Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 770South Africa
Sibani Group (PTY) Ltd v Doves Group (PTY) Ltd (3620/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 770 (15 September 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 September 2022
Headnotes
the mere assertion by a deponent that he can swear positively to the facts is not regarded as being sufficient, unless there are good grounds for believing that the deponent fully appreciated the meaning of these words.[1] [15] In President of the Republic of South Africa and Others v M & G Media Ltd the Supreme Court of Appeal remarked as follows on the meaning of personal knowledge:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Sibani Group (PTY) Ltd v Doves Group (PTY) Ltd (3620/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 770 (15 September 2022)
Sibani Group (PTY) Ltd v Doves Group (PTY) Ltd (3620/2020) [2022] ZAGPJHC 770 (15 September 2022)
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sino date 15 September 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG.
CASE
NUMBER: 3620/2020
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
15
September 2022
In
the matter between:
SIBANI
GROUP (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
DOVES
GROUP (PTY)
LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
OLIVIER
AJ:
Introduction
[1]
The applicant claims specific performance of the respondent's
obligation
to pay in terms of a Service Level Agreement ("the
agreement") concluded between the parties on 28 February 2018.
[2]
In terms of the agreement, the respondent appointed the applicant to
provide
construction and renovation services to its various franchise
outlets. The applicant contends that it rendered certain services
in
terms of the agreement and that, despite demand, the respondent
failed to pay an amount R1 543 317.07 that was due and payable.
[3]
The respondent denies that the applicant performed in terms of the
agreement.
As this is a claim for specific performance, the
respondent contends that the applicant is obliged not only to prove
that it performed
work, but that it performed the work in accordance
with the specific terms of the agreement. The respondent contends
that the applicant
has failed to establish a
prima facie
case.
[4]
As captured in the joint practice note, the issues for determination
are
whether: (1) the deponent to the founding affidavit is a
competent witness; (2) the evidence establishes the applicant's
performance
in terms of the agreement and the respondent's
indebtedness; (3) the defendant is entitled in these proceedings to
challenge its
indebtedness in circumstances where it allegedly failed
to object to invoices and the applicant’s notice of breach.
Point
in
limine
[5]
The respondent questions whether the deponent to the founding
affidavit
has personal knowledge of the material facts on which the
applicant bases its case – and furthermore submits that the
documents
the deponent attaches to the affidavit do not relate to the
material facts of the applicant's performance and cannot assist in
giving him personal knowledge of these facts.
[6]
The deponent to the founding affidavit is
Amon Tendai Toto
. He
describes himself as an in-house legal adviser for the applicant on a
retainer basis. He states in the affidavit that he can
"confidently”
assert the facts deposed to and that they are within his personal
knowledge and/or derived from his "personal
inspection" of
the applicant's "business records" and "an extensive
briefing” with Khumbulani Lembede,
who is a director of the
applicant. The deponent concludes by stating that the facts are to
the best of his knowledge both true
and correct unless the contrary
appears from the context.
[7]
He claims to depose to the affidavit on the basis of a resolution of
the
applicant’s directors authorising him to act as “company
representative” in this matter. It furthermore authorises
him
to give lawful instructions to counsel, and to sign, endorse and
execute all legal documents, including affidavits, for court
action
or applications pertaining to the debt owed to the applicant by the
respondent.
[8]
The respondent argues that the deponent cannot claim to have personal
knowledge of how, where and when the applicant performed in terms of
the agreement, simply by virtue of his position as adviser.
The
deponent is not employed by the applicant and he was not involved in
any aspect of the applicant's alleged performance in terms
of the
agreement.
[9]
The respondent submits further that the documents attached to the
affidavit
– the agreement, the applicant's breach letter and a
spread sheet (which is a payment reconciliation) – do not
establish
the deponent's personal knowledge of the essential facts
relating to the applicant's performance in terms of the agreement.
The
payment reconciliation and the breach letter are only evidence of
the fact that the applicant asserts a claim against the respondent
and that a dispute exists between the parties; the spread sheet does
not give him personal knowledge of the applicant’s specific
performance. He has not attached any reliable documentation proving
when, where and at what cost the applicant rendered services
to the
respondent in terms of the agreement.
[10]
The deponent claims to have consulted with Lembede “extensively”,
yet no confirmatory
affidavit from him is attached.
[11]
The effect of this, according to the respondent, is that the
allegations of the applicant's
performance are hearsay evidence, and
so too are the allegations of the cost of the work and the allegation
that the respondent
"audited" the work, thus satisfying
itself as to its quality.
[12]
The applicant argues that the deponent is deposing to the affidavit
as in-house adviser,
not as the applicant’s attorney. The
application deals with an agreement that he is familiar with as legal
adviser. He has
inspected the records of the applicant, which is
adequate compliance. He has verified with the directors regarding the
records.
There is a resolution from directors, so his affidavit
cannot be hearsay evidence.
[13]
In application proceedings, the affidavits take the place not only of
the pleadings in
action proceedings, but also of the essential
evidence which would be led at trial. The deponent thus "testifies"
in
motion proceedings. From this it follows that generally relief may
only be granted in motion proceedings if it is supported by
admissible evidence in the affidavits. Whether the deponent's
evidence is admissible depends on whether he has personal knowledge
of the facts. The hearsay evidence rule applies to all proceedings,
including applications. According to
Section 3(4)
of the
Law of
Evidence Amendment Act 45 of 1988
, hearsay evidence is “evidence,
whether oral or in writing, the probative value of which depends upon
the credibility of
any person other than the person giving such
evidence.”
[14]
In
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
the
court held that the mere assertion by a deponent that he can swear
positively to the facts is not regarded as being sufficient,
unless
there are good grounds for believing that the deponent fully
appreciated the meaning of these words.
