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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Munyai Malaka Engineers (PTY) Ltd v TGBI Social Housing Company (NPC) and Others (77719/2018)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 31 (23 January 2023)
Munyai Malaka Engineers (PTY) Ltd v TGBI Social Housing Company (NPC) and Others (77719/2018)
[2023] ZAGPPHC 31 (23 January 2023)
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sino date 23 January 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
PROVINCAL DIVISION
Case
No: 77719/2018
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED:
Yes
23/01/2023
In
the matter between:
MUNYAI
MALAKA ENGINEERS (PTY)
LTD
Plaintiff
(Reg
No: 1999/026328/07)
and
TGBI
SOCIAL HOUSING COMPANY
(NPC)
First Defendant
(Reg
No:2016/460026/08)
TGBI
HOLDINGS (PTY)
LTD
Second Defendant
(Reg
No:2016/501795/07)
CIVCON
HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
Third Defendant
(2013/201312/07)
IAN
MARK BROWN
Fourth Defendant
JUDGMENT
SARDIWALLA
J:
[1]
In this action the Plaintiff claims payment
of
its outstanding invoices due and payable by the Defendants for
professional services rendered by the Plaintiff on instruction
of the
Defendants in
the sums of R1 790 407.59,
together with
mora
interest thereon and cost of suit.
Background
[2]
On/or about 24 August 2016 the Plaintiff and the First to Third
Defendants, duly represented by
the Fourth Defendant entered into a
partially written, partially oral agreement (“
the
agreement
”) in terms of which the Defendants appointed the
Plaintiff as civil and structural engineers for the project.
[3]
The relevant written terms
[1]
of
the agreement were as follows:
3.1
That the shareholding agreement is different from the
professional fees.
3.2
Professional fees are at arm’s length as professional
fees will be costed into construction.
3.3
MME (the Plaintiff) is appointed to do all engineering work,
as no one else has been appointed.
3.4
The Fourth Defendant awarded the Plaintiff the Social Housing
Engineering Contract.
[4]
The further express alternatively, tacit further alternatively,
implied terms of the agreement
were as follows:
4.1
The First, Second and Third Defendants would be liable jointly and
severally, to pay the Plaintiff for the professional consulting
services rendered at the rate and cost set out in the Plaintiff’s
taxed invoice rendered to the Defendants from time to time.
4.2
The Plaintiff’s invoices would be due and payable upon receipt
of such invoice by one or
more of the Defendants.
[5]
The Plaintiff allegedly rendered professional consulting services to
the First and Second Defendants
between August 2016 and August 2018.
[6]
The Plaintiff also allegedly rendered both Civil and Structural
Engineering services to the Defendants
and completed stages 1 to 2 as
prescribed in the Government Gazette, 4 December 2015 No. 39480 (the
“Government Gazette”).
[7]
The Plaintiff consequently invoiced the Third Defendant for an amount
of R251 217.24,
[2]
as directed
by the Fourth Defendant, which amount was duly paid by the Second
Defendant.
[8]
The Plaintiff alleges that it illustrated its concerns regarding the
calculation of the amount
of R251 217.24.
[9]
On or about 1 August 2018, the Defendants repudiated the agreement
and informed the Plaintiff
that it was now splitting the Civil and
Structural Engineering work and that the Plaintiff was welcome to do
all the civil works
only as long as it is in line with
all professional fees to be finalized by the quantity surveyor.
[10]
That upon the Defendants’ unilateral decision to revoke the
Plaintiff’s structural
works it was no longer financially
viable for the Plaintiff to continue with the agreement for only
civil work and the Plaintiff
consequently, accepted the repudiation.
[11]
The Plaintiff duly rendered its invoice for
professional services rendered from date of the agreement to
date of
the termination less the amount already paid by the Second Defendant.
[12]
The Defendants have refused alternatively, failed further
alternatively, neglected to pay the
Plaintiff for the work completed
to date as per its invoice in the outstanding amount of R1 790
407.59.
[13]
The defence to this claim as pleaded in its second amended plea, is
that the First Defendant
entered into a shareholders’ agreement
with Triple M Properties (Pty) Ltd (“MMM”) in terms of
which MMM would
allegedly render professional consulting and
engineering services for the Soweto City Social Housing Project (the
“Project”).
