Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 740South Africa
Notre Coal (Proprietary) Limited v Southern Palace Investments 425 (Proprietary) Limited (2024-071100) [2024] ZAGPPHC 740 (30 July 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
30 July 2024
Headnotes
liable for any such delays.”
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Notre Coal (Proprietary) Limited v Southern Palace Investments 425 (Proprietary) Limited (2024-071100) [2024] ZAGPPHC 740 (30 July 2024)
Notre Coal (Proprietary) Limited v Southern Palace Investments 425 (Proprietary) Limited (2024-071100) [2024] ZAGPPHC 740 (30 July 2024)
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sino date 30 July 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2024-071100
1.
REPORTABLE: NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3.
REVISED: YES
DATE: 30 July 2024
In
the matter between:
NOTRE
COAL (PROPRIETARY) LIMITED
Applicant
and
SOUTHERN
PALACE INVESTMENTS 425 (PROPRIETARY)
Respondent
LIMITED
JUDGMENT
K
STRYDOM, AJ
1.
In this urgent application for specific performance, the Respondent
raised points
in limine
pertaining to urgency as well as the
failure of the Applicant to comply with the provisions of Rule 41A.
2.
I was
satisfied that the Applicant had made out a case for urgency. Insofar
as the failure to comply with the provisions of Rule
41A is
concerned, I agree with the Applicant that such a failure is not a
bar to the hearing of this application.
[1]
3.
The Respondent manufactures jigging plants for use in the mining
industry. On the 22
nd
of January 2024, the Applicant
accepted a quote for such a plant and entered into an agreement (“the
main agreement”)
with the Respondent. The relevant terms were:
a.
“
The prices quoted are valid for 30 days from date issued
and are fixed for the period subject to any changes made by the
client…
.[The Respondent]
reserves the right to alter
the prices at its own discretion, if deemed necessary and agreed by
[the Applicant]
.”
b.
“
Duration of manufacturing:
[The Respondent]
will
provide
[the Applicant]
with an estimated date of completion,
which is normally 10-12 weeks but will be discusses and agree upon 22
January 2022 and will
depend on factors such as its existing
commitments at the time of receipt of the order and the availability
of materials and the
lead times of buy-out items.
[The
Respondent]
will make every effort to complete the order within
this time, even so, delays do sometimes occur that are beyond its
control and
it will not be held liable for any such delays.”
c.
“
Payment terms:
i.
1
st
Payment: 50% deposit .
ii.
2
nd
Payment:20%: 4 weeks.
iii.
3
rd
Payment: 15% on shipping
iv.
4
th
Payment: after startup of
the total amount, plus the Value Added Tax (V A T ) thereupon (at
prevailing rate) and will not
commence with manufacturing unless the
deposit has been cleared and the order received.”
4.
The initial purchase price was an amount of R 11 412 025.00. The
Respondent made sporadic payments
between January 2024 and March
2024. It had only paid the 50% deposit on the 12
th
of
March 2024. Thereafter it made a R500 000-00 payment on the 30
th
March 2024. As such, it was late in making the second payment per the
main agreement. Following threats by the Respondent
to cancel
the agreement, the parties concluded a variation agreement on the 8
th
and 10
th
of May 2024. The relevant terms thereof were:
1.4 The parties hereby
agree to the variation of the payment dates and amounts, taking into
consideration the amounts mentioned
above in paragraph…
1.4.1 Payment of R2
011 730.00 by the signing of this Addendum by both parties;
1.4.2 Payment of the
amount of R2 589 755.00 on the 21
st
of May 2024;
1.4.3 An amount of
R250 000.00 payable in the trust account of Zyl's Incorporated before
the product is loaded and transferred to
the sight (sic) of the
Purchaser;
4. The Supplier hereby
undertakes to deliver the product as stipulated in the quote as soon
as possible. The Purchaser take note
that due to the interruption of
the
project as previously agreed to, the Supplier has
to deliver the product outside its original planning.
5. Both parties
undertake not to interrupt or delay the project or payment as such
delays may incur more waisted costs.”
5.
The Respondent made payment of R2 011 730.00 on signing the variation
agreement. However, it failed to
make the second payment by the 21
st
of May 2024, leading to the Applicant (again) placing it on terms
should it fail to affect the payment within 10 days from the
3
rd
of June 2024. The letter of demand indicated the Respondent reserved
it rights, including the right to complete the plant at our
its own
costs and to sell it to the first willing and able purchaser to
mitigate its damage.
6.
Payment was made on the 13
th
of June 2024, however, the
Respondent’s attorneys informed the Applicant that the payment
is kept on trust subject to the
following:
“
In terms of the
agreement signed by both parties on the 08th and 10th of May 2024,
the abovementioned payment was supposed to be
made on or before 21
May 2024. This delay in payment by your client left our client with
no alternative than to accept another
project that was fully paid
for. The project of your client can only continue after our client's
current project is finish, which
will take approximately 12 weeks.”
“
4. We have
consulted with our client regarding the way forward and our client
instructed us that the two main suppliers of the jigging
plants and
the screen manufacturer informed him at the end of May 2024 that they
can't supply our client with the same goods for
the same price as
quoted before. Our client is in the process to gather information and
reveal to your client the difference in
prices. This increased prices
which is a loss for our client is directly as a result of your
client's late payment.”
7.
