Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1902South Africa
Uni-Span Formwork and Scaffolding (Pty) Ltd v SVK Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (26270/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1902 (20 September 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Uni-Span Formwork and Scaffolding (Pty) Ltd v SVK Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (26270/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1902 (20 September 2023)
Uni-Span Formwork and Scaffolding (Pty) Ltd v SVK Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others (26270/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1902 (20 September 2023)
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# IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO
: 26270/2021
DATE
:
20-09-2023
In
the matter between
UNI-SPAN
FORMWORK & SCAFFOLDING (PTY) LTD
Plaintiff
and
SVK HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
and 3 OTHERS
Defendant
JUDGMENT
DAVIS,
J
:
I intend rendering an
extempore
judgment. As introduction, the following:
The
applicant’s cause of action is based on a contract. The
applicant seeks to enforce the terms of a settlement agreement
reached between the parties and, as a consequence, claimed payment of
R8 655 000.00 The applicant alleges that this amount
is due and
payable in terms of a written settlement agreement.
The
respondent opposes the matter, principally claiming that the
settlement agreement came about as a result of undue influence
and
therefore should be unenforceable.
The
second part of the applicant’s claim relates to security
furnished by way of moveable property, in particular a certain
“Bruiser” armoured vehicle. In terms of a directive
reached during case-management proceedings in May of this
year, the
issue regarding the security was separated from the payment claim and
the parties thereafter proceeded with the payment
claim which is
currently before the Court.
As the
dispute centres around the terms of the settlement agreement, it is
apposite to start therewith. The settlement agreement
is a
written agreement. It was signed on 17 April 2021 by a Mr
Marais on behalf of the applicant, by Mr Andre Brand Van der
Merwe,
both in his personal capacity and in representing the first
respondent, SVK Holdings (Pty) Ltd and he warranted that he
was duly
authorised to do so.
The
relevant terms of the settlement are the following, and I quote from
the preambles and certain clauses:
“
WHEREAS
the applicant and the first respondent concluded a rental agreement
in which the applicant rented certain scaffolding equipment
to the
first respondent.
AND WHEREAS a dispute
arose between the applicant and the first respondent relating to the
total tonnage of the scaffolding equipment
at the Kusile site and
rented by the first respondent.
AND WHEREAS the
applicant launched an urgent application under the abovementioned
case number against the first, second, third,
and fourth respondents
in two parts, being Part A for the return of the scaffolding
equipment in which applicant sought interim
relief against the
second, third, and fourth respondent, and Part B for an order against
the first respondent of payment of outstanding
rental due by the
first respondent to the applicant.
AND WHEREAS Part A of
the application was settled between the parties by way of a
settlement agreement which was made an order of
court on 22 October
2019 in terms of which order, inter alia Part B, was postponed.
AND WHEREAS no further
relief is claimed against the second, third, and fourth respondents
in terms of Part B of the application.
AND WHEREAS Andre
Brand Van Der Merwe, an adult male and sole director of the first
respondent, agrees and consents to be joined
through this application
and to be bound by any judgment granted against him pursuant to this
settlement agreement.
AND WHEREAS the
applicant agrees to withdraw its opposition under case number
92558/2019 within two days from date of signature
of this agreement.
AND WHEREAS the
applicant, the first respondent, and Van Der Merwe have come to an
agreement to settle the application and wish
to record the terms of
the settlement in writing.
NOW THEREFORE the
applicant, the first respondent, and Van der Merwe agree as follows:
2.1.3 “Claimed
amount” shall mean the amount as set out in Part B of the
notice of motion, being R8 965 916.40, plus
interest at a rate of 2%
above the prime overdraft interest rate per annum charged by Standard
Bank of South Africa Limited from
time to time.
2.1.4
Commencement date shall mean the date of signature of the last party
signing this agreement.
2.1.5
Effective date shall mean the earliest of one year from the
commencement date or the resolution of a pending dispute
arbitration
between the first respondent and Alstom S&E Africa trading as GE
Steam Power Systems (General Electric).
