Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 494South Africa
New Salt Rock City (Pty) Ltd and Others v Kilken Platinum (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022-018387) [2024] ZAGPPHC 494 (28 May 2024)
Headnotes
by the second to the fourth respondents (Newshelf).
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## New Salt Rock City (Pty) Ltd and Others v Kilken Platinum (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022-018387) [2024] ZAGPPHC 494 (28 May 2024)
New Salt Rock City (Pty) Ltd and Others v Kilken Platinum (Pty) Ltd and Others (2022-018387) [2024] ZAGPPHC 494 (28 May 2024)
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sino date 28 May 2024
SAFLII
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2022-018387
DOH:
20 September 2023
1)
REPORTABLE: NO
2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3)
REVISED.
DATE 28 May 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
NEW
SALT ROCK CITY (PTY) LTD
First Applicant
Registration
No. 2007/005000/07
ZAMIEN
INVESTMENTS 102 (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
Registration
No. 2003/006135/07
CSHELL
80 (PTY) LTD
Third Applicant
Registration
No. 2005/029828/07
FREDERICK
WILHELM AUGUST
Fourth
Applicant
LUTZKIE
6[...]
And
KILKEN
PLATINUM (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
Registration
No. 2003/001334/07
KILKEN
INVESTMENTS (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
Registration
No. 2020/551840/07
KILKEN
ENTERPRISES (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
Registration
No. 2020/551835/07
KILKEN
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Fourth Respondent
Registration
No. 2020/551830/07
ZUNAID
ABBAS MOTI
ID:
7[...]
Fifth Respondent
CITAX
INVESTMENTS SA (PTY) LTD
Sixth Respondent
Registration
No. 2021/000194/07
ANY
RENTAL (PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
Registration
No. 2007/010332/07
JUDGMENT
THIS
JUD
GMENT
HAS BEEN HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES
BY EMAIL. ITS DATE AND TIME OF HAND DOWN SHALL BE DEEMED
TO BE 28 MAY
2024
Bam J
Introduction
1.
The applicants claim delivery and transfer
of a helicopter together with publicly traded shares from the
respondents. The claim
arises from a settlement agreement they had
cancelled in June 2022, following what they said was the respondents’
failure
to perform.
2.
The respondents raise three defences.
Firstly, they say the time and conditions for them to perform their
obligations never arose;
in addition, given the reciprocal nature of
their obligations, the respondents were under no obligation to
perform until and unless
the applicants had purged their own
non-performance, which they never did. The result is that the
applicants’ right to enforce
the Rouwkoop provisions of the
agreement simply never arose. Secondly, they say the applicants made
an election to cancel the agreement.
Cancellation precludes
enforcement. The applicants are accordingly not allowed to
simultaneously blow hot and cold. They are bound
by their election.
Thirdly, by all parties’ accounts, the Settlement Agreement was
cancelled. Cancellation has the result
that all the obligations under
the Settlement Agreement are extinguished and can no longer be
enforced. There is a further complaint
about new matters in reply and
in the Heads of Argument, which I address in the course of this
judgment. The respondents further
complain that the present
application is an abuse of the court’
s
processes.
A. BACKGROUND
3.
The facts are uncomplicated and are common
cause. They are: During 2020 and over a number of months, Salt Rock
(the first to the
third applicants) acquired 35.1% of shares in the
first respondent, for which it paid a consideration of R242 million.
The remainder
of the shares of 64.9% are held by the second to the
fourth respondents (Newshelf).
4.
In early March 2021, a dispute arose
between the applicants and the first respondent in relation to a
short paid invoice for management
fees claimed by the applicants. In
April 2021, the applicants issued a demand in terms of Section 345
(1) of the Companies Act
61 of 1973. The first respondent reacted by
launching urgent legal proceedings in the Durban High Court to
interdict the applicants
from winding it up (the Sec 345 interdict
application).
5.
In July 2021, following a breakdown in
discussions between the Fourth applicant, Lutzkie and the Fifth
respondent, Moti, the applicants
launched urgent proceedings in this
court for relief in terms of Section 163 of the
Companies Act 71 of
2008
. The application was enrolled for 16 February 2022. In the lead
up to the hearing in February, Lutzkie and Moti concluded a
settlement
agreement on 19 October, which was subsequently amended on
25 October 2021 (Settlement Agreement). The relevant material terms
of the Settlement Agreement read
,
inter
alia,
that:
(i)
The majority in the first respondent would
acquire the minority shareholding.
