Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 572South Africa
Walker and Others v Faerie Glen Waterpark (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/041428) [2025] ZAGPPHC 572 (2 June 2025)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
2 June 2025
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Walker and Others v Faerie Glen Waterpark (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/041428) [2025] ZAGPPHC 572 (2 June 2025)
Walker and Others v Faerie Glen Waterpark (Pty) Ltd and Others (2024/041428) [2025] ZAGPPHC 572 (2 June 2025)
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sino date 2 June 2025
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA)
CASE NO:
2024/041428
(1) REPORTABLE: YES
/ NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES / NO
(3) REVISED. YES
DATE 2 June
2025
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
C
J WALKER
FIRST
APPLICANT
JOHN
WALKER ATTORNEYS INC
SECOND
APPLICANT
J
VAN DEN BERG
THIRD
APPLICANT
and
FAERIE
GLEN WATERPARK (PTY) LTD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
D
J VAN HEERDEN N.O.
SECOND
RESPONDENT
RESOLVE
AFRICA (PTY) LTD t/a THE TRIBUNAL FOR COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
THIRD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Introduction:
1.
May an arbitrator, pursuant to handing down his final award,
mero
motu
clarify his award by addressing an aspect that was omitted
in his final award?
2.
This is the crux of the application instituted by the applicants
to
set aside an arbitral award handed down by the second respondent.
Background:
3.
During 2019, the first respondent and the second applicant entered
into a written lease agreement in terms of which the first respondent
let to the second applicant certain premises situated at
Boardwalk
Office Park, Faerie Glen for 5 (five) years commencing on 1 August
2019.
4.
The second applicant is a firm of attorneys.
5.
In January 2023, the second applicant vacated the premises without
the first respondent's consent. The first respondent contends
that this amounted to a repudiation of the lease agreement,
which
repudiation the first respondent accepted and cancelled the lease
agreement on 26 January 2023.
6.
In terms of clause 20.1 of the written lease agreement aforesaid:
“
Should any
party breach any of the terms of this agreement (the ‘Defaulting
Party’) and the other party (the ‘Aggrieved
Party’)
shall be entitled, at the election of the Aggrieved Party, to
institute action/proceedings against the Defaulting
Party either in a
court having jurisdiction over such dispute, alternatively
through
Dispute Resolution in terms of the Rules of the Tribunal for
Commercial Property
(‘TFCP”).”
(my
emphasis)
7.
In terms of clause 3.9.2 of the written lease agreement:
“
All legal costs
incurred by the Lessor in consequence of any default of the
provisions of this Agreement of Lease by the Lessee
shall be payable
on demand on a scale as between Attorney and Client and shall
include…the costs incurred by the Lessor
in endeavouring to
enforce such rights prior to the institution of legal proceedings and
the costs incurred in connection with
the satisfaction of enforcement
of any judgment awarded in favour of the Lessor in terms of or
arising out of this Agreement of
Lease.”
8.
On 26 January 2023, the first respondent’s attorneys of
record
delivered a letter to the second applicant in terms of which the
second applicant was informed of the fact that:
8.1.
The lease agreement was cancelled;
8.2.
That the second applicant remained liable for the full term of the
lease agreement;
8.3.
That the
first respondent was proceeding with action against the second
applicant for arrear rentals as well as damages suffered
by the first
respondent.
[1]
9.
The first respondent subsequently delivered its Statement of
Claim,
in which it sought to hold the second applicant liable for damages
related to outstanding rentals, as well as damages for
reinstatement
(including repairs and renovations).
10.
On 1 May 2023, the first respondent successfully secured a new tenant
for the
premises. This resulted in the first respondent
reducing the amount claimed from the second applicant (as principal
debtor)
and against the first and third applicants (as sureties) to
the following amounts:
10.1.
Damages pertaining to outstanding rentals R34,716.12; and
10.2.
Reinstatement damages of R904,13.
11.
The second respondent, a practising advocate, was ultimately
appointed as the
arbitrator (“the arbitrator”).
12.
Having regard to the significantly reduced claim, the arbitrator
implored the
parties to settle this matter. Had the parties taken
this seriously, significant costs would have been spared.
13.
Instead, the matter proceeded to arbitration and the first respondent
called
2 (two) witnesses, namely one factual witness and one expert
witness.
