Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1108South Africa
SMEC South Africa (Pty) Ltd v South African National Road Agency SOC Ltd (075024/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1108 (29 August 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
29 August 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## SMEC South Africa (Pty) Ltd v South African National Road Agency SOC Ltd (075024/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1108 (29 August 2023)
SMEC South Africa (Pty) Ltd v South African National Road Agency SOC Ltd (075024/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1108 (29 August 2023)
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sino date 29 August 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 075024/2023
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
29/08/23
In the matter between:
SMEC
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
SOUTH AFRICAN
NATIONAL ROAD AGENCY SOC LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
DU PLESSIS AJ
[1]
This is an application for an interim interdict to
maintain the
status quo
with
regard to the scoring system for tenders, pending the finalisation of
a review application. It relates to several open tender
invitations
that the Applicant contends should not be proceeded with or
adjudicated using a new scoring system, pending the finalisation
of a
review application to set aside a decision to amend the conditions of
the tender invitations concerned, which introduced the
new scoring
system.
[2]
The
Applicant is SMEC South Africa (Pty) Ltd, a private company active in
the infrastructure building industry. The Respondent is
the South
African National Road Agency SOC Ltd (SANRAL), a state-owned company
created in terms of the South African National Roads
Agency Limited
and the National Roads Act,
[1]
responsible for the road infrastructure in South Africa.
[3]
The Respondent implemented a new scoring system in
awarding new and existing tenders. The Applicant wishes to submit
tender bids
in some of them. A review application is pending in the
Eastern Cape Division of the High Court in Gqeberha, where the
Respondent’s
decision to implement a new scoring system in
awarding tenders is challenged. The Applicant intends to intervene in
that review
and to seek similar relief sought by the Applicant and
the Second Respondent in that application or, alternatively, to bring
a
separate review application in this court. The choice depends on
issues of jurisdiction, multiplicity of litigation and the number
of
parties that will have to be involved in such an application. The
Applicant has undertaken to proceed with its intervention
application, alternatively its review application, by no later than
28 August 2023 according to its Founding Affidavit. However,
during
argument, they stated they might need more time as this application
took some time to prepare.
[4]
The Applicant points out that the Respondent
admitted under oath in the Gqeberha case that that court order will
not only affect
the two tenders that form the subject matter in that
application, but it will have an effect on all the Respondent’s
tenders
and contracts by placing them on hold until the dispute in
the Gqeberha review application is resolved. Yet, the Applicant
state,
the Respondent refuses to provide an undertaking that it will
not proceed to place the tender processes in which the Applicant has
an interest on hold, pending the disputes concerned. Therefore this
application.
# Ad urgency
Ad urgency
[5]
The Applicant sets out the facts of urgency as
follows: the closing dates for the tender invitation pertaining to
this application
are fast approaching. By the time of the hearing of
this application, the first of the extended closing dates had passed.
The Respondent
indicated that it intends to adjudicate the tenders
unless it is interdicted from doing so.
[6]
At the heart of the matter lies the review
application to and set aside the Respondent’s decision to adopt
a new Preferential
Procurement Policy, which includes a new scoring
system.
[7]
Should the Respondent continue to adjudicate and
implement the tenders applicable in this application, and relief in
that review
eventually be granted, then all of the steps taken in
adjudicating and implementing such tenders would be void. This has a
cost
implication for persons who submitted the tenders, and it would
require the undoing of many actions if the work has commenced. The
Applicants seek to avoid this. They do this by applying for an
interim interdict based on the reasonable prospect of success in
the
review application. The interim order of the Gqeberha court on 12
July 2023 triggered the process that started with a letter
of demand
on 14 July 2023 and ended in this application.
[8]
The Respondent notes that a letter of demand was
sent on 14 July 2023 for an undertaking by 19 July 2023. When this
did not happen,
an urgent application was launched. They point out
that the matter was then set down for 22 August 2023, with no
explanation for
the month-long delay between the launch and the set
down of the hearing. In argument they stated that if it were really
that urgent,
they would have afforded the Respondent no more than 72
hours. In reply, the Applicants say that the reason for the delay is
to
afford the Respondents the maximum time to give notice of
intention to oppose and to file an answering affidavit in what they
deem
a complex matter.
