Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1121South Africa
Special Investigating Unit v Gekkonomics Propietory Limited t/a Infonomix and Another (90545/18) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1121 (1 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Special Investigating Unit v Gekkonomics Propietory Limited t/a Infonomix and Another (90545/18) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1121 (1 September 2023)
Special Investigating Unit v Gekkonomics Propietory Limited t/a Infonomix and Another (90545/18) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1121 (1 September 2023)
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sino date 1 September 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO:
90545/18
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED
01
September 2023
In
the matter between:
THE
SPECIAL INVESTIGATING UNIT
APPLICANT
And
GEKKONOMICS
PROPIETORY LIMITED
FIRST
RESPONDENT
T/A
INFONOMIX
SOUTH
AFRICAN BROADCASTING
SECOND
RESPONDENT
CORPORATION
SOC LIMITED
JUDGMENT
TLHAPI J
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant, the Special Investigating Unit (‘SIU’) was
established in terms of
the Special Investigating Units and Tribunals
Act 74 of 1996 (‘SIU Act’). Its purpose is to investigate
malpractices
and maladministration associated with state institutions
as defined in the preamble to the SIU Act.
[1]
[2]
The President was empowered in terms of section 2(1) of the SIU Act
to establish a Special Investigating
Unit and the second respondent
as a public entity was referred for investigation by the SIU under
subsection 2(2).
[2]
The
authorisation was by way of a Proclamation published in Government
Gazette No. 41086 dated 1 September 2017 under Regulation
Gazette No.
10754 Proclamation No. R.29 of 2917.
The
SIU as part of its functions and when its investigations revealed
evidence that would support a civil claim, is empowered to
institute
proceedings in its own name or on behalf of the State Institution
concerned before a Special Tribunal or before a court
of law.
[3]
[3]
The Proclamation authorising the investigations, stated that the
investigation by the SIU was
as a result of allegations about the
affairs of the second respondent herein, regarding losses the second
respondent (‘the
SABC’) or the State had suffered which
losses may be recovered. The SABC is not opposing the application.
[4]
The SABC is a public broadcaster, a state- owned company, duly
registered under registration number
2003/023915/30. It is identified
in Schedule 2 of the Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999 (the
‘PFMA’), as a major
public entity to which the PFMA is
applicable in terms of section 3(1)(b). The first respondent
(“Infonomix”) is a
private company duly registered under
number 2015/157386/07 and is identified as one of the entities to be
investigated as stated
in the Schedule to the Proclamation.
[4]
[5]
The following orders are sought in this application:
“
1.
That the decision of the second respondent of 15 November 2016 to
award the tender to the first
respondent is reviewed and set aside
alternatively declared constitutionally invalid.
2.
Declaring the contract concluded between first respondent and second
respondent on 7 December
2016 void ab initio.
3.
Ordering the first respondent to repay all the payments made to by
the second respondent
under the said contract.
4.
In the alternative to prayer 3 above, that this Honourable Court
orders;
4.1
The first respondent to render a full account of all payments it
received under the impugned contract
and its reasonable expenses,
supported by necessary vouchers;
4.2
The debate of the said accounts;
4.3
Payment to the second respondent of whatever profits earned by the
first respondent upon debate of the
account;
5.
That the costs of this application be paid by the first respondent
and that such costs shall
include the costs consequent upon the
employment of two counsel.”
[6]
The SIU investigators collected evidence of fact and had available to
them documents seized from
the SABC during the investigations. It is
from these documents where ‘glaring irregularities’ were
allegedly discovered
regarding a contract concluded between Infonomix
and the SABC on 7 December 2016. In these proceedings the applicant
also relied
on affidavits obtained from employees of the SABC during
the investigations.
BACKGROUND
[7]
The SIU contended that the contract was entered into without
following a competitive tender process
as is required by law and
regulation, in terms of section 217 of the Constitution, the PFMA,
National Treasury Regulations, Treasury
Instructions and the SABC
Supply Chain Policies. The SIU dealt with an overview of the laws and
policies of the SABC as stated
hereunder.
The Principles
Governing Procurement for Goods and or Services in Public Entities
and State Institutions.
[8]
The SIU contended that the foundational principles to be observed by
the SABC for the procurement
of goods and or services are to be found
in the peremptory provisions of section 217(1)
[5]
of the Constitution and these are echoed in section 51(1)(a)(i)
and(iii) of the PFMA.
[6]
The
PFMA allows National Treasury to make its own regulations or issue
instructions applicable to all institutions to which the
Act
applies.
[7]
[9]
The SIU contended that the principles pronounced in section 217 of
the Constitution were applied
in the PFMA and adopted in regulations
such as Treasury Regulation 16A6.2,
[8]
though not applicable to Schedule 2 entities such as the SABC, gave
sense of the meaning behind the prevailing principles of section
217
read with section 237 of the Constitution which provided that
Constitutional obligations be performed diligently and without
delay.
A supply chain management system was required from public
entities to which the PFMA was applicable, which provided
for
adjudication through bid evaluation and adjudication committees.
[10]
The National Treasury circular of 27 October 2004 was referred to,
which provided for the obligations of
accounting officers authority
to appoint a bid committee responsible for compiling bid
specifications which should be written ‘in
an unbiased manner
to allow all potential bidders to offer their goods and or services”.
Furthermore, it required the evaluation
and adjudication processes to
be done within the ambit of section 217 and the prescripts contained
in the PPPFA and the Broad-
Based Black Economic
Empowerment Act 53
of 2003
.
[11]
The SIU
[9]
contended that
transparency required the set-up of a framework
[10]
that
allows interested members of the public to access information
regarding tenders and an insight into the type of agreements
envisaged. The National Treasury issued a note to public authorities/
entities
[11]
giving guidance on
how emergency procurements must be dealt with when employing a
deviation from the normal supply chain management.
A procedure was
prescribed in the note and a system of procurement procedures even in
the instances of a deviation where applicable.
[12]
It was contended that all entities to which the Constitution and the
PFMA were applicable, were required
to adopt and comply with such law
and, the standards set out therein,
[12]
together with instructions from Treasury.
[13]
These provide for a system that ensures transparency in supply chain
management, a system which complies with section 217 of the
Constitution. The SABC would not be bound by agreements that are in
contravention of procurement processes envisaged in section
217 of
the Constitution.
[13]
Although doubting the prescripts of the Supply Chain Management Guide
(‘SCM Guide’)
[14]
issued
by National Treasury, to accounting officers/ authorities, the SIU
referred to it where it dealt with demand management process.
As a
first step to be engaged was a total analysis and needs assessment of
the goods, works and services to be procured and an
understanding of
the end result being that value formoney is achieved in the process.
The Supply Chain
Management Policy of the SABC
[14]
The PFMA required an accounting authority of a public entity to
maintain an appropriate procurement policy.
[15]
The SABC approved a Supply Chain Management Policy (“SCM”)
on 26 April 2016 which provided that section 217 of
the Constitution
was applicable to it when contracting for goods, services, works and
content. The SABC while recognizing that
it was exempt from Treasury
Regulation 16A, undertook to follow the guidelines wherever possible
and applicable. There was a Supply
Chain Management division which
was responsible for developing a manual detailing the procurement
process of the SABC. Certain
salient provisions in the policy
documents of the SABC were identified.
