Case Law[2024] ZASCA 88South Africa
Tyte Security Services CC v Western Cape Provincial Government and Others (479/2024) [2024] ZASCA 88; 2024 (6) SA 175 (SCA) (7 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
7 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Section 18 of Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 – leave to execute pending appeal – requirements of exceptional circumstances and irreparable harm considered.
Judgment
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## Tyte Security Services CC v Western Cape Provincial Government and Others (479/2024) [2024] ZASCA 88; 2024 (6) SA 175 (SCA) (7 June 2024)
Tyte Security Services CC v Western Cape Provincial Government and Others (479/2024) [2024] ZASCA 88; 2024 (6) SA 175 (SCA) (7 June 2024)
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sino date 7 June 2024
FLYNOTES:
CIVIL PROCEDURE – Appeal –
Execution
of order pending appeal
–
Exceptional
circumstances – Necessary prerequisite for exercise of
court’s discretion – Irreparable harm
– Any
success by appellant in contemplated appeal would be setting aside
of award – Would not result in substitution
of appellant as
successful tenderer – Prejudice appellant seeks to rely upon
is more ephemeral than real – Appeal
dismissed –
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
s 18.
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 479/2024
In the matter between:
TYTE SECURITY SERVICES
CC
APPELLANT
and
WESTERN CAPE
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
FIRST RESPONDENT
MEC FOR THE DEPARTMENT
OF INFRASTRUCTURE,
WESTERN CAPE
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE DEPARTMENT OF
INFRASTRUCTURE,
WESTERN CAPE
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT
THIRD RESPONDENT
ROYAL SECURITY CC
FOURTH RESPONDENT
SS SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
t/a SEAL SECURITY
FIFTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Tyte
Security Services CC v Western Cape Provincial Government and Others
(Case no 479/2024)
[2024] ZASCA 88
(7 June 2024)
Coram:
PONNAN, MAKGOKA, MABINDLA-BOQWANA and GOOSEN JJA
and COPPIN AJA
Heard
:
27 May 2024
Delivered
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email,
publication on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and release to SAFLII. The date for hand
down is deemed to be 7 June 2024 at
11h00.
Summary:
Section 18 of
Superior Courts Act 10 of
2013
– leave to execute pending appeal – requirements of
exceptional circumstances and irreparable harm considered.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Western Cape Division of the High
Court, Cape Town (Gamble and Wille JJ, sitting as court of first
instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel where
so employed.
JUDGMENT
Ponnan JA (Makgoka,
Mabindla-Boqwana and Goosen JJA and Coppin AJA concurring):
[1]
I
observed in
Manong
v Minister of Public Works
that
‘State tenders have become fertile ground for litigation’.
[1]
A decade and a half later, this yet again is one such matter, having
occupied the attention of our courts for some four years.
A challenge
to a previous award for the same services came before the Western
Cape High Court, Cape Town (the high court)
in 2001. Binns-Ward J
commenced his unreported decision in that matter (
Red
Ant Security Relocation and Eviction Services (Pty) Ltd v The
Department of Human Settlements (Western Cape)
(
Red
Ant
))
with a reference to Cachalia and Kohn that: ‘Tendering has
become a verifiably “messy business” and the courts
are
increasingly drawn into the quagmire in review proceedings. . .’.
[2]
[2]
The first
respondent, the Western Cape Provincial Government (the Provincial
Government), contracts with security companies for
the provision of
essential security services in respect of property belonging to it,
which is especially vulnerable to unlawful
occupation and vandalism.
Each contract typically endures for two years. On 25 March 2021, the
tender for the services in question
was first awarded jointly to the
appellant, Tyte Security Services CC (Tyte), and Seal Security
(Seal). The award of the contract
(the first contract)
followed upon a state procurement tender process.
[3]
Red Ant
Security Relocation and Eviction Services (Pty) Ltd, an unsuccessful
tenderer, applied to the high court to review and set
aside the
decision to award the first contract jointly to Seal and Tyte. The
application succeeded before Binns-Ward J, who,
inter
alia
:
(i) declared the award of the first contract invalid and set it
aside; (ii) suspended the declaration of invalidity, pending the
conclusion of an expedited process
de
novo
by
the Provincial Government to lawfully procure the services, the
subject of the tender; and, (iii) directed the Provincial Government
to ensure that the process is completed within six months or such
further period as may be permitted by the court on application
to it.
