Case Law[2025] ZAGPJHC 339South Africa
Ekurhuleni Water Care Company v Maziya General Services CC (2023/090528) [2025] ZAGPJHC 339 (3 April 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Ekurhuleni Water Care Company v Maziya General Services CC (2023/090528) [2025] ZAGPJHC 339 (3 April 2025)
Ekurhuleni Water Care Company v Maziya General Services CC (2023/090528) [2025] ZAGPJHC 339 (3 April 2025)
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sino date 3 April 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case Number: 2023-090528
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
In
the matter between:
EKURHULENI
WATER CARE COMPANY
Applicant
and
MAZIYA
GENERAL SERVICES CC
Respondent
This judgment was
handed down electronically by circulation to the parties' and/or the
parties' representatives by email and by
being uploaded onto
CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be 3 April
2025
JUDGMENT
PUTTER
AJ
:
Introduction
1.
This is a self-review concerning multiple
contractual extensions by Ekurhuleni Water Care Company ("
Erwat
"),
a municipal entity involved in the Vlakplaats Waste Water Care Works
project. The contract, awarded to Maziya General Services
CC ("
the
Contractor
" or the "
Service
provider
") through a lawful tender
process, falls under the "General Conditions of Contract for
Construction Work, 3rd Edition
(2015)" ("
GCC
Contract
"). The Scope of Work
includes “modifications to flow diversion”, final
effluent collection, and maturation and
retention ponds. Erwat
launched the "self-review" against the contractual
extensions it granted on the basis that the
extensions were unlawful.
The review is based on a legality review in terms of section 1(c) of
the Constitution (not under PAJA)
as a component of the rule of law.
2.
Erwat initiated this self-review on the
basis that the extensions were unlawfully granted. The review is
conducted as a legality
review under section 1(c) of the
Constitution.
3.
The parties to the review are Erwat ("
the
Employer
") and Maziya General
Services CC ("
the Service
provider
").
4.
Erwat seeks the following relief:
4.1
that all decisions which were taken after
29 November 2018,
alternatively
30 August 2019, under the GCC Contract be declared unconstitutional,
unlawful and invalid and consequently be reviewed and set
aside;
4.2
that, in addition to the review, the
"Adjudication Decision" of 26 May 2023 be stayed pending
the determination of the
review application;
4.3
that condonation be granted to it for the
late filing of the review application.
5.
In contrast, the Service provider contends
that the extensions under the Contract did not involve the exercise
of public power and
that Erwat found itself in the position of a
contracting party. Due to the cancellation notice of 26 October 2021
by Erwat of the
GCC Contract, the issues in respect of the loss of
profit and termination of the Contract were referred to an
adjudication process.
Both Erwat and the Service provider
participated therein, whereafter an adjudication was made by the
Adjudication Board.
6.
The Service provider launched a
counter-application wherein it seeks relief for:
"1. Payment of
an amount of R8 653 384,39 plus interest;
2.
Confirmation of the cancellation of the GCC
Contract; ..."
7.
In addition to the counter-application, the
Service provider claims that the application be dismissed with costs
Delay in launching the
Review
8.
The
review application was issued and served on 8 September 2023. There
is no prescribed fixed period for the bringing of a legality
review.
However, the delay must be evaluated according to a two-step
analysis. In the first step, the question is whether Erwat
unduly
delayed in bringing the review and if not, the Court must proceed on
the merits and consider the interests of justice.
[1]
If, however, the delay was unreasonable, the Court must proceed to
the second step which relates to the question of interests of
justice.
9.
Erwat's case is that the extensions given
in terms of the contractual procedures unlawfully extended the GCC
Contract duration period
under the tender process. The GCC Contract
commenced on 30 August 2016 for a duration of 27 months (what is
referred to in the
GCC Contract as "duration period") and
should have been completed by 29 November 2018, which was the
"completion
date" in the event that there were no
extensions.
10.
It is not in dispute that the project
executed under the GCC Contract contained contractual terms and that
certain extensions could
be granted for practical completion as
governed therein.
11.
Erwat did not raise the illegality and the
non-compliance with the MFMA prior to 26 October 2021. From the
stipulated date of completion,
being 18 November 2018 until 26
October 2021 (the cancellation date) the Contract was executed and
managed in the normal course
of the context and purpose of the
contract for nearly 3 years without raising the illegality issue.
