Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 644South Africa
Bizz Tracers (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd (13374/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 644 (2 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
2 July 2024
Headnotes
is whether the Excipient is prejudiced.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Bizz Tracers (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd (13374/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 644 (2 July 2024)
Bizz Tracers (Pty) Ltd and Another v Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd (13374/2020) [2024] ZAGPPHC 644 (2 July 2024)
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sino date 2 July 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 13374/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 4 July 2024
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
BIZZ
TRACERS (PTY) LTD
1
st
Excipient1
st
Applicant
RATLHOGO
PETER CALVIN RAFADI
2
nd
Excipient/2
nd
Applicant
And
ESKOM
HOLDINGS SOC LTD
Respondent/Plaintiff
JUDGMENT
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected on 2 July 2024 and is handed down electronically
by
circulation to the parties/their legal representatives by e-mail and
by uploading it to the electronic file of this matter on
CaseLines.
The date for hand-down is deemed to be10h00 on 2 July 2024.
MNISI AJ
[1]
This is an exception to the plaintiff’s
particulars of claim taken by the first and second defendants (“the
excipients/defendants”).
The defendants complain that the
particulars of claim has failed to catalogue and allege that the
first defendant’s breach
of the contract and its right to
cancel and claim restitution which accrued to it due to the breach.
Moreover, the defendants complain
that the particulars of claim lack
averments necessary to sustain a cause of action.
[2]
Before I deal with the exception raised by the defendants, an
overview of the applicable general
principles distilled from case law
is necessary. It is trite that when considering a challenge of a
pleading at exception stage,
the pleading must be considered as a
whole.
[1]
During exception
proceedings where the challenge to the pleading is made on both
recognised grounds (that the pleading is vague
and embarrassing and
that it lacks averments necessary to sustain a cause of action), a
two stage approach is followed, for the
complaint that the pleading
is vague and embarrassing calls for an enquiry to cover the situation
where, if a cause of action appears
from the pleading, there is some
defect or incompleteness in the manner in which it has been
formulated which results in embarrassment
to the defendant.
[3]
Our courts, in cases of that kind, uphold exceptions as to permit the
action to proceed towards
trial based on it would only go to compound
the embarrassment, and quite likely give rise to a confusing or
argumentative plea.
It would ultimately conduce to a situation where
case manager or trial judge would likely be faced with some
difficulty in
delimiting the issues for the purpose of judicially
managing the conduct of the trial. It is not only the second
defendant that
would be prejudiced if the pleading were to stand, but
also the court.
[2]
[4]
It is important to deal with the applicable principles in an
Exception, as stated in
Erasmus,
Superior Court Practice
[3]
“
(a) In
each case the court is obliged first of all to consider whether the
pleading does lack particularity to an extent amounting
to vagueness.
Where a statement is vague it is either meaningless or capable of
more than one meaning. To put it at its simplest;
the reader must be
unable to distil from the statement a clear, single meaning.
(b) If there is
vagueness in this sense, the court is then obliged to undertake
a quantitative
analysis of such embarrassment as the excipient can show is caused to
him or her by the vagueness complained of.
(c) In
each case an ad hoc ruling must be made as to whether the
embarrassment is so serious as to cause prejudice to
the excipient if
he or she is compelled to plead to the pleading in the form to which
he or she objects. A point may be of the
utmost importance in one
case, and the omission thereof may give rise to vagueness and
embarrassment, but the same point may in
another case be only a minor
detail.
(d) The
ultimate test as to whether or not the exception should be upheld is
whether the Excipient is prejudiced.
(e) The
onus is on the excipient to show both vagueness embarrassment and
amount to prejudice amounting to embarrassment.
(f) The
Excipient must make out his or her case for embarrassment by
reference to the pleadings alone.
(g) The Court
would not decide by way of Exception the validity of an agreement
relied upon or whether a purported contract
may be void for
vagueness.”
[5]
The degree of precision with which a pleading must
be formulated depends on the circumstances
of each case.
