Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 709South Africa
Jet Education Services NPO v Manufacturing Engineering and Related Services Sector Education and Training Authority (2023/070358,2023/071032) [2024] ZAGPJHC 709 (2 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
2 August 2024
Headnotes
the self-review before him fell within the provisions of section 31(1) of the SDA. That
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Jet Education Services NPO v Manufacturing Engineering and Related Services Sector Education and Training Authority (2023/070358,2023/071032) [2024] ZAGPJHC 709 (2 August 2024)
Jet Education Services NPO v Manufacturing Engineering and Related Services Sector Education and Training Authority (2023/070358,2023/071032) [2024] ZAGPJHC 709 (2 August 2024)
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sino date 2 August 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 2023-070358 &
CASE
NO: 2023/071032
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO.
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO.
3.
JUDGMENT :
2
AUGUST 2024
CASE
NO 2023-070358
In
the matter between –
JET
EDUCATION SERVICES NPO
Applicant
And
THE
MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING AND
RELATED
SERVICES SECTOR EDUCATION AND
TRAINING
AUTHORITY
Respondent
Consolidated
with –
CASE
NO 2023/071032
THE
MANUFACTURING ENGINEERING AND
RELATED
SERVICES SECTOR EDUCATION AND
TRAINING
AUTHORITY
Applicant
AND
JET
EDUCATION SERVICES NPO
Applicant
JUDGMENT
(Heard
1 August 2024)
Snyckers
AJ:
INTRODUCTION
1.
Two consolidated applications served before me. One, the JET
application, was brought by JET Education Services NPO, a
non-profit
organisation active in the education sector. The other, the SETA
application, was brought by the Manufacturing, Engineering
and
Related Services Sector Education and Training Authority (‘MerSETA’).
MerSETA is established in terms of the provisions
of the Skills
Development Act 97 of 1998 (“SDA”).
2. The
applications concerned a series of transactions concluded between JET
and MerSETA between 2018 and 2022. These transactions
related to the
PSET CLOUD Project, a project in relation to which MerSETA provided
funding for the performance of services by JET.
3.
The Project was to be completed in phases. Addenda and new contracts
were concluded to regulate the deliverables and funding
as the
Project developed. On 4 April 2023, MerSETA, having notified JET on
30 March 2023 that the Project was suspended and all
work should
cease, notified JET that the contracts were void and terminated with
immediate effect, on the strength of a forensic
report said to have
been received by MerSETA. This notification was the basis for the two
applications.
4.
The JET application was one brought under the provisions of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
It
contended that the termination of the contracts constituted unlawful
administrative action and should be declared unlawful.
It had,
however, “accepted” what it contended was the repudiation
(of contract) entailed by such unlawful termination.
It sought an
order that the court award it some R19m in what it called ‘liquid
damages’ by way of an appropriate remedy.
5.
The SETA
application was a so-called self-review. It asked that the decisions
to award to JET the funding for Project be declared
unlawful and
invalid and be set aside.
[1]
6.
The applications were consolidated by order of this court (Vally J)
on 21 February 2024.
7.
The papers in the applications spanned some 2000 pages.
8.
Amongst the papers, from page 1815 onwards, appeared a supplementary
affidavit from JET uploaded on Caselines on 18 June
2024.
9.
The supplementary affidavit referred to two developments. One is
directly relevant to this judgment. The relevant development
was a
judgment handed down in this court on 8 March 2024 by Moorcroft AJ.
It was attached to the supplementary affidavit. This
judgment has
since been reported as
Manufacturing Engineering & Related
Services Sector Education and Training Authority v Social Enterprise
Trust
(2024) 45 ILJ 1330 (GJ).
10.
The judgment in question concerned what I shall call the SET Project.
It was a project funded by MerSETA on the basis
of contracts
concluded with SET. The judgment concerned an application for
self-review by MerSETA of the decision to conclude the
agreement
regulating the SET project.
11.
In the
instant case (the JET matter), the self-review is very squarely
founded on a forensic report. There are disputes concerning
the
status and character of this report, and, of course, its contents and
findings, but for present purposes these are irrelevant.
The report
deals with several projects funded by MerSETA. Its bulk deals with
the SET project. But it also deals with the PSET
CLOUD Project
concluded with JET. In both cases the conduct of the Chief Operations
Officer of MerSETA, Ms Nomvete, was central
to the grievances of
MerSETA about the contracts concluded with SET and JET. The other
development referred to in the supplementary
affidavit, to which
brief reference is made above, is the report of 8 April 2024 issued
after the disciplinary proceedings initiated
against Ms Nomvete,
which were pending at the time of the SET judgment. That report found
Ms Nomvete not guilty of all charges.
