Case Law[2022] ZASCA 155South Africa
Greater Tzaneen Municipality v Bravospan 252 CC (428/2021) [2022] ZASCA 155 (7 November 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
7 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Constitutional law – enrichment claim not ‘debt’ as defined in Institution of Legal Proceedings against Certain Organs of the State Act 40 of 2002 – no notice in terms thereof required – no general enrichment action recognised in our law – appropriate remedy available to the respondent – court’s discretionary power in terms of s 172(1)(b) of the Constitution to grant a just and equitable remedy.
Judgment
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## Greater Tzaneen Municipality v Bravospan 252 CC (428/2021) [2022] ZASCA 155 (7 November 2022)
Greater Tzaneen Municipality v Bravospan 252 CC (428/2021) [2022] ZASCA 155 (7 November 2022)
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sino date 7 November 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
No: 428/2021
In
the matter between:
GREATER
TZANEEN
MUNICIPALITY
APPELLANT
and
BRAVOSPAN
252
CC
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Greater
Tzaneen Municipality v Bravospan 252 CC
(Case
no. 428/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 155
(7 November 2022)
Coram:
ZONDI, VAN DER MERWE and HUGHES JJA and
MOLEFE and CHETTY AJJA
Heard:
1 September 2022
Delivered:
7 November 2022
Summary
:
Constitutional law – enrichment claim not ‘debt’ as
defined in Institution of Legal
Proceedings against Certain Organs of
the State Act 40 of 2002 – no notice in terms thereof required
– no general enrichment
action recognised in our law –
appropriate remedy available to the respondent – court’s
discretionary power in
terms of s 172(1)
(b)
of the Constitution to grant a just and
equitable remedy.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Limpopo Division of the
High Court, Polokwane (Makgoba JP, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with no order as to costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
(a) It is declared
that the plaintiff is entitled to compensation for the services
rendered to the defendant during the period from
1 November 2014 to
31 October 2016 as a just and equitable remedy under s 172(1)
(b)
of the Constitution;
(b) Costs of the hearing
on the merits are reserved.’
3
The matter is referred back to the high court to determine the
quantum of that compensation in accordance with the applicable
law.
JUDGMENT
Molefe
AJA (Zondi, Van der Merwe and Hughes JJA and Chetty AJA concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against the judgment of the Limpopo Division of the
High Court,
Polokwane (the high court) granting the respondent’s
enrichment claim against the appellant in an amount to be determined.
The appeal is with the leave of the high court.
[2]
The appellant, Greater Tzaneen Municipality (the municipality), a
municipality established
in terms of s 1 of the Local Government:
Municipality Structures Act 117 of 1998, and the respondent,
Bravospan 252 CC (Bravospan)
concluded a Service Level Agreement
(SLA) on 20 November 2013, pursuant to a competitive tender process.
In terms of the SLA, Bravospan
would render security services to the
municipality for a period of 12 months from 1 November 2013 to 31
October 2014.
[3]
Towards the end of the term of the SLA, and without any tender
process, the municipality
and Bravospan concluded an addendum to the
SLA (the extension agreement) in terms of which it was agreed that
the SLA would be
extended for a further 24 months from 1 November
2014 to 31 October 2016. Prior to the signing of the extension
agreement, Bravospan
enquired from the municipality as to the
validity of an extension agreement without a bidding process. The
municipality assured
Bravospan that it had obtained a legal opinion
that confirmed that the parties could legally enter into the
extension agreement
without an additional tender process.
[4]
The extension agreement had the effect that the SLA became a
long-term contract as
defined in the
Municipal Supply Chain
Management Regulations (the
regulations).
[1]
One
of the significant differences between a long term contract and a
contract with a duration of one year or less is that a long
term
contract has to be advertised for a period of not less than 30 days
and the agreement of a period of one year or less can
be advertised
for a period of 14 days.
[2]
[5]
On 9 February 2015, the municipality launched an application in which
it sought a
declaratory order that the extension agreement be
declared null and void, alternatively that the extension agreement be
reviewed
and set aside. Bravospan launched a counter-application for
payment of R2 005 000 for the security services rendered for the
period November 2014 to March 2015. Even after the municipality had
commenced with litigation it requested Bravospan to continue
rendering services ‘until such a time that a new service
provider was secured’. The municipality continued to accept
and
enjoyed the benefit of the services without any payment to Bravospan.
