Constitutional Court orders CPS to pay Sassa R81.3m

South Africa's Constitutional Court has ruled that Cash Paymaster Services must pay the South African Social Security Agency R81.3-million for profits earned under an invalid contract. Recovery remains uncertain due to CPS's insolvency since 2020. The judgment concludes years of litigation over the matter.

The Constitutional Court ordered Cash Paymaster Services (CPS) to pay the South African Social Security Agency (Sassa) R81.3-million. Justice Steven Majiedt delivered the judgment, noting years of litigation and ordering each party to bear its own costs due to mutual accusations of non-cooperation.

The dispute stems from a 2014 ruling that declared Sassa's nationwide payment tender to CPS constitutionally invalid, though CPS continued operations to ensure grant payments. The court found CPS acted as an organ of state, barring it from retaining profits from the unlawful contract.

CPS entered final liquidation on 16 October 2020. A liquidator's report from 23 May 2025 lists assets of about R51-million against proved claims of R779-million, mostly from Sassa, and disputed SARS tax claims of R401-million. Sassa must claim the amount as a concurrent creditor, with low recovery prospects if SARS prevails.

CPS has a separate claim against Sassa for R316.4-million. Lincoln Mali, CEO of Lesaka Technologies (formerly Net1, CPS's parent), welcomed the ruling, stating it brings closure as Lesaka was not party to prior orders and faces no claims from the liquidator.

Relaterade artiklar

A courtroom scene illustrating the court order for ECD subsidies in KwaZulu-Natal, with a judge, lawyers, and children in the background.
Bild genererad av AI

Court orders KZN Education Department to pay ECD subsidies

Rapporterad av AI Bild genererad av AI

The Legal Resources Centre secured a High Court order on 23 June 2026 compelling the KwaZulu-Natal Department of Education to pay long-overdue subsidies to early childhood development centres.

A financial dispute between Sekunjalo Investment Holdings and the Southern African Clothing and Textile Workers’ Union (Sactwu) has intensified following a Supreme Court of Appeal ruling and a new lawsuit. The Supreme Court of Appeal ordered Sekunjalo Independent Media to repay at least R458.6 million on a 2013 loan. Sekunjalo counters with a R628 million claim against Sactwu over an alleged unfulfilled funding commitment.

Rapporterad av AI

President William Ruto has defended plans for higher National Social Security Fund contributions, stating that employees and employers will each pay 6 per cent of monthly wages. His comments follow a Court of Appeal ruling that upheld the unconstitutionality of the NSSF Act, 2013.

The Nelson Mandela Bay Municipality faces suspension of its equitable share grant unless it meets National Treasury compliance demands by 30 April. Acting chief operations officer Lulamile Moolman confirmed the Treasury has started invoking Section 216(2) of the Constitution. Councillors clashed at a recent Municipal Public Accounts Committee meeting over document processing.

Rapporterad av AI

South Africans for Constitutional Reform has raised over R500,000 by framing its petition around citizen priorities over foreigners. Its founder Princy Mthombeni later revealed primary motivations tied to energy policy and NGO regulation.

A person in Västerås must repay 1,293,859 kronor to Försäkringskassan after receiving sickness benefits paid out incorrectly. The agency launched an investigation after the person reported improved work ability this year.

Denna webbplats använder cookies

Vi använder cookies för analys för att förbättra vår webbplats. Läs vår integritetspolicy för mer information.
Avböj