Case Law[2024] ZASCA 151South Africa
Mbambisa and Others v Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality (272/2023) [2024] ZASCA 151; (2025) 46 ILJ 277 (SCA); 2025 (3) SA 112 (SCA) (8 November 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
8 November 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Statutory interpretation – s 32 of Local Government: Municipal Finance Management Act 56 of 2003 (MFMA) – liability of municipal officials for unauthorised, irregular, fruitless and wasteful expenditure – s 176(1) – exclusion of liability of officials for loss or damage arising from performance of functions in good faith – whether s 176(1) a prerequisite for liability under s 32 of the MFMA.
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
>>
2024
>>
[2024] ZASCA 151
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mbambisa and Others v Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality (272/2023) [2024] ZASCA 151; (2025) 46 ILJ 277 (SCA); 2025 (3) SA 112 (SCA) (8 November 2024)
Mbambisa and Others v Nelson Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality (272/2023) [2024] ZASCA 151; (2025) 46 ILJ 277 (SCA); 2025 (3) SA 112 (SCA) (8 November 2024)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
Links to summary
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2024_151.html
sino date 8 November 2024
FLYNOTES:
MUNICIPALITY
– Liability of officials –
Irregular
expenditure
–
Statutory
interpretation of Act – Defendants contend municipal
officials are not financially liable for irregular expenditure
but
rather legally accountable – Municipality submits that
section creates statutory liability – Recovery of
such funds
is not optional – Municipality is enjoined to recover such
expenditure from person liable in terms of Act
– Personal
liability – Appeal upheld in part – High Court’s
order amended –
Local Government: Municipal Finance
Management Act 56 of 2003
,
ss 32
and
176
(1).
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 272/2023
In the matter between:
MPILO SAKILE
MBAMBISA
FIRST
APPELLANT
MHLELI MLUNGISI
TSHAMASE SECOND
APPELLANT
TREVOR
HARPER
THIRD APPELLANT
MZWAKE
CLAY
FOURTH APPELLANT
WALTER
SHAIDI
FIFTH APPELLANT
ERASTYLE (PTY)
LTD
SIXTH APPELLANT
ROLAND
WILLIAMS
SEVENTH APPELLANT
MAMISA
CHABULA-NXIWENI
EIGHTH APPELLANT
and
NELSON
MANDELA BAY
METROPOLITAN
RESPONDENT
MUNICIPALITY
Neutral
citation:
Mbambisa and Others v Nelson
Mandela Bay Metropolitan Municipality
(Case no 272/2023)
[2024] ZASCA
151
(
8 November
2024
)
Coram:
SCHIPPERS, MOKGOHLOA and NICHOLLS JJA
and BAARTMAN and
MASIPA AJJA
Heard:
30 August 2024
Delivered:
8 November 2024
Summary:
Statutory interpretation –
s 32
of Local Government:
Municipal Finance Management Act 56 of 2003 (MFMA) – liability
of municipal officials for unauthorised,
irregular, fruitless and
wasteful expenditure – s 176(1) – exclusion of
liability of officials for loss or damage
arising from performance of
functions in good faith – whether s 176(1) a prerequisite
for liability under s 32 of the
MFMA.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Eastern
Cape Division of the High Court, Gqeberha (Rugunanan J, sitting
as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld in part.
2
Paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of the High Court’s order dated 26 April
2022, are set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
2.
The plaintiff is granted judgment against the first, second, fourth
and fifth defendants jointly and severally for:
2.1
payment of the sum of
R5 263
179.89;
2.2
interest on the aforesaid amount at the prescribed legal rate from
the date of summons to the date of payment;
2.3
costs,
including the costs of two counsel. Such costs shall include those
occasioned by the postponement of the trial on 9 November
2020.
3.
The plaintiff is granted judgment against the first, second, fourth,
fifth, sixth and seventh defendants, jointly
and severally for:
3.1
payment of the sum of
R1 390 800;
3.2
interest on the aforesaid amount at the prescribed legal rate from
the date of summons to the date of payment;
3.3
costs,
including the costs of two counsel.
4.
The plaintiff is granted judgment against the first, second, fourth,
fifth and eighth defendants, jointly and severally
for:
4.1
payment of the sum of R984
197.21;
4.2
interest on the aforesaid amount at the prescribed legal rate from
the date of summons to the date of payment;
4.3
costs,
including the costs of two counsel.’
5
Save as aforesaid, the appeal is dismissed with costs, including the
costs of
two
counsel.
JUDGMENT
Schippers
JA (Mokgohloa and Nicholls JJA and Baartman and Masipa AJJA
concurring)
Introduction
[1]
This appeal, with the leave of this Court, concerns the meaning and
effect of ss 32 and 176(1) of the Local Government: Municipal Finance
Management Act 56 of 2003 (MFMA). The appellants (defendants)
are
former senior managers of the respondent, Nelson Mandela Bay
Metropolitan Municipality (the Municipality). At the relevant
times,
the first appellant, Mr Mpilo Sakile Mbambisa (the second defendant),
was the Municipal Manager; the third appellant, Mr
Trevor Harper (the
fifth defendant), the Chief Financial Officer (CFO); and the fifth
appellant, Mr Walter Shaidi (the eighth
defendant), the
Executive Director: Infrastructure and Engineering. They are the only
defendants participating in this appeal.
[2]
The matter arises from the defendants’ respective roles in
the
Municipality’s appointment, in February 2014, of Erastyle (Pty)
Ltd (Erastyle) as a lead consultant in the development
of a
comprehensive communication and marketing strategy, valued at some R6
million, for the Integrated Public Transport System
(IPTS) of the
Municipality (the impugned appointment). It is common ground that
Erastyle was appointed without a public tender
process and in breach
of the Municipality’s Supply Chain Management Policy (the SCM
policy); and that pursuant to the impugned
appointment, the
Municipality paid the following amounts to Erastyle: R5 263
179.89, R1 390 800 and R984 197.21
(the unlawful payments).
