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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## JK Structures CC v City of Cape Town and Others (leave to appeal) (14485 / 2021)
[2023] ZAWCHC 93 (8 May 2023)
JK Structures CC v City of Cape Town and Others (leave to appeal) (14485 / 2021)
[2023] ZAWCHC 93 (8 May 2023)
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sino date 8 May 2023
Republic
of South Africa
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No. 14485 / 2021
Before: The Hon. Mr
Justice Binns-Ward
Date of hearing: 4 May
2023
Date
of judgment: 8 May 2023
In the matter between:
JK
STRUCTURES CC
Applicant
and
THE
CITY OF CAPE
TOWN
First
Respondent
THE
CITY MANAGER, CAPE TOWN
Second Respondent
NEJENI
CONSTRUCTION & MANAGEMENT (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
MARTIN
AND EAST (PTY) LTD
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
(Applications
for leave to appeal and in terms of s 18 of Act 10 of 2013)
BINNS-WARD J:
[1]
The first and second respondents in the
principal proceedings, the City of Cape Town and the City Manager -
the latter presumably
acting on behalf of the City, have applied for
leave to appeal against the judgment of this court delivered on
20 February
2023. The outcome of the principal proceedings
turned on the proper interpretation of the Construction Industry
Development
Board Act 38 of 2000 (‘the CIDB Act’) and, in
particular, the related regulations. The judgment in the
principal
proceedings held that the City’s misinterpretation of
the regulations resulted in it applying the incorrect contractor
grading
qualifications in terms of the CIDB Act for the purposes of
tender 134Q/202/21, thereby wrongly excluding from consideration
contractors
with a grading lower than 7CE.
[2]
The invitation to tender concerned a
‘framework agreement’, in terms of which the City
intended to appoint a panel of
up to three contractors with whom it
would, during the three-year term of the framework agreement,
individually conclude, as and
when required, a number of construction
works contracts for the replacement of sewer pipes. The value
of the contemplated
construction work contracts would vary according
to the nature and extent of the work required in each instance, but
no such contract
would exceed R6 million in value.
[3]
It was not in issue that, in terms of the
regulations, contractors with a registered grading of 4CE and above
were considered to
be capable of undertaking a construction works
contract valued at up to R6 million. That much followed
from regulation
17 and the range of tender values (‘TVR’)
set out therein in Table 8 (reproduced in para 29 of the principal
judgment).
The judgment in the principal case held that the
City’s tender invitation should have been open to contractors
with a grading
of 4CE or above, and that consequently the tender
submitted by the applicant (‘JKS’), which had a
registered grading
of 6CE (which denoted a certified capability to
undertake a construction works contract of a value up to
R20 million), had
been wrongly excluded from consideration.
[4]
The principal judgment is listed on SAFLII,
sub nom
.
JK Structures CC v City of Cape
Town and Others
[2023] ZAWCHC 31
(20
February 2023). The orders made in the principal judgment speak
for themselves. The tender process was set aside,
but the order
was suspended for six months to enable the City to make alternative
arrangements for the procurement of the services
concerned.
[5]
The application for leave to appeal was
heard together with an application by JKS, in terms of s 18(1)
and (3) of the Superior
Courts Act (‘the Act’), for an
order putting into effect the judgment obtained in its favour in the
principal case
notwithstanding any pending application for leave to
appeal or appeal by the City against the judgment. In the
alternative
to its application in terms of s 18 of the Act, and
in the event of this court being minded to grant the City leave to
appeal,
JKS applied for an order, ostensibly in terms of s 17(5)
of the Act, imposing as a condition of such leave a direction that
JKS’s bid in respect of tender 134Q/202/21 be remitted to the
City for reconsideration as an acceptable bid.
[6]
The questions for determination in the
application for leave to appeal are whether (i) the contemplated
appeal would have a
reasonable prospect of success or (ii) there is
some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard,
including conflicting
judgments on the matter under consideration.
It is only if it is able to form a positive opinion on either or both
of those
propositions that this court (or the SCA on ‘petition’)
is empowered to give leave to appeal; see s 17(1)(a) read with
s
17(2)(b)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[7]
In a recent judgment on an application to
that court for leave to appeal, the Supreme Court of Appeal held that
‘[t]
he test of reasonable
prospects of success postulates
a
dispassionate decision based on the facts and the law
that a court of appeal could reasonably arrive at a conclusion
different to that of the trial court. In other words, the appellants
in this matter need to convince this Court on proper grounds that
they have prospects of success on appeal. Those prospects of
success
must not be remote, but there must exist a reasonable chance of
succeeding. A sound rational basis for the conclusion that
there are
prospects of success must be shown to exist
’;
see
Ramakatsa and Others v African
National Congress and Another
[2021]
ZASCA 31
(31 March 2021) at para 10.
