Case Law[2024] ZASCA 95South Africa
MEC for the Department of Public Works and Others v Ikamva Architects CC and Others (867/2022) [2024] ZASCA 95 (13 June 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
13 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Civil Procedure – on appeal, the appellants were not entitled to an order they did not seek in the court of first instance – attachment of a bank account held by an organ of State – order of this Court on appeal would be of no practical effect – issues raised were moot – costs order of the court a quo reversed on account of serious injustice suffered by the first respondent.
Judgment
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## MEC for the Department of Public Works and Others v Ikamva Architects CC and Others (867/2022) [2024] ZASCA 95 (13 June 2024)
MEC for the Department of Public Works and Others v Ikamva Architects CC and Others (867/2022) [2024] ZASCA 95 (13 June 2024)
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THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 867/2022
In the matter between:
MEC FOR THE DEPARTMENT
OF
PUBLIC WORKS
FIRST
APPELANT
MEC FOR THE DEPARTMENT
OF
HEALTH SECOND
APPELLANT
MEC FOR FINANCE,
EASTERN CAPE
THIRD APPELANT
and
IKAMVA ARCHITECTS
CC FIRST
RESPONDENT
THE SHERIFF OF THE
HIGH COURT
KING WILLIAM’S
TOWN
SECOND RESPONDENT
THE SHERIFF OF THE
HIGH COURT
DISTRICT OF ZWELITSHA,
MDANTSANE
AND
STUTTERHEIM
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
MEC for the
Department of Public Works & Others v
Ikamva
Architects CC
and Others
(867/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 95
(13 June 2024)
Coram:
DAMBUZA, MBATHA and MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JJA and WINDELL and UNTERHALTER AJJA
Heard:
25 August 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ representatives by email, published
on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website, and released to SAFLII. The
date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 13 June 2024.
Summary:
Civil
Procedure
–
on appeal, the appellants
were not entitled to an order they did not seek in the court of first
instance – attachment of a
bank account held by an organ of
State – order of this Court on appeal would be of no practical
effect – issues raised
were moot – costs order of the
court
a quo
reversed on account of serious injustice suffered by the first
respondent.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern Cape Division of
the High Court, Bhisho (Van Zyl DJP, Tokota and Govindjee JJ sitting
as court of first instance):
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
2.
The appellants are ordered to pay the first
respondent’s costs of the appeal, including the costs of two
counsel, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other (s) to be
absolved.
3.
Save to the extent set out in paragraphs 4
and 5 below the cross-appeal is dismissed.
4.
Each party is ordered to pay its own costs
in relation to the cross-appeal.
5.
The order of the full court is amended to
read as follows:
‘
1.
The intervening party is given leave to intervene in the matter as
the third applicant.
2.
The third appellant is to pay the first respondent’s costs of
the application for intervention,
including the costs of two counsel.
3.
The further execution of the writs of attachment dated 11 March 2016,
including the removal
of the attached movables, is stayed pending the
final determination of the application for leave to appeal the order
of Bheshe
J dated 16 February 2021 (case number 2610/2019), including
any consequent appeals.
4.
The appellants are to pay the first respondent’s costs of the
application, jointly
and severally, including the costs occasioned by
the Rule 30 applications dated 22 June 2021 and 30 July 2021, and the
reserved
costs of the hearing of the application on 5 August 2021,
such costs to include the costs of two counsel where so employed.’
JUDGMENT
Dambuza
JA (Mbatha and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Windell and Unterhalter AJJA
concurring)
Introduction
[1]
The three appellants are Members of the Executive Council of
the Eastern Cape Departments of Public Works, Health and Finance.
They
appeal against parts of the judgment of the Eastern Cape
Division of the High Court, Bhisho (Van Zyl DJP, Tokota and Govindjee
JJ, the full court). That court granted the third appellant, Member
of Executive Council for the Department of Finance, Eastern
Cape (MEC
for Finance), leave to intervene in an application brought by the
first appellant, the Member of the Executive Council
for the
Department of Public Works (MEC for Public Works), and the second
appellant, the Member of Executive Council for the Department
of
Health (MEC for Health) in the Eastern Division of the High Court,
Bhisho (high court). It then granted an order staying execution
of
two warrants of attachment that were issued at the instance of the
first respondent, Ikamva Architects CC (Ikamva) against the
Departments of Public Works and Health. The order staying execution
of the warrants was granted provisionally, pending finalisation
of an
application for leave to appeal that had been brought by the two
appellants against an order granted by Bheshe J of the same
Division.