The
High Court proceedings
The
pleadings
[3]
On 11 February 2016 the Municipality instituted an action in
the Eastern Cape Division of the High Court, Gqeberha (the High
Court), against Erastyle and a number of officials of the
Municipality,
including the defendants. The Municipality sought
orders, inter alia, declaring the impugned appointment unlawful and
invalid;
and directing Erastyle and the defendants to repay the
unlawful payments, jointly and severally.
[4]
The Municipality brought four separate claims. Of these only the
first, second and third claims are relevant for present purposes. In
its first claim the Municipality sought an order declaring
the
impugned appointment and certain decisions taken by the second and
third defendants to facilitate that appointment, unlawful
and invalid
in terms of s 172(1) of the Constitution. The grounds for this relief
were essentially the following:
(a)
The decision on 13
February 2014 by the third defendant, the late Dr Mamisa
Chabula-Nxiweni, the Acting City Manager, to approve
the impugned
appointment without a tender process, was a violation of s 217 of the
Constitution,
[1]
and the SCM
Policy. The Municipality pleaded that the action was brought without
undue delay; alternatively, if it was not, that
the delay should be
condoned.
(b)
The second defendant’s decisions: (i) recommending that the
Acting City Manager approve the payment of R6 million to Erastyle;
(ii) that the cap on payments in respect of the impugned appointment
be lifted to increase the contract value; and (iii) that the City
Manager approve an increase in the contract value from R6 000 000
to R6 984 197.22, are unlawful and invalid. These decisions were made
without a competitive bidding process and constitute the
incurrence
of irregular expenditure as defined in the MFMA.
[5]
The second claim was one of unjustified enrichment against Erastyle.
The Municipality alleged that since the procurement of Erastyle’s
services was unlawful, there was no legal basis for the
unlawful
payments made to it; it did not provide services to the value of
R7 638 177.10; and it was unjustifiably enriched
to that
extent at the Municipality’s expense. In addition, the
Municipality sought to recover the unlawful payments from
the second
and fifth defendants under the second claim. The basis for this claim
was that they had negligently authorised and effected
those payments
to Erastyle, which constituted irregular expenditure recoverable in
terms of s 32(1)
(c)
of the MFMA, because it was incurred
in contravention of the SCM policy.
[6]
The Municipality’s
third claim was founded in delict, namely fraudulent
misrepresentation by the fourth and eighth defendants
(although the
claim was pleaded as a breach of their duties of employment).
[2]
The Municipality alleged that the fourth defendant, Mr Mhleli
Mlungisi Tshamase, had prepared memoranda in which he intentionally,
alternatively negligently, represented to the Municipality that the
impugned appointment was lawful; that there were exceptional
circumstances that justified dispensing with an official procurement
process; that Erastyle could be appointed directly and its
contract
value could be increased; and that Erastyle was entitled to the
unlawful payments. These misrepresentations induced the
Municipality
to make the unlawful payments to Erastyle and caused it to suffer
loss in the sum of R7 638 177.10. The
eighth defendant, it
was alleged, had intentionally or negligently endorsed the fourth
defendant’s memoranda, and was equally
liable for the loss to
the Municipality as a result of the misrepresentations.
[7]
The second, fifth and eighth defendants filed a special plea that
the
Municipality had delayed unreasonably in instituting the action for
the review of impugned decision, based on the principle
of legality.
They asked that the action be dismissed for this reason.
[8]
In its plea on the merits, Erastyle admitted the impugned appointment
but denied that it was unlawful. It also admitted receipt of the
unlawful payments, but pleaded that these were received after
it had
submitted invoices to the Municipality for services rendered, and
that the Municipality had benefited from those services.
[9]
The second defendant admitted that he signed the relevant memoranda
and resolutions giving effect to the impugned appointment. However,
he denied that his actions were unlawful or invalid, that the
unlawful payments constituted irregular expenditure, or that they
were made in breach of the SCM policy. The fifth and eighth
defendants did not dispute that they had signed the memoranda and
resolutions in which they supported the impugned appointment and
authorised the unlawful payments, but they denied that they
intentionally or negligently authorised or incurred irregular
expenditure.
[10]
The fifth defendant pleaded that when the recommendation for the
consideration of the financial
aspects of the matter was given to
him, the impugned appointment had already been approved by the acting
City Manager. The fifth
and eighth defendants pleaded that at the
relevant times they complied with their obligations as officials of
the Municipality.
They denied that they had deliberately or
negligently authorised or made any irregular or fruitless and
wasteful expenditure as
contemplated in s 32 of the MFMA.
The
evidence
[11]
The Municipality adduced evidence by three witnesses, namely Mr Burt
Botha, Mr Johan Mettler
and Ms Barbara de Scande. Mr Botha was a
forensic investigator at Deloitte at the time, which had been
appointed by the National
Treasury (the Treasury) to conduct an
investigation into expenditure by the Municipality of grant funding
relating to the IPTS
project. Mr Mettler was appointed as the
Municipal Manager in December 2015. Ms De Scande is the
Municipality’s Director
of Expenditure Management. At the
relevant times she was the Acting CFO.
[12]
Mr Botha testified that in December 2013, the Treasury had paid an
amount of approximately
R2.1 billion to the Municipality. The
investigation by Deloitte which commenced in February 2014, was aimed
at establishing the
amounts of money transferred to some 300 key
suppliers involved in the IPTS project (a bus service); and to locate
the documents
supporting those payments. The investigation revealed
that invoices had been over-inflated, for example, an invoice from
Erastyle
was submitted for payment of R5.2 million, whereas the value
of the work allegedly done was only R2 million.