[14]
That during March 2018, the Third Defendant allegedly entered into an
oral agreement with the
Plaintiff to render services to the
Third Defendant in respect of a stormwater attenuation plan for the
Project. The Defendants
therefore deny that the Plaintiff was
contracted for any professional services save for the services in
respect of a stormwater
attenuation plan for the project.
[15]
The issue before this Court is a factual one relating to whether or
not an agreement was concluded
between the parties. The following
is
in dispute:
15.1
The agreement as alleged by the Plaintiff.
15.2
The terms as alleged by the Plaintiff.
15.3
The nature of the work that the Plaintiff rendered to the Defendants
and
the
nature of the work that the Plaintiff compensated the Defendants for.
15.4
Whether the Plaintiff is entitled to payment in the amount of R 1 790
407.59.
Evidence
[16]
The Plaintiff led the evidence of Mr Tsepho Matshego. The summary of
his evidence is as follows:
16.1
He testified that the appointment date was 24 August 2016, in terms
of which the parties had concluded a partially oral
and partially
written agreement. In terms of the Agreement concluded the Plaintiff
would render professional services to the
First and Second
Defendant for all engineering work which would include all civil and
structural work. It confirmed that the Plaintiff
duly rendered all
services which included but was not limited to advising on the
structural aspects of the Project, providing the
Defendants with the
necessary structural advice, input and structural estimates. The
Plaintiff would also render all services relating
to the
civil engineering which included but was not limited to
stormwater, sewer, roads, water and so forth.
16.2
The Plaintiff had also submitted the necessary reports to City of
Johannesburg: Johannesburg Water and Johannesburg Roads
Agency
(“Johannesburg”); for Water & Sanitation and also
Roads & Stormwater services respectively; to
obtain the
necessary comments.The Plaintiff was not tasked with compiling such
traffic impact assessment report as this was
part of the Traffic
Engineers’ duties. This outstanding report held up the process
to advance to stage 3 in terms of the
Government Gazette. As such the
Plaintiff completed stage 1 (Inception) and 2 (Concept and
Viability also termed Preliminary
Design) of the project by
submitting the necessary reports and obtaining the necessary comments
from Johannesburg.
16.3
Stage 3 would be the amendments of the Reports to bring them in
line with the comments received and submitting them
for final
approval. This would also include the submission of detailed drawings
and technical specifications for such approved
work that incorporates
all comments and conditions. The Plaintiff’s report was
accepted by Johannesburg on 25 June 2018.
16.4
Johannesburg Roads Agency, in principle, accepted the Plaintiff
report however, indicated that the Traffic Report must
first be
submitted. The Plaintiff completed stage 2 in this regard and could
not proceed further until the Traffic Report was made
available.
16.5
It submitted that the Plaintiff did not want to enter into the
shareholding agreement with the Second Defendant
as it intended
to separate its engineering services from property management
services which was the purpose of the shareholders
agreement, to
manage the development once the project was completed. As such the
Plaintiff substituted itself with another juristic
entity, Triple M
Properties (MMM), which is a property management company. The purpose
of MMM entering into the shareholders
agreement would be to manage
the development from an engineering point of view once completed. For
example, if certain engineering
services would be required after the
completion of the development MMM would procure those services to
attend to upgrades for example.
16.6
It was therefore the parties intention to separate professional
services the Plaintiff rendered from the shareholders
agreement and
shareholding at completion of the project, as confirmed by the Fourth
Defendant in the email correspondence.
16.7
On or about 1 August 2018, the Defendants repudiated the Agreement by
informing the Plaintiff that another service provider
had been
appointed for structural engineering work and the Plaintiff can, if
it wanted to, only proceed with the civil engineering
work. The
Plaintiff’s witness explained that it could not proceed on this
basis given work already completed and due to the
fact that civil and
structural engineering was integrated. The witness further testified
that for indemnity, risk and insurance purposes
it could not
proceed in this fashion. The witness further testified that it would
not be financially viable for the Plaintiff to
only proceed with
civil engineering work and as such it elected to accept the
Defendants repudiation.