2.1.9 “Settlement
amount” shall mean the amount of R4 500 000 plus the taxed
and/or agreed costs in respect of the urgent
applications launched by
the first respondent and Van der Merwe under case number 92558/2019
on 5 March 2020 and 20 March 2020
respectively.
2.1.10 “The
debtors” shall mean the first respondent and Van der Merwe
jointly and severally.”
3.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT OF DEBT:
“
The
Debtors acknowledge that they are jointly and severally liable for
payment of the settlement amount.”
4.
SETTLEMENT:
“
4.1
The debtors undertake to make payment to the applicant of the
settlement amount on or before the effective date in full and
final
settlement of any and all claims the applicant has against the first
respondent subject to Clause 8 below.
4.2
Payment of the settlement amount will be paid into the trust account
of the Applicant’s
attorneys of record.
4.3 Upon payment of
the settlement amount by the debtors will the applicant withdraw Part
B of the application under case number
74295/2019 against the first
respondent.
8
DEFAULT/ACCELERATION.
8.1 If the debtors
fail to make due and timeous payment on the effective date and/or
breach of any of the provisions of this agreement:
8.1.1 The entire
balance of the claimed amount at that date shall be become due and
payable forthwith, together with interest.
8.1.2 The applicant
shall be entitled to recover, in addition to the aforegoing, all
costs disbursed by itself to [indistinct –
01:10:06] attorneys
in securing the debtors’ compliance with the provisions hereof
on an attorney-and-client scale.
9.1 It is agreed
between the parties that monthly updates will be provided to the
applicant’s attorneys of record in respect
of the pending
dispute between the first respondent and General Electric.
11
UNCONDITIONAL INDEPENDENT CAUSE. The debtors acknowledge and
agree that this document, when signed
by them, constitutes a firm and
binding acknowledgment, undertaking and commitment assumed by them in
terms hereof. The debtors’
liability arising here from is
not subject to any condition whatsoever and this document signed by
it constitutes its own unconditional
causa against the debtors
independently of any other causa.
- The debtors
acknowledge and agree that:
The debtors
acknowledge and agree that:
12.1.1 No warranties
or representations have been made by or on behalf of the applicant
which may have had the effect of inducing
the debtors to sign this
document and assume obligations herein.
14.1 The parties
hereby record and agree that the applicant shall be entitled to have
this agreement made an order of court and
the debtors hereby waive
notice of application to make this an order of court. In the
event of the debtors’ failure
to make payment in terms of this
agreement the applicant shall be entitled to have a warrant of
execution issued or proceed with
any other legal proceedings.
14.2
Insofar as this agreement, or any portion thereof, are not, for any
reason whatsoever, made an order of court, the parties
record that it
is nevertheless binding on themselves inter partes
.”
Now, how this settlement
agreement came about is as follows: The applicant sought to
recover what it thought was due to it
in terms of rental of
scaffolding by the first respondent. The amount calculated was
based on an alleged 1351 tons of scaffolding
rented and utilised by
the first respondent.
That
amount was disputed and the first respondent, at some stage, averred
that no amount can be determined unless a scaffolding
audit had been
conducted. The applicant instituted the application which was
later referred to in the settlement agreement
against the first
respondent and certain other parties, including General Electric, as
well as Eskom Holding SOC Limited where
the scaffolding was utilised
on one of its sites.
That
application was launched as one of urgency on 8 October 2019 in case
number 74295/2019. By agreement between the parties,
an order
was made by this Court on 22 October 2010. That order provided
certain interim relief as claimed in Part A of the
urgent
application.
That
order envisaged the return of the scaffolding dismantled by the first
respondent and identified by the applicant. Further
provisions
were made for access to the site for the collection of the
scaffolding by the applicant and of importance is paragraph
11 of the
order, on which the respondents now relied in this court.
