Case Law[2025] ZAWCHC 336South Africa
Ingerop South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Water and Sanitation and Others (11175/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 336 (6 August 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
6 August 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative law – Application to review a tender award – Applicant relying on s 21 of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 as basis for insisting that this court has jurisdiction – Jurisdiction determined in terms of section 1 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 – Court lacks jurisdiction to hear the matter - Application dismissed with costs.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Ingerop South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Water and Sanitation and Others (11175/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 336 (6 August 2025)
Ingerop South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Water and Sanitation and Others (11175/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC 336 (6 August 2025)
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FLYNOTES:
ADMINISTRATIVE – Tender –
Jurisdiction
–
Jurisdictional
requirements – Administrative decision was made in Pretoria
– Parties were based in Gauteng –
Applicant’s
rights were affected at its Johannesburg headquarters –
Jurisdictional framework not based on geographical
location of
subject matter – Court lacked jurisdiction to hear review
application – Gauteng Division was the
appropriate forum –
Delay of nearly a year was inexcusable – Application
dismissed –
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of
2000
,
s 1.
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN CAPE DIVISION,
CAPE TOWN
Case No: 11175/2024
In
the matter between:
INGEROP
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
(Registration
number 1995/002040/07)
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF WATER AND SANITATION
First
Respondent
DIRECTOR-GENERAL,
DEPARTMENT OF
WATER
AND SANITATION
Second
Respondent
BIGEN
AFRICA SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
Neutral citation:
Ingerop South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Water and
Sanitation and Others
(Case no 11175/2024) [2025] ZAWCHC (06
August 2025)
Coram: LEKHULENI J and
SIPUNZI AJ
Heard: 13 June 2025
Delivered:
Electronically on 6 August 2025
Summary:
Administrative law – Application to review a tender award –
Applicant relying on
s 21
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
as
basis for insisting that this court has jurisdiction –
Jurisdiction determined in terms of
section 1
of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
– Court lacks jurisdiction
to hear the matter - Application dismissed with costs.
ORDER
1. This
court lacks jurisdiction to hear the review application.
2. The
applicant’s application to review the decision to award a
tender to the third respondent is hereby
dismissed.
3. The
applicant is ordered to pay the costs of this application on a party
and party scale, including the cost
of two counsel where so employed,
on Scale C.
JUDGMENT
SIPUNZI
AJ
(LEKHULENI J concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This an opposed application for the review and setting aside of the
decision of the
Minister and/or Director General of the Department of
Water and Sanitation to award the tender of raising the Clanwilliam
Dam:
Professional Multi-disciplinary Services to Bigen Africa
Services. At the inception, the applicant sought relief as set out in
the notice of motion in the following terms:
1. To
the extent that this court may find it necessary, the Applicant’s
non-compliance with the provisions
of
Section 7
of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000
, and in impugning the decision
mentioned directly herein below, is condoned as being in the interest
of justice.
2. To
review and set aside the award of the tender under bid number:
DWS23-1222 WTE OLIFANTS-DORING RIVER WATER RECOURCES PROJECT:
RAISING OF CLANWILLIAN DAM: PROFESSIONAL MULTI-DISCIPLINARY SERVICES
(“The tender”) by the first and or second respondent
to the third respondent.
3. That
the contract concluded with the third respondent, if any, pursuant to
and as a result of the award of
the aforesaid tender be set aside.
4. An
order in terms of
s 8
of Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of
2000
(‘PAJA’)
in terms of which the tender be
awarded to the applicant,
alternatively
, remitting the said
order to the first and /or second respondent to be evaluated and
adjudicated by the bid evaluation committee
and the bid adjudication
committee subject to the directions of this Honourable Court and/or
with due considerations of the findings
of the court in these
proceedings.
5. That
the first and/or second respondent be ordered to pay the costs,
jointly and severally the one paying the
other to be absolved, of
this application on Scale C.
6. That
the third respondent be ordered to pay the costs of this application
if the application is opposed by
the third respondent.
7.
Further and/or alternative relief.’
[2]
During the oral submissions, the applicant departed from its previous
relief sought
in the notice of motion and delivered a draft order, in
terms of which it sought relief that varied that which was stated in
their
notice of motion. In the draft order, the applicants sought an
order, as set out below:
1. ‘The
applicant’s non-compliance with the provisions of
section 7
of
the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000
is condoned,
and the time period cast in the said section is extended in terms of
section 9
of this Act to the date upon which this application was
issued, as being in the interests of justice.
