Case Law[2025] ZASCA 41South Africa
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Business Connexion (Pty) Ltd (1186/2023) [2025] ZASCA 41 (10 April 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
10 April 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Section 17(2)(f) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – contractual claim – software and licences – whether there was delivery of the licences – budget cuts reason for cancellation – no grave injustice – matter struck from the roll.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Business Connexion (Pty) Ltd (1186/2023) [2025] ZASCA 41 (10 April 2025)
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Business Connexion (Pty) Ltd (1186/2023) [2025] ZASCA 41 (10 April 2025)
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sino date 10 April 2025
FLYNOTES:
CONTRACT
– Performance –
Software
and licences –
Claim
for payment from municipality – Whether non-performance by
supplier – Delivery shown to have taken place
– Not
agreed to be supplied at later date when needed – Inability
to pay for a contract freely and voluntarily
entered into is no
defence in these circumstances – Supplier procured the
licences and paid for them on instruction
of municipality –
High Court correctly dismissing defences and ordering payment.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case
no: 1186/2023
In
the matter between:
EKURHULENI
METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
APPLICANT
and
BUSINESS
CONNEXION (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Ekurhuleni
Metropolitan Municipality v Business Connexion (Pty) Ltd (
1186/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 41
(10 April 2025)
Coram:
NICHOLLS, SMITH, KEIGHTLEY and BAARTMAN
JJA and MODIBA AJA
Heard:
17 March 2025
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email, publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and
released to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down of the judgment
is deemed to be 11h00 on 10 April
2025
Summary:
Section 17(2)
(f)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
–
contractual claim – software and licences – whether there
was delivery of the licences – budget cuts
reason for
cancellation – no grave injustice – matter struck from
the roll.
ORDER
On appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (Dlamini J sitting
as court of first instance):
The
matter is struck from the roll and the applicant is to pay the costs
of the reconsideration including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Nicholls
JA
(Smith, Keightley and Baartman JJA and Modiba AJA
concurring):
[1]
This matter comes before this Court pursuant to
an application for reconsideration to the President in terms of s
17(2)
(f)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the Act). On 31 January 2023,
the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the
high court)
found that there was a valid and binding agreement between the
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality (the Municipality),
the
applicant, and the respondent, Business Connexion (Pty) Ltd (BCX). It
ordered the Municipality to pay to BCX the sum of R85
479 535.26 plus
interest for the purchase of software licences and related services.
The high court refused an application for
leave to appeal by the
Municipality, as did two judges of this Court on petition.
[2]
The first consideration is whether this Court has jurisdiction to
hear the appeal.
The power conferred on the President in terms of s
17(2)
(f)
is to determine whether there are exceptional circumstances that
warrant a reconsideration of the matter.
[1]
If the President exercises her discretion in favour of the applicant,
the matter is then referred to five judges. This Court has
held in
Motsoeneng
v South African Broadcasting Corporation Soc Ltd and Others
,
[2]
and more recently in
Bidvest
Protea Coin Security (Pty) Ltd v Mabena
,
[3]
that it is the court to which a referral is made in terms of s
17(2)
(f)
that must decide whether there are exceptional circumstances. Only if
exceptional circumstances are established does this Court
have
jurisdiction.
[4]
[3]
Although there is a reluctance to define what exceptional
circumstances
entail as each case must be considered on its own
merits, it is generally accepted that it must encompass something out
of the
ordinary. This Court in
Avnit
v First Rand Bank,
[5]
emphasised that what is not contemplated is a re-hashing of old
arguments ‘unless it is strongly arguable that justice will
be
denied unless the possibility of an appeal can be pursued’,
[6]
or there must be a matter of some importance that has been
overlooked.
[4]
The issues in this application for
reconsideration do not raise any important or disputed questions of
law. The disputes are largely
factual. The thrust of the
Municipality’s application is essentially that there was a
factual basis to claim non-performance
of the contract which warrants
a reconsideration. It remains to determine whether there is a risk of
a grave failure of justice,
which this Court is obliged to remedy.
