Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1320South Africa
K H Mining and Engineering Projects (Pty) Ltd v Evander Gold Mining (Pty) Ltd and Another (2024-130458) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1320 (10 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
10 December 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## K H Mining and Engineering Projects (Pty) Ltd v Evander Gold Mining (Pty) Ltd and Another (2024-130458) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1320 (10 December 2024)
K H Mining and Engineering Projects (Pty) Ltd v Evander Gold Mining (Pty) Ltd and Another (2024-130458) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1320 (10 December 2024)
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sino date 10 December 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number:
2024-130458
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 10 December 2024
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
K
H MINING AND ENGINEERING PROJECTS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
EVANDER
GOLD MINING (PTY) LTD
First Respondent
MPC
CHEMICALS SOUTH AFRICA (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J:
Introduction
[1]
This urgent application pertains to two agreements entered into
between the applicant and the
first respondent for the provision of
vamping and de-watering services at the mine where the first
respondent is engaged in mining
activities. On 12 September
2024 the first respondent issued notices of termination of the
agreements, in terms of which
the agreements would have terminated on
9 October 2024. The applicant disputes the first respondent’s
entitlement to terminate
the agreements and as result, applies for an
interim interdict restraining the first respondent from implementing
the termination
notices pending the finalisation of arbitration
proceedings.
Factual matrix
[2]
The applicant, KH Mining and Engineering Projects (Pty) Ltd, provides
labour services, in terms
of the two agreements mentioned
supra
,
to the first respondent, Evander Gold Mining (Pty) Ltd.
[3]
The second respondent is MPC Chemicals South Africa (Pty) Ltd. No
relief is claimed against the
second respondent and the second
respondent was merely cited because it is a party to one of the
agreements entered into between
the applicant and the first
respondent.
[4]
On 24 February 2022 the parties entered into an agreement in terms of
which the applicant had
to perform de-watering services for the first
respondent. The initial contract period was from 1 March 2022 to 29
February 2023.
[5]
On 14 September 2023, the applicant, the first respondent and the
second respondent entered into
a Tripartite agreement in terms of
which the applicant was appointed as a sub-contractor to perform
vamping services on behalf
of the second respondent for the benefit
of the first respondent. The initial contract period was three
months. Both contracts
were extended from time to time and the latest
extension provides for a contract period from 1 July 2024 to 30 June
2025.
[6]
On 14 July 2024 the first respondent issued a purchase order in
respect of the de-watering services.
The order pertains to services
for the period July 2024 to June 2025 and the following clause
appears at the end of the order:
“
Please
complete, sign and return this Purchase order as acknowledgment and
agreement that your company shall commence with the services
on the
terms and conditions of
this
Purchase
Order.”
(own emphasis).
[7]
On 26 July 2024 a similar purchase order was issued in respect of
vamping services.
[8]
The termination notices dated 12 September 2024 is similar in wording
and the notice in respect
of vamping services reads as follows:
“
We refer to the
contract entered between JH Mining Consultants (Pty) Ltd and Evander
Gold Mining (Pty) Ltd (EMG) for the services
of Contract Vamping at
EGM 7 Shaft.
This letter serves to
inform JH Mining (Pty) Ltd that
Evander
Gold Mining (Pty) Ltd is terminating the services as per clause 12.2
and its subclauses of the contract referenced above.
JH Mining Consultants
(Pty) Ltd is hereby given 30 (thirty) calendar days’ notice
effective from 11
th
September 2024 and ending on 9
th
October 2024.
Final payment shall be
done as per contract and all invoices to be submitted to the relevant
EMG representative. ….”
[9]
Clause 12 of the Tripartite agreement in respect of the vamping
services regulates the termination
of the agreement by notice and
reads as follows:
“
12.1
Evander Gold may terminate this Agreement for its convenience by
providing MPC and KH Mining with thirty (30) days’
prior
written notice informing them of its decision to terminate for its
convenience and the effective date of such termination.”
[10]
The de-watering termination notice was given in terms of clause 8 of
the de-watering agreement. The wording
of clause 8 differ slightly
from the wording of clause 12.1, to wit:
“
8.1.2 EGM may
in its sole discretion, without cause or reason, terminate this
Agreement by giving 30 (thirty) calendar days prior
written notice to
the CONTRACTOR, without being in breach of the Agreement. CONTRACTOR
may in its sole discretion, without cause
or reason, terminate this
Agreement by giving 60 (sixty) calendar days prior written notice to
EGM, without being in breach of
Agreement.”