12.
Erwat failed to explain why it did not
raise the illegality issue immediately after the completion date. The
23-month delay on which
Erwat relies is factually wrong, it is in
fact 4 years and 10 months. In the light thereof -
12.1
the self-review was only brought 5 years
after the termination date on which Erwat relies;
12.2
Erwat failed to explain how the illegality
issue occurred and the circumstances why and how the "illegality"
became transparent
to it;
13.
When one studies the submissions made and
the responses by National Treasury and Provincial Treasury that
served before Erwat's
directors it appears that both Treasury
Departments contended that the extensions of the contract beyond "36
months"
amounted to irregular expenditure due to non-compliance
with sections 116(3) and 33 of the MFMA.
14.
Erwat clearly followed this "illegality
route" in order to avoid the effect of the prescribed extensions
which were in
fact beyond the control of the Service Provider.
15.
In order to address the delay, Erwat was
compelled to explain the self-review and to deal with the
consequences thereof, the potential
prejudice and the nature of the
services which were rendered.
16.
Although Erwat's Board considered the
reinstatement of the contract which it had terminated (from July to
September 2022) it ultimately
persisted with the termination thereof.
It appears that following a change in Erwat's top management
structure, the GCC Contract
was reviewed and found not to comply with
sections 33 and 116 of the Municipal Finance Management Act, Act 56
of 2003 ("
the MFMA
")
which respectively deal with general provisions in respect of
contracts that have budgetary implications and the management
of
contracts.
17.
The real issue is whether Erwat, in these
circumstances, can rely on the MFMA and a self-review in the face of
its contractual obligations
under the GCC Contract. That poses a
further question - whether the delays should be overlooked.
Should the delay be
overlooked
18.
What goes to the heart of the dispute
between the parties is the question whether the extensions granted in
terms of the GCC Contract
constituted public power.
19.
The context of the extensions under the GCC
Contract is paramount and will influence the outcome of the
self-review. The applicant
claims that the completion date of 27
months was extended and that this was unlawful.
20.
The extensions granted took place in terms
of GCC contractual terms.
21.
The legality of the tender process and the
GCC Contract that was awarded to the Service Provider is not in
dispute.
22.
The extensions of the GCC Contract beyond
the 27 months were granted in terms of the provisions of the
contract. The extensions
were not related to the procurement of
further goods or services. The sole purpose of the extensions was to
afford the Service
Provider an opportunity to complete the contract.
Although the appointment was for 27 months, the extended duration for
completion
was done and approved lawfully. The timeframe and the
purpose of the delays can be summarised as follows:
22.1
delays in approval of the Water Use Licence
application – 218 days;
22.2
delays in delivery of material – 46
days;
22.3
groundwater seepage affecting excavations –
36 days;
22.4
community unrest – 35 days;
22.5
heavy rainfall and flooding on site –
75 days;
22.6
national lockdown;
22.7
delays in payment of invoices due to
budgetary constraints – 120 days.
23.
The various extensions were granted in line
with the GCC Contract.
24.
The complaint regarding illegality is,
however, that no formal extensions of time were requested in
accordance with the MFMA.
25.
The tender and contract that followed is
directly related to Erwat's water care works and to regularise the
treated effluent therefrom.
26.
In submissions by the managing director of
Erwat, Mr Kennedy Nyasha Chihota (the deponent to the founding
affidavit) explained the
basis on which the tender and eventually the
Contract took place as follows;
"The water care
works is currently operating at 150 millilitres per day against the
regraded capacity of 55 millilitres per
day, this operating
conditions overloads the plant by 208%, consequently the treated
effluent contravenes the acceptable discharge
limit of the current
Water Use Licence (WUL). The non-compliance challenge of the treated
effluent deteriorates the water quality
of the discharge river (i.e.
Natalspruit), consequently. The Department of Water and Sanitation
(DWS) has recently served Erwat
with a Notice to impose a
non-compliant Directive on Vlakplaats WCW.
The
project for modification to flow diversion at Vlakplaats WCW was
initiated as a mitigation to improve the compliance of the
discharge
of the Works. The project is based on designing and constructing a
system to divert and retain access flow during peak
hours and then
releasing it for treatment during low-flow hours."
[2]
27.
