Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 1020South Africa
National Department of Public Works v Roux Property Fund (PTY) Limited and Another (52530/2011) [2022] ZAGPPHC 1020 (19 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 December 2022
Headnotes
as follows:[2]
Judgment
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## National Department of Public Works v Roux Property Fund (PTY) Limited and Another (52530/2011) [2022] ZAGPPHC 1020 (19 December 2022)
National Department of Public Works v Roux Property Fund (PTY) Limited and Another (52530/2011) [2022] ZAGPPHC 1020 (19 December 2022)
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sino date 19 December 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 52530/2011
REPORTABLE:
YES/NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
19
December 2022
In
the matter between:
NATIONAL
DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC WORKS
APPLICANT
and
ROUX
PROPERTY FUND (PTY) LIMITED
FIRST RESPONDENT
NEDBANK
LIMITED
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
# Introduction
Introduction
[1]
The applicant approached the court seeking
an order declaring the Standard Lease Agreement
(the
lease),
concluded
between
the
applicant
(the
DPW)
and
the
respondent (Roux Property Fund/ Roux Property) for office
accommodation at the Sanlam Middestad [MidCity] Building Pretoria
(the property), entered into on 13 July 2010, invalid
ab
initio.
[2]
The application is essentially a
self-review application under the doctrine of legality. However, the
applicant does not explicitly
seek an order reviewing and setting
aside its administrative decision but only seeks declaratory relief.
[3]
In
the Constitutional Court in
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape and Another v Kirkland Investments (Pty)
Ltd
,
[1]
Cameron
J, writing for the majority, held as follows:
[2]
'
Can
a decision by a state official, communicated to the subject, and in
reliance on which it acts, be set aside by a court even
when
government has not applied (or counter-applied) for the court to do
so?
Differently
put, can a court exempt government from the burdens and duties of a
proper review application, and deprive the subject
of the protections
these provide, when it seeks to disregard one of its own officials'
decisions?' That is the question the judgment
of Jafta J (main
judgment) answers.
The
answer it gives is Yes.
I
disagree.
Even
where the decision is defective – as the evidence here suggests
– government should generally not be exempt from
the forms and
processes of review.
It
should be held to the pain and duty of proper process.
It must apply formally for a court to
set aside the defective decision, so that the court can properly
consider its effects on those
subject to it.
The
reasons spring from deep within the Constitution's scrutiny of power.
The
Constitution regulates all public power. Perhaps the most important
power it controls is the power the state exercises over
its subjects.
When
government errs by issuing a defective decision, the subject affected
by it is entitled to proper notice, and to be afforded
a proper
hearing,
on
whether
the
decision
should
be
set aside.
Government
should not be allowed to take shortcuts.
Generally,
this means that government
must apply formally to set aside the decision.
Once the
subject has relied on a decision, government cannot, barring specific
statutory authority, simply ignore what it has done.
The decision,
despite being defective, may have consequences that make it
undesirable or even impossible to set it aside.
That demands a
proper process, in which all factors for and against are properly
weighed.'
[4]
In casu
,
the DPW approached the court for a declaration that the contract
concluded between itself and the Roux Property Fund in July 2010
is
ab initio
void.
Since the application was instituted, a body of caselaw developed
that indicates that such a declarator can only be granted
once the
applicant made out a case that the decision to conclude the contract
was invalid. In this matter, the DPW's approach can
be criticised,
but it did not merely disregard the existence of the agreement or
regard it as a non-approval. The applicant informed
the respondents
of the Public Protector's investigation and ultimately approached the
court to determine the agreement's validity.
The matter thus stands
to be distinguished from the facts in
Kirkland.
The first respondent was given proper
notice of the relief sought and afforded the opportunity to put its
case before the court.
The applicant provided the court and the first
respondent with all the relevant documentation that sets out the
history of the
decision and its shifting attitude towards it. All
material parts of the 'review record' were placed before the court
despite the
applicant not utilising rule 53 but rule 6 of the Uniform
Rules of Court.
[5]
If the papers filed of record are
considered, it would be overtly technical to hold that because the
applicant did not include as
prayer 1 to its notice of motion 'that
the decision taken to conclude the impugned agreement be reviewed and
set aside,' this application
cannot be considered for what it
essentially is, namely a self-review under the doctrine of legality.
It must be stated, though,
that the effluxion of time since the
application was issued, and the course of events that subsequently
followed arguably rendered
the issue of the lease agreement's
validity moot. However,
having
considered
the
majority
decision
in
Buffalo
City
Metropolitan
Municipality
v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd,
[3]
I
am persuaded that the unlawfulness of a contract, even when the
contract period has lapsed due to the effluxion of time at this
point, cannot be ignored. The application is thus considered.
