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South African Law • Jurisdictional Corpus
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Gobela Consulting CC v Makhado Municipality

Citation(Case no 910/19) [2020] ZASCA 180 (22 December 2020)
JurisdictionZA
Area of Law
Administrative Law
Constitutional Law
Contract Law
Public Procurement Law
Municipal Law

Facts of the Case

On 22 February 2011, Gobela Consulting CC submitted an unsolicited proposal to Makhado Municipality to review and develop an anti-corruption strategy and provide capacity building training. The Municipal Manager accepted the proposal by letter dated 5 May 2011, appointing Gobela to conduct training on anti-corruption and fraud for all officials and councillors from May to November 2011 at R7 500 per person for approximately 745 incumbents (total value over R5 million). Gobela prepared for performance by drafting manuals, flyers, engaging contractors and employing facilitators. On the scheduled commencement date, Gobela was informed the training could not proceed due to unresolved political issues between the mayor and ANCYL. The training never commenced. The municipality subsequently invited public tenders for the same service in August 2011, which were later withdrawn due to budget constraints. Gobela issued an invoice for R6 369 750 and later sued for R5 131 470 as damages for breach of contract. The appointment was made without following competitive bidding processes required by law for contracts exceeding R200 000, and the Municipal Manager acted without proper authorization.

Legal Issues

  • Whether a court may declare a contract invalid and unlawful in the absence of a counter-application for review and setting aside of that contract
  • Whether a collateral challenge to the validity of a public procurement contract is permissible in proceedings brought to enforce that contract
  • Whether a public procurement contract concluded in breach of section 217 of the Constitution and the Municipal Finance Management Act is invalid
  • Whether the municipality could rely on the invalidity of the contract as a defense without having proactively sought to set it aside

Judicial Outcome

The appeal was dismissed with costs.

Ratio Decidendi

A court may declare a public procurement contract invalid and unlawful, and dismiss a claim for enforcement of such contract, even in the absence of a counter-application for review and setting aside, where: (1) the contract was concluded in breach of section 217 of the Constitution and applicable procurement legislation (Municipal Finance Management Act and regulations); (2) the invalidity is squarely raised in the pleadings as a defense; and (3) justice requires entertaining the collateral challenge, particularly where enforcing the contract would sanction the very conduct that procurement prescripts seek to prevent. Public procurement contracts concluded in breach of mandatory competitive bidding requirements are invalid from inception. The permissibility of a reactive/collateral challenge to administrative action depends on the circumstances of each case and whether justice requires it.

Obiter Dicta

The Court observed that Gobela impermissibly claimed the full contract fee despite not having progressed beyond preparatory steps and not having met the assessment requirements stipulated in the appointment letter. The Court noted that allowing the claim would be tantamount to enforcing an unperformed obligation and would require the municipality to pay for a benefit it did not receive, notwithstanding undisputed budgetary constraints. The Court also noted that the case was not of such complexity as to warrant the employment of two counsel (relevant for costs purposes). The judgment reinforced that Oudekraal and Kirland did not fossilize unlawful administrative action as indefinitely effective, nor did they impose an absolute obligation on private citizens to take the initiative to strike down invalid administrative decisions, or an absolute duty of proactivity on public authorities - it all depends on the circumstances.

Legal Significance

This case is significant in South African administrative and procurement law as it clarifies the circumstances under which courts may entertain collateral challenges to the validity of public procurement contracts. It demonstrates that organs of state need not always proactively seek to set aside invalid contracts in separate review proceedings, but may raise invalidity as a defense in enforcement proceedings where justice requires. The judgment reinforces the principle that courts will not enforce contracts that violate constitutional procurement requirements under section 217, even in the absence of formal review proceedings, particularly where enforcement would undermine the very objectives of procurement legislation. It provides guidance on applying the Merafong and Tasima jurisprudence to procurement disputes, emphasizing that the permissibility of reactive challenges depends on the specific circumstances and the interests of justice. The case also serves as a warning to service providers dealing with organs of state to ensure strict compliance with procurement processes before commencing performance.

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This case references

Applies

  • Merafong City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti Limited[2016] ZACC 35
  • Department of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Limited[2016] ZACC 39

Follows

  • Merafong City Local Municipality v AngloGold Ashanti Limited[2016] ZACC 35
  • Department of Transport and Others v Tasima (Pty) Limited[2016] ZACC 39

Referenced by

Applied By

  • Kunene Rampala Inc. v North West Province Department of Education and Sport Development(460/2022) [2023] ZASCA 120 (15 September 2023)

Considers By

  • NAD Property Income Fund (Pty) Ltd v Bushbuckridge Local Municipality and Another(422/2024) [2025] ZASCA 184

Distinguished By

  • NAD Property Income Fund (Pty) Ltd v Bushbuckridge Local Municipality and Another(422/2024) [2025] ZASCA 184

Followed By

  • Kunene Rampala Inc. v North West Province Department of Education and Sport Development(460/2022) [2023] ZASCA 120 (15 September 2023)