Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 866South Africa
Actophambili Roads (Pty) Limited v Member of Executive Council: Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Road and Transport and Others (2024/097004) [2024] ZAGPJHC 866 (4 September 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 September 2024
Headnotes
hostage by the incompetent report structures withing (sic) the Department”. They point out that no confirmatory affidavits
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Actophambili Roads (Pty) Limited v Member of Executive Council: Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Road and Transport and Others (2024/097004) [2024] ZAGPJHC 866 (4 September 2024)
Actophambili Roads (Pty) Limited v Member of Executive Council: Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Road and Transport and Others (2024/097004) [2024] ZAGPJHC 866 (4 September 2024)
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sino date 4 September 2024
THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
2024/097004
(1)
REPORTABLE: Yes☐/ No ☒
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: Yes☐ / No ☒
(3)
REVISED: Yes ☐ / No ☒
Date: 04 September 2024
WJ du Plessis
In
the matter between:
ACTOPHAMBILI
ROADS (PTY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
MEMBER
OF EXECUTIVE COUNCIL:
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT:
DEPARTMENT
OF ROADS AND TRANSPORT
First Respondent
HEAD
OF DEPARTMENT:
GAUTENG
PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT:
DEPARTMENT
OF ROADS AND TRANSPORT
Second Respondent
ANDREW
NGOBENI
Third Respondent
PEWE
HLATSHWAYO
Fourth Respondent
HERALD
MLAMBO
Fifth Respondent
KWAGGA
HOLDINGS (PTY) LIMITED
Sixth Respondent
TAU
PELE CONSTRUCTION (PTY) LIMITED
Seventh Respondent
TEFLA
GROUP (PTY) LTD
Eighth Respondent
LEAFY
SPACE (PTY) LTD
Ninth Respondent
BEST
ENOUGH TRADING AND PROJECTS 398 CC
Tenth Respondent
DOT
AFRICA CIVILS
Eleventh Respondent
Coram:
Du Plessis AJ
Heard
on:
3 September 2024
Decided on:
xxx
This
judgment has been delivered by uploading it to the CaseLines digital
database of the Gauteng Division of the High Court of
South Africa,
Johannesburg, and by email to the attorneys of record of the parties.
The deemed date and time of the delivery is
10H00 on 4 September
2024.
ORDER
The
following order is made:
1.
The application is struck from the urgent
roll for lack of urgency.
2.
The applicant must pay costs on a party and party scale, and on scale
C.
JUDGMENT
DU
PLESSIS AJ
[1]
This urgent application is for contempt of court, in which the
applicant asks that the first to fifth respondents be declared in
contempt of the court order under case number 2024-025996, and be
imprisoned for three months.
[2]
The applicant, Actophambili Roads (Pty) Limited (“Actop”),
is a private company that obtained interdictory relief under
case
number 2024-025986 against the first and second respondents pending a
review of a tender granted to the sixth to eleventh
respondents.
[3]
The first respondent is the Member Executive Council: Gauteng
Provincial Government: Department of Roads and Transport (hereafter
“MEC”, currently Ms Kedibone Diale-Tlabela), the
executive authority of the Gauteng Department of Roads and
Transport.
The second respondent is the Head of Department:
Gauteng Provincial Government: Department of Roads and Transport
(hereafter “HOD”,
currently Dr Thulani Mdadane). The
third respondent, Mr Andrew Ngobeni, is employed by the Gauteng
Provincial Government: Department
of Roads and Transport. So is the
fourth respondent, Mr Simpewe Hltashwayo and the fifth respondent, Mr
Herald Mlambo. They will
be collectively referred to as “the
respondents” unless where it is necessary to distinguish
between them, then they
will be referred to as they are cited.
[4]
The sixth to eleventh respondents are private companies cited
in this application as successful bidders in the Gauteng Department
of Roads and Transport, contracting to supply and apply dilute
emulsions on various roads for three years to the Gauteng Province.
No relief is sought against them.
Background
[5]
The applicant states that the first to fifth respondents are
in contempt of the judgment and order granted by this court on 30
April
2024. This order followed an application to interdict the first
and second respondents from taking any actions to further implement
the tender, pending the finalisation of review proceedings of the
tender that was awarded to the sixth to eleventh respondents.
[6]
On 22 August 2024, Adtop received information that the
Department has taken steps to further the Tender and the works
contemplated
therein. Their attorneys immediately contacted the
first, second and sixth to eleventh respondents, informing them that
if they
breached the order, the applicant would approach the court to
seek an order to hold them in contempt of court. In this letter, they
referred to the judgment of Pullinger AJ case number 2024-025986,
annexed the order
and
quoted the relevant paragraphs in the
letter. In their heading, they placed the incorrect case number
2023-084713.
[7]
On 23 August 2024, the 6
th
respondent undertook not
to contravene the order, as did the tenth and eleventh respondents.
[8]
On 23 August 2024, the Department’s legal
representatives emailed to inform the applicant that their client
would not proceed
with any further steps in contravention of the
court order. The applicant required a written undertaking from the
department, which
they have not received.
[9]
On 23 August 2024, the legal representatives of the tenth and
eleventh respondents sent correspondence that they received, urging
the applicant to contact the Department to get clarity. The letter
was written by Andrew Ngobeni, with Simphiwe Hlatshwayo and
Herald
Mlambo included in the email, advising them that they can continue
with their current scope of work. The email stated
We
have noted the attached letter and judgment.
We
subsequently made a verbal contact with our legal unit in the
department who advised that we proceed and complete the current
scope
of work in spite of the attached letter and judgment”.
[10]
The reference line included case number 2024-025986, the case
number of Pullinger AJ's judgement and order.
[11]
The applicants then sent another letter to the Department,
addressed to the three individuals, informing them that a declaratory
order would be sought against them personally for contempt of court
and incarceration. It also requested an irrevocable and unconditional
undertaking that they would not contravene the judgment and order.
Such an undertaking must be sent by 10:00 on Tuesday, 27 August
2024.
Otherwise, an urgent application will be launched to place them in
contempt and commit them to imprisonment. Mr Hlatshwayo
replied by
email, giving an undertaking, but the applicants wanted a signed
undertaking, which they did not receive.
[12]
The Department answered that they investigated the matter and
found that purchase orders were issued by the 3rd, 4th and 5th
respondents,
and the work had started, but they are still awaiting a
detailed response on the issue. The Department met with the
individuals
and found out that they are based in the Regions, and
some of them are in the Directorate Maintenance. The issue was
handled through
the Directorate: Supply Chain Management, who was not
part of the court proceedings and was unaware of the order; they are
now
aware of it. They will abide.
[13]
These colleagues were thus unaware of the judgment and the
order, and its implications were not communicated to them. When
another
colleague inquired about the court order, they enquired about
the order under case number 2024-004029, and the legal department
advised them that they could proceed as there was no interdict at the
time. However, this was a court order under a different case
number.
The three colleagues have since been made aware of the judgment and
will abide by it. They signed undertakings that they
would abide by
the order. Although only two of the three were uploaded on the day of
the hearing, counsel informed the court that
it was due to an error
of the attorneys. The respondents state this is not a case of
deliberate or malicious undermining of the
court order.
[14]
The respondents further stated that this application is an
abuse of process. They state that there are other remedies available
that can be employed instead of contempt. Resorting to contempt
proceedings should be reserved for those genuine cases where the
wrongdoer deliberately and maliciously embarks on a pattern to
undermine the court's integrity. This is not such a case, they say.
[15]
The applicant still persisted with the relief sought. They
insist that the Department must inform all the relevant departments
and
regions of the court order and the consequences of such a court
order. Neither the applicant nor the court “should […]
be held hostage by the incompetent report structures withing (sic)
the Department”. They point out that no confirmatory affidavits
were filed and that the facts are true and correct.
Ad
urgency
[16]
The
respondents argue that contempt proceedings are not inherently
urgent, relying on
Manamela
v Maite
[1]
.
Dippenaar J stated
“
The
applicant’s broad reliance on “contempt proceedings being
inherently urgent” is also misconceived. Simply
because an
application concerns contempt proceedings, that does not of itself
justify the enrolment of such application on the
urgent court’s
roll. As in every other urgent application, the issue of urgency must
be evaluated in the context of the specific
facts of the matter.
There must be exact compliance with the requirements of r 6(12)(b)
and an applicant must explicitly set out
the specific facts which
render such application urgent and why an applicant could not be
afforded substantial redress at a hearing
in due course.”
[17]
A
similar approach was set out in
Volvo
Financial Services Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Adamas Tkolose Trading
CC
,
[2]
where Wilson J stated that
“
I
do not think that can be true as a general proposition. I accept that
the enforcement of a court order may well qualify as urgent,
in
situations where time is of the essence, but it seems to me that
contempt proceedings entail the exercise of powers which often
demand
the kind of careful and lengthy consideration which is generally
incompatible with urgent proceedings.
For example, it cannot be
sound judicial policy to commit someone to prison, even where the
committal is suspended, or to impose
a fine, on an urgent basis,
simply because that might be the only way to enforce a court order.
There must, in addition, be some
other feature of the case that
renders it essential that the court order be instantly enforced, such
that the penalties associated
with contempt require immediate
imposition
. [own emphasis]
The
fundamental point is that a matter is urgent because of the imminence
and depth of harm that the applicant will suffer if relief
is not
given, not because of the category of right the applicant asserts.”
[18]
I agree. No specific facts were proffered for why, on these
facts, this application is still urgent. On this basis, the
application
fails. In their heads of argument, the applicants make
the following argument: they received a court order, they received
information
that the court order is contravened, and immediately
launched the application because should the contravention continue
and there
be a furtherance of the Tender, then the review proceedings
become moot. In reply the respondents state that the relevant people
know now about the correct position, and they gave undertakings that
they will not contravene the order, therefore the application
is not
urgent. The applicant's focus then shifts, and they state that this
does not detract from the fact that the respondents
contravened the
order despite being called to cease their actions. This falls outside
what Wilson J sets out above.
[19]
Thus, when the third to fifth respondents gave the undertaking
not to proceed while the review is pending, the matter was no longer
urgent.
Order
[20]
The following order is made:
1.
The application is struck from the urgent
roll for lack of urgency.
2.
The applicant must pay costs on a party and party scale, and on scale
C.
WJ du Plessis
Acting Judge of the High
Court
For
the Applicants:
CJS
Kok instructed by Goodes & Co Attorneys
For
the Respondents:
S
Sthungu instructed by the State Attorney
[1]
[2023] ZAGPJHC 1011 para 47.
[2]
[2023] ZAGPJHC 846 par 7 – 8.
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