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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2024] ZAGPPHC 274
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## King Price Insurance Company Limited v Integritas Risk Solutions (Pty) Ltd (037834/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 274 (25 March 2024)
King Price Insurance Company Limited v Integritas Risk Solutions (Pty) Ltd (037834/2022)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 274 (25 March 2024)
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sino date 25 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 037834/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
Date:
25 March 2024
Signature:
In
the matter between:
KING
PRICE INSURANCE COMPANY LIMITED
Applicant
(Registration
Number: 2009/012496/06)
and
INTEGRITAS
RISK SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Respondent
(Registration
Number: 2016/194427/07)
JUDGMENT
NYATHI
J
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The plaintiff seeks summary judgment in the
amount of R 6 489 711-05.
The plaintiff’s claim is premised on an acceleration clause
contained in a repayment
agreement.
[2]
To sustain its claim for acceleration, the
plaintiff relies on two
alleged breaches of the repayment agreement: first, that the
defendant failed to provide it with specific
documentation in breach
of clause 3.2 and second, that the defendant has moved its insurance
book in breach of clause Vll thereof.
B.
BACKGROUND
[3]
During their business dealings which are
unknown to this court, the
plaintiff overpaid an amount to the defendant, which the defendant
has undertaken to repay. The defendant
breached the agreement to make
repayment and due to an acceleration clause now owes the plaintiff
R6,489,711.05.
[4]
Not much is in dispute between the parties
as it is common cause
between them that they entered a repayment undertaking and an
acknowledgement agreement (hereafter "repayment
agreement")
which is annexed to the particulars of claim.
[5]
The plaintiff claims that the defendant breached
the repayment
agreement in two different ways and argues that any one of these
breaches entitles the plaintiff to the relief sought
in the
particulars of claim and need not be proven cumulatively.
[6]
Upon the occurrence of a breach, an acceleration
clause was
triggered, resulting in the balance of the outstanding amounts owed
to the plaintiff becoming due and payable immediately.
[7]
As a defence to the plaintiff's claim, the
defendant alleges that it
did not breach the repayment agreement and in addition, instituted a
counterclaim in the amount of R1,448,885.57.
[8]
The plaintiff hereafter argues that there
is no
bona fide
defence to the claim and in fact, it is clear from a perusal of the
plea that the defendant breached the agreement.
[9]
The plaintiff argues that the defendant's
counterclaim does not
constitute a
bona fide
defence, is underpinned by a different
agreement and for an amount lesser than the plaintiff’s claim.
Even if the court were
to find that the counterclaim constitutes a
bona fide
defence, the plaintiff would still be entitled to
judgment in terms of rule 32(6) of the uniform rules of court to an
amount of
R5,040,825.48.
C.
THE TERMS OF THE AGREEMENT BROADLY:
[10]
The current claim is against the defendant for the unpaid
balance of
the overpayment, which the defendant has agreed to the following
repayment terms:
10.1
The defendant acknowledged
its indebtedness to the plaintiff for a total amount of
R7,495,563.00.
10.2
The amount would be repaid
in monthly instalments of R25,000.00 per month, first instalment to
be made before the last day of June
2021.
10.3
The debt would, however, be
fully repaid no later than 1 July 2028.
[11]
To ensure the repayment of the debt, the defendant ceded its
entitlement to its net profits to the plaintiff until such time as
the debt had been settled in full.
[12]
In addition, the defendant would remit 100% of its net profits
to the
plaintiff on a monthly basis.
[13]
To ensure all monthly net profits were paid to the plaintiff,
the
defendant was obliged to make available to the plaintiff such
management accounts, records or documentation reasonably required
by
the plaintiff to verify the defendant's calculation of its net
profits ceded to the plaintiff and in respect of which it incurred
the monthly obligation to pay.
[14]
The
agreement contained an acceleration clause in terms of which the
monthly repayments of R25,000.00 per month as detailed
above, would
fall away and the total outstanding debt would become immediately due
and payable should the defendant breach the
agreement in any
manner.
