Case Law[2023] ZASCA 88South Africa
PIC SOC Ltd and Another v Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another (365/2022) [2023] ZASCA 88; 2024 (1) SA 66 (SCA) (8 June 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
8 June 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Jurisdiction – power of court of appeal – judgment sought to be appealed against a nullity – appeal court unable to exercise discretion when no dispute or lis exists between the parties – matter struck from the roll.
Judgment
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## PIC SOC Ltd and Another v Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another (365/2022) [2023] ZASCA 88; 2024 (1) SA 66 (SCA) (8 June 2023)
PIC SOC Ltd and Another v Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another (365/2022) [2023] ZASCA 88; 2024 (1) SA 66 (SCA) (8 June 2023)
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sino date 8 June 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 365/2022
In the matter between:
PUBLIC INVESTMENT
CORPORATION
SOC
LTD FIRST
APPELLANT
GOVERNMENT EMPLOYEES
PENSION
FUND SECOND
APPELLANT
and
TRENCON CONSTRUCTION
(PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
GVK-SIYA ZAMA BUILDING
CONTRACTORS (PTY)
LTD SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
PIC SOC Ltd and
Another v Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd and Another
(365/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 88
(8 June 2023)
Coram:
PONNAN, NICHOLLS, GORVEN and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA
and UNTERHALTER AJA
Heard:
4 May 2023
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by email,
publication on
the Supreme Court of Appeal website and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 11h00 on 8
June 2023.
Summary:
Jurisdiction – power of court of
appeal – judgment sought to be appealed against a nullity –
appeal court unable
to exercise discretion when no dispute or
lis
exists between the parties – matter struck from the roll.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Neukircher J, sitting as court of first
instance):
The matter is struck from
the roll with each party to pay its own costs.
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Mabindla-Boqwana JA
(Ponnan, Nicholls and Gorven JJA and Unterhalter AJA concurring):
[1]
At the hearing of the appeal, counsel for
the parties were, at the outset, required to address this Court as to
whether a live dispute
or
lis
existed between the parties, upon which this Court could, and
therefore should, exercise its appellate jurisdiction. This, in
circumstances where
the
first respondent, Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd (Trencon), failed to
obtain leave to appeal against the dismissal of a review
application
brought by it in
the
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the high court).
The
high court did however grant leave to appeal to the respondents in
that application, the
first
appellant, the
Public
Investment Corporation SOC Ltd (the PIC), and the second appellant,
the Government Employees Pension Fund (the GEPF), against
an order
that it had issued after it had already finalised its judgment.
[2]
Trencon
conducts
business
as a building and civil engineering contractor.
The
PIC is a corporation
established
in terms of
s 2
of the
Public Investment Corporation Act 23 of 2004
.
It is wholly owned by the State, with the Minister of Finance acting
as a representative shareholder on behalf of the State.
[1]
It is also an authorised financial services provider in terms of the
Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act 37 of 2002
and
conducts business as an asset management company. Its clients are
mostly public sector entities, including the GEPF. The
GEPF
,
established by s 3 of the Government Service Pension Act 57 of
1973 (since repealed),
is
the largest pension fund in Africa. It is regulated by the Government
Employees Pension Law, 1996.
[2]
[3]
Trencon submitted a bid in response to an
invitation advertised by the PIC on behalf of the GEPF in November
2019, to
appoint a
building contractor for a shopping centre in Pretoria (the tender).
The tender was awarded to the second respondent, GVK-Siya
Zama
Building Contractors (Pty) Ltd (GVK).
After
losing the tender, Trencon
launched
an application in the high court seeking to review and set aside the
PIC’s decision to award the tender to GVK. It
also sought a
declaratory order that the
GEPF was
an organ of state in terms s 239
(b)
(ii)
of the Constitution. On 2 November 2021, the high court dismissed
Trencon’s application.
[4]
After the dismissal of its application, and
on 8 November 2021, Trencon filed a notice in terms of rule 42(1)
(b)
of the Uniform Rules of Court seeking an amendment to the high
court’s order in the following terms:
‘
1.
It is declared that the [GEPF]
is an organ of state in terms of section 239
(b)
(ii)
of the Constitution.
2.
Save for the aforesaid order, the application is dismissed.’
[5]
The amendment was sought on the basis that
the high court had allegedly committed an error or omission by not
pronouncing on the
declarator sought in the notice of motion that the
GEPF was an organ of state in terms s 239
(b)
(ii)
of the Constitution. To support this application, Trencon relied on
the following observation in the high court’s judgment:
‘
Therefore,
in my view, in issuing this tender it cannot be said that the GEPF
was performing a quintessentially domestic function.
In my view both
the function and power were public ones and this being so, the GEPF
is an organ of state and the action of the
award to GVK was an
administrative one and reviewable under PAJA.’
[6]
It also contended that the high court had
in addition expressed the view, in a footnote, that the declaratory
relief sought by Trencon
‘is [not] overbroad and shall be
limited to this application’. The appellants did not oppose the
application to amend;
instead, they chose to abide the high court’s
decision.
[7]
On 22 November 2021, the high court granted
an amendment of the order that it had given on 2 November 2021,
but not in the
terms sought by Trencon. It issued the following order
(the amended order):
‘
1
for
purposes of the present application
,
the second respondent is an organ of state in terms of section
239
(b)
(ii)
of the Constitution.
2
save for the
aforesaid order, the application is dismissed.’ (My emphasis.)
[8]
This prompted the appellants to file an
application for leave to appeal against the amended order as well the
high court’s
failure to grant a costs order in their favour on
13 December 2021. On 31 January 2022, Trencon applied for leave to
cross-appeal
against paragraph 2 of the amended order, read with the
original order, dismissing the application as well as against the
high
court’s failure to grant costs in its favour. This
application was accompanied by an application for condonation for the
late filing of the application for leave to cross-appeal.
[9]
On 4 April 2022, the high court granted the
appellants leave to appeal but dismissed Trencon’s application
for condonation
with costs. Before the hearing of the appeal, the
Registrar of this Court was directed to dispatch the following note
to the parties:
‘
In
this matter, the high court: (a) dismissed Trencon’s review
application; and, (b) ruled ‘
for
the purposes of the present application that the GEPF is an
organ of state
’. Trencon
thereafter failed to obtain leave from the high court to appeal
against (a), which means that this order is not
open to
reconsideration on appeal. Thus, even on the acceptance that the
appeal by the PIC and GEPF is directed
at (b), it
will nonetheless be necessary,
at the
hearing of the appeal
, for the parties
to address the following:
Inasmuch
as the final word has been spoken on the application, which is not
susceptible to alteration on appeal:
(i)
Is there still an
existing dispute or
lis
between
the parties upon which this court can and should exercise its
appellate jurisdiction?
(ii)
Will any judgment
that issues on appeal affect the rights and obligations of the
parties
inter se
or
have any practical effect or result as contemplated in s 16(2)
(a)
(i)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013?’
(My emphasis.)
[10]
Section 16(2)
(a)
(i)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (Superior Courts Act)
provides that:
‘
When
at the hearing of an appeal the issues are of such a nature that the
decision sought will have no practical effect or result,
the appeal
may be dismissed on this ground alone.’
[11]
Both parties filed supplementary heads of
argument in response to the note from the Registrar. The appellants
contended that the
legal question regarding the status of the GEPF
arose independently of the review relief claimed in the notice of
motion. This,
in their view, had implications for the GEPF because it
informed how it had to conduct itself going forward. Therefore, a
dispute
still existed between the parties upon which this Court was
required to exercise its appellate jurisdiction.
[12]
It
is well established in our law that ‘once a court has duly
pronounced a final judgment or order, it has itself no authority
to
correct, alter or supplement it. The reason is that it thereupon
becomes
functus
officio
:
its jurisdiction in the case having been fully and finally exercised,
its authority over the subject-matter has ceased’.
[3]
[13]
There
are a few exceptions to this rule. A court may within the
contemplation of rule 42, for example, (a) clarify its judgment,
if
it is ambiguous or uncertain
to
give effect to its true intention,
but it may not alter the sense and the substance of the judgment
[4]
or (b) correct a
clerical,
arithmetical or other error in its judgment or order so as to give
effect to its true intention
[5]
or (c) supplement the judgment
in
respect of
accessory
or consequential matters, such as costs and interest on a judgment
debt, it had overlooked or inadvertently omitted to
grant.
[6]
This does not equate to altering a definitive order once pronounced.
[14]
These exceptions were not applicable in
this matter. The high court dismissed the application. That should
have been the end of
the matter. The high court unfortunately did not
engage with this issue. Nowhere did it deal with whether Trencon had
brought itself
within rule 42. It gave no consideration at all to the
fact that having dismissed the application, it may have been
functus
officio
.
[15]
The
question of whether the GEPF is an organ of state did not give rise
to any self-standing relief. On the application papers as
originally
framed, the resolution of this question was a step in the
determination of the review application. Having dismissed
the review,
the high court had no power to revisit that order. The amended order
was in effect a nullity because it was made without
jurisdiction by
the court making it.
[7]
[16]
In
this case, Trencon unsuccessfully applied for leave to appeal the
dismissal of its application. Its remedy was to then petition
this
Court for leave to appeal. It did not do so. As the dismissal of the
application by the high court was not open to correction
on appeal,
the final word had been spoken by that court. Logically, the
dispute
or
lis
between
the parties no longer existed upon which this Court could and should
exercise its appellate jurisdiction.
[8]
[17]
The
question of whether this Court nonetheless has a discretion to
entertain the appeal therefore does not arise. As it was held
by this
Court in
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Smit
,
[9]
‘[w]hen there is no longer any
issue
between the parties, for instance because all issues that formerly
existed were resolved by agreement, there is no “appeal”
that this Court has any discretion or power to deal with’. This
approach was endorsed in
Legal-Aid
South Africa v Magidiwana and Others
.
[10]
[18]
In any event, the amended order was limited
in scope. The declaration that ‘the [GEPF] is an organ of state
in terms of section
239
(b)
(ii)
of the Constitution’ was subject to the qualifier ‘
for
purposes of the present application
’.
(My emphasis.)
[19]
The expression ‘present application’
in the amended order, evidently referred to the application brought
by Trencon
to review and set aside the decision to award the tender
to GVK. It could not have any broader application. This means that
any
order of this Court on appeal will have no practical effect or
result beyond the confines of this matter. While the question of
whether the GEPF is an organ of state might be of importance to the
appellants, the declarator was limited by the court to the
specific
circumstances of the review application between the parties and does
not extend to all tender processes outside its reach.
In the
circumstances, there would also be no reason for this Court to hear
the appeal as contemplated in
s 16(2)
(a)
(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act. In
the light of the findings in this
judgment, there is no need to consider any other remedy, other than
to strike the matter from
the roll.
[20]
As to costs, Trencon asked for costs to be
awarded in its favour because the appellants persisted with the
appeal despite the note
from this Court directing their attention to
the preliminary issue. Before this note, both parties laboured under
the impression
that the amended order was validly obtained and
issued, and susceptible to appeal. Neither party was blameless. The
point held
to be decisive was raised by the Court. There was no
justification in either party having persisted in the matter. In
these circumstances,
it is appropriate to order each party to pay its
own costs.
[21]
For these reasons, the matter is struck
from the roll with each party to pay its own costs.
___________________________
N P MABINDLA-BOQWANA
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellants:
K
Pillay SC with C Tabata and M Dafel
Instructed
by:
Bowman
Gilfillan Inc, Sandton
McIntire
Van der Post, Bloemfontein
For
the first respondent:
M
Chaskalson SC with S Pudifin-Jones
Instructed
by:
Joubert
Galpin Searle, Gqeberha
Honey
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section
3
of the
Public Investment Corporation Act 23 of 2004
.
[2]
Section
2
of the Government Employees Pension Law, 1996 (Proclamation 21
published in
Government
Gazette
17135 of 19 April 1996).
[3]
Firestone
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Genticuro AG
[1977]
4 All SA 600
(A);
1977 (4) SA 298
(A) at 306F.
[4]
I
bid
at 307A.
[5]
Ibid
at 307C.
[6]
Ibid
at 306H.
[7]
Master
of the High Court (North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria) v Motala N O
and Others
[2011]
ZASCA 238
;
2012 (3) SA 325
(SCA)
paras 12 and 14. See also
Department
of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
[2016]
ZACC 39
;
2017 (1) BCLR 1
(CC);
2017
(2) SA 622
(CC) para 197, in which this principle was endorsed.
[8]
Legal-Aid
South Africa v Magidiwana and Others
[2014] ZASCA 141
;
[2014] 4 All SA 570
(SCA);
2015 (2) SA 568
(SCA)
para 22.
[9]
Port
Elizabeth Municipality v Smit
[2002] ZASCA 10
;
2002 (4) SA 241
(SCA) para 7.
[10]
Magidiwana
fn
8 above para 22.
sino noindex
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