Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 910South Africa
Exacube CC t/a Exacube Training Institute v Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development and Another (32787/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 910 (15 November 2022)
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Exacube CC t/a Exacube Training Institute v Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development and Another (32787/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 910 (15 November 2022)
Exacube CC t/a Exacube Training Institute v Gauteng Department of Agriculture and Rural Development and Another (32787/2017) [2022] ZAGPJHC 910 (15 November 2022)
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sino date 15 November 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 32787/2017
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
15/11/2022
In the matter between:
EXACUBE
CC t/a EXACUBE TRAINING INSTITUTE
Plaintiff
(Registration Number 2010/105757/23)
And
THE
GAUTENG DEPARTMENT OF
First
Defendant
AGRICULTURE AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT
THE
MEC OF THE GAUTENG DEPARTMENT FOR
Second
Defendant
ECONOMICAL ENVIRONMENT AGRICULTURE
AND
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
JUDGMENT
MAKUME,
J
:
BACKGROUND
[1]
During 2016 the Defendant requested proposals from service providers
in the field of Agriculture
specifically to train aspirant and
existing farmers in the Province of Gauteng on various short courses.
[2] The
Plaintiff was the successful bidder and was informed by way of a
letter addressed to it dated
the 24
th
October 2016. On the
27
th
October 2016 a detailed service level agreement was
concluded between the Plaintiff and the Defendant (“the
Agreement”).
[3]
Training commenced on the 6
th
November 2016 and was meant
to be completed by April 2017 in terms of a revised training plan and
schedule.
[4] It
is common cause that in terms of the Agreement the Plaintiff was to
provide training in both
theory and practicals to 1036 farmers who
would have been identified by the Defendant. In the execution of the
Agreement the Defendant
appointed a Mr Njoni as the project manager
whilst the Plaintiff was represented by Mr Alex McNab.
[5] The
total contract value was the sum of R6 921 929.60. On the
16
th
January 2017 the Defendant made payment of R2 171
455.00 to the Plaintiff and on the 13
th
February 2017 a
further payment of R1 202 652.00 was made both after the Plaintiff
had invoiced the Defendant for services rendered.
[6] A
further invoice for the period 15
th
February 2017 was
submitted but the Defendant declined to make payment instead on the
3
rd
March 2017 Mr Njoni sent an SMS to Mr McNab informing
him that the contract is suspended.
[7] The
Plaintiff later accepted the Defendant repudiation of the Agreement
cancelled same and issued
summons claiming payment of the sum of
R4 012 823.40 made up as follows:
CLAIM A
R1 603 536.00
CLAIM B
R 465 000.00
CLAIM
C
R1 944 287.40
TOTAL
R4 012 823.40
THE
ISSUES
[8] It
is common cause that the terms of the Agreement are not in dispute
what is in dispute is whether
it is the Plaintiff or the Defendant
who breached the agreement.
[9] In
their counter claim the Defendant claims repayment of the amount paid
to the Plaintiff as set
out above on the basis that the Plaintiff
failed to deliver services in accordance with the Agreement.
THE
PLAINTIFF’S CASE
[10] The
Plaintiff’s case is that it complied fully with the Agreement
including terms of reference
since inception and that the Defendant
unlawfully suspended and later verbally cancelled the agreement
without furnishing any reasons
for such cancellation in writing. In
the result the Plaintiff seeks to hold the Defendant liable for
payment of the full contract
price of R6 921 929.60.
THE
DEFENDANT’S CASE
[11] The
Defendant’s case is that Plaintiff failed to provide services
in accordance with the
Agreement including the terms of refence,
further that payments made to the Plaintiff during January and
February 2017 were made
on condition that Plaintiff remedied the
defective services that it had been rendering. In particular, the
Defendant says the learner
farmers were not given practicals and
therefore service was defective.
EVIDENCE
MISS NOMTHANDAZO BUSISIWE LUBISI
[12] The
first witness for the Plaintiff was Ms Nomthandazo Busisiwe Lubisi.
She is the sole member
of the Plaintiff. Mr Alex McNab is employed as
a Manager. She told the Court that she developed interest in
Agriculture because
her father was involved in Agriculture. During
the year 2013 after she finished University studies and whilst doing
in service
training in Mpumalanga she met Mr Alex McNab and that is
when the idea of being involved in training farmers developed.
[13] Ms
Lubisi went on to explain how accreditation of courses by the
Agriculture seta (Agriseta)
takes place and how certification takes
place once a student or aspiring farmer finishes attending training.
They as trainers are
accredited by Agriseta. They do training and
assessment and therefore issue a competence certificate to the
learner and also inform
Agriseta about the student’s
competency.
[14] The
Agreement that the Plaintiff and the Defendant concluded during
October 2016 was to offer
training on short courses to the farmers
identified by the Defendant. Each week after they shall have trained
a group of farmers
they did assessment and the farmers wrote an
examination on what had been taught to them.
[15] In
their training they use training manuals which they get from Agriseta
which manuals have been
accredited by the Standard Qualifications
Authority (SAQA). They also source accredited learning material
relevant to their training
from other institutions.
[16]
When the Defendant published the Request for Proposal (RFP) Mr Alex
McNab completed the tender
document and submitted same to the
Defendant. Subsequent to that they received a letter of award on the
24
th
October 2016. The letter of award indicate that they
had to train farmers with credit bearing training in terms of the
Request
for Proposal (RFP).
[17] Ms
Lubisi confirmed that a Service Level Agreement to which was attached
Terms of Reference as
well as scope of work was signed on the 27
th
October 2016. The document titled Terms of Reference sets out clearly
what they as the successful tenderer had to do in the training
of
1036 farmers.
[18] The
scope of work and the deliverables were set out in the Terms of
Reference (TOR). The training
was aimed at qualifying the farmers on
short courses on NQF level 1 and level 2 and because the dates that
appear on the Terms
of Reference were dates that were before the
tender was awarded a new Training plan was then drafted and agreed
upon between Mr
McNab and Mr Njoli. That training plan commenced on
the 6
th
November 2016 and was to continue until April
2017.
[19]
Miss Lubisi described that the abbreviation HACCP stood for a
training course on food safety.
In executing the training, it was
agreed that each week before a Friday the Department through Mr Njoli
will forward a list of
names of identified farmers to the Plaintiff
which list also indicated where the persons had to be picked up by
the Plaintiff.
[20] The
arrangement was that the trainees were to be picked up at identified
places on a Sunday and
be transported to the training venue being a
lodge identified and approved by the Defendant in this case called
the Don Bosco Centre
in Walkerville.
[21]
Training would start on a Monday and last until the Friday and when
that group has been assessed
they would then be given certificates of
competency where-after the next group would be picked up on a Sunday
then training start
on a Monday.
[22] Ms
Lubisi was referred to clause 17 of the Agreement which deals with
default and breach. She
told the Court that contrary to what clause
17 stipulated no written notice of cancellation of the agreement was
ever sent by the
Defendant to the Plaintiff. What was sent to them on
the 3 March 2017 was an sms suspending the contract. According to her
understanding
clause 17.10 of the Agreement placed a duty on the
Defendant to provide them with a written notice setting out the
reasons for
cancellation of the agreement. The Defendant failed to do
that.
[23]
Similarly clause 18.1 also placed a duty on the Defendant to appoint
another services provider
in the event the Plaintiff defaulted
subject to the Defendant giving written notice which she says was
never done. Clause 18.6
also requires written notice to be given on
termination of the Agreement.
[24]
Reference was also made to clause 23.1 of the document titled
Government Procurement General
Condition of Contract July 2010. That
clause also placed an obligation on the Defendant to terminate a
contract awarded by giving
written notice to the tenderer/supplier.
[25] On
the 14
th
December 2016 Ms Lubisi sent to the Defendant the
first of their invoices for services rendered for the period 6
th
November 2016 to 9
th
December 2016 for the sum of
R2 171 455.00. The Defendant made payment of that invoice
during 20 January 2017.
[26] On
the 3
rd
February 2017 Ms Lubisi sent to the Defendant the
second invoice for services rendered for the period 15
th
January 2017 to 3
rd
February 2017 for the amount of
R1 202 572.00 which amount the Defendant also paid.
[27] On
the 28
th
February 2017 Ms Lubisi sent to the Defendant
their third invoice for services rendered for the period 15
th
February 2017 to 24
th
February in the amount of
R1 202 652.00. This invoice was not paid.
[28] A
fourth invoice dated the 10
th
March 2017 for services
rendered for the period 26
th
February 2017 to 3
rd
March 2017 for the amount of R400 884.00 was sent to the
Defendant and was also not paid.
[29] The
amounts stated in paragraphs 26 and 27 above make out the amount in
claim A being the sum
of R1 603 536.00.
[30] She
testified that as regards claim B being the sum of R465 000.00
she is unable to say
how it was arrived at but that Mr McNab will be
able to explain how the amount was arrived at and what it was for.
[31]
Claim C being for payment of the sum of R1 944 787.40 that
claim is in respect of the
balance of the repudiated contract. She
testified that but for the repudiation they as the Plaintiff would
have provided the agreed
services and would have been entitled to
payment of that amount.
[32] Ms
Lubisi testified that during or about November 2016 a meeting was
held with Mr Njoli when
various complaints were addressed. Among the
complaints was dissatisfaction with the venue and the food provided
by Don Bosco as
a result Mr Njoli on behalf of the Defendant asked
the Plaintiff to look for a better venue. This the Plaintiff did and
the training
venue was moved to a place called Lapeng. This was done
despite the fact that the Defendant had prior to awarding the
contract
approved Don Bosco secondly when moving to the new venue the
Defendants were told that it will be more expensive and the amount
being charged by Lapeng were not in the tender document. The
Plaintiff had prepared its tender in respect of the venue using the
rates at Don Bosco.
[33] The
first meeting took place on the 29
th
November 2016. The
second meeting was held on the 5
th
December 2016. In the
minutes penned by the Plaintiff pursuant to both meetings it is clear
that the issues that formed the basis
of those meetings were
resolved.
[34]
Amongst the complaints was the issue of Practical training which the
Plaintiff conceded did not
take place because the trainees did not
come properly dressed for practicals to be carried out at the piggery
and at chicken farms.
However, Ms Lubisi indicated that the trainees
observed how work was done that is those who did not have proper PPE
clothing. According
to her it was the Defendant’s duty to see
to it that the trainees had PPE’s not them. She testified that
in their tender
they did not quote- for PPEs. As the Plaintiff they
did inform Mr Njoli about their trainees not properly dressed and Mr
Njoli
in an email acknowledged that and never raised the issue that
they as Plaintiff had to provide PPEs.
