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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Ezaga Holdings (Pty) Ltd v National Student Financial Aid Scheme Coinvest Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (9526/24)
[2024] ZAWCHC 190 (15 July 2024)
Ezaga Holdings (Pty) Ltd v National Student Financial Aid Scheme Coinvest Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others (9526/24)
[2024] ZAWCHC 190 (15 July 2024)
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sino date 15 July 2024
FLYNOTES:
ADMINISTRATIVE – Tender –
Student
financial aid
–
Service
provider for payment of students – Decisions of NSFAS to
terminate service level agreement and make other payment
arrangements – Decisions administrative in nature –
Unconstitutional self-help by NSFAS – Contended that
irreparable harm will ensue from mismanaged public funds –
Balance of convenience favours grant of interdict –
NSFAS is
interdicted, pending determination of Part B
Republic
of South Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No:
9526/24
Before:
Sven Olivier AJ
Date
of hearing: 8 and 9 July 2024
Delivered
electronically on: 15 July 2024
In
the matter between:
EZAGA
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
NATIONAL
STUDENT FINANCIAL AID SCHEME COINVEST AFRICA (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
COINVEST
AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
NORACCO
CORPORATION (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
TENET
TECHNOLOGY (PTY) LTD
Fourth
Respondent
MINISTER
OF HIGHER EDUCATION, SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
Fifth
Respondent
SPECIAL
INVESTIGATING UNIT
Sixth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Introduction
1.
The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS)
is a statutory body, established in terms of
section 3(1)
of the
National Student Financial Aid Scheme Act, 56 of 1999
. NSFAS is also
subject to the
Public Finance Management Act, 1 of 1999
, in terms of
which NSFAS is listed as a Schedule 3A entity mandated for a specific
economic or social responsibility of the Government.
In terms of
section 3(2)
NSFAS is managed, government and administered by the
NSFAS board.
2.
NSFAS was conceptualised as a loan and bursary
scheme in order to address the rising student debt problem in higher
education institutions
and give effect to the Government’s
commitment and duty to redress the inequities of the past. NSFAS
accordingly provides
financial aid to eligible students at public
universities and Technical Vocational Education and Training (TVET)
colleges who meet
the criteria for admission to a further education
and training program or to a higher education program.
3.
The students are from poorer or working-class
families who would otherwise be unable to afford to study. In the
2020 academic year
NSFAS assisted close to 500,000 TVET students and
close to 430,000 university students to obtaining financial aid, and
awarded
R41 billion in loans and bursaries for poor academically
eligible students. This grew to R 47.6bn in 2023 serving a student
population
of 1.1 million.
4.
Section 29(1)(b) of the Constitution provides that
“
everyone has a right to further
education which the state, through reasonable measures, must make
progressively available and accessible
.”
In terms of
section 4
of the
National Student Financial Aid Scheme
Act, 56 of 1999
, NSFAS allocates funds for loans and bursaries to
eligible students.
5.
NSFAS
is funded primarily by the South African National Department of
Higher Education and Training. Since the inception of NSFAS
funds
allocated to it have increased substantially. The December 2017
Presidential pronouncement on Fee Free Higher Education has
led to
the need to redesign and restructure the organisation to enable it to
deal with its existing requirements and, more importantly,
to create
a platform for the future as a full bursary provider.
[1]
6.
Mr O Cook SC assisted by Mr Sive appeared for
eZaga, Mr T Ngcukaitobi SC, assisted by Mr M Sulakazana, appeared for
NSFAS, and Mr
P Mokoena SC assisted by Ms Z Bhero-Manentsa appeared
for the Special Investigating Unit (the SIU). Though their affidavits
had
been struck out, Ndita J, in an earlier ruling, had afforded the
second to fourth respondents the opportunity to address the Court
at
this hearing. Mr J Moorcroft appeared for the third respondent and Mr
J Pammenter, assisted by Ms T Palmer appeared for the
fourth
respondent. I express my gratitude to counsel for their assistance
with the heads of argument and notes which were filed
and their
argument in a matter with heavily disputed issues and complex legal
principles.
The salient facts
7.
The present urgent application arises from a
tender bid advertised on 25 January 2022.
8.
The
salient facts are these. The tender earlier awarded to First National
Bank was cancelled as Mr Nongogo, the then Chief Executive
Officers
of NSFAS gave the instruction that this, the second tender, be
cancelled because the requirement for a bank licence was
non-inclusive.
[2]
Publicly it
was recorded that the requirement for the service fell away.
9.
A third tender bid for a “
direct
payment solution
“
was advertised
on 25 January 2022. The Request for Proposal invited bid proposals
for the direct disbursement of allowances into
bank accounts of NSFAS
funded students for a period of 5 years.
10.
Eighteen bids were submitted of which four were
successful.
11.
The tender was awarded to the four successful
bidders, eZaga Holdings (Pty) Ltd, Coinvest Africa (Pty) Ltd, Norraco
Corporation
(Pty) Ltd and Tenet Technology (Pty) Ltd, on 15 June
2022. They are so-called fin-tech companies. The four successful
bidders are
respectively the applicant, and the second to fourth
respondents in the present application. They were advised that they
were to
meet for negotiation on prices and value-added services.
These price negotiations took place on 23 June 2022.
12.
Subsequently, on 12 July 2022, they concluded
service level agreements with NSFAS.
13.
Shortly after the award of the tender, the Special
Investigating Unit was tasked on 26 August 2022, in terms of a
Proclamation under
the hand of the Minister of Justice, to
investigate any alleged serious maladministration in connection with
the affairs of NSFAS,
improper or unlawful conduct by the employees
or officials of NSFAS, unlawful appropriation or expenditure of
public money or property,
unlawful, irregular or unapproved
acquisitive act, transaction and so forth, which took place between 1
April 2016 and 26 August
2022 (the date of publication of the
proclamation). This arose from widely published allegations levelled
against Mr Nongogo in
the press.
14.
On 14 March 2023 NSFAS issued notices of
non-performance to eZaga and the three other service providers,
invoking clause 14.1.5
of the service level agreements, affording
eZaga and the others seven days to rectify matters, and reserving the
right to cancel
same.
15.
In April 2023 the Special Investigating Unit
informed the Standing Committee at Parliament that prior to the
implementation of the
direct payment solution over 40,000 undeserving
students benefited irregularly, funding amounting to over Rand 5
billion was allocated
to undeserving students and that institutions
were unable to identify fraudulent applications. Several departmental
officials have
been investigated for fraud.
16.
On 10 July 2023 the Stellenbosch Student
Representative Council filed a complaint with the Public Protector,
which complaint pertained
to the direct payment solution.
17.
The
board of NSFAS had commissioned
[3]
its own investigation pursuant to which a preliminary report by
attorneys Werksmans led by Mr Ngcukaitobi was produced on 15 October
2023. This report galvanised the NSFAS board into action and it
convened a media briefing on 18 October 2023.
18.
At the media briefing held on 18 October 2023 Mr
Ernest Khosa, the chairman of NSFAS, informed the media of the
investigation into
the allegations of bid irregularities and that the
board had appointed Werksmans Attorneys and Mr Ngcukaitobi to
investigate the
alleged irregularities relating to the third tender.
The allegations related to the conflict of interest of Mr Nongogo in
the appointment
of the four service providers. A number of defects in
the procurement process were identified – such as the lack of a
feasibility
study, the amendments to the bid specifications which
favoured the fin-tech companies, and the failure to conduct a
thorough due
diligence of the service providers. It also referenced
Dr Chirwa’s association with eZaga Remit and a possible
relationship
between Mr Nongogo and,
inter
alia
, eZaga Holdings. It was conveyed
that the board had resolved to implement the recommendations of the
Werksmans report, and,
inter alia
,
to terminate the service level agreements with the four service
providers.
19.
It was recorded that the report had been furnished
to Mr Nongogo and was granted an opportunity to advise why his
contract should
not be terminated. The report was only made available
to the service providers and the Court on the second day of the
hearing.
20.
It was recorded that notwithstanding the current
challenges the board affirmed its commitment to implement the “
direct
payment solution
”
. The media
briefing recorded the view of the board, namely that the direct
payment solution is a necessary measure to reduce instances
of
unauthorised access to beneficiaries’ allowances, payment of go
students, inconsistencies, and the late payment of allowances.
21.
It will be recalled that the Request for Proposal
was for the “
provision of direct
payments of allowances to NSFAS students for a period of 5 years,
renewable
”
.
22.
The recommendations were expressly predicated upon
the irregularities expounded in the media briefing, which was
explicated on in
the answering affidavit. All of those reasons
advanced pertain to irregularities in the tender process and the
award of the tender.
It relates to non-compliance with the NSFAS
Supply Chain Management Policy, shortfalls therein, changes in the
tender requirements
as between the second and third tenders, and so
forth.
23.
On 18 October 2023 an urgent meeting was convened
with the four service providers, chaired by Mr Ernest Khosa, the
present chairman
of NSFAS. It is in dispute whether Mr Khosa advised
the four service providers at that meeting that NSFAS had decided to
cancel
the decision to award the tender to them, and furthermore to
terminate the service level agreements on the strength of the
Werksmans’
report.
24.
Subsequently, in early 2024, it was conveyed to
the universities and colleges in a circular which recorded that the
service providers
“
remain enlisted
by NSFAS to fulfil the crucial task of disbursing allowances to
students until such time that NSFAS communicates
otherwise.
”
The circular was the result of a board resolution
of 31 January 2024 which resolved for the continuation of the service
level agreements
with the four service providers. Mr Ngcukaitobi
termed this a bizarre resolution – no doubt because it flies in
the face
of what was conveyed on 18 October 2023.
25.
On 12
April 2024 NSFAS took the decision to extend the payment of
allowances to the beneficiaries through the universities instead
of
through the direct payment solution provided by the service providers
(the 12 April 2024 diversion decision).
[4]
26.
On 24 April 2024 NSFAS took a decision to stop
issuing payment instructions to the service providers (the 24 April
diversion decision)
and on 26 April 2024 NSFAS implemented a payment
mechanism to distribute the allowances directly to students (the 26
April diversion
decision).
27.
The 26 April diversion decision led to the present
application being launched on 5 May 2024.
28.
On 24 May 2024 proceedings were instituted before
the Special Tribunal, established in terms of section 2(1) of the
Special Investigating
Unit and Special Tribunals Act, 74 of 1996,
wherein an urgent interdict against the continued implementation of
the service level
agreements and a review of the award of the tender
and the service level agreements are sought. Both the SIU and NSFAS
are applicants
in those proceedings. This was done to give effect to
the decision to terminate the service level agreements.
29.
Mr Ngcukaitobi explained that a fundamental change
took place in April and May of this year. The board of NSFAS was
dissolved. It
was only upon the appointment on 12 April 2024 of the
present administrator, Mr Nomvalo, the deponent to the answering
affidavit,
that the 12 April 2024 diversion decision was taken and
shortly thereafter the 26 April 2024 diversion decision.
The Court proceedings
30.
The urgent part of the composite application (Part
A) was allocated to me to be heard on 8 and 9 July 2024 during Court
recess.
The date was arranged by agreement between the parties in
conjunction with the office of the Acting Deputy Judge President of
this
Court.
31.
The
relief sought by applicant is predicated on the communication of 18
October 2023 and the subsequent steps taken by NSFAS. It
is
appropriate to set out in full the relief sought – an urgent
interdict and just and equitable relief under section 172(1)(b)
of
the Constitution,
[5]
as follows
(a)
First, an order restraining NSFAS from taking any
steps to implement its decision:
(i)
on or about 18 October 2023 to terminate its
service level agreement with the applicant ("the October 2023
termination decision")
in relation to tender number SCMN022
("the tender") for the provision of direct payment of
allowances to NSFAS students
for a period of five years, renewable,
which agreement came into effect on 12 of July 2022;
(ii)
on or about 18 October 2023 to cancel the decision
it made on 12 July 2022 to award the tender to the applicant;
(iii)
on or about 12 April 2024 to extend the payment of
allowances to NSFAS-funded students and beneficiaries through the
universities
themselves instead of through the direct payment
solution provided by the applicant;
(iv)
on or about 24 April 2024 to stop issuing payment
instructions and making associated payments to the applicant for the
direct disbursement
of allowances into the bank accounts of the
NSFAS-funded students and beneficiaries which the applicant has
onboarded; and
(v)
on or about 26 April 2024 to implement a payment
mechanism with the assistance of its banker to distribute allowances
directly to
student's bank accounts.
