Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 1332South Africa
African Rainbow Minerals Ltd v Tam Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023-097235) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1332 (19 December 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
19 December 2024
Headnotes
on 14 January 2021 and in which the Parties were represented as follows:
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## African Rainbow Minerals Ltd v Tam Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023-097235) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1332 (19 December 2024)
African Rainbow Minerals Ltd v Tam Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (2023-097235) [2024] ZAGPPHC 1332 (19 December 2024)
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sino date 19 December 2024
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 2023-097235
1.
REPORTABLE:
YES
/ NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
YES
/NO
3.
REVISED:
YES
/ NO
DATE:
19 December 2024
SIGNATURE OF JUDGE:
In the matter between:
AFRICAN RAINBOW
MINERALS LTD
Applicant
and
TAM
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
TECHNOLOGY
AND MINERAL HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
PIETER
GIDEO VAN DER MERWE
Third Respondent
PRETORIUS
CHEMICAL CONSULTATION (PTY) LTD
Fourth Respondent
DR
GERARD
PRETORIUS
Fifth Respondent
JUDGMENT
MEADEN A J
On
06 NOVEMBER 2024 upon hearing counsel for the parties and considering
the papers, I handed down the following Order:
[1]
“
The Arbitral Award attached to the Notice of Motion,
marked “X,” which was delivered by Jenny Cane SC in the
arbitration
between the Applicant (the Claimant in the arbitration)
and the Respondents (the Respondents in the arbitration), is made an
Order
of Court in terms of
Section 31(1)
of the
Arbitration Act 42 of
1965
;
[2]
the First to Third Respondents are to pay the costs of this
application, including costs of counsel on Scale C, on attorney and
own client scale.”
The
above Order was handed down, taking consideration of the
undermentioned:
[1]
This is an
application to have an arbitral award dated 13 August 2023, duly
delivered by a single arbitrator - Ms Jenny Cane SC,
made an order of
court and as provided for in
section 31
of the
Arbitration Act 42 of
1965
.
[1]
The arbitration award
itself was annexed to the Notice of Motion as Annexure 1
[2]
thereto.
[2]
The chronology of this matter is of relevance and in arriving at the
above Court
Order.
[3]
On 28 February 2019, the applicant entered into and concluded a
“
SECOND AMENDED AND RESTATED LETTER AGREEMENT REGARDING
POWDER-TECH PRODUCTS, THERMO POWER PILOT PLANT, WITBANK PRODUCTS AND
THE
TAM TECHNOLOGY
” (“the letter agreement”)
with the 1
st
, 3
rd,
and 5
th
respondents. In concluding this letter agreement, the above parties
pooled resources and entered into a joint venture as between
the
applicant and the 1
st
respondent for purposes of
purchasing vanadium and titanium rich ores, raw materials and
products to process and beneficiate these
ores for sale and for the
benefit of the joint venture.
[4]
Also on 28 February 2019, the 3
rd
and 4
th
respondents in conjunction with Gideotech (the guarantors) executed a
guarantee in favour of the applicant and in terms of which,
the
guarantors jointly and severally guaranteed all of the 1
st
respondent’s obligations arising in terms of the above
agreement.
[5]
Per
clause 13.9 of the letter agreement - “
Governing
law and dispute resolution
”
and at clause 13.9.2.1
[3]
thereof, the parties agreed when presented with disputes to attempt
to negotiate with each other in good faith in resolving these
disputes and failing this; to proceed by way of binding arbitration
and on the basis premised on clause 13.9.2.3 of the letter
agreement.
[4]
The content of
13.9.2.3 is recorded below:
“
13.9.2.3
Unless other agreed in writing by the Parties; (i) the appointing
authority in terms of the UNCITRAL Arbitration Rules
shall be the
Association of Arbitrators (Southern Africa), (ii) the arbitration
shall be administered by the Parties, (iii) the
number of arbitrators
shall be 1 (one); (iv) the governing substantive law of the
arbitration shall be the law of South Africa,
(v) the arbitrator
shall have the same remedial powers as the court of law in South
Africa would have were it adjudicating the
dispute, and (vi) the
arbitrator shall deliver an award, which award shall be final and
binding on the Parties and not subject
to appeal, together with
written reasons within 20 (twenty) days from the date on which the
arbitration ends.”
[6]
On 01
December 2020, the applicant referred a dispute that had arisen
between it and the respondents to arbitration and in terms
of the
above clause 13 of the letter agreement read with clause 8 of the
guarantee. The parties jointly agreed to the appointment
of Adv.
Jenny Cane SC - a member of the Johannesburg Bar and as sole
arbitrator in the dispute.
[5]
[7]
Prior to the actual conduct of the arbitration, a First
Pre-Arbitration Meeting
was convened and held on 14 January 2021 and
in which the Parties were represented as follows:
Claimant - Adv. T
Bruinders SC, R Shein, T Herholdt, K Chaisaka, and M Cramer,
1
st
, 4
th,
and 5
th
respondents – W Niedinger,
2
nd
& 3
rd
respondents – Dr. G Pretorius,
Arbitrator – Adv.