[2]
In
the same order the full court granted an order of costs against
Ikamva, in respect of two applications that had been brought
by it
against the first and second appellants (the appellants) in terms in
terms of Rule 30 of the Uniform Rules of Court. It also
granted a
punitive costs order against Ikamva in relation to a supplementary
affidavit that it had filed.
[1]
Ikamva cross-appeals against the orders granted by the full court.
Leave to appeal and cross appeal was granted by the full court.
The facts
[3]
The order of the full court was preceded by
protracted litigation which was instituted by Ikamva against the
appellants. The background
is the following. During 2003 the
Department of Public Works offered to appoint Ikamva as ‘Consulting
Architects/Principal
Agents’ for a construction project
described as ‘Frere Hospital (East London): Maintenance
(Various): Masterplan, Upgrade’.
A written agreement was
concluded on 15 September 2003. During March 2007, the Department of
Public Works appointed Coega Development
Corporation (Coega) as the
implementing agent for the same project. Coega appointed a different
firm of architects to do the work
that Ikamva had been contracted to
do. On 9 July 2007 the Department of Public Works wrote to Ikamva
advising that it would not
be honouring its obligations under the
contract. Ikamva accepted the repudiation of the contract and
instituted an action against
the two appellants, claiming an amount
of R41 031 279.48 as damages for breach of contract.
[4]
In the action for damages, the Departments pleaded that the
consultancy contract, in terms of which
Ikamva was appointed, was
invalid because it was concluded contrary to the provisions of the
Constitution, the Preferential Procurement
Policy Framework Act 2000
(PPPF), and the Regulations promulgated in terms of the PPPF. During
the course of the litigation, Ikamva
called upon the Departments to
make discovery in terms of Rule 35(1). When they failed to do so,
Ikamva obtained an order compelling
them to make discovery within 10
days, on pain of having their defence struck out.
[5]
In compliance with that court order, the appellants made discovery.
Ikamva was not satisfied and obtained
a court order directing them to
make further and better discovery of listed documents, in terms of
Rule 35(3). Further and better
discovery was not made, leading to
Ikamva approaching the high court, yet again, to obtain an order
compelling further and better
discovery within 10 days, failing which
the defence filed by the appellants would be struck out and judgment
would be sought ‘.
. . based on the same papers, amplified if
necessary’. (Majiki AJ order, granted on 10 November 2011).
[6]
When the appellants failed to comply with the order granted by Majiki
AJ, Ikamva brought an application
for default judgment before Dukada
J. An issue arose as to whether the order granted by Majiki AJ meant
that the defence tendered
by the appellants was automatically struck
out once they failed to comply with the order of Majiki AJ or whether
Ikamva had to
first approach the court to have the defence struck
out. In the relevant part, the order granted by Majiki AJ was framed
as follows:
‘
The
Defendants [are] granted a period of ten (10) days from the date of
service hereof to reply to the Plaintiff’s Notice
in terms of
Rule 35(3) dated 22 July 2011, failing which the Defendant’s
defence will be struck out and the plaintiff will
apply for judgment
against the Defendants based on the same papers, amplified if
necessary.’
Dukada
J refused to grant default judgment, insisting that Ikamva should
first bring an application for an order that the defence
raised by
the Departments be struck out.
[2]
[7]
Ikamva’s appeal to the full court against Dukada J’s
refusal order was successful. The full
court (in a judgment written
by Plasket J) noted that Majiki AJ’s order was drafted
differently from other orders of its
type, in that it did not provide
that in the event of non-compliance by the appellants, Ikamva could
apply, on the same papers,
amplified if necessary, for their defence
to be struck out. The court concluded that the terms of the order
indicated that an order
having a different effect from the usual
order was intended. It held that the order granted by Majiki AJ meant
that ‘if the
defendants have not complied within ten days of
the date of service of the order on them, their “defence will
be struck out”
and then ‘the Plaintiff will apply for
judgment against the Defendants, based on the same papers, amplified
if necessary’.
The full court found the conduct of the
appellants, in failing to make discovery, to have been ‘startlingly
contumacious’
in that they did not appeal the order granted by
Majiki AJ, but simply failed to comply with it. It held that Ikamva
was entitled
to set the matter down for default judgment. However,
the appellants could still comply with the order compelling discovery
and
then approach the court to have their defence reinstated.
[3]
[8]
The Departments merely brought an application for reinstatement of
their defence without complying with
the order of discovery. However,
they withdrew the application for reinstatement on the day that it
was due to be heard in court.