14.
After the first respondent closed its case, the applicants likewise
closed their
case, but without presenting any evidence.
15.
On 9
November 2023, the arbitrator issued the following final award:
[2]
“
145.
The claimant is ordered to pay the defendants’ costs up until
the date of the Amendment
of the Statement of Claim, i.e., 26 June
2023;
146.
The defendants are ordered to, jointly and severally, the one to pay
the other to be absolved,
make payment to the claimant as follows:
146.1
Payment of damages in the amount of R34,716.12;
146.2
Payment for reinstatement costs in the amount of R904.13;
146.3
Interest on the aforesaid amounts at the prime rate, compounded
monthly, from 1 February 2023 to date
of final payment;
146.4
Costs of the arbitration on an attorney and client scale, such cost
to include the cost of the Arbitrator,
the cost of the Tribunal and
the cost relating to the hiring of the Arbitration facility.”
16.
The aforesaid award does not specify whether the costs order in
favour of the
first respondent is to be taxed on a High Court or a
Magistrates Court scale.
17.
On 5 March 2024, the arbitrator issued a “
Taxation
Directive
” (“the Taxation Directive”) in which
he made the following ruling:
“
2.
On or about 22 January 2024 I was requested to tax the account of the
Claimant.
3.
I have, inter alia and in terms of Rule 36 appointed Ms Sylvia Venter
as a Cost
Consultant (the CC) to advise me accordingly. In this
regard, the following Directive is issued:
3.1.
The defendants are to file their written objections, together with
reasons
thereto within 7 days hereof i.e., on/before 12 March
2024;
3.2
The claimant is to respond to the objections within 5 days thereof,
i.e.,
19 March 2024 (the claimant’s submissions);
3.3
The defendants may then respond to the claimant’s submissions
within
3 days thereof, i.e., 22 March 2024, no new submissions will
be allowed;
3.4
The CC will thereafter advise me as to an appropriate Tax Bill of
Costs
(BoC) to be issued by myself;
3.5
I will thereafter consider same and issue a BoC within 5 days i.e.,
29
March 2024;
3.6
A failure to comply with the aforesaid time frames will obviate a
party’s
opportunity to make representations to the CC;
3.7
The costs occasioned as a result of the taxation will be incorporated
in the BoC.
4.
Having perused and considered the correspondence leading up to the
request for taxation, I issue the following Declarator pertaining
to
the cost award issued as part of the final award:
4.1
The costs shall be taxed on a High Court scale.
5.
The Declarator is issued for purpose of clarity in circumstances
where the very
nature of this Tribunal, its Rules, the nature of the
Lease Agreement between the parties as well as the pre-arbitration
agreement,
make such scale of costs obvious and undisputed.”
(my emphasis)
The review application
18.
The applicants have applied to set aside the Taxation Directive in
terms of
section 33(1) and (4) read with sections 35(1) and (2) of
the Arbitration Act of 1965 (“the
Arbitration Act&rdquo
;). The
applicants in their Notice of Motion have formulated the relief
sought as follows:
“
1.
That the “Taxation Directive” issued by the Second
Respondent on 5 March 2024
be and is hereby set aside in terms
of
sections 33(1)
and (4) read with
sections 35(1)
and (2) of the
Arbitration Act of 1965
;
2.
That the award in respect to the scale of costs be referred to
determination to the
Arbitration Foundation of South Africa for the
appointment of an arbitrator or to such other arbitration tribunal,
and on such
terms, as this court may determine.;”
19.
The application to set aside the arbitral award, in broad terms, is
based on
the following:
19.1.
The Taxation Directive and, in particular, the declaratory order that
the costs
were to be taxed on a High Court scale, amounted to a gross
irregularity for the following reasons:
19.1.1.
The arbitrator had no authority to issue this declaratory
order;
19.1.2.
None of the parties applied for this directive/declarator,
and this
was issued unilaterally;
19.1.3.
Pursuant to handing down his final award on 9 November
2023, the
arbitrator was
functus
officio
.
19.2.
The arbitrator committed a gross irregularity by awarding costs on a
High Court
scale.
19.3.
The arbitrator was biased in favour of the first respondent.
19.4.
The arbitrator was also guilty of committing other irregularities.
Applicable legal
principles:
20.