[8]
I have underlined part of the passage
quoted from the judgment in
Ramakatsa
for highlighting purposes because in the current matter there were no
material disputes of fact. (The City points out that
this court
misconstrued the evidence concerning the tender value of the
framework contract - treating it as R180 million instead
of
R80 million. Accepting that to be so, the error was
immaterial to the outcome of the principal case, as Mr
Farlam
SC for the City readily acknowledged.) Being concerned wholly
with a question of statutory interpretation, the decision of
the
principal case turned exclusively on a matter of law.
[9]
The first matter for determination is
therefore whether I am able to form the opinion that there is a
reasonable prospect that another
court might on appeal conclude that
this court erred in law in its construction of the applicable
regulations. The principal
judgment sets forth in detail this
court’s reasoning in support of the interpretive conclusions
reached. There is no
need to repeat that reasoning here.
[10]
The issue in contestation was whether the
municipal manager’s contention that the ‘tender value’
- that is the
budgeted expenditure in respect of the framework
contract, viz. R80 million over three years - was the value to
be applied
for the purposes of regulation 17 of the CIDB Act
regulations, or whether, as found by the court, the maximum value of
each the
individual construction works contracts that might be
concluded pursuant to the framework agreement was the relevant
measure.
(The distinction between ‘framework agreements’
and ‘construction works contracts’ – also called
‘works project contracts’ – and the manner in
which the two types of contract interrelate is described in
para
12-14 of the principal judgment.) As explained in the principal
judgment, a ‘framework agreement’ is
not
a ‘construction works contract’.
The legislation is not concerned with framework agreements,
only
with construction works contracts. It is common ground that the
legislation makes no reference to framework agreements (see
para 24-25 of the principal judgment).
[11]
As discussed in para 38 of the principal
judgment, the municipal manager’s construction of the
legislation (as to which, see
the text of the manager’s
memorandum quoted at para 15) was founded on a misconceived
apprehension of the import of
regulation 25(1B). (Regulations
25(1), 25(1B) and 25(3) are quoted at para 5 of the principal
judgment.) The municipal
manager’s interpretation of the
legislation is not only inconsistent with the language of the
regulations and governing statute,
it is also a construction which,
if applied, would be inimical to the achievement of the stated
objects of the
Construction Industry Development Board Act (as
to
which, see para 18-25 of the principal judgment).
[12]
In argument in support of the application
for leave to appeal, counsel for the City stressed that the municipal
manager’s
opinion was reportedly supported by senior counsel’s
advice. I understood the thrust of the submission was to
suggest
that this supported the reasonable possibility that another
court might agree with the municipal manager’s interpretation
of the regulations. There is nothing in the point in my view.
If the manager’s interpretation was consistent
with the opinion
he obtained, as one would imagine is the case, then the opinion
relied upon was demonstrably wrong for exactly
the reasons given in
the judgment. The proper construction of a statutory provision
is not determined by a head count.
[13]
Suffice it to say that, having
dispassionately reviewed the principal judgment, I find it most
unlikely that another court would
construe the statutory provisions
differently. Otherwise expressed, I consider that the
contemplated appeal would have very
poor prospects of success.
I am therefore unable to form the opinion that s 17(1)(a)(i) of
the Act requires me to have
in order to grant leave to appeal in
terms of that subparagraph.
[14]
The enquiry consequently turns to the
possible existence of some other compelling reason why an appeal
should be heard; see s 17(1)(a)(ii)
of the Act. In
Caratco
(Pty) Ltd v Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
[2020] ZASCA 17
(25 March
2020);
2020 (5) SA 35
(SCA), which also
concerned an application for leave to appeal, Cachalia JA observed
(in para 2) that ‘
A
compelling reason includes an important question of law or a discreet
issue of public importance that will have an effect on future
disputes.
But here too, the
merits remain vitally important and are often decisive
.
[The applicant]
must satisfy this court
that it has met this threshold
’.
(See also
Minister of Justice and
Constitutional Development and Others v Southern African Litigation
Centre and Others
[2016] ZASCA 17
(15
March
2016);
2016 (4) BCLR 487
(SCA);
[2016] 2 All SA 365
(SCA);
2016
(3) SA 317
(SCA) at para 24.)
[15]
The implication in the sentence in the
learned judge’s observation in
Caratco
that I have underlined is that appeals are primarily meant to be
about obtaining different results, not second opinions.
Even if
there is an important point of law or an issue of public importance
in point, no purpose is served by it being reconsidered
on that basis
alone by another court on appeal if the prospect of interference with
the judgment at first instance is remote.
