Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 164South Africa
Halifax Group (Pty) Ltd v National Minister of Home Affairs and Others (8913/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 164 (31 March 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Halifax Group (Pty) Ltd v National Minister of Home Affairs and Others (8913/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 164 (31 March 2022)
Halifax Group (Pty) Ltd v National Minister of Home Affairs and Others (8913/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 164 (31 March 2022)
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sino date 31 March 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
(1)
REPORTABLE:
YES
/
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
(3)
REVISED.
31/03/22
CASE NO:
8913/2022
In
the matter between:
HALIFAX
GROUP (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
(Registration
No. 2013/205374/07)
and
NATIONAL
MINISTER OF HOME
AFFAIRS
1
st
Respondent
DIRECTOR
GENERAL: DEPARTMENT OF HOME AFFAIRS
2
nd
Respondent
DELIBLOX
(PTY) LTD
3
rd
Respondent
(Registration
No. 2013/021502/07)
JUDGMENT
MNGQIBISA-THUSI,
J
[1]
In
Part A of its application, the applicant, Halifax Group (Pty) Ltd, is
seeking, on an urgent basis, an interim interdict restraining
the
first respondent from concluding a contract flowing from, Bid No.
DHA12-2021: Appointment of a Service Provider for
Infrastructure/Refurbishment/Construction,
including consequential
general building, electrical, mechanical, structural, civil and
engineering works at the Department of Home
Affairs offices, Refugee
Centres and Ports of Entry (“the tender”), with the third
respondent, Deliblox (Pty) Ltd, pending the
determination of a
pending review application (Part B).
[1]
[2]
The
applicant is an unsuccessful bidder and the third respondent is the
successful tenderer.
[3]
The
first respondent, the Minister of Home Affairs, is the political head
of the national Department of Home Affairs (“DHA”).
The
second respondent is the Director General and accounting officer of
the DHA.
[4]
In its
review application (Part B) the applicant seeks the following relief:
4.1
that the decision to award contract flowing from Bid No. DHA12-2021
be reviewed and set aside;
4.2
that the award of the contract to third respondent be declared null
and void ab initio and set aside;
4.3
that the decision to award the tender to third respondent be referred
back to the first respondent.
[5]
In brief the following facts are common cause.
[6]
During August 2021 the first respondent issued an
invitation to tender for the services alluded to in paragraph 1
above. The
applicant and others submitted their bids. As
part of its tender document the applicant submitted,
inter
alia
, the following: (i) a declaration of
interests; (ii) a Central Supplier Database report and for purposes
of Broad-Based Black Economic
Empowerment (“B-BBEE”)
verification, (iii) a certificate issued by Mosela Rating Agency; and
(iv) a share certificate of the
FAH Trust (‘the Trust”).
[7]
On 18 January 2022 the DHA informed the applicant
that it was unsuccessful in its bid.
[8]
Subsequent thereto the applicant, through its
attorneys of record, sought from the first respondent reasons for its
application being
unsuccessful.
[9]
When the respondent did not respond to the
request for reasons, the applicant’s attorneys sent a letter to the
first respondent
in which it sought an undertaking that it would not
conclude a contract with the third respondent pending its decision to
review
the decision to award the tender to the third respondent.
[10]
On 2 February 2022, the first respondent
responded to the applicant’s request for reasons which reads in
part:
“
2.
Your office is advised that your Client’s application for the above
bid was rejected
on the grounds that your Client provided the
Department with false information or misrepresented information
relevant to assessing
the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment
(B-BBEE) status of his company, which is in contravention and an
offence in terms of Section
130(1)(a) and (c) of the Broad-Based
Black Economic Empowerment Act, 2003 (Act NO. 53 of 2003) (B-BBEE
Act).
3.
Consequently, the Department has a legal obligation in terms of
Section 13A of
the B-BBEE Act not to enter into contractual
agreements with your clients should they exist”.
[11]
On 8 February 2022 the applicant’s attorneys
sought clarification from the first respondent with regard to its
assertion that the
applicant did not comply with the B-BBEE Act.
[12]
In response thereto the first respondent sent the
applicant’s attorneys a letter on 10 February 2022 in which it
intimated that
the applicant did not qualify as a ‘Black person’
for purposes of Black Broad Based Empowerment as he only became a
South African
citizen by naturalisation after the cut-off date of 27
April 1994.
