Manong & Associates (Pty) Ltd v Department of Transport in the Eastern Cape Province and Another (928/06) [2007] ZAEQC 1; 2008 (6) SA 423 (Eqc) (18 October 2007)

82 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Equality — Tender review — Applicant sought to review and set aside the disqualification of its tender by the First Respondent for provincial road upgrades, alleging the disqualification procedure was unconstitutional and discriminatory — Respondents contended the court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the application — Court held that it had jurisdiction to review the administrative decision and found the disqualification procedure inconsistent with section 217 of the Constitution, thus unlawful and discriminatory under the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an application brought in the Equality Court (constituted at the Bhisho High Court) in terms of the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000 (“the Act”). Although the notice of motion originally sought urgent interim relief in Part A, the judgment dealt only with Part B, which sought final relief of a review and declaratory nature.


The applicant was Manong & Associates (Pty) Ltd, a private company that had submitted a tender to the Eastern Cape provincial department responsible for roads and transport. The first respondent was the Department of Transport in the Eastern Cape Province (referred to in the judgment as the Department of Roads and Transport of the Eastern Cape). The second respondent was the National Treasury, established under the Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999, and responsible (according to the judgment) for prescribing tender regulations and practice notices.


Procedurally, the matter had a “long and checkered history”. The urgent application for interim relief in Part A was refused, and subsequent attempts to appeal (including an application for leave to appeal and a petition to the Supreme Court of Appeal) were also refused. The proceedings then continued on Part B, which was argued on 13 June 2007. Before that hearing, a hearing contemplated by section 20(3)(a) of the Act was convened and completed, although the judgment noted the unusual sequence that the urgent Equality Court proceedings had already been entertained before the section 20(3)(a) enquiry occurred.


The general subject matter of the dispute concerned the applicant’s disqualification from a provincial procurement process for professional engineering services in relation to roadworks projects. The relief sought was framed as both (i) a review of the disqualification and any award made to other tenderers, and (ii) declaratory relief challenging the procurement evaluation procedure (described in the tender “Bid Rules”) as inconsistent with section 217 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, and as unfair discrimination under the Act.


2. Material Facts


During June 2006 the first respondent published an advertisement calling for tenders for professional engineering services for the construction of five roadworks-related projects. The applicant submitted its tender response on 20 July 2006.


The applicant alleged that it was subsequently disqualified on the basis of a perceived failure to meet functionality requirements and/or non-compliance with tender procedures. The applicant denied that it had failed to meet the relevant functionality requirements.


A critical feature of the case, as characterised by the court, was that the applicant’s complaint was directed not at misconduct by the tender committee in applying the prescribed procedures, but at the lawfulness and constitutional acceptability of the prescribed procedure itself. The procurement procedures were set out in the invitation to tender and bid notice, with the Bid Rules identifying relevant legislative foundations (including the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000, the Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999 (and another statute identified as Act 19 of 1999 in the Bid Rules), the Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act 53 of 2003, and the Department’s supply chain management manual). The applicant attacked the procedure described in clause 24 of the Bid Rules as producing an outcome inconsistent with section 217 of the Constitution, and it also sought to characterise the disqualification procedure as unfair discrimination under the Act.


As to the litigation conduct, the court recorded that the respondents did not file heads of argument and had not pleaded to the applicant’s allegations. The respondents filed notices purporting to be under Rule 6(5)(d)(iii) of the Uniform Rules of Court; the earlier notice (30 August 2006) did not properly set out a question of law, and a later notice (stamped 12 June 2007, served on the eve of the hearing) raised points of law including that the Equality Court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the review. At the hearing, the respondents also advanced the contention that the Equality Court did not have jurisdiction to decide issues of constitutionality, a point raised as an additional jurisdictional objection.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine were jurisdictional in nature.


The first question was whether the Equality Court had jurisdiction to entertain an application that was, in substance, a review of an administrative/procurement decision by an organ of state, including the power to “review, correct and set aside” the decision to disqualify the applicant and to set aside any tender award to another party.


The second question was whether the Equality Court had jurisdiction to decide constitutional validity issues implicated by the applicant’s attack on the tender evaluation procedure, including the contention that clause 24 of the Bid Rules (or alternatively clause 9.4 of the National Treasury practice note underpinning them) was inconsistent with section 217 of the Constitution.