16.8
The witness testified that all professional fees and calculations
were based on the Quantity Surveyor’s calculations
of project
estimates up to concept and viability, being stage 2. The witness
testified that the Plaintiff was entitled to 30% of
its fees having
completed stages 1 and 2 as per the Government Gazette, less the
amount already paid of R251 217.24.The amount
due reflected as R1 790
407.59.
[17]
Mr Ian Mark Brown testified for the Defendants’ that the First
Defendant is a Social Housing
Institute (“SHI”) and is
registered and accredited as such by the Social Housing Regulatory
Authority (“SHRA”).
The witness referred to the
accreditation received from SHRA and testified as follows:
17.1
The Plaintiff was approached to be a shareholder in the project, to
supply its engineering services at risk until funding
comes through.
The basis of the shareholding would be to form a consortium of
like-minded professionals, to form the SHI and to
show they have the
capacity to do the work for SHRA.
17.2
According to the witness, the Plaintiff indicated to the Defendants
that the Plaintiff can’t sign the shareholding
agreement as it
would pose a problem to them and proposed that Triple M sign instead.
The two companies had the same shareholders
and the witness for the
Defendants testified that to his mind it was the same the party.
17.3
The witness pointed out on the shareholder agreement that the
Plaintiff’s name was then replaced with that of Triple
M, and
also pointed to the paragraph indicating that the initial work would
be done at risk until the project is funded.
17.4
The shareholder agreement provides further that Triple M would
receive 100 shares to procure that the First Defendant
is provided
with all such engineering services as may be required and agreed in
writing from time to time. Triple M would onboard
the services if
they couldn’t do the work. The witness testified that the
agreement primarily, almost exclusively relates
to the
Development and not to the property management as alleged by the
Plaintiff as SHRA does not fund property management,
and only funds
the development.
17.5
The witness testified that SHRA only releases money on certain
investment criteria being met and referred to two distinct
portions
of a project; Conditions Precedent and Financial Close. The witness
testified that “we needed to reach Financial
Close, until then
we wouldn’t get money from SHRA”.
17.6
In terms of clause 12 of the shareholding agreement, TBG would
onboard the Third Defendant to be the Development Manager
and would
use its own resources and work at risk until Financial Close, when
money is released from SHRA.
17.7
The witness testified that Conditions Precedent relates to Land and
Bulk Services. This includes electricity, sewerage
and sanitation,
water and roads. Once Conditions Precedent has been reached, they are
allowed to draw down from SHRA to pay for
the Land and Bulk Services
portion.
17.8
Financial Close relates to design and development of the social
housing and has ten requirements. The requirements include
an
approved Site Development Plan (“SDP”), approved building
plans, signed contracts with professionals and signed
building
contracts. As part of Financial Close, SHRA had to approve the
professional contracts and appointments. He testified that
they never
reached Financial Close as they did not have the signed professional
agreements or an approved SDP. They never received
a stamp from JRA
for the roads and stormwater report and therefore did not have an
approved SDP.
17.9
He averred that the Plaintiff was contracted to assist the
Defendants’ with the Bulk Services which forms part
of
Conditions Precedent. The Plaintiff was paid for these services upon
the first draw down from SHRA for Land and Bulk Services.
17.10
On the ‘fee proposal’ email the witness testified that
they were trying to wrap up the agreements so they
can put it forward
to SHRA. The Quantity Surveyor had to negotiate the fees with the
Plaintiff, but it was never accepted. No agreement
could be reached
as there was a disagreement on the roles of the engineers, including
the Plaintiff’s role. A decision was
taken to split civil and
structural engineers and the Plaintiff disagreed with it.
17.11
All of the professionals worked on risk, subject to receiving payment
once SHRA releases payment, upon Financial Close.
SHRA did release
payment to the Defendants upon the first investment criteria being
met, Land and Services, and the professionals
were paid accordingly.
The Plaintiff received R 251 217.24. That was the only money released
from SHRA.
17.12
The payments were made after the Quantity Surveyor consulted the
professionals, satisfying itself that the work was done.
The
Defendants’ could not comment on how the amount paid to the
Plaintiff was calculated and testified that it was calculated
by the
Quantity Surveyor.
