Ndjibu and Others v Member of the Executive Council for Health, Eastern Cape Province and Others (331/2023) [2023] ZAECBHC 33 (10 October 2023)

82 Reportability

Brief Summary

Labour — Public service — Employment contracts of foreign nationals — Applicants, Congolese medical doctors with refugee status, challenged the termination of their employment contracts by the Eastern Cape Department of Health, asserting that the contracts were valid despite the district manager's claim of lack of authority to appoint foreign nationals. The court found that the district manager acted ultra vires and declared the termination unlawful, setting aside the letters of appointment as invalid under the Public Service Act 103 of 1994, section 10(1)(a).

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns an urgent application (followed by a final hearing) in which the applicants sought relief arising from the purported termination of their employment as medical officers in the Eastern Cape Department of Health. The matter proceeded as a main application by the applicants and a counter-application by the respondents, with the counter-application framed as a reactive legality challenge to the validity of the applicants’ appointments.


The parties were four applicants, Congolese nationals recognised as refugees in South Africa, employed as Medical Officer Grade 1 at Isilimela District Hospital in Port St Johns. The respondents were the Member of the Executive Council for Health, Eastern Cape Province, the Superintendent-General of the Department of Health, and the Chief Executive Officer of Isilimela District Hospital.


Procedurally, the applicants approached the High Court on 27 June 2023 on an urgent basis after receiving termination letters. That urgent appearance culminated in an interim order dated 23 June 2023 (with costs reserved), which permitted the applicants to remain employed month-to-month from 1 July 2023 pending final determination of the application and counter-application. The matter was then set down for final determination, with directions for amended notices and supplementary affidavits, and it was heard on 7 September 2023, with judgment delivered on 10 October 2023.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the tenure and legality of employment of foreign nationals in the public service. In substance, the applicants contended they were permanent employees whose employment could not lawfully be terminated on the stated basis, while the respondents contended the purported “permanent” appointments were unlawful from inception because the applicants were neither South African citizens nor permanent residents, and because the appointing official acted beyond lawful authority.


2. Material Facts


The applicants were Congolese nationals who held degrees in Bachelor of Medicine and Surgery obtained in the Democratic Republic of Congo. It was common cause that they were not South African citizens and were not permanent residents. The court also accepted that, in terms of section 24(3)(a) of the Refugees Act 130 of 1998, each applicant held formal recognition of refugee status, with specified validity periods.


During June 2020, the Department of Health concluded employment arrangements with the applicants. The applicants represented themselves, and the Department was represented by the District Manager: OR Tambo (Ms Nomvume Ntshanga). The terms of employment were contained in letters of appointment, signed by the district manager and the applicants. The court treated the letters as embodying the relevant contracts and recorded that the letters’ foreword stated: “Your employment is of a permanent nature and is in terms of the Public Service Act, 1994.” The letters further regulated salary and benefits, disciplinary procedures, resignation notice, and leave. The court noted that the contracts were subject to the Public Service Act and departmental policies and procedures, and it was not seriously disputed that the contracts incorporated implied or tacit reference to section 17 of the Public Service Act concerning dismissal on specified grounds.


On 11 May 2023, the applicants received termination notices from the third respondent (the hospital CEO). These notices purported to terminate each applicant’s employment contract with effect from 30 June 2023 on the premise that the contracts were fixed-term contracts of three years, and they referred to the Policy on Recruitment of Foreign Health Professionals.


A further material fact relied upon by the court was the respondents’ account (through the Superintendent-General, Ms Rolene Wagner) concerning the PERSAL system. Ms Wagner stated that when the applicants’ particulars were loaded onto PERSAL, it was “detected” that the contracts were fixed-term and were loaded as such, and that the first page of the letters of appointment was altered during loading to reflect a contract/fixed-term nature rather than permanence. The court regarded this as significant and expressed concern about the respondents’ conduct, describing the alteration as suggestive of administrative self-help.


The court distinguished disputed from undisputed aspects concerning whether the applicants knew they were fixed-term employees. The respondents relied on “enquiry leave credits” printouts, allegedly provided to the applicants when they made leave enquiries, which reflected a contract termination date of 30 June 2023. The applicants did not directly engage those allegations. The court found it “unthinkable” that the applicants would not have accessed such printouts if they made leave enquiries, and it rejected the applicants’ denial as untenable and far-fetched on the papers.


The respondents’ counter-application (filed on 21 June 2023) sought to set aside the letters of appointment as unlawful, relying primarily on section 10(1)(a) of the Public Service Act and the National Policy on the Utilisation of Foreign Nationals to address Human Resources and Skills Needs in the Public Service. The court accepted that the applicants did not meet the statutory precondition for permanent appointment contemplated by section 10(1)(a), and that the policies contemplated that foreign nationals without permanent residence could only be employed temporarily and, in the health sector context, generally on fixed-term contracts not exceeding three years, subject to stated conditions (including possession of a valid refugee permit).


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine were whether the applicants’ purported permanent appointments in the public service were lawful and valid in light of section 10(1)(a) of the Public Service Act, 1994, given that they were neither citizens nor permanent residents, and whether the appointing official acted ultra vires in issuing letters of appointment purporting to create permanent employment.


A closely related issue was whether, assuming the appointments were unlawful, the respondents were entitled to raise a reactive legality review via counter-application to set aside the appointments, and what the consequences were of the delay (approximately three years) between the conclusion of the contracts and the initiation of the counter-application. This required the court to engage with the doctrine that legality reviews must be brought without undue delay, and with the discretionary component of whether delay should be overlooked.


A further issue was whether estoppel could operate against the respondents to prevent them from denying the validity of the appointments, given the applicants’ reliance on the letters of appointment and their contention that they were induced to believe they were permanent employees.


In character, the dispute primarily concerned the application of law to fact (the legal consequences of undisputed facts about the applicants’ status and the statutory framework), together with a value judgment inherent in assessing undue delay and the remedial consequences under legality review. The court also made credibility-type evaluations on the papers in rejecting the applicants’ denial regarding their awareness of a fixed-term termination date reflected on leave printouts.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began from section 10(1)(a) of the Public Service Act, which provides that no person may be appointed permanently to any post in a department unless they are a South African citizen or permanent resident. The court treated this statutory requirement, together with the relevant policies, as establishing a clear legal framework: permanent appointment is precluded in the absence of citizenship or permanent residence, while policy instruments contemplate temporary/fixed-term employment of foreign nationals in defined circumstances.


Against that framework, the court assessed the applicants’ contention that breach of the Public Service Act did not necessarily render the contracts invalid, and that the Act contained reporting and disciplinary mechanisms (including reliance on section 16A) rather than nullity. The applicants relied on interpretive dicta, in particular from Steenkamp and Others v Edcon Ltd 2016 (3) SA 252 (CC), to argue that statutory non-compliance does not invariably result in invalidity and that legislative purpose and remedies must be considered. The court accepted the correctness of the general approach articulated in Steenkamp but held it inapplicable on these facts, distinguishing Steenkamp as a matter concerning non-compliance with retrenchment procedure under the Labour Relations Act rather than the lawful conclusion of public service appointments in breach of a statutory qualification for permanent appointment.


The applicants also relied on Discovery Health Limited v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others [2008] ZALC 24, advancing the argument that employment protection principles can apply even where there are legal defects. The court distinguished Discovery Health on the basis that, in that matter, the employee had a work permit at the commencement of employment and there was no suggestion of lack of authority in concluding the contract; accordingly, a valid contract was found to have existed at inception. By contrast, in the present case, the statutory conditions of section 10(1)(a) were absent at the time the contracts were concluded, and the applicants’ attempt to treat the dispute as one premised on a valid employment relationship was therefore rejected as unsustainable.


The court located the analysis within the doctrine of legality as an incident of the rule of law under the Constitution, emphasising that public power must be exercised within the limits of lawful authority and that conduct inconsistent with legality is invalid. It reasoned that concluding employment contracts in the public service without meeting the statutory preconditions was an exercise of public power that was reviewable and susceptible to being set aside. The court further held that an organ of state resisting an unlawful claim could bring a counter-application to review and set aside the impugned conduct, which it characterised as a permissible reactive legality challenge.


On delay, the court acknowledged that legality reviews are not subject to the statutory 180-day period applicable to PAJA reviews, but must be brought without undue delay, calculated from when the reviewing party became aware or reasonably ought to have become aware of the impugned action. The court applied the two-stage enquiry: first, whether the delay was unreasonable (a factual enquiry with a value judgment), and second, whether the court should nevertheless exercise its discretion to overlook the delay and entertain the review.


Although the court criticised the respondents for lack of disclosure about when and how the irregularity was detected, and although it described the alteration of the letters during PERSAL loading as suggestive of impermissible self-help, it nevertheless found that there was no adequate explanation for the delay, which inhibited the factual enquiry and rendered the delay undue. However, the court held that even where delay is unreasonable and not satisfactorily explained, a court is still compelled to declare unlawful conduct unlawful, because constitutional democracy requires organs of state and officials to act within lawful bounds. The court treated the nature of the illegality as a crucial factor in determining relief, indicating that legality concerns remain central despite delay.


The court then dealt with estoppel. It recorded the applicants’ reliance on inducement and prejudice, and the respondents’ contention that ordinary financial commitments do not constitute the kind of prejudice required. The respondents also contended that the applicants knew or ought to have known, given the incorporation of the Act and departmental policies, and given the leave printouts reflecting a termination date. The court rejected the applicants’ denial about access to the printouts as far-fetched. In any event, the court held that estoppel could not be used to perpetuate a state of affairs prohibited by law, citing authority that estoppel is inoperable where it would sustain illegality in the public interest. On the court’s approach, the applicants’ ineligibility for permanent appointment and the unlawfulness of the appointing official’s conduct meant estoppel could not validate what the statute prohibited.


Having reached the conclusion that the letters of appointment and contracts were unlawful, the court determined that the appropriate remedy was to uphold the counter-application and set aside the letters of appointment as unlawful and invalid, while dismissing the applicants’ main application seeking declaratory and reinstatement relief premised on permanence.


In its costs reasoning, the court separated three components. It held that the applicants were entitled to the costs of the urgent interim proceedings because they were substantially successful in obtaining interim relief, including costs of two counsel where employed. It applied the general rule that costs follow the result to the final outcome of the main application, awarding costs against the applicants. However, despite the respondents’ success in the counter-application, the court expressed displeasure at the respondents’ conduct and lack of transparency and therefore deprived them of a costs order on the counter-application, directing each party to pay their own costs in that component.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court dismissed the applicants’ main application and awarded costs against the applicants in relation to that application. The court nevertheless awarded the applicants their costs relating to the urgent proceedings on 23 June 2023, including the costs of two counsel where employed.


The respondents’ counter-application was upheld. The court declared that the letters of appointment issued by the district manager on 1 July 2020 were in breach of section 10(1)(a) of the Public Service Act, 1994 (Proclamation 103 of 1994) and in contravention of the National Policy on the Utilisation of Foreign Nationals to address Human Resources and Skills Needs in the Public Service. It further held that the district manager acted ultra vires in issuing the letters of appointment, and the letters were set aside as unlawful and invalid.


On costs in the counter-application, the court ordered that each party pay their own costs.


Cases Cited


Standard Bank v Estate Van Rhyn 1925 AD 266.


Pottie v Kotze 1954 (3) SA 719 (A).


Steenkamp and Others v Edcon Ltd 2016 (3) SA 252 (CC).


Discovery Health Limited v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others [2008] ZALC 24.


Govan Mbeki Municipality v New Integrated Credit Solutions (Pty) Ltd [2021] ZASCA 34.


Altech Radio Holdings (Pty) Ltd & Others v Tshwane City [2020] ZASCA 122; 2021 (3) SA 25 (SCA).


Khumalo and Another v MEC for Education KwaZulu-Natal 2014 (5) SA 579 (CC).


State Information Technology Agency SOC Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd 2018 (2) SA 23 (CC).


Department of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Ltd 2017 (2) SA 622 (CC).


MEC for Health Eastern Cape and Another v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a Eye & Laser Institute 2014 (3) SA 481 (CC).


Buffalo City Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd [2019] ZACC 15.


Provincial Government of the Eastern Cape v Contractprops 25 [2001] 4 All SA 273 (A).


Legislation Cited


Refugees Act 130 of 1998.


Public Service Act, 1994 (Proclamation 103 of 1994).


Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995.


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (section 2).


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the applicants, as foreign nationals who were neither South African citizens nor permanent residents, did not satisfy the statutory qualification for permanent appointment under section 10(1)(a) of the Public Service Act. The purported permanent letters of appointment issued by the district manager therefore constituted an unlawful exercise of public power and were reviewable and liable to be set aside under the principle of legality.


The court further held that the respondents were entitled to raise a reactive legality challenge by counter-application, and that although there was an undue delay and inadequate explanation, the court remained compelled to declare unlawful public conduct unlawful. The court also held that estoppel could not operate to validate or perpetuate a state of affairs prohibited by law.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that, under section 10(1)(a) of the Public Service Act, permanent appointment in the public service is statutorily precluded unless the appointee is a South African citizen or permanent resident, and that departmental policies reinforce temporary/fixed-term employment of foreign nationals in the public service context.


It reaffirmed that the doctrine of legality (as an incident of the rule of law) requires public officials to act within lawful powers, and that public power exercised contrary to statute is inconsistent with the Constitution and invalid, rendering the conduct reviewable and susceptible to being set aside. It further accepted that an organ of state may bring a reactive legality review to resist the continuation of unlawful conduct, including by counter-application.


On delay, the judgment applied the principle that legality reviews must be instituted without undue delay, assessed through a two-stage enquiry (unreasonableness and discretion to overlook). The court endorsed that even where delay is undue and not properly explained, courts may still be compelled to declare unlawful conduct unlawful, while tailoring relief with regard to the nature of illegality and the circumstances.


On estoppel, the judgment applied the settled principle that estoppel cannot be used to perpetuate illegality or validate a state of affairs prohibited by law, particularly where doing so would conflict with public interest and statutory requirements governing the exercise of public power.

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[2023] ZAECBHC 33
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Ndjibu and Others v Member of the Executive Council for Health, Eastern Cape Province and Others (331/2023) [2023] ZAECBHC 33 (10 October 2023)

FLYNOTES:
LABOUR – Public service –
Foreign
nationals

Contracts
as medical officers with doctors from Democratic Republic of Congo
with refugee status – Received termination
letters based on
fixed term of three years – Applicants seeking order
declaring termination unlawful – Appointment
issued by
district manager in breach of Public Service Act as well as
national policy on foreign nationals – District
manager
acted ultra vires her powers and letters of appointment are set
aside as unlawful and invalid – Public Service
Act 103 of
1994, s 10(1)(a).
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN
CAPE DIVISION, BHISHO)
CASE
NO. 331/2023
In
the matter between:
DIBIWE
NDJIBU

FIRST APPLICANT
MULANGALA
TRESOR MUKINAYI

SECOND APPLICANT
ISSU
JAMES MANDUANGA

THIRD APPLICANT
TRESOR
KANTENGA NSAMBA

FOURTH APPLICANT
and
THE
MEMBER OF THE EXECUTIVE
COUNCILFOR
HEALTH,
EASTERN
CAPE PROVINCE

FIRST RESPONDENT
THE
SUPERINTENDENT GENERAL,
DEPARTMENT
OF HEALTH,
EASTERN
CAPE PROVINCE

SECOND
RESPONDENT
THE
CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER,
ISILIMELA
DISTRICT HOSPITAL

THIRD RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Rugunanan
J
[1]
The applicants are Congolese nationals and
are medical doctors in the employment of the Eastern Cape Department
of Health (the department).
They are neither citizens nor permanent
residents of South Africa. Their dispute with the respondents
concerns the tenure of their
employment status. The first applicant
is the main deponent to the founding affidavit. Each of the remaining
applicants have deposed
to confirmatory affidavits and support the
averments in the founding affidavit and the relief sought.
[2]
On 27 June 2023 the applicants approached
this Court on urgency. Their approach culminated in an interim order
with costs reserved.
[3]
Quoted in relevant part the order reads:

2
Pending the final determination of the application and
counter-application:
2.1
The applicants are to remain in the employ of the Eastern Cape
Department of Health on a
month-to-month basis commencing on 1 July
2023 on the same terms and conditions as set out in their respective
employment contracts
with the Eastern Cape Department of Health.’
[4]
The order, in addition, made provision for
the parties to amend their notices of motion and supplement their
affidavits and to file
heads of argument in readiness for the matter
be heard on 7 September 2023.
History
[5]
The applicants are serving at the Isilimela
District Hospital in Port St Johns. They each occupy the post of
Medical Officer Grade
1. Each of them holds a degree in Batchelor of
Medicine and Surgery obtained in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
[6]
In
accordance with section 24(3)(
a
)
of the Refugees Act
[1]
the
applicants enjoy formal recognition of refugee status in South
Africa. The first applicant is recognised as such for the period
25
June 2021 to 25 June 2025. The second applicant is recognised for the
period 19 May 2021 to 15 May 2025. The third applicant,
for the
period 21 June 2021 to 24 June 2025; and the fourth applicant for the
period 10 October 2022 to 10 October 2026.
[7]
During June 2020 the department entered
into contracts of employment with the applicants. The applicants
were represented by
themselves and the department was represented by
Ms Nomvume Ntshanga, the District Manager: OR Tambo (the district
manager). The
employment contracts are incorporated in letters of
appointment that were signed by the district manager and the
applicants.
[8]
On 11 May 2023 the applicants received
letters (termination notices) from the third respondent who purported
to give notice of termination
of each applicant’s contract of
employment with effect from 30 June 2023 on the premise that their
contracts were for a fixed
term of three years. This precipitated the
applicants’ initial approach to this Court and culminated in
the interim order.
The order presently regulates their incumbency
pending final determination of the relief they seek.
The principal
contentions and relief sought
[9]
I
begin with the approach adopted by the respondents. They resist the
relief sought by the applicants by contending that the applicants
did
not meet the qualification in the Public Service Act, 1994
[2]
(the Act) of citizenship or permanent residency in South Africa, and
that the district manager did not have the authority to enter
into
and conclude the employment contracts with the applicants as foreign
nationals.
[10]
I will henceforth refer to the Public
Service Act or the Act interchangeably depending on the context.
[11]
The respondents’ stance falls into
the paradigm of a reactive or defensive challenge, at the heart of
which the legality of
the contractual appointments is called into
question. At the outset therefore the respondents maintain that the
employment contracts
were unlawful and since they were invalid from
inception that which followed by way of the third respondent’s
purported termination
is immaterial.
[12]
The case advanced by the applicants, in
what will be referred to as the main application, is that they are
permanent employees and
for that reason the purported termination of
their employment is neither sanctioned by law nor by the terms of
their contracts.
They contend that their case must be viewed in the
context of an employment relationship. Interlocked with this argument
is that
the Act properly interpreted does not invalidate employment
contracts concluded by the government with persons who are not South

African citizens or permanent residents. They contend that breach of
the Act as alleged by the respondents does not constitute
grounds for
terminating their employment contracts, and that section 16A of the
Act provides adequate disciplinary and reporting
mechanisms for
non-compliance by a public official.
[13]
In summary, the applicants’ stance is
that contracts concluded in breach of the Act are not to be visited
with nullity.
[14]
Accordingly, they seek orders: declaring as
unlawful the respondents’ termination of their employment
contracts; that the
contracts be declared to remain of full force and
effect notwithstanding the effluxion of a three-year period; that the
respondents
be directed to reinstate them on the same terms and
conditions as stipulated in the contracts; and that the human
resource and
payroll system known as PERSAL (persal) be corrected to
reflect them as permanent employees of the department.
[15]
In
their counter-application the respondents on the other hand seek
orders: dismissing the applicants’ main relief; declaring
that
the applicants’ respective appointments were in breach of
section 10(1)(
a
)
of the Act and were in contravention of the
National
Policy on the Utilisation of Foreign Nationals to address Human
Resources and Skills Needs in the Public Service
[3]
(the utilisation policy); setting aside as unlawful the applicants’
letters of appointment issued by the district manager;
and in the
alternative, that that the applicants were employed on a fixed term
contract each commencing on 1 July 2020 and terminating
on 30 June
2023 by effluxion of time.
The employment
contracts
[16]
The uniform and material provisions of the
applicants’ employment contracts are detailed in the letters of
appointment.
[17]
The foreword states:

Your
employment is of a permanent nature and is in terms of the Public
Service Act, 1994.’
[18]
What follows are the essential terms which
stipulate
inter alia
:

Your
salary will be R821 205.00 per annum plus applicable allowances
and benefits’.

You
are not eligible for membership to the Government Employees Pension
Fund (GEPF)’.

You
will be subject to the disciplinary procedures and rules applied by
this department and as contained in the Public Service Central

Bargaining Chamber (PSCBC) Resolution 1 of 2003’.

One
month’s written notice is required should you wish to resign’.

Other
than the conditions of service detailed in this document, you will be
subject to those policies and procedures laid down by
the Department
as amended from time to time. A copy of the Department’s
policies and procedures may be viewed during office
hours on request
to your immediate supervisor’.
[19]
Provision is made for vacation leave, sick
leave, special sick leave, special leave and family responsibility
leave. Relevant to
vacation leave, this is regulated by the condition
reproduced hereunder:

Leave
is granted at the beginning of the contract period on a pro rata
basis at the rate of one twelfth of 22 days for each month
of
service. The granting of vacation leave is subject to prior approval
of your supervisor. Vacation leave must be authorised before
you
proceed on leave. Unused vacation leave for any year lapses at the
end of June the next year…’
[20]
It is not pointedly in issue that the
contracts incorporate implied or tacit reference to section 17 of the
Act which provides for
dismissal of an employee of a department on
account of incapacity due to ill health or injury; operational
requirements; incapacity
due to poor work performance; or misconduct.
[21]
In summary, the applicants’ contracts
of employment are subject to the Public Service Act and departmental
policies and procedures.
I intend, later in this judgment, to deal
with the relevant provisions.
[22]
The notices of termination in terms of
which the third respondent purported to act communicate the
following:

The
purpose of this letter is to confirm termination of your employment
contract with the Eastern Cape Department of Health under
OR Tambo
District (Isilimela Hospital). Regrettably, this means your contract
of employment will be terminated. This decision is
not a reflection
of [y]our performance but is in adherence to paragraph 5, 7 & 14
of the Policy on Recruitment of Foreign Health
Professionals…’
Evaluation and
applicable legal principles
[23]
A useful starting point commences
with section 10(1)(
a
)
of the Act. The section precludes the appointment, whether
permanently or on probation, of any person to any post on the
establishment
in a department unless he or she is a South African
citizen or permanent resident.
[24]
For convenience the text of the section
reads:

10.
Qualifications and appointment
(1)
No person shall be appointed permanently, whether on probation or
not, to any post on the establishment
in a department unless he or
she-
(a)
is a South African citizen or permanent resident; and
(b)
…’
[25]
In her supporting affidavit the district
manager states that she was under the impression that the applicants’
appointments
were ordinary appointments and that she did not notice
that they were foreigners. It is significant that she states that she
had
no authority to appoint foreign professionals on a permanent
basis. While her supporting affidavit does not state that she had no

delegated powers to sign the letters of appointment, this is
inconsequential – the applicants did not (and do not) meet the

qualification either of citizenship or permanent residence.
[26]
Ms Rolene Wagner is the main deponent to
the respondents’ answering affidavit. She deposes thereto in
her capacity as Superintendent-General
and Accounting Officer of the
department.
[27]
Ms Wagner does not dispute what is stated
in the foreword to the letters of appointment but goes on to declare
the following:

At
the time of loading the particulars of the [applicants] into the
[persal] system, it was detected that the contracts were for
a fixed
term of employment and were loaded as such.’
[28]
Gleaning from what she further explains it
appears that the foreword on the first page of the applicants’
letters of appointment
was substituted during the loading process.
She states:

The
first page of the letter[s] of appointment [were] altered at the time
of loading the particulars in the system to reflect the
fixed term
nature of appointment as … “your employment is of a
contract nature [and] is in terms of the Public Service
Act, 1994.”

[29]
As for the term of the applicants’
appointment she mentions:

[T]he
applicants as Congolians had to be appointed on a fixed term that did
not exceed three years at a time.
[30]
Elsewhere, she proceeds to say:
[The applicants] were
advised on 11 May 2023 that their contracts were terminating on 30
June 2023 by way of a reminder …
[T]he termination on 30
June 2023 will be the result of effluxion of time.’
[31]
Ms Wagner’s affidavit, in addition,
makes reference to paragraphs 5.2.1 and 5.5.4 (a) of the utilisation
policy.
[32]
Quoted in full, the identified paragraphs
of the utilisation policy read as follows:

5.2.1
In terms of section 10(1)(
a
)
of the Public Service Act no person shall be appointed permanently to
a post unless she or he is a South African citizen or permanent

resident. Foreign nationals who are not in possession of a permanent
residence permit may therefore only be employed temporarily
in
departments.’

5.5.4
(a)
The employment of foreign nationals must be on a fixed term contract
basis, the term
of employment must not exceed the term of the
relevant work permit and the employment relationship must be on a
full-time basis
in funded vacant posts.’
[33]
Annexed to the utilisation policy is a
further document entitled
Employment of
Foreign Health Professionals in the South African Health Sector
(the
health sector policy). Paragraph 3 thereof which is quoted in
relevant part reads:

No
foreign health professional shall be allowed to initially take up
employment in a professional capacity or continue with such

employment without a valid work permit or refugee’s permit or
treaty permit …’
[34]
Turning for a moment to the notices of
termination issued by the third respondent. These incorporate
reference to the
Policy on Recruitment
of Foreign Health Professionals
(the
recruitment policy). The material parts of the policy are reproduced
hereunder (all sic):

5
Except for Foreign Health Professionals recruited through a
government-to-government
agreement, a Corporate Permit obtained in
terms of section 2 of the Immigration Act or unpaid of volunteer
services, the employment
of Foreign Health Professionals shall only
be allowed after they have been successful in competing for an
advertised post and there
is record of no South African citizen or
permanent resident was available and found suitable to fill the
particular post. The National
Minister of Health may prescribe how
posts would be advertised to ensure consistent practices in the
health sector.

7.
Only fixed term employment contracts shall be issued to Foreign
Health Professionals.
An employment contract shall not exceed a term
of three years from the date of employment and may not be extended
unless otherwise
determined by a specific government-to-government
agreement. A Foreign Health Professional who is not employed under
government-to-government
agreement, shall not be allowed to enter
into a new employment contract during the currency of the initial
contract. Should a health
employer wish to renew an employment
contract during or after the initial contract of three years, the
conditions contained in
paragraph 5 above shall be applicable.

14.
At no stage, the recruitment and employment of Foreign Health
Professionals shall compromise
employment opportunities available to
South African citizens and permanent residents. Healthcare employers
shall present a recruitment
and employment plan containing quotas for
the employment of Foreign Health Professionals for consideration by
the National Minister
of Health and reporting to the National Health
Council. The National Minister of Health may issue further directives
to health
employers regarding quotas for the employment of Foreign
Health Professionals.’
[35]
In summary, it is apparent from the Act and
the policies referred to hereinabove that: the Act precludes the
permanent appointment
of persons who are not South African citizens
or permanent residents. The policies on the other hand, allow
(subject to the conditions
stipulated therein) for the recruitment
and employment of foreign health professionals for a fixed term not
exceeding three years
provided that they are in possession of a valid
work permit, or refugee’s permit or treaty permit.
[36]
The respondents adopt the position that
because the contracts were unlawfully concluded for breach of section
10(1)(
a
)
of the Act, it is inconsequential whether or not the district manager
was cloaked with the authority to enter into the contracts
even
though she maintains that she did not have the authority to conclude
the contracts with foreigners.
[37]
The applicants’ argument against the
respondent’s defence of unlawfulness proceeds from the premise
that the Act is
to be interpreted in the context of an employment
relationship. From this perspective they argue that there is no
provision in
the Act to the effect that a permanent contract of
employment shall be void if concluded with someone who is not a South
African
citizen or permanent resident.
[38]
Relying
on
dicta
from decided cases
[4]
, the
applicants argue that the capricious effects of the alleged
invalidity of their contracts are not consistent with the intention

of the legislature to render a prohibited act invalid; hence the
purpose of the legislation must be considered taking into account
the
provision for remedies for breach of the relevant provision. In this
regard they place store on
Steenkamp
and Others v Edcon Ltd
[5]
where it is stated (footnotes omitted):

[182]
The approach that the use of the word “shall” in a
statutory provision means that anything done contrary
to such a
provision is a nullity is neither rigid nor conclusive. The same can
be said of the use of the word “must”.
Many factors must
be considered to determine whether a thing done contrary to such a
provision is a nullity. There are cases where
the performance of an
act in breach of a statutory obligation does not necessarily result
in the act being invalid and of no force
and effect. When the
question arises whether something that was done contrary to a
statutory provision is invalid and of no force
and effect, the proper
approach is to ascertain what the purpose of the legislation is in
this regard. Sometimes the purpose of
the legislation will be to
render it a nullity. At other times the purpose will not be to render
such a thing a nullity. In each
case the legislation will need to be
construed properly to establish its purpose.
[183]
Some of the factors that should be taken into account in the
construction of the statute to establish its
purpose are the
following: the purpose of the legislation as a whole, the purpose of
the relevant section of the Act, the mischief
sought to be addressed,
whether the statute makes provision for remedies for its breach, or
whether, if the act were not held to
be null and void, it would mean
that the provision may be breached with impunity. Where the statute
does make provision for some
remedies for the breach of the relevant
provision, the court would also have to take into account whether the
remedies provided
are adequate. Where they are adequate, there seems
to be no justification for the conclusion that the purpose of the
legislation
is to visit an act committed in breach of the provision
with nullity. It would be a different case where the remedies
provided
by the statute are not adequate, particularly if they are
substantially inadequate or where such remedies cannot be easily
obtained.’
[39]
While
the correctness of the above
dictum
is not doubted it is with respect inapplicable in the present
context. On the facts
Steenkamp
dealt with a dismissal/retrenchment procedure that did not accord
with legislative prescripts
[6]
and is therefore distinguishable from the present context which deals
with the conclusion of employment contracts in breach of
section
10(1)(
a
)
of the Act.
[40]
The
applicants’ argument based on the supposition that the Act is
to be interpreted in the context of an employment relationship
where
there is a valid contract, is unsustainable. Reliance is sought on
Discovery
Health Limited v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and
Arbitration and Others
[7]
.
The case concerned an Argentinian national Mr Lanzetta who was
dismissed by Discovery Health when his work permit expired.
[41]
At the time of assuming his employment
Lanzetta was already in possession of a work permit, and there is no
indication on the facts
of the matter that whoever represented
Discovery Health when the employment contract was entered into with
Lanzetta, was not authorised
to do so. As the legality conditions
were extant at the time of the conclusion of the employment contract
the Labour Court considered
that a valid contract had come into
existence and Lanzetta fell within the definition of ‘employee’
in the Labour Relations
Act.
[42]
In the present case the conditions in
section 10(1)(
a
)
of the Public Service Act were not present at the time of the
conclusion of the employment contracts with the applicants. The
Discovery
case is therefore distinguishable, and it does not assist the
applicants to argue that contractual validity must be upheld where

there has been non-compliance with the Act.
[43]
The
doctrine of legality, which is an incident of the rule of law, is one
of the constitutional controls through which the exercise
of public
power is regulated by the Constitution. Gleaning from this is that
the exercise of public power which is at variance
with the principle
of legality is inconsistent with the Constitution and invalid. The
legality principle requires that public officials
must act within the
ambit of the law and that they may not exercise powers that are not
conferred upon them by law. That is a consequence
of what section 2
of the Constitution stipulates.
[8]
[44]
The question therefore is: Was the
condition of citizenship or permanent residency present at the time
when the district manager
concluded the contracts with the
applicants? If it was, that is the end of the matter. If it was not,
the matter may be reviewed
and set aside under legality review,
reactive or otherwise. An organ of state may, in resisting an
unlawful claim and to prevent
its continuance, file a counter-claim
or counter-application seeking the review and setting aside of the
impugned decision or conduct.
This is what the respondents have done.
[45]
In this case the conclusion of the
employment contracts without either of the requisite statutory
conditions being present was an
exercise of public power. So too when
upon conclusion of the contracts the district manager states that she
was under the impression
that the applicants’ appointments were
ordinary appointments and that she did not notice that they were
foreigners. She thus
failed to apply her mind to the requirements of
section 10(1)(
a
)
of the Act and the utilisation policy.   The principle of
legality is thus a vehicle for reviewing the appointments,
reactive
or otherwise.
[46]
Accepting on the material before this Court
that there are sufficient indications that the applicants were
neither citizens nor
permanent residents of South Africa and for that
reason the conclusion of their contractual appointments were
unlawful, the issue
of delay is a vital aspect and must be considered
as well.
[47]
Unlike
reviews under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
[9]
which lays down a 180-day bar within which to initiate a review,
there is no such period applicable to a legality review. The review

must be initiated without undue delay and the time period starts to
run from the date the party seeking review became aware or
reasonably
ought to have become aware of the action taken.
[10]
[48]
It
has long been recognised that courts have the inherent power to
either overlook the delay or to refuse a review application in
the
face of an undue delay.
[11]
The test for assessing undue delay in launching a legality review has
two components: First, it must be determined whether the
delay is
unreasonable or undue (this is a factual enquiry upon which a value
judgment is made). Where there is no explanation for
the delay (as in
this instance) the court is inhibited from making this factual
enquiry and the delay is undue. Second, if the
delay is unreasonable,
the question is whether the court’s discretion should
nevertheless be exercised to overlook the delay
and entertain the
proceedings.
[12]
[49]
The counter-application presenting the
respondents’ reactive challenge was filed on 21 June 2023
(three weeks after the applicants
issued their application) and about
three years after the contracts were entered into. At worst for the
respondents the delay was
three years because no indication is given
by Ms Wagner as to when the particulars of the applicants were
loaded into the
system nor by whom and under what circumstances was
it discovered (at first opportunity) that the contracts were for a
fixed term.
This lack of disclosure should not be countenanced for
the reason that public functionaries are duty-bound to diligently
investigate
and rectify without delay irregularities brought to their
attention.
[50]
In
Gijima
[13]
the Constitutional Court considered the rule against delay in
bringing review applications with reference to
Tasima
[14]
and
Kirland
[15]
and found that even in the instance of a reactive challenge due
process must be followed by an organ of state as there is no reason

to exempt the latter. At paragraph [50] the court confirmed the
correctness of the following
dictum
by Cameron J in
Kirland
:

[T]here
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.’
[51]
In that regard it bears mentioning that
organs of state have constitutional obligations which must be
performed diligently and without
delay. The respondents did not
launch review proceedings without delay (i.e. at first opportunity).
Had that been done it would
have been obligatory to have disclosed
the reasons for the decision to appoint the applicants, to issue
letters of appointment
and conclude contracts with them.
[52]
In short, all relevant aspects pertaining
to the history of the matter would have had to be disclosed and the
role players involved
(including the persons mentioned in the
affidavit by the district manager) would have had to be identified
and their involvement
explained.
[53]
All the facts have not been placed before
this Court.
[54]
Gauging
from Ms Wagner’s affidavit (much of which is hearsay) my sense
is that the alteration of the first page of the applicants’

letters of appointment at the time of loading the system amounts to
administrative self-help. The respondents disregarded recourse
to the
correct legal process
[16]
and
sat idly for several years. This is utterly reprehensible and evokes
a sense of indignation.
[55]
In
the absence of a reasonable and satisfactory explanation, and where
it is found that there is no basis for overlooking an unreasonable

delay as in the present case, a court is nevertheless compelled to
declare the conduct of a public official or organ of state unlawful

for the reason that our constitutional democracy enjoins organs of
state and public officials to conduct themselves and exercise
powers
sanctioned by law.
[17]
[56]
That is the rationale of the rule of law.
[57]
The
nature of the illegality is a crucial factor in determining the
relief to be granted when a court is faced with a delayed review.
So
too in the case of a reactive challenge. Therefore, as part of
assessing the delay, this Court may consider the issue of the

lawfulness of the employment contracts under the principle of
legality.
[18]
Estoppel
[58]
The contention advanced by the applicants
is that the respondents induced them to believe that the contracts of
employment were
valid, and therefore to act to their prejudice by
entering into them.
[59]
Quoting directly from their heads of
argument, this is what the respondents weigh-in:

There
has been no evidence to suggest that the applicants acted to their
prejudice as a result of the letters of appointment that
were issued
to them by the district manager… Buying cars, taking children
to school, family rentals, medical expenses, insurance
policies,
debit and stop orders, support of wife and children, monthly
financial obligations – these are all matters that
are
incidental to anyone. They cannot be used as a basis for estoppel.
These are generic undertakings by anyone who has such responsibility.

If they were usable for founding estoppel, all employees would be
estopped from terminating employment contracts of employees.
These
are outflows of employment. When an employee is unemployed and
therefore struggles to satisfy these needs, that is an unfortunate

outflow of unemployment, but they are no grounds for estoppel.’
[60]
In addition, the respondents argue that the
applicants knew or ought to have known that they were employed on a
fixed term basis.
Their contracts incorporate reference to the Act
including departmental policies and procedures. The applicants are by
no means
unsophisticated individuals – they were not entitled
to shut their eyes as to what is stated in their contracts or to
downplay
their own culpability in the process as they now do. They
ought to have familiarised themselves with the ‘rules of the
game’.
[61]
Ms Wagner’s affidavit (tacitly)
supports this.
[62]
Her affidavit includes as annexures a
series of printouts entitled ‘enquiry leave credits’.
These items indicate the
date of the applicants’ engagement as
well as their contract termination date which is 30 June 2023.
[63]
Maintaining that the printouts were
provided to the applicants whenever they made enquiries about their
accrued leave credits, the
respondents argue that the applicants must
have known that they were employed on a fixed term basis. The
applicants pointedly declined
to join issue contending rather that
any allegation in Ms Wagner’s affidavit that is not
specifically traversed should be
taken to be denied. The provision
for vacation leave contained in their contracts requires that the
granting of leave is subject
to prior approval and authorisation, and
that unused vacation leave for any year lapses at the end of June the
following year.
[64]
It is unthinkable that the applicants would
not have made enquiries about unused leave and that they would not
have had access to
the printouts.
[65]
Their denial is untenable and far-fetched
and rejected merely on the papers.
[66]
Even if I am mistaken in the above
conclusion, there is a more insistent reason why estoppel is
inoperable. The applicants seek
to portray innocence by contending
that they were misled into believing that the employment contracts
were of a permanent nature.
[67]
It is not disputed that their appointments
were in terms of the Act.
[68]
In that regard, the situation between the
immediate parties is this: The applicants did not meet either one of
the qualifications
stipulated in the Act nor did the district manager
have the authority to enter into and conclude the contracts with them
as foreigners.
For this reason, even if it is assumed that the
necessary factual requirements for estoppel to operate were properly
raised in
their papers, it is doubtful if this is a case in which
estoppel can be allowed to operate.
[69]
It
is settled law that a state of affairs prohibited by law cannot in
the public interest be perpetuated by reliance upon the doctrine
of
estoppel
[19]
.
Conclusion and costs
[70]
The letters of appointment issued to the
applicants and the employment contracts concluded with them are
unlawful. The order below
accordingly speaks to the
counter-application and the relief sought by the respondents.
[71]
Reserved costs were attendant on the court
order of 23 June 2023. The order was not taken by agreement and in
submission the applicants
contended that they were substantially
successful in being accorded interim relief. The award of costs
proceeds from two basic
principles, the first being that the award is
in the discretion of the presiding judicial officer, and the second
is that the successful
party should, as a general rule, be awarded
its costs. The applicants were successful is securing the interim
relief and must accordingly
be awarded their costs.
[72]
As for the main application, the applicants
were unsuccessful and the general rule must apply against them.
[73]
Regarding the counter-application, although
successful, this Court’s displeasure at the respondents’
conduct and lack
of transparency is expressed in the costs order
below. Their lack of disclosure is a circumstance that necessitates
depriving them
of a costs order.
[74]
In the result the following order issues:
1.
The main application by the applicants is
dismissed with costs.
2.
The applicants are awarded costs in respect
of the proceedings on 23 June 2023, such costs to include those
of two counsel
where so employed.
3.
The respondents’ counter-application
is upheld and it is further ordered that:
(a)
The letters of appointment issued by the district manager on 1 July
2020
were in breach of section 10(1)(
a
) of the Public Service
Act, 1994 (Proclamation 103 of 1994) as well as the National Policy
on the Utilisation of Foreign Nationals
to address Human Resources
and Skills Needs in the Public Service.
(b)
The District Manager acted
ultra vires
her powers in issuing
the letters of appointment and same and are hereby set aside as
unlawful and invalid.
(c)
Each party shall pay their own costs.
____________________________
M S RUGUNANAN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Appearances:
For the Applicants: D
Cooke and L Ntikinca, Instructed by T L Luzipho Attorneys c/o Msamo
Attorneys King Williams Town
For
the Respondents: A Nyondo, Instructed by The State Attorney, East
London
Date heard:
07 September 2023
Date
delivered:      10 October 2023
[1]
Refugees Act 130 of 1998
.
[2]
Public Service Act, 1994 (Proclamation 103 of 1994).
[3]
Issued on 1 December 2009 by the Minister for the Public Service and
Administration as a directive in terms of section 41 (3)
of the
Public Service Act, 1994 to elucidate and supplement the Public
Service Regulations 2001, Chapter1, Part VII B1, B4, C
and D.
[4]
Standard
Bank v Estate Van Rhyn
1925 AD 266
at 274, and
Pottie
v Kotze
1954 (3) SA 719
(A) at 727E.
[5]
2016 (3) SA 252
(CC).
[6]
In terms of the
Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995
.
[7]
[2008] ZALC 24.
[8]
Section 2 of the Constitution provides that the Constitution ‘is
the supreme law of the Republic; law or conduct inconsistent
with it
is invalid, and the obligations imposed by it must be fulfilled’.
[9]
Act 3 of 2000.
[10]
Govan
Mbeki Municipality v New Integrated Credit Solutions (Pty) Ltd
[2021] ZASCA 34
generally at paras 34-37 and the authorities
referred to.
[11]
Altech
Radio Holdings (Pty) Ltd & Others v Tshwane City
[2020] ZASCA 122
;
2021 (3) SA 25
(SCA) para 18 and footnotes
thereto.
[12]
Khumalo
and Another v MEC for Education KwaZulu-Natal
2014 (5) SA 579
(CC) paras 49-51;
Altech
Radio Holdings supra
para
19.
[13]
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Ltd v Gijima Holdings (Pty) Ltd
2018
(2) SA 23
(CC) paras 43-50.
[14]
Department
of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Ltd
2017 (2) SA 622 (CC).
[15]
MEC for
Health Eastern Cape and Another v Kirland Investments (Pty) Ltd t/a
Eye & Laser Institute
2014 (3) SA 481 (CC).
[16]
MEC for
Health Eastern Cape and Another v Kirland Investments
supra
para
50.
[17]
State
Information Technology Agency SOC Limited v Gijima Holdings (Pty)
Limited
supra
para 52.
[18]
Buffalo
City Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd
[2019] ZACC 15
para 58.
[19]
Provincial
Government of the Eastern Cape v Contractprops 25
[2001] 4 All SA 273
(A) at 278
b
.