Although the papers also raised issues about equality and discrimination, the judgment treated those matters as dependent on, and intertwined with, the jurisdictional questions. The dispute therefore primarily concerned questions of law (the scope of the Equality Court’s statutory and constitutional powers), and the application of constitutional and procedural principles to the relief sought (review and constitutional declarators). The court approached the matter on the basis that if it upheld the jurisdictional objections, the matter would end without reaching the merits.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began by treating the respondents’ jurisdictional objections as dispositive and therefore convenient to decide first, especially given that the merits stood uncontested on the papers (the respondents having not pleaded to the applicant’s allegations).


In analysing jurisdiction, the court located the Equality Court within its statutory framework. It described the Equality Court as a “special court” created by Parliament to advance constitutional values linked to equality and dignity, but emphasised that its powers are those granted by the Act. The court relied on section 21(1) of the Act as defining the Equality Court’s mandate as determining whether unfair discrimination, hate speech or harassment has taken place, and section 21(2) as listing remedies related to those determinations. The court contrasted this with section 169 of the Constitution, which confers jurisdiction on the High Court to decide constitutional matters (subject to exclusions), and noted that the Act did not “directly” empower the Equality Court to decide constitutional matters.


The court accepted that, in practical terms, determining whether the application of the Bid Rules amounted to discrimination would require “delving into the essence of the rules”. It reasoned that this would entail an unavoidable enquiry into whether the rules “strain the constitution”, because unconstitutionality and discrimination were closely connected in the way the claim was framed. Notwithstanding that interrelationship, the court considered that the Equality Court did not appear to have been empowered to review, correct or set aside the Bid Rules, nor to review the administrative procurement decision itself.


The court then addressed “review” as a legal concept. It referred to the classic articulation of the three meanings of review in Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Company v Johannesburg Town Council 1903 TS 111, distinguishing review of inferior courts, review of statutory/public body action involving illegality or irregularity, and broader legislatively conferred review powers. The court treated the applicant’s case as most closely resembling review of public body action (the second category), but held that this did not assist because the present proceedings were not brought under the conventional review machinery applicable in the High Court.


In that respect, the court reasoned that review proceedings are governed by Rule 53 of the Uniform Rules of Court, which regulates review in the High Court. In the court’s view, even if the applicant’s complaint could properly be advanced as a review, it would need to be pursued via Rule 53 in the High Court, and the Equality Court lacked jurisdiction to grant such review relief.


The court reinforced the constitutional character of administrative-law review by relying on Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of SA and Another: In Re Ex Parte President of the Republic of South Africa and Others 2000 (2) SA 674 (CC). It extracted from that decision the proposition that judicial control of public power through review is “and always has been” a constitutional matter, and that common-law review principles have been subsumed under the Constitution. This supported the court’s conclusion that what the applicant sought—review of the exercise of public power—entailed constitutional adjudication beyond what the Equality Court was empowered to do.


The applicant argued that because the Equality Court was constituted at the level of the High Court, it had the ordinary jurisdiction of the High Court, including review and constitutional jurisdiction. The court rejected this, drawing a distinction between the High Court as a court of general jurisdiction and the Equality Court as a specialised forum with a delimited mandate, even when a High Court judge presides. The court referred to section 16(2) of the Act, emphasising that presiding in the Equality Court depends on special designation and training, and treated this as underscoring the institutional separateness of the Equality Court from the High Court’s ordinary jurisdiction.


The applicant also relied on Minister of Environment Affairs and Tourism v George and Others 2007 (3) SCA 62 to argue for “double jurisdiction” and concurrent competence. The court distinguished that authority on the basis that it concerned parallel proceedings in the High Court and an Equality Court sitting at High Court level, and it did not address whether an Equality Court had the power to grant the kind of review relief sought here. The court therefore found that the “double jurisdiction” reasoning did not resolve the core issue, namely whether this Equality Court was empowered to review the administrative decision and decide constitutional validity challenges to the procurement rules.


The court further rejected reliance on section 172 of the Constitution, holding (on the facts as framed) that the applicant was not attacking the constitutional validity of an Act of Parliament or a provincial Act, but rather tender rules and related instruments, and that section 172 did not establish the Equality Court’s competence to decide the matter.


Having found a lack of jurisdiction, the court nonetheless added that even if it had review jurisdiction, the application would still fail on the review standard described in the case law it cited. It endorsed the summary in Durbsinvest (Pty) Ltd v Town and Regional Planning Commission, Kwa-Zulu Natal and Others 2001 (4) 103 (N), which—drawing from Pharmaceutical Manufacturers—describes review as a constitutional enquiry centred on whether the decision is objectively rationally related to the purpose for which the power was given, and whether it was taken bona fide and within authority. The court also cited Mkhatshwa v Mkhatshwa and Another 2002 (3) SA 441 (T). The court observed that the applicant’s complaint was not that the tender committee acted irregularly or unlawfully in applying the rules, and this observation counted against the prospects of review relief on the traditional grounds of irregularity or illegality.