[9]
Moreover, the Respondent indicates that the
tenders have been open for a long time, with the Applicant only now
approaching the
court as the closing dates approach. The new scoring
system was made known on 12 May 2023 when the Respondent’s
Preferential
Procurement Policy of 2022 was uploaded to the website.
There is thus a two-month delay in bringing the application.
Furthermore,
they can submit tenders
and
lodge a review application while the adjudication
process is pending.
[10]
This does not hold, the Applicants reply. This is
because the tender invitations were published with the inclusion of
the old scoring
system. The present application relates to the
amendment of the tender invitations. They contend that the mere
publication of the
policy on the website does not mean that the
Applicant had knowledge thereof, and it has no legal effect. It was
only in the Gqeberha
urgent application that the Respondent admitted
that granting the relief sought would put all pending tenders on hold
that the
Applicant realised that they needed to act with urgency.
[11]
As for substantive remedies in due course, the
Respondent states that the Applicant can intervene in the Gqeberha
High Court matters.
It could have just applied for intervention since
it has already granted similar interim relief. The matter is,
therefore, not
urgent.
[12]
The Applicant argues that it is undesirable of a
government body to continue to engage in behaviour that appears to be
unconstitutional,
despite a review application being underway or
anticipated. Such scenarios have led to a series of legal precedents
demonstrating
the harmful impacts of such actions and the suitable
solution for addressing them. These cases show that should the
Respondent
not be interdicted from implementing the new scoring
system now, the Applicant will not be able to obtain pragmatic and
practical
just and equitable relief in the review application. Relief
capable of being implemented is part of the fundamental right to have
disputes adjudicated in a court of law. And this is dependent on the
status quo
(before
the new scoring system) being maintained.
[13]
The
question thus is whether the Applicant will be able to obtain
substantial redress in due course. For the right it seeks to protect,
I think not. In
Millennium
Waste Management (Pty) Ltd v Chairperson, Tender Board: Limpopo
Province,
[2]
the court was faced with a tender process that has run its course but
was then set aside after review. In that case, it could not
give the
Applicant relief, as the tender was awarded and the work started.
Equally, in
Chairperson,
Standing Tender Committee v JFE Sapela Electronics (Pty) Ltd,
[3]
the court was faced with a situation where it had to, due to
effluxion of time, allow an invalid administrative act to stand as
the successful tenderer has done so much work that any order will no
longer be capable of practical implementation. In other words,
should
the Respondent continue to adjudicate the tenders based on the new
system, and the Applicant is eventually successful in
the review
application, then the Applicant will not have substantial redress.
[14]
There is no other way to stop possible unlawful
conduct than with interim relief. The question is, however, if they
made a case
for it. The answer hinges on whether they have a
reasonable prospect of success in the review application.
[15]
The
Respondents raised the issue of
locus
standi
with
reference to the deponent of the Founding Affidavit (Manager
Commerical and Legal of the Applicant) and the bringing of the
application (the attorneys). However, based on case law,
[4]
and in the absence of a rule 7 notice, this argument stands to be
dismissed.
# Ad merits: interim relief
Ad merits: interim relief
[16]
The Applicants argue that the Gqueberha court
granted the relief and that this is at least persuasive authority
that there is a
reasonable prospect of success in the review
application. The Respondent disagrees, stating that this case
pertains to open tenders,
while in the Gqueberha court, relief was
sought for two specific tenders that were already closed. The outcome
of that review application
will not have an automatic application on
the tenders in this case, specifically because the Applicant has not
submitted a tender
yet.
[17]
The
importance of “reasonable prospects of success” links
with the requirements for an interdict, specifically the “prima
facie right”. The question before me is thus whether the
Applicant has a reasonable chance of success in the review
application,
and if so, if it proved the requirements for an interim
interdict. This was set out again in
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance
[5]
,
namely
The test requires that an
applicant that claims an interim interdict must establish (a) a prima
facie right even if it is open to
some doubt; (b) a reasonable
apprehension of irreparable and imminent harm to the right if an
interdict is not granted; (c) the
balance of convenience must favour
the grant of the interdict and (d) the applicant must have no other
remedy.