(ii)
The parties agreed to ‘
stop
litigation now
’
.
(iii)
The applicants were to be paid an amount of
R350 million on or before 31 January 2022, otherwise the ‘
shares
and helicopter [would be] Rouwkoop if not paid
’
.
(iv)
Frikkie, the fourth applicant, was to ‘put
[the minority’s] shares into [an] attorney’s trust
account until the
R350m [had been] paid and the shares transferred.’
The reference to Frikkie is a reference to Lutzkie.
6.
The following events which
have
relevance in determining breach of the Settlement Agreement and are
not in dispute
:
6.1 On 13 December 2021,
the applicants gave notice of their intention to amend the relief
sought in the Notice of Motion in the
Sec 163
application.
6.2 On 11 January 2022,
following an objection by the respondents to the proposed amendment,
the applicants launched an application
to amend the relief sought in
the
Sec 163.
1.7cm; text-indent: -0.7cm; margin-bottom: 0cm; line-height: 150%">
6.3 On the eve of the
hearing of 15 February, the applicants filed further Heads of
Argument in the
Sec 163
application and further notified the
respondents of a new order they intended moving for during the
hearing. The application in
terms of
Sec 163
and the application to
amend were heard on 16 February.
6.4 On 17 March, the
applicants filed a supplementary affidavit in the
Sec 345
Interdict
Application in the Durban High Court.
7.
The judgment in the
Sec 163
application was
handed down on 17 May 2022, where the court found that the
application had been compromised/resolved by the October
2021
settlement. It ordered that the matter be removed from the roll and
called upon the applicants to pay the respondents’
costs.
8.
On 16 June 2022, the applicants cancelled
the Settlement Agreement, which the respondents accepted in September
2023.
B. THE LAW
Exceptio non
adimpleti contractus
9.
Very
briefly, the principle of reciprocity (
exceptio
non adimpleti contractus
)
recognises the fact that, in many contracts, the common intention of
the parties, expressed or unexpressed, is that there should
be an
exchange of performances.
[1]
The
common intention is that neither should be entitled to enforce the
contract unless he/she has performed or is ready to perform
his/her
own obligations.
[2]
It
is common cause in the present case that the parties obligations were
reciprocal. A perusal of the terms of the Settlement Agreement
reveals that the parties had agreed to stop litigating against one
another.
Election
10.
The
doctrine of election proceeds from the point that an injured party in
a contract, owing to his or her contracting party’s
failure to
perform, has options.
[3]
They
can elect to treat the contract as binding or cancel the contract.
Once an election has been made, it is binding. The rationale
for the
binding nature of the election stems from the principle that no one
can take up two positions
[4]
which
are inconsistent with each other.
Consequences of
cancellation of an agreement
11.
In
Naka
Diamond Mining (Pty) Limited
v
Johannes
Frederick Klopper NO & Others
, a
party to a joint venture agreement, Naka, sought to enforce certain
obligations that its partner, SouthernEra (Pty) Ltd, had
incurred in
terms of a joint venture agreement which had been cancelled. The
court held:
‘…
cancellation
of a contract results in termination of the obligations created
thereby. ‘If a contractual obligation has not
yet been
fulfilled, cancellation has the result that obligations from the
contract are extinguished and can therefore no longer
be enforced.
[5]
C.
DISCUSSION
1st
Defence:
Exceptio non adimpleti
contractus
12.
The
respondents submit that the applicants had failed to perform. The
very first obligation owed by the parties towards each other
was to
cease litigation. In breach of the term of the settlement agreement
which said, ‘
Stop
litigation now
’,
the applicants continued to litigate. I have isolated the steps taken
by the applicants as of 11 December onwards.
