Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 851South Africa
Shoes Travel and Enterprises CC v Oberthur Technologies (PTY) Ltd (2020 / 21134) [2022] ZAGPJHC 851 (25 October 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
25 October 2022
Headnotes
JUDGMENT) This
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Shoes Travel and Enterprises CC v Oberthur Technologies (PTY) Ltd (2020 / 21134) [2022] ZAGPJHC 851 (25 October 2022)
Shoes Travel and Enterprises CC v Oberthur Technologies (PTY) Ltd (2020 / 21134) [2022] ZAGPJHC 851 (25 October 2022)
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sino date 25 October 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case
no: 2020 / 21134
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
Date:
25 October 2022
In
the matter between:
SHOES
TRAVEL & ENTERPRISES
CC
Plaintiff
And
OBERTHUR
TECHNOLOGIES (PTY)
LTD
Defendant
JUDGMENT
(SUMMARY JUDGMENT)
This
judgment is handed down electronically by circulation to the parties’
legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading
the signed copy
hereof to Caselines.
Practice
— Judgments and orders — Summary judgment —
Liquidated amount in money under Rule 32(1) of Uniform Rules
—
What constitutes — Claim for damages arising from breach of
contract not constituting liquid amount — Discretion
under Rule
32(9)(a) relating to order stay of action until plaintiff has paid
the defendant’s costs taxed as between attorney
and client not
exercised.
MOULTRIE
AJ
[1]
The plaintiff seeks summary judgment on a claim that it instituted
against
the defendant arising out of the latter’s alleged
repudiation of an agreement in terms of which the plaintiff leased
four
vehicles to the defendant for a period of 5 years. The claim is
formulated in the particulars of claim as one for damages, being
the
total amount payable by Plaintiff to Defendant in terms of the
agreement less payments received in terms of the agreement plus
the
cost of repairing physical damage caused to the vehicles. The
application for summary judgment does not include that portion
of the
amount claimed in respect of the physical damage allegedly sustained
to the vehicles.
[2]
Rule 32(1)
of the Uniform Rules of Court, which contemplates a Court granting
judgment without a trial even though notice of intention
to defend
has been properly given
[1]
and
the plea has been delivered, stipulates that summary judgment may be
granted “
only
”
in relation to certain categories of claims. Summary judgment cannot
be granted in relation to a claim falling outside of
these
categories, no matter how weak the defence set out in the plea (and
evidenced in the affidavit opposing summary judgment)
may be.
[3]
According
to the plaintiff, the portion of the claim in respect of which
summary judgment is sought is one for a liquidated amount
in money,
as contemplated in Rule 32(1)(b). It is by now trite law that a
liquidated amount in money is an amount which is either
agreed upon
or which is capable of speedy and prompt ascertainment or, put
differently, where ascertainment of the amount in issue
is a mere
matter of calculation.
[2]
[4]
Had the
current claim been one for payment of arrear rentals,
[3]
or for payment of a pre-agreed sum of damages,
[4]
or one in which the word ‘damages’ had been used loosely
to refer to what is in fact a liquidated amount,
[5]
it would potentially have constituted a claim for a liquidated amount
in money. However, the claim is one for damages arising out
of losses
allegedly suffered by the plaintiff as a result of the defendant’s
alleged repudiation of the lease agreement.
[5]
Although the plaintiff alleges in the combined summons that the
damages
fall to be assessed on the simple basis of the amount that
the plaintiff would have received in rental had the agreement
continued
in force until the expiry of the lease, I cannot agree that
the mere simplicity of the formulation of the claim has the effect of
converting it into a liquidated amount in money. In my view, the
claim remains one for damages and as such, the Court would be
required to assess them in accordance with the established rules in
that regard.
[6]
On the
assumption that the defendant has indeed breached the agreement and
that there is a causal connection between the alleged
breach and any
loss that the plaintiff may have suffered, the assessment of damages
for breach of contract involves what was seminally
described by Innes
CJ as “
that
most
difficult question of fact
”,
namely that the innocent party “
should
be placed in the position he would have occupied had the contract
been performed, so far as that can be done by the payment
of money,
and without undue hardship to the defaulting party
”.
