Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 506South Africa
Housing Development Agency v Khavhakone Construction Group (Pty) Ltd (22632/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 506 (16 May 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 May 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Housing Development Agency v Khavhakone Construction Group (Pty) Ltd (22632/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 506 (16 May 2025)
Housing Development Agency v Khavhakone Construction Group (Pty) Ltd (22632/2022) [2025] ZAGPPHC 506 (16 May 2025)
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sino date 16 May 2025
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No: 22632/2022
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO THE JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
SIGNATURE:
DATE
:
16 MAY 2025
In
the matter between:
HOUSING
DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
Applicant
and
KHAVHAKONE
CONSTRUCTION GROUP (PTY) LTD
(Registration
No.2014/178409/07)
Respondent
In
re:
KHAVHAKONE
CONSTRUCTION GROUP (PTY) LTD
(Registration
No.2014/178409/07)
Plaintiff
and
HOUSING
DEVELOPMENT AGENCY
First
Defendant
THE
MINISTER OF HUMAN SETTLEMENTS N.O.
(In
her official capacity as the
responsible
Minister for the
Department
of Human Settlements)
Second
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 I their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
handing down is deemed to be 16 May 2025.
JUDGMENT
RETIEF
J
[1]
The applicant applies for leave to appeal to the Full Bench of this
Division. This
must be a typographical error and should read to the
Full Court of this Division, alternatively to the Supreme Court of
Appeal
[SCA] against the whole of the judgment and order delivered on
the 5 December 2024 in which the applicant was ordered to pay the
respondent an amount of R 1,246,811.53 in respect of two interim
payment certificates IPC25 and IPC26 arising from a Service Level
Agreement [agreement].
[2]
The nub of the applicant's leave to appeal and argument centred
around a perceived
error the Court acted under when adjudicating the
dispute before it. This error was the disregard of one of the
applicant's pleaded
defences, in its amended plea at paragraph 52.2.
Paragraph 52.2 alleged that the interim certificates IPC25 and IPC26
were invalid
for the fact that their valuation was based contrary to
the contract. The trigger of the Court's error it argued was apparent
in
paragraph 3 of the judgment in which the Court found, as referred
to in the respondent's replication, that it did not have to deal
with
the applicant's defence as raised at paragraph 52 of its amended
plea, in that, the same would be dealt with by the Arbitrator
in an
interim award (ostensibly still to be awarded at that time). This
error it argued appeared to permeate into the remainder
of the
reasoning. The applicant misunderstands the Court's reasoning as at
the time, the Arbitrator's interim award had been furnished.
[3]
In short, the applicant's defence at paragraph 52.2 of arose from the
fact that the
contract it referred to was a lump sum contract and not
a measurable contract and thus the dissatisfactions raised by it with
regard
to IPC25 and IPC26 inadvertently implicated the correct manner
of the valuation of the IPCs' because some line items had already
exceeded 100% of their allocated value, a feature that is a
contravention of a lump sum contract strategy. This the nub of
invalidity
based on valuation to ward off paying the respondent.
[4]
The Arbitrator's interim award was handed down in January 2024, a
date after the respondent'
filed its replication and after the
applicant filed its amended plea. Both parties did not amend their
pleadings in so far as they
deemed fit. The pre warning that an
interim arbitration award for consideration, as raised as a point in
limine, would become available
had materialised. By agreement the
interim award formed part of the Trial bundle. The parties too, as
per the directive, agreed
on the triable issues in a joint minute. Be
that as it may, notwithstanding the pleadings the Court was actually
aware of the common
cause facts recorded by the Arbitrator in the
interim award that pertained to the contract whilst having regard to
paragraph 52.2
of the applicant's amended plea namely, that:
"X.
THE BILL OF QUANTITIES
50.
By the end of the hearing, it was common cause that:
50.1
The second contract (the contract before the Court at the time - own
emphasis) was a lump sum contract, and
the issue of the bill of
quantities for the valuing interim payment certificates (including
IPC25 and IPC26) did not alter the
second contract from a lump sum to
a measurable contract;
50.2
The level of precision required for the final account was greater
than the precision of the interim payment
certificates, which could
be adjusted, if necessary, in the next interim payment certificate;
50.3
The amount due to the claimant (the respondent - own emphasis) when
the contract was terminated was the portion
of the lump sum;
50.4
-
50.5
-“
[5]
Furthermore, at the hearing before the Arbitrator, the parties also
agreed that the
portion of the lump sum due to the respondent as a
recorded at 50.3 above, would be calculated on a particular basis.
The discrepancy
of value in the interim certificates would have an
impact when the final account was to be rendered. The final account
required
a level of precision .The level of precision required for
the final account was greater than the precision of the interim
payment
certificates, which could be adjusted, if necessary, in the
next interim payment certificate. The termination date being the date
of determination. The arbitrator therefore did not make a validity
determination of the interim certificates. The Court at paragraph
3
merely emphasised that, in the event the Court found that the
agreement was lawfully terminated, the prospect of further
adjustments
after February 2022, if necessary, to recoup
inaccuracies, as agreed, with the next interim payment appeared
uncertain. Therefore,
at paragraph 3 the Court warned, "
Of
significance the first defendant (the applicant-own emphasis) was
aware of the possible consequence of a lumpsum SLA when Cato
dealt
with the prospect and consequences in his witness statement in
October 2023. The first defendant's failure to do the precision
work
(as at final account stager-own emphasis) before and now after notice
to terminate the SLA has been received has consequences
."
This was stated absent the final account. The respondent's claim
related to the payment of interim payment certificates;
no final
account was before the Court.
[6]
The Court put necessary weight to the common cause facts and
agreements between the
parties, as invited when it considered the
pleaded case before it. The narrow issue before the Court was whether
the respondent
was entitled to the payment of the interim
certificates IPC25 and IPC26, absent a final account and whether it
was entitled to
terminate the SLA on the evidence presented. The
applicant does not raise issue with the Court's finding of the
termination of
the agreement, nor does it raise any other ground of
error or misdirection of fact or law relating to the identified
triable issues
or reasoning thereof.
[7]
Reconsidering the reasoned judgment and the argument this Court is of
the opinion
that the appeal as raised and argued would not have a
reasonable prospect of success and as such, the applicant has failed
to meet
the threshold of
section 17
of the
Superior Courts Act, 10 of
2013
. The application must fail.
[8]
The following order:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs, taxed on
scale B.
L.A.
RETIEF
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division
Appearances:
For
the Applicant :
Adv M Phalane
Cell: 060 402 1560
phalane@thulamelachambers.co.za
Instructed
by attorneys: Madiba Motsai
Masitenyane & Githiri Attorneys
Mr M Sibiya
Email:
majaha@mmmgattorneys.co.za
For
the Respondent
Adv B Stevens
Cell: 076 584 5095
Email:
brookstevens@lawcircle.co.za
Instructed
by attorneys: Clyde & Co Inc
Mr J van der Wath
Email:
johan@constructionlaw.co.za
Date
of hearing: 12 May 2025
Date
of judgment: 16 May 2025
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