[13]
In August 2015 Deloitte furnished its report to the Treasury and the
Municipality. A criminal
investigation into the conduct of municipal
officials, based on Deloitte’s findings, was commenced.
[14]
Mr Mettler is an attorney who worked as a municipal manager in
various municipalities.
He was appointed as the Municipal Manager in
December 2015 when the Deloitte report was brought to his attention.
The matter was
placed under his direct supervision. After he was
briefed by Deloitte, representatives from the Treasury and the
Municipality’s
attorneys, Mr Mettler took over all disciplinary
proceedings against municipal officials that were ongoing at the
time, and he
decided to institute disciplinary proceedings against
certain other municipal officials in February 2016.
[15]
Mr Mettler said that in 2016, in his capacity as the accounting
officer, he submitted a
report to the Treasury concerning wasteful,
irregular and unauthorised expenditure, as he was obliged to do under
the MFMA. Prior
to his appointment, no such report had been submitted
to the Treasury.
[16]
Ms De Scande, who at the time was working at the Municipality for
some 36 years, testified
about the procurement process that the
defendants were required to follow, but did not. In her capacity as
the Acting CFO, she
refused to support a recommendation in a
memorandum dated 28 January 2014 by the fourth defendant to the
Acting City Manager, that
the impugned appointment be approved. The
memorandum states that the appointment of Erastyle would be for 12
months for approximately
R6 million ‘which will amount to R300
000 a month for the 12-month period’. This obviously, is wrong
– the total
of the monthly fees were R3.6 million.
[17]
Ms De Scande’s stance was that the fourth defendant’s
request to bypass the
SCM policy was impermissible and that a 14-day
tender process had to be followed. The Acting City Manager agreed and
declined to
approve the impugned appointment.
[18]
However, two weeks later the fourth defendant prepared a second
recommendation for approval
of the impugned appointment, in which it
is stated that ‘it would neither be practical nor lawful to
advertise the tender’;
which, he said, ‘would have severe
legal implications and challenges for the Municipality’ as the
lead consultant had
already been appointed. Based on this so-called
legal advice, the Acting City Manager approved the impugned
appointment on 13 February
2014.
[19]
In March 2014 the fifth defendant was appointed as the CFO of the
Municipality. His background
was not in local government and Ms De
Scande offered to assist him. It was agreed between them that all
documents which required
the fifth defendant’s signature, would
be given to Ms De Scande for her comments. This happened from time to
time.
[20]
On 23 April 2014 Ms De
Scande sent an email to the fifth defendant’s secretary in
which she reiterated her position that a
tender process had to be
followed, and that if Erastyle had been appointed as a consultant
without following the SCM policy, then
there was no purpose in the
fifth defendant signing an approval of the impugned appointment, and
a report in terms of s 32 of the
MFMA was required.
[3]
She went on to say that neither the CFO nor the accounting officer
has authority to condone non-compliance with the MFMA, nor to
bypass
the procurement process. Ms De Scande also gave evidence of the
transactions that resulted in the impugned payments.
[21]
The Municipality established that the second, fifth and eighth
defendants, according to
the documents proved and evidence adduced at
the trial, had deliberately or negligently recommended, authorised
and supported the
impugned appointment and unlawful payments. At the
end of the Municipality’s case, the defendants chose not to
testify.
[22]
The Municipality pursued its claims against Erastyle by default
because its defence had
previously been struck out. The second, fifth
and eighth defendants were represented by counsel. At the end
of the Municipality's
case they chose not to testify. They closed
their case and called no witnesses in rebuttal of the Municipality's
case.
The
High Court’s judgment
[23]
The High Court held that s 32 of the MFMA creates a statutory claim
for the recovery of
unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and wasteful
expenditure from the official liable for such expenditure, as a
penalty, and
not as damages. It found that s 32 constitutes a
self-standing claim based on the jurisdictional requirements
contained in that
provision; and that a municipality is statutorily
obliged to recover unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and wasteful
expenditure
from the persons specified in s 32. Whether a
municipality receives value for such expenditure, the court held, is
not a relevant
factor and no preconditions are set for its recovery.
[24]
As regards the first claim, the High Court found that the action was
instituted on 11 February
2016 without undue delay, after the
Municipality received a draft forensic investigative report from the
Treasury in August 2015.
The court held that the evidence by the
Municipality’s witnesses was reliable; that a perceived
procedural obstacle should
not prevent the court from considering a
challenge to the lawfulness of the exercise of public power; and that
the issue of delay
was irrelevant to a claim under s 32 of the MFMA.
[25]
As to the second claim, the High Court held that the evidence showing
that the impugned
appointment was unlawful was incontrovertible, and
that there was no lawful basis for the impugned payments. The second
defendant,
who was responsible for implementing the SCM policy and
managing the Municipality’s financial administration, had
authorised
the unlawful payments to Erastyle. The High Court found
that the fifth defendant was aware of the circumstances surrounding
the
unlawful appointment of Erastyle, and the fact that there was no
basis for the unlawful payments. Consequently, he was also liable
for
irregular expenditure under s 32(1)
(c)
of the MFMA. The court
stated that despite having pleaded a comprehensive defence, the fifth
defendant adduced no evidence to contradict
the evidence of Ms De
Scande. Her evidence established that the SCM policy had been
contravened, and accordingly that the unlawful
payments to Erastyle
had no basis.