[6]
The applicant stated in its founding
affidavit:
'Whether the lease is
invalid is evidently placed in issue by the respondent, and in the
circumstances it is necessary to establish
the correct position by
declaratory order. The terms of the impugned lease are such that
considerable sums of public monies are
involved, and the matter is
one which in the public interest clearly needs to be determined as
expeditiously as possible.'
[7]
The applicant included prayer 3 in its
notice of motion seeking further and alternative relief. There is no
reason to hold that
the 'further relief' excludes the review and
setting aside of the decision that preceded the conclusion of the
impugned agreement
if a case is made out for such relief on the
papers.
# Salient facts
Salient facts
[8]
The lease agreement concluded between the
applicant and first respondent in July 2010 and amended thereafter,
has been the subject
of an investigation by the Public Protector and
the Special Investigating Unit. The investigations led to findings
that the lease
was concluded under highly irregular circumstances,
which vitiated the lease. The applicant brought this application
pursuant to
those findings.
[9]
The
applicant contends that because the validity of the lease was (and
still is) contested, a declaration of invalidity is necessary
to
regularise the situation. For this reason, the applicant seeks a pure
declarator, simply declaring the lease void
ab
initio
.
The applicant seeks no ancillary relief. The first respondent, in
turn, did not launch
any
counter-application
in
which
ancillary
relief
is
requested,
although
counsel for the respondent submitted during argument that' justice
and equity require remedial amelioration to preserve
Roux Property's
accrued rights under the lease.' Counsel for the first respondent
submitted that under s 172 of the Constitution,
a court deciding a
constitutional matter has a wide remedial power and that Roux
Property Fund finds itself in the same position
as the innocent
tenderer in
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd.
[4]
[10]
It is common cause that a competitive open
tender process did not precede the conclusion of the lease agreement
between the applicant
and Roux Property Fund. The agreement was
concluded through a negotiated bilateral process in July 2010. This
process was initiated
after a letter was sent about two months
earlier by the South African Police Service's Divisional Commissioner
responsible for
Supply Chain Management to the Director-General of
the Department of Public Works (DPW). The letter identified the
Sanlam Midcity
Centre as the ideal premises to house the SAPS'
headquarters but without providing any needs assessment. Nor did it
provide any
confirmation for funding. The DPW requested confirmation
of funding. A memorandum dated 10 May 2010 was sent to the SAPS's
National
Commissioner. It was, amongst other things, stated in the
memorandum that:
i.
Funds for the relocation to the premises
were not budgeted for. Additional funding would have to be sourced;
ii.
The Department administered all lease
contracts. The Department would have to invite tenders due to the
extent of office accommodation
required. A shortened tender process
could be followed once confirmation of funding for this purpose was
received.
[11]
In a letter dated 11 May 2010, the Deputy
National Commissioner of SAPS informed the DPW that funding for the
lease agreement had
been approved and that the DPW should continue
with the "immediate procurement of two floors at Sanlam MidCity
Centre for
SAPS communication services during the FIFA World Cup as a
matter of urgency."
[12]
The deponent to the applicant's founding
affidavit explained that, at the time, he was led to believe that the
need for the property's
procurement was sufficiently urgent to
justify a negotiated procurement strategy as opposed to an open
tender. The initial procurement
instruction dated 13 May 2010 was
only for two floors of the property, not the whole building. A second
procurement instruction
for the whole building was issued later. The
procurement was eventually approved subject to "accommodation
being procured
according to the approved norm document."
[13]
The needs assessment that SAPS subsequently
provided was later reformulated. The identified building was not
vacant at that time.
In fact, only one of the floors was available
for immediate occupation. The matter was, however, ostensibly pressed
for time because
of the pending World Cup series. The SAPS's alleged
need to occupy the building without delay because of the pending
World Cup
series underpinned the DPW's decision to follow a
negotiated process and depart from the mandatory procurement process.
In a supplementary
affidavit by the deponent to the applicant's
founding affidavit attached to Roux Property Fund's answering
affidavit, it is stated
that the officials were aware that no other
property was available that would meet the SAPS's needs and that it
would be a waste
of money to advertise the tender knowing this
[14]
The building was, however, only ready for
tenant installations to commence some three months later. The
impugned contract was eventually
signed only after the conclusion of
the World Cup. By that time, SAPS have not yet occupied the building.