2. The
award of the tender under bid number DWS23-122 WTE OFIFANTS-DORING
RIVER WATER RESOURCES PROJECT: RAISING
OF CLANWILLIAM DAM:
PROFESSIONAL MULTI-DISCIPLINARY SERVICES by First and/or Second
Respondent to the Third Respondent is declared
unlawful, is reviewed
and set aside.
3. The
contract concluded between the Respondents pursuant to and as a
result of the award of the aforesaid tender
is set aside.
4. The
declaration of unlawfulness and the striking down of the service
level agreement concluded between the
Respondents is suspended for a
period of 180 days, subject to the following directions:
4.1.
The First and Second Respondents are ordered to within this period
embark upon a fresh
process for the awarding of the said tender,
which shall include the calling for: evaluation and awarding of a new
tender and the
conclusion of a new service level agreement with the
successful tenderer.
4.2.
The First and Second Respondents are to take all necessary steps to
ensure that there is
not to be a delay in the examination of the
construction related work consequent to the new tender process
ordered above.
4.3.
The First and Second Respondents are ordered to take all necessary
steps to ensure that
the appointed successful tenderer will provide
all necessary engineering related services upon the expiry of this
period, which
steps are to include (but are not limited to) the
provision of an updated and augmented scope of the works by means of
projections
and estimations if necessary in relation to work
the third Respondent is to perform within this time period, and the
work
the successful tenderer is to perform thereafter.
4.4.
All issues related to payment- and liability for work already done by
the Third Respondent
is to be dealt with further in terms of the
service level agreement concluded between them, and on the basis that
the agreement
had terminated at the expiry of the time period
mentioned supra.
5. The
First, Second and Third Respondents are ordered to pay the
costs of this application jointly and
severally, the one paying the
other to be absolved, with the costs of counsel to be on Scale C.’
[3]
The application is opposed by all the respondents. According to the
respondents, there
had been undue and unreasonable delay on the part
of the applicant, which should not be condoned. The respondents
complained about
the non-joinder of Tlou Integrated, a subcontractor
to the third respondent. They contended that the review application
had no
substance as there were no irregularities in the award of
tender to the third respondent. Notably, the third respondent also
raised
a point that this court lacked the necessary jurisdiction to
adjudicate this dispute.
The
parties
[4]
The applicant is Ingerop South Africa (PTY) LTD (‘Ingerop’)
(Registration
number: 1995/002040/07), a private company with limited
liability registered and incorporated in terms of the relevant
Statutes
of the Republic of South Africa. The applicant carries on
the business of a professional consulting engineering firm with the
main
place of business located at 1
st
Floor, 61 Katherine
Street, Sandton, Johannesburg, Gauteng Province.
[5]
The first respondent is the Minister of Water and Sanitation (‘The
Department’)
in her capacity as such and whose address for
purposes of the application is 1[…] P[…] Street, 15
th
Floor, Room 1[…], Cape Town, Western Cape Province and The
State Attorney, 4
th
Floor L[…] L[…] C[…],
2[…] L[…] Street, Central, Cape Town, Western Cape
Province.
[6]
The second respondent is the Director General: Department of Water
and Sanitation
in his capacity as such and whose address for purposes
of the application is 1[…] P[…] Street, 15
th
Floor, Room 1[…], Cape Town, Western Cape Province and The
State Attorney, 4
th
Floor L[…] L[…] C[…],
2[…] L[…] Street, Central, Cape Town, Western Cape
Province.
[7]
The third respondent is Bigen Africa Services (Pty) Ltd (‘Bigen’),
a private
company with limited liability registered and incorporated
in terms of the relevant Statutes of the Republic of South Africa.
The
third respondent carries on the business of a professional
consulting engineering firm and has its principal place of
business
located at 3
rd
Floor, N[…] B[…],
A[…] Building, Carl Cronje, Bellville, Cape Town, Western Cape
Province.
Facts
[8]
On 13 December 2022, the
Department through its website as well as various other e-tender
portals published an invitation to bid for the professional
multi-disciplinary services under bid number DWS23-1222 WTE
Olifants-Doring
River Water Resources Project: Raising of Clanwilliam
Dam: Professional Multi-Disciplinary Services
.
The closing
date for the tender was originally listed as 23 February 2023, which
date was subsequently extended by way of addendums
to 16 March 2023.