[6]
They
are not in dispute. As a consequence, submit the respondents, they
were entitled to withhold their performance until such time
that the
applicants had purged their non-performance or, at the very least,
tendered to perform, which the applicants failed to
do. As I
understand the applicants’ response, they do not deny that the
parties’ obligations were reciprocal. They
also do not deny
that they continued to litigate. Nor do they engage directly with the
defence. Instead, they conflate the question
of reciprocity with a
conditional contract. They then set off, arguing that the stance
raised by the respondents that the contract
was conditional is a new
one. The point in reciprocal contracts is that no party is entitled
to enforce the contract until they
have performed or have tendered
their own performance. I conclude that the applicants have failed to
overcome the defence raised
by the respondents.
2nd Defence: The
applicants made an election
13.
It is common cause that the applicants
wrote to the respondents on 16 June 2022 informing them of their
cancellation of the settlement
agreement. The respondents duly
informed the applicants of their acceptance of the cancellation
during September, terming it acceptance
of the applicants’
repudiation. The law does not countenance that a person can hold two
positions that are inconsistent with
one another. An injured party in
an agreement, as a result of the actions of the other contracting
party, has options. They can
either treat the contract as valid and
enforce the obligations or cancel it and sue for damages. The
applicants decided to cancel
the agreement. Cancellation precludes
enforcement. They cannot now seek to enforce the very same contract
they cancelled. Again,
the applicants fail to confront this defence
or answer it cogently. I conclude that the applicants are bound by
their election.
On this basis, the claim cannot succeed.
3rd
Defence: The consequence of cancelling an agreement is that the
obligations arising therefrom are extinguished.
14.
It is not in dispute that the settlement
agreement was cancelled. It no longer exists. Whether it was
cancelled on 22 June or in
September, cancellation has the result
that all the obligations under the Settlement Agreement are
extinguished and can no longer
be enforced. As the court said in
Naka
Diamond
, cancellation of a contract results in
termination of the obligations created thereby. On this defence too,
the applicants have
no plausible response.
Purpose of affidavits
in motion proceedings
15.
The
enduring purpose of affidavits in motion proceedings — that
they serve as pleadings and evidence — is established
law. The
main foundations of the application are the allegations of fact
stated in the founding affidavit because that is the case
to which
the respondent is invited to affirm or deny.
[7]
It
is thus impermissible for a party to make a new case in a replying
affidavit, as the respondent is allowed only one opportunity
to deal
with the applicant’s cause of action and present evidence in
opposition in the answering affidavit.
[8]
It
is not pedantry to hold parties to their pleadings; it is an integral
part of the principle of legal certainty which is an element
of the
rule of law.
[9]
16.
I
mention some of the new matters raised by the applicants for the
first time in the replying affidavit and their Heads of Argument.
For
example, contrary to the applicants’ assertions in the founding
affidavit that the parties concluded a valid, enforceable
and
unconditional settlement agreement, the applicants suggest in their
replying affidavit that the obligation to stop litigation
on their
part was conditional upon the respondents delivering the helicopter
and transferring the shares.
[10]
The
short answer is, this is not the applicants’ case. However,
given that the respondents have had the opportunity to engage
with
the new matter, I address it. T
he
applicant
s
are not entitled to blow hot and cold. At first, the agreement was
unconditional. It cannot now be conditional for them to get
around
the fact that they did not stop litigating. In any event, purely from
reading the language used in the agreement (‘stop
litigation
now’) and in the context of the entire document, it would be a
stretch to arrive at the meaning now contended
for by the
applicants
[11]
.
The point must fail.
17.
In
their Heads of Argument, the applicants raise the defence of waiver
which was not pleaded. In this regard, the applicants query
the
respondents’ silence when the applicants committed the breaches
of the settlement agreement only for their acceptance
of the
applicants’ repudiation to be conveyed by the deponent to the
opposing affidavit in the liquidation proceedings. They
query the
deponent’s authority and point to the length of time it took
the respondents to convey their acceptance of the
repudiation.
Ultimately, the applicants contend that the respondents have waived
their right to cancel. This point cannot be traced
to any of the
applicants’ affidavits. It surfaces for the first time in the
Heads of Argument.
Garvas
informs
that parties must be held to their pleadings. On the basis that the
respondents have dealt with the point in their Heads
of Argument, I
address it. For over half a century, our courts have laid down the
law that no one is presumed to have waived their
rights. In
Road
Accident Fund
v
Mothupi
,
it was said that ‘the onus is on the party alleging it
[waiver]. In this regard, clear proof is required of an intention
to
do so and that the conduct from which waiver is inferred must be
unequivocal, that is to say, consistent with no other
hypothesis’
.