It
provided that in respect of identified scaffolding, the first
respondent will be deemed to have returned the scaffolding and
for
purposes of further relief by the applicant, the applicant and the
first respondent were directed to appoint representatives
to record
in writing the items of scaffolding returned to or collected by the
applicant, and the fourth respondent to that application
would have
been a witness of such confirmation for purposes of removal of the
items from the Kusile site. The fourth respondent
was Alstom
S&E Africa (Pty) Ltd trading as GE Steam Power Systems.
Subsequent
to this order having been made an order of court, the first
respondent was placed under business rescue on 14 November
2019.
Shortly thereafter, on 17 December 2019, the business rescue was
discontinued and converted in liquidation proceedings.
Whilst
the first respondent was being wound up, it got wind of further
tenders to be issued by Eskom at the Kusile site and Mr Van
der
Merwe, also representing the first respondent, contemplated that the
first respondent might secure work in terms of those tenders
in
excess of R135 million. Such a windfall will, of course, assist
the first respondent in extinguishing its debts, of which
its
principal creditor was the South African Revenue Services.
The
securing of those tenders would not only constitute a lifeline of
liquidity for the first respondent but would ensure its future
existence and the retention of employee and the like.
On 20
March 2020, the first respondent and Mr Van der Merwe therefore
launched an urgent application for the discharge of the liquidation
order. This was done, of course, as aforesaid, with a view of
securing the tenders. The applicant in this application
sought
to oppose the application for the discharge of the winding-up order.
During
April 2020, one of the applicant’s directors, a Mr Damant,
received a call from Mr Van der Merwe requesting a possible
settlement of the disputes between the parties in exchange for the
applicant’s withdrawal of its opposition to the application
for
the discharge of the winding-up order.
The
applicant’s deponent, being one of its directors, Mr Marais,
stated in the replying affidavit to the current application
that the
applicant was willing to consider any settlement proposal by the
respondents. I interject also to mention that Mr
Damant
furnished a confirmatory affidavit.
After
having been approached by the respondents in this fashion on 16 April
2020, the respondents’ attorney wrote a letter
to the
applicant’s attorney. The attorneys representing the
first and second respondents at that time had been their
attorneys of
record for more than a decade and they also feature as the current
attorneys of record. The letter of 16 April
2020 refers to the
furnishing of the vehicle being an armoured-personnel carrier to be
provided as security (less the artillery).
The
next day the applicant’s attorneys responded by saying as
follows, with reference to Mr Babinski:
“
Dear
Istvan, the above matter, as well as our conversation of earlier
today as reference. Istvan, please find annexed hereto
the
settlement agreement as discussed. Kindly peruse the contents
of same and provide us with your comments. Can we
kindly
request that any suggested changes in the settlement agreement be
done by way of track changes? Looking forward to
hearing from
you
.”
Such changes were
effected and later on the same day, Mr Babinski reverted as follows:
“
With
reference to the abovementioned, as well as the proposed settlement,
we wish to comment as follows:
(a)
The agreed settlement amount between
our respective clients was the amount of R4.5-milliion in full and
final settlement.
Please amend same accordingly.
(b)
The basis for the settlement is that
Uni-Span would, upon Mr Van der Merwe personally taking
responsibility for the settled debt
of R4.5-million, support and
consent to the application lodged in order to discharge the current
liquidation status of the company.
This seems to be absent from
the settlement.
(c)
Our client has given security in the
form of a Bruiser Model 112 APC armed-personnel-carrier vehicle.
Our client will sign
any and all documents to provide your client
with the said security. However, if your client would like to
register a material
bond, such costs would be for your client’s
account.
(f) As
mentioned, the entire agreement was reached on the basis that our
client requires your client’s support in order
to discharge the
current liquidation status. Only once same is done can the
funds be generated in order to pay the settlement.
As I
understand, will your client not accept that this settlement is
subject to our client being taken out of provisional liquidation,
which is our instructions. However, then as an alternative,
should Mr Van der Merwe still be afforded the period as per 2.1.5
irrespective if the liquidation status is discharged or not.