(b)
Second, an order directing NSFAS to implement the
service level agreement, issue payment instructions and make the
associated payments
to the applicant for the direct disbursement of
allowances into the bank accounts of the NSFAS-funded students and
beneficiaries
which the applicant has onboarded.
32.
eZaga cited as second to fourth respondents the
other three successful bidders who had also entered into service
level agreements
with NSFAS. These respondents filed affidavits in
support of the application. The fifth respondent, the Minister of
Higher Education
and Technology abides the decision of the Court. The
Special Investigating Unit made an application to intervene.
33.
The urgent interdictory relief sought by NSFAS and
the SIU in the self-review application before the Special Tribunal
directly contrasts
the relief sought by eZaga in this court.
34.
The application, initially set down for Tuesday,
28 May, was removed by agreement and then re-enrolled for 30 and 31
May.
35.
On 30 May 2024 Van Leeve AJ, postponed the
application to 10 and 11 June 2024.
36.
On 31 May 2024 the third respondent, Norraco
Corporation Limited, gave notice of its counter application,
mirroring similar relief
to that as sought by the eZaga.
37.
On 6 June 2024 the second respondent, Coinvest
Africa, gave notice of its counter application, seeking similar
relief to that claimed
by eZaga.
38.
The matter came before Ms Justice Ndita on 10 and
11 June. In terms of the order issued by Ndita J, she
(a)
struck out the second, third and fourth
respondents’ affidavits;
(b)
dismissed the third respondent’s counter
application; (the other intervention application, by the second
respondent, was withdrawn);
(c)
granted the intervening party, the SIU leave to
intervene; and
(d)
struck the application from the roll for want of
urgency, ordering the applicant to pay the costs of the first and
sixth respondents,
including the costs of two counsel.
Interdictory relief
39.
An
applicant for an interim interdict must establish (a) a
prima
facie
right
even if it is open to some doubt; (b) a reasonable apprehension of
irreparable and imminent harm to the right if the interdict
is not
granted; (c) that the balance of convenience favours the grant of the
interdict; and (d) that there is no other remedy available.
[6]
In addition, where the interdict, it granted, will restrain the
exercise of a statutory power, there must be both exceptional
circumstances and a strong case made out for the relief.
[7]
40.
The
accepted test for a
prima
facie
right
in the context of an interim interdict is to take the facts averred
by the applicant, together with such facts set out by
the respondent
that are not or cannot be disputed and to consider whether, having
regard to the inherent probabilities, the applicant
should on those
facts obtain final relief at the trial. The facts set up in
contradiction by the respondent should then be considered
and, if
serious doubt is thrown upon the case of the applicant, she cannot
succeed.
[8]
The question is
whether, having regard to the facts and the inherent probabilities,
the applicant should obtain final relief when
the main case is
heard.
[9]
It is not necessary
for an urgent court to make a final determination on the legal
issues.
[10]
41.
Mr Ngcukaitobi predicated his argument that eZaga
had made out no
prima facie
case for an interdict, and that such an interdict
would only be granted in the clearest of cases. In
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC).
Outa
explicated as follows
“
[43]
A little less than 40 years before the advent of our Constitution, in
Gool
,
[11]
a full bench of the Cape Provincial Division was called upon to grant
an interdict restraining the minister pendente lite from
exercising
certain powers vested in him by a statute. Ogilvie-Thompson J,
writing for a unanimous court, considered the requirements
for an
interim restraining order announced in
Setlogelo
,
and said the following:
'The
present is however not an ordinary application for an interdict. In
the first place, we are in the present case concerned with
an
application for an interdict restraining the exercise of statutory
powers. In the absence of any allegation of
mala
fides
,
the court does not readily grant such an interdict. . . .'
[12]
And later the learned
judge observed:
'The
various considerations which I have mentioned lead, in my opinion,
irresistibly to the conclusion that the Court should only
grant an
interdict such as that sought by the applicant in the present
instance upon a strong case being made out for that relief.
I have
already held that the Court has jurisdiction to entertain an
application such as the present, but in my judgment that jurisdiction
will, for the reasons I have indicated, only be exercised in
exceptional circumstances and when a strong case is made out for
relief.'
[13]
[Emphasis added.]
[44] The common-law
annotation to the
Setlogelo
test is that courts grant
temporary restraining orders against the exercise of statutory power
only in exceptional cases and when
a strong case for that relief has
been made out. Beyond the common law, separation of powers is an even
more vital tenet of our
constitutional democracy. This means that the
Constitution requires courts to ensure that all branches of
government act within
the law. However, courts in turn must refrain
from entering the exclusive terrain of the executive and the
legislative branches
of government unless the intrusion is mandated
by the Constitution itself.
[45]
It seems to me that it is unnecessary to fashion a new test for the
grant of an interim interdict. The
Setlogelo
test, as adapted by case law, continues to be a
handy and ready guide to the bench and practitioners alike in the
grant of interdicts
in busy magistrates' courts and high courts.
However, now the test must be applied cognisant of the normative
scheme and democratic
principles that underpin our Constitution. This
means that when a court considers whether to grant an interim
interdict it must
do so in a way that promotes the objects, spirit
and purport of the Constitution.
”
A
prima facie
right?
42.
Does eZaga meet the test set in
Outa
?
The parties are worlds apart –
43.
eZaga’s case is that the impugned decisions
are unlawful in at least four independent respects –
(a)
NSFAS
had resorted to unconstitutional self-help, and that it ignored the
binding legal effect of the legal consequences of the
award of the
tender, and service level agreement, which have not been set aside or
reviewed. The sole power to pronounce on the
legal validity of the
award lies with the courts. NSFAS has no power to invalidate or
ignore them. The award and the service level
agreement remain legally
effective until successfully challenged by the right actor in the
right proceedings. For rule-of-law reasons,
the award and the service
level agreement stand. Reliance is placed on a number of cases, in
particular
Kirland
,
[14]
Merafong
[15]
and
Tasima.
[16]
(b)
The impugned decisions materially and adversely
affect the rights and legitimate expectations of eZaga. In violation
of its fundamental
rights to a fair procedure, NSFAS failed to
provide eZaga with any notice of the impugned decisions, or with an
opportunity to
make representations about the impugned decisions,
before they were made.
(c)
The procedure adopted by NSFAS leading up to the
impugned decisions is irrational (in order for the exercise of public
power to
be valid, it must be rationally connected to the purpose for
which the power was granted). Irrational not to consult eZaga and
irrational to make the decisions to terminate the service level
agreement and cancel the award solely based on the recommendation
in
a report by Werksmans
(d)
Violation of eZaga’s constitutional right to
administrative justice and rights under the award and the service
level agreement,
as well as the rights of tens of thousands of
affected students to further education ito section 29(1) of the
Constitution and
to their fundamental statutory rights to receive
funds for loans and bursaries from NSFAS.
44.
eZaga further contends
(a)
The impugned decisions are, at least,
prima
facie
, irregular and a unlawful. NSFAS
has acted in flagrant violation of the law by making the impugned
decisions, which ignore the
binding and operative for award and
service level agreement. In the face of the award and service level
agreement, NSFAS unilaterally
decided to make the impugned decisions
without giving any notice to eZaga or affording it an opportunity to
make representations.
(b)
eZaga also has the fundamental right to
administrative action that is lawful, reasonable and procedurally
fair. It has the right
under the award and service level agreement to
render services, including the disbursement of funds to the NSFAS
students and to
conduct by NSFAS and persons controlled by NSFAS that
enables it to comply with its obligation to provide the services in
terms
of the service level agreement.
(c)
The students also have the right to receive the
funds timeously as well as the fundamental right to further
protection under section
29(b) of the Constitution.
45.
Messrs
Cook and Sive, submitted that NSFAS had exercised its statutory power
to make allocations of funds, and the impugned decisions
amounted to
administrative acts which were subject to PAJA, and which were
nothing else than unconstitutional self-help, which
fell foul of
Oudekraal
,
[17]
Kirland
and
Merafong
.
46.
NSFAS contends that it is a contractual right
which eZaga has impermissibly framed to pursue administrative law
remedies. In addition,
the impugned decisions do not constitute
administrative acts. It contends that eGaza, had contractual remedies
available to it
when NSFAS admittedly repudiated the service level
agreement.
47.
eZaga points to the fundamental tension in the
NSFAS answering affidavit – on the one hand NSFAS confirms that
it is allowing
eZaga to continue to implement the service level
agreement in respect of TVET students, and on the other hand NSFAS
claims that
it is justified in ignoring the service level agreement
in respect of the universities. This, eZaga contends violates and
negates
its rights under the service level agreement and also
violates the fundamental rights of the students.
48.
It is far from easy to grapple with this nettle.
Do the impugned
decisions constitute administrative action?
49.
Whether the impugned decisions indeed constitute
administrative action is complicated. As Binns-Ward J remarked in
Ma-Afrika Hotels (Pty) Ltd v Cape
Peninsula University of Technology
2023
(3) SA 621
(WCC) at [12]
“
It
is well recognised that distinguishing what falls within the ambit of
'administrative action' from what does not can often be
a difficult
undertaking. It has been remarked more than once that there can be no
all-embracing test
[18]
, and
the question is one that the courts have to decide on a case-by-case
basis.
[19]
”
50.
eZaga contends that the impugned decisions were
indeed administrative action. NSFAS never purported to rely on any of
the contractual
provisions when it took and implemented the impugned
decisions. Its contentions regarding the invalidity of the award of
the tender
and the service level agreements are firmly rooted in the
findings of the Werksmans report and are founded on principles of
administrative
law. It is on that very basis that it has brought the
self-review application before the Special Tribunal.
51.
Mr Ngcukaitobi contended that consequent upon the
conclusion of the service level agreement, the relationship between
the parties
is regulated by the law of contract, and that
administrative law principles found no application. eZaga was
compelled to exercise
its contractual remedies. He relied upon
Government of the Republic of South
Africa v Thabiso Chemicals (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 112
;
2009
(1) SA 163
(SCA) at par
[18]
where Brand JA held as follows
“
[18]
… I do not believe that the principles of administrative law
have any role to play in the outcome of the dispute. After
the tender
had been awarded, the relationship between the parties in this case
was governed by the principles of contract law (see
eg
Cape
Metropolitan Council v Metro Inspection Services (Western Cape) CC
and Others
2001
(3) SA 1013
(SCA)
(
2001 (10) BCLR 1026)
at para 18;
Steenkamp
NO v Provincial Tender Board, Eastern Cape
2006
(3) SA 151
(SCA) ([2006]
1 All SA 478)
at paras 11 and 12). The fact
that the tender board relied on authority derived from a statutory
provision (ie s 4(1)(eA) of the
State Tender Board Act) to cancel the
contract on behalf of the government, does not detract from this
principle. Nor does the
fact that the grounds of cancellation on
which the tender board relied were, inter alia, reflected in a
regulation. All that happened,
in my view, is that the provisions of
the regulations - like the provisions of ST36 - became part of the
contract through incorporation
by reference.
”
52.
In his
further note, filed after the hearing he amplified with reference to
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Limited v Industrial Development Corporation of
South Africa Limited
,
[20]
where the Constitutional Court held that
“
[75]
Second, the Supreme Court of Appeal did not value the distinction
between public and private law. The decision to award a tender
is a
matter of public law. It is governed by the Constitution, the
Public
Finance Management Act, the
Procurement Act and the Procurement
Regulations.
Although
there may be interplay between public and private law, the
distinction must not be collapsed. Ordinarily, an issue like
contract
price adjustment that is subject to negotiation after the procurement
process has taken place, ought to fall squarely
within the domain of
private law.
It
is subject to ordinary contractual negotiations between enterprising
parties. Importantly, the parties agreed during oral argument
that
this distinction is applicable
.”
(emphasis by Mr Ngcukaitobi)
53.
He submitted that eZaga had abandoned their
contractual remedies, and had utterly failed to show that the four
impugned decisions
were of an administrative nature. They do not meet
the requirements of an administrative act as defined under PAJA, nor
do they
fell foul of the principles of legality. On that basis the
application did not get out of the starting blocks.
54.
As already stated, it remains a vexed question
whether and when administrative law should apply where the parties
had entered into
a contract.
55.
The service providers in response relied on
Logbro
Properties CC v Bedderson NO & Others
2003
(2) SA 460
(SCA) where Cameron JA, as he then was, held
“
[7]
Even if the conditions constituted a contract (a finding not in issue
before us, and on which I express no opinion), its provisions
did not
exhaust the province's duties toward the tenderers. Principles of
administrative justice continued to govern that relationship,
and the
province in exercising its contractual rights in the tender process
was obliged to act lawfully, procedurally and fairly.
