Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 959South Africa
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa v Hughes and Others (2019/34170) [2022] ZAGPJHC 959 (1 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
1 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa v Hughes and Others (2019/34170) [2022] ZAGPJHC 959 (1 December 2022)
Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa v Hughes and Others (2019/34170) [2022] ZAGPJHC 959 (1 December 2022)
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sino date 1 December 2022
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE
NUMBER:
2019/34170
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
01
DECEMBER 2022
In
the matter between:
INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
Plaintiff
and
PETER
WILLIAMS
HUGHES
First Defendant
CAREL
VISSER
Second Defendant
KEVIN
JOHN
ALBERTS
Third Defendant
SEAN
THOMPSON
Fourth Defendant
LENA
LYNNECE
JANSEN
Fifth Defendant
PAUL
VISSER
Sixth Defendant
RONALD
ALEXANDER BRINK
Seventh Defendant
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' and/or the parties' representatives by email and by
being
uploaded onto CaseLines. The date and time for hand-down is deemed to
be 10h00 on 01 December 2022.
JUDGMENT
REDMAN
AJ
:
[1]
The seventh defendant ("
the
excipient
") excepts to the
plaintiff's particulars of claim on the basis that they lack
averments to sustain a cause of action, alternatively
are vague and
embarrassing.
[2]
The plaintiff's claim against the excipient is
based on a guarantee agreement signed by him (and the other
defendants) on 20 May
2014 in terms of which,
inter
alia
, the excipient irrevocably and
unconditionally guaranteed as a primary obligation in favour of the
plaintiff the due, proper and
punctual performance by Spring Romance
Properties 34 (Pty) Limited t/a Impahla Clothing ("
Impahla
")
of the guaranteed liabilities defined in the guarantee agreement. The
excipient further undertook to the plaintiff that
each time a
guarantee claim notice was delivered to it, it would within three
business days after receipt thereof pay all sums
claimed in such the
guarantee claim notice.
[3]
The guarantee agreement guaranteed amounts owed or
which may become owing to the plaintiff by Impahla under certain
finance documents.
[4]
The liability under the guarantee was limited to
R2 million for each of the signatories, jointly and severally the one
paying the
other to be absolved.
[5]
The plaintiff in its particulars of claim pleads
that prior to, and subsequent to, the signing of the guarantee
agreement Impahla
entered into three written credit loan agreements
with the plaintiff, namely –
5.1.
a loan agreement dated 7 October 2011 in terms of
which the plaintiff made available and advanced a loan of R4 million
to Impahla,
which amount has been fully repaid;
5.2.
a loan agreement dated 2 June 2014 in terms of
which the plaintiff made available and advanced a loan of R2 million
to Impahla,
and in terms of which there was an amount of R1 379
455,07 outstanding (the second loan agreement);
5.3.
a loan agreement dated 24 February 2016 in terms
of which the plaintiff made available and advanced a loan of R10
million to Impahla,
and in terms of which there was an amount of R11
176 576,87 outstanding (the third loan agreement).
[6]
The plaintiff's claim against the excipient was
limited to an amount of R2 million under the guarantee agreement in
respect of both
the second and third loan agreements. The total claim
against the excipient is for payment of the globular amount of R2
million
together with costs and interest.
[7]
The excipient excepts to the plaintiff's
particulars of claim on nine grounds, some of which overlap. Before
addressing the grounds
of exception it is apposite to reiterate the
Court's approach in these matters.
[8]
In order to establish that particulars of claim
fail to disclose a cause of action, the excipient bears the onus of
establishing
that on every reasonable interpretation that can be
placed on the particulars of claim no cause of action is disclosed.
See
Francis v Sharp and Others
2004 (3) SA 230
(C) at 237G.
[9]
An exception must be determined on the pleadings
as they stand and on the assumption that the facts contained therein
are true.
(See
Stewart v Botha
[2008] ZASCA 84
;
2008 (6) SA 310
(SCA) at paragraph
[4]
). This
requires a holistic analysis of the pleadings. The purpose of an
exception is to dispose of the entire matter and to avoid
the leading
of any evidence. (See
Barclays National
Bank Ltd v Thompson
1989 (1) SA 547
(A)
at 553F-I).
[10]
One cannot look at the individual paragraphs or
prayers in isolation. “
Cause of
action
”
was defined in
McKenzie
v Farmers’ Cooperative Meat Industries Ltd
1922
(AD) 16 at 23 to mean “
every fact
which it will be necessary for the plaintiff to prove, if traversed
in order to support his right to the judgment of
the court
”
.