[5]
It is not disputed that the Municipality
entered into an agreement with BCX for the purchase of software and
licences for the sum
of R85 479 535.26. The question is whether there
was non-performance of the contract by BCX, which absolves the
Municipality from
making payment. The Municipality relies primarily
on two defences. The first is that BCX failed to show that there was
delivery
of the said licences and the software, which it was obliged
to do in order to succeed in its claim. The second is the timing of
the delivery, which the Municipality contends should have taken place
only once its infrastructure had been upgraded to a more
stable
environment. As such the Municipality contends that the software was
to be purchased on an ‘as-and-when-required’
basis.
[6]
In March 2020, Oracle Corporation (South
Africa) (Pty) Ltd (Oracle) assessed the Municipality’s
information system and advised
that it needed to upgrade its
infrastructure. As a result, in May 2020 the Municipality embarked on
a process to establish a panel
of accredited service providers to
renew the existing software licences and to procure new software
licences from Oracle. BCX was
appointed by the Municipality to its
panel of service providers.
[7]
On
5 August 2020, the Municipality sent a Request for Quotation (RFQ) to
each of the Oracle partners on the list, including
BCX. The heading
of the letter largely mirrors that of the letter of appointment and
stipulates that it is ‘…for the
acquisition of
additional software licences, software licence renewal, software
maintenance, implementations and enhancements for
Oracle Software
that is in use from date of award until 30 June 2023’. BCX‘s
bid was successful.
[8]
On 27 August 2020 the Municipality sent the
agreement to be signed by BCX. This was titled, ‘ICT
Instruction to Perform Work’
(IPW). Once again, the heading is
identical to the RFQ. The licence specifications and prices are set
out with a total sum provided
for in the amount of R85 479 535.26.
The IPW was followed by a letter from the Municipality to Oracle SA
confirming the ‘execution’
of the agreement with BCX and
setting out the Oracle products to be purchased. Believing that they
had been awarded the tender,
on 28 August 2020, BCX procured the
specified licences and made payment. On 1 September 2020, Oracle sent
a welcome letter to the
Municipality ‘C/O Business Connexion
(Pty) Ltd’ confirming the purchase and the availability of the
licences, as well
as technical support services. The letter was
emailed to Ms Musa Tleane (Ms Tleane) at BCX and to Mr Peter Paulos
Moloko Monyepao
(Mr Monyepao) at the Municipality. Mr Monyepao is the
deponent to the Municipality’s answering affidavit.
[9]
On 23 September 2020, Ms Matlhodi Senyatsi from
the Municipality sent an email to Ms Tleane at BCX stating that they
‘would
like to place the order for procurement of additional
licences on hold, while the City determines if the modules intended
to be
used by these licences will be required going forward’.
Ms Tleane responded that BCX had ordered and procured the licences
as
per the Municipality’s instruction of 27 August 2020. It was
therefore impossible to put the procurement on hold. A couple
of days
later, on 25 September 2020, Mr Monyepao sent an email stating that
due to budget cuts, the Municipality was unable ‘to
honour the
order for additional licences’ and that they had not received
delivery of the licences. They would, however, proceed
with the
procurement of the Taleo and compliance licences which is the first
line item on the IPW. Ms Tleane responded that the
licences were
emailed to Mr Monyepao between 29 and 30 August 2020, consisting of
the welcome pack from Oracle with all the entitlements
attached to
the software, as per the IPW.
[10]
On 29 October 2020, the Municipality sent a
letter to BCX in the following terms (letter of cancellation):
‘
SUBJECT:
REQUEST FOR CANCELLATION OF ORDER
City
of Ekurhuleni placed an order with BCX on 27 August 2020 for
procurement of additional Oracle software, which includes acquisition
of Taleo subscription and technical licences to allow migration of
software licences to a new environment and cater for the expansion
of
additional modules. Refer to the attached Annexure.