17.13
They averred that the Plaintiff never questioned the payment request
form the Defendants and simply accepted payment.
The Plaintiff sent a
fee proposal for further work to the Defendants which was never
accepted by the Defendants. The fees of the
Plaintiff would have to
be agreed upon between the professionals, the Quantity Surveyor and
the Project Manager.
17.14
The witness testified that the status of the project is that it is on
hold due to a contractual dispute with SHRA. Stage
1 was never even
completed. They did not receive any money from SHRA for Financial
Close, only the first portion for Land and Bulk
Services which was
used to pay the professionals, including the Plaintiff for work under
Bulk Services.
17.15
He reiterated that the amount that was paid to the Plaintiff was
calculated by the Quantity Surveyor after the Plaintiff
submitted the
work it did to the Quantity Surveyor. According to the witness, the
Plaintiff never asked any questions on this amount.
It was payment
for Conditions Precedent which is Land and Bulk Services. The
witness testified that various of the deliverables
as set out in the
Government Gazette was not done by the Plaintiff.
[18]
Under cross-examination it was put to the witness that his version is
contradictory in that he
pleaded an agreement in August 2016 and an
agreement in March 2018. The witness disputed same. Defendants’
submitted that
it was clearly an error where reference is made to
March 2018. In cross-examination the witness continued to testify
that Stage
1 and 2 was a separate agreement to bulk services for
Conditions Precedent, and that it was never entered into and was
subject
to a PROCSA agreement and that the fee proposal was never
accepted. The reports which were submitted by the Plaintiff related
to
bulk services for Conditions Precedent only.
[19]
The witness disputed that the professionals calculate their fees
based on the document at page
001-16. He indicated that it was a
budget and that fees would be agreed upon by the Project Manager, the
Quantity Surveyor and
the Professionals, sitting at a table,
negotiating, to be then put in a PROCSA agreement.
The
Plaintiff’s submissions
[20]
The Plaintiff submitted that Defendant’s
witness not only attempted to mislead the Court but was also
evasive
in questions put to him regarding work submitted to Johannesburg,
based on the letters received from Johannesburg confirming
the
reports submitted to it. Further that the Defendant’s witness
also made bare denials and failed to clarify contradictions
pointed out to him regarding the conclusion of the partially written,
partially oral agreement. The Defendants’ witness also
attempted to mislead the Court regarding the fact that the Plaintiff
had to complete the traffic report, which according to the
meeting
minutes was not so and later corrected by the witness.
[21]
It was the Plaintiff’s further submission that the witness also
failed to prove, as the
Defendants’ defence that t
he
Plaintiff only completed stormwater attenuation. That based on the
above-mentioned the Court cannot accept Mr. Brown as a reliable
and
credible witness and the Defendant’s version should be rejected
and the Plaintiff’s version accepted.
The
Defendant’s submissions
[22]
It is the Defendants’’ submission that the Plaintiff did
not discharge its onus.
The Plaintiff did not prove an offer,
acceptance of the offer, or the terms, and most certainly not
consensus. The email that the
Plaintiff relies on is nothing more
than a statement intended to induce the Plaintiff into negotiations
with a view to arriving
at a contract. In the Defendant’s view
there is a clear distinction between stating that one intends to
contract and actually
doing so. It submitted that a party will also
not be held to a partial agreement if the remainder of the terms were
still being
negotiated, for a lack of
animus contrahendi
and
in such circumstances it can also be argued to be void for vagueness
or uncertainty. Lastly it submitted that no evidence was
led in
regards to the Defendants counterclaim and the Court would be
justified in granting absolution from the instance.
The
Law
[23]
The dispute between the plaintiff and the defendant is a factual one,
relating to emails and
the interpretation of those emails. It is
trite that the principles applicable to the interpretation of written
documents finds
application in this matter and that the primary
meaning of the emails must be determined from the language of the
emails in accordance
with the well-known rules of interpretation.
[24]
In essence the contractual relationship between the plaintiff and the
defendant is being disputed
where the Plaintiff says there was a
legally enforceable agreement in place between them, which provided
for a number of terms
and conditions which regulated the relationship
between them. The Defendants on the contrary says that there was no
such contract
in place, only an intention to contract.