[11]
When approaching an exception a court should not
adopt an overly technical approach and minor blemishes should not be
elevated (See,
for example
Living Hands
(Pty) Ltd v Ditz
2013 (2) SA 368
(GSJ)
at para [15]).
[12]
In
Trope v South
African Reserve Bank
1992 (3) SA 208
(T) at 221A-E, the Court described the process in determining
exceptions on the grounds that a pleading is vague and embarrassing:
“
An
exception to a pleading on the ground that it is vague and
embarrassing involves a twofold consideration. The first is whether
the pleading lacks particularity to the extent that it is vague. The
second is whether the vagueness causes embarrassment of such
a nature
that the excipient is prejudiced …. As to whether there is
prejudice, the ability of the excipient to produce an
exception proof
plea is not the only, or indeed the most important test …. If
that were the only test the object of pleadings
to enable parties to
come to trial, prepare to meet the other’s case and not be
taken by surprise may well be defeated. Thus
it may be possible to
plead to particulars of claim which can be read in any number of ways
by simply denying the allegations made,
likewise to a pleading which
leaves one guessing as to the actual meaning. Yet there can be no
doubt that such a pleading is excipiable
as being vague and
embarrassing.”
[13]
It follows that averments in a pleading which are
contradictory and which are not pleaded in the alternative are vague
and embarrassing,
one can but be left guessing as to the actual
meaning if any conveyed by the pleadings. Pleadings are required to
be drafted in
a lucid, logical and intelligible form (c.f.
Trope
supra
). The need
for clarity and conciseness is of crucial importance when a matter
involves complex legal or factual issues.
[14]
Although a Court will adopt a benevolent approach
to the consideration of pleadings, it should not allow a matter to
proceed in
circumstances where the issues have not been properly
defined and encapsulated in the pleadings. In
Jowell
v Bramwell Jones
1998 (1) SA 836
(W) at
902J – 903E, Heher J set out the general principles applicable,
namely:
“
(a)
Minor blemishes are irrelevant;
(b) Pleadings
must be read as a whole; no paragraph can be read in isolation;
(c) A
distinction must be drawn between the facta probanda or primary
factual allegations which every plaintiff
must make, and the facta
probantia, which are the secondary allegations upon which the
plaintiff will rely in support of his primary
factual allegations.
Generally speaking, the latter are matters for particulars for trial
and even then are limited. For the rest,
they are matters for
evidence;
(d) Only
facts need be pleaded; conclusions of law need not be pleaded;
(e) Bound up
with the last-mentioned consideration is that certain allegations
expressly made may carry with
them implied allegations and the
pleadings must be so read; c.f.
Coronation Brick (Pty) Ltd v
Strachan Construction Co (Pty) Ltd
1982 (4) SA 371
(D) at 377,
379B, 379G-H. Thus an allegation of negligent conduct, especially
where the negligence is particularised, implies that
a reasonable
person would not have so acted or would have acted otherwise. So, in
a case involving a motor vehicle collision, it
is sufficient to plead
that the defendant acted negligently in particular respects. This
implied that a reasonable person would
not have so acted. If damage
is alleged to flow therefrom this implies in turn that there was a
breach of a legal duty not to act
so.”
[15]
If a party adequately knows what the plaintiff’s
case is and its attorneys are able to take instructions and record a
meaningful
response to such pleadings, such pleading should not be
struck down as excipiable. See
Absa Bank
v Boksburg Transitional Local Council (Government of the Republic of
South Africa, third party
)
1997 (2) SA 415
(W) at 418.
[16]
The fundamental test which is applicable is
whether the plaintiff has made out a case which is clear enough to
enable the respondent
to plead thereto. See
Venter
and Others NNO v Barrett
2008 (4) SA
639
(CPD) at 644G. As stated in
Luttig v
Jacobs
1951 (4) SA 563
(O) at 571A-B:
"[I]t is essential for the
defendant to know what the contract is on which the plaintiff is
relying ..."
If the particulars of claim leave this
in doubt they are excipiable.
[17]
The nine grounds of exception are dealt with
below.
First and sixth grounds of
exception – fulfilment of conditions precedent.
[18]
The plaintiff's claim is divided into two parts.
Claim 1 addresses Impahla's liability under the second loan agreement
and Claim
2 addresses its liability under the third loan agreement.
Both the second and third loan agreements contain conditions
precedent.