[26]
Regarding the third claim, the High Court stated that the eighth
defendant admitted endorsing
the fourth defendant’s memorandum
seeking an increase in the contract value in an amount of
R984 197.22, despite the
fact that Erastyle had been paid the
full contract value in advance. The court held that the evidence
established that the fourth
and eighth defendants intentionally,
alternatively, negligently breached their duty to act in good faith,
and not to engage in
conduct prejudicial to the Municipality, which
caused the Municipality to suffer loss in the amount claimed.
[27]
The High Court made the following declaratory orders in relation to
the first claim, and
ordered the defendants to pay the costs jointly
and severally:
(a)
The impugned appointment is unlawful and invalid.
(b)
The third defendant’s decision to approve the impugned
appointment
is unlawful and invalid.
(c)
The second defendant’s decision that payment of R6 million to
Erastyle be approved
by the Acting City Manager, is unlawful and
invalid.
(d)
The second defendant’s decision requesting the Chief Operating
Officer to remove
a cap on the value of the contract granted to
Erastyle in terms of the impugned appointment, is unlawful and
invalid.
(e)
The second defendant’s decision to recommend an increase of the
contract value from
R6 million to R6 984 197.22, is
unlawful and invalid.
[28]
As regards the second claim, the High Court granted judgment in
favour of the Municipality
against Erastyle, the first, second and
fifth defendants, jointly and severally, for payment of the unlawful
amounts, together
with interest and costs. In the alternative, the
Municipality was granted judgment against the third defendant for
payment of the
unlawful amounts, together with interest and costs.
[29]
In relation to the third claim, the High Court granted judgment in
favour of the Municipality:
(a)
against the fourth defendant for payment of R5 263 179.89
and R1 390 800,
together with interest and costs;
(b)
against the fourth and eighth defendants, jointly and severally, for
payment of the sum
of R984 197.21, together with interest and
costs.
Submissions
in this Court
The
defendants’ submissions
[30]
The defendants submit that the High Court erred in holding that s 32
of the MFMA is a self-standing
penalty provision in terms of which
the municipality is obliged to recover the full extent of the
prescribed expenditure from the
relevant official, regardless of
whether the Municipality has sustained any loss or damage, and
irrespective of the extent of such
loss. Such an interpretation, so
the defendants submit, is neither purposive nor contextual, and
disregards the general scheme
and purpose of the MFMA. It would also
be inconsistent with the Constitution and result in an absurdity.
[31]
Section 32, it is submitted, does not refer to a penalty and it would
be unconscionable
and discriminatory to impose such a penalty on a
municipal official in circumstances where the municipality has
suffered no loss
or damage. The MFMA provides for other consequences
if unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and wasteful expenditure is
incurred.
[32]
The defendants contend that the recovery of unauthorised, irregular
or fruitless and wasteful
expenditure from the person liable in s 32,
must be interpreted to mean that officials are ‘legally
answerable’ or
accountable. It does not mean that municipal
officials are financially liable for that expenditure. This
interpretation, the defendants
say, is reasonable and sensible.
[33]
The defendants submit that their interpretation accords with s 176 of
the MFMA. It provides
that municipal officials exercising a power or
performing a function in good faith under the MFMA, are not liable
for any loss
or damage resulting from the exercise of that power or
the performance of that function; and that a municipality may recover
from
its officials any loss or damage it suffered because of the
deliberate or negligent unlawful actions of those officials. This
interpretation,
the defendants submit, accords with s 32(1), ‘expands
on section 32(2) which provides for the obligation of the
municipality
to recover’, and is consistent with the law that a
party ought not to be doubly compensated, nor receive compensation
where
no loss or damage has been suffered. Section 32(2) should thus
be read in general terms and subject to the circumstances prescribed
in s 176.
[34]
Finally, it is submitted that the municipality received significant
value for work done
under the IPTS. As regards the claim against the
second defendant, which is based on contractual damages, the
Municipality failed
to prove its damages and the claim must fail for
that reason alone.
Submissions
on behalf of the Municipality
[35]
Counsel for the Municipality submit that on its plain language, s 32
of the MFMA creates
a statutory liability on the part of the
office-bearers and officials referred to in s 32(1), who
intentionally or negligently
incur the expenditure described in that
provision, in addition to any liability under the common law. A
municipality is obliged
under s 32(2) to recover that expenditure
from the person liable for incurring it. The further obligations
referred to in s 32(4)
to (7) emphasise the seriousness with which
the Legislature considers unauthorised, irregular, or fruitless and
wasteful expenditure.
[36]
It is submitted that the defendants’ argument that it could
never have been the legislative
intention that a municipality could
have the benefit of services rendered, yet still claim repayment of
monies expended, must fail.
This defence was not pleaded and was
raised for the first time in argument in the application for leave to
appeal. Apart from this,
the defendants’ argument would require
words to be read into s 32(2).
The
issues
[37]
This appeal raises three issues:
(a)
The proper construction of s 32 of the MFMA.
(b)
Was the Municipality precluded from instituting the action against
the defendants on account of unreasonable delay in seeking an order
to review and set aside the impugned appointment?
(c)
Was the High Court correct in making the order it did? More
specifically,
the effect of the order is that the Municipality’s
three claims are duplicated.
Section
32 of the MFMA
[38]
The Municipality’s case is principally based on s 32(1) and (2)
of the MFMA, located
in Chapter 4 of the Act that regulates municipal
budgets. These sections provide:
‘
Unauthorised,
irregular or fruitless and wasteful expenditure
(1)
Without limiting liability in terms of the common law or other
legislation-
(a)
a
political office-bearer of a municipality is liable for unauthorised
expenditure if that office-bearer knowingly
or after having been
advised by the accounting officer of the municipality that the
expenditure is likely to result in unauthorised
expenditure,
instructed an official of the municipality to incur the expenditure;
(b)
the
accounting officer is liable for unauthorised expenditure
deliberately or negligently incurred by the accounting
officer,
subject to subsection (3);
(c)
any
political office-bearer or official of a municipality who
deliberately or negligently committed, made or authorised
an
irregular expenditure, is liable for that expenditure; or
(d)
any
political office-bearer or official of a municipality who
deliberately or negligently made or authorised a
fruitless and
wasteful expenditure is liable for that expenditure.