It also mentioned that the
charges against Ms Nomvete in relation to the JET contracts
[2]
had been withdrawn by MerSETA. It does not say why.
12.
In
the SET judgment, Moorcroft AJ held that the self-review before him
fell within the provisions of section 31(1) of the SDA. That
subsection confers exclusive jurisdiction on the Labour Court “
in
respect of all matters arising from this Act”
.
Moorcroft AJ found that the self-review was a matter arising from the
SDA. He held “
discretionary
grants are allocated in terms of the
Skills Development Act.”
[3
]
He referred the application to the Labour Court in terms of
s31(3)
of
the SDA. He also gave a punitive costs order against MerSETA.
13.
In the supplementary affidavit, JET adopts the attitude that the
effect of the SET judgment is that the MerSETA self-review
in
relation to the JET Project should follow the same fate as its
self-review in the SET judgment. It contends, however, that the
JET
application should not suffer that fate, because “
JET does
not rely on the SDA in any way for [its] relief”.
It
therefore persists in seeking its relief in this Court, but contends
that the SETA application should be referred to the Labour
Court.
14.
On 22 July
2024, I, at that stage not having seen the contents of the
supplementary affidavit,
[4]
asked the parties to address me at the hearing
inter
alia
on
the question whether, in light of certain decisions to which I
referred them,
[5]
the
termination decision was governed by the law of contract or was a
matter of administrative law. I mention this because this
question
assumed prominence, especially in the argument advanced by Mr Maodi
for MerSETA, in the jurisdictional question the subject-matter
of
this judgment, as will appear in what I say below.
PROCEDURE
ON JURISDICTION ISSUE
15.
In the
hearing before me on 29 July 2024,
[6]
Mr Bishop, who appeared for JET, and Mr Maodi, for MerSETA, were
ad
idem
that
I needed to consider and rule upon the jurisdictional issue first,
before I could hear the merits of either application. This
was
obviously correct.
16.
Mr Bishop submitted that this court had jurisdiction to determine the
JET application, but not to determine the SETA application.
Mr Maodi
submitted that this court had jurisdiction to determine both
applications.
17.
Both parties accepted after some debate that it would be
inappropriate, if I were to accept JET’s submissions on
jurisdiction, for me to refer the SETA application to the Labour
Court while continuing there and then to hear the JET application.
There were several reasons for this, including that my findings on
the merits of the JET application could contradict findings
by the
Labour Court on the merits of the SETA application – in
circumstances where the merits were essentially mirror-images
of each
other, at least to a very substantial degree. Furthermore, since the
SETA application attacked the coming into being of
the contracts, and
the JET application their termination, it made sense to await a
finding on the lawfulness of their coming into
being before it became
necessary to consider the lawfulness of their termination.
Ultimately, again after some debate, neither
party saw the
consolidation as an insuperable obstacle to a splitting of the
applications, with one being referred to the Labour
Court and the
other being retained in this court but postponed pending the
determination of the Labour Court on the other, if the
jurisdictional
question were to be answered differently for the two applications.
18.
Both parties accepted that, if the finding was that the court lacked
jurisdiction on both applications, it was appropriate
to employ the
empowering provisions of
section 31(3)
to refer the applications to
the Labour Court, rather than to dismiss them for want of
jurisdiction. There was much debate about
costs, which will be dealt
with below.
JURISDICTION
AND SECTION 31 – ‘MATTERS ARISING FROM THIS ACT’
19.
Section 31(3) of the SDA provides as follows:
“
Subject to the
jurisdiction of the Labour Appeal Court and except where this Act
provides otherwise, the Labour Court has exclusive
jurisdiction in
respect of all matters arising from this Act.”
20.
The noun used is “matter”. This noun is repeated in
subsection (3) that deals with the referral power of the
court:
“
If proceedings
concerning any matter contemplated in subsection (1) are instituted
in a court that does not have jurisdiction in
respect of that matter,
that court may at any stage during proceedings refer the matter to
the Labour Court.”
21.
In order to determine the scope of the ouster in section 31(1), one
must accordingly determine what is encompassed by
the notion
“matter”, and what by the requirement that it be “arising
from” the SDA.
22.