On 1 December 2015, Ikamva
obtained default judgment against the appellants in the amount of R41
031 279 48 (the Malusi AJ
order).
[4]
The appellants’ application for leave to appeal the default
judgment was refused by Malusi AJ.
[9]
On 11 March 2016 a warrant of execution against property was issued
in relation to the judgment debt,
at the instance of Ikamva. The
appellants brought an application for stay of execution of the
warrant, pending the finalisation
of an application for rescission of
the order granted by Malusi AJ. The application for rescission of the
default judgment was
dismissed (Hartle J’s order).
[5]
In the judgment refusing rescission, Hartle J found that the
appellants had litigated recklessly and ignored the prejudice they
had caused to Ikamva and to the public purse. An appeal before a full
court, against the order refusing rescission of judgment
failed. This
Court and the Constitutional Court refused to grant leave to appeal.
[10]
Subsequent to the dismissal of the rescission application, Ikamva
took steps to execute in respect of the judgment
debt. This led to an
application by the appellants for a stay of further execution of the
writ. An order staying execution of the
warrant was granted by
Rugunanan J by agreement between the parties. The order included a
waiver by the appellants, of the right
to raise the applicability of
the
in duplum
rule on the interest payable on the judgment
debt.
[11] During
September 2019, the appellants returned to the high court with a
self-review application seeking an order
that Ikamva’s
appointment as a consultant for the Frere Hospital project, and the
contract concluded pursuant to that appointment,
be reviewed and set
aside. In opposing the self-review application, Ikamva contended,
amongst other things, that the Departments
should be non-suited
because of the delay in bringing the self-review application. Ikamva
also maintained that the issue of the
validity of the consultancy
contract was rendered
res judicata
by the default judgment
granted by Hartle J.
[12] The high
court agreed with Ikamva’s contentions and dismissed the
self-review application (Bheshe J’s
order). Ikamva again
proceeded to take further steps to execute the writ. This led to
attachment of all the office furniture, equipment
and vehicles of the
appellants. The Sheriff rendered inventories framed in similar terms,
that the attached goods were:
‘
All
the office furniture and related office equipment and vehicles of the
Department of Public Works Health, Eastern Cape, Qhasana
[Dukumbana]
Building, Bhisho’, to the value of R42 million.
[13]
The appellants approached the court, on an urgent basis, seeking a
stay of execution of the writ. That application
was struck from the
roll for lack of urgency (Lowe J’s order).
[6]
On the same day, Ikamva issued another warrant of attachment, dated
10 March 2021, specifically directing the Sheriff to execute
against
a bank account held by the Department of Health with the Standard
Bank of South Africa. That writ was duly executed, leading
to
attachment of the right title and interest to moneys held by the
Department of Health with the Standard Bank. The Sheriff rendered
a
notice of attachment which indicated that the right, title and
interest of the MEC for Health, in respect of the Standard Bank
account had been attached for the amount of the judgment debt and
costs.
[14] The
appellants approached the high court once more, as a matter of
extreme urgency, seeking an order staying further
execution of the
two notices of attachment dated March 2016, and that the attachment
of the bank account of the Department of Health,
be set aside or
stayed, pending determination of an application for leave to appeal,
the dismissal of the self-review application,
and any consequential
appeals.
[15]
Following the first postponement of the urgent application, the court
issued a directive, inviting the parties
to make submissions on
whether Ikamva was entitled to “freeze” the funds in the
bank account held by the Department
of Health without a court order.
The full court (court
a quo) was
constituted to hear this
application because of the attachment of a bank account held by a
State organ.
[16] Prior to
hearing the application, the full court invited further submissions
from the parties on whether: (1) Majiki
AJ had jurisdiction to strike
out the first and second applicants’ defence, and (2) if she
did not have jurisdiction, and
her order was a nullity, whether the
order of Malusi AJ (default judgment) was valid.
At this stage the MEC of
Finance entered the fray, seeking leave to intervene and to also
challenge the validity of the warrants
of execution issued pursuant
to the order of Malusi AJ. The MEC for Finance joined the appellants
in contending that the attachment
of State funds in execution of a
money judgment was impermissible under the
State Liability Act 20 of
1957
.
[17] Ikamva
filed two notices in terms of
Rule 30
, objecting to the directives
issued by the court. In a related affidavit, Ikamva’s legal
representatives expressed concern
about the involvement of the Judge
President of the Division in the case management of this application
as he had signed some of
the pleadings and represented the appellants
in the application prior to his appointment to the bench. They
asserted that the issues
raised in the directives were never raised
by the parties. They pleaded irremediable prejudice as a result of
the raising of further
issues by the court. They suggested that the
raising of the new issues reinforced a perception that the court had
“descended
into the arena”, and they requested that the
directives be withdrawn. It is these contentions by Ikamva that led
to the punitive
costs order against it.