As a result of the indication that there the Respondent would not
deliver the Applicant’s plant
until the Respondent’s
current project had been completed, the present application was
launched.
Evaluation
8.
From the
outset it should be noted that both parties argued the matter along
the lines of the requirements for a final interdict.
In cases of
specific performance, this is not the correct approach. As stated by
in Christie’s ‘The Law of Contract
South Africa’:
[2]
"One way of
breaching a contract is by doing something expressly or impliedly
forbidden by the contract or inconsistent with
the obligations
imposed by the contract. A plaintiff who asks for an interdict to
prohibit such a breach is in reality asking for
specific performance
in the negative form of non-performance of the forbidden or
inconsistent act to ensure performance of the
contract. His
entitlement to an interdict, subject only to the court’s
discretion, is therefore as unquestionable as in the
case of a
plaintiff who seeks specific performance in the positive form.
Especially,
his entitlement is not subject to the requisites for
an application for an interdict
set out by Van der Linden”
[Underlining my own]
9.
As such, I
do not intend to pertinently address the factors in support of and
against the granting of final interdict. The simple
question is
whether the Applicant is entitled to specific performance. It would
only be entitled to demand specific performance
if there was a
contractual obligation on the Respondent to deliver the jigging plant
by a defined date or upon the occurrence of
a certain event and the
Respondent had failed to comply with its obligation.
[3]
10.
The Respondent essentially argues that payment of the 50% payment
deposit ‘triggered’ the Applicant’s obligation
to
start manufacturing of the plant (per paragraph 1c above). Based on
the estimated date of completion (per paragraph 1b above)
being
between 10 to 12 weeks, it argues that (assuming 12 weeks from the
12
th
of March 2024) the plant should have been ready for
delivery by the 12
th
of June 2024. As such,
regardless of the late subsequent payments, the Respondent argues
that it is now entitled to delivery of
the plant.
11.
The interpretation afforded to the main agreement, as read with the
variation agreement by the Applicant is, in my view, incorrect
in
several respects.
12.
The Applicant’s argument that the main agreement set out a
definite period for manufacturing is incorrect. Plain reading
of the
main agreement clearly indicates that the manufacturing period was an
estimated period.
13.
The Applicant also submitted that the main agreement set out a
definitive list of instances where the 12 weeks period may be
exceeded. The wording used is: “…
factors
such
as
its existing commitments at the time of receipt of the
order and the availability of materials and the lead times of buy-out
items.”
14.
Much was made in argument of the fact that the Respondent only
informed the Applicant that it had taken on another project
after it
had made the penultimate payment on the 13
th
of June 2024.
It was argued that the other project was not in “existence”
at the time of conclusion of the main agreement
or the variation
agreement and therefore could not be relied on as a reason for the
delay in completion of the plant. This is also
incorrect. On plain
reading, the instances following the words “
such as
”
are examples and not a set defined list.
15.
Even if the Applicant’s reading of the main agreement was
correct, the manufacturing period per the main agreement was
clearly
varied by clause 4 of the variation agreement:
“
The
[Respondent]
hereby undertakes to deliver the product as
stipulated in the quote
as soon as possible
. The
[Applicant]
takes note that due to the interruption of the
project as previously agreed to, the
[Respondent]
has to
deliver the product outside its original planning.
16.
On the Applicant’s version, the date for delivery per the main
agreement would have been the 12
th
of June 2024 –
i.e the “original planning” was for manufacturing to have
been completed by the 12
th
of June 2024. In terms of the
variation agreement, the Applicant took note that delivery would be
outside
of the original planning. This argument
seemingly tied in with the (incorrect) interpretation that any delay
may only occur
due to the “set” list of circumstances.
This position is unsustainable given the fact that any date for
delivery that
may have been defined per the main agreement, had
clearly been varied by the variation agreement to “as soon as
possible”.
17.
The Applicant has therefore failed to prove that it the Respondent
has breached the agreement and resultantly, has failed to
prove its
entitlement to specific performance.
18.
As a result, the following order is made:
Order
1.
The application is enrolled and determined as a matter of urgency
pursuant to the provisions of uniform
rule of court 6(12) and any
non-compliance with the ordinary rules and practices pertaining to
forms, service and enrolment is
hereby condoned.
2.
The application is dismissed
3.
The Applicant is ordered to pay the Respondent’s costs on a
High Court scale, with counsel’s
fees determined at Scale B.
K STRYDOM
ACTING JUDGE OF THE
HIGH
COURT, GAUTENG
DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Judgment
reserved: 16 July 2024
Judgment
handed down: 30 July 2024
Appearances:
For the
Applicant:
Adv J van Rooyen,
instructed by DE Bruwer attorneys
For the
Respondent:
Adv RF de Villiers,
instructed by Van Zyl’s Incorporated
[1]
See:
Nomandela
and Another v Nyandeni Local Municipality and Others
2021
(5) SA 619
(ECM) as well as
Growth
Point Properties vs Africa Master Blackchain Company (Pty) Ltd
(2020/43806)
[2022] ZAGPJHC 836 (26 October 2022)
[2]
LexisNexis, 6th Edition at pages 555-556
[3]
See for instance:
Singh
v McCarthy Retail Ltd t/a McIntosh Motors
[2000] 4 All SA 487
(A), also reported at
[2000] ZASCA 129
;
2000 (4) SA 795
(SCA).
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