[16]
The
policy provided for procurement thresholds and according to the
procurement mechanism, procurement for goods or services of
more than
R2million had to go through competitive bids. ‘The
pre-requisite is that there must be an approved business case,
purchase requisition and specifications and further that the award
must be as per Delegation of Authority Framework” (DAF)
[17]
[15]
The SABC SCM model echoed the requirements of National Treasury
Supply Chain Management Framework.
[18]
Provision was made for instances of deviations and exclusions
[19]
from the SCM policy. Although not contained in the SCM policy, the
SIU contended that it was peremptory that the SABC as a Schedule
2
entity obtain prior written authority by the relevant treasury before
a deviation is implemented as provided in National Treasury
Note 3 of
2016/17.
The SABC Supply Chain
Management Procedures Manual
[16]
The SCM procedures manual was approved on 15 November 2016 with
effective date being 1 June 2016. The manual
is said to emphasize
processes that maintain a framework that is geared to delivering
value to the business of the SABC as stated
in the SCM manual
[20]
and described as the pillars of procurement by the SIU. The manual
emphasises that all procurement complies with the delegation
of
authority framework in the policy document and as ‘approved by
the board of directors and delegated to the group executive
committee. The manual requires observance of policy regarding
procurement thresholds and processes of procurement for goods and/or
services above R2million.
[21]
[17]
The SABC SCM manual provides for demand management
[22]
,
which is managed by the Head of Supply Chain Management. This takes
place on two levels, ‘strategic demand management and
operational demand management’. The demand manager and any
official engaged in procurement must ensure that planning, assessment
and identification of the needs is done; in complex and higher value
procurement the submission of detailed motivation/business
case is
required and, compliance with the correct bid process by submitting
all specifications for approval by the Bid Specification
Committee
before selection; correct contracts have to be in place.
[18]
The manual provided that the SABC was not obliged to consider
unsolicited bids ‘outside the normal
supplier selection process
and that such bids will be used for future reference’. If a
decision is taken to consider such
unsolicited bid, it may only be
done according to the SCM procedures and
only
if
the “product or service offered is a
unique
and innovative concept
that
will be exceptionally beneficial to, or have exceptional cost
advantages for the SABC; that t
he
person who made the bid is the sole provider of the product and
service;
that
the need for the product of service by the SABC has been established
during its strategic planning and budgeting process; The
reasons
for not going through the normal bidding processes are found to be
sound by the Bid Adjudicating Committee or a level as
per the
DAF”.
[23]
[19]
Furthermore, the manual provided that in highly specialised markets,
where there was justification ‘to
confine invitations to a
known sole source supplier(s) or to negotiate directly with them, a
request for a proposal (RFP) is sent
to such supplier to be evaluated
according to predefined criteria, and procurement is authorised
according to DAF, which must contain
reasons for the selected or
closed bid and what the implications would be if an open invitation
or bid was insisted upon.
[24]
It is mandatory that the organizations, institutions, and individual
who provide goods and services to government must register
on a
Central Supplier Database (CSD). In order to register on the CSD
website valid details had to be provided (email address,
identity
number, cell number and bank details) From 1 April 2016 the SABC as a
public entity was required to use the CSD.
[20]
The SCM manual also provided for the appointment of professional
consultants where the necessary skills to
perform the function do not
exist, and where it is reasonably impossible for the SABC to train or
recruit in the time available.
Their selection is based on a project
basis where three quotations are called for and accompanied by a
detailed motivation from
the Executive in the relevant business unit,
through the SCM for service providers process and approval is
according to DAF. Approval
must be given by the GCEO/COO/CFO
[25]
and such a decision is documented by the Bid Evaluation Committee.
[21]
The manual provided for deviations from the SCM procedures of
inviting competitive bids, where it is impractical
to invite
interested parties at short notice and where such procurement of
goods or services needed immediate attention by the
Executive
Directors. The SCM gives examples of situations that may arise. A
full motivation for the deviation is to be forwarded
to the Head of
SCM for submission for and approval by way of DAF.
[22]
The SABC appointed Infonomix on the basis that it was not feasible to
obtain three quotations or to follow
a competitive bid process. The
SCM policy provided that only one quotation may be sourced from
Suppliers who were registered on
the SABC supplier database or the
central supplier database. The SIU contended there was no proof or
any evidence which indicated
that Infonomix qualified in
respect of the exclusionary rule categorising it as having become the
de
facto
service provider in ‘digital media tools and
software’.
[26]
Infonomix
was only registered as a company in 2015 and it opened up a bank
account for the first time on 12 November 2016 which
was the first
time it ever received payment from the SABC. Therefore, mention in
the business case or deviation motivation of its
alleged ‘de
facto’ position in media tools and software standards as
offered by it to many entities in the industry
was incorrect.
The
Infomomix Award
[23]
The SIU contended that Infonomix did not meet the criteria for
acquisition for an unsolicited bid. According
to the investigation
and information from affidavits obtained by the SIU from officials at
the SABC, Ms Thandeka Ndlovu mentioned
that from information she had,
a gentleman by the name Muthe was seeking opportunity to present a
digital offering to the SABC.
Ms Bessie Tungwana confirmed that Mr
Aguma confirmed at OPS that he met with people who presented a
digital platform concept to
him, which he thought was needed for the
SABC digital platform.
[24]
The conclusion of the contract and payment to Infonomix was preceded
by a resolution (annexed as ‘FA2’)
taken after an
operational summit of the SABC, held from 11 to 13 October 2016.
Gathered from the resolution it was intended ‘to
expedite an
aggressive SABC digital media proposition including but not limited
to technical infrastructure, platforms, content,
strategic
partnership and commercialization of SABC digital properties’.
[25] Ms
Thandeka Ndlovu (Ms Ndlovu) attached to the office of the Group Chief
Executive Officer (“GCEO”)
facilitated the meeting. Mr
Mutheiwana Rambuwani, a representative of Infonomix presented a
digital strategy proposal and it was
then decided to engage Infonomix
for the commercialisation of the digital strategy of the SABC. As
projected the proposal had the
potential of generating revenue for
the SABC in the amount of about R83 million. Ms Ndlovu was advised
after the meeting by Mr
Tshifiwa Molaudzi (Mr T Molaudzi) and Mr
Anton Heunis (Mr Heunis) that there was value to be derived on the
proposal. Attending
the presentation were the following
employees of the SABC:
1,Mr Tshifiwa Mulaudzi,
the Group Executive Commercial
2.Ms Thandeka Ndlovu, the
GM in the office of the Group Chief Executive Officer;
3.Mr Anton Heunis
Commercial Advisor in the office of the Chief Operations Officer;
4.Ms Nompumelelo Phasha-
GM in the office of the Chief Operations Officer;
Ms Ndlovu recalled that
Mr T Molaudzi and Heunis gave feedback to Mr James Aguma, the GCEO;
Ms B Tugwana the acting Chief Operations
Officer, (ACOO); and Ms A
Raphela the acting chief Financial officer ( ACFO) and Mr T
Molaudzi undertook to prepare a business
case to commence the process
of appointment.
[26] Mr
T Molaudzi received instructions from Mr Aguma that he wanted the
SABC to conclude a contract with Infonomix
through Commercial
Enterprises pursuant to the digital media resolution. The contract
was managed through Commercial Enterprises
as it was regarded as a
‘return on investment type of contract’ which required
the SABC to invest R4,5 million for
set up costs, ‘in relation
to the construction of the websites in return for R83 million that
would be generated over time.’