[6]
This is an exercise that involves proof by the plaintiff, and not
mere presumption.
[7]
The court
must consider the evidence tendered to assess the damages as best it
can so as “
to
arrive at some amount, which in the opinion of the court will meet
the justice of the case
”.
[8]
[7]
In
Solomon
NO v Spur Cool Corporation (Pty) Ltd
,
Binns-Ward J observed that “
[t]his
entails the application of pragmatism and common sense rather than
formalism. It will in general be appropriate in quantifying
contractual damages which … involve a component of prospective
loss, to have regard to the effect of relevant events intervening
between those dates and the trial insofar as that will facilitate a
more accurate achievement of the object
.”
[9]
[8]
In the
current instance, it would appear to me that it cannot possibly be
the case that the damages to be awarded by a court to
the plaintiff
as a result of the defendant’s alleged breach could amount to
the full value of the revenue generated by the
lease for the
remainder of its term. A range of questions would be relevant in this
regard, not least of which would be the fact
that it is the
plaintiff’s net loss that has to be ascertained and, where
there is a difference, it is not entitled to be
compensated for its
gross loss.
[10]
This means
that any expenses that would be incurred by the plaintiff in
maintaining and licensing the vehicles over the course
of the lease
period (which the plaintiff itself pleads it was obliged to do under
the lease) would have to be deducted. There is
also the issue of
whether plaintiff would be able to mitigate its damages, for example
by leasing the vehicles to some other lessee,
and if so, at what
rentals?
[9]
Thus, even
though it is correct that the exercise of assessing damages for
breach of contract is intended to put the innocent party
in the
position it would have been had the contract had been properly
performed,
[11]
that cannot be
done in this case by simply assuming that the plaintiff would have
profited by the amount it would have earned in
rental over the
remainder of the lease period. A claim for damages for breach of
contract such as the one advanced by the plaintiff
in this case
cannot be regarded as one for a liquidated amount in money. In my
view, the position is best expressed by Howard J
in
Leymac
:
“
the
amount of these damages will not be liquidated until the Court has
assessed the
quantum
thereof,
by the exercise of its own judgment
”.
[12]
[10]
The
defendant referred in its heads of argument to the judgment of
Sutherland J (as he then was) in
Standard
Bank of South Africa v Renico Construction (Pty) Ltd
,
[13]
in which the defendant lessor (Renico) advanced five different
counterclaims against the cessionary of its lessee (Standard Bank)
arising from a lease agreement. The claims were for (i) arrear
rentals; (ii) damages in the sum paid to an agent to relet the
premises; (iii) damages in respect of loss of revenue over the period
of the lease, owing to the premises being relet at a lower
rental
level; (iv) damages in respect of the value of physical improvements
made to the premises by the lessee which were removed
without
consent; and (v) an unrelated damages claim arising from the lessee’s
breach of contract in not finishing a particular
construction
job.
[14]
Of these claims, the
court found that “
only
one 'claim' can be said to be obviously liquidated: the arrear rental
claim
”,
[15]
and that “
all
the other claims having to do with the breached lease are damages
claims. The individualisation of these claims may be useful
for
analytical purposes but it has to be recognised that the
differentiation is artificial; there is only a single cause of
action:
damages caused by the breach of contract by [the lessee].
Splitting them up does not, by such a contrivance, afford them
distinct
and different status
.”
[16]
The court went on to hold, with reference to the
Solomon
case, that:
The correct
computation of contractual damages can never, in principle, be mere
arithmetic. A value judgment is an element of the
computation of the
quantum, which computation embraces the effects of a reasonable
effort to mitigate the damages. The figure of
damages cannot under
such circumstances be determined until that debate is exhausted, as a
rule, before a court.
…
Moreover, until a
court has pronounced, no sum is yet due and payable, save perhaps the
arrear-rental claim … It bears emphasis
to remark that the
condition of 'illiquidity' is not a result of the absence of evidence
or proof of the indebtedness; rather it
is the result of an inability
to compute a figure in the absence of an investigation that is more
than a mechanical exercise.
