Panel on
Climate Change projected that between 75 and 250 million people will
be adversely affected by this
climate change by 2020. The
selection of dry sanitation systems is informed by this context in
that it is understood that in
the long term, increased water scarcity
will negatively affect the use of modern technology including modern
waterborne flush toilets
that require large amounts of water.
34.
As
indicated above, during argument, a legality argument was advanced in
respect of the dry sanitation system to the effect that it
breaches
Regulation 12(2) of the Minimum Norms and Standards Regulations.
The point was only raised in the replying affidavit
and in my view it
would be unfair to entertain it because had it been duly raised in
the founding affidavits, the NECT would have
been able to explain the
precise extent to which the needs of individual schools were assessed
before a determination was made that
the dry sanitation system would
be a suitable one for the relevant schools.
[20]
The NECT was not pertinently afforded that opportunity. And in
any event, to the extent that the case is foreshadowed,
it is
answered in that the NECT explains that the schools earmarked for the
dry sanitation system are all in deep rural areas which
are water
scarce and without any bulk water system or running water.
35.
Accordingly, on the
affidavits before me, I am of the view that the applicant cannot
succeed in its review of the procurement system
based on the attack
on the dry sanitation system specification.
The standards
specification
36.
In
order to assess the lawfulness of the standards specification, it is
necessary to interpret the requirements of the Minimum Norms
and
Standards Regulations and the Agrément Act.
[21]
Specifically, to consider whether they do impose a requirement that a
dry sanitation system used in schools can
only
be
Agrément certified or whether it is lawful to specify that the
technology be either SANS certified or Agrément certified as
occurred
in this caser. This requires a fuller consideration of
the language, purpose and legislative context within which Regulation
18(15), which imposes the Agrément certification requirement, is
found. Also relevant is that Regulation 18(15) is
intended
to protect constitutional rights of learners, usually
children, by ensuring that children are educated in dignified, safe
and suitable
conditions.
[22]
37.
Regulation 4 of the
Minimum Norms and Standards Regulations is titled ‘Implementation
of regulations’. Regulation 4(1)(a),
upon which the NECT
relies, provides (with emphasis supplied):
‘
(1)
Notwithstanding the provisions of these Regulations, the norms and
standards contained in the regulations –
(a)
Must, subject to
subregulation (5) and
as
far as reasonably practicable
,
be applied to all new schools and additions, alterations and
improvements to schools, with the exception of schools contemplated
in subregulation (2); ….’
38.
Regulation
12 of the Minimum Norms and Standards Regulations deal with
Sanitation specifically.
[23]
Regulation 12(1) imposes a requirement,
inter
alia,
that sanitation facilities ‘comply with all relevant laws’.
39.
Regulation 18 is titled
‘Design considerations for all education areas’. It
contains 15 sub-regulations most of which apply
generally to all
education areas covering a range of issues such as ventilation and
background noise. Both Regulation
18(14) and (15) are
relevant, and read:
‘
(14)
In the planning and design of all schools contemplated in regulation
4(1)(a), school design must comply with all relevant
laws, including
the National Building Regulations, SANS 10-400 and the Occupational
Health and Safety Act 85 of 1993.
(15) Where the use
of alternative or innovative building technologies are to be
considered for the implementation of the norms
and standards
contained in these Regulations, certification is required from
Agrément South Africa.’
40.
Mr Bham submitted that
these requirements must be understood in context of the provisions of
the Agrément Act itself.
Notably, the Agrément Act does
not use the language of alternative or innovative building
technologies’. It uses the language
of a ‘non-standardised
construction related product’ which is defined in section 1 to mean
‘a construction related product
or system, which may not
necessarily be regarded as innovative and for which no SABS standard
specification exists or which falls
outside the scope and
requirements of an existing SABS standard specification.’ In
turn, a ‘construction related product
or system’ is defined to
mean ‘a product, material, component, element, system, method,
assembly, process or procedure intended
for use in the construction
of a building or infrastructures within the built environment.’
Under section 5(1) of the Agrément
Act, Agrément South Africa
is empowered to certify the fitness-for-purpose of a
‘non-standardised construction related product
or system.’
41.
In this context, Mr
Bham submitted that the standards specification serves a legitimate
purpose and complies with the Minimum Norms
and Standards Regulations
read with the Agrément Act. While it is common cause that a
dry sanitation system is an alternative
or innovative building
technology as contemplated by Regulation 18(15) of the Minimum Norms
and Standards Regulations, the standards
specification anticipates
that there may be features of such a system for which a SABS
standards specification exists and which must
then be in place.