[6]
The municipality’s application and counter-application were
argued before Mokgohloa
DJP, and the extension agreement was declared
null and void for want of constitutionality and the
counter-application was dismissed
with costs. In her judgment,
Mokgohloa DJP concluded:
‘
The
present case falls into the first category for the simple reasons
that the applicant’s authority to extend the Service
Level
Agreement must be sought in the provisions of the Statute. Section
217 of the Constitution requires contract for goods or
services by an
organ of State such as the applicant, to be in accordance with a
system which is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive
and cost
effective. Therefore, failure by the applicant to comply with s 217
renders the extension of the Service Level Agreement
unlawful.
Consequently, an unlawful transaction cannot be remedied by estoppel
because that would give validity to a transaction
which is unlawful
and therefore ultra vires.’
[7]
Bravospan unsuccessfully applied for leave to appeal Mokgohloa DJP’s
judgment
and its subsequent application for leave to appeal in this
Court failed. It is undisputed that throughout the 24 months’
period after the extension agreement was declared null and void, the
municipality, at its request, enjoyed the benefit of security
services provided by Bravospan without payment and without engaging
another service provider. During January 2018, Bravospan instituted
an action against the municipality for payment of R9 624 000,
which amount was the sum total of invoices submitted to
the
municipality for the duration of the extension agreement. It relied
on four alternative causes of action, namely delict, fraud,
constitutional damages and unjust enrichment. The issues were
separated and quantum stood over for later determination. On 2
February
2021, Makgoba JP ruled that Bravospan had made out a case
against the municipality based on unjust enrichment. He declared the
municipality liable to pay an amount to be determined.
[8]
The municipality raised only two issues on appeal, namely:
(a) Bravospan failed to
comply with the provisions of s 3(2) of the Institution of Legal
Proceedings against Certain Organs of State
Act 40 of 2002; and
(b) Alternatively, a
portion of Bravospan’s enrichment claim had prescribed.
Failure to comply with
section (3)2 of the Institution of Legal Proceedings against Certain
Organs of State Act 40 of 2002 (the
Act)
[9]
The municipality contended
that Bravospan’s notice in terms of s 3(2) of the Act does not
comply with all the requirements
set out in the Act, in that, the
said notice was not served on the municipality within a period of 6
months from the date on which
the debt became due in accordance with
s 4(1) of the Act. The notice that was served on 8 September 2017 was
late; that the municipality
had not consented to the late service of
the notice; and that there was no condonation application for the
late service. It was
argued that the debt became due at the latest on
1 November 2016 therefore, the 6-month period consequently expired on
1 May 2017.
[10]
The question is whether compensation for unjust enrichment is damages
within the definition of
‘debt’ in s 1 of the Act. In
this section ‘debt’ is defined as any debt arising from
delictual, contractual
or other act or omission under any law, for
which an organ of the state is liable to pay damages whether the debt
became due before
or after the fixed date.
[11]
At the hearing of this matter, counsel for the municipality conceded
that the claim for unjust
enrichment was not a ‘debt’ as
defined in s (1) of the Act and/or at least because it was not a
claim for damages.
Thus, it was rightly conceded by the municipality
that the Act was not applicable to the enrichment claim, and the
absence of a
notice in terms of the Act did not therefore bar the
enrichment claim. This defence therefore has to fail.
Whether a portion of
Bravospan’s claim for unjust enrichment has prescribed
[12]
It is trite that the party who raises a plea of prescription bears
the onus of proof. Rule 22
of the Uniform Rules of Court, provides
that a party who raises a plea shall, in his plea, ‘clearly and
concisely state all
material facts upon which he relies’. In
Hurst,
Gunson, Cooper, Taber Ltd v Agricultural Supply Association (Pty)
Ltd,
[3]
the
court held that in order to found a plea of prescription based on a
3-year period, it is essential and material to expressly
allege the
facts on which the plea is based.