In consequence,
some of its contractual rights — such as the entitlement to
give no reasons — would necessarily yield
before its public
duties under the Constitution and any applicable legislation.
[8] The principles of
administrative justice nevertheless framed the parties' contractual
relationship, and continued in particular
to govern the province's
exercise of the rights it derived from the contract.
…
[10]
The case
[21]
is thus not
authority for the general proposition that a public authority
empowered by statute to contract may exercise its contractual
rights
without regard to public duties of fairness. On the contrary: the
case establishes the proposition that a public authority's
invocation
of a power of cancellation in a contract concluded on equal terms
with a major commercial undertaking, without any element
of
superiority or authority deriving from its public position, does not
amount to an exercise of public power.
[22]
[11]
In the present case, it is evident that the province itself dictated
the tender conditions, which McLaren J held constituted
a contract
once the tenderers had agreed to them. The province was thus
undoubtedly, in the words of Streicher JA in
Cape
Metropolitan
, acting from a
position of superiority or authority by virtue of its being a public
authority in specifying those terms. The province
was therefore
burdened with its public duties of fairness in exercising the powers
it derived from the terms of the contract.
”
56.
In
South
African National Parks v MTO Forestry (Pty) Ltd & Another
2018
(5) SA 177
(SCA) the majority per Dambuza JA found that there was a
legitimate expectation to be consulted before the terms of a lease
was
to be varied.
[23]
The
Court held as follows at paragraphs 23 – 26 and 32 and 37
“
[23]
The submission on behalf of SanParks, that the exercise by an organ
of state of rights under a contract attracts no public-law
obligation, was considered by this court in
Logbro
Properties CC v Bedderson NO and Others
.
[24]
As in this case, the appellant in
Logbro
relied
on
Cape
Metro Council v Metro Inspection Services (Western Cape) CC and
Others
[25]
for
the contention that public-law responsibilities had no place in a
contract concluded by a state organ.
[24] In
Logbro
the contention was that conditions stipulated in a tender gave the
Western Cape Province a contractual right to withdraw a tender
'without
having to pass the scrutiny of lawful administrative action'
[26]
.
In paras 7 – 8
of the judgment Cameron JA held as follows:
'Even if the
conditions constituted a contract (a finding not in issue before us,
and on which I express no opinion), its provisions
did not exhaust
the province's duties towards the tenderers. Principles of
administrative justice continued to govern that relationship,
and the
province in exercising its contractual rights in the tender process
was obliged to act lawfully, procedurally and fairly.
In consequence,
some of its contractual rights — such as the entitlement to
give no reasons — would necessarily yield
before its public
duties under the Constitution and any applicable legislation.
This is not to say
that the conditions for which the province stipulated in putting out
the tender were irrelevant to its subsequent
powers. As will appear,
such stipulations might bear on the exact ambit of the ever-flexible
duty to act fairly that rested on
the province. The principles of
administrative justice nevertheless framed the parties' contractual
relationship, and continued
in particular to govern the province's
exercise of the rights it derived from the contract.' [Footnotes
omitted.]
[25]
Logbro
highlighted
that
Cape
Metropolitan Council
is
no authority for a general principle that a public authority
empowered by statute to contract may always exercise its contractual
rights without regard to public duties of fairness. More importantly,
the court in
Logbro
stressed
the distinguishing factors in that case that underpinned the court's
decision. It noted that the tender
[27]
and employment
[28]
cases were
not relevant to the facts in
Cape
Metropolitan Council
because
of the equal power of the contracting parties in that case.
[26]
The reliance by the appellant on
Government
of the Republic of South Africa v Thabiso Chemicals
[29]
does
not take the matter any further. Unlike in this case, the dispute in
Thabiso
,
as well as in
Cape
Metropolitan Council
,
turned on the contract entered into between the two parties. The
pivotal issue in
Thabiso
was
the limited factual determination into whether the facts relied on by
the government in cancelling a tender could sustain the
cancellation
under the relevant clause in the contract.
Thabiso
did
not concern the effect that the exercise of a power sourced in a
contract would have on the public and its interests.
[27]
Already in the pre-constitutional era this court acknowledged that in
a contractual context circumstances may be such as to
compel notions
of fairness and the application of the principle of legitimate
expectation. In this regard, see
Lunt
v University of Cape Town and Another
.
[30]
Professor
Hoexter warns against the dangers of formalism in that an exclusive
focus on the concept of a contract might distract
from the reasons
why fairness ought to be observed in a particular case, whether it be
of a private or of a public nature.
[31]
…
[32] Having regard to
the factual background set out above, considering SanParks' statutory
obligations and the principles set out
in case law referred to above,
it is clear in my view that Parkscape and its members had a
legitimate expectation to be consulted
before the decision to vary
the lease was made. The court below was correct in holding in favour
of Parkscape.
…
[36]
The ambit of
Cape Metro
,
confirmed in
Logbro
,
was as follows: the Metropolitan Council cancelled a contract with a
private contractor. The main issue was whether the cancellation
in
terms prescribed by the contract involved administrative-law
principles. On the facts of that case, this court held that the
cancellation did not constitute administrative action. It was this
distinction that Logbro sought to make
.”
57.
In
Polokwane Local
Municipality v Granor Passi (Pty) Ltd
2019
JDR 0346 (SCA) Wallis JA simply pointed out that
“
a
decision regarding the implementation of a contract to which the
municipality is a party is an act of administration. It was taken
by
an organ of state, exercising a public power or function in relation
to the enforcement of a contract concluded in terms of
the empowering
provisions governing transactions of this character.
[32]
It had a direct external legal effect and adversely affected Granor’s
rights. It did not fall with in any of the statutory
exceptions.
Accordingly, it was administrative action and reviewable under
PAJA.
[33]
”
[34]
58.
Wallis JA in
Granor
referred with approval to what Navsa JA and Davis
JA held in
Sanparks
,
namely
“
[37]
There is no bright-line test for determining whether administrative
principles intrude in relation to a contract involving
an organ of
state and a private party. However, there are indicators. One might
rightly ask whether coercive state power can be
brought to bear by a
state organ on the private party. Further, one will be constrained to
consider whether the public interest
is affected by the exercise of
the contractual right. …
The contractual terms,
seen contextually, will also be scrutinised to determine how the
parties envisaged disputes in relation to
their agreement being dealt
with prospectively.
[38]
Having regard to the authorities referred to by Dambuza JA,
[35]
… a court should be concerned with whether, in the
circumstances of the case, the state can be said to be acting fairly,
which includes, but is not limited to, questions of procedural
propriety. It does not necessarily follow, where there is an equality
of arms in relation to the conclusion of a contract and where the
public interest is not directly involved, that the private party
will
be able to resort to administrative-law principles. Each case has to
be decided on its own merits and courts will exercise
a value
judgment.
[39]
Proportionality is a constitutional watchword, the exercise of which
can be employed in adjudicating whether to import administrative-law
principles into cases involving an organ of state and a private
party. …
”
59.
NSFAS’ response is that the rights upon
which eZaga relies is sourced in service level agreement and where
NSFAS has repudiated
that agreement the remedy which eZaga had, but
chose not to exercise was to be found in the agreement itself, it was
a contractual
remedy and not a public law remedy.
60.
NSFAS
did not seek to rely on any contractual remedy – in fact, its
case in the answering affidavit was that it had not cancelled
the
service level agreement.
[36]
61.
A contractual notice was sent to eZaga on 14 March
2023, but NSFAS did not follow it up with any further steps. eZaga in
its answering
affidavit dealt with the steps it took to remedy the
complaints levelled. The second and addendum to the service level
agreement
were entered into in mid-June 2023. It is fair to assume,
that if there had been any serious malperformance by eZaga, this
would
not have been concluded.
62.
NSFAS never (save for the notice given on 12 March
2023) purported to enforce its rights in terms of the service level
agreement,
nor did it seek cancellation under the provisions of the
service level agreement. In the answering affidavit it was contended
that
there was no cancellation at all. The facts do not bear this
contention out. The intention to terminate the service level
agreements
was announced on 18 October 2023. It was justified on the
recommendations of the Werksmans report – none of which were
rooted
in contract.
63.
Accordingly, when NSFAS seeks to exercise a power
extraneous to the contract, in order to terminate it, it is not
exercising a contractual
right and it cannot, in turn, insist that
the other party is confined to its contractual remedies. That creates
and uneven playing
field where there is no equality of arms.
64.
Mr Ngcukaitobi reiterated this in argument, and
again in the further note which was handed in post the hearing. He
stated that there
was no evidence of any decision to cancel the
service level agreement.
65.
The board decision as reflected in the NSFAS media
briefing of 18 October 2023 records
“
As
a result of the finds, the Board has therefore decided to do the
following
..
3.
Advise all four direct payment service providers that their contracts
will be terminated. The Board will ensure that this termination
does
not affect the students negatively. In this regard the Board is
mindful of the universities they may have made and expectations
they
had over the next step will take into account both the law and the
implications of service delivery
.”
66.
On the same day a meeting was held with the four
service providers where this was conveyed to them.
67.
NSFAS also never sought, in these proceedings, to
justify, any cancellation founded in contract. It never contended
that it was
exercising any contractual rights in respect of any of
the impugned decisions. Instead, it denies that there was any
cancellation,
despite Mr Ngcukaitobi having submitted that NSFAS had
repudiated the service level agreement.
68.
It is therefore plain that NSFAS had taken a
decision to terminate the service level agreements. And perhaps
“
terminate
”
is
the correct terminology, as opposed to “
cancellation
”
.
Cancellation implies a contractual right to terminate – and
clearly this was not what was exercised by NSFAS. It stepped
outside
of the confines of the contract when the board resolved to terminate
the service level agreement.
69.
In addition, it is clear that NSFAS is acting from
a position of superiority.
70.
For the reasons set out above I am of the view
that this constituted administrative action and I hold accordingly.
In the premises
I conclude that both the termination decision and the
diversion decisions, accordingly, were taken in the exercise of a
public
power, and not the enforcement of contractual rights.
71.
Mr Ngcukaitobi submitted that the decision taken
on 12 April 2024 to extend the payment of allowances to the
beneficiaries through
the universities instead of through the direct
payment solution provided by eZaga was a policy-laden poly-centric
decision and
that it was not open to the Court to second guess the
exercise of such power.
72.
The Constitutional Court in
Outa
held
“
[67]
… The duty to determine how public resources are to be drawn
upon and re-ordered lies in the heartland of Executive
Government
function and domain. What is more, absent any proof of unlawfulness
or fraud or corruption, the powered and prerogative
to formulate and
implement policy on how to finance public project resides in the
exclusive domain of the National Executive subject
to budget are
appropriations by Parliament.
[68]
Another consideration is that the collection and ordering of public
resources inevitably calls for policy-laden poly-centric
decision-making. Courts are not always well-suited to make decisions
of that order.
“
73.
I should be mindful of the deference required as
described by the SCA in
Logbro
at
paras 21 – 22 as follows:
“
(A)
judicial willingness to appreciate the legitimate and
constitutionally-ordained province of administrative agencies; to
admit
the expertise of those agencies in policy-laden or polycentric
issues; to accord their interpretation of fact and law with due
respect; and to be sensitive in general to the interests legitimately
pursued by administrative bodies and the practical and financial
constraints under which they operate. This type of deference is
perfectly consistent with a concern for individual rights and a
refusal to tolerate corruption and maladministration. It ought to be
shaped not by an unwillingness to scrutinise administrative
action,
but by a careful weighing up of the need for — and the
consequences of — judicial intervention. Above all,
it ought to
be shaped by a conscious determination not to usurp the functions of
administrative agencies; not to cross over from
review to appeal.
”
74.
The retort from eZaga was the policy-laden
body-centric decision was the decision to implement the direct
payment solution, consequent
upon which the tender was awarded and
the service level agreement entered into. It was no longer open to
NSFAS to apply self-help
and invalidate the award and the service
level agreements - that only a court could do.
75.
In response to the contention by Mr Ngcukaitobi
that eZaga may not rely on public law rights Mr Sive submitted that
eZaga indeed
could rely on PAJA to make out a
prima
facie
case. He referred to the
Eskom
Vaal River
judgement at paragraph [280]
where the court held as follows
“
[280]
… On first principles, the nature of the right envisaged by
the definition of “administrative action” in
section 1,
read with section 4 (1), of PAJA is not restricted. All that it need
be is a right. It may take whatever form based
on what we know of
that concept in common law, statutory law or in respect of
constitutionally protected rights.