[4]
A plaintiff acts in breach of the abovementioned requirements if its
particulars of claim include, for example, extracts from and
references to other documents and sources or if those statements made
in the pleading are not material to any clearly disclosed
cause of
action.
[6]
It is trite that the defendants bear the onus of proof that the
particulars of claim do
not address the cause of action and amount to
vagueness which causes embarrassment. In
Vermeulen
v Goose Valley Investments (Pty) Ltd
,
[5]
Marais JA stated as follows:
“
It
is trite law that an exception that a cause of action is not
disclosed by a pleading cannot succeed unless it can be shown that
ex
facie the allegations made by the plaintiff and any other document
upon which his cause of action may be based, the claim
is
(not
may be) bad in law. . . .”
[7]
It is also a well-established principle that the object of pleadings
is to enable each side to come
to trial prepared to meet the case of
the other and not be taken by surprise.
[8]
In
Jowell v Bramwell-Jones and Others
1998 (1) SA 836
(W) at
913B-G
it was explained thus:
“…
The
Plaintiff is required to furnish an outline of its case. This does
not mean that the Defendant is entitled to a framework like
a
crossword puzzle in which every gap can be filled by logical
deduction. The outline may be asymmetrical and possess rough edges
not obvious until explored by evidence. Provided the defendant is
given a clear idea of the material facts which are necessary
to make
the cause of action intelligible, the plaintiff will have satisfied
the requirements”.
[9]
An exception to a pleading on the ground that it lacks averments
necessary to sustain a cause
of action requires the excipient to show
that upon every interpretation which the pleading in question can
reasonably bear, no
cause of action is disclosed. If the excipient
cannot show this, the exception ought not to be upheld.
[10]
It is further trite law that an exception that a cause of
action is not disclosed by a pleading cannot
succeed unless it be
shown that
ex
facie
the
allegations made by a plaintiff and any document upon which his or
her cause of action may be based, the claim is (not may be)
bad in
law.
[6]
[11]
I am of the view that this exception automatically fails due to the
fact that the plaintiff has set out the
cause of action succinctly
and intelligible in a manner that the defendants can plead. The
defendants can
admit or deny the
allegations or confess and avoid the allegations, and most
importantly, raise a special plea. I am of the view
that the
particulars of claim has addressed all the required forms of pleading
and does not form any embarrassment on the part
of the defendants.
[12]
In this case, the particulars of claim are clear that the
plaintiff relies on the written agreement
on 19 October 2015. It also
sets out that such an agreement did not comply with the provisions of
section 217 and the relevant
provisions of the
Public Finance
Management Act, 1999
. The plaintiff then attached the written
agreement and pointed out, amongst other things, the material terms
of the agreement relied
upon to substantiate the claim.
[13]
The defendants argue that a party wishing to claim for a declaratory
order that a contract be cancelled and
for restitution as a basis for
its cause of action, it is necessary to catalogue, allege and
unequivocally prove;
a)
A breach of contract;
b)
The right to cancel had accrued to the material
breach of the contract; and
c)
A clear and unequivocal notice of rescission
was conveyed to the defendant.
[14]
There is absolutely no merit in this exception raised that the
particulars of claim lacks averments
necessary to sustain a cause of
action. The defendants’ exception is clearly misplaced as the
plaintiff has made a case of
what constitutes its cause of action in
compliance with the Rules of this Court. I accordingly surmise that
the complaint is nothing
else but a nit-picking exercise as the
particulars of claim does address the root cause of the action and is
neither vague nor
embarrassing.
[15]
The plaintiff claims an amount of R28, 162 409.50 from the
defendants. At paragraph 8 of the particulars of claim,
plaintiff
sets out how the defendants became liable to the plaintiff.
Surely, the issues raised by the defendants in this
interlocutory
application is a matter to be addressed at trial and indeed the
plaintiff does have to provide evidence of the amount
due by the
defendants, however the defendants can plead and put the plaintiff to
proof thereof than to merely raise an exception.