[27] Mr
T Mulaudzi, Group Commercial Enterprises Officer, prepared the
business case and deviation request which
were to be submitted
simultaneously. He averred that he was instructed on various
occasions to revise the business case to align
with the deviation
request which resulted in the business case being signed after the
deviation request.
[28]
According to Mr T Mulaudzi’s affidavit
[27]
the Infonomix proposal addressed the following:
1.The SABC was battling
with a digital strategy and the respondent undertook to develop a
media proposition which would be commercialised.
The first respondent
identified seven websites that would be suitable for revenue
creation.
2.The websites would be
repurposed and changed from their current platforms to attract
consumer interactivity to commercial platforms
to create revenue
generation. ‘The respondent’s would assist the SABC in
commercializing the seven websites, transforming
the websites into
the SABC’s immediate digital medial proposition.
3.The first respondent
would implement Value Added Services on the seven websites.
The Business Case
[29]
The business case presented for consideration, for a service provider
that would provide for commercialisation
of the digital media
proposition project, is annexed as “FA4”. This was
‘intended to build a digital ecosystem
that better positions
the SABC, generate revenue for new content offerings via existing
channels, increased traffic to websites,
gain more insights to the
sales and attract new advertisers’.
[30]
The business case confirms that the SABC was approached by Infonomix
an external service supplier which:
“
3.1
specialized in big data analytics, digital strategy development and
implementation, and Value-Added services”.
There had been
“extensive engagements with Infonomix to explore a possible
partnership arrangement to ensure that the SABC
begins to derive
meaningful value from its digital assets .
4.
Financial implications Partnership with Infonomix will be on
risk/reward dispensation based
on 70/30 share of revenue derived from
digital sales and VAS. The revenue split is 70% in favour of the
SABC.
4.1
The envisaged Digital Medial proposition projected requires set up
funding of R4,5 million, The costs
are for implementing of a new
responsive design of 7 websites chosen by the SABC. The costs are for
website skinning/platform development
…..”
[31]
The business case document was duly signed by the author Mr T
Mulaudzi on 14 November 2016; signed on 15
November 2016 by Ms B
Tungwana the Acting Chief Operating Officer; signed on 14 November
2016 by Ms A Raphela Acting Chief Financial
Officer. The business
case was approved on 15 November 2016. Ms Tungwana averred that she
signed the document because it addressed
the SABC’s ‘needs,
challenges and vulnerabilities. The SIU contended that this alone was
not sufficient to single source
a service provider where there might
have been others with better products
The Deviation
[32]
The request for deviation annexure ‘F5’ was presented for
approval on 11 November 2016 and this
was prior to the approval of
the business case. It was signed by Mr T Mulaudzi as Business
Unit Line Manager; Ms A Mkhize
as General Manager SCM Governance &
Special Projects; Mr S Mulaudzi as Head of SCM and Ms Raphela
as GCEO/CFO/COO
[33] Mr
S Mulaudzi averred in his affidavit that he had reservations about
approving the deviation request until
he met Mr Aguma the former GCEO
after seeking clarity on the matter. Mr S Mulaudzi’s
initial view was that the SABC
had to embark on an open tender
process because there were insufficient grounds to deviate. He
averred that if the request had
been by a junior staff member he
would have referred it back and decided that an open tender be
embarked upon. He engaged the GCEO
as a matter of courtesy.
[34]
Mr S Mulaudzi and Ms T Ndlovu gave reasons why they thought the
deviation was necessary.
[28]
The SIU contended that these reasons were a ploy which showed the
lengths to which Mr Aguma was prepared to go at the expense of
the
SABC, and that they constituted an after- thought as these reasons
are not found in the business case nor motivation for a
deviation. It
was contended that the reasons fell short of the prescripts of
section 217 of the Constitution
[35]
The SIU contended that it appeared from Infonomix’s responses
it wished to play a significant role
in the digitisation of the
National Broadcaster by avoiding competitive tender because an open
tender would have disclosed entities
with better expertise. According
to the SIU it can be inferred from this response that Infonomix was
aware that the services offered
by them were not novel or unique as
revealed in its responses to the SIU.
[29]
Conclusion of the
Contract with Infonomix
[36]
The letter of award to Infonomix was signed by Mr S Mulaudzi on 15
November 2016 being the same date that
the business case was
approved. The contract
[30]
between Infonimix and the SABC was signed by Mr T Mulaudzi on 7
December 2016.
[37]
The SIU contended that the award and appointment of Infonomix should
have been subjected to a process before
the Bid Evaluation and Bid
Adjudication
[31]
. It also
contended that the contract partnership between the SABC and
Infonomix which was valid for five years was concluded where
there
was no indication of an emergency or pressing reason that Infonomix
was possessed of the ‘unique singularly available
capacity’
sought by the SABC, Infonomix was therefore not a “soul source
“ supplier within meaning as provided
in the SCM manual.
[32]
The contract which was concluded could be classified as that of
rendering a service. The supply chain management policies were
manipulated to favour Infonomix, in particular the SABC’s
policies on demand planning and management provided for in its
manuals were not followed. The SIU contended that the SABC was not
obliged to consider unsolicited bids received outside the normal
supplier processes. Infonomix was paid upfront an amount of
R4 550 000 excluding VAT where there was no justification
for doing so.
[38]
The SIU contended that at the time of its appointment Infonomix was
not yet registered as a service provider
on the SABC database, it was
only registered on 18 November 2016 and on the Central Supplier
Database on 12 December 2016. Furthermore,
it contended that the
special payment to Infonomix from the cost centre of the Chief
Financial Officer was not in compliance with
the SCM which stipulated
how all payments to service providers should be done.
[33]
PAJA, Legality Grounds
and Remedy
[39]
The application is brought in terms of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”)
alternatively
, under the principle of legality in terms of
section 172(1)(a).
The
SIU contended that the court was empowered to review and set aside
the decision of the SABC under PAJA because (i) the award
was biased
or suspected of bias,
[34]
(ii)
the award was driven by a desire to favour Infonimix and was made for
a reason not authorised by the empowering provisions,
[35]
(iii) the decision was for an ulterior purpose or motive,
[36]
(iv) the award was tainted by fraud and was made in bad faith,
[37]
(v) the process and action of awarding the contract was not
rationally connected to the reasons given for it by the SABC.
[38]
Furthermore, under the principle of legality the SIU contended that
the SIU as an organ of State and its officials can only exercise
and
perform functions vested upon them by law and that any purported
exercise of powers and functions not vested in terms of the
law were
constitutionally invalid and must be set aside.
[40]
The SIU contended that the Infonomix should not be permitted to
profit from an illegality. The representative
of Infonomix ought to
have known that the contract it desired to conclude with the SABC
must be preceded by an open tender. The
pre-payment it received was
unlawful and, that it would be in the interests of justice that the
monies be repaid as prayed for
or that an order as prayed for in the
alternative be granted.
[41] Mr
Rambuwani who deposed to the answering affidavit on behalf of
Infonomix, contended that the SIU delayed
in enforcing its rights in
bringing the application. The application was brought after a lengthy
delay from the time that the decision
was taken on 7 December 2016,
to the date on which the application was launched on 19 December
2018, after a period of two years
and twelve days. It is contended
that the applicant was aware of the decision and the alleged
irregularities from October 2017
as appeared from the affidavit of Mr
T Mulaudzi.