[1]
[15]
The
plaintiff, reliant upon a certificate of indebtedness,
[2]
claims the outstanding amount of R6 489 711.05.
D.
POINT
IN LIMINE
[16]
As a point
in
limine
,
the defendant takes issue with the plaintiff having filed a
replication and plea to the counterclaim after having launched the
current application for summary judgment. The defendant alleges that
the plaintiff has “
waived”
its right to apply for summary judgment.
[3]
[17]
The plaintiff submits that it never waived the right to apply
for
summary judgment by filing a replication and plea to the
counterclaim. It launched the application for summary judgment before
the replication and plea.
[18]
This is thus the first question to be answered in this application.
The
defendant’s defence:
[19]
Secondly, the defendant denies the first breach of the repayment
agreement. It alleges that clause 3.2, properly construed, does not
require the defendant to provide specific documents but instead
requires the defendant to make available such management accounts,
records and/or documentation reasonably required by the plaintiff
to
verify the defendant’s calculation of its net profit. The
defendant insists that it complied with the clause by providing
quarterly management accounts, income statements and balance sheets
for the entire period in question. There was accordingly no
breach of
clause 3.2.
[20]
Thirdly, as to the second alleged breach, the defendant confirms
that
it did move its insurance book but did so out of necessity. The need
to move the book arose because of the plaintiff's
mala fide
cancellation of the binder agreement which made the defendant's
performance under the repayment agreement impossible without moving
its book. The defendant accordingly did not move its book "by
its own doing" and in breach of clause VII.
[21]
Fourthly, the defendant has a claim for set-off, which claim
is
uncontested in the plaintiff's affidavit in support of summary
judgment and reduces the plaintiff's claim to the lesser amount
of R5
040 825.49.
[22]
Finally, the defendant has a counterclaim in the further amount
of R1
053 505.30. This claim arises out of the plaintiff's unlawful and
intentional use of the defendant's confidential information
and
consequent unlawful competition.
E.
THE LEGAL PROVISIONS
[23]
Summary
judgment is a procedure used to obtain the swift enforcement of a
claim against a defendant who has no real defence to the
claim.
[4]
[24]
Rule 32
provides for a summary judgment procedure which is designed to enable
a plaintiff whose claim falls within certain defined
categories to
obtain judgment without the necessity of going to trial, in spite of
the fact that an intention to raise a defence
has been intimated by
the delivery of a notice of intention to defend. By means of this
procedure a defence lacking in substance
can be disposed of without
the otherwise inevitable delay in obtaining judgment and without
putting the plaintiff to the expense
of a trial.
[5]
[25]
Rule 32 was
amended with effect from 1 July 2019.
[6]
Before then the delivery of a notice of intention to defend was a
prerequisite to an application for summary judgment under rule
32(1)
as it was. It has been held that once a notice of intention to defend
had been delivered and the plaintiff took a further
procedural step
like filing a declaration, he thereby waived his right to apply for
summary judgment. The delivery of a plea is
now a prerequisite to an
application for summary judgment under rule 32(1) in its current
amended form.
[7]
[26]
In
Mncube
v Wesbank a Division of FirstRand Bank Limited
[8]
the defendant gave notice of intention to amend his plea within the
time period allowed for the bringing of an application for
summary
judgment. The amendments to the plea were effected after that period
expired. The plaintiff delivered its application for
summary judgment
within 15 days after the amendments to the plea were effected. In a
subsequent opposed application brought by
the defendant to set aside
the summary judgment application as an irregular step in terms of
rule 30 because it allegedly was delivered
out of time, the court
held that the plaintiff had 15 days from the date on which the
amendments to the plea were effected to deliver
its application for
summary judgment. Consequently, the application was not an irregular
step.
