Case Law[2025] ZASCA 102South Africa
MEC for Health: Gauteng Province and Others v Buhle Waste (Pty) Ltd (338/2024 ; 384/2024) [2025] ZASCA 102 (15 July 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
15 July 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative Law – provisions of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 – interdict and in alternative declarator sought under Part A – Part B review application not before court – tender reviewed and set aside in Part A – review most appropriate procedure for setting aside administrative action.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2025
>>
[2025] ZASCA 102
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## MEC for Health: Gauteng Province and Others v Buhle Waste (Pty) Ltd (338/2024 ; 384/2024) [2025] ZASCA 102 (15 July 2025)
MEC for Health: Gauteng Province and Others v Buhle Waste (Pty) Ltd (338/2024 ; 384/2024) [2025] ZASCA 102 (15 July 2025)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
Links to summary
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2025_102.html
sino date 15 July 2025
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 338/2024 & 384/2024
In
the matter between:
THE
MEC FOR HEALTH:
GAUTENG
PROVINCE
FIRST
APPELLANT
HEAD
OF DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH
FOR
THE GAUTENG PROVINCE
SECOND
APPELLANT
CHAIRPERSON
OF THE BID
ADJUDICATION
COMMITTEE
THIRD
APPELLANT
CHAIRPERSON
OF THE BID
EVALUATION
COMMITTEE
FOURTH
APPELLANT
TSHENOLO
WASTE (PTY) LTD
FIFTH
APPELLANT
and
BUHLE
WASTE (PTY) LTD
RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
The MEC for Health: Gauteng Province and Others v Buhle Waste
(Pty) Ltd
(338/2024 & 384/2024)
[2025] ZASCA 102
(15 July
2025)
Coram:
MBATHA and BAARTMAN JJA and STEYN, TOLMAY and VALLY AJJA
Heard:
21 May 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 15 July
2025.
Summary:
Administrative Law – provisions of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
– interdict and in
alternative declarator sought under Part A – Part B review
application not before court –
tender reviewed and set aside in
Part A – review most appropriate procedure for setting aside
administrative action.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Cajee AJ sitting as court of first instance)
1
The appeal is upheld with costs including the costs of two counsel
where
so employed.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The application is
dismissed with costs such to include the costs of two counsel where
so employed.’
JUDGMENT
Baartman
JA (Mbatha JA and Steyn, Tolmay and Vally AJJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
On 30
November 2023, the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg,
Cajee AJ (the high court) seized with an initial urgent
application
in terms of Part A,
[1]
pending a
review in Part B, declared that tender number GT/GDH/060/2022 (the
tender)
[2]
had lapsed on 17
November 2022. It is in issue whether the high court impermissibly
set aside administrative action in an application
for a declarator
and gave equitable relief not applied for. Further whether the
application should have proceeded in terms of the
provisions of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA). The appeal
is with leave of the high court.
[2]
On 15 July 2022, the first appellant, the MEC for Health:
Gauteng
Province (the MEC), advertised an invitation to interested parties to
tender for the removal of medical waste. The closing
date for lodging
tenders was 19 August 2022. All bids had to be valid for 90 days. It
follows that the bid validity period would
expire on 17 November
2022. The respondent, Buhle Waste (Pty) Ltd (Buhle Waste), was among
15 bidders who responded to the invitation.
On 17 November 2022, the
last day of the tender’s validity, the MEC requested an
extension of the bid validity period until
15 February 2023. However,
that email was only sent on 18 November 2022. This is apparent from
an email dated 18 November 2022,
signed by the chief financial
officer on 17 November 2022, from which the following appear:
‘
Dear sir/Madam
1. A possibility exists
that the tender of which particulars…may not be disposed of
before the expiry of the current validity
period, and I shall be glad
to learn whether you are willing to hold your tender validity IN ALL
RESPECT for the further period
indicated. To facilitate the matter,
the reply hereunder may be completed and returned.
2. Should you not be
willing to hold your tender valid for the further period, it will of
course lapse on expiry of the current
validity period and will
therefore be ignored if the tender is not adjudicated within the
period . . . .’
[3]
On 18 November 2022, Buhle Waste, per return email, consented
to the
request. The MEC in its answering affidavit merely noted the above
allegations and alleged the following in respect of the
extension:
‘
The submission of
the bid was open until 19 August 2022. Before the closing date, 15
bids were received. The tender was valid for
90 days from 20 August
2022 to 17 November 2022. A valid extension was requested for 90 days
on or about 16 November 2022 to 15
February 2023. Another valid
extension was further requested for 120 days from 16 February 2023 to
15 June 2023, and the third
valid extension was also requested for a
period of month to month but not exceeding 90 days from 16 June 2023
to 13 September 2023.
