Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 912South Africa
Lehana's Pass Investments CC v Africa Campus Trading 300 (PTY) Ltd and Others (16138/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 912 (17 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
17 November 2022
Headnotes
obiter, that section 12B (4) (a) of the Act does not stretch to that relief (Engen Petroleum Limited v Business Zone 1010 CC 2015 JDR 2606 (SCA), paragraph 23). In Business Zone, the Supreme Court of Appeal held that section 12B distinguishes between a “corrective remedial jurisdiction” and a “compensatory remedial jurisdiction”. “Corrective” relief is necessarily forward looking, and is meant to address unreasonable and unfair contractual practices. It does not extend to
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lehana's Pass Investments CC v Africa Campus Trading 300 (PTY) Ltd and Others (16138/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 912 (17 November 2022)
Lehana's Pass Investments CC v Africa Campus Trading 300 (PTY) Ltd and Others (16138/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 912 (17 November 2022)
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sino date 17 November 2022
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IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
Case No. 16138/2021
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
17 November 2022
In
the matter between:
LEHANA’S
PASS INVESTMENT CC
Applicant
and
AFRICA
CAMPUS TRADING 300 (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
BP
SOUTHERN AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
CONTROLLER
OF PETROLEUM PRODUCTS
Third Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
AJ
:
1
The applicant, “Lehana’s Pass”, is the owner
of a property in Orange Farm on which the first respondent, “Africa
Campus”, runs a petrol station. Africa Campus does so as a
franchisee of the second respondent, BP. BP leased the property
from
Lehana’s Pass in 1993. Since then, a series of franchisees has
operated a petrol station on the property in BP’s
name. Africa
Campus is the latest in the series. It sublet the property on 1
January 2015, and has operated a BP petrol station
on it ever since.
2
By all accounts, Africa Campus has been a very successful
franchisee. It has increased the turnover of BP fuels at the property
ten-fold in the eight years since it took over the franchise. Africa
Campus’ success drew Lehana’s Pass’ attention.
Instead of renting the property to BP, Lehana’s Pass decided to
take possession of the lucrative business Africa Campus had
built up.
3
Lehana’s Pass did so by telling BP that it would not
renew BP’s head lease unless BP agreed to allow it to operate a
petrol station on the property as BP’s franchisee. BP
acquiesced. In order to exclude Africa Campus from the property, BP
and Lehana’s Pass agreed that Lehana’s Pass would
terminate BP’s head lease. In terms of clause 42 of the
sublease,
this would have the effect of automatically terminating
Africa Campus’ right of occupation. Once that had been done, BP
and
Lehana’s Pass could enter into a new franchise agreement,
with the effect that Lehana’s Pass would effectively take
over
Africa’s Campus’ business.
4
Africa Campus calls this arrangement collusion. BP and
Lehana’s Pass call it business. Whatever its moral content,
there is
no real dispute between the parties that this is the
arrangement that was reached, and that the arrangement will
effectively deprive
Africa Campus of the equity it has built up in
its franchise since 2015. While Africa Campus has obviously reaped
the benefit of
its enhanced turnover at the property, it cannot sell
the franchise as a going concern, because Lehana’s Pass’
and
BP’s arrangement deprives its business of any commercial
value. Ms. Lombard, who appeared for Africa Campus before me, said
that what had been brought about was the “theft” of
Africa Campus’ business. Emotive as that description is,
I
appreciate why Africa Campus sees matters that way.
5
Aggrieved, Africa Campus referred BP’s conduct for
arbitration in terms of
section 12B
of the
Petroleum Products Act 120
of 1977
.
Section 12B
was inserted into the Act in 2003, and took
effect in 2006. Its purpose is to level the playing field between
wholesalers and retailers
in the petroleum market. Wholesalers are
often multinational companies, like BP, who distribute their product
through franchises.
Retailers are generally much smaller businesses,
like Africa Campus, who lack the bargaining power necessary to
negotiate favourable
franchise terms.
6
Section 12B
seeks to remedy this imbalance by permitting
retailers to ask the Controller of Petroleum Products to refer any
unreasonable or
unfair contractual practice committed by a wholesaler
to arbitration. Once the Controller decides to make the referral, the
parties
choose an arbitrator, or have one chosen for them
(section
12B
(3)). The arbitrator must then determine whether the contractual
practice complained of is unfair or unreasonable. Having reached
the
conclusion that there is an unfair or unreasonable practice, the
arbitrator is empowered to make “such award as he or
she deems
necessary to correct such practice”
(section 12B
(4) (a)).
7
Section 12B
does not graft easily onto the relationship
between the parties in this case. Africa Campus’ problem lies
not only with BP.
It is, on Africa Campus’ version, BP’s
collusion with Lehana’s Pass that has caused it harm. But the
arbitration
Africa Campus has triggered under
section 12B
does not
engage Lehana’s Pass at all. Lehana’s Pass is not a party
to it, and no relief can be granted against Lehana’s
Pass, even
if Africa Campus is successful in demonstrating that BP has engaged
in an unreasonable or unfair contractual practice.