These questions must be determined in order to consider the cogency
of an argument that a cause of action not founded
upon the SDA, nor
engaging with its provisions (or with those of subordinate
legislation promulgated under it), is not covered
by the ouster in
s31(1). Only if such an argument is cogent could there be any merit
in the contention that the JET application
is not covered by the
ouster because it is not founded on the SDA.
23.
In argument before me on the jurisdiction question, Mr Bishop for
JET, while not abandoning his submission that the ouster
did not
apply to the JET application, advanced only arguments that supported
the application of the ouster to both applications.
Put differently,
the submissions he advanced as to why the SETA application was
covered by the ouster applied equally to the JET
application. Mr
Bishop did not press the submission that he did not abandon, nor
insist that any distinction was in fact cogent.
Submission
24.
Mr Maodi
for MerSETA, at least initially, relied primarily on consent, or
submission, to jurisdiction on the part of JET as a basis
for
precluding it from objecting to jurisdiction, and submitted that this
applied to both applications. Mr Bishop correctly submitted
that
parties could not competently confer jurisdiction on the High Court
in the teeth of a statutory exclusion such as that in
s31(1), and
referred in this regard to
Snyders
v De Jager.
[7]
I have
little hesitation in rejecting an argument that, if a “matter”
is covered by section 31(1), the parties can nevertheless
competently
confer jurisdiction on the High Court over such “matter”,
and demand the court hear them, by submission
to jurisdiction.
“
Matters
arising from the SDA”
25.
In the SET
judgment, Moorcroft AJ said that the words “
arising
out of”
denoted
“
a
causal connection between the Act and the harm complained of”.
[8]
The words used in section 31(1) are “
arising
from”
.
26.
The judgment then appears necessarily to imply that this causal
connection was present in a case relating to the lawfulness
of a
decision by a SETA to give a discretionary grant, due to the finding
in paragraph 11 that discretionary grants were allocated
in terms of
the SDA. I may note that the SETA application in the instant case is
to have “
the decision(s) to award discretionary grant(s) to
the respondent”
self-reviewed.
27.
Mr Maodi
submitted in the instant case that MerSETA’s case was not
exclusively based on the SDA, but was instead also based
on section
217 of the Constitution (I will come to the argument on contract
below), and this meant the ouster did not apply. This
same argument
was rejected by Moorcroft AJ in the SET judgment, who held that even
if the causes of action relied upon included
s217 and other
legislation, this did not mean the ouster ceased to apply.
[9]
Although in this regard Moorcroft AJ also invoked the principle of
subsidiarity, holding that the primary legislation that was
pertinent
was the SDA, even if this in turn gave effect to constitutional
imperatives,
[10]
the main
reason Moorcroft AJ rejected the multiple cause of action argument
was that “
the
relief sought by the applicant relates to matters arising from the
Act”
.
[11]
This must mean that Moorcroft AJ held that, whatever the cause of
action was, if it related to a matter that arose from the SDA,
with
“
arising
from
”
implying some causal connection, then the ouster applied. It also
implies a reading of the term “matter” that
extends
beyond the cause of action involved and encompasses the dispute and
facts giving rise to the relief sought.
28.
Mr Maodi did not seek to distinguish the SET case. He conceded that,
if that decision was correct, then it applied to
this case. He
submitted, however, that it was wrong. I am bound to follow the SET
judgment unless I am persuaded that it is clearly
wrong.
29.
The
important question to determine is whether the ouster applies only to
causes of action founded in the SDA, or that engage its
provisions or
those of its subordinate legislation,
[12]
on the one hand, or, on the other hand, applies to all causes of
action that relate to matters that arise from the SDA in the causal
sense required in the SET judgment.
30.
The next question would then be whether the causes of action in the
instant case engage the provisions of the SDA, if
one assumed a
narrower construction of the ouster for purposes of answering the
first question.
31.
I debated with Mr Maodi the problem MerSETA faced in that its
self-review was a public-law legality review, invoking,
as one of the
main grounds for the unlawfulness of the decisions to give the
discretionary grant, the fact that the provisions
of the “Grant
Criteria and Guidelines” were not followed in respect of the
JET grants. These Guidelines are issued
as part of the implementation
by MerSETA of its duties and powers to determine discretionary grants
in terms of the Grant Regulations
promulgated in terms of s36 of the
SDA. Even if one were to adopt a narrow construction of the
requirement of the ouster in s31(1)
to encompass only causes of
action that engage the SDA, therefore, the basis, or at least
a
substantive basis, upon which MerSETA brings its application for
self-review would appear undeniably to be one grounded in the
SDA
through its subordinate legislation.