The standards specification thus serves to ensure that nothing falls
between the cracks and that all necessary
certifications are in
place. As against this, Mr Grobler contended that Regulation
18(15) is quite clear in its requirements
and must be strictly
applied to the products in question.
42.
The Regulation must, in
my view, be interpreted consistently with the Agrément Act.
Notably, Regulation 18(15) predates the
enactment of the Agrément
Act but it invokes the Agrément South Africa regime, which –
according to its transitional provisions
– entailed certification
through a Board appointed by the Minister of Public Works. The
Regulations are subordinate legislation
and expressly contemplate
that school planning and design generally and sanitation facilities
in particular comply with all relevant
laws. Thus the reference
to certification by Agrément South Africa in Regulation 18(15) must
be interpreted to mean certification
in accordance with any governing
laws. Once this is accepted, Mr Bham’s submissions have
traction as it would be wholly
undesirable let alone impracticable if
any part of the technology used somehow fall between the cracks of
SANS or Agrément certification.
This approach also comports
with a purposive interpretation of Regulation 18(15) – its purpose
being to ensure that alternative
and innovative technologies are
assessed as fit for purpose – and it serves to advance its
constitutional goals.
43.
Viewed in this way, the
standards specification cannot be said to be unlawful or in breach of
section 6(2)(a)(i), section 6(2)(b)
or section 6(2)(f)(i) of PAJA.
Nor can it be said to be irrational.
44.
This means, however,
that in the application of the standards specification, it is
incumbent upon NECT only to award bids to tenderers
whose technology
is in fact so compliant. It is more difficult to discern on the
papers before me what this means practically
for the parties and the
legality of the application of the specification is not before me,
only the specification itself. Suffice
to note that I am unable
to discount that, in practice, the applicant may be correct in saying
that Agrément certification may in
fact be required for this tender,
even if it is not the only necessary certification in context of a
particular bid. This in
circumstances where counsel confirmed
that there is no dispute that dry sanitation systems invariably
entail alternative and innovative
technology, and no applicable SANS
standards have been drawn to the Court’s attention that apply to
dry sanitation systems.
45.
The NECT also defended
the standards specification on the basis that it entails substantial
compliance with the Minimum Standards
Regulations. In this
regard, it was pleaded that the NECT’s empirical understanding is
that not many entities have the relevant
Agrément certification and
limiting the certification sought to Agrément certification would
have had the effect of limiting the
number of responses to the to the
requests for quotations and in turn impacted the efficiency with
which the SAFE Project is rolled
out. The NECT pleaded
that there are other safeguards in the process such as the
requirement for a sign off from a qualified
and duly registered
structural engineer.
46.
Mr
Grobler submitted that the test for substantial compliance is not
met. He relied on test the Constitutional Court articulated
for
compliance with a statutory provision in
ACDP
being
‘whether [the conduct] constituted compliance with the statutory
provisions viewed in light of their purpose.’
[24]
He submitted further that substantial compliance cannot be achieved
on peremptory requirements such as what is contained in
Regulation
18(15).
47.
The
latter submission is difficult to reconcile with
All
Pay
in
which the Constitutional Court held:
[25]
‘
Assessing
the materiality of compliance with legal requirements in our
administrative law is, fortunately, an exercise unencumbered
by
excessive formality. It was not always so. Formal distinctions were
drawn between 'mandatory' or 'peremptory' provisions on the
one hand
and 'directory' ones on the other, the former needing strict
compliance on pain of non-validity, and the latter only
substantial compliance or even non-compliance. That strict
mechanical approach has been discarded. Although a number of
factors need to be considered in this kind of enquiry, the central
element is to link the question of compliance to the purpose of
the
provision. In this court O'Regan J succinctly put the question
in
ACDP v Electoral Commission
as
being 'whether what the applicant did constituted compliance with the
statutory provisions viewed in the light of their purpose'. This
is not the same as asking whether compliance with the provisions will
lead to a different result.
48.
The
question is then whether the standards specification complies with
Regulation 18(15) viewed in light of its purpose (see above).
Regulation 18 encourages the use of innovative and alternative
technologies in its detail. Viewed contextually, the purpose
of
Regulation 18(15) must include to ensure that such technologies have
been suitably assessed as fit for purpose in accordance with
the
Agrément South Africa dispensation, whose objectives include
minimizing the risk associated with non-standardised products or
systems.
