Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 922South Africa
Services Sector Education and Training Authority v Amanz Abantu Services (PTY ) Ltd (in business rescue) and Another: In re: Amanz Abantu Services (PTY ) Ltd (in business rescue) v Services Sector Education and Training Authority (3409/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 922 (15 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
15 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Services Sector Education and Training Authority v Amanz Abantu Services (PTY ) Ltd (in business rescue) and Another: In re: Amanz Abantu Services (PTY ) Ltd (in business rescue) v Services Sector Education and Training Authority (3409/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 922 (15 November 2022)
Services Sector Education and Training Authority v Amanz Abantu Services (PTY ) Ltd (in business rescue) and Another: In re: Amanz Abantu Services (PTY ) Ltd (in business rescue) v Services Sector Education and Training Authority (3409/2022) [2022] ZAGPJHC 922 (15 November 2022)
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sino date 15 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NO: 3409/2022
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
15
November 2022
In
the matter between:
SERVICES
SECTOR EDUCATION AND TRAINING
AUTHORITY
Applicant
and
AMANZ’
ABANTU SERVICES (PTY) LTD (in business
rescue)
First Respondent
THE
SHERIFF: JOHANNESBURG-NORTH
Second Respondent
In
re:
AMANZ’
ABANTU SERVICES (PTY) LTD (in business
rescue)
Execution Creditor
and
SERVICES
SECTOR EDUCATION AND TRAINING
AUTHORITY
Execution Debtor
JUDGMENT
CRUTCHFIELD
J:
[1]
The applicant, the Services Sector Education and Training Authority,
a statutory body
established in terms of
section 9(1)
of the
Skills
Development Act 97 of 1998
, sought the stay of a writ of execution
issued at the instance of the first respondent, pending the outcome
of an appeal, by way
of urgency.
[2]
The first respondent, Amanz’ Abantu Services (Pty) Ltd (in
business rescue),
opposed the application on the basis that there was
no pending appeal and that the applicant failed to demonstrate or
establish
a right.
[3]
The second respondent, the Sheriff Johannesburg-North, cited as an
interested party,
played no role in the proceedings.
[4]
The applicant and the first respondent agreed to refer their dispute
to arbitration.
The dispute related to whether the construction
contract concluded between them was remeasurable. The respondent
contended
that it was and claimed a final payment certificate.
[5]
The arbitrator delivered his award on 4 November 2021 (‘the
award’).
It was common cause between the parties that the award
came to the parties’ attention during January 2022.
[6]
The award included a finding that the contract sum was remeasurable
and directed
the parties to agree to the appointment of a Quantity
Surveyor (‘QS’), an expert, in order to assess the first
respondent’s
claim for a final payment certificate. In
addition, the arbitrator directed that the applicant issue a final
payment certificate
for the amount determined by the QS, failing
which that the QS issue the final payment certificate.
[7]
The arbitrator directed the applicant to make payment to the first
respondent of any
amount assessed as being owing by the QS, within
ten calendar days of the issue of the final payment certificate.
[8]
Pursuant thereto, the parties mutually appointed the QS to assess the
first respondent’s
claim for a final payment certificate.
Accordingly, the applicant accepted the arbitrator’s award and
acted upon it.
[9]
On 2 June 2022, the first respondent obtained an order of this Court
in terms of which the
arbitrator’s award was made an order of
court.
[10]
The QS completed the remeasurement process and delivered his
determination on 1 July
2022. The applicant, dissatisfied with
the QS’s decision, declined to issue the final payment
certificate and the QS did
so on 7 July 2022, in the amount of
R9 395 851.54. The amount was payable in terms of the
arbitrator’s award
within ten days, by 17 July 2022.
[11]
Whilst the parties’ agreement to determine their dispute by way
of arbitration incorporated
a provision that the arbitration be final
and binding upon them, the applicant alleged that the parties
concluded an addendum to
the arbitration agreement, during March
2018. The addendum allegedly provided for the arbitration award to be
subject to an appeal
in terms of the Rules of the Arbitration
Foundation of South Africa (‘AFSA’).
[12]
The applicant, on 6 July 2022, submitted an appeal in respect of
the determination
of the QS, not the award of the arbitrator itself.
The first respondent objected to the appeal on the ground that the
QS’s
determination was not appealable.