[18] In
granting the order staying further execution of the attachment
notices, the full court found that the order
of Majiki AJ was
erroneous as provided under
Rule 42(1)
(a)
because the court
followed a one-stage, instead of a two-stage procedure, in striking
out the Defendants’ defence. However
the order was not invalid,
so said the full court. It was binding because Majiki AJ had the
necessary power under
Rule 35(7)
to grant the order striking out the
appellants’ defence. Consequently, Malusi AJ was duly empowered
to grant judgment.
[19] In
addition, the full court found that the attachment of incorporeal
movable property of government departments,
more particularly in
relation to this appeal, the attachment of the right to the funds in
the bank account held by the Department
of Health with the Standard
Bank, was in accordance with the law and the Constitution. The full
court, however, found that the
second warrant of execution was
over-specific in requiring the sheriff to attach, specifically, the
funds held in the bank account
of the Department of Health. It found
that, contrary to Rule 45(1), the wording of the second writ did not
correspond substantially
with Form 18 of the First Schedule to the
Uniform Rules of Court. This resulted in the Sheriff being unable to
comply with the
steps prescribed under Rule 45, such as, demanding
that the writ be satisfied, and affording a representative of the
relevant Department
opportunity to point out sufficient movable
property, other than the bank account, to satisfy the debt.
[20]
In their application to this Court for leave to appeal against the
dismissal of the self-review application,
[7]
the appellants contended that the findings of the full court, on
nullity of Majiki J’s order and its interpretation of the
provisions of the
State Liability Act were
obiter
.
That application for leave to appeal was referred for hearing before
an open court in terms of
s 17(2)
(d)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. This Court, in a unanimous
judgment (penned by Gorven JA) dismissed the application.
[8]
Significantly, amongst the issues considered in that application was
that in the self-review application the appellants had sought,
as a
just and equitable relief under s 172 of the Constitution, orders
reviewing the decisions to appoint Ikamva as a professional
consultant, together with orders that:
‘
3.
The contract concluded between the Department of Public Works and
Ikamva Architects CC in September 2003 . . . is declared void
ab
initio
;
4.[Ikamva was] entitled
to no further payments under the contract referred to in paragraph 3
above and in terms of the default and
in terms of the default order
of Malusi AJ’.
[21]
In dismissing the application for leave to appeal, Gorven JA,
considered that, during argument, the appellants
had accepted that
the application for rescission had been definitely disposed of.
Consequently, ‘any contention that the
default judgment was
anything other than competent, valid and binding was expressly
abandoned [by the Departments]’.
[9]
[22] Gorven
JA further referred to the appellants’ reply in the self-review
application, to the effect they were
resisting payment of the
judgment debt by way of self- review. They sought to render the
default judgment nugatory. In the circumstances
there was no legal
basis for the order sought by the Departments, of permanently
preventing execution of a valid and binding order,
which was not
susceptible of being set aside.
[23]
Gorven JA also highlighted that the source of the judgment debt was
the judgment or order of Malusi AJ, rather
than the decisions sought
to be reviewed. He emphasised that the judgment of Malusi AJ was not
susceptible to being rescinded or
set aside. Consequently, the effect
of the relief sought by the appellants in prayer 4 of the Notice of
Motion, amounted to permanent
prevention of execution of a valid and
binding judgment, which had not been abandoned or set aside. The
Court held that an order
preventing enforcement of an order of
another court could not be just and equitable. Furthermore, the novel
order sought by the
appellants in prayer 4 of the Notice of Motion
was an attempt to enlist the assistance of the court in their efforts
to undermine
the “dignity and authority of the courts, by
rendering nugatory a perfectly valid, binding, enforceable, and
extant judgment’.
That could not be countenanced, the Court
held.
[10]
Discussion
[24] In this
appeal the appellants advanced the same arguments that they made in
the full court (court
a quo
) in relation to the directives
issued by the court. These include the distinction drawn by the full
court in the judgment by Plasket
J between the power that Majiki AJ
had to consider the application that served before her in terms of
Rule 35 (7) and her granting
of the ‘impermissible’ order
striking out their defence. They contended that the full court erred
in not rescinding
the order of Majiki AJ as provided in Rule
42(1)(a). They persist in the argument they made in the full court
that, because the
order granted by Majiki AJ was a nullity, the
consequential order granted by Malusi AJ, and further court processes
resulting from
the incompetent order, were all a nullity. They denied
having accepted the finality of the orders granted by Majiki AJ and
Malusi
AJ and argued that they demonstrated their non-acquiescence to
these orders by repeatedly resisting the application for default
judgment and the execution of the order. They maintained that they
could not consent to invalid orders.