The DPW informed Nedbank
and Roux Property in August 2010 that the
Department had reason to believe that not all the required
procurement processes were
followed in connection with the conclusion
of the lease agreement and that the Public Protector would conduct a
full investigation.
The Public Protector requested that the
implementation of the lease be suspended. During November 2010,
before the outcome of the
investigation of the Public Protector and
the Special Investigating Unit was received, the DPW informed the
respondents that the
DPW was proceeding with the lease agreement and
that the outcome of the reports would have no effect on the validity
and enforceability
of the lease agreement - this despite
communicating an opposite view previously.
An addendum to the agreement was
subsequently concluded in terms of which the SAPS would take
occupation of the property on 1 April
2011, and that rental would be
payable from 1 April 2011.
[15]
Roux Property Fund obtained a loan from
Nedbank and bought the property based on the negotiations with the
DPW and the fact that
the lease agreement was approved. A mortgage
bond was registered over the property in favour of Nedbank. Due to
the fact that the
DPW ultimately opined that the lease agreement was
void
ab
initio,
inter alia,
for
non-adherence to the prescribed open tender procurement process, no
payments were made to Roux Property Fund in terms of the
agreement.
SAPS never occupied the property.
[16]
As a result of the dispute and the DPW's
view herein, Roux Property Fund could not honour its commitment
towards Nedbank. Nedbank
obtained default judgment by consent against
Roux Property Fund for amounts borrowed and advanced to Roux Property
Fund. The property
was eventually sold in execution to Nedbank. It is
common cause that Nedbank acquired ownership of the property, subject
to the
lease agreement, on 11 October 2013. Nedbank applied for, and
was granted the right to intervene in these proceedings.
[17]
In a supplementary affidavit filed by
Nedbank, Nedbank states that it "has taken the place of Roux
Property as the lessor under
the lease agreement and acquired all
rights which Roux Property had in terms of the lease agreement."
In my view, counsel
for the applicant correctly contends that through
the operation of
huur gaat voor koop
,
Nedbank became the successor of all the rights in and to the lease
agreement that was or might have been held by Roux Property.
The
matter subsequently became settled between the applicant and Nedbank,
and Nedbank withdrew its opposition to the relief sought
by the
applicant in this application.
[18]
I agree with the applicant's submission
that Roux Property Fund did not retain any interest in the subject
matter of this application,
nor retained any residual role in the
proceedings relating to the validity of the lease agreement, since
Nedbank took its place
as lessor under the lease agreement and
acquired all the rights which Roux Property Fund had in terms of the
lease agreement.
[19]
I am of the view that the DPW's
failure to follow the prescribed open tender process in the
circumstances of this matter sufficiently
tainted the whole
procurement process to the extent that the decision to conclude the
contract needs to be set aside. It is well-known
and widely accepted
that public organisations often rely on a competitive bidding process
to achieve better value for money. It
is as widely known that when it
comes to fighting corruption, a non-competitive procurement process
is considered a potential source
of concern.
In
casu, no rational reason was tendered,
either in the founding affidavit, the answering affidavit, or the
supplementary affidavit
by the deponent to the founding affidavit
annexed to the first respondent's answering affidavit, for bypassing
the competitive
open bidding procurement process in favour of a
negotiated bilateral process. The initial urgency, if it existed,
evaporated as
time passed and, in any event, related only to the
lease of two floors in the property, not the whole building. If the
impact of
this lease agreement on the public purse is considered, it
was imperative to follow the prescribed competitive tender process.
The failure to do so renders the agreement to be declared
constitutionally invalid. This renders the conclusion of the contract
in July 2010
ab initio
void.
[20]
Although the applicant contends that, apart
from the procurement challenge, the lease is also impugned based on s
66 of the Public
Finance Management Act 1 of 1999 (the PFMA), it is
not, in light of the finding above, necessary to additionally
consider this
aspect. Neither is it necessary to consider the issue
regarding the availability of funding and the fact that the SAPS's
budget
did not reflect that provision was made for the lease.
[21]
The
question then arises whether this court should consider granting just
and equitable relief to Roux Property Fund. The Supreme
Court of
Appeal recently held in
Sekoko
Mametja Incorporated Attorneys v Fetakgomo Tubatse Local
Municipality:
[5]
'It is incumbent on a
court making an order of invalidity under s 172(1)(a) to then invoke
the provisions of s 172(1)(b) in considering
whether or not to make
an order which is just and equitable. This the high court did not do.