(2)
A municipality must recover unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and
wasteful expenditure from the person liable for that expenditure
unless the expenditure-
(a)
in
the case of unauthorised expenditure, is-
(i) authorised
in an adjustments budget; or
(ii) certified
by the municipal council, after investigation by a council committee,
as irrecoverable and written off
by the council; and
(b)
in
the case of irregular or fruitless and wasteful expenditure, is,
after investigation by a council committee,
certified by the council
as irrecoverable and written off by the council.’
[39]
The Municipality’s case concerning the first and second claims,
is founded on s 32(1)
(c)
– the liability of municipal
officials who deliberately or negligently authorise or make irregular
expenditure, which is defined
in s 1 of the MFMA as follows:
‘“
irregular
expenditure
”,
in relation to a municipality or municipal entity, means-
(a)
expenditure
incurred by a municipality or municipal entity in contravention of,
or that is not in accordance with,
a requirement of this Act, and
which has not been condoned in terms of section 170;
(b)
expenditure
incurred by a municipality or municipal entity in contravention of,
or that is not in accordance with,
a requirement of the Municipal
Systems Act, and which has not been condoned in terms of that Act;
(c)
expenditure
incurred by a municipality in contravention of, or that is not in
accordance with, a requirement of the Public Office-Bearers
Act, 1998
(
Act
20 of 1998
);
or
(d)
expenditure
incurred by a municipality or municipal entity in contravention of,
or that is not in accordance with,
a requirement of the supply chain
management policy of the municipality or entity or any of the
municipality’s by-laws giving
effect to such policy, and which
has not been condoned in terms of such policy or by-law, but excludes
expenditure by a municipality
which falls within the definition of
“unauthorised expenditure”.’
[40]
The proper approach to statutory interpretation is settled:
‘
It
is the language used, understood in the context in which it is used,
and having regard to the purpose of the provision that constitutes
the unitary exercise of interpretation . . . [T]he triad of text,
context and purpose should not be used in a mechanical fashion.
It is
the relationship between the words used, the concept expressed by
those words and the place of the contested provision within
the
scheme of the agreement (or instrument) as a whole that constitute
the enterprise by recourse to which a coherent and salient
interpretation is determined.’
[4]
[41]
The inevitable starting
point is the language of the statutory provision.
[5]
Section 32 of the MFMA has been drafted with a specific purpose in
mind, expressed by the words and concepts that Parliament has
chosen.
These words are therefore the primary source by which meaning is
ascertained. For these reasons, as this Court stated
in
Capitec
,
[6]
‘
interpretation
begins with the text and its structure. They have a gravitational
pull that is important. The proposition that context
is everything is
not a licence to contend for meanings unmoored in the text and its
structure. Rather, context and purpose may
be used to elucidate the
text.’
[42]
Applied to the present case, it is not helpful to characterise s 32
as a penalty provision.
And, contrary to the defendants’
submission, nothing turns on the fact that the word ‘penalty’
does not appear
in s 32. Rather, when interpreting a statute, courts
are required to ascertain the meaning of the words which Parliament
has used.
[43]
Section 32(1), on its plain wording, renders municipal officials
statutorily liable for
unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and
wasteful expenditure, in addition to any liability under the common
law or any other legislation.
The reach of s 32(1) and (2) is not
limited to municipal officials, but extends to political
office-bearers, who are not involved
in the day-to-day running of a
municipality.
[44]
Parliament has also
defined unauthorised, irregular, and fruitless and wasteful
expenditure in considerable detail, which leaves
no uncertainty as to
what they comprise.
[7]
And s
32(1) makes it clear that in each category, the relevant political
functionary or municipal official who deliberately or
negligently
incurred, made or authorised the expenditure, is liable to the
municipality for payment of ‘that’ expenditure,
ie the
expenditure contemplated in s 32(1)
(b)
,
(c)
and
(d)
.
[45]
It follows that the
defendants’ argument that the word ‘liable’ in s
32(1) should be interpreted according to
its dictionary definition,
which means ‘accountable’ as opposed to monetary
liability, is wrong. It ignores the plain
language and context of s
32(1). As this Court cautioned in
Capitec
:
[8]
‘
Endumeni
simply
gives expression to the view that the words and concepts used in a
contract and their relationship to the external
world are not
self-defining. The case and its progeny emphasise that
the
meaning of a contested term of a contract (or provision in a statute)
is properly understood not simply by selecting standard
definitions
of particular words, often taken from dictionaries, but also by
understanding the words and sentences that comprise
the contested
term as they fit into the larger structure of the agreement, its
context and purpose
.
Meaning is ultimately the most compelling and coherent account the
interpreter can provide, making use of these sources of
interpretation.
It is not a partial selection of interpretational
materials directed at a predetermined result.’ (Emphasis
added.)
[46]
The plain wording of s 32 also makes it clear that recovery of
unauthorised, irregular,
and fruitless and wasteful expenditure by a
municipality, is not optional. Instead, a municipality is
enjoined to recover
such expenditure from the person liable for it,
hence the word ‘must’ in s 32(2).