[37]
The only question is whether the decision in issue has adversely
(section 1) or has materially and adversely (section 4 (1)) affected
(or has the capacity so to affect (
Greys
Marine
[38]
))
that right, whatever its nature. It is unsurprising that Quinot and
Maree say that –
“
the
impact element of the definition of an administrative action should
not be narrowly interpreted to refer only to private-law
or
common-law rights or to fundamental rights in the Bill of Rights, but
also includes so-called “public-law rights”,
which emerge
from broad constitutional and statutory obligations placed on organs
of state.
[39]
”
76.
eZaga, in addition, submitted that once public or
administrative decisions have been communicated by an organ of state
such as NSFAS,
they are final and operative and may be subject to
judicial review. Contrary to NSFAS’ bald assertions to the
contrary, the
impugned decisions are final and reviewable.
77.
In my view the impugned decisions were not rooted
in contract, nor did NSFAS contended that they do. Rather, the
decisions involved
“
the exercise
of a public power
”
or “
a
public function
”
, namely on the
administration of funds and manner in which they are disbursed to
students, which is the mandate under which NSFAS
operates in terms of
section 4 of the NSFAS Act, and therefore was administrative in
nature.
78.
It is also no answer to say that they amounted to
a polycentric decision which the Courts should refrain from
interfering with.
This is not the issue at stake – the question
rather is whether the impugned decisions amounted to impermissible
self-help.
An aspect which falls to be considered below.
The students
79.
Reliance was also placed in the founding affidavit
upon the rights of the students to timeously receive the funds that
have been
allocated to them under section 4 of the NSFAS Act and that
they have the fundamental right to further indication in terms of
section
29(b) of the Constitution. Lawyers for Human Rights v
Minister of Home Affairs
[2004] ZACC 12
;
2004 (4) SA 125
(CC)
where
O’Regan J held as follows
“
[16]
In her judgment in
Ferreira
v Levin
[40]
O'Regan J advocated the following approach to determine the reach of
the provision in the interim Constitution equivalent to s
38(d) of
the Constitution as well as whether and when a person or organisation
could be said to have been acting in the public
interest in a
particular case:
'This
Court will be circumspect in affording applicants standing by way of
s 7(4)(b)(v) and will require an applicant to show that
he or she is
genuinely acting in the public interest. Factors relevant to
determining whether a person is genuinely acting in the
public
interest will include considerations such as: whether there is
another reasonable and effective manner in which the challenge
can be
brought; the nature of the relief sought, and the extent to which it
is of general and prospective application; and the
range of persons
or groups who may be directly or indirectly affected by any order
made by the Court and the opportunity that those
persons or groups
have had to present evidence and argument to the Court. These factors
will need to be considered in the light
of the facts and
circumstances of each case.'
[41]
80.
eZaga submitted that eZaga was entitled to bring
the application on behalf of the students and public interest demands
that it be
allowed to do so. I was referred to the affidavits by the
students filed in amplification. NSFAS had not given any explanation
as to why those were not valid concerns.
81.
In support of the application, as part of the
eZaga replying, affidavits by students were filed in which they
confirmed that
(a)
they had not received NSFAS allowances since the
implementation of the diverted payment system;
(b)
the implementation of the impugned decisions had
compromised the academic progress, let to frustration, and inhibited
them from
obtaining the basic daily goods they required, including
food;
(c)
as a consequence of the impugned decisions, they
are being charged personal banking fees to access to funds they
receive directly,
which exceed those they had been charged by eZaga;
(d)
that are being deprived of the opportunity to
benefit from eZaga’s on-campus services.
82.
Mr
Ngcukaitobi objected to these affidavits, they were impermissibly
introduced in reply, and, in any event, were from only six
students
out of one million. In the further note which was submitted post the
hearing he referred to
Mostert
v FirstRand Bank t/a RMB Private Bank and another,
[42]
SOS
Support Public Broadcasting Coalition v South African Broadcasting
Corporation (SOC) Ltd
[43]
and
Gelyke
Kanse and Others v Chairperson of the Senate of the University of
Stellenbosch.
[44]
83.
I tend to agree with Mr Ngcukaitobi and do not
propose take these affidavits into account.
84.
I am, however concerned with the plight of the
students. It is abundantly clear that their rights require
protection. It is they
who suffer the most as a result of the
failures in the system.
Self-help?
85.
As the interim relief is sought pending the
finalisation of the review, I must also be satisfied that the
applicant has good prospects
of success in the review. In
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Gordhan and Others and a related matter
2020 (6) SA 325
(CC) at para 42, the
Constitutional Court explained the applicable test and approach as
follows:
“
The
claim for review must be based on strong grounds which are likely to
succeed. This requires the court adjudicating the interdict
application to peek into the grounds of review raised in the main
review application and assess their strength. It is only if a
court
is convinced that the review is likely to succeed that it may
appropriately grant the interdict
.”
86.
A cornerstone of eZaga’s application is the
application of the principle that NSFAS must treat the award and
service level
agreement as valid and binding unless and until they
are reviewed and set aside by a competent court. In this regard it is
pointed
out that NSFAS had not sought to utilise the contractual
remedies available to it and, instead, has ignored the binding legal
effect
and legal consequences of the award and the service level
agreement. This was no less than unconstitutional self-help.
87.
The award of the tender, on the face of it, was
effected in compliance with the requirements of section 217 of the
Constitution.
I am aware, of course, of the pending application
before the Special Investigations Tribunal at the instance of the SIU
and NSFAS
with in interdictory and declaratory relief is sought,
impugning the award of the tender and the conclusion of the service
level
agreement. No relief is sought in this Court, declaring the
award of the tender invalid and consequently also the conclusion of
the service level agreement. I deal separately further below with the
reactive challenge.
88.
eZage relied extensively on a line of judgments
culminating in
Tasima
.
89.
In
Kirland
Cameron J held as follows at [82] – [83]
'
PAJA requires that
the government respondents should have applied to set aside the
approval, by way of formal counter-application.
They must do the same
even if PAJA does not apply. To demand this of government is not to
stymie it by forcing upon it a senseless
formality. It is to insist
on due process, from which there is no reason to exempt government.
On the contrary, there is a higher
duty on the state to respect the
law, to fulfil procedural requirements and to tread respectfully when
dealing with rights. Government
is not an indigent or bewildered
litigant, adrift on a sea of litigious uncertainty, to whom the
courts must extend a procedure-circumventing
lifeline. It is the
Constitution's primary agent. It must do right, and it must do it
properly.
Counsel
for the department told this court, as he told the Supreme Court of
Appeal, that, if the department had to bring a counter-application
under PAJA, it would face the PAJA 180-day rule. Well, precisely. An
explanation for the delay is a strong reason for requiring
a
counter-application’.
”
90.
In
Tasima
[45]
,
Khampepe J held that it was for a court to make any declaration
regarding in validity. It is apposite to set out in full what
Khampepe J writing for the majority held in
Tasima
“
[145]
The first judgment's approach resuscitates an argument advanced by
the minority in Kirland, and extended by the minority in
Merafong.
After
noting that the conduct of a government official was inconsistent
with ss 33 and 195 of the Constitution, the minority in
Kirland
argued for the proposition that '(a) decision flowing from [conduct
violating ss 33 and 195(1)] must not be allowed to
remain in
existence on the technical basis that there was no application to
have it reviewed and set aside';
[46]
and further that '(u)nder our Constitution the courts do not have the
power to make valid administrative conduct that is
unconstitutional'.
[47]
[146]
But these sentiments did not prevail in those cases. The majority
judgment in
Kirland
held
that the court should not decide the validity of the decision because
'the government respondents should have applied to set
aside the
approval, by way of formal counter-application'.
[48]
In the absence of that challenge — reactive or otherwise —
the decision has legal consequences on the basis of its
factual
existence. One of the central benefits of this approach was said to
be that requiring a counter-application would require
the state organ
to explain why it did not bring a timeous challenge.
[49]
The same was required of the municipality in
Merafong.
[50]
[147]
This position does not derogate from the principles expounded in
cases like
Affordable
Medicines Trust
and
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers
.
[51]
These decisions make patent that any law or conduct that is
inconsistent with the Constitution is invalid to the extent of its
inconsistency. This includes the exercise of public power. Moreover,
when confronted with unconstitutionality, courts are bound
by the
Constitution to make a declaration of invalidity. No constitutional
principle allows an unlawful administrative decision
to 'morph into a
valid act'.
[52]
However, for
the reasons developed through a long string of this court's
judgments, that declaration must be made by a court.
[53]
It is not open to any other party, public or private, to annex this
function. Our Constitution confers on the courts the role of
arbiter
of legality. Therefore, until a court is appropriately approached and
an allegedly unlawful exercise of public power is
adjudicated upon,
it has binding effect merely because of its factual existence.
[148]
This important principle does not undermine the supremacy of the
Constitution or the doctrine of objective invalidity.
[54]
In the interests of certainty and the rule of law, it merely
preserves the fascia of legal authority until the decision is set
aside by a court: the administrative act remains legally effective,
despite the fact that it may be objectively invalid.
[149]
This approach was endorsed and explained by a unanimous court in
Economic Freedom Fighters.
[55]
There, Mogoeng CJ concluded that our constitutional order hinges on
the rule of law:
'No
decision grounded on the Constitution or law may be disregarded
without recourse to a court of law. To do otherwise would amount
to a
licence to self-help. Whether the Public Protector's decisions amount
to administrative action or not, the disregard for remedial
action by
those adversely affected by it, amounts to taking the law into their
own hands and is illegal. No binding and constitutionally
or
statutorily sourced decision may be disregarded willy-nilly. It has
legal consequences and must be complied with or acted upon.
To
achieve the opposite outcome lawfully, an order of court would have
to be obtained.'
[56]
[150]
An organ of state, like any other party, must therefore challenge an
administrative decision to escape its effects. This it
can do
reactively, provided its reasons for doing so are sound, and there is
no unwarranted delay.
”
91.
It is clear the NSFAS requires the Court’s
imprimatur for declaring the award and the service level agreement
invalid and
why it instituted the proceedings before the Special
Tribunal. As I have already found it, the contention that no decision
had
as yet been taken to cancel the service level agreement is not
borne out by the facts.
92.
It follows that eZaga had established at least
prima facie
a
clear right arising from the unconstitutional self-help by NSFAS.
93.
This is, however not the end of road. There
remains the collateral or reactive challenge to the validity of the
tender and the service
level agreements. I deal with this aspect
further below.
Procedural fairness
and
audi
94.
It was submitted that before administrative action
is taken, an organ of state such as NSFAS must give the affected
party an opportunity
to be heard. It is common cause that no notice
was given to the service providers nor were they afforded an
opportunity to make
representations.
95.
Section
3(1) of PAJA requires procedural fairness not only in the event of a
“
breach
”
of a
right, but whenever administrative action “
materially
and adversely affects
”
a
right or legitimate expectation of any person.
[57]
96.
eZaga’s case is that its rights, as well as
those of the students, have been materially and adversely affected
and that it
had a legitimate expectation to be heard before the
decision was taken.
97.
Mr Ngcukaitobi contended that there was no
obligation to afford eZaga an opportunity to be heard as the
preparation of the Werksmans
report did not qualify as a hearing and
accordingly that
audi
did
not apply.
98.
Mr
Ngcukaitobi submitted in his further note, that it is settled law
that executive decisions do not attract a duty to be heard.
In
Masetlha
v President of the RSA
[58]
the
Constitutional Court held that
“
[78]
This does not, however, mean that there are no constitutional
constraints on the exercise of executive authority. The authority
conferred must be exercised lawfully, rationally and in a manner
consistent with the Constitution.
[59]
Procedural fairness is not a requirement. The authority in s 85(2)(e)
of the Constitution is conferred in order to provide room
for the
President to fulfil executive functions and should not be constrained
any more than through the principle of legality and
rationality
.
[79] It is appropriate
to recall what this court had occasion to observe in SARFU:
(T)he
exercise of the powers must not infringe any provision of the Bill of
Rights; the exercise of the powers is also clearly constrained
by the
principle of legality and, as is implicit in the Constitution, the
President must act in good faith and must not misconstrue
the powers.
These are significant constraints upon the exercise of the
President's power.”
[60]
99.
Whether the decision was executive or
administrative it must meet the requirements of legality and, as set
out above, self-help
does not meet that requirement.
100.
In
addition, when it is decided to implement the report, the situation
changes. NSFAS deemed it appropriate to furnish the report
to Mr
Nongogo and afford him the opportunity to make representations. This
is in accordance with the notion that this is also an
opportunity for
NSFAS to acquire information which may be pertinent to the just and
proper exercise of the power.
[61]
Why would it not be required to afford eZaga the same opportunity?