It clearly could not enforce payment
under a void tender but it could
consider whether an amount should be paid on the basis that it was
just and equitable for the
municipality to do so.'
[22]
Moseneke
DCJ gave guidance in
Steenkamp
NO v Provincial Tender Board of the Eastern Cape,
[6]
when
he said:
'It goes without saying
that every improper performance of an administrative function would
implicate the Constitution and entitle
the aggrieved party to
appropriate relief. In each case the remedy must fit the injury. The
remedy must be fair to those affected
by it and yet vindicate
effectively the right violated. It must be just and equitable in the
light of the facts, the implicated
constitutional principles, if any,
and the controlling law. It is nonetheless appropriate to note that
ordinarily a breach of administrative
justice attracts public law
remedies and not private law remedies. The purpose of a public law
remedy is to pre-empt or correct
or reverse an improper
administrative function. In some instances the remedy takes the form
of an order to make or not to make
a particular decision or an order
declaring rights or an injunction to furnish reasons for an adverse
decision. Ultimately the
purpose of a public remedy is to afford the
prejudiced party administrative justice, to advance efficient and
effective public
administration compelled by constitutional precepts
and at a broader level, to entrench the rule of law.' (Footnote
omitted.) If
properly examined and considered, the facts of each
matter will often reveal whether an appropriate remedy is necessary.
Once that
has been established, the remedy must be crafted to
ameliorate the injustice of suffering a loss that can be avoided.'
[23]
In
Central
Energy Fund SOC Ltd and Another v Venus Rays Trade (Pty) Ltd and
Others,
[7]
the
Supreme
Court
of
Appeal
reiterated
that
neither
party
should
benefit
from an unlawful contract. Innocent parties, although not entitled to
benefit from an unlawful contract, are not required
to suffer any
loss as a result of the invalidation of the contract.
[24]
Roux Property Fund contended that it was
not privy to the applicant's, SAPS's, or the National Cabinet's
internal processes. Counsel
submitted on behalf of Roux Property Fund
that even though the DPW asks for a 'pure declaration of rights,'
this court has a remedial
power to ameliorate the effect of such an
order, if granted. Counsel submitted that on the grounds of justice
and equity, the court
should 'preserve any rights Roux Property
accrued under the Sanlam Midcity Centre lease.'
[25]
This
proposition should, however, fail on two grounds. The first is that
Nedbank obtained Roux Property Fund's rights in terms of
the lease
agreement after Nedbank became the owner of the property subject to
the lease agreement. The second is that the Supreme
Court of Appeal
already found that Roux Property Fund's failure to timeously give
notice in terms of the Legal Proceedings Against
Certain Organs of
State Act 40 of 2002 constitutes a bar to Roux Property Fund
proceeding with its damages claim against the DPW
in the amount of
R340 million arising from the alleged breach of the written lease
agreement by the DPW.
[8]
Even
if it was found that it is just and equitable, and competent to
preserve the rights that the first respondent accrued in terms
of the
lease agreement, despite the second respondent having obtained the
ownership of the building and stepped into its shoes
as lessor, the
SCA's decision renders such an order nugatory.
[26]
I agree with the applicant's submission
that Roux Property Fund did not retain any interest in the subject
matter of this application,
nor retained a residual role in the
proceedings since Nedbank took its place as lessor under the lease
agreement and acquired all
the rights which Roux Property Fund had in
terms of the lease agreement. Since Nedbank does not oppose the
application and settled
the matter with
the
applicant,
and
due
to
the
effluxion
of
time,
no
need
exists
to
limit
the
retrospective effect of the declaration of invalidity or to suspend
the declaration of invalidity.
[27]
Is it necessary to restore Roux Property
Fund to its status
quo ante
?
The timeline of events indicates that although Roux Property Fund's
loan agreement with Nedbank was approved as early as 30 June
2010,
the deed of sale regarding the property was only concluded with C-Max
Investment in January 2011. This agreement was concluded
with Roux
Property Fund being fully aware of the Public Protector's
investigation into the conclusion of the agreement, the Public
Protector's request that the implementation of the agreement be
suspended, and well-knowing that the Public Protector's report
was
pending.
