Case Law[2025] ZASCA 83South Africa
Maximum Profit Recovery (Pty) Ltd v Naledi Local Municipality and Others (340/2024) [2025] ZASCA 83 (10 June 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
15 September 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Section 16(2)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the Superior Courts Act) – whether in the interest of justice to hear moot appeal – factors to be considered – s 16(2)(a)(ii) of the Superior Courts Act – no exceptional circumstances present to justify hearing of appeal to determine question of costs only – appeal dismissed for mootness.
Judgment
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## Maximum Profit Recovery (Pty) Ltd v Naledi Local Municipality and Others (340/2024) [2025] ZASCA 83 (10 June 2025)
Maximum Profit Recovery (Pty) Ltd v Naledi Local Municipality and Others (340/2024) [2025] ZASCA 83 (10 June 2025)
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sino date 10 June 2025
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 340/2024
In
the matter between:
MAXIMUM
PROFIT RECOVERY (PTY)
LTD
APPELLANT
and
NALEDI
LOCAL
MUNICIPALITY
FIRST RESPONDENT
TRIPLE
M ADVISORY SERVICES (PTY) LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
SEGAPO
MODISENYANE
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Maximum Profit Recovery
(Pty) Ltd v Naledi Local Municipality & Others
(340/2024)
[2025] ZASCA 83
(10 June 2025)
Coram:
HUGHES, KATHREE-SETILOANE, SMITH and KEIGHTLEY JJA and HENNEY AJA
Heard
:
21 May 2025
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically to 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 June 2025.
Summary:
Section 16(2)(
a
)(i) of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
(the
Superior Courts Act) – whether
in the interest of justice
to hear moot appeal – factors to be considered –
s 16(2)(
a
)(ii) of the
Superior Courts Act – no
exceptional
circumstances present to justify hearing of appeal to
determine question of costs only – appeal dismissed for
mootness.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: North West
Division
of the High Court, Mahikeng, (Djaje AJP sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is dismissed.
2
The parties shall bear their own costs.
JUDGMENT
Smith
JA (Hughes, Kathree-Setiloane and Keightley JJA and Henney AJA
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This appeal concerns the validity of a contract for the provision of
Value Added Tax (VAT) recovery
services, which the first respondent,
the Naledi Local Municipality (the municipality), awarded to the
second respondent, Triple
M Advisory Services (Pty) Ltd (Triple M),
in April 2022. The contract was awarded for a period of three years,
commencing on 5
April 2022 and terminating on 4 April 2025.
[2]
On 22 April 2022, the appellant, Maximum Profit Recovery Services
(Pty) Ltd (Maximum Profit),
launched an application in the North West
Division of the High Court, Mahikeng (the high court), for an order
reviewing and setting
aside the contract. It contended that the
tender procedure adopted by the municipality in awarding the impugned
contract to Triple
M was unfair, untransparent and uncompetitive. The
contention thus advanced is that the award, consequently, did not
comply with
the prescripts of s 217 of the Constitution, the
Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000 (the PPPFA)
or the municipality’s
Supply Chain Management Regulations.
[3]
The high court (per Djaje J), in its judgment delivered on 15
September 2023, found that Maximum
Profit had failed to establish
that the award was reviewable on any of the contended grounds. It
consequently dismissed the application
with costs. Maximum Profit
appeals against that judgment with the leave of the high court.
[4]
Both Maximum Profit and Triple M are duly registered companies which
specialise in financial advice
and revenue recovery services. Triple
M was not involved in either the proceedings before the high court or
in this appeal. The
municipality is a local municipality, established
in terms of the
Local Government: Municipal Structures Act 117 of
1998
. The third respondent, Mr Modisenyane Segapo (Mr Segapo), is
cited in his official capacity as the municipality’s municipal
manager. I refer to the municipality and Mr Segapo collectively as
the respondents, where the context so requires.
[5]
The following issues require consideration:
(a)
Whether the appeal has become moot because the impugned contract had
terminated on 4 April 2025;
(b)
If so, whether the appeal should nevertheless be heard in the
interests of justice; and
(c)
If the question in (b) is answered in the affirmative, then was the
procurement procedure followed
by the municipality in awarding the
contract to Triple M fair, transparent and competitive.
The
facts
[6]
The circumstances which resulted in the award of the contract to
Triple M are briefly as follows.
On 23 June 2021, the municipality
published a tender notice inviting service providers to submit bids
for appointment to a panel
that would provide diverse financial
services, including VAT reviews and auditing services, to the
municipality for a period of
three years. By the closing date, namely
7 July 2021, sixteen bids had been submitted, including those of
Maximum Profit and Triple
M.