Before addressing the specific complaints raised, it is perhaps
appropriate
to discuss the differences between an appeal and a
review, as well as to highlight other fundamental legal principles.
21.
In
Dexgroup
[3]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal quoted with approval the principle
[4]
that "
unless
the arbitration agreement otherwise provides, the arbitrator is not
obliged to follow strict rules of evidence provided the
procedure
adopted is fair to both parties and conforms to the requirements of
natural justice
."
22.
And at para 20 the following was indicated:
“
The advantages
of arbitration over litigation, particularly in regard to the
expeditious and inexpensive resolution of disputes,
are reflected in
its growing popularity worldwide. Those advantages are
diminished or destroyed entirely if Arbitrators are
confined in a
straitjacket of legal formalism that the parties to the arbitration
have sought to escape. Arbitrators should
be free to adopt such
procedures as they regard as appropriate for the resolution of the
dispute before them unless the arbitral
agreement precludes them from
doing so.
23.
In the
article
Judicial
Review of Arbitration Awards
[5]
Justice
Brand provides a very helpful synopsis of the relevant applicable
legal principles:
At p249.
“…
the
primary and essential value of arbitration lies in the very fact that
it exists as a way of avoiding a formal trial. Indeed,
the advantages
of arbitration are unfailingly framed in comparison with the
disadvantages of litigation, and centre on the ways
in which
arbitration offers a means of circumventing these.
It stands to reason,
then, that these advantages are diminished, or even largely
destroyed, if the courts should adopt an over-keen
approach to
intervene in arbitration awards. This is so because an
interventionist approach by the courts is likely to encourage
losing
parties who feel that the arbitrator’s decision is wrong –
as losing parties mostly do – to take their
chances with the
court. And if arbitration becomes a mere prelude to judicial review,
its essential virtue is lost. There is also
the argument that it is
wrong in principle for the courts to meddle in disputes that the
parties themselves clearly chose to withdraw
from them.”
At p253.
“…
a
useful starting point seems to be the oft quoted statement from Ellis
v Morgan
28
that “an irregularity in proceedings does not mean an incorrect
judgment; it refers not to the result, but to the method
of a trial,
such as, for example, some high-handed or mistaken action which has
prevented the aggrieved party from having his case
fully and fairly
determined.”
…
In
Goldfields
Investment Ltd v City Council of Johannesburg
(“Goldfields
Investment”) this statement was elaborated on by Schreiner JA
in the following way:
…
Where
the point relates only to the merits of the case it will be straining
the language to describe it as a gross irregularity
or denial of a
fair trial. One would say that the magistrate has decided the case
fairly but has gone wrong on the law. But if
the mistake leads to the
court’s not merely missing or misunderstanding a point of law
on the merits, but to its misconceiving
the whole nature of the
enquiry or of its duties in connection therewith, then it is in
accordance with the ordinary use of language
to say that the losing
party has not had a fair trial.”
From these authorities
it is therefore apparent that “gross irregularity”
relates to the conduct of the proceedings
and not to the result
thereof. Moreover, that it is not every irregularity in the
proceedings which will constitute a ground for
review on this basis.
In order to justify a review on this ground, the irregularity must
have been of such a serious nature that
it resulted in the aggrieved
party not having his case fully and fairly determined. Errors of law
or fact can therefore no doubt
lead to gross irregularities in the
conduct of the proceedings. An example would be where an arbitrator,
because of a misunderstanding
of the audi principle, refuses to hear
the one party.
And at p254:
An
irregularity frequently relied upon
, which often comes
close to an attempted appeal on the merits, is that the award is not
supported by any admissible evidence. Authority
for this proposition
is usually sought in the obiter statement to that effect by Lord de
Villiers in
Dutch Reformed Church v Town Council of Cape
Town
. With regard to the admissibility of evidence in
arbitration proceedings, the Supreme Court of Appeal, however,
recently referred
with approval, in the case of
Dexgroup
(Pty) Ltd v Trustco Group International (Pty) Ltd
(“Dexgroup”),
to the following
statement by Butler and Finsen:
“
[U]nless
… the arbitration agreement provides otherwise, whether
expressly or by implication, an arbitrator is not as a matter
of law
obliged to comply with the formal rules of evidence, as long as the
procedure which he follows complies with the rules of
natural justice
by being fair to both parties.”
