Case Law[2024] ZASCA 183South Africa
Zeal Health Innovations (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Another (967/2023) [2024] ZASCA 183 (27 December 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
27 December 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Procurement law and administrative law – court’s powers when contract declared constitutionally invalid – just and equitable remedy in terms of s 172(1)(a) and (b) of the Constitution.
Judgment
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## Zeal Health Innovations (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Another (967/2023) [2024] ZASCA 183 (27 December 2024)
Zeal Health Innovations (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Defence and Military Veterans and Another (967/2023) [2024] ZASCA 183 (27 December 2024)
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sino date 27 December 2024
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case
no: 967/2023
In the matter between:
ZEAL HEALTH
INNOVATIONS (PTY) LTD APPELLANT
and
MINISTER OF DEFENCE
AND
MILITARY
VETERANS FIRST
RESPONDENT
ACTING
DIRECTOR-GENERAL:
DEPARTMENT OF MILITARY
VETERANS SECOND RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Zeal Health
Innovations (Pty) Ltd
v Minister of
Defence and Military Veterans and Another
(967/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 183 (27 December 2024)
Coram:
ZONDI DP and MAKGOKA, MABINDLA-BOQWANA
and WEINER JJA and BLOEM AJA
Heard:
21 November 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives via e-mail
publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and released to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down are deemed to be 27 December
2024 at
11h00.
Summary:
Procurement law and administrative law
– court’s powers when contract declared constitutionally
invalid – just
and equitable remedy in terms of s 172(1)
(a)
and
(b)
of
the Constitution.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Mngqibisa-Thusi J, sitting as court of
first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld in part, with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
1
The decision to award
Tender Number
DMV/SES/001/2015 for the provision of healthcare and wellness
services (the services) to military veterans for the
period between 1
June 2015 and 30 May 2018 to Zeal Health Innovations (Pty) Ltd
(Zeal Health); the contract, which was concluded
on 27 May 2015
between the Department of Military Veterans and Zeal Health, for the
provision of the services; and all consequential
decisions flowing
the above decision and contract are hereby declared constitutionally
invalid.
2
The order of constitutional invalidity
in paragraph 1 above does
not have the effect of divesting Zeal Health of any rights to
which it would have been entitled
under the contract referred to in
paragraph 1 above, but for the declaration of invalidity.
3
The respondents shall pay the applicant’s
costs, jointly and
severally the one paying the other to be absolved.’
JUDGMENT
Bloem AJA (
Zondi
DP and Makgoka, Mabindla-Boqwana and Weiner JJA
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The
principal issue in this appeal is whether the second respondent,
Mr Tsepe Motumi (Mr Motumi), who was the Acting Director-General
(the Acting Director-General) of the Department of Defence and
Military Veterans (the Department
[1]
),
validly appointed the appellant, Zeal Health Innovations (Pty) Ltd
(Zeal Health), as a service provider following a tender process.
The
ancillary issue is, if Zeal Health was not validly appointed, would
it be entitled to any relief?
[2]
Zeal Health is a private company which
operates in the health services sector. It provides, among other
things, healthcare and wellness
services (the services). The first
respondent is the Minister of Defence and Military Veterans (the
Minister), who is the national
executive responsible for the
Department, which encompasses military veterans. The Acting
Director-General is the administrative
head of the Department.
Factual background
[3]
On 30 January 2015, the Department
advertised tenders for service providers to assist in the provision
of the services to 16 000
military veterans. Seven bids, amongst
them Zeal Health, were received before the closing date. On 20 May
2015, the Department’s
Bid Adjudication Committee (BAC)
convened and decided to approve the award of the tender to Zeal
Health. On 21 May 2015, the chairperson
of the BAC, Mr Kopano Peter
Lebelo, who was the Chief Director of the Department’s supply
chain management unit, informed
Zeal Health that it was the
successful bidder. On 27 May 2015, Zeal Health and the
Department, represented by the Acting Director-General,
concluded a
three-year contract for the provision of the services (the contract).
