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Aviation Co-Ordination Services (Pty) Limited and Others v Airports Company South Africa SOC Limited and Others (22/20741) [2023] ZAGPJHC 778 (10 July 2023)

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IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA

GAUTENG LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG

 

 

  CASE NO:22/20741

NOT REPORTABLE

NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES

REVISED

In the matter between:

 

AVIATION CO-ORDINATION SERVICES (PTY) LIMITED

 

AIRLINES ASSOCIATION OF SOUTHERN AFRICA

 

BOARD OF AIRLINE REPRESENTATIVES OF SOUTH AFRICA


  Applicant

 

2nd Applicant

 

3rd Applicant

And


 

AIRPORTS COMPANY SOUTH AFRICA SOC LIMITED

 

MINISTER OF TRANSPORT

 

MINISTER OF FINANCE

 

SOUTH AFRICAN CIVIL AVIATION AUTHORITY

 

AIR BOTSWANA (PTY) LTD

 

AIR FRANCE –KLM

 

AIR PEACE

 

AIR SEYCHELLESLTD

 

AIR ZIMBABWE (PRIVATE) LIMITED

 

BRITISH AIRWAYS PLC

 

CEMAIR LIMITED

 

CONGO AIRWAYS S.A

 

COMAIR LIMITED T/A BRITISH AIRWAYS AND KULULA

 

CONDOR FLUGDIENST

 

EDELWEISS AIR AG

 

EGYPT AIR

 

EMIRATES

 

ETHIOPIAN AIRLINES GROUP T/A

ETHIOPIAN AIRLINES

 

ETIHAD AIRWAYS

 

FLYSAFAIR

 

GLOBAL AVIATION OPERATIONS (PTY) LTD T/A

GLOBAL AIRWAYS AND LIFT

 

KENYA AIRWAYS PLT

 

LINHAS AREAS DE MOCABIQUE SAR T/A

LQM

 

LUFTHANSA AIRPLUS SERVICEKARTEN GMBH T/A LUFTHANSA

 

PRECISION AIR SERVICES LIMITED T/A PROFLIGHT ZAMBIA

 

QANTAS

 

QATAR AIRWAYS GROUP T/A QATAR AIRWAYS

 

SWISS INTERNATIONAL AIR LINES AG T/A SWISS

 

TAAG ANGOLA AIR LINES E.P T/A TAAG

 

TURKISH AIRLINES

 

UNITED AIRLINES INC

1st Respondent

 

2nd Respondent

 

3rd Respondent

 

4th Respondent

 

5th Respondent

 

6th Respondent

 

7th Respondent

 

8th Respondent

 

9th Respondent

 

10th Respondent



 11th Respondent

 

12th Respondent

 

13th Respondent

 

14th Respondent

 

15th Respondent

 

16th Respondent

 

17th Respondent

 

18th Respondent

 

19th Respondent

 

20th Respondent

 

21st Respondent

 

22nd Respondent

 

23rd Respondent

 

24th Respondent

 

25th Respondent

 

26th Respondent

 

27th Respondent

 

28th Respondent

 

29th Respondent

 

30th Respondent

 

31st Respondent 


Coram: Dlamini J

 

Date of Request for Reasons: 22 May 2023

 

Date of delivery for Reasons:  10 July  2023

 

JUDGMENT

 

DLAMINI J

 

[1]  On 23 May 2023, I made a draft order marked “X” an order of this Court. Below are my reasons for that order.

 

[2]  This is an application in terms of Rule 30A of the Uniform Rules of Court.

 

[3]  The common cause facts are as follows, on 14 June 2022 the applicants launched a review application in terms of Rule 53 of the Uniform Rules of Court seeking the following relief;-

 

3.1 Declaring that the decision of the first respondent, communicated by the first respondent to the first applicant by a letter on or about 17 December 2022, refusing to agree to the first applicant's planned replacement of aging Hold Baggage Screening ("HBS") equipment (“the refusal decision”)  is unlawful, reviewed and set aside.