[35]
During January 2017 the training was moved to a new venue called
Lapeng Hotel even though they
had not as yet been paid for services
already rendered. They had to take an overdraft on their business
account in order to pay
Lapeng Hotel. When they started with training
at Lapeng they thought that all the complaints had been dealt with
and resolved.
[36]
During February 2017 some of the learners started being uncooperative
they would arrive for classes
being under the influence of liquor and
became rowdy and disruptive. They as the Plaintiff complained to Mr
Njoli who responded
by saying that the Trainees were adults and can’t
be admonished. Training continued under those difficult and
disruptive
circumstances.
[37] It
also happened that when their drivers went to pick up the trainees
some would be drunk and
along the way would insist on having the
vehicle stop to enable then to relive themselves. In one of the
grievances the farmers
had questioned how they as the Plaintiff had
been awarded the tender Ms Lubisi informed Mr Njoli telephonically on
the 2 March
2017 about the behaviour of the trainees. Mr Njoli was in
Durban at that time. Instead on the 3 March 2017 Njoli sent an sms to
Alex McNab suspending the contract. When McNab informed him that they
had already paid for the hotel accommodation and transport
for
learners for the week commencing on the 5 March 2017 they were told
that if they proceed with training it will be at their
own expenses.
[38] A
meeting was held on Monday the 6
th
May 2017 attended by Mr
Njoli, Mr Ishmael, Alex McNab, Miss Lubisi a student called Vusi. It
was on this day that Mr Ishmael verbally
told them that the contract
had been cancelled. Mr Ishmael told the Plaintiff to give him reasons
why the contract should not be
terminated. He told them that a formal
letter will follow. That did not happen.
[39] She
testified further that the sms dated 3 March 2017 did not give reason
for the suspension
of the agreement. She received the farmer’s
grievance document on the 3
rd
March 2017. The document
itself is not dated.
[40] On
the 8
th
March 2017 she addressed an email to Mr Njoli in
the following words:
“
I am doing a follow up on the
sms I received on Friday 3 March 2017 where you were suspending the
training and went along to invite
us to a meeting for Monday where we
were supposed to solve the challenges raised. When we arrived for the
meeting on Monday 6 March
2017 we were told verbally that our
contract had been terminated and up until today we have not received
any formal cancellation.
We are actually in the dark as to what
is going on because we had already prepared for all the remaining
trainings. The hotel, transport,
training material etc. had already
been paid for.
We are still waiting for a way
forward.
Regards,
Thandi.”
[41] Mr
Njoli responded with a short and terse warning on the 9
th
March 2017 and said the following: “As per your email below, I
wish to remind you that you were part of the meeting and you
know
what is the way forward as per the meeting resolution.”
[42]
Miss Lubisi told the Court that she had no idea what the way forward
was as a result a further
meeting was held with the Head of the
Department a certain Ms Mbassa the meeting was held on the 22
nd
March 2017. Prior to that the Plaintiff had sent a detailed letter to
the Head of the Department setting out the problem and the
issues.
They also sent a detailed training report for the attention of Miss
Mbassa. In the report they had trained +/- 800 farmers
when the
contract was suspended.
[43] The
meeting of the 22 March 2017 did not resolve the issues the status
remained the same according
to the Defendant the contract had been
cancelled because of non-performance of the agreed terms. The HOD
told the CFO to pay for
services rendered.
[44]
Miss Lubisi produced a document indicating that on the 1
st
March 2017 Plaintiff paid Lapeng hotel the sum of R440 000.00
being accommodation for the period starting on 5 March 2017
to 10
March 2017. Accommodation was not used because Defendant had
suspended the contract. Plaintiff was not reimbursed by the
hotel nor
by the Defendant. They also had paid transport fees for transporting
learners on the 5 March 2017 to Lapeng hotel.
[45] On
the 6 June 2017 they instructed P Smit Attorneys who addressed a
letter of demand to the Defendant
to make payment. That letter was
not responded to.
[46]
Miss Lubisi was cross-examined at length by counsel for the
Defendant. It turned out that most
of the issues that concerned
management of the project at Don Bosco and at Lapeng hotel, she was
not personally involved and referred
to Mr McNab who would be able to
answer such questions.
[47]
Miss Lubisi confirmed that she addressed a letter to the Head of the
Department on the 20
th
March 2017 which letter was a
precursor to their meeting arranged for the 22
nd
March
2017 at which meeting they as the Plaintiff sought audience from the
Head of the Department about the cancellation of the
contract.
[48]
Miss Lubisi was cross-examined extensively on the issue of the
learners or farmers that attended
practicals without Personal
Protective Equipment (PPE). She indicated that on the occasions that
the learners had to go and do
physical practicals at a Piggery in
Delmas they did not have their protective clothes on as a result they
were not allowed inside
the Piggery. This was the same position when
they had to go and do practicals at a chicken farm.
[49] It
was eventually put to Miss Lubisi that the Defendant’s
officials cancelled the agreement
because the Plaintiff did not
execute training in accordance with the agreement by not taking
students for practicals. This became
a vexed and contentious question
and it is at the centre of the dispute as to the cancellation of the
contract.
[50] The
version of the Defendant was that the Plaintiff had to supply the
learners with protective
clothing. The Plaintiff denied this and
referred to an email written by Mr Njoli in which Mr Njoli asked the
Plaintiff’s
representatives to remind him that he should tell
the learners to bring protective clothing. That letter alone
indicates in no
uncertain terms that the responsibility for
protective clothing lay with the Department not the Plaintiff.
[51] In
any event Miss Lubisi explained that practiclas did take place even
though some of the learners
did not have protective clothing. This
evidence was later corroborated by Mr Alex McNab who elaborated that
when such an event
takes place they devise other means to expose
learners to practical work. Also that not all practicals take place
at farms some
are carried out inside the classrooms.
[52] Ms
Lubisi elaborated that learners completed feed-back question and she
never saw any complaint
about lecturers being mentioned in all the
feed-back document that they received from the learners. This
evidence was also corroborated
by Mr McNab who referred to a number
of evaluation forms in which the learners expressed their
appreciation at the level of training
they were receiving and exposed
to.
[53]
Miss Lubisi indicated further that pursuant to the meeting held with
representatives of the Defendant
on the 29 November 2016 they as a
company decided to change the venue from Don-Bosco to Lapeng hotel.
This was done to satisfy
the complaints by the farmers (learner) as
some of them had said they expected to be housed at places like the
Garden Court in
Hartfield not chalets in Walkerville.
[54] Mr
Njoli was informed and also approved of the new venue after having
visited it and inspected
it in the same way he had done with the
venue at Don-Bosco Mr Njoli gave his go-ahead about the new venue.
[55]
Miss Lubisi testified that when Mr Njoli suspended the contract on
the 3
rd
March 2017 they as a company had already trained
711 farmers. She told the Court that the numbers as well as the
particulars of
the farmers who attended and were certified competent
is in a detailed report that was sent to the Defendant.
[56]
Miss Lubisi testified that when Mr Njoli suspended the contract on
the 3
rd
March 2017 they as a company had already trained
711 farmers. She told the Court that the numbers as well as the
particulars of
the farmers who attended and were certified competent
is in a detailed report that was sent to the Defendant.
[57]
Miss Lubisi was questioned about her email wherein she put the number
of people trained at +/-
800. This in my view was a dead question
because it is clear that in the letter Miss Lubisi estimated.
[58]
Sacono and Nulaid was their strategic partner who now and then came
to the training centre to
make presentation on their products and
were never involved in the assessment of students.
[59]
Miss Lubisi stressed further that Mr Njoli was made aware before the
start of the training in
January 2017 that the learners appointed by
them had to have PPE’s Lubisi indicated further that Mr Njoli
was aware of that
requirement as far back as December 0f 2016.
[60]
Cross-examination shifted once more to the issue of practicals as
opposed to theory. Miss Lubisi
re-emphasised that not all practicals
took place at the farms some did take place in the class room when
learners were asked to
make presentation after the lecture. According
to them that also sufficed as practical training.
[61]
When it was put to her that failure to take the learners for actual
practical at a Piggery or
Chicken farm was not in compliance with the
agreement she disputed this.
[62]
Cross-examination continued on the following day being 25
th
January 2022. Miss Lubisi gave a different number of learners they
had trained which now appears to have been 745 trainers. She
explained this contradiction by telling the Court that the report was
compiled by Mr McNab. I do not find this mild contradiction
being
material after all Miss Lubisi gave an estimate not an exact number.
She then indicated that Mr McNab will be better placed
to respond to
that question about the number because he wrote the reports.
[63] As
regards the uploading of the names of those farmers who had been
certified competent by the
Plaintiff which information was entered
into the record of the Agriseta Lubisi said that the question will be
best answered by
Mr McNab but she herself knows that it was done.
[64] The
issue of the PPE’s was revisited again when it was put to Miss
Lubisi that Mr Njoli
will testify that he wrote the email about PPE’s
not as an admission that PPE’s was their responsibility.
[65]
Likewise the issue of the learners not having done practical at a
Piggery and in respect of layers
was brought up again in
cross-examination. It became clearer that Miss Lubisi did not have
first-hand information and referred
such question to Mr McNab. She
however, did indicate that practicals do not only take place at a
farm some do take place in classrooms
and that suffices. In certain
instances, the learners do observations at a particular farm without
them necessarily taking part.
She insisted that observation is also
practical.
[66] It
was put to Miss Lubisi that Mr Njoli will say that the first time he
came to know that the
learners were misbehaving and came to class
drunk was on the 5
th
March 2017. Miss Lubisi disputed this
and told the Court that each month Mr McNab in his monthly report to
the Department did mentioned
unruliness and usage of alcohol as a
challenge to the training.
[67] The
witness was also questioned as to why the issue of the PPE was not
pleaded by the Plaintiff
Miss Lubisi correctly responded that she has
no knowledge how his legal representatives chose to style the
pleadings. She emphasised
that it was the responsibility of the
Department to have told the learners to buy PPE’s for training
purposes.
[68]
Miss Lubisi further testified that claim A being payment of the sum
of R1 603 536.00
was for services rendered and for which
the Defendant is refusing to pay.
[69] It
was put to Miss Lubisi that the Defendant will testify that they paid
the first two invoices
totalling the sum of R3 374 107.00
not because services had been rendered but it was on condition that
the Plaintiff
made good all its mistakes and deficiencies in
rendering the services. Miss Lubisi denied this and told the Court
that payment
was unconditional and was made because Defendant had
satisfied themselves that the services had been rendered.
[70] As
regards payment of the amount of R440 000.00 to Lapeng hotel by
the Plaintiff which is
part of claim B it was put to Miss Lubisi that
the relocation of the learners from Don-Bosco to Lapeng hotel was
made after the
Defendant brought it to the attention of the Plaintiff
that Don Bosco as a venue was substandard and not in line with the
Department’s
requirements. Miss Lubisi responded that when they
responded to the tender they submitted quotations from Don-Bosco and
once they
had been shortlisted the Department’s officials
visited the venue and approved of it.