[42] He
contended that the SIU failed to exercise its constitutional
obligations diligently as is required in
terms of section 237 of the
Constitution. Infonomix was prejudiced by the delay and because the
SIU seeks the court’s indulgence,
it has failed to make out a
proper case for condonation and, has not provided any explanation
covering the entire period for the
delay before it launched this
application and that it stands to be dismissed on these grounds
alone,
[43] It
is contended further, that the relief sought to declare the contract
between Infonomix and the SABC void
ab initio
is academic. It
is contended that Infonomix has performed its obligation in terms of
the appointment and that the agreement between
the parties was
terminated by the parties due to the failure of the SABC to perform
its part of the terms of the contract and that
the application stands
to be dismissed on this ground alone.
[44]
Infonomix contended that the case is not clearly set out in the
founding papers. The papers contain unnecessary
lengthy legal
argument, and casts aspersions without any factual foundation,
therefore requiring very little for it to answer to.
The introduction
of such material was impermissible and was prejudicial to Infonomix.
[45]
According to Mr Rambuweni, at the time of the appointment of
Infonomix, the SABC was experiencing financial
difficulties and it
found a need to introduce new innovations to increase revenue with a
cash injection. Infonomix as a ‘possessor
of profound digital
knowledge, products and experience’ was accordingly invited
during the third quarter of 2016 to make
a presentation to a team of
SABC’s management on its vision towards transformation and
revenue generation for the SABC on
how to improve sales in the
digital space.
[46]
Infonomix asserted that during that time the SABC ‘was nowhere
near the top 10 media houses when it
came to digital sales.
Several meetings and presentations were made to management and the
team sought approval for Infonomix
to develop an integrated digital
strategy which was presented to the SABC on 23 May 2017 annexed as
‘AA2’ to the answering
papers.
[47]
Initially seven websites were approved by the SABC:
1.
Technical Planning;
2.
Content Strategies;
3.
User and Consumer strategy;
4.
Internal ops strategies;
5.
Project Plans;
6.
Testing plans;
7.
Go-live plans;
[48]
The contention by the SIU that the SABC never intended to follow a
procurement procedure that was ‘fair,
equitable, competitive
and cost effective’ as provided in section 217 of the
Constitution cannot be supported. The SABC took
a resolution at its
operations summit meeting to expediate an aggressive digital strategy
including but not limited to “technical
infrastructure,
platforms, content, strategic partnerships and the commercialisation
of SABC digital properties”.
[49]
Infonomix contended that it had no knowledge of the internal
procedures at the SABC. It further had no knowledge
that these were
not followed before it was invited by the SABC to make a presentation
and before the agreement was signed on 15
December 2016. The clause
12.1 of the manual provides for circumstances which merit a
deviation which is motivated by the
relevant Group Executive for
approval to the head of the SCM division and as per DAF.
[50]
Infonomix contended that it is not the case of the of the applicant
that the deviation process was in itself
invalid. Matters of a
strategic nature are also dealt with by a deviation process unless
advised otherwise by the CFO and given
the dire financial straits in
which the SABC was, it was clear that it would be impractical to
invite competitive bids as provided
by the SCM policy. What was
important was that a deviation was done as a result of which
the contract with SABC was concluded.
[51]
Infonomix denied that the decision sought to be reviewed was
unlawful, and contended that its appointment
was lawful. It contended
that it was an innocent service provider invited to a meeting
arranged by the SABC and, that there were
no allegations that it had
failed to meet its obligations in terms of the contract.
[52]
In the event that it be found that the agreement was unlawfully
concluded the court was entitled to take
into account any possible
unjust consequences and make an order that was just and equitable in
the circumstances.
[39]
Infonomix contended that in this instance it would be inequitable and
unjust if it were ordered to repay monies it received where
it had
rendered service in terms of the contract entered into. It would be
prejudiced in that it utilised its ‘time, resources
and
manpower’ which it could have rendered for other clients.
Infonomix contended that it would be just and equitable that
it
should be allowed to retain monies it had received and it be
permitted to enforce payment for services already rendered.
[53] In
reply the SIU raised an objection to the filing of an affidavit by Mr
S Mulaudzi which was annexed to
the answering papers and was titled
‘confirmatory’ Affidavit’. The affidavit did not
confirm the content of Mr
Rambuwani’s answering affidavit and
the SIU had already in the founding papers addressed excerpts from an
affidavit obtained
during its investigation from Mr S Mulaudzi.
[55] In
as far as the delay was concerned the SIU denied that there was a
delay, it maintained that and its reasons
were explained in a
supplementary affidavit. It is denied that the SABC terminated the
contract as a result of its failure to perform.
It is also denied
that it was the SABC which first approached Infonomix, as is evident
from annexure ‘FA9’. The SIU
stands by its founding
papers that the process leading up to the decision and deviation was
flawed and that the SABC failed to
follow a procurement process as
provided by section 217 of the Constitution and according to its
policies.
ANALYSIS AND THE LAW
Mr S Mulaudzi’s
Second Affidavit dated 9 August 2021
[56] Mr
S Mulaudzi has filed an affidavit titled ‘confirmatory
affidavit’ which has a hundred and
sixty-five paragraphs and
together with annexures exceeds three hundred pages. The SIU has
responded to some parts of the affidavit
in reply. Counsel for the
SIU contended in heads of argument that this affidavit should not be
considered by the court. Counsel
for Infonomix has not addressed this
point in the heads of argument except to object to what seemed to be
the SIU making out a
case for review in reply by using Mr S Mulaudzi
affidavit. It is not clear which affidavit of Mr S Mulaudzi is being
referred to
because there were two affidavits, the first addressed in
the founding affidavit.
[57] It
is my considered view that if it is the second affidavit that is
being referred to, I find that it is
not properly before the court.
As pointed out in reply that Mr S Mulaudzi has not been joined or
intervened as a party, nor has
a proper case been made out why it
should be considered as either a confirmatory or supporting affidavit
on behalf of Infonomix.
There was further no application to file such
affidavit. I shall exercise my discretion to disregard the
second affidavit
or any reference to it in argument and I shall rely
on the founding, answering and replying affidavit where relevant to
the answering
affidavit.
CONDONATION
[58]
Infonomix raised the delay of more than two years by the SIU in
launching the application. The SIU explained
the delay in a
supplementary affidavit. Counsel for the SIU has dealt with this
point
in limine
in its heads of argument and counsel for
Infonomix has not dealt with the issue.
[59]
The launch of the application was preceded by an investigation
authorised by the President during September
2017, in a proclamation
where the SIU had to investigate eight entities Infonomix being one
of them. The investigations took just
over a year to complete during
September 2018 and the application was launched in December of 2018.
I find that the delay was understandable
and reasonable and since the
matter has not been taken further, I assume that there is no
objection to condonation being granted.
In the circumstances
condonation is granted.
THE INFONOMIX AWARD
[60] In
terms of Act 74 of 1996 (‘the SIU Act’) the SIU was
authorised by the President by proclamation
issued in terms of
section 2(1)(a)(ii) of the SIU Act to investigate malfeasance within
the SABC. The SABC, is a public entity
as provided in Schedule 2 of
the PFMA. The SIU’s functions are provided for in section 4 of
the SIU Act and with regard to
this matter in terms of section
4(1)(c)(i) and 5(5) it is permitted to institute civil proceedings in
its name before a court of
law .
