Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 87South Africa
Rutega Education Services CC (South Africa) v Optimal Student Recruitment (Pty) Ltd (110609/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 87 (6 February 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Rutega Education Services CC (South Africa) v Optimal Student Recruitment (Pty) Ltd (110609/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 87 (6 February 2025)
Rutega Education Services CC (South Africa) v Optimal Student Recruitment (Pty) Ltd (110609/2023) [2025] ZAGPPHC 87 (6 February 2025)
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sino date 6 February 2025
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
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SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case No:
110609/2023
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO
OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED: YES
DATE:
06 FEBRUARY 2025
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
RUTEGA
EDUCATION SERVICES CC (SOUTH AFRICA)
Excipient
/Defendant
and
OPTIMAL
STUDENT RECRUITMENT (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
In
re:
OPTIMAL
STUDENT RECRUITMENT (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
RUTEGA
EDUCATION SERVICES CC (SOUTH AFRICA)
Defendant
This
judgment is prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected as such 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 Case Lines.
The date for handing down is deemed to be 06 February 2025.
JUDGMENT
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The defendant, Rutega Education Services CC
(South Africa) [ the excipient] takes exception to the plaintiff’s
particulars
of claim on two grounds in terms of Uniform Rule 23
namely that, the plaintiff’s particulars of claim fail to
disclose a
cause of action and that its particulars of claim are
vague and embarrassing. This exception is opposed.
[2]
On the date of the hearing and after much
deliberation in oral argument, both Counsel were finally
ad
idem
that the only ground to be
determined by this Court was the first ground. The first ground
raises a complaint as against this Court’s
jurisdiction to
entertain the action and, in consequence that no cause of action has
been established on the pleadings. A sensible
agreement on exception
as, this complaint may serve the intended purpose of an exception
namely, to curtail unnecessary and further
litigation. If not, the
plaintiff has been forewarned. It is then on this basis, that the
Court only deals with the veracity of
the first ground and, in so
doing, considers the ground as against the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim [jurisdictional challenge].
THE
PARTICULARS OF CLAIM
[3]
The plaintiff is a
peregrinus
who instituted an enrichment claim against the excipient an
incola
,
for an amount of AUD $52,493.96 (ostensibly an amount of R646,237.39
as date of the institution of the action) [claimed amount]
which it
alleges that the excipient retains without justification, at its
expense.
[4]
The
jurisdictional fact relied on by the plaintiff on the pleadings is
that the excipient’s registered address, which is situated
within the jurisdiction of this Court, namely 7[...] H[...] Avenue,
Faerie Glen, Pretoria. An accepted allegation on the face of
it on
exception. This Court in consequence, in terms of section 21(1) of
the Superior Courts Act
[1]
possesses the requisite jurisdiction. However, this, jurisdictional
fact, according to the excipient is not the end of the jurisdictional
enquiry.
[5]
To commence the enquiry, it is noted that the
allegations in plaintiff’s particulars of claim are clearly set
out and dealt
with under headings. In this way, the relevant
background facts are set out to demonstrate the Plaintiff’s
justification
of the claimed amount. Such justification explained
with reference to an agreement.
[6]
To contextualise this justification is to deal
with the pleaded background facts which then gives rise to its
enrichment claim against
the excipient:
6.1.
The plaintiff and the excipient entered into a
joint venture agreement on the 22 June 2022 at Pretoria,
alternatively in Western
Australia [the agreement].
6.2.
At the time of the conclusion of the agreement,
a joint venture company, Rutega Education Services Limited (Kenya)
[the company]
had already been established. In terms of the
agreement, the plaintiff was tasked with the day-to-day functions of
the company.
For such services the plaintiff was entitled to receive
remuneration.
6.3.
The remuneration, in this case the claimed
amount was payable by the company for the services rendered to it by
the plaintiff. Payment
to be made within 30 days of presentation of
an invoice.
6.4.
The plaintiff pleads that its performance in terms of the agreement.
6.5.
It was a condition precedent of the agreement
that the excipient was to open one or more separate bank accounts in
the name company
by 6:00pm on the 30 June 2022. Relying on such
condition precedent, the plaintiff at paragraph 9.6 of the
particulars of claim
pleaded that:
9.6
Upon the conditions precedent and pleaded above, not being satisfied
by 6:00pm on the 30 June 2022,
the parties agreed that the agreement
would cease to have effect immediately after that time on that date,
except for [clause 5.5].
6.6.
Clause 5.5 lists the clauses that would survive such cessation of the
agreement.
Although not all these clauses are pleaded, the plaintiff
pleads the relevant clause which it relies on, clause 5.5.13. Clause
5.5.13 deals with the survival of “
any rights, remedy,
obligations or liabilities that have accrued under this agreement
.’
6.7.
The excipient did not fulfil the condition precedent. In consequence,
save
for the surviving clauses, the agreement ceased to have an
effect.
6.8.
The plaintiff rendered services for the company, tendered invoices
which remain
unpaid and as a result, the company became indebted to
it.
THE
JURISDICTIONAL CHALLENGE
[7]
After the background facts establishing the plaintiff’s right
and the
company’s liability to pay the claimed amount, the
plaintiff in its particulars of claim deals with the basis for its
enrichment
claim against the excipient. In short,
the
plaintiff alleges the excipient received payment of company income
from third parties and deposit it in its bank account. This
was done
without justification, and the excipient has failed to pay it the
plaintiff the claimed amount on the company’s
behalf.
