Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 36South Africa
Uni-Span Formwork and Scaffolding (Pty) Ltd v SVK Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (26270/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 36 (26 January 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
26 January 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Uni-Span Formwork and Scaffolding (Pty) Ltd v SVK Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (26270/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 36 (26 January 2024)
Uni-Span Formwork and Scaffolding (Pty) Ltd v SVK Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Another (Leave to Appeal) (26270/2021) [2024] ZAGPPHC 36 (26 January 2024)
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sino date 26 January 2024
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 26270/2021
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
26 JANUARY 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
UNI-SPAN
FORMWORK & SCAFFOLDING (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
SVK
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
ANDRE
BRAND VAN DER MERWE
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
(Application
for Leave to Appeal)
This
matter has been heard on a virtual platform and is otherwise disposed
of in terms of the Directives of the Judge President
of this
Division. The judgment and order are accordingly published and
distributed electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
On 20 September 2023
this court granted an order enforcing a settlement agreement between
the initial applicant, Uni-Span Formwork
& Scaffolding (Pty) Ltd
(Uni-Span) and SVK Holdings (Pty) Ltd (SVK) and its director, Mr Van
der Merwe. SVK and Mr Van
der Merwe now seek leave to appeal
that order.
Ground
for application for leave to appeal
[2]
In their notice of application for leave to
appeal, SVK and Mr Van der Merwe relied on four grounds, identified
in their notice
under the headings
Lis
pendens
, Dispute of Fact, Shabangu
Judgment and Status of SVK Holdings (Pty) Ltd.
Lis pendens
[3]
In case no 74295/2019 Uni-Span sought to
recover monies and/or scaffolding due to it in relation to the rental
of certain scaffolding
by SVK. The matter initially proceeded
by way of an urgent application (Part A of the relief) which was
settled between the
parties. The settlement which was made an
order of court on 22 October 2019 provided for a “scaffolding
audit”
in order to determine the repayment relief sought in
PART B thereof.
[4]
Subsequent to the above, the parties to
that matter and under the same case number reached a further written
settlement agreement
with each other on 17 April 2020. In
that settlement agreement and as part of an extensive preamble, the
abovementioned
prior litigation was explained. Thereafter the parties
expressly agreed that the new settlement agreement would constitute
an “Unconditional
Independent Cause” (Clause 11
thereof). Mr Van der Merwe provided certain warranties to the
settlement agreement and
expressly consented to be joined and to be
bound “…
by any judgment
granted against him pursuant to the settlement agreement
”.
[5]
The settlement agreement provided for
payment of a “Settlement Amount” of R4, 5 million and,
failing timeous payment
thereof, payment of the “Claimed
Amount” of R 8 965 916, 40. Certain securities
were also contemplated.
[6]
The
lis
pendens
argument is simply this:
Uni-Span should not be entitled to enforce the settlement agreement
whilst the initial application in case
74295/2019 had not been
withdrawn. There is no merit in this point. Once a
settlement had been reached, the parties
considered case no
74295/2019 to have been disposed of and no
lis
existed between them any longer.
No withdrawal had been necessary. I find that there is no
prospect of success on appeal
in respect of this point.
Factual dispute
[7]
The alleged factual dispute argument
relates to the alleged undue influence exerted on SVK. This
aspect has sufficiently been
dealt with in the judgment. The
settlement agreement was vetted by the attorney of SVK and Mr Van der
Merwe (which attorney
still represents them) prior to it being
signed. No undue influence had been exerted which would have
vitiated the agreement.
SVK simply itself wanted to “be
taken out of liquidation” so that it could secure new lucrative
tenders. It settled
its payment dispute with Uni-Span who in
turn then withdrew its opposition to SVK’s application to have
the provisional winding
up order discharged, opting to be paid as
promised by SVK than share a dividend as a creditor in a winding-up
process. These
economic realities and prospects did not amount
to the type of undue influence in law which would negate a contract
and I find
no prospects of success on appeal in this regard.
The
Shabangu judgment
[1]
[8]
In the matter before the Constitutional
Court, an invalid loan agreement had been settled by a subsequent
acknowledgment of debt.
The Constitutional Court had found that
an acknowledgement perpetuating an original invalidity would itself
be invalid. Clearly,
that case is distinguishable on the facts,
not least of which is that it hasn’t been found in the present
matter that the
original scaffolding rental and use agreement had
been invalid. Therefore, no subsequent settlement agreement
would be tainted
by invalidity. There is according no merits in
this point.
The status argument
[9]
As a last-ditch attempt SVK and Mr Van der
Merwe argued that they could never have entered into the settlement
agreement with Uni-Span
prior to the discharge of the provisional
winding-up order without the consent or participation of the
provisional liquidators.
[10]
While it is open to a party to raise a new
point of law on appeal, it can only be done on condition that all the
relevant evidence
has been led and that the other party would not be
prejudiced thereby. This is not such a case: no factual
allegations regarding
this point had been made in the case a quo and
Uni-Span was denied the opportunity to enquire from the liquidators
whether they
had knowledge of the agreement, had consented or
acquiesced thereto, or whether, by the time the winding-up order was
discharged
in court, it was done with the liquidators’ blessing
or not. The “point” is therefore not a purely legal
point but has factual elements attached to it, which had not been
placed in evidence.
[11]
In fact, Mr Van der Merwe had, under oath,
stated quite the opposite from the present contention. In his
answering affidavit
he stated: “
It
was common cause that if the company was not taken out of provisional
winding-up, it will not be able to tender for the contract
which
include the joint venture contract with Lesedi
”.
[12]
This “common cause” position
also featured in SVK’s separate application and what must be
remembered, is that
the withdrawal referred to in the settlement
agreement, was not a withdrawal of the liquidation application by
Uni-Span, it was
the withdrawal of Uni-Span’s opposition to
SVK’s application for the discharge of the provisional winding
up order.
In that application (in case no 92558/2019) all the
erstwhile and later provisional liquidators had been joined and
agreements
had similarly been reached with all other creditors,
including SARS. The settlement agreement with Uni-Span was just
the
last hurdle and the involvement of the various provisional
liquidators therein (or not) is a factual question which SVK cannot
now raise as a new and uncanvassed point on appeal.
Conclusion
[13]
It follows that no grounds have been
established which would satisfy the test prescribed by
section
17(1)(a)(i)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. I further
find no cogent reason why costs should not follow the event, on the
same scale as in the main application.
[14]
Order
The application for leave
to appeal is refused with costs, such costs to be on the scale
between attorney and client, including
the costs of senior counsel.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing:
18 January 2024
Judgment
delivered:
26 January 2024
APPEARANCES:
For Applicant:
Adv A Subel SC
Attorney for
Applicant:
Ramsay Webber Inc.,
c/o Andrea Rea
Attorneys, Pretoria
For Respondents:
Adv H Hansen
Attorneys for
Respondents:
CJ Willemse &
Babinszky Attorneys,
Pretoria
[1]
Being a reference to
Shabangu
v Land and Agriculture Development Bank of South Africa
2020 (1) SA 305
(CC).
sino noindex
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