Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 860South Africa
Goscor Finance (PTY) Ltd and Another v Shakgapicle Trading and Projects Limited and Another (6822/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 860 (31 October 2022)
Headnotes
judgment to be entered against the respondents, who are the defendants in the main action, jointly and severally in the following terms:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Goscor Finance (PTY) Ltd and Another v Shakgapicle Trading and Projects Limited and Another (6822/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 860 (31 October 2022)
Goscor Finance (PTY) Ltd and Another v Shakgapicle Trading and Projects Limited and Another (6822/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 860 (31 October 2022)
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sino date 31 October 2022
SAFLII
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Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 6822/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
31
October 2022
In
the matter between:
GOSCOR
FINANCE (PTY) LIMITED
FIRST APPLICANT
(Registration
No: 2008/014469/07)
GOSCOR
EARTHMOVING EQUIPMENT
SECOND APPLICANT
a
division of GOSCOR (PTY) LIMITED
(Registration
No: 1970/000790/07)
And
SHAKGAPICLE
TRADING AND PROJECTS
FIRST RESPONDENT
LIMITED
(Registration
No: 2014/033360/07)
LESUPI:
GAOAREABE REBECCA
SECOND RESPONDENT
(Identity
No: [....])
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by
the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
Parties / their legal representatives by email and
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on Case Lines.
The date
of the judgment is deemed to be the 31
st
of October 2022
TWALA
J
[1]
The applicants, who are the plaintiffs in the main action, brought
this application
seeking an order for summary judgment to be entered
against the respondents, who are the defendants in the main action,
jointly
and severally in the following terms:
1.1
Payment of the sum of R1 915 905.22 to the first applicant
in respect of arrear rental;
1.2
Interest on the sum of R 1 915 905.22 at the rate of 10%
calculated per annum from 18 November 2021
t date of payment;
1.3
Payment of the sum of R3 155 511.86 to the first applicant
in respect of early termination penalties
in terms of clause 12.8 of
the Master Rental Agreement;
1.4
Interest on R3 155 511.86 at the rate of 10% calculated per
annum from 30 August 2021 to date of
payment;
1.5
Payment of the sum of R1 877 073.79 to the first applicant
in respect of liquidated damages in terms
of clause 12.2.2.1 of the
Master Rental Agreement;
1.6
Interest on the sum of R1 877 073.79 at the rate of 10%
calculated per annum from 18 November 2021;
1.7
Payment of the sum of R576 204.17 to the first applicant in
respect of the costs of repairs to the Returned
Equipment;
1.8
Interest on the sum of R122 619.26 to the second applicant in
respect of the GEM Service Agreement;
1.9
Interest on the sum of R122 619.26 at the rate of 10.5%
calculated per annum from 22 February 2022;
1.10 Costs of suit
on the scale as between attorney and own client.
[2]
For the purposes of this judgment, I propose to refer to the parties
as the applicants
and the respondents and where necessary, I shall
refer to them as the first or second applicant or respondent.
[3]
The foundational facts of this case are that on or about the 2
nd
of April 2020 and in Klerksdorp the applicants and the first
respondent, who was represented by the second respondent, concluded
a
written credit agreement including the standard terms and conditions
of sale, rental and service. It was a term of the credit
agreement
that the signatory (the second respondent) binds herself in her
private and individual capacity as surety and co-principal
debtor in
solidum with the first respondent in favour of the applicants for the
due performance of any obligation of the first
respondent and for the
payment to the applicants by the first respondent of any amounts
which may now or at any time be or become
owing to the applicants by
the first respondent from whatsoever cause arising and including, but
without limiting the generality
of the aforegoing, any claims or
actions against the first respondent acquired by way of cession.
[4]
On the 27
th
of May 2020 and in Kempton Park, the first
respondent entered into a written Master Rental Agreement (“the
MRA”) with
the first applicant whereby the first respondent
rented certain equipment, four of which known as Front End Loaders
and the fifth
as an Excavator against payment of a monthly rental
amount. The first applicant performed its obligation under the MRA by
delivering
the equipment to the first respondent. However, it was a
term of the MRA that ownership of the equipment shall remain vested
with
the first applicant. The first applicant then continued to
render invoices to the first respondent in respect of the rental
amounts
due to the first applicant by the first respondent.