[17]
[11]
Although
the
Renico
case did not involve a summary judgment application, and was
concerned with the question whether the counterclaims were liquidated
and could be set off against the claim in convention (which is very
much a similar enquiry), a similar conclusion was reached by
the
court in
Lovemore
v White
.
In that case, the plaintiff sought to quantify the damages that it
suffered as a result of the defendant’s holding over
under a
lease agreement on the basis of a
pro
rata
calculation of the annual rental from the date of the breach until
the date upon which the defendant vacated the property. While
summary
judgment was granted for the defendant’s ejection, the court
held that the plaintiff’s counsel had correctly
“
conceded
that he could not ask for [such] damages in an application for
summary judgment
”.
[18]
[12]
In the circumstances, I find that the plaintiff’s claim is not
one contemplated in
Rule 32(1)(b), and that the application falls to
be dismissed.
[13]
It was clearly alleged in paragraphs 9 to 11 of the defendant’s
opposing affidavit
that the plaintiff’s claim was not one which
is amenable to summary judgment. Despite this, the plaintiff not only
persisted
with the application but failed to address this obviously
critical issue in its heads of argument, save to note that “
a
minor portion of the Plaintiff’s claim [i.e. arising out of
physical damage to the vehicles] constitutes a claim for damages
[and] is not included in [the] application for summary judgment and
shall be abandoned if necessary
”.
[14]
The
plaintiff continued to persist even after the issue was placed ‘front
and centre’ in the defendant’s heads
of argument. At the
hearing of the matter, the plaintiff’s representative ignored
the issue, and focused his argument on
the defendant’s breaches
of the agreement and the absence of a
bona
fide
defence. When I raised the issue of the nature of the claim with him,
he was unable to advance any cogent argument as to why the
claim
constitutes one for a liquidated amount in money. He contended
(without explaining why) that the authorities relied upon
by the
defendant (i.e.
Renico
and
Solomon
)
were distinguishable, and sought to rely on the judgment in
Liberty
Group Limited v La Kandyan Trading (Pty) Limited
.
[19]
In my view, it is the
Liberty
Group
case that is distinguishable. Although that was a summary judgment
application involving a lease, there was no claim for damages,
but
only for payment under an acknowledgment of debt and for “
arrear
rentals and charges under the lease agreement
”.
[20]
[15]
In terms of
Uniform Rule 32(9), a court hearing a summary judgment application
“
may
make such order as to costs as to it may seem just
”.
Rule 32(9)(a) furthermore stipulates that “
where
the case is not within the terms of subrule (1)
”,
the court may order that the action be stayed until the plaintiff has
paid the defendant’s costs and may also order
that such costs
be taxed as between attorney and client. This is a wide
discretion.
[21]
[16]
An application for summary judgment affords a plaintiff considerable
strategic advantages:
even if it is unsuccessful it forces the
defendant to put its defence on affidavit, and this gives rise to
concerns that the procedure
could be abused by plaintiffs for purely
strategic reasons. Indeed, the recent changes to the rule, which
require a plaintiff to
wait until the defendant has pleaded, appear
to be a response to such concerns. In view of this, it seems to me
that there has
recently been a clear shift in legal policy towards
the discouragement of unmeritorious summary judgment applications.
[17]
In that
context, it is relevant that it has (in my view correctly) been
observed that the purpose of Rule 32(9)(a) is to discourage
patently
unmeritorious applications for summary judgment, not only because
they put the defendant to unnecessary trouble and expense,
but also
because they are a waste of the court's time.
[22]
To these reasons, I would add that such unmeritorious applications
only serve to drive up the cost of litigation, which is a significant
barrier to access to justice.
[18]
Although I
would have been open to a consideration of whether this application
is an example of one which justifies the exercise
of the discretion
referred to in Rule 32(9)(a), the defendant does not seek either a
stay of the action or punitive costs order,
but expressly indicates
in its heads of argument that it seeks an order of costs “
on
a party and party scale
”.
In the circumstances, and in the absence of any notice to the
plaintiff,
[23]
it would not be
appropriate for me make a punitive order as to costs.
