Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 159South Africa
Scientific Group (Pty) Limited and Another v South African National Blood Services and Others (5495/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 159 (18 March 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
18 March 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Urgent application – Uniform Rule of Court 6 (12) – the applicant should set forth explicitly the reasons why the matter is urgent – why is it claimed that substantial redress would not be afforded at a hearing in due course – Rules of Court and Practice Directives can only be ignored at a litigant's peril – application struck from the roll for lack of urgency –
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Scientific Group (Pty) Limited and Another v South African National Blood Services and Others (5495/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 159 (18 March 2022)
Scientific Group (Pty) Limited and Another v South African National Blood Services and Others (5495/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 159 (18 March 2022)
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sino date 18 March 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO
:
5495/2022
DATE
:
18
th
march 2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
REVISED:
In
the matter between:
THE
SCIENTIFIC GROUP (PTY) LIMITED
First Applicant
ORTHO-CLINICAL
DIAGNOSTICS
Second Applicant
and
SOUTH
AFRICAN NATIONAL BLOOD SERVICES (NPC)
First Respondent
BIO-RAD
LABORATORIES (PTY) LIMITED
Second Respondent
IEPSA
(PTY)
LIMITED
Third Respondent
SITETECH
SUPPLIES (PTY) LIMITED
Fourth Respondent
Coram:
Adams
J
Heard
: 15
March 2022 – The ‘virtual hearing’ of this Urgent
Application was conducted as a videoconference on
Microsoft
Teams
.
Delivered:
18
March 2022 – This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties' representatives by email, by being
uploaded to
CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 14:00 on 18 March 2022.
Summary:
Urgent application – Uniform Rule of Court 6 (12) –
the applicant should set forth explicitly the reasons why the matter
is urgent – why is it claimed that substantial redress would
not be afforded at a hearing in due course –
Rules
of Court and Practice Directives can only be ignored at a litigant's
peril – application struck from the roll for lack
of urgency –
ORDER
(1)
The first and second applicants’ urgent application be and is
hereby
struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
(2)
The first and second applicants, jointly and severally, the one
paying
the other to be absolved, shall pay the first and the second
respondents’ costs of the urgent application, such costs to
include the costs consequent upon the utilisation of two Counsel,
where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Adams
J:
[1].
This is an opposed urgent application by
the first applicant (TSG) and the second applicant (Ortho) for
interim interdictory relief
against the first respondent (SANBS) and
the second respondent (Bio-Rad). Pending the determination of final
relief sought in part
B of the notice of motion, the applicants seek
an order, on an urgent basis, interdicting and restraining SANBS from
implementing
the award of a tender relating to the supply of blood
automation instruments and related consumables by SANBS to Bio-Rad.
The applicants
also seek to interdict SANBS from concluding any
contract or service level agreement with Bio-Rad arising from the
tender.
[2].
In part B the applicants apply for a
review and the setting aside of the decision by SANBS to award the
tender to Bio-Rad.
[3].
SANBS and Bio-Rad oppose the urgent
application
inter alia
on the grounds that the application is not urgent. In the event that
it is determined that there is any urgency, then it is submitted,
on
behalf of the respondents, that the urgency is entirely self-created.
The applicants, so SANBS and Bio-Rad allege, have been
aware since
the beginning of November 2021 that it was unsuccessful in its
tender. It has, since the early part of December 2021,
been aware of
the reasons for which it was unsuccessful in its tender. Despite
this, it only launched the urgent application on
14 February 2022,
that is two months after the applicants learnt of the reasons for
TSG’s bid failure and three months after
it was first informed
that its tender was unsuccessful,
[4].
In any event, so the respondents
contend, the interim relief claimed by the applicants in this urgent
application is academic in
that the contract that TSG seeks to
interdict was concluded on 11 January 2022 – more than a month
before TSG launched the
application, and more than two months before
the date on which it was set down for hearing.
[5].
I find myself in agreement with these
submissions. The simple fact of the matter is that on 3 November
2021, TSG was informed
that their bid was unsuccessful. On
18 November 2021, they sought clarity from SANBS on the
rejection of their bid and on
26 November 2021 SANBS responded in
detail to this enquiry. Importantly, on 6 January 2022, in response
to a demand from TSG that
they retract the award of the tender to
Bio-Rad, SANBS, through their legal representatives, made it
abundantly clear that they
refuse to retract the award of the tender.
[6].
Despite the aforegoing, and the supposed
urgency of the matter, TSG only launched the urgent application on 14
February 2022.
[7].
What is more is that the
‘irregularities’ complained of by the applicants in
relation to the bid, were based on decisions
to adjust the BB-BEE
criteria of the
Request for Quotes
and to request the parties to quote for both clusters of sites rather
than the sites being divided into two clusters, all of which
occurred
during May 2021. The question to be asked rhetorically is why did the
applicants not then object to the tender process.
[8].
In sum, there are two difficulties which
the applicants face relative to the issue of urgency. The first
relates to the fact that
as early as May 2021 SANBS took the
decisions complained of. It is reasonable to expect the applicants,
if they were as aggrieved
by the decisions as they would have the
Court believe, to have taken action then. Secondly, during November
2021, SANBS awarded
the tender to Bio-Rad and shortly thereafter they
made it clear that they would not be changing their mind about that
decision.
By then, it should have been crystal clear to TSG that it
needed to take action in order to protect its alleged right to be
fairly
treated in public procurement processes. The applicants did
nothing. Instead, they engaged in addressing further demands to the
SANBS, when it would have been clear that legal action ought to be
commenced sooner rather than later. All the same, there is no
explanation, let alone an acceptable one, why the applicants did not
launch their urgent application during January 2022.
[9].
In my view, there has been
non-compliance with the provisions of Uniform Rule of Court 6(12),
which reads as follows:
‘
(b)
In every affidavit or petition filed in support of the application
under para (a) of this sub-rule, the applicant
shall set forth
explicitly the circumstances which he avers render the matter urgent
and the reasons why he claims that he would
not be afforded
substantial redress at a hearing in due course.’
[10].
On behalf of the applicants it was
submitted that the application is urgent. TSG, so the applicants
contend, did not sit on its
hands after it learned on 3 November
2021 that its bid had been unsuccessful. It continuously engaged with
SANBS to seek reasons
and to further make enquires in relation to the
rejection of its bid and prefaced its challenges to the SANBS's
tender process.
This contention is not born out or supported by the
evidence. Even on TSG’s own version, by at least 6 January
2021, they
should have realised that they needed to launch the urgent
application. They did not do so. And that does not even take into
account,
as already indicated, that as early as May 2021 alarm bells
should have sounded for them and they should have commenced legal
proceedings
against SANBS.
[11].
I therefore do not accept the
applicants’ contentions in that regard. In my view, the
applicants should have launched
this application as soon as SANBS
made it clear to them that they would not be reconsidering their
decision to award the tender
to Bio-Rad. If they did so, urgency
would not have been an issue now.
[12].
In
my view, the salient facts in this matter are no different from those
in
Afrisake
NPC and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and
Others
[1]
,
where Fabricius J held as follows at para 12:
‘
[12]
It is my view that Applicant could have launched a review application
calling for documents, amongst others in terms
of the Rules of Court,
in February 2016. On its own version, it was also ready to launch an
urgent application by then, even without
the so-called critical
documents. The threatened internal appeal also did not materialize.
[13]
In the meantime, First Respondent has been in possession of the site
since 28 January 2016. Third Respondent's
Contract Manager made
an affidavit stating that offices, toilets, septic tanks, electricity
facilities, generators, storage facilities,
bore-holes and access
roads have all been established. By 16 May 2016, Third Respondent had
done about 500 000 cubic metres of
excavation, had surveyed the
pipe-line and had procured about 70km of pipe at a cost of about R
188 million. Personnel have been
employed.
[14]
I do take into account that the whole project will take 24 months to
complete. I do not however agree with Applicant's
Counsel, who
submitted in this context, that for those reasons the needs of the
community played no significant role. Having regard
to the whole
history of the matter, which is set out in great detail in
Esorfranki
Pipelines (Pty) Ltd and Another v Mopani District Municipality and
Others
ZASCA 21 (28103/2014), the interest of the particular
community that requires the supply of water, remains a relevant
consideration,
both in the context of self-created urgency and the
balance of convenience, which does not favour the Applicant at this
stage at
all.
[15]
This Court has consistently refused urgent applications in cases when
the urgency relied-upon was clearly self-created.
Consistency is
important in this context as it informs the public and legal
practitioners that Rules of Court and Practice Directives
can only be
ignored at a litigant's peril
. Legal certainty is one of the
cornerstones of a legal system based on the Rule of Law.’
(Emphasis added)
[13].
For all of these reasons, I am not
convinced that the applicants have passed the threshold prescribed in
Rule 6(12)(b) and I am
of the view that the application ought to be
struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
Costs
[14].
The
general rule in matters of costs is that the successful party should
be given his costs, and this rule should not be departed
from except
where there are good grounds for doing so, such as misconduct on the
part of the successful party or other exceptional
circumstances. See:
Myers v
Abramson
[2]
.
[15].
I can think of no reason why I should deviate from this
general rule.
[16].
Accordingly, I intend awarding costs in favour of the first
and second respondents against the first and second applicants. In
that
regard, it requires mentioning that the third and fourth
respondents, who were the other unsuccessful bidders, played no part
in
this litigation. In any event, no relief was sought against any of
them by the applicants, hence them not opposing the application.
Order
[17].
Accordingly, I make the following order: -
(1)
The first and second applicants’ urgent application be and is
hereby
struck from the roll for lack of urgency.
(2)
The first and second applicants, jointly and severally, the one
paying
the other to be absolved, shall pay the first and the second
respondents’ costs of the urgent application, such costs to
include the costs consequent upon the utilisation of two Counsel,
where so employed.
L
R ADAMS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
HEARD
ON:
15
th
March 2022 –
as a
videoconference on
Microsoft Teams
.
JUDGMENT
DATE:
18
th
March 2022 – judgment handed down
electronically
FOR THE FIRST AND SECOND
APPLICANTS:
Adv Omphemetse Mooki SC, together with Adv Sechaba Mohapi
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Werksmans Attorneys, Sandton
FOR THE FIRST
RESPONDENT:
Adv Carol Steinberg SC, together with Advocate
Janice Bleazard
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Norton Rose Fulbright SA Incorporated, Sandton
FOR
THE SECOND
RESPONDENTS:
Advocate Henry Martin, together with Advocate Kendall Turner
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Hogan Lovells Johannesburg Inc, Sandton
FOR
THE THIRD AND FOURTH
RESPONDENTS:
No appearance
INSTRUCTED
BY:
No appearance
[1]
Afrisake
NPC and Others v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and
Others
(74192/2013) [2014] ZAGPPHC 191 (14 March 2014);
[2]
Myers v
Abramson
,
1951(3) SA 438 (C) at 455.
sino noindex
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