Submissions
by parties
[11]
The applicant states that the agreements between the parties were
executed in two formats, to wit: written
agreements and purchase
orders. The purchase orders are for specific periods within which the
work had to be concluded and according
to the applicant, are
distinguishable from the written agreements
[12]
The applicant acknowledges that the written agreements may be
terminated in terms of the clauses referred
to
supra
.
According to the applicant, the purchase orders, however, created
separate contractual obligations and the first respondent may
not
unilaterally cancel the orders without sufficient reason to do so.
Insofar as the “
termination for convenience”
clauses
in the written agreements are concerned, the applicant submits that
the enforcement thereof in circumstances where the applicant
has not
breached the terms of the agreement, will yield an absurd result with
far-reaching consequences.
[13]
The applicant contends that the question whether the written
agreements and the purchase orders are separate
contracts and the
question of the interpretation of the “
termination for
convenience”
clause in the written agreements should be
referred to arbitration as envisaged in the written agreements.
[14]
The first respondent does not agree and contends that the express
provisions of the purchase orders incorporate
the terms and
conditions of the agreements between the parties and/or the first
respondent’s standard terms and conditions.
Insofar as the
purchase orders might create separate contractual obligations, the
first respondent states that the orders are still
subject to the
first respondent’s terms and conditions for purchase. In this
regard, the first respondent referred to the
clause at the end of the
purchase orders, which clause has been referred to
supra
.
[15]
The first respondent, however and without any reasonable explanation,
failed to attach the terms and conditions
for purchase to the
answering affidavit. The terms and conditions for services were
attached and according to the first respondent
these terms and
conditions are similar to those applicable to purchases.
[16]
The first respondent, furthermore, referred to clause 2.1.1 of
Annexure “A” attached to the de-watering
agreement and
submitted that purchase orders are merely issued for the work to
commence. The clause reads as follows:
“
The work will
only commence once a Purchase Order or, in the case of a standing
order, once a quotation has been approved by EGM.”
[17]
The first respondent referred to clauses 7.1.1 and 7.1.2 of the
de-watering watering agreement that expressly
linked the purchase
orders to the agreement, namely
“
7.1.1 EGM shall
pay the price to the Contractor.
7.1.2 All
payments due in terms of or as a consequence of this Agreement shall
be paid as stipulated in Purchase order
together with such additions
and subject to such deductions there from as are provided herein.”
[18]
The first respondent pointed out that the applicant has neglected to
set out the terms and conditions of
purchase and has therefore failed
to establish a
prima facie
right to arbitration.
[19]
Save to state that it is entitled to cancel the agreements for
“
convenience”
, the first respondent did not
address the interpretation and applicability of the term in the
present circumstances.
Interim interdict:
requirements
[20]
The parties were
ad idem
that the only real issue in dispute
insofar as the requirements of an interim interdict is concerned, is
whether the applicant has
established a
prima facie
right to
the relief claimed. I agree and will for present purposes accept that
the applicant has established the requirements of
irreparable harm,
balance of convenience and no other satisfactory remedy.
Prima facie right
[21] Mr
Russell, counsel for the first respondent, quite correctly, submitted
that in order to establish a
prima facie
right the applicant
must demonstrate that it has prospects of success in the arbitration
proceedings. In
Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd v Vaal River Development
Association (Pty) Ltd
2023 (4) SA 325
(CC) the majority held that
the existence of a “
viable case”
in the intended
proceedings will suffice [para 284].
[22] Mr
Russell, once again correctly so, contended that the question in the
arbitration will involve the interpretation
of the agreements.
[23]
The applicant does not deny the terms and conditions of the
agreements. The applicant, furthermore, does
not deny that the
purchase orders were issued in terms of the agreements. Clause 12 and
clause 8, respectively, confer a right
on the first respondent to
cancel the agreements for convenience. The fact that the notices of
termination were duly issued in
terms of the provisions of these
clauses is also common cause between the parties.
[24] Against
the aforesaid common cause facts, this court must, albeit on a
prima
facie
basis, determine whether the
unknown
terms and
conditions of purchase, amend or alter the express wording of the
agreements. Without knowing what these terms and conditions
are, I am
simply unable to do so. Thus, I am on the present facts, of the
prima
facie
view that the purchase orders are subject to the terms and
conditions of the agreements.