[4]
On 19 June 2015, the Department,
represented by Ms Mabel Rantlha (Ms Rantlha), who was the
Department’s Deputy Acting
Director-General of Socio-Economic
Support Services, entered into a memorandum of understanding with
Zeal Health. The memorandum
of understanding set out, among other
things, the basis upon which the parties should co-operate; the
parties’ respective
responsibilities; and the management of the
contract.
[5]
On 31 July 2015, being his last day as
Acting Director-General, Mr Motumi issued a supplier’s
advice (Government Order),
signed by him. The purpose of the
Government Order was to facilitate payment, by the Department to Zeal
Health, of R60 million,
for the provision of the services during the
period between 1 June 2015 and 30 April 2016.
[6]
Zeal Health began providing the services
from 1 June 2015. It forwarded monthly invoices to the Department
after the provision of
the services. The Department failed to pay for
the services.
Litigation history
[7]
During September 2015, Zeal Health launched
an urgent application, in the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (the high
court), for an order for specific performance,
namely that the Department be compelled to pay it for the services
rendered under
the contract. The Department instituted a
counter-application for the judicial review and setting aside of
various decisions made
by the Department’s officials during the
procurement process leading to the award of the tender to Zeal
Health; the award
of the tender to Zeal Health; the conclusion of the
contract; the conclusion of the memorandum of understanding; and the
issue
of the Government Order.
[8]
On
7 October 2022, the high court dismissed Zeal Health’s
application and granted the Department’s counter-application.
The high court reviewed and set aside, amongst others, the decisions
made by the various bid committees of the Department’s
supply
chain management unit, which decisions led to the award of the tender
to Zeal Health to provide the services to military
veterans; the
decision of the Acting Director-General to approve the award of the
tender to Zeal Health at a total cost of over
R198 million; the
decision of Ms Rantlha to enter into the memorandum of understanding
with Zeal Health on 19 June 2015;
and the Government Order,
issued by the Acting Director-General on 31 July 2015, in favour
of Zeal Health for R60 million.
The high court also declared the
contract and the Government Order unconstitutional, unlawful and void
from the beginning. The
parties were ordered to pay their own costs
of the application and the counter-application. It is with the leave
of the high court
that Zeal Health appeals to this Court against the
whole of its judgment and order.
[2]
In this Court
[9]
Zeal Health
persists in this appeal in seeking an order to be paid for services
rendered by it in terms of the contract. In the
alternative, if the
review is upheld, Zeal Health seeks payment for services rendered as
a just and equitable remedy, as envisaged
in s 172 of the
Constitution.
[3]
The Department
submits that the decisions made during the procurement process, the
award of the tender to Zeal Health and
the conclusion of the
contract between the Department and Zeal Health were all
correctly found to have been unconstitutional,
unlawful and
unenforceable because they infringed the principle of legality, as
derived from the rule of law. It accordingly submits
that the order
of the high court granting its counter-application be upheld, and the
appeal be dismissed.
Legislative and
regulatory framework
[10]
Section
5 of the Military Veterans Act 18 of 2011 (the MVA) lists the
benefits relating to military veterans. In terms of s 5(1)
(i)
of the MVA, read with regulation 13 of the Military Veterans Benefits
Regulations of 2014,
[4]
military
veterans are entitled to healthcare services, at the expense of the
State. In terms of s 5(3)
(a)
,
‘[t]he Minister has the responsibility, subject to available
resources and any regulation that may be prescribed in this
regard,
for ensuring that benefits are paid or provided to military veterans,
either through the Department or through other organs
of state.’
In terms of s 5(3)(ii), ‘[t]he [Acting Director-General] may,
from funds appropriated by Parliament for
the purpose [of providing
benefits to military veterans], transfer funds to organs of state or
other institutions that pay or provide
benefits to military
veterans.’ In terms of s 6
(g)
,‘[w]ithout
derogating from its general powers and duties as a national
department of state, the Department may, through the
[Acting
Director-General], enter into a memorandum of understanding or
conclude a service level agreement with any organ of state
which is
concerned with military veterans’ affairs or which administers
any law relating to benefits of a military veteran
in order to
achieve the objects of [the] Act.’
