Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 461South Africa
Tikka Tikka Projects (Pty) Limited and Others v Carrim Holdings (Pty) Ltd (046271/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 461 (14 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Tikka Tikka Projects (Pty) Limited and Others v Carrim Holdings (Pty) Ltd (046271/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 461 (14 May 2024)
Tikka Tikka Projects (Pty) Limited and Others v Carrim Holdings (Pty) Ltd (046271/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 461 (14 May 2024)
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sino date 14 May 2024
SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
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SAFLII
Policy
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No:
046271/2022
(1)
Reportable: NO
(2)
of interest to other judges: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
DATE: 14 May 2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
TIKKA TIKKA PROJECTS
(PTY) LIMITED
First Applicant
MICHAEL BRUNI (ID:
5[...])
Second Applicant
KONSTANDINA BRUNI (ID:
6[...])
Third Applicant
MARIA MAGDALENA VAN
VUUREN
Fourth Applicant
(ID: 6[...])
KOBUS VLOK (ID:
8[...])
Fifth Applicant
And
CARRIM HOLDINGS (PTY)
LTD
RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
LESO AJ.
INTRODUCTION
1.
Tikka Tikka
Project (Pty) Ltd took an exception to Carrim Holdings' particulars
of claim complaining that the reliance on tacit
acceptance of a
credit agreement between the parties leads to confusion about whether
a written or oral agreement is relied upon
by Carrim Holdings.
BACKGROUND
2.
On 15
February 2023 and 22 March 2023 Tikka Tikka took exception to some of
Carrim Holdings' particulars of claim and on 17 April
2023 Carrim
Holdings attended to remove the cause of complaint by amending its
declaration. Under Carrim Holdings' subsequent amendment,
Tikka Tikka
raised a new exception to Carrim Holdings' declaration on 03 May
2023. The matter was then set down for hearing on
opposed roll after
Carrim declined to remedy the alleged defect in its particulars of
claim as it was called upon to do so by Tikka
Tikka. Tikka Tikka did
not file the heads of arguments nor did they attend the proceedings
in court and Carrim proceeded to argue
the matter in its absence.
Grounds
of Exception
3.
Tikka Tikka
grounds for exception are as follows:
3.1
Particulars
amount to an irregular step;
3.2
The
particulars are expiable and/or;
3.3
The
particulars fail to disclose a cause of action and/or;
3.4
Particulars
are vague and embarrassing; and/or;
3.5
Defendant
will be embarrassed in pleading thereto.
4.
The subject
matter of this application is found in Tikka Tikka’s second
exception of March 2023 where the cause of complaint
firstly relates
to Carrim Holdings' reliance on a tacit acceptance and a written
credit agreement, secondly, Tikka Tikka alleged
that Carrim Holding
has not pleaded when the tacit acceptance occurred. Tikka Tikka
complains that in
paragraph
4 of the particulars, Carrim Holdings pleads
that
‘
on/or
about 06 April 2022 at Centurion the plaintiff duly represented and
the 1
st
defendant duly represented by the 2
nd
,
4
th
and 5
th
defendant concluded a written Credit Facility Agreement in the form
application for credit facility made by the 1
st
defendant tacitly accepted the plaintiff incorporating the standard
Terms and Conditions applicable to the sale of goods and the
provision of services and Deed Of Suretyship
’
.
5.
According to
Tikka Tikka, the last copy of the agreement marked as annexure “
D2
”
was not signed by Carrim Holdings and Carrim Holdings failed to plead
whether the purported application made by the defendant
was accepted
in writing, alternatively communicated orally to Tikka Tikka by the
Carrim Holding. Tikka Tikka claims that it is
unsure what Carrim
Holdings is referring to when pleading that the first Defendant was
tacitly represented by certain parties,
lastly,
Tikka
Tikka relied on the provision of Rule 18(6) and Sub-rule (4) of the
Uniform Rules.
6.
Before the
Court counsel representing Carrim Holdings contended that on 06 April
2022 at Centurion Tikka Tikka concluded a written
application for
credit facilities and the application was tacitly accepted by Tikka
Tikka. According to counsel representing Carrim
Holdings, Tikka Tikka
breached the terms of the agreement that incorporated a deed of
Suretyship respectively binding the second
to fourth respondents by
failing to effect payment for the purchased goods within 30 days from
the date of the statement after
it ordered and purchased various
goods and or services from Carrim on 23 May 2022 and 22 June 2022.
