Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 417South Africa
Infinite Blue Trading 29 cc t-a Motau Projects v Johannesburg Roads Agency Soc Limited (2024-004605) [2024] ZAGPJHC 417 (25 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 March 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Repudiation – State Organ terminating private agreement concluded with private entity pursuant to opinion expressed by Auditor General of possible irregularity in the awarding of the tender; opinion expressed not constituting lawful ground to repudiate agreement by State Organ
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Infinite Blue Trading 29 cc t-a Motau Projects v Johannesburg Roads Agency Soc Limited (2024-004605) [2024] ZAGPJHC 417 (25 March 2024)
Infinite Blue Trading 29 cc t-a Motau Projects v Johannesburg Roads Agency Soc Limited (2024-004605) [2024] ZAGPJHC 417 (25 March 2024)
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sino date 25 March 2024
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2024-004605
BEFORE
THE HONOURABLE JUSTICE, AUCAMP AJ 25 March 2024
In
the matter between:
INFINITE
BLUE TRADING 29 CC t/a MOTAU PROJECTS
[Registration
no: 2005/137585/23]
Applicant
And
JOHANNESBURG
ROADS AGENCY SOC LIMITED
[Registration
no: 2000/028993/30]
First
Respondent
AUDITOR
GENERAL
Second
Respondent
Neutral
Citation: Infinite Blue Trading 29 CC t/a Motau Projects v
Johannesburg Roads Agency SOC Ltd and Another (2024/004605) [2024]
ZAGPJHC (25 March 2024)
Coram:
Aucamp S
Heard:
2 February 2024
Delivered:
25 March 2024 – This judgement was handed down electronically
by circulation to the parties’ representatives
by email, by
being uploaded to Caselines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 10:00 on 25 March 2024.
Summary
:
Repudiation – State Organ terminating private agreement
concluded with private entity pursuant to opinion expressed by
Auditor General of possible irregularity in the awarding of the
tender; opinion expressed not constituting lawful ground to repudiate
agreement by State Organ
JUDGEMENT
INTRODUCTION
[1] The
applicant makes application, (a) interdicting and restraining the
first respondent, the Johannesburg
Roads Agency SOC Ltd (“
the
JRA
”). From implementing
its repudiation of the agreement: Contract No: JRA/20/63 and (b)
directing and ordering the respondent
to immediately implement the
agreement on the same basis as it did prior to the purported
repudiation of the agreement.
[2] Pursuant
to a competitive tender process, the JRA awarded Tender JRA/20/63 to
a panel of four service
providers. The applicant was one of the
aforesaid four service providers. Pursuant to the aforesaid tender
award to the applicant,
the applicant and the JRA concluded a formal
service level agreement in April / May 2021 (“
the
agreement
”).
[3] The
parties continuously implemented the agreement until during or about
20 December 2023, when the JRA
purported to repudiate the agreement
by having issued the applicant with correspondence, recording that
due to an alleged irregularity
identified by the second respondent,
the Auditor General in the previous tender process, the JRA would no
longer place any orders
with the applicant. The correspondence reads:
“
Dear
Sit/Madam
You
letter of appointment for the abovementioned contract dated the 23
rd
April 2021 has reference.
The
Johannesburg Roads Agency would like to notify you that it is no
longer going to issue any further Purchase Orders from the
date of
this letter to your company due to some irregularity that was
identified by the Auditor General during the regularity audit
regarding the evaluation of specialised vehicles submitted in your
tender which did not qualify to be awarded points as per the
specification.
Furthermore,
you indicated that you will subcontract drilling and road marking
activity and there was no proof of experience for
such services
provided in your tender. This resulted in AG not agreeing with the
allocated points in the functional evaluation.
The
JRA is bound not to continue with your services as this will be
deemed irregular expenditure as your contract with JRA is an
“as
and when required” contract.
For
any enquiries and concerns regarding the contract please do not
hesitate to call our contract management department number 0[…]
(Khangelani Gumbi). Thank you for continuing patronage and support
patronages.”
[4] The
JRA on 17 January 2024 further wrote to the applicant and recorded:
“
3. The
JRA wishes to place it on record that its letter dated the 20
December 2023 does not constitute termination,
and/or a repudiation
of contract and thus refutes any claims that the JRA has terminated
the contract with your client.