And at page 256:
Most recently, in
Leadtrain Assessments v Leadtrain
, the Supreme Court held
that:
“
The
guiding principle of consensual arbitration is finality – right
or wrong … It would be extraordinary if the conduct
of an
arbitrator that falls short of the strict constraints of
s 33(1)
were
nonetheless to be capable of being set aside and committed for
reconsideration under
s 32(2).
As was pointed out in
Benjamin
Sobac South African Building and Construction (Pty) Ltd
,
correctly, the effect of so holding would be to emasculate the
provisions of
s 33(1).
However one approaches the question of what is
‘good cause’ it seems to us that it inexorably requires
something other
than mere error on the part of the arbitrator.”
And at page 256:
Influence of the
Constitution
With the advent of our
new constitutional dispensation the question arose whether the
provisions of our Constitution have any influence
on the approach of
our courts to the review of awards in private arbitrations.
…
When confronted with
this issue in
Lufuno Mphaphuli and Associates v Andrews
the
majority of the Constitutional Court held that… interference
by the courts is limited to the grounds stipulated in
section 33(1)
of the
Arbitration Act. But
of course, so the Constitutional Court
held,
section 33(1)
must be interpreted in the light of section 34 of
the Constitution. On my reading of the majority judgment as a whole,
I venture
to suggest, however, that the current approach of our
courts to the review of awards in private arbitrations will generally
pass
constitutional muster. As explained by the Constitutional Court,
the focus of section 34 is clearly on the fairness of the hearing
–
as opposed to the fairness of the result. This accords with the
touchstone of the tests formulated by our courts in applying
the
“gross irregularity” provision in
section 33(1)(b)
of the
Arbitration Act.
At
pages 259 to 260:
With regard to
consensual arbitrations “gross irregularity” still has
the meaning attributed to the term in
Ellis v Morgan and
Goldfields Investment
. That means it is purely procedure based.
It has nothing to do with the outcome. It can only be invoked where,
as a result of something
that went wrong procedurally, the aggrieved
party can be said not to have had a fair trial.
At page 262:
South African
legislation governing the review of arbitration awards has, since the
turn of the 20th century, provided only narrow
grounds for review and
these have in turn been restrictively interpreted. In the result,
while the courts have demonstrated a willingness
to assist parties
aggrieved by procedural wrongs, they have limited their reviews to
these alone and have refused jurisdiction
in cases that requested
their review of the arbitrator’s legitimate exercise of
discretion. The courts have therefore maintained
their lack of
jurisdiction to enquire into the correctness of the conclusion
arrived at by the arbitrator on the evidence before
him or her. In
the result, the integrity of the arbitration process is preserved
save for in cases where the arbitrator himself
has discredited it
through mala fides, gross irregularity or the exercise of powers not
conferred upon him.
And at page 263:
Just a few short
months ago in the case of
Hubbard v Cool Ideas 1186 CC
the
Supreme Court of Appeal wrote that “[e]ver since
Dickenson &
Brown v Fisher’s Executors
it has been our law that a
mistake of law by an arbitrator does not permit interference by a
Court”. This comment perfectly
reflects the consistency
with which our law has developed. Remaining true to the restraint
shown in these early decisions, our
courts have over the years
systematically resisted the judicial urge to right arbitral wrongs by
making inroads into the finality
of arbitration awards. Judicial
restraint has gone so far as to disallow extended grounds for review
even in cases where the parties
to the arbitration agreement
themselves contracted for a more generous standard of review. Our law
in this area has remained as
constant as the Southern Cross,
successfully guiding our courts even today through the vastly changed
legal landscape of our constitutional
democracy.
24.
The three limited grounds in terms of which
an Arbitrator’s award may be reviewed and set aside should be
construed reasonably
strictly.
25.
In
Telcordia
[6]
,
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held
[7]
that:
"
by
agreeing to arbitration, the parties had limited the grounds of
interference in their contract by the courts to the procedural
irregularities set out in
s 33(1)
of the
Arbitration Act. By
necessary implication, they had waived the right to rely on any
further grounds of review, whether it common law or otherwise."
and at para 67:
"
The Act did not
allow for review on the ground of material error of law.
"
26.