[4]
On 21 April
2021, the Provincial Government invited fresh bids for a new 24-month
contract. On 31 May 2023, it awarded the tender
to – and
concluded a contract to commence immediately (the second contract)
with – the fourth respondent, Royal Security
CC (Royal). On 15
June 2023, Seal brought an urgent application for an order that
pending the final determination of a review application
(the review
application), the Provincial Government be interdicted from
implementing or giving effect to its decision to award
the tender to
Royal. By way of a counter application, Tyte also sought the review
and setting aside of the award. On 27 June 2023,
Francis J, in
issuing directions in respect of the further conduct of the review
application, ordered that Seal and Tyte would
continue to render
services in terms of the first contract, pending the outcome of the
review application.
[5]
The review
application was heard by Gamble et Wille JJ from 28 to 30 November
2023. Separate judgments were delivered on 21 February
2024, with
Gamble J concurring, for somewhat different reasons, in the order
proposed by Wille J. The review application by Tyte
and Seal was
dismissed and the award of the tender to Royal upheld. The following
order issued (the main order):
‘
1.
The applicant’s [Tyte’s] application and the
twenty-second respondent’s
[Seal’s] counter
application for the judicial review and setting aside the award by
the first to
ninth respondents of Tender
[T002/23] to the tenth respondent [Royal] are dismissed.
2.
The tenth respondent shall take over and commence the operations
required under
the
tender contract within one calendar month of the date of this order.
3.
The applicant and the twenty-second respondent shall hand over such
operations
to the tenth
respondent and do everything necessary to enable the tenth respondent
to
commence
with the required security services within the stipulated timeframe.
4.
The applicant shall pay the tenth respondent’s costs of the
review application
(including the costs of two counsel where
retained).
5.
The twenty-second respondent shall pay the tenth respondent’s
costs of
and incidental to the counter application
(including the costs of two counsel where retained).
6.
The applicant shall pay the tenth respondent’s costs of the
interdict application
brought under case number
9698/2023.
7.
There shall be no further orders regarding costs.’
[6]
On 28
February 2024, Tyte applied for leave to appeal the main order. On 7
March 2024, Royal applied urgently in terms of
s 18(1)
, read with s
18(3), of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the Act) (the s 18
application), for an order in the following terms:
‘
.
. .
2.
That paragraphs 1 to 3 of the order [the main order] handed down by
this Court
on 21 February 2024 in the main
application brought under the abovementioned case
number be implemented immediately pursuant to the provisions of
section 18
of the
Superior Courts Act, No. 10 of 2013
, and not be
suspended pending the hearing of any application
for leave to appeal and the final determination
of any appeal against
the
order, whether in the High Court, the Supreme
Court of Appeal, or the
Constitutional Court.
3.
That the costs of this application be paid by those Respondents who
oppose the
relief sought.’
[7]
On 8 March
2024, Seal and Tyte gave notice of their intention to oppose the
s 18
application. The Provincial Government elected to abide. Seal
withdrew its opposition on 12 March 2024 and subsequently complied
with the deadline fixed by the main order by handing operations over
to Royal on 21 March 2024. The high court heard the
s 18
application
and Tyte’s application for leave to appeal the main order on 22
April 2024. On 24 April 2024, the high court
dismissed Tyte’s
application for leave to appeal. Four days later, it delivered
judgment in the
s 18
application. It ordered that ‘[t]he
operation and execution of the orders numbered 1, 2 and 3 . . .
granted on 21 February
2024 . . . are to be implemented pending the
outcome of any appeal process by [Tyte] or until another court
otherwise directs’
(the execution order).
[8]
On 3 May
2024, Tyte filed an application with this Court for leave to appeal
the main order. Exercising an automatic right of appeal
under s
18(4)(ii) of the Act, Tyte filed a notice of appeal in respect of the
execution order with this Court on 8 May 2024. The
matter was
thereafter enrolled, in accordance with s 18(4)(iii), as one of
urgency for hearing on Monday 27 May 2024.
[9]
This
Court has examined the requirements for the implementation of an
execution order pending an appeal in
University
of the Free State v Afriforum
(
Afriforum
);
[3]
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation
;
[4]
Premier
of Gauteng v Democratic Alliance
;
[5]
Knoop
v Gupta (Knoop)
;
[6]
and, most recently, in
Zuma
v Downer and Another
.