The
City hereby requests for cancellation of the order, the only licence
which the City would like [to] proceed with is the acquisition
of the
Taleo Licences. Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the City has been
struggling with revenue collection and as a result, budgets
have been
drastically cut.
Departments
have been instructed to reprioritise the maintenance of existing
solutions. The City has also been struggling with the
successful
implementation of these Oracle Modules since 2017; despite engaging
the Original Equipment Manufacturer (OEM).’
[11]
BCX responded in a letter dated 27 January
2021, setting out how Oracle processed the order from BCX and issued
an electronic entitlement
copy to the Municipality via the email
address of Mr Monyepao. The letter confirmed that the order was
non-cancellable, BCX had
paid for the licences and it would be
impossible to reverse the transaction. It was noted that ‘…the
proposed cancellation
is of a commercial budget nature’ and BCX
offered to come to some workable payment arrangements. When no
agreement could
be reached, BCX launched this application on 14
October 2021.
[12]
The high court rejected the Municipality’s
defences. Firstly, it rejected the argument that Mr Benjamin Strydom,
the deponent
to BCX’s founding and replying affidavits, had no
personal knowledge of the matter. It held that as the managing
executive
of BCX to whom all Oracle units reported, he had sufficient
knowledge of the matter. Secondly, the high court found that there
was ‘no legal basis’ for the Municipality’s
contention that the licences were not delivered. On the facts, the
keys were made available for utilisation by the Municipality on 28
August 2020. Moreover, said the high court, the Municipality
did not
deny it received the Taleo licences which were delivered at the same
time. It had tendered to pay R6 933 948 in respect
of the Taleo
licences on receipt of a proper invoice. Finally, the high court did
not accept that it was a tacit term of the agreement
that the
licences were not required immediately but at some future date when
the Municipality had migrated from an outdated, unstable
and
unsupported IBM environment to a more stable Huawei environment.
[13]
As indicated, in the application for
reconsideration, too, the primary focus was the non-delivery of the
licences and what was referred
to as the timing of the delivery. In
respect of the latter, the Municipality sought to bolster its
argument that the licences were
not to be delivered until the
upgrades had taken place, by referring to paragraph 2 of the RFQ,
which provides as follows:
‘
Acquisition
of additional software licences
The
department intends to migrate the current Oracle solution to a more
stable and supported Huawei environment. …The service
providers will be requested to provide a quotation to procure
additional infrastructure licences to cater for this migration.’
[14]
This, said the Municipality, shows that the
intention to acquire the licences at some future date, rather than
immediately, was
expressly contemplated in the RFQ. It is common
cause that a request for a ‘service quotation’ was never
forthcoming
from the Municipality. In any event, this interpretation
is at odds with the language employed in the IPW and the confirmation
of execution letter. There is no express or implied term that the
appointed service provider was obliged to ascertain the
Municipality’s
licence needs prior to procurement. Furthermore,
the IPW did not explicitly state that the Taleo licences would be
required immediately,
while the others would not be. The IPW in its
terms presents one order for all the licences listed therein.
[15]
If it were indeed the intention of the parties
that the contract would be executed as and when certain upgrades were
made, this
would have been clearly and unambiguously stipulated in
the agreement. Nor would the tender office of the Municipality have
written
to confirm the rates for 12 months after approval if it had
not anticipated that the procurement would be within the year. In the
email exchange between the parties, at no point did the Municipality
positively assert that the agreement between the parties was
to
procure the licences as and when required. Significantly this is not
one of the grounds for the purported cancellation of the
agreement.
The high court was quite correct in dismissing this defence.