After
the Service Provider lodged its final account the Notice of
Termination dated 26 October 2021 was served by Erwat
[3]
.
The relevant part of the Notice reads as follows:
"During the contract
review process contract: ERW 201602/TNDR-001 has been deemed to be in
contravention of sections 10, 11,
33 and 116 of the MFMA.
Therefore, Erwat is
required by law to terminate the contract with immediate effect.
Furthermore no further works must be performed
from date of this
letter."
28.
Erwat
appointed Virtual Consulting Engineers who were responsible for the
design and site supervision of the GCC Contract. The Engineers
responded on 29 October 2021 to the termination notice. It denied
that sections 10 and 11 had a bearing on the termination. It
contended that Section 33 of the MFMA deals with contracts that will
inform financial obligations on the Municipality beyond 3
years. It
does, however, not prohibit such Contracts.
[4]
29.
Shortly thereafter, on 4 November 2021, the
Service Provider's attorney denied that there was any breach of the
GCC Contract and
gave Erwat an opportunity to rescind the unlawful
termination.
30.
A dispute was thereafter declared in terms
of clause 10.3 of the GCC Contract.
31.
On 7 June 2022, the time limits under the
GCC Contract were suspended between the parties while Erwat
considered the reinstatement
thereof.
32.
On 3 February 2023, the Service Provider
proceeded with the adjudication process.
33.
In April 2023 Erwat and the Service
Provider entered into an Adjudication Board meeting agreement in
terms of the GCC Contract to
deal with the termination of the GCC
agreement and the damages relating thereto.
34.
The Service Provider filed a Referral to
Adjudication and Erwat responded thereto by way of a Statement of
Response.
35.
The Adjudication Board determined that the
Service Provider was entitled to payment of damages in the amount of
R8 653 384,39 VAT
inclusive.
36.
On 4 July 2023, Erwat issued a Notice of
Dissatisfaction with the Adjudication Board's Ruling; the relevant
extract thereof reads
as follows:
"2. We refer
specifically to the Adjudication Award dated 26 May 2023 in terms of
which the Adjudicator found as follows:
2.1
The Service Provider properly terminated
the Contract on 31 May 2022;
2.2
The Service Provider is entitled to damages
of R8 653 384,29 inclusive of VAT, which the Employer must pay within
the payment period
specified in the Contract.
3.
We wish to place on record that our client is dissatisfied with the
decision of the Adjudicator and will accordingly be
challenging the
procedure in the appropriate forum."
[5]
37.
Subsequently, and without an agreement to
arbitrate, Erwat instituted this self-review in September 2023, as
referred to hereinabove.
Erwat participated in the dispute resolution
process. Clause 10.6.1 of the GCC Contract makes provision that if a
party is in disagreement
with the Adjudication Board's decision such
party is entitled to refer the matter to arbitration or court
proceedings whichever
is applicable in terms of the Contract.
Were extensions under
the GCC Contract reviewable?
38.
As
stated by the Supreme Court of Appeal, there is no bright line test
for determining whether administrative principles include
a contract
involving an organ of state and a private party
[6]
.
39.
In my view the decision of Erwat to extend
the GCC Contract did not constitute "administrative action"
as defined in PAJA
due to the fact that –
39.1
the decision was not taken in terms of any
legislation; and
39.2
the decision did not involve the exercise
of a public power or public function.
40.
In the
Sanparks
matter Navsa JA and Davis AJA suggested certain indicators which
might be used in deciding whether administrative law should govern
a
contract between a private party and an organ of state. The
contractual terms between the parties provide for different aspects
and termination of the agreement. Erwat did not act in terms of any
position of power.
41.
Erwat called for tenders in order to
rectify the non-compliance of its water care works. Thereafter, the
consulting engineers and
the Service Provider saw to the Scope of
Work.
42.
I refer to certain relevant definitions
contained in the GCC Contract wherein "practical completion"
overrides the timeframe
as relied upon by Erwat.
43.
The "due completion date" on
which Erwat relies reads as follows:
"1.1.1.14
"Due completion date" means the date of expiry of the time
stated in the contract data for achieving
practical completion of the
Works, calculated from the commencement date and as adjusted by such
extensions of time or acceleration
as may be allowed in terms of the
contract.
44.
"Practical completion" reads as
follows:
"1.1.1.24
"Practical completion " means that the whole or portion of
the Works has reached a state of readiness.