On that reasoning, the court upheld the respondents’ points of law and concluded that the Equality Court lacked jurisdiction to entertain the review and constitutional challenges as formulated, with the result that the application had to be dismissed.


5. Outcome and Relief


The application was dismissed on the basis that the Equality Court lacked jurisdiction to entertain what was essentially an application for review of an administrative/procurement decision and to decide associated constitutional challenges.


The court ordered that costs follow the result, and accordingly dismissed the application with costs.


Cases Cited


Johannesburg Consolidated Investment Company v Johannesburg Town Council 1903 TS 111.


Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of SA and Another: In Re Ex Parte President of the Republic of South Africa and Others 2000 (2) SA 674 (CC).


Minister of Environment Affairs and Tourism v George and Others 2007 (3) SCA 62.


Durbsinvest (Pty) Ltd v Town and Regional Planning Commission, Kwa-Zulu Natal and Others 2001 (4) 103 (N).


Mkhatshwa v Mkhatshwa and Another 2002 (3) SA 441 (T).


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (sections 169, 172, 217).


Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000 (sections 2, 16(2), 20(3)(a), 21, 23(5), 30).


Public Finance Management Act 1 of 1999.


Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000.


Broad-Based Black Economic Empowerment Act 53 of 2003.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(5)(d)(iii).


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 53.


Held


The court held that the Equality Court’s jurisdiction is confined to that conferred by the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000, and it does not extend to granting review relief aimed at “reviewing, correcting and setting aside” an administrative procurement decision of an organ of state.


The court further held that the relief sought would require determination of constitutional validity and administrative-law review issues that fall within the competence of the High Court exercising its ordinary jurisdiction (and governed procedurally by Rule 53), rather than the Equality Court. The fact that the Equality Court was constituted at the level of the High Court did not mean it automatically possessed the High Court’s full ordinary jurisdiction while sitting as an Equality Court.


On that basis, the application was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, with costs.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The Equality Court is a specialised statutory forum whose powers are limited to those conferred by the Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000. Its mandate under section 21 is directed at determining whether unfair discrimination, hate speech, or harassment has occurred and granting remedies linked to those determinations; it is not, without more, a general review court.


Judicial review of the exercise of public power constitutes a constitutional enquiry. Following Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of SA and Another: In Re Ex Parte President of the Republic of South Africa and Others 2000 (2) SA 674 (CC), common-law review principles are subsumed under the Constitution, and constitutional and common-law review concepts are intertwined rather than separate.


Review of administrative decisions in the High Court is procedurally governed by Uniform Rule 53. Where a litigant seeks to set aside an administrative decision by an organ of state (including in procurement), the relief ordinarily falls to be pursued through the High Court’s review jurisdiction rather than through Equality Court proceedings, unless the empowering statute clearly provides otherwise.


In review proceedings concerning executive/administrative decisions, the court’s focus includes whether the decision is objectively rationally related to the purpose for which the power was conferred, and a court may not interfere merely because it disagrees with the decision if it was taken bona fide and within authority, as summarised in Durbsinvest (Pty) Ltd v Town and Regional Planning Commission, Kwa-Zulu Natal and Others 2001 (4) 103 (N).

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[2007] ZAEQC 1
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Manong & Associates (Pty) Ltd v Department of Transport in the Eastern Cape Province and Another (928/06) [2007] ZAEQC 1; 2008 (6) SA 423 (Eqc) (18 October 2007)