[4]
The
defendant must prove the facts that the plaintiff was required to
know before prescription could commence and must allege that
the
plaintiff had knowledge of those facts on or before the date upon
prescription is alleged to commence.
[5]
In
MEC
for Health, Western Cape v Coboza,
Van
der Merwe JA held that the appellant in that case failed to allege
the facts that were necessary to determine when the respondent
knew
of the primary facts or should have reasonably have known them.
Therefore, the court held that the determination of the ‘plea
of prescription was an exercise in futility’.
[6]
[13]
This Court in
Gericke
v Sack
[7]
held
that:
‘
It
was the respondent who challenged the appellant on the issue that the
claim of damages was prescribed - this he did by way of
special plea
five months after the plea on the merits had been filed. The onus was
clearly on the respondent to establish this
defence. He could not
succeed if he could not prove both the date of the inception and the
date of completion of the period of
prescription. . . . It follows
that if the debtor is to succeed in proving the date on which
prescription begins to run he must
allege and prove that the creditor
had the requisite knowledge on that date’.
[14]
The summons was issued on 19 January 2018 and the municipality
accepted for purposes of argument
that it was served on that date. In
this Court, the municipality argued that the debt became due on a
month-to-month basis from
the end of November 2014. Therefore, so it
contended, the portion of Bravospan’s claim that arose before
19 January 2015
(for services rendered during November and December
2014) had prescribed. However, that was not what it pleaded. It
pleaded that
prescription had commenced on 9 February 2015, being the
date on which the application to invalidate the extension agreement
had
been launched. At the hearing before this Court, the municipality
correctly conceded that it failed to prove that prescription had
commenced on that date. On the principles that I have referred to,
the municipality could not be permitted to advance a different
case
on appeal. The alternative reliance on prescription of a (small) part
of the debt therefore had to fail.
[15]
This, however, is not the end of the matter. South Africa is yet to
recognise a general claim
for unjustified enrichment. In
Nortje
en ‘n Ander v Pool, NO,
[8]
Botha
JA, writing on behalf of the majority, held that ‘there is
nowhere in what we have shown an express recognition of the
existence
in our law of a general enrichment action.’
[9]
The
judgment of Botha JA is described as having delivered the final
deathblow to a general unjustified enrichment action in South
Africa.
However, Botha JA did note that there might be instances where an
unjustified enrichment claim may be available to a party
in order to
counteract unfairness and to come to the rescue of an impoverished
person.
[10]
More
than 30 years after
Nortje
,
this Court in
McCarthy
Retail Ltd
v
Shortdistance Carriers CC,
[11]
reiterated
that our law had yet to recognise a general enrichment action. The
court explained that this non-recognition stems from
the fact that
the Roman law also did not make provision for a general enrichment
action. Makgoba DJP’s order granting Bravospan’s
claim
for unjust enrichment was therefore not sustainable in law.
Section 172 of the
Constitution - appropriate remedy
[16]
On the facts, however, it would be manifestly unjust for Bravospan to
be afforded no compensation
for the services that it had rendered to
the municipality. For the reasons that follow, Bravospan should in
the exceptional circumstances
of this case be afforded compensation
for the services rendered under the extension agreement as a just and
equitable remedy under
s 172(1)
(b)
of the Constitution.
[17]
Section 172(1)
(a)
of the Constitution provides that when deciding a constitutional
matter, a court must declare any law or act that is inconsistent
with
the Constitution invalid. Section 172(1)
(b)
of the Constitution empowers the court, in respect of an order of
invalidity, to make any order that is just and equitable. In
Central
Energy Fund SOC Ltd and Another v Venus Rays Trade (Pty) Ltd and
Others,
[12]
this
Court held that the power to grant an appropriate remedy applies in
review proceedings, whether under the principle of legality
or in
terms of the provisions of Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3
of 2000 (PAJA).
[13]
This
is a wide discretionary power granted to the court to make
any
order.
[14]
In
Bengwenyama
Minerals (Pty) Ltd and Others v Genorah Resources (Pty) Ltd and
Others,
Froneman
J held that this discretionary power follows upon an order of
invalidity in terms of PAJA or the principle of legality.