32.
Mr Maodi was driven to submit that, if the ouster applied to those
causes of action that engaged the SDA, and this included
the causes
of action based on non-compliance with the Guidelines, the court
would still retain jurisdiction over those causes of
action that did
not, such as s217 of the Constitution, and, in particular, the more
appropriate contractual lens through which
to view the matter, in
light of the authorities on contract and administrative law to which
I had referred the parties.
33.
Neither
application was framed in contract. But Mr Maodi submitted that,
after reflection upon the query directed at the parties,
MerSETA’s
submission was that the contractual lens was indeed the more
appropriate lens through which to view the matter,
and this meant
that it did not entail a matter engaging the provisions of the SDA.
He invoked reasoning reflected in the
Cape
Metropolitan Council
decision
referred to above to the effect that the mere fact that statutory
provisions constituted the authority upon which a contract
was
concluded did not mean conduct in terms of that contract was
administrative action as opposed to contractual conduct.
[13]
The submission was that matters of pure contract were not covered by
the ouster in s31(1) and that, properly viewed, however the
applications were framed, they were matters of pure contract.
34.
To assess
this submission is it not necessary, nor in the circumstances
appropriate, for me to resolve the question whether the
termination
decision ought more appropriately to be treated as one in contract or
one in administrative law, and in the process
to confront the
uncertainties that remain in relation to such questions after the
SANPARKS
decision.
[14]
It is very difficult to make the SETA self-review one of pure
contract – as it deals with the legality of having made a
decision to offer a discretionary grant, i.e. the decision to
conclude the contract, rather than with the legality of conduct as
a
contracting party, which the decision to terminate could be, invoking
Cape
Metropolitan Council
.
It would be very difficult, in my view, to ignore the public law
character of the decision to offer the grant, and to fail to
recognise that it is governed by the provisions of the regulations
promulgated under the SDA, which would make it a matter arising
from
the SDA, even on a narrow construction of that phrase as covering
only causes of action engaging the SDA, as opposed to all
causes of
action related to matters arising from the SDA in a causal sense. In
the interesting use of language employed by the
Labour Court in
Services
Sector Education & Training Authority & Others v Minister of
Higher Education & Training & Others (1)
,
[15]
the grant authorisations
were “
actions
taken in connection with the provisions of the SDA”
.
[16]
35.
But in any event, I believe that the proper construction of the term
“matter” in section 31 is wider than
a cause of action
engaging the SDA and encompasses all disputes that relate causally to
the SDA or functions performed under the
SDA. That would cover the
instant disputes between the parties, at least because the grants
purport to be the fulfilment by MerSETA
of its statutory mandate
under the SDA as regulated by the Grant Regulations, and the matter
relates directly to the legality of
the grants – both in
respect of the decision to give them and the decision to terminate
them.
36.
In this regard, Mr Bishop emphasised the practical and conceptual
difficulties that a narrow reading of the term “matter”
or the term “arising from” would entail and the strong
likelihood that the legislature intended the term “matter”
to have a broad enough sweep to enable a dispute related to SDA
functions to be determined fully and properly by the Labour Court
instead of having portions of the dispute fall under the jurisdiction
of the Labour Court and portions under that of the High Court,
depending on the extent to which the statutory functions are directly
engaged by the cause of action in question. This is a persuasive
argument in favour of a broad interpretation of the phrase “matter”
such as I find was at least necessarily implied
in the finding in the
SET judgment.
37.
We debated the question where one would draw the line in ousting the
jurisdiction of this court when it came to contracts
concluded by
SETAs. An example Mr Maodi offered was one for the painting of the
wall of one of the buildings occupied by the SETA.
The attraction of
the logic of the argument is that, at some point, in relation to some
contracts, the mere fact that the SETA,
which is charged with
statutory functions under the SDA, is the entity that concludes the
contract, cannot make disputes about
that contract “matters
that arise from the SDA”.
38.
One may
accept that there should indeed conceptually be such a point while
also accepting the
Sorites
paradox
[17]
that the logical difficulty of locating this point does not mean the
transition from SDA arising matters to non-SDA arising matters,
when
it comes to SETA contracts, does not exist.
39.
