Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 51South Africa
Channel Construction (Pty) Ltd v Transnet SOC and Others (2024/111291) [2025] ZAGPJHC 51 (21 January 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
21 January 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Channel Construction (Pty) Ltd v Transnet SOC and Others (2024/111291) [2025] ZAGPJHC 51 (21 January 2025)
Channel Construction (Pty) Ltd v Transnet SOC and Others (2024/111291) [2025] ZAGPJHC 51 (21 January 2025)
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sino date 21 January 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
Number: 2024-111291
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
24/01/2025
In
the matter between:
CHANNEL
CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LTD
Applicant
(Registration number
2004/009100/07)
and
TRANSNET
SOC LTD
First Respondent
(Registration number
1990/000900/30)
MBALI
INDUSTRIAL SOLUTIONS
Second Respondent
(PTY) LTD
(Registration number
2005/046349/23)
BUREAU
VERITAS (PTY)
Third Respondent
(Registration number
2006/014342/07)
DORMAC
(PTY) LTD
Fourth Respondent
(Registration number
2008/001056/07)
PRO
AUTO RUBBER CC
Fifth Respondent
(Registration number
2010/129334/23)
6SIGMA
(PTY) LTD
Sixth Respondent
(Registration number
2018/435091/07)
ISIPHETHU/AMABUTHO
JV
Seventh Respondent
STEFANUTTI
STOCKS (PTY) LTD
Eighth Respondent
(Registration number
2003/022221/07)
AMULET
GROUP (PTY) LTD
Ninth Respondent
(Registration number
2015/158294/07)
MMK
GAUGES BICS ENGINEERING JV
Tenth Respondent
ENELAD
(PTY) LTD
Eleventh Respondent
(Registration number
2017/230579/07)
AFRICA
PROJECTS CONSULTANTS
Twelfth Respondent
(PTY) LTD
(Registration number
2018/273082/07)
DAMIEN
SHIPYARDS (PTY) LTD
Thirteenth Respondent
(Registration number
2007/007944/07)
GUERRINI
MARINE
Fourteenth Respondent
CONSTRUCTION CC
(Registration number
1995/053307/23)
ZM
SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Fifteenth
Respondent
(Registration number
2024/097893/07)
JUDGMENT
FISHER
J
Introduction
[1]
This is the “A” part of an application relating to the
review of a decision in terms of which the applicant’s
bid
under a tender put out by the first respondent, Transnet was
rejected. The dismissal of an internal appeal and the award of
the
tender to second respondent, Mbali are also sought to be reviewed.
[2]
The other tenderers have been cited as interested, but the only
opposition is by the first and second respondents. I will
refer to
the first and second respondents as “the respondents.”
[3]
The review itself is contained in part B of the application.
[4]
This “A” part of the application was brought urgently. It
seeks, in essence, to interdict the implementation
of the tender
pending the final outcome of the review.
[5]
The “A” part of application initially came before
the urgent court but was allocated to this court to
be heard as a
special motion.
[6]
The respondents continue to deny that matter is urgent. In
light of the special allocation and the need for certainty
and
finality for the parties I have decided to entertain it on the basis
that it has sufficient urgency to be heard in this context.
[7]
I thus turn to the case made out in the founding affidavit.
Founding
facts
[8]
The applicant conducts business in the engineering and construction
industry and has performed work on tenders for Transnet
in the past.
[9]
It is important that Transnet is a State Owned Company (SOC).
[10]
The request for proposals (RFP) in relation to the tender was
published on 31 January 2024.
[11]
The tender is for the replacement of what is known as the Sturrock
Dry Dock (SDD) Inner caisson gate at the port of Cape
Town.
[12]
On 9 May 2024 the applicant submitted its tender. This is the tender
in issue.
[13]
On 06 September 2024 Transnet sent a letter authored by Mr M S Hogg,
Transnet’s executive manager: infrastructure
procurement to the
applicant in terms of which the applicant was informed that on
evaluation of its bid by the Bid Adjudication
Committee (BEC) was
found not to meet the compulsory minimum requirements of the tender
which required the credentials of the engineer
on the project to be a
Pr. Eng. Or Pr. Tech.
[14]
The requirement that the Engineer on the project meet these minimum
credentials was set out clearly. It was, furthermore,
made clear in
the RFP documents that non-responsive tenders in relation to these
mandatory qualifications would be disqualified.