[13]
The first respondent informed AFSA on 20 July 2022, of its view
that the QS’s
determination was not appealable. On 31 August
2022, AFSA advised by way of correspondence that its participation in
the matter
was limited to the appointment of an arbitrator and that
it had no jurisdiction to appoint an appeal tribunal.
[14]
The first respondent caused the arbitrator’s award and the
Court order to be served
on the applicant’s attorneys of record
on 24 August 2022, and, on National Treasury on 2 September
2022, Thereafter,
on 28 September 2022, the first respondent
informed the applicant that it intended procuring the issue of a writ
based on
the award that the applicant pay the amount determined by
the QS.
[15]
The writ was issued on 4 October 2022, in the amount of
R9 395 851.54 plus
interest thereon at the rate of 7.5% per
annum from 18 July 2022 to date of payment, in terms of the
payment certificate issued
on 7 July 2022 read together with the
Court order dated 2 June 2022.
[16]
The first respondent’s attorneys brought the writ to the
attention of the applicant’s
attorneys by way of correspondence
on 6 October 2022. As a result, the applicant launched this
application by way of urgency
for a stay of the writ, on 13 October
2022.
[17]
The deponent to the affidavit in support of the application for the
issue of the writ of
execution, referred in that affidavit to:
17.1 Section
3(3)(a)(i) of the State Liability Act, 20 of 1957 (‘the Act’),
to the effect that a final court
order against a department of state
for the payment of money must be satisfied within 30 days of the date
of the court order becoming
final;
17.2 Section
3(4) of the Act to the effect that if the final court order for the
payment of money is not satisfied within
30 days of the date of the
order becoming final, the judgment creditor may serve the court order
on the attorney of record and
the relevant treasury;
17.3 In terms
of s 3(5)(a) of the Act, the relevant treasury must, within 14 days
of the service of the final court
order, ensure that the judgment
debt is satisfied;
17.4 In terms
of s 3(6) of the Act, in the event that the relevant treasury fails
to ensure that the judgment debt is
satisfied within the time periods
specified, the Registrar must upon the written request of the
judgment creditor or his legal
representative, issue a writ of
execution or a warrant of execution in terms of the applicable Rules
of Court against movable property
owned by the State and used by the
department concerned.
[18]
The deponent stated further that the judgment debtor, the applicant,
failed to satisfy
the judgment debt within 30 days of the date for
payment and the court order was served on the judgment debtor’s
attorney
of record and upon the National Treasury.
[19]
The issues to be determined by me were:
19.1 Whether
the applicant established urgency sufficient to bring the application
on the truncated time periods utilised
by it regarding notice and
service of the application; and
19.2 Whether
real and substantial justice required the stay of the writ or whether
an injustice would result if the
writ was not stayed.
[20]
The applicant submitted that in the alternative to a determination of
whether real and
substantial justice required a stay, the applicant
was entitled to a stay if:
20.1 The
applicant established a
prima facie
right to the relief sought
by it;
20.2 There
was a reasonable apprehension of irreparable harm; and
20.3 The
balance of convenience favoured the applicant.
[21]
Given that the application involved the stay or otherwise of a writ
in excess of R9 million,
I determined that the application was
sufficiently urgent to justify it being determined on the basis on
which it was brought before
me by the applicant, and that the matter
should be enrolled and determined as a matter of urgency.
[22]
The applicant relied on the potential injustice that it alleged would
follow in the event
that the writ was not stayed, and the applicant
ultimately found success in its appeal against the determination of
the QS. Furthermore,
the applicant contended that this Court was not
required to consider the merits of the underlying dispute as the sole
enquiry was
whether the underlying
causa
remained in dispute
between the parties. The applicant argued that it was not asserting a
right but rather seeking to prevent an
injustice and that the
granting of real and substantial justice compelled the ordering of
the stay. Accordingly, the applicant
argued further that the first
respondent’s contentions that the applicant did not have a
prima facie
or a clear right, was not relevant to the issues
under consideration.
[23]
Whilst I am
not seized with the merits of the underlying dispute, they are
relevant insofar as I am obliged to assess whether the
alleged
dispute regarding the underlying
causa
relied
upon by the applicant, constitutes a triable issue.
[1]
[24]
The parties, pursuant to the award, agreed to refer the assessment of
the payment certificate
to an expert, the QS, who reached a
determination. Neither party alleged that the QS did not act honestly
and in good faith in
rendering his determination. Thus, I accept that
the QS performed the assessment honestly and in good faith.