[1]
[15]
In
President of the Republic of South Africa and Others v M &
G Media Ltd
the Supreme Court of Appeal remarked as follows on
the meaning of personal knowledge:
A court is not bound to
accept the ipse dixit of a witness that his or her evidence is
admissible… Merely to allege that
that information is within
the 'personal knowledge' of a deponent is of little value without
some indication, at least from the
context, of how that knowledge was
acquired, so as to establish that the information is admissible, and
if it is hearsay, to enable
its weight to be evaluated. In this case
there is no indication that the facts to which Mr Chikane purports to
attest came to his
knowledge directly, and no other basis for its
admission has been laid. Indeed, the statement of Mr Chikane that I
have referred
to is not evidence at all: it is no more than bald
assertion.
[2]
[16]
If the deponent to a founding affidavit lacks personal knowledge of
the material facts,
the integrity and veracity of the “evidence”
placed before the court is compromised. In any trial, a court should
be
vigilant to manage how witnesses testify, ensuring that the rules
of evidence are observed scrupulously. Similar vigilance should
be
displayed in motion proceedings – however, courts must be
mindful not to adopt an over-formalistic approach.
[17]
The deponent relies on a resolution passed by the applicant’s
directors authorising
him to act on their behalf and to perform
certain actions. Often there is a conflation of the authority to
launch proceedings,
and the competence of a deponent to depose to an
affidavit.
[18]
In
Ganes
and Another v Telecom Namibia Ltd,
the
court observed that the “deponent to an affidavit in motion
proceedings need not be authorised by the party concerned
to depose
to the affidavit” but that it is the “institution of the
proceedings and the prosecution thereof which must
be authorised.”
[3]
The resolution means naught if the deponent lacks personal knowledge
of the material facts necessary to make the applicant’s
case.
If he has no personal knowledge, no resolution will save the
affidavit.
[19]
The entire claim is based on the founding affidavit of the deponent,
who bases part of
his personal knowledge on “extensive”
consultation with Lembede. The deponent does not disclose what the
nature of
his “extensive” consultation with Lembede was.
Lembede is referred to only once in the affidavit, and that is in
relation
to the notice of breach which he sent by e-mail. The notice
of breach is one of the three documents attached to the founding
affidavit.
Considering the deponent’s description of their
interaction, it is doubtful that it would have been limited only to
this
issue.
[20]
Under such circumstances Lembede should have deposed to a
confirmatory affidavit, at least
confirming the correctness of the
content in the founding affidavit as it relates to him. Where the
evidence of a particular witness
is crucial, a court is entitled to
expect the actual witness who can depose to the events in question to
do so under oath. Without
doing so, a hearsay statement supported
merely by a confirmatory affidavit, in many instances, loses cogency.
[21]
One might expect an explanation why a confirmatory affidavit was or
could not be obtained
from Lembede, and submissions on why the
evidence nevertheless should be admitted. This assumes, of course,
that the applicant
or deponent in this case was alive to the need for
a confirmatory affidavit.
[22]
Technically, then, the “evidence” gleaned from Lembede is
hearsay. Nevertheless,
this is not necessarily fatal, depending on
the weight the court decides to attach to it. The difficulty faced by
the applicant,
however, is that the extent on which the deponent has
relied on Lembede to form his own knowledge, is not known.
[23]
Although it is not essential for the deponent to have been involved
personally in the completion
of the work or services, he must at
least with sufficient particularity explain how he knows, for
example, when, where and how
the applicant performed in terms of the
agreement. If the personal knowledge he purports to have is based on
documents he consulted,
then such documents must actually be the
source of his knowledge.
[24]
The information in the spread sheet is only a summary of certain
information, namely projects
(both completed and ongoing), project
costs (in the case of completed and ongoing projects), and payments
by the respondent. The
deponent does not state that he has consulted
the original invoices, or the requisition quotations, or any other
relevant documents
that form the basis of the spread sheet. He states
that he consulted business records, but without explaining what these
are.
[25]
The present situation is not akin to that of a manager in the
collections department of
a credit provider, who deposes to
affidavits in summary judgment applications as a matter of course. In
such cases the deponent
exercises overall control of the relevant
accounts and all the necessary information can be found in the
relevant files. All necessary
documents are attached to the founding
affidavit. No reliance is placed on unspecified “extensive”
consultation with
another person to gain personal knowledge.
[26]
In summary, the deponent relies heavily on a spread sheet that
contains scant information;
the extent of the hearsay evidence is
unclear and in the absence of at least a simple confirmatory
affidavit by Lembede, I take
the view that the deponent lacks
personal knowledge of the material facts.
[27]
The point in
limine
is accordingly upheld. Considering this
finding, it is unnecessary for me to consider the merits of the
application.
[28]
The respondent, as the successful party, is entitled to its costs.
IN
THE RESULT THE FOLLOWING ORDER ISSUES:
a.
The point in
limine
is upheld.
b.
The application is dismissed with costs.
M
Olivier
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Local Division, Johannesburg
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the parties
and/or parties’ representatives by email and by
upload
to CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to be
16h00 on
15 September 2022.
Appearances
For
the Applicant:
I. Mureriwa
Instructed
by S E Kanyoka Attorneys
For
the Respondent:
M. Seape
Instructed
by CMS RS Partners Inc
DATE
OF HEARING: 24 May 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT: 15 September 2022
[1]
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
1976 (1) SA 418
(A) at 423D—E.
[2]
2011 (2) SA 1
(SCA) at para 38.
[3]
[2003] ZASCA 123
;
[2004] 2 All SA 609
(SCA) at para
[19]
.
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