[28]
One would expect that a party who contends
that it was not privy to the internal processes that preceded the
conclusion of a lease
agreement to the value of millions of rands for
a period of 9 years and 11 months, who initially received written
confirmation
that all internal processes were duly adhered to only to
be informed some 3 weeks thereafter that contrary to the first
communication
everything does not seem to be in order as far as the
contract is concerned, who was informed of, and interviewed during,
an investigation
by the Public Protector and Special Investigation
Unit, who perceived the Public Protector to be hostile towards it,
who subsequently
received written confirmation that the DPW will
proceed with the agreement irrespective of what the outcome of the
Public Protector's
investigation might be, would be very reluctant to
purchase a building and acquire financial obligations in excess two
hundred
and forty-eight million rand, based on the agreement that is
the subject of the Public Protector's investigation, without having
had sight of the Public Protector's report. Even more so, where Roux
Property Fund, on its own account, stated in its answering
affidavit
that the applicant's attorneys of record addressed a letter dated 30
September 2010 to its attorney of record wherein
it is stated that:
i.
The investigation into the lease has now
been completed;
ii.
Such investigation has established, to the
satisfaction of the DPW, that the lease is invalid and not legally
enforceable;
iii.
DPW accordingly intends not to implement
the lease, and
iv.
An
entirely
new
procurement
process
will
be
conducted
in
due
course
in
respect of the National Head Quarters of SAPS.
[29]
Roux Property Fund stated in its answering
affidavit that 'but for the State's express undertaking that the
decision to proceed
with the lease
in
the face of the
Public Protector
investigation, the transaction [regarding the purchase of the
property] would not have been concluded.' Incurring
a significant
financial obligation on the premise that the lease agreement that is
subject to the Public Protector's investigation
will proceed, is
reckless. In these circumstances, granting remedial relief is not
just and equitable.
# Costs
Costs
[30]
Although the application stands to be
granted, I am of the view that it is just in the circumstances for
the applicant and the first
respondent to each bear their own costs.
The first respondent cannot be expected to bear the applicant's costs
in circumstances
where the applicant failed to follow its own
prescribed processes to ensure that the lease agreement was concluded
in accordance
with a system that is fair, equitable, transparent, and
competitive. The first respondent, in turn, should not have opposed
the
application in the factual circumstances of this case. Not only
did it recklessly engage with the DPW well knowing that an
investigation
was conducted because of the DPW's apparent failure to
follow the prescribed procurement processes, but it was also aware of
the
fact that Nedbank obtained all its rights and interests in the
lease agreement and the validity thereof, after acquiring ownership
of the property. The first respondent contributed to the protracted
litigation. As a result, each party stands to bear its own
costs.
# Miscellaneous:
Application to introduce the supplementary affidavit of Mr. Vukela
Miscellaneous:
Application to introduce the supplementary affidavit of Mr. Vukela
[31]
The first respondent filed a substantive
application that the supplementary affidavit deposed to by Mr. Samuel
Vukela, the deponent
to the applicant's founding affidavit, be
admitted as evidence.
[32]
This affidavit is, however, attached to the
first respondent's answering affidavit, and as such, I had regard
thereto. I found it
somewhat peculiar that the first respondent, who
stated in the answering affidavit that Mr. Vukela was not
sufficiently involved
in the administrative actions of the applicant
to testify positively to such actions, launched this application.
[33]
After considering the content of the
affidavit and considering that it already formed part of the body of
evidence before this court,
I dismissed the application.
# ORDER
ORDER
In the result, the
following order is granted:
1.
The decision to conclude the Standard
Lease Agreement between the applicant and the respondent for office
accommodation at the Sanlam
Middestad Building Pretoria, entered into
during July 2010, is reviewed and set aside;
2.
The Standard Lease Agreement, concluded
between the applicant and the respondent for office accommodation at
the Sanlam Middestad
Building Pretoria, entered into during July
2010, is declared invalid
ab initio
;
3.
The applicant and the first respondent
are to bear their own costs.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. As a
courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
For
the applicant:
Adv. John Peter SC
With:
Adv. K.M. Mokotedi
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney, Pretoria
For
the first respondent:
Adv. J.J. Botha
Instructed
by:
Naude & Naude Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
11 October 2022
Date
of judgment:
19 December 2022
[1]
(CCT
77/13)
[2014] ZACC 6
at para
[38]
.
[2]
Supra
,
para [64], [65].
[3]
2019
(4) SA 331 (CC).
[4]
2018
(2) SA 23
(CC) at paras [53]-[54].
[5]
(Case
No. 60/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 28
(18 March 2022) at para [9].
[6]
2007
(3) 121 (CC) at para [29].
[7]
(119/2021)
2022 (5) SA 56
(SCA) at para [39] – [42].
[8]
Minister
of Public Works v Roux Property Fund
(Pty)
Ltd (779/2019)
[2020] ZASCA 119
(1 October 2020).
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