Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 143South Africa
AD All CC t/a Millenium Bodyguards v Joinbach (Pty) Ltd (22464/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 143 (14 February 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
14 February 2025
Headnotes
although a contravention of section 10 would not affect the validity of such an agreement, it would nevertheless disentitle unregistered home builders from receiving or claiming consideration under it and the Court will be precluded from enforcing it.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## AD All CC t/a Millenium Bodyguards v Joinbach (Pty) Ltd (22464/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 143 (14 February 2025)
AD All CC t/a Millenium Bodyguards v Joinbach (Pty) Ltd (22464/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 143 (14 February 2025)
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sino date 14 February 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 22464/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE:
NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
(3)
REVISED:
NO
(4)
Date: 14 February 2025
Signature:
In
the matter between:
AD ALL CC t/a
MILLENIUM BODYGUARDS
Plaintiff/Respondent
And
JONIBACH
(PTY) LTD
Defendant/Excipient
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
On 31 March 2022, the plaintiff instituted action against the
defendant for
breach of contract.
[2]
During August 2018, the plaintiff and the defendant concluded a
written services
agreement pursuant to which the plaintiff was to
render security services to the defendant for a fee. This would be in
terms of
a service level agreement (“SLA”) between the
parties.
[3]
On receipt of the summons, the defendant delivered a notice to remove
a cause
of complaint under Rule 23(1). The plaintiff amended its
particulars of claim. This caused the defendant to deliver a further
notice
to remove cause of complaint, whereafter it excepted to the
amended particulars of claim.
[4]
I refer to the parties as in the action. References to the
particulars of claim
are to the amended particulars of claim.
[5]
The exception is founded on two grounds, both of which assert that
the particulars
of claim lacks averments necessary to sustain a cause
of action against the defendant.
[6]
The first exception engages the provisions of the Private Security
Industry
Regulation Act, 56 of 2001 ("the PSIRA").
[7]
The second exception concerns an unenforceable agreement-to-agree
which the
plaintiff attempts to enforce in this Court.
B.
THE LEGAL PRINCIPLES ON EXCEPTIONS
[8]
Uniform Rule 23(1) provides that an exception may be taken against a
pleading
on the grounds that “
it lacks averments which are
necessary to sustain an action”.
[9]
For the purposes of determining whether a cause of action has been
pleaded,
the Court is required to assume that all of the averments in
the particulars of claim are correct.
[10]
Based on the two grounds detailed in its exception, the defendant
contends that the particulars of
claim does
not
disclose a
cause of action against it.
C.
FIRST GROUND: The plaintiff is not a registered security
service provider
[11]
The plaintiff, a security service provider, does not allege that it
is a registered security service
provider with PSIRA. It is essential
that it should allege that it is a registered security service
provider with PSIRA.
[12]
The plaintiff claims in its particulars of claim that the defendant
breached the SLA when it failed
to pay the plaintiff for security
services that were rendered under the SLA.
[13]
As the plaintiff's claim relates to the rendering of security
services by someone other than the State,
and as the private security
industry in South Africa is regulated by the PSIRA, it was necessary
for the plaintiff to allege in
its particulars of claim that it is
entitled under the PSIRA to be paid for the rendering of such
security services. Should it
fail to do so, its claim will be
excipiable in that it will not disclose a cause of action.
[14]
The PSIRA defines a “
security service provider”
in
section 1 as:
“
a
person who renders a security service to another for a remuneration,
reward , fee or benefit and includes such a person who is
not
registered as required in terms of this Act.”
[15]
Considering
the above definition, a "security service provider" as
contemplated in the PSIRA can therefore either be a
registered
security service provider or an
unregistered
security service provider. The plaintiff’s particulars of claim
simply state that: “The Plaintiff is a security service
provider as contemplated in the Private Security Industry Regulation
Act, 56 of 2001.”
[1]
[16]
Section 20(1) of the PSIRA, however, expressly prohibits the
rendering of security service for remuneration,
reward, a fee or
benefit by anyone other than a
registered
security service
provider. In this regard, section 20 reads as follows:
“
no
person, except a Security Service contemplated in section 199 of the
Constitution, 1996, may in any manner render a security
service for
remuneration, reward, a fee or benefit, unless such person is
registered as a security service provider in terms of
this Act".