Especially as eZaga in these papers have advanced a multitude
of
reasons why it would be detrimental to terminate the service level
agreements and ostensibly revert to previous system which
resulted in
enormous losses and was the very reason for the implementation of the
direct payment solution?
101.
Mr Sive submitted that the decision to terminate
the service level agreements, communicated on 18 October 2023 was
final. eZaga
had a right to be heard. In
Joseph
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others
2010
(4) SA 55
(CC), the question was whether the applicants were entitled
to procedural fairness under section 3 of PAJA before the electricity
supply was terminated. If section 3 found application three secondary
issues arose, one of which was the content of procedural
fairness
required in the circumstances of that case.
102.
Mr
Sive relied on
Psychological
Society of South Africa v Qwelane and Others
[2016]
ZACC 16
, at [33] – [34] for the trite proposition that at
common law and in terms of the tenets of natural justice,
audi
alteram partem
is
an indispensable condition of fair proceedings. The principle is
underpinned by two important considerations of legal policy.
The
first is recognising the subject’s dignity and sense of worth.
Second there is the more pragmatic consideration that
audi
alteram partem
inherently
conduces to better justice. In
Qwelane
the
Court referred to
South
African Roads Board v Johannesburg City Council
[62]
where Milne J said that the application of the
audi
alteram partem
principle
“
has
a two-fold effect. It satisfies the individual’s desire to be
heard before he is adversely affected; and it provides an
opportunity
for the repository of the power to acquire information which may be
pertinent to the just and proper exercise of the
power.
”
103.
Emphasising the importance of the procedural
requirements I was referred to
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development Association (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2022] ZACC 44
where
Madlanga J held as follows at [210]
“
there
is always something that informs administrator action. At times, just
like Eskom says is the case here, the administrative
action may be
meant to avert grave consequences. But however grave the
consequences, the functionary
must
follow
the fair process applicable to administrative action affecting the
rights of the public set out in section 4 of PAJA. The
greatness of
the consequences sought to be averted alone can never be a licence
for the functionary to act as if our law does not
impose of rights to
just administrative action. Of course, the form and extent of the
fair process depends on the nature and circumstances
of what is at
issue.”
104.
In the premises I am of the view that eZaga has
established, at least on a
prima facie
basis, a right to have been heard, at least in
sense that it should have been afforded an opportunity to make
representations as
to why the Werksmans report’s
recommendations should not be implemented.
Rationality
105.
eZaga contended that from a rational procedure
point of view it could never be rational to have ignored the service
level agreement.
Reliance was placed on
Minister
of Water & Sanitation v Sembcorp Siza Water (Pty) Ltd
2023
(1) SA 1
(CC) at [45] Jafta J held as follows
“
[45]
However, the concept of rationality encompasses the procedure
followed in reaching a decision. Our law requires that the procedure
followed should itself be rationally connected to the purpose for
which the power was exercised. In other words, the procedure
followed
must reasonably be capable of leading to the attainment of the
purpose for which the power was conferred. The leading
cases on this
point are Albutt
[63]
and
Democratic Alliance,
[64]
both
of which were referred to by the High Court. The High Court quoted
the following statements from Democratic Alliance:
'The
means for achieving the purpose for which the power was conferred
must include everything that is done to achieve that purpose.
Not
only the decision employed to achieve the purpose, but also
everything done in the process of taking that decision, constitutes
means towards the attainment of the purpose for which the power was
conferred.'
[65]
106.
Given the conclusion I arrived in respect of the
earlier two review grounds it is unnecessary in these interdict
proceedings to
also deal with this ground and the further ground as
the infringement of any constitutional right to administrative
justice and
rights under the award of the tender and the service
level agreement.
The reactive challenge
in principle?
107.
A collateral or reactive challenge is commonly
understood as a challenge to the validity and enforcement of an
administrative act
or decision, which is raised in proceedings that
are not designed or aimed at impeaching, directly, the validity of
such act or
decision. The challenge is one raised incidentally, in
response to an attempt to enforce the act or decision.
108.
The further question which accordingly arises in
this application is whether I am to decide the validity of the award
of the tender
or, consequentially, the conclusion of the service
level agreement. Those are already the subject matter of the pending
application
before the Special Investigations Tribunal, and there is
no formal counter-application before me.
109.
eZaga submitted that it would be invidious of me
to add this interim stage, make findings regarding the validity or
invalidity of
the tender.
110.
It seems to me, however, that I have to give
consideration to the reactive challenge, first as to whether it is to
be entertained,
and second, as to its merits.
111.
A number of defects in the award of the tender is
referred to in the answering affidavit. In brief summary they are
(a)
A requirement of the tender submission was the
proof of entity professional indemnity of at least twenty million
Rand. This was
a mandatory requirement, failure of which would
immediately disqualify the bid. eGaza’s tender document
contains a letter
from insurance brokers recording: “
We
confirm that a Quotation for Professional Indemnity cover is in place
for the above company with our Underwriters. The Quotation
is for 25
million Rand and will be activated should the said tender be awarded
to the above company.
”
(b)
The impermissible interference by Mr Nongogo;
(c)
The undisclosed interest in eZaga Remit which Dr
Chirwa had.
(d)
The reduction in the requirements as between the
second and third tenders.
112.
I deal with these later.
113.
eZaga and the other service providers objected to
the manner in which it was sought to introduce the collateral
challenges.
114.
Despite the pending application before this Court,
and after it was launched, the proceedings were instituted before the
Special
Tribunal. It remains unclear why the proceedings were brought
before the Special Tribunal. It was submitted that justice demanded
that the Court should not countenance self-help and that a reflective
challenge should be raised appropriately and formally.
115.
Mr Ngcukaitobi relied upon
Gobela
Consulting v Makhado Municipality
[2020]
ZASCA 180
;
Kunene Rampala Inc v
Northwest Province Department of Education and Sport Development
.
[2023] ZASCA 120
and
Thabzo Security
Services CC v The Musunduzi Municipality and Others
,
KZN 2682/23P for the proposition that a formal counter application
was not required to raise a reactive challenge.
116.
In
Gobela
the
Supreme Court of Appeal found that justice required the High Court to
have declared the impugned contract invalid and unlawful
despite the
absence of a frontal challenge in the form of a counter-application,
as the validity and lawfulness of the contract
had been squarely
raised in the pleadings. It held that if the court had not
entertained the municipality’s reactive challenge
”
the
untenable result would be that the court would be giving legal
sanction to the very evil which section 216 of the Constitution
and
all other procurement-related policies kept sought to prevent
”
[66]
.
117.
In
Kunene
,
as in
Gobela
,
an action was instituted to claim monies for work invoiced but not
actually done, which the provincial Department refused to pay
as the
addendum agreement was concluded without complying with the
procurement prescripts and as such, it sought that the contract
be
declared unlawful and invalid. The crisp question on appeal was
whether the High Court was correct in finding that the contract
was
invalid, unlawful and in breach of the applicable procedure
prescripts, in the absence of a counter application seeking a review
and setting aside of the addendum.
[67]
118.
Molemela JA held as follows in
Gobela
“
[18]
The law relating to collateral challenges was settled by the
Constitutional Court
in
Merafong City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti Limited
(Merafong).
Having surveyed the pre-constitutional case-law, the majority
judgment found that South African law has always allowed
a degree of
flexibility in reactive challenges to administrative action. Having
considered the impact of the Constitution on that
body of law, it
re-asserted that the import of
Oudekraal
was
that the government institution cannot simply ignore an apparently
binding ruling or decision on the basis that it was patently
unlawful, as that would undermine the rule of law; rather, it has to
test the validity of that decision in appropriate proceedings.
The
decision remains binding until set aside. That court expressed some
guidelines for assessing the competence of a collateral
challenge.
With specific reference to
Kirland
,
it stated as follows:
‘
But
it is important to note what
Kirland
did
not do. It did not fossilise possibly unlawful – and
constitutionally invalid – administrative action as
indefinitely
effective. It expressly recognised that the
Oudekraal
principle
puts a provisional brake on determining invalidity. The brake is
imposed for rule of law reasons and for good administration.
It does
not bring the process to an irreversible halt. What it requires is
that the allegedly unlawful action be challenged by
the right actor
in the right proceedings. Until that happens, for rule of law
reasons, the decision stands.
Oudekraal
and
Kirland
did not impose an absolute obligation on
private citizens to take the initiative to strike down invalid
administrative decisions
affecting them. Both decisions recognised
that there may be occasions where an administrative decision or
ruling should be treated
as invalid even though no action has been
taken to strike it down. Neither decision expressly circumscribed the
circumstances in
which an administrative decision could be attacked
reactively as invalid. As important, they did not imply or entail
that, unless
they bring court proceedings to challenge an
administrative decision, public authorities are obliged to accept it
as valid. And
neither imposed an absolute duty of proactivity on
public authorities. It all depends on the circumstances.
. . . .
Against this
background, the question is whether, when AngloGold sought an order
enforcing the Minister’s decision, Merafong
was entitled to
react by raising the invalidity of her ruling as a defence.
. . . .
A reactive challenge
should be available where justice requires it to be. That will
depend, in each case, on the facts.’ (Emphasis
added.)”
119.
Molemela JA concluded
“
[22]
Notably, despite the fact that the appointment letter pertinently
stated that there would be an assessment after finalisation
of every
phase and that Gobela had not gone beyond the preparatory steps for
its performance of its obligations in terms of the
contract, it
impermissibly claimed the full contract fee. Allowing the claim would
thus be tantamount to enforcing an unperformed
obligation. For all
these reasons, I conclude that justice required that the court a quo
declare the impugned contract invalid
and unlawful despite the
municipality not having counter-applied for it to be reviewed and set
aside. There is no question here
of impermissible self-help. The
decision that the contract was unlawful and invalid was a decision by
a court.
It
follows that the appeal has to fail. …”
120.
Gobela
and
Kunene
were both actions instituted and presumably this
was the last opportunity to prevent fossilising an invalid
administrative act.
121.
Mr
Ngcukaitobi did not rely on
Thabzo
in is
oral argument. In
Thabzo
,
in interim interdict proceedings, the Court referred to
Gobela
.
The Court, however, also relied upon the minority judgement in
Tasima
,
for the proposition that it could not be correct for a court to
follow an approach that leads to a party being entitled to an
interim
order preserving rights until final determination even with those
rights flow from an illegal or fraudulent act.
[68]
122.
Kirland
, perhaps
summarises the position best
“
[106]
In summary: having failed to counter-apply during these proceedings,
the department must bring a review application to challenge
the
approval granted to Kirland, which remains valid until set aside. In
those proceedings, the department will no doubt explain
its
dilly-dallying by accounting for the long months before it acted. As
respondent, Kirland will in turn be entitled to defend
the decision,
whether on the ground of its validity, or on the ground that it
should not be set aside, even if it is invalid.”
123.
Merafong
explicated
par 106 of Kirland at par [41]
“
[41]
The import of
Oudekraal
and
Kirland
was
that government cannot simply ignore an apparently binding ruling or
decision on the basis that it is invalid. The validity
of the
decision has to be tested in appropriate proceedings. And the sole
power to pronounce that the decision is defective, and
therefore
invalid, lies with the courts. Government itself has no authority to
invalidate or ignore the decision. It remains legally
effective until
properly set aside
.”
124.
The footnote to this paragraph states
“
Where
Kirland … para 106 says that a decision not properly set aside
'remains valid', it means that it remains legally effective.
Absence
of challenge by the right litigant in the right forum at the right
time doesn't magically heal the administrative-law flaws
in the
decision. It means that the decision continues to have effect in law
until properly set aside
.”
125.
In
Tasima
,
in the interdict proceedings, a formal counter-application, setting
aside the unlawfully extended contract, as a collateral challenge
was
in fact brought.
126.
This Court in
Executive
Council of the Western Cape Province and Others v Kannaland Local
Municipality and Others
(229/2021)
[2021] ZAWCH 51, in
interim
interdict proceedings, gave consideration to the
raising of a co-lateral challenge, and ultimately refrained from
entertaining the
challenge. Mangcu-Lockwood AJ, as she then was, held
as follows
“
49.
… The law relating to collateral challenges was set out by the
Constitutional Court in
Merafong
City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti Limited
(‘Merafong’).
The majority judgment found that our courts have always allowed a
degree of flexibility in collateral
(or reactive challenges) to
administrative action, even before our Constitutional era. However,
the Constitutional Court re-asserted
that the import of
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town
and
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape and Another v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd
t/a Eye & Lazer Institute
was
that a government institution cannot simply ignore an apparently
binding ruling or decision on the basis that it is invalid,
as that
would undermine the rule of law; rather, it has to test the validity
of that decision in appropriate proceedings. The decision
remains
binding until set aside. Referring to
Kirland
,
the Constitutional Court stated that it did not fossilise possibly
unlawful – and constitutionally invalid – administrative
action as indefinitely effective. It expressly recognised that the
Oudekraal
principle
puts a provisional brake on determining invalidity. The brake is
imposed for rule of law reasons and for good administration.