A further valid extension was requested from 14
September 2023 to 27 September 2023 and all the parties consented.’
[4]
At the time of request of the above extensions, Buhle
Waste was the
incumbent and continued to render services to the relevant medical
facilities. It continued to do so while the appointment
of a new
service provider in terms of the tender was pending. The urgent
application was launched by Buhle Waste on 9 October 2023
and at that
stage, it was in the dark as to whether the tender had been awarded
or not; hence it sought interdictory relief in
Part A pending review
proceedings in Part B.
[5]
However, prior to the hearing of the application before
the high
court it came to the attention of Buhle Waste that the tender had
been awarded to the fifth appellant, Tshenolo Waste
(Pty) Ltd
(Tshenolo) and one other company. In correspondence, dated 24 October
2023, Tshenolo’s attorney enquired from Buhle
Waste’s
attorneys as follows: ‘In paragraph 3 of Part A of your
client’s Notice of Motion, your client seeks
final relief in
the alternative to the relief sought in paragraph 2 thereof. Please
confirm that this alternative relief, which
is not interdictory
relief, is no longer persisted with. If this relief is persisted
with, our [c]lient would be entitled to the
record of the decision
relevant to that relief if it is capable of being separated from the
remainder of the record of the decision
sought to be reviewed and set
aside’. Buhle Waste did not reply to the correspondence;
instead, it proceeded with the relief
sought.
[6]
At the
hearing, the high court proposed that the parties deal with the
17 November 2022 extension upfront as the court indicated
that
that issue would be dispositive of the entire matter. For its
authority, the high court relied on
City
of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Takubiza Trading &
Projects CC and Others
[3]
where this Court held that once the tender validity had expired,
there was nothing to extend. The MEC and other opposing parties
were
opposed to the proposed cause of action. Hence only the relief sought
in Part A was fully argued. The high court did not deal
with the
interdictory relief but limited itself to the declaratory relief
sought in the alternative.
[7]
The high
court found that Buhle Waste had all the documents necessary to have
challenged the 17 November 2022 extension within the
period
prescribed by PAJA,
[4]
and that
its failure to have instituted review proceedings timeously was
probably because, as the current service provider, it
benefited
financially by serving the Department of Health during the extended
period, which was already close to a year.
[8]
Despite the aforementioned finding the high court granted
the
following declaratory relief:
‘
1. It is declared
that the tender for the “appointment of Service Providers to
Render Competitive Healthcare Waste Management
for the Department of
Health Institutions for a thirty-six months” (“the
tender”) …has lapsed because
no valid extension of the
tender period occurred after the 17
th
of November 2022 and
accordingly that the tender and RFP are of no force and effect.
2. The award of any
tenders to the tenth and fifteenth Respondents and any contracts
entered into by them thereafter by or on behalf
of the first and
second Respondents pursuant to and as a result of the invalid
extension of the tender periods are declared invalid
and set aside.
3. The orders in
paragraph 1 and 2 above are suspended for six months to allow for the
re-advertisement of the tender and for the
appointment of suitable
service providers to render comprehensive healthcare waste management
for the Department of Health Institutions.
4. No order as to costs
is made.’
[9]
The following two issues arise in the appeal. First,
whether the high
court followed the correct procedure in setting aside the
administrative action. Second, whether the high court
granted relief
that was not sought by Buhle Waste.
[10]
The
question on whether the high court followed the correct procedure in
setting aside the administrative action, if found to be
correct,
would be dispositive of this appeal. I turn to that enquiry. This
Court in
Millennium
Waste Management (Pty) Ltd v Chairperson of the Tender Board: Limpopo
Province and Others
held that administrative action should ordinarily be dealt with
through the provisions of PAJA.
[5]
Buhle Waste avoided reliance on the provisions of PAJA by seeking
declaratory relief in circumstances where it could have timeously
sought a review of the 17 November 2022 decision to extend the bid
validity period and obtain interdictory, alternatively declaratory
and just and equitable relief.
[6]
It did so, opportunistically, so as to continue servicing the
relevant institutions during the extended period. In seeking the
declaratory relief, Buhle Waste did not have to comply with the
timeframes as required in terms of PAJA.