[9]
[27]
In
Quattro
Citrus (Pty) Ltd v F & E Distributors (Pty) Ltd t/a Cape
Crops
[10]
the question arose whether a plaintiff who takes a further procedural
step after the defendant has delivered a plea, i.e. a replication
or
exception, thereby waives his right to apply for summary judgment or
is precluded from exercising that right under rule 32 in
its amended
form. In
Quattro
the plaintiff delivered a replication simultaneously with its
application for summary judgment. The court held that by delivering
its replication, the plaintiff did not waive its right to apply for
summary judgment. (emphasis added). Summary judgment
was
accordingly granted.
[28]
In the
recent case of
Ingenuity
Property Investments (Pty) Ltd v Ignite Fitness (Pty) Ltd
,
[11]
as in
Quattro
,
the plaintiff also delivered its replication and application
simultaneously. The defendant subsequently applied for an order that
the summary judgment application be set aside as an irregular step in
terms of rule 30. The court followed
Quattro
and dismissed the application.
[29]
In
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd
[12]
Corbett JA (as he then was) held that:
“
Accordingly,
one of the ways in which a defendant may successfully oppose a claim
for summary judgment is by satisfying the Court
by affidavit that he
has a bona fide defence to the claim. Where the defence is based upon
facts, in the sense that material facts
alleged by the plaintiff in
his summons, or combined summons, are disputed or new facts are
alleged constituting a defence, the
Court does not attempt to decide
these issues or to determine whether or not there is a balance of
probabilities in favour of the
one party or the other. All that the
Court enquires into is:
(a) whether the
defendant has 'fully' disclosed the nature and grounds of his defence
and the material facts upon which it is founded,
and
(b) whether on the
facts so disclosed the defendant appears to have, as to either the
whole or part of the claim, a defence
(c) which is both bona
fide and good in law. If satisfied on these matters the Court must
refuse summary judgment…”
[30]
In
Cohen
N.O. and Others v Deans
[13]
the
Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
“
The only
decision to trace the history and reasoning behind the amended
procedure for summary judgment in detail is
Tumileng
Trading CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd; E & D Security
Systems CC v National Security and Fire (Pty) Ltd
(Tumileng).
[14]
As observed by Binns-Ward J in
Tumileng,
most of the old authorities still apply in determining whether a
defendant has disclosed a
bona
fide
defence. All the defendant is required to do is disclose a genuine
defence, as opposed to 'a sham' defence. Prospects of success
are
irrelevant and as long as the defence is legally cognisable in the
sense that it amounts to a valid defence if proven at trial,
then an
application for summary judgment must fail.”
[15]
[31]
Whether
under the old rule 32 or the amended rule 32, what has not changed is
that a defendant, to successfully oppose a summary
judgment
application, must disclose a
bona
fide
defence.
[16]
[32]
Mr. Loots
SC submitted on behalf of the defendant that clause 3.2 of the
repayment undertaking does not require the defendant to
provide
specific documents MONTHLY but instead requires the defendant to make
available such management accounts, records and/or
documentation
reasonably required by the plaintiff to verify the defendant’s
calculation of its net profit. In other words,
the agreement allows
the plaintiff to request documentation reasonably required to verify
the debtor's net profit.
[17]
(emphasis added).
[33]
Clause 3.2 reads as follows:
“
The
Debtor cedes its entitlement to its net profits. (Generated from any
business conducted by it) to the Creditor until such time
as the Debt
has been settled in full. The Debtor shall remit 100% of its net
profits to the Creditor on a monthly basis and (at
the request of the
Creditor) make available to the Creditor such management accounts,
records and/or documentation reasonably required
by the Creditor to
verify the Debtor's calculation of its net profits in question, the
first payment of which shall be made on
or before the last day of the
month following the month in which this Acknowledgment is signed by
the last signing party and each
subsequent payment to be made on or
before the last day of each succeeding month until such date on which
50% of the Debt is paid
(each payment being based on the preceding
month’s net profits).”