[25]
The QS,
thereafter, became
functus
officio
and
his decision final and binding on the parties. The only method of
disturbing the expert’s determination was by way of
review
proceedings.
[2]
It was common
cause between the parties that the applicant did not institute review
proceedings in respect of the QS’s determination.
[26]
In order
for this Court to suspend the decision constituting the underlying
causa
,
the applicant had to demonstrate that the underlying
causa
was disputed between the parties.
[3]
[27]
As stated afore, the applicant accepted and acted upon the award in
terms of which the
arbitrator directed the appointment and assessment
of a QS. The arbitrator’s award remains undisputed by the
applicant. The
latter did not bring appeal or review proceedings
against the award.
[28]
Rule 22.2 of AFSA’s Arbitration Rules provides that “A
notice of appeal shall
be delivered by the appellant, within 7
calendar days of publication of the award, failing which the interim
award or final award
shall not be appealable. …”.
Accordingly, given the absence of a notice of appeal by the applicant
in respect of the
arbitrator’s award within the stated time
period, the award became final.
[29]
As regards
the applicant’s alleged appeal against the determination of the
QS, the respondent objected to the appeal in that
the QS was
appointed, by agreement between the parties, as an expert and thus
did not perform a quasi-judicial function. As a result,
the QS’s
determination is not capable of sustaining an appeal.
[4]
[30]
On 15 August 2022, the applicant adopted the view that the QS’s
determination
was reviewable. Notwithstanding, the applicant did not
persist therewith, took no action in that regard and did not furnish
any
basis upon which the QS allegedly did not act honestly or in good
faith. Moreover, as submitted by the applicant’s counsel
in
argument before me, the Arbitration Act does not permit of a general
entitlement of a party to an arbitration to bring review
proceedings.
In any event, the applicant’s grounded its application firmly
upon the alleged purported appeal of the QS’s
determination
[31]
Reference
to the requirements of an interim interdict in the context of Rule
45A, is not entirely appropriate in circumstances where
“an
applicant is not asserting a right in the strict sense but a
discretionary indulgence based on the apprehension of injustice,”
[5]
as occurred in this matter.
[32]
The
alternate interdictory relief sought by the applicant must fail given
that the applicant did not rely upon a right in the strict
sense.
[6]
That however does not necessarily mean that the applicant’s
application must fail. The interests of justice in terms of Rule
45A
and this Court’s inherent jurisdiction remain relevant to the
relief sought by the applicant herein.
[7]
[33]
The applicant relied upon an injustice in the event that the writ was
not stayed and the
applicant succeeded in its appeal. Stated
differently, the applicant contended that irreparable harm would
invariably result if
there was a possibility that the underlying
causa
was the subject-matter of an ongoing dispute between the
parties.
[34]
However, there is no ongoing dispute between the parties. The
arbitrator’s award
is final and binding given that the
applicant did not lodge a review or an appeal against the award in
terms of Rule 22.2 of AFSA’s
Rules.
[35]
As regards the alleged appeal against the QS’s determination,
AFSA advised the applicant
on 31 August 2022, that AFSA does not
have jurisdiction to appoint an appeal tribunal. Accordingly, there
is no pending appeal
of the QS’s determination.
[36]
In the circumstances, the applicant did not establish that the
underlying
causa
is in dispute between the parties and that
irreparable harm will result if the writ is not stayed.
[37]
Insofar as I am obliged to exercise this Court’s discretion
under Rule 45A judicially,
that requires that I not close my eyes to
the fact that there is no pending appeal by the applicant.
[38]
Given the
absence of a pending appeal, the ‘question arises as to whether
Rule 45A provides a residual, equitable discretion
to a Court …’.
[8]
In short, uniform rule 45A does not envisage ‘the exercise of
an equitable jurisdiction unhinged from any legal
causa
,
… simply predicated on the equities of a case.’
[9]
[39]
Accordingly,
the first respondent’s argument that absent a protectable right
this Court does not have a residual equitable
discretion to order a
stay of execution in terms of uniform rule 45A,
[10]
was correctly made.