[71]
Defendant’s Counsel then proceeded to put versions by two of
the learners namely, Rowan
Mckey and one Kenny Mhlari who will
testify that the rooms that they were allocated were dirty, filthy
and had leakages. Miss Lubisi
responded that it was never brought to
her attention and in any case the rule is that if tenants are not
happy with the condition
of the rooms they had to report to the hotel
management.
[72] It
was put to Miss Lubisi that there was no need to make payment to
Lapeng because the contract
had been suspended she responded that
when they were told of the suspension payment had already taken place
via EFT on the 1
st
March 2017.
[73] On
the 6
th
March 2017 when the CFO told them at a meeting
that the contract had been cancelled she asked that the cancellation
giving reasons
be done in writing and up to now the Department had
not given them written notice of cancellation.
[74] She
testified further that in preparation for the next intake of students
or learners that were
to come in on Sunday the 5
th
March
2017 Mr McNab paid Bafo Taxi Services a cash amount of R25 000.00.
This was not recovered even though no services were
rendered by the
Taxi Group. Similarly, the payment to Lapeng was not recovered even
though no one came because it was a block booking
of the premises.
She concluded by saying that Mr Alex McNab will be in a position to
give evidence on the payment of the sum of
R25 000.00 transport
costs.
[75]
Miss Lubisi was accused of being evasive and changing her version of
events. This she denied.
Miss Lubisi was then cross-examined on the
contents of an affidavit deposed to by Mr Njoli when the Defendant
opposed an application
for summary judgment. In particular reference
was made to a document by the South African Farmers when numerous
complaints had
been listed. Miss Lubisi responded that the document
was never there at the first meeting held on the 29
th
November 2016 and that the first time they saw that document was on
the 6
th
March 2017 at the second meeting.
[76] On
the 2
nd
March 2017 some of the farmers refused to attend
classes and were toy-toying outside. Miss Lubisi called Mr Njoli who
was in Durban
at that time informing him about the happenings Mr
Njoli sent one of his colleagues to come speak to the farmers. Miss
Lubisi told
the court that at that meeting the toy-toying farmers
raised the issue that they were used to being trained by ARC and not
the
Plaintiff. She could not recall if the farmers listed any
complaint.
[77] At
the third and last meeting held with the HOD Miss Mbassa the HOD
asked both Mr Njoli and the
CFO Mr Ismael Ebrahim why the contract
was cancelled. She said that she is going to institute an
investigation but in the meantime
she gave an instruction to the CFO
to pay the outstanding invoices.
[78]
Despite that instruction the CFO did not pay and sent an email to the
HOD that there was a backlog
meaning that because it was almost end
of financial year the payment may not be made timeously. When Miss
Lubisi was referred to
an email by the CFO wherein they as the
Plaintiff were required to separate the invoices and indicate what
amount was involved
for theory and how much for practicals to
separate that as the tender did not make provisions for that.
[79] The
witness Miss Lubisi was then referred to the affidavit in support of
the resistance to the
application for summary judgment which
affidavit had been deposed to by one Bright Nkontwana. In the
affidavit dated the 20
th
November 2017 Mr Nkotwana
described himself as the Head of Department and paragraph 32 thereof
Mr Nkotwana says that payment of
the two invoices by the Defendant
totalling the amount of R3 374 107.00 was done based on the
undertaking by Plaintiff’s
representatives that it would
urgently rectify the problems complained of by the farmers. In
response Miss Lubisi indicated that
when payment was made Mr Nkotwana
was not the HOD it was a Miss Thandeka Mbassa. Secondly the so called
farmers’ grievances
continued in Annexure NSI were only
presented at a meeting in March 2017 long after payments had been
made which means that such
complaints played no role in the decision
by the Defendant to make payments. Miss Lubisi concluded that payment
was made with no
conditions attached it was made because the
Defendant had satisfied itself that indeed services had been
rendered.
[80]
Finally it was put to Miss Lubisi that there was no obligation on the
CFO and other officials
to made payments despite instructions to do
so by the then HOD Ms Mbassa because according to the CFO and Njoli
the Plaintiff had
failed to render services in accordance with the
agreement.
[81] In
answering questions put to her by the Court Miss Lubisi said that
they did not ask for a refund
of the amount of R440 000.00 and
the R25 000.00 paid to Lapeng hotel and Bafo Taxis respectively
even though no services
were rendered because firstly Lapeng had been
block booked for the duration of this training and the taxi people
were paid in cash
and Mr McNab who made the payment will be able to
give more information on that.
MR
ALEX DANIEL MCNAB
[82] The
second witness for the Plaintiff was Mr Alex McNab who took the stand
on Tuesday the 25
th
January 2022 in the late afternoon and
only finished testifying on Thursday the 27
th
January
2022. This is understandable as he is the witness who was the
executor of the agreement. He signed the agreement with the
Defendant. He is the one who prepared the tender document and was
also the project manager overseeing facilitation of the learners,
arranging transport, prepared training schedules and generally was
the face of the Plaintiff in the execution of the agreement.
He also
prepared reports that were sent each week to the Defendant and
compiled reports that accompanied invoices for payment.
[83] Mr
Alex McNab explained that he was the manager at Exacube Training and
not a Director at the
time of the completion of the tender documents.
After they had been awarded the tender he had a discussion with Mr
Njoli the Department’s
representative, a new training schedule
was prepared to fit in with the period 6
th
March 2016 to
30
th
March 2017 in terms of the bid documents.
[84] The
evidence of Mr McNab both in chief and under cross-examination mostly
traversed what had
already been testified to by Ms Lubisi with
exception of minor and immaterial difference their evidence
corroborated each other
on the major and real issues in this matter.
Mr McNab’s evidence dealt to a large extent with the following
matters:
84.1 Preparation of Training
schedules.
84.2 Supervision of Training
(Theory & Practicals).
84.3 Accommodation at Training
Centres.
84.4 Personal Protective
clothing.
84.5 Collection and
Transportation of Learners/Farmers.
84.6 Communication with the
Defendant’s representative Mr Njoli Skhalele (Njoli).
84.7 Submission of Invoices and
Payments.
84.8 Complaints and Meetings
held.
[85] I
will now deal with each of the above topics individually or
collectively but not in the sequence
that they are listed above.
PREPARATION
OF TRAINING SCHEDULES
[86] Mr
McNab testified that he and the Plaintiff are accredited Trainers in
the field of Agriculture.
The accreditation was done by Agriset in
accordance with standards approved by the South African Qualification
Authority.
[87] In
terms of the agreement the Defendant appointed the Plaintiff to
conduct training of 1036 Farmers
in the Gauteng Province and after
such training to issue them with SETA accredited certificates.
[88]
During the bidding process it became clear that the bid document had
dates that had passed as
a result after the tender had been awarded
it was agreed between Mr McNab and Mr Njoli Skhalele (Njoli) the
Defendant’s project
manager that the training schedule be
revised. This Mr McNab did and submitted same to Mr Njoli who
approved same. The unit standards
and subjects to be taught were
proposed by Mr McNab to fit in with the deliverables and taking into
consideration the time period
allocated for the whole training.
[89] Mr McNab testified further that
as a result of the period allocated being 5 months from November 2016
to March 2017 he had
to squeeze in unit standards thus making it
short courses geared to train farmers on the basics and not
qualifying them from small
to commercial farmers Mr Njoli approved of
the training schedule and the unit standard and topics to be covered.
A training plan
was submitted by Plaintiff which was approved by the
Defendant.
ACCOMMODATION
FOR TRAINING
[90] As
part of their bid document the Plaintiff had sourced a quotation for
a training centre at
a place known as Don-Bosco Centre in Walkerville
South of Johannesburg. The Defendant’s representative did a
site inspection
of the centre and approved of it.
[91]
Training commenced at that centre on the 6
th
November
2016. During that month complaints were raised by some of the trainee
farmers who complained about the condition and food
being served at
Don-Bosco. This led to a meeting between the project managers on the
29
th
November 2016 the issues were discussed and resolved.
Mr McNab testified that however in order to mitigate the problem he
proposed
to Mr Njoli that they as the company will seek a new venue.
This they did and from 15
th
January 2017 training was
moved to Lapeng hotel which is not far from Don-Bosco in the same
area.
COLLECTION
AND TRANSPORTATION OF TRAINEE FARMERS TO AND FROM
THE
TRAINING VENUE
[92] In
terms of the training schedule training commenced on a Monday and
ended on a Friday. What
used to happen is that because Mr Njoli and
his colleagues in the department were already in possession of the
agreed training
schedule it was their duty to appoint or nominate
aspirant trainee farmers at the different arrears within the Province
of Gauteng
and furnish the names and particulars of such trainees to
the Plaintiff at least seven days before training day.
[93] In
the document from the department (Defendant) the Plaintiff was
advised as to where to pick
up the trainees at what time and how
many. Based on such information the Plaintiff through Mr McNab would
then arrange with a Taxi
fleet owner in this case Bafo Taxi
Association to make available transport on a Sunday before the
Monday. Drivers would then pick
up the trainees at particular times
at the pick-up points and drop them off at the training centre on a
Sunday. That process was
not without its own problems. It was
reported that at certain instances a driver would arrive having been
given a list of say 10
people to pick up but only find 3 or 5 of
them. At times trainees arrived under the influence of liquor from
the pick-up points
and presented problems on the way to the centre.
As a result, the number always fluctuated. However, it was the duty
of the Defendant
that they meet the agreed number of 1036 by the end
of March 2017.
[94]
McNab testified that when Mr Njoli suspended the contract by way of
an sms on Friday the 3
rd
March 2017 the Plaintiff had
already paid Lapeng Hotel an amount of R440 000.00 on the 1
st
March 2017 which amount was for accommodation of 100 learners for the
week commencing on Sunday the 5
th
March 2017 to Friday the
10
th
March 2017. He also made a cash payment of R25 000.00
to Bafo Taxi on the 3
rd
March 2017 even though he had
already received the sms suspending the contract. He confirmed that
the hotel rooms were not occupied
by the learners during that week as
the driver found no one at the nominated pick up points.
TRAINING
(THEORY AND PRACTICALS PPE’S
[95] Mr
McNab sourced facilitators to conduct training in both theory and
practicals. One such facilitator
was a Mr Sabelo Zulu. Each trainee
was in possession of a training guide as well as a learner guide.
Students were also provided
with own learning material including note
books and pens.