[9]
The tender evaluation methodology consisted of five phases. The
phases followed each
other chronologically in the following order:
1.
Phase 1
: The Mandatory requirements. According to Clause
10.3.1, at page 23 of the Tender Document, failure to comply with
this phase requirements
would lead to immediate disqualification of a
bid. There are three specific requirements for bidders, namely,
firstly, attendance
of the compulsory on-site/physical briefing
session and the bidders name must appear on the attendance register;
Secondly, the
lead professional engineer must submit an active and
valid certified copy of professional registration with the
Engineering Council
of South Africa (ECSA) and a comprehensive
curriculum vitae; Lastly, a bidding company had to submit proof of
valid and current
professional indemnity insurance to the value of
bid price.
2.
Phase 2
: Pre-qualification criteria, being the 30% mandatory
sub-contracting of the value of the bid to a specific EME OR QSE. The
agreement
between the bidder and the sub-contracting company must be
submitted along with the bid. The documents must include a valid
B-BBEE
status level certificate, or a sworn statement or affidavit of
the sub-contractor; proof a sub-contactor’s Central Supplier
Database (CSD) registration; Tax Compliant status PIN page from SARS
and pro-forma sub-contracting agreements signed by both parties.
3.
Phase 3
: Functionality/ Technical evaluation. Bidders had to
score at least 70% for functionality, otherwise they will be
disqualified
as technically incompetent, unacceptable and
non-responsive. These relate to the technical experience of the
bidder, their methodology
or functionality, inclusive of their
proposed work programme and capacity to overcome challenges.
4.
Phase 4
: Administrative Compliance. the bidders were required
to be registered with the National Treasury database; tax compliance,
active
registration with Companies & Intellectual Property
Commission and they must furnish letters of good standing with
professional
regulators. The bidders must have completed and signed
all prescribed forms and in an overall administrative compliance; and
5.
Phase 5
: Price and B-BBEE status level of contribution. Where
the price will be determined in terms of the preferential procurement
regulations.
Each bidder would be required to submit original valid
B-BBEE status level certificate.
[10]
There were four (4) bids received, one from Bigen the third
respondent; the second bid was from
Ingerop who is the applicant; the
third and fourth bid were received from Isao and Knight Piesold/Gibb
JV respectively. The
applicant became disqualified at the Phase
2 level which the applicant described as unlawful, unjustifiable and
without equitable
reasons. Isao was disqualified at phase 1 due
to its failure to attend the compulsory briefing, which was the first
requirement
of phase 1 level.
[1]
Knights Piesold/Gibb JV was disqualified at phase 1 due to its
failure to submit a valid professional indemnity insurance policy
along with its bid.
[11]
When the applicant was disqualified at phase 2, it was deemed to be
non-responsive. This was
occasioned by the alleged failure of the
applicant to submit a proforma sub-contract agreement of 30 % of the
value of the contract,
to an at least 51% black owned company, a
mandatory condition of the tender. The applicant contended that it
had filed a letter,
the essence of which undertook that an agreement
would be entered into if the tender was granted to the applicant and
not an actual
agreement.
[12]
The bid price of the third respondent was R199 981 898 61.
However, they submitted the proof
of professional insurance for
R100 million.
[2]
In terms
of the third requirement of phase 1 level, they would have been
non-compliant
.
The
applicant contended that, for this reason, they ought to have been
disqualified for failure to submit proof of a valid professional
indemnity insurance to the value of the bid price, namely
R199 981 898.61. The applicant asserted that
notwithstanding
the failures to comply with the third requirement of
phase 1, and an inconsistency on the part of the Department, the
third respondent
and Knight/Gibb JV were allowed to progress to phase
2.
[13]
On 22 May 2023, the applicant was advised that it had been
disqualified. The reasons for this
decision were provided on 16 June
2023. On 17 August 2023, the applicant launched an urgent application
in which it sought to interdict
the implementation of the tender
award at the Gauteng Division, Pretoria. This application was struck
off the roll for lack of
urgency.
[14]
On 9 October 2023, when the Gauteng High Court provided its reasons,
and amongst others, it remarked
that:
‘
[11] I cannot
understand why this information caused the launch of the urgent
application. The applicant had known since 22 May
2023 that the
applicant’s bid had been unsuccessful. It stands to reason that
at the time the tender had been awarded and
the applicant would have
made enquiries at that stage as to whom the entity was to who the
tender had been awarded. The applicant
could have launched a review
application at the time but chose to engage with the first respondent
in correspondence. I cannot
find that it was the first respondent’s
duty to advise as to which steps to be taken in the circumstances.