[61]
The SIU launched the application in terms of PAJA alternatively in
terms of the principle of legality. Counsel
for the SIU contended
that SIU now relies mainly on the principle of legality as determined
in various cases. In Gijima
[40]
the following was stated:
“
[39]…
The principle of legality is “an incident of the rule of law”,
a founding value of our Constitution. In
Affordable Medicines Trust
the principle of legality was referred to as a Constitutional control
of the exercise of public power.
Ngcobo J put it thus:
“
The
exercise of public power must therefore comply with the Constitution
which is the supreme law, and the doctrine of legality
which is part
of that law. The doctrine of legality which is an incident of the
rule of law, is one the constitutional control
through which the
exercises of public power is regulated by the Constitution.”
[40]….the exercise
of public power which is at variance with the principle of legality
is inconsistent with the Constitution
itself. In short it is invalid
The principle of legality
may thus be a vehicle for its review. The question is: did the award
conform to legal prescripts? If it
did. That is the end
of the matter. If it did not it may be reviewed and possibly set
aside under legality review.”
Counsel
for the respondent agrees that this matter was always located only
within the legality principle and nowhere else and that
the SIU
should not be allowed to flip-flop between a PAJA and legality
review. I am of the view that the matter will be dealt with
on the
principle of legality. In the Fedsure Life Assurance
[41]
the following was stated:
“ …
a
local government may only act within the powers conferred upon it by
law. There is nothing startling in this proposition –
it is a
fundamental principle of the rule of law, recognised widely, that the
exercise of public power is only legitimate where
lawful. The rule of
law – to the extent at least that it expresses the principle of
legality-is generally understood to be
a fundamental principle of
constitutional law.”
[62]
The SABC complied with the prescripts of procurement as provided in
section 217 of the Constitution,
[42]
and the PFMA
[43]
by
incorporating them in its procurement policies and manuals. The PFMA
places certain responsibilities on officials in a public
entity which
includes the SABC.
[44]
The
SABC has incorporated into its policy and manuals National
Treasury’s
[45]
instructions and guidelines to accounting officers in public entities
on finance and supply chain management.
[63] It
is common cause between the parties that Infonomix was identified in
the Proclamation issued by the President
as one of eight companies
that were to be investigated. The case against infonomix is mainly
based on a discovery during such investigation
by the SIU that the
SABC failed to comply with its procurement policies before appointing
Infonomix and concluding a contract.
Furthermore, it regarded as
unlawful the upfront payment of R4,5 million.
[64]
The SIU contends that there was no justification for such payment and
Infonomix agrees that it received
such payment but on the one
hand it denied that there was no basis for such payment because it
had rendered a service, however
on the other hand it admits that it
required the R4,5 million as set up funding which it included in its
digital media proposition.
Infonomix does not indicate the nature of
the services it rendered which justified such payment or explain how
the monies were
utilised for set up within the premises of the SABC.
The SIU also does not tell this court what the investigation
uncovered regarding
the use of the payment as start up finance and
whether there were services rendered to the SABC by Infonomix.
[65]
Counsel for Infonomix concedes that neither the quotation process nor
bidding process was followed before
the appointment, however, it was
contended that the appointment in terms of the deviation process was
lawful in that it complied
with the SABC’s SCM policy and
manual. Infonomix has not divulged what these pre-deviation SCM
processes were and which it
had knowledge of, that there was
compliance with the SCM policies.
[66] In
my view Infonomix, therefore does not dispute that the SIU relied on
policies of the SABC as the basis
for it case and on the processes
which should have been engaged by the SABC before awarding the
tender, as set out in the founding
papers. It does not dispute the
fact that the Head of Supply Chain had the delegated authority to
manage procurement to
administer processes such as the
administration of quotations, bids drafting of contracts,
pre-qualification of suppliers, negotiation
of contracts with
suppliers; conducting due diligence audits on high risk suppliers and
contractors; and to facilitate the appointment
of members of the Bid
Specification and Evaluation Committees.(
my underlining)
[67]
As I see it, the framework for procurement adopted by the SABC not
only complied with the law but it served
the public interest because
the SABC relies among other sources of income, on contributions
through licence fees from the public.
The SABC’s polices and
manuals
[46]
served to ensure
that all employees or functionaries, without exception abide by a
process of procurement that brings transparency
and integrity to the
SABC and conforms to section 217 of the Constitution; that public
resources are properly utilised; that malfeasance
and corruption in
the administration is rooted out. In as far as the SABC failed to
comply with the law, such conduct was reviewable,
and the award may
consequently be set aside and the contract entered into declared void
ab initio.
[68]
Where provision is made for the eventuality of a deviation, the
process leading up to that state must have
followed the laws of
procurement for services and or goods. Section 217 makes it
peremptory that the processes preceding the procurement
are fair,
equitable, transparent, competitive and cost effective.
[69] In
fact, in the answering affidavit Infonomix bemoaned the lengthy
founding papers which it said were mainly
argumentative and cast
aspersions without factual foundation, which left very little to
answer to. The founding papers were indeed
very lengthy because SIU
embarked on an exposition of the laws and SCM procedures on which it
founded its case. In my view there
is nothing wrong in that approach.
It would not have served the SIU well if it had not dealt with
the source of these procedures
in the founding papers and only dealt
with them in argument. Its case is mainly based on its investigations
within the SABC, supported
by affidavits obtained from employees
involved and who had personal knowledge of the incident. The SABC,
has not opposed this application.
The excerpts from the employees’
affidavits which were not controverted remain relevant to
consideration herein.
[70]
Infonomix was very circumspect about the individuals it encountered
on several occasions at the SABC, referring
to them as the
team
.
The SIU deals with the affidavits of Ms T Ndlovu and Mrs
Tugwana who had knowledge of the unsolicited bid made to the GCEO
and
how a meeting was facilitated for the presentation by Infonomix
before the OPS summit; that Mr T Mulaudzi, Mr Anto Heunis
informed to Ms Phasha and herself of their approval of Infonomix’s
proposal and later they gave feed back to the GCEO, Ms
Tungwana Ms
Raphela and herself. A resolution to expedite the commercialization
of an aggressive digital strategy was taken. The
resolution standing
alone does not validate the process of procurement.
[71]
The question that needs to be asked is whether the SABC complied with
its policies before making the award
and entering into a contract
with Infonomix. In my view, even if the procurement of the digital
strategy was unsolicited and based
on a resolution which may have
been classified as necessary or urgent at an OPS meeting, procurement
thereof in all formats identified
required that the necessary demand
management be undertaken and correct processes complied with, which
were fair, transparent,
equitable, competitive and cost effective,
even where it was necessary to engage a deviation to the process of
procurement.
[72] I
reiterate the SIU relies on content of the affidavits of the
employees as to what transpired. Infonomix
does not have a version of
what transpired even though it had several meetings and met with the
team to conclude the agreement.
In order to qualify Infonomix as a
sole supplier the SABC had to comply with in paragraph 9.4 and 9.5 of
the SCM manual. Infonomix’s
stance is that it should not be
treated harshly because it is an innocent service provider, which had
no knowledge of the SABC’s
SCM.