The second loan agreement recorded the following
conditions precedent:
"4. CONDITIONS PRECEDENT
4.1. The advance of any
Loan by the [plaintiff] is subject to the following conditions
precedent being fulfilled (or
waived by the [plaintiff] in writing)
to the satisfaction of the [plaintiff]:
4.1.1
The execution and delivery of the relevant Finance Documents to the
[plaintiff];
4.1.2
The Borrower shall have provided the [plaintiff] with a resolution of
its Board
of Directors in the form provided for in annexure "A1"
hereto authorising conclusion of the Finance Documents to which
it is
a party;
4.1.3
The Borrower shall have furnished the [plaintiff] with all documents
as may be required
by the [plaintiff] in relation to compliance by
the [plaintiff] with the Financial Intelligence Centre Act. No. 38 of
2001, as
amended, in relation to the transactions contained in the
Finance Documents;
4.1.4
The Borrower shall have furnished and/or shall ensure that the
[plaintiff] is furnished
with the Security and, to the extent
applicable, confirmation that all obligations in respect of Section
45 of the Companies Act
relating to the Security shall have been
complied with;
4.1.5
The Borrower shall have furnished the [plaintiff] with a certified
copy of its securities
register;
4.1.6
The Borrower shall have procured that each shareholder delivers the
letter of undertaking
in the form provided for in annexure "D"
form pursuant to which each shareholder undertakes to procure that
the Borrower
complies with its obligations under the Finance
Documents, ensure that the Borrower does not issue any further shares
and does
not dispose of its shares in the Borrower;
4.1.7
The Borrower shall have furnished the [plaintiff] with a signed debit
order form
in the form provided for in annexure "C" hereto;
and
4.1.8
The Borrower shall have furnished the [plaintiff] with written
confirmation from
the Borrower's auditor, confirming current
shareholders and directors of the Borrower."
[19]
The conditions precedent contained in the third
loan agreement were similar to the second loan agreement but included
the following
conditions:
"4.1.3 The Borrower shall
have furnished the [plaintiff] with a bank certified debit order,
duly signed and completed
by the Borrower substantially in the form
of annexure "B" hereto;
4.1.8 The Borrower shall have
furnished the [plaintiff] with the written consent obtained from Absa
Bank Limited for the Borrower
to -
4.1.8.1
enter into the Loan Agreement with the [plaintiff] for the loan and
to provide the Security, in
format contained in annexure "E"
hereto; and
4.1.8.2
specifically to provide second the mortgage bond referred to in
clause 1.`9.2.6 above;
4.1.9 The Borrower shall have
furnished the [plaintiff] with an amendment to its lease agreement
concluded with Fusion Properties
dated 12 July 2012, in terms of
which the property situated at [....] P [....] Avenue, Epping
Industria was leased, such that the
terms of this lease agreement is
extended to be a period equal to or surpass the Term of the Loan;
4.1.10 The Borrower shall have
furnished the [plaintiff] with undertakings signed by each of Fusion
Properties and Kitunda Properties
in their capacities as landlords,
acknowledging the Lenders interest in the existing and new general
and special notarial bonds
registered and/or to be registered over
certain assets contained / to be contained on each of their premises,
and that each landlord's
rights under their lease agreements and at
law may be made subject to the said bonds.
4.1.11 The Borrower shall have
furnished the [plaintiff] with a fully executed lease agreement
between it and Acucap Investments
(Proprietary) Limited for the
building situated at Portion of 3
rd
floor Park Terraces,
Erf [....], Mowbray, which agreement should include an undertaking by
the landlord acknowledging the [plaintiff's]
interest in the existing
and new general and special notarial bonds registered and/or to be
registered over certain assets contained
/ to be contained on each on
the premises, and that the landlord's rights under their lease
agreement and at law be made subject
to the said bonds."
[20]
The conditions precedent in respect of the loan
agreements are addressed in the particulars of claim as follows:
"The advance of the loan by
the Plaintiff was subject to the Conditions Precedent as contained in
para 4 of the ... Loan Agreement
being fulfilled (or waived by the
Plaintiff in writing), which said Conditions Precedent were fulfilled
to the satisfaction of
the Plaintiff, alternatively waived by the
Plaintiff;"
[21]
The excipient excepts to the manner in which the
particulars of claim addresses the fulfilment or waiver of the
conditions precedent.
It complains that the plaintiff has failed to
allege when and in what manner the conditions were fulfilled, which
conditions were
fulfilled and which conditions were waived in
circumstances where they could not have both been fulfilled and
waived. It also complains
that there is no allegation that any
alleged waiver was in writing.
[22]
In argument it was contended on behalf of the
excipient that the allegations of fulfilment of the conditions
precedent and waiver
are mutually destructive and cannot both be
relied on by the plaintiff. I, do not, however, understand the
pleading to suggest
that the applicant is simultaneously relying on
both the fulfilment and the waiver of any of the conditions. The
alleged waiver
was clearly pleaded in the alternative.