[5]
During August 2021 the first respondent and without the consent of
the first applicant,
terminated the MRA prematurely by returning
three of the equipment to the first applicant with effect from the
31
st
of August 2021. The equipment was damaged and the
costs of repair amounted to a sum of R576 204.17. Once again the
first respondent
committed a breach of the MRA during the period June
2021 and October 2021 by failing to make payment to the first
applicant of
the monthly rental amount in respect of the equipment
when it fell due. On the 28
th
of October 2021 the first
applicant delivered a written notice to both the respondents
notifying them of the first respondent’s
failure to make
payment of the rental amounts to the first applicant when they fell
due and payable.
[6]
Due to the failure of the respondents to rectify the breach by making
the necessary
payment of the monthly rentals, on the 18
th
of November 2021 the first applicant issued a written notice
terminating the MRA and demanded the immediate return of the
equipment
which was still in the possession of the first respondent.
However, it was only during January and February 2022 when the first
applicant uplifted the equipment from the first respondent.
[7]
It is further undisputed that in March 2021 and in Boksburg, the
first respondent,
represented by the second respondent, concluded an
oral agreement with the second applicant for the provision of parts
and service
by the second applicant to the first respondent (“the
GEM Service Agreement”). It was a term of the GEM service
agreement
that the second applicant would supply parts and services
for the equipment at the special request and instance of the first
respondent
and render the invoices and statement payable within
thirty (30) days from the date of the statement. The second applicant
rendered
invoices and statements but the respondents failed to make
payment as agreed in terms of the GEM service agreement.
[8]
The applicants instituted action proceedings, jointly and severally
against the first
respondent and the second respondent as surety for
the recovery of: a) the arrear rental amount, b) the early
termination penalties,
c) liquidated damages, d) the repairs to the
early returned equipment and e) for provision of parts and services
by the second
applicant in terms of the GEM service agreement. The
respondents filed their plea to the claims of the applicants –
hence
this application for summary judgment.
[9]
Counsel for the respondents submitted that the respondents do not
dispute the existence
of the contracts between the parties and the
terms thereof. However, it is contended that the first applicant
breached the terms
of the MRA by supplying and or delivering
defective equipment which was unable to meet the needs of the first
respondent. Furthermore,
so the argument went, when the first
respondent encountered financial difficulties when its contract with
its client was cancelled,
it was agreed between the parties, through
their representatives, that payment of the monthly rental amount will
be suspended until
the first respondent has secured another contract
and that the applicants will also assist in the procurement of
another contract
for the first respondent.
[10]
It was submitted further by counsel for the respondents that the
applicants breached the terms
of the agreement by cancelling the
contract without giving written notice to the respondents as provided
for in clause 12 of the
MRA. Counsel urged the Court not to follow
strictly the Shifren principle in order to give effect to the
principle of good faith.
The respondents, so the argument went, in
good faith concluded an oral agreement with the representatives of
the applicants that
the rental payment will be suspended until the
respondents secure another contract.
[11]
It has been decided in a number of cases that, where the parties
voluntarily conclude a contract,
they should be urged to observe and
discharge their obligations in terms of their agreement and should
only be allowed to deviate
therefrom if it can be demonstrated that a
particular clause in the agreement is unreasonable and or so
prejudicial to a party
that it is against public policy. Furthermore,
it is a trite principle of our law that the privity and sanctity of a
contract should
prevail and should be enforced by the courts.
[12]
In
Mohabed’s Leisure Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sun Hotel
Interests (Pty) Ltd (183/17)
[2017] ZASCA 176
(1 December 2017)
the
Supreme Court of Appeal reaffirmed the principle of the privity and
sanctity of the contract and stated the following:
“
paragraph 23
The privity and sanctity of contract entails that contractual
obligations must be honoured when the parties have entered
into the
contractual agreement freely and voluntarily. The notion of the
privity and sanctity of contracts goes hand in hand with
the freedom
to contract, taking into considerations the requirements of a valid
contract, freedom to contract denotes that parties
are free to enter
into contracts and decide on the terms of the contract.
”
[13]
The Court continued and quoted with approval a paragraph in
Wells
v South African Alumenite Company
1927 AD 69
at 73
wherein the
Court held as follows:
“
If there is one
thing which, more than another, public policy requires, it is that
men of full age and competent understanding shall
have the utmost
liberty of contracting, and that their contracts, when entered into
freely and voluntarily, shall be held sacred
and enforced by the
courts of justice.”