[7]
Relying, in part, on some of the statements made in those judgments,
in particular
Afriforum
and
Knoop,
counsel
for Tyte, argued that it was for an applicant for an execution order
(in the position of Royal), to establish three separate,
distinct and
self-standing requirements, namely:
first
,
exceptional circumstances (the
first
);
second
,
that it will suffer irreparable harm if the order is not made (the
second
);
and,
third
,
the party against whom the order is made (in this case Tyte) will not
suffer irreparable harm if the order is made (the
third
).
[10]
Whilst there
are indeed statements in those judgments that would appear to support
counsel’s fundamental hypothesis, they
seem to have been made
in passing. They thus call for closer examination in this matter. An
important point of departure, so it
seems to me, is that
consideration of each of the so-called three requirements is not a
hermetically sealed enquiry and can hardly
be approached in a
compartmentalised fashion.
[11]
It is important to recognise that
the
existence of ‘exceptional circumstances’ is a necessary
prerequisite for the exercise of the court’s discretion
under s
18. If the circumstances are not truly exceptional, that is the end
of the matter. The application must fail and falls
to be dismissed.
If, however, exceptional circumstances are found to be present, it
would not follow, without more, that the application
must succeed.
[8]
In
its consideration of s 17(2)
(f)
of
the Act, the Constitutional Court pointed out in
Liesching
and Others v S
:
‘
As
with section
18(1), section
17(2)(f)
prescribes
a departure from the ordinary course of an appeal process. Under
section
17, in the ordinary course, the decision of
two or more Judges
refusing leave to appeal is final. However, section
17(2)(f)
allows
for a litigant to depart from this normal course, in exceptional
circumstances only, and apply to the President for reconsideration
of
the refusal of leave to appeal.
In
Ntlemeza
,
the requirement of exceptional circumstances is viewed as a
“controlling measure”. In terms of section
17(2)(f),
the President has a discretion to deviate from the
normal course of appeal proceedings – such discretion can only
be exercised
in exceptional circumstances. The requirement of the
existence of exceptional circumstances before the President can
exercise her
discretion is a jurisdictional fact which may operate as
a controlling or limiting factor.’
[9]
[12]
It has long been accepted that it is ‘undesirable to attempt to
lay down any general rule’
in respect of ‘exceptional
circumstances’ and that each case must be considered upon its
own facts.
[10]
In
MV
Ais Mamas Seatrans Maritime v Owners, MV Ais Mamas and Another
,
Thring J summarised the approach to be followed. He said that ‘what
is ordinarily contemplated by the words “exceptional
circumstances” is something out of the ordinary and of an
unusual nature; something which is excepted in the sense that the
general rule does not apply to it; something uncommon, rare or
different’.
[11]
[13]
What
constitutes irreparable harm is always dependent upon the factual
situation in which the dispute arises, and upon the legal
principles
that govern the rights and obligations of the parties in the context
of that dispute.
It
was accepted in
Knoop
that:
‘the need to establish exceptional circumstances is likely to
be closely linked to the applicant establishing that they
will suffer
irreparable harm if the . . . order is not implemented
immediately’.
[12]
The
same, I daresay, can be said of its counterpart, the absence of
irreparable harm to the respondent. In that sense, the presence
or
absence of irreparable harm, as the case may be, can hardly be
entirely divorced from the exceptional circumstances enquiry.
It
would perhaps be logically incoherent for a court to conclude, on the
one hand, in favour of an applicant that exceptional circumstances
subsist, but, on the other, against an applicant on either leg of the
irreparable harm enquiry.
[14]
The argument, as I have it, is that as the language of s 18(3) is
clear – it is for an
applicant, in addition to exceptional
circumstances, to prove on a balance of probabilities that it will
suffer irreparable harm
and conversely the other party would not. A
court is thus required to undertake what would be in the nature of a
tick-box exercise
by enquiring into and satisfying itself as to the
first
, then the
second
and finally the
third
, in
that order. Unless each box is successfully ticked, the applicant
must fail. Here, so the argument proceeds, the high court
failed to
undertake such an exercise; had it done so, it could not permissibly
have ticked the third box, consequently, the s 18
application
should have failed. Even accepting that the legislature has employed
the words ‘in addition [to exceptional circumstances]
proves on
a balance of probabilities’ in s 18(3), it would be passing
strange that if an applicant comes short in respect
of either the
second
or
third
requirements it would nonetheless still
be able to successfully meet the exceptional circumstances threshold.