[73] In
my view this does not bear truth because Infonomix should have known
that the SABC was not a private company
but a public entity which
would be required to subject itself to open tender processes,
especially where millions of rand were
involved. This is a fact that
it could have familiarised itself with the processes before
approaching the SABC to present its unsolicited
presentation since it
went to great lengths to research the product it wished to sell to
the SABC. Infonomix did not dispute its
responses to the SIU dealt
with in the founding papers. The responses show that Infonomix
researched global broadcasting services
like ‘Sky’ ‘HBO’
and others and even knew that the BBC had embarked on a similar
project. What was
not established by the SABC was whether
Infonomix possessed a product that was standard in the market and
Infonomix in answer does
not demonstrate or make out a case in that
regard. The SABC relied on the say so of Infonomix.
[74]
The SIU contended that this was indication that Infonomix had no
track record of innovations and expertise
in the digital media
sphere, that it was a fairly new company and that it was aware that
it would not compete with well established
players in the industry if
the procurement for services and goods in this field was subjected to
open tender.
[75]
The SABC manual does provide for the appointment of a sole
provider.
[47]
A sole provider
is one that has a product which is unique and innovative. This
requires ‘strategic planning’ involving
a needs analysis
and an evaluation whether the need has been budgeted for, and in
exceptional cases whether there were cost advantages
for the SABC.
Reasons had to be provided to the Bid Evaluation Committee for not
going through normal bidding processes, and this
should be coupled
with a DAF approval. The SIU relied on the affidavit of Ms Tungwana
and Mr T Mulaudzi as to what occurred when
the business case was
prepared. According to Mr T Mulaudzi, this document had to be amended
to suite Mr Aguma and it seems that
in this instance he took
decisions that should have been made by the Bid Specification and Bid
Evaluation Committees.
[76]
The business case penned by Mr T Mulaudzi confirms that the SABC was
approached by Infonomix an external
service provider also stating its
speciality. The set up costs were for ‘implementing a new
responsive design of 7
websites …for skinning/platform
development’. A partnership arrangement was envisaged on a
70/30 shareholding without
any assurance that Infonomix had been in
the business and could render the service. The business case was
presented to Mr S Mulaudzi
with a request for deviation as Head of
SCM.
[77]
The SIU dealt with Mr S Mulaudzi’s affidavit whose first hunch
was that there were insufficient grounds
to deviate from the
procurement process; he stated that he would have directed that the
request for the deviation for the appointment
of Infonomix for the
procurement of digital tools be subjected to open tender if it came
from an employee of lower rank. This meant
that he was not in
agreement or convinced with what was proffered in the business case
(i) that it was not feasible to apply for
three quotations or a
competitive bid process or (ii) that the service to be provided by
Infonomix did not qualify as one of the
exclusions listed in the
manuals or was an exceptional case (iii) that the service to be
provided by Infonomix was disguised as
an investment type of contract
which required the SABC to invest R4,5million for set-up costs for a
projected return of R83million
and for profits to be shared (iv) the
probability that Infonomix did not possess the speciality it
professed and that an open tender
was justified(v) that this was a
procurement of service that it had to go though the Bid
Specifications and Bid Evaluation Committees
to evaluate the need for
a deviation.
[78] Mr
S Mulaudzi was also aware that the policy had set down a procurement
threshold that procurements above
R2 million had to be subjected to
open tender. In my view Mr Molaudzi’s first hunch expressed the
correct position which
his mandate demanded in terms of the SCM
policy and manuals, especially because the SABC was bound by law and
had in principle
and in writing confirmed and adopted the law with
regard to procurement and to be bound by the National Treasury
Regulation 16A
where applicable. Any other instruction given outside
of these policies were therefore reviewable and invalid and the award
thus
made had to be set aside. He appended his signature to the
deviation request knowing that the appointment did not comply with
the
law. The reasons given by Mr S Mulaudzi as to why he changed his
mind after discussions with by Mr Aguma have no merit. As see it,
the
discussions were intended to protect Infonomix by ensuring that it
was awarded the tender.
[79] In
terms of the policy the decision not to subject the procurement to
open tender was not for Mr Aguma to
make alone or for Mr S Mulaudizi
to comply with the request when he knew that procurement policies had
not been followed by Mr
Aguma, Mr T Mulaudzi and others. Ms Ndlovu
went further and suggested that there were reasons for not to issuing
an RFP(request
for a proposal) but this does not explain why the
correct process was not followed. The RFP would have enabled the SABC
to evaluate
the risk and revenue available to engage Infonomix to be
selected as a sole source and to present this to the Bid Evaluation
Committee
according to ‘predefined criteria’ of the SABC.
Ms Ndlovu further supported a request for a special payment from the
cost centre of the Chief Financial Officer which request is presented
in the business case. She requested approval for the payment
a day
after Infonomix was registered on the supplier data.
[80]
The payment of R4,5 million is dealt with in the business case and in
the
contract. In the business
case it is stated that the:
“
4
……..Digital Media proposition requires set up funding
of R4.5 million. The costs are for implementing of a
new
responsive design of 7 skinning/platform development intended to meet
the following objectives
In the contract concluded
the following is stated:
“
9.1
In consideration for the services to be rendered by the service
provider to the SABC in terms of phase 1 and 2 of this agreement,
the
SABC shall pay the service provider the amount of R4,5 million
excluding VAT prior to the commencement of services.”
The contract does not
explain whether the services to be rendered include set up costs.
[81] In
the answering affidavit and without giving details Infonomix
contended that the agreement was terminated
by the parties. The SIU
denies that the upfront payment was contractually justified and
lawful and further denies that the termination
of the contract was
unfair irregular and unlawful. It is also not clear whether any
services were rendered by Infonomix for setting
up the websites
chosen by the SABC and to what extent both parties had progressed in
implementing the contract, whether any payments
were made to
Infonomix over and above the R4,5 million rand. No facts are given
whether the SABC and Infonomix made profits and
to what extent any
have been paid out. These facts may not be relevant to prayers 1 and
2 of the notice of motion in that I have
already found that the
appointment of Infonomix was reviewable and should be set aside and
consequently the contract entered into
was void
ab initio
where
the procurement procedures had not been complied with/
[82] In
as far as prayers 3 and 4, are concerned, I am of the view that both
Infonomix and the SABC flouted the
SCM procedures, the SABC being the
most guilty party by failing to follow a competitive bidding process
as envisaged in section
217 of the Constitution and the PFMA and, for
engaging an unsolicited bid with an entity which did not qualify as a
sole source
provider.
[83]
None of the employees involved in the malfeasance have been joined
individually to this application which
would probably have made them
liable in their personal capacities for the loss the SIU wishes to
recover. The prayers suggest there
is probably more to the initial
payment of R4,5 million which the SIU wishes to uncover for example
as suggested in the alternative
prayer. The SABC has not
opposed the application and in my view an order cannot be made in the
circumstances of this case
that only Infonomix repay the loss the SIU
wishes to recover where the SIU has not shown that the SABC had not
derived any benefit
from the payment it made.
[84]
While it is trite that Infonomix should not benefit out of a contract
which is void ab initio, in this instance
the SABC may have
benefitted from whatever service it received from Infonomix before
the contract was terminated and probably extending
beyond that
period. By declaring the agreement void ab initio Infornomix would be
prevented from deriving further benefit from
the SABC derived out of
the contract.