4. In
accordance with our self-explanatory letter of the 20 December 2023,
it was JRA’s advice to your
client that the Auditor General of
South Africa (herein referred to as AGSA), identified some
irregularities in the bidding process,
more so, that your client did
not qualify to be awarded points as per the tender specification of
the above-mentioned contract.
5. Your
client had also indicated that they will subcontract drilling
road-making activities and there was
no proof of experience for such
services provided in their tender and thus AGSA did not agree with
the points in your client’s
functional evaluation.
6. Recognising
the responsibility to ensure transparent procurement as required in
terms of section 217 of
the Constitution, your client was then
advised that no new purchase orders shall be issued to them in
respect of this contract
in line with the findings and
recommendations of the AGSA.
7. …
8.
The
Act, the applicable circulars and regulations further places an
obligation on the accounting officer
to put in place measures to
prevent the recurrence if irregular expenditure in instances where
procurement is declared to be irregular.
9. Therefore,
the JRA shall honour the purchase order(s) already allocated to your
client, if there are any.
Your client is thus required in terms of
their contractual obligation, to execute such order. Same shall be in
accordance with
instruction and mandate in accordance with the
contract.
10. Lastly,
the JRA is well aware that your client’s appointment is due to
lapse on the 23
rd
April 2023, and thus the appointment shall be terminated only by the
lapse of the contractual period as stipulated in the appointment
letter and contract.”
[5] In
the answering affidavit to this application, the JRA in paragraphs 57
and 70 stated that:
“
I
confirm that the contract was awarded without any issues or concerns
regarding fraud or dishonesty on the part of the applicant.”
And
“
Were
it not for the Auditor General’s findings, the first respondent
would have continued to issue purchase orders to all
service
providers. This is because at no stage did I, as the accounting
officer of the first respondent suspect or doubt the integrity
of the
outcome of the first respondent’s BEC.”
[6] It
is therefore abundantly clear, but for the findings and report of the
Auditor General, the JRA would
not have proceeded to terminate the
agreement with the applicant as it did.
[7] The
applicant, as far as the Auditor General is concerns, submits that:
7.1. the
Auditor General conducts an audit of the processes of the JRA and as
part of this duty it performed
an audit on the manner in which
certain tenders were evaluated by the JRA including the tender
awarded to the applicant;
7.2. it
was the exercise of this audit that resulted in the Auditor General
having arrived at its conclusions
that the BEC incorrectly scored the
applicant of functionality;
7.3. the
Auditor General, with reference to the registration papers of certain
vehicles relevant to the tender,
did not confirm that the said
vehicles in fact met the required qualities for purposes of
performing the activities for which they
were required;
7.4. the
JRA provided the Auditor General with the following response to the
said findings of the Auditor
General:
“
Proof
of existing vehicles: Management evaluated the attached documents as
per the bidder’s submission and the registration
papers
indicating elevating unit/flat deck/platform deck was submitted. The
description of the vehicle means that it is a tower
wagon. Refer to
annexure “
18
”
of the bid document.”
7.5. the
Auditor General did not give the applicant an opportunity to respond
to its intended findings which
is indicative of the fact that the
Auditor General did not intend to express any opinion on the validity
and/or enforceability
of the existing agreement between the applicant
and the JRA.
THE
ISSUES FOR CONSIDERATION
[8] The
issue for consideration is whether the communication from the JRA
that it will no longer provide
the applicant with orders amount to a
repudiation of the agreement?
REPUDIATION
[9] In
Discovery Life Ltd v Hogan and Another
2021 (5) SA 466
(SCA) at 16
and 17 the following was stated:
“
[16]
As
Corbett JA stated in NASH v Golden Dumps (Pty) Ltd:
‘
Where
one party to a contract, without lawful grounds, indicates to the
other party in words or by conduct a deliberate and unequivocal
intention no longer to be bound by the contract, he is said to
repudiate the contract … Where that happens, the other party
to the contract may elect to accept the repudiation and rescind the
contract. If it does so, the contract comes to an end upon
communication of his acceptance of repudiation and rescission to the
party who has repudiated …
[17] This
court has consistently said that the test for repudiation is not
subjective but objective. The
emphasis is not on the repudiating
party’s state of mind, on what she subjectively intended, but
on what she subjectively
intended, but on what someone in the
position of the innocent party would think she intended to do,
repudiation is accordingly
not a matter of intention, it is a matter
of perception. The perception is that of a reasonable person placed
on the position of
the aggrieved party. The test is whether such a
notional reasonable person would conclude that proper performance (in
terms of
a true interpretation of the agreement) will not be
forthcoming. The inferred intention as manifested by objective
external conduct
accordingly serves as the criterion for determining
the nature of the threatened actual breach.”