[11]
The Department, being an organ of state in
the national sphere of government, was obliged, in terms of s 217(1)
of the Constitution,
to contract for the provision of the services in
accordance with a system which is fair, equitable, transparent,
competitive and
cost-effective.
The
Public
Finance Management Act 1 of 1999 (the PFMA)
gives effect to s
216(1) of the Constitution, which requires that:
‘
National
legislation must establish a [N]ational [T]reasury
[5]
and prescribe measures to ensure both transparency and expenditure
control in each sphere of government, by introducing –
(a)
generally recognised accounting practice;
(b)
uniform expenditure classifications; and
(c)
uniform treasury norms and standards.’
[12]
In terms of subsec (2) ‘[t]he
[N]ational [T]reasury must enforce compliance with the measures
established in terms of [subsec]
(1).’ The PFMA confers
specific responsibilities on accounting officers. One of them is that
accounting officers must ensure
that their departments do not
overspend their budgets.
[13]
Section 38 of the PFMA provides for the general
responsibilities of accounting officers. Section 38(2) provides as
follows:
‘
An
accounting officer may not commit a department, trading entity or
constitutional institution to any liability for which money
has not
been appropriated.’
[14]
Section
7(1) of the PFMA provides that ‘[t]he National Treasury must
prescribe a framework within which departments [and]
other public
entities . . . must conduct their cash management.’ Pursuant to
that dictate, the National Treasury, through
the Minister of Finance,
issued the Treasury Regulations.
[6]
Regulation
15.10 deals with banking and cash management of departments and those
other entities. Regulation 15.10.1.1 provides that
‘[t]he
accounting officer [of a department] is responsible for establishing
systems, procedures, processes and training and
awareness programmes
to ensure efficient and effective banking and cash management.’
Regulation 15.10.1.2
(c)
provides that, for purposes of regulation 15, ‘sound cash
management includes – avoiding prepayments for goods or
services (ie payments in advance of the receipt of the goods or
services), unless required by the contractual arrangements
with the
supplier.’ Clearly, prepayment for services still to be
provided is to be avoided. It should not be done unless
the
contractual arrangements provide for it.
Discussion
[15]
The Department’s 2015/2016 progress report states that R38.6
million was budgeted
for healthcare and wellness services, but
because R4.3 million had already been expended and committed, the
available budget was
R34.2 million as at 30 June 2015. The
Department’s case is that the contract was unlawful because the
contract price of R198
million far exceeded the Department’s
budget of R38.6 million. Zeal Health contends that the Department’s
understanding
of the budget is incorrect and based on a misreading of
the medium-term expenditure framework. It asserts that the budget of
R38.6
million was not for the three-year duration of the contract,
but only for the 2015/2016 financial year and that the contract price
of R198 million was meant to have been spread over the three years.
[16]
The R198 million represents the capitated fee over the three years,
which, according to
Zeal Health’s proposal, the Department was
required to spend R70 172 160 in the first year in respect
of 16 000
veterans at R365.48 per person over 12 months; and
R63 993 600 in each of the second and third years. The
number of veterans
was reduced from 16 000 to 14 346, with
the result that the Department was required to pay R5 243 176.08
per
month to Zeal Health, being 14 346 veterans at R365.48 per
person.
[17]
The Department’s progress report of June 2015, prepared by
Ms
Rantlha
, states that the budget for
the 2015/2016 financial year for the services was R38.7 million;
R40.6 million for the 2016/2017
financial year; and 42.7 million
for the 2017/2018 financial year. When the tender was awarded, the
contract price of R198 million
obviously exceeded the cumulative
budgets for the three financial years (R122 million) by R76 million.
Zeal Health contends that
the budget was revisited in 2016, resulting
in an increase of the budget to R218.2 million over the
medium-term, being 2016
to 2019. It adopted the stance that the
increased budget was sufficient to cover the contract price.
[18]
The first invoice that Zeal Health sent to the Department amounted to
the correct sum of
R5 243 176.08; the second invoice
amounted to R5 261 084.61, being 14 395 veterans
(incorrect number of
veterans, as the parties agreed on 14 346
veterans) at R365.48 per person; and the third invoice amounted to
R5 261 084.61,
being 14 395 (incorrect number of
veterans, stated as 1 395, and incorrect total sum) veterans at
R365.48 per person.
