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[2001] ZASCA 68
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Provincial Government of the Eastern Cape and Others v Contractprops 25 (Pty) Ltd (414/99) [2001] ZASCA 68; [2001] 4 All SA 273 (A) (25 May 2001)
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REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE NO: 414/99
In the matter between
THE PROVINCIAL GOVERNMENT OF THE
EASTERN CAPE
1st Appellant
THE PREMIER OF THE EASTERN CAPE
2nd Appellant
THE MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
FOR THE EASTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF
EDUCATION, CULTURE AND
SPORT 3rd Appellant
THE
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL
FOR THE EASTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT
OF
ROADS AND PUBLIC WORKS 4th
Appellant
THE MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR
THE
EASTERN CAPE DEPARTMENT OF FINANCE 5th
Appellant
and
CONTRACTPROPS 25 (PTY) LIMITED Respondent
CORAM: MARAIS, OLIVIER, SCOTT, STREICHER JJA et BRAND AJA
DATE
HEARD: 8 MAY 2001
DATE DELIVERED 25 MAY 2001
Leases concluded
by Department without reference to Tender Board – leases invalid for want
of compliance with s 4(1) of the
Tender Board Act (Eastern Cape) 2 of 1994
– doctrine of estoppel
inapplicable.
JUDGMENT
MARAIS JA
MARAIS JA:
[1] The central issue in this appeal is whether or
not two leases of buildings concluded between respondent (Contractprops 25 (Pty)
Ltd) as lessor and the Department of Education, Culture and Sport of the Eastern
Cape Province as lessee are invalid because the
Department purported to enter
into the leases without the Tender Board established by the Tender Board Act
(Eastern Cape) 2 of 1994
(the Act) having arranged the hiring of the premises in
terms of s 4(1) of the Act. The court a quo (Pickard JP) granted
respondent’s application for a declaratory order that they are not but
granted leave to appeal to this
Court.
[2] That provision is in these
terms:
“4 (1) Within the framework of the principles set out in the guidelines, the Board shall have the sole power to procure supplies and services for the Province, and, subject to the provisions of any other Act of the Provincial Legislature, to arrange the hiring or letting of anything or the acquisition or granting of any right for or on behalf of the Province, and to dispose of movable Provincial property, and may for that purpose –
on behalf of the Province conclude an agreement, which shall be in
writing, with a person within or outside the Republic for
the furnishing of
supplies and services to the Province or for the hiring or letting of anything
or the acquisition or granting of
any right for or on behalf of the Province or
for the disposal of movable Provincial property;
with a view to concluding an agreement referred to in paragraph (a), in any
manner it may deem fit, invite offers and determine the
manner in which and the
conditions subject to which such offers shall be made;
inspect and test or cause to be inspected and tested supplies and services
which are offered or which are to have been furnished in
terms of an agreement
concluded under this section, and anything offered for hire;
accept or reject any offer for the conclusion of an agreement referred to in
paragraph (a);
take steps or cause steps to be taken to enforce an agreement concluded under
this section;
on behalf of the Province, resile from any agreement concluded under this
section and, in an appropriate case, claim damages;
subject to the provisions of subsection (2), on such conditions as it may
determine, exempt any person with whom such an agreement
has been concluded from
compliance with such agreement or condone the failure or such person to comply
with such agreement;
subject to the provisions of subsection (2), negotiate a settlement with a
person referred to in paragraph (g), or amend the agreement
concerned with the
approval of such person;
issue directives to Provincial departments with regard to the procurement of
supplies and services for, the disposal of movable property
of, and the hiring
or letting of anything or the acquisition or granting of any right for, or on
behalf of, the Province, in order
to achieve the objects of this Act;
invite expert or technical advice, and call upon any officer or employee to
provide expert or technical advice in so far as it is
legally permissible for
such officer or employee to provide the required advice to the Board;
exercise such other powers as may be prescribed by regulation under section
9.”
[3] A detailed exposition of the factual background is
unnecessary. It suffices to say that the Department purported to conclude
the
leases in June 1996 without any reference to the Tender Board, that it entered
into occupation of the premises, and that it has
been paying the rent for some
three years, but that it no longer wishes to occupy the premises. To that end
it gave three months’
notice of its intention to terminate the leases.