Although Lehana’s
Pass holds a site licence under the Act,
section 12B
provides for
arbitrations only between wholesalers and retailers.
8
In line with its arrangement with BP, Lehana’s Pass has
terminated BP’s head lease, and has therefore triggered the
termination of BP’s sublease with Africa Campus.
9
That termination notwithstanding, Africa Campus refuses to
vacate the property. Lehana’s Pass now applies for Africa
Campus’
eviction. It is, though, in no-one’s interests to
affect the profitability of the petrol station. Since the termination
of
the head lease on 15 March 2021, the parties have conducted
themselves as if the agreements governing their relationship are
still
effective.
10
Mr. van As, who appeared for Lehana’s Pass, argued the
matter as a straightforward
rei vindicatio
. Whatever the
dispute between BP and Africa Campus, Lehana’s Pass has
terminated Africa Campus’ rights to occupy its
property, and is
entitled to an eviction order. The arbitration between BP and Africa
Campus does not, he submitted, affect this
legal reality. Mr. van As
was not so insouciant as to suggest that Lehana’s Pass had not
been party to a degree of sharp
dealing. He restricted himself to the
argument that, as a matter of law, Africa Campus’ complaint
against BP at arbitration
has no effect on Lehana’s Pass’
right to retake its property.
11
Ms. Lombard was constrained to accept that this is the legal
position. She also accepted that there is no basis on which Africa
Campus can remain in occupation of the property indefinitely. She
asked only that the eviction application be stayed until the
arbitration had run its course.
12
There is no formal application for a stay pending the
arbitration before me, but there is a postponement application which
seeks
essentially the same relief. Paragraph 1 of the notice of
motion in that application seeks a postponement
sine die
.
Paragraph 2 seeks an order preventing the application from being
re-enrolled “until such time as the arbitration proceedings
pending between [Africa Campus] and [BP] have concluded”.
13
I cannot grant that relief. There is no basis on which the
arbitrator is empowered to extend Africa Campus’ right to
occupy
Lehana’s Pass’ property. Even if the arbitrator
could revive Africa Campus’ sublease with BP (an outcome which
is itself no more than a remote possibility), he could not revive the
head lease, for the simple reasons that Lehana’s Pass
is not a
party to the arbitration, and that
section 12B
was never meant to
regulate situations like this – in which the holder of a site
licence and the holder of a wholesale licence
under the Act are not
the same person. There is accordingly no basis on which the
determination of Lehana’s Pass’ substantive
right to
retake its property can be deferred pending the arbitration. The
outcome of the arbitration will have no impact on that
right.
14
In any event, Ms. Lombard submitted in argument that Africa
Campus does not wish to remain on the property indefinitely. What it
hopes for is compensation from BP to make good on the loss of equity
in its business that it says it has suffered. What Africa
Campus
really wants is the eviction suspended or delayed pending the outcome
of the arbitration. It does not seek to resist the
eviction
per
se
.
15
Whether or not Africa Campus can claim compensation against BP
is also a matter of some controversy. The Supreme Court of Appeal
has
held,
obiter
, that
section 12B
(4) (a) of the Act does not
stretch to that relief (
Engen Petroleum Limited v Business Zone
1010 CC
2015 JDR 2606 (SCA), paragraph 23). In
Business Zone
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that
section 12B
distinguishes
between a “corrective remedial jurisdiction” and a
“compensatory remedial jurisdiction”.
“Corrective”
relief is necessarily forward looking, and is meant to address
unreasonable and unfair contractual practices.
It does not extend to
ordering the payment of compensation. This is because “compensatory”
relief is backward looking.
It can only be awarded to penalise a
frivolous complaint under
section 12B
(4) (b), not to correct an
unreasonable or unfair contractual practice under
section 12B
(4)
(a).
1cm; line-height: 200%">
16
The Supreme Court of Appeal’s decision in
Business
Zone
was later overturned in appeal (
Business Zone 1010 CC t/a
Emmarentia Convenience Centre v Engen Petroleum Limited
2017 (6)
BCLR 773
(CC)), but not on that point. This court has as a result
twice held itself bound by the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
obiter
remarks about the remedial powers conferred on an arbitrator in terms
of
section 12B
(see
Engen Petroleum Limited v Mfoza Service
Station (Pty) Limited
[2020] ZAGPJHC 242 (5 October 2020),
paragraph 20 and
Marndre Beleggings CC v Minister of Energy
[2018] ZAGPPHC 93 (22 March 2018), paragraph 24).
17
I think these decisions have taken a wrong turn, for three
reasons. The first is that the analysis of
section 12B
of the Act
provided in the Supreme Court of Appeal’s decision in
Business
Zone
was clearly
obiter
, and therefore not binding on the
High Court.
18
The second is that, although the Constitutional Court did not
specifically conclude that the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
analysis
of
section 12B
was wrong insofar as it excluded the
possibility of an award of damages to correct an unreasonable or
unfair contractual practice,
the Constitutional Court’s
decision comprehensively rejected the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
general approach to interpreting
the Act. I do not think that the
Constitutional Court’s decision in
Business Zone
is
consistent with an endorsement of the Supreme Court of Appeal’s
characterisation of an arbitrator’s compensatory
powers.