The use of the words
‘in addition proves’ in s 18(3)
ought not to be construed as necessarily enjoining a court to
undertake a further or
additional enquiry. The overarching enquiry is
whether or not exceptional circumstances subsist. To that end, the
presence or absence
of irreparable harm, as the case may be, may well
be subsumed under the overarching exceptional circumstances enquiry.
As long
as a court is alive to the duty cast upon it by the
legislature to enquire into, and satisfy itself in respect of
exceptional circumstances,
as also, irreparable harm, it does not
have to do so in a formulaic or hierarchical fashion.
[15]
Although it has been postulated that the
second
and
third
are
distinct
and discrete enquiries, they are perhaps more accurately to be
understood as being two sides of the same coin. The same
facts and
circumstances, which by that stage ought largely to be either common
cause or undisputed, will inform both enquiries.
The logical
corollary of an applicant suffering irreparable harm, will invariably
– but not always – be that the other
party has not. The
enquiry into each can thus hardly be mutually exclusive, particularly
because as far as the
third
is
concerned, unlike the
second
,
the onus cast upon an applicant would be to prove a negative, in
accordance with the usual civil standard. This suggests that,
as with
the exceptional circumstances enquiry, a court considering both the
second
and
third
must
have regard to all of the facts and circumstances in any particular
case. Insofar as the
third
goes,
although s 18(3) casts the onus (which does not shift) upon an
applicant, a respondent may well attract something in the nature
of
an evidentiary burden.
[13]
This would be especially so where the facts relevant to the
third
are
peculiarly within the knowledge of the respondent. In that event, it
will perhaps fall to the respondent to raise those facts
in an
answering affidavit to the s 18 application, which may invite a
response from the applicant by way of a replying affidavit.
[16]
What
counsel’s argument boiled down to was that as each of the
second
and
the
third
so-called
requirements had to be approached as discrete, isolated enquiries,
there was accordingly to be no weighing-up of the irreparable
harm of
the one as against the other. In that regard, reliance was placed on
Afriforum
,
[14]
which, in turn, referred with approval to
Incubeta
Holdings
and
Another v Ellis and Another
,
where Sutherland J is reported to have said:
‘
A
hierarchy of entitlement has been created . . . Two distinct findings
of fact must now be made, rather than a weighing-up to discern
a
“preponderance of equities”.’
[15]
It
is not clear what the learned Judge sought to convey by ‘a
hierarchy of entitlement has been created’. Counsel experienced
some difficulty in trying to explain – or support –
such a characterisation.
[17]
Counsel fared
no better in defence of the contention that s 18(3) leaves no room
for a ‘weighing-up’ by the court. As
I understood
counsel, it was for an applicant, on pain of otherwise failing, to
show a complete absence of irreparable harm to
the other party. Any
irreparable harm (or even the potentiality of irreparable harm) to a
respondent, no matter how slight would
irredeemably tip the scales
against an applicant. It thus would matter not that the irreparable
harm of a respondent was relatively
slight or inconsequential or that
it was significantly outweighed by that of the applicant. The mere
fact of irreparable harm in
respect of the respondent, irrespective
of its nature or extent, would per force non-suit the applicant. In
other words, unless
there was no (as in ‘zero’, in the
words of counsel) irreparable harm to a respondent the s 18
application had to fail.
[18]
Counsel did
not shrink from the logical consequence of the contention, namely
that such a mechanistic approach, which rested on
the supposition
that the
second
and
third
had to be approached as isolated enquiries, may well strip a court of
any discretion that it may possess or that it could give
rise to a
manifestly inequitable conclusion, which could serve to undermine the
rule of law. This approach, if it is to be favoured,
would disregard
entirely the rationality, reasonableness and proportionality
yardsticks that have become important touchstones
in our
jurisprudence. It likely would also, to all intents and purposes, set
the bar so high as to render the remedy illusory.