I agree
with Mr Bishop that, whatever contracts concluded by a SETA may be
regarded as so far removed from the SDA as not to be
capable of being
regarded as matters arising from the SDA, the contracts in this case
are not amongst them.
[18]
The
contracts in this case concern the very core of the statutory mandate
the SETA discharges under the SDA – the grants
it provides in
terms of the statutory framework of the SDA. These are matters
arising from the SDA, and disputes about their origin
and termination
are matters arising from the SDA as contemplated in s31(1).
40.
Mr Maodi submitted that in the instant case the grievance is that the
contract in question was concluded outside the framework
of the SDA –
it was therefore precisely
not
concluded in the discharge of
the SETA’s mandate, and for this reason not a matter arising
from the SDA. This may at first
blush sound attractive, but it would
logically mean that the characterisation of a dispute as to whether
it arises from the SDA
or not would depend on the outcome of the
dispute as to whether the provisions of the SDA were in fact properly
applied or not
– if they were, it would be a matter arising
from the SDA, and if they were not, it would not be. This cannot be a
tenable
basis upon which to include or exclude “matters”
from the ambit of the jurisdiction ouster in s31(1).
41.
I am therefore of the respectful view that the judgment in the SET
matter is correct on this score, and that both applications
before me
are “
matters arising from”
the SDA as contemplated
in s31(1), meaning this court lacks jurisdiction over either
application. In the circumstances it would
in my view be appropriate
to exercise the power under section 31(3) and refer both applications
to the Labour Court, as was done
in the SET matter on the application
in question there.
COSTS
42.
Both parties failed in their applications in this court, as the court
declined to accept jurisdiction over each application.
43.
In the SET matter, it appears that SET took the jurisdiction point
both before and after it filed its answering papers
to the SETA
application, but MerSETA persisted with its application. This led
Moorcroft AJ to make a punitive cost order against
MerSETA. Moorcroft
AJ held that the court retained the jurisdiction, in referring the
matter to the Labour Court, to make a cost
order in the process. The
costs awarded in SET appear to me to have been all the costs of the
application, not only the costs wasted
in the High Court –
significant costs, no doubt the bulk of the costs incurred in the
application, would have been incurred
in an application that was to
serve in the Labour Court, and were not wasted.
44.
In the instant case, it would ordinarily, following the usual
principles, appear to me to make sense to reserve the costs
of the
applications for the determination of the Labour Court, as such costs
would have been incurred in applications that ultimately
ended up
serving before that Court as the court of proper jurisdiction, save
to order each losing party to bear the wasted costs
incurred in the
High Court (i.e. the costs incurred in relation to this hearing)
relating to its own application.
45.
But I was referred to correspondence that had passed between the
attorneys after the supplementary affidavit was uploaded
that has a
significant bearing on the issue of costs.
46.
The supplementary affidavit was uploaded on the 18
th
of
June 2024.
47. On
20 June, Mr Maodi’s firm wrote to JET’s attorneys and
intimated that the supplementary affidavit might have
rendered the
matter not ripe for hearing. The response this elicited was an
invitation to seek a postponement and to tender costs,
on the basis
that JET was ready to proceed. On 21 June 2024, MerSETA through its
attorneys proposed that steps be taken to have
both applications
transferred to the Labour Court by agreement. This elicited no
response from JET. This exchange does not form
part of the uploaded
papers, but it was common cause that its essence had been accurately
conveyed to me from the bar.
48.
It seems undeniable that, had MerSETA’s proposal been taken up,
no costs would have been wasted after 21 June in
having the matter
argued in this court, only to be referred to the Labour Court after
argument in this court.
49.
I can see no reason, and Mr Bishop did not offer a persuasive one,
why JET should not be responsible for those wasted
costs. I agree
with Mr Bishop that it would not be fair to label JET’s conduct
in this regard as reprehensible or vexatious
and I cannot lose sight
of the fact that the party that argued strenuously that this court
did indeed possess jurisdiction was
MerSETA, not JET, which was the
argument that ultimately did not prevail. A punitive order against
JET would accordingly not be
called for, in my view.
50.
In the circumstances it would be appropriate to direct JET to pay the
wasted costs incurred in this Court, but to reserve
the remaining
costs of both applications for determination by the Labour Court.
51.
Mr Maodi submitted that the appropriate scale for an order, if not
given on an attorney-client basis, would be scale C,
given the
complexity of the matter. I do not think scale C is warranted for the
wasted costs occasioned by the hearing on jurisdiction
– and
such complexities as the matter may possess on the merits remain
preserved in the applications that are now referred
to the Labour
Court. It appears to me that scale B is an appropriate scale.
52.
The following order is made:
A. The consolidated
applications (2023-070358 and 2023/071032) are referred to the Labour
Court in terms of section 31(3) of
the Skills Development Act 98 of
1997.
B. Save as provided
in C below, the costs of the referred applications are reserved for
determination by the Labour Court.
C. JET is directed
to pay all costs occasioned by both applications from 21 June to the
hearing, inclusive, on a party and
party basis, on scale B.
F
Snyckers
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION JOHANNESBURG
The
orders in this judgment were handed down in open court by being read
into open court on 2 August 2024 and this judgment was
subsequently
uploaded onto Caselines; the date of the judgment is accordingly 2
August 2024
Heard
on: 1 August 2024
Delivered:
2 August 2024
Counsel
for the Applicant (JET):
A Bishop
Instructed
by:
Dewey Mclean Levy Inc
Counsel
for the Respondent (MerSETA):
TJ Maodi (attorney)
Instructed
by:
TJ Maodi Inc
[1]
The relevant prayer in the “Republished Notice of Motion”
of 7 December 2023 reads as follows: “the decision(s)
by the
applicant to award discretionary grant(s) to the respondent…
is declared unlawful and invalid and is reviewed and
set aside.”
[2]
Charge 10.
[3]
Paragraph 11.
[4]
The practice notes and heads of argument were uploaded on Caselines
before the SET judgment and before the supplementary affidavit,
and
were not updated after them, and only a full reading of the papers
before the hearing revealed the existence of these developments.
[5]
Cape
Metropolitan Council v Metro Inspection Services (Western Cape) CC
2001
(3) SA 1013
(SCA) and
South
African National Parks v MTO Forestry (Pty) Ltd
2018
(5) SA 177 (SCA).
[6]
By then my reading of the papers had included the supplementary
affidavit containing the SET judgment.
[7]
2016 (5) SA 218
(SCA), para 8.
[8]
Paragraph 13, citing, albeit concededly in a different context,
National
Housing and Planning Commission v Van Nieuwenhuizen
1952
(4) SA 532
(T) and
Jacobs
v Auto Protection Insurance Co Ltd
1964
(1) SA 690
(W).
Jacobs
dealt
with the need for an injury to “arise out of” the
driving of a vehicle, and it was held that this required at
least
some
causal
connection between the driving and the injury.
Van
Niuewenhuizen
is not of much assistance as the statutory words at issue there were
“for or in connection with”, and the Afrikaans
words
(considered in the judgment) “vir of in verband met”.
[9]
Paragraph 16.
[10]
Paragraphs 17 and 18.
[11]
Paragraph 16.
[12]
A challenge to the legality of the Grant Regulations promulgated
under s36 of the SDA, for example, would obviously and
uncontentiously
fall within the ambit of the s31(1) ouster –
as in
Business
Unity SA v Minister of Higher Education & Training & Others
92015)
36 ILJ 3057 (LC), para 25.
[13]
See
Cape
Metropolitan Council
para
11.
[14]
2018 (5) SA 177
(SCA): “
There
is no bright-line test for determining whether administrative
principles intrude in relation to a contract involving an
organ of
state and a private party
”
– para 37 of the separate concurring judgment of Navsa JA and
Davis JA.
[15]
(2011) 32 ILJ 2225 (LC)
[16]
Paragraph 10.
[17]
It is impossible to say at what point (i.e. after exactly how many
grains) adding another grain of sand to a few grains of sand
would
turn the collection of individual grains into a heap of sand.
Nevertheless, the real distinction between the concept of
a heap of
sand and the concept of some grains of sand does not collapse due to
this impossibility.
[18]
An interesting question in this regard relates to the jurisdictional
issue that was decided in
Naicker
v Services Sector Education and Training Authority
Case
no. 15635/2013, [2015] ZAGPJHC 186 (Keightley J), 27 August 2015,
about the concurrent jurisdiction of the Labour Court and
High Court
in relation to certain contractual issues that also engaged the
provisions of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act.
The employer
was a SETA, yet it was not suggested that s31(1) ousted the High
Court’s jurisdiction, despite the fact that
the employment
contract in question was arguably one “arising from the SDA”,
and a dispute about it therefore arguably
a “matter arising
from the SDA”. Mr Maodi invoked this authority, if not exactly
on this particular point.
sino noindex
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