[96]
Earlier on Mr Njoli had in an email dated the 30
th
October
2016 raised concerns about the number of training days which he said
had been reduced from five to three days Mr McNab
responded that he
explained to Mr Njoli that training will still last 5 days and they
are guided by the approved unit standards
as approved by SAQA. They
as trainees are also guided by Agriseta as to at what level they
could pitch seeing that the period of
training was to be only 5
months. This meant that all that they as trainees had to present was
short courses that equals to a grade
9 certificate.
[97] It
is common cause that in the training there is the theoretical part as
well as the practical
part. Mr McNab told the Court that whilst
theory is done mostly in the classroom in certain instances
practicals are also conducted
in the classroom depending on what the
subject matter is. It is also common cause that when learners are
taken out to do practicals
at farming operations for example a
poultry farm, piggery, vegetable, farm and others it is a requirement
that learners should
be properly dressed in protective clothing
(PPE). He testified that in terms of the agreement it was the
responsibility of the
Defendant to see to it that their learners
which had been identified by them bring along PPE to the training
course.
[98] Mr
McNab told the Court that he informed Mr Njoli during December 2016
that when training commenced
in January 2017 the learners should have
PPE. He explained that in training in Unit standard NQF levels in 5
there are specific
percentages for theory and practicals which is
usually 30% theory and 70% practicals. However, some practicals for
example a course
in Co-operative Governance a facilitator would do
practicals in class with the learners by requiring them to do
presentation after
learning theory.
[99] He
also explained that in those instances where learners are taken out
to, for example, a vegetable
farm for practical training and it so
happens that some of the learners are not properly clothed in PPE’s
then only those
who have PPE will take part in actual training whilst
those without will only observe. That observation is taken as
practical training.
The same thing happens at piggeries and poultry
farms.
[100] In respect of those
learners who did Advance beef Cattle production the sort of practical
training that they gave
was to take learners to a farm and show them
and what methods was used to grow it for example the type of feed not
where it is
kept. They show them how such cattle are slaughtered
after it shall have been weighed. They are taught how to weigh it
before such
a carcass is sent to the butchery.
[101] Mr McNab was
confronted during cross-examination with a statement that they as
facilitators unilaterally took
decisions to change the way practicals
should be done and which was not in line with the provisions of the
agreement. Mr McNab
disputed this and said everything was done in
accordance with the agreement and that in instances where learners
did not have PPE
they as facilitators had to devise means to
accommodate them and that is not a unilateral amendment of the
agreement.
COMMUNICATION
BETWEEN PLAINTIFF AND DEFENDANT AND MEETINGS
HELD
TO RESOLVE ISSUES RAISED BY FARMERS AND THE DEFENDANT
[102] Three meetings were
held the first on the 29
th
November 2016 followed by one
on the 6
th
March 2017 and lastly the meeting held with the
Head of the Department on the 22
nd
March 2017. In between
the meeting Mr McNab and Mr Njoli held informal meetings and
exchanged views in project managing the learning
of the farmers.
[103] A recordal of the
resolutions taken after the first meeting held on the 29
th
November 2016 is contained in emails dated the 29
th
November 2016 and those dated the 5
th
December 2016 by Mr
Njoli and Miss Lubisi respectively. A reading of those emails
captures the notion that there were complaints
by farmers about the
food being served at Don-Bosco as well as the condition of the rooms.
The farmers wanted TV sets in their
rooms. As regards training the
only thing mentioned was that the drafting of a Constitution should
be included in the manual for
training on the subject of Co-operative
Governance. Language in the training was also raised.
[104] A reading of the
email by Miss Lubisi dated the 5
th
December 2016 clearly
sets out that all the issues that were raised at the meeting were
amicably resolved. In particular, the issue
around accommodation at
Don-Bosco was not a problem to be resolved by Exacube but by the
management of Don Bosco in any case Mr
McNab re-emphasised that the
Representatives of the Defendant visited Don-Bosco before the tender
was awarded and satisfied themselves
of its suitability and the type
of meals served.
[105] Mr McNab in response
to a document marked “NSI” which was an annexure to the
affidavit resisting Summary
Judgment which document purported to come
from an organisation calling themselves South African
Farmers(Gauteng) in which it has
set out various grievances by the
“farmers” against Exacube Mr McNab told the Court that
the first time that, that
document surfaced was during the second
meeting held on the 6
th
March 2017 and not at the first
meeting. As proof that the document was not there at the November
2016 meeting Mr McNab informed
the Court that no practicals for
piggery had as yet taken place in November 2016 and the fact that the
memorandum makes reference
to such training is proof that it was
never there.
[106] Mr McNab indicated
that from the onset of the agreement they had made preparation to
train 1036 learner farmers
in accordance with the bid document. He
indicated that some learners came more than once in other words they
would come in week
one, then two and three when it was expected that
each week there would be new faces. Mr McNab aptly called it
“recycling”
and said that they as trainers could do
nothing about that as it was the choice and prerogative of the
Defendant to indicate people
that had to attend.
[107] The second meeting
that took place on the 6
th
March 2017 being a Monday was
preceded by an sms message addressed to Mr McNab or Miss Lubisi by Mr
Njoli informing them that the
contract had been suspended with
immediate effect pending resolution of the complaints laid by the
farmers. When Mr McNab received
that sms on the 3
rd
March
2017 he had already in preparation for training scheduled to begin on
the 6
th
March 2017 paid Lapeng Hotel R400 000.00 for
accommodation of 100 learners and paid R25 000.00 to Bafo Taxi
Association
to enable them to pick up the learners on Sunday the 5
th
March 2017 and drop them off at Lapeng Hotel. Mr McNab on telling
that to Mr Njoli received a terse message that if they Plaintiff
go
ahead it will be their own fruitless expenditure.
[108] Mr McNab telephoned
Mr Sibandze the owner of Bafo Taxi Services on Sunday the 5
th
March 2017 not to send out his drivers to the designated pick up
points. The meeting took place on Monday the 6
th
March
2017 which was attended by Mr McNab, Miss Lubisi, Mr Njoli, Mr
Ebrahim Ismael (CFO) and others. Mr McNab as well as Miss
Lubisi told
the Court that at that meeting Mr Ismael the CFO verbally told them
that the contract had been cancelled and asked
the Plaintiffs to tell
him why they should not be blacklisted from doing further business
with Government. Mr McNab asked for written
reasons for cancellation
of the agreement and was promised that such a letter will follow. We
now know that no such letter was
ever written and or received.
[109] Frustrated by that
decision Miss Lubisi and Mr McNab decided to address a letter to the
Head of Department of
Miss Thandi Mbassa on the 20
th
March
2017 as a result of that letter a third meeting was convened for the
22
nd
March 2017 attended by all the people who attended
the second meeting and added to it the legal representatives of the
Department
of Agriculture.
[110] Mr McNab and Miss
Lubisi testified that after deliberations Miss Mbassa told the CFO to
make payment of invoices
that had already been submitted whilst she
institutes an investigation around the cancellation. Mr McNab told
the Court that Miss
Mbassa questioned the cancellation of the
agreement hence the decision that payment be made whilst she
undertook an investigation.
[111] According to the
Plaintiff this was payment in respect of claim A being the sum of
R1 603 536.00. The CFO
did not pay instead he addressed an email
to the Deputy HOD that there was a back log which meant that the
request for payment
of the amount will be kicked out because it will
most probably fall in the ensuing financial year. According to Mr
McNab once the
Finance Department had received instruction they had
to pay.
SUBMISSION
OF INVOICES FOR PAYMENT
[112] On the 14
th
December 2016 the Plaintiff submitted their invoice for services
rendered for the period 6
th
November 2016 to 9
th
December 2016 duly accompanied by training reports as well as
attendance register. The invoice was for payment of the sum of R2 171
455.00. The Defendant made payment of that amount on the 16
th
January 2017. On the 3
rd
February 2017 the Plaintiff
submitted their second invoice for payment of the sum of R1 202
652.00 for services rendered for
the period 15
th
January
2017 to the 3
rd
February 2017 that amount was paid on the
13
th
February 2017.
[113] During March 2017
the Plaintiff submitted a third invoice for payment of the sum of
R440 000.00 which amount
the Plaintiff had already paid in
advance to Lapeng Hotel. This invoice was not paid, on the 10
th
May 2017 a further invoice for payment of R25 000.00 which the
Plaintiff had paid to Bafo Taxi Services was sent to the Defendant.
Both invoices which make up claim B being the sum of R465 000.00
also remain unpaid.
[114] When it became clear
that the Defendant was not prepared to reengage the services of the
Plaintiff Mr McNab prepared
a final report for the whole period being
the 6
th
March 2016 up to 30
th
March 2017 he
explained that claim C being the sum of R1 944 287.40 was for loss of
earnings pursuant to the unlawful cancellation
of the contract.
CERTIFICATE
OF COMPETENCE
[115] Mr McNab explained
the process leading up to the certification of learners and said that
after the completion
of training on a Thursday the learners are
assessed on Friday through writing examination and for those who
cannot write oral examinations
are done. When the assessor is
satisfied a certificate of competence is issued and the names of the
successful candidates are linked
in the profile of Exacube with
Agriseta as proof that a particular candidate had acquired such and
such competency.
[116] The certificates are
then handed over to the Department of Agriculture who would decide
when to hand them over
to the successful candidates. In accordance
with the Service Level Agreement it was a provision that in the event
that the service
provider does not issue the certificate then the
Department was entitled to withhold 10% of the invoice due at that
time. It is
significant that when the two payments were made no
amounts were withheld which means that the Defendant was satisfied
that the
certificates had been issued.
[117] Mr McNab said that
early this year he was able to check with Agriseta and can confirm
that the names of all the
learners they trained appeared on the
Agriseta system as having been trained by them. He gave the total
number that they trained
as 711 it later changed to 745 during
cross-examination.
EVIDENCE
OF MR MCNAB UNDER CROSS EXAMINATION
[118] The
cross-examination was long and repetitive and stretched over a period
of 2 days during which time Mr McNab
appeared clearly irritated by
questions being repeated. He however, despite all that was able to
field all questions that were
of relevance to the dispute in this
matter.
[119] The Defendant’s
version which was put to Mr McNab as well as to Miss Lubisi is to the
following effect:
i)
That the Plaintiff failed
to provide services in accordance with the
agreement in the following respect:
a)
The accommodation was of a
poor quality at Don Bosco.
b)
That the food was of a low
standard at Don Bosco.
c)
Training did not include
Practical training.
d)
That payment of the first
two invoices was done conditionally in that the Plaintiff had agreed
to remedy its shortcomings as far
as training was concerned.
e)
That Mr Njoli and Mr
Ebrahim Ismael had the right and authority to cancel the agreement as
they did.
f)
That the Head of the
Department Ms Thandi Mbassa at no stage gave instruction that the
outstanding invoices should be paid.
g)
That it was the
Responsibility of the Plaintiff to provide the learners with PPE’s.