[25] In
view of my
prima facie
view
supra,
it is necessary to
have regard to the terms and conditions of the agreements insofar as
the “
termination for convenience”
clauses are
concerned
[26] Mr
Roos, counsel for the applicant, referred to
Phambili
Environmental Services (Pty) Ltd v Pikitup Johannesburg SOC Limited
(39499/2018) [2018] ZAGPJHC 677 in which the respondent submitted
that the program forming the subject matter of the agreement between
the parties was not cost effective and as a result it decided to
terminate the contract for convenience. The court held that there
was
no evidence to suggest that the program which was cost effective at
its inception is no longer cost effective. The court found
that in
the aforesaid circumstances “
It does prima facie lend
credence to the argument that the notion of ‘convenience”
ought not to be measured against
the subjective whim of the
respondent’s representatives, but ought to be objectively
ascertainable, bearing in mind the following
factors…”
[27] In
casu
the first respondent stated that there is a good business
rationale to the entitlement to terminate, namely, that gold prices
and
the cost to mine gold fluctuates. The first respondent must,
therefore, be in a position to swiftly respond to such fluctuations
and reduce costs.
[28]
The first respondent explains that the termination of the applicant’s
services and the taking over
of its work force was necessitated by
the fact that the costs to mine and extract gold is substantially
more than what it is able
to recoup from the sales of the gold.
[29]
The first respondent stated that the situation cannot continue as it
will result in mass retrenchments and
potential closure of the mine.
An extract of its annual report for the year ending 30 June 2024
confirming the negative outlook
is attached to the answering
affidavit
[30] In
view of the aforesaid financial dilemma, the first respondent decided
in early 2024 to reduce operating
costs by terminating all of its
subcontracting arrangements and to either carry out the required work
itself or through a single
contract mining company. To this end, the
first respondent has facilitated employment of the applicant’s
entire workforce
through its mining contractor, KB Mining.
[31] In
providing a reason for its decision to terminate the agreements, the
first respondent acknowledges that,
notwithstanding the provisions of
clauses 12 and 8, convenience still needs to be established. This
acknowledgment is in line with
the finding in
Phambili
Environmental Services (Pty) Ltd v Pikitup Johannesburg SOC Limited,
supra
. It is not clear from the papers if, and how much the first
respondent will save by substituting the applicant with its mining
contractor. Curiously, the first respondent stated that the decision
to reduce cost by terminating the contracts of sub-contractors
was
taken in early 2024. Notwithstanding the aforesaid decision, the
first respondent extended the two agreements in
July 2024
for
a period of
one
year. As stated
supra
purchase orders
for the whole period of the agreements were issued by the first
respondent.
[32] I
pause to mention, that the first respondent did not raise any
problems with the applicant’s performance.
In view of the fact
that the first respondent still requires the services rendered by the
applicant in terms of the agreements
between the parties and the lack
of any detail in respect of the so-called “
saving”
if
the services are rendered by another contractor, an arbitrator may
well find that the proclaimed “
convenience”
the
first respondent relies on does not justify the decision to terminate
the agreements some six months prior to their expiry date.
[33] To
this end, I am of the view that the applicant has established a
prima
facie
right that the interpretation of “
convenience”
and its applicability in the prevailing circumstances should be
tested in arbitration proceedings. Save to state that the applicant
has at least a viable case for purposes of the arbitration
proceedings, I do not pronounce on the ultimate success of its case.
[34]
The first respondent did raise a concern that arbitration proceedings
will take a long time to conclude,
which would in turn result in the
interim relief becoming final.
[35]
Arbitration proceedings is, however, capable of speedy resolution. It
will be in the hands of the parties
to ensure a speedy resolution.
Arbitrators are, in the normal cause, readily available and the
parties can agree on strict timelines
for the exchange of pleadings.
Costs
[36]
Costs of the application will be costs in the arbitration. Should the
applicant fail to institute arbitration
proceedings in terms of this
court order, the applicant is ordered to pay the costs of the
application.
ORDER
The
following order is granted:
1.
The first respondent is interdicted and
restrained from implementing or giving effect to the notices of
termination of the vamping
and de-watering agreements pending the
finalisation of arbitration proceedings.
2.
The applicant is to commence arbitration
proceedings by delivery of a written referral to arbitration,
together with a statement
of claim, within 10 days from date of this
order, failing which the interim order shall lapse.
3.
Costs is costs in the arbitration. Should the
applicant fail to institute arbitration proceedings with 10 dayso0f
date of this order,
the applicant shall pay the costs of the
application.
N. JANSE VAN
NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
DIVISION,
PRETORIA
DATE
HEARD:
04 DECEMBER 2024
DATE
DELIVERED:
10
December 2024
APPEARANCES
For
the Applicant:
Advocate
W Roos
Instructed
by:
Velile
Tinto & Associates Inc
For
the 1
st
Respondent:
Advocate
A Russel
Instructed
by:
Malan
Scholes Inc
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