[12] In the consequences
I found the application not to be urgent, as the applicant had since
22 May 2023 that the applicant’s
bid for the tender was
unsuccessful and had not acted immediately by either approaching the
Court for the interim interdict at
the time
or
launching a review application on an urgent basis.’
[3]
(my emphasis)
[15]
Subsequent thereto, the applicant instituted a second application in
which it sought to interdict
the operations that had already
commenced at Clanwilliam Dam. In March 2024, the second application
was argued before the Gauteng
Division of the High Court. This
application was dismissed on 11 December 2024. On 24 May 2024, the
applicant issued review application
in this court to challenge the
decision to award the tender to the third respondent. The main
complaint raised by the applicant
was that its elimination at phase 2
evaluation was unfair and/or wrongful. The applicant also complained
that the third respondent
was non-responsive at phase 1 evaluation
and ought to have been disqualified on that reason.
Preliminary
Issues
[16]
Before the determination of the merits of the challenge to the
appointment of the third respondent,
various preliminary questions
arose for the court to consider, namely:
1)
Whether this court had the necessary jurisdiction to determine the
merits of this application;
2)
Whether the application by the third respondent to file a further
affidavit in accordance with Uniform Rule
6(5)(e) of the Uniform
Rules for the court to receive the latest update on the work
performed on site should be granted;
3)
Whether non-compliance with section 7 of PAJA, which prescribes
specific timeframes within which a review application
must be issued
should be condoned;
4)
Whether, Tlou Integrated Tech CC, a BBEE company that was
sub-contracted by the third respondent ought to have
been joined in
the review application;
5)
Whether certain specified averments in the applicant’s replying
affidavit should be struck-out. I turn
to deal with these issues ad
seriatim.
[17]
I must mention that the third respondent’s application in terms
of Rule 6(5)(e) was not
opposed and was granted by agreement at the
commencement of the hearing. I turn to consider the preliminary issue
relating to jurisdiction.
Jurisdiction
[18]
The respondents impugned the jurisdiction of this court. The
respondent contended that this court
does not have the requisite
jurisdiction to hear this matter. Interestingly, the applicant did
not include an averment to allege
that this court had the requisite
jurisdiction over this application in its founding affidavit. The
applicant traversed matters
relating to jurisdiction in its reply to
the point
in
limine
raised
by the third respondent.
[4]
[19]
The applicant relied on the provisions of s 21(1) of the Superior
Court Act
[5]
and the common law
in asserting that these provisions conferred the necessary
jurisdiction to this court and on matters that arose
within its
territorial jurisdiction particularly in that the Clanwilliam Dam is
situated in the area of jurisdiction of this court.
This became
apparent when the applicant replied to the point in limine that was
raised by the third respondent. However, when the
matter was heard,
Mr Grobler SC, counsel for the applicant departed from that version
and relied on the definition of ‘Court’
in s 1 of PAJA
particularly, the phrase ‘within whose area of jurisdiction the
administrative action occurred or administrator
has his or her or its
principal place of administration or
the
party whose rights have been affected is domiciled or ordinarily
resident or the adverse effect of the administrative action
was, is
or will be experienced’. He submitted that the adverse effect
of the administrative action would be felt by the applicant
at the
Clanwilliam Dam if the administrative action awarding the tender to
the third respondent was not set aside.
[20]
Mr Els SC, counsel for the third respondent, impugned the
jurisdiction of this court to hear
the matter and asserted that the
head offices of the respondents were both within the Gauteng Division
jurisdiction, and all the
administration; evaluation, adjudication
and decision of the tender was carried out in Pretoria. He argued
that the High Court
Gauteng Division had the jurisdiction over this
review application. In support of his argument Mr Els SC relied on s
1 of PAJA
which regulates the conferring of jurisdiction on
administrative action disputes. Furthermore, counsel relied on
TMT
Services & Suppliers (Pty) Ltd t/a Traffic Management
Technologies v The MEC: Department of Transport
,
Province
of KwaZulu Natal and Others,
[6]
to the extent that it clarified the determination of jurisdiction on
PAJA matters, the exclusion of the Superior Court and common
law
applications to such matters.