[10] I
have little doubt that but for the existence of lawful grounds to
have issued the termination notice,
that the said notice constitutes
a repudiation of the agreement.
[11] The
JRA is of the view that the effect of the findings of the Auditor
General constitute the required
lawful grounds upon which the
termination notice was predicated upon.
[12] I
am in agreement with Mr Els acting for the applicant, that the
findings, to the extent that the opinions
expressed by the Auditor
General can indeed be classified as “findings” and I am
not convinced that it indeed constitutes
findings, that the Auditor
General did not make findings binding on the JRA and which findings
could be used to summarily terminate
the agreement with the
applicant. Instead, the opinions of the Auditor General in this
instance did not more than prescribing to
the JRA on how certain
expenses had to be recorded in its financial statements.
[13] When
an organ of state procures goods and services, it generally, does so
through a competitive bidding
process, a process that is
administrative of nature. When the organ of state proceeds to
conclude an agreement with the successful
bidder, the relationship,
no longer is governed by public law but instead by private law. See:
-
Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd v
Industrial Development Cooperation of South Africa Ltd and Another
2015 (5) SA 245
(CC at [75]. The distinction is relevant because when
an organ of state in a private contractual relationship with a
private entity
is desirous to terminate the contractual relationship,
it can only do so with reference to with the applicable principles of
contract
law. When an organ of state realises that there has been an
irregularity in a tender process, such an organ of state is obliged
to approach a court of law by way of a self-review. See: -
MEC
for Health, Eastern Cape and another v Kirkland Investments (Pty) Ltd
t/a Eye and Laser Institute
2014 (3)
SA 481
(CC) at [82].
[14] It
would seem rather drastic and draconian of a state organ, on the say
so of an opinion expressed by
the Auditor General of possible
irregularities would entitled and in fact oblige the said organ of
state to terminate the contractual
arrangement with the private
contract party without having allowed for the irregularity to be
tested through due process which
inter
alia
afford the private contracting
party an opportunity to test the alleged irregularity.
[15] As
a consequence, I am persuaded that the termination notice issued by
the JRA on [
insert date
]
constituted a repudiation of the agreement for which no lawful basis
existed.
[16] Mr
Els continues to submit, relying on
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2018 (2) SA 23
(CC) that the proper approach in instances such as the
present one is that only a court of law has the authority and the
power,
in terms of section 172(1) of the Constitution to set aside an
agreement concluded pursuant to a competitive tender process.
[17] For
the very same reasons, I find the submission made on behalf of the
JRA that because the agreement
does not guarantee orders being issued
to the applicant but only on the basis as and when required, that the
termination issue
does not constitute a repudiation of the agreement,
unconvincing.
CONCLUSION
[18] Consequently,
I make the following order:
18.1. The
first respondent is interdicted and restrained from implementing its
repudiation of the agreement:
Contract No. JRA/20/63 (“
the
Agreement
”).
18.2. The
first respondent is ordered to immediately implement the agreement on
the same basis as it did
prior to 20 December 2023.
18.3. The
first respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s costs, such
costs to include the services
of two counsels where so employed.
S
AUCAMP
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANESBURG
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and/or the parties’ representatives by email
and
by being uploaded to Caselines. The date and time for hand-down is
deemed to be 25 March 2024
DATE
OF HEARING:
2 FEBRUARY 2024
DATE
OF JUDGEMENT:
25 March 2024
APPEARANCES:
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
ADV APJ ELS
ATTORNEYS
FOR THE APPLICANT:
ALBERT HIBBERT ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT:
ADV T SEBOKO
ATTORNEYS
FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT:
SMM ATTORNEYS INC
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