Jenny Cane SC.
[6]
[8]
Per the written minutes of this Pre-Arbitration Meeting and
specifically in
relation to Rules and Conduct of Arbitration, the
parties, inter alia, agreed that:
(i)
The arbitration be conducted in terms of clause 13.9.2.1 to 13.9.2.3
as set out in
Second Amended and Restated Letter Agreement (“letter
agreement”) concluded between the claimant and respondents on
28 February 2019,
(ii)
the arbitrator be Jenny Cane SC, duly appointed by agreement of the
parties;
(iii)
the rules of the conduct of the arbitration will be in accordance
with the UNCITRAL rules,
as supplemented by such directions as the
arbitrator may issue and such agreement as may be recorded in the
minute of the and Pre-Arbitration
meeting;
(iv)
the Arbitrator has all the powers provided by the UNCITRAL rules to
determine how the arbitration
will proceed, including the power to
determine procedural principles by which the arbitration is to be
conducted as envisaged in
article 17; and,
(v)
the provisions of
Sections 20
,
23
, and
25
of the
Arbitration Act 42
of 1965
be waived. This included waiving time limits associated with
the conduct of an arbitration.
[9]
Following hereon, the hearing of the arbitration commenced on 04 July
2022 and
closing arguments were delivered just short of the year
later on 02 June 2023 and whereupon the Arbitrator reserved her
award.
[10]
On 05 July
2023, the applicant’s legal representative (T. Hoerholdt) per
electronic email wrote to the Arbitrator requesting
an indication on
when the parties may expect to receive the Arbitrator’s
award.
[7]
This correspondence
was also simultaneously addressed to WWB Botha Attorneys – then
representing the 1
st
-
3
rd
respondents and Anderson-Kriel Attorneys representing the 4
th
and 5
th
respondents.
[11]
On 05 July
2023, Adv. Cane SC electronically responded to all the above
referenced addressees advising anticipating giving an award
during
August 2023.
[8]
No issue was
taken nor objection raised by any of the parties to this arbitration
regarding the aforesaid advices received from
Adv. Cane SC.
[12]
Then on 10 August 2023, Adv. Cane SC emailed the above parties’
legal representatives advising
that she will be in a position to make
her award “
early
next week
”. With this,
Adv. Cane SC requested that the parties’ attorneys confirm that
they hold sufficient funds with which
to make payment of her fees –
R 225 000 plus VAT and which will then require the each of the
parties to contribute R 75 000
plus VAT on these fees.
[13]
On 10
August 2023 Bowman Gilfillan for the Claimant undertook to effect
payment in favour of Adv Cane SC.
[9]
On 14 August 2023, WWB Botha Attorneys for the 1
st
– 3
rd
respondents confirmed in writing being placed in funds sufficient to
settle Adv. Cane’s account.
[10]
[14]
Again, no issue was raised by any of the parties on when Adv. Cane SC
envisaged presenting her award
and further in paying the arbitrator’s
account and no reference was made by the respondents to such award
being a nullity.
The parties to this application awaited production
of the award.
[15]
On 16 August 2023, the award was published. This was then followed up
by the applicant’s attorneys
on 25 August and again on 11
September 2023 with letters of demand then addressed to the 1
st
– 3
rd
respondents’ attorneys demanding
payment in the sum of R55,336,369 together with interest accruing
thereon. The above
correspondence was acknowledged by WWB Botha
Attorneys on 19 September 2023 and in so doing WWB Botha Attorneys
recorded that the
1
st
– 3
rd
respondents
were considering their options and were afforded a period of 6 weeks
post the award in which to launch an application
for review of the
arbitration award. Crucially, no reference was made here to the
award being out of time, a nullity or otherwise.
[16]
In the absence of payment being made on the award, alternatively;
arrangements put in place to settle
the award over an extended period
of time or otherwise in compromising on the award, the applicant on
26 September 2023 launched
the above application to have the above
award made an order of court. This application was set down for
hearing in the ordinary
course on the unopposed motion roll for 14
May 2024. On 09 May 2024, the respondents delivered a Notice of
Intention to Oppose
the above application and on 20 May 2024, the 1
st
– 3
rd
respondents filed their answering affidavit.
[17]
The 1
st
– 3
rd
respondents premised their
opposition to this application on the following:
(i)
The applicant failing to make out a case for the
relief sought;
(ii)
the award that the applicant sought to make an order
of court being a
nullity. This is averred in circumstances where the respondents
submited that the arbitration proceedings lapsed
prior to the
purported award having been made;
(iii)
the award
if not a nullity falling to be reviewed and set aside in terms of
Section 33
of the
Arbitration Act.