[47]
What is more, Parliament has clearly stated the exceptions to the
obligation to recover:
(i) unauthorised expenditure, in subsection
(2)
(a)
; and (ii) fruitless and wasteful expenditure, in
subsection (2)
(b)
. Unauthorised expenditure need not be
recovered if it is (a) authorised in an adjustments budget; in other
words, the unauthorised
expenditure should have been part of planned
expenditure, or (b) the unauthorised expenditure is certified as
irrecoverable and
written off by the council, after investigation by
a committee. The exception in (b) also applies to irregular, or
fruitless and
wasteful expenditure envisaged in s 32(1)
(d)
.
[48]
The above interpretation
accords with the context of s 32 as a whole. Thus, s 32(3) of the
MFMA provides that an accounting officer
(the municipal manager) will
not be liable for unauthorised, irregular, and fruitless and wasteful
expenditure if he or she informs
the council, the mayor or the
executive committee in writing that a decision, which if implemented,
is likely to result in such
expenditure.
[9]
The fact that unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and wasteful
expenditure has been written off as irrecoverable, is no excuse
in
criminal or disciplinary proceedings against the person who incurred
that expenditure.
[10]
[49]
The seriousness with which Parliament considers unauthorised,
irregular or fruitless and
wasteful expenditure, is underscored by s
32(6) of the MFMA. It obliges the accounting officer to report to the
police, all cases
of alleged irregular expenditure which constitute a
criminal offence, and theft and fraud which occurs in the
municipality. Further,
s 32(7) enjoins the council of a municipality
to take all reasonable steps to ensure that all cases referred to in
s 32(6) are
reported to the police if the charge is against the
accounting officer, or where that officer fails to comply with that
subsection.
[50]
The text and structure of
s 32 – an independent provision imposing statutory liability
for the deliberate or negligent incurrence
of specific categories of
expenditure – is reinforced by the object of the MFMA contained
in s 2: ‘to secure sound
and sustainable management of the
fiscal and financial affairs of municipalities and municipal
entities’.
[11]
This
central purpose is also stated in the long title to the Act.
[51]
For the above reasons,
the defendants’ submission that where the Municipality’s
claim is not based on loss or damage
being sustained, the claim must
fail, is wrong. This, as the Municipality correctly submits, would
require words to be read into
s 32(1). It is trite that words cannot
be read into a statute by implication, unless that implication is
necessary in the sense
that without it effect cannot be given to the
statute as it stands.
[12]
[52]
The defendants’ submission that a claim under s 32 should fail
where significant
value is received for the work done, is also
incorrect. No such requirement is contained in s 32. Rather, s 32 is
a self-standing
provision that imposes statutory liability on
political office-bearers and municipal officials for unauthorised,
irregular, and
fruitless and wasteful expenditure, as defined in s 1
of the MFMA. In this case the Municipality proved that the defendants
had
incurred irregular expenditure – the impugned appointment
and the unlawful payments were made deliberately or negligently
in
violation of the SCM policy – which the Municipality was
enjoined to recover.
[53]
In any event, the defendants ignore the facts: they adduced no
evidence to contradict the
fact that the impugned appointment and the
unlawful payments that followed, was a contravention of the SCM
policy. Neither did
the fifth and eighth defendants present any
evidence to rebut the Municipality’s case against them on the
third claim, despite
having pleaded a comprehensive defence. And the
submission that the Municipality received value for the work done has
no foundation
in the evidence: it is based on a speculative response
by Mr Botha in cross-examination that according to what he had been
told,
Erastyle may have done some work.
[54]
The defendants’
reliance on s 176(1) of the MFMA is misplaced,
[13]
and can be dealt with briefly. Section 176(1) protects, amongst
others, a municipality and its officials against liability to third
parties, for loss or damage that results from the bona fide exercise
of a power or the performance of a function under the MFMA.
In terms
of s 176(2), a municipality is authorised to recover loss or damage
it suffered from the official concerned, where that
loss or damage
has been caused deliberately or negligently. Such loss obviously
excludes the expenditure contemplated in s 32,
which the municipality
is obliged to recover in terms of that provision.
[55]
Section 176(1) has nothing to do with the recovery of unauthorised,
irregular or fruitless
and wasteful expenditure from municipal
officials: it merely underscores the fact that s 32 is a
self-standing provision aimed
at the recovery of such expenditure.
The definition of unauthorised expenditure illustrates the point. It
includes overspending
of the total amount appropriated in an approved
budget, which may cause no loss or damage to the municipality, yet
the amount that
has been overspent must be recovered. Likewise, a
municipality might benefit from a service procured in contravention
of a SCM
policy, but the expenditure incurred in obtaining that
service remains irregular expenditure, recoverable under s 32(2).
Similarly,
fruitless and wasteful expenditure means expenditure made
in vain that could have been avoided by the exercise of reasonable
care
– loss or damage to a municipality is not a prerequisite
for its recovery.
[56]
To sum up:
(a)
Section 32, construed in the context of that section as a whole
and
the wider context of the MFMA, makes it clear that the place and
function of s 32 is to create personal liability on the part
of
municipal officials in particular circumstances. The meaning conveyed
by the wording of s 32 is clear and unambiguous. Liability
arises as
soon as an official intentionally or negligently incurs unauthorised,
irregular, and fruitless and wasteful expenditure:
s 32 is not
conditional upon a municipality sustaining loss or damage.
(b)
Section 32 gives effect to the intention of Parliament: to secure
sound and sustainable management of the fiscal and financial affairs
of municipalities, by holding political office-bearers and
municipal
officials personally liable for the intentional or negligent
incurrence of the defined expenditure. This is what renders
s 32
completely different from s 176(1) of the MFMA in its purpose and
operation.
(c)
This construction is not unconscionable and produces no absurdity.