## (i)Prima facie right
(i)
Prima facie right
[18]
The Applicant argues that they have a prima facie
right that the procuring process be conducted lawfully. They
summarise their argument
for the review application to show the
possible unlawfulness and unconstitutionality.
[19]
It starts with s 217 of the Constitution provides
that
(1) When an organ of
state in the national, provincial or local sphere of government, or
any other institution identified in national
legislation, contracts
for goods or services, it must do so in accordance with a system
which is fair, equitable, transparent,
competitive and
cost-effective.
(2) Subsection (1) does
not prevent the organs of state or institution referred to in that
subsection from implementing a procurement
policy providing for-
(a) categories of
preference in the allocation of contracts; and
(b) the protection or
advancement of persons, or categories of persons, disadvantaged by
fair discrimination.
(3) National legislation
must prescribe a framework within which the policy referred to in
subsection (2) must be implemented.
[20]
This
is done in terms of the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework
Act
[6]
and regulations issued in
terms thereof. The applicable regulations in this regard are the
Preferential Procurement Regulations,
2022. In terms of these
regulations, there is a point-based system in which certain points
are awarded for specific goals. Depending
on the size of the tender,
it is either 10
[7]
or 20
[8]
points that may be granted for specific goals.
[21]
This
should be read with the Broad-based Black Economic Empowerment Act
[9]
that created a system to promote the achievement of the
constitutional right to equality, to increase broad-based and
effective
participation of black people in the economy, to promote a
higher growth rate, increase employment and more a more equitable
outcome
distribution, to establish a national policy on broad-based
black economic empowerment to promote the economic unity of the
nation,
the common market, and to promote equal opportunity and
access to government services.
[10]
[22]
The
Applicants state that the new
scoring
system
was introduced through an addendum to all tender invitations then
pending and all the new tender invitations. Before introducing
this
system, a company’s B-BBEE level could account for 0 – 10
or 0 – 20 of the points, depending on its B-BBEE
level. With
the new system, a B-BBEE level, regardless of the level, now only
accounts for a maximum of 1 or 2 points, depending
on the contract
size. Added to that is the possibility of another 5 points (if the
maximum is 10) based on being wholly black-owned
and 4 points (if the
maximum is 10) if targeted enterprises are subcontracted. This, the
Applicants state, renders the Broad-based
Black Economic Empowerment
Act
[11]
a nullity. Compliance
with the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act
[12]
is also undermined, as compliance now only amounts to a fraction of
the points. All the money companies spent to obtain a high
B-BBEE
score would now mean nothing. This usurpation of the national B-BBEE
policy by a narrow referral to black ownership and
sub-contracting,
the Applicant states, is destructive of the national policy and,
thus, the achievement of the constitutional right
to equality and the
rest. The Applicant says that the loss of the points in that category
cannot be overcome with a price reduction.
This means that the
Applicant will be excluded from being considered for the award of any
tenders.
[23]
These
facts will be used in the review application in terms of s 6(2)(a),
(b) and (c) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act
[13]
in that the administrator who took the decision was not authorised to
do so by the empowering provision and/or acted under a delegation
of
power which was not authorised by the empowering provision;
[14]
a mandatory and material procedure or condition prescribed by an
empowering provision was not complied with; and
the
action
was procedurally unfair.
[24]
The Applicant will further argue in the review
application that the decisiosn is contrary to s 217 of the
Constitution, as it is
not fair, equitable, transparent,
cost-effective and competitive and does not promote the purpose of
the procurement policy envisaged
in s 217(2) and (3) of the
Constitution and the framework created by legislation. This leads to
a review in terms of s 6(2)(d),
(e), (f), (h) and/or (i) of PAJA.
[25]
To
determine all this, it is necessary to have regard to all the facts,
which is why the review application is important.
[15]
[26]
On the
above, the Applicant has a reasonable prospect of success and should
be allowed to take the decision on review and have an
effective
remedy available. The right to partake in a constitutionally
compliant procurement process is a clear right.
[16]
The right to have a review application heard in which the court would
be able to grant just and equitable relief is also a clear
right. The
Applicant has thus established that it has a
prima
facie
right.