7.
According to
Carrim Holdings acceptance(tacit) occurred during the conclusion of
the written agreement, a copy of which is attached
to the pleadings.
Counsel representing Carrim argues that the reliance by Carrim
Holding on tacit acceptance and the written agreement
needs no
further averment because there are no formal requirements in South
African Law of Contract in respect of Offers or acceptance
and that
there is a distinction between the conduct of the parties preceding
the conclusion of a contract and the conclusion of
the contract
itself. He explains the Oxford dictionary meaning of tacit and
the legal meaning as he submits that the dictionary
meaning of
tacit
is indirectly or understood, rather than said in words’ while
the legal definition refers to tacit contracts are contracts
that are inferred from the conduct of the parties as opposed to
written or verbal agreements embodying coinciding expressions of
intention’. Counsel submits that the are no formality
requirements
in South African law of contract in respect of offers however the
National Credit Act creates an exception to the rule in the
agreements subject to the
National Credit Act, 34 of 2005
.
ISSUES
TO BE DETERMINED
8.
Whether
Carrim Holdings' claim that the written agreement was tacitly
accepted is vague and embarrassing and whether Carrim Holdings
allegation of the conclusion of a written agreement and tacit
acceptance of such agreement is inadequate due to the absence of
the
date of such acceptance.
DISCUSSION
AND APPLICABLE LAW
9.
The
law on exception is found in Rule 23(1) of the Uniform Rules
[1]
that
(1)
‘
Where any pleading is vague and embarrassing, or
lacks averments which are necessary to sustain an action or defence,
as the case
may be, the opposing party may, within the period allowed
for filing any subsequent pleading, deliver an exception thereto and
may apply to the registrar to set it down for hearing within 15 days
after the delivery of such exception(
. . .)’.
The
above rule directs the court to mainly focus on the content of the
plaintiff particulars of the claim form part of the pleadings
as
regulated by Rule 18, the rule relating to pleading generally.
Sub-rule (4) and sub-rule (6) of the above-mentioned rule require
the
pleadings to contain a clear and concise statement of material facts
with sufficient particularity to enable the opposite party
to reply
and the
plaintiff
who relies upon the contract to state if the contract was in writing
or orally, where and when it was concluded and if
it was a written
agreement to attach a copy of the agreement
[2]
.
10.
It
is common cause that the cause of action is based on the breach of a
credit agreement concluded between the parties wherein Carrim
Holding
provided goods to Tikka Tikka and Tikka Tikka failed to make payment.
Tikka Tikka has not denied performance by Carrim
Holdings based on
the agreement. A copy of a credit agreement is attached by Carrim
Holding as part of the pleadings. My analysis
of the Tikka Tikka
objection appears to be that it is not known whether the agreement
was tacitly agreed upon by Carrim and when
it was accepted by Carrim
Holdings because the agreement was not signed.
I
wish to indicate outright that Carrim Holdings’ argument on the
interpretation of the wording used in its particulars of
claim and
the validity of the agreement itself goes to the merits of this
matter which this court is not ceased with.
Tikka Tikka is not satisfied with the court's view about the issue of
interpretation in
Alfred
McAlpine & Son (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial Administration
[3]
will
assist in the distinction between a tacit term and the expressed
terms of the contract
.
In
this case
the
court stipulated that ‘
an
unexpressed provision of the contract which derives from the common
intention of the parties, as inferred by the Court from the
express
terms of the contract and the surrounding circumstances
,
whether
a contract contains such a term is a question of interpretation
’.
11.
I
have analysed the content of the particulars of the claim subject to
the complaint and the relationship between the parties,
the nature of
the claim, and the answer to the question of whether Carrim Holding's
claim of tacit acceptance and a written agreement
is embarrassing
should be adverse. Without dealing with the interpretation of Carrim
Holding's pleadings, I found that both parties
agreed to the terms of
the credit agreement to the extent that Carrim had performed under
the contract. Rule
18
(5)
cautions the litigants in their pleadings to answer the point of
substance and not to be evasive in the denial of an allegation
of
fact raised in the previous pleading
[4]
.
provides that ‘When in any pleading a party denies an
allegation of fact in the previous pleading of the opposite
party, he
shall not do so evasively, but shall answer the point of substance’
and
Rule
18(7) ‘
It
shall not be necessary for any pleading to state the circumstances
from which an alleged implied term can be inferred.’