[25]
The evidence must then be decided on a balance of probabilities where
there are two destructive
versions before the Court.
[26]
In
Stellenbosch Farmers' Winery Group Ltd and Another v Martell
and Others
,
2003 (1) SA 11
(SCA) at para 5, the Supreme Court of
Appeal dealt with how to resolve factual disputes by stating the
following:
‘
To
come to a conclusion on the disputed issues a court must make
findings on:
(a) the credibility of
the various factual witnesses;
(b) their reliability;
and
(c) the probability or
improbability of each party's version on each of the disputed issues.
In light of the
assessment of (a), (b) and (c), the court will then, as a final step,
determine whether the party burdened with
the onus of proof has
succeeded in discharging it. The hard case, which will doubtless be a
rare one, occurs when a court's credibility
findings compel it in one
direction and its evaluation of the general probabilities in another.
The more convincing the former,
the less convincing will be the
latter. But when all factors equipoised probabilities prevail’.
[27]
In
National Employers' General Insurance Co Ltd v Jager
,
1984
(4) SA 437
(ECD), at 440D-441A the court remarked as follows:
‘
It
seems to me, with respect, that in any civil case, as in any criminal
case, the onus can ordinarily only be discharged by adducing
credible
evidence to support the case of the party on whom the onus rests. In
a civil case the onus is obviously not as heavy as
it is in a
criminal case, but nevertheless where the onus rests on the plaintiff
as in the present case, and where there are two
mutually destructive
stories, he can only succeed if he satisfies the court on a
preponderance of probabilities that his version
is true and accurate
and therefore acceptable, and that the other version advanced by the
defendant is therefore false or mistaken
and falls to be rejected. In
deciding whether that evidence is true or not the court will weigh up
and test the plaintiff's allegations
against the general
probabilities. The estimate of the credibility of a witness will
therefore be inextricably bound up with a
consideration of the
probabilities of the case and, if the balance of probabilities
favours the plaintiff then the court will accept
his version as being
probably true. If however the probabilities are evenly balanced in
the sense that they do not favour the plaintiff's
case any more than
they do the defendant's, the plaintiff can only succeed if the court
nevertheless believes him and is satisfied
that his evidence is true
and that the defendant's version is false.
This
view seems to me to be in general accordance with the views expressed
by Coetzee J in
Koster Ko-operatiewe
Landboumaatskappy Bpk v Suid-Afrikaanse Spoorweë en Hawens
(supra) and
African
Eagle Assurance Co Ltd v Cainer
(supra).
I would merely stress however that when in such circumstances one
talks about a plaintiff having discharged the onus which
rested upon
him on a balance of probabilities one really means that the court is
satisfied on a balance of probabilities that he
was telling the truth
and that his version was therefore acceptable. It does not seem to me
to be desirable for a court first to
consider the question of
credibility of the witnesses as the trial judge did in the present
case, and then, having concluded that
enquiry, to consider the
probabilities of the case, as though the two aspects constitute
separate fields of enquiry. In fact, as
l have pointed out, it is
only where a consideration of the probabilities fails to indicate
where the truth probably lies, that
recourse is had to an estimate of
relative credibility apart from the probabilities’.
[28]
In
Govan v Skidmore
,
1952 (1) SA 732
(N), the following
principle was enunciated:
‘
In
finding facts or making inferences in a civil case, it seems to me
that one may, as Wigmore conveys in his work on evidence …
by
balancing probabilities select a conclusion which seems to be the
more natural or plausible conclusion from amongst several
conceivable
ones, even though that conclusion may not be the only reasonable
one.’
Application
of the law to the facts of this matter
[29]
The main issue is that of probabilities of the Defendant’s
allegation that the payment
of
R251 217.24
was
related to Bulk Services for Conditions Precedent and therefore there
was never an offer and acceptance for Professional Consulting
and
work for the Structural and Civil Engineering on the project by the
Plaintiff. What I find significant about the Defendant’s
version is that it claims that the fees are calculated by the
Professionals, the Quantity Surveyor and the Project Manager, however
it accepted that the payment of
R251 217.24 was made by the
Quantity Surveyor alone and could not even comment on how the fee was
calculated. Yet surprisingly was
confident in that the payment was
related to Bulk services only and not for professional services as it
claimed that the fees still
were required to be finalised and that
this was not done because disputes arose surrounding the Plaintiff’s
role in the project.