[13]
It is the applicant’s contention that this
application is urgent in that if the interim interdict sought is not
granted and a contract
between the first respondent and the third
respondent was concluded and the services subsequently rendered, and
in the event of the
impugned decision being reviewed and set aside,
it being successful in reviewing and having the impugned set aside,
it will suffer
financial loss as it would not be able to recover the
financial benefits of the contract.
[14]
The applicant contends that it and not the third
respondent should have been awarded the tender as it qualified as
having a Level
1B-BBEE status. In this regard, the applicant
asserts that the FAH Trust (‘the Trust”) owns 100% of the shares
in the applicant
and that the deponent to the founding affidavit’s
children are the beneficiaries of the Trust. It is further the
applicant’s
contention that its bid was the lowest. No basis
is, however, set out in the founding affidavit why the applicant
believes
its bid was the lowest and why the third respondent should
not have been awarded the tender.
[15]
The applicant further contends that it was
disqualified from the tender because the first and second respondent
are biased against
it due to the fact that, as the successful tender
for the same services in a previous contract, there are current
disputes between
the parties which are still not resolved.
[16]
The respondents contend that the applicant’s
bid was disqualified mainly on the ground it had provided false
information with regard
to the assessment of its B-BBEE status.
[17]
For an applicant to succeed in an
application for an interim interdict it has to satisfy the following
requirements:
17.1
that it has a
prima facie
right, though open to some doubt;
17.2
that the balance of convenience favours the
granting of the interim interdict;
17.3
that it has a reasonable apprehension of
irreparable harm and imminent harm to the right if the interim
interdict is not granted;
and
17.4
that
it has no other satisfactory remedy.
[2]
[18]
To
establish that it has a
prima
facie
right which ought to be protected, it was contended on behalf of the
applicant that by virtue of being an unsuccessful tenderer,
it has a
right to fair administrative action in terms of the Constitution on
the grounds as set out in the provisions of the Promotion
of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”)
[3]
.
It was further submitted that the applicant was disqualified because
the first and second respondents had incorrectly assumed
that its
B-BBEE status did not qualify for Level 1 B-BBEE status.
[19]
It was
further submitted on behalf of the applicant that the balance of
convenience favour it in that if the interim interdict is
not granted
and its review application is successful, it would lose income it
would have generated from the contract. Further,
that the
financial benefits that would have accrued to it as the successful
tenderer would be irrecoverable as there was no available
suitable
alternative remedy as it would not be able to claim the profits to be
deprived from the contract.
[20]
Respondents
dispute that the matter is urgent on the ground that the applicant
has delayed in launching these proceedings and had
as a result
burdened the respondents with truncated time periods to respond to
its application even though it must have been clear
to the applicant
that its application for a review would not be successful.
Further, the respondents oppose the relief sought
by the applicant on
the grounds that it has not met all the requirements for the granting
of an interim interdict.
[21]
Regarding
the
prima
facie
right claimed by the applicant, it is the respondents’ contention
that the applicant has not shown that its application meets the
requirements which have to be satisfied for an interim interdict to
be granted. It was submitted that the applicant has not
shown
that it has a right which, if not protected by an interim interdict,
it will suffer irreparable harm.
[22]
According
to the respondents, which fact is not denied by the applicant, under
its declaration of interest, the applicant did not
declare any other
interest other than that the deponent to the founding affidavit was a
director of the applicant and only attached
the verification
certificate. It was submitted on behalf of the respondents that
what the deponent to the founding affidavit,
Mr Olurufeni Adedoyini
Adeleke (Mr Adeleke”) alleged about the Trust holding 100% of the
shares in the applicant was inconsistent
with what is contained in
the Central Supplier Database (“the CSD”) which formed part of
the applicant’s bid documentation,
which reflects,
inter
alia
,
that Mr Adeleke owns 100% shares in the applicant. It is the
respondents’ contention that because of this inconsistency,
it is
unlikely that the applicant will succeed in its review application.
It was argued that, because of the failure of the
applicant to
disclose the status of the ownership it was correctly disqualified.
Further that, even if the court was to find
in favour of the
applicant on the disclosure of its ownership, the tender would not
have been awarded to it as its bid was not the
lowest.
[23]
It is
the respondents’ contention that the balance of convenience favours
the dismissal of the application in that the first respondent
has a
constitutional and statutory duty to provide services to the public
and since this tender involves critical projects where
there is a
need for urgent remedial work to be done, the granting of an interim
interdict would hamstrung the first respondent in
the performance of
its constitutional and statutory obligations.