[23]
The conditions precedent described in the loan
agreements are conditions for the benefit of the plaintiff, primarily
to ensure that
Impahla's indebtedness was secured. No doubt it is for
this reason that the conditions were required to be fulfilled to the
satisfaction
of the plaintiff.
[24]
Significantly the conditions prescribed in clause
4 of the loan agreements do not appear to govern the whole of the
loan agreements
but merely place conditions on the advancement of any
loans thereunder. I am alive to the fact that a court should exercise
caution
when deciding questions concerning the interpretation of
contracts on exception. The plaintiff, in respect of both loan
agreements,
pleads that it complied with all its duties and
obligations "
insofar as the asset
and working capital loans were advanced to Impahla at Impahla's
special instance and request and utilised by
Impahla
".
[25]
The manner in which each condition was fulfilled
or waived and when this was done is a matter for evidence. For the
purposes of
pleading it is unnecessary for the particulars of claim
to contain any further detail in this regard.
[26]
In regard to the alleged waiver, however, the loan
agreements specified that any waiver had to be in writing. The
failure to allege
a written waiver renders the particulars of claim
vague and embarrassing. The excipient would be entitled to know
whether any alleged
waiver was compliant with the provisions of the
loan agreements.
[27]
The first and sixth grounds of exception are
accordingly upheld only to the extent that the plaintiff has failed
to allege that
any waivers relied on were in writing.
Grounds 2 and 7 – Draw-down
conditions
[28]
The second and third loan agreements provided that
the plaintiff would "
not be obliged
to make any advances unless the draw-down conditions had been
satisfied in form and substance satisfactory to the
plaintiff
".
[29]
The draw-down conditions did not place any
obligation on the plaintiff. The provisions merely entitled the
plaintiff to refuse to
make any advances if the conditions recorded
therein were not satisfied. In the light of the plaintiff's
allegations that monies
were lent and advanced pursuant to the second
and third loan agreements, it was unnecessary for it to make any
reference to the
draw-down conditions which do not constitute an
essential allegation to complete its cause of action. The allegation
that the draw-down
conditions were "
satisfied
in the form and substance satisfactory to the plaintiff alternatively
waived by the plaintiff
" is
sufficient to enable the excipient to plead thereto. The alleged
contradictory mechanisms by which the draw-down conditions
were
satisfied, i.e. being fulfilled alternatively waived, are pleaded in
the alternative.
[30]
Accordingly, the second and seventh grounds of
exceptions cannot be sustained.
Third and eighth grounds
[31]
In paragraph 13.9.2 of its particulars of claim
the plaintiff pleads that the full amount due under the second loan
agreement became
payable fourteen days after the plaintiff had given
notice in writing of a breach to Impahla. A similar allegation is
made in respect
of the third loan agreement.
[32]
The excipient is entitled to know what amount is
owing by Impahla under the relevant loan agreements. It is those
amounts that,
according to the plaintiff, the excipient has
guaranteed. Impahla's obligation to make payment of the full amount
of the loans
would thus only arise after the 14-day notice had been
given. The failure to allege that the 14-day breach notice was given
and
that Impahla had failed to remedy its breach is a necessary
allegation to sustain a cause of action based on the guarantee
agreement.
The plaintiff's failure to make this allegation renders
the particulars of claim excipiable.
[33]
Grounds 3 and 8 of the exception are accordingly
upheld.
Fourth ground
[34]
In paragraph 21 of the plaintiff's particulars of
claim, it is pleaded that a letter of demand was served by the
Sheriff at the
domicilium
address of
inter
alia
, the excipient. In the letter of
demand reference is made to three certificates confirming the
outstanding guaranteed liability,
yet no certificates were attached
to the particulars of claim. The excipient contends that in the
absence of these certificates
it is not possible to ascertain whether
the demand was as a proper demand and alleges that the particulars of
claim are accordingly
excipiable.
[35]
I do not agree. Sufficient allegations have been
made in the particulars of claim to enable the excipient to plead
thereto. The
plaintiff has alleged that a letter of demand was served
and attaches a copy thereof. There is no reason why the excipient
cannot
address these allegations in its plea.
Fifth ground
[36]
The excipient avers that the third loan agreement
was not a loan agreement to which the guarantee agreement related
alternatively
no and/or insufficient allegations have been made by
the plaintiff from which this conclusion can be drawn. The
determination of
this ground of exception necessarily involves an
interpretation of the guarantee agreement. The excipient bears the
onus of persuading
the Court that on every reasonable interpretation
no cause of action has been revealed. See
Francis
v Sharp
supra
.