[26]
49.
The explanation for
deviation proffered by NECT is difficult to understand in the absence
of evidence that there are SANS compliant
dry sanitation systems.
Furthermore, as postulated above, on the limited information to hand
but on the face of it, it may
be that, practically, some level of
Agrément certification cannot be avoided if dry sanitation systems
are required. However, I
have insufficient evidence before me to draw
any firm conclusions in this regard. Nevertheless, provided the
specifications
standard is understood to require certification under
one or both systems – each of which serve to set what the
legislature regards
as suitable standards – it is difficult to see
how it is either unlawful or irrational. The real question
seems to be how
it is applied in practice.
50.
In the result, I am of
the view that the applicant’s attack on the standards specification
itself must also fail.
Costs and order
51.
The NECT has succeeded
in defending the application on its merits. The Minister was
materially unsuccessful in defending the
application on the three
technical points raised. In my view, the NECT is entitled to
its costs including the costs of two
counsel. In all the
circumstances, the second respondent should, in my view, carry its
own costs.
52.
I make the following
order:
52.1.
The application is
dismissed.
52.2.
The applicant is
directed to pay the costs of the first respondent including the costs
of two counsel.
52.3.
The second respondent
is to pay its own costs.
SJ Cowen
Judge, High Court
Pretoria
Date of hearing: 16
May 2023
Date of decision:
21 August 2023
Appearances:
Applicant:
S
Grobler SC instructed by Honey Attorneys
First Respondent:
A
Bham SC and C Tabata instructed by Mkhabela Huntley Attorneys
Second Respondent:
P
Hemraj SC, K Bokaba and L Sonke instructed by the State Attorney,
Pretoria
[1]
Government
Gazette 25492, GN 2512.
[2]
Published under
GN R920 in GG 37081 of 29 November 2014 and made under section
5A(1)(a) of the South African Schools Act 1996 (the
Minimum Norms
and Standards Regulations).
[3]
The
President assented to the Act on 13 December 2015 and it commenced
on 1 April 2017. Section 3 provides that the body,
which was
established by the Minister of Public Works and which exists when
the Act took effect continues to exist and is a juristic
person.
[4]
Its
objects are set out in section 4 of the Agrément Act.
[5]
Tenders
No N[...]1(Batch One); N[...]1(Batch Two); N[...]3 (Batch Three).
[6]
25 contractors
were appointed for Batch One (from 152 bids);
24
contractors were appointed for Batch Two (from 83 bids) and 36 for
Batch Three (from 122 bids).
[7]
Regulation
12(2) is titled Sanitation and provides:
(1)
All
schools must have a sufficient number of sanitation facilities, as
contained in Annexure G, that are easily accessible to all
learners
and educators, provide privacy and security, promote health and
hygiene standards, comply with all relevant laws and are
maintained
in good working order.
(2)
The
choice of an appropriate sanitation technology must be based on an
assessment conduct on the most suitable sanitation technology
for
each particular school.
(3)
Sanitation
facilities could include one or more of the following:
(a)
Water
borne sanitation;
(b)
Small
bore sewer reticulation;
(c)
Septic
or conservancy tank systems;
(d)
Ventilated
improved pit latrines; or
(e)
Composting
toilets.
(4)
Plain
pit and bucket latrines are not allowed at schools.
Annexure
G sets out the number of toilets, basins and urinals required in
primary and secondary schools based on enrolment ranges
and gender.
[8]
In
the founding affidavit it is incorrectly alleged at a point that the
tender process required neither SANS certification nor Agrément
certification.
[9]
Giant
Concerts CC v Rinaldo Investments (Pty) Ltd and others
2013(3)
BCLR 251 (CC) (
Giant
Concerts
)
para 41a. Compare:
Areva
NP Incorporated in France v Eskom Holdings Soc Limited and others
[2016] ZACC 51
; 2017(6) BCLR 675 (CC)’ 2017(6) SA 621 (CC) in
which the Constitutional Court held that a party who did not submit
a bid in its
own right did not have standing to institute a review.
In that case, the applicant was part of the same group of companies
of the company that submitted the bid.
[10]
See
para 8 above.
[11]
See
Bowring
NO v Vrededorp Properties CC
[2007] ZASCA 80
; 2007(5) SA 391 (SCA) at para 21 and
South
African History Archive Trust v South African Reserve Bank
2020(6) SA 127 (SCA) at para 30.