Counsel was however
willing to accept that there must always remain a residual
discretion. What exactly was meant by a residual
discretion or when
precisely it was to be exercised remained opaque. However, on the
acceptance of a discretion, even a residual
one, the argument against
a weighing-up evaporates. If the argument were correct, the court
would have no discretion to grant relief
under s 18 whatever the
consequences or however irreparably disastrous to an applicant.
[19]
Irreparable harm, it has been said in a somewhat different context,
is more than a rationale
– it is a critical factor in testing
the claim for an interlocutory injunction.
[16]
The
nature of irreparable harm is not easy to define. R J Sharpe points
out:
‘
The
rationale for requiring the plaintiff to show irreparable harm is
readily understood. If damages will provide adequate compensation,
and the defendant is in a position to pay them, then ordinarily there
will be no justification in running the risk of an injunction
pending
the trial. While it is easy to see why this requirement should be
imposed, it is difficult to define exactly what is meant
by
irreparable harm.’
[17]
[20]
Over a century ago, Innes JA, after referring to Van der Linden's
Institutes, where the essentials
for an interdict application had
been enumerated, had this to say:
‘
That
element [the injury feared must be irreparable] is only introduced by
him in cases where the right asserted by the applicant,
though prima
facie established, is open to some doubt. In such cases he says the
test must be applied whether the continuance of
the thing against
which an interdict is sought would cause irreparable injury to the
applicant. If so, the better course, is to
grant the relief if the
discontinuance of the act complained of would not cause irreparable
injury to the other party.’
[18]
Interim
interdicts (akin to interlocutory injunctions) are regular fare in
our courts. They provide a flexible and most useful tool
in the aid
of justice. Our courts have accordingly come to accept that the
remedy should not be granted if there is a danger that
it may work an
injustice.
[21]
In
Hoffmann-La Roche & Co AG and Others v Secretary of State
for Trade and Industry
, Lord Wilberforce expressed the view that:
‘
The
object of [an interim injunction] is to prevent a litigant, who must
necessarily suffer the law's delay, from losing by the
delay the
fruit of his litigation; this is called "irreparable"
damage, meaning that money obtained at trial may not
compensate
him.’
[19]
Albeit
said in the context of the consideration of a wholly discretionary
remedy, and thus not perfectly analogous, the sentiment
expressed is
not entirely without value here, inasmuch as it echoes precisely the
position in which Royal finds itself.
[22]
The judgment of Binns-Ward J essentially only concerned the issue of
what would be a just and
equitable remedy in the circumstances of the
case. His order that a fresh tender process be completed within six
months was not
met and subsequently had to be extended until 31 May
2023. This meant that Seal and Tyte had the full benefit of the
entire period
of the first contract, notwithstanding the declaration
of invalidity and the contract having been set aside. In addition,
the effect
of the order of Francis J was that Seal and Tyte simply
continued to perform services in terms of the tender awarded to them
jointly
on 25 March 2021.Despite the award having been set aside by
Binns-Ward J, by the time the main order came to be delivered on 21
February 2024, Seal and Tyte had the benefit of the award for a
further nine months. Thus, not only has Tyte had the benefit of
a
two-year contract that was set aside as having been unlawfully
awarded to it, but by the time the matter came to be heard in
this
Court, it would have continued to reap the rewards of that contract
for an additional year. Conversely, as things presently
stand, Royal
has been denied the benefit of at least one year of the second
contract, which the high court has found in the review
application to
have been lawfully awarded to it.
[23]
Inasmuch as
the second contract
is due to terminate in June 2025
,
there is every prospect that by the time the appeal comes to be heard
and irrespective of the outcome, Royal will be left remediless.
Royal
drew attention to the fact that when the review application issued,
it had already commenced with the roll-out process, which
was well
underway. It is not in dispute that, as required by the second
contract, it had to provide insurance cover of R5 million
per 300
guards, furnish a performance guarantee in an amount equal to 1% of
the contract, being R2.8 million and establish sites
in six different
districts. Royal has also spent in excess of R1 million in respect of
uniforms and R7.5 million in respect of
an order for tactical
response vehicles. As against that, the continued rendering of
services in terms of the impugned first contract,
has generated in
excess of R70 million for Seal and Tyte.