[16]
On the question of non-delivery, the
Municipality contends that BCX did not provide proof that it had
provided the licences. For
this it relies on the fact that the
welcome letter was sent by Oracle to the Municipality ‘C/O
BCX’. This is of little
moment, the licences were delivered by
email to Mr Monyepao, as was confirmed in an email to him almost four
weeks later. Delivery
by email to Mr Monyepao was also confirmed by
Mr Anees Mayet who was employed by Oracle.
[17]
Mr
Monyepao does not directly deny receiving the email with the licences
but rather puts BCX to the proof thereof. As this Court
has
re-iterated on numerous occasions, a genuine dispute of fact only
exists where the party who raises the dispute seriously and
unambiguously addresses the disputed facts. A bare denial is only
sufficient where there is no other way open to the disputing
party.
[7]
This is not such a
case. The Municipality set out no details as to what steps it took to
confirm that the key codes did not grant
it access to the licences.
Nor is it explained how the Taleo licences, which it was conceded
were made available on the same basis,
were accessible on receipt of
the welcome letter but the remaining licences were not.
[18]
It is the letter of cancellation that sets out
in the clearest terms the reason for the Municipality’s refusal
to pay. Nowhere
is the non-delivery of the licences mentioned, or
that the common understanding was that the licences would only be
required once
certain upgrades were completed. The sole reason
provided is that the Municipality did not have the money to pay the
purchase price
because their revenue had been drastically reduced due
to Covid-19. It was conceded by the Municipality in argument that the
reason
it did not want the licences was because it was unable to pay
for them.
[19]
Inability to pay for a contract freely and
voluntarily entered into is no defence in these circumstances. It is
undisputed that
BCX procured the licences and paid for them on the
instruction of the Municipality. BCX will be out of pocket to the
tune of R85
479 535.26 should the appeal succeed. The high court
cannot be faulted for dismissing both of these defences.
[20]
The judgment of the high court led to no
grave injustice and did not bring the administration of justice into
disrepute. Consequently,
given also that I have found that there is
no disputed question of law that arises for consideration, there are
no exceptional
circumstances that warrant our reconsideration of the
decision of this Court to decline leave to appeal. This matter
accordingly
does not engage the jurisdiction of this Court.
[21]
The
following order is made:
The
matter is struck from the roll and the applicant is to pay the costs
of the reconsideration including the costs of two counsel.
C
E HEATON NICHOLLS
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the applicant:
G I Hulley SC (with N Strathern)
Instructed
by:
Du Plessis, De Heus Van Wyk and
Chiba Attorneys, Benoni
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the respondent:
M S Baloyi SC (with M Phukubje)
Instructed
by:
Motsoeneng Bill Attorneys Inc, Sandton
Honey Attorneys,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
Section 17(2)
(f)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, was amended in Government
Gazette No. 50430, with effect from 3 April 2024, and reads as
follows:
‘…
(f)
The decision of the majority of the judges considering an
application referred to in paragraph (b), or the decision of the
court, as the case may be, to grant or refuse the application shall
be final: Provided that the President of the Supreme Court
of Appeal
may, in circumstances where a grave failure of justice would
otherwise result or the administration of justice may
be brought
into disrepute, whether of his or her own accord or on application
filed within one month of the decision, refer the
decision to the
court for reconsideration and, if necessary, variation.’
[2]
Motsoeneng
v South African Broadcasting Corporation Soc Ltd and Others
[2024] ZASCA 80
; 2024 JDR 2195 (SCA) para 14.
[3]
Bidvest
Protea Coin Security (Pty) Ltd v Mabena (Bidvest)
[2025] ZASCA 23
; 2025 JDR 1325 (SCA) para 12.
[4]
Ibid para 12.
[5]
Avnit
v First Rand Bank
[2014]
ZASCA 132
; 2014 JDR 2014 (SCA) paras 6 and 7.
[6]
Ibid
para 6.
[7]
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another
[2008]
ZASCA 6
;
[2008] 2 All SA 512
(SCA); 2008(3) SA 371 (SCA) paras 13
and 14.
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