[21]
To give context to the view I take in this matter and to the order
made hereinbelow, I deem it
wise to traverse the law and the relevant
authorities on jurisdiction in matters falling within the application
of PAJA. For that
reason, I turn to consider the law on jurisdiction
on PAJA cases.
The
Law
[22]
For the purposes of administrative action, a 'Court' means-
‘
a
High Court or another court of similar status;
Within
whose area of jurisdiction the administrative action occurred or the
administrator has his or her or its principal place
of administration
or the party whose rights have been affected is domiciled or
ordinarily resident or the adverse effect of the
administrative
action was, is or will be experienced.’
[7]
[23]
In
TMT Services & Suppliers (PTY) LTD v MEC: Department of
Transport (supra),
the court clarified four instances in which a
court would have jurisdiction in PAJA review proceedings,
as:
‘
1. The high court
within whose area of jurisdiction the administrative action occurred;
2. The high court within
whose area of jurisdiction the administrator who took the
administrative action has the principal place
of administration;
3. The high court within
whose area of jurisdiction the person whose rights have been affected
by the administrative action is domiciled
or ordinarily resident; and
4. The high court within
whose area of jurisdiction the adverse effects of the administrative
action was, is or will be experienced.’
[8]
[24]
In
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism and Others,
[9]
the court emphasised
that, ‘the provisions of section 6 divulge a clear purpose to
codify the grounds of judicial review of
administrative action as
defined in PAJA. The cause of action for the judicial review of
administrative action now ordinarily arises
from PAJA, not from the
common law as in the past. And the authority of PAJA to ground such
causes of action rests squarely on
the constitution. It is not
necessary to consider here causes of action for judicial review of
administrative action that do not
fall within the scope of PAJA. As
PAJA gives effect to s 33 of the Constitution, matters relating to
the interpretation and application
of PAJA will of course be
constitutional matters.’
[25]
In the case of
Gcaba
v Minister of Security
2010
(1) BCLR 35 (CC),
[10]
the
court held that, ‘Jurisdiction is determined on the basis of
the pleadings, as Langa CJ held in
Chirwa,
and not the substantive
merits of the case. The court observed that in the event of the
court’s jurisdiction being challenged
at the outset (
in
limine
),
the applicant’s pleadings are the determining factor. They
contain the legal basis of the claim under which the applicant
has
chosen to invoke the court’s competence. The court further
noted that while the pleadings - including in motion proceedings,
not
only the formal terminology of the notice of motion, but also the
contents of the supporting affidavits - must be interpreted
to
establish what the legal basis of the applicant’s claim is, it
is not for the court to say that the facts asserted by
the applicant
would sustain another claim, cognisable only in another court.’
Discussion
of Jurisdiction
[26]
At the outset, I must stress that there is a difference between the
jurisdiction founded on
s 21
of the
Superior Courts Act as
against
that found in
s 1
of PAJA. Until the challenge to the jurisdiction of
this court, it was abundantly clear from the papers that the
applicant was
ignorant of the definition of a ‘court’ for
purposes of PAJA judicial review. In its initial answer to the point
in limine
raised by the third respondent, the applicant
expressly relied on the provisions of
s 21(1)
of the
Superior Courts
Act and
the common law, as the basis for insisting that this court
had the necessary jurisdiction.
[27]
As it was pointed out in
Gcaba
v Minister of safety and Security
,
‘that jurisdiction is determined on the basis of the pleadings,
and not the substantive merits of the case. In the event
of the
court’s jurisdiction being challenged at the outset, the
applicant’s pleadings are the determining factor, as
they
contain the legal basis of the claim under which the applicant has
chosen to invoke the court’s competence.’
[11]
The
applicant mainly tied its case on the geographical location of the
Clanwilliam Dam, which is within the Western Cape Province
and within
the jurisdiction of this court. It argued that the entire project was
executed at the Clanwilliam Dam, located in the
Western Cape and
therefore within the jurisdictional area of this Court.
[12]
[28]
Belatedly, during oral arguments, the applicant’s counsel was
in agreement that jurisdiction
herein could only be determined in
terms of
s 1
of PAJA and as also outlined in the
TMT Services &
Supplies
decision. With reference to the
TMT Services Supplies
case, the applicant acknowledged that, parties affected by and those
who made the administrative decision were domiciled and their
ordinary or principal business residents fell within the jurisdiction
of the Gauteng Division of the High Court. The applicant
however
argued that this court found jurisdiction on the basis that the
adverse effects of the administrative action would be experienced
at
the Clanwilliam Dam which fell within the territorial area of the
Western Cape, and thereby conferring the jurisdiction to this
Court.