If services were rendered during the remaining
ten months of the 2015/2016 financial year, the Department would have
been required
to pay to Zeal Health R52 431 760.80, being
R5 243 176.08 over 10 months. When the tender was awarded
to Zeal
Health, the Department only had R34.2 million of the R38.6
million budget.
[19]
Whether the Department was required to pay R70.1 million or
R52.4 million to Zeal
Health during the 2015/2016 financial year
is irrelevant because both amounts were above the budget of R38.6
million. The fact
that, on Zeal Health’s version, the budget
was increased over the medium-term after the 2015/2016 financial year
is also
irrelevant. What is important is whether the contract price
fell within the budget when the tender was awarded. The evidence
shows
irrefutably that the Acting Director-General
committed
the Department to a liability, being the difference between what was
left in the budget (R34.2 million) and the portion
of the
contract price that was allocated to the 2015/2016 financial year
(either R70.1 million or R52.4 million), when such
difference
had not been appropriated for services in respect of that financial
year.
[20]
The Acting Director-General did not have the power
to commit the Department to a liability for which money had not been
appropriated.
That is exactly the conduct that s 38(2) of the
PFMA prohibits. The Acting Director-General had the responsibility of
ensuring
that the Department did not overspend its budget. He acted
unlawfully when he breached the provisions of s 38(2). The
awarding
of the tender to Zeal Health, in circumstances where the
provisions of s 38(2) were breached, was clearly unlawful and
invalid.
[21]
The finding, that the awarding of the tender was
invalid, has consequences for everything that was done pursuant to
the award of
the tender to Zeal Health. That finding means that there
was no lawful basis for the Department to conclude the contract with
Zeal
Health on 27 May 2015; Ms Rantlha could not have lawfully
entered into the memorandum with Zeal Health on 19 June 2015;
and the Acting Director-General could not have lawfully issued the
Government Order in Zeal Health’s favour on 31 July 2015.
The
high court accordingly correctly declared the contract and the issue
of the Government Order by the Acting Director-General
unconstitutional, and unlawful. The high court also correctly
reviewed and set aside Ms Rantlha’s decision to enter into
the
memorandum and the issue of the Government Order by the Acting
Director-General. However, the high court did not consider a
just and
equitable remedy in the circumstances. In that regard, it erred.
Remedy
[22]
Having
established that the award of the tender to Zeal Health was unlawful
and accordingly unconstitutional, this Court must, in
terms of
s 172(1)
(a)
of the Constitution, declare the Acting Director-General’s
conduct invalid.
[7]
In terms of
s 172(1)
(a)
,
courts are obliged to declare invalid any law or conduct that is
inconsistent with the Constitution.
[8]
[23]
In view of
the declaration of invalidity of the award of the tender to
Zeal Health and the consequent invalidity of the contract,
this
Court may make an order that is just and equitable in terms of s
172(1)
(b)
of the Constitution. The declaration of invalidity of the award of
the tender and the contract does not mean that the contract,
in this
case, must be set aside. As the Constitutional Court said in
Steenkamp
,
‘[I]n each case the remedy must fit the injury. The remedy must
be fair to those affected by it and yet vindicate effectively
the
right violated. It must be just and equitable in the light of the
facts, the implicated constitutional principles, if any,
and the
controlling law.’
[9]
Section 172(1)
(b)
gives the court a true discretion in this regard, which must be
judicially exercised on a case-by-case basis against the background
of all the relevant facts of each case.
[10]
[24]
In
this case, while the contract was invalid, Zeal Health had rendered
the services in terms of that contract. It was not involved
in the
perpetuation of irregularities. The high court found it to be an
innocent party. Under those circumstances, it should be
entitled to
payment of any amount it is able to establish. The quantum of the
services so rendered has not been determined. That
is not for this
Court to determine. It is open to the parties to determine the
further course regarding the determination of the
quantum of payment
to be made to Zeal Health for the provision of services to
military veterans.
[11]
In this
regard, we were informed that action proceedings are pending between
Zeal Health and the Department in the high court.