## (ii)Irreparable harm
(ii)
Irreparable harm
[27]
It
follows that any exclusion from participation in a process must be
based on a sound and lawful foundation, absent of which, the
Applicant will have a
prima
facie
right
and an apprehension of imminent irreparable harm.
[17]
The immediate irreparable harm lies in the possibility that its
constitutional rights are infringed by being subjected to an
unconstitutional
scoring system.
[28]
The
Respondent denies that the Applicant is precluded. They state that no
pre-qualification criterion prevents a bidder from submitting
the
relevant bid. There are no predetermined outcomes – in fact, if
the Applicant applies, it may emerge as the successful
bidder. Added
to this is that the revised scoring method applies to specific goals
only, which carry no more than 10 out of the
100 points. The
Applicant will earn some of the points in that category. If it wants
to improve its score in the black ownership
category, it can make use
of subcontractors from target enterprises to better the score. The
rest of the 90 out of the 100 points
relate to pricing, and this
might well mean that the Applicant wins the tender. Moreover, in
terms of s 2(1)(f) of the Preferential
Procurement Policy Framework
Act,
[18]
organs of state may
award the tender to a bidder other than the highest-scoring bidder
based on objective criteria, which means
there is also a possibility
there for the Applicant to get awarded the tender.
[29]
As to
the argument that the Applicant can subcontract to comply, the
Applicants argue that this is not cost-effective and that it
is
important to have the information that is necessary to enable the
would-be bidders to decide whether it will prepare a tender.
[19]
[30]
The Respondents further contend that the harm
complained of is speculative as they cannot predict the outcome of
the tender process.
In fact, they stand an equal chance to the other
bidders in being successful. They should submit a tender pending the
outcome of
the review application.
[31]
The
Applicants disagree and argue that they cannot be expected to submit
a tender in a process they deem unconstitutional and then
challenge
its constitutionality. A similar issue was before Roger J in
SMEC
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town; SMEC South Africa (Pty)
Ltd v City of Cape Town
[20]
where
he stated that
In principle, it seems
undesirable that a bidder should be at liberty to “take a
chance” in the hope that it will be
awarded the tender, keeping
in reserve an attack on the validity of the tender terms should it be
unsuccessful in winning the bid.
However, in view of the conclusion I
have reached on other aspects, I need not finally decide this point.
[32]
I agree with Roger J that the Applicants can not
be expected to partake in a possibly unlawful and unconstitutional
process and
that being unable to do so is harmful.
## (iii)Balance of convenience
(iii)
Balance of convenience
[33]
The
Respondent states that where a court seeks to restrain an executive
function of government, it must do so very carefully and
only when a
proper and strong case has been made for the relief and if it is
constitutionally appropriate to grant such relief.
That aligns with
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance.
[21]
In
that regard, it was pointed out that the Respondent has an obligation
to manage the national road network, and the tenders were
sent out to
comply with this obligation. Preventing the adjudication and awarding
of tenders might cripple service delivery and
halt the operations of
the Respondent. Thus, the balance of convenience favours the
Respondent.
[34]
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance
[22]
qualified
the test for an interim interdict by stating that if an interim
interdict is sought against the state, the prima facie
right cannot
simply be the right to take the decision on review.
[23]
The court stated:
Under the Setlogelo test,
the prima facie right a claimant must establish is not merely the
right to approach a court in order to
review an administrative
decision. It is a right to which, if not protected by an interdict,
irreparable harm would ensue. An interdict
is meant to prevent future
conduct and not decisions already made. Quite apart from the right to
review and to set aside impugned
decisions, the applicants should
have demonstrated a prima facie right that is threatened by an
impending or imminent irreparable
harm. The right to review the
impugned decisions did not require any preservation pendente lite.
[35]
The court found that the applicants, in that case,
did not have a prima facie right, as the harm they rely upon will not
be caused
by the decisions they seek to review. Thus, There was a
misalignment between the decision under review and the source of the
harm.
In this case, there is an alignment between the decision that
will be reviewed and the source of the harm.