[15]
It
is normally triggered under circumstances where parties have altered
their position on the basis that the administrative action
was valid
and would be prejudiced if the administrative action is set
aside.
[16]
This
power must be exercised judicially; the court must be convinced to
either exercise its discretion to grant a remedy or to refuse
it.
[18]
In
Steenkamp N O v Provincial Tender Board, Eastern Cape,
Moseneke
DCJ held:
‘
It
goes without saying that
every
improper performance of an administrative function would implicate
the Constitution and entitle the aggrieved party to appropriate
relief.
In 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.
It
is nonetheless appropriate to note that ordinarily a breach of
administrative justice attracts public law remedies and not private
law remedies.
The purpose of a public law remedy is to pre-empt or correct or
reverse an improper administrative function. . . Ultimately the
purpose of a public remedy is to afford the prejudiced party
administrative justice, to advance efficient and effective public
administration compelled by constitutional precepts and at a broader
level, to entrench the rule of law.’
[17]
(My
emphasis.)
[19]
In
Electoral Commission v Mhlope & Others
the
Constitutional Court held:
‘
Section
172(1)
(b)
clothes our courts with remedial powers so extensive that they ought
to be able to craft an appropriate or just remedy, even for
exceptional, complex or apparently irresoluble situations. And the
operative words in the section are “any order that is
just and
equitable”.
This
means that whatever considerations of justice and equity point to as
the appropriate solution for a particular problem, may
justifiably be
used to remedy that problem.
If justice and equity would best be served or advanced by that
remedy, then it ought to prevail as a constitutionally sanctioned
order contemplated in section 172(1)
(b).
’
[18]
(My
emphasis.)
[20]
In
AllPay Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and others v
Chief Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and others (Corruption Watch and another as amici curiae) (Allpay 2),
the Constitutional Court developed two guiding principles to
assist courts in crafting an appropriate remedy. These are the
corrective
and ‘no-profit-no-loss’ principle. It
explained the corrective principle as thus:
‘
This
corrective principle operates at different levels. First, it must be
applied to correct the wrongs that led to the declaration
of
invalidity in the particular case. This must be done by having due
regard to the constitutional principles governing public
procurement,
as well as the more specific purposes of the Agency Act. Second, in
the context of public procurement matters generally,
priority should
be given to the public good. This means that the public interest must
be assessed not only in relation to the immediate
consequences of
invalidity – in this case the setting aside of the contract
between SASSA and Cash Paymaster – but
also in relation to the
effect of the order on future procurement and social security
matters.’
[19]
In respect of the
‘no-profit-no-loss’ principle, it held:
‘
It
is true that any invalidation of the existing contract as a result of
the invalid tender should not result in any loss to Cash
Paymaster.
The converse, however, is also true. It has no right to benefit from
an unlawful contract.’
[20]
[21]
The effect of Mokgohloa DJP’s order was to declare the
extension agreement unconstitutional
under s 172(1)
(a)
of the Constitution because proper procurement processes had not been
followed in respect thereof. That court was not called upon
to
determine a just and equitable remedy under s 172(1)
(b)
.
Ordinarily a declaration of unconstitutionality and a just and
equitable remedy would be claimed in the same proceedings, but
I can
see no reason in principle why relief under s 172(1)
(a)
and s 172(1)
(b)
may not be claimed in separate consecutive legal proceedings. One
can, for example, envisage a case where a declaration of
unconstitutionality
may be obtained on motion because of the absence
of factual disputes in respect thereof, but where the nature of the
disputes in
respect of remedy would require their determination at a
trial. Counsel for the municipality conceded that all the facts
relevant
to whether Bravospan should in principle be compensated
under s 172(1)
(b)
are before us and that the municipality would not be prejudiced by an
order referring the matter back to the court a quo for the
determination of the quantum of just and equitable compensation.
[22]
Bravospan was not responsible for the unconstitutionality of the
extension agreement. On the
contrary, the municipality in this regard
allayed its concerns. The municipality had the benefit of Bravospan’s
services
for the full period from 1 November 2014 to 31 October 2016.