[85]
The SIU has not determined in its investigations what the value of
such benefit might be and it has not made
out a case why it should be
determined that it is entitled to an order in the alternative, if in
its investigations it did not
go further in determining what gains or
losses the SABC suffered as a result of the impugned decision or what
profits were earned.
The SIU had full access to information at the
SABC from which it could establish that more than the R4,5 million
was paid out.
The SIU has made no demand for repayment of the R4,5
million and additional amounts it might have uncovered prior to the
launch
of this application. The SIU does not make out a case that the
SABC itself was not playing open cards and was refusing to avail
information from its books regarding its dealings with Infonomix
justifying an order in the alternative against Infonomix only.
Infonomix has not been prior to the launch of this application been
approached by the SIU to give an account of its services to
the SABC
and payment received or profits paid out and that Infonomix declined
to give such information. In my view there is scant
information
available to this court to justify the rendition of a statement of
account and debatement thereof.
[86] In
my view it would therefore not be just and equitable to grant prayers
3 or the alternative prayer 4.
[86] In
the result the following order is granted:
1.
It is ordered that the decision of the
second respondent of 15 November 2016 to award the tender to the
first respondent is reviewed
and is set aside;
2.
It is hereby declared that the contract
entered between the first and second respondent on 7 December 2016 is
void
ab initio
;
3.
The first respondent is ordered pay the
costs of this application and that such costs shall include the costs
consequent upon the
employment of two counsel;
TLHAPI J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
HEARD AND RESERVED ON:
26 AUGUST 2023
DELIVERED ON: 01
SEPTEMBER 2023
Appearances
:
For
the Applicant: Adv J Motepe SC with M V Magagane (instructed by)
Werksmans Attorneys
For
the First Respondent: Adv M Makgato (instructed by) Manong Pilane
Mokotedi Inc
[1]
Preamble
of SIU Act: “….establishment of Special Investigating
Units for the purpose of investigating serious malpractices
or
maladministration in connection with the administration of State
institutions, state assets and public money as well as any
conduct
which may seriously harm the interests of the public and of
instituting and conducting civil proceedings in any court
of law….in
its own name or on behalf of the State institutions…..to
provide for the establishment of Special Tribunal
so as to
adjudicate over civil maters……”
[2]
SIU
Act section2 (1):”The President may ……whenever
he or she deems it necessary on account of any of the grounds
mentioned in subsection (2) by proclamation in the Gazette (a)
establish a Special Investigating Unit in order to investigate
the
matter concerned.” 2(2) “The President may exercise the
powers under subsection (i) of any alleged:
(a)serious
maladministration in connection with the affairs of any State
Institution;
(b)improper or unlawful
conduct by employees of any State Institution;
(c)unlawful
appropriation or expenditure of public money or property;
(d)unlawful, irregular
or unapproved acquisitive act, transaction, measure or practice
having a bearing upon State property;
(e)intentional or
negligent loss of public money or damage to public property
(f)……..
(g)……”
[3]
Sections
4(1)(c) and 5(5) of the SIU Act.
[4]
Schedule
to the Proclamation:”1.The procurement of, or contracting of
goods, works or services by or on behalf of the SABC
from………………….Gekkonomix
(Pty)Ltd (trading as Infonomix) ……and payments
made in
respect thereof, in a manner that was:-
(a)Not fair,
competitive, transparent, equitable or cost effective;
(b)Contrary to
applicable-
(i)
legislation;
(ii)
manuals, guidelines, practice notes, circulars of institutions issue
by National Treasury; or
(iii)manuals,
policies, procedures, prescripts, institutions or practices of or
applicable to the SABC;
and
related unauthorised irregular or fruitless and wasteful expenditure
incurred by the SABC or
the
State.”
[5]
Section
217 (1) of the Constitution: “When and 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.” (
my
underlining)
[6]
Section
51(1)(a)(i) and (iii) of the PFMA: “(1) An accounting
authority for a public entity- (a) must ensure that a public
entity
has and maintains- (i) effective, efficient and transparent systems
of financial and risk management and internal control;
(ii)………..
(iii) an appropriate
procurement and provisioning system which is
fair, equitable,
transparent, competitive and cost -effective”
(my
underlining)
[7]
Section
76(4) of the PFMA: “The National Treasury may make regulations
or issue instructions to all institutions to which
this Act is
applicable concerning-
(a)…….
(b)……
(c) the determination of
a framework for an appropriate procurement and provisioning system
which is
fair, equitable, transparent, competitive, and
cost-effective.”
(my underlining)
[8]
Treasury
Regulation 16A6.2-which provides for a supply chain management
system in subjecting procurement through a bidding process
which
requires bids to be adjudicated through a bid adjudication
committee-the establishment, composition and functioning of
bid
specification, evaluation and adjudication committees, the selection
of bid adjudication members – bidding procedures
-approval of
bid evaluations and/or adjudication committee recommendations.
[9]
Section
217(3) of the Constitution provided that National legislation must
prescribe a framework…..
[10]
Section
217 of the Constitution and section 76(4)(c) which provides National
Treasury to make regulations or issue instructions
to all
institutions to which the Act applies concerning: “the
determination of a framework for an appropriate procurement
and
provisioning system which is fair equitable transparent competitive
and cost effective.
[11]
National
Treasury Instructions Note 3 of 2016/17 addressed to all
Accounting Authorities of Public Entities and others which
was
issued as a guide to prevent and combat abuse in supply chain
management systems. This instruction (8.1) deals with when
an
accounting office or authority/officer may deviate from inviting
competitive bids in cases ‘of emergency, serious unexpected
situations that pose immediate risk to health, life, property etc
and where (8.3) sole source procurement may occur
where
there is evidence that only one supplier possesses the unique and
singularly available capacity to meet the requirements
of the
institution at (8.4)…invite as many suppliers as possible and
select the preferred supplier using the competitive
bid system. At
(8.5)deviation will be allowed in exceptional cases subject to the
approval from relevant treasury
[12]
Section
217 of the Constitution and Foot note 9
[13]
Foot
note 11
[14]
Issued
by National Treasury dated February 2004- Chapter 3: 3.1.1;3.1.2;
3.2
[15]
Section
51(1)(a)(iii) if the PFMA
[16]
Founding
Affidavit paragraphs 54: 54.1 to 54.3-“The Head of Supply
Chain Management had delegated authority to implement
and administer
the procedures and processes in terms of the SCM Policy-inter- alia
administration of quotations, procurement
contracts,
pre-qualification of suppliers, negotiation with suppliers….-
“ the SCM policy provides for Bid Adjudication,
Operations,
Bid Specification and Bid Evaluation Committees and the Head is to
facilitate the appointment of the Bid Specification
and Bid
Evaluation Committees- and paragraph 119.2 of the Founding Affidavit
and 6.5.1 of the SCM
[17]
Founding
Affidavit paragraph 54.4
[18]
Founding
Affidavit paragraph 55 dealing with section 8 of the SCM model-
demand management; acquisition management; logistics
management;
disposal management; risk management; supply chain performance
management (footnote 14)
[19]
Section
11 SABC SCM policy: “11.1 In cases where circumstances merit
deviation(s) from particular provision(s) of the policy
or
procedures including emergency purchases, written submissions shall
be routed through the SCM division, for approval in accordance
with
DAF for further approval.