It does
not bring the process to an irreversible halt. What it requires is
that the allegedly unlawful action be challenged by
the right actor
in the right proceedings. Until that happens, for rule of law
reasons, the decision stands.’
50.
The Constitutional Court pointed out that neither
Oudekraal
nor Kirland expressly circumscribed the
circumstances in which an administrative decision could be attacked
reactively as invalid.
It all depends on the circumstances. A
collateral challenge should be available where justice requires it to
be; and that will
depend, in each case, on the facts. As the Court
stated, the permissibility of a collateral challenge by an organ of
state must
depend on a variety of factors, invoked with a 'pragmatic
blend of logic and experience', and it would be imprudent to
pronounce
any inflexible rule.
“
127.
Munchu-Lockwood
AJ, found that it was inappropriate at the interim interdict stage to
entertain reactive challenge which would best
be dealt with at the
Part B stage.
[69]
The more so
in the present case where there is already a pending review
application before the Special Tribunal. Munchu-Lockwood
also was
also of the view that upholding the reactive challenge would, in
effect lend support to the self-help.
[70]
128.
Mr Ngcukaitobi cited examples of the sympathetic
view adopted by the courts towards self-review applications.
129.
In
Siyangena
Technologies (Pty) Ltd v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa and
Others
2023(2)
SA 51 (SCA) Prasa brought a legality review, seeking the review and
setting aside of its own decisions to conclude procurement
contracts.
The High Court had found that the previous management of Prasa had
placed obstacles in the way of a newly constituted
board to an earth
the true state of affairs by frustrating the flow of information. The
new board was constituted in August 20,
2014 but the obstacles
remained until July 2015 when the erstwhile group chief executive
officer Mr Lucky Montana resigned. The
High Court condoned the delay
of 10 months, the review application having been only instituted in
early February 2016.
[71]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal found that in the context of a litany of
breaches of the procurement system, condonation was to be
granted in
the interests of justice.
[72]
130.
The Supreme Court of Appeal referred to its
earlier judgement in
Swifambo Rail
Leasing (Pty) Ltd v Passenger Rail Agency of South Africa
2020(1) SA 76 (SCA) at [34]. This was also a
self-review application. There the court held, in condoning a delay
of June half years
for the review of the decision in terms of section
1 of the constitution, as follows
‘
In
my view state institutions should not be discouraged from ferreting
out and prosecuting corruption because of delay, particularly
not
where there has been obfuscation and interference by individuals
within the institution.
’
131.
Mr Ngcukaitobi also referred to another
self-review application namely
Eskom
Holdings SOC Ltd v McKinsey and Company Africa (Pty) Ltd and Others
(22877/2018)
[2019] ZAGPPHC 185. A Full Bench
referred to Tasima where the Constitutional Court held
“…
That
state functionaries are entitled to challenge exercises of public
power, including their own, was recognised by the Supreme
Court of
Appeal in
Pepcor
,
and endorsed by this Court in
Khumalo
.
There it was noted that ’state functionaries are enjoined to
uphold and protect [The Constitution].’ And that a court
should
be slow to allow procedural obstacles to prevent it from lodging and
challenge into the lawfulness of an exercise of public
power.
“
132.
In
McKinsey
the new board of Eskom took office in January
2018. It immediately investigated the unlawful conduct of the
previous board and its
decisions and all payments made by it. After
securing the necessary evidence, and 29 March 2018, it launched its
application. The
Court had no difficulty in condoning the delay.
133.
Mr Sive emphasised that those cases all dealt with
self-review applications, and that here were no collateral challenge
raised by
NSFAS - all the service providers contended that the
co-lateral challenge was first raised when Mr Ngcukaitobi filed his
heads
of argument in the early hours of 10 June 2024 when the
application was set down for using before Miss Justice Ndita.
134.
The response by both Mr Ngcukaitobi and Mr
Mokoena, who appeared for the SIU, was that there was a pending
application before the
Special Tribunal where an interdict against
the implementation of the service level agreements and a preview of
the award and service
level agreements were sought. It was submitted
that this court should not, in view of those spending applications,
grant interim
relief. It was not suggested that this court did not
have jurisdiction to grant such an interdict but it was argued that
the grant
of an interdict would render the pending interim relief
application before the Special Tribunal moot, and, possibly also,
depending
on the terms of any interim relief that may be granted by
this court, also the self-review application.
135.
In
Tasima
a purportedly extended agreement was implemented.
The Auditor General declared the extension of the contract to be
irregular as
it was done without following procurement requirements
such as tendering. The Department of Transport then sort to terminate
the
agreement. In June 2012 the Department stopped making payments.
Tasima turned to the High Court to enforce the purportedly extended
contract. It is sought interim relief directing the Department to
effect payment and perform all its obligations under the agreement,
pending the finalisation of the arbitration proceedings to be
instituted. The Department of Transport contended that the decision
to extend was impugned on the ground that it was not in compliance
with section 217 of the Constitution, section 38 of the PFMA
and the
Treasury Regulations. Tasima nonetheless successfully obtained
interim relief.
136.
In subsequent contempt proceedings the Department
also lodged a counter application for the review and setting aside of
the extension
and raised a co-lateral challenge against the
extension.
137.
Should I proceed to entertain, and make a finding
with regard to the reactive challenge, I would do so without having
had the benefit
of a proper explanation for the delay, bearing in
mind that the SIU who had also been mandated to investigate the
irregularities
on a 26 August 2022, and who had competed those
investigations by 23 April 2023, without explaining the delay on its
part to Institute
the interdict and review proceedings before the
Special Tribunal. I would also do so without NSFAS having met the
requirements
for such an application, such as explaining not only the
delay, but also why it would be in the interests of justice to allow
the
challenge.
138.
In
Kirland
the Constitutional Court emphasised that —
“
there
is a higher duty on the state to respect the law, to fulfil
procedural requirements and to tread respectfully when dealing
with
rights. Government is not an indigent or bewildered litigant, adrift
on a sea of litigious uncertainty, to whom the courts
must extend a
procedure-circumventing lifeline
.”
[73]
139.
Neither a procedural nor a substantive lifeline
would be justified in this instance.
140.
Accordingly, I refrain from entertaining the
reactive challenge for the reasons set out above. This issue will
require resolution
either in the proceedings before the Special
Tribunal or in the part B proceedings of the present application.
The merits of the
reactive challenge
141.
To the extent that I may be wrong in coming to
this conclusion I turn to consider the prospects of such a challenge
being successful.
There are two aspects, the first is the issue of
delay, and the second is the prospects of success on the merits.
142.
Mr Ngcukaitobi explained in detail the malfeasance
in the run-up to the invitation for the third tender. Mr Nongogo had
immediately
upon his appointment as chief executive officer cancelled
the award of the second tender, which he had considered as being
exclusionary,
on the publicly proclaimed basis that the reason for
the service specified had fallen away. This was not true. Mr Nongogo
had also
pared down the bid specifications, and did away with the
requirement of a banking licence, which had the effect of benefitting
the fin-tech companies who were ultimately successful bidders.
143.
Though it does not appear from the affidavits
filed that the board of NSFAS was dissolved when the second
administrator was appointed,
I assume that this is indeed so. There
is no explanation why the board had failed to act upon the complaints
in the public domain
regarding the involvement of Mr Nongogo in the
award of the tenders. The board would have been well aware of the
proclamation and
the investigation into NSFAS. No allegations are
made that, like Mr Lucky Montana in the PRASA decisions, Mr Nongogo
dominated
the NSFAS board.
144.
The delay in question is not only that of NSFAS,
but also of the Special Investigating Unit.
145.
The investigation mandating the SIU into
maladministration in the affairs of NSFAS was proclaimed on 26 August
2022 and in his affidavit
Mr Williams, the Chief Forensic
Investigator states that as a result of this proclamation and
allegations regarding the conduct
of Mr Nongogo, the SIU conducted an
investigation into the present tender award. That investigation was
concluded on the 23 April
2023 with the last interview was conducted.
The annexures reflect that Dr Chirwa was interviewed on the 23 April
2024 and I assume
that the deponent erred in stating the year 2023.
None the less there is no explanation for why it took from 26 August
2022 to
23 April 2024 to conclude the investigation.
146.
The attorneys of record were briefed on 6 May 2024
and consultations on the approach to bringing civil litigation and
prospects
of the intended cause of action were held on 11 and 15 May
2024. The review application was filed and 24 May 2024. There is no
explanation for the delay neither between August 2020 and April 2023,
nor for the in order and a delay from 23 April 2023 to 15
May 2024.
147.
The issue of delay may therefore very well feature
prominently when the reactive challenge is before a court.
148.
The factual complaints in support of the
invalidity of the tender award are as follows.
149.
The fact that Mr Nongogo had been intricately
involved in the specification, evaluation and price negotiation in
relation to the
tender. The Bid Adjudication Committee approval would
be submitted to him for his support “
for
onward approval by the NSFAS board.
”
Here
it is submitted that he had found himself in conflict in the relation
to his functions as the chief executive officer.
150.
eZaga submitted that Mr Nongogo’s conduct
was not precluded by the then applicable Supply Chain Management
Policy. Moreover
the fact that Mr Nongogo would ultimately facilitate
the approval of the recommendation implies that it was proper for him
to act
as an observer and is questioned to enhance his ability to
perform his oversight role. He is appointment of himself as the
chairperson
of the negotiating committee under clause 2.5 of the
Supply Chain Management Policy was not prohibited nor could it be
suggested
that it would be irrational for him to be involved.
151.
NSFAS submitted that in breach of a rudimentary
requirement that each bid should have been evaluated by the members
acting together
the Bid Evaluation Committee members acted
individually in evaluating the bids instead of considering or
evaluating the bids collectively.
This was required so that they
would be fairness and transparency in the evaluation by the various
committee members.
152.
The
2021 Supply Chain Management Policy the required under the rubric
“
evaluation
of functionality
” “
each
panel member must, after thorough evaluation, independently award
his/her own value to each individual criterion.…
”
[74]
153.
Though perhaps not precluded on a literal reading
of the Supply Chain Management Policy document, it may not have been
in compliance
with what was required of the Bid Evaluation Committee.
Whether that results in the invalidity of the bid process is not
clear
and I expressed no view there on.
154.
A requirement of the tender submission was the
proof of entity professional indemnity of at least twenty million
Rand. This was
a mandatory requirement, failure of which would
immediately disqualify the bid.
155.
The requirement was formulated as follows –
“
the bidder must provide adequate
evidence of the reimbursement in the case of theft/fraud. The proof
of entity professional indemnity
of at least 20 million Rand must be
submitted
”
156.
eGaza’s tender document contains a letter
from insurance brokers recording: “
We
confirm that a Quotation for Professional Indemnity cover is in place
for the above company with our Underwriters. The Quotation
is for 25
million Rand and will be activated should the said tender be awarded
to the above company.
”
157.
Upon a proper reading of the letter it seems to me
that the requirement has been met. There was no need for the
insurance to be
in place at the tender state already as it is clear
that the risk would only arise upon the award of the tender and proof
of that
cover being in place in that eventuality was what was
required. To require otherwise would entail that all bidders would
have to
put in place insurance policies, and pay the premiums in
respect of thereof, irrespective of whether they are successful in
the
bids or not. That would not be a businesslike interpretation of
the requirement.
158.
A further complaint is that the bid evaluation
committee did not evaluate the bidders on the pricing that they
attended for the
cost to students. The pricing for the cost to
students, which is where the competitiveness of the tender could have
been evaluated,
was only negotiated after the decision to recommend
the tenderers had been made by the Bid Approval Committee. Pricing
was, therefore,
not used to evaluate the competitiveness and cost
effectiveness of the bid proposals.
159.
eZaga’s answer was that the successful
bidders were also required to negotiate and standardise the pricing
and value-added
benefits for the student. This ensured
competitiveness and cost-effectiveness and, so it was submitted, is
consistent with section
217 of the Constitution.
160.
eZaga contended that, beyond bald allegations,
NSFAS had failed to demonstrate that the bid Evaluation Committee did
not use pricing
to evaluate the competitiveness and cost
effectiveness of the bids. The pricing that was advanced by the
respective bidders for
the cost to students varied greatly. What
happened was that, at a meeting held after the award of the tenders,
on 23 June 2022
a meeting took place where at the four service
providers were provided an opportunity to discuss the proposed
costing amongst themselves
and had agreed on a proposed consistent
pricing. NSFAS subsequently agreed to the proposed R89.00 bundled
cost to students.