[12]
18.
The applicants have made no attempt to
discharge the onus required to establish waiver. The conduct
demonstrated by the respondent
throughout, points to a party who had
no intention to waive any of their rights. The applicants in their
founding affidavit refer
to a cryptic response received from the
respondents after they had warned them of the looming date for
performance, in January
2022. In this regard, the respondents wrote
back advising that no purpose will be served by engaging with the
contents of the applicants’
letter and on the 31 January 2022,
they simply did not make the payment of R350 million. At a minimum,
it can be said that on the
basis of that letter, the respondents
intended not to debate the contents of the letter but at the same
time, they made it clear
that they do not agree with the applicants.
The respondents had taken steps opposing the applicants’
intended amendment prior
to the hearing of the matter in February
2022. These are not steps consistent with a party intending to wave
their rights. The
applicants have failed to discharge the onus placed
on them to establish waiver
.
D.
CONCLUSION
19.
For all the reasons set out in this
judgment, the application must fail. The respondents seek costs,
including the costs of two
counsel. As the successful party, the
respondents are entailed to costs but not costs of two counsel.
E. ORDER
20.
The application is dismissed. The
applicants must pay the respondents’ costs.
N.N
BAM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing
:
20 September 2023
Date
of Judgment:
28 May 2024
Appearances:
Applicants
’
Counsel:
Adv
J.J Brett SC
with
Adv
J.G Smit
Instructed
by:
Gothe
Attorneys
Queenswood,
Pretoria
Respondents’
Counsel:
Adv
A.R Bhana SC
with
Adv T Dalrymple
Instructed
by:
Knowles,
Husain Lindsay Inc. ℅
Friedland Hart
Solomon & Nicholson Attorneys
Monument
Park, Pretoria
[1]
Cradle
City (Pty) Ltd v Lindley Farm 528 (Pty) Ltd
(1212/2016)
[2017] ZASCA 185
;
2018 (3) SA 65
(SCA) (6 December 2017), paragraph
20.
[2]
Euhar
Truck & Bus (SA) (Pty) Ltd v Dorbyl Limited t/a Dorbyl Transport
Products and Busaf
,
CASE NO: (38/03), (25 MARCH 2004)
,
paragraph 12.
[3]
Sandown
Travel (Pty) Ltd v Cricket South Africa
(42317/2011)
[2012] ZAGPJHC 249;
2013 (2) SA 502
(GSJ) (7 December 2012),
paragraph 31.
[4]
Sandown
note
9, paragraph 31;
Chamber
of Mines of South Africa v National Union of Mineworkers
(243/86)
[1986] ZASCA 152
(28 November 1986), paragraph 22 - 23
[5]
(277/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 94
(17 June 2022), paragraph 23.
[6]
Paragraph
6 of this judgment.
[7]
Director
of Hospital Services v Mistry
(272/77)
[1978] ZASCA 126
(9 November 1978).
[8]
Gold
Fields Limited and Others v Motley Rice LLC,
In
re:
Nkala
v Harmony Gold Mining Company Limited and Others
(48226/12)
[2015] ZAGPJHC 62;
2015 (4) SA 299
(GJ);
[2015] 2 All SA 686
(GJ)
(19 March 2015), paragraph 122.
[9]
South
African Transport and Allied Workers Union and Another v Garvas and
Others
(CCT
112/11)
[2012] ZACC 13
;
2012 (8) BCLR 840
(CC);
[2012] 10 BLLR 959
(CC); (2012) 33 ILJ 1593 (CC);
2013 (1) SA 83
(CC) (13 June 2012),
paragraph 114.
[10]
Paragraph
15 of the replying affidavit.
[11]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality, 920/2010
[2012] ZASCA 13
, paragraph 18.
[12]
Road
Accident Fund v Mothupi
(518/98)
[2000] ZASCA 27
;
2000 (4) SA 38
(SCA);
[2000] 3 All SA 181
(A) (29
May 2000), paragraph 19.
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