[7]
It is apparent that the respondent would have had to bring a
condonation application if it had proceeded in terms of PAJA. In
Minister
of Health and Another NO v New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Ltd and
Others (Treatment Action Campaign and Another as amici
curiae),
the Constitutional Court held as follows:
‘
A litigant cannot
avoid the provisions of PAJA by going behind it, and seeking to rely
on s 33(1) of the Constitution or the
common law. That would
defeat the purpose of the Constitution in requiring the rights
contained in s 33 to be given effect to by
means of national
legislation.’
[8]
[11]
The facts
of this matter underscore the danger of avoiding the provisions of
PAJA. Tshenolo timeously indicated that it intended
to exercise its
rights in terms of PAJA. It awaited the delivery of the record in
terms of Rule 53 before filing a comprehensive
answer to the review
application.
[9]
It was denied
that right. Counsel for the fifth appellant submitted that:
‘
Buhle Waste’s
pleaded case was that the bid validity survived past the year 2022
and was extended from time to time until
October 2023. Buhle Waste
did not rely on the validity period having lapsed on 17 November
2022. Despite this, the High Court granted
an order declaring that
the tender validity period lapsed “because no valid extension
of the tender period occurred after
the 17
th
of November
2022”.
This is not the case which the appellants were called
upon to answer and could not have answered it without the benefit of
that
portion of the record of the tender process relevant to the
extension of the tender validity period
.’ (My emphasis.)
[12]
In addition, I find that Buhle Waste avoided seeking condonation for
bringing
the review application in terms of PAJA, which prejudiced
the other parties to the application. It compromised the public
interest
in the finality of administrative action and trampled on the
rights of the other parties affected by the tender award. This was
impermissible. The PAJA was enacted in response to s 33 of the
Constitution as the mechanism to guarantee administrative action
that
is lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair. After the hearing, in
correspondence dated 5 June 2025, Buhle Waste filed further
documents
before this Court. Included therein are the respondent’s
Practice Note, dated 19 October 2023, the respondent’s
amended
Practice Note, dated 19 October 2023, the parties’ Joint
Practice Note dated 14 November 2023, and the respondent’s
Practice Note in the Application for Leave to Appeal, dated 19
October 2023. The purpose for supplementing its papers was to convey
to this Court that in Part A, it had also sought alternative relief
in the form of a declaratory order. This occurred despite Tshenolo
having placed on record that it would not file an answering affidavit
without being furnished with a Rule 53 record. Furthermore,
Tshenolo
emphasised, in its correspondence of 24 October 2023 to Buhle Waste
that the only issue set down for hearing before the
high court would
be in relation to the interdictory relief.
[13]
Despite the assurance given to Tshenolo that it would be afforded an
opportunity
to respond to Part B once the Rule 53 record became
available, the matter was disposed of before that eventuality. This
was impermissible
for three reasons: First, Buhle Waste did not
allege that the tender had expired on 17 November 2022; instead, its
pleaded case
was that it had timeously extended its tender ‘as
required’ but was unaware whether ‘each tender extension
was
done lawfully and/or competently’. It therefore, reserved
its right to challenge any extension ‘where the Rule 53 record
demonstrates’ that an extension was not validly done. Second,
this was not the case the appellants were called upon to meet
in
terms of Part A of the relief sought. They had also pointed out that
in the event that the high court proceeded with the declaratory
relief, they would suffer prejudice. Third, the letter from the
Department calling for bidders to grant the extension cautioned
as
follows: ‘Should you not be willing to hold your tender valid
for the further period, it will of course lapse on expiry
of the
current validity period and will therefore be ignored if the tender
is not adjudicated within the period….’
[14]
This Court
in
Aventino
Ecotroopers Joint Venture and Others v The MEC for the Department of
Roads and Transport, Gauteng Province and Others
[10]
held that ‘the exclusionary stipulation’ permitted the
relevant Department to exclude bids of bidders who either fail
to
respond or refuse to hold their bids valid for the requested extended
period, and that whoever was unhappy with that condition,
could have
taken the department on review. The validity of the extensions arose
only in Part B of the application and not in the
interdictory relief.
It is common cause that the record was not available at the time of
the hearing, therefore Part B of the application
was not ripe for the
hearing.
[15]
A court is
limited to the case it is called upon to determine. It was
impermissible for the high court to raise the 17 November
2022
extension and to pronounce on it in circumstances where the issue had
not been fully canvassed.
