Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 71South Africa
Kariki Pipeline and Water Project (Pty) Ltd v Rand Water Board and Another (2017/0027774) [2022] ZAGPJHC 71 (4 February 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
4 February 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Kariki Pipeline and Water Project (Pty) Ltd v Rand Water Board and Another (2017/0027774) [2022] ZAGPJHC 71 (4 February 2022)
Kariki Pipeline and Water Project (Pty) Ltd v Rand Water Board and Another (2017/0027774) [2022] ZAGPJHC 71 (4 February 2022)
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sino date 4 February 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
CASE
NO: 2017/0027774
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
04/02/2022
In
the matter between:
KARIKI
PIPELINE AND WATER PROJECT (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
RAND
WATER
BOARD
First Respondent
CHIEF
EXECUTIVE OFFICER: RAND WATER BOARD
Second Respondent
J
U D G M E N T
MOKUTU
AJ:
Introduction
1.
This matter came before me on 8 March 2021 and at the conclusion
of
the argument, I gave judgment and ordered as follows:
1.1.
the application for the amendment of the notice of motion be
dismissed with costs; and
1.2.
the costs of the previous postponement in the matter (prior 8 March
2021) be costs in the review application.
2.
The said order was as a result of the oral judgment that I had
granted, although the reasons were recorded on case line.
3.
On 29 November 2021, I received a letter from the respondent’s
attorneys addressed to me, along these lines:
“…
We refer to the above
matter and the order handed down by the Honourable Acting Judge
Makutu (sic) on 08 March 2021, which was uploaded
on Vaselines (sic)
on 01 July 2021.
Kindly note that this
was an interlocutory application to amend our client’s notice
of motion, which was dismissed with costs.
Kindly note further
that we then subsequently applied for the hearing of the main action
before the Honourable Judge Mahalelo, who
removed the matter from the
roll for reasons which indicated that the Honourable Judge Makutu
(sic) may have erred in dismissing
our client’s interlocutory
application.
Our client has
instructed us to request written reasons for that order.
To that end, we humbly
request that you provide us with written reasons or an indication on
when we can expect the written reasons.
…”
4.
Upon receipt thereof, on 3 December 2021, I sought clarity from
the
respondent’s attorneys in that paragraph 3 of the said letter,
insofar as it was recorded that honourable Judge Mahalelo
had removed
the matter from the roll on the basis that I had erred in dismissing
the respondent’s application for amendment.
5.
On a reading of Judge Mahalelo’s order of 15 November
2021, the
contents thereof are at odds with paragraph 3 of the respondent’s
attorneys aforesaid letter dated 29 November
2021. For ease of
reference Judge Mahalelo’s order was to the effect that:
“
IT IS
ORDERED: -
1.
That the First and second Respondents are directed to comply
with Rule 53(1)(b) and dispatch to the Registrar the full record of
the tender proceedings for Tender No. RW 01177/17.
2.
That the first and second respondents are directed to comply
with prayer 1 above within 10 days of this order.
3.
That the First and Second Respondents be ordered to pay the
costs of this application jointly and severally, the one paying the
other absolved. …”
6.
Subsequently, on 6 December 2021, I received an email communication
from the respondent’s attorneys which,
inter alia
,
sought to clarify paragraph 3 of their aforesaid letter dated 29
November 2021 and it was recorded that the respondent’s
merely
sought reasons for the order that I had granted on 8 March 2021.
7.
It is noteworthy that between 8 March 2021 and 6 December 2021,
I was
not made aware that the respondent would seek reasons flowing for my
order of 8 March 2021. Same was only brought to my attention,
as I
have stated above, only on 6 December 2021.
8.
On 6 December 2021, I requested the recording of the hearing
on case
line through the secretary/clerk, which recording was made available
to me on 14 December 2021. However, the said recording
expired within
7 days from the date of receipt and I had to seek another recording
which was mailed to me on 17 January 2022.
9.
It is in that context that my reasons for judgment and order
which
were recorded on case line (on 8 March 2021) are being furnished and
or communicated to the parties as at present.
Brief
background facts
10.
The applicant approached this Court by way of an interlocutory
application.
The applicant sought to amend its notice of motion as
contemplated in Rule 28(1) of the Uniform Rules. In terms of Rule
28(1) of
the Uniform Rules, any party desiring to amend any pleading
or document other than a sworn statement filed in connection with any
proceedings, shall notify all other parties of his/her intention to
amend and shall furnish particulars of the amendment.
11.
The dispute between the parties was in relation to how the initial
notice of
intention to amend the notice of motion was initiated,
suffice to state that, in due course, the applicant filed its notice
of
intention to amend. On a closer examination of the notice of
intention to amend, the applicant sought a prayer to the effect that
the respondent had intentionally allowed the tender validity period
of 180 days to lapse, which according to the applicant was
unlawful.
12.
The applicant further sought, in the alternative, a prayer that the
applicant
be paid damages in the amount of R53 million or so, to be
incorporated in its notice of intention to amend its notice of
motion.
13.
The question before me, therefore, was whether, the Court had the
authority
to grant or refuse an amendment in circumstances where, on
the applicant’s own version, the applicant became aware of the
decision affording it preferred bidder status (administrative
action), allegedly, on 2 September 2016 in circumstances where the
review application was launched after expiry of 180 days calculated
from 2 September 2016.
The
delay rule
14.
It is
common cause fact that the 180 days period calculated from 2
September 2016, in terms of section 7
[1]
of Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“
PAJA
”)
lapsed on or about 7 March 2017. At that time the applicant had not
instituted review application proceedings either to
compel the
respondents or to pursue the matter.
15.
However, the applicant’s case was that in July 2017, the
applicant approached
the respondent and sought information (around
the tender validity period) in terms of the Promotion to Access
Information Act 2
of 2000 (“
PAIA
”) application,
not necessarily the PAJA application. In my view, the question
whether the Court can consider and/or grant
or refuse an amendment,
also has a bearing on the merits of the case.
16.
Mr Tsatsawane, on behalf of the respondent, made three submissions on
the nature
of the proposed amendment. To summarise, he contended that
the relief sought was bad in law in that the cancellation of a tender
did not amount to an administrative action, in law. Even if I was
inclined to grant the amendment, so went the argument, the issue
at
hand was, in the event the amendment sought was granted, there
existed little prospects of success in the main review application.
17.
As I have stated above, the thrust of Mr Tsatsawane’s
contention was that
because the decision to cancel a tender did not
amount to an administrative action.
18.
I was in agreement with Mr Tsatsawane’s submission in that
regard. I should
not, however, be construed as making a finding of
fact on the merits of the pending review application (in the
reviewing Court).
19.
Furthermore, Mr Tsatsawane submitted that the relief sought in the
amendment
was sought outside the 180-day period, it being a
stand-alone ground of review, that the respondent allowed the tender
to lapse.
20.
According to the applicant’s counsel, Ms Ntingane, the
circumstances that
led to the lapse of tender validity period were
unclear and/or the merits thereof were yet to be debated by the
reviewing Court.
21.
It was
further submitted, on behalf of the respondent, in countering the
applicant’s argument that the condonation application
had not
been launched by the applicant (as it should have) and reliance was
placed on the judgment of
Passenger
Rail Agency of South Africa v Siyangena Technologies (Pty) Ltd
.
[2]
22.
It was also, in the main, further contended, on behalf of the
respondent, that
the damages claim of R53 million militated against
the grant of the sought amendment purely because the applicant had
invoked review
application proceedings and sought damages and in law
and in general, damages claims are non-suited in application
proceedings.
23.
In
MEC
of Health, EC v Kirland Investments,
[3]
the
Constitutional Court held that:
“
[81] The
Supreme Court state that the approval was, on Dr Diliza’s own
evidence, tendered by the department, ‘invalid’.
This was
incautious. The approval was not before the court. But the court
itself said so. It pointed out that the validity of the
approval ‘is
not the subject of challenge in these proceedings. So it is wrong to
take its statement as a definitive finding.
The court was merely
categorising Dr Diliza’s conduct for the purpose of reaching
the issue that was in fact before it, namely
whether Mr Boya was
entitles to revoke her approval. The court was saying that, even on
the department’s version, its legal;
argument must fail.
[82]
All
this indicates that this court should not decide the validity of the
approval. This would be in accordance with the principle
of legality
and also, if applicable, the provisions of PAJA. PAJA requires that
the government respondents should have applied
to set aside the
approval, by way of formal counter-application. They must do the same
even if PAJA does not apply. To demand this
of government is not to
stymie it by forcing upon it a senseless formality. It is to insist
on due process, from which there is
no reason to exempt government.
On the contrary, there is a higher duty on the state to respect the
law, to fulfil procedural requirements
and to tread respectfully when
dealing with rights. Government is not an indigent or bewildered
litigant, adrift on a sea of litigious
uncertainty, to whom the
courts must extend a procedure-circumventing lifeline. It is the
Constitution’s primary agent. It
must do right, and it must do
it properly
.”
24.
Preller, J,
[4]
specifically held that:
“
[16] …
Returning to the question
whether the plaintiff has employed the incorrect procedure
it is
indubitably correct that an undiluted constitutional issue should be
raised by way of motion proceedings… The plaintiff
could not
be heard to argue to the contrary.”
25.
The
importance of condonation application was recently restated in the
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Limited
.
[5]
Importantly at paragraph 47, the Court held that:
“
[47]
However,
this time period is not absolute. Section 9 of PAJA provides a
mechanism for extensions:
(1)
The period of—
(a)
90 days referred to in section 5 may be reduced; or
(b)
90 days or 180 days referred to in sections 5 and 7 may be extended
for a fixed period, by agreement
between the parties or, failing such
agreement, by a court or tribunal on application by the person or
administrator concerned….
When
the delay is longer than 180 days, a court is required to consider
whether it is in the interests of justice for the time period
to be
extended.”
26.
As far as the application before me was
concerned, the founding affidavit in support of the amendment
application made mention of
the late filing of the replying
affidavit, however, the applicant sought to deal with the extension
in terms of section 7 read
with section 9 of PAJA. The difficulty
that I had was that the said affidavit did not explain what had
transpired between 2 September
2016 and March 2017.
27.
In any event, the same affidavit
recorded the fact that the applicant contended that the review
application was launched within
the required 180-day period as
contemplated in PAJA. If that was the case, it begged a question why
the condonation application
was filed, if the applicant was of the
view that the review application was launched within the 180-day
period as contemplated
in section 7(1) of PAJA.
Conclusion
28.
In the result, I was not convinced that
the applicant had made out a case for the grant of the relief sought
in the notice of motion
based on what I have already stated on
record.
29.
If the Court were inclined to grant the
amendment sought by the applicant it was, in my view, undesirable to
do so because the amendment
sought, if granted, would not have result
in any meaningful debate between the parties on account of the dates
that had
ex facie
been pleaded before me which related to 2 September 2016 and March
2017.
30.
In my view, the applicant ought to have
applied for an extension of the period in terms of section 9 of PAJA
and in any event, it
would have been incompetent of me to grant an
amendment which would be faced with an exception to the effect that
damages claim,
as I have stated, are
non-suited
for
application proceedings.
31.
In the result I granted the following
order.
ORDER
31.1.
the application for amendment of the
notice of motion is dismissed with costs;
31.2.
the costs of the previous postponement
in the matter, prior to 8 March 2021, would be costs in the review
application.
32.
I was not prepared to entertain the
costs occasioned by the postponement of the previous matter on the
previous occasion, simply
because those facts are/were not placed
before me, however, it is for the reviewing Court when it deals with
the merits of the
review application, in its totality, that all costs
incurred by the parties in as far as the merits of the application
are concerned
would be dealt with.
MOKUTU
AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Date
of hearing:
8 March 2021
Judgment
and order communicated:
8 March 2021
Written
reasons for judgment sought:
6 December 2021
Date
of communicating written reasons:
4 February 2022
Attorneys
for Applicant:
Rambevha
Morobane Attorneys
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv Sipho Mahlangu (did not
appear)
Adv
Neo Ntingane (argued the matter)
Attorneys
for Respondent:
Raborifi Attorneys Incorporated
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv Kennedy Tsatsawane SC
Adv.
Tumelo Loabile-Rantao
[1]
(1) Any proceedings for
judicial review in terms of section 6 (1) must be instituted
without
unreasonable delay and not later than 180 days after the date -
(a)
subject to subsection (2)
(c)
,
on which any proceedings instituted in terms of internal remedies as
contemplated in subsection (2)
(a)
have
been concluded; or
(b)
where
no such remedies exist, on which the person concerned was informed
of the administrative action, became aware of the action
and the
reasons for it or might reasonably have been expected to have become
aware of the action and the reasons.
(2)
(a)
Subject to paragraph
(c)
, no court or
tribunal shall review an administrative action in terms of this Act
unless any internal remedy provided for in any
other law has first
been exhausted.
(b)
Subject to paragraph
(c)
, a court
or tribunal must, if it is not satisfied that any internal remedy
referred to in paragraph
(a)
has been exhausted, direct that
the person concerned must first exhaust such remedy before
instituting proceedings in a court
or tribunal for judicial review
in terms of this Act.
(c)
A court or tribunal may, in
exceptional circumstances and on application by the person
concerned, exempt such person from the
obligation to exhaust any
internal remedy if the court or tribunal deems it in the interest of
justice.
(3)
The Rules Board for Courts of Law established by section 2of the
Rules Board
for Courts of Law Act, 1985 (Act 107 of 1985), must,
before 28 February 2009, subject to the approval of the Minister,
make rules
of procedure for judicial review.
(4)
Until the rules of procedure referred to in subsection (3) come into
operation,
all proceedings for judicial review under this Act must
be instituted in a High Court or another court having jurisdiction.
(5)
Any rule made under subsection (3) must, before publication in
the
Gazette
, be approved by Parliament.
[2]
2020
JDR 2740 (GP).
[3]
2014 (3) SA 481
(CC) at para. 82.
[4]
In
The
South African National Roads Agency SOC Ltd v Face First Media (Pty)
Ltd and Others
[Unreported] Case No. 69993/2014 GNP at para 16.
[5]
2019(4) SA 331 (CC) between paras. 46 – 50.
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