161.
It may be that there was a failure to comply with
section 217 of the Constitution, the PPPFA and the SCMP in this
respect. Whether
this will lead to invalidity will depend on a
consideration of all the facts, and full argument.
162.
The complaint was also levelled against the
appointment of one Dr Chirwa as an expert to the Bid Evaluation
Committee. It was contended
that it was highly irregular that another
person, other than Mr George the senior manager in the supply chain
management unit,
be appointed as an expert to provide advice on the
interpretation of mandated are requirements, which is a supply chain
management
function. The expertise that Dr Chirwa could provide, so
it was submitted, was more appropriately required at the bid
specifications
level, and not at the bid evaluation level. Dr
Chirwa’s involvement is tainted by the fact that he was also a
director of
and 20 % shareholder in eZaga Remit. His failure to
declare his interest in eZaga tainted the evaluation process with
unfairness.
163.
eZaga submitted that eZaga holds no shares in
eZaga Remit. There was no evidence that eZaga would benefit from the
award of the
tender-it was apparently a vehicle for a venture which
had not yet materialised.
164.
eZaga contended that the tender did not contain
irregularities that tainted its legality or constitutionality. It was
submitted
that even if a court reviewed the award and service level
agreement, eZaga would demonstrate to the Court that, in the
circumstances,
it would not be just and equitable to set them aside.
165.
The facts set out above and the disputes in
relation thereto are not readily resolved and may or may not result
in a declaration
on invalidity. I make no firm pronouncement on it,
as it is, in my view better decided at the hearing of Part B, or in
the review
application before the Special Tribunal.
166.
But even if it results in a declaration of
invalidity, that will not be the end of the matter as section 172 of
the Constitution
then comes into play.
167.
If the coming into effect of an order invalidating
an administrative action would result in an injustice, section 8 of
PAJA, read
with section 172 of the Constitution empowers a Court to
prevent the injustice by making a just and equitable order. This
power
enables our Courts to regulate consequences flowing from a
declaration of constitutional invalidity. This suggests that the need
to exercise this power arises when there is a declaration of
invalidity or an administrative action is set aside. If there is no
declaration of invalidity, generally the exercise of the power may
not be triggered.
168.
In terms of this section, once a court has made a
pronouncement that conduct was unlawful, unconstitutional, and
invalid, it remains
for the court to decide on a “
just
and equitable relief
”
to be made.
169.
For all of these reasons I would not entertain the
reactive challenge and leave that for consideration by the Court
hearing part
B, or the Special Tribunal when it hears the self-review
application.
Irreparable harm
170.
eZaga has to show a reasonable apprehension of
irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted.
171.
Irreparable
harm in the context of an interim interdict means that the effects or
consequences of the conduct the interdict seeks
to restrain cannot be
reversed or undone.
[75]
172.
Here eZaga relies principally on the fact that the
“
direct payment solution
”
was devised precisely to avoid what had happened
previously when over 40,000 undeserving students benefited
irregularly, funding
amounting to over Rand 5 billion was allocated
to undeserving students and that institutions were unable to identify
fraudulent
applications and fraud was rife.
173.
It is common cause that this was the reason for
introducing the “
direct payment
solution
”
was to mitigate these
risks.
174.
NSFAS offered no explanation of the systems that
it was putting into place to avoid a recurrence. Instead, it still
communicated
the direct payments solution was the preferred method.
175.
eZaga submits that it is likely that the public
funds distributed to NSFAS to universities and colleges will be
mismanaged and misappropriated.
Many of these losses will be
irrecoverable. As a consequence both it and the students will suffer
irreparable harm.
176.
It is therefore appropriate that the status quo
ante be restored until the determination of Part B of the
proceedings.
Balance of convenience
177.
A court must be satisfied that the balance of
convenience favours the granting of a temporary interdict. It must
first weigh the
harm to be endured by an applicant, if interim relief
is not granted, as against the harm a respondent will bear, if the
interdict
is granted. Thus a court must assess all relevant factors
carefully in order to decide where the balance of convenience rests.
178.
Outa
, again, set
the point of departure
[47] The balance of
convenience enquiry must now carefully probe whether and to which
extent the restraining order will probably
intrude into the exclusive
terrain of another branch of government. The enquiry must, alongside
other relevant harm, have proper
regard to what may be called
separation of powers harm. A court must keep in mind that a temporary
restraint against the exercise
of statutory power well ahead of the
final adjudication of a claimant's case may be granted only in the
clearest of cases and after
a careful consideration of separation of
powers harm. It is neither prudent nor necessary to define 'clearest
of cases'. However,
one important consideration would be whether the
harm apprehended by the claimant amounts to a breach of one or more
fundamental
rights warranted by the Bill of Rights. This is not such
a case.
…
[63]
There is yet another and very important consideration when the
balance of convenience is struck. It relates to separation of
powers.
In ITAC we followed earlier statements in Doctors for Life
[76]
and warned that —
'(w)here
the Constitution or valid legislation has entrusted specific powers
and functions to a particular branch of government,
courts may not
usurp that power or function by making a decision of their
preference. That would frustrate the balance of power
implied in the
principle of separation of powers. The primary responsibility of a
court is not to make decisions reserved for or
within the domain of
other branches of government, but rather to ensure that the concerned
branches of government exercise their
authority within the bounds of
the Constitution. This would especially be so where the decision in
issue is policy-laden as well
as polycentric.'
[77]
[64]
In a dispute as the present one, this does not mean that an organ of
state is immunised from judicial review only on account
of separation
of powers. The exercise of all public power is subject to
constitutional control.
[78]
In
an appropriate case an interdict may be granted against it. For
instance, if the review court in due course were to find that
SANRAL
acted outside the law then it is entitled to grant effective
interdictory relief. That would be so because the decisions
of SANRAL
would in effect be contrary to the law and thus void.
[65] When it evaluates
where the balance of convenience rests, a court must recognise that
it is invited to restrain the exercise
of statutory power within the
exclusive terrain of the executive or legislative branches of
government. It must assess carefully
how and to what extent its
interdict will disrupt executive or legislative functions conferred
by the law and thus whether its
restraining order will implicate the
tenet of division of powers. While a court has the power to grant a
restraining order of that
kind, it does not readily do so, except
when a proper and strong case has been made out for the relief and,
even so, only in the
clearest of cases.
[66]
A court must carefully consider whether the grant of the temporary
restraining order pending a review will cut across or prevent
the
proper exercise of a power or duty that the law has vested in the
authority to be interdicted. Thus courts are obliged to recognise
and
assess the impact of temporary restraining orders when dealing with
those matters pertaining to the best application, operation
and
dissemination of public resources. What this means is that a court is
obliged to ask itself not whether an interim interdict
against an
authorised state functionary is competent but rather whether it is
constitutionally appropriate to grant the interdict.
[79]
[67] The harm and
inconvenience to motorists, which the high court relies on, result
from a national executive decision about the
ordering of public
resources, over which the executive government disposes and for which
it, and it alone, has the public responsibility.
Thus, the duty of
determining how public resources are to be drawn upon and reordered
lies in the heartland of executive-government
function and domain.
What is more, absent any proof of unlawfulness or fraud or
corruption, the power and the prerogative to formulate
and implement
policy on how to finance public projects reside in the exclusive
domain of the national executive subject to budgetary
appropriations
by parliament.
[68] Another
consideration is that the collection and ordering of public resources
inevitably call for policy-laden and polycentric
decision-making.
Courts are not always well suited to make decisions of that order. It
bears repetition that a court considering
the grant of an interim
interdict against the exercise of power within the camp of government
must have the separation-of-powers
consideration at the very
forefront.”
179.
it was submitted that eZaga had measures in place
which were effective and had been utilised since the inception of the
tender in
June 2022. NSFAS itself was still allowing eZaga to
administer the payments to the students at the colleges and had until
April
2024 permitted eZaga to administer all payments to all of the
students.
180.
eZaga made much of the well publicised
deficiencies in the manner in which NSFAS had previously managed
payments to the students
which led to many millions of Rands being
lost.
181.
NSFAS submitted that to revert to the direct
payment solution, utilising eZaga would create confusion amongst the
students.
182.
It was pointed out that students are now being
forced to open bank accounts at cost to them without any evidence as
to whether they
were better off doing so.
183.
Mr Ngcukaitobi emphasised the allowing eZaga to
continue will result in wasteful expenditure and that such
expenditure will probably
not be recovered from eZaga if the review
is successful. Mr Mokoena voiced similar concerns.
184.
I am not sure to what extent wasteful expenditure
is being incurred where eZaga is performing its functions in terms of
the agreed
amended schedule. It may turn out to be wasteful to the
extent that there may have been an “overcharge”, but no
clear
evidence of that has been tabled. Certainly, no allegations of
fraud, corruption or mismanagement of funds have been levelled
against
eZaga.
185.
In the premises, I am of the view that that the
balance of convenience favours the grant of the interdict.
186.
In my view NSFAS will suffer no harm or prejudice
if the interdict is granted.
The alternative remedy
187.
Mr Ngcukaitobi accepted that conduct by NSFAS
constituted a repudiation of the service level agreement. He
submitted that eZaga
was compelled to pursue their private law
contractual remedies whether for specific performance or damages
utilising the arbitration
provision in the service level agreement.
188.
It was suggested that Ezaga or to have invoked the
arbitration provisions in the service level agreement and that,
through arbitration,
it had a quick and efficient remedy.
189.
I am doubtful whether arbitration is a viable
option. In the first instance where NSFAS contends that the agreement
itself is invalid,
ordinarily, and unless expressly otherwise
provided for, the arbitration clause is equally invalid.
190.
The
second reason is that, in terms of
Airports
Company South Africa Ltd v ISO Leisure OR Tambo (Pty) Ltd
2011
(4) SA 642
(GSJ) it is not permissible to bestow jurisdiction upon a
private arbitrator to decide a claim brought in terms of PAJA.
[80]
191.
In
Novare Investments
(Pty) Ltd and Another v Des Heuyer
[2020]
ZAWCHC 37
Wille J referred with approval to the Airports matter.
192.
For all these reasons I am not persuaded that the
applicants have alternative remedy other than to approach this Court.
193.
It is implicit in granting this Order, that I am
persuaded that the matter is urgent, and warrants urgent intervention
by this Court.
No-one suggested otherwise in argument.
194.
In the circumstances, I grant an order in the
following terms
ORDER
1.
Pending the final determination of Part B of this
application:
1.1.
the first respondent is interdicted from taking
any steps to implement its decision on or about 18 October 2023 to
terminate ("
the October 2023
termination decision
") its service
level agreement with the applicant in relation to tender number
SCMN022 for the provision of direct payment
of allowances to NSFAS
students for a period of five years, renewable, which agreement came
into effect on 12 of July 2022 ("
the
service level agreement
");
1.2.
the October 2023 termination decision is
suspended;
1.3.
the first respondent is interdicted from taking
any steps to implement its decision on or about 18 October 2023 to
cancel the decision
it made on 12 July 2022 to award the tender to
applicant ("the cancellation decision");
1.4.
the cancellation decision is suspended;
1.5.
the first respondent is interdicted from taking
any steps to implement its decision on or about 12 April 2024 to
extend the payment
of allowances to NSFAS-funded students and
beneficiaries through the universities themselves instead of through
the direct payment
solution provided by the applicant ("the 12
April 2024 diversion decision");
1.6.
the 12 April 2024 diversion decision is suspended;
1.7.
the first respondent is interdicted from taking
any steps to implement its decision on or about 24 April 2024 to stop
issuing payment
instructions and making associated payments to the
applicant for the direct disbursement of allowances into the bank
accounts of
the NSFASfunded students and beneficiaries which the
applicant has onboarded ("the 24 April 2024 diversion
decision");
1.8.
the 24 April 2024 diversion decision is suspended;
1.9.
the first respondent is interdicted from taking
any steps to implement its decision on or about 26 April 2024 to
implement a payment
mechanism with the assistance of its banker to
distribute allowances directly to students' bank accounts ("the
26 April 2024
diversion decision");
1.10.
the 26 April 2024 diversion decision is suspended;
1.11.
the first respondent is directed to implement the
service level agreement, issue payment instructions and make the
associated payments
to the applicant for the direct disbursement of
allowances into the bank accounts of the NSFAS-funded students and
beneficiaries
which the applicant has onboarded.