[14]
Recently the Constitutional Court in
Beadica 231 and Others v
Trustees for the Time Being of Oregon Trust and Others CCT 109/19
[2020] ZACC 13
also had an opportunity to emphasized the
principle of pacta sunt servanda and stated the following:
“
paragraph 84
Moreover,
contractual relations are the bedrock of economic activity and our
economic development is dependent, to a large extent,
on the
willingness of parties to enter into contractual relationships. If
parties are confident that contracts that they enter
into will be
upheld, then they will be incentivised to contract with other parties
for their mutual gain. Without this confidence,
the very motivation
for social coordination is diminished. It is indeed crucial to
economic development that individuals should
be able to trust that
all contracting parties will be bound by obligations willingly
assumed.
Paragraph
85 The fulfilment of many of the rights promises made by our
Constitution depends on sound and continued economic development
of
our country. Certainty in contractual relations fosters a fertile
environment for the advancement of constitutional rights.
The
protection of the sanctity of contracts is thus essential to the
achievement of the constitutional vision of our society. Indeed,
our
constitutional project will be imperilled if courts denude the
principle of pacta sunt servanda.”
[15]
It is necessary at this stage to restate the relevant clauses of the
MRA to put matters in the
correct perspective and they are as
follows:
“
Clause 4 Rental
and Payment Terms
4.1
……………….
4.3
All payments shall be made in full, in South African currency,
without any deduction or set off, and free
of bank exchange or other
commission. The Customer shall not be entitled to withhold payment of
any amount due in terms of this
Agreement for any reason whatsoever.
Clause 6 Customer’s
Obligations
The Customer shall-
6.1
……….
6.14 not be
entitled to withhold or delay payment of any monies due by the
Customer to Goscor in terms of the Rental Agreement
or claim any
remission of Rental by reason of the Equipment or any part thereof
being in a defective condition or in a state of
disrepair.
Clause 12 Termination,
Cancellation and Suspension
12.1 ………..
12.8 The
Customer shall not be entitled to terminate this Agreement before the
end of the Rental Term without the prior written
consent of Goscor.
In the event that the Customer prematurely terminates this Agreement
in whole or in part inn respect of any
or all of the Equipment listed
on Annexure A or any subsequent annexure, without the consent of
Goscor, the Customer shall pay
to Goscor, as an Early Termination
Penalty, an amount equal to the balance of the Rentals due in terms
of the Agreement or 12 (twelve)
months’ Rentals, whichever is
less, plus all costs and expenses incurred by Goscor in recovering
possession of the Equipment,
and restoring or repairing the Equipment
to a good and proper working condition, fair wear and tear excepted.
Clause 15 Jurisdiction
and Legal Proceedings
15.1 ………….
15.2 Goscor
shall be entitled to recover from the Customer, in addition to the
aforegoing amounts, all costs disbursed by
itself to its attorneys in
securing any compliance with the provisions hereof which costs may be
taxed and recovered on the scale
as between attorney and his own
client provided so ruled by the competent court.
Clause 18 General
18.1 …………………..
18.2 No party
shall have any claim or right of action arising from any undertaking,
representation or warranty not included
in this Agreement or the
Annexures.
18.4 No
agreement to vary, add to or cancel this Agreement shall be of any
force or effect unless reduced to writing and signed
by hand, by or
on behalf of the parties to the Agreement
[16]
The thread that runs through the authorities quoted in the preceding
paragraphs is that the sanctity
of contracts should be protected in
order to advance constitutional rights. These authorities espouse
that the fulfilment of the
constitutional project would be imperilled
if the Courts were to denude the principle of pacta sunt servanda.
The protection of
the sanctity of contracts, since there are rights
that flow from it, is therefore essential for the achievement of the
constitutional
vision of the society.
[17]
I do not understand the respondents to be disputing that they
concluded the MRA and the GEM service
agreement with the applicants.
However, the respondents raise the issue that the Shifren principle
should be relaxed since there
were other oral agreements entered into
between the parties. The difficulty with that proposition is that the
respondents have
failed, in their affidavit resisting summary
judgment, to state exactly why there should be such a relaxation when
the parties
concluded the MRA freely and voluntarily. There is no
onus on the respondents but an evidentiary burden to show a good
reason why
it could not comply with the terms of the agreement. The
respondents have dismally failed to show good reason why it failed to
comply with the terms of the contract or that the terms of the
contract are contrary to public policy.