[7]
All the bidders were notified on 6 September 2021 that their bids had
been successful and they
were required to accept their appointments
in writing. Only Maximum Profit, Triple M and seven other bidders
accepted their appointments.
[8]
On 23 March 2022, the municipality invited four of the panellists
(including Triple M) to quote
for VAT recovery services. It is common
cause that Maximum Profit was not invited to submit a quotation, nor
was it informed of
the municipality’s intention to appoint one
of the panellists to render those services exclusively.
[9]
The letter inviting Triple M to submit proposals stipulated the
applicable rate on which its quotation
should be based. As stated
earlier, the municipality subsequently awarded the contract to Triple
M for a period of three years,
which terminated on 4 April 2025.
[10]
Although Maximum Profit launched the application because it was
aggrieved by the manner in which Triple M
was appointed to render the
VAT advisory services, its notice of motion was ambiguous regarding
the decision it sought to impugn.
The order sought in its notice of
motion was for the review and setting aside of ‘the decision to
award Tender NLM2021-009A:
Provision of Panel for the Financial
Services for 3 years (‘the tender’) to the second
respondent [Triple M].’
The municipality was, understandably,
under the impression that the attack was directed at its initial
decision to appoint the
panel and only filed the
rule 53
record
pertaining to that decision.
[11]
Consequently, the
rule 53
record in respect of the decision to
appoint Triple M for the provision of VAT recovery services was not
before the high court,
and nor is it before this Court. I explain the
significance of this omission below.
[12]
On 16 April 2025, the respondents’ attorneys, being of the view
that the appeal had become moot, wrote
to Maximum Profit’s
attorneys proposing that they withdraw the appeal and tender costs.
They explained that the offer was
made in the belief that they bore
the duty, where an appeal has become moot, to make a sensible
settlement proposal to contribute
to the ‘efficient use of
judicial resources’.
[13]
Maximum Profit’s attorneys replied to that letter on 16 May
2025, taking issue with the assertion that
the appeal had become
moot. Its view was that because the contract had been extended beyond
the expiry date, the dispute between
the parties remained extant.
Consequently, they contended that the relief sought would have
practical effect.
The
parties’ submissions
[14]
In its founding papers, Maximum Profit asserted that the tender
documents envisaged that the municipality
would invite all the
panellists to submit quotations as and when it required financial
advisory services. This would have ensured
that a service provider
was appointed pursuant to a fair, transparent and competitive
procurement process.
[15]
The municipality’s decision to invite only four panellists to
submit proposals, without allowing others
the same opportunity, was
consequently unfair, irregular and contrary to the provisions of the
s 217 of the Constitution, the PPPFA
and the municipality’s
Supply Chain Management Regulations. This rendered the process
procedurally unfair and reviewable
under s 6(2)(
c
)
[1]
of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
.
[16]
Maximum Profit further submitted that the municipality committed a
material procedural irregularity by prescribing
the rate on which
Triple M’s quotation should be based. The award of the contract
to Triple M, so argued Maximum Profit,
was accordingly unlawful,
invalid and fell to be reviewed and set aside.
[17]
In argument before us, counsel for Maximum Profit conceded that the
issue whether the contract had been extended
was not properly before
us. He submitted, however, that it is nevertheless in the interest of
justice that the appeal should be
heard as there are conflicting
judgments
[2]
on the issue of whether an organ of state, which has appointed a
panel of service providers pursuant to a public procurement process,
is entitled or has the discretion, to invite only certain members of
the panel to submit quotations for specific services.
[18]
More importantly, so submitted Maximum Profit, it is in the interests
of justice for this Court to determine
the appeal on the basis, which
is common cause, that the municipality had readvertised the tender,
and has again appointed a panel
of service providers, which include
Triple M and Maximum Profit. Absent guidance from this Court, Maximum
Profit asserts, the respondents
will act on the view, endorsed by the
high court, that they have a discretion to invite only selected
panellists to submit quotations
without following due process. The
point made was that the respondents were likely, once again, to
commit the same irregularity.
For this submission, Maximum Profit
relied on the judgment of the Western Cape High Court (per Rogers J)
in
WWF
South Africa v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and
Another
[3]
(
WWF
South Africa
).
In that matter, the applicant challenged the determination of the
total allowable catch for the 2017/18 season under the
Marine Living
Resources Act 18 of 1998
. The respondents argued that the matter had
become moot because the 2017/18 season had already closed. Rogers J,
however, found
that the order sought by the applicant would have
practical effect because ‘a previous year’s determination
may be
relevant to the succeeding year’s determination.’