The filtering object
of s 17(1) would be subverted were meritless questions sent on
appeal when there was no compelling reason
for the matter in question
to deserve the attention of a higher court.
[16]
The
matter did indeed raise an important question of law. That much
was acknowledged in the treatment in the principal judgment
of JKS’s
application for condonation in terms of
s 9
of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
. But having been settled
by the principal judgment, there is nothing to indicate that the
question of the proper interpretation
of the regulations will, or
should, be a matter of future dispute. On the contrary, the
evidence was to the effect that the
City’s procurement
officials, being persons with expertise and experience in the field
and the authors of the City’s
procurement
Guidelines
document (2014), had understood and previously applied the
regulations consistently with the construction thereof that was
upheld
in the principal judgment. For what it was worth, the
Construction Industry Development Board also provided JKS’s
attorneys
with a letter indicating that that was also the way in
which the Board interpreted the regulations. The dissonant
opinion
was that of the City’s municipal manager, who, by
directive dated 4 August 2020, required the City’s
procurement
officials to discard the relevant provisions of the
City’s existing
Guidelines
and apply his own interpretation of the regulations - an
interpretation that the principal judgment, for the reasons therein
fully
set out, found to be erroneous.
[17]
The
regulations have been in force since between 2004 and 2006.
[1]
There was nothing in the evidence to suggest that the issue that
arose out of the municipal manager’s misinterpretation
of the
regulations has manifested elsewhere in the country. It is
improbable, having regard to the starkly anomalous effect
of the
municipal manager’s construction, that they have been
interpreted that way by any other organs of state. If
they had
been, it is unlikely that the better
part 20
years would have passed
without an earlier challenge by a contractor finding itself in a
position similar to that of JKS in the
current matter.
[18]
This
case is therefore distinguishable, for example, from the type of
matter with which I had to deal in
Brackenfell
Trailer Hire (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of Transport
[2019] ZAWCHC 30
(20 March
2019);
2019 (2) SACR 62
(WCC), in which,
notwithstanding my opinion that there were poor prospects of an
appeal court differing from this court’s
finding on the import
of the legislative provisions there in issue – an opinion
vindicated in the appeal court’s judgment
in
Minister
of Transport v Brackenfell Trailer Hire (Pty) Ltd and Others
(707/2019)
[2021] ZASCA 5
;
2021 (1) SACR 463
(SCA) ;
[2021] 2 All SA
72
(SCA) (14 January 2021), I granted leave to appeal to the Supreme
Court of Appeal because the evidence demonstrated an inconsistent
application of the legislation by prosecuting and road traffic
authorities throughout the country, and a nationally binding
determination
was accordingly desirable.
[19]
Therefore,
with the dictum in
Caratco
,
quoted above, in mind, I find myself also unable to form the opinion
posited in s 17(1)(a)(ii) of the Act that is necessary
to grant
leave to appeal.
[20]
The application for leave to appeal will be
dismissed accordingly.
[21]
It remains open to the City, if so advised,
to apply further to the Supreme Court of Appeal for leave to appeal.
That means
that it is necessary to consider JKS’s application
in terms of s 18 of the Act and the relief it seeks in the
alternative
thereto, purportedly in terms of s 17(5).
[22]
Section 18 of the Act provides as follows
in relevant part:
‘
Suspension
of decision pending appeal
(1) Subject to
subsections (2) and (3), and unless the court under exceptional
circumstances orders otherwise, the operation and
execution of a
decision which is the subject of an application for leave to appeal
or of an appeal, is suspended pending the decision
of the application
or appeal.
(2) …
(3) A court may only
order otherwise as contemplated in subsection (1) or (2), if the
party who applied to the court to order otherwise,
in addition proves
on a balance of probabilities that he or she will suffer irreparable
harm if the court does not so order and
that the other party will not
suffer irreparable harm if the court so orders.
(4) …
(5)
For the purposes of subsections (1) and (2), a decision becomes the
subject of an application for leave to appeal or of an appeal,
as
soon as an application for leave to appeal or a notice of appeal is
lodged with the registrar in terms of the rules.’
[23]
The
provisions of s 18(1) and (3) are in large part a codification of the
common law position that was authoritatively expounded
in
Reid
and Another v Godart and
Another
1938
AD 511
and, in relation to the Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959, in
South
Cape Corporation (Pty) Ltd v Engineering Management Services (Pty)
Ltd
1977 (3) SA 534
(A), at 544-5.