[18]
By definition the Shifren principle is that contracting parties are
able to limit their future
contractual freedom by stipulating that
any variation is only valid if done in the form prescribed in the
relevant contract. Put
differently, parties are not permitted to
introduce extrinsic evidence to contradict the express terms of the
contract.
[19]
In
Mohamed’s Leisure Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Southern Sun Hotel
Interests (Pty) Ltd (183/17)
[2017] ZASCA 176
;
2018 (2) SA 314
(SCA)
(1 December 2017)
the Supreme Court of Appeal stated the
following:
“
Paragraph 29 In
this case there is no complaint that the impugned clause is
objectively unconscionable. No allegation is made that
the lease
agreement was not concluded freely. There is also no evidence or
contention advanced by either of the parties that there
was an
unequal bargaining power between them. On the contrary, the ample
evidence that the parties contracted with each other on
the same
equal footing. In other words, it cannot and neither was the
respondent’s case that there was an injustice which
may have
been caused by the inequality of bargaining power. Evidently the
respondent was at all material times aware or must have
been aware of
the implications of the cancellation clause. When the respondent
committed the first breach in June 2014, its attention
was drawn to
the fact that in the event of a further breach in the future, the
appellant will invoke the provisions of clause 20
and cancel the
agreement and evict them from the premises. It is disingenuous on the
part of the respondent to now contend that
by cancelling the
agreement and not affording them an opportunity to remedy the breach,
the appellant wanted to snatch at a bargain.
The facts demonstrate
that the appellant did not cancel the agreement or communicate its
intention to so immediately upon non-payment
of the October rental.
It waited for a period of 12 days to lapse before it cancelled the
agreement.”
[20]
The Court continued to state the following:
“
Paragraph 30
The fact that a term in a contract is unfair or may operate harshly
does not by itself lead to the conclusion that
it offends the values
of the Constitution or is against public policy. In some instances
the constitutional values of equality
and dignity may prove to be
decisive where the issue of the party’s relative power is an
issue. There is no evidence that
the respondent’s
constitutional rights to dignity and equality were infringed. It was
impermissible for the high court to
develop the common law of contact
by infusing the spirit of Ubuntu and good faith so as to invalidate
the term or clause in question”.
[21]
The terms of the MRA in so far as it relates to the non-variation
clause is plain, clear and
unambiguous and there is nothing to
suggest that it is prejudicial to any of the parties or that it is
contrary to public policy.
It would be catastrophic for business in
this country if the Courts were not to hold parties to their contract
for flimsy excuses.
Clause 18 of the MRA makes it plain that any
variation or addition to the agreement shall be of no force and
effect unless it is
reduced to writing and signed by hand by the
parties or their representatives. There is nothing ambiguous or
unclear about the
wording of the section nor can it be said that it
is prejudicial to any of the parties or contrary to public policy.
There is therefore
no sufficient or good reason advanced by the
respondents for the relaxation of the Shifren principle.
[22]
Similarly, clause 4 read together with clause 6 provides that the
customer, the respondents in
this case, shall not be entitled to
withhold payment of any amount due for any reason whatsoever
including for an equipment or
part thereof that was defective or in a
state of disrepair. It is therefore not open to the respondents to
say that they did not
pay for the two equipment which they allege
were defective when they were delivered to their premises.
Furthermore, the respondents
misconstrue clause 12 of the MRA with
regard to the issuing of a notice to terminate the MRA. In terms of
clause 12 it is the customer,
the respondents, who are required to
obtain the written consent of the applicants before they could
terminate the contract and
not visa versa.
[23]
There is no merit in the argument that the Court should not allow the
plaintiffs to aprobate
and probate at the same time. This is
contended in relation to the claim of the second plaintiff which is
based on an oral agreement.
However, the respondents do not dispute
the claim of the second respondent nor do they put up a challenge to
the terms of the GEM
service agreement except to contend that the
Court should equally give credence to the other oral agreements
concluded by the parties
irrespective of the existence of the non -
variation clause. Furthermore, the respondents are losing sight of
the fact that it
was agreed between the parties that the GEM service
agreement will be on the same terms as the MRA.