Please
be so kind as to take instructions from your client on the
aforementioned and revert back to us as soon as possible
.”
The comments were
accepted and incorporated in the settlement agreement, in the terms
as already referred to above, later on, on
the same, that is 17 April
2020, whereafter the agreement was signed.
On 20
April 2020 the applicant, via its attorneys in compliance with its
undertaking in terms of the agreement, forwarded the notice
of
withdrawal to the respondent’s attorneys. For purposes of
the special notarial bond, as envisaged in the agreement
and in the
correspondence, the particulars of Mr Van der Merwe relating to his
identity document, proof of residence, proof of
marital status, and
the address where the moveable asset will be kept were required.
Subsequent
to the notice of withdrawal of 20 April 2020, the liquidation
application proceeded before Holland-Muter, then AJ, who
in his
judgment, in setting aside the winding-up proceedings, referred to
the fact that the setting aside was supported by the
South African
Revenue Services as the largest preferent creditor and he also noted
that the applicant, having previously opposed
that application, had
withdrawn its opposition. Accordingly, the first respondent was
“taken out of liquidation”.
Pursuant
to that, the further steps subsequent to the settlement, apart from
the withdrawal, leading to the setting aside of the
liquidation on 28
April 2022, was that the applicant had requested powers of attorney
on two occasions from the respondents for
the registration of a
notarial bond over their vehicle. Those powers of attorney were
indeed furnished by Mr Van der Merwe
on behalf of the first
respondent and himself, and the notarial bond was indeed registered
on 15 April 2021 with registration number
BN00017457/2021 in the
Deeds Office, Pretoria.
I
mention these steps taken subsequent to the settlement agreement and
in implementation thereof as at no stage had the respondents
raised
any objection against the settlement agreement or its validity or
enforcement. In fact, they went further and kept
the applicant
updated as to the progress in the arbitration mentioned in clause
2.1.5 of the settlement agreement.
Once
the time period for payment of the settlement amount of R4.5-million
had come and gone and once no payment had been made, the
applicant
proceeded in launching the present application wherein it then claims
the agreed outstanding amount, as already referred
to above, in
excess of R8,965-million.
In the
answering affidavit in the current application the respondents raised
a dispute in the following terms, and I quote from
Mr Van der Merwe’s
affidavit:
“
Although
a settlement was reached between the parties, it is submitted that
the unfounded and malicious opposition by the applicant
resulted in
the applicant placing the respondents with their backs against the
wall. It is submitted that the agreement was
only entered into
as a consequence of undue influence and pressure imposed by the
applicant. The applicant, knowing that
the fate of the company
and its employees would be sealed should the respondents not settle
the matter, held a position of substantial
power over the
respondents. Ultimately, the applicant used its position
unscrupulously towards the respondents and subsequently
resulted in
the respondents, without any choice, entering into the said
transaction. This transaction is nothing short of
being
prejudicial and, if the respondents had been exercising a normal and
free will, the respondent would not have entered into
the jural act
or transaction
.”
Insofar as the settlement
agreement virtually halved the claimed amount and also terminated any
dispute regarding the computation
thereof, one would have expected
the respondents to indicate their problem with the R4.5-million.
The halving of the disputed
amount was clearly to their advantage.
Nothing was said about this.
Nothing
was also said in the affidavit as to why Mr Van der Merwe then then
bound himself to the agreement and what else he would
have then
agreed to or done had there not been the alleged undue influence.
Without
abandoning this point, Mr Van der Merwe said that the amount of R4,
5-million was, and I quote again from his affidavit:
“…
derived
from the possible claim that the applicant might have against the
first respondent. It is also submitted by the respondents
that
the amount of R4.5-million was to be a full and final settlement and
that the respondents never agreed or acknowledged to
be indebted to
the applicant for an amount of R8 965 960.40
.”