[120] In the process of
responding to question by Defendant’s Counsel Mr McNab also
alluded to one of issues which
involved the fact that some learners
arrived late in class others were in fact not aspirant farmers’
one of the facilitators
Mr Sabelo Zulu informed the Court that
amongst the learners was a car washer. It was also brought to the
attention of Mr Njoli
that some learners attended class whilst under
influence of liquor and slept during lessons. Despite all that Mr
McNab supported
by the evidenced of Sabelo Zulu the facilitator
informed the court that lessons proceeded as planned. He spoke of all
these as
challenges that required him together with the officials of
the department to resolve together.
[121] In dealing with the
instructions of the HOD given verbally on the 22
nd
March
2017 that Plaintiff’s invoices be paid Mr McNab referred to the
email from Ms Vuyokazi Jongwana dated the 24
th
March 2017
two days after the meeting with the HOD. In that email addressed to a
Bra Mike and Njoli reference was made to the invoice
from Exacube.
Miss Jongwana instructed Njoli and Bra Mike to prepare and submit
RL502 to Finance should the invoice be acceptable.
The email
concluded with the following salutary words:
“
I think it was sent to HOD due
to the meeting that was held with HOD and yourselves on Wednesday.”
[122] Mr McNab explained
that once an invoice is submitted to Finance it is due for payment.
He disputed that there
was a rider to that. It was put to him that
the invoice was not acceptable to Mr Njoli and the CFO hence no
payment was made.
[123] What is clear and
obvious in this instance is that both Mr Njoli and the CFO defied the
instructions of their
Superior namely the HOD What is also strange is
that the CFO responded to that email on the same day at 09h03 and
said the following:
“
Unfortunately the system for
invoices is back-logged at GDF. We not sure if this will make it into
the Webcycle for today due to
this. Further I am not sure if Mr Njoli
and Mosifane will GRV this given the information request they sent to
Exacube.”
[124] The issue of
practical and the PPE’s occupied a large portion of the
cross-examination and in the final
result Mr McNab stood firm that
firstly PPE’s was not a responsibility of the Plaintiff and
secondly the fact that when doing
practicals the facilitators made
those learners who did not have PPE’s to observe and not take
part in actual practical was
a way of compromise and as far as he is
concerned they followed methods suggested in the learning materials.
All learners were
accommodated. When they did that they told Mr Njoli
he indicated that he and Mr Njoli spoke on a daily basis over the
phone or
met physically and he Mr McNab reported all the challenges
that they were facing.
[125] The
cross-examination then moved on to deal with the version of two
learners namely Kenny Mhlari and Rowan Mckery
who according to the
Defendant would testify about the filthiness of the rooms and the
behaviour of Mr McNab. These in my view
is one of those issues that
are irrelevant and had no bearing on what was in issue before me. Mr
McNab testified that they as the
Plaintiff decided to change the
venue not so much because they wanted to satisfy the learners but
because they wanted to preserve
the relationship as a service
provider with the Gauteng Department of Agriculture it was part of
their own project management decision.
He also informed Mr Njoli who
approved.
[126] It was put to Mr
McNab that the tender documents required the Plaintiff to train
farmers from being small scale
to large scale. His response was that
seeing that what they had designed for the training which was
approved by the Department
was short courses that in itself will not
qualify the learners to be commercial farmers. It is impossible to do
that type of training
in five days.
[127] The incident of what
led to firstly the suspension and later cancellation of the contract
was revisited once more
Mr McNab told the Court that on the 1
st
and 2
nd
meeting in March 2017 the learners were scheduled
to go and do practicals before sitting for tests on Friday the 3
rd
March 2017. He received information about drunkenness by the learners
from the hotel management when he arrived in the morning
some
learners were toy-toying and disrupted classes. It was then that Miss
Lubisi telephoned Mr Njoli who said that he was in Durban
and will
sent someone. Indeed, a representative from the Department did arrive
it was a lady but she also could not convince the
learners to
continue with classes she left. It was then that they as the
Plaintiff received the sms suspending the contract on
Friday 3
rd
March 2017.
[128] He indicated that he
has given Agriseta all the information about the people they trained
and it is not their
duty as Plaintiff to upload that information onto
the Agriseta system it is Agriseta which must do it. According to his
calculations
they trained 711 students. It was put to Mr McNab that
the Defendant will testify that none of the learners’
particulars
have been uploaded onto the Agriseta system Mr McNab said
it is the duty of Agriseta to do that all that Exacube did was to
furnish,
Agriseta with the required information.
[129] After each training
on a Friday the Defendant’s officials used to hand over to the
learners’ forms
for evaluation which they completed as
anonymous and in none of the evaluation forms submitted by the
learners during December
2016 was there a complaint about the
standard of training on the manuals. The forms presented to court
indicates total satisfaction.
[130] It was put to Mr
McNab that at that meeting the CFO did tell Mr McNab and Miss Lubisi
that the contract was being
cancelled because of non-compliance. Mr
McNab disputed that they were never told anything only that they
should give reasons why
they as a company should not be blacklisted
from doing business with the Government in future.
[131] As regards payment
of the sum of R25 000.00 to Bafo Taxi he indicated that payment
was done by him on Friday
the 3
rd
March 2017. He collected
cash from one of their businesses a shop in Boksburg and paid the
money to Mr Sibandze of Bafo Taxi Services.
[132] As regards the claim
C Mr McNab testified that it is common sense that he made
arrangements and preparation for
1036 learners to be taught till 30
March 2017 and because the contract was cancelled prematurely without
any valid reason they
were entitled to damages. He himself could
testify how the amount of R1 944 289.40 claimed in claim C is arrived
at.
[133] He confirmed that Mr
Sibandze did not issue a receipt when he paid him the amount of
R25 000.00 in cash.
He distributed money to other taxi drivers
whom he had subcontracted to enable them to put in petrol and also
money for airtime
and food for the drivers. Each taxi owner received
R3 500.00 for the delivery and fetching of the learners from
home to the
training centre and back home making it four trips for
each taxi.
[134] The Plaintiff called
Mr Sabelo Zulu a facilitator to testify. Mr Zulu holds a National
Diploma in Agriculture
as well as a B-Tech degree in Crop production.
He confirmed that during the period November 2016 till March 2017 he
was engaged
by the Plaintiff as a facilitator at Don-Bosco and Lapeng
hotel in Walkerville.
[135] He gave lessons or
facilitated lessons to farmer in Co-operative Governance and open
vegetable production. In
facilitation he used learning material
supplied by Agriseta. He not only taught the learners in class but
took them out to farms
to do practical training. As regards
Co-operative Governance practicals were done in the class room.
During the training he used
English as a medium of instruction
however he also accommodated those who had difficulty with the
language and used a vernacular
language.
[136] He lectured and
trained learners on vegetable production for 2 weeks i.e 10 days
during which time practicals
were also done. Practicals on open
vegetable production were done at a farm called Varsfontein. He
taught them how to do planting,
fertilisation, irrigation and
spraying.
[137] He explained that
when they went out to do practicals those learners who did not wear
protective clothing could
only observe and not take part in
practicals but this was also regarded as sufficient.
[138] He disputed the
grievances set out in a document from the South African Farmers
Association. He stressed that
all what was complained of in that
document relating to training was not correct. Mr Zulu also indicated
that some learners arrived
to lessons under the influence of liquor
whilst others slept in class during lecturing. It also came to his
notice that some of
the people who attended were in fact not farmers.
He however, continued to teach them.
[139] In cross-examination
he told the Court that the process of uploading the names of
successful candidates onto the
Agriseta system was not his department
he does not know how it has to be done. However, each day that he
managed a class he has
to make sure that each learner signs an
attendance register. Practicals were also done in the classroom.
[140] Mr Zulu corroborated
the evidence of both Mr McNab and Miss Lubisi when he testified that
not only were some of
the practicals done in the classroom but when
they went out to farms those learners who were not properly clothed
in protective
clothing could only do observation when those with
PPE’s performed practicals, this was regarded as being in
compliance.
[141] At the end of the
week learners that he taught completed anonymous evaluation forms.
All the people that he taught
could only say positive things about
his teaching method save to say that one complained that he spoke too
softly.
[142] Mr Justice Sibandze
told the Court that he concluded an agreement with Mr McNab to fetch
identified learners from
their places and transport them to
Walkerville on a Sunday and then collect them and take them back home
on the Friday.
[143] On the 3
rd
March 2017 Mr McNab paid him R25 000.00 which was agreed
transport costs to collect 100 learners on Sunday the 5
th
March 2017. He has 2 minibus taxis that carry 22 persons and he
subcontracted the other 15 seater taxis from other taxi owners.
[144] On Sunday the 5
th
March 2016 he had already paid the owners of the 4 taxis their quoted
or agreed prize which amounted to R3 500.00 per taxi. He
received a
call from Mr McNab that he should tell all drivers not to do any
collection as the contract has been suspended.
[145] The Plaintiff then
called 3 witnesses who were part of the learners namely Vusumuzi
Makhoba, Mrs Thandi Mthimkhulu
and Miss Tselane Alina Mathope. All
three testified that they attended training at Bosco and Lapeng hotel
and that they were satisfied
with the training. Mr Makhoba in
particular told the Court that since he attended the training his
business has grown. The witness
contradicted each other on issues
around practicals and the time spent. However, it must be recalled
that they were called to testify
on events that took place in
2016/2017 and their memories were faint. Despite that all three
expressed their satisfaction and informed
the Court that they learnt
a lot.
[146] The Plaintiff then
closed its case. The Defendant called as its first witness Mr Abdula
Mohammed Ismael.
[147] Mr Abdula Mohammed
Ismael is the CFO in the Department of Agriculture of the Defendant.
He signed the service
level agreement on behalf of the Department and
regards himself to be bound by the PFMA in the conduct of the
agreement in particular
that in terms of Section 45 of the PFMA Act
it is his duty as the official responsible for expenditure in the
department to see
to it that there is no unauthorised, irregular or
wasteful and fruitless expenditure in the department.
[148] In evidence in chief
he was led on the specific terms and conditions of the service level
agreement and under
cross-examination he confirmed that clause 21.1
provides that “no amendment, alteration, variation of or
addition to this
agreement shall be of any force or effect unless
reduced to writing and signed by the parties or their duly authorised
representatives.”
[149] Mr Ismael was also
referred to clause 18.2 of the service level agreement which reads as
follows: “That
in the event of the Department providing the
service provider with written notice of the service providers breach
and the breach
not being remedied by the service provider within 7
days from the date of receipt of the written notice, the Department
shall be
entitled
inter alia
to cancel the agreement.”
[150] Clause 18.2 read
with 18.6 reiterate the principle that any of the parties to the
agreement had the right to terminate
the relationship if the other
commits any breach of any term and fails to remedy such breach within
7 days after the giving of
a notice to that effect by the other
party.