[24]
Moreover, it
is common ground that the price tendered by Royal was the most
favourable to the Provincial Government, being lower
than all the
others by a significant margin. Royal’s bid of R282 million for
the 24-month contract was 18.45% below the pre-tender
estimate,
whereas Seal and Tyte exceeded the estimate by 5.62% and 1.35%
respectively. The anticipated windfall to Seal and Tyte
of a further
turnover of R100 million after the award of the bid to Royal
represents 28.16% of the full-term value of the second
contract.
Apart from illustrating the exceptional nature of this matter, these
facts also bear testimony to the extent of the existing
and ongoing
prejudice to Royal and the public at large. The significance of the
public interest was recognised by the high court
in the concurring
judgment of Gamble J in the review application, in which he said:
‘
At
the end of it all, the approach adopted by the province was in
accordance with the touchstone of public procurement – the
promotion of competition and cost-effective tendering. Importantly,
the exercise resulted in a significant saving for the public
purse –
around R83m when compared to Seal’s price.’
[25]
In the
circumstances, it was unsurprising that in this Court, Tyte was
constrained to accept that there are exceptional circumstances
and
that Royal will suffer irreparable harm. The argument thus centred on
the
third
.
However, even were we to approach the matter on the footing posited
by counsel, namely that the
third
had to be considered as an isolated edifice, the high court
effectively put paid to that in these terms:
‘
Simply
put, the tenth respondent has been losing daily revenue on not being
permitted to perform under a lawfully awarded tender.
On the other
side of the coin, the twenty-second respondent has been benefiting
from an unlawfully awarded tender for close to
three years and will
suffer no judicially cognizable harm whatsoever if the tenth
respondent were to perform the services provided
in its contract for
the remaining little more than one year of its intended duration. The
twenty-second respondent does not engage
with these factual
averments, which are common cause.’
[26]
In that, the
high court cannot be faulted. In arguing that it will suffer
irreparable harm, Tyte takes a rather narrow view of the
matter. It
focuses on the profits that it will lose going forward, but ignores
entirely the windfall that it has received from
a contract that was
unlawfully awarded to it. It seeks to continue to reap that windfall
for an indefinite period well into the
future. It does so in the face
of a new contract that has been held by the high court to have been
lawfully awarded to Royal. What
is more, for as long as Tyte
continues to perform in terms of the first contract that has been
held to be unlawful, it does so
at an inflated cost to the Provincial
Government. The windfall, taken together with the inflated costs, is
completely dispositive
of Tyte’s argument that the harm to it
is irreparable.
[27]
There will obviously be cases in which a litigant may suffer
irreparable harm by being forced
to abide a decision of a court that
is subsequently held to be wrong on appeal. However, even on a most
general impression as to
the strength of Tyte’s case and its
ultimate prospects of success, this is not such a matter. The
argument is that if Tyte
is compelled to now hand over operations to
Royal, but ultimately succeeds in having the award of the second
contract set aside
on appeal, then the rendering of the services
would, without more, have to revert to it.
Tyte
asserts such an entitlement by dint of the orders of Binns-Ward J and
Francis J. However, those orders were a temporary expedient
and in no
way sought to (or could for that matter) resolve the respective
rights and obligations of the parties.
[28]
Any success by Tyte in the contemplated appeal, would achieve no more
than the setting aside
of the award of the second contract to Royal.
It would not result in the substitution of Tyte for Royal as the
successful tenderer
– such relief was advisedly not sought.
The
consequence of the setting aside of the award to Royal on appeal is
that the matter must then be dealt with under s 172(1)
(b)
of
the Constitution (as it was at the outset by Binns-Ward J in
Red
Ant
),
pursuant to which
courts
have the widest possible remedial discretion.
[20]
It
is thus not a foregone conclusion that success in the envisaged
appeal will inexorably lead to Tyte replacing Royal. The upshot
is
that such prejudice as Tyte seeks to rely upon is perhaps more
ephemeral than real.
[29]
In the
result, the appeal must fail and it is accordingly dismissed with
costs, including those of two counsel where so employed.
________________
V M PONNAN
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellant:
R van Riet SC and P Tredoux
Instructed
by:
De Waal, Grobbelaar, Fisher Inc., Cape Town
JL
Jordaan Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the first to third
respondents: A Nacerodien (heads
of argument prepared by
J
Newdigate SC and A Nacerodien)
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney, Cape Town
The
State Attorney, Bloemfontein
For the fourth
respondent:
JC Heunis SC and PS van Zyl
Instructed
by:
Ravindra Maniklall & Co., Durban
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
## [1]Manong
& Associates (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Public Works and Another[2009]
ZASCA 110; 2010 (2) SA 167 (SCA); [2010] 1 All SA 267 (SCA) para 1.