[25]
I need only refer to the findings of this Court
(per Gorven JA) in paragraphs 22 to 23 above, in terms which this
Court found that
there were no prospects of success to the
appellants’ attempts to nullify the orders of Majiki and Malusi
AJJ. The contentions
made by the appellants in this appeal were
conclusively considered by this Court in that application. There is
no reason to depart
from the findings made in that instance.
[26]
At the start of the hearing of this appeal, counsel for the
appellants was asked to make submissions on whether
this Court can
grant an order that was never sought in the full court. For clarity,
in their urgent application, brought on the
basis of extreme urgency,
to set aside or stay execution of the writs, the applicants sought an
order in the following terms:
‘
2
The following writs and attachments are declared invalid and set
aside:
2.1
the second respondent’s [Sheriff’s] notice of attachment
dated 11 March 2016
of “all the office furniture and related
office equipment and vehicles of the Department of Health, Eastern
Cape”,
which vehicles and movables have not been properly
identified and inventoried pursuant to this attachment;
2.2
the second respondent’s [Sheriff’s] notice of attachment
dated 11 March 2016
issued by the sheriff of “all the office
furniture and related office equipment and vehicles of the Department
of Public
Works, Eastern Cape” which vehicles and movables have
not been properly identified and inventoried pursuant to this
attachment;
2.3
the writ of attachment dated 10 March 2021 issued by the first
respondent,
2.4
the second respondent’s attachment of the Department of
Health’s Standard Bank account number 273021567 on 11 March
2021,
Alternatively,
to the relief set out in prayer 2
3
The further execution of the writs of attachment dated 11 March 2016
including
the removal of the attached movables is stayed and the
attachment of the Department of Health’s Standard Bank account
number
273021567 on 11 March 2021 by the second respondent is
uplifted, pending the final determination of the application for
leave to
appeal the whole judgment and order of her Ladyship Bheshe J
dated and handed down on 16 February 2021 in case number 2610/2019
including any consequent appeals.’
[27] The full
court granted an order in terms of the appellants’ alternative
prayer. In their notice of appeal
to this Court, the appellants
(including the MEC of Finance), seek an order that:
‘
1.
the orders of Majiki AJ of 11 November 2011 and Malusi AJ of 1
December 2015, are declared
to be nullities and as such, may be
disregarded as having no binding effect in law;
2.
the Third Respondent’s (Sheriff) notices of attachment dated 11
March 2016,
are declared to be unlawful and of no legal force and
effect;
3.
an attachment of the banking account of either the First or the
Second Appellant
or any organ of state for that matter, is
unconstitutional and/unlawful and as such, invalid.’
[28]
The order sought as per the Notice of Appeal was never sought in the
high court. Counsel for the applicant acknowledged
the ‘novelty’
of their appeal - in which the order sought on appeal was never
sought in the court
a
quo
.
He explained that this appeal has its roots in the issues raised in
the full court’s directives. If that court had granted
an order
of nullity, that would have put an end to this case, including the
self-review, he explained. He urged this Court to ‘advance
the
frontiers of the law’ by entertaining the appeal, and granting
the order sought in the notice of appeal, even if that
was not the
order sought by the appellants in the high court. Unsurprisingly,
when pressed to provide authority for a court’s
power to grant
an order which was never sought, he could not recall any. This is
because, generally, courts do not have the power
to grant orders that
were never sought by the parties.
[11]
[29]
Regarding the directives of the full court it is so that a court may,
on its own, raise a point of law that is
apparent on the papers. This
is necessary where the common approach of the parties, on the papers,
is premised on a wrong approach
of what the law is, and the decision
of the court would therefore be founded on an incorrect application
of the law.
[12]
That was not
the case with the application for a stay of the writs. The appellants
sought to set aside or to stay execution of
the warrants. They
acknowledged the validity of the judgment debt. However, they
explained that after consulting a fresh team of
legal representatives
and reconsidering ‘the entire matter’, they resolved to
launch the self-review application.