When its right to do so was contested by respondent, it fell back upon the
contention
that the leases were void for the reason set forth in par [1] of this
judgment.
[4] Counsel for the parties referred us to the well-known
reported cases relevant to the interpretation of statutory provisions
which
require formalities (such as, for example, reduction to writing) to be complied
with when certain types of agreement are entered
into. The criteria to be taken
into account in solving the perennial problem of whether or not the legislature
intended non-compliance
to be visited with invalidity were reventilated in
argument. To cite the case law yet again will serve little purpose other than
to swell the ever growing number of annotations of them in the law reports. It
is by now well-established that the language of
the Act, its nature and scope,
the mischief it seeks to prevent, and the consequences of visiting invalidity
upon the transaction
are all relevant considerations.
[5] Here of course
we are dealing not with the form in which a statute requires a transaction to be
clothed but with something
more fundamental: the express conferment of sole
power upon a specified entity, to the exclusion of any other person or entity,
to arrange leases. (I say “to the exclusion of any other person or
entity” because that is undeniably the plain and
ordinary meaning of the
words “shall have the sole power ----- to arrange the hiring ----- of
anything ----- for or on behalf
of the Province”.) That does not mean of
course that the criteria other than language which are taken into account when
the
consequences of non-compliance with statutory requirements going to form (as
opposed to vires) are under consideration are entirely irrelevant when
interpreting the provision. But their persuasive impact would have to be great
indeed before a departure could be justified from what unambiguously and plainly
appears to be a severely restricted confinement
of vires to enter upon a
particular kind of transaction.
[6] Far from a consideration of those other
criteria casting any doubt upon the linguistically plain meaning of the
provision, in
my view, they reinforce it. As to the nature and scope of the
Act, there can be no doubt that it is designed to interpose a Tender
Board
between the Province and those with whom it might wish to contract for
“supplies and services ---, the disposal of movable
property ---, --- the
hiring or letting of anything or the acquisition or granting of any
right”. The preamble to the Act
and the substantive provisions of s 2,
3, 4, 7 and 10 show that to be so. The Tender Board is to be appointed in a
manner which
gives the public at large an opportunity to nominate candidates for
half of the positions on the Board, and to hear them being interviewed
by the
Executive Council. (s 3(4).) The Board is to “exercise its powers and
perform its functions fairly, impartially and
independently”. (s 2(3).)
A tendering system devised by the Board “shall be fair, public and
competitive”. (s
4(2).) The powers conferred upon the Board by s 4(1)
are extremely wide and show the extent to which it alone has been deputed by
the
legislature to regulate the procurement of supplies and services for, the
disposal of movable property of, and the hiring or
letting of anything or the
acquisition or granting of any right for, or on behalf of, the Province. The
matters in respect of which
it must advise the member of the Executive Council
responsible for financial matters are:
“(a) Promoting
competition in procurement;
establishing policies, procedures and practices to ensure procurement of the
requisite quality within the time available at the lowest
practicable cost, to
minimise fraud, and waste in procurement and to eliminate unnecessary
overlapping or duplication of functions
and effort,
achieving greater uniformity and simplicity in procurement;
promoting economy, efficiency and effectiveness in procurement;
minimising disruptive effects of Provincial procurement on particular
industries, areas or occupations;
improving understanding of Provincial procurement policy and procedures by
everyone concerned with Provincial procurement in both
the public and private
sectors;
promoting fair dealing and equitable relationships among parties to
Provincial contracts; and
any other matters relating to Provincial procurement.” (s 10.)
[7] All these provisions show how important a role the
Tender Board is intended to play in ensuring good governance in the field
of
procurement policies and procedures and the priority accorded to fair dealing
and equitable relationships among parties to Provincial
contracts. It is
difficult to see any room for the co-existence of a power residing in other
entities or persons within the provincial
administration to do, without any
reference whatsoever to the Tender Board, that which s 4(1)(a) and (b) empowers
the Tender Board
to do. That the Tender Board acts “on behalf of the
Province” in arranging to hire premises or in concluding a lease
cannot
derogate from the fact that s 4(1) disables the Province from acting
autonomously in that regard. Indeed, even the Tender
Board’s power to
delegate any of its powers is restricted. Section 5(2) precludes it from doing
so without the prior approval
of the member of the Executive Council responsible
for financial matters.
[8] As to the mischief which the Act seeks to
prevent, that too seems plain enough. It is to eliminate patronage or worse in
the awarding of contracts, to provide members of the public with opportunities
to tender to fulfil Provincial needs, and to ensure
the fair, impartial, and
independent exercise of the power to award Provincial contracts. If contracts
were permitted to be concluded
without any reference to the Tender Board without
any resultant sanction of invalidity, the very mischief which the Act seeks to
combat could be perpetuated.
[9] As to the consequences of visiting such
a transaction with invalidity, they will not always be harsh and the potential
countervailing
harshness of holding the Province to a contract which burdens the
taxpayer to an extent which could have been avoided if the Tender
Board had not
been ignored, cannot be disregarded. In short, the consequences of visiting
invalidity upon non-compliance are not
so uniformly and one-sidedly harsh that
the legislature cannot be supposed to have intended invalidity to be the
consequence. What
is certain is that the consequence cannot vary from case to
case. Such transactions are either all invalid or all valid. Their
validity
cannot depend upon whether or not harshness is discernible in the particular
case.
[10] I have not lost sight of the qualification in s 4(1)
of the Act to the conferment upon the Tender Board of sole power to
arrange the
hiring or letting of anything. It is “subject to the provisions of any
other Act of the Provincial Legislature”.
We were not referred to any
other relevant Act so that the qualification is of no relevance in this
case.
[11] The central question therefore falls to be answered adversely
to respondent and Pickard JP’s contrary conclusion must
be taken to be
erroneous. It remains to consider an alternative contention advanced by counsel
for respondent: estoppel. There
are formidable obstacles in the way of a
successful invocation of estoppel. However, even if it be assumed in favour of
respondent
that estoppel was pertinently raised in the papers (the matter came
before the court a quo by way of motion proceedings) and that all the
necessary factual requirements for the doctrine to be applicable were canvassed,
this
is not a case in which it can be allowed to operate. It is settled law
that a state of affairs prohibited by law in the public interest
cannot be
perpetuated by reliance upon the doctrine of estoppel. (See Trust Bank van
Afrika Bpk v Eksteen 1964 (3) SA 402 AD at 411 H – 412 B.)
[12]
This is such a case. It was not the Tender Board which conducted itself in a
manner which led respondent to act to its detriment
by concluding invalid leases
of property specially purchased and altered at considerable expense to suit the
requirements of the
Department. It was the Department. If the leases are, in
effect, “validated” by allowing estoppel to operate, the Tender
Board will have been deprived of the opportunity of exercising the powers
conferred upon it in the interests of the taxpaying public
at large. Here again
the very mischief which the Act was enacted to prevent would be perpetuated.
(Cf Strydom v Die Land-en Landboubank van SA 1972 (1) SA 801 (AD) at 815
E – F.)
[13] This is not a case in which “innocent”
third parties are involved. It is a case between the immediate parties
to
leases which one of them had no power in law to conclude and had been deprived
of that power (if it ever had it) in the public
interest. The fact that
respondent was misled into believing that the Department had the power to
conclude the agreements is regrettable
and its indignation at the stance now
taken by the Department is understandable. Unfortunately for it, those
considerations cannot
alter the fact that leases were concluded which were
ultra vires the powers of the Department and they cannot be allowed to
stand as if they were intra vires.
[14] Finally, it is necessary
to record that a foreshadowed application by respondent to apply for leave to
reopen the case to
enable it to lead evidence to endeavour to prove that the
Tender Board did not exist in law at the time because its appointment had
not
been duly promulgated, was not made. Accordingly, no more need be said about
it.
[15] The appeal is upheld with costs. The order of the Court a
quo is set aside and the following order is substituted for
it:
“The application is dismissed with
costs”.
R M
MARAIS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
OLIVIER JA
)
SCOTT JA )
STREICHER JA )
BRAND AJA )
CONCUR