[34]
From the above-quoted clause 3.2 the management accounts in
question
are to be requested by the Creditor. There is no explicit suggestion
that they are due every month.
[35]
The defendant further alleged that even in the event where
the
acceleration clause were to be breached, the agreement provides that
the plaintiff would still be required to provide the defendant
with
an opportunity to remedy its breach before the acceleration clause
would kick in.
[36]
Having regard to the foregoing analysis, it is
my view
that the plaintiff did not waive its right to apply for summary
judgment by having filed a replication and plea to the
counterclaim
after launching the current application for summary judgment.
[37]
On a
consideration of the merits of the application for summary judgment
itself, the defendant’s affidavit resisting the application
falls squarely within the findings in
Maharaj
v Barclays National Bank Ltd,
[18]
in that
it sets out a
bona
fide
defence to the application for summary judgment.
[38]
The next
issue up for consideration, is the defendant’s counterclaim. In
Soil
Fumigation Services Lowveld CC v Chemfit Technical Products (Pty)
Ltd
[19]
it was held that even where summary judgment has been granted for
that part of the claim that would be extinguished by the
counterclaim,
the defendant can still pursue the counterclaim by
issuing summons in a separate action. The court emphasised that the
doors of
the court would not be finally closed to the defendant. I
thus do not opt to deal here with the defendant’s counterclaim
in a piecemeal fashion.
[39]
In conclusion, the defendant has disclosed a
bona fide
defence. Accordingly, the defendant should be allowed to defend the
action.
[40]
There is no reason why the costs in this matter cannot follow
the
cause.
[41]
The following order is made:
The application for
summary judgment is dismissed with costs on an attorney and client
scale including costs of two counsel so employed.
J.S. NYATHI
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of hearing: 04 October 2023
Date
of Judgment: 25 March 2024
On behalf of the
Applicant:
Adv. C. Richard
Duly instructed by:
Weavind &
Weavind Inc.
Tel: 012 346 3098
E-mail:
nic@weavind.co.za
and
yolandi@weavind.co.za
On behalf of the
Respondent:
Adv. A. Loots SC
With him:
Adv. Robertson
Duly instructed by:
Clyde & Co.
Inc.
C/O:
Macintosh Cross &
Farquharson, Pretoria
Tel:
012 342 4855
E-mail:
tony.hardie@clydeco.com
lauren.fine@clydeco.com
Thabiso.matsane@clydeco.com
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
25
March 2024
.
[1]
Clause
VII of the agreement.
[2]
Which was agreed between the parties to be prima facie proof of the
content thereof at clause Vill of the agreement.
[3]
Affidavit
resisting summary judgment para 15.
[4]
Civil
Procedure – A Practical Guide 2
nd
Ed – Pete, Hulme et al, p589 Glossary.
[5]
Herbstein and Van Winsen: The Civil Practice of the High Courts and
the Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa 5
th
Ed, 2009 ch17 – p516
[6]
By GN R842 in GG 42497 of 31 May 2019.
[7]
Erasmus – Superior Court Practice Volume 2 RS 22, 2023, D1
Rule 32-12.
[8]
Mncube v Wesbank a Division of FirstRand Bank Limited, Unreported
Case No. (2022/9750)
[2023] ZAGPJHC 895 (10 August 2023).
[9]
Ibid
paras
33 – 34.
[10]
[2021]
JOL 49833.
[11]
[2023]
3 All SA 458 (WCC)
[12]
Maharaj v Barclays National Bank Ltd 1976 (I) SA 418 (A
[13]
Cohen
N.O. and Others
[2023] ZASCA 56
[14]
Tumileng
Trading
[2020] ZAWHC 52.
[15]
Cohen
N.O. and Others v Deans
supra
at para [29].
[16]
Ibid
para
[28].
[17]
See
also defendant’s affidavit resisting summary judgment at paras
44 to 46.
[18]
Supra
ft
12.
[19]
2004
(6) SA 29
(SCA) at 35C – D.
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