In
Total
Support Management
[8]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held
[9]
that:
"
Proof that the
Arbitrator had been guilty of such misconduct or had committed a
gross irregularity in the conduct of the arbitration
was a
prerequisite for the setting aside of the award, and the onus in this
regard was on the appellants. It was clear from
the authorities
that the basis on which an award could be set aside due to misconduct
was very narrow. A gross or manifest
mistake was not
sufficient, but at best provided evidence of misconduct which, taken
alone, or in conjunction with other considerations,
would ultimately
have to be sufficiently compelling to justify an inference (as the
most likely inference) of what had in the past
variously been
described as "wrongful and improper conduct", "dishonesty",
"mala fides or partiality"
or "moral turpitude".
"
27.
It is not
every irregularity which could justify a review. The court must
be satisfied that the irregularity caused a substantial
injustice.
Only in those cases where it can be said that what happened is so far
removed from what could reasonably be expected
of the arbitral
process that one would expect the court to act.
[10]
28.
In
Palabora
Copper
[11]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held
[12]
that:
"
Where
an arbitrator engages in the correct enquiry, but errs either on the
facts or the law, that is not an irregularity and is
not a basis for
setting aside an award. If parties choose arbitration, courts
endeavour to uphold their choice and do not lightly
disturb it."
The powers of the
arbitrator:
The
Arbitration Act:
29.
In
terms of section 30 of the Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965 (“the
Arbitration Act&rdquo
;):
“
An
arbitration tribunal may correct in any award any clerical mistake or
any patent error arising from any accidental slip or omission.
”
30.
In terms of
section 35
of the
Arbitration Act:
>
“
(1)
Unless the arbitration agreement otherwise
provides, the award of costs in connection with the reference
and
award shall be in the discretion of the arbitration tribunal, which
shall, if it awards costs, give directions as to the scale
on which
such costs are to be taxed and may direct to and by whom and in what
manner such costs or any part thereof shall be paid
and may tax or
settle the amount of such costs or any part thereof, and may award
costs as between attorney and client.
(2)
If no provision is made in an award with regard to costs, or if no
directions have been given
therein as to the scale on which such
costs shall be taxed, any party to the reference may within fourteen
days of the publication
of the award, make application to the
arbitration tribunal for an order directing by and to whom such costs
shall be paid or giving
directions as to the scale on which such
costs shall be taxed, and thereupon the arbitration tribunal shall,
after hearing any
party who may desire to be heard, amend the award
by adding thereto such directions as it may think proper with regard
to the payment
of costs or the scale on which such costs shall be
taxed.”
The lease dispute
rules:
31.
In the written lease agreement, the parties agreed that the
commercial lease
dispute rules of the Tribunal for Commercial
Property (“
the lease dispute rules
”) would apply
to the arbitration. The following relevant rules are
emphasized:
“
1.1
The
purpose of these Rules is to give effect
to the procedure and process
of the arbitration and to allow for expedited resolution of disputes
and are not aimed to create obstructions
to the process of justice
and should be interpreted and/or applied with these traits as primary
objective and purpose …
…
10.
The arbitrator shall
be entitled to, at the request of any of the
Parties to the Arbitration, to abbreviate or curtail any time period
laid down in
the Rules and to conduct the arbitration on an expedited
basis, which discretion the Arbitrator shall be entitled to exercise
after
affording the Parties an opportunity to make representations,
either in writing or orally in this regard. The ruling or award made
by the Arbitrator in this regard shall be final and binding on the
Parties. In exercising the discretion the Arbitrator shall however
comply with the requirements of the arbitration shall be conducted in
a just and fair manner to all Parties …
…
22.1
The Arbitrator shall proceed with the arbitration within the shortest
time as practicable in the circumstances.
…
22.3
The Arbitrator shall act in an inquisitorial manner and shall
therefore conduct the hearing in accordance
to the principles
relating to an inquisitorial hearing, which authority of the
Arbitrator shall include but not be limited to:
…
…
27.2
The Arbitrator in his/her sole discretion shall decide any issues
raised by any of the parties relating to
procedural and interlocutory
matters.
27.3 The
Arbitrator shall furthermore be clothed with the same powers as
accorded to a Judge of the High Court of the
Republic of South
Africa.