[17]
Section 20(3) provides that any contract, whether concluded before or
after the commencement of this
Act, which is inconsistent with a
provision contained in subsection (1), (2) or section 44(6), is
invalid
to the extent to which it is so inconsistent.
[18]
The purpose of section 20 of the PSIRA and its effect on this action
is therefore clear: unless the
plaintiff alleges and proves that it
is a
registered
security service provider under the PSIRA, it
cannot succeed in its claim.
[19]
Section 38(3)(a) of the PSIRA makes it an offence to contravene or
not comply with section 20(1).
[20]
There are instances of similar statutory provisions to those referred
to above, for example:
20.1
The Housing Consumers
Protection Measures Act, 95 of 1998 (“the HCPMA”); and
20.2
The predecessor of the
Property Practitioners Act, 22 of 2019 ("the PPA"), being
the Estate Agency Affairs Act, 112 of
1976 ("the EAAA").
[21]
Regarding the provisions of the
HCPMA
:
21.1
Section 10 provides that no
person shall receive any consideration in terms of any agreement with
a housing consumer in respect
of the sale or construction of a home,
unless that person is a registered home builder; and
21.2
Section 21 makes it an
offence to contravene section 20.
21.3
In
Hubbard
v Cool Ideas
[2]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that although a contravention of
section 10 would not affect the validity of such an agreement,
it
would nevertheless disentitle unregistered home builders from
receiving or claiming consideration under it and the Court will
be
precluded from enforcing it.
21.4
In
IS
& GM Construction CC v Tunmer
[3]
,
Goldblatt J, held that particulars of claim based on a written
agreement to erect a dwelling house was excipiable as the
plaintiff
did not allege that it is a registered home builder as defined in the
HCPMA. The plaintiff therefore failed to establish
that it was
entitled to receive any consideration.
[4]
[22]
Insofar as the EAAA is concerned
:
22.1
Under section 34A, an estate
agent was not entitled to any remuneration or other payment in
respect of or arising from the performance
of any act referred to in
subparagraph (i), (ii), (iii) or (iv) of paragraph (a) of the
definition of 'estate agent', unless at
the time of the performance
of the act a valid fidelity fund certificate has been issued (a) to
such estate agent; and (b) if such
estate agent is a company, to
every director of such company or, if such estate agent is a close
corporation, to every member referred
to in paragraph (b) of the
definition of ‘estate agent’ of such corporation.
22.2
The above prohibition is
repeated in section 56 of the PPA.
22.3
In
Taljaard
v TL Botha Properties,
The
Supreme Court of Appeal confirmed that unless an estate agent had a
valid fidelity fund certificate when she performed the relevant
act,
she will be prevented from enforcing her/his claim.
[23]
By parity of reasoning, unless the plaintiff alleges and proves that
it is a
registered
security service provider as contemplated
in the PSIRA, it cannot establish that it is entitled to remuneration
under the PSIRA,
and it cannot seek the court’s assistance in
enforcing its claim.
[24]
T
h
e plaintiff therefore failed to plead
that it as a registered security service provider.
[25]
The PSIRA makes it an express condition for a security service
provider to be registered before it
becomes entitled to remuneration,
reward, a fee or benefit.
[26]
It was
therefore necessary for the plaintiff to allege that its claim falls
within the parameters of the statute. The plaintiff
therefore had to
plead that it was a registered security service provider. As it did
not do so, it failed to establish its legal
entitlement to payment
and its particulars of claim fails to disclose a cause of action.
[5]
[27]
The statutes referred to above by way of similar examples as well as
the PSIRA provisions that are
at issue here, makes it quite clear
that the plaintiff’s insistence that its allegations disclose a
cause of action, fall
short of what is expected in light of the
statutory provisions.
[28]
It follows that, even if the plaintiff’s allegations in the
particulars of claim are factually
correct, the absence of the
allegation of registration as a security service provider, supported
by evidence of course, renders
the particulars of claim fatally
defective and disentitles the plaintiff from judgment.
[29]
The first ground of the defendant's exception is upheld.
D.
THE SECOND GROUND: An agreement-to-agree is unenforceable
[30]
The
plaintiff’s damages claim against the defendant is based on the
Service Level Agreement (SLA) that was automatically renewed
on 13
August 2021 (“
the
2021 renewal”
).