[40]
Insofar as
the applicant argued that neither the arbitrator’s award or the
determination of the QS provided for payment by
the applicant of
interest,
s 29
of the
Arbitration Act 42 of 1965
, provides for
interest on the amount awarded in terms of an award for payment of a
sum of money. Such amount shall, unless the
award provides otherwise,
carry interest at the same rate as a judgment debt. Accordingly, the
Prescribed Rate of Interest Act 55 of 1975
applies in respect of the
payment of interest. Additionally, the capital amount claimed under
the writ is correct.
[11]
[41]
Accordingly, the first respondent is entitled to
mora
interest
at the prevailing rate on the amount ordered by the arbitrator, being
the amount determined by the QS, from the date of
the award subject
to the relevant provisions of the
State Liability Act aforementioned
.
[42]
There is
nothing irregular in the first respondent’s procedure in having
the award made an order of Court prior to the completion
by the QS of
his determination. The issue of a writ of execution arising from a
court order that provides for payment of an amount
determined by an
expert, (or for payment of a list of expenses
[12]
),
and the inclusion of the amount so determined in the writ, is valid
and regular. The amount so determined is capable of sustaining
a writ
if it is easily ascertainable and has been ascertained in an
affidavit filed on behalf of the judgment creditor, which duly
transpired in this matter.
[43]
The applicant argued that the issue in dispute between the parties
was whether or not the
determination of the QS constituted an award
capable of appeal. The applicant alleged that it did sustain an
appeal and the first
respondent the opposite. It is not for me to
determine the merits or otherwise of that dispute. It suffices for
purposes hereof
that the underlying
causa of
the writ is not
in dispute as alleged by the applicant as there is no pending appeal,
as stated afore.
[44]
In so far as
Rule 45A
does not provide for a residual equitable
jurisdiction based on the equities of a case and in the absence of
legal
causa,
there is no ground available to me to grant the
application sought by the applicant and stay the execution of the
writ.
[45]
In
addition, the first respondent holds an enforceable judgment. It is
entitled to payment.
[13]
[46]
In the circumstances, there is no basis upon which I may grant the
application and order
the stay of the writ, even on an interim basis,
and the appropriate order will follow hereunder. There is no reason
to order otherwise
than that the order on the costs follow the order
on the merits of the application.
[47]
By reason of the aforementioned, I grant the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the application such
costs to include
the costs of two counsel including senior counsel,
where two counsel including senior counsel, were utilised.
I
hand down the judgment.
A
A CRUTCHFIELD
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION
JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be 15 November 2022.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Ms L Segeels-Ncube
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc
COUNSEL
FOR THE FIRST RESPONDENT:
Mr H B Marais SC
Mr J G Botha
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Peter le Mottée Attorneys
DATE
OF THE HEARING:
17 October 2022
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
15 November 2022
[1]
BP SA v
Mega Burst Oils
2022
(1) SA 162
(GJ) (‘
BP
’)
para 21.
[2]
Transnet
National Ports Authority v Reit Investments (Pty)Ltd
[2020]
ZASCA 129
(2020 JDR 2104) paras 32-34 (‘
Transnet
’);
Tahilram
v Trustees, Lukamber Trust
2022
(2) SA 436
(SCA) para 27;
Lufuno
Mphaphuli & Associates (Pty) Ltd v Andrews & Another
[2007] ZASCA 143
;
2008
(2) SA 448
(SCA) para 22 (‘
Lufuno
’).
[3]
Gois
t/a Shakespeare’s Pub v Van Zyl & Others
2011
(1) SA 148
(LC) para 37.
[4]
Transnet
note 2
above
;
Lufuno
note
2 above.
[5]
BP
note
1 above;
MEC,
Department of Public Works v Ikamva Architects
[2022]
3 All SA 760
(ECB) para 83;
Road
Accident Fund v Strydom
2001
(1) SA 292 (C) 304E;
[6]
BP
note
1 above para 15.
[7]
Id.
[8]
BP
id
para 24.
[9]
Firm
Mortgage Solutions (Pty) Ltd & Another v Absa Bank Limited &
Another
2014 (1) SA 168
(WCC) para 33 (‘
Firm
Mortgage’)
as
quoted in
BP
id.
[10]
Firm
Mortgage
id
paras 3, 7, 9 and 13.
[11]
Dunlop
Rubber Co v Stander
1924
CPD 431.
[12]
Butchart
v Butchart
1997
(4) SA 108 (W) 111 C-J.
[13]
BP
note 1 above para 27.2;
Perelson
v Druain
1910
TS 458.
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