[12]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism and others
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC) at para 27.
[13]
Section 6(2)
provides:
‘
A
court or tribunal has the power to judicially review an
administrative action if-
(a)
the
administrator wh
o took
it-
(i)
was
not authorised to do so by the empowering provision;
(ii)
acted
under a delegation of power which was not authorised by the
empowering provision; or
(iii)
was
biased or reasonably suspected of bias;
(b)
a
mandatory and material procedure or condition prescribed by an
empowering provision was not complied with;
(c)
the
action was procedurally unfair;
(d)
the
action was materially influenced by an error of law;
(e)
the
action was taken-
(i)
for
a reason not authorised by the empowering provision;
(ii) for
an ulterior purpose or motive;
(iii)
because
irrelevant considerations were taken into account or relevant
considerations were not considered;
(iv)
because
of the unauthorised or unwarranted dictates of another person or
body;
(v) in
bad faith; or
(vi) arbitrarily
or capriciously;
(f)
the
action itself-
(i)
contravenes
a law or is not authorised by the empowering provision; or
(ii)
is
not rationally connected to-
(aa)
the
purpose for which it was taken;
(bb)
the
purpose of the empowering provision;
(cc)
the
information before the administrator; or
(dd)
the
reasons given for it by the administrator;
(g)
the
action concerned consists of a failure to take a decision;
(h)
the
exercise of the power or the performance of the function authorised
by the empowering provision, in pursuance
of which the
administrative action was purportedly taken, is so unreasonable that
no reasonable person could have so exercised
the power or performed
the function; or
(i)
the
action is
otherwise unconstitutional or unlawful.
[14]
See
fn 13 above.
[15]
Id.
[16]
Grey’s
Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd and others v Minister of Public Works and
others
2005(6)
SA 313 (SCA) (
Grey’s
Marine
)
at para 23.
[17]
Steenkamp
NO v Provincial Tender Board, Eastern Cape
[2006]
ZACC 16
; 2007(3) SA 121 (CC); 2007(3) BCLR 300 (CC).
[18]
Earthlife
Africa and another v Minister of Energy and others
2017(5)
SA 227 (WCC) at para 37.
[19]
Plascon-Evans
Paints v Van Riebeeck Paints
1984(3)
623 (A) at 634H-635C;
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and ano
2008(3)
SA 371 (SCA), para 13.
## [20]Administrator
of Transvaal and Others v Theletsane and Another[1990]
ZASCA 156; 1991 (2) SA 192 (AD); [1991] 4 All SA 132 (AD).
[20]
Administrator
of Transvaal and Others v Theletsane and Another
[1990]
ZASCA 156; 1991 (2) SA 192 (AD); [1991] 4 All SA 132 (AD).
[21]
Cool Ideas
1186 CC v Hubbard and another
2014(4)
SA 474 (CC) (Cool Ideas) at para 28.
## [22]Section
10, section 28(2) and section 29(1) of the Bill of Rights. See tooKomape
and Others v Minister of Basic Education[2018]
ZALMPPHC 18;Komape
v Minister of Basic Education[2019] ZASCA
192.
[22]
Section
10, section 28(2) and section 29(1) of the Bill of Rights. See too
Komape
and Others v Minister of Basic Education
[2018]
ZALMPPHC 18;
Komape
v Minister of Basic Education
[2019] ZASCA
192.
[23]
See
above n 7 for its detailed requirements.
[24]
African
Christian Democratic party v Electoral Commission and others
2006(83)
SA 305 (CC) at para 25. See too,
Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer, South African Social Security Agency, and
Others
[2013]
ACC 42;
2014
(1) SA 604 (CC)
(2014 (1) BCLR
1
at para 30
.
[25]
At
para 30.
[26]
The
objects of Agrément South Africa are set out in section 4 and are
to –
(a)
Provide
assurance to specifiers and users of the fitness-for-purpose of non
standardised construction related products or systems;
(b)
Support
and promote the process of integrated socio-economic development in
the Republic as it relates to the construction industry;
(c)
Support
and promote the introduction and use of certified non-standardised
construction related products or systems in the local
or
international market;
(d)
Support
policy makers to minimize the risk associated with the use of a
non-standardised construction related product or system;
and
(e)
Be
an impartial and internationally acknowledged South African centre
for the assessment and confirmation of fitness-for-purpose
of
non-standardised construction related products or systems.’
sino noindex
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