[25]
In all the circumstances, the appeal must be upheld in part.
Although the appeal
against the counter-application is dismissed,
Zeal Health was successful in so far as it seeks the preservation of
its rights to
pursue payment for services provided, as a just and
equitable remedy.
Costs
[26]
Regarding costs, the effect of the order of the high court was that
Zeal Health was
not entitled to any payment for the provision of
the services to military veterans. It was accordingly entitled to
appeal to this
Court to have that finding overturned. Zeal Health is
accordingly entitled to the costs of the appeal. Had the high court
found
that Zeal Health was entitled to payment for the provision of
the services, there would have been no reason to have deprived
Zeal Health
of the costs of the application. The Department
should accordingly be ordered to also pay Zeal Health’s costs
in the high
court.
[27]
For the above reasons, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld in part, with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
1
The decision to award
Tender Number
DMV/SES/001/2015 for the provision of healthcare and wellness
services (the services) to military veterans for the
period between 1
June 2015 and 30 May 2018 to Zeal Health Innovations (Pty) Ltd
(Zeal Health); the contract, which was concluded
on 27 May 2015
between the Department of Military Veterans and Zeal Health, for the
provision of the services; and all consequential
decisions flowing
the above decision and contract are hereby declared constitutionally
invalid.
2
The order of constitutional invalidity in paragraph 1 above does
not have the effect
of divesting Zeal Health of any rights to
which it would have been entitled under the contract referred to in
paragraph 1 above,
but for the declaration of invalidity.
3
The respondents shall pay the applicant’s costs, jointly and
severally the one
paying the other to be absolved.
’
_________________________
G H BLOEM
ACTING JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellant:
I B Currie
Instructed
by:
Allan Levin
& Associates Attorneys, Johannesburg
Lovius Block Inc.,
Bloemfontein
For the respondents:
I Ellis SC
Instructed
by:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
State Attorney,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
In terms of the
Defence Act 42 of 2002
,
'Department' means
the Department of Defence and
'Minister' means
the Minister of Defence. In terms of the
Military Veterans Act 18 of
2011
, 'Department' means the department of state responsible
for military veterans and 'Minister' means the Minister
responsible
for military veterans. The Department of Defence is the
department of state responsible for military veterans and the
Minister
of Defence is the Minister responsible for military
veterans. In the circumstances, reference to ‘the Department’
in this judgment is reference to the Department of Defence, which is
the department of state responsible for military veterans.
That
department is referred to as the Department of Defence and Military
Veterans.
[2]
Leave to appeal was granted by Swanepoel J on 1 September 2023
because
Mngqibisa-Thusi
J was unavailable.
[3]
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.
[4]
Military
Veterans Benefits Regulations of 2014 published under GN R122 in GG
37355 of 19 February 2014.
[5]
A
National Treasury has been established in terms of s
5
of the PFMA.
[6]
Published under GN R225 in GG 27388 of 15 March 2005 and issued in
terms of the PFMA.
[7]
Section 172(1) of the Constitution reads as follows:
‘
When deciding a
constitutional matter within its power, a court-
(a)
must declare that any law or conduct that is inconsistent with
the Constitution is invalid to the extent of its inconsistency; and
(b)
may make any order that is just and equitable, including-
(i)
an order limiting the retrospective effect of the declaration of
invalidity; and
(ii)
an order suspending the declaration of invalidity for any period and
on any conditions, to allow the competent
authority to correct the
defect.’
[8]
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd
[2019]
ZACC 15
;
2019 (6) BCLR 661
(CC);
2019 (4) SA 331
(CC) (
Asla
Construction
)
paras 63, 67 and 149. See also
Special
Investigating Unit v Phomella Property Investments (Pty) Ltd and
Another
[2023] ZASCA 45
;
2023 (5) SA 601
(SCA)
(SIU
v Phomella)
para 6.
[9]
Steenkamp
NO v Provincial Tender Board of the Eastern Cape
[2006] ZACC 16
;
2007 (3) SA 121
(CC);
2007 (3) BCLR 300
(CC) para
29.
[10]
SIU
v Phomella
para
20.
[11]
Asla
Construction
para 103.
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