The construction that the defendants contend for – that a
municipality can recover unauthorised, irregular, and fruitless
and
wasteful expenditure only if it has suffered loss or damage –
renders s 32 meaningless.
Unreasonable
delay is no defence
[57]
A delay in challenging
administrative action or the exercise of public power may serve to
bar the challenge. The two main reasons
for the delay rule are to
curb potential prejudice resulting from the delay; and the value of
finality and certainty in relation
to public decision-making.
[14]
[58]
The Municipality’s claims are founded on s 32 of the MFMA.
Section 32 does not require
the review and setting aside of the
impugned appointment before the Municipality may invoke its
provisions. The High Court was
correct in holding that the issue of
undue delay is irrelevant to a claim under s 32 of the MFMA. In
addition, undue delay is entirely
irrelevant to the third claim
against the fifth and eighth defendants, which is founded on a
misrepresentation.
The
High Court’s order
[59]
In paragraph 2 of the High Court’s order dated 26 April 2022,
it granted judgment
on the Municipality’s second claim against
the first, second and fifth defendants, jointly and severally, in the
amounts
of R5 263 179.89, R1 390 800 and R984 197.21,
together with interest and costs. In the alternative, however, it
also granted judgment against the third defendant for payment of
these amounts.
[60]
The parties were asked to file brief submissions as to whether
paragraph 2 of the High
Court’s order dated 26 April 2022, is
appropriate. Concerning the second claim, the defendants submit that
there is no scope
for any monetary judgment to be retained as against
the second and fifth defendants, because the High Court granted the
alternative
relief against the third defendant and no appeal lies
against that order, since there is no cross-appeal by the third
defendant.
[61]
The defendants further submit that the eighth defendant should be
excluded from any order;
the claim against him was contractual and no
damages were proved against him. But that is not so. The third claim
against the eighth
defendant, based on an intentional; alternatively,
negligent misrepresentation, was proved by the documentary and
oral evidence
– which was unchallenged. On 24 February 2015 he
signed a memorandum (prepared by the fourth defendant) approving an
increase
in the contract value from R6 000 000 to
R6 984 197.22, and the payment of R984 197.22 to
Erastyle. He
also endorsed the misrepresentations by the fourth
defendant that Erastyle had been lawfully appointed; that the
increase in the
contract value without following the SCM policy, was
lawful; that there was compliance with the MFMA supply chain policies
and
finance procedures; and that the payment of R984 197.22 to
Erastyle was lawful.
[62]
The Municipality submits
that if the appeal is dismissed, the alternative order against the
third defendant should be set aside,
since at the time of the trial
she was deceased and the Municipality did not pursue the claims
against her or her estate. Therefore,
all references in the High
Court’s order to the third defendant should be deleted. The
Municipality concedes that in granting
relief in respect of all three
claims in the total amount of R7 638 177.10, the first,
second and third claims were in
effect duplicated. Therefore,
paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of the High Court’s order should also be
set aside and substituted with
an order in terms of prayers 4, 5 and
6 of the particulars of claim (excluding the third defendant), which
the Municipality sought
at the conclusion of the trial.
[15]
[63]
In conceding that it did not pursue any claim against the third
defendant, the Municipality,
in effect, has abandoned the alternative
order granted erroneously in its favour. The High Court’s order
should thus be amended
accordingly. It is also doubtful whether it
was competent for the High Court to grant judgment in favour of the
Municipality in
respect of the second claim, on both its main and
alternative claims. The latter claim was specifically pleaded by the
Municipality
as an alternative, in the event of the main claim
against Erastyle and the first, second and fifth defendants failing.
That was
the case which the defendants were called upon to meet. What
is more, the alternative claim contains different allegations of fact
which contradict those in the main claim. But no more need be said
about this.
[64]
The Municipality is correct that the effect of the High Court’s
order is that
the first second and third claims are duplicated, and
that this was never intended by the Municipality nor the court.
In
this respect, the order must also be corrected.
[65]
I make the following order:
1
The appeal is upheld in part.
2
Paragraphs 2, 3 and 4 of the High Court’s order dated 26 April
2022, are set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
2.
The plaintiff is granted judgment against the first, second, fourth
and fifth defendants jointly and severally for:
2.1
payment of the sum of
R5 263
179.89;
2.2
interest on the aforesaid amount at the prescribed legal rate from
the date of summons to the date of payment;
2.3
costs,
including the costs of two counsel. Such costs shall include those
occasioned by the postponement of the trial on 9 November
2020.
3.
The plaintiff is granted judgment against the first, second, fourth,
fifth, sixth and seventh defendants, jointly
and severally for:
3.1
payment of the sum of
R1 390
800;
3.2
interest on the aforesaid amount at the prescribed legal rate from
the date of summons to the date of payment;
3.3
costs,
including the costs of two counsel.
4.
The plaintiff is granted judgment against the first, second, fourth,
fifth and eighth defendants, jointly and severally
for:
4.1
payment of the sum of R984
197.21;
4.2
interest on the aforesaid amount at the prescribed legal rate from
the date of summons to the date of payment;
4.3
costs,
including the costs of two counsel.’
5
Save as aforesaid, the appeal is dismissed with costs, including the
costs of
two
counsel.
A SCHIPPERS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
first, third and fifth appellants:
J J
Nepgen SC
Instructed
by:
Kaplan
Blumberg Attorneys, Gqeberha
Honey
Inc, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
R G
Buchanan SC with J G Richards
Instructed
by:
Pagdens
Inc, Gqeberha
Bezuidenhouts
Inc, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section 217(1) of the Constitution provides:
‘
(1)
When an organ of state in the national, provincial or local sphere
of government, or any other institution identified
in national
legislation, contracts for goods or services, it must do so in
accordance with a system which is fair, equitable,
transparent,
competitive and cost-effective.’