…
33.1
Within 5 (five) days after the receipt of an award, a party, with
notice to the other parties, may request
the Arbitrator to correct in
the award any error in computation, any clerical or typographical
error, or any error or omission
of a similar nature. If the
Arbitrator determines that the request is justified, he/she shall
make the correction within
10 (ten) days of receipt of the request.
33.2
The Arbitrator may within 5 (five) days after the delivery of the
award make such corrections of his/her
own initiative.
33.3
Such corrections shall be in writing, signed by the Arbitrator and
shall form part of the award. Such correction
to the award shall be
delivered by the Arbitrator to the parties and the Tribunal.
…
36.1
The Arbitrator shall, as part of the award or thereafter, make an
award in respect of the costs.
36.2
In exercising his/her discretion, the Arbitrator may take into
account such circumstances as he/she considers
relevant, including
but not limited to the success achieved by each of the parties and/or
the extent to which each party has conducted
the arbitration in an
expeditious and cost-effective manner.
36.3
The Arbitrator may forthwith, as part of the award, fix, tax or
settle the costs, and shall therefore include
in the award, or in a
separate award thereafter, an award for the amount of costs to be
paid by any party to any other party in
the arbitration proceedings
on the scale as between attorney and own client. The Arbitrator
shall determine the reasonableness
of the costs.
36.4
If the Arbitrator fix, tax or settles the costs, he/she shall be
entitled to employ the services of a cost
consultant to assist
him/her in determining the amount of such costs. In the event
of the Arbitrator employing the services
of a cost consultant, the
costs thereof shall be costs in the cause subject to the Arbitrator’s
award as to costs.
The election on the identity of any cost
consultant shall be at the Arbitrator’s sole discretion which
it exercised shall
be final and binding.
36.5
At any time during the arbitration, the Arbitrator may, on
application of a party/ies, make an award on costs
and if applicable
that such costs shall be determined and payable immediately.
36.6
The Arbitrator shall, before making an award for costs, afford the
parties an opportunity to make sufficient
to the Arbitrator regarding
the award of the costs, and the amount in which it shall be allowed
by the Arbitrator.
36.7
The Arbitrator and/or cost consultant shall be entitled to obtain
such information and/or documents including
but not limited to draft
Bill of Cost from the parties, as deemed fit by the Arbitrator.
…
.
36.9
The Arbitrator is not obliged to make the award regarding costs
simultaneously with the award on the merits
(without limiting the
enforceability of such award on the merits); but is obliged to do so
no later than 30 (thirty) days after
conclusion of the application.”
The
same powers as a Judge of the High Court
:
32.
In terms of the lease dispute rules, more specifically
Rule 27.3
, the
arbitrator shall be clothed with the same powers as accorded to a
Judge of the High Court of the Republic of South Africa.
33.
In terms of Uniform
Rule 42
, a Judge of the High Court has the power
to
mero motu
vary an order or judgment in which there is an
ambiguity, or a patent error
or omission
.
34.
In this
regard, our courts have granted an order allowing qualifying fees in
respect of expert witnesses,
[13]
an order to include interest where the court has overlooked the
plaintiff’s claim for interest,
[14]
an amendment of its order as to costs where an order for costs has
been made without hearing argument thereon.
[15]
35.
From the aforementioned, it is clear that:
35.1.
Any of the parties could have requested the arbitrator to clarify the
issue with
regard to the scale of costs; or
35.2.
The arbitrator could
mero motu
clarify and/or vary any aspect
of his award that he omitted to deal with.
36.
Significantly, both parties in their respective affidavits allege
that the arbitrator
had omitted to specify the scale of costs, i.e.,
namely, whether the costs are to be taxed on a High Court or a
Magistrates Court
scale.
37.
Under the circumstances and having regard to the wide powers of the
arbitrator,
it was clearly within his powers to
mero motu
address this omission by clarifying his judgment in the way that he
did.
38.
The reliance by the applicants on
section 35(2)
of the
Arbitration
Act is
accordingly misplaced.
39.
It can accordingly not be suggested that the arbitrator could not
have clarified
his award
mero motu
.
Could the arbitrator
have awarded costs on a High Court scale?
40.
In terms of the powers bestowed on the arbitrator, he had an
unfettered discretion
to award a costs order that he deemed
appropriate, including costs on an attorney-and-own-client scale.
41.