[24]
Further
it was submitted on behalf of the respondents that if the interim
interdict is granted, the first respondent and the public
at large
would suffer irreparable harm in that planned essential remedial
works would have to be halted until finalisation of the
review
proceedings. On the other hand, should the review application
be successful, the applicant can still sue for any damages
it may
have suffered.
[25]
With
regard to urgency, I am satisfied that the matter is urgent when one
takes into account that the first and second respondents
had
undertaken not to enter into a tender contract with the third
respondent until the 25 March 2022. I am of the view that
it
was prudent of the applicant to have instituted these proceedings now
as, if they were to be successful in their review application,
whatever rights they may have would have been scuppered by the fact
that the contract would have been implemented and or completed
by the
time the review application is heard. Further, since the matter
relates to the procurement of services by government
which services
appear to be essential.
[26]
The
main issue to be determined is whether the applicant has satisfied
the requirements of an interim interdict to be granted.
As
correctly pointed out by counsel for the applicant, the merits of the
pending review application are not in issue in these proceedings.
[27]
The applicant as an unsuccessful tenderer
complains about the manner in which he was disqualified from the
tender. It cannot
be disputed that having regard to the
provisions of the Constitution, in particular s 33 of the
Constitution, the applicant has a
right to vindicate its
administrative justice rights. As an unsuccessful tenderer
which complains about being unfairly disqualified
because of wrong
assumptions made by the first respondent with regard to its B-BBEE
status, I am of the view that the applicant has
established a prima
facie right even if there is some doubt. The respondents’
assertions that the applicant did not disclose
its ownership status
and its share certificate appears to be incorrect when one takes into
account the applicant’s annexure to
the founding affidavit marked
‘H1’ which includes the FAH trust share certificate and the
verification certificate issued by
Mosela Rating Agency. It
cannot be disputed that these documents formed part of the
applicant’s bid documents. Taking
into account the reasons
given by the first respondent for the disqualification of the
applicant and the evidence contained in the
bid documentation, I am
of the view that the applicant has established a prima facie right
though open to some doubt.
[28]
If the interdict is granted, it would not have
final effect in that should the review application be dismissed, the
first respondent
can proceed implementing the tender contract.
However, if the application for an interim interdict is not granted
and the review
application is successful, the applicant would suffer
irreparable harm in that the contract between the first and third
respondents
would have been concluded and implementation would have
taken place. Even though the services related to the tender
contract
appear to be essential that cannot trump the applicant’s
constitutionally guaranteed right.
[29]
As correctly contended for by counsel for the
applicant, if the interim interdict is not granted and the tender
contract is implemented,
and the review is successful, the applicant
would not be able to claim any financial benefits should it be
qualified to have been
awarded the contract.
[30]
With regard to the costs of this application, I
am of the view that it would be fair and reasonable that the costs be
determined on
finalisation of the whole application.
[31]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
That this application be dealt with as an
urgent application in accordance with Rule 6(12) of the Uniform Rules
of Court and that
any non-compliance with the Uniform Rues of Court
is condoned.
2.
That the first and second respondents are
interdicted and restrained from giving effect to, or further effect
if 7it has commenced,
to the contract flowing from Bid No.
DHA12-2021: Appointment of a Service Provider for
Infrastructure/Refurbishment/Construction,
including consequential
general building, electrical, mechanical, structural, civil and
engineering works at the Department of Home
Affairs offices, Refugee
Centres and Ports of Entry.
3.
That the interim interdict shall operate with
immediate effect, pending the finalisation of Part B of this
application.
4.
That leave is granted to the applicant to
supplement the application relating to the relief sought in Part B of
this application upon
a date to be determined by the Registrar.
5.
Costs to be costs in the cause.
N
P MNGQIBISA-THUSI
Judge
of the High Court
Date
of hearing : 23 March 2022
Date
of Judgement: 31 March 2022
Appearances
For
Applicant: Adv C M Rip (instructed by De Jager Inc.)
For
First and Second Respondents: Adv J Hershensohn with Adv P
Nyapholi – Motsie (instructed by the State Attorney)
For
Third Respondent: Adv A Vorster (instructed by Cox & Yeats
Attorneys)
[1]
Section 217 of the Constitution prescribes that government may
procure goods and services only through a tender system which is
‘fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and cost-effective’.
[2]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
at 227.
[3]
In
this regard the applicant relies on sections 6(2) (a)(iii); 6(2)(c);
6(2)(d); 6(2)(f)(ii) and 6(2)(h) of PAJA.
sino noindex
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