The proper approach to s 18 of the Act was settled in
University
of the Free State v Afriforum and Another
[2016] ZASCA 165
(17 November 2016);
[2017] 1 All SA 79
(SCA);
2018
(3) SA 428
(SCA) at para 5-15. (See also
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation and Another
[2017]
ZASCA 93
;
2017 (5) SA 402
(SCA) from para 28, and
Premier
for the Province of Gauteng and Others v Democratic Alliance and
Others
[2020] ZASCA 136
(27 October
2020);
[2021] 1 All SA 60
(SCA) at para 9-15.)
[24]
The
general rule is that the effect of a judgment is immediately
suspended when an application for leave to appeal against it is
lodged. It remains so suspended until the determination of any
ensuing appeal, unless the court, exceptionally, directs otherwise.
The appeal court has held that the requirements in s 18 of the
Act have increased the threshold for obtaining an order that
a
judgment should be implemented notwithstanding undetermined
appeal-related proceedings; see in this regard
University
of the Free State
supra, at para 11,
Minister of Social Development Western
Cape and Others v Justice Alliance of South Africa and Another
[2016] ZAWCHC 34
(1 April 2016) at para 24-26 and
Incubeta
Holdings and
Another
v Ellis and Another
[2013] ZAGPJHC 274
(16 October
2013);
2014 (3) SA 189
(GSJ) at para 24.
[25]
In
my judgment, JKS has failed to establish that it will suffer
irreparable harm if the judgment is suspended pending the
determination
of any ensuing appeal. I accept that with the
passage of time that might intervene between now and the
determination of any
appeal, JKS will be deprived of the opportunity
of obtaining appointments to undertake construction work contracts
with the City
in terms of any framework agreement put in place in
terms of a fresh tender process, but the loss of a particular
opportunity does
not amount to irreparable loss within the meaning of
s 18 of the Act. JKS is not prevented by the loss of
opportunity
in this case from availing of alternative corporate
opportunities in the construction industry. The City of Cape
Town is
not the only employer in the industry. The effect of
the judgment is that the current framework agreement is set aside.
Whether JKS would consequently obtain an appointment as a service
provider in terms of any fresh procurement process undertaken
by the
City is an open question, in other words speculative.
[26]
It
would be a rare case where a litigant who has won an award in money
or an order directing the opposite party to render some or
other
performance or to desist from some or other allegedly objectionable
conduct would not to some extent be disadvantaged by
the delay
imposed on the enforcement of the judgment attendant on its
suspension because of the lodging of an appeal. That
sort of
disadvantage is an inherent feature of the law. And insofar as
time passed is opportunity forever spent, the delay
in obtaining
finality in the litigation and the ordinarily attendant disadvantages
nevertheless do not constitute ‘exceptional
circumstances’
within the meaning of s 18(1) of the Act, or ‘irreparable
harm’ within the meaning of s 18(3).
On the
contrary, as I have noted, they are commonplace consequences of the
generally applicable rule when either an appeal or an
application for
leave to appeal is pending.
[27]
JKS
did, however, identify some factors that might support an application
to the President of the Supreme Court of Appeal for an
expedited
hearing of any appeal that could ensue pursuant to the grant of leave
to appeal by that court. Indeed, in its answering
papers in the
s 18 application, the City implied that it would not oppose, and
in fact would cooperate with JKS to bring any
appeal to a hearing on
the most efficient basis possible. At the hearing, Mr
Farlam
,
while opposing the suggestion by JKS’s counsel that this court
should specify a timetable to expedite any appeal that might
ensue,
indicated that the City would have no objection to the court
mentioning in the judgment the existence of the readily apparent
features of the matter that make it deserving that any appeal be
afforded some priority. I have desisted from fixing a
timetable,
as requested, because I am doubtful that it would it be
appropriate for this court to purport to interfere in matters that
are
regulated by the rules and procedures of the appeal court.
[28]
JKS’s
application in terms of s 18 of the Act was ill-advised.
In the context of the refusal of the City’s
application for
leave to appeal, it is not necessary to consider its application in
the alternative, purportedly brought in terms
of s 17(5) of the
Act. It bears remarking, however, that the nature of the relief
sought by JKS in the latter regard
[2]
was not of the procedural character related to a pending appeal that
the subsection appears to contemplate.
[29]
In
the result, orders will issue in the following terms:
1.
The application by the first and second
respondents in the principal proceedings for leave to appeal is
dismissed with costs, including
the fees of two counsel.
2.
The application in terms of
s 18
of
the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
by the applicant in the principal
proceedings is refused with costs.
A.G. BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
[1]
See
the dates of commencement set out in GN 692 in
GG
26427
of 9 June 2004, as amended and supplemented in GN R1333 of 2004 (wef
12 November 2004) and GN 751 of 22 July 2005.
[2]
See
paragraph [5]
above.
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