[15]
The engineer proposed by the applicant in its bid was a certain Mr
Paardenkooper who is a Control and Instrumentation
Engineer.
[16]
Although Mr Pardenkooper is very experienced in the industry and has
managed similar projects to the one in issue, it
is not disputed that
his qualifications do not, strictly speaking, meet the mandatory
qualifications required under the tender.
[17]
The applicant appealed the decision notified under Mr Hogg’s
letter to disqualify it from the tender process.
[18]
The grounds of appeal stated were, essentially, that Mr Paardenkooper
was an experienced engineer; had previously worked
on caisson
projects for Transnet and was the most qualified person to conduct
the works.
[19]
It seems, thus, that what was contended for was that the bid was
substantially compliant in that the qualifications of
Mr
Paardenkooper were, at least, equivalent to those required under the
tender.
[20]
The applicant, to drive this position home, submitted further that
the tender was similar in relation to the methodology
for the works
required on a previous tender – the Robinson Drydock Tender
which the applicant was awarded.
[21]
Transnet explained, at some length, in its response to the appeal how
the qualifications required under the tender differed
from those of
Mr Paardekooper’s. It explained further that, in its view, it
did not, at law, have the latitude to vary the
criteria
ex post
facto
.
[22]
The applicant responded by way of a letter dated 23 September 2024
which served, at least in part, to amend the appeal
grounds.
[23]
The applicant now contended that the tender process was not
competitive or fair in that Transnet had abused the regulatory
framework relating to public procurement. This abuse, it alleged, was
the imposition of the minimum qualification criteria for
the purposes
of deliberately eliminating bidders such as the applicant.
[24]
The applicant went further and alleged corruption on the part of
Transnet in that it is alleged that the award was backdated.
The
arguments raised
[25]
The applicant alleges that it has met the requirements for an interim
interdict.
[26]
The prima facie right relied on is simply that it has a
constitutional right to review the decisions involved.
[27]
It contends further that, in order to properly exercise this right of
review, the status
quo
must be preserved because, if this is
not done, it will be met by a fait accompli.
[28]
The balance of convenience, it argues serves it. This, it says is
because of the potential irretrievable loss and the
direct impact on
its constitutional rights whereas the only prejudice suffered by
Transnet is a delay to the project.
[29]
It submits that these considerations, taken together with the fact
that it will be difficult if not impossible to claim
damages, means
that it has no satisfactory remedy other than the interim interdict.
[30]
The applicant argues further that it has prospects of success in the
review.
[31]
The respondents argue that no case has been made out for interdictory
relief. They say that this is especially so because
the application
impacts on conduct that flows from statutory powers and functions
referred to in section 156 of the Constitution.
[32]
They make the point that the prima facie right as identified by the
applicant is inapposite in relation to the inquiry
to be undertaken
in the context of the facts and particularly the first defendant’s
public function.
[33]
A further point made by the respondents is that they intend to raise
a point in limine to the effect that the application
has been brought
outside of the 180 day limit imposed by PAJA for the bringing of
reviews.
[34]
The argument is to the effect that if, as it appears to be the case,
a central complaint of the applicant is that the
tender was drawn
with the aim of deliberately excluding the applicant, that the review
should have been brought at the stage of
publication of the RFP in
January 2024 and not, as it was, in September 2024 which is
approximately 7 months after this publication
and after its tender
was disqualified.
[35]
The argument is that there should be an application for condonation
in that the application was not brought within the
180 day limit in
PAJA. Such an application, argue the respondents would have poor
prospects of success.
Applicable legal
principles
[36]
The legal
inquiry in an application for an interim interdict is well settled.
The applicant must establish prima facie the existence
of a right; a
well-grounded fear of irreparable harm; that the balance of
convenience is served by the interdict and that there
is no other
appropriate remedy. These are known as the
Setlogelo
requirements
or the
Setlogelo
Test.
[1]
[37]
As set out above, the applicant argues that it has met this test.
[38]
However,
what is not specifically addressed by the applicant is that in
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others
2012 (6) Sa 223 (CC)
[2]
(OUTA)
the Constitutional Court put a gloss on these requirements in
circumstances where the interdict sought was against organs
of state
and in restraint their statutory power.
[39]
This particular prejudice, the Court termed “separation of
power prejudice”. This conveyed that the proposed
interference
with the statutory function involved was part of the general
prejudice which had to be weighed in the balance.