Even after the municipality had launched its review application on
9
February 2015, it persuaded Bravospan to continue to perform services
in terms of the extension agreement. At some stage, Bravospan
sent
invoices to the municipality for services rendered, and the
municipality, in a letter dated 8 July 2015, undertook to make
payment of those invoices. The municipality also sought and obtained
a legal opinion from its own attorneys that stated that the
municipality had been enriched at the expense of Bravospan and that
the municipality should pay. Given the role played by the
municipality in the breach of the Constitution, Bravospan should be
afforded compensation for the services it rendered as a just
and
equitable remedy under s 172(1)(
b
).
[23]
In the particular circumstances of the case, the order of the court a
quo must be set aside and
replaced with an order declaring that
Bravospan is entitled to compensation for the services rendered to
the municipality from
1 November 2014 to 31 October 2016, as a just
and equitable remedy under s 172(1)
(b)
of the Constitution.
The matter must be referred back to the high court to determine the
quantum of that compensation in accordance
with the applicable law.
[24]
The following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with no order as to costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following:
‘
(a)
It is declared that the plaintiff is entitled to compensation for the
services rendered to the defendant during the period from
1 November
2014 to 31 October 2016 as a just and equitable remedy under s
172(1)
(b)
of the Constitution;
(b)
Costs of the hearing on the merits are reserved.’
3
The matter is referred back to the high court to determine the
quantum of that compensation in accordance with the applicable
law.
D
S MOLEFE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
appellant:
A P J Els
Instructed
by:
Maloka Sebola Attorneys Inc, Tzaneen
Phatshoane Henny
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
I Hussain SC with
N J Tee
Instructed
by:
MED Attorneys, Bedfordview
McIntyre van der Post
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
‘
Municipal
Supply Chain Management Regulations, GN
R868,
GG
40553,
20 January 2017’.
The Regulations Supply defines a ‘Long term contract’
defined as ‘a contract with a duration period exceeding
one
year.’
[2]
Regulation 22 provide as follows:
‘
(1)
A supply chain management policy must determine the procedure for
the invitation of competitive bids, and must stipulate –
(a)
. . .
(b)
the information a public advertisement must contain, which must
include –
(i)
the closure date for the submission of bids, which may not be less
than 30
days in the case of transactions over R10 million (VAT)
included), or which are of a long term nature, or 14 days in any
other
case, from the date on which the advertisement is placed in
the newspaper, subject to a sub-regulation (3).’
[3]
Hurst,
Gunson, Cooper, Taber Ltd v Agricultural Supply Association (Pty)
Ltd
1965 (1) SA 48
(W) at 52.
[4]
Hurst
ibid.
[5]
See
Links
v Member of the Executive Council, Department of Health, Northern
Cape Province
[2016]
ZACC 10
;
2016 (4) SA 414
(CC);
2016 (5) BCLR 656
(CC) para 24.
[6]
MEC
for Health, Western Cape v Coboza
2020
ZASCA 165
para 13.
[7]
Gericke
v Sack
1978 (1) SA 821
(A) at 827H–828B.
[8]
Nortje
en ‘n Ander v Pool, NO
[1966]
3 ALL SA 359 (A).
[9]
Nortje
at
394.
[10]
Nortje
at
395.
[11]
McCarthy
v
Shortdistance Carriers CC
[2001] ZASCA 14; [2001] 3 All SA 236 (A).
[12]
Central
Energy Fund SOC Ltd and Another v Venus Rays Trade (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2022]
ZASCA 54.
[13]
Ibid
para 36.
[14]
Ibid.
[15]
Bengwenyama
Minerals (Pty) Ltd and Others v Genorah Resources (Pty) Ltd and
Others
[2010]
ZACC 26
;
2011 (4) SA 113
(CC) para 84.
[16]
Ibid
para 84
.
[17]
Steenkamp
N O v Provincial Tender Board, Eastern Cape
2007 (3) BCLR 300
;
2007 (3) SA 121
(CC) para 29.
[18]
Electoral
Commission v Mhlope and Others
[2016]
ZACC 15
;
2016 (8) BCLR 987
(CC) para 132.
[19]
AllPay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and
Others (Corruption Watch and Another as amici curiae) (Allpay 2)
para 32.
[20]
Ibid
para 41.
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