No answer was given as to
why the R4.5-million as agreed to was then not paid timeously or at
all. The allegation by Mr Van
der Merwe that the respondents
had not agreed or acknowledged an indebtedness to the applicant for
the full amount is, of course,
gainsaid by the expressed terms of the
agreement themselves.
In
respect of the defence of undue influence, the respondents conceded
that they have an onus to prove that the applicant had influence
over
the respondents, that such influence had weakened the respondents’
resistance, that the applicant used the influence
unscrupulously,
that the respondents were innocent parties, and that the transaction
was prejudicial to the respondents and exercising
normal free will
the respondents would not have entered into the agreement.
This
was made with reference to the judgment of Davis J in
Advtech
Resourcing (Pty) Ltd trading as Communicate Personnel v Kuhn
2008(2)
SA 375 (C) at [30].
Reference was
also made to
Preller v Jordaan
1956(1)
SA 483(A) where a party has influenced another to such an extent that
his will became weak and pliable and that the party
exercising the
influence brought a will to bear in an unprincipled manner.
It
must also be mentioned that the respondents did not rely on the
issues of duress or the threats of an improper nature as mentioned
in
Arend and Another v Astra Furnishers
(Pty) Ltd
1974(1) SA 298 (K) at 306A -
B, discussed in
BOE Bank Limited v Van
Zyl
2002(5) SA 165 (KPA), but only on
the issue of undue influence as referred to above.
When
one contemplates the full assistance of the respondents by their
attorneys and the exchange of correspondence which I had referred
to,
it is difficult to match the allegations in the answering affidavit
with the preceding facts. There was no indication
in any of
those interactions that any undue influence was exerted or, in fact,
that any demand was made by the applicant.
In
fact, the proposal for settlement came from the respondents and was
pursued through their attorney who had full and extensive
time to
consult with the respondents and to consider the matter.
It is
apparent from the correspondence that they did so. This is
apparent from the various comments made by Mr Babinski and
those
incorporated in the agreement. I find on these facts no
substantiation of any alleged influence or weakening of the
will as
claimed by Mr Van Der Merwe in his affidavit.
Another
weighty factor which weighs against this defence is the fact that
after the settlement agreement had been entered into and
after the
first respondent had been “taken out of liquidation” in
April 2020, nothing further was done in respect of
the recent claim
of invalidity of the agreement in the subsequent months, or any other
months leading up to the due date of payment
of the settled amount.
In
fact, the opposite was apparent, namely that the respondents
cooperated in the implementation of the agreement which they now
claim that they had been unduly influenced into entering. It is
only when the claim came for the payment of the full agreed
amount
that these allegations surfaced.
I find
that in these circumstances the respondents have not raised a
bona
fide
and real dispute of fact and that
the allegations are such that they can be rejected out of hand on the
papers. There is
therefore also no need for any reference to
oral evidence.
During
argument today and as an apparent last resort, counsel for the
respondents raised two new points which had not previously
been
canvassed in either the answering affidavit or heads of argument.
The
first was the issue of
lis pendens
.
As I understood the argument, it went like this: The urgent
application in case number 74295/2019 was not or has not
yet been
withdrawn and it was in fact still alive and pending, and therefore a
party should be precluded from enforcing a subsequent
agreement and
this Court should also preclude the applicant from proceeding with
the settlement agreement. Once one has regard
to the contents
of the settlement agreement as quoted above, it becomes clear that
the parties clearly intended that settlement
agreement to be an end
of the disputes in the preceding urgent application.
The
agreement, particularly insofar as it relates to an initial halving
of the amount claimed without any further dispute about
the
computation thereof, clearly amounts to a compromise. A
compromise has defined as an agreement between two or more persons
for the purpose of preventing, avoiding, or terminating a dispute.
The
locus classicus
confirming this is
Gollach &
Gomperts (1967) (Pty) Ltd v Universal Mills & Produce Company
(Pty)
Ltd 1978(1) SA 914 (A) at 921 A –
D.
Even
if by some notion the urgent application in case number 74295/19
might still be pending insofar as it has not been formally
withdrawn,
this Court has a discretion to uphold a plea of
lis
pendens.