[30] The case
made by the appellants in their application to set aside the writs
was based on a contention that the
writs were ‘not preceded by
compliance with ss 3(4) to (6) of the
State Liability Act. In
the
alternative they sought ‘upliftment of the attachment until the
final determination of the leave to appeal [the] application
before
Bheshe J, including any consequent appeals’. The full court
(Plasket J) had considered comprehensively the issues
raised in the
directives. It seems to me that if the full court (court
a quo
)
had to consider the question of nullity of the order of Majiki J, it
had to take into account the conclusions reached in the judgment
written by Plasket J. There is no indication in its judgment that it
did.
[31]
Furthermore, it is trite law that an appeal is directed at undoing
the result of a judgment. For that reason, an
appeal can only lie
against a substantive order of court and not against the reasons
given for the order or findings made in the
judgment. This Court has
repeatedly held as much.
[13]
In
Tecmed
Africa (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Health and another
[14]
this Court explained the principle as follows:
‘
First,
appeals do not lie against the reasons for the judgment but against
the substantive order of a lower court. Thus, whether
or not a court
of Appeal agrees with a lower court’s reasoning would be of no
consequence if the result would remain the
same’.
[32] Apart
from having no power to grant an order that was not sought in the
high court, this Court has no jurisdiction
to consider an appeal
which is primarily directed only at the reasons. This is particularly
so in this case, in which the contested
reasons did not form the
basis of the order granted by the court
a quo.
[33]
In any event, the order granted by the full court in August 2021,
including the order granting the intervention
by the Minister of
Finance was of no practical effect. So would any order that this
Court would make on both the appeal and the
cross-appeal. By 3 May
2021 the attached Standard Bank account had been closed by the
Department of Health. It was operating a
‘Paymaster General
(PMG) bank account with ABSA Bank. This fact was not in dispute
before us. The details appear in an affidavit
deposed to by the Head
of the Eastern Cape Treasury Department, Mr Daluhlanga Majeke, which
was filed in
Member
of the Executive Council for Finance, Economic Development,
Environmental Affairs and Tourism (Eastern Cape) and Others v
The
Legal Practice Council and Others
[15]
(LPC)
.
[34]
LPC
was a test case, as agreed between the parties in that matter, to
determine the lawfulness of attachment of moneys in bank accounts
held by government departments. In that case too, the MEC for Finance
had challenged the attachment of the rights title and interest
to the
credit balance in the Department’s ABSA Bank account. He
advanced the same basis in that case, as in this one, arguing
that
the Paymaster General account in which the funds of the Department of
Health were held, was a subsidiary of the Provincial
Revenue Fund
account, from which payments could only be made in accordance with
s 226(2)
of the Constitution and s 22 of the PFMA.
[16]
The full court, in a judgment penned by Eksteen J, held that neither
the Constitution nor the PFMA made reference to the Paymaster
General
account in which the attached funds were held. It found that moneys
allocated to the various government departments in
terms of the
Provincial Appropriation Act 8 of 2023, were withdrawn from the
Provincial Revenue Fund account and paid over to the
account of the
relevant department under s 226(2)
(a)
of
the Constitution. The Paymaster General account is therefore not an
account protected under s 226 of the Constitution. This finding
is
consistent with the position expressed by the Constitutional Court in
Provincial
Government: North West Province v Tsoga Developers and Others
(Tsoga)
.
[17]
[35] As in
this case, the argument in
Tsoga
was that attachment of the
right to funds held in a departmental account is impermissible, being
contrary to s 226(2) of the Constitution.
Although the Court did not
make a firm finding in this regard, at para 23, Madlanga J, writing
for a unanimous court, said:
‘
[23]
Not unmindful of the provisions of sections 7 and 21 of the PFMA and
regulation 15.2, the question arises whether – once
monies are
sitting in an account held by a government department – they
have not, in fact, been appropriated to that department
as envisaged
in s 226
(a)
.
If they have been, can their attachment amount to a contravention of
this section? If – in accordance with section 226(2)
–
“appropriate” includes the transfer of monies from a
Provincial Revenue Fund to an account held by a department,
can that
understanding be trumped by the provisions of sections 7 and 21of the
PFMA and Regulation 15.2?
[24]
Section 3(3)
(b)
(ii)
of the
State Liability Act makes
specific reference to funds
appropriated to a department. The section provides that payment of a
judgment debt by the accounting
officer of a department “must
be charged against the
appropriated budget of the department
concerned”
. If payment is expected to be from the
appropriated budget, how is it that funds held under that same budget
are somehow no longer
“appropriated” and thus no longer
available for attachment, as the applicants appear to contend?’