[29]
On the other hand, the respondents were emphatic in that, the adverse
effects of the administrative
decision or action of the first and
second respondents were felt by the applicant, whose residence fell
outside the jurisdiction
of this court and within the area of
jurisdiction of the Gauteng High Court, where the applicant was
resident.
[30]
The fact that the dam which was the subject matter of the dispute
between the parties was located
within the territorial boundaries of
the Province of the Western Cape remained a neutral factor because it
was not necessary to
consider the location of the cause of action for
judicial review of administrative action.
[13]
The location of the dam did not turn on any significance because
jurisdiction prescribed in terms of PAJA was not based on
the
location of the cause of action.
[31]
Noteworthy, the applicant launched this application in this court
despite the fact that there
was a pending application for
interdictory relief in the Pretoria High Court at the time this
application was issued. Clearly,
on these facts, it can be reasonably
inferred that the applicant believed that the court with the
necessary jurisdiction in this
matter was the Pretoria High Court. It
seems that the applicant chose to institute review proceedings in
this court for convenience
purposes. However, such decision
conflicts with
s 1
of PAJA. Furthermore, it should be borne in mind
that questions of convenience do not arise when a high court decides
whether it
has jurisdiction in terms of PAJA.
[14]
[32]
When all the decisive jurisdictional factors listed in
TNT
Services and Supplies
, together with the provisions of
s 1
of
PAJA are construed correctly and applied to the facts at hand, the
applicant’s choice of this Court lacked in all respects.
Most
importantly, the decision makers in the administrative decision had
their principal place of business in Pretoria; the
third
respondent and the applicant who were directly affected by the
administrative decision both had their principal places of
business
within the territorial jurisdiction of the Gauteng Division; the
administrative decision was taken in Pretoria. From these
facts it is
abundantly clear that the court having the necessary jurisdiction in
terms of
s 1
of PAJA is the court in Gauteng.
[33]
Therefore, there could be no basis upon which this Court found
jurisdiction over this dispute.
Indeed, this court lacked the
necessary jurisdiction.
[34]
Even if I am wrong on the question of jurisdiction, I am still of the
view that the applicant
failed dismally to make out a case for
condonation for the late filing of its review application as
envisaged in
s 9
of PAJA.
Section 7(1)
of PAJA provides that
‘
any
proceedings for judicial review in terms of
s 6(1)
must be instituted
without unreasonable delay and not later than 180 days after the date
–
(a)
subject to subsec (2)(c), on which any proceedings instituted in
terms of internal remedies as contemplated in subsec (2)(a)
have been
concluded; or
(b)
where no such remedies exist, on which the person concerned was
informed of the administrative action, became aware of the action
and
the reasons for it or might reasonably have been expected to have
become aware of the action and the reasons.
[35]
The applicant issued its application for review of the decision to
disqualify it on 23 May 2024.
As foreshadowed above, on 22 May 2023,
the applicant was informed of the decision to disqualify it from the
tender. The reasons
for the disqualification were furnished on 3 June
2023. The review application was issued in about twelve (12) months
after the
applicant was advised of the decision to eliminate it from
the bid by the Department, and some eleven (11) months after the
applicant
was furnished with the reasons for its elimination.
[36]
The review application was preceded by two other applications that
served before the North Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria.
The first application was on an urgent basis, it sought to prevent
the third respondent from
commencing with the work at the Clanwilliam
Dam. After it was struck off the roll for lack of urgency, the
applicant pursued the
another application, seeking to interdict the
operations at the Clanwilliam Dam, pending the finalisation of its
review litigation
process. This second application was dismissed on
11 December 2024.
[37]
The applicant submitted that its failure to institute the review
proceedings within the prescribed
time period was occasioned by
various factors. Such factors included that, after receipt of the
reasons for their disqualification
from the tender on 3 June 2023, it
also engaged in correspondence with the Department in relation to its
elimination. The Department
furnished applicant with the complete
record of the tender on 11 September 2024. Further that, due to the
fact that the applicant
was an engineering company, it was not
necessarily aware of the legal requirement to issue the review
application within a prescribed
time period. According to the
applicant, and on the advice of Tiefenthaler Attorneys, it was also
under the mistaken belief that
the prescribed period of 180 days was
to start running upon receipt of the outcome of the internal
investigation that was conducted
by the Department.