[1]
Manong
& Associates (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Public Works and Another
[2009]
ZASCA 110; 2010 (2) SA 167 (SCA); [2010] 1 All SA 267 (SCA) para 1.
[2]
R
Cachalia and L Kohn ‘The Quest for “Reasonable
Certainty”: Refining the Justice and Equity Remedial Framework
in Public Procurement Cases’
(2020) 137
SALJ
659
at 696 cited by Binns-Ward J in
Red
Ant Security Relocation and Eviction Services (Pty) Ltd v The
Department of Human Settlements (Western Cape)
WCHC
Case No 9370/2021
(
Red
Ant
)
para 1.
[3]
University
of the Free State v Afriforum and Another
[2016]
ZASCA 165
;
[2017] All SA 79
(SCA);
2018 (3) SA 428
(SCA)
(
Afriforum
).
[4]
Ntlemeza
v Helen Suzman Foundation and Another
[2017]
ZASCA 93; [2017] 3 All SA 589 (SCA); 2017 (5) SA 402 (SCA).
[5]
Premier
for the Province of Gauteng and Others v Democratic Alliance and
Others
[2020]
ZASCA 136; [2021] 1 All SA 60 (SCA).
[6]
Knoop
and Another NNO v Gupta
(
Tayob
Intervening
)
[2020] ZASCA 149
;
[2021] 1 All SA 17
(SCA);
2021 (3) SA 135
(SCA)
(
Knoop
).
[7]
Zuma
v Downer and Another
[2023]
ZASCA 132
;
[2023] 4 All SA 644
(SCA);
2024 (2) SA 356
(SCA);
2024
(1) SACR 589
(SCA).
[8]
See
George
Hlaudi Motsoeneng v South African Broadcasting Corporation Soc Ltd
and Others
[2024]
ZASCA 80
para 13, where this was said in respect of
s 17(2)
(f)
of
the
Superior Courts Act, which
provides:
‘
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
exceptional circumstances, 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.’
[9]
Liesching
and Others v S
[2018]
ZACC 25
;
2018 (11) BCLR 1349
(CC);
2019 (1) SACR 178
(CC);
2019 (4)
SA 219
(CC) paras 136-137.
[10]
Norwich
Union Life Insurance Society v Dobbs
1912
AD 395
at 399.
[11]
MV
Ais Mamas Seatrans Maritime v Owners, MV Ais Mamas, and Another
2002
(6) SA 150
(C) at 156H-J.
[12]
Knoop
fn 6 above para 47.
## [13]MV
'TARIK III' Credit Europe Bank N.V. v The Fund Comprising the
Proceeds of the Sale of the MV Tarik III and Others[2022]
ZASCA 136; [2022] 4 All SA 621 (SCA) para 24–34.
[13]
MV
'TARIK III' Credit Europe Bank N.V. v The Fund Comprising the
Proceeds of the Sale of the MV Tarik III and Others
[2022]
ZASCA 136; [2022] 4 All SA 621 (SCA) para 24–34.
[14]
Afriforum
fn
3 above para 10-11.
[15]
Incubeta
Holdings and Another v Ellis and Another
[2013]
ZAGPJHC 274;
2014 (3) SA 189
(GSJ) para 24.
[16]
P M
Perell ‘The Interlocutory Injunction and Irreparable Harm’
(1989) 68
The
Canadian Bar Review
538
at 540.
[17]
R J
Sharpe
Injunctions
and Specific Performance
(1983)
at 77. Cited in P M Perell ‘The Interlocutory Injunction and
Irreparable Harm’ (1989) 68
The
Canadian Bar Review
538
at 540.
[18]
Setlogelo
vs Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
at
227.
[19]
Hoffmann-La
Roche & Co AG and Others v Secretary of State for Trade and
Industry
[1975]
AC 295
at 355;
[1974] 12 All ER 1128
at 1146 (HL).
[20]
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);
Minister
of Mineral Resources and Energy and Others v Sustaining the Wild
Coast NPC and Others
[2024]
ZASCA 84.
sino noindex
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