FORM A
FILING SHEET FOR EASTERN CAPE
JUDGMENT
IN
THE EQUALITY COURT
PARTIES
:
MANONG & ASSOCIATES
..............................
APPLICANT
AND
DEPARTMENT
OF TRANSPORT
.......................1
ST
RESPONDENT
IN
THE EASTERN CAPE PROVINCE
THE
NATIONAL TREASURY
.............................
2
ND
RESPONDENT
Case
Number:
928/06
High
Court:
BHISHO
HIGH COURT
DATE
OF HEARING:
13/06/2007
DATE
DELIVERED:
18/10/2007
JUDGE(S):
PILLAY,
J
LEGAL
REPRESENTATIVES –
Appearances:
for
the Applicant(s):
....................
ADV
MASUKU
for
the Respondent(s):.
...............
ADV
NTSALUBA
Instructing
attorneys:
Applicant(s):
Messrs
Mlonyeni & Lesele Inco
.
Respondent(s):
State
Attorney
C/O
Shared Legal Services
Office
of the Premier
CASE
INFORMATION -
Nature
of proceedings
:
Equality
Court Case
IN THE EQUALITY
COURT
.............................
Reportable
(BHISHO
HIGH COURT)
CASE NUMBER:
928/06
DATE DELIVERED: 18/10/07
In
the matter between:
MANONG
& ASSOCIATES (PTY) LTD
......................
APPLICANT
AND
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORT IN
THE
..................
1
ST
RESPONDENT
EASTERN CAPE PROVINCE
THE NATIONAL
TREASURY
…........................
2
ND
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
PILLAY,
J
:
This is an application launched by
the Applicant in this court during August 2006. I am called upon to
deal with what has been
referred to as Part ‘B’ of the
Notice of Motion. Part ‘A’ was interim relief sought on
an urgent basis
pending the outcome of the application as constituted
in Part ‘B’. Only the relief sought in Part ‘B’
will therefore be dealt with herein.
The relief sought in Part ‘B’
of the application reads as follows:

1. Reviewing,
correcting and setting aside the decision taken by the delegated
authority of the First Respondent, at some time before
16 August
2006, to disqualify from consideration the Applicant’s tender
for the upgrading of the provincial roads referred
to in paragraph 2
of Part A relief of the Notice of Motion;
2. Reviewing,
correcting and setting aside the decision of the delegated authority
of the Respondent to award of the tender (sic)
any other tenderer (to
the extent that such an award has been made);
Declaring that any
purported contract entered into with any other tenderer in relation
to the tendered services (pursuant to the
award of the tender) be
declared to be null and void, and of no force and effect (to the
extent that such a contract has been
made);
Declaring that the
procedure followed by the First Respondent or its delegated
authority outlined in clause 24 of the Bid Rules
issued by the First
Respondent, to disqualify the Applicant is inconsistent with the
requirement of section 217 of the Constitution
of the Republic of
South Africa, alternatively that clause 9.4 of the Practice Note
issued by the National Treasury in terms
of which the Bid Rules are
made is inconsistent with section 217;
Declaring the procedure
followed by the delegated authority to disqualify the Applicant’s
tender bid unfairly (sic) discriminatory
in terms of the
Promotion
of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act 4 of 2000
and therefore unlawful;
Directing the
Respondents to undergo an audit of its procurement procedures and
practices as the Court may direct;
Granting Applicant
further and or alternative relief;
That the costs of this
application be borne by the Applicant.”
The matter has a long and checkered
history. The urgent application for interim relief was refused as
was the subsequent application
for leave to appeal and petition to
the Supreme Court of Appeals for leave to appeal. Another related
application was also refused.
Paragraphs 1, 2 and 3 of the relief
are of a practical nature and refer to the decisions of a state
institution which is sought
to be,
inter
alia
, reviewed and set
aside. Paragraph 4 seeks a declarator in terms of which the
procedure followed by the relevant tender committee
and outlined in
clause 24 of the Bid Rules be declared inconsistent with section 217
of the Constitution of the Republic of South
Africa of 1996 (‘the
Constitution’).
Paragraph 5 similarly seeks a
declarator that the procedure, in terms of which the delegated
authority disqualified the Applicant’s
tender is declared
unfair and unlawful as envisaged in the Promotion of Equality and
Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act No.
4 of 2000 (‘the
Act’).
Paragraph 6 seeks an order directing
the Respondents to undergo an audit of their procurement procedures
and practices as this court
may deem appropriate.
Paragraphs 7 and 8 do not touch on
the nature of the rationale of this application.
The application with all the papers
was filed and served on 22 August 2006. It gave notice that the
application would be brought
before the Equality Court on 25 August
2006. By the nature of the relief sought and as set out in the
Notice of Motion, it could
only have been brought before the court on
an urgent basis to deal with Part ‘A’ of the relief.
A notice of opposition dated 24
August 2006 was filed by the Respondents. The matter was postponed
on 25 August 2006 to 31 August
2006. Furthermore, the Respondents
filed a Notice in terms of the Rules of the High Court,
viz
Rule 6 (5) (d) (iii)
which reads as follows:

(d) any person
opposing the grant of an order sought in the notice of motion shall –
---------;
---------;
If he intends to raise
any question of law only he shall deliver notice of his intention to
do so, within the time stated in the
preceeding sub-paragraph,
setting forth such question.”
The
period referred to therein is fifteen (15) days.
The notice of the Respondents dated
30 August 2006 in terms of Rule 6(5)(d)(iii) sets out the following:-