[37]
The guarantee agreement guaranteed "
the
due, proper and punctual performance by [Impahla] of the Guaranteed
Liabilities including the full, prompt and complete payment
of all
the guaranteed liabilities when and as same shall become due
".
The Guaranteed Liabilities were defined in the guarantee to mean:
"all present and future monies
and liabilities (whether actual or contingent and whether owed
jointly or severally or in any
other capacity whatsoever) which are
now, or which may hereafter become owing by [Impahla] to [the
plaintiff] in terms of the Finance
Documents together with all
damages and all costs, charges and expenses incurred by [the
plaintiff] in connection with a breach
by [Impahla] of its
obligations under the Finance Documents and which [the plaintiff] is
entitled to recover from [Impahla] in
terms of the Finance Documents,
including all items which would be Guaranteed Liabilities but for the
winding-up, absence of legal
personality or incapacity of [Impahla]
of any statute of limitations and a reference to the "Guaranteed
Liability" shall
be to any one or more of the Guaranteed
Liability as the context requires."
[38]
Clause 1.1.5 of the guarantee agreement provided
that "
Finance Document
"
would bear the meaning ascribed to that term in the "
Loan
Agreemen
t". "
Loan
agreement
" was defined to mean the
loan agreement concluded or to be concluded between Impahla and the
plaintiff "
on or about the
Signature Date
". The "
Signature
Date
" was defined to be the date
of signature of the guarantee agreement by the party last signing
(being 4 June 2014).
[39]
The excipient argues that because the second loan
agreement was the only loan agreement signed on or about 4 June 2014,
the guarantee
only covers Impahla's liability under that loan
agreement. This conclusion, however, does not accord with the terms
of the guarantee
agreement. The guarantee covered liability under the
Finance Documents. The meaning of "
Finance
Documents
" was "
ascribed
"
in the loan agreement. The second and third loan agreements record
the term "
Finance Documents
"
to mean –
“
1.8.1
this
loan agreement;
1.8.2 any one or
more Security
";
1.8.3
"
any
other agreement or document designated as a Finance Document by
written agreement between [the plaintiff] and [Impahla
]".
[40]
If one were to accept that reference to the "Loan
Agreement" in the guarantee agreement is reference to the second
loan
agreement, one would still be left with the question as to
whether the third loan agreement constitutes a document designated as
a Finance Document by written agreement between the plaintiff and
Impahla.
[41]
In the particulars of claim the plaintiff alleges
that the guarantee served as security for Impahla's indebtedness
towards the plaintiff
in terms of the third loan agreement. I am not
persuaded that on every reasonable interpretation the third loan
agreement did not
constitute a Finance Document to which the
guarantee related. The allegation that the third loan agreement was
secured by the guarantee
provides sufficient particularity to enable
the excipient to understand the plaintiff's case and to plead
thereto.
Ninth ground
[42]
Under claim 1 of the particulars of claim
(relating to the second loan agreement) the plaintiff avers that
there is an amount of
R1 379 455,07 due by Impahla. Under claim 2
(relating to the third loan agreement) it is averred that there is an
amount of R11 176
576,87 due. The plaintiff's prayer for
judgment, however, is limited to R2 million.
[43]
The excipient claims that the failure to delineate
between the first and second claims in the prayers renders the
particulars of
claim excipiable.
[44]
The plaintiff's claim against the excipient is not
based on the two loan agreements, it is based on the guarantee
agreement. The
plaintiff has alleged that Impahla is indebted to it
in an amount in excess of R2 million. The plaintiff has correctly
limited
its claim against the excipient to R2 million.
[45]
The pleadings are not vague and embarrassing in
this regard and the ninth exception accordingly falls to be
dismissed.
[46]
Although the excipient was successful in four out
of the nine exceptions it was unsuccessful in five. It cannot be
contended that
either party was substantially successful in this
application and in the exercise of my discretion I make no order as
to costs.
[47]
In the result, I make an order in the following
terms:
1.
Exceptions one, three, six and eight are upheld.
2.
Exceptions two, four, five, seven and nine are
dismissed.
3.
The plaintiff is afforded a period of fifteen days
from date of this Order to amend its particulars of claim.
N.
REDMAN
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Johannesburg
Heard
:
22 November 2022
Judgment
:
01 December 2022
Appearances
:
For
Plaintiff
:
Z. Mokatsane
Instructed
by
:
N. Meyer and Associates Inc.
For
Seventh Defendant
:
L. Hollander
Instructed
by
:
Smith Tabata Buchanan Boyes
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