11.2 Where a closed bid
is justified, prior approval shall be granted in accordance with
DAF”
[20]
Paragraph
62 of the Founding Affidavit. SCM manual para 5.4 the pillars
being (a) value for money (b) Open and effective
competition which
require a framework of procurement laws, policies, practices and
procedures that is transparent (documents
that must be readily
accessible to all parties-openness of procurement process and
encouragement of effective competition (c)
Ethics and fair dealing;
(d) accountability and reporting -……it is an essential
element of accountability that
there is openness and transparency in
administration, by external scrutiny through public reporting-
within the procurement framework
*the CFO is accountable to the SABC
GCEO for the overall management of procurement activities; *Managers
are accountable to the
CFO…*All people exercising procurement
functions must have regard for this policy and are accountable to
management; (e)Equity
[21]
Foot
Note16 and 17
[22]
Founding
Affidavit paragraph 64 – dealing with paragraph 8 of the
Manual.
[23]
Paragraph
9.4 SCM Manual (DAF-Delegation Authority Framework -deals with
accountability , transparency in the decision making
in all spheres
of management-procurement-finances and budget approvals
[24]
Founding
Affidavit paragraph 68 (paragraph 10.2 and 10.3 of the SCM
[25]
GCEO
(Group Chief Executive Officer)/ COO(Chief Operations Officer)
CFO(Chief Financial Officer)
[26]
Paragraph
12.2 of the SCM manual
[27]
FA3
affidavit Mr T Mulaudzi
[28]
Founding
Affidavit paragraph 98: Mr S Mulaudzi’s affidavit: Infonomix
was going to exploit the advertising space with regard
to multimedia
set up-A platform that was at the time not operating effectively
within the SABC-the idea was to sell advertising
space on
multimedia…this was treated as a confidential approach to the
market/competitors…in the event we were
to embark on an open
ender process and request for proposal, our competitors ….could
reposition themselves to close off
the market to the SABC and create
an environment where it becomes difficult for the SABC to come in
and make favourable commercial
impact – Infonomix was going to
provide training and establish a unit within the SABC ….Mr
Aguma believed strongly
that his aspect should not be known to the
market because you would then have to include this in your
specifications…Infomnomix
had current engagements with our
competitors. As a result of this, Mr Aguma felt that it would
jeorpadise the current relationship
of Infonomix with their current
clients if they would find out than Infonomix were to tender at the
SABC which is a direct competitor-Infonomix
had exclusive rights on
content and were the sole supplier of sport related content
including video based, highlights etc which
was to be provided to
the SABC,” At paragraph 16 of his affidavit – “although
the most viable option would
have been to embark on an open tender
procedure, I was comfortable that the reasons provided to embark on
a deviated procedure
were justifiable and documented.”
Founding Affidavit
paragraph 99: Ms T Ndlovu’s affidavit: ….reason to
deviate…aimed to develop and implement
the digital media
strategy in a confined manner without losing competitive edge….The
project was intended to create an
additional digital revenue stream
which had not been explored to its full potential by the SABC as the
corporation advertises
on TV and Radio….”
[29]
Paragraph
4.1 of its responses to the SIU-it saw an opportunity “to be
recognised as a digital great for helping lead the
national
broadcaster into the 21
st
century mimicking established global players….the BBC
embarked on a similar project in 2001…” In Paragraph
4.8 ….it investigated “largest most successful
broadcasting services and content providers globally” and
“major systems such as HBO, Hulu, Netflix, ESPN, Bloomberg and
Sky”
[30]
Salient
terms of the contract in Paragraph 111 of the founding affidavit:
“3.1 The SABC wishes to engage a suitably qualified
service
provider to provide the services. The SABC requires the
implementation of aggressive digital media proposition including
but
limited to technical infrastructure, platforms, content, strategic
partnership and commercialisation of the SABC digital
strategies.
3.2The service provider
specializes in big data analytics, digital strategy development and
implementation and value-added services
and has represented to the
SABC that it has the necessary ability, expertise, resources and
skills to render the services required
by the SABC.
3.1.1 The SABC hereby
wishes to appoint the service provider for the development and
execution of a digital strategy whose outcome
is to launch and run
medial sales for the SABC through commercial enterprises.
3.1.2 The SABC further
wishes to conform that the service provider will also run Value
Added Services;
5.2 The parties agree on
a profit share model of 70% to the SABC and 30% to the service
provider ………
5.3 With respect to VAS
profit share is based on gross revenue less operator costs and/or
subscriber competition price. The profit
share is 68% to the SABC
and 32% to the service provider…..
9.1 In consideration for
the services to be rendered by the service provider to the SABC in
terms of Phase 1 and 2 of this agreement,
the SABC shall pay the
service provider the contract amount of R4, 5million excluding prior
to the commencement of the services.”
[31]
Founding
Affidavit paragraph 119.2 and 120: the SABC procurement policy 6.5.1
and 6.5.2 and 6.8.1 “The BEC is the
committee that
comprises individual who are specialists from different divisions of
the SABC who are brought together to evaluate
bid for procurement of
goods, services, works or content and make recommendations to the
BAC”
[32]
Sole
source means “where there is only one supplier” and at
9.5(a) of the manual :”a sole source situations
is where there
is only one supplier and or OEM for the goods sought.”
[33]
SCM
Manual paragraph 10,11(a):” All payments to suppliers are to
be made by Finance Department except petty cash disbursements.
Suppliers will be paid by electronic funds transfer (EFT) according
to the standard agreed and contracted supplier payment terms
and
conditions. Standard payment terms and conditions must apply where
possible. The SABC standard payment terms are 30days from
dated of
statement. In certain instances, suppliers may request early
payment. This needs to be considered at the discretion
of the Head
of SCM or his delegate.:
[34]
as
intended in section 6(2)(a)(iii)
[35]
as
intended in section 6(2)(e)(i), and
[36]
as
intended in section 6(3)(ii)
[37]
as
intended in section 6(2)(e)(v)
[38]
as
intended in section 6(2)(f)(ii)(dd)
[39]
Section
172(1)(b) of the Constitution
[40]
State
Information Technology Agency Soc Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2018(2)SA 23 (CC) paragraphs [38] [39][40]
[41]
Fedsure
Life Assurance v Greated Johannesburg TMS
[1998] ZACC 17
;
1999 (1) SA 374
(CC)
paragraph [56] ; Affordable Medicines Trust and Others v The
Minister of Health and Others 2006 (3) 247 (CC)
[42]
Foot
note 5 -the tendering system must be fair, equitable, transparent,
competitive and cost effective
[43]
Footnote
15 – maintains “(iii) an appropriate procurement and
provisioning system which is fair, equitable, transparent
competitive and cost effective”
[44]
Section
57 of the PFMA:” An official in a public entity (a) must
ensure that the system of financial management and internal
control
established for that public entity is carried out within the area of
responsibility of that official; (b) is responsible
for the
effective, efficient, economical and transparent use of financial
and other resources within that official’s area
of
responsibility’ (c) must take effective steps to prevent,
within that official’s area of responsibility, any irregular
expenditure and fruitless and wasteful expenditure any under
collection of revenue; (d) must comply with the provisions of this
Act to the extent applicable to that official including any
delegations and instructions in terms of section 56; and (e) is
responsible for the management ….of the assets and
management of the liabilities within that officials area of
responsibility”
[45]
National
Treasury Note 3 of 20120176; and Treasury Regulations 16A6.2
[46]
Section
2.2 and 5.4 of the SCM manual; foot note 20 and 23 above
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