In the circumstances of
this case and having regard to the parties’ express clear
intention set out in the settlement agreement
and in the exercise of
that discretion, this Court declines to uphold the plea of
lis
pendens.
The
second point raised was slightly dissimilar from a plea of
lis
pendens
simpliciter. It was
this. In clause 11 of the order in case 74295/2019, it was
envisaged that there would be a recordal
of scaffolding returned or
collected and that the fourth respondent would have witnessed that
removal and confirmed it.
The
argument went that insofar as that had not taken place or insofar as
there is no evidence that that clause had been fulfilled
and no
confirmation thereof by the fourth respondent, the order still
remained alive and cannot otherwise be enforced. That
argument,
of course, ignores what the parties had expressly subsequently
agreed, and that is that despite the terms of paragraph
A they have
agreed on a settlement of everything claimed by the applicant in Part
A of the notice, and that application and the
settlement involved a
payment of a fixed amount and by default then the total amount
claimed. I find that this point, belatedly
raised as it was,
also has no weight.
As a
last-gasp defence, Mr Du Toit, appearing for the respondents, relied
on the judgment of the Constitutional Court in
Shabangu
v Land and Agricultural Development Bank of South Africa and Others
reported as
2020 (1) SA 305
(CC). The argument was that insofar
as the initial agreement or dispute had not yet been concluded or
Part A of the initial
order had not yet been enforced or finally
dealt with, a subsequent settlement agreement cannot be enforced.
This
argument was preceded not on the basis that the prior agreement which
constituted the order by consent of Part A in case number
74295 was
invalid, but that the performance in respect thereof was
uncompleted. As debated with counsel, the judgment of
the
Constitutional Court is completely distinguishable on the facts in
that case. In a similar manner as in the case of
Panamo
Properties 103 (Pty) Ltd v Land and Agricultural Development Bank of
South Africa
2016 (1) SA 202
(SCA), the
issue therein was whether a subsequent agreement, undertaking or
surety could be afforded validity if it was based on
a preceding
invalid agreement. Clearly the facts are different and
distinguishable.
I do
not find that the judgment in
Shabangu
has direct application in this matter and even if it did have some
merit, it is clear that the parties intended that any and all
of the
terms of Part A in the preceding application had been terminated and
settled by agreement and as if by a novation by way
of the settlement
agreement. In short, there is nothing left of Part A which the
parties contemplated should be a bar to
the settlement agreement
being implemented. I therefore find that the respondent’s
defence should fail, and that the
applicant should be entitled to the
order as claimed in the first part of its notice of notion, which has
been incorporated into
a draft order, which appears on E13 on the
Caselines records.
The
only outstanding issue is then that of costs. In the settlement
agreement it was agreed that should the applicant have
to enforce the
agreement, it would be entitled to cost on an attorney-and-client
scale. Mr Subel also urged the Court if
the Court is mindful of
granting cost in favour of the applicant that such cost should
include the cost of two counsel where employed.
The amount is
substantial. The disputes have a long history, and the
determination thereof is clearly of importance to the
parties and, in
particular, the applicant. I find that the employment of two
counsel was justified and that such costs should
be included in the
costs order.
I also
find no cogent reason why the customary principle that costs follow
the event should not also find application herein.
Accordingly,
there shall be an order in terms of the draft, which for good order I
shall read out. It is as follows:
1
The first and second respondents jointly
and severally, the one paying the other to be absolved, are ordered
to make the following
payment to the plaintiff:
1.1
Payment in the sum of R8 965 916.14.
1.2
Interest on the aforesaid sum at the rate
of 2% above prime overdraft rate charged by Standard Bank of South
Africa from 18 April
2020 to date of final payment.
1.3
Costs on an attorney-and-client scale,
including the costs of two counsel where employed.
DAVIS, J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
DATE
JUDGMENT DELIVERED
: 20
SEPTEMBER 2023
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