2.
The costs of Part A of this application, including
the costs of two counsel on scale C are to be paid jointly and
severally by first
and sixth respondents.
3.
The costs of the third and fourth respondents
stand over for determination at Part B of this application.
4.
The Orders made in terms of paragraph 1.1 to 1.11
above shall remain in effect until such time as either this Court or
the Special
Tribunal constituted in terms of section 2 of the Special
Investigating Units and Special Tribunal Act 74 of 1964, should make
a final order, that the Service Level Agreement concluded between the
Applicant and the First Respondent not be given effect to.
Sven Olivier SC
Acting Judge
15 June 2024
[1]
The
NSFAS Request for Proposal, annexure FA2, page 11
[2]
The
first tender fell away as it was considered non-responsive
[3]
It is
not apparent from the papers when this was commissioned.
[4]
I
follow the terminology in the notice of motion and in the affidavits
for the impugned decisions which eZaga is challenging
[5]
Section
172(1)(b) provides that a court may make a just and equitable order
to accommodate potentially harsh effects of the operation
of the
doctrine of objective constitutional invalidity. Section 172(1)
reads:
'When
deciding a constitutional matter within its power, a court—
(a)
must declare that any law or conduct that is inconsistent with the
Constitution
is invalid to the extent of its inconsistency; and
(b)
may make any order that is just and equitable, including —
(i)
an order limiting the retrospective effect of the declaration of
invalidity;
and
(ii)
an order suspending the declaration of invalidity for any period and
on any conditions,
to allow the competent authority to correct the
defect.'
[6]
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and
Others
2012
(6) SA 223
(CC) at para [41], referring to
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
and
Webster
v Mitchell
1948
(1) SA 1186 (W)
[7]
OUTA
(supra)
at paras [43] to [45], referring to
Gool
v Minister of Justice and Another
1955
(2) SA 683 (C)
[8]
Spur
Steak Ranches Ltd and Others v Saddles Steak Ranch, Claremont and
Another
1996
(3) SA 706
(C) at 714E-H; See also
Gool
v Minister of Justice and another
1955
(2) SA 682
(C) at 688 (E)
[9]
ibid
[10]
Zulu
v Minister of Defence and Others
[2005] ZAGPHC 16
;
2005
(6) SA 446
(T) paras 41 - 42
[11]
Gool
above.
See also
Molteno
Brothers and Others v South African Railways and Others
1936
AD 321
at 329 and 331.
[12]
Gool
id at
688F.
[13]
Id at
689B – C
[14]
Kirland
MEC for Health, Eastern Cape and Another v Kirland Investments (Pty)
Ltd t/a Eye & Lazer Institute
2014
(3) SA 481
(CC)
[15]
Merafong
City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti Ltd
2017
(2) SA 211 (CC)
[16]
Department
of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
2017
(2) SA 622 (CC).
[17]
Oudekraal
Estates (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town and Others
2004
(6) SA 222 (SCA)
[18]
Cf eg
Calibre Clinical Consultants (Pty) Ltd and Another v National
Bargaining Council for the Road Freight Industry and Another
2010
(5) SA 457
(SCA) ([2010]
4 All SA 561
;
[2010] ZASCA 94)
para 40 and
the observations of Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead in Parochial Church
Council of the Parish of Aston Cantlow &
Wilmcote with
Billesley, Warwickshire v Wallbank
[2003] UKHL 37
;
[2004] 1 AC 546
([2003] UKHL 37;
[2003] 3 All ER 1213)
(a matter in which it was accepted that a
distinction might be drawn between a 'core public authority' and a
'hybrid public authority',
the latter exercising both public and
non-public functions). Lord Nicholls said, in para 12, that there
could not be a single
test for determining whether a function was a
public one. He proceeded: 'There cannot be, given the diverse nature
of governmental
functions and the variety of means by which these
functions are discharged today. Factors to be taken into account
include the
extent to which in carrying out the relevant function
the body is publicly funded, or is exercising statutory powers, or
is taking
the place of central government or local authorities, or
is providing a public service.'
[19]
See,
for example, President of the Republic of South Africa and Others v
South African Rugby Football Union and Others
2000 (1) SA 1
(CC)
(
1999 (10) BCLR 1059
;
[1999] ZACC 11)
para 143 and Minister of
Defence and Military Veterans v Motau above n2 para 113. In
President, RSA v SARFU loc cit it was held
that '[the] boundaries [.
. .] will need to be drawn carefully in the light of the provisions
of the Constitution and the overall
constitutional purpose of an
efficient, equitable and ethical public administration'
[20]
2015
(5) SA 245
(CC) at para 75
[21]
Cape
Metro Council v Metro Inspection Services
(WC)
CC
2001 (3) SA 1013 (SCA).
[22]
The
importance to the decision of the parties' equality of bargaining
power is rightly emphasised by Iain Currie and Jonathan
Klaaren The
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act Benchbook (2001) at 72, 74
[23]
at
par [32]
[24]
Logbro
Properties CC v Bedderson NO and Others
2003
(2) SA 460 (SCA)
[25]
Cape
Metropolitan Council v Metro Inspection Services (Western Cape) CC
and Others
2001
(3) SA 1013 (SCA)
[26]
Logbro
above
para 5.
[27]
For
example,
Umfolozi
Transport (Edms) Bpk v Minister van Vervoer
[1997]
2 All SA 548 (SCA)
[28]
See
Administrator,
Transvaal, and Others v Zenzile and Others
1991
(1) SA 21
(A) ((1991) 12 ILJ 259;
[1990] ZASCA 108)
where a contract
of employment was summarily terminated as a result of the employees
having engaged in work stoppage. The contractor
in
Cape
Metro
had
relied on
Zenzile
in
asserting a right to procedural fairness prior to cancellation of
its contract to collect outstanding levies on behalf of the
municipality. See also
Administrator,
Natal, and Another v Sibiya and Another
1992
(4) SA 532 (A).
[29]
Government
of the Republic of South Africa v Thabiso Chemicals (Pty) Ltd
2009
(1) SA 163 (SCA)
[30]
Lunt
v University of Cape Town and Another
1989
(2) SA 438 (C)
[31]
C
Hoexter Administrative Law in South Africa 2 ed (2012) at 446.
[32]
The
disposal of publicly owned land by a municipality has always been
regulated by legislation and it is not disputed in this
case that
provisions of the Local Government Ordinance 17 of 1939 had governed
the initial sale and that post-democracy legislation
governing such
transactions may have been applicable to the actual transfer that
Granor desired.
[33]
Minister
of Defence and Military Veterans v Motau and Othe
r
s
2014
(5) SA 69
(CC) para [33]
[34]
at
[11]
[35]
The
majority judgement in relation to which Navsa and Davis was a
concurrence
[36]
For
the moment I deal only with the eZaga application, but this, of
course, applies to all the other service level agreements.
[37]
I
repeat that for my purposes I am not concerned with the debate
whether 'right' includes something more than what we know to
be a
right. It is not necessary to engage in that debate because here we
are concerned with what are unquestionably rights. The
debate
between the first and my judgments is about what right or rights can
properly be asserted for purposes of the interim
interdict and
intended PAJA review.
[38]
Grey's
Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Public Works and Others
[2005] ZASCA 43
;
2005
(6) SA 313
(SCA) at para 23.
[39]
Quinot
& Maree 'Administrative Action' in Quinot et al Administrative
Justice in South Africa: An Introduction 2 ed (Oxford
University
Press, Cape Town 2020) at 93
[40]
Ferreira
v Levin NO and Others; Vryenhoek and Others v Powell NO and
Others
1996
(1) SA 984
(CC)
(
1996 (1) BCLR 1).
[41]
Id at
para [234]
[42]
2018(4)
SA 443 (SCA) at para 13
[43]
2019
(1) SA 370
(CC) at para 77
[44]
2020
(1) SA 368
(CC) at paras 18 and 19
[45]
Department
of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
2017
(2) SA 622 (CC)
[46]
Kirland
MEC for Health, Eastern Cape and Another v Kirland Investments (Pty)
Ltd t/a Eye & Lazer Institute
2014
(3) SA 481
(CC) para 43.
[47]
Id
para 60
[48]
Id
para 82.
[49]
Id
para 83.
[50]
Merafong
City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti Ltd
2017
(2) SA 211
(CC) (
[2016] ZACC 35) para 40
[51]
Affordable
Medicines Trust Affordable Medicines Trust and Others v Minister of
Health and Others
[2005] ZACC 3
;
2006
(3) SA 247
(CC) paras 45 – 50
;
Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Pharmaceutical Manufacturers
Association of SA and Another: In re Ex parte President of the
Republic
of South Africa and Others
[2000] ZACC 1
;
2000
(2) SA 674
(CC) paras 8 – 9.
[52]
Kirland
para
103.
[53]
Merafong
para
42;
Kirland
paras
101 – 103;
Camps
Bay Ratepayers' and Residents' Association and Another v Harrison
and Another
2011
(4) SA 42
(CC)
(
2011 (2) BCLR 121
;
[2010] ZACC 19)
para 62
;
Bengwenyama Minerals (Pty) Ltd and Others v Genorah Resources (Pty)
Ltd and Others
2011
(4) SA 113
(CC)
(
2011 (3) BCLR 229
;
[2010] ZACC 26)
para 85. For
this principle's application in the context of school-admission
policies, see
MEC
for Education, Gauteng Province, and Others v Governing Body,
Rivonia Primary School and Others
2013
(6) SA 582
(CC)
(
2013 (12) BCLR 1365
;
[2013] ZACC 34)
;
Head
of Department, Department of Education, Free State Province v Welkom
High School and Others
2014
(2) SA 228
(CC)
(
2013 (9) BCLR 989
;
[2013] ZACC 25)
(Welkom);
Head of Department, Mpumalanga Department of Education and Another v
Hoërskool Ermelo
2010
(2) SA 415
(CC)
(
2010 (3) BCLR 177
;
[2009] ZACC 32).
[54]
See
the discussion of the minority in paras 134 – 136.
[55]
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Speaker, National Assembly and Others
2016
(3) SA 580 (CC) (
2016 (5) BCLR 618;
[2016] ZACC 11)
[56]
Id
para 74
[57]
Joseph
at [31]
[58]
2008
(1) SA 566 (CC).
[59]
See
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers
para
85; and
Prinsloo
v Van der Linde and Another
[1997] ZACC 5
;
1997
(3) SA 1012
(CC)
(
1997 (6) BCLR 759)
para 25
[60]
SARFU
para 148
[61]
South
African Roads Board v Johannesburg City Council
[1991]
ZASCA 63;
1991 (4) SA 1 (A)at 13 B – C
[62]
1991
(4) SA 1
(A) at 13B-C
[63]
Albutt
v Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation, and
Others
2010
(3) SA 293 (CC)
[64]
Democratic
Alliance v President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
2013
(1) SA 248
(CC)
[65]
Sembcorp
Siza Water (Pty) Ltd v Umgeni Water
KZD
11908/2015 (13 September 2017) (High Court judgment) para 35
[66]
par
[21].
[67]
par
[14]
[68]
para
[65] read with par [42] of Tasima
[69]
At
par [52]
[70]
At
par [55]
[71]
It
appears that
Siyangena
had
earlier obtained an interdict preventing Prasa from refusing it
access to various sites.
[72]
Prasa
had launched an earlier review application in February 2016, which
was dismissed for want of an application for condonation
for the
delay in bringing the application under PAJA. After the
Constitutional Court judgement in
Gijima
,
a legality review application was launched. (
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2018
(2) SA 23
(CC)
[73]
Par
82
[74]
Clause
10.112.2(d)
[75]
Economic
Freedom Fighters
at
[66]–[67]
[76]
Doctors
for Life International v Speaker of the National Assembly and Others
2006
(6) SA 416 (CC) (
2006 (12) BCLR 1399;
[2006] ZACC 11)
[77]
International
Trade Administration Commission v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd
2012
(4) SA 618
(CC)
(
2010 (5) BCLR 457
;
[2010] ZACC 6)
at para 95
[78]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of SA and Another: In re Ex parte
President of the Republic of South Africa and Others
2000
(2) SA 674
(CC)
(
2000 (3) BCLR 241
;
[2000] ZACC 1)
in para 20.
[79]
International
Trade Administration Commission v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd
2012
(4) SA 618
(CC)
(
2010 (5) BCLR 457
;
[2010] ZACC 6)
(ITAC) in paras
47 – 55 at para 69
[80]
at
[68];
Council
for the Advancement of the SA Constitution and Others v Ingonyama
Trust and Others
2022
(1) SA 251
(KZP)
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