[151] Similarly clause
20.1 provides that “notices in terms of this agreement must be
in writing and will take
effect from receipt of the stated
domicilium. Such notice might be given by registered mail, by hand
against written confirmation
upon receipt or per facsimile.
[152] Mr Ismael confirmed
that the golden thread running through the clauses referred to above
is that notices must
be in writing. The evidence in this matter has
clearly and in no uncertain terms demonstrated that cancellation of
the contract
was never done in writing. Mr Ismael was at pains to
explain that the HOD did write that letter of cancellation but it was
never
signed. That unsigned letter was never discovered nor was it
presented as evidence before this Court. I have no doubt to conclude
that the contract was terminated unlawfully and without following the
prescribed procedures. Mr Njoli and Mr Ismael were never
authorised
to unilaterally and verbally suspend repudiate the agreement. They
acted on their own.
[153] The next vexed
question that was put to Mr Ismael and which took him a long and
roundabout way was as follows:
MR COWLEY:
Specific to this contract what would have been required before
payment was
made?
MR ISMAEL:
In this instance the portfolio of evidence would be that you
would
receive the certificates, the accredited certificates of the farmers
to justifiably say that they have reached the standard
and that they
have passed and they are now accredited in that field. So you have
met the requirements of that training or we have
met the requirements
and you subsequently can pay us.
[154] What Mr Ismael said
is not provided in the service level agreement. There is nowhere in
that agreement which requires
that the service provider must submit
certification of training before payment can be made. All that clause
7.2 says is that:
“
(7.2)
The service provider shall render original invoices to verify
expenditure. Invoices shall be detailed and refer to work done and
time spent and costs.”
Clause 7.3 provides that:
“
(7.3) The invoices shall
contain:
-
A reference to this
agreement
-
The GPG order number
-
A description of the
services and or products.”
[155] Mr Ismael quickly
contradicted himself when a follow up was made as to his earlier
evidence that certification
was a requirement before the department
could make a payment.
MR COWELY:
Where is the requirements that certification was necessary before
payment was
made?
MR ISMAEL:
I would not say it is specifically in the contract that it says
you
would need to certify.
[156] Mr Ismael’s
evidence around this question became more and more confusing as he
avoided answering a simple
question to indicate where in the contract
does it state that payment will only be made by the Department on
production of certificate
of training.
[157] In the final
analysis Mr Ismael failed dismally to produce any evidence that
certification was a requirement before
payment could be made. His
evidence on that aspect crawls with inconsistences. He was
argumentative and his evidence was invariably
unconvincing. In his
veiled attempt to explain why payment of two invoices was made by the
department despite the fact that according
to him the Plaintiff had
not complied with the terms of the contract Ismael gave a ludicrous
response. The question and answer
proceeded in the following manner:
MR COWLEY:
Let me understand then Mr Ismael, payment was made not in terms of
the SLA
nor in terms of Annexure A or B this was done because of an
act of gratuity by the Department?
MR ISMAEL:
Well, I would not say an act of gratuity because what we did
ask them
to show us is evidence of the advancements we made towards
accommodation and the food and the transport so that we could
justifiably say that they did advance money and that what we were
paying was going towards part of the costs of the training”
[158] Mr Ismael conceded
under further cross-examination that he is unable to dispute the
evidence of Mr McNab that
he submitted the Plaintiff’s invoices
for payment to the project manager Mr Njoli who in terms of the
department’s
internal procedures issued the GRV to Finance to
make payment. He Mr Ismael as the CFO does not deal with that. He
however insisted
that payment was made to “assist” the
Plaintiff. This last answer is problematic in the first instances it
was put
to the Plaintiff’s witness that payment was made on
condition that the Plaintiff made good on their failures it was never
put to them that they were being pitied or being assisted.
[159] Once more the
“assist” or advance payment made to the Plaintiff was in
contravention of clause 7.6.4
which reads that No up-front payment
may be made. When it was put to Mr Ismael that according to his
evidence the two payments
were made not in terms of the contract he
as usual gave a nonsensical response which goes as follows: “I
would not necessarily
agree with that I did explain that even though
it says no upfront payment were made, we applied the rules of Section
45of the PFMA.
We understood the predicament Exacube were in because
they had advanced substantial amounts for accommodation. We were
trying to
assist this institution to deliver on this training on
behalf of the department hence we used Section 45 of the PFMA.”
[160] It was not
surprising that Mr Ismael could not explain how Section 45 of the
PFMA was the reason for this so called
“advance” or
“assist” payment. In the result I reject and dismiss his
evidence as misleading and evasive
and not at all helpful.
[161] Mr Ismail was
referred to clause 6.1 of the SLA which reads as follows:
“
The Department shall pay the
service provider after completion, review, approval of each
deliverable received from the service provider.
The invoice must
detail specific activities performed.”
[162] It is to be noted
that the two invoices that the Defendant paid complied with the
requirements set out in clause
6.1. The Defendant never raised any
issue about the two invoices not being compliant. Mr Ismael in
justify payment which he says
should not have been done says that:
“If we were very stringent on the entirety of the SLA at the
onset, we would have dismissed
Exacube in the first meeting and not
pay even a single cent to them, but like I have repeated your
Lordship, we were always trying
to work and assist them on two fold,
one to grow them as an institute and to ensure that we as a
Department received this training
that is of utmost importance in
terms of our dollar/grand. But yes in terms of 6.1 we should know
they have paid any invoices.
And we did not pay any of the invoices
in terms of 6.1.”
[163] Mr Ismael kept on
insisting that payment was made in terms of Section 45 of the PFMA
Act and not in terms of clause
6.1. Mr Ismael’s interpretation
of Section 45 of the PFMA is to say the least irresponsible. That
Section prevents precisely
what he says he did, it prohibits
unauthorised, irregular and fruitless expenditure. I find his
evidence once more to be problematic
and evasive. The simple answer
is that the payment if he did it in terms of his own interpretation
was not authorised and is thus
irregular expenditure. Mr Ismael
insisted that the fact that no certificates had been issued to the
learners when payments were
made it means no services had been
rendered. I find his attitude to be very patronising. He wants this
Court to believe that it
was because of feeling pity for the
Plaintiff that they made payment. This Court does not believe that Mr
Ismael would run the
risk of his Department‘s Finances being
qualified because of that and at the expense of him being
disciplined.
[164] Mr Ismael conceded
that Mr Njoli the Project Manager issued the GRV to Finance
Department to make payment after
he had satisfied himself that the
Department had received value in that the Plaintiff Exacube had paid
for accommodation, transport
and for food. The question then remains
if that is the case why is the Defendant demanding refund.
[165] In its counterclaim
the Defendant claims payment of the amount it paid in respect of the
two invoices without
taking into consideration that it conceded that
the Department did receive value in respect of what the Plaintiff
paid for accommodation,
transport and food. The Department’s
counterclaim is in my view excipiable and falls to be dismissed. He
now says that the
payment they made amounts to fruitless and wasteful
expenditure and has created a material irregularity in terms of the
Public
Audit Act and that it needs to be recovered. Mr Ismael has now
miraculously abandoned his reliance on Section 45 of the PFMA Act
as
justification for the irregular payment.
[166] Mr Ismael whilst
conceding that the payment made is irregular and will cause the
Auditor General to raise a materiality
impact he on a question posed
now in the year 2022 says that no such materiality has been raised
but that the payment made has
been raised as a contingent liability
and a contingent asset.
[167] In trying to justify
their claim for a refund from the Plaintiff Mr Ismail made an example
about their Department
having made payment of an amount of R2.5
million to a wrong person who has refused to repay it as a result
they as the Department
have now referred the matter to the National
Prosecuting Authority. With due respect this is an irrelevant and
inappropriate example.
The facts in that matter are miles apart from
the facts in this matter because firstly payment has not been made to
a “wrong
person” secondly payment was made in terms of a
written agreement.
[168] Under further
cross-examination Mr Ismael agreed that the proposal that Exacube
presented to the Department met
with the requirements of the tender
hence they were successful and were then appointed. This answer in my
view puts paid to the
evidence that the Plaintiff failed to amongst
other secure proper accommodation for the conference. It confirms
what Mr McNab and
Miss Lubisi testified to namely that Mr Njoli
inspected the venue at Bosco and was satisfied.
[169] In line with his
concern above Mr Ismael was referred to the document annexed to the
SLA being the Department
Terms of Reference. In that document under
the subheading “Project Deliverable” he agreed that what
the Plaintiff had
to deliver in respect of courses, the number of
trainees for each course and the time to be spent on each course
including the
Unit Standards is as certified by Agriseta. He conceded
that he cannot deny that after the awarding of the tender Mr McNab
and
Mr Njoli met and revised the training plan which was acceptable
to the Department.
[170] Mr Ismael agreed
that he cannot comment on the training schedules submitted to Mr
Njoli indicating the subject
and the number of farmers to be trained.
He said that only Mr Njoli will be able to respond to that evidence.
Mr Ismael in fact
confirmed that it is only Mr Njoli in his capacity
as the Project Manager who has the responsibility to confirm that the
training
material consisted of the required deliverables. He agreed
that the training material that Exacube submitted with their tender
documents had been approved and prescribed by Agriseta.
[171] Mr Ismael was taken
through the different learner guides that were used in the training
from which it became clear
that the practical training in respect of
some of the units or courses took place in the classroom not
necessarily outside for
example learner guide 44 being in respect of
“Risk factor in food safety and quality.”
[172] Mr Ismael told the
Court that he cannot dispute that Agriseta needed a copy of a
farmer’s identity document
the attendance register relevant to
the specific unit standard as well as the assessment where after a
competency certificate would
be issued by Agriseta. Mr Ismael was
referred to a number of competency certificates produced by Exacube
and which had been loaded
onto the system of Agriseta he could not
dispute that the certificates were authentic. That evidence was also
not disputed when
Mr McNab testified.
[173] It became very clear
during further cross-examination that the Department was aware of the
competency certificates
that Exacube had produced and uploaded onto
Agriseta’s website to enable that institute to issue the
learners with certificate
of competency and yet the Department did
nothing to verify their authenticity. Mr Ismael once more was
disingenuous in his stance
that the certificates were not genuine.
His excuse being that he had left the employ of the Department of
Agriculture two years
ago and would not be able to say why it was not
done. He finally agreed that it is up to the Department to take up
the offer to
visit the Agriseta website and verify if the
certificates of competency had infact been issued and if they fail to
do so then the
evidence of Mr McNab remains unchallenged.