[40]
The
Constitutional Court made the point in OUTA that the existence of
mala fides is an important consideration in this inquiry.
The Court
quoted with approval the decision in
Gool
[3]
as follows:
"The present is
however not an ordinary application for an interdict. In the first
place, we are in the present case concerned
with an application for
an interdict restraining the exercise of statutory powers. In the
absence of an allegation of
mala fides the Court does not readily grant such an interdict.”
[4]
[41]
The
Court clarified that such an interdict would be granted “only
in the clearest of cases.”
[5]
[42]
The
Court furthermore, whilst not defining the “clearest of cases”
pointed out that an important consideration would
be whether the harm
apprehended amounted to a breach of one or more of the fundamental
rights in the Bill of Rights.
[6]
[43]
The
weighing up inquiry which a court has to engage in when determining
whether a case has been made for an interdict takes into
account the
prospects of success in the review. The stronger the prospects of
success the less not for the balance of convenience
to favour the
applicants; the weaker the prospects of success the greater the need
for the balance to favour the applicants.
[7]
[44]
With these principles in mind, I move to a
discussion of the merits.
Discussion
[45]
In
OUTA
the Court put the position relating to the prejudice to the
separation of powers thus
[8]
:
“
A
court must carefully consider
whether
the grant of the temporary
restraining
order pending a review will cut across or prevent the proper
exercise of a power or duty that the law
has vested in the authority to be
interdicted
.
Thus courts are obliged to recognise and assess the impact of
temporary restraining orders when dealing with those matters
pertaining
to the best application, operation and dissemination of
public resources.
What this
means is that a court is obliged to ask
itself not whether an interim interdict
against an authorised state functionary
is competent but rather whether it is constitutionally appropriate to
grant the interdict.”
( emphasis
added)
[46]
The respondents argue further that the applicants have
conceded that they fell outside of the strict requirements of the
tender
and that this makes their prospects of success negligible to
non -existent.
[47]
The right relied on by the applicant is not correctly framed.
The fact that a person has the right of review does not, in and of
itself, constitute the required right. If this were a correct
characterisation of the right then every person bringing a review
would automatically get past the hurdle of establishing a
prima
facie
right. This is not the law.
[48]
In fact, the determination moves from the premise that State
entities which are carrying out their public function need to be free
to act in this context unless there are special considerations which
are at play and which defer to the doctrine of separation
of powers.
[49]
From a general perspective, as long as a State entity is
carrying out its function in good faith, it would require the
clearest
of cases to thwart its progress.
[50]
The applicant has not shown that this is one such case and
neither has it shown that the prospects of success on the review
favour
it.
Order
[51]
I make the following order:
Part A of the application
is dismissed with costs such costs to be taxed according to scale C.
FISHER J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
JOHANNESBURG
This Judgment was handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties/their legal
representatives by email and by uploading
to the electronic file on
Case Lines. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 21 January 2025.
Heard:
28 November 2024
Delivered:
21 January 2025
APPEARANCES:
Applicant’s
counsel:
Adv. G D Harpur SC
Adv. R
R Kisten
Applicant’s
Attorneys:
K M Attorneys Inc
First
Respondent's counsel:
Adv. M J Ramaepadi SC
Adv.
Langa
First Respondent
Attorneys:
Mkhabela Huntley Attorneys Inc
Second Respondent’s
counsel:
Adv. K Tsatsawane SC
Adv. P
Volmink
Second Respondent’s
Attorneys:
Dirk Kotze Attorneys
[1]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
at 227.
[2]
National
Treasury and Others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and
Others
2012
(6) SA 223 (CC).
[3]
Gool
v Minister of Justice
1955
(2) SA 682 (C).
[4]
OUTA
at para 43.
[5]
Id
at para 26 and 47.
[6]
Id
at para 47.
[7]
Olympic
Passenger Service Pt Ltd v Ramie an
1957
(2) SA 382
(D) at 383D-G, cited with approval in
Eriksen
Motors Welkom Ltd v Protea Motors Warrenton
1973 (3) SA 685
(A) at 691F-G. See also
Simon
NO v Air Operations of Europe AB
[1998] ZASCA 79
;
1999 (1) SA 217
(SCA) at 231G.
[8]
OUTA
at para 6
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