[11
]
[18]
The aforesaid allegations raised on behalf of the 1
st
–
3
rd
respondents and in alleging that the award made on 16
August 2023 is unenforceable are when reconciled with the above
factual circumstances
and chronology, irreconcilable and
unsustainable. In this regard, upon resorting to and convening the
arbitration and with that,
agreeing the modus operandi of the
arbitration process in the minuted First Pre-Arbitration meeting held
on 14 January 2021, the
parties expressly agreed to waive the
requirements of
Section 23
of the
Arbitration Act and
with that, the
enforcement of specific time limits attributed to the arbitration.
[19]
Further and as evinced in the above chronology, prior to the service
of the 1
st
– 3
rd
respondents’
answering affidavit; no reference was ever made on the part of the
1
st
– 3
rd
respondents regarding the award
being a nullity and delivered out of time. This allegation on the
part of the 1
st
– 3
rd
respondents is
actually a very late afterthought creatively conceived of in
attempting evading accountability vis-à-vis
the arbitration
award and is best described as being disingenuous and unsustainable.
When presented with the proposed time limits
in which the Arbitrator
envisaged delivering her award and as summarized in the chronology
above, the respondents raised no objection.
Further, the respondents
assured the Arbitrator that they had sufficient funds to pay the
Arbitrator’s fees upon delivery
of the award and this then begs
the question, if the award was void
ab initio
, why then would
the respondents pay the Arbitrator for the production of the award?
[20]
On the issue of the intended review of the award made, this was
initially referenced on the part of
the respondents back on 19
September 2023. However, no review application has in the interim
been resorted to. In any event, a
review of an arbitral award does
not stay the actual enforcement of the award.
[21]
Reference was also made on behalf of the respondents regarding the
making of the arbitrator’s
award an order of court, being
against public policy. The respondents do not elaborate hereon and in
the process adduce reasons
and facts in support of this bald
assertion. I construe there being no factual and legal impediment to
the arbitrator’s above
award being made an order of court and
nothing contained in the 1
st
– 3
rd
respondents’ Answering Affidavit convinces me to the contrary.
What is clearly apparent from the respondents’ above
conduct is
that there is a deliberate attempt afoot to evade accountability,
including in effecting payment of the award and with
that, in
attempting to delay and frustrate the applicant in enforcing the
award and making it an order of this Honourable Court.
The
allegations made on behalf of the respondents and as summarized in
paragraph 17 above are best described as being creative
and
completely out of sync with the above chronology of the matter and
arbitration.
[22]
Bearing in mind that the dispute was declared on 01 December 2020,
the First Pre-Arbitration meeting
held on 14 January 2021 and
whereupon the actual arbitration proceedings were ongoing over the
period 04 July 2022 - 02 June 2023;
the ensuing delivery of an award
three months hence and on 16 August 2023 is certainly not
unreasonable and is consistent with
that agreed in the above First
Pre-Arbitration meeting and again per the chronology duly accepted by
the parties.
[23]
The award is valid and stands to be made an Order of Court and
thereupon duly enforced.
[24]
Post the publication of the award, the 1
st
– 3
rd
respondents enjoyed ample time in which to consider their legal and
commercial options, constructively engage with the applicant
and with
that, put in place arrangements on the payment of the award. What is
disconcerting here is that the 1
st
– 3
rd
respondents have not chosen to proceed on a mature basis and as
above. Instead, they have failed to honour the award, thus placing
themselves in breach and with that engaged in an attrition, forcing
the applicant to have to resort in bringing this application.
I
accordingly and in noting this Court’s disapproval of the above
conduct, award a special order as to costs against the
1
st
– 3
rd
respondents on the attorney and own client
scale and including the costs of legal counsel on Scale C.
ORDER
Accordingly.
I make the following order:
[1]
“
The Arbitral Award attached to the Notice of Motion,
marked “X,” which was delivered by Jenny Cane SC in the
arbitration
between the Applicant (the Claimant in the arbitration)
and the Respondents (the Respondents in the arbitration), is made an
Order
of Court in terms of
Section 31(1)
of the
Arbitration Act 42 of
1965
;
[2]
the First to Third Respondents are to pay the costs of this
application, including costs of counsel on Scale C, on attorney and
own client scale.”
MEADEN
J R
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
This
Judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ and or parties’ representatives by email
and by
being uploaded to CaseLines. The date and time for the hand down is
deemed to be 13h00
on this 19
th
day of December 2024
Appearances
For Applicant:
Adv. LG Minné
Instructed by:
Bowmans Gilfillan Inc.
For 1
st
– 3
rd
Respondents:
Adv. R Raubenheimer
Instructed by:
Willemse Potgieter &
Babinszky Inc.
For 4
th
& 5
th
Respondents:
No Appearance
Instructed by:
Anderson-Kriel
Attorneys
Date
of Hearing:
04
November 2024
Date
of Judgment:
19
December 2024
[1]
02-52.
[2]
02-6-48.
The actual award is set out at 02-47-48 of the Court Bundle.
[3]
02-150.
[4]
02-151.
[5]
Annexure
RZS3 02-108/109.
[6]
02-203.
[7]
RZS14
02-211.
[8]
RZS15
02-214.
[9]
RZS18
02-223.
[10]
RZS19
02-227.
[11]
02-120.
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