(emphasis in
the original text)
[36]
Mr Majeke who deposed to the founding affidavit in
LPC
deposed
to the founding affidavit on behalf of the MEC for Finance in this
case. I therefore agree with the submission on behalf
of Ikamva that,
when prosecuting the application for leave to intervene and this
appeal, all the appellants must have known that
the attachment in
relation to the bank account in this case, and the issues pertaining
to s 226(2) of the Constitution and the
State Liability Act had
become moot. And although, notionally, the issue of attachment of
incorporeal moveables owned by State organs might arise in the
future, apart from
LPC
,
the Constitutional Court considered the issue conclusively in
Nyathi
v Member of the Executive Council for the Department of Health,
Gauteng and another
.
[18]
Costs
[37]
Ultimately, the only issue that required consideration in the order
of the full court was that of costs. Ordinarily,
an appeal against an
order of costs only is not lightly granted. It may be granted where a
matter of principle is involved, and
where the amount of costs is not
insubstantial.
[19]
It is
evident from the above discussion that grave injustice has been done
to Ikamva. For an exceptionally long period it has been
repeatedly
prevented from executing on a valid judgment debt. Various courts,
including this Court, have pronounced on the validity
of the judgment
debt. Despite the repeated pronouncements by the courts on the
absence of prospects of reversal of the judgment
debt, the appellants
persistently used the courts and public funds to frustrate execution.
[38]
Consequently, it is in the interests of justice that the appellants
bear the costs of this appeal and the proceedings
in high court. As
to the costs of the cross-appeal, again it is apparent, particularly
from the judgment of Gorven JA and this
judgment that Ikamva was
entitled to execute on the order granted by Malusi AJ, which is not
likely to be rescinded. Added to that,
is the fact that Ikamva was
dragged to this Court for an unmeritorious appeal. When it had been
attempting to execute on the judgment
debt for over a decade, its
exasperation is understandable. Consequently, it is appropriate that
each party pay its own costs for
the cross appeal.
[39] As to
the punitive costs order made against Ikamva, the full court was
displeased with the filing the supplementary
affidavit in which it
was suggested that the court had descended into the arena and ‘was
threatened with an application for
recusal unless the legal points
raised were withdrawn’. The court found the ‘conduct and
tone’ of Ikamva’s
objections to the directives to border
on contempt and undermining respect for the judiciary.
[40] The full
court, however, did not find that the factual basis on which the
threat of a recusal application was made,
was unfounded. Ikamva was
entitled to express its anxiety regarding the directives,
particularly when the issues raised in the
directives had been
considered by the full court (Plasket J) on appeal. Parties should be
afforded the latitude, subject to applicable
ethical boundaries, to
express their dissatisfaction with matters they consider to affect
the fairness of the conduct of their
cases. Perhaps in a case where
the facts on which a threatened recusal application is based is
fabricated, incorrect, made in bad
faith, or ethical boundaries,
there could be reason for punitive costs. The fact that the
threatened recusal application never
materialised is not the central
inquiry. In addition, where the court’s displeasure lies with
the conduct of a practitioner,
rather than the veracity or good faith
of the underlying basis, an alternative route of reporting the
professional misconduct to
the relevant authority, seems more
appropriate than punishing the litigant itself.
[41]
Consequently the following order shall issue:
1.
The appeal is dismissed.
2.
The appellants are ordered to pay the costs of the appeal, including
the costs of two counsel,
on the attorney and client scale, jointly
and severally, the one paying the other (s) to be absolved.
3.
Save to the extent set out in paragraphs 4 and 5 below, the
cross-appeal is dismissed.
4.
Each party is ordered to pay its own costs in relation to the
cross-appeal.
5.
The order of the full court is amended to read as follows:
‘
1.
The intervening party is given leave to intervene in the matter as
the third applicant.
2.
The third appellant is to pay the first respondent’s costs of
the application for intervention,
including the costs of two counsel.
3.
The further execution of the writs of attachment dated 11 March 2016,
including the removal
of the attached movables, is stayed pending the
final determination of the application for leave to appeal the order
of Bheshe
J dated 16 February 2021 (case number 2610/2019), including
any consequent appeals.
4.
The appellants are to pay the first respondent’s costs of the
application, jointly
and severally, including the costs occasioned by
the
Rule 30
applications dated 22 June 2021 and 30 July 2021, and the
reserved costs of the hearing of the application on 5 August 2021,
such
costs to include the costs of two counsel where so employed.’
___________________
N
DAMBUZA
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For the first to third
appellants: M A
Albertus SC with S Sephton
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Cape Town
State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
For the first
respondent:
I J Smuts SC with A G Dugmore SC
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Cape Town
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein.