[174] Mr Ismael’s
responses when asked about the first invoice submitted by Exacube
dated the 14
th
December 2016 changed dramatically he now
says that whilst he recognises that the invoice tallies in all
respects with the document
on the training schedule and that same
complied with the provisions of clause 7.2 he now advises that the
certificates must be
verified before payment could be made. It must
be recalled that this is one of the invoices that was paid without
any query being
raised by the Department and to now keep on adding
other conditions by Mr Ismael is in my view strange to say the least.
It is
not what was put to the Plaintiff’s witnesses. His
version changed from accreditation to verified. He struggled and
could
not explain this obvious contradiction. Mr Ismael then
confirmed that the unpaid invoices look exactly or are formatted in
the
same manner as the paid invoices.
[175] Mr Ismael agreed
that as far as the disputed evidence about the HOD Ms Mbassa having
given instructions to pay
the disputed invoices it is only Mrs Mbassa
who can testify on that issue.
[176] Mr Ismael confirmed
that the first meeting held in November 2016 with Exacube related to
complaints about food,
accommodation and transport and nothing else.
That meeting was attended by Mr Njoli, Mr McNab, Ismael and Mr
Mosefani a former
director responsible for Agriculture in the
Department. Mr Njoli reported to him. It became clear that at that
meeting some aspects
of training were discussed when Mr Ismael was
shown the emails dated the 29
th
November 2016 from Mr
Njoli and one dated the 5
th
December 2016 from Miss
Lubisi. Mr Ismael confirmed that all issues raised at that first
meeting were resolved.
[177] An issue arose about
a document marked NSI emanating from a group called South African
Farmers Gauteng. That is
a document that contained grievances by the
farmers. When it was brought to the attention of Mr Ismael that the
grievances therein
could not have been discussed at that first
meeting because items or lessons complained of in that document had
not taken place
as yet when the meeting was held, Mr Ismael agreed
and glibly responded that this happened a long time ago and that Mr
Njoli is
best suited to respond to that. The contradictions about
issues discussed at that meeting becomes obvious when it was revealed
that in fact Mr Njoli in his affidavit resisting Summary Judgment
actually referred and attached that farmers’ grievances
document to the affidavit in which he confirmed that those grievances
were discovered at the first meeting in November 2016. Once
more Mr
Ismael in attempting to evade and explain this obvious contradiction
says that the document has no date. He eventually
conceded that the
document was possibly produced much later than the first meeting.
[178] Mr Ismael further
complicated the issues when he testified that a second meeting took
place at the end of January
2017 and that it is at that meeting that
issues raised by the South African farmers were discussed. He now
agreed that what Mr
Njoli said in his affidavit resisting Summary
Judgment could not be correct. It was put to him that if what he says
is correct
that Mr Njoli was present at that second meeting held at
the end of January 2017 then it was expected of Mr Njoli to have
mentioned
that meeting in his affidavit. Mr Ismael again avoided
answering the question by deferring the response to Mr Njoli. When
asked
by the Court if minutes are not kept at such meeting he steered
away from answering the question and said that he is only an attendee
it is not his meeting he only comes to such meetings to help, rectify
the situation or mediate. Once again I find his response
in that
regard extremely unconvincing and a clear indication to avoid the
obvious.
[179] Mr Ismael agreed
that at that second meeting if there was any material breach of
contract by the Plaintiff they
as the Department should have acted in
accordance with clauses 18.2 and 18.6 of the agreement and placed the
Plaintiff on terms
in writing to rectify the breach within seven
days. He in fact says that same should have been done after the first
meeting held
in November 2016. It was put to Mr Ismael that when the
first invoice was paid on the 16
th
January 2017 there was
no evidence that the Plaintiff had infact breached any terms of the
agreement. Mr Ismael’s response
to that goes this way: “Mr
Ismael: I do not necessarily agree but there is no evidence to prove
otherwise more so as the
Project Manager he will share with you any
breaches.” This last answer to me just about wraps up the
Defendant’s counterclaim
as being unfounded.
[180] The Court posed the
following questions:
COURT:
No evidence to prove what?
MR ISMAEL:
If there was any breach.
COURT:
So you cannot prove it, only the Project Manager can say
It?
MR ISMAEL:
I would not be in a position because I was not at the forefront
of
this programme, if there was actually a continuation of breach by
Exacube.
Mr Ismael further confirmed that
payment could only have been made because Mr Njoli as the Project
Manager signed off the invoice
with goods received voucher (GRV).
[181] Mr Ismael admitted
that they erred as a Department by not putting the Plaintiff on terms
after the first and second
meetings. As regards the meeting of the
6
th
March 2017 there was no agenda. His evidence is that
in fact that meeting never took long because according to them
Plaintiff’s
representatives namely Mr McNab and Miss Lubisi
were uncooperative and walked out of the meeting. He conceded that
they should
have long addressed a letter of intention to terminate
the agreement if Exacube failed to make good their breach of
contract. He
however miraculously recalls after the Plaintiff had
walked out of the meeting the HOD had written as formal letter of
termination
to Exacube but that letter was never signed and could
accordingly not be sent to the Plaintiff. He could not explain why
the HOD
did not sign that letter and could not tell the court where
that letter was. This Court finds that explanation highly
unconvincing
and implausible. I have no doubt to deduce that no such
letter exists.
[182] In as far as
provision of Protective Personal Equipment or clothing is concerned
Mr Ismael agreed that nowhere
in the agreement does it state that it
was the duty of the Plaintiff to supply the learners with PPE’s.
He was referred to
the email dated the 29
th
November 2016
from Mr Njoli to Exacube in which Mr Njoli said “Please inform
me in advance if farmers will have to bring
their work suit for
practical purposes” Mr Ismael response was as usual not helpful
at all he avoided the question by saying
that Mr Njoli by so saying
was only trying to help Exaculbe because they as the Department were
not to supply the PPE’s.
[183] On the 20
th
March 2017 prior to the meeting with the HOD Miss Lubisi had
addressed a letter to the HOD in which amongst others she pointed
out
that the farmers did not have PPE’s as a result they were
refused access to Piggery in Delmas for practical training.
Mr Ismael
dismissed this by saying he is not sure if Ms Lubisi was writing on
behalf of Exacube. I find this response also being
dodgy and
unhelpful.
[184] In the final
analysis under cross-examination Mr Ismael agreed that the training
offered to the farmers was to
give them an opportunity to get
training in an effort to build them up into large scale farmers and
that the 5-day training offered
to the farmers was never meant to
turn them suddenly into large scale farmers. This was just one of the
processes and steps leading
to that. Mr Ismael’s exact words
were as follows:
“
You are correct it is not that
simple then, you would just become a magnificent farmer that is why
we offer the small, the first
student of the training and then
advance. So that small farmers would go for the first training
probably then in this financial
year received. He or she then move to
the advance training because they have now got production inputs in
the ground. So it is
growth process.”
[185] In re-examination Mr
Ismael repeated that the HOD never gave instructions for payment of
the disputed invoice.
He added that Ms Mbassa is not the only person
who can testify to that there are other officials within the
Department who could
testify to that. Mr Ismael did not tell the
Court who else was available to give evidence on that aspect it was
left hanging instead
counsel for the Defendant raised the issue or
implied that the Plaintiff itself should have called Ms Mbassa to
testify.
[186] Mr Ismael confirmed
that Ms Mbassa was the Accounting Officer in the Department and he
reported to her. Mr Ismael
could not express a view why Mr Njoli
addressed an email dated the 10
th
March 2017 to Exacube in
which Mr Njoli thanked Exacube for sending the detailed invoices and
requesting that Exacube indicate
on the invoices how much practical
training, catering and theoretical training was charged. It must be
recalled that this email
is addressed after the Defendant had
repudiated the agreement. The question to be asked is why ask that
information. The only reason
why Njoli asked that is because he was
preparing to pay the invoices.
[187] Mr Derrick Skhalele
Njoli was the next witness for the Defendant. He testified that he
joined the Department of
Agriculture Gauteng Province in 2009 and
left in 2018. He is presently based at the National Office of the
Department of Land Reform
and Rural Development based in Nelspruit.
In his work he interacts a lot with farmers he advices and trains
farmers. Training is
done in two ways firstly in house by the
Department and also external in which they outsource to accredited
trainers.
[188] He confirmed that he
was the project manager in charge of the training provided by the
Plaintiff (Exacube). They
as the Department did the selection of the
farmers that required training and provided the list to Exacube. He
dealt with Mr Alex
McNab from Exacube. The whole aim of the training
ws to move the farmers being subsistence farmers to a level where
they will be
commercial farmers.
[189] Mr Njoli told the
Court that he was involved in the bidding process and made certain
that the successful bidder
would give value to the Department in
compliance with Section 45 of the PFMA. Exacube was appointed as they
qualified in all requirements.
[190] Mr Njoli insisted
that it was the duty of Exacube to provide PPE’s to the
learners. He relies in this respect
on clause 5.4 of the Agreement
which clause only speaks about the service provider complying with
all applicable legislative and
regulatory requirements on health and
safety. What Mr Njoli and Mr Ismael want this Court to accept is that
the clause means Exacube
had to supply the learners with PPE’s.
That interpretation is flawed in all respects none of the two
witnesses could tell
this court where specifically in the agreement
is it stated that Exacube had to supply PPE’s. The issue gets
worse when the
letter sent by Njoli to McNab stated that he Njoli
wants McNab to remind him if the learners have to bring their
protective clothing.
[191] It is also worth
mentioning that the Defendants never pleaded that it was a term of
the contract that Plaintiff
was obliged to supply protective clothing
to the learners neither was it alleged that the Plaintiff had
breached such term of the
contract.
[192] This evidence by
Njoli was an afterthought. It was also pointed out by Mr McNab that
the RFP did not require the
bidders to quote for the provisions of
protective clothing. Mr Njoli went so far as to allege when
questioned by this Court that
the Plaintiff was supposed to keep
stock of protective clothing at the training venues despite not
knowing the sizes of each learner.
I find that ridiculous if not
disingenuous.
[193] It is common cause
that on the 3
rd
March 2017 Mr Njoli sent an sms to Miss
Lubisi informing her of his decision to suspend the contract. This
was after it had been
reported to him by McNab that some learners
were disrupting lessons. It is also common cause that on Monday at a
meeting attended
by Lubisi, McNab, Ismael, Njoli and other Department
officials Ismael in his capacity as CFO unilaterally informed Lubisi
and McNab
that the contract is cancelled.
[194] An issue arose
during the evidence of Mr Njoli when he alleged that the Plaintiff
was not accredited to offer
a course in Co-operative Governance
because it was not an Agriseta accredited course. This was an
absurdity because Exacube was
awarded the tender on what they
presented to the Department in any case when Mr McNab and Miss Lubisi
testified this was never
put to them. The truth of the matter is that
at the time the Plaintiff submitted their tender that course was an
Agriseta accredited
course.