Fit for the intended
purpose, and occupation without danger or undue inconvenience to the
Employer, even though some Works may
be outstanding.
45.
With regard to the extensions of time for
practical completion, clause 5.12.1 of the GCC Contract reads as
follows:
"5.12.1. If
the Contractor considers himself entitled to an extension of time for
circumstances of any kind whatsoever
which may occur that will
actually extend Practical Completion of the Works beyond the Due
Completion Date, the Contractor shall
claim in accordance with clause
10.1 such extension of time as is appropriate. Such extension of time
shall take into account any
special non-working days and all relevant
circumstances including concurrent delays or saving of time which
might apply in respect
of such claim."
46.
The terms of the GCC Contract informs the
exact ambit of the contractual relationship.
47.
Erwat's reasoning that the 27-month period
in the GCC Contract came automatically to an end when the 27 month of
the tender conditions
ran out, fails to take the principal of
practical completion into account and that the scope of what had to
be reached had to be
“a state of readiness".
48.
The GCC Contract term was adjusted through
various extensions which were made by Erwat and are not in dispute. I
have dealt with
this aspect more fully above.
49.
The delays in the project completion took
place due to the events that triggered the respected extensions which
were beyond the
control of the Service Provider.
50.
In addition, Erwat took part in the
administration and management of the GCC Contract over time.
51.
The stance that Erwat’s decision to
grant the decisions were in fact administrative decisions and forms
part of its public
powers were not disclosed since August 2016, at
the commencement of the GCC Contract. The first sign of this point of
departure
was the cancellation notice of 26 October 2021.
52.
The termination of the GCC Contract did not
entail the use of public power.
53.
The SCA already considered the nature of
the power exercised by a public authority in cancelling a contract in
Cape Metropolitan Council v Metro
Inspection Services (Western Cape) CC and Others
2001 (3) 1013 SCA at paras [18] and [22] and in
Logbro
Properties CC v Bedderson and Others
2003 (2) SA 460
(SCA) para [11].
54.
The reasoning of these cases are clear. The
tender contract and in this case the GCC Contract between Erwat and
the Service Provider
makes it clear. Erwat derived its power to
cancel the GCC Contract from its terms and the common law. When
concluding the Contract
Erwat did not act in a position of
superiority or authority.
55.
As far as the Service Provider's claim for
payment in respect of the adjudication amount is concerned, as
reflected in the counter-application,
the parties are bound by the
provisions of clause 10.6.1. of the GCC Contract which provides for
arbitration proceedings.
Finding:
56.
In the circumstances –
56.1
the late filing of the review application
is not condoned; and
56.2
the review application is dismissed;
56.3
Erwat is ordered to pay the costs of the
review application including the costs of counsel on the scale C;
56.4
the counter-application is postponed
sine
die
in order for the parties to refer
any disagreement with the Adjudication Board's Decision to
arbitration within 56 days of date
of this Order and within the
procedures prescribed for dispute resolution in terms of the GCC
Contract.
BY ORDER,
REGISTRAR
L PUTTER
Acting Judge of the High
Court
Gauteng Division,
Johannesburg
Heard: 20 November 2024
Judgment: 3 April 2025
Appearances
:
For Applicant: BL Manetsa
R
Tsalong
Instructed by: Mamatela
Attorneys Inc.
E-mail:
snene@mamatelainc.co.za
asetlhare
@mamatelainc.co.za
For Respondent: Adv Jan
Möller
Instructed by: Moller &
Pienaar Attorneys
E-mail:
amarentiea@mollers.co.za
[1]
See
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction
2019
(4) SA 331
(CC) at 345 paras 49 and 50;
Transnet
SOC Ltd v Tipp-Con (Pty) Limited and Others
(797/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 12
)31 January 2024), para [26].
[2]
Caselines: 02-06, Founding affidavit: Caselines: 02-121, Annexure
FA13.1 Submission dated 6 July 2022
[3]
Caselines: 02-76 Founding affidavit:
annexure
FA7.
[4]
Caselines: 02-143; Answering affidavit, Annexure AA3 –
02-188.
[5]
Caselines: 02-183 Answering affidavit: Annexure AA1.
[6]
See
Sanparks
v MTO Forestry
2018 (5) SA 177
(SCA) at para [37].
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