[24]
It has been decided in a plethora of cases that the purpose of the
summary judgment procedure
is to afford an innocent plaintiff who has
an unanswerable case against an elusive defendant a much quicker
remedy than that of
waiting for the conclusion of an action at the
trial. It is furthermore trite that for the defendant to successfully
resist a claim
for summary judgment it has to satisfy the Court by
affidavit that it has a bona fide defence to the claim.
[25]
The essential question in this case is whether the respondents in
their affidavit resisting summary
judgment, disclose a bona fide
defence that is good in law and whether they state therein the nature
and grounds of their defence
and disclose the material facts upon
which their defences are based in accordance with the peremptory
provisions of Rule 32(3)
of the Uniform Rules of Court which provides
as follows:
“
Rule 32 (3)
Upon the hearing of an application for summary judgment the defendant
may-
(a)
……………
..
(b)
Satisfy the court by affidavit (which
shall be delivered before noon on the court day but one preceding the
day on which the application
is to be heard) or with the leave of the
court by oral evidence of himself or of any other person who can
swear positively to the
fact that he has a bona fide defence to the
action; such affidavit or evidence shall disclose fully the nature
and grounds of the
defence and the material facts relied upon
therefor.”
[26]
In the case of
Joob Joob Investments (Pty) Ltd v Stocks Mavundla
Zek Joint Venture
2009 (5) SA 1
(SCA)
, the Court stated the
following:
“
The rationale
for summary judgment proceedings is impeccable. The procedure is not
intended to deprive a defendant with a triable
issue or a sustainable
defence of her/his day in court. After almost a century of successful
application in our courts, summary
judgment proceedings can hardly
continue to be described as extraordinary. Our courts, both of first
instance and at appellate
level, have during that time rightly been
trusted to ensure that a defendant with a triable issue is not shut
out. In the Maharaj
case at 425 G-426E, Corbett JA, was keen to
ensure first, an examination of whether there has been sufficient
disclosure by the
defendant of the nature and grounds of his defence
and the facts upon which it is founded. The second consideration is
that the
defence so disclosed must be both bona fide and good in law.
A court which is satisfied that this threshold has been crossed is
then bound to refuse summary judgment. Corbett JA also warned against
requiring of the defendant the precision apposite to pleadings.
However, the learned judge was equally astute to ensure that
recalcitrant debtors pay what is due to a creditor.”
[27]
As indicated above, the defendants do not dispute the terms of the
agreements concluded between
the parties and their failure to perform
their obligations in terms of the agreements. I am of the view that
the plaintiffs have
an unanswerable claim against the defendants and
the defendants have failed to raise a bona fide defence and the
material facts
upon which they rely to the plaintiffs’ claims
in their affidavit resisting summary judgment. The unavoidable
conclusion
is therefore that the applicants are entitled to the
relief they seek.
[28]
In the circumstances, the following order is made against the
defendants, jointly and severally
for:
1.
Payment of the sum of R1 915 905.22 to the first applicant
in respect of arrear rental;
2.
Interest on the sum of R 1 915 905.22 at the rate of 10%
calculated per annum from
18 November 2021 t date of payment;
3.
Payment of the sum of R3 155 511.86 to the first applicant
in respect of early
termination penalties in terms of clause 12.8 of
the Master Rental Agreement;
4.
Interest on R3 155 511.86 at the rate of 10% calculated per
annum from 30 August
2021 to date of payment;
5.
Payment of the sum of R1 877 073.79 to the first applicant
in respect of liquidated
damages in terms of clause 12.2.2.1 of the
Master Rental Agreement;
6.
Interest on the sum of R1 877 073.79 at the rate of 10%
calculated per annum from
18 November 2021;
7.
Payment of the sum of R576 204.17 to the first applicant in
respect of the costs of
repairs to the Returned Equipment;
8.
Interest on the sum of R122 619.26 to the second applicant in
respect of the GEM Service
Agreement;
9.
Interest on the sum of R122 619.26 at the rate of 10.5%
calculated per annum from 22
February 2022;
10.
Costs of suit on the scale as between attorney and own client.
TWALA
M L
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
Date
of Hearing:
24
th
October 2022
Date
of Judgment:
31
st
October 2022
For
the Applicants:
Advocate C van der Linde
Instructed
by:
Knowles Hussain Lindsay
Tel: 011 669 6109
kma@khl.co.za
For
the Respondent:
Advocate
Instructed
by:
Theron Jordaan & Smit Inc
Tel: 011 788 0188
nakka@couzyns.co.za
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