19
One of the Constitutional Court’s principal points of
departure from the Supreme Court of Appeal’s decision was the
Constitutional Court’s emphasis on the broad equitable standard
an arbitrator under
section 12B
must apply. The Constitutional Court
made clear that the Supreme Court of Appeal had missed this feature
of the Act. The conferral
of a supple equitable jurisdiction on an
arbitrator under
section 12B
seems to me to be inconsistent with the
Supreme Court of Appeal’s election to carve compensatory
corrective powers out from
section 12B
(4) (a) of the Act, merely on
the basis that compensatory powers are specifically provided for in
section 12B
(4) (b). There is no reason why, in exercising an
equitable jurisdiction to make “such award as he or she deems
necessary
to correct” an unfair or unreasonable contractual
practice, an arbitrator cannot award compensation in an appropriate
case.
An appropriate case would be one in which the award of damages
would have the effect of correcting the unfair or unreasonable
practice.
20
“Correcting” the practice can have at least two
meanings that are consistent with the overall purpose of the Act. The
first is restoring the parties to the position that they would have
been in but for the unreasonable or unfair practice. The second
is
discouraging an unreasonable or unfair contractual practice in the
market more generally. Compensation, in an appropriate case,
can
clearly “correct” an unfair or unreasonable contractual
practice in either of these senses.
21
The third reason why
Mfoza
and
Marndre Beleggings
were too quick to adopt the Supreme Court of Appeal’s reasoning
on the compensatory powers of arbitrators under
section 12B
is that
the Constitutional Court has itself declined to do so when the
opportunity has presented itself, and appears to consider
that
section 12B
permits an arbitrator to make compensatory orders under
section 12B
4
(a). In
Crompton Street Motors CC t/a Wallers Garage
Service Station v Bright Idea Projects 66 (Pty) Limited t/a All Fuels
(2021 (11) BCLR 1203
(CC) the Constitutional Court had to deal with
the meaning of
section 12B
once again. In doing so, the Court
referred freely to an arbitrator’s “wide remedial powers
to remedy the unfair or
unreasonable contractual practice and make
compensatory awards” (paragraph 45). If there had been any real
sense that the
Constitutional Court viewed compensatory awards as
being appropriate only under
section 12B
(4) (b) of the Act, the
Court surely would have said so.
22
For all these reasons, I think that Africa Campus is in
principle able to claim compensation from BP in the arbitration.
Whether
such an award should be made depends on the facts, and is
obviously a matter for the arbitrator.
23
The question that remains is what effect, if any, the
compensatory claim in the arbitration has on Lehana’s Pass’
rights
to vindicate its property. As I have already held, it can have
no impact on the merits of the claim. But I think it does have some
impact on the manner of its enforcement.
24
I enjoy a broad discretion to suspend the execution of an
order if to do so would be in the interests of justice (see section
173
of the Constitution, 1996, and Rule 45A of the Uniform Rules of
Court).
25
In the circumstances of this case, where the parties are
co-operating as if the contract had never been terminated; where
Africa
Campus accepts that it must inevitably leave the property but
seeks only the resolution of its arbitral claim before it does so;
and where, on Africa Campus’ version, Lehana’s Pass and
BP are implicated in a scheme that has triggered the need for
the
relief claimed at arbitration, it would plainly be in the interests
of justice to suspend the execution of the eviction order
on
appropriate terms.
26
Those terms will allow Africa Campus to remain in occupation
pending the outcome of the arbitration it has initiated, and will
give
it a reasonable period in which to vacate once the arbitral
award has been made.
27
I do not think that any costs order would be appropriate on
the facts of this case. While Lehana’s Pass has been successful
in obtaining an eviction order, it has not obtained that order on the
terms it asked for. Nor would it be appropriate to award
Lehana’s
Pass costs where Africa Campus’ resistance to the application
was, in my view, a reasonable response to the
arrangement made
between BP and Lehana’s Pass which will ultimately result in
Africa Campus’ exclusion from the property.
28
For all these reasons, I make the following order –
28.1 The first respondent
is evicted from ERF [....] Orange Farm Extension [....], Registration
Division IQ, Transvaal.
28.2 The eviction may be
executed on or after the sixtieth calendar day from the date of the
award in the arbitration
pending between the first and second
respondent. To the extent necessary, any of the parties may apply to
Wilson AJ, on five days’
notice to the other parties, for a
determination of the date of eviction.
28.3 Each party will pay
its own costs.
S
D J WILSON
Acting
Judge of the High Court
HEARD
ON:
8 November 2022
DECIDED
ON:
17 November 2022
For
the Applicant:
E van As
Instructed by Koor Attorneys
For
the First Respondent:
N Lombard
(Heads of Argument drawn by D
Aldworth)
Instructed by Garlicke and Bousfield
Inc
For
the Third Respondent
Lawtons Africa Inc
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