[15]
[38]
Mr Grobler SC for the applicant also submitted that, at some point,
the applicant was under the
impression that the prescribed timeframe
for the initiation of the review proceedings would start running
after the litigation
which was unfolding before the Gauteng Division
of the High Court had completed its course. The applicant submitted
that if due
regard was given to its cause of complaint, it was in the
interests of justice for the merits of the review application to be
decided.
According to them, the delay was 180 days and it was not
exorbitant.
[16]
[39]
Relying on
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd,
[17]
the applicant argued
that, when assessing delay the court had to consider if it was
unreasonable. Further that the court should
be guided by
South
African National Roads Agency Ltd v Cape Town City,
[18]
to be able to fairly conclude if it was in the interests of justice
to condone a delay that was longer than 180 days. On the application
of these techniques, the applicant argued that it had good prospects
of success when regard was had to their cause of complaint
against the awarding of the tender to the third respondent and that
the interests of justice permitted condonation of their lateness.
[19]
[40]
The respondents, on the other hand, highlighted that when the
applicant’s urgent application
failed before the Gauteng High
Court, the court warned that the correct process for it would have
been to pursue a review application.
However, the applicant made a
different selection. The respondents also pointed out that the work
at the Clanwilliam Dam had commenced
and is at an advanced stage.
Implying that any interference with the ongoing operations would be
disastrous in many respects, and
blamed that on the sluggish conduct
of the applicant’s litigation, which according to them was
inexcusable. They submitted
that the delay in instituting proceedings
was deeply prejudicial with huge safety to the communities in close
proximity to the
dam and financial loss risks to the fiscus.
[20]
Discussion
of Condonation
[41]
Starting with the
classicus
legal principle that
ignoratia
non excusta or ingnoratia legis neminem excusat,
it is
unavoidable to agree with the respondents’ assertion that this
excuse is unconvincing. Let alone that it does not qualify
as an
explanation for delay in the given circumstances. Therefore, the
excuse that their erstwhile counsel gave them bad advice
cannot hold.
[42]
Noteworthy, the operation at Clanwilliam Dam commenced in August
2023, as at 10 October 2024, 16% of
the work had been done and up to
R15mil had been spent.
[21]
At
the hearing of this application, up to 25% of the work at the dam had
been completed.
[22]
From this,
it seems that there has been significant progress in execution of the
impugned tender. As the applicant acknowledged
this reality, it
resiled itself to the potential complications in regard to the
work already performed by the third respondent
in terms of the
service level agreement. But, with the same breath insisted that such
should be resolved in terms of the contractual
terms between the
respondents.
[43]
As discussed in paragraph 14 of this judgment, on 9 October 2023,
when the Gauteng High Court
handed down its reasons to the judgment
on the urgent application for an interim interdict, it remarked that
the applicant had
known since 22 May 2023 that the applicant’s
bid had been unsuccessful. The court also stated that the applicant
could have
launched a review application at the time but chose to
engage with the first respondent in correspondence. The court also
found
that the applicant’s application was not urgent, as the
applicant had since 22 May 2023 that its bid for the tender was
unsuccessful
and had not acted immediately by either approaching the
Court for the interim interdict at the time or launching a review
application
on an urgent basis.
[23]
[44]
These remarks were restated by the Gauteng High Court on 11 December
2024, when it handed down
its judgment and dismissing the interim
interdict application that was at the instance of the applicant. The
court further said
that, ‘Instead of launching the review
application as it should have done, Ingerop launched an urgent
application.’
[24]
[45]
Notwithstanding these compelling remarks of the court on 9 October
2023, it still took the applicant
until 13 May 2024 to launch this
review application. Even if it could be accepted for once that the
applicant, as an engineering
firm, was ignorant about the applicable
legal timeframes, it could not provide a plausible explanation for
the delay after the
court explicitly directed it to rather pursue a
review application, as early as 9 October 2023.
[46]
In my respectful view, the applicant failed to make out a case for
condonation for the late filing
of its application. This conclusion
is fortified by the following factors, namely: (a) the applicant was
unable to provide a reasonable
explanation for its failure to issue
the review application within the time period set out in
s 7(1)
of
PAJA; (b) the applicant did not demonstrate that it was entitled to
the extension of the prescribed timeframe in terms of
s 7(2)
of PAJA.