[195] It is common cause
also that Mr McNab and Njoli jointly agreed to work according to a
training plan and schedule
that had been adjusted to meet the time
frame set aside by the Department for completion of the training.
[196] Mr Njoli in trying
to distance himself from the agreed training schedule told the Court
that the document on 004-154
was just a “training
implementation plan” Njoli did not bother to explain what the
difference between a training schedule
and a training implementation
plan was. In any event the alleged failure which Njoli says was a
breach was never identified by
the Department during or after the
termination of the Agreement. It is once more an afterthought and
that evidence falls to be
rejected. During cross-examination Mr Njoli
conceded that the training manuals offered the best evidence on which
both theory and
practical training took place. He Mr Njoli told the
Court that he did not visit the training centre each week he depended
on extension
officers to advise him. It is so that the Defendant
never called any of the extension officers to testify for the
Defendant about
training.
[197] The evidence by
Ismael and Njoli that no practicals were offered stands to be
rejected because firstly they never
attended at the training centre.
Secondly the reports signed by the learners made no complaint about
no practicals. Similarly,
the evidence about inadequate training
material and outdated material cannot be accepted. The only evidence
tendered by the Defendant
in this regard is that by two learners
namely Mr Mhlari and one Ms Mckerry. Mr Mhlari clearly attended a
course which was far below
what he already knew and as for Miss
Mckerry she became upset when she was made to make photocopies for
herself because she arrived
late on a Tuesday. The evidence of the
two can hardly be said to prove that the Plaintiff had materially
breached the agreement.
[198] Contrary to what Mr
Mhlari and Miss Mckerry testified the Plaintiff had also called two
learners as witnesses
in the person of Ms Mthimkhulu and Ms Mathope.
Both witnesses testified that they benefitted immensely from the
training and in
practicals Ms Mthimkhulu said that her business as a
vegetable farmer had expanded since she received training. The other
witness
who testified for the Plaintiff was a Mr Vusi Makhoba he also
is a vegetable farmer. The evidence of Mthimkhulu, Mathope and
Makhoba
was that they received training manuals according to which
they were trained. That evidence was left unchallenged by the
Defendants.
[199] The evidence of
Njoli and Mr Ismael about the memorandum prepared by a group calling
themselves South African
Farmers Gauteng is another of those bizarre
pieces of evidence that the two of them sought to rely on for
cancelling the agreement.
Both of them insisted that the memorandum
was discussed at the first meeting held on the 29
th
November 2016 when in fact it was clear that the issues stated in
that memorandum only arose in February 2017. Mr Ismael in his
usual
casual manner kept on saying that as a result of that document they
should have in fact terminated the agreement in November
2016 but
they just felt pity for the Plaintiff. This aspect of Messrs Ismael
and Njoli’s evidence placed their credibility
in question. Mr
Ismael was argumentative and evasive.
[200 It needs to be
remembered that the complaints in that memorandum were never set out
in a letter to the Plaintiff
as a basis or reason for cancelling the
agreement.
[201] In an attempt to
salvage the contract that was clearly terminated unlawfully and
unprocedurally Miss Lubisi addressed
a passionate letter to the HOD
Miss Thandeka Mbassa. Amongst the issues set out in that letter Miss
Lubisi and Mr McNab explain
the circumstances that resulted in
practical training as regards visit to the Piggery not taking place.
The Department despite
the requirements of the agreement did not see
it fit to place the Plaintiff in mora and call on them to remedy the
breach. Instead
the Department summarily terminated the agreement
without giving the Plaintiff the required breach notice.
[202] The evidenced of Mr
Mhlari and that of Ms Mckerry takes the Defendant’s case no
further. The Defendant pleaded
that the facilitators were not
qualified, also that one of them had an unacceptable attitude and
that manuals without explanation.
This bold plea was not supported by
any evidence when regard is had to the evaluation documents completed
by the learners none
of them raised the pleaded issue.
[203] It has by now become
clear that the only issues discussed at the meeting of the 29
th
November 2016 was about the quality of food as well as the
accommodation. That aspect was resolved when according to Miss Lubisi
and Mr McNab the two of them went out of their way to please their
client by arranging a new place being Lapeng hotel where further
learning took place.
[204] Like all other
grievances the issue about catering was never stipulated as a
material breach in any written notice
of breach in accordance with
the agreement. The same applies to issue about transportation of
farmers. Mr Sibandza the Transport
Company Official confirmed that he
received the amount of R25 000.00 from Mr McNab on the 3
rd
March 2017 being fees for transportation of learners for the week
commencing the 5
th
March 2017.
[205] The evidence of both
Lubisi and McNab that Lapeng hotel was paid R440 000.00 (Four
Hundred and Forty Thousand
Rands) for accommodation for the period
5
th
March 2017 to 10
th
March 2017, that payment
was never disputed by the Defendant. Likewise, the evidence by Mr
Sibandze that he was paid R25 000.00
was not disputed. The
Defendant failed to provide any evidence to the contrary.
EVALUATION
OF EVIDENCE
[206] The evidence
presented by both Ms Lubisi and Mr McNab stands largely unchallenged
in as far as it concerns payment
of the two invoices which were
indeed paid by the Defendant during January and February 2017
totalling the amount of R3 347
107.00. It is this amount that
forms the Defendant’s counterclaim.
[207] The evidence of both
Ismael and Njoli in support of the counterclaim is flawed. It is
based on the allegation
that the Plaintiff failed to perform in terms
of the agreement secondly that payment was made conditionally on an
undertaking by
the Plaintiff to remedy the non-performance thirdly
that payment was made in order to assist the Plaintiff with cash
flow. On the
Defendant’s own version, the Defendant made
payment contrary to the provisions of the agreement and most
seriously in contravention
of the Public Finance Management Act.
[208] For the Defendant to
succeed with its counterclaim it must prove that the Plaintiff failed
to perform its obligations
as imposed by the terms of the agreement
or that the performance was wrong. Secondly the Defendant must
demonstrate that it placed
the Plaintiff in
mora
and that
despite having done so the Plaintiff failed to make good its
non-compliance. Magid J in the matter of
Ally and Others NNO v
Courtesy Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
1996 (3) SA 134
at page 149 F
said
the following:
“
The right to cancel the
agreement in terms of clause 8 thereof which I have quoted above
arises if and only if:
a)
The offending party has
committed a breach of the agreement.
b)
The innocent party has
given the offending party 14 days’ written notice to remedy the
breach.
c)
The offending party has
notwithstanding the notice, failed to remedy the breach.”
[209] The Defendant has
not managed in this matter to demonstrate in evidence any of the
three jurisdictional requirements.
To the contrary the Plaintiff has
proved that on the 6
th
March 2017 the Defendants officials
unilaterally repudiated the agreement verbally which repudiation the
Plaintiff accepted and
is entitled to damages occasioned by the
premature and unprocedural termination of the agreement. The SLA
provides that if a breach
occurs then the defaulting party must be
placed on terms and afforded seven days to remedy the breach and only
if he remains in
breach the innocent party may elect to cancel. It
did not happen in this case.
[210] It is further common
cause that on the 28
th
February 2017 the Plaintiff
rendered its third and fourth invoices for the amount of R1 202
652.00 being in respect of lessons
conducted for Basic Boiler
Production, Basic Beef Production, Advanced Boiler Production,
Advanced Beef Cattle Production and Advanced
Small Cattle. These
courses were given over the period 15
th
February 2017 to
24
th
February 2017. During the last week of February two
further courses were given and an invoice dated the 10
th
May 2017 was generated in the sum of R400 884.00.
[211] The Plaintiffs claim
A is a combination of the third and fourth invoices which makes a
total of R1 603 536.00.
This amount remains unpaid. Instead of paying
the amount the Defendant unilaterally cancelled the agreement. In the
result he Plaintiff
is entitled to payment of the amount as set out
in its third and fourth invoices. It is for the services already
rendered.
[212] Claim B comprises of
disbursements made by the Plaintiff in respect of accommodation and
transport costs. There
is no dispute that the amount of R440 000.00
was paid to Lapeng hotel and R25 000.00 (Twenty-Five Thousand
Rand) paid
for transport costs. The Plaintiff proved that the payment
was made in advance before the Defendant unlawfully cancelled the
agreement.
The Defendant is in my view liable to reimburse the
Plaintiff for such.
[213] Claim C is for
payment of the sum of R1 479 286.60 being payment of the
balance of the contract price.
The question to be asked in order to
answer this claim is the “but for test” which is would
the Plaintiff have suffered
the loss but for the Defendants’
breach? The Court in the matter of
International Shipping Co (Pty)
Ltd v Bentley 1990 (1) SA (AD) page 680 at 700 F – G
described this loss and resultant claim as follows:
“
This enquiry as to factual
causation is generally conducted by applying the so called “but
for test” which is designed
to determine whether a postulated
cause can be identified as a cause
sine qua non
of the loss in
question. In order to apply this test one must make a hypothetical
enquiry as to what probably would have happened
but for the wrongful
conduct of the Defendant.”
[214] I am satisfied that
had the Defendant not acted as it did on the 3
rd
and 6
th
March 2017 when it wrongfully cancelled the agreement it prevented
the Plaintiff from earning the full amount of the contract price.
The
Plaintiff did nothing wrong to cause cancellation of the contract. It
is the Defendant who unilaterally and without just cause
terminated
the contract and for that the Plaintiff is entitled to be placed in
the positon it would have been “but for ”
the wrongful
action of the Defendant.
[215] In the result I find
that the Plaintiff has proved its cause of action in all respects and
is entitled to judgment
in its favour on the other hand I must find
that the Defendant has failed to prove that it is entitled to a
refund of monies already
paid under the contract accordingly the
Defendant’s counterclaim falls to be dismissed.
ORDER
1.
The Plaintiff is granted
judgment as prayed for and the Defendant’s counterclaim is
dismissed with costs.
2.
The Defendant is ordered
to pay the Plaintiff the amount of R3 547 822.60 being the total of
claim A, B, C plus interest thereof
calculated at the rate of 10.25%
calculated from the 6 June 2017 to date of payment.
3.
The Defendant is further
ordered to pay the Plaintiff taxed party and party costs which costs
shall include the costs of two counsel.
Dated
at Johannesburg on this 15
th
day of November 2022
M
A MAKUME
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Appearances:
DATE OF
HEARING
:
JULY 2022
DATE OF
JUDGMENT
:
15 NOVEMBER 2022
FOR
APPLICANT
: ADV HH
COWLEY SC
WITH
ADV S MATHIBA
INSTRUCTED
BY
: TL SI
INCORPORATED
FOR
RESPONDENT
:
ADV MATHIBEDI SC
WITH
ADV MHANGO
ADV MOTHEBE
INSTRUCTED
BY
: OFFICE
OF THE STATE ATTORNEY
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