[4]
[19]
In addition, Maximum Profit argued that monies paid to Triple M
pursuant to an invalid contract may constitute
irregular or
unauthorised spending in terms of the Local Government: Municipal
Finance Management Act 56 of 2003 (the Municipal
Finance Management
Act). An order by this Court declaring the contract invalid would
oblige Triple M to repay all monies paid to
it by the municipality.
The order sought in its notice of motion would consequently also have
practical effect in this regard.
[20]
The respondents took issue with those contentions and asserted that
the appeal has been rendered moot by
the fact that the contract
awarded to Triple M had expired on 4 April 2025. They argued that any
order granted by this Court will
therefore have no practical effect.
[21]
The respondents further argued that the process the municipality
followed in appointing Triple M, in any
event, complied with the
applicable legislation and its own Supply Chain Management
Regulations. The municipal regulations sanction
the two-stage bidding
process, which resulted in Triple M’s appointment. The
municipality was entitled, in the first stage,
to invite and consider
proposals on ‘conceptual design’ and performance
specifications. It was only during the second
stage that it was
required to consider final technical proposals and priced bids.
[22]
While in their answering affidavit the respondents contended that the
municipality had a discretion to invite
only certain members of the
panel to submit quotations, in argument before us, their counsel
conceded that the exclusion of the
other panellists from that process
was irregular. Counsel argued, however, that the irregularity was not
material in the context
of the award, particularly because the tender
was based on a two-stage bidding process.
Analysis
and discussion
[23]
I will deal first with the mootness point, as it may well be
dispositive of the appeal. In my view, the appeal
is self-evidently
moot because the impugned contract terminated on 4 April 2025.
Maximum Profit conceded this. The question which
then remains for
consideration is whether this Court should, nevertheless, hear the
appeal in the interests of justice.
[24]
Section 16(2)(
a
)(i)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the
Superior Courts Act)
provides
that where issues, which fall for decision in an appeal, are
of such a nature that the order sought will have no practical effect
or result, the court hearing the appeal may dismiss it on this ground
alone. In
Normandien
Farms (Pty) Ltd v South African Agency for Promotion of Petroleum
Exploration and Exploitation SOC Ltd and Others
[5]
,
the Constitutional Court held that a court of appeal, when exercising
its discretion, in the interests of justice, to hear an
appeal that
has become moot, must have regard, among others, to the following
factors: whether the order sought will have any practical
effect for
the parties or others; the importance of the matter; the complexity
of the issues; the fullness or otherwise of arguments
advanced; and
the need to resolve conflicting judgments.
[25]
I find that none of these factors are present in this appeal. First,
it is not the function of courts to
provide legal advice to
litigants. Maximum Profit’s reliance on
WWF South Africa
for
the contention that the order sought will have practical effect
because a pronouncement by this Court will provide guidance
to the
municipality in respect of future awards, is misplaced.
[26]
WWF
South Africa
is distinguishable on the facts. In that matter Rogers J found that
the case raised ‘important questions about alleged
non-compliance
by the DDG [Deputy Director General] with binding
constitutional and statutory objectives and principles in determining
the TAC
[total allowable catch] of a highly depleted resource.’
[6]
The present case is fact specific and does not implicate any
constitutional issues or the rule of law.
[27]
Second, the public procurement of goods and services is extensively
regulated by the Constitution, the PPPFA
and – in this case –
also by the municipality’s own Supply Chain Management
Regulations. Moreover, our courts
have over the years carefully
considered and pronounced on almost every facet of procurement law.
The applicable legal principles
are thus well established. I
therefore find that it will not serve any practical purpose for this
Court to pronounce on issues
that will effectively only confirm
established jurisprudence.
[28]
Third, the existence of conflicting judgments on a disputed issue is
but one of the factors a court must
consider in deciding whether it
is in the interests of justice to hear a moot appeal.
[7]
I am, however, mindful of the Constitutional Court’s dictum in
Normandien
Farms
that ‘[w]here there are two conflicting judgments by different
courts, especially where an appeal court’s outcome has
binding
implications for future matters, it weighs in favour of entertaining
a moot matter’.
[8]
[29]
In this appeal there are compelling reasons why that consideration
must yield to other factors, which overwhelmingly
militate against
the appeal being heard. These are that although the tender was
readvertised and a new panel has been appointed
for a period of three
years, the municipality has conceded, rightly so, that it does not
have the discretion to invite only certain
panel members to quote for
specific services. More importantly, the full rule 53 record
pertaining to the impugned decision is
not before us and we do not
know why, or by what process, the four panellists were selected to
submit quotations or how Triple
M ultimately was selected. This means
that there is no proper factual basis to enable this Court to
pronounce authoritatively on
the disputed issue.