Assuming that the arbitrator had awarded costs on a High Court scale
as part
of his final award of 9 November 2023, the question is
whether there would have been a basis for such a cost order.
42.
The arbitrator, in his comprehensive final award, deals extensively
with the
reason why a punitive costs order was ultimately awarded in
favour of the first respondent.
43.
Accordingly, it cannot seriously be suggested that the arbitrator did
not consider
the various factors before awarding attorney-and-client
costs (later clarified to be on a High Court scale).
44.
If the arbitrator had properly considered various factors in arriving
at his
cost order, then it cannot be suggested that he committed an
irregularity, let alone a gross irregularity.
45.
If it turns out that the arbitrator was wrong in awarding costs on a
High Court
scale, then and in that event, it does not assist the
applicants either, as arbitrators are entitled to be wrong and simply
being
wrong is not a basis in law to set aside an arbitral award.
46.
But that is not all. In terms of the written lease agreement,
the parties
expressly agreed that in the event of a breach of the
lease agreement by the lessee, and in the event of the lessor (the
first
respondent) having to enforce its rights, the lessee would be
liable for the lessor’s costs on an attorney-and-client scale.
47.
Why would the parties have agreed to such a provision? Clearly, the
lessor wanted
to be adequately indemnified by the lessee when
enforcing a claim against the lessee.
48.
The objective and purpose of this provision will be better achieved
if costs
were to be awarded on a High Court scale.
The award fell within
the monetary jurisdiction of the Magistrate’s Court:
49.
The main argument advanced by the applicants in this regard is that,
because
the ultimate amount awarded fell within the monetary
jurisdiction of the Magistrates Court, costs ought to have been
awarded on
a Magistrates Court scale.
50.
I agree with Mr. van Rensburg SC that, as a general point of
departure, when
costs are awarded, the arbitrator or a court should
consider the capital amount awarded. That is, however, not the
end of
the enquiry, and there are countless other factors that a
court or arbitrator ought to consider in exercising his/her
discretion
when awarding costs.
51.
These additional considerations were properly considered by the
arbitrator,
and as such, I do not agree that the arbitrator committed
an irregularity, let alone a gross irregularity, when awarding costs
on a High Court scale.
Was the arbitrator
functus officio
?
52.
The applicants further contended that as the arbitrator was
functus
officio
, it was not permissible for him to issue the declarator
by awarding costs on a High Court scale.
53.
The arguments advanced by the applicants in this regard are mutually
destructive.
On the one hand, both the applicants and the first
respondent contend that the arbitrator
omitted
to address a
specific issue in his final award, namely the scale of costs.
On the other hand, the applicants simultaneously
suggest or contend
that the arbitrator is
functus officio
.
54.
If the arbitrator had omitted to deal with a specific issue, it
self-evidently
means that he has not yet addressed that specific
issue, and as such, he cannot be
functus officio.
55.
Moreover, Uniform
Rule 42
caters for an exception to the general
principle that a court is
functus officio
, i.e., under
circumstances where an order has an ambiguity, a patent error or an
omission.
56.
In this regard,
section 30
of the
Arbitration Act also
makes it clear
that the arbitrator is entitled to vary his award under the
aforementioned circumstances.
57.
Accordingly, it is the finding of this court that the arbitrator was
not
functus officio
with regard to the scale of costs, and it
was open to him to address it in the way that he did.
Was there proper
audi
?
58.
The applicants contend that the Taxation Directive of 5 March 2024
was inherently
unfair, and it failed to comply with the
audi
alteram partem
principle.
59.
Pursuant to the conclusion of the arbitration proceedings, both
parties had
to submit written heads of argument.
60.
On the 8
th
of September 2023, the first respondent
submitted its written heads of argument in which the first respondent
dealt extensively
with the issue of costs, including the first
respondent’s request that the costs had to be awarded on a High
Court scale.
61.
The applicants were required to submit their written heads of
argument in response
by September 18, 2023. The applicants had
every opportunity to address the issue of costs (as well as a scale
thereof).
In addition, and aside from the written heads of
argument filed by both parties, the issue of costs as well as the
scale thereof
was also extensively argued during closing argument.
Again, the applicants had every opportunity to fully address the
arbitrator
regarding the scale of costs.
62.
Accordingly, there is no merit in the suggestion that the applicants
did not
have an opportunity to address the arbitrator regarding the
scale of costs.