[8]
The thrust of the excipient’s argument
lies at paragraph 11 of the particulars of claim where the plaintiff
alleges that:
“
The
agreement however stipulates that certain terms thereof would
survive, should the agreement not come to force in terms of clause
5.5, the contents of the clause
bearing relevance to this
action
(own emphasis) to this action being the stipulation
that any rights, remedies, obligations or liabilities that have
accrued under
the agreement, would be enforceable.”
[9]
Paragraph 11 is clearly pleaded under the
heading “RELEVANT FACTUAL BACKGROUND” sub-heading “JOINT
VENTURE AGREEMENT”
[10]
The relevance of such background facts appeared
to have escaped the excipient who now, argues that the plaintiff’s
reliance
of clause 5.5.13 translates into the plaintiff pleading that
its enrichment claim is brought in terms of the agreement.
[11]
In this way, and moving from this premise, the
excipient on exception relies on clause 41 of the agreement. Clause
41, in terms
of clause 5.5 survives the unfulfilled condition
precedent. Clause 41 states that:
“
GOVERNING
LAW AND JURISDICTION
41.1
This agreement and any dispute or claim (including non-contractual
disputes or claims) arising out of or
in connection with it or its
subject matter or formation shall be governed by and construed in
accordance with the laws of Kenya.
41.2
Each party irrevocably agrees that the courts
of Kenya shall have exclusive jurisdiction to settle any dispute or
claim (including
non-contractual disputes or claims) arising out of
or in connection with the agreement or its subject matter or
formation.”
[12]
Relying on clause 41, the excipient
inter
alia
, argues that the enrichment
claim is governed by the application of Kenyan law principles and is
too, to be heard in Kenya. This
is the basis of the jurisdictional
challenge.
DISCUSSION
[13]
The excipient is bound to its exception. Moving
from that premise, and reading the particulars of claim as a whole,
paragraph 11,
under the heading “
RELEVANT
FACTUAL BACKGROUND”
is simply
that, background facts from which the plaintiff’s accrued right
in terms of the agreement to the claimed amount
as against the
company is established and explained, nothing more than that. In
other words, a basis for its claim against the
company in terms of
the surviving clauses of the agreement. No exception lies against the
justification of the claim against the
company.
[14]
Furthermore, none of the clauses which have
survived the agreement, as pleaded, create any
ex
contractu o
bligation between the
plaintiff and the excipient which the plaintiff can or does rely on.
[15]
Paragraph 11 therefore refers to the
plaintiff’s right to claim its remuneration from the company
which right accrued under
the agreement and therefore it “-
bears
relevance to the action”
and
was pleaded
.
[16]
The
plaintiff sets its enrichment claim under a separate heading and
bases its claim against the excipient on its own conduct. The
excipient’s conduct to justifiably hold company funds falls
outside the purview of the surviving clauses referred to in 5.5
of
the agreement. As such, clause 41 does not provide the protection
relied on by the excipient.
[2]
[17]
Culminated
with the above reasoning is to consider the well settled fact that a
foreign jurisdiction clause, like clause 41, does
not automatically
exclude a Court’s jurisdiction. In this matter a
ratio
jurisdictionis
was pleaded for a Court to entertain the matter. The plaintiff’s
registered office is in the Court’s jurisdiction,
which on
exception is accepted as a fact. This Court, as the pleadings stand,
and at this stage, can entertain the action as instituted
[3]
.
[18]
Lastly, there is a practical reason why a
litigant would rather raise a jurisdictional challenge by way of
special plea instead
by way of exception. The practical answer is
that at the special plea stage, a litigant attracts an onus, a
replication can be
filed, and a Court can consider evidence, if lead.
In this way, the veracity of allegations can be weighed and tested.
This is
not the case on exception. Be that as it may, the excipient
procedurally was not precluded from raising its jurisdictional
challenge
by way of exception however, it did so unsuccessfully.
[19]
Ground one then fails, and the exception as
raised is to be dismissed. There is no reason why costs should not
follow the result
in the absence of argument to the contrary to
consider.
The
following order:
1.
The exception is dismissed with costs on Scale B.
L.A.
RETIEF
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Appearances
:
For
the Excipient:
Adv
LD Isparta
Cell:
081 042 5295
Email:
isparta@saadvocate.co.za
Instructed
by attorneys:
Vermeulen
Attorneys
Tel:
010 109 1089
Email:
cathleen@vermeulenla.co.za
For
the Respondent
Adv K
Howard
Cell:
072 706 8329
Email:
khoward@adv21.co.za
Instructed
by attorneys:
Alant,
Gell and Martin Incorporated
Tel:
012 492 5617
Email:
mark@amglaw.co.za
cordney@agmlaw.co.za
Ref:
MvS/CB/A00083
Date
of hearing:
30
January 2025
Date
of judgment
:
06
February
2025
[1]
Act
10 of 2013, as amended.
[2]
Foize
Africa (Pty) Ltd v Foize Beheer BV and Others
[2012] ZASCA 123
;
[2012] 4 All SA 387
(SCA);
2013 (3) SA 91
(SCA) at
[13]
,
Atlas
Organic Fertilisers (Pty) Ltd v Pikkewyn Ghwane (Pty) Ltd
1981 (2) SA 173
(T).
[3]
Yorigami
Maritime Construction Co Ltd Nissho-Iwai Co Ltd
1977
(4) SA 692
(C) at 692H.
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