[36]
The balance of convenience also favours the
Applicants. The Respondents will still be entitled to consider and
adjudicate the tenders
based on the scoring system that was
applicable before the new system, also being the system that was
applicable when most of the
dates opened for the tenders. It can also
elect to extend some of the dates, pending the outcome of the review
application. It
is not precluded from awarding tenders, merely from
applying the new scoring system, pending the outcome of the review
application.
## (iv)No alternative remedy
(iv)
No alternative remedy
[37]
As for the alternative remedy, the Respondent
argues that the Applicant can intervene in the Gqeberha proceedings.
The Applicant,
however, highlights that the Respondent, in its
answering affidavit, states that the Gqeberha review application will
have no practical
effect on the tenders in which the Applicants are
interested, it only applies to those two tenders.
[38]
Apart from taking the decision on review, there is
no alternative remedy. And while that application is waiting to be
heard, there
is no other remedy than an interdict to protect the
Applicant’s rights.
# Order
Order
[39]
I, therefore, make the following order:
1.
The matter is dealt with as one of urgency, and
non-compliance with the rules of court is condoned in so far as may
be necessary.
2.
The late filing of the answering affidavit is
condoned.
3.
The Respondent is interdicted and restrained from
proceeding with and/or implementing and/or giving effect to the
outcome of the
tender adjudicating process relating to the tender
invitations contained in the list that is appended to the Applicant’s
Founding Affidavit as Appendix UFA1, pending the final determination
of –
3.1.
The review application in the Eastern Cape
Division, Gqeberha of the High Court of South Africa under case
number 1731/2023; alternatively
3.2.
Any review application relating to the tender
invitations concerned that the Applicant may institute in the Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
of the High Court of South Africa.
4.
The Applicant is directed to take all steps
necessary to either apply to intervene in the abovementioned review
in the Eastern Cape
Division, Gqeberha of the High Court of South
Africa, alternatively to institute a review application in the
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria of the High Court of South Africa, within
10 (ten) days of this order.
5.
In the event of the Applicant failing to timeously
take all steps necessary to apply to intervene or to institute the
review proceedings
as directed in terms of paragraph 3 above, the
interim interdict referred to in paragraph 2 above will
ipso
facto
lapse and be of no further force
and effect.
6.
The costs of this application are reserved
sine
die
.
WJ DU PLESSIS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered: This
judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
It will be sent to the
parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel for the
Applicant:
Mr SD Wagener SC
Instructed by:
Counsel the for
Respondent:
Mr G Shakoane SC
Mr C Shongwe
Instructed by:
Phaleng-Podile Attorneys
Date of the hearing:
24 August 2023
Date of judgment:
29 August 2023
[1]
7 of 1998.
[2]
2008
(2) SA 481 (SCA).
[3]
2008
(2) SA 638 (SCA).
[4]
See for instance
Ganes
v Telecom Namibia Ltd
.
[2003] ZASCA 123
;
[2004] 2 All SA 609
(SCA) para 19.
[5]
2012
(6) SA 223 (CC).
[6]
5 of 2000.
[7]
Contracts above R50
million in value.
[8]
Contracts below R50
million in value.
[9]
53 of
2003.
[10]
FA par 25.
[11]
53 of
2003.
[12]
5 of 2000.
[13]
3 of 2000.
[14]
Democratic
Alliance v President of the Republic of South Africa
2013
(1) SA 248
(CC), para [27].
[15]
Airports
Company South Africa (SOC) Ltd v Imperial Group Ltd
2020
(4) SA 17 (SCA).
[16]
Down
Touch Investments (Pty) Ltd & Another v South African National
Roads Agency SOC Ltd and Another
[2020]
JOL 48865 (ECG).
[17]
Down
Touch Investments (Pty) Ltd & Another v South African National
Roads Agency SOC LTD
[2020]
JOL 48865 (ECG).
[18]
5 of 2000.
[19]
Relying
on
Rainbow
Civils CC v Minister of Transport and Public Works, Western Cape,
2013
JDR 0198 (WCC).
[20]
[2022]
ZAWCHC 131
(23 June 2022).
[21]
2012
(6) SA 223
(CC).
[22]
2012
(6) SA 223 (CC).
[23]
Par 50.
sino noindex
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