[16]
The defendants bears the onus to satisfy the court that the pleadings
are excipiable, however in this application,
they have failed to make
out a clear case that the plaintiff’s particulars of claim are
excipiable.
The
Supreme Court of Appeal has held in
Telematrix
(Pty) Ltd t/a Matric Vehicle Tracking v Advertising Standards
Authority
SA
2006 (1) SA 461
(SCA) at 465H
that:
“
Exceptions
should be dealt with sensibly. They provide a useful mechanism to
weed out cases without legal merit. An over-technical
approach
destroys their utility
.”
[17]
In
Frank v Premier Hangers CC
2008 (3) SA 594
(C)
,
Griesel J stated as
follows at para [11] page
600:
“
In
order to succeed in its exception, the plaintiff
[Excipient]
has
the onus to persuade the court that, upon every interpretation which
the defendant’s
[Respondent]
plea and counter-claim
[Particulars of Claim]
can reasonably bear, no defence or
cause of action is disclosed. Failing this, the exception ought not
to be upheld.”
[own insertion]
[18] The
exceptions that have been brought by the defendants have not met the
above requirements, instead they have
proven that the plaintiff’s
case is indeed with merit and the nitpicking exercise destroyed the
very nature of the exception.
[19] As
pointed out above, the plaintiff’s particulars of claim, as
pleaded are complete and valid and contains
all the averments which
are necessary to sustain a cause of action.
[20] In
the circumstances, the defendants have failed to make out a case for
the relief sought and accordingly
the plaintiff seeks orders that the
defendants’ exception be dismissed with costs.
Costs
[21]
Counsel for the plaintiff urged this Court to grant costs on an
attorney and client scale. She argued
that the conduct of the
defendants is a clear abuse of process, which the Court has a duty to
eliminate in order to protect its
dignity and processes and I am
inclined to agree.
[22]
In
Public
Protector v South African Reserve Bank
2019
(6) SA 253
(CC) at para 8, Mogoeng CJ noted that “
[c]osts
on an attorney and client scale are to be awarded where there is
fraudulent, dishonest, vexatious conduct and conduct that
amounts to
an abuse of court process.”
[23]
In
Plastics
Convertors Association of SA on behalf of Members v National Union of
Metalworkers of SA and Others
(2016)
37 ILJ 2815 (LAC) at para 46, the Labour Appeal Court stated:
“
The
scale of attorney and client is an extraordinary one which should be
reserved for cases where it can be found that a litigant
conducted
itself in a clear and indubitably vexatious and reprehensible manner.
Such an award is exceptional and is intended to
be very punitive and
indicative of extreme opprobrium.”
[24]
It is my considered view that this application was brought
mala
fide,
which has caused an unnecessary delay in finalising the
matter, and therefore it is worthy of this Court’s rebuke
.
[25]
I therefore make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The applicants/defendants/excipients to pay costs of this application
on an attorney and client scale
jointly and severally, the one paying
the other to be absolved.
J
Mnisi
Acting
Judge of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ legal representatives by e-mail.
The date for
hand-down is deemed to be 10h00 on 2 July 2024.
Counsel
for the Excipients:
Adv
T. Mhlanga
Instructed
by:
Mohanoe
Inc.
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv
X. Hilita
Instructed
by:
Matamela
Attorneys
[1]
Nel and Others N.O. v McArthur
2003 (4) San 142 (T) at 149F.
[2]
Super
Group Trading (Pty) Ltd t/a Super Rent v Bauer and Another
2022 (5)
SA 622
(WCC)
at
[22].
[3]
At
B1 154 to B1 154A.
[4]
See Inprefed (Pty) Ltd v
National Transport Commission
1993 (3) SA 94
(A) at 107.
[5]
[2001] 3 All SA 350
(A) at para 7.
[6]
Vermeulen v Goose Valley Investments
(Pty) Ltd
2001 (3) SA 986
(SCA) at 997.
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