1. The Applicant
has failed to satisfy the requirements for the relief (interim
interdict) it seeks;
Consequently, the
application ought to be dismissed with costs.”
It is unclear what the Respondents
were attempting to convey in the notice. It certainly does not
comply with Rule 6(5)(d)(iii)
in that it does not set forth any
question of law.
In any event the urgent application
was proceeded with on 31 August 2006 and was refused. The
application was postponed for the
purposes of dealing with Part B of
the relief sought.
The application proper was heard by
me on 13 June 2007 after a hearing as contemplated in section
20(3)(a) of the Act was convened
and completed. The purpose of a
hearing in terms of sub-section 20(3)(a) is to investigate,
inter
alia
, whether the
substance of the proposed proceedings are such that it should be
entertained by the Equality Court or some other court
or forum.
However by the time that hearing was held, the urgent application had
already been entertained by the Equality Court
and the decision in
respect of Part ‘B’ of the relief was postponed
accordingly.
The order did not contain a directive
that a hearing in terms of section 20(3)(a) should be held.
Consequently the order in question
must be construed to have meant
that the application (proper) was postponed to the Equality Court.
It is therefore understandable
that the presiding officer in the
section 20(3)(a) hearing, felt constrained to deal with the issue
placed before him on the basis
that consideration as to whether the
matter should be dealt with outside of the Equality Court was
excluded because he could not
have set that order aside or amended it
in any way. That being the case, the Equality Court was seized with
the matter.
The
Respondents did not plead to the allegations made by the Applicant at
all.
Heads of Argument on behalf of the
Applicant were properly and timeously filed. Surprisingly, there
were no Heads of Argument filed
on behalf of the Respondents as is
generally required in matters such as this. The provision of Heads
of Argument in opposed applications
is so trite that the failure to
do so could hardly be excused and is unacceptable in the extreme.
More significantly, on the morning of
the hearing, I was provided with a Notice in terms of Rule
6(5)(d)(iii) of the Uniform Rules
of Court. It carries the
Registrar’s stamp dated 12 June 2007.
This
notice reads as follows:-

Please
take notice that First and Second Respondents intend to raise
questions of law only which is set forth hereunder:-
The (sic) Honourable
Court does not have jurisdiction to entertain the application for
review as sought by the Applicant;
The Applicant, on its
papers, does not make out a case for the Respondents to answer; and
Consequently, the
application ought to be dismissed with costs.”
Counsel for both parties came to see
me prior to the commencement of the hearing and Mr Masuku (who
appeared for the Applicant)
indicated that though he was taken by
surprise, he wanted to proceed with the hearing.
When
Mr Ntsaluba (who appeared for the Respondents) started to argue
first, as per agreement between the parties, he strung a second