[19]
The application for summary judgment is dismissed with costs.
RJ
Moultrie AJ
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
DATE
HEARD:
3 October 022
JUDGMENT
SUBMITTED FOR DELIVERY:
25 October 2022
APPEARANCES
For
the Plaintiff:
Attorney J Berkowitz of J Berkowitz
Attorneys
For
the Defendant: S
Maziba, instructed by Bongani Khanyile Attorneys
[1]
Van den
Bergh v Weiner
1976 (2) SA 297
(T) at 300B.
[2]
Botha v
Swanson & Co (Pty) Ltd
1968 (2) P.H. F85;
Tredoux
v Kellerman
2010 (1) SA 160
(C) para 18, approved by the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
Blakes
Maphanga Inc v Outsurance Ins Co Ltd
2010 (4) SA 232
(SCA) para 17.
[3]
Cf
Hyprop
Investment Ltd v Sophia's Restaurant CC and Another
2012 (5) SA 220 (GSJ).
[4]
Cf
Leymac
Distributors Ltd v Hoosen
1974 (4) SA 524
(D) at 527H, where it was agreed in a hire purchase
agreement “
that
the plaintiff's loss would be the difference between the unpaid
balance of the price and the value of the bus as determined
by the
valuation
”
and thus held that “
the
quantum of the damages does not have to be assessed by the Court on
the basis of what the Court considers reasonable and just
”.
See also
Probert
v Baker
1983 (3) SA 229
(D) at 236 – 237.
[5]
Cf
Pick
'n Pay Retailers (Pty) Ltd t/a Hypermarkets v Dednam
1984 (4) SA 673
(O) at 677F – I.
[6]
Victoria
Falls and Transvaal Power Co Ltd v Consolidated Langlaagte Mines Ltd
1915 AD 1
at 22.
[7]
Swart v
Van der Vyver
1970 (1) SA 633
(A) at 643D and
Sommer
v Wilding
[1984] ZASCA 53
;
1984 (3) SA 647
(A) at 664D – 665H.
[8]
Stolte
v Tietze
1928 SWA 51 at 52.
[9]
Solomon
NO and Others v Spur Cool Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Others
2002 (5) SA 214
(C) para 46. The case was overruled in
Picardi
Hotels Ltd v Thekwini Prop (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 128
;
2009 (1) SA 493
(SCA) para 15, but in relation to a different
aspect.
[10]
Cooper
NNO v Syfrets Trust Ltd
[2000] ZASCA 128
;
2001
(1) SA 122
(SCA) para 24;
One
Nought Seven Fourways (Pty) Ltd t/a Property Mart v Shady Woods
Retirement Village Development (Pty) Ltd
1992 (3) SA 756
(W) at 757 - 758
[11]
Scoin
Trading (Pty) Ltd v Bernstein
NO
2011 (2) SA 118
(SCA) para 18.
[12]
Leymac
Distributors
(above)
at 528F – G.
[13]
Standard
Bank of South Africa v Renico Construction (Pty) Ltd
2015 (2) SA 89
(GJ).
[14]
Id para 19.
[15]
Id para 21.
[16]
Id para 22.
[17]
Id paras 25 and 26.
[18]
Lovemore
v White
1978 (3) SA 254
(E) at 256B and 261B
[19]
Liberty
Group Limited v La Kandyan Trading (Pty) Limited
2021
JDR 2118 (GJ).
[20]
Id paras 3.2 and 13.
[21]
Tredoux
(above)
para 15.
[22]
Absa
Bank Ltd (Volkskas Bank Div) v SJ du Toit & Sons Earthmovers
(Pty) Ltd
1995 (3) SA 265
(C) at 267H – 268I and
South
African Bureau of Standards v GGS/AU (Pty) Ltd
2003 (6) SA 588
(T) para 10. See also
Floridar
Construction Co (SWA) (Pty) Ltd v Kriess
1975 (1) SA 875
(SWA) at 878A.
[23]
Cf
Abdi
v Minister of Home Affairs
2011 (3) SA 37
(SCA) para 36.
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