[1]
The
order of the full court reads thus:
‘
1
The intervening party is given leave to intervene on the matter as
third applicant.
2
The further execution of the writs of attachment dated 11 March
2016, including the removal of the attached
movables, is stayed
pending the final determination of application for leave to appeal
the court order of Beshe J dated 16 February
2021 (case number
2610/2019), including any consequent appeals.
3
The first respondent is to pay the costs of intervention, the costs
occasioned by the
Rule 30
applications dated 22 June 2021 and 30
July 2021 and the reserved costs of the hearing of the application
on 5 August 2021, such
costs to include the costs of two counsel
where so employed, but excluding any costs associated with the
presentation of the
‘Majiki J bundle’ and the ‘SCA
bundle’ to the court.
4
The costs of the first respondent’s supplementary and
confirmatory affidavits dated 21 July 2021
and the applicants’
answering affidavit dated 28 July 2021 are to be paid by the first
respondent on the attorney and client
scale’.
[2]
Ikamva
Architect CC v MEC for Department of Public works and Another ECD
(Bhisho)
Case
No 596/2008 (unreported decision handed down on 9 May 2013).
[3]
Ikamva
Architects CC v MEC for the Department of Public Works and Another
2014
JDR 1700(ECG).
[4]
Ikamva
Architects CC v MEC for the Department of Public Works and Another
ECD
(Bhisho) Case No 596/2008.
[5]
MEC
for the Department of Public Works and Another v Ikamva Architects
ECD
(Bhisho) Case No 596/2008 dated 19 September 2017. Majiki and Malusi
AJJ have since been appointed as judges of the Eastern
Cape Division
of the High Court.
[6]
MEC for
Public Works and Another v
Ikamva
Architects CC
ECD
(Bhisho) Case No 596/2008; an unreported decision dated 19 June
2015.
[7]
See
para 14 above.
[8]
MEC
for Department of Public Works, Eastern Cape and Another v Ikamva
Architects CC
(544/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 184
(20 December 2022).
[9]
MEC
for Department of Public Works, Eastern Cape and Another v Ikamva
Architects
CC
[2022]
ZASCA 184
para 9.
[10]
Ibid
para 35.
[11]
The
National Commissioner of Police and Another v Gun Owners of South
Africa
[2020]
ZASCA 88
;
[2020] All SA 1
(SCA)
2020 (6) SA 69
(SCA);
2021 SACR 44
(SCA) at 27-29.
[12]
Quartermark
Investments (Pty) Ltd v Mkhwanazi
2014
(3) SA 96 (SCA).
[13]
Manana
v King Sabata Dalindyebo Municipality
All
SA [2011] 3 (SCA 140;
S
A Reserve Bank v Khumalo and Another
All
SA 26 (SCA);
Atholl
Developments (Pty) Limited v Valuation Appeal Board for the City of
Johannesburg
JOL
33081 (SCA)
[2012]
4 All SA 149
(SCA) para 1
.
The
Law of South Africa
,
vol 4, 3
rd
ed, para 785. In
Lebea
v Menye and Another
2023
(3) BCLR 257
(CC) the Constitutional Court refused leave to
intervene to an applicant who sought to have set aside adverse
credibility finding
that had been made against him; See also;
Uniform Court
Rule 49(4)(a).
[14]
Tecmed
Africa v Minister of Health and Another
(495/11)
[2012] ZASCA 64
; [2012]4 All SA 149 (SCA).
[15]
Member
of the Executive Council for Finance, Economic Development,
Environmental Affairs and Tourism (Eastern Cape) and Others
:
The
Legal Practice Council and Others
Case
No 2091/2021. This application was dismissed by the high court on 21
June 2022.
[16]
Section 226 of the Constitution provides that:
‘
1
There is a Provincial Revenue Fund for each Province into which all
moneys received by the provincial government must be paid,
except
money reasonably excluded by an Act of Parliament.
2
Money may be drawn from a Provincial Revenue Fund only
a
in terms of an appropriation by a provincial Act, or
b
as a direct charge against the Provincial Revenue Fund, when it is
provided for in the Constitution or a provincial
Act’.
[17]
Provincial
Government: North West Province v Tsoga Developers CC and Others
[2016]
ZACC 9; 2016 (5) BCLR 687 (CC).
[18]
Nyathi
v Member of the Executive Council for the Department of Health,
Gauteng and Another
2008
(5) SA 94 (CC).
[19]
Section
16(2)(
a
)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
sino noindex
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