[2]
See J Neethling and J M Potgieter
Law
of Delict
8
ed (2020) at 358-359.
[3]
Section 32(3) and (4) provide:
‘
(3)
If the accounting officer becomes aware that the council, the mayor
or the executive committee of the municipality, as the
case may be,
has taken a decision which, if implemented, is likely to result in
unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and wasteful
expenditure, the
accounting officer is not liable for any ensuing unauthorised,
irregular or fruitless and wasteful expenditure
provided that the
accounting officer has informed the council, the mayor or the
executive committee, in writing, that the expenditure
is likely to
be unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and wasteful expenditure.
(4)
The accounting officer must promptly inform the mayor, the MEC for
local government in the province and the Auditor-General,
in
writing, of-
(a)
any
unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and wasteful expenditure
incurred by the municipality;
(b)
whether
any person is responsible or under investigation for such
unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and wasteful
expenditure; and
(c)
the steps that have been taken-
(i) to
recover or rectify such expenditure; and
(ii) to
prevent a recurrence of such expenditure.’
[4]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Ltd and Another v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 99
;
[2021] 3 All SA 647
(SCA);
2022
(1) SA 100
(SCA) para 25, referring to
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA)
para
18, affirmed in
University
of Johannesburg v Auckland Park Theological Seminary and
Another
[2021]
ZACC 13
;
2021 (8) BCLR 807
(CC);
2021
(6) SA 1
(CC)
para
64.
[5]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund
fn
4
para 18;
Capitec
fn 4 para 25.
[6]
Capitec
fn 4 para 51.
[7]
Section 1 provides that ‘unauthorised expenditure’
means, ‘
any
expenditure incurred by a municipality otherwise than in accordance
with section 15 or 11 (3), and includes-
(a)
overspending
of the total amount appropriated in the municipality's approved
budget;
(b)
overspending
of the total amount appropriated for a vote in the approved budget;
(c)
expenditure
from a vote unrelated to the department or functional area covered
by the vote;
(d)
expenditure
of money appropriated for a specific purpose, otherwise than for
that specific purpose;
(e)
spending
of an allocation referred to in paragraph
(b)
,
(c)
or
(d)
of
the definition of 'allocation' otherwise than in accordance with any
conditions of the allocation; or
(f)
a
grant by the municipality otherwise than in accordance with this
Act.’
‘
Fruitless
and wasteful expenditure is defined as ‘expenditure that was
made in vain and would have been avoided had reasonable
care been
exercised.’
[8]
Capitec
fn 4 para 50.
[9]
See s 32(3) of the MFMA quoted in fn 3.
[10]
Section 32(5) of the MFMA reads:
‘
The
writing off in terms of subsection (2) of any unauthorised,
irregular or fruitless and wasteful expenditure as irrecoverable,
is
no excuse in criminal or disciplinary proceedings against a person
charged with the commission of an offence or a breach of
this Act
relating to such unauthorised, irregular or fruitless and wasteful
expenditure.’
[11]
Section 2 of the MFMA provides:
‘
The
object of this Act is to secure sound and sustainable management of
the fiscal and financial affairs of municipalities and
municipal
entities by establishing norms and standards and other requirements
for-
(a)
ensuring
transparency, accountability and appropriate lines of responsibility
in the fiscal and financial affairs
of municipalities and municipal
entities;
(b)
the
management of their revenues, expenditures, assets and liabilities
and the handling of their financial dealings;
(c)
budgetary
and financial planning processes and the co-ordination of those
processes with the processes of organs of
state in other spheres of
government;
(d)
borrowing;
(e)
the
handling of financial problems in municipalities;
(f)
supply chain management; and
(g)
other
financial matters.’
[12]
Rennie
NO v Gordon and Another NNO
1988
(1) SA 1
(A) at 22E.
[13]
Section 176(1) provides:
‘
Liability
of functionaries exercising powers and functions in terms of this
Act
(1)
No municipality or any of its political structures, political
office-bearers or officials, no municipal entity or its
board of
directors or any of its directors or officials, and no other organ
of state or person exercising a power or performing
a function in
terms of this Act, is liable in respect of any loss or damage
resulting from the exercise of that power or the
performance of that
function in good faith.
(2)
Without
limiting liability in terms of the common law or other legislation,
a municipality may recover from a political office-bearer
or
official of the municipality, and a municipal entity may recover
from a director or official of the entity, any loss or damage
suffered by it because of the deliberate or negligent unlawful
actions of that political office-bearer or official when performing
a function of office.’
[14]
C Hoexter and G Penfold
Administrative
Law in South Africa
3
ed (2021) at 720.
[15]
In prayers 4, 5 and 6 of the particulars of claim, the Municipality
sought payment of the amounts of R5 263 179.89,
R1 390 800
and R984 197.21 separately, against the defendants liable for that
irregular expenditure.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Afriforum NPC v Nelson Mandela Foundation Trust and Others (371/2020) [2023] ZASCA 58; 2023 (4) SA 1 (SCA); [2023] 3 All SA 1 (SCA) (21 April 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 58Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Nelson Attorneys v Smit N.O and Others (532/2024) [2025] ZASCA 162 (24 October 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 162Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Mkhonto and Others v Bushbuckridge Local Municipality and Others (218/2024) [2025] ZASCA 111 (23 July 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 111Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
N M v Central Authority for the Republic of South Africa and Another (1078/2024) [2024] ZASCA 178 (19 December 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 178Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
SAHRA and Others v Dr Mandela and Others (825/2024) [2026] ZASCA 6 (22 January 2026)
[2026] ZASCA 6Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar