Bateleur Books (Pty) Ltd and Others v MEC Northern Cape Provincial Government Department of Education and Others (1304/06) [2006] ZANCHC 119 (15 December 2006)

80 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Administrative Law — Review of administrative decision — Centralised procurement of Learner Teacher Support Material (LTSM) — Applicants, comprising various publishers, challenged the Department of Education's decision to centralise LTSM procurement for grades 8, 9, and 11 without allowing schools to select materials — Court found that the decision was made without consulting interested parties, including the publishers, and without affording schools the right to choose materials — Decision reviewed and set aside, with directions for the Department to withdraw existing orders and inform schools of their selection rights.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter was an urgent application for judicial review brought in the Northern Cape Division of the High Court. The applicants were a group of publishers (including Bateleur Books (Pty) Ltd, Cambridge University, Oxford University Press (Pty) Ltd, and others) who supplied learning and teaching support material (LTSM) for schools. The first and second respondents were the MEC for Education: Northern Cape Provincial Government and the Head of Department (HOD): Northern Cape Department of Education, with further publishers listed on an annexure cited as additional respondents.


The dispute arose from decisions taken within the Northern Cape Department of Education to centralise the selection and procurement of LTSM for Grades 8, 9, and 11 for the 2007 school year, thereby removing (or materially limiting) the customary role of individual schools in selecting titles from approved catalogues. The applicants challenged the lawfulness and procedural fairness of this change and sought to have the decisions reviewed and set aside.


Procedurally, the court heard full argument on 20 November 2006. Given the time-sensitive context of school procurement and delivery timelines, the court issued an order on 21 November 2006 (granting substantial relief) and reserved reasons. The written reasons were later delivered on 15 December 2006. The judgment records that the court regarded the matter as pressing because the procurement process for the 2007 academic year was already underway and the impugned decisions had immediate operational consequences.


The general subject matter concerned the lawfulness of a provincial education department’s procurement method for educational materials, specifically in relation to procedural fairness under administrative law and the constitutional standards applicable to state contracting for goods and services.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the Northern Cape Department of Education historically followed a recognisable procurement process for LTSM in which publishers submitted titles for evaluation, approved titles were included in an official catalogue, and schools were then able to select and requisition from the approved catalogue according to their needs. The publishers paid submission fees, participated in departmental processes (including road shows), and undertook marketing and support activities directed at schools within this established framework.


The court treated as materially established that the department followed this customary process up to the stage of compiling the approved catalogues, but then deviated by adopting a centralised selection model. Under the new approach, departmental officials would select one title per learning area for the implementing grades, and the department would procure those titles centrally, rather than allowing schools to choose from the full range of approved titles. The judgment records that the department’s internal document (annexed as “DFR 13”) expressly motivated centralisation on grounds including administrative efficiency, equitable distribution, standard setting, and potential discounts through bulk procurement.


The first key decision was contained in Annexure DFR 13, dated 20 June 2006 and signed by the HOD on 15 July 2006, recording the intention of “centralised procurement of LTSM for Grades 8, 9 & 11 for 2007” and indicating that departmental managers and coordinators would advise on which books to “select and procure.” The second key decision was communicated through Departmental Circular 67/2006, dated 20 July 2006 and signed on 1 September 2006, which informed a wide range of departmental and school stakeholders that the department would provision LTSM for Grades 8, 9, and 11 centrally.


The court treated it as undisputed that the publishers were not consulted before the decisions were taken and were overlooked as interested parties for representations or information. The schools, while notified of the change, were likewise not invited to comment or make representations in advance of implementation. The publishers only became aware of the centralised provisioning around 2 October 2006, after which they immediately raised objections and requested urgent clarification and engagement.


A meeting took place on 18 October 2006 between departmental representatives and a delegation of the Publishers’ Association of South Africa (PASA), of which all applicant publishers were members. The court accepted as reliable, based on the department’s response in its answering affidavit, that departmental officials confirmed at the meeting that the department had firmly decided on centralised selection (one title per learning area for the implementing grades) and that this was a departure from normal procedure. The court further accepted that the department’s stance, including its description of centralisation as “once-off” with a possible future extension, indicated recognition of an established normal procedure.


After the publishers’ objections were made known, the department nevertheless continued with the requisitioning and ordering process in the centralised manner. The court considered this continuation relevant to both procedural fairness and the appropriateness of setting aside the decisions despite timing concerns.


3. Legal Issues


The court identified four principal issues requiring determination.


The first issue was whether the HOD’s decision to centralise the selection and procurement of LTSM for Grades 8, 9, and 11—thereby removing selection from schools—constituted administrative action that was reviewable, and if so, whether setting it aside would be prejudicial to schools and learners given the time pressures of the procurement cycle. This issue was primarily a question of law (characterisation of power and reviewability), with a consequential remedial component involving the application of law to fact.


The second issue was whether the publishers had established a legitimate expectation that schools would retain the ability to select LTSM from approved catalogues (rather than central selection by the department), based on prior practice and the publishers’ participation in departmental processes. This issue involved the application of legal standards for legitimate expectation to the established factual matrix.


The third issue was whether the applicants had established grounds of review under section 3 of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA), read with section 217(1) of the Constitution, which requires that state contracting occur in accordance with a system that is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive, and cost-effective. This issue concerned both procedural fairness (PAJA) and constitutionally compliant procurement standards (section 217), again involving application of legal norms to the conduct of the department.


The fourth issue, contingent on success, concerned the appropriate order as to costs.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On reviewability and administrative action, the respondents argued that the decision was closely connected to policy and budgetary choices, making it political in nature and not administrative action subject to review. The court rejected this characterisation. It emphasised that the enquiry focuses on the nature of the power exercised, rather than the identity of the actor or the fact that a decision has political implications. Relying on Constitutional Court authority (including Permanent Secretary, Education & Welfare, Eastern Cape v Ed-u-College (PE) and President of the Republic of South Africa v South African Rugby Union), the court treated the procurement decision as an exercise of public power concerning the spending of appropriated public funds, implemented through departmental administration rather than legislative action.


The court further relied on Grey’s Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Public Works to interpret the concept of administrative action under PAJA, particularly the requirement of “direct and external legal effect.” It reasoned that a literal and restrictive reading focused only on whether rights were in fact adversely affected could not be intended, and that the combined requirements were directed at decisions impacting individuals directly and immediately. On this approach, the decision to alter procurement selection and proceed with centralised ordering was treated as administrative action with sufficient external impact to attract review.


The respondents raised a standing-type objection (framed as a point in limine), contending that the arrangement was a matter between the department and schools, and that the department owed no duty to consult publishers until orders were placed. The court rejected this. It accepted the applicants’ submission that they were not purporting to represent schools or learners, but rather to protect their own legitimate interests arising from an established and acknowledged working relationship integral to the procurement system. The court described a “symbiosis” between department, schools, and publishers in the practical functioning of LTSM acquisition and accepted that the publishers’ interests were sufficiently and directly implicated to challenge the decision.


On legitimate expectation, the department contended that publishers could not reasonably expect schools to select titles where additional funding arrangements required centralised selection and procurement, and that centralisation was justified by goals such as standard setting, equitable distribution, and cost savings through bulk discounts. The court found the argument unsupported on the record. It placed weight on the department’s own repeated acknowledgement of a normal procurement practice and on the objective conduct leading up to the decision, including the call for submissions, publishers’ payment of fees, participation in road shows, and the compilation of approved catalogues, all of which were consistent with schools being allowed to choose from the approved range.


Applying the requirements for legitimate expectation discussed in South African Veterinary Council v Szimanski (with reference to National Director of Public Prosecutions v Phillips), the court concluded that the publishers’ reliance on the established practice was reasonable and that the expectation was legitimate. The court considered that the publishers at least had a legitimate expectation to be heard before a material change to the established process was implemented, particularly where they had already committed resources and engaged in departmental processes on the premise of the usual selection method.


On procedural fairness under PAJA and compliance with section 217(1) of the Constitution, the court held that the decision-making process failed to meet the required standards. It reasoned that the department had embarked upon a process involving publishers and schools over an extended period, but then adopted a different process in mid-2006 without notice to the publishers and without inviting representations. Even after the publishers’ objections were raised at the 18 October 2006 meeting, the department continued with selection and procurement from certain selected publishers.


The court evaluated the process against section 217(1) and concluded that the department’s assertion that its approach satisfied fairness, equity, transparency, competitiveness, and cost-effectiveness was not borne out. It found the process lacked transparency, particularly because centralisation was not openly communicated to affected stakeholders until a late stage, and because the criteria and method for selecting single titles per learning area were not shown to be disclosed and applied in a way that ensured equal treatment. It also held that excluding some publishers without a demonstrated, procedurally fair process was inconsistent with equity and competitiveness. The court rejected the suggestion that competitiveness was irrelevant because the process was not framed as a “tender,” reasoning that competitiveness in this context should be driven by open opportunity and informed choice rather than undisclosed departmental selection.


On the remedial discretion, the respondents argued that even if the decisions were invalid, the court should decline to set them aside because the process had progressed substantially and the timeframes for delivery would not be met if schools were allowed to select materials. The court was not persuaded. It accepted evidence and submissions indicating that delivery remained feasible, including that reversing the decisions would involve more publishers sharing responsibility and increasing delivery capacity. The court therefore considered that setting aside the decisions would not inevitably prejudice learners and that the urgency did not justify allowing an unlawful process to stand.


On costs, the court applied the general principle that costs follow the result, relying on authorities including Pelser v Levy and Price Waterhouse Meyernel v Thoroughbred Breeders Association. It emphasised that the department proceeded with the impugned process despite being informed of the publishers’ objections and despite the potential adverse consequences, and it found no basis to depart from the ordinary costs rule.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court reviewed and set aside the HOD’s decision (as reflected in Annexure DFR 13 and Circular 67/2006) insofar as it informed schools that the department would order LTSM for Grades 8, 9, and 11 without giving schools the right to select such material. It also reviewed and set aside the HOD’s decision to continue with requisitioning and ordering after the department had been informed of the applicants’ objections.


The court directed the HOD to withdraw all orders already placed for Grades 8, 9, and 11 LTSM, to ensure that all schools receive catalogues of approved LTSM for those grades, and to ensure schools are informed of their right to select LTSM for procurement by the department for 2007. The HOD was further directed to collate requisitions and place orders without delay on behalf of schools that had not exercised their right to select.


The MEC and the HOD were ordered to pay the applicants’ costs, including the costs of the earlier application of 3 November 2006, and including the costs of two counsel where employed.


A concurring note by Kgomo JP emphasised that the judgment should not be taken to establish an absolute rule that centralisation can never occur, but stated that any centralisation would need to comply with section 217 of the Constitution, PAJA, and the South African Schools Act 84 of 1996, and that the views of schools should be canvassed timeously with due regard to educational quality.


Cases Cited


Premier, Mpumalanga v Executive Committee, Association of State–Schools, Eastern Transvaal 1999 (2) SA 91 (CC)


Permanent Secretary, Education & Welfare, Eastern Cape v Ed-u-College (PE) 2001 (2) SA 1 (CC)


Grey’s Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of Public Works and Others [2005] ZASCA 43; 2005 (6) SA 313 (SCA)


Jurgens Johannes Steenkamp N.O v The Provincial Tender Board of the Eastern Cape CCT 71/05


Logbro Properties CC v Bedderson N.O and Others 2003 (2) SA 460 (SCA)


President of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South African Rugby Union and Others 2000 (1) SA 1 (CC)


South African Veterinary Council and Another v Szimanski 2003 (4) SA 42 (SCA)


National Director of Public Prosecutions v Phillips and Others 2002 (4) SA 60 (W)


Administrator, Transvaal v Traub 1989 (4) SA 731 (A)


Attorney General of Hong Kong v Ng Yuen Shiu [1983] 2 All ER 346 (PC)


Hauptfleisch v Caledon Divisional Council 1963 (4) SA 53 (C)


Chairperson: Standing Tender Committee v JFE Sapela Electronics (Pty) Ltd [2005] 4 All SA 487 (SCA)


Pelser v Levy 1905 TS 466


Price Waterhouse Meyernel v Thoroughbred Breeders Association 2003 (3) SA 54 (SCA)


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, section 33(1)


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, section 217(1)


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000, section 1 (definition of “administrative action”)


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000, section 3(1)


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000, section 3(2)


South African Schools Act 84 of 1996


Rules of Court Cited


No specific rules of court were expressly cited in the judgment text provided.


Held


The High Court held that the HOD’s decision to centralise the selection and procurement of LTSM for Grades 8, 9, and 11, thereby denying schools the right to select from approved catalogues, constituted reviewable administrative action. The decision was not insulated from review on the basis that it related to budgetary or policy choices, because it involved the administrative implementation of procurement and the spending of public funds.


The court held further that the publishers had established a legitimate expectation, arising from established procurement practice and the department’s conduct, that the established process would continue or, at minimum, that they would be afforded a procedurally fair opportunity to be heard before a material change was implemented.


The court found that the department failed to adopt a procedurally fair and constitutionally compliant process, particularly in relation to the standards of fairness, equity, transparency, competitiveness, and cost-effectiveness required by section 217(1) of the Constitution, read with PAJA’s procedural fairness requirements. The decisions and subsequent continuation of ordering were therefore set aside, and the department was directed to revert to a process recognising schools’ selection rights from approved catalogues.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


Administrative action under PAJA is determined primarily by the nature of the power exercised, not merely by whether the decision has political implications or by the seniority of the decision-maker. Decisions concerning the implementation of procurement and the expenditure of public funds by an organ of state may constitute administrative action subject to review where they directly and immediately affect affected parties’ interests.


A legitimate expectation may arise from an established and consistently applied governmental practice, particularly where affected parties are invited into structured processes (such as submissions, evaluation, cataloguing, and road shows) and reasonably rely on that practice continuing. Where such an expectation exists, procedural fairness generally requires adequate notice and a reasonable opportunity to make representations before a material departure from the established practice is implemented.


When an organ of state contracts for goods or services, section 217(1) of the Constitution requires procurement to be undertaken through a system that is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive, and cost-effective. A procurement-related process that is implemented without adequate openness, that excludes affected participants without a procedurally fair basis, or that proceeds on undisclosed selection criteria may fail to meet these constitutional requirements and be susceptible to review and setting aside.


In exercising remedial discretion, a court may consider practical consequences and urgency, but time pressures and administrative convenience do not, without more, justify allowing an unlawful procurement process to stand where procedural unfairness and constitutional non-compliance have been established.

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[2006] ZANCHC 119
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Bateleur Books (Pty) Ltd and Others v MEC Northern Cape Provincial Government Department of Education and Others (1304/06) [2006] ZANCHC 119 (15 December 2006)

Reportable: YES/
NO
Circulate
to Judges: YES/
NO
Circulate
to Magistrates:
YES
/NO
Circulate
to Regional Magistrates:
YES
/NO
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(Northern
Cape Division)
CASE NUMBER:
1304/06
HEARD:
20/11/2006
DELIVERED: 15/12/2006
In
the application of:
BATELEUR
BOOKS (PTY) LTD 1
st
Applicant
CAMBRIDGE
UNIVERSITY 2
nd
Applicant
CLEVER
BOOKS (PTY) LTD 3
rd
Applicant
HIBBARD
PUBLISHERS (PTY) LTD 4
th
Applicant
MACMILLAN
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD 5
th
Applicant
MASKEW
MILLER LONGMAN (PTY) LTD 6
th
Applicant
NASOU
VIA AFRIKA (PTY) LTD 7
th
Applicant
OXFORD
UNIVERSITY PRESS (PTY) LTD 8
th
Applicant
SHUTTER
AND SHOOTER PUBLISHERS (PTY) LTD 9
th
Applicant
VILIA
PUBLISHERS & BOOKSELLERS (PTY)LTD 10
th
Applicant
and
THE
MEC, NORTHERN CAPE PROVINCIAL 1
st
Respondent
GOVERNMENT:
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
THE
HEAD: EDUCATION: NORTHERN CAPE
PROVINCIAL
GOEVERNMENT: DEPARTMENT
OF
EDUCATION 2
nd
Respondent
THE
PUBLISHERS LISTED ON ANNEXURE “B” 3
rd
Respondent
Coram:
Kgomo JP et Molwantwa AJ
JUDGMENT
Molwantwa AJ
Introduction
On 20 November 2006 we
heard full argument from counsel (van Niekerk SC for the
Applicants/Publishers and Jamie SC for the Respondents/Department).

On 21 November 2006 we decided to issue the order set out below due
to the pressing nature of the matter and reserved the reasons
for
our decision:

1. The
decision of the Second Respondent (the HOD) contained in Annexure
DFR 13 to the Applicants’ supplementary affidavit
and in
Department Circular 67/2006, dated 20 July 2006, to the extent to
which the Second Respondent decided and the schools were
informed
that the Department of Education would be ordering Learner Teacher
Support Material (LTS-Material) regarding grades 8,9
and 11 from
publishers without giving any schools the right to select such
material, is reviewed and set aside.
The
decision of the Second Respondent to continue with the
requisitioning and ordering process after the Department was
informed
of the Applicants’ objection to the above process is
reviewed and set aside.
The
Second Respondent is directed to:
Withdraw
all orders in respect of LTS-Material for grades 8,9 and 11 which
have already been placed with any of the parties
to this
application;
Ensure
that all schools in the Northern Cape receive a copy of the
catalogues of approved LTS-Material for grades 8, 9 and 11;
Ensure
that all schools are forthwith informed of their right to select
LTS-Material for procurement by the Department of Education
in
respect of grades 8, 9 and 11 in 2007;
To
collate all requisitions once received and to place such orders
without delay on behalf of those schools which have not
exercised
their right to select LTS-Material.
The
First (the MEC) and Second Respondents are ordered to pay the costs
of this application, including the costs of the application
of 3
November 2006, and which costs are to include the costs of two
counsel where employed.
The
reasons are reserved.”
The Department

s
first decision which we set aside was contained in Annexure DRF
13(referred to above) and is dated 20 June 2006 but was signed
on 15
July 2006 by the HOD, who is the decision maker, and reads as
follows:

SUBJECT
HEADING:CENTRALISED PROCUREMENT OF LTSM FOR GRADES 8,9 &
11 FOR
2007.
CONTEXT
1. This submission
relates to the National Curriculum Statement (NCS) implementation as
contained in the operational plan for the
2006/2007 financial year.
AIM
2. To obtain
authorization for
2.1 Centralised
procurement of LTSM for Grades 8,9 &11
2.2 Implementation of
the above within the prevailing budgetary constraints.
BACKGROUND
3. As you are aware
the roll-out of the NCS will continue in 2007 for grades 8, 9 &11
as planned.
4. The department of
education and by extension all schools are expected to prioritise
grades that are implementing the NCS.
5. The procurement of
LTSM is central to ensuring effective implementation of the National
Curriculum Statement.
6. The grade 8 and 9
procurement will be made from the provincial catalogue.
7. The grade 11
cataloguing process was centralised by the national department to
ensure uniformity in terms of the quality of titles
in the final
catalogue.
DISCUSSION
8. Most high schools
will have to procure LTSM for three grades implementing NCS in 2007.
9. This places a
bigger challenge for schools in terms of administration and budgets.
10.
To
monitor and control the timeous delivery of quality LTSM, the
procurement process needs to be centralised to counter the above

challenges.
11.
This
will also have a positive impact on standard setting, equitable
distribution of materials, pacesetting, and standardized assessment.
12. While the
intention is to provide each learner with a full compliment of books,
schools will not be able to carry this with
their section 21
allocations.
13. With the
centralised procurement, a set
of
6 books per learner for grades 8 and 9 is proposed .For grade 11, a
set of 5 books is proposed.(See attached annexures for financial

break-down)
14.
Given
the current situation, a centralised procurement process will be more
efficient and cost-effective as a discount of up to
30% can be
negotiated.
15.
Learning
Area Managers, Learning Area /Subject Coordinators and the LTSM
section will advise on the best possible books to select
and procure
.
POLICY
IMPLICATIONS
16. The recommendation
is congruent with the policy related to the Council of Education
Ministers (CEM) decision to implement the
National Curriculum
Statement in grades 8,9 and 11 in 2007.
LEGAL
IMPLICATIONS
17. The recommendation
is consistent with the applicable legislative framework.
FINANCIAL
IMPLICATIONS
18. The available
budget for the Learning Support Material procurement in the 2006/7
financial year is R 6, 3 Million.
19 This represents a
total shortfall of R33 Million. See attached annexure A
20. To source the
funding for the R33 Million shortfall available funds under programme
2 could be exploited. See attached annexure
B.” (My
underlining)
3.
The
second decision that we rescinded was contained in Departmental
Circular 67/2006 (supra) that was dated 20 July 2006 but was
only
signed by the HOD on 01 September 2006.This circular was addressed to
the MEC for Education, Chief Directors, Directors and
Unit Heads,
District Directors, Circuit Managers, Corporate Services and Supply
Chain Management,Principals of all schools, School
Governing Bodies
and Educators.It reads :

Circular
67/2006
LEARNING AND
TEACHING SUPPORT MATERIAL (LTSM) FOR SECTION 21 AND NON-SECTION 21
SCHOOLS FOR THE YEAR 2006/2007
1. The Department will
be provisioning LTSM for Grades(8,9 & 11) implementing
NCS(National Curriculum Statement) in 2007 centrally.
2. Section 21 schools
however, will be responsible for procuring their own Text Reading
books for all other top-up Grades,as well
as the textbooks not
supplied by the Department for Grades 8,9 & 11 and other areas of
LTSM (Paper,Writing books & stationery)
from the allocations they
will be receiving.
3. Non-section 21
schools will place their orders from approved suppliers appointed
through the bidding process via the District
offices.
4. The approved book
catalogues for all Grades except Grade 9 with copies of the
Management Plan and Circular No 22 will be forwarded
via the District
Offices to all schools.
5. District Offices
are kindly requested to ensure that all schools adhere to these dates
in the management plan.
6. The Supply Chain
Management Unit will be procuring the Grades 8,9 and 11 titles on
behalf of the schools as follows:
Grade 8-7 Text Books
per learner (Excluding Languages)
Grades 9-7 Text Books
per learner (Excluding Languages)
Grades 11-5 Text Books
per learner (Excluding Languages)
7.
The
Publishers will deliver the (books) directly to Head Office who will
in turn be responsible for the receipt and packaging of
these books
to the schools via the District Offices.
8. Schools will in
turn be responsible, as in the past, for providing regular progress
reports on the ordering and delivery of all
LTSM to their respective
District Offices who will, in turn, have to provide Head Office with
these progress reports.
Your co-operation in
this regard will be appreciated.
Signed by Deputy
Director General, 01.09.06.
“ (My underlining)
4. What is immediately
conspicuous is that the Applicants/Publishers were overlooked as
interested parties for their comments or
representations or
information. It will be noted that whilst the schools were notified
of the change they were not asked to comment
or make representations.
It was undisputed that the Publishers only learned of the centralized
provisioning on or about 02 October
2006.They immediately wrote a
letter to the Department to this effect:

ORDERING
OF LTSM FOR THE 2007 SCHOOL YEAR
I write to you on a
matter of considerable concern to our members. It has come to our
notice that Northern Cape schools will not
be permitted to
requisition for their LTSM requirements for 2007 as the decision has
been taken that your Curriculum Unit will
be selecting one title per
learning area to be used by all learners in the Province.
Could you please let
me know urgently whether this information is correct or not?
If it is correct it
has serious implications for schools and publishers. We would also
like to know whether this decision applies
to all Grade 8,9 and 11
learning areas.
As publishers we would
expect schools to have access to the wide range of approved LTSM
available, and to make their choice according
to the specific needs
in their schools.
Publishers
were not informed in advance that the selection of LTSM would be
made by the Curriculum Unit. So in good faith and
in response to an
invitation from your Department, publishers submitted their Grade 8
and Grade 9 titles for screening. From this
screening process a
catalogue of approved LTSM was compiled by your Department. Grade 11
titles were screened nationally.
Based on departmental
practice of previous years, publishers then expected the approved
LTSM catalogues to be sent to schools to
enable them to see what LTSM
were available to choose from.
At no time during the
screening process and compilation of the approved catalogue were
publishers informed that the ordering system
would be centralised at
the Curriculum Unit and that schools would not be given the
opportunity to choose their requirements.
Publishers therefore
embarked on their marketing activities and incurred considerable
costs in doing so.
Are we now to assume
that publishers have incurred the following costs with considerable
uncertainty as to whether they will get
any orders from the
expenditure?
Submission
costs
submission
fees and submission copy costs
courier
fees
resubmission
costs (where applicable)
Marketing
costs
marketers’
salaries, accommodation and vehicle costs
promotion
copy costs
cost
of promotional catalogues and other promotional material.
The
Department also convened road shows for both Grade 8 and Grade 9.
Teachers were invited to attend these road shows and publishers
were
invited to display materials, which further illustrates the apparent
intention of the Department to follow the usual process
of allowing
schools to select the LTSM that best suits their requirements.
There
may be publishers who benefit from centralised ordering but there
will also be publishers who will be severely prejudiced
by this
decision.
How
will the selection of tittles for use in schools be made? Who will
make the decisions? What selection criteria will be used?
(One
assumes that ALL approved titles were measured against the selection
criteria in the screening process and found to be suitable
for use in
the Northern Cape schools.)
We
know from past experiences that as soon as a centralised system for
choosing LTSM is used, it immediately creates suspicion no
matter how
noble the intentions are. The spectre of vested interests looms
large over the process.
If
it is true that only certain titles are going to be selected by the
Curriculum Unit for use in Northern Cape schools in 2007,
we ask that
a delegation from the Publishers’ Association of South Africa
meet with the relevant departmental officials to
discuss the matter
further.
We
would welcome the opportunity to enter into dialogue with you on this
matter and try and resolve it to everyone’s satisfaction.
I look forward to
hearing from you.
Yours sincerely
Dave Ryder
CHAIRPERSON: PASA
EDUCATION SECTOR”
5.
On
18 October 2006 a meeting
took
place between representatives of the Department and a delegation of
the Publishers’ Association of South Africa (PASA)
of which all
the Applicants/Publishers are members.
5.1 During this
consultation it became common cause that the Department has firmly
decided it would select one title per learning
area for the
implementing grades, which title was to be used by all learners in
the province;
5.2 This system was
contrary to the Department’s normal procedure which had been
previously followed namely, that the Northern
Cape schools could
requisition any books for the implementing grades from the catalogue
of approved books for their LTS-Material
requirements for 2007;
5.3 It was further common
cause that the normal procedure was that the Department calls for the
evaluation of books, that the Publishers
pay a fee and submit books
to the Department. Those Publishers of books that are approved are
advised of that fact whereupon these
approved books are listed in a
catalogue;
5.4 The catalogue is then
circulated to all Publishers to ensure that the details are correct.
The catalogue is then distributed
to schools which would then order
any book from the catalogue of approved books for any given year;
5.5 The Publishers
participate in the Department’s Road shows to market their
books. Publishers are also encouraged to market
books at schools, to
run workshops for teachers on the benefits or attributes of the
books;
5.6 This normal
procedure, it was also common cause, was oncemore followed by the
Department on this occasion up to the stage where
the catalogues were
distributed to the schools. However, the Department deviated from
that procedure thereafter in the manner already
discussed.
6.
The
minutes, Annexure DRF 4, that were prepared by the Publishers and
from which paragraph 5 of this judgment was extracted, was
fairly
reliable if evaluated against the Department’s response to
these minutes. For instance the Department says in paragraph
76.1 of
its Answering Affidavit:

In relation to
the supposed minutes of the meeting of 18 October 2006, the
department does not accept this document as an official
minute, but
acknowledges that it purports to be a record of what occurred at the
meeting, albeit a record compiled on behalf of
the applicants. I in
particular refer to paragraphs 3 and 5 of the document, Annexure
“DRF4”, which correctly reflects
what was said by the
department officials at the meeting, and which is also in accordance
with what I have said in this affidavit.”
7. The Department has not
denied the contents of paragraph 4 of the same minutes, Annexure DRF
4, which states:

4. The
Department views this centralised procurement for the implementing
grades as “a once-off” and it was stated repeatedly
that
things will return to normal next year and thereafter with
LTS-Material being procured via the normal channels. Towards the
end
of the meeting, Mr Masuabi stated that the Department may, however,
decide to use this centralised method of procurement for
Grade 12
next year.”
I am satisfied that the
Department has hereby, directly or by implication, acknowledged the
existence of an established normal procedure.
The matters also
raised in the Publishers’ letter of 02 October 2006 are valid.
8.
Mr
van Niekerk has argued that based on the matters that are common
cause or not disputed and on the documentation supplied by the

Department there cannot be any doubt that the Department has not
complied with the provisions of section 217(1) of the Constitution.

This section provides that:

When an organ
of state in the national, provincial or local sphere of government,
or any other institution identified in national
legislation contracts
for goods or services, it must do so in accordance with a system
which is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive
and
cost-effective.

9.
Mr van
Niekerk
has
further relied on the provisions of section 3 of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act, No 3 of 2000.The relevant portion
of this
section provides that:

3(1)
Administrative action which materially and adversely affects the
rights or legitimate expectations of any person must be procedurally

fair.
2(a) A fair
administrative procedure depends on the circumstances of each case.
(b) In order to give
effect to the right to procedurally fair administrative action, an
administrator, subject to subsection(4)must
give a person referred to
in subsection (1)-
(i) adequate notice of
the nature and purpose of the proposed administrative action;
(ii) reasonable
opportunity to make representations;
(iii) a clear
statement of the administrative action.”
10. Mr van Niekerk argued
that as far back as 2004 the Department embraced the relationship
that I have already addressed between
itself and the Publishers. In a
document DRF 13 – A.1 entitled “
IMPLEMENTING
THE NATIONAL CURRICULUM STATEMENT GRADES 10-12: Consolidated National
Strategy on the Development and Procurement of
Learning and Teaching
Support Materials, 2004,”
the Department acknowledges this long standing relationship. The
document involves the different role-players including the Publishers

and schools (without any distinction
).
It indicates the essential steps in the books acquisition process,
the time available to implement each step and how each step
will
affect or impact upon the next and ultimate delivery of LTS-Material
for Grade 10 - 12 implementation in 2006.
11.
THE
ISSUES
TO BE DETERMINED.
The first issue that
confronted us, which Mr Jamie raised, was whether the decision of
the HOD to centralise the selection and
procurement of LST-Material
for grades 8, 9 and 11 and remove this function from the schools,
was an administrative action
which is reviewable? If it is
reviewable whether it will be prejudicial to the schools and the
learners to set it aside;
The second issue was
whether the Applicants had a legitimate expectation that
LTS-Material for specified grades will be selected
by schools and
not centrally;
Thirdly, whether the
Applicants had established grounds of review as contemplated in
section 3(2) of PAJA read with section
217(1) of the Constitution.
See paragraphs 8 and 9 (above);
The fourth issue
concerns costs which will arise only if some of the three issues
are substantially resolved in favour of the
Applicants.
THE ISSUE IN
RESPECT OF PARAGRAPH 11.1 (ABOVE)
The Department urged us
to dismiss the application on the ground that the decision of the
HOD is not an administrative action
which is reviewable. Counsel
submitted that the decision under review is so closely related to
policy based decisions in respect
of budgetary choices and financial
implementation that it does not constitute an administrative action
or if it was then it was
not an administrative action that was
subject to administrative review. The nub of the contention is that
the decision under
review was political in nature and therefore its
exercise did not constitute an administrative action as contemplated
in s33
of the Constitution. In this regard Counsel relied on the
dictum
in
para 51 (p114D - E) of
Premier,
Mpumalanga v Executive Committee, Association of State–Schools,
Eastern Transvaal
1999
(2) SA 91
(CC) which states that :

(A) Court
should generally be reluctant to assume the responsibility of
exercising a discretion which the Legislature has conferred
expressly
upon an elected member of the executive branch of government.
Accordingly, the Court should be slow to conclude that
there is bias
such as to require a Court to exercise a discretion, particularly
where the discretion is one conferred upon a senior
member of the
executive branch of government.”
I am unable to support
Mr Jamie’s contention because it is quoted out of context.
O’
Regan J
in
Permanent
Secretary,Education &Welfare ,EC v Ed-u-College(PE)
2001 (2) SA 1
(CC) at 12F-H pointed out that:

To the extent
that the applicants relied upon this case to establish that a
decision to allocate subsidies is not reviewable as
administrative
action in terms of the Constitution, they were mistaken. The case is
authority for the contrary proposition. This
dictum is concerned not
with the question of the character of the power exercised by the
official and whether it was administrative
action or not but with the
question of when it is appropriate for a court to substitute its
decision for that of an administrative
official. The Court was
considering the appropriate remedy that should be ordered once it had
already concluded that the decision
to cancel grants had been found
to fall short of the requirements of the administrative justice
provisions of the interim Constitution.
To the extent that the
applicants rely on this dictum to determine whether the exercise of a
power under s 48(2) of the Schools
Act constitutes administrative
action, it is therefore of no assistance to the applicants' case.
Furthermore, the fact that a decision
has political implications does
not necessarily mean that it is not an administrative decision within
the meaning of s 33 as the
decision in Premier, Mpumalanga
illustrates.”
The Respondent’s
counsel contended further that the decision does not have any
direct, external and legal effect on the
Applicants in terms of PAJA
as the HOD owes no duty of care to the Publishers but it does so to
the schools and learners which
the Publishers cannot claim to
represent. Section 1 of PAJA defines an administrative action as
“any
decision…by ...a public organ of state when exercising any
such public power or performing a public function
in terms of any
legislation ….which adversely affects the rights of any
person which has a direct, external legal effect
….”
15
.
In
Grey’s
Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of Public Works and
Others
[2005] ZASCA 43
;
2005
(6) SA 313
(SCA) at 323D-F
Nugent
JA
had this to say on the definition of an administrative action:

While PAJA’s
definition purports to restrict administrative action to decisions
that, as a fact, ‘adversely affect the
rights of any person’,
I do not think that literal meaning could have been intended. For
administrative action to be characterized
by its effect in particular
cases (either beneficial or adverse) seems to me paradoxical and also
finds no support from the construction
that has until now been
placed on s33 of the Constitution. Moreover, that literal
construction would be inconsonant with s3 (1),
which envisages that
administrative action might or might not affect rights adversely. The
qualification, particularly when seen
in conjunction with the
requirement that it must have a ‘direct and external effect’,
was probably intended rather
to convey that the two qualifications in
tandem serving to emphasise that administrative action impacts
directly and immediately
on individuals.”
16. In my view when the
HOD made the decision which we have set aside it was not a decision
made by the legislature, nor was it
debated or considered by the
legislature, neither did it form part of the legislative process ,
nor did the decision follow as
a matter of course from the
legislature itself. Indeed the decision took place in the light of
the
challenge of the new
curricula
which the schools were facing. The funds had already been
appropriated for purposes of being disbursed by the Department of
Education.
The HOD was simply determining how it should be spent.
This is evidenced by the fact that the decision to shift funding for
this
specific purpose was taken first whereafter the decision to
procure the material by the Department followed. It ought not to have

had any bearing on the right of the schools to select their own
material. The Department’s argument in this respect must

therefore be rejected.
The Point in
Limine By The Respondent
17.
The
Respondents raised a point in limine to the effect that the
arrangement for the selection and procurement of specific
LTS-Material
is a matter between the Department and the schools to
the exclusion of the Publishers and that, consequently, the
Department owes
them no duty to consult with them before any decision
is taken as it has no external effect at this stage of the process.
Such
external effect only arises when orders are placed with specific
publishers, so the argument proceeded. In the premises, it was

submitted, the Publishers-Applicants have no standing to challenge
the decision of the HOD as they are not acting and cannot act
in the
interests of the schools and learners of the Northern Cape.
Mr van Niekerk, made it
plain that it is not the case of the Publishers that they are
representing the schools or learners of
this Province. He alluded to
the symbiosis which exists between the Department, the schools and
the publishers. He pointed out
that the Department cannot exist
without the schools nor can the schools function without the
intervention of the Department.
On the other hand the Publishers and
their publications are indispensable to both the Department and the
schools. Counsel contended
that the Publishers are representing
their own legitimate interests borne out by a long-standing and well
established business
relationship which the Department has directly
or by implication acknowledged. I agree.
This
point
in
limine
can therefore not succeed.
19.
Mr
Jamie contended that the additional funding made available for
procurement of LTS-Material for the specified grades was appropriated

from another allotment and therefore could not be dealt with in
accordance with the ordinary process set out above because:
19.1 The total budgetary
allocation to schools for learners in grades 8, 9 and 11 for the 2007
financial year was R6.3 million.
This amount, it was said, covered
all categories of expenditure and only a portion thereof was awarded
for the acquisition of
LTS-Material. That the accrual requirement to
purchase the required new LTS-Material for the aforesaid implementing
grades was
about R37 million and that the resultant shortfall
was almost R32 million;
19.2 The HOD has the
prerogative to deal with the funds as he deems fit and in line with
his mandate as an Accounting Officer;
19.2 This case has vast
implications for the principle of the separation of powers which
prescribes that Courts should not be allowed
to prescribe to the
Executive what to do with State revenue or how to deal with its
funding.
20.
I have great difficulty with this contention. In
Permanent
Secretary, Education &Welfare, EC v Ed-u-College(PE)
(
supra
)
at paragraph 18
O’Regan
J
remarked :

In
President of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South African
Rugby Union and Others
2000(1)
SA 1 (CC)
this
Court held that, in order to determine whether a particular act
constitutes administrative action, the focus of the enquiry
should be
the nature of the power exercised, not the identity of the actor”.
It is not in dispute that
the funding in issue was public funds determined after deliberations
by democratically elected representatives
as contended by the
Respondents. However, the administrative action is a power which is
and must be exercised within the confines
of the Constitution. Public
funds no matter what label or name is attached to it or whether it be
Special/Additional funding or
where they are shifted from will remain
subject to public scrutiny, must be accounted for and audited in
accordance with the Constitution,
the Financial Regulations and
Treasury Instructions. Dealing with such money will always amount to
administrative action. That
is so because the decision taken by an
organ of state which wields public power or performs a public
function in terms of the Constitution
or legislation where the
decision materially and directly affects the legal interests or
rights of an affected party (in this case
the Publishers) is
administrative. See:
Jurgens
Johannes Steenkamp N.O v The Provincial Tender Board of The Eastern
Cape
CCT
71/05;
Grey’s
Marine Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd and Others v Minister of Public Works and
Others
[2005] ZASCA 43
;
2005
(6) SA 313
(SCA) at para21-24;
Logbro
Properties CC v Bedderson N.O and Others
2003 (2) SA 460
(SCA).
Did The
Applicants Have A Legitimate Expectation That LTS-Material For
Specified Grades Will Be Selected By Schools And Not Centrally?
21. The Department argued
that the Publishers did not have a legitimate expectation that
LTS-Material for specified grades will
be selected by schools and not
centrally. They submit that one of the conditions of the transfer of
the aforesaid additional funding
was that LTS-Material would be
selected and procured by the Department. The reasons the Department
proffered for this situation
were that:
The centralised
selection would
“assist
with standard setting, the equitable distribution of LTS-Material,
and the standardized assessment of learners’
performance”
;
See paragraph 11 of DFR13 quoted at paragraph 2 (above).
The centralised bulk
procurement would furthermore allow the Department to obtain a
substantial discount as high as 30%. See
paragraph 14 of the same
Annexure DFR 13.
22. The contention has no
sound basis. The right of schools to select their own material has
been acknowledged on various occasions
and instances by the
Department. The Publishers, as stated, were all along involved in the
incremental implementation of the new
grades. This acknowledgment is
reflected in a letter of March 2005 (“DRF 7”) in which
the good working relationship
was acknowledged by the Department. The
contents of this letter also correspond with that of a letter that
was circulated by the
Department a year later in March 2006
containing an agreement between the Department and the Publishers
pertaining to procurement
time frames. It is evident that all parties
were in agreement that deliveries will continue until January 2007.
As the decision
(“DRF 13”) stands it is clear that it
does not suggest that the additional funds were to be used
conditionally as contended
for by the Department or that it was
necessary to take away the right of the schools to select their
LTS-Material.
23. It is undisputed that
prior to the Department’s centralization the Publishers
were
invited by them to make submissions which the Publishers paid for.
The Publishers participated in road shows at the instance
of the
Department .They exhibited their material including the LTS-Material
under discussion. This whole exercise, in my estimation,
created a
legitimate expectation in the Publishers’ minds that their
material will be bought or at least that they will be
heard before
any decision changing the acknowledged and commonly applied practice
is taken away.
24. The case of
South
African Veterinary Council and Another v Szimanski
2003(4) SA 42 (SCA) at 49E-H sets out the requirements relating to
the legitimacy of the expectation upon which an applicant may
seek to
rely as pertinently drawn together by
Heher
J
in
NDPPv
Phillips and Others
2002 (4) SA 60
(W) at 27-28 as follows:

The law does
not protect every expectation but only those which are ‘legitimate’.
The requirements for legitimacy of
the expectation,include the
following:
i) The representation
underlying the expectation must be ‘clear, unambiguous and
devoid of relevant qualification’:
De Smith,Woolf and Jowell(op
cit]Judicial Review of Administrative Action 5
th
ed] at 425 para 8-055).The requirement is a sensible one .It accords
with the principle of fairness in public administration, fairness

both to the administration and the subject .It protects public
officials against the risk that their unwitting ambiguous statements

may create legitimate expectations. It is also not unfair to those
who choose to rely on such statements. It is always open to
them to
seek clarification before they do so, failing which they act at their
peril. ii)The expectation must be reasonable :Administrator,

Transvaal v Traub (supra[1989(4)SA731(A) at 7561-757B);De Smith,Woolf
and Jowell(supra at 417 para 8-037. The representation must
have
been induced by the decision maker:De Smith,Woolf and Jowell(op vcit
at 422 para 8-050;Attorney General of hong Kong v Ng
Yuen Shiu[1983]2
All ER 346 (PC) at 350h-j iii)The representation must be one which it
was competent and lawful for the decision
maker to make without which
the reliance cannot be legitimate:Hauptfleish v Caledon Divisional
Council
1963 (4) SA 53
(C) at 59E-G.”
.This
exposition is also supported by the Constitutional Court in
President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v South African Rugby
Union and Others
2000(1) SA 1(CC) at para 216.
25. Adopting this
exposition, in my view, the Applicants justifiably relied on the
clear and unambiguous LTS-Material acquisition
practice which existed
prior to 14 July 2006 .Their expectation that the Department would
rely on the practice was reasonable and
legitimate. I accordingly
endorse these views.
Have the
Applicants established grounds of review as contemplated in terms of
section 3(2) PAJA read with section 217(1) of the
Constitution which
provides for lawful, procedurally fair and justifiable process?
Having set out above
that the decision of the HOD is an administrative action in terms of
section 1 PAJA, it will helpful to consider
the decision of the
Premier,
Mpumalanga v Executive Committee, Association of State –Schools,
Eastern Transvaal
(supra)
relied on by the Respondents. The MEC for Education in Mpumalanga
had decided summarily to terminate with retroactive
effect subsidies
he had already formally granted. In so doing, he did not afford any
hearing to schools to which the subsidies
had been granted. The
court found that in the circumstances of that case a legitimate
expectation had arisen which required him
to give reasonable notice
of the decision to terminate the subsidies or to afford those
schools to which subsidies had been granted
an opportunity to be
heard prior to the decision to terminate the subsidies
retroactively.
The
Premier,Mpumalanga
case
(
supra)
is apposite to this case. On the facts a legitimate expectation had
arisen which meant that the right of the schools to select
and
procure their own material directly from the Publishers could not be
cancelled without an opportunity to be heard. By necessary

implication the Publishers also had to be heard in terms of the
symbiosis factor that Mr Van Niekerk spoke of.
The issue that remains
to be determined is then whether the process was procedurally fair
and justifiable. Section 3(2) of PAJA
requires that administrative
action which affects or threatens legitimate expectation has to be
procedurally fair. The right
to just administrative action is a
constitutional imperative. Section 33(1) of the Constitution
provides:
“Everyone
has the right to administrative action that is lawful, reasonable
and procedurally fair.”
A process was already
started in 2005 or even in 2004 with discussions between the
Department and the Publishers regarding the
implementation of
LTS-Material. This was continued up until July 2006 when without any
notice to the Publishers a different process
was adopted. It is
clear that prior to the meeting of 18 October 2006 the Applicants
had not been informed by the Department
of the HOD’s decision
as per “DRF 13”.At this meeting the Applicants’
objections and concerns were made
public. Yet the Department
proceeded to select and procure materials from certain selected
publishers.
O’Regan J
remarked in
Premier
Mpumalanga
(
supra)
at paragraph 41
that :
“In
determining what procedural fairness means a court should be slow to
impose obligations upon government which inhibit
its ability to make
and implement policy effectively
(a
principle well recognized in our common law and that of other
countries).As a young democracy facing immense challenges of

transformation, we cannot deny the importance of the need to ensure
the ability of the Executive to act efficiently and promptly.
On the
other hand, to permit the implementation of retroactive decisions
without, for example, affording other parties an effective

opportunity to make representations would flout another important
principle, that of procedural fairness…”
.
See also
Logbro
Properties CC v Bedderson NO and Others
2003(2)
SA 460 (SCA) at 466H-467C.
All this has to be seen
in the overarching purview of section 217 of the Constitution which
provides that when an organ of State
in the provincial sphere of
government contracts for goods or services, it must do so in
accordance with a system which is fair,
equitable, transparent,
competitive and cost-effective. The Department’s submission
that the process followed by the HOD
satisfied these requirements is
flawed. It is not clear how equity will be achieved by a process
which by its very nature has
excluded some publishers without any
sound basis whatsoever. There is no reason advanced why the
centralization was kept under
a cloak of secrecy until such a late
stage (02/10/2006). There was, without doubt, no transparency at
all. The process has not
been shown to have been cost effective or
to promote competitiveness. The Department’s contention that
this is not a tender
process which has to promote competitiveness is
not persuasive. Competitiveness in this context can only be healthy
when it is
allowed to be determined and driven by the market forces
and not by the Department on undisclosed criteria. This process can

only be achieved when all publishers are given an equal opportunity
to market their products to the schools and then be supported
and
chosen on the quality of their products. In their own words,
captured in their Answering Affidavit, the Department states
that
schools can still procure the material of their choice by using
their inadequate allocated funding or private funds to acquire

publications or titles of their choice.
A final aspect argued by
Mr Jamie was that in the event of the Court granting the order
sought by the Publishers then the time-frames
previously agreed upon
for the delivery of the LTS-Material agreed upon will not be
achieved. The process would have to start
afresh. The Department
reckoned that to allow the schools to select the materials would
leave no time to deal with the orders
as teachers who are
responsible to select LTS-Material would not be available due to end
of the year examinations and the imminent
closure of schools by the
first or fifth of December 2006. Counsel argued that even if we
found that the decision in DRF 13 and
Circular 67/2006 were invalid
we should exercise our discretion not set them aside as set out by
Erasmus
J
in
Chairperson:
Standing Tender Com v JFE Sapela Electronics
[2005] 4 All SA 487( SCA)
at para 27-28 because the process has
progressed substantially.
In my view the
time-frames are substantially achievable. Mr Ryder has dealt
succinctly with the impact and feasibility of reversing
the
decisions. He stated that more publishers would be incorporated to
share the responsibility and the efforts to deliver would
be
increased. This submission was not contradicted or denied in the
papers. I have no reason to doubt that all parties will act
speedily
and in the best interests of the learners.
In the circumstances of
this case, I find that the Applicants have established that there
are grounds of review for the following
reasons:
There is clear
evidence that there was a legitimate expectation which arose from
the existence of a regular practice which the
Publishers reasonably
expected to continue;
The decision of the
HOD to cancel the right of the schools to select and procure
LTS-Material in respect of grades 8,9 and 11
without giving prior
notice to the Publishers was an administrative action which is
subject to review;
The HOD failed to
adopt a procedurally fair and justifiable process in terms of
section 217 of the Constitution read with section
3(2) of PAJA.
35. Having found that the
Applicants have established grounds of review as outlined above it
follows, in my view, that the decision
as contained in Annexure DRF
13 and Circular 67/2006 were invalid and could not be allowed to
stand.
Costs
36. It is a fundamental
principle that, as a general rule, the party which succeeds should be
awarded its costs, and that this
rule should not be departed from
except on good grounds. See
Pelser
v Levy
1905 TS 466
at 469 and
Price
Waterhouse Meyernel v Thoroughbred Breeders Association
2003 (3) SA 54
(SCA) at 61E. The Department was informed at the
meeting of 18 October 2006 of the Publishers’ objection against
the centralised
system and the Annexure DRF 13 decision and what the
impact on all Publishers was or would be, yet the Department
proceeded with
selecting and procuring LTS-Material in respect of the
specified grades. The Publishers contend that contrary to what the
Department
professes, they made every effort through a meeting and
other communications to try not to bring this application but their
efforts
fell on deaf ears. In the circumstances I find no culpable
delay on the part of the Publishers. In fact I agree with the
Publishers
that this unilateral process which had the strong
potential of adversely affecting the learners of the Northern Cape
could have
been avoided prior to the Department taking the decision
to centralise or at the latest at the meeting of 18 October 2006.
ORDER
It is for the aforegoing
reasons that we made the order set out in paragraph 1 of this
judgment.
__________________________
BC
MOLWANTWA
ACTING
JUDGE
NORTHERN
CAPE DIVISION
I have read the judgment
of my Sister Molwantwa AJ and concur therein. This judgment should
not be understood to lay down a principle
to the effect that the
acquisition of LTS- Material, be that publications, title, books etc,
can never be centralized by the Department.
It is fundamental that
the Department ought first to comply with the provisions of Section
217 of the Constitution, the relevant
provisions of PAJA and those of
the
South African Schools Act, 84 of 1996
; there are also its own
Rules and Regulations to be seen to before a change could be
affected, if at all. Whilst the schools
have not voiced any
opposition to the proposed method, and possibly may never do so, it
is cardinal that the attitude of the schools
be canvassed timeously
if the Department were to persist in its endeavours to centralise the
existing procurement system. In doing
so quality education must not
be sacrificed at the alter of costs saving.
____________________________
F
D KGOMO
JUDGE PRESIDENT
NORTHERN CAPE DIVISION
For applicants:
Adv
J. Van Niekerk SC
Instructed by: Duncan &
Rothman Attorneys
For respondents:
Adv
I. Jamie SC
Assisted by:
Adv
Borgström
Instructed
by: Haarhoffs
29