string to his bow by adding the further point that this court did not
have the jurisdiction to deal with issues of constitutionality.
Again
Mr Masuku, who was visibly surprised by this new aspect, informed me
that he preferred to continue with the hearing nonetheless.
In the light of the Respondent’s
approach, it is clear that if they succeed in their contention that
this court lacked jurisdiction
to entertain what is essentially an
application to review the administrative decision of the Respondents
and/or that this court
lacked the jurisdiction to decide on issues of
constitutionality, then the matter will end at that point in this
court. If they
do not succeed, then the merits, which stand
uncontested, will have to be dealt with. In the circumstances, it
would be convenient
to deal with the jurisdictional issue(s) first.
The Applicant is a company registered
in accordance with the laws of the Republic of South Africa with its
principle place of business
(it seems) in East London.
The First Respondent is the
Department of Roads and Transport of the Eastern Cape with its
principle officer in King William’s
Town.
The Second Respondent is the National
Treasury established in terms of the
Public Finance Management Act 1
of 1999
and in terms of which the National Treasury is empowered to
prescribe tender regulations and practice notices. The Second
Respondent
operates its Head Office in Pretoria.
On or about June 2006, the First
Respondent published an advertisement calling for tenders in respect
of the provision of professional
engineering services for the
construction of five (5) different projects each related to
roadworks.
The Applicant responded to the
advertisement on 20 July 2006. It alleges that it was then
disqualified on the grounds of a perceived
lack of functionality
requirements and/or that the tenders did not comply with the relevant
tender procedure.
The Applicant denied that it failed
to meet the functionality requirements. Significantly it alleged and
was indeed strongly argued
by Mr Masuku, that the prescribed
procedure followed by the Respondents in disqualifying the Applicant
was itself unlawful for
want of constitutionality. He explained that
the Applicant had no quarrel with the way the tender committee
handled the said tender
in following the prescribed procedure but it
was the effect of this very procedure which was offensive.
The Applicant alleged that the
procurement procedure followed by the Respondents is not fair,
transparent, cost effective and does
not promote equality and
consequently, is contrary to and inconsistent with section 217 of the
Constitution (which broadly provides
for what procurement procedure
and policies should be adopted). It follows therefore that, in
essence, the Applicant contends
that the procurement procedure
dealing with the Applicant’s tender is unconstitutional.
The rules and procedures which were
to be adopted in dealing with these tenders are clearly set out in
the Invitation to Tender
and the Bid Notice.
Clause
23 of the Bid Rules sets out that the procurement procedures were
subject (and therefore based) on the following:-
The
Preferential
Procurement Policy Framework Act No. 5 of 2000
;
The Public Finance
Management Acts No’
s 1
and
19
of 1999;
The Broad Based Black
Economic
Empowerment Act No. 53 of 2003
;
The Department of Roads
and Transport Manual on supply Chain Management.
Clause 24 of the Bid Rules details
the method of evaluation of each bid and/or tender. It is the
procedure referred to therein
that is the subject of the Applicant’s
complaint.
Clearly the foundation of these rules
is the aforementioned legislation and regulations which in turn are
based on empowering legislation.
An argument that the rules upon
which the Applicant’s bid was disqualified do not give rise to
the question of constitutionality
but rather a situation which
requires the decision to be reviewed (as has effectively been sought
by the Applicant) would meet
with difficulty. The problem with such
an argument would be two-fold.
Firstly, it ignores the fact that the
very rules are founded on empowering legislation. In my view, it
places them in a special
category in which the issue of
constitutionality could be raised. Furthermore, the rules themselves
could be rendered invalid
because they were incorrectly promulgated
or if they have the effect of straining the constitution (as is
alleged by the Applicant).
Secondly, the question is whether the
adoption of the rules is reviewable or not. The argument presupposes
the court’s jurisdiction
to do that. This aspect will be dealt
with more fully in due course.
The Equality Court is a special court
born out of very crucial constitutional notions like equality,
equity, social progress, justice,
dignity, fairness and democratic
values. It is created in terms of the constitution by an Act of
Parliament which creates and
sets out the powers of Equality Courts.
Section
169 of the Constitution empowers the High Court to decide:

(a) any
constitutional matter except a matter that –
only the Constitutional
Court may decide or;
is assigned by an Act
of Parliament to another court of a status similar to a High Court;
and
any other matter not
assigned to another court by an Act of Parliament.”
Section 21(1) of the Act empowers the
Equality Court to determine whether unfair discrimination, hate
speech or harassment has taken
place. It is clearly restricted to
dealing with these aspects. Section 21(2) makes provision for
various remedies or orders the
court may make in relation to issues
it has considered in terms of section 21(1).
Section 169 of the Constitution
clearly empowers the High Court to deal with certain matters
involving constitutional matters including
any such matters not
assigned to another court by an Act of Parliament. The Act does not
directly make provision for the Equality
Court to decide on
constitutional matters.
However, it is precisely this set of
rules aforementioned which form the substance of the complaint. It
is alleged that the application
of those rules gives rise to
discrimination. It is, in my view, not necessary to decide whether
that is indeed so when dealing
with the issue of jurisdiction.
What is quite apparent is that in
order to determine whether the effect of the proper application of
the rules in question amounts
to discrimination or not, it is
necessary to delve into the essence of the rules. This would entail
the unavoidable exercise of
determining whether these rules strain
the constitution or not because inevitably, if it is unconstitutional
they are likely to
be discriminatory (and perhaps
vice-versa
).
Consequently, on the face of it, this issue would then fall within
the powers of the Equality Court. Strictly speaking however,
the
Equality Court does not seem to be empowered with the jurisdiction to
review, correct or set the bid rules aside.
The Equality Court has furthermore
not been empowered to review decisions of the kind in question.
Section 23(5) of the Act directs
that a decision of the Equality
Court constituted at a Magistrate’s Court level and related to
a defined prohibited ground
of discrimination, must be submitted to a
High Court having jurisdiction for review. That is the only aspect
to which the Act
speaks to the notion of review.
It was argued by Mr Masuku that this
Equality Court, sitting at the level of a High Court did in fact have
jurisdiction to review
the decision in question and determine the
constitutionality of the Rules because it was constituted at the
level of the High Court
which is empowered to deal with such issues.
He referred me to
Minister
of Environment Affairs and Tourism v George and Others
2007 (3) SCA 62 page 12-14 in a valiant attempt to persuade me that
this Equality Court had concurrent jurisdiction with the High
Court
to deal with a constitutional matter as it was convened at that
level.
In the
George
matter, a number of fishermen had launched an application in the High
Court and the Equality Court (sitting at the level of High
Court) at
the same time. They urged the Equality Court to hold an enquiry
before the matter was dealt with in the High Court.
The Appellants
(as Respondents) requested that the court
a
quo
refer the matter to
the High Court in terms of section 20 of the Act. This was refused
and the Appellant appealed against the
refusal.
The refusal was based on the
rationale that there is no reason why those who have interrelated
remedies under the Act and other
legislation should not be entitled
to pursue parallel claims in the Equality Court, constituted at the
level of the High Court,
and in the High Court. Coupled with this was
the finding that the Respondent’s request to refer the matter
to a High Court
was incapable of being granted because that Equality
Court was itself a High Court.
It followed, so it was argued, that
the High Court, sitting as an Equality Court had double jurisdiction
and therefore had the required
jurisdiction to deal with the
Applicant’s application. This case is clearly distinguishable.
Firstly it is not a matter which
involved a quest for a referral of the matter. Secondly this is not
a matter in which the question
of double jurisdiction arises. It is
precisely the power of this court to review which is in issue.
As will be seen from the form of the
relief sought, the Applicant essentially seeks to have the decisions
which affect it reviewed,
corrected and set aside. For the purposes
of this judgment I will confine myself to the question of review
especially in the light
of the Respondent taking the specific point.
Prior to the present Constitutional
dispensation the word ‘review’ is capable of three (3)
meanings within the legal
framework. These were comprehensively set
out in the often quoted decision of Innes CJ in
Johannesburg
Consolidated Investment Company v Johannesburg Town Council
1903 TS 111.
It
is explained that:

In
the first and most usual signification it denotes the process by
which, apart from appeal, the proceeding of inferior courts
of
justice, both civil and criminal are brought before this court in
respect of grave irregularities occurring during the course
of such
proceedings …”

But
there is a second species of review to the one with which I have
dealt, but differing from it in certain well defined respects.

Whenever a public body has a duty imposed upon it by statute and
disregards important provisions of the statute or is guilty of
gross
irregularity or clear illegality in the performance of the duty this
court may be asked to review the proceedings complained
of and set
aside or correct them. Then as to the third significance of the
word. The legislature has from time to time conferred
upon this
court or a judge a power to review which in my opinion, is meant to
be far wider than the power which it possesses under
either of the
review procedures to which I have alluded”
Review proceedings are governed by
Rule 53 of the Uniform Rules of Court which rules regulate the
conduct of proceedings of several
Provincial and Local Divisions of
the High Court of South Africa. In the light of the nature of the
Applicant’s case that
it is only the impact of the bid rules
which it finds offensive, it is difficult to place its case in any of
the three (3) categories
referred to in the aforementioned quote.
However, if it did fall into one of
these, then it was likely to fall within the second category as the
decision complained of is
one which flows from the conduct of a
public body involved in a public function.
But
the issue goes further.
In the case of
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of SA and Another: In Re Ex Parte President
of the Republic of South Africa and Others
2000(2) SA 674 cc @ 692 E-G. Chaskalson P, expressed himself as
follows:

The
control of public power by the courts through judicial review is and
always has been a constitutional matter. Prior to the
adoption of
the interim Constitution this control was exercised by the courts
through the application of common-law constitutional
principles.
Since the adoption of the interim Constitution such control has been
regulated by the Constitution which contains
express provisions
dealing with these matters. The common-law principles that
previously provided the grounds for judicial review
of public power
have been subsumed under the Constitution and, insofar as they might
continue to be relevant to judicial review,
they gain their force
from the Constitution. In the judicial review of public power, the
two are intertwined and do not constitute
separate concepts”.
In my view therefore, even if the
complaint was one which could be dealt with by review, it should be
dealt with in terms of Rule
53 aforementioned. Consequently this is
an application with which the Equality Court cannot deal with for
lack of jurisdiction.
If regard is had to section 21 of the
Act and section 169 of the Constitution, then it is clear that only
the High Court has the
power to deal with constitutional matters and
the Equality Court has not been empowered to do so either by the
Constitution or
the Act itself.
Mr Masuku also relied on section 172
of the constitution to advance his argument that this court is a
court envisaged in section
172 and empowered to hear this matter.
Suffice to say that this section refers,
inter
alia
, to the
constitutional validity of an Act of Parliament and a Provincial Act.
The substance of what is sought to be attacked by
the Applicant is
neither an Act of Parliament nor a Provincial Act. It is clear
therefore that this is not a matter in which double
jurisdiction is
apparent. Nor is it a matter in which the High Court sitting as a
Equality Court could equally deal with the issue(s)
at hand.
Mr Masuku further argued that because
the High Court is sitting as an Equality Court, it had the ordinary
jurisdiction of the High
Court. It follows, from his argument, that
the High Court, when sitting as an Equality Court, can then assume
the jurisdiction
of the High Court merely because it is a High Court
which is sitting as an Equality Court. The argument is flawed
because to adopt
that approach would overlook to essential
differences between these two courts. It is important to always be
mindful of the fact
that the Equality Court is different from a High
Court even if the latter is constituted as an Equality Court.
The objects of the Act are set out in
section 2 thereof and clearly demonstrates the boundaries within
which the Equality Court
operates. It operates within the parameters
of section 9 of the Constitution and is intended to deal with the
protection of all
the values set out therein. Section 2 of the Act
and the Code of Practice as purported to have been promulgated by the
Minister
of Justice and Constitutional Development in terms of
section 30 of the Act broadly confirm this contention.
The differences and separateness of
these two courts is also borne out by section 16(2) of the Act. It
clearly provides that only
an officer who has completed a training
course as a presiding officer and whose name has been included on a
list of presiding officers
designated to preside in an Equality
Court, may so preside.
It is clear therefore that in the
case of a High Court sitting as an Equality Court, a judge might
technically be capable of dealing
with matters which he or she could
have dealt with as an ordinary High Court judge. However, it does
not follow that any judge
of the High Court is empowered to deal with
issues designated for the Equality Court.
Consequently while there will be
cases in which double jurisdiction would be apparent and capable of
being dealt with in either
of the courts (as referred to in
George
),
it is necessary to generally be mindful of the fundamental
difference(s) between the two courts lest it be clouded by
convenience.
This
case is not a matter such as that with which
George
was concerned and there are clear issues which involve the questions
of constitutionality of the Bid Rules and the review of the
decision.
In my view, the Equality Court is not empowered to pronounce on
either.
Consequently even if this court did
have the power to pronounce on the constitutionality of the rules and
their effect, it does
not have the power to review and correct the
decision complained of which is, in any event, integral to the basis
of the quest
to have the tender committee’s decision reviewed,
set aside and corrected.
Furthermore, even if this court did
have the power to review as envisaged in this application, the
application would, in my view,
still fail both in terms of common-law
and constitutionally. This is because even if I thought that the
conclusion was one which
I would not have arrived at, I would not be
permitted to interfere therewith absent any irregularity or
illegality by the Respondent
and in particular by the tender
committee in the exercise of its duties.
I respectfully agree with the summary
of the legal position in this regard as enunciated in the
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers
case by
Magid J, in
Durbsinvest
(Pty) LTD v Town and Regional Planning Commission
,
Kwa-Zulu Natal and Others
2001 (4) 103 (N) at 107 G – H as follows -

(1) The
review of an administrative decision of an organ of the Executive
gives rise to a constitutional enquiry.
(2) In any such enquiry
the first question to be asked is whether the decision complained of
is, objectively speaking, rationally
related to the purpose for which
the power was given.
(3) If it was, and the
decision was arrived at
bona
fide
and within the authority and jurisdiction of the body whose decision
is being enquired into, the Court cannot interfere with the
decision
merely because it disagrees with it.”
See :
Mkhatshwa
v Mkhatshwa and Another
2002 (3) SA 441
(T)
Mindful of the fact that the conduct
of the tender committee in applying the rules is not the source of
complaint in this application,
it would seem to me, in so far as it
is necessary to comment thereon, that the application must fail in
this respect also.
In the circumstances, the point of
law taken by the Respondents is a good one and the application must
therefore fail for lack of
jurisdiction of this court.
It seems to me that the costs should
follow the result and I will make such an order accordingly.
In
the result, the application is dismissed with costs.
-------------------------------
R
PILLAY
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
APPEARANCES
FOR
THE APPLICANT
:
ADVOCATE MASUKU
INSTRUCTED
BY : MESSRS MLONYENI & LESELE INCO.
APPLICANT’S
ATTORNEYS
FOR
THE RESPONDENT
:
ADVOCATE NTSALUBA
INSTRUCTED
BY : STATE ATTORNEY
C/O
SHARED LEGAL SERVICES
OFFICE
OF THE PREMIER
RESPONDENT’S
ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF HEARING
:
13 JUNE 2007