This despite the payment made and the invoice
for the payment that was submitted by the Plaintiff clearly indicated
Professional
Fees.
[30]
It also attempted to use the fee proposal by the Plaintiff and the
Defendants’ rejection
of the fee proposal to suggest that the
fee structure was not finalised and as a result there could not have
been any contract
that existed between the parties.
[31]
The Plaintiff on the other hand had commenced work already on the
project and per Mr. Brown’s
testimony the Quantity Surveyor
inspected the Plaintiff’s work and calculated the fees which
resulted in the payment of
R251 217.24. However, the Defendant
alleges that the payment came from SHRA’s budget for Bulk
Services and that it paid the
Plaintiff in terms of work rendered for
Bulk Services and not for professional services rendered. In this
regard I think it would
have been prudent for the Quantity Surveyor
to have led evidence in this regard and begs the question why the
Defendants did not
lead such evidence.
[32]
I am furthermore of the view that, on the probabilities, the
Defendant’s explanation that
the reference to the date of the
appointment being a clear clerical error is unacceptable and must be
rejected. It is inexplicable
and certainly there is no relation
between August 2016 and March 2018 that one can ever aver that this
is purely clerical in nature.
Lastly the Defendants’ attempt to
place the burden on the Plaintiff querying the payment of
R251
217.24 being for Bulk Services makes no sense. It
is
highly unlikely that they would have concluded an agreement for Bulk
Services only as alleged by the Defendants.
[33]
To the contrary the Defendants’ version corroborated certain
material aspects of the Plaintiff’s
version significantly so
was the Defendants’ taking the decision to split the Structural
and Civil works that the Plaintiff
accepted the repudiation as it
would not be financially viable to proceed on the Civil works only. I
find the Plaintiff’s
version to accord with the probabilities.
It would make no sense after almost two years of working on a project
of this magnitude
that the Plaintiff would want to restructure a
contract and place itself in a financially risky position to
accommodate an unknown
third party to take on the Structural
Engineering work. The issue of accountability and liability would
definitely have arisen
and be a cause of concern for any company in
the industry. It is unlikely that they, after two years of conducting
work, would
sit down and agree on terms and conditions.
[34]
Applying the principles in
National Employers' General Insurance
Co Ltd v Jager
(supra), I am of the view that the probabilities
in this matter favour the Plaintiff. I say so for the above reasons.
[35]
In my view and having regard to the above considerations and the
probabilities in their totality,
the version of the Plaintiff is more
probable than that of the Defendants. I am therefore satisfied that
the Plaintiff’s
evidence is true and the Plaintiff has
discharged the onus on it to prove the existence of the agreement.
[36]
As far as the Defendants’ counterclaim is concerned, the
Defendants’ conceded that
no evidence has been placed before me
in support of the counterclaim. The counterclaim therefore stands to
be dismissed.
[37]
I according make the following order:-
37.1
The First to Fourth Defendant’s
are directed to
make payment of the amount of R1 790 407.59 to the Plaintiff.
37.2
The First to Fourth Defendants are directed to pay
interest
on the above-mentioned amount calculated at the prescribed rate of
10.25% per annum, a
tempore morae
, to date of
final payment;
37.3 The First to
Fourth Defendants are ordered to pay the costs of this action jointly
and severally, the one paying the other
to be absolved; and
37.4 The First to
Fourth Defendant’s counterclaim is dismissed.
C
SARDIWALLA
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances:
For
the Plaintiff:
Adv. K.A. Slabbert (Wilson)
Instructed
by:
Weavind and Weavind Inc.
For
the Defendants:
Adv L Pretorius
Instructed
by:
Gerhold & Van Wyk Attorneys
[1]
Plaintiff’s
Heads of Argument, pages 2-5
[2]
Particulars
of Claim, pages 001-11 and 12
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