 

3.2 If applicable, declaring that the decision of the first respondent to procure HBS equipment itself and conduct a competitive process for the appointment of a third party to conduct HBS services at the first respondent's airports ("the termination decision") is unlawful, reviewed, and set aside.

 

[4]  On 21 July 2022, the first respondent filed the record. Not satisfied with the filed record, the applicants launched this application in terms of Rule 30A compelling the first respondent to file a complete record.

 

[5]  The main bone of contentions relates to the contents, status, and interpretation of the first respondent’s letter dated 17 December 2021, written by the first respondent’s attorneys to the first applicant’s attorneys.

 

[6]  It is contended by the first applicant that the 17 December 2021 letter constitutes the refusal decision. The first applicant avers that the termination insourcing decision and the termination decision are for all intent purposes similar. In that with the insourcing decision, the first respondent has determined to insource the provision of HBS and with the termination decision it has determined that ACSA is responsible for the provision of HBS services and a result cannot allow ACS to continue providing HBS services, unless the first respondent has appointed ACS through a procurement process that is conducted in terms of section 217 of the Constitution to provide HBS services on ACSA’s airports.

 

[7]  In the results, the first applicant insist that they are entitled to all the documents that relate to both the refusal and termination decisions.

 

[8]  In its reply, the first respondent denies that the 17 December 2021 letter constituted a refusal decision by ACSA. The first respondent contends that it has not taken any decision cable of judicial review concerning the management and operation of HBS at its airport. The first respondent insists that the applicants are aware that no termination decision exists, in that no termination notice was given to the applicants from rendering the service of HBS. Further, that after the letter dated 17 December 2023 to date, the applicants continue to operate the HBS services at all ACSA airports.

 

[9]  In my view,  ACSA's submission that the letter of 17 December 2021 was simply a reply to the first applicant demand that ACSA  should confirm or support the first applicant's application to SACAA for the replacement of the HBS system at ACSA's airport has merit.

 

[10] The submission by the first applicant that ACSA has taken what the first applicant refer to as the termination decision is concerned is meritless and must be dismissed. This is so because as at the launch, up to the hearing of this application, the first applicant continue to provide HBS services at all ACSA's airports. It was only during the hearing of this application that Counsel for the first respondent advised this Court that the ACSA’s Board had on 18 May 2023 taken a decision that related to the provision of HBS services at its airports. In part the resolution reads as follows; “1, The insourcing of Hold Bagge Screening Service be and is hereby approved subject to approval by the Minister in accordance with section 54(e) of the Public Finance Management Act, as amended”.

 

[11] On a businesslike and sensible interpretation, it is clear that it is only the above-mentioned ACSA’s Board decision of 18 May 2023, that has the effect of a ‘refusal’ and ‘terminating’ of the first applicant’s provision of the HBS services at ACSA’s airports and not the 17 December 2021 letter.

 

[12] It should therefore follow that this Court cannot grant an order compelling ACSA to produce records of a non-existent decision.

 

[13] In all the circumstances alluded to above, the first applicant have failed to discharge the onus that rested on their shoulders to justify the order that they seek.

 

ORDER

 

1.  The draft order marked “X” that I signed on 22 May 2023 is made an Order of this Court.


DLAMINI J

 

JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA

 

  GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG

 

Date of Request for Reasons:   22 May 2023


Date Delivered:  10 July 2023


For the Applicants: 

FA Snyckers SC (Mr)

Email: snyckers@group621.co.za

N Luthuli (Mr)

luthuli@group621.co.za


Instructed by:

Webber Wentzel

Haydn Davies (Mr) et al

haydn.davies@webberwentzel.com  


For the Respondents:

Adv. IV Maleka SC

Email:   ivmaleka@mweb.co.za

Adv. NB Kekana

nisisa@thulamelachambers.co.za


Instructed by: 

Mashiane Moodley & Monama Inc.

David Tumi Maphakela (Mr) et al

dmaphakela@m4attorneys.co.za