Other irregularities
63.
The applicants further suggest that the arbitrator was biased, as
various findings
were made in favour of the first respondent.
64.
The arguments with regard to the alleged bias hinge, to a large
extent, on the
success of the applicants’ arguments regarding
the alleged irregularities. If there are no irregularities, let
alone
gross irregularities, the argument regarding the alleged bias
largely falls away.
65.
I have already found that there were no irregularities, let alone
gross irregularities,
and as such, there is no merit in the
suggestion that the arbitrator was biased in favour of the first
respondent.
Conclusion of the
review application
66.
Having considered the various grounds advanced by the applicants, it
is the
finding of this court that the arbitrator was not guilty of
any irregularities, let alone gross irregularity in arriving at his
final award. Accordingly, the application for review ought to
be dismissed.
The first respondent's
counter-application
67.
The first respondent has instituted a counter application in which it
seeks
an order that the arbitrator's final award (as amended) be made
an order of court.
68.
The application is opposed by the applicants on the basis of the
alleged irregularities
committed by the arbitrator as fully dealt
with above. I have already found that there were no irregularities,
and as such, the
basis of the opposition to the counter-application
falls away.
69.
In the premises, the following order is granted:
69.1.
The applicants’ application is dismissed.
69.2.
The final award granted by the arbitrator issued on 9 November 2023,
and the subsequent
inclusion of the High Court scale tariff costs on
5 March 2024, as well as the Taxation Award, is made an order of
court in terms
of
section 31
of the
Arbitration Act, 42 of 1965
;
69.3.
The applicants are ordered to pay the first respondent’s costs
pertaining
to:
69.3.1.
The applicants’ application; and
69.3.2.
The first respondent’s counter-application,
jointly and severally,
the one paying the other to be absolved, on a scale as between
attorney and client (on a High Court scale),
including the costs of
senior counsel.
SIGNED AT PRETORIA ON
THIS THE 2
nd
DAY OF JUNE 2025.
SG MARITZ AJ
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Counsel
for Applicant:
Adv SJ van Rensburg SC
Cell:
076 941 0447
Email:
i@advstefen.com
Attorneys for the
Applicant:
John Walker Attorneys/Wallberg Attorneys Inc.
Tel:
012 991 9141
Email:
john@wallberg.co.za
jeanri@wallberg.co.za
Counsel
for First Respondent:
Adv J de Beer SC
Cell:
084 661 0623
Email:
jdebeer@clubadvocates.co.za
Attorneys for First
Respondent: AB
Löwe Attorneys
Tel:
012 676 8775
Email:
leigh@ablowe.co.za
Date of Hearing:
21 May 2025
Date
of Judgment:
2 June 2025
[1]
Page
01 – 157.
[2]
Pages
016 – 226 to 016 – 227.
[3]
Dexgroup
(Pty) Ltd v Trustco Group International (Pty) Ltd & Others
2013
(6) SA 520 (SCA)
[4]
At
para
17, p 526
[5]
Stellenbosch,
LR 2014 2
[6]
Telcordia
Technologies Inc. v Telkom SA Ltd
2007
(3) SA 266 (SCA)
[7]
ParA
51, p 292 A – B.
[8]
Total
Support Management (Pty) Ltd and Another v Diversified Health
Systems (SA) (Pty) Ltd and Another
2002
(4) SA 661 (SCA)
[9]
At para 21.
[10]
Unreported
matter of Fourways Precinct (Pty) Ltd v Bentel Associates
International (Pty) Ltd, Gauteng Division, Pretoria, case
number:
49962/13 at para 31.
[11]
Palabora
Copper (Pty) Ltd v Motlokwa Transport and Construction (Pty) Ltd
[2018]
2 All SA 660 (SCA)
[12]
At
para 8
[13]
Lynmar
Investments (Pty) Ltd v South African Railways and Harbour
1975 (4) SA 445 (D).
[14]
West
Rand Estates Ltd v New Zealand Insurance Co Limited
1926 AB 173.
[15]
Estate
Darlick v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1934 AB 499;
Art
v Broadacres Investments Ltd
1978 (2) SA 47
(N);
Jojwana
v Regional Court Magistrate
2019 (6) SA 524
(ECM) at 532A – 533B.
sino noindex
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