[11]
In this matter, it caused prejudice to all the appellants who were
denied the opportunity to plead their version as amplified by
the
Rule 53 record. In support of this finding, I reiterate what this
Court stated in
Fisher
and
Another v Ramahlele
and
Others
(
Ramahlele
):
[12]
‘
Turning then to
the nature of civil litigation in our adversarial system, it is for
the parties, either in the pleadings or affidavits
(which serve the
function of both pleadings and evidence), to set out and define the
nature of their dispute, and it is for the
court to adjudicate upon
those issues. That is so even where the dispute involves an issue
pertaining to basic human rights guaranteed
by our Constitution, for
“it is impermissible for a party to rely on a constitutional
complaint that was not pleaded”.
There are cases where the
parties may expand those issues by the way in which they conduct the
proceedings. There may also be instances
where the court may
mero
motu
raise a question of law that emerges fully from the evidence
and is necessary for the decision of the case. That is subject to the
proviso that no prejudice will be caused to any party by its being
decided. Beyond that it is for the parties to identify the dispute
and for the court to determine that dispute and that dispute alone.’
[16]
Furthermore,
in
Ramahlele
this Court, stated that there is an exception to the general rule. It
stated as follows:
‘
A court may
sometimes suggest a line of argument or an approach to a case that
has not previously occurred to the parties. However,
it is then for
the parties to determine whether they wish to adopt the new point.
They may choose not to do so because of its implications
for the
further conduct of the proceedings, such as an adjournment or the
need to amend pleadings or call additional evidence.
They may feel
that their case is sufficiently strong as it stands to require no
supplementation. They may simply wish the issues
already identified
to be determined because they are relevant to future matters and the
relationship between the parties.
That
is for them to decide and not the court. If they wish to stand by the
issues they have formulated, the court may not raise
new ones or
compel them to deal with matters other than those they have
formulated in the pleadings or affidavits
.’
[13]
(footnotes omitted.) (Own emphasis.)
[17]
The high
court also misdirected itself by going beyond the requirements for a
declaratory order, if met, by setting aside the award
of the tender.
When the court makes a declaratory order, it acts in terms of s
21(1)
(c)
of the Superior Courts Act.
[14]
The jurisdictional facts for the declaratory order to be established
are whether the applicant has an interest in an existing,
future or
contingent right or obligation. In
United
Manganese of Kalahari (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner of the South
African Revenue Service and four other cases
,
[15]
the Constitutional Court confirmed that a court exercises a
discretion when it grants or refuses declaratory relief.
[18]
In the exercise of its discretion, the high court should have
considered the importance of the Rule 53 record.
In
Turnball-Jackson
v Hibiscus Coast Municipality
and Others
, the
Constitutional Court held as follows:
‘
Undeniably, a rule
53 record is an invaluable tool in the review process. It may help:
shed light on what happened and why; give
a lie to unfounded
ex
post facto
(after the fact) justification of the decision under review; in the
substantiation of as yet not fully substantiated grounds of
review;
in giving support to the decision-maker’s stance; and in the
performance of the reviewing court’s function….’
[16]
[19]
Buhle Waste could forgo its right to rely on the Rule 53 record but
could not make that decision for the other
parties to the litigation.
The high court failed in the exercise of its discretion to have
regard to the importance of the Rule
53 record and Tshenolo’s
right of access to the relevant part of the record before it was
required to file its answering
affidavit. As the issues relevant to
the decision involved disputed factual issues and legal questions,
declaratory relief was
inappropriate.
[20]
In the circumstances of this matter, I find that the high court erred
in setting aside administrative action through
a declarator. It was
the wrong procedure, and that is dispositive of this matter. It is
therefore unnecessary to deal with the
second issue referred to
above. The relief granted by the high court exceeded that which was
prayed for and affected Tshenolo and
other parties directly by
depriving them of the opportunity to file comprehensive answering
affidavits to the review application.
[21]
In the result, I grant the following order:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs including the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
The application is
dismissed with costs such to include the costs of two counsel where
so employed.’
E
BAARTMAN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
the first to fourth appellants: W M Mokhare SC with M H Mhambi
Instructed
by:
Motsoeneng Bill Attorneys Inc, Sandton
Honey Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
the fifth appellant:
K Tsatsawane
SC
Instructed
by:
Weavind & Weavind Attorneys, Pretoria
MM Hattingh Attorneys
Inc, Bloemfontein
For the
respondent:
K Premhid with C Juries and P Vabaza
Instructed
by:
Fairbridges Wertheim Becker Attorneys, Sandton
Phatshoane Henney
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
‘ . . . Interdicting and suspending the first respondent, the
Department of Health, from taking any further steps in respect
of
the tender of the “Appointment of Service Providers to Render
Comprehensive Healthcare Waste Management for the Department
of
Health Institutions for a Period of Thirty-Six Months with the
Request for Proposal (RFP) . . . pending the review application
to
be heard in Part B of these proceedings….