(c) the applicant’s excuse that their delay was occasioned by
bad legal advice is not a competent explanation to
justify the
condonation; (d) failure of the applicant to heed the advice of the
court when they were furnished with reasons why
the urgent
application was struck off the roll was fatal to the applicant’s
bid to have the condonation granted.
Conclusion
[47]
In light of the findings and conclusions above, the question of
jurisdiction became dispositive
in this matter. Consequently, this
court stood precluded from traversing the remainder of preliminary
issues raised; the merits
of the review application, and the draft
order that was proposed by the applicant at the time of hearing this
application.
Costs
[48]
The legal representatives of all the parties were in agreement on the
course of how costs should
be determined. This was in that there was
no reason for a departure from the norm that costs should follow the
results, with which
I agree.
Order
1. This
court lacks jurisdiction to hear the review application.
2. The
applicant’s application to review the decision to award a
tender to the third respondent is hereby
dismissed.
3. The
applicant is ordered to pay the costs of this application on a party
and party scale, including the cost
of two counsel where so employed,
on Scale C.
Sipunzi
AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
I
agree
And
it is so ordered.
Lekhuleni
J
Judge
of the High Court
Appearances
For
the Applicant:
Adv. Grobler SC.
Instructed
by:
York Attorneys INC.
For
the first and second respondents:
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney, Johannesburg
For
the third respondent:
Weavind & Weavind Inc. Pretoria
[1]
BEC report in paragraph 6.2.1
[2]
BEC report on page 4, point 3
[3]
Ingerop South Africa (PTY) LTD v Department of Water and Sanitation
and Others (Case number 82093/2023) GHC, 9 October 2023,
paras
11 and 12
[4]
Third
respondent’s answering affidavit, 7.1 and 8
[5]
‘
Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013
, S
21(1)
A Division has jurisdiction over all persons residing or being in,
and in relation to all causes arising and all offences triable
within, its area of jurisdiction and all other matters of which it
may according to law take cognizance, and has the power- (a)
to hear
and determine appeals from all Magistrate Courts within its area of
jurisdiction; (b) to review the proceedings of all
such courts; (c)
in its discretion, and at the instance of any interested person, to
enquire into and determine any existing,
future or contingent right
or obligation, notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any
relief consequential upon the determination.’
[6]
2022 (4) SA 583 (SCA).
[7]
Promotion
of Administrative Action Act 3 of 2000, s 1 , Definitions
[8]
TMT
Services & Supplies (PTY) LTD t/s Traffic Management
Technologies v MEC: Department of Transport, Province of KwaZulu
Natal and Others (Case no. 1059/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 27
(15 March
2022)
para
14
[9]
Bato Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism and Others [2004] ZACC 15
[2004] ZACC 15
; ;
2004 (4) SA 490
CC, para 25
[10]
Gcaba
v Minister of Safety and Security
2010 (1) BCLR 35
CC, para 75
[11]
Gcaba
v Minister for safety and security
2010 (1) BCLR 35
(CC), para 75
[12]
Applicant’s
replying affidavit, para 24-26
[13]
Bato Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism and Others (supra)
[14]
TMT
Services & Supplies (Pty) Ltd t/a Traffic Management
Technologies v MEC: Department of Transport, Province of
KwaZulu-Natal
and Others ( Case no. 1059/2020)
[2022] ZASCA 27
(15
March 2022), para 35
[15]
Founding
affidavit , para 19
[16]
Founding
affidavit , para 23
[17]
Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd
(CCT 91/17) [2019] zacc 14 (16 April 2019) ; [2019] ZACC
15
[18]
The South African National Road Agency v City of Cape Town 2016 (4)
All SA 332; 2017 (1) SA 468 (SCA)
[19]
Applicant’s heads of arguments,
Paras
21-26
[20]
First
and second respondents’ heads of arguments , paras 30-32
[21]
First
and second respondents’ answering affidavit, dated 10 October
2024
[22]
Uniform
Rule
6(5) Affidavit of Dr. Le Grange
[23]
Ingerop South Africa (PTY) LTD v Department of Water and Sanitation
and Others (Case number 82093/2023) GHC, 9 October 2023,
Paras
11-12
[24]
Ingerop South Africa (PTY) LTD v Department of Water and Sanitation
and Others (Case number 82093/2023) GHC, 11 December 2024,
Para
7
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