12.
The rest of
the issues raised by Tikka Tikka in this application should be dealt
with in their plea and counterclaim while the Carrim
Holdings
argument and explanation of what it meant by tacit acceptance and
written agreement will be canvased in the main proceedings.
In
the same breath, Tikka Tikka did not dispute or challenge the
existence of the agreement. Unfortunately, a no-show in court by
Tikka Tikka and failure to file its heads of argument left the court
with speculations about what Tikka Tikka’s objection
is about.
It
cannot be correct that Carrim Holdings particulars failed to disclose
the cause of action because Tikka Tikka has agreed that
there was a
written agreement between the parties the rest of the issues raised
on the agreement itself go to the merits of the
case which can be
dealt with in Tikka Tikka’s plea and counterclaim.
13.
The
ultimate test as to whether or not the exception should be upheld is
whether the excipient is prejudiced and the onus is on
the excipient
to show both vagueness amounting to embarrassment and embarrassment
amounting to prejudice as it was held in
Quinlan
v MacGregor
[5]
.
Peter Van Blerk I writes that ‘
in
determining whether or not a pleading fails to disclose a cause of
action or defense it must be remembered that if the pleadings
can
bear more than one meaning the excipient must satisfy the court that
on all its meanings the pleadings is bad
’
[6]
.
In
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank
[7]
the court held that ‘
an
exception to a pleading on the ground that it is vague and
embarrassing involves a two-fold consideration. The first is whether
the pleading lacks particularity to the extent that it is vague. The
second is whether the vagueness causes embarrassment of such
a nature
that the excipient is prejudiced
.’
CONCLUSION
14.
I found that
the exception raised by Tikka Tikka is technical and does not render
the plaintiff's pleadings or declaration expiable.
The
function of an exception was explained by the court in Trope.
In
South African National Parks v Ras
2002 (2) SA 537
(C) at 541
,
it was held that unless the excipient can satisfy the court that
there is a real point of law or a real embarrassment, the exception
should be dismissed.
15.
I find that
Tikka Tikka's exception to Carrim Holding particulars of claim cannot
stand and it is therefore dismissed.
COSTS
16.
At the end of
his submissions, Carrim Holding's counsel argued that the exception
be dismissed with costs on the attorney and client
scale however
there was no substantive argument on this issue.
THEREFORE,
I MAKE THE ORDER AS FOLLOWS:
ORDER
1.
Exception
is dismissed.
2.
The
defendant must file its plea and counterclaim if any within 10 days
of this
order
and judgment.
3.
Costs
to be determined in the trial court.
The
judgment was handed down electronically and by circulation to the
parties/ legal representatives by e-mail and by uploading
to
Caseline. The date of hand down is the date when the judgment was
signed
.
J.T LESO
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH COURT,
SOUTH AFRICA, GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing:
26 February 2024
Date
of Judgment:
14 Mar 2024
APPEARANCE:
For
the Applicant:
No
Appearance
Van
der Walt Attorneys
Tel:
012 004 0344
Email:
robert@rvdwattorney.co.za
For
the Respondent:
RWL
INC
Adv
CGVO Sevenster/Adv J. A Van Wyk
Room
48, Circle Chambers
Advjavanwyk@gmail.com
072 223
5803
[1]
See
Rule 23(1) of the Uniform Rules of the High Court,
[2]
See
Rule 18(4) and Rule 18(6) on the Uniform Rules
[3]
See
Alfred
McAlpine & Son (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial Administration
1974(3) All SA 497,,Pan American World Airways Inc v
SA Fire and
Accident Insurance Co Ltd
1965 (3) All SA 24.
[4]
See Rule 8(5) which provides that ‘
When
in any pleading a party denies an allegation of fact in the previous
pleading of the opposite party, he shall not do so evasively,
but
shall answer the point of substance
.’
[5]
See
Quinlan
v MacGregor
[5]
1960
(4) SA 383
(D) at
393G; Trope v South African Reserve Bank
1992
(3) SA 208
(T)
and ABSA Bank Ltd v Boksburg Transitional Local Council
1997
(2) SA 415
(W)
at
421J–422A.
[6]
See
Peter
Van Blerk
Legal
Drafting, Civil Proceedings, second edition, page 50.
[7]
See
Trope
v South African Reserve Bank
[7]
1992 [3] SA 208 T at `221A-E.
sino noindex
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