3.
In the alternative to prayer 2, above, and conditionally, declaring
that the tender . . .has
lapsed or been cancelled whether by
effluxion of time or no compliant tenderer being identified by the
Department to potentially
award the tender or because no valid
extension of the tender has occurred, and accordingly that the
tender and RFP is of no force
and effect . . . .’
[2]
For the ‘appointment of Service Providers to render
Comprehensive Waste Management for the Department of Health
Institutions
for a period of thirty-six months’ (the tender)
with Request for proposal number GT/GDH/060/2022’.
[3]
City of
Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Takubiza Trading &
Projects CC and Others
[2022] ZASCA 82; 2023 (1) SA 44 (SCA).
[4]
Section 9 of PAJA provides:
‘
Variation
of time
(1)
The period of-
(a)
90 days referred to in section 5 may be reduced; or
(b)
90 days or 180 days referred to in sections 5 and 7 may be extended
for a fixed period,
by
agreement between the parties or, failing such agreement, by a court
or tribunal on application by the person or administrator
concerned…
.’
[5]
Millennium
Waste Management (Pty) Ltd v Chairperson of the Tender Board:
Limpopo Province and Others
[2007]
ZASCA 165
; [2007] SCA 165 (RSA); [2008] 2 All SA 145; 2008 (2) SA
481; 2008 (5) BCLR 508; 2008 (2) SA 481 (SCA).
[6]
Section 8 of PAJA.
[7]
Sections 7(1) and 9 of PAJA.
[8]
Minister
of Health and Another NO v New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Ltd and
Others (Treatment Action Campaign and Another as amici
curiae)
2006 (2) SA 311
(CC);
2006 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) para 96.
[9]
Mamadi
and Another v Premier of Limpopo Province and Others
[2022] ZACC 26
;
2023 (6) BCLR 733
(CC);
2024 (1) SA 1
(CC) para 39.
‘
.
. . The advantages to an applicant are that once the record and the
reasons are obtained, the applicant may supplement their
founding
affidavit, and the respondent is in a position to file a
comprehensive answer. . .’.
[10]
Aventino
Ecotroopers Joint Venture and Others v The MEC for the Department of
Roads and Transport, Gauteng Province and Others
[2025] ZASCA 32
paras 11-14.
[11]
Minister
of Safety and Security v Slabbert
[2009]
ZASCA
163;
[2010] 2 All SA 474
(SCA) para 11: ‘The purpose of the
pleadings is to define the issues for the other party and the court.
A party has a duty
to allege in the pleadings the material facts
upon which it relies. It is impermissible for a plaintiff to plead a
particular
case and seek to establish a different case at the trial.
It is equally not permissible for the trial court to have recourse
to issues falling outside the pleadings when deciding a case.’
[12]
Fisher
and Another v Ramahlele
and
Others
[2014] ZASCA 88
;
2014 (4) SA 614
(SCA);
[2014] 3 All SA 395
(SCA)
(
Ramahlele
)
paras 13-14.
[13]
Ibid para 14.
[14]
The
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[15]
United
Manganese of Kalahari (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner of the South
African Revenue Services and four other cases
[2025] ZACC2;
2025 (5) BCLR 530
(CC) para 37.
[16]
Turnball-Jackson
v Hibiscus Coast Municipality and Others
[2014] ZACC 24
;
2014; 2014 (6) SA 592
(CC);
2014 (11) BCLR 1310
(CC)
para 37.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
MEC of Health and Social Development of the Gauteng Provincial Government v M (272/2022) [2024] ZASCA 21 (5 March 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 21Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa99% similar
MEC for Health, Gauteng Provincial Government v AAS obo CMMS (401/2023) [2025] ZASCA 91; 2025 (6) SA 152 (SCA) (20 June 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 91Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
SN obo ON v MEC for Health: Eastern Cape (277/2023) [2025] ZASCA 36 (2 April 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 36Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
MEC for Health Eastern Cape v A.S obo S.S (842/2023) [2025] ZASCA 2 (15 January 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 2Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
NSS obo AS v MEC for Health, Eastern Cape Province (017/22) [2023] ZASCA 41; 2023 (6) SA 408 (SCA) (31 March 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 41Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar