Case Law[2022] ZASCA 63South Africa
IGS Consulting Engineers & Another v Transnet Soc Limited (198/2020) [2022] ZASCA 63 (29 April 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
29 April 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative law – non-compliance with s 217 of the Constitution - contracts set aside.
Judgment
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## IGS Consulting Engineers & Another v Transnet Soc Limited (198/2020) [2022] ZASCA 63 (29 April 2022)
IGS Consulting Engineers & Another v Transnet Soc Limited (198/2020) [2022] ZASCA 63 (29 April 2022)
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sino date 29 April 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not Reportable
Case no: 198/2020
In the matter between:
IGS CONSULTING ENGINEERS
CC
FIRST APPELLANT
TURNMILL PROQUIP
ENGINEERING (PTY)
LTD
SECOND APPELLANT
and
TRANSNET SOC
LIMITED
RESPONDENT
Neutral
Citation:
IGS
Consulting Engineers & Another v Transnet Soc Limited
(Case
no 198/20)
[2022] ZASCA 63
(29 April 2022)
Coram:
DAMBUZA,
SCHIPPERS and NICHOLLS JJA and TSOKA and MOLEFE AJJA
Heard:
18 February
2022
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 have been at 14h00 on 29 April
2022.
Summary:
Administrative
law – non-compliance with s 217 of the Constitution -
contracts set aside.
Civil procedure – s 16(2)(
a
)
of
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
– decision on appeal having no
practical effect - no live issue other than costs – no exceptional
circumstances justifying a
hearing on costs.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng
Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (Vally J, sitting as court
of first instance):
1
Paragraph 2 of the order of the high court is varied to read as
follows:
‘
2.
The contract concluded between the Applicant and the Third Respondent
on 27 August 2015 (the second contract)
is declared unlawful and is
set aside; and
2.1
The First and Second Respondents are to serve and file with the
Registrar of this Court an audited statement
of the expenses
incurred, the income received and the net profit earned under the
second contract within 60 days of this order;
2.2
The Applicant is to obtain and file with the Registrar of this Court
an independent audited verification
of the details provided by the
First and Second Respondents in terms of paragraph 2.1 within 30
(thirty) days of the receipt of the
information, and the First and
Second Respondents are to permit the auditors appointed by the
Applicant to have unfettered access
to the relevant financial
information for this purpose;
2.3
The First Respondent is to pay to the Applicant its verified profit
within thirty (30) days of service
of the audit verification.
2.4
The Second Respondent is to pay to the Applicant its verified profit
within thirty (30) days of service of
the audit verification.’
2
The First and Second Appellants are to pay the costs of this appeal
which costs are to include
those occasioned by the appointment of two
counsel.
JUDGMENT
Nicholls
JA (Dambuza and Schippers JJA and Tsoka and Molefe AJJA concurring):
[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.’ These are
the words of
s 217
of the Constitution. If there is
non-compliance with this constitutional imperative a court must make
a declaration of constitutional
invalidity in respect of such
conduct
[1]
.
The only discretion it has is determining a just and equitable
remedy.
[2]
[2]
This
appeal concerns the ever-growing trend of organs of state, in this
instance Transnet SOC Limited (Transnet), approaching courts
on
‘self-review’ on discovering that their functionaries had
concluded contracts which are an anathema to values set out in
s 217.
These reviews are brought on the basis of legality.
[3]
No
party has a right to benefit from an unlawful contract.
[4]
Disgorgement
of profits has been said to be an extraordinary remedy only to be
used in exceptional circumstances.
[5]
Unfortunately,
the extraordinary has become commonplace with the pillage of our
state-owned enterprises. The loss to the public purse
runs into
billions of rand but the damage caused by the erosion of public trust
is immeasurable.
[3]
Transnet,
who is the respondent in these proceedings, sought to set aside five
contracts concluded between Transnet and IGS Consulting
Engineers CC
(IGS), the first appellant, during the period 2015 and 2016. The
second appellant, Turnmill Proquip Engineering (Pty)
Ltd (Turnmill)
was cited on the basis that it had entered into joint venture
agreements with IGS in respect of certain of the contracts.
[4]
The
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg (the high court),
per Vally J, granted the order to set aside the five contracts,
the
total value of which was in excess of R204 million, and ordered a
disgorgement of the profits.
The
appeal is with the leave of the court a quo.
[5]
On
the morning of the appeal, counsel for IGS, the main protagonist,
informed the Court that he had been instructed to withdraw the
appeal
and tender Transnet’s costs. In consequence the ambit of the appeal
was considerably circumscribed.
Counsel
for Transnet and Turnmill were invited to make submissions on whether
there was any live issue for determination. Whereas
Transnet agreed
that nothing of practical effect remained, it was strenuously
submitted on behalf of Turnmill that a decision on
its liability,
jointly and severally, with IGS for profits made by the IGS Joint
Venture, would not be academic. This necessitated
the hearing of the
appeal.
[6]
Very
briefly, the facts are as follows.
Five
contracts were awarded by Transnet to IGS under its New Multi Product
Project. This involved the maintenance of a 715 kilometre
multi-product pipeline for high pressure transportation of liquid
petroleum gas from Durban to Gauteng. It was in respect of two
of the
five contracts that Turnmill was implicated. These contracts were
referred to as the second contract and the fourth contract,
which
nomenclature will be adopted in this judgment.
[7]
In
summary the following orders were made by the high court in respect
of the five contracts:
Each contract was declared
unlawful and set aside.
(a)
IGS, and
Turnmill only in respect of the second contract, were to serve and
file with the Registrar an audited statement of the expenses
incurred, the income received and the net profit earned within sixty
days of the order;
(b)
Transnet was
to file an independent audited verification of the above;
(c)
IGS, and
Turnmill only in respect of the second contract, were to permit the
auditors appointed by Transnet to have unfettered access
to their
financial information for this purpose;
(d)
IGS, and
Turnmill only in respect of the second contract, were to pay Transnet
the verified profit within thirty (30) days of service
of the audited
verification, jointly and severally the one paying the other to be
absolved;
(e)
IGS and
Turnmill were to pay the costs of the entire application, jointly and
severally the one paying the other to be absolved, which
costs
included those occasioned by the appointment of two counsel.
[8]
The
high court found firstly, that there was a corrupt relationship
between Mr Sipho Sithole (Mr Sithole), the sole member of IGS
and
Mr Sipho Linyenga Herbert Msagala (Mr Msagala) who was the chief
executive of Transnet’s specialised unit for capital
projects,
Transnet Group Capital. Secondly, there was non-compliance with the
prescribed tender and procurement procedures, and applicable
legislation. The high court concluded that fraud vitiated the award
of the contracts which did not comply with the prescripts of
s 217
of the Constitution.
[9]
After
the high court judgment, on 31 August 2021 the Special Tribunal
[6]
made damning
findings in respect of the very same contracts that IGS had concluded
with Transnet. The Tribunal ordered a disgorgement
of the profits
made by Mr Msagala and his family trust, as well as those made by Mr
Sithole and IGS. This was in addition to the
R26 423 028.77
that Mr Msagala was ordered to pay back to Transnet.
[7]
Undoubtedly,
these findings contributed, in no small measure, to IGS’ decision
to withdraw its appeal.
[10]
The relief
sought against Turnmill was limited to the second and fourth
contract, and premised on the fact that Transnet had awarded
these
contracts to a joint venture of which Turnmill and IGS were parties.
Two joint venture agreements were concluded between IGS
and Turnmill
on 27 August 2015 and 7 July 2016, for the second contract and
the fourth contract, respectively.
[11]
The fourth
contract was for the surcharging and demolition of accumulator tanks
at Terminal 1, Durban. It was concluded on an emergency
basis with
the ‘IGS Joint Venture’ commencing on 25 January 2016, although
the NEC Engineering and Construction Contract was
signed by Transnet
and Mr Sithole, who represented that he was the managing director of
the joint venture, on 6 June 2016. The work
therefore started six
months before the second joint venture agreement between IGS and
Turnmill was signed. Turnmill denied any involvement
whatsoever with
the fourth contract. It was unaware that the fourth contract had been
concluded when it signed the second joint venture
agreement; it did
not perform any work nor receive any payment in respect thereof; it
has no documents pertaining to the fourth contract
except those
provided by Transnet during the discovery process.
[12]
Turnmill’s
lack of involvement in the fourth contract was accepted by Transnet,
and the high court. No more needs to be said about
the fourth
contract, save to state that even prior to the withdrawal of IGS’
appeal, Turnmill was alive to the fact that the only
live issue in
respect of the fourth contract was the question of the costs awarded
by the high court, in respect of the entire application.
[13]
What remains
is the second contract. This contract was for ‘tightlining’ at
terminal 1 in Durban to ensure the delivery of fuel
products from
Durban to Heidelberg. This entailed an interim measure to bypass the
need for the storage fuel tanks which were still
under construction
at the Durban terminal. The second contact was concluded pursuant to
a site visit to Turnmill’s premises on
5 July 2015 to assess its
capacity to render services to Transnet. The contract was awarded to
the joint venture on an emergency
basis commencing on 13 July 2015,
although the joint venture agreement itself was concluded more than a
month later on 27 August
2015. The NEC3 Engineering Construction
Contact was signed on 31 August 2015. The value of the contract
was R50 485 630.20
of which R49 325 479.29 has
been paid to IGS.
[14]
The high court
set aside the second contract and ordered that the profits be
ascertained and verified, and then be disgorged, jointly
and
severally, by IGS and Turnmill. Turnmill alleges that it did all the
work on the project and invoiced IGS for R23 004 608.67
for
the services it rendered. However, it was underpaid by R7 302 608.76
and has demanded payment for the outstanding amount
from IGS. To date
it has not been paid. Thus, according to Turnmill, it has made no
profit, and has, in fact, suffered a loss.
[15]
Turnmill has
at all times protested its innocence and distanced itself from IGS’
fraudulent conduct. It argued that the two joint
venture agreements
were signed only in order to regularise relationships between itself
and IGS. It insisted that Transnet was erroneously
treating the
relationship between itself and IGS as a partnership. Turnmill has
been steadfast in its stance that it was a subcontractor
to IGS and
pointed to the subcontracting agreement between itself and IGS
commencing 13 July 2015. This, it is contended, is also
evidenced by
the fact that Transnet at all times paid IGS, not the joint venture
which did not have a bank account. Furthermore,
the fact that IGS
submitted an invoice to Transnet before the conclusion of the joint
venture agreement is, so Turnmill contends,
dispositive of the
contention that Transnet contracted with the joint venture in respect
of the second contract.
[16]
There is no
factual basis for these submissions. Turnmill was a signatory to the
joint venture agreement and it is common cause that
the second
contract was awarded to the ‘IGS Joint Venture’. IGS did not have
a Construction Industry Development Board (CIDB)
grading which was a
prerequisite for the award of the second contract. A CIDB grading is
determined by financial capability and works
capability. A
construction company is allocated a ranking, ranging from level 1
which is the entry level to the highest - level 9,
based on the value
and experience of its past construction projects.
[8]
At the time
Turnmill was in the process of acquiring its grade 8 CIDB, which was
obtained in August 2015. A few days later the joint
venture agreement
was signed.
[17]
The reason why
IGS concluded the joint venture agreement is evident: IGS did not
have the key determinants for a CIDB rating, namely
track record and
capital. For this it needed Turnmill. However, on the face of it
there was no discernible advantage to Turnmill.
This begs the
question why Turnmill saw fit to enter in the written joint venture
agreements. Mr Paul Pienaar, the managing
director of Turnmill
and the deponent to Turnmill’s answering affidavit, stated that the
joint venture agreements were merely subcontracting
agreements which
in retrospect were ‘. . .clearly devised by Sithole to
prevent Turnmill from competing with IGS in contracts
with Transnet
. . . ’. But this cannot be so - without a CIDB grading,
IGS was unable to compete.
[18]
The answer
lies in the fact that without the joint venture it is unlikely that
Turnmill would have received any work from Transnet.
Mr Sithole was
the one who had the connections with Transnet but lacked the
expertise to perform in terms of the contracts. Without
the necessary
CIDB rating Transnet could not sign off on the project. Turnmill’s
version that its understanding of the joint venture
‘merely
confirmed to Transnet that Turnmill would be responsible for
performing certain obligations for which Turnmill required
and had
the requisite rating’, cannot be correct. Transnet could never rely
on the CIDB rating of a subcontractor. The joint venture
was
specifically concluded in respect of the tightlining project. In
clause 3 it was specified that IGS had sourced the relevant
contracts
and Turnmill was to provide the relevant expertise. This is precisely
why the joint venture was necessary to conclude the
contract.
[19]
In short,
Turnmill had the skills and expertise to do the work whilst Mr
Sithole of IGS had the connection to Mr Masagala which guaranteed
the
award of the contracts by Transnet. While it seems that Turnmill did
not unduly profit from the contracts with Transnet, its
professed
innocence as to the signing of the joint venture agreement does not
hold water. The only inference to be drawn is that
Turnmill was well
aware of the role it was to play. That its relationship with IGS
soured at a later stage does not detract from
the fact that Turnmill
was a willing participant at the time that the joint venture
agreements were signed. Irrespective of whether
the joint venture
agreements amounted to a partnership or not, the fact remains that
the contracts that the joint venture concluded
with Transnet were
unlawful and fell to be set aside. This, it seems, is not disputed by
Turnmill. Whatever the relationship created
by the joint venture, it
allowed IGS to represent to Transnet that Turnmill and IGS were
working together on the second and fourth
contracts.
[20]
Notwithstanding
the above, there is no evidence that Turnmill was involved in
unlawful conduct or any wrongdoing. Nor was there any
suggestion of
corruption on the part of Turnmill. The high court’s order that IGS
and Turnmill jointly and severally pay any profits
made in respect of
the second contract, had the potential to expose Turnmill to a
substantial claim for profits which it did not
make, but which were
made by IGS. These potential adverse consequences for Turnmill were
the reason why Turnmill was insistent on
proceeding with the hearing
once IGS had withdrawn its appeal. However, after IGS’s withdrawal
and once the proceedings had commenced,
counsel for Transnet advised
that Transnet was prepared to abandon the joint and several order in
respect of the second contract.
As a result, any concerns that
Turnmill may have had that it was being penalised for what was
essentially IGS’s malfeasance, fell
away.
[21]
Turnmill’s
cardinal objection to the order was thus no longer a live dispute
that required determination between the parties.
[9]
Nor could it
be said that there were any remaining legal issues which would be of
public importance or would affect matters in the
future.
[10]
[22]
Our
courts will not hear matters where there is no live issue or decide
matters of academic interest which will have no practical
effect on
the parties or the public at large.
[11]
As
a general rule our courts do not hear appeals where the only
consideration is costs. These are longstanding rules of our common
law, now buttressed by the
Superior Courts Act
(the
Act).
[12]
[23]
Section
16(2)(
a
)
of the Act provides that:
(i)
‘
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.
(ii)
Save
under exceptional circumstances, the question whether the decision
would have no practical effect or result is to be
determined
without reference to any consideration of costs.
[24]
The appeal was moot for all intents and purposes, as envisaged by
s 16(2)(
a
)(
i
)
of the Act. For this reason alone, it falls to be dismissed.
[13]
[25] The only issue
which would have any practical effect was that of costs. Counsel for
Turnmill argued that the high
court had incorrectly awarded costs
against it in that it had been substantially successful in its
opposition of both the second
and fourth contract in the high court.
This is not correct. In respect of the fourth contract Transnet
sought, and was granted, the
setting aside of the contract between
the joint venture and Transnet. In respect of the second contract
Turnmill was not successful
in the high court.
[26]
It is trite that an appeal court will rarely intervene where the
court a quo has exercised a discretion as to
the costs order
that it considers to be appropriate. It can only do so if the court a
quo did not act judicially; acted on wrong
principles; misdirected
itself on the facts; or reached a decision which could not reasonably
have been made in light of the relevant
facts and principles.
[14]
There is
nothing to indicate that the learned judge did not exercise his
discretion judicially. There is thus no justification for
interference by this Court on the question of costs.
[27]
Most importantly, and as the parties were alerted at the commencement
of the hearing, appeal courts will not easily
entertain an appeal on
costs alone. In terms of
s 16(2)(
a
)(
ii
)
a consideration of costs, where it is the only live issue, will only
be heard in exceptional circumstances. Here there were no exceptional
circumstances in the high court which warranted an argument on costs
alone in terms of
s 16(2)(
a
)(
ii
).
[15]
[28]
In this appeal Turnmill had limited success by virtue of the
concessions made by Transnet at the commencement of
this hearing. But
this does not absolve it from paying the costs of the appeal. This
Court in
John
Walker Pools v Consolidated Aone Trade & Invest 6 (Pty) Ltd
[16]
cautioned
that:
‘
.
. . As a general rule, litigants and their legal representatives are
under a duty, where an appeal or proposed appeal becomes moot
during
the pendency of appellate proceedings, to contribute to the efficient
use of judicial resources by making sensible proposals
so that the
appellate court’s intervention is not needed. If a reasonable
proposal by one of the litigants is rejected by the other,
this would
play an important part in the appropriate costs order. . .’.
[29] This was an
example of a sensible and reasonable proposal being rejected for no
good reason. This Court’s intervention
was unnecessary after
Transnet had agreed to abandon that portion of prayer 2.2 and 2.3
where joint and several liability was sought.
[30] In the result
the following order is made:
1
Paragraph 2 of the order of the high court is varied to read as
follows:
‘
2.
The contract concluded between the Applicant and the Third Respondent
on 27 August 2015 (the second contract)
is declared to be unlawful
and is set aside; and
2.1
The first and second respondents are to serve and file with the
Registrar of this Court an audited statement
of the expenses
incurred, the income received and the net profit earned under the
second contract within 60 days of this order;
2.2
The applicant is to obtain and file with the Registrar of this Court
an independent audited verification
of the details provided by the
first and second respondents in terms of paragraph 2.1 within 30
(thirty) days of the receipt of the
information, and the first and
second respondents are to permit the auditors appointed by the
applicant to have unfettered access
to the relevant financial
information for this purpose;
2.3
The first respondent is to pay to the applicant its verified profit
within thirty (30) days of service
of the audit verification.
2.4
The second respondent is to pay to the applicant its verified
profit within thirty (30) days of service
of the audit verification.’
2
The first and second appellants are to pay the costs of this appeal
which costs are to include
those occasioned by the appointment of two
counsel.
C HEATON
NICHOLLS
JUDGE OF
APPEAL
APPEARANCES:
For first appellant:
I Hussain SC
Instructed
by:
Essack Attorneys Inc., Johannesburg
Phatshoane
Henney Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
second appellant: C van der Merwe
Instructed
by:
De Souza Attorneys Inc., Sandton
Lovius
Block Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
S Vivian SC and B Morris
Instructed by:
Mncedisi Ndlovu &
Sedumedi
Attorneys, Johannesburg
Poswa
Incorporated, Bloemfontein
[1]
Section 172(1)(
a)
of the Constitution.
[2]
Section 172(1)(
b
)
of the Constitution.
[3]
State Information Technology Agency SOC
Limited v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Limited
[2017]
ZACC 40
;
2018 (2) BCLR 240
(CC);
2018 (2) SA 23
(CC) para 38
;
Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla
Construction (Pty) Ltd
[2019] ZACC 15
;
2019 (6) BCLR 661
(CC);
2019 (4) SA 331
(CC) para 1;
Govan
Mbeki Municipality v New Integrated Credit Solutions
(Pty) Ltd
[2021]
ZASCA 34
;
2021 (4) SA 436
(SCA) para 34.
[4]
Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and
Others
[2013] ZACC 42
;
2014 (1) SA 604
(CC);
2014 (1) BCLR 1
(CC)
para 67-70.
[5]
Atlantic Lottery Corp Inc. v Babstock
,
2020 SCC 19.
[6]
Special Tribunal set up in terms of section 2(1)
of the Special Investigations Unit and Tribunals Act 74 of 1996.
[7]
Special Investigating Unit case number GP05/2020.
See also Special Investigating Unit GP03/2020 where the Tribunal
made a final
order forfeiting certain of Mr Msagala’s moveable and
immoveable property and interdicting the Transnet Pension Fund from
paying
out Mr Msagala’s pension pending the outcome of the action
before the Tribunal.
[8]
https://registers.cidb.org.za/PublicContractors/GradingDesignationCalc
accessed on 01/04/2022.
[9]
National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian
Equality v Minister of Home Affairs
[1999]
ZACC 17
;
2000 (2) SA 1
(CC); 2000 (1)
BCLR 39 (CC);
Port Elizabeth
Municipality v Smit
2002 (4) SA 241
(SCA) para 7;
Legal Aid South Africa v
Magidiwana
[2014] ZASCA 141
;
2015 (2)
SA 568
(SCA);
[2014] 4 All SA 570
(SCA) para18-20.
[10]
Centre for Child Law v Governing Body of
Hoerskool Fochville
[2015] ZASCA 155
;
[2015] 4 All SA 571
(SCA);
2016 (2) SA 121
(SCA) para 9-11.
[11]
Park 2000 Development 11 v Mouton
and Others
[2021]
ZASCA 140
para 22 and 23;
Director-General
Department of Home Affairs and Another v Mukhamadiva
[2013] ZACC 47
; 2014 (3) BCLR306 (CC) para 33.
[12]
Section 16(2)(
a
)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
.
[13]
City of Cape Town v Khaya Projects (Pty) Ltd
[2016] ZASCA 107
;
2016 (5) SA 579
(SCA);
[2016] 4
All SA 1
(SCA) para 5;
City of Tswane
Municipality and Others v Nambiti
Technologies
(Pty) Ltd
[2015] ZASCA 167
;
[2016] 1
All SA 332
(SCA);
2016 (2) SA 494
para 5;
Kruger
v Joint Trustees
of the Insolvent
Estate of Paulos Bhekinkosi Zulu and Another
[2016]
ZASCA 163
;
[2017] 1 All SA 1
(SCA) para 15.
[14]
Minister of Rural Development and Land Reform
and Another v Phillips
[2017] ZASCA 1
;
[2017] 2 All SA 33
(SCA) para 36
;
Dobsa Services CC v Dlamini Advisory
Services (Pty) Ltd and Another; Dlamini Advisory Services (Pty) Ltd
and Another v Dobsa Services
CC
[2016]
ZASCA 131
para 14.
[15]
See
Khumalo and
Another v Twin City Developers
[2017]
ZASCA 143, where the majority held that
there were no exceptional circumstances which justified this Court
only having consideration to costs
as set out in
s 16(2)(
a
)(
ii
)
of the Act.
[16]
John Walker Pools v Consolidated Aone Trade &
Invest 6 (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) & another
[2018]
ZASCA 12
;
2018 (4) SA 433
(SCA)
para 10.
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