[30]
Fourth, there is the question whether the setting aside of the
contract would have financial consequences
for Triple M and the
municipality because, Maximum Profit submitted, the contract payments
would then be categorised as unauthorised
and wasteful expenditure
under the provisions of the Municipal Finance Management Act. Maximum
Profit contended that this engaged
this Court’s constitutional
powers to grant just and equitable relief in appropriate
circumstances and was an additional
reason why the appeal should be
considered. This issue was not, however, properly canvassed in this
appeal. It was not raised in
the founding papers, nor were any facts
alleged that would enable this Court to make any sensible
determination on what just and
equitable relief should follow in the
event of the appeal being heard.
[31]
In making these findings, I am fortified by this Court’s
judgment in
Laser
Transport Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Elliot Mobility (Pty) Ltd and
Another
.
[9]
In that matter, this Court dismissed an appeal on a point of mootness
although there were still three months of the contract period
left.
For the abovementioned reasons, I find that the appeal is moot and
that there are no compelling circumstances which require
the matter
to be heard in the interests of justice.
Costs
and order
[32]
Regarding the issue of costs, I am mindful of the injunction in s
16(2)(
a
)(ii) of the
Superior Courts Act, which
provides that
‘[s]ave under exceptional circumstances, the question of
whether the decision would have no practical effect
or result is to
be determined without reference to any consideration of costs.’
For the reasons stated above, I find that
there are no such
exceptional circumstances present in this matter.
[33]
Maximum Profit was timeously alerted to the fact that the respondents
would raise the issue of mootness at
the hearing of the appeal. Apart
from the letter of 16 April 2025, the respondents had raised the
issue squarely in their heads
of argument, filed in September 2024.
Maximum Profit nonetheless persisted with the appeal, thus assuming
the risk of an adverse
costs order in the event of the appeal being
dismissed for mootness.
[34]
The respondents are, however, not blameless. They conceded that it
was irregular for the municipality to
invite only four of the
panellists to submit quotations. Therefore, although they argued that
the irregularity was not material
and did not vitiate the award of
the contact to Triple M, Maximum Profit’s challenge was not
without merit. If that concession
had been made earlier, the
proceedings may well have taken a different course. The appropriate
order would therefore be for the
parties to bear their own costs.
[35]
In the result I make the following order:
1
The appeal is dismissed.
2
The parties shall bear their own costs.
J E SMITH
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
APJ
Els SC and AA Basson
Instructed
by
Albert
Hibbert Attorneys, Pretoria
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
the 1
st
& 3
rd
respondents:
T
Moretlwe and B Nthambeleni
Instructed
by:
Modiboa
Attorneys, Mahikeng
McIntyre
Van der Post Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Section 6(2)(
c
)
of PAJA provides that a court has the power to judicially review an
administrative action if the action was procedurally unfair.
[2]
On
23 May 2025 the Kwazulu-Natal High Court, Durban handed down
judgement in
Maximum
Profit Recovery (Pty) Ltd v Umkhanyakude Distrcit Municipality and
Another
(D12061/2024)
[2025] ZAKZDHC 32 (23 May 2025), where Maximum Profit also
challenged an award by the municipality to a competitor
in
substantially similar circumstances. In that matter, the
municipality also contended that it had a discretion to invite only
certain members of a panel to submit quotations. The high court
reviewed and set aside the impugned contract based on its finding
that the procedure adopted by the municipality did not accord with
the provisions of s 217 of the Constitution and the PPPFA.
[3]
WWF
South Africa v Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries and
Another
[2018]
ZAWCHC 127; [2018] 4 All SA 889 (WCC); 2019 (2) SA 403 (WCC).
[4]
Ibid para 71.
[5]
Normandien
Farms (Pty) Ltd v South African Agency for Promotion of Petroleum
Exploration and Exploitation SOC Ltd and Another
[2020]
ZACC 5
;
2020 (6) BCLR 748
(CC);
2020
(4) SA 409
(CC) para 50.
[6]
Ibid para 78.
[7]
Normandien
Farms
fn 2 para 50.
[8]
Ibid para 49.
[9]
Laser
Transport Group (Pty) Ltd and Another v Elliot Mobility (Pty) Ltd
(835/2018)
[2019]
ZASCA 140
(1 October 2019).
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