[6]
[31]
For the plaintiff to succeed in its damages claim arising from the
2021 renewal, the plaintiff must
allege the existence of a valid and
enforceable renewal agreement. This entails alleging at least terms
relating to:
31.1
the nature and scope of the
security services that were to be rendered by the plaintiff to the
defendant; and
31.2
the remuneration payable by
the defendant to the plaintiff in return for such security services.
[32]
Whilst the 2021 renewal contained identifiable and enforceable terms
relating to the nature and scope
of the security services that were
to be rendered by the plaintiff to the defendant, it is silent on the
terms
relating to the remuneration payable by the defendant to
the plaintiff in return for such security services under the 2021
renewal.
[emphasis added].
[33]
Clause 3.4 of the SLA in dealing with the remuneration, reads as
follows:
"The
contract price with regard to any renewal in terms of the agreement
will escalate annually on the anniversary of this
agreement
by a
rate subject to the negotiation".
[34]
The words
used in Clause 3.4 evinces “an agreement to agree”, a
pactum
de contrahendo,
which
is unenforceable in law. In
Van
Zyl v Government of the Republic of South Africa
[7]
the Supreme Court of Appeal reiterated the trite position that a
promise to contract is not a contract.
[35]
This is so
because an “agreement to agree” or an agreement to
negotiate further in order to close gaps in an existing
agreement is
as a basic point of departure, unenforceable and insufficient to cure
an incomplete agreement, specifically because
the parties retain an
absolute discretion to agree.
[8]
[36]
In
Seale
v Minister of Public Works
[9]
,
the
Supreme Court of Appeal stated “I accepts that there was
implicit obligation on the parties to negotiate in good faith,
but
subject thereto, the further agreement was entirely dependent on the
will of the parties”. It was thus highlighted that
an agreement
to agree is not enforceable as there is no provision to address the
failure to negotiate.
[37]
The SLA does not stipulate what is to happen should the parties not
be able to agree on a rate of escalation
and it also does not contain
a deadlock-breaking mechanism to make provision for such an event.
The SLA, particularly the 2021
renewal, is therefore void for
vagueness and uncertainty and is unenforceable.
[38]
Due to the above considerations, the plaintiff has failed to make the
necessary allegations in its
particulars of claim to disclose a cause
of action.
[39]
The second ground of the defendant's exception stands to be upheld as
well.
E.
CONCLUSION
[40]
In
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matrix Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards
Authority SA
[10]
it was held that an exception provides a useful mechanism to weed out
cases without legal merit. The claim as it stands in the
particulars
of claim suffers from similar deficiencies.
[41]
Accordingly, I make the following order:
41.1
The first and second
exceptions are upheld and the plaintiff's amended particulars of
claim dated 31 March 2022 is struck out.
41.2
The plaintiff is afforded a
period of 10 days from the date of this order within which to give
notice of its intention to file an
amended particulars of claim under
Uniform Rule 28;
41.3
Should the plaintiff fail to
comply, or timeously comply, with paragraph 40.2 above, the defendant
may approach the Court on the
same papers, duly amplified, for an
order dismissing the plaintiff’s claim;
41.4
The plaintiff shall pay the
excipient’s costs.
J.S. NYATHI
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 16/10/2024
Date
of Judgment: 14 February 2025
On behalf of the
Plaintiff:
Adv. JL Myburgh
Duly instructed by:
Horn Attorneys,
Pretoria
e-mail:
quentin@hornlegal.co.za
On behalf of the
Respondent:
Adv MJ Kleyn
Duly instructed by:
Rianie Strydom
Attorneys
e-mail:
rianie@strijdomprok.co.za
Delivery
:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' legal representatives by email and uploaded on the
CaseLines
electronic platform. The date for hand-down is deemed to be 14
February 2025.
[1]
Paragraph
1.3 of particulars of claim.
[2]
1186
CC
2013
(5) SA 112 (SCA).
[3]
2003
(5) SA 218 (W).
[4]
At
220H-I.
[5]
IS & GM Construction CC v Tunmer
2003 (5) SA 218
(W) at 220G-I.
[6]
Particulars of claim – paras 5.4 and 9.
[7]
2008
(3) SA 294 (SCA)
[8]
ABSA
Bank Bpk v Janse van Rensburg
2002 (3) SA 701
(SCA) at 708-9.
[9]
[